Daily hansan
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Thursday, April 1, 1954
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 120
—Kansan photo by Rozanne Atkins
Chorale to Sing 15 Concerts On 5-Day Tour
The University Chorale of 20 student voices will sing 15 concerts in as many southwestern Kansas cities in its annual spring vacation tour, April 5-9.
Now in its fourth year, the group was organized and is led by Prof. Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education. Mr. Krehbiel former soloist and assistant director of the Robert Shaw chorale
WHO STOLE THE DING DONG?—The campanile's top tumbles to the ground following an explosion that rocked the memorial this morning. Rozanne Atkins, Kansan photographer, caught this unusual shot while walking through Marvin grove to class. (P.S. It didn't really happen, APRIL FOOL.)
Mary Jo Huyck, fine arts sophomore, is the accompanist.
The tour will open with a performance in Hutchinson April 5. Other engagements include: April 6—Pratt, Greensburg, Coldwater, Medicine Lodge, and Kiowa; April 7 Protection, Ashland, and Meade; April 8—Hugoton, Ulysses, Lakin, and Dodge City; and April 9—St. John and Stafford.
The chorale includes the following students: sopranos—Judith Tate, education junior; Sandra Keller, college sophomore; Phyllis Nehrbass, education senior; Betty Southern, fine arts sophomore, and Nina Newman, education senior.
Altos—Christine Wiley, education senior; Delores Stitkey, education junior; Barbara Barnes, education junior; Linda Stormont, fine arts senior; and Rosemary Owen, education senior.
Tenors-Delbert Fillmore, business senior; Richard Scott, college senior; Fred Terry, education junior, and Edward Kindley, education junior.
Baritones—Gerald Scott, college junior; Edwin Howard, college senior; Frank McCollum, business senior; Jerry Clark, education senior; Robert Tebow, pharmacy sophomore, and Larry Burt, education junior.
Dr. Kester Dies Services Friday
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Tamar Kester, of the home; two sons, Frederick E. Kester Jr., Wichita Falls, Tex., and William Kester, St. Louis; two daughters, Mrs. Barbara Page, Urban, Ill., and Mrs. Betty Holmer, Tulsa, and eight grandchildren.
Dr. Frederick E. Kester, 81, professor emeritus of physics and a KU faculty member since 1909, died yesterday at his home, 1612 Louisiana st., after a long illness
Western Civilization Trial Exams Set
Trial examinations in Western Civilization over units 1-5 and 6-10 will be given at 7:30 p.m. April 14-15 in 102 Snow, Harrison Madden,istant director of Western Civilization, said today.
He was born in Eaton, Ohio, Feb. 22, 1873, and was a graduate of Ohio State college. He received his master's and Ph.D. degrees from Cornell university.
Memorial services will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist church. The Rev, Albin Holmer of Topeka will conduct services.
Dr. Kester was a physics professor here for 35 years and chairman of the department more than 30 years prior to his retirement in 1944. Since he had served as chairman of committee on committees of the University Senate.
Both examinations will be given each night, and it is not necessary for students to register before taking them. The tests designed to help students prepare for the final examination, will not be graded.
U. S. diplomats viewed the proposal as a bold move to strengthen the hand of powerful, anti-American groups in Europe—particularly in France and Italy—and in this way help undercut the effort to create a European army with Germany.
The State department spokesman said his statement represented an "American rejection" of the plan. Nevertheless, the United States intends to meet soon with Britain and France to work out a formal reply to Moscow.
"The present proposal of the Soviet Union inspires no confidence in face of the continued iron grip of the Soviet Union on its captive peoples, the State department of humanism and strictism. "It is a manure for gain admittance within the walls of the West to undermine its security."
Moscow pulled its rabbit out of the hat yesterday when it suggested in notes to the Big Three that a Europe-Wide security pact be set up—with America as a member—and that Russia join the NATO alliance.
U.S. Rejects Russian Bid To Join NATO
The State department informally rejected the surprise proposal last night, calling it a trick to "undermine" Western unity and security. Authorities expect the United States, Britain and France to agree quickly on a formal turn-down.
Washington — (U.P.) — American officials heaped ridicule on Russia's bid to join the North Atlantic pact today and predicted the Allies will turn it down cold.
with winds shifting to strong northerly a nd some blowing dust West, and Central portions. Warmer t o d ay and in East to night. Colder Northwest, a nd
Weather
The forecast for Kansas today is:
Generally fair and partly cloudy
S
-WINDY-
Primary Election Balloting Light
turning colder East and South to-
tomorrow. High today near 60 South-
west and in the 50s elsewhere.
A check at 5 primary polls at 10:15 a.m. today showed that balloting has been slow.
In the Student Union building 17 persons had voted in Allied Greek Independent primary, 33 in Strong rotunda, 30 in Strong hall basement, 50 in Marvin hall, and 32 in Fraser hall.
Probers Still Seek Counsel
Washington — (U.P.)— Sen. Karl E. Mundt said the Senate Investigating subcommittee will either pick a special counsel today or decide on a new way to find one to head its investigation of the McCarthy-Army row.
"The activities of Sen. McCarthy to which many people object can be curbed if the Senate adopts proper rules for the work of its committees." Rep. Kean said in a newsletter to his constituents. "Certainly there should be no one-man investigating committees."
The South Dakota Republic, temporary chairman of the subcommittee, said he hoped for a "break" this afternoon in the 16-day search for a counsel. He said "I will have something to announce—either a name or a change in procedure or criteria."
Sen. Mundt said if a prominent, impartial lawyer cannot be found today to take over the investigation of the Army-McCarthy fight he will call a meeting of the subcommittee and "try to break this log jam."
Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.), whose fight with the Army prompted the investigation, came under fire from a new quarter. Rep. Robert W. Kean (R-N.J.) said Sen. McCarthy "has done more harm than good" and urged the Senate to curtail his investigation tactics.
Lawson Services Set for 3 p.m. Today
Funeral services for Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, who died late Tuesday, will be held at 3 p.m. today in the First Presbyterian church. The Rev. A. John Anderson of the West Side Presbyterian church will conduct services. Burial will be in Oak Hill cemetery.
Pallbearers will be E. B. Stouffer, professor of mathematics; Dean John H. Nelson, the Graduate school; H. H. Hungerford, professor of entomology; Raymond Beamer, professor of entomology; Laurence Woodruff, dean of students; Gilbert Ulmer, acting dean of the College, and W. A. Ramsey and Marion Barlow, both of Lawrence.
Students were voting for the POGO and Married parties in the Student Union only. The POGO party had 4 votes and the Married party 5 votes cast.
--the delivery of munitions of war.
The number of students voting for senior class officers included 10 in Strong rotunda, 13 in Strong basement, 16 in Marvin hall, 12 in Fraser hall, and 7 in the Student Union; for junior class officers 15 in Strong rotunda, 14 in Strong basement, 40 in Marvin, 8 in Fraser hall, and 14 in the Student Union; for sophomore officers, 12 in Strong rotunda, 9 in Strong basement, 15 in Marvin hall, 15 in Fraser hall, and 10 in the Student Union.
Four students have been nominated for president of the senior class and six for president of the All Student Council.
The elections ballots will be counted tonight.
Students nominated for president of the ASC are Ron Denchfield, college sophomore; Bob Kennedy, education junior; Marjorie Englund, education junior, and Bill Arnold, college junior, all members of the Allied Greek Independents; Fred Rice, college sophomore, and Nathan Harris, college junior, have been nominated by the new Greek party. POGO.
Nominated for president in the non-partisan senior class election are Louisa Hall, fine arts junior; Jann Duchossois, education junior; Harlan Parkinson, business junior; and Mary Ann Kaaz, business junior.
In order to vote a student must present his student identification card and also have his name on one of the three parties lists. All three parties, the Allied Greek-Independents, POGO, and the Married Couples' party, are having closed primaries.
Pianist Gets Three Encores
Although the audience was not as large as usual for offerings of the concert course, Paul Badura-Skoda, concert pianist, was warmly applauded and called back for three encores at the conclusion of his program last night in Hoch auditorium.
Mr. Badura-Skoda opened his program with Bach's "Partita No. 2 in C Minor" and Beethoven's "Sonata in C Minor, Opus 13." Following the intermission, he played "Metamorphoses on Old English Contredansees" by the contemporary Austrian composer, Alfred Brendel, "Etude in C Sharp Minor, Opus 25, No. 7" by Chopin, and Brahms" Sonata in F Minor, Opus 5."
Not All Jokers
It's Fool's Day—Situation Normal
By GENE SHANK
You're kidding! My pants rip-
per! I wore them, yeh.
April Fool's day again!
So the blushing fellow gives a disgusted grunt, remembers that it's all a big joke, and moves on with visions of salty pranks dancing in his wee little head.
But caution! Most people seem to think that April Fool is just another day, that nothing really happens, a few rather sour practical jokes.
Just to prove how wrong they are, here are a few scattered bits of unusual news reported down on April Fool's 20th century on April Fool's day:
1915-King George of Great Britain volunteered to give up alcoholic liquors and to issue an order against their use in the royal household. The proclamation came as a result of measures trying to cope with drunkenness, which was causing a delay in
the delivery of munitions of war.
1923—After robbing a record shop in New York City, one of the men who had been robbed left it on the counter before leaving. It was "Are You Sorry I'm Leaving You Now?"
1928-Col. Charles A. Lindbergh took off from St. Louis in the latest creation in aviation—a new Ryan monoplane built especially for him. He denied rumors of a round-the-world flight.
1931—A pressure steam main broke in Times Square, forming two pillars of steam that shot for more than a block in all directions—to the delight of a thousand spectators.
1936 A meteor almost scored a bullseye on a monument erected to mark the center of the population of the United States at Linton, Ind. The meteor explosion damaged several houses and dug a six-foot-square hole near the monument.
1940-Temperatures in Hays reached a new April Fool's high of 95 degrees, Topeka, St. Joseph, and Kansas City also sweltered in the heat with 91 degree weather.
1946—The Soviet government adopted a dollar diplomacy to tell the world in unmistakable terms that it had no intention of leaving the United Nations. Russia sent the UN $1,723,000—her entire quota.
1950—A woman in Chappaqua, N.Y., accused of stealing two toy cats and five resulting kitten demands a jury trial and got it.
1951-A clockmaker in Göteborg, Sweden, who helped 36,000 persons escape the Nazis and who helped refugees for 20 years, was honored by 15 nations on his 70th birthday.
1954—Who knows?—save Father Time, who bids two bits that it won't be normal.
On Other Campuses -
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 1. 1954
A&M Students Have Shooting I-State Girl Has Red Face
In recent happenings on college campuses, two Oklahoma A&M students mocked the recent shootings in Congress, Greek houses at Colorado took part in a cleanup campaign, censorship of college newspapers came up for discussion at a journalism conference at Oklahoma, the paper at Syracuse blasted the use of initials to replace proper nouns, and the name of a coed at Iowa State has caused the girl untold embarrassment.
This stunt was staged following the conviction of Ron Clodfelter, student senator, for election irregularities. However, the only casualty of the prank, patterned after the recent shootings in the United States Congress, was a student senator who bumped his head while ducking under a desk.
Daily Transan
OKLAHOMA A&M—Two masked students, complete with pistols, created pandemonium in the school's student sonate by shouting, "Free Clodfelter," and firing blank cartridges.
COLORADO—One thousand fraternity and sorority members assembled on a Saturday morning to work on the 1954 Greek week work project. Each fraternity and sorority on the campus pledged the same number of members to the project as were in their pledge classes at the beginning of the spring semester. The five jobs undertaken were the painting of curbs, general cleanup of Freshman park, raking the campus leaves, cleaning the area behind the new faculty apartments, and picking up trash and rubbish piles in the campus area.
OKLAHOMA—The student editors of six Southwestern college publications, attending the Southwestern Journalism conference here, discussed methods of turning out a better college paper. The problem of censorship of college publications by pressure groups was the subject that drew hottest discussion.
SYRACUSE — The university newspaper has become peeved at the use of initials to replace proper nouns. In denouncing the system, it cited the example of SCCSIAMRNASNPWP99 set up by the House of Representatives. This mumbility-jumble stands for: Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of All Matter Relating to the Need for Adequate Supplies of Newsprint, Printing, and Wrapping Paper, Paper Products, Paper Pulp, and Pulpwood.
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, Mail Subscriptions rate: $3 a semester or $4.50 year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan. for all years except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence University under act of March 3, 1879.
IOWA STATE—A home economics freshman at this school has a name that has made her the victim of many embarrassing moments and untold stares. Her name—Marilyn Monroe.
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
New Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 376
of March 3,1879.
The question of whether or not the United States should continue with its series of hydrogen bomb tests has come in for much discussion the past month.
U.S. Must Continue H-BombProduction
The March 1 test in the Marshall islands was five times greater than had been expected by the scientists. A Japanese fishing boat 80 miles away from the blast was showered with radioactive ash and its crewmen burned. Last week the Atomic Energy commission reluctantly admitted that the mushroom cloud from the blast had been lost completely, but was reassuring in saying only extremely unusual circumstances could result in its harming anyone.
The latest reports are that 23 of the Japanese fishermen who were burned have entered the critical condition of radiation illness. It is also reported that the biggest test blast of all is scheduled for around April 22,weather permitting.
Reports like these are not comforting, of course, but as the leader of the free world and in the development of atomic and hydrogen weapons, the United States cannot afford to let these happenings slow or deter its progress in the field.
There have been recent outcries from nations all over the world protesting the test series and asking the U.S. to cease with the project at once. Even Great Britain, our No.1 ally, has voiced concern over the tests and asked for reassurances that extreme caution would be taken in any further testing.
Developing and testing the most powerful weapons ever conceived by mankind is not the most pleasant method of building up defense in the hope of decreasing the chance for another major world war, but it is the only way open to us at the present time. Russia herself has admitted that atomic war would be a great threat to the existence of humanity, and if building bigger and better bombs will impress our enemies with what a disaster another war would be, then there is no other course open to us except to progress in our weapons development as rapidly as possible and prevent the occurrence of another major war. —Court Ernst
A historian said Monday that there may never have been such a man as Homer, who supposedly wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey. Next thing you know they'll be doubting Santa Claus and the Easter rabbit.
The campus primary elections have been postponed because of too many candidates. Looks like everyone who formed a new party also got on the ballot.
Don't be surprised if you see a large mushroom cloud floating over the campus one of these days. The one from the March 1 H-bomb explosion in the Pacific was lost by the scientists.
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
WELL, TIME I:00! I'LL REOPEN THE CASE... NOW, WHO DO YOU SUSPECT, OWL?
OL' MOLE! THAT'S WHO!
MOLE?
YESSIR, HIM! YOU NOTICE HIM SNOOPIN' AROUN'? OK, HE GOT A BAD NAME... HE AINT UP TO NO GOOD... AN' WHAT'S MORE...
by Dick Bibler
WELL, TIME 1:00!
I'LL REOPEN THE CASE... NOW, WHO DO YOU SUSPECT, OWL?
OL'MOLE! THAT'S WHO!
MOLE?
LOVE JOGG MUST KNELY
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
YEGGIR, HIM! YOU NOTICE HIM SNOOPIN' AROUN'? OH, HE GOT A BAD NAME...HE AINT UP TO NO GOOD...AN WHAT'S MORE...
I SAID TO HIM: 'SEED THE PUP DOG?' I SAYS... AN' HE SAYS: 'WHO?'... HA! WHO INDEEDS: HE DODGED, AN' ALL THE TIME HE GOT THAT SNEAKY LOOK IN HIS EYE.
I SAID TO HIM: "SEED THE PUP DOG?" I SAYS... AN' HE SAYS: "WHO?" ... NA! WHO INDEEDS! HE DODGED! AN' ALL THE TIME HE GOT THAT SNEAKY LOOK IN HIS EYE.
WHICH EYE WAS THIS HERE SNEAKY LOOK IN, SIR?
ALL OF 'EM!
IN ROUND NUMBERS HOW MANY WOULD YOU SAY? AT A ROUGH GUESS?
HIS EYE.
WHICH EYE WAS THIS HERE SNEAKY LOOK IN, SIR?
ALL OF 'EM!
IN ROUND NUMBERS HOW MANY WOULD YOU SAY? AT A ROUGH GUESS?
...Letters...
George H. Brooks University Extension
The editor's explanation following the letter is hardly sufficient to justify the choice of dates. To state that the Relays are more consistent than Holy Week is less than accurate, for a quick look in an almanac will show that Easter falls rather consistently in the order of the universe. Or, the date on which Easter falls can be found far in advance on calendars so marked.
The Thursday, March 25 issue of the Kansan carried a letter from three students in the college which criticized the University administration for scheduling the Kansas Relays during Holy Week. The three students are to be commended for expressing disappointment in the choice of Relay dates which fall on Good Friday and Holy Saturday.
To the Editor:
So perhaps one should say that the editors of the Kansan are right in defending the Relay dates—providing one believes in "the expedient" and not in "principle."
The real issue, however, is that a nation, which identifies itself as Christian, treats lightly the scheduling of events on days which have particular significance for the Christian religion. Either we should admit that we are motivated by the expedient as well as a desire to conform to the social milieu and refrain from calling ourselves Christian, or we should endeavor to practice the tenets identified with Christianity.
Short Ones
Movie actress Gene Tierney says she doesn't want to "rush into a marriage" with Aly Kahn because she wants the next one to be permanent. And Prince Aly has proven himself to be "oh so stable!"
Baseball spring training is progressing according to schedule in the major leagues. Last year's second division clubs are predicting great things and the top teams are crying the blues.
Don't be surprised if the UDK is accused of being Communistic after yesterday's editorial page concerning a certain senator. After all, doesn't anything that is anti-McCarthy become pro-communist by definition?
We see where the battleship Missouri is slated to be put in mothballs as a part of the Navy's newlook plan, and ex-Fresident Truman is opposing it on the grounds that it is a symbol of American strength. Really, Harry, we need more than symbols these days.
Kansan to Publish Series on Senators
The Daily Kansan will print a series of informative articles on a number of United States senators who are up for reelection this fall. These articles will give a brief biographical sketch and appraisal of each of the men.
The first will be Sen. Leverett Saltonstall, Republican of Massachusetts.
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54
Dolan Convicted For Perjury in Greenlease Case
Kansas City, Mo, —(U.P.)—A jury decided yesterday that a St. Louis policeman lied about what he did with the $600,000 Greenlease ransom money, but the conviction of Elmer Dolan for perjury shed no light on where more than half of the money is now.
The federal court jury deliberated three hours and a half before returning its verdict that Mr. Dolan lied when he told a grand jury that he took two suitcases containing the money to a St. Louis police station at the same time executed kidnap-killer Carl Austin Hall was brought in to be booked.
Defense Attorney Mark Hennelly announced he would ask for a new trial, and Judge Albert Ridge gave him until April 15 to file the motion. Sentencing was delayed until that date.
Mr. Dolan and Lt. Louis Shoulders arrested Hall at the Town House hotel in St. Louis last Oct. 6. Shoulders also has been charged with perjury in connection with the disappearance of the ransom, largest ever paid, and will be tried April 12.
Six government witnesses testified during the three-day trial that they were in the Newstead ave. police station when Hall was booked, and saw no sign of the ransom containers. Mr. Dolan, the only defense witness, said he took the two suitcases in with Hall, then went back to the Town House and got a third suitcase, containing the kidnaper's clothing. He said he took the third container into the police station about 90 minutes after the first two.
Two government witnesses said they didn't see Mr. Dolan leave the hotel with the third suitcase, but one witness testified he saw Mr. Dolan come into the station with a suitcase about an hour and a half after Hall was booked.
The ransom containers were turned over to the FBI the day after Hall's arrest and a former FBI agent said they contained less than $300,000.
Group Plans 2nd Jubilee
the second annual Jayhawk Jubilee, sponsored by Statewide activities, will be held April 17 on the campus, Dick Winternote, field secretary of the alumni association, said yesterday.
University facilities will be on display to Kansas high school seniors. County clubs of the Statewide activities will meet with the groups from their home towns. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. in the Student Union lounge.
Events which have been planned for the day include tours of the campus and opportunities to meet other high school leaders of the state. The Kansas Relays and the Engineering Exposition will be held Friday and Saturday. All departments and divisions of the University will be open to the guests, including the Museum of Natural History and the Museum of Art.
Have A Good Vacation from DRAKE'S BAKES
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Thursday, April 1. 1954 University Daily Kansan Page For Extra Cash, Sell Those Items with a Kansan Classified.
Service Schedule Change
Beginning April 4
The Late Sunday Service
Will Begin at 10 a. m.
10th and Vermont
For Extra Cash, Sell Those Items with a Kansan Classified.
Seems Like Old Times Crazy Bones
by
The Four Freshmen
925 MASS.
Bell's
PH. 375
ARE YOU GOING? WHY NOT?
Are you going to be at the Folies Bergere, Saturday night, July 31? Will you be at the Baths of Caracalla, Friday night, July 9? Other Jayhawkers will be, why won't you?
ku
Go with a group, however, if you want able administration and interpretation of the art, language, customs, and attitudes that you meet. Good leadership is at your disposal for a great European adventure.
How many from your house are going to Europe this summer? Are you? It's simpler and easier than you think. A little planning and foresight now can mean July in Rome or the Riviera or Paris, August in Copenhagen and London. But you won't be there if you just think about it. You've got to do some action, now!
Do you know that a KU group is leaving from this campus for Europe? There are several students in almost every house planning on a summer in Europe. Are you just thinking about it-or are you really going? Again, why not?
From Capri to Venice, Florence to Stratford, Geneva to Heidelberg, down the Rhine, beside the Seine—it's your tour. Why aren't you on it?
If you never have thought about it, do so now. Talk to your dad and mother when you see them write and get their attitudes. Ask yourself how much it costs your family'to keep you around for a summer, or how much it costs YOU to live during the summer. And, then subtract that from the tour price of your KU European tour. Surprised? You will be!
An education doesn't mean merely books and courses. It means meeting people, traveling, seeing for yourself. It's up to you! If you want to explore Europe on your own O.K.!
Do you know that a KU group sailing from Quebec in June will be seeing ten countries of Europe, spending some time in the major cities of these countries? Mingling with Europeans, exploring the back alleys and broad boulevards, eating at small cafes and sumptuous restaurants from Monte Carlo to Rotterdam, learning the political, economic, cultural situation: all of this is but part of the KU itinerary.
It's almost too late now. If you are ever going to make up your mind; if you think this can be your own "summer in the sun"; decide and follow through with some action today. It's up to you!
If interested, if in need of information, if curious, if you want to go, contact Tom Maupin, 1015 Massachusetts Street (next to the Varsity Theatre) or phone 3361. Put some action behind those dreams of a trip to Europe.
Tom Maupin Travel Service
1015 Mass.
Phone 3661
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 1, 1954
Roberts Loses Again, Says He 'Feels Ready'
Bv UNITED PRESS
Robin Roberts discounted a Grapefruit league record which would shame a bush league pitcher today and said he "felt ready" to flash the form that enabled him to win 20 or more games in each of the last four years.
"I'm sure I'll be all right by opening day after yesterday's performance," the Philadelphia Phillies' righthander said. "I was getting worried but now my arm and back feel strong—in fact I never felt better."
Roberts suffered his third defeat of the spring when Detroit pounded him for 13 hits in a 7-2 triumph yesterday but he pointed out that he shut out the Tigers with only three hits during the last four innings.
Roberts, who had a 23-16 record for the Phillies last season, has been hammered for 40 hits and 39 runs in 31 innings this spring but Manager Steve O'Neill was inclined to go along with his star's optimistic analysis.
"He'll be perfectly all right," O'Neill said. "He tells me he's all right now and he's never let me down."
The Washington Senators and St Louis Cardinals continued to receive outstanding pitching in yesterday's games but Manager Casey Stengel was more bewildered than ever over the form of his world champion New York Yankees.
The amazing Senators scored their ninth straight victory over major league opposition when they defeated the Cincinnati Redlegs, 9-2, with the aid of Frank Shea's six shutout innings. Tom Wright and Pete Runnels sparked Washington's nine-hit attack while Shea and Johnny Dixon limited the Redlegs to eight singles.
Gerry Staley twirled two-hit, shutout ball for seven innings to lead the Cardinals to a 6-3 triumph over the Chicago White Sox and give St. Louis a 14-8 Grapefruit league mark. Staley, an 18-game winner in 1953, has permitted only one run, one walk and seven hits in his last 20 innings of pitching this spring.
The Yankees, meanwhile, completed the poorest Florida training program in Stengel's six - year regime when rookie right-handers Bob Purkey and Fred Green pitched eight-hit ball to give the Pittsburgh Pirates an easy 9-3 win. It was the fifth straight loss and the 16th in 24 games for the Yankees.
The New York Giants took advantage of rookie Rudy Regalado's double error to score three unearned runs in the first innings and went on to beat the Cleveland Indians, 4-2. It was New York's ninth victory in 12 games with the Indians, who were held to seven hits by Jim Hearn and Don Liddle.
The Brooklyn Dodgers outsugged the Milwaukee Braves, 10-7 despite two home runs each by Ed Mathews and Johnny Logan in the only other game. Gil Hodges homered for Brooklyn—a 450-foot blast off Ray Crone in the second iming.
Quality
Photography
by
ES ES
Phone 151
Doctor Postpones Williams Training
Miami, Fla.—(U.P.)—Ted Williams was described by Dr. Herbert Virgin as "jubilant" today despite a last-minute order to postpone his spring training program at least a week.
For Appointment
Williams was scheduled to begin working out with the Boston Red Sox tomorrow but Dr. Virgin cancelled those plans with an announcement that he doesn't "want Ted running or doing anything that might hurt him."
Dr. Virgin said he would tell Williams when he could begin workouts after additional x-rays are examined on April 7. Dr. Virgin hopes the tail slugger will be able to head for Boston immediately after the examination and start working out at either Harvard or Tufts.
Williams has not indulged in a single workout since he suffered a fractured collarbone attempting to catch a fly ball 10 minutes after he
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Dr. Virgin said x-rays taken yesterday indicated "good progress" and said Williams was "ubilant" when
donned his uniform on the first day of spring training.
from duty in Korea with the Marine Air corps, has been trying to keep in shape by taking daily exercises. He weighs 210 pounds - about over his normal playing weight.
he talked by telephone last night with General Manager Joe Cronin of the Red Sox.
the 35-year-old outfielder, who hit .407 last year after returning
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Thursday, April 1. 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Large KU Track Team Goes to Texas Relays
Sooners Play KU In Tennis Opener
The KU tennis team opens its 1954 tennis schedule this afternoon at 3 p.m. when it meets the University of Oklahoma on the varsity courts.
The mainstays of the Oklahoma team are Ken Taylor, Big Seven champion last year, Dave Metezger, and John Martin. Oklahoma has already played three matches this season winning all three, and it is regarded as the outstanding team in the Missouri valley area this season.
Facing Taylor in the No.1 singles match will be Al Hedstrom, who was No.2 singles man last season.
'Cardinals Have Chance'
Dick Hadley, transfer from Yale, Merle Sellers, and Don Franklin will play in the second, third, and fourth singles matches, and Roger Youmans will play the No. 5 singles match.
St. Petersburg, Fla—Manager Eddie Stanky headed north today with his St. Louis Cardinals, still giving his club only an "outside chance" of winning the National league pennant. The little bossman did say his Redbirds' showing in the Florida phase of spring training had made him "feel better" about their chances.
KU EUROPE TOUR
Visit 10 countries during leisurely summer in Europe. Departing June 12th returning August 20th You can have lots of fun with your own group from KU Reservations still available, but hurry. Our ample block of low-cost steamship space is going quickly.
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Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
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Chicago 14, Illinois
Coach M. E. "Bill" Easton and 18 trackmen left Topeka this morning by plane for Austin Texas where they will compete in the annual Texas relays tomorrow and Saturday. This is the largest squad the University has ever sent to this meet.
The trackmen will attempt to retain four championships earned in the 1953 relays and add new records to their laurels.
Led by Wes Santee, the medley relay team composed of Frank Cindrich, Lloyd Koby, Art Dalzell, and Santee, hope to better their indoor record for that event. This foursome set a new American indoor record for the medley at the Michigan State relays last month, with a time of 9:51.4, and they could add the outdoor record this weekend by running a similar time.
In defending their sprint medley title, the Jayhawks will have Santee anchoring the team with Dick Blair, Ralph Moody, and Cindrich running the first three carries.
The two-mile and four-mile relay teams should not have too much difficulty retaining their crowns. Even without the services of Santee, Easton has such dependable runners as Al Frame, Dick Wilson, Koby, and Dalzell to run in these events. All of these runners are capable of running the half-mile well under two-minutes, and if Easton should decide to put Santee in either, or both events, Texas relay records would be endangered.
Kansas also expects to score in the field events with three shot-put men. Dick Knowles, Gene Blasi, and Bill Nieder; two javelin men, Done Sneegas and Bill Brown, and two high jumpers, Leon Wells and Kermit Hollingsworth.
Santee has been training all week in preparation for his first try on the cinder track this season. After a somewhat disappointing performance in the Bankers mile in the Chicago Daily News meet last weekend, Wes hopes to "find" himself in Texas.
Kansas is well fixed in the high jump with the Big Seven co-champion, Wells, and last year's conference outdoor champion, Hollingsworth. Wells jumped 6 feet 4 inches in tying Phil Whidden of Oklahoma, and Hollingsworth 6 feet 3 inches in tying Phil Heidelk of Nebraska for third and fourth in the conference indoor meet.
All three shot men have thrown over 48 feet this season, and Blasi and Knowles have thrown it over 49 feet. Blasi set a new school record of 49 feet $1 \frac{1}{2}$ inches in the Big Seven breakout game. With 49 feet $1 \frac{1}{2}$ inches, Knowles set in the first meet of the season. Nieder's best distance is 48 feet 2 inches.
Sneegas and Brown are both cap-
tainment officers in 500 feet
and should place in this event.
Bill Biberstein should also score in the hurdles events for KU. He wont both the high and low hurdles races in the conference indoor meet.
All four Faurut brothers—Don Fred, Jaylyle, and Bob—won football letters at the University of Missouri.
Armand Savoie and Arthur Persley, lightweights, were idle today before their 10-round clash in St. Louis tonight.
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Olson Nervous On Eve of Title Fight
Chicago-(U.P.)—Carl (Bobo) Olson had the jumping jitters and Kid Gavilain had a strange repression of the right hand today on the eve of their classic battle of champions at Chicago stadium.
Hawaiian - born Olson of San Francisco had found sanctuary in an apartment hideout on the suburban
north shore after fuming, "I'm ready to blow my top." No longer could the tempermental 160-pound boss withstand the waves of reporters, photographers, autograph seekers, and telephoners at the Parkway hotel.
But everyone concerned was confident both fine boxers would show up "razor-sharp" tomorrow night for the fight-of-the-year, in which welterweight champion Gavilan would try to wrest the middleweight crown from Olson.
Gavilan of Cuba and his handlers were still trying to explain what was probably the strangest wind-up boxing session in ring history. They were trying to convince the suspicious that the 147-pound champion actually was not suffering from an injured right hand.
The workout required an explanation because Gavilan *putually* threw but one solid right during four rounds of sparring with Junius Washington and Andy Figaro at the Midwest gymnasium late yesterday.
He belabored his sparmates with left jabs and left hooks but held the right fist throughout in guarding position.
Several conscientious reporters examined the right mitt after the workout and found no trace of swelling.
Most asteroids have a period of revolution between $3\frac{1}{2}$ and 6 years.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Thursday, April 1, 1954
ReligiousGroupsElect Officers,ObserveLent
Dr. Harold G. Barr, dean of the Kansas School of Religion, spoke to the Fifty-Fifty Sunday school class of the Country Club Christian church, Kansas City, Mo., Sunday.
Sunday evening Dr. Barr was a guest speaker of the Lutheran Students association of the Trinity Lutheran church, 1245 New Hampshire st.
Wesley foundation and Kappa Phi Metodist women's club will commemorate the Last Supper by attending a "Meal in the Upper Room." April 16 at the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont sts.
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Richard Howard, education senior, was elected Kaw Valley District delegate to the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints general conference to be held April 4 to 11 in Independence. Mo.
The dinner will be eaten in silence except for the reading of scripture passages.
New officers for Crossroads, Presbyterian group, are, president, Patricia Reynolds, graduate student; vice president, Johanna Trotter, college sophomore; and secretary-treasurer, Gary Bryan, college freshman.
The Rev. A. John Anderson, pastor of the First Presbyterian church 9th and Vermont, spoke to the Presbyterian Women's organization Tuesday evening. Rev. Anderson discussed the Book of Acts, which Presbyterian women are studying during Lent. Plans for the organization's birthday dinner and the forthcoming April Fool Christmas tree meeting were discussed. Barbara Moser, college senior, was in charge of the program. New officers for the group will be elected April 13.
William Hagman, college freshman, was elected president of the
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Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Van Dyke, of Kansas City, Missouri, announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Mardelle, to Mr. Murray Allison Keyes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gladys Keyes, also of Kansas City.
SHIRTS • TIES • UNDERWEAR • MANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTSWEAR
School buses account for about 70 per cent of the annual U.S. bus output.
Miss Van Dyke, fine arts junior,
is a member of Alpha Phi sorority
and a pledge to Delta Phi Delta,
honorary art fraternity. Mr. Keyes
was graduated from the University
of Missouri in February, where he
was a member of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity and Delta Sigma Phi and
Alpha Phi Omega, honorary business
and service fraternities.
Sunday Evening fellowship, Presbyterian group, last Sunday. Other officers are Carolyn Craft, fine arts freshman, vice president; William King, college freshman, secretary-treasurer; Patricia Ellis, college freshman, supper chairman; Ruth Roney, education freshman, social chairman; and Edward Jones, engineering freshman, arrangements chairman.
Peggy Whitney, college sophomore, was elected regional officer for the Estes Student YMCA-YWCA conference, June 6 to 13 in Estes, Colo. The election was held at the Kansas District conference in Manhattan, March 26.
Christian emphasis on campuses and the importance of an executive secretary for campus YWCA organizations were discussed by Miss Odile Sweeney of the headquarters staff of the National Student YWCA in New York city, at a luncheon Monday in the Faculty club.
Newman club members will attend Lenten services at their home parishes during the spring vacation.
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Page 7
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
are accepted
the bill will
be $3. p.m. (ex-
the university.
Journ- 45 p.m. the
**words or less ...** *see*
*additionals.* *time.* *phone.* *Phone orders with the understanding that he paid promissor. Ads must during the hours 10 a.m. to cepit Sept 30, 2016. Kansan Business nalm bigd, not later than day before publication date.*
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYINGP. Quick, accurate typing.
Resusable bits. Call Mrs Merrigulli. 1801-24
m o r t s e m.
WOULD LIKE to care for pre-school child in my home. Call 3831T. 4-2
JAHYAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop. We can help you with one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
CABINET-MAKER a. and RIFFINISHER:
Antique pieces, Bar-t top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom. Res. and Shop. 623 Ala.
ERAGES ice cold, all kinds, by the pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 615 Vt. tf
WANTED
LIBRARIAN with professional training and or experience for Public Library. Pleasant working conditions, 24 days paid vacation. No Sunday or holidays. Write giving qualifications. Box E-32. Lawrence Journal-World. 4-5
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RIDE WANTED to New York area and back for spring vacation. Will share expenses. Can leave Thursday night or Friday. Call Nick Dilene, 2122. 4-2
MIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day rates. Call 800-325-1761 or visit National Bank for free pamphlets and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tf
RIDE WANTED to New York or vicinity.
Can leave morning of Friday, April 2nd.
Share expenses. Call Charles B. Warhaffig,
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RIDE WANTED to New York City area and back. Will drive and share expenses. Can leave Thursday night or Friday. Call Ben Lozito, 2917M. 4-1
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wibhla every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 3103J evenings.
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Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone tf 3661.
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TUXEDO in excellent condition. Size 37
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BATTERIES: Guaranteed unconditionally for six months. $5 and old battery. Battery Stores Associated, 512 East 9th, home-owned. Phone 943. tf
For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansas Classified.
Duncan to Edit Kansas Engineer
Thursday, April 1, 1954
James Duncan, engineering junior, has been named editor of the Kansas Engineer, student magazine engineers, for the 1954-55 school year.
Other members of the staff of the magazine are: Marjorie Heard, engineering sophomore, associate editor; Lawrence Merrigan, engineering senior, business manager; Ludwig Smith Jr., engineering junior, advertising manager; Charles K. Johnson, engineering junior, circulation manager.
The magazine is published four times a year and has a circulation of 2,000. It contains articles written by engineering students on related subjects.
Wright Attending Psychology Meeting
Dr. Erik Wright, director of clinical psychology training, is attending the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation conference on Psychiatric Problems of the Chronically Ill in Galveston, Texas this week. He is one of 30 nationally known experts in clinical psychology who were individually invited to the conference by the University of Texas.
Dr. Wright, who has training in psychology, medicine, and psychiatry, is presenting a coordinating view of the three fields.
New York —(U.P.)— The Edison hotel announced yesterday it will send its room clerks to a memory specialist. The management wants them to call returning guests by name.
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The Kansan can be a Daily Letter!
Any student interested in improving his reading speed may enroll for classes any time between 3 to 5 p.m. in 18 Fraser, Dr. Henry P. Smith, director of the reading and study laboratory, announced today.
"There is no magical way to improve reading speed, but the students who have finished the course seem to feel they have been helped," said Dr. Smith, in explaining the course.
The new class will meet from 4
Reading Class Being Offered
Dr. Charles E. Johnson, assistant professor of education, will speak to a noon meeting of the Rotary club at Oatle on April 7 and in the afternoon will meet with elementary teachers in Oatle to discuss professional problems centered around teaching the basic skills or reading, writing, and arithmetic.
Johnson to Speak at Olathe
Sunset
A group of 25 students finished the course last Friday. This was the first class to be taught by the Harvard film program. This is a new approach to the problem. By using motion picture film and some printed material, the student is gradually forced to read faster and faster.
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Official Bulletin
TODAY
Der deutsche Verben does not meet
Thursday because of the reception
with the new manager.
AWS House of Representatives meeting. 4. p.m. Student Union.
YWCA all membership meeting. 306
Memoria Union Program: Report from
Memoria Union Program
Quack Club try out in swimming, 7:30 p.m. Robinson gym.
Delta Sigma Pi business meeting. 8 p.m., Oread room, Memorial Union. If you have a pledge book, please bring it to the meeting.
ROTC Units Have Federal Inspection
The annual federal inspection of the Air Force and University Army ROTC groups is being here today and tomorrow, Campus Air Force and Army officials announced today.
The Air Force inspection will be held by an Air University inspection team of three members. They are Col. Kermitt D. Stevens, professor of air science and tactics at the University of Minnesota; Lt. Col. Robert E. Philips, from AFROTC headquarters in Montgomery, Alabama, and Maj. Alfred Ransel, of West Lynn Air Force base in Delaware, Ohio.
The Army inspection will be conducted by Col. James H. Workman, professor of military science and tactics at the University of Nebraska. Drill reviews by Campus Air Force and Army ROTC groups today on the Intramural field will highlight the inspection. Visitors were guests at the Faculty club for lunch today.
Foreign Students Learn Jive
How to jitterbug and jive were taught to International club members last night in the Jayhawker room of the Student Union. Miss Shirley Hughes, instructor in physical education, assisted the foreign students in their efforts to learn American dances.
KDGU Schedule
5:00 Late Afternoon Headlines
5:20 Two's Company
5:30 Jazz Junction
6:00 Potpourri
6:45 Sport Light
7:00 Bookstore Hour
7:55 News
8:00 Great Moments in Music
9:00 Telfel Tells the News
9:05 Artistry in Jazz
9:30 Dancing in the Dark
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News, Weather, Sign Off
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Page 8
France Dismisses Marshal Juin
Paris —U.K.— France fired Marshal Alphonse-Pierre Juin, her most respected soldier, from all of his national offices today for an act of insubordination that followed his criticism of the European Defense Community project.
The cabinet humbled Marshal Juin, France's only living marshal, for ignoring an order to appear before French Premier Joseph Laniel and account for his anti-European urmy statements.
Marshal Juin went instead to a reserve officers' meeting and said he would not change his stand which he thought he had made clear.
He was ousted as vice president of the superior council of war and as permanent military adviser to the government.
The outspoken 65-year-old French hero retained his title as marshal but it was indicated he may be dismissed as commander of all
allied ground forces in central Europe.
His future status in the defense of the west against aggression was placed in the hands of Gen. Alfred M. Gruenent, supreme allied commander in Europe.
The North Atlantic council called a special meeting to consider whether Marshal Jain will continue to command central European armies.
The marshal last Sunday said he
favored replacing the European army with a military system that would permit each nation to handle its own military force rather than take part in an integrated unit.
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily hansan
51st Year. No. 121
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 2, 1954
Alaska, Hawaii May Be Rejected By 'Cold' House
Washington—(U.P.)House leaders gave a frigid reception to the Senate-passed Alaska-Hawaiian statehood bill today, and its future was very much in doubt.
House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck (Ind.) charged that the Senate "played fast and loose" in tieing- Alaska statehood to the House-approved Hawaii bill.
Rep. Halleck, personally opposed to the combined bill, said Hawaiian partisans who voted to include Alaska "may bear the blame for sabotaging" Hawaii's chances.
Statehood supporters were happy over the 57 to 28 vote by which the Senate approved the combined bill yesterday. But they were apprehensive about its prospects in the House.
Unanimous consent is required in the Lower Chamber to empower a Senate-House conference committee to work out a combined bill for the House, which has approved statehood for Hawaii only. That consent appeared unlikely.
If consent is not granted the issue goes to the House rules committee which has had an Alaska bill in cold storage for some time.
85 Will Attend Speech Contest
Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech, will be director of the 1954 national meeting of Phi Rho Pi, national forensic society for junior colleges, at the University Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday.
Approximately 85 students from five out-of-state schools, who won the right to participate in the meet by winning preliminary contests in their territory, are expected to attend.
The contest is divided into orate-
extremely improvable, interpe-
tative and unimaginable.
Trophies and individual medals for the first four places in each division will be awarded, and all participants will receive a certificate. A sweepstakes trophy will be awarded to the school which scores the most points.
BAC
—Kansan photo by Tom Shannon
VICTORY—Clifford Holland, first year law; Fred Rice, business junior, and Robert Kennedy, engineering junior, aren't telling of their campaign strategy as they look over the results of the primary balloting yesterday; they each won the ASC presidential nominations of their respective parties—Marrried Students, POGO, and AGI, respectively.
McCarthy-Army Head Investigation Criticized
Washington—(U.P.)-Boston attorney Samuel P. Sears, who has publicly praised Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, came under fire today within hours after he was picked to run the investigation of the McCarthy-Army row.
Sen. Charles E. Potter (R.-Mich.), a member of the Senate Investigating subcommittee that selected Mr. Sears as special counsel for the inquiry, said he would ask Mr. Sears point-blank if he can conduct an importial investigation.
Weather
Generally fair weather is expected today and tonight, becoming partly
A drawing of a boy with a grin. He has brown hair and is wearing a blue shirt with a yellow collar. The background is black with a grid pattern.
cloudy tomorrow.
Warmer t o d a y
and turning much
colder northeast
a n d extreme
north portions to-
morrow. H i g h
today around 70.
Low tonight will
be in the 30s in
Dr. Roberts and a medical advisory committee recommended to Community Studies firm and the McLvain Fund trustees that available funds could best be used to
the north and near 40 in the south.
Career Investigatorship Set Up at Medical Center
The board of directors of Community Studies, Inc. of Kansas City, Mo., and the University School of Medicine have announced the establishment of the McIlvain Career investigatorship in the department of medicine at the KU Medical center, Kansas City.
The joint announcement also revealed that Dr. Santiago Grisolia would come to the KU Medical Center May 1 as McLvain Career investigator. He also will be associate professor of medicine and biochemistry. His research space in the Medical Sciences building will be designated the McLvain laboratory.
A grant of $54,000 has been made by Community Studies firm to the Medical center from funds made available by the trustees of the Frederic Ervine McIlvain memorial fund. The trustees are Arthur Mag of Kansas City and the First National Bank of Kansas City, Ms. This trust was established by the late Mrs. McIlvain in 1960, who designated her physician, Dr. Sam E. Roberts, as medical adviser to the trustees.
Dr. Santiago Grisolia was selected for his research record and because his specific field—enzyme, hormone, and electrolyte changes in heart disease—seems to hold great promise in the further study of heart disease.
> "I have no reason to doubt that he can." Pen. Potter said.
He is a graduate of the University of Barcelona, and is now assistant professor of physiological chemistry in the Enzyme Institute at the University of Wisconsin and a recipient of the award of "Established Investigator" by the American Heart association. The Heart association will continue to give him some support for his studies because of his rank as "Established Investigator."
support an outstanding career investigator in the field of heart disease. It was further recommended that the investigator, requiring clinical and basic science resources of a medical school, should be located at the KU School of Medicine.
Mr. Sears' selection drew immediate criticism and added more fuel to the already explosive feud between Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and the Army that has rocked the Republican party.
Potter said he would put the question to Mr. Sears Monday when the attorney returns from Boston to begin the delayed investigation. Televised public hearings are scheduled to begin the following week.
He was unanimously named to the counsel's job by the subcommittee yesterday after a 16-day search for an independent attorney to take on the task. Sen. McCarthy, regular subcommittee chairman who has stepped aside for the inquiry, did not vote.
It was learned that Mr. Sears had sought the job, once rejected by the president of the American Bar association.
But dispatches from Boston quoted him as quarreling with three anti-McCarthy Harvard professors two years ago and saying at that time Sen. McCarthy "has done a great job and he will continue to do so as he drives the pinks and commies out of government. He won't sleep on the job until he finally accomplishes his aims."
Mr. Sears told a news conference here that he had never taken a stand "publicly or privately" on Sen. McCarthy or "McCarthyism." It was learned he made similar statements privately to the subcommittee.
SUA Applications Due at 5 Today
Students interested in positions on the Student Union Activities board should apply at the SUA office before 5 p.m. today.
Persons will be considered on the basis of previous work and general interest in SUA.
982-A Record Vote in Primaries
By TOM LYONS
By TOM LYONS
(Complete List of Candidates on Page 6)
A record 982 students voted in the three party primaries yesterday, nominating Fred Rice, POGO (Party of Greek Organizations), Bob Kennedy, Allied Greek Independents, and Clifford Holland, Married Student's party, as candidates for president of the All Student Council.
Engineers Hold Soil Conference
Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture officially opened the fourth annual Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering conference this morning.
Approximately 95 professional engineers and 50 students attended the conference. The purpose of this conference, said Thurmul F. McMahon, assistant professor of civil engineering and chairman of the conference, "is to provide a contact for students with men out in the profession and to enable the students to see the practical application of the theories which they learn in class."
D. D. Haines, associate professor in civil engineering, read a paper titled "Social Pressures Beneath Footings of Various Sizes and Shapes."
"Chemical Soil Solidification" was discussed by C. Martin Riedel Chemical Soil Solidification company, Chicago.
"This is a new method which is being used for the improvement of foundation conditions for structures," he said. "It has been used successfully in stabilizing sands for cutting trenches in restricted areas."
W. C. Huntington, chairman of the civil engineering department at University of Illinois, read a paper on earth pressures and stability of retaining walls.
"Some Fundamentals of Flexible Pavement Design" was the title of a paper by M. H. Price, city engineer, Coffeyville.
Proficiency Results to Be Told The results of the English proficiency exam will be released April 13. Miss Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English, said today.
The ASC and class officer elections are April 20.
AGI, which had individual voting, listed 818 voting in its closed primary, while POGO listed 19 and MSP 20. In the POGO and MSP closed primaries only one representative from each member house was allowed to vote.
In the non-partisan class officer primary, Harlan Parkinson, business, Jamn Duchosset, education, James Nixon, nominated for senior class president.
None of last years incumbent parties will be represented in this election. FACTS, which dissolved last week, and Pachacamac-NOW, which folded last month after six member Greek houses succeeded, will be replaced by AGI and POGO. The advent of the new MSP rounds out the organizations to be represented in the spring elections.
AGI which accumulated the largest primary vote in the history of political parties at KU, had to turn away voters yesterday afternoon after all of the ballots had been used. It took 10 AGI members five hours to tabulate the results last night.
One hundred six names will be on the election ballots April 20. Fifty-five students have been nominated by AGI, 38 by POGO, and 13 by MSP.
Besides candidates for ASC presidency and the class officers, nominees from thirteen ASC districts were voted on. Representatives from the schools of Business, Education, Engineering and Architecture, Fine Arts, Journalism, Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, the College, and Graduate school, and representatives from fraternities, sororities, and freshman dormitories were chosen to be voted on in the election.
Candidates for president of the junior class are Dirk Maguire, college, Ralph Moody, education, and Jerry Rosenlund, engineering.
Candidates for president of the sophomore class are Delmont Hadley, Paul DeGood, and Janice Ijams, all from the College.
OrientationCenterStaff Announced by Burzle
The staff for the fourth annual foreign student orientation center to be held at the University July 25 to Sept. 5 has been announced by Dr.J.A.Burzle, professor of German.
The orientation is a 6-week training program for foreign students brought to this country by the U.S. government for one year's study in American colleges and universities.
The staff will be Dr. Burzle, director, and Dr. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, orientation lecturer. Dr. Sidney Johnson, professor of German; Dr. Alexander MacGibbon, associate professor of German, and Mr. Helga Vigliana, instructor in German, will be responsible for English language work. Mrs. Vigliana will also be the head counsellor for women. William Conboy, instructor in speech and drama, will be in charge of speech work and conversation.
Special lecturers will be Allen Crafton, professor of speech; W. D. Paden, professor of English; Charles Oldfather, associate professor of law, and Pat Reed, a university
Extension lecturer. Other special lecturers will be announced later.
KU is one of eight colleges and universities in the U.S. that has been invited by the Institute of International Education and the State department to conduct an orientation center.
The purposes of the orientation center are to increase the student's proficiency in English, to increase his knowledge of events which have grown into American civilization, to enable him to observe democracy in action, to acquaint him with the general purposes of democracy in America, and with our classroom procedure.
Classes will be offered in written composition, reading, pronunciation of American English, oral composition, conversation and vocabulary development, and American civilization.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
Forces in China Stand Stalemated
(Editor's Note:: This is the last of two articles on the Chinese situation as it stands today.)
Chiang Kai-Shek was chosen president of China in 1948, but the Communists won battle after battle and pushed their way relentlessly southward. After resigning his office in January 1949, Chiang resumed his duties in March 1950, three months after Nationalists had been forced to flee to Formosa—now their sole island in the Communist sea.
The Nationalists proclaimed in 1950 that they were against Communism, were advocates of the United Nations, were for academic freedom, thought, and religious belief, and that "when we recover our mainland we shall show no mercy to Chinese Communist leaders and their collaborators."
While Chiang was not in office Mao proclaimed the People's Republic of China in September 1949 in Peiping. Almost immediately he signed a 30-year treaty of "friendship, alliance and mutual assistance" with Russia.
The Communist policy there has been to divide up large landholdings, establish controls for imports and exports, halt inflation, and rebuild Manchurian industries. Ousted by this regime were foreign missions and religious schools. Education was revived to teach the Marxian economy. Radio propaganda, and to a lesser degree, all forms of propaganda, is carried on constantly against the U.S.
The country has seen few years of 100 per cent peace. In its known history, which dates back to 2852 B.C., it has had to withstand attacks from such warriors as the Huns, Tibetans, Tartars, savages in the country itself, Siberians, Japanese, and innumerable civil wars. During the past 1,000 years northern China has been ruled more than half the time by alien invaders.
Now the two forces face each other across 110 miles of China Sea. Chiang realizes that his 600,000-man army, although undoubtedly better trained than that of the Communists, cannot hope to cope with the untold millions of Red soldiers. Mao realizes that the small band on Formosa is not giving him too much trouble, so he probably will not attempt an attack.
With that, the oldest nation in the world stands stalemated, even among the powers of the world who do not know which to recognize.
The current struggle between Chiang and Mao is little more than a repeat performance of what has transpired in China through its 24 dynastic histories and modern times. The two philosophies may come together or one may be discarded if the old "rule" that once a dynasty had lost its moral claim to the throne little could save it is still true in modern Chinese thought.
There is little basic difference in the current feud—only the names are changed.
Chna's history shows many such periods when the "real" ruler or party either had many long years or was destroyed in rapid succession. Time after time dynastic decline went hand in hand with increasing inefficiency of the ruling house. This may happen again as the persons get fed up with one or the other of the two conflicting idealogies.
Major upheavals in the past usually were instigated by the lowly peasants who could stand no more oppression. These peasants might be compared with the Red soldiers of today, at least if reports about Red tactics in the Korean War were correct.
U. S. policy toward China has ranged from involvement to abstention, action to inaction.
Our trade with China began in 1785 at Canton under the guidance of British companies. In 1844 we signed a peaceful treaty for open trade and in 1899 came out strongly for the Open Door for trade policy. In this century we have stood more or less for the territorial integrity of China.
Public opinion in America has been of support for China, possibly because of its long war with Japan and the traditional American attitude of being for the underdog. But when the Communists were trying to gain the power they were in the underdog role, but once again it is the Nationalists who are the oppressed.
And the American fear of communism makes us support Chiang's government and tend to repeal the other.
Although it will never come about, the best solution for China's troubles, or the world's for that matter, was spoken by the man many consider one of the all-time great thinkers, Confucius.
He said "Do not do to others what you do not wish done to you."
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
Stan Hamilton
The oafish behavior of a group of photographers added nothing constructive to Prof. Rhys Carpenter's brilliant Humanities Series lecture Tuesday night. One by one these wiltless individuals arose in the darkened theater to snipe at the speaker with their flash equipped press cameras. In all, they must have fired on him two dozen times and with each blinding flash the continuity of the lecture was disrunted.
...Letters ...
Let us hope that out of consideration for our visiting lecturers, for common courtesy, and for better photography, this practice will not continue.
Lesser men than Prof. Carpenter would have qualified before the onslaught, but he continued without pause as though trying to ignore the presence of the vandals. The rising tone of his voice, however, belied the anger he must have felt.
This treatment of visiting lecturers is not at all new to KU. On the contrary, it seems as though the photographer with his flashgun and clattering film holders is an ever increasing feature. But only rarely does a photographer sit through an entire lecture. More often, he does his damage and then stumbles in front of the speaker and out of the room.
—Dale L. Johnson.
On observing the photographers' approach to the problem of taking Prof. Carpenter's picture one wonders what they hoped to achieve. Certainly they didn't waste their time at a Humanities lecture just to photograph the back of his head. And yet, several of the pictures were taken when the speaker had his head turned away from the photographers.
It is clear that these student photographers need practice, but perhaps something less obtrusive could be arranged. For example, they might find it quite gratifying to photograph each other.
To the editor:
As I read last Wednesday's Kansan headlines announcing the official "death" of FACTS party many questions remained unanswered as to the validity of such action. No, I'm not proposing that the Greek-dominated Student court review the situation, for undoubtedly the death rattle of an organization that was betrayed by its own leaders became noticeable almost a year ago—however, perhaps the Kansan readers would be interested in knowing just how the actual dissolution took place.
Although I checked the Kansan notice column and the union bulletin notices, no FACTS meeting was announced for Tuesday, March 2, at 9:30. Through the grape-vine however, I learned there would be such a meeting. Undoubtedly a quorum was present, although the president and vice president of AGI helped comprise same.
It was all rather simple as clockwork; minutes were read, treasurer's report given, and then a succession of motions were made, resulting in the dissolution of FACTS, a surrender of their records, properties, and even an option on office space. True enough a quorum was present of individuals possessing FACTS membership cards, (which I do not possess) but a quorum by-in-large composed of AGI officers, members, and fellow-travelers.
I wish to pose one question: Is this any more unethical than the Republic's joining the Democrats and subsequently voting to erase the Democrats as an organization, even though it would be a good way to eliminate competition?
Jack Buchanek
FENCING GYM INSTRUIA
B. BROOK
J-30
"I'm afraid Worthal has flunked his final."
Publick Occurrences BOTH FORREIGN AND DOMESTICK Friday, April 2, 1954
CAMPUS
Look for the KU debating twosome of Bill Arnold and Hubie Bell, college juniors, to return from the April 21-24 West Point national tournament with one of the top two trophies.
Easter (or spring, if you prefer) vacation next year probably will be changed to coincide with Easter Sunday instead of a week before the Holy day as this year. Much dissatisfaction has been expressed here recently over the seemingly more important KU Relays.
This year's Engineering Exposition, to be held April 16 and 17 in conjunction with the Relays, will be the biggest and best by far in the 34-year history of the event.
STATE
KU Young Democrats for the first time in years have a chance to do some real, live campaigning during vacation due to the entry into the gubernatorial race of Lawrence banker George Docking. But don't expect the local resident to do too good a job of bucking the powerful Democratic machines in a pair of the state's larger cities.
NATIONAL
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, after telling Americans that there will be no major concessions made to Russia at the upcoming Geneva conference, won't be able either to propose or accept anything approaching a satisfactory agreement on the Indochinese problem.
And don't think Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R.-Wis.) has slowed down because of the current squabble with the Army. Expect him to charge high civilian officials with graft, fraud, and what not as soon as the Stevens thing has blown over. This may help divert some of the fury directed at his own shortcomings or may be designed to frighten off antagonists.
INTERNATIONAL
The French now feel it is required to adapt gradually to reality. Therefore, don't be surprised if the French National Assembly approves the European army treaty soon.
Look for more protests the world over concerning U.S. nuclear testing in the Pacific ocean. Many friendly nations have been upset by the intensity of the recent explosions and will push for a halt.
POGO
POGO
MAN! I IS WORED OUT! TROMPIN' ALL OVER THE SWAMP AN' NARY HIPE NOR HAIR OF THE PUP!
HEY! IS YOU SEED ANYTHIN' OF OL' MOLE WHILE YOU WAS OUT LOOKIN' FOR THE PUP DOG?
4.2 ROST HALL SYNDICATE
POGO
MAN! I IS WORED OUT! TRUMPIN' ALL OVER THE SWAMP AN' NARY MIDE NOR HAIR OF THE PUP.
HEY! IS YOU SEED ANYTHIN' OF OL' MOLE WHILE YOU WAS OUT LOOKIN' FOR THE PUP DOG?
NOPE! WE DIN'T SEE THE PUP AN' WE DIN'T SEE MOLE, NEITHER.
ADD THAT UP, PARDNER. TIME 1:12 ... Remarks: Both the Mole and the Pup wasn't seen.
IN OTHER WORDS: TOGETHER, THEY IS MISSIN'!
CHECK! AN' YOU CAN ADD (TIME 1:13') The Mole Ain't too tall.
THE WAY EVIDENCE IS PIILIN' UP, IT'S POSITIVELY UNCANNY!
Member of the Kansas Press Assm., Inland Daily Press Assm., Associated Collegiate Press Assm., Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Medford Avenue, N.Y. City. Mail Subscription rates: $5 per semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unversity holidays and examination periods Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1919, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Don Tice Assistant
NOPE! WE DIN'T
SEE THE PUP AN'
WE DIN'T SEE
MOLE, NEITHER.
ADD THAT UP, PARDNER.
TIME 1:19 ... Remarks:
Both the Mole
and the Fly
Wasn't seen.
IN OTHER
WORDS:
TOGETHER,
THEY IS
MISSIN'!
CHECK! AN' YOU CAN ADR (TIME 1:15 $)
The Mole
DINT-That
talkin'
THE WAY EVIDENCE IS PILIN' UP, IT IS POSITIVELY UNCANNY!
IT'S SUCKY TO BE HEP FOR ME.
I NEED MY BOOT.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Don Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon.
Court Ernst.
r
I am very pleased with the progress of this project. I am confident that it will be a valuable addition to our library and will provide us with access to a wealth of resources for research and learning. I hope you find this information useful and will continue to support us in our future endeavors.
Friday, April 2, 1954 University Daily Kansan Paq
This is the life!
LIVE
to enjoy it!
12
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The UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 2. 1954
On the Hill
Theta Phi Alpha sorority announces the initiation of Colleen Fitzgerald and Rosine Gualdoni, fine arts sophomores, and Margaret Steinke, college sophomore. Mary Kinnane, assistant instructor in speech and drama, was initiated as an alumna member. The formal initiation ceremonies were followed by a banquet. The guest speaker was Rev. George Towle. Members of the Kansas City Alumni association attended.
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity recently initiated John S. Mace, associate professor of military science; Gary Sick, Samuel Stayton, Paul Kent, R. L. Brown, Gary Skinner, Dennis Knight, John Eland, Robert Kimbail, Larry Mayer, Larry Bowman, Gary Griffiths, and Neil Ryle, all are college freshmen. Bret Waller and William Littell, fine arts freshmen; Jack Riegle, second year architecture; Karl Nirschl and Don Waggoner, business juniors; Larry Winter and Jack Hartung, college sophomores; and Leigh Stratton, engineering sophomore. Gary Sick was honor pledge and Major John Mace was faculty initiate.
Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pinning of Marilyn Ahlstrom, college sophomore, to Bill Taylor, engineering sophomore. The pinning was announced Saturday evening at the Spring Cotillion dinner-dance by a poem read by Carol Fluhardy, college sophomore. Miss Ahlstrom's attendants were Mary Lou Bird, bird junior; Lucy McKeithan, fine arts sophomore; Eddie Schumaker from Topeka, and Miss Fluhardy.
Alpha Phi sorority recently held a birthday-initation banquet celebrating the fourth birthday of Gamma Delta chapter at KU, and honoring the new initiates. Those initiated were Doris Miller Thelen, former student and colony pledge; Ann Jocine Clark, and Karamaneh Ione Perikowsky, college juniors; Mary Patricia Copeland, college senior; Cara Jane Gollier, Alice Katharine Muehlschuster, and Barbara Jean Shaw, college sophomores; Mary Edith Kizer, fine arts sophomore; and Cynthia Ann Mason. premursing sophomore. Miss Perikowsky was honor initiate. Twenty-seven members were initiated last December.
Miss Ahlstrom is from Topeka and Taylor is from Kansas City, Mo. and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Dr. Noble E. Melencamp of Dodge City was honorally initiated into Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity recently. Dr. Melencamp is a member of the state medical board and former president of the state medical society. His son, Noble Jr., was graduated from KU in 1948.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Ukena of Highland announce the engagement of their daughter Dorothy to Arnold Dwayne Dorrell, son of Mr. and Mrs Melvin Dorrell of Highland, Miss Ukena, college junior, lives at Templin hall. She attended Highland Junior college before entering the University this semester. Mr. Dorrell was graduated from Highland Junior college last June. He will enter the Navy April 8 and will be stationed at Treasure Island, Cal.
Sigma Phi Epsilon recently initiated Chris Divich, education sophomore, of Doland, S. D.
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Dr. and Mrs. A. H. Dyck of Me-
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University in January, in geological
Crystal Cafe
Page 4
609 Vermont OPEN SUNDAYS
Persistent rumors that Gavilan may have injured his right hand in training caused the odds to lengthen from yesterday's 7-5. The Keed's handlers have repeatedly denied the rumors.
Olson, Gavilan Fight For Middleweight Title
Chicago —(U.P.)— Carl (Bobo) Olson and Kid Gavilan from the widely separated islands of Hawaii and Cuba will meet tonight at Chicago stadium in what shapes up as a classic "battle of champions."
Should Gavilan triumph, he will be the second man to make the immediate transition from welterweight champ to middleweight ruler. Only the great Sugar Ray Robinson did it before. Robinson turned the trick in the same stadium ring on Feb. 14, 1951, when he stopped Jake LaMotta in the 13th round.
After a late check with the box office, Secretary Truman Gibson of the International Boxing club said, "We expect 18,000 paid spectators and a gross gate of about $220,000." In addition, the TV-radio fee is $100,000. Prices for reserved seats ranged from $5 to $30.
Twenty-eight-year-old Gavilain will not be risking his 147-pound crown while challenging for 25-year-old Olson's 160-pound title. However, should the speedy Cuban win tonight, he will automatically relinquish his welterweight title. A tournament would be staged for the vacant crown.
Olson has been favored at fluctuating odds ever since the match was made. One of the reasons was his generally expected weight advantage of about seven pounds. He was expected to uphold the ancient adage: "A good big man can always beat a good little man."
Pallid-faced, prematurely balding Olson, who spent most of his life in Honolulu, was a solid favorite at 2-1 to keep his middleweight crown in the scheduled 15-rounder with the slender welterweight ruler from Camaguey, Cuba.
The fight contract provides that if the "Keed" wins tonight he must gain. Olson a return title bout within 30 days at a site to be selected.
Tommy Ryan, Mickey Walker, and Lou Brouillard lost their welter crowns before winning the middle-weight bonnet.
In one of his three test defenses last year, Gavilan had a close call with Carmen Basilio at Syracuse, N.Y. Basilio floored him once and pressed him in every round. But the "Keed" wound up with a disputed decision. Doug Ratford, another pressure fighter, twice clipped the wings of the Cuban hawk back in 1947 and '48; and Robert Villemain outpointed him in 1950.
Marcia Hinginer, college junior,
was elected president of Xi chapter
of Sigma Kappa sorority. Other officers are Eleanor Major, college sophomore, first vice-president; Jerry Ann Street, education junior, recording secretary; Jo Dillsaver, college sophomore, corresponding secretary; Juliane Keeter, college sophomore, treasurer; Doris Reiner, education junior, registrar; Ina May Brewster, college sophomore, rush chairman, and Joanne Van Hoozer, college sophomore, social chairman.
engineering. He is a member of Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, engineering fraternities, and Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geological engineering fraternity. He is stationed as Fort Belvore, Va., in the Army.
Irish Open Practice Under Young Coach
South Bend, Ind. — (U.P.)—Notre Dame's Irish, with such stars as Ralph Guglielmi, Frank Varrichione, Dick Szymanski and Ray Lemek, will open spring practice today for the first season under youthful coach Terry Brennan.
Brennan, only six years ago a halfback great on Frank Leahy's national championship elevens, took over control of the Notre Dame football destinies from Leahy Feb. 1.
Sam Snead returns to the professional golf circuit today playing in the $10,000 Greensboro Open.
The University of Missouri announced that it will reduce football admissions from $3.60 to $3.00 for the coming season.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity extended their championship winning streak to seven as they won the intramural swimming title. The Phi Gams, with 61 points, lacked one point of doubling the score on second place Independents who scored 31. TKE was third with 9, Beta fourth with 4, the Phi Phil's took fifth with 3 points, and the Sigma Chi's in sixth place scored 2 points.
Phi Gam's Win Swim Title
Scoring was on a 6-4-3-2 basis in the individual events, and 8-6-4-2 in the relays. No records were broken in any event.
160-yd. freestyle relay, 1. Phi
Gam, 2. Independent, time: 1:39.9;
60-yd. breast stroke, 1. Clevenger,
The results:
Phi Gam, 2. Convis, Beta, 3. Curry Independent, 4. Stevens, Phi Gam, time: 41.2
100-yd. freestyle, Perry, TKE, and Grogger, Phi Gam, tied for first, 3. Brownrigg, Independent, 4. Schutz, Phi Gam, time: 64.6; 100-yd. back-stroke, 1. Widick, Phi Gam, 2. Morris, Phi Gam, 3. Cate, Phi Gam; 4. Ruese, Phi Gam, time: 131.6.
Diving, 1. Tuckness, Independent,
2. Harr, Independent, Fiss, Phi
Gam, 4. Ryberg, Phi Gam; 40-yd.
freestyle, 1. Curry, Independent,
2. Peery, TKE, 3. Klotz, Independent,
4. Gibbs, SIGma, Chi time: 21.4.
60-yd. individual medley, 1. Clevenger, Phi Gam, 2. Widick, Phi Gam, 3. Alberty, Phi Psi, time: 39.2; 120-yd. medley relay, 1. Phi Gam, no time, only one entry.
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Page 5
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By DANA LEIBENGOOD Kansan Sports Editor
With the major league season rapidly approaching we have decided to go out on the limb and predict the outcome of the pennant races.
In the American league we think that New York will finish first, Chicago second, Cleveland third, Boston fourth, Washington fifth, Detroit sixth, Baltimore seventh, and Philadelphia eighth.
We can't see any team that has improved enough to beat the Yankees. New York has some old, key pitchers. However, it has the young pitchers to take the regular starts and save Allie Reynolds, Ed Lopat, and Johnny Sain for spot performances. Cleveland and Chicago can't do that. Cleveland must find replacements for Bob Feller and Early Wynn, and young Dave Hoskins can fill such a large assignment. The White Sox can't expect such a spectacular performance from Virgil Trucks this year, for he is at the age where he might not win anymore than 10 games.
The Yankees could have been strongly pushed by Boston had Ted Williams not broken his shoulder. When Williams, baseball's greatest hitter, was injured, the Red Sox chances were hurt terrifically. Boston will have to get some fine pitching from some of the young members of the staff in order to be a contender.
Washington could easily finish in the first division this year. It has fine pitching but will be hard pressed to score runs. It probably has fewer power hitters than any team in the majors. As far as the rest of the league is concerned, Baltimore needs more than spirit to be a contender; Detroit is rebuilding, and Philadelphia has no pitching.
In the National league its the Dodgers first, Cardinals second. Giants third, Milwaukee fourth, Phillies fifth, Cincinnati sixth, Cubs seventh, and Pittsburgh eighth.
Brooklyn should win the National league, but it will be hard pressed to beat the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cardinals have excellent pitching and could easily win the pennant should the Dodgers falter. With Don Newcombe and Carl Erskine leading the pitching staff and with the tremendous power and bench strength the club has it is hard to see how the Dodgers can lose.
For third place we are picking Leo Durocher's Giants. Last year the team fell apart and finished fifth, but this year it has much better pitching and, with Willie Mays back from service, should give a good account of itself.
Last year Milwaukee took everyone by surprise, and with great support from the fans, finished second. However, we expect them to slip considerably this year. The trades which Milwaukee made could hurt the club. Danny O'Connell is a fine infielder, and Bob Thomson is a good outfielder, but to get these men the team had to give up three pitchers. Although Max Surkont won only 11 games, practically all of them were at the first part of the season giving the club a fast start. To get Thomson, Milwaukee had to give up Don Liddle and John Antonelli, two young pitcheres of great promise. Warren Spahn also can't be expected to win 23 and lose only seven again this year.
Cincinnati could be a big surprise under Manager Birdie Tebbets. However, it has pitching trouble just as we expect Milwaukee to have.
As far as the Cubs and Pirates are concerned they can be forgotten as far as being pennant contenders. Chicago needs some new fielders, and Pittsburgh needs more experience.
The Phillies have Robin Roberts and Curt Simmons, but the rest of the staff isn't too impressive. The infield and the outfield both could use some improvement.
Baseball Team Starts Season At Arkansas
Jayhawker baseball Coach Floyd Temple will start two new infielders as the KU baseball team opens the season with a southern swing to the University of Arkansas Monday and Tuesday and Tulsa University Wednesday and Thursday.
Two outfielders Boll Allison and Bob Conn, a new pitcher B Shirley pitcher. Don Augst will round out their first-year starters for the squad.
John Perry, who collected six home runs early last season, will start in left field.
Shortstop Heitholt was the regular centerfielder on last year's club as a sophomore. Coach Temple said, "He has a long way to go before he becomes a shortstop, but he is a pretty good hitter and is working hard to learn the position. Our first four games will tell the tale on his fielding."
The Arkansas Razorbacks will have two games under their belts when the Jayhawkers meet them for they open against Bradley today and tomorrow in Favetteville.
Temple will start Bill Heitholt at shortstop and Forrest Hoglund at third base. Returning veterans John Trombold, first base, and Bill Pulliam, second base, will play their regular positions.
Bob Shirley, Grantville sophomore, and John Brose, veteran lefty, will start on the mound against Arkansas Monday and Tuesday. Wayne Tiemeyer, senior right hander, and Fuzzy Martin, sophomore righthander, are scheduled to pitch the Tulsa series.
Shirley and Brose each pitched six impressive innings in Saturday's intra-squad game, but Martin is still having trouble with control.
The Jayhawks will leave Sunday noon on their southern trip.
Yanks Send Eight To Minor Leagues
St. Petersburg, Fla., (U.P.)—Eight rookies were lopped off the Yankee roster today and co-owner Dan Topping hinted that some veterans may follow them unless they get those complacement notions "out of the back of their heads."
Topping made his remarks after an announcement that eight players, including Negro catcher Elston Howard and pitcher Steve Kraly, had been farmed to minor league clubs.
"We never like to get licked, even in exhibition games," said Topping.
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
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DAIRY PRODUCTS USE MILK for SNACK TIME
Here's a real health tip for busy students Drink milk when you take a "break" from the books. You'll gain big dividends in greater energy, calmer nerves, and better all-around health.
Friday, April 2, 1954
SO DRINK GOLDEN CREST MILK
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First KU Football Clinic To Be Friday, Saturday
Phone 3162
The first football clinic for high school football coaches presented by the University of Kansas coaching staff will be held in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union next Friday and Saturday.
The clinic begins at 8:15 a.m. on Friday with registration in the hawk room of the Student Union Friday and Saturday.
The KU coaching staff plan holding three clinics a year. Since the new KU staff has only been here six weeks, and they didn't get the invitations sent out until about three weeks ago, it will be hard to estimate the number of coaches who will attend the clinic
Women's Softball To Start April 12
In addition to the lectures on each phase of football by the Kansas coaches, Don Pierce, KU sports publicity director, will speak on public relations, and Dean Nesmith, KU trainer, will talk on the treatment of football injuries.
The Tri Delt's, Alpha Phi's, Sigma Kappa's, and A O Pi's will start women's softball competition on Monday, April 12 at 4 p.m. on the intramural field.
The elimination tennis doubles tournament will also get underway Monday, April 12. The schedule will be posted Monday morning in the physical education office.
Two games will be played each day with Chi Omega and Alpha Delta Pi, Pi Beta Phi and Gamma Pi, Beta playing Tuesday; Kappa Alpha Theta and Corbin, Miller-Watkins and North College on Wednesday; Alpha Chi Omega and Locksley-Monchonsia, Jayettes and Delta Gamma on Thursday.
For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansas Classified.
Sooners Defeated In Tennis Meet
The KU tennis team won its opening match of the season by defeating the highly regarded Oklahoma Sooners 5-2 in an upset yesterday afternoon on the KU courts.
Coach Dick Mechem's team won four of the five singles matches and one of the two doubles matches. Al Hedstrom lost the No. 1 singles matches to Ken Taylor, Big Seven singles champion last year, 6-2, 6-2. Other results:
Dick Hadley, def. John Martin,
0, 6-3, 8-6.
Don Franklin, def. Russ Fuller,
0, 6-3, 7-5.
Merl Sellers, def. Tom Mahaffey,
0, 6-0, 8-6.
Roger Youmans, def. Bob Shwartz,
0, 7-5, 6-4.
Sellers and Franklin, def. Martin and Mahaffey, 0, 6-0, 6-4.
Taylor and Fuller, O, def. Hedstrom and Hadlev. 6-2, 4-6, 6-0.
Bill Sweeney today was signed to a 1-year contract to manage the Los Angeles Angels in the Pacific Coast league.
The Syracuse Nationals and the Minneapolis Lakers open their 7-game series tonight in Minneapolis for the National Basketball association championship.
S
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Students Named in Primaries
Friday, April 2, 1954
One hundred six candidates were chosen in yesterday's three closed primaries to run on the ASC ballot, and 36 on the non-partisan class officer ballot in the April 20 spring election.
SENIOR CLASS
President: Harlan Parkinson, Jann Duchossoy. Mary. Ann. Kaaz.
Vice president: Norman Capps.
Gene Schanze, Kay Siegfried.
Secretary; Barbara Bateman, Martha
Nienstedt; Stéphane States.
JUNIOR CLASS
Treasurer: Diane Miller, Peggy Jones.
President: Dirk MaGuire, Ralph Moody, Jerry Rosenlund.
Vice president: Carol Mather,
Apalade Miller, Mat Pierson
Secretary: Beverly Jackson, Barbara Korn, Jo Parker.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Treasurer: Bob Babcock, P h i
Coolidge, Dorolyn Humbarger.
President; Paul DeGood, Delmont
Hadley, Janice Iiams
Vice president: John Eland, Jerry Roberts, Jerry Whitson.
Secretary: Tom Horne, Dave Leslie, Roland Peschka.
Treasurer: Richard Billings, Collette Peterman, Ann Straub.
ALL STUDENT COUNCIL
President: Bob Kennedy, AGI Fred Rice, POGO; Clifford Holland MSP.
Vice president: Marjorie Englund,
AGI; Nathan Harris, POGO; Bob
Kav, MSP.
ASC SENATE
Betty Bubb, POGO; Merl Sellers,
POOG; Duane Houtz, AGI; Phil
Pettit, AGI; Bruce Johnston, MSP; George Michale, MSP.
District II—College
Bill Buck, POGO; Jack McCall,
POGO; Dick Myers, POGO; Louie
Petrie, POGO; Nancy Darnell,
POGO; Mary Ellen Lewis, POGO;
AGI, Ted Ice, AGI; Harlan Stamper,
Ron Denchfield, AGI; Larry Gutsch,
AGI; Wiley Gabrielson, AGI; Alice
Wiley, AGI; Darrel Nixon, MSP.
District III—Education
Peg Jones, POGO; Sandy Pulver, POGO; Larry Schultz, POGG; Peggy Hughes, AGI; Alberta Johnson, AGI; Bill Heitholt, MSP.
District IV-Engineering
Joe Galbraith, POGO; Tom Griffith, POGO; Scott Hayden, POGO; Forrest Hoglund, POGO; Jack Frost, AGI; Jack Rogers, AGI; Ludwig Smith, AGI; Dave Sommers, AGI.
District IV—Engineering
District V—Fine Arts
Donna Francis, POGO; Janice Mason, POGO; John Nangel, POGO; Sam Van Meter, AGI; Mary Ann Curtis, AGI; Sally Lindemuth, AGI.
District VI—Graduate
Homer Ball, POGO; Bob Pope,
AGI; Jerry Lysaught, MSP; Elliot
Valenstein, MSP
district VII—Journalism
District VII—Journalism Karen Hilmer, POGO; Letty Lemon, AGI; Stan Hamilton, MSP.
District VIII—Law
Frank Sabatini, POGO; Tom
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
One day ..50c
Phone KU 376
CloudSand Advertising Post
Classified Advertising Rates
Additional words...10 a.m. 20 a.m. 30 a.m.
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex-
cuse your phone) or brought to the Daily Kalyan office. Journal
national bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
FOR SALE
BUSINESS SERVICES
BATTERIES: Guaranteed unconditionally for six months. $5 and old battery. Battery Stores Associated. 512 East 9th, home-owned. Phone 943. tt
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FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking.
also draft. in 1843-L 425 N.Y. WMF-14
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routes; rates. Mrs. Veci
Phone: Phone MWF-2
TYPING: Call, accurate, typing. Reasonable rates. Quick call Mrs. Merritt. 1801-594-7222.
WOULD LIKE to care for pre-school child in my home. Call 3837W. 4-2
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop for you, as well as our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fins, snips and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418.
CABINET-MAKER a.and REFISHERN-
Antique pieces, Bar-top finish on table
tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E.
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BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. vf
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
Payne, AGI; Bob Bradstreet, MSP District, JX - Medium
WANTED
LIBRARIAN with professional training and or experience for Public Library Pleasant working conditions. 24 day paid vacation. No Sunday or holiday Write giving qualifications. Box E-32 Lawrence Journal-World. 4-
theoretical Chuck Kirkpatrick, POGO; Jim Gleason, AGI.
FOR RENT
WHY WALK or spend time waiting for a bus when you can have a nice room one block from the Union. Phone 2745M.
TRANSPORTATION
Pharmacy
Crandall Mellia, POGO; Kay
Lowis, AGI.
RIDERS WANTED: To Denver. Bare
expenses call 12968. Frank Brown. 4-2
ASC—HOUSE
LEAVING FOR Denver early. Sunday morning. Arrive Sunday evening. Returning Tuesday. April 8 or Wednesday. Takes Tues. One-way or round trip 2938M.
University Daily Kansan
District X—Pharmacy
RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day rates. Visit Rose Glesman at the First National Bank of California in Palms and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 1f
RIDE WANTED to New York area and back for spring vacation. Will share expenses. Can leave Thursday night or Friday. Call Nick Dilee, 2122. 4-2
Sororities
Gene Bortnick, POGO; Bob Bush, POGO; Gene Coombs, POGO; Bill Cool, POGO; Dip Dye, POGO; Bud Salanski, POGO; Jerry Whitehead, POGO; Larry Weeds, POGO; Jack Dusay, AGI; Tom Hampton, AGI; Fritz Heath, AGI; HUMMy Hodge, AGI; Al Hyer, AGI; George Sheldon, AGI; Al Sweeney, AGI.
TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE
Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines, authorized agents for all steamship lines, authorized agents for interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature on your Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone 3661.
Gay Coolidge, POGO; Jane Collier, POGO; Lois McArdle, POGO; Martha Nienstedt, POGO; Pat Davis, AGI; Joss Dougherty, AGI; Jane Henry, AGI; Fredrica Voiland, AGI.
Ronnie Brown. AGI; William Hirsch, AGI; Edward Wall, AGI.
Men's Dorms
DUCK'S Sea Food TAVERN
Margot Baker, AGI; Barbara Fisher, AGI.
We Specialize In MEXICAN FOOD 434 Locust Ph.4199 La Tropicana Club Open Sundays
Will be Closed on: April 5,6,&7
Women's Dorms
Freshman Women's Dorms
Diane Hawley, POGO; Ann Rumsey, POGO; Ann Straub, POGO; Jane Pugh, AGI; Anne Wiedeman, AGI; Janis Johanson, AGI.
Co-ops, Professional Fraternities
Don Pearson, AGI; Dale Trott, AGI.
TO SERVE YOU
We Will Open Again on - April 8-
Unorganized Students
Gary Davis, POGO; Jack Stewart,
POGO; Alice Ann Shearer, POGO;
Bill Awad AGI; Burton Baldwin,
AGI; Grace Faal, AGI;
mon, AGI; Dave Miller, AGI; Frank
newy, AGI; Joyce Sejorka, AGI;
Leroy Watkins, AGI; Jerry Willis,
AGI
Passenger cars operated by rental and drive-yourself companies in the United States have doubled in number since 1950.
Page 6
At the Granada, informed sources tell us that "Knights of the Round Table" will not disband for another day or so. When and if they do complete their draining of Arthurian plasma, the screen will reflect the inimitable strawbrains known as Ma and Pa Kettle. Their new venture is intriguingly entitled "Ma and Pa Kettle Back Home."
Eternity,' Gang Films Hold Forth at Cinema
By BILL STRATTON
Today Red Skelton takes on a half-serious role in "The Great Diamond Robbery," at the Patee. Even though Skelton is hapless with the straight lines, the story skips along in an amusing fashion, drawing much of the humor from the supporting cast.
Although our temporary release from formal education does not materialize legally until tomorrow, there are many cinemaniacs who will prefix their vacations with a movie in Lawrene. It is for these insugents that we scan the immediate film listings.
The Varsity is at the top with the undisputed "From Here to Eternity," which, after recent Academy sweepstakes, can only be defiled by someone with political asylum, like the junior senator from Wisconsin. This candid translation of the James Jones novel accumulated Oscars in a quantity unequalled since "Gone With the Wind." People to be seen re-enacting the old Army days around Schofield barracks are Montgomery Clift, Burt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra, Donna Reed, and Deborah Kerr. This will play until Sunday at the Varsity.
Domestic warfare then has priority on the screen under the able criminal generalship of James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson. Their budding efforts appear in a pair of dusty, almost antiquated, movies called "The Public Enemy" and "Little Caesar." These reels were among the first to depict massacre on-mainstreet and win the hearts
of American gangsters.
James Whitmore and Kurt Kasznar are a pair of natural heavies who never seem to go wrong no matter where they place their characterizations. "The Great Diamond, robbery is linked to a travel folder about New Orleans and Mardi Gras, called "Louisiana Territory," and lasting 45 minutes.
The Javahawk has snared "Lure of the Sila," an unpublicized Italian film of variable merit. Vittorio Gassman and Silva Mangano are the players. The dialogue is in English and the love scenes are in Italian. This will ride over the weekend.
Silk Textiles, U.S. Art in Museum
The former is a group of paintings by leading American artists showing the main trends in painting in the U.S. in the past half century. Among the artists represented are Kansas' own John Stewart Curry, Peter Hurd, Robert Henri, John Martin, and 16 others. The International Business Machines corp. lending the exhibit.
Traveling exhibits during April at the University Museum of Art include "Cross Currents in American Art" and "Silks of the Harmonists."
For Good Eating Over Vacation
it's Your
Student Union
Cafeteria
A. H. WOODS
Cafeteria Vacation Hours Beginning Monday, April 5
Breakfast 7:30-8:30 a.m.
Lunch . . . . 11:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Dinner 5-6 p.m.
Coffee Bar open--7:30 a.m.- 6 p.m.
The Hawk's Nest will close at 7 p.m. Saturday, April 3 and will open again at 4 p.m. Sunday, April 11
___
图
Report Expected To Indicate Slump in Jobs
Washington - (U.P) Informed sources said today a government report probably will show that unemployment increased last month but remained below the 4 million mark.
About 3,671,000 jobless were reported in February.
The Commerce department's monthly report on the nation's over-all labor situation also was expected to show a seasonal gain in employment, particularly among construction and farm workers, in March. Workers with jobs totalled 60,051,000 in February.
The report was scheduled to be made public today after being discussed by President Eisenhower and his cabinet at their weekly meeting this morning.
Unemployment rose by a whopping $84,000 in February. And some government economists interpreted a smaller increase in March as an indication that unemployment was beginning to level off and that a definite upturn would come soon
Some government officials were said to consider the March figures as encouraging, although unemployment usually drops that month. They had feared the number of jobless might go higher than it did.
They also did not believe that March unemployment would justify President Eisenhower's taking any drastic anti-recession steps. He said last Feb. 17 that if employment did not show a definite upturn in March, it would be a warning calling for a number of measures—possibly including further tax cuts for lower-income consumers.
The Commerce department's labor force report was based on a survey taken in the second week of March. Commerce Secretary Sinclair Weeks said last Wednesday there had been reports since that week that "numerous" companies had been calling workers back to their jobs after laffoffs.
Mr. Eisenhower last week said that he meant a new examination of the problem would be required other than that any slam-bang emergency measures would be put into effect instantly.
Unemployment has been increasing since last October when it hit a post-World War II low of 1,200,000.
However, a large part of these might have been included in the employed total anyway. The department counts as employed those idle persons who have a definite promise of work within 30 days.
Alumni Secretaries To Visit 7 Towns
Mr. Ellsworth will visit Liberal April 6 and Elkart April 7.
Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the alumni association, and Richard Wintermote, field secretary of the alumni association, will visit alumni groups in seven Kansas towns.
Mr. Wintermote will visit Iola Monday, April 5, and will travel to Neodesha and Winfield, April 6. He will then go to Newton April 7 and the following day will be in McPherson.
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
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EDW. G. ROBINSON
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"PUBLIC ENEMY"
JAMES CAGNEY
"LITTLE CAESAR"
EDW. G.
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Good vs. Bad This Week:
U.S. Shows H-Bomb, as Reds Blank EDCTreaty
By UNITED PRESS
THE GOOD
1. The U.S. took the wraps off the H-bomb and revealed its awesome power for all the world to see. A shudder went through the free world at the thought of what World War III could mean. But the revelation was a warning to the Communists of U.S. power to smash an aggressor. It awoke Americans to the necessity of strengthening their whole civil defense set-up. The hope was that the H-bomb would not bring war closer but make it more remote.
The week's balance sheet between the good and bad news in the hot and cold wars:
2. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles warned Russia and Red China that they will not be permitted to impose their rule on southeast Asia and specifically on Indochina. Mr. Dulles said any Communist threat should be met by united action of the free world. President Eisenhower approved his speech.
3. In Italy, Premier Mario Seetau was cracking down on the Reds. Also, a moderate coalition threw out the Reds in municipal elections at Castellamare, the greatest industrial center of southern Italy. Extremists had dominated the area for 50 years except during the Fascist era.
Art work by children from the Prairie Village elementary schools near Kansas City, Mo., are being displayed in 332 Strong and in the hallway outside.
The exhibit is comprised of handcrafts, finger painting, silk screen prints, designs, drawings, and paintings by students ranging from kindergarten age to sixth grade.
Included in the display are book covers decorated with cut paper designs, a black and white design made of paper and string, four paintings illustrating a poem written by a fifth grade student, silk screen prints made by a crayon process, and animal figures made of miscellaneous materials ranging from thread spools to sweet potatoes.
Children's Art Shown Here
Persons from the Prairie Village schools responsible for the exhibit are Mrs. Arlene Carter, art supervisor, who is working on her master's degree here; Miss Mary Hoyster, director of elementary education, and Harold C. Dent, superintendent of schools.
SILVANA MANGANO
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VITTORIO GASSMAN
Comfort Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW PARK ROAD CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW thru SATURDAY
SILVANA MANGANO
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Prevue
Saturday
SUNDAY
TONY
CURTIS
FRANK
LOVEJOY
MARRY
MORPHY
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PRINT BY
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Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
Comfort Conventional
JAYHAWKER
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SILVANA MANGANO
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Saturday
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FRANK
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2. There could be a cabinet crisis in France. Cabinet and parliament are increasingly split on the ratification of the Western European army plan—the European Defense community treaty. To make things worse, Marshal Alphonse-Pierre Juin, vice president of the high French council of defense and commander of central European forces of NATO, made a speech denouncing the EDC. He snubbed Premier Joseph Laniel, who called on him to explain himself. Mr. Juin was promptly fired as vice president of the defense council and from his other government posts.
1. Russia made a new attempt to sabotage the EDC treaty, which calls for a Western European army, including German troops. The Kremlin first proposed that the U.S., Britain, and France join its plan for a 32-nation "General European Security" treaty. Secondly it offered to join the North Atlantic Treaty organization. The 32-nation group would be dominated by Communist countries. To let Russia in on NATO, as a British commentator said, would be inviting the robbers to join the cops.
3. A series of frontier "incidents" increasingly serious, brought the possibility of another war between Israel and its A r a b neighbors dangerously close. President Eisenhower called on both sides to restrain their extremists and accept the aid of other countries in settling their disputes.
THE RAD
Donald Widdows New ISA Head
Donald Widdows, college freshman, has been installed as president of the Independent Students association.
Other officers are Margaret Jean Smith, college sophomore, vice president; Sharon McClure, fine arts freshman, secretary; Sheila Haller, college sophomore, social chairman and Thelma Jean Diehl, college freshman, activities chairman.
Final arrangements have been made for the trip to the National ISA convention to be held at Cornell university, April 12. Delegates are Widdows, Dan Jennings, college senior, and James Baird, journalism senior.
HELD OVER
thru Saturday
M-G-M'S FIRST
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Granado PHONE 0415
SOON — "ROSE MARIE"
Friday, April 2, 1954
Patch Designer To Get $50 Bond
A $50 war bond will go to the winner of a shoulder patch contest sponsored by the Air Force ROTC.
The contest closes April 26. Open to all University students, the contest is to produce for the University AFROTC a shoulder patch symbolic of the University.
The design may be a cartoon or some other symbol. The patch must be drawn free hand, in full color, on durable paper or cardboard and it must be 12 by 12 inches.
The contest closes April 26, and all drawings must be submitted at the Air Science office in the Military Science building by that day.
Second prize for the contest is
a gift card to $30 in cash,
and honorary prizes of $5,
The winning patch will be shown at the spring Air Force dance May 14
The judging committee is Col. Thomas B. Summers, professor of air science and tactics; Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, associate professor of air science, patch committee chairman Theoreon Pursley, college senior, and members of the Angel Flight squadron of the Campus AF-ROTC.
The Jay Janes pledged 15 girls yesterday in a candlelight ceremony in the Pine room of the Student Union.
Jay Janes Pledge 15 in Ceremony
Pledged were Frances Hennington, Carol Stutz, Dorothy Gerber, and Melba Austin, education juniors; Frances Meng, Mary Michener, Terry Hoffman, Sheila Haller, Peggy Hopfer, and Joyce Sejkora, college sophomores; Barbara Korn and Mary Schroeder, fine arts sophomores; Jo Ann Quistgard, fine arts junior, and Catherine Morrison, fine arts freshman.
KDGU Schedule
5:05 Dixie's Doorstep 5:20 Flin Side
5:00 Late Afternoon Headline
5:30 Flip Side
6:00 Potpourri
6:45 Keynotes by Carle
7:00 Bookstore Hour
7:55 News
8:00 Great Moments in Music
11:00 News, Weather, Sign Off
8.00 Capitol Classics
10:00 In the Mood
postage stamps were placed on sale July 1, 1847, at New York City.
Sunset
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Tonight & Saturday
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Midnite Show Sat. HALF PAST MIDNIGHT
M.G.H. GOES AGAIN!
Another TECHNOLOG Spectacle
Jason SIMMONS *Direct* GRIEGER
YOUNG BESS
Dianne KEIR *Charlie LABERTON*
Show Starts at Dusk
Alumni to Hear Ellsworth
Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, will speak to the KU Alumni association in Minneapolis, Minn., April 23.
MONTANA
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Join the Bumper Strip Club
COMMONWEALTH'S
LAWRENCE
Drive-In Theatre
West 23rd St. on Hiway 10
COMMONWEALTH'S LAWRENCE Drive-In Theatre West 23rd St. on Hiway 10
Patee
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Patee PHONE 311 NOW! Shows 7:9:05 A FUN SPARKLER!
Red
Red SKELTON THE GREAT DIAMOND ROBBERY Cara WILLIAMS - James WHITMORE Plus Second Feature — "Louisiana Territory" See the Mardi Gras
INTO A MODEL FARM!
STARTS
SUNDAY
PREVUE SATURDAY 11:15
THE WHOLE HAPPY
HILARIOUS
Kettle Clan
IS TURNING
THE OLD HOMESTEAD
INTO A MODEL
FARM!
UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL presents
Marjorie Percy
MAIN·KILBRIDE
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KETTLE
AT HOME"
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ALICE KELLEY-BRETT HALSEY-ALAN MOWBRAY
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From 1 p.m. - Open 12:45
Aranada
"Ma and Pa KETTLE AT HOME"
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Granada
PHONE QA
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 2. 1954
4
Mr. Formal Goes To Town!
THE HOME OF
mensional
omic Marvel
SCOPE
MARVEL'S
DIRECTOR OF PRODUCTIONS
Commonwealth Theatres — 2 Month's Passes
NATIONAL CHAMPION
Chuck Wagon — 2 Steak Dinners
JOHN R. KENNEDY
Allison-Thomas Flower Shop — Corsage
CHES
KOOL
George's Pipe Shop — "Perfect" Pipe Tobacco
RONALD G. HUNTER
Stadium Barber Shop — Haircut and Shampoo
PRAIRIE AUGUSTINE
Jayhawker-Varsity Theatres — 2 Month's Passes
A.J. BROWN
Dixie Carmel Corn — Box of Pecanette Candy
IACS AGRICULTURE ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Royal College Shoe Store — Pair of Freeman Tux Shoes
Mr. Formal at Kansas University, Joe Stroup of the TKE house is pictured above receiving the prizes offered by the Lawrence merchants in the recent Mr. Formal Contest.
Joe also received from the "After Six" Tux Co., sponsors of the contest, a complete "After Six" summer formal outfit, a Ronson cigarette lighter, and a Kawoodie pipe.
As the winner, Joe was picked from among 28 men that were entered as representatives of organized houses on the hill.
This year's contest was sponsored in Lawrence by Ober's, Carl's, The Town Shop, and the University Shop.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
KU Medical Center Dedicates New Building
A $600,000 Student Center was dedicated in Kansas City last Monday at the University Medical Center. The building, located at Olathe and Rainbow boulevards, was constructed and furnished in part from the Battenfeld Memorial fund established by Mrs. Edward H. Hashinger in memory of her son, Dr. Jesse R. Battenfeld Jr.
Speakers at the dedication ceremonies were Dr. Edward H. H. Hashinger, president of the Student Center; Rev. Howard E. Mueller, Chaplain at the Medical Center; Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine; Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, chancellor of the University; James C. Warren, fourth year medical student, and Dr. Galen Tice, professor of radiology.
The Student Center includes dining facilities for students and faculty, an auditorium that can seat the entire student body and faculty, a lounge, a book store for medical texts, a snack bar, and a recreational library, all on the first floor. A seminar room, a recreation room with pool and ping pong tables and showers, and food preparation and storage spaces are being completed in the basement.
The second floor contains 13 double hotel-type rooms for visiting lecturers and participants in the postgraduate course.
Miss Mildred Cravens, former assistant institutional manager at the University of Tennessee, was named executive director and resident manager of the Center.
Since then fund drives have been held, and with the assistance of individual contributions the building was completed.
THE MUSEUM OF FICTION AND DRAMA
NEW STUDENT CENTER—This is the building which was dedicated last week as the $600,000 Student Center for the University Medical Center in Kansas City. All of the money used for the new structure came from private contributions. A cafeteria, an auditorium, a lounge, a book store, a snack bar, and a library are included in the Center.
Daily hansan
51st Year, No. 122
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
P. A. L.
CAROL SHELLHAAS
Carol Shellhaas Tops Field Of Relays Queen Hopefuls
Miss Carol Shellhaas, college sophomore, has been chosen queen of the 29th annual Kansas Relays, to be held Friday and Saturday.
Monday, April 12, 1954
Miss Shellhaas was selected in competition with candidates from other Kansas and Big Seven colleges and universities. Marlene Smith of Washburn university and Marilyn Hobbii of Ft. Hays college were chosen as attendants.
Judges for the contest were Jack Stevens of the Patricia Stevens Modeling agency, and Jay Barrington, sports announcer from Kansas City. Mo.
the queen will be crowned at 3 p.m. Saturday in Memorial stadium. During the relays she will present medals and trophies to the winning individuals and relay team members. She will also preside at the relays dance to be held Saturday night in the Student Union. The
The third annual Parents Day at the University has been set for the UCLA football game Oct. 2. The University will hold open house for the parents in the morning, and in the afternoon the parents can buy tickets at reduced prices, in the student section.
Parents Day Set for Oct. 2
Miss Shellhaas was selected to represent the University in the Relays queen contest from a group of 54 girls in a contest sponsored by Student Union Activities. Judges for the KU contest were Dr. John Ise, professor of economics; John Estes, photographer, and Kathryne Stevens, society editor of the Lawrence Journal-World.
queen and her attendants will also participate in the KU Relies parade in Lawrence on Saturday morning.
Trail Memorial Dedication Set
Dr. Howard R. Driggs, president of the American Pioneer Trails association, will formally present an Oregon Trail Memorial to the University at 9 a.m. Saturday in front of Lindley hall.
The formal dedication will be part of the Kansas centennial year celebration. Dr. Driggs will make a short presentation address and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will accept the memorial. Dean E. Wood, president of the Kansas City council of the association, will speak on the topic, "The Significance of the Oregon Trail."
Dr. Driggs, professor of English, education at New York university, gave the Oregon Trail plaque to the University last year to permanently mark the spot where the old trail passed over the campus. Funds to erect the base of the memorial were contributed by the class of 1916.
On the plague is a picture of an oxen-drawn prairie schooner and the words "Oregon Trail Memorial." Besides the plaque, Dr. Driggs has given the University 20 books written by himself on famous pioneer trails in the United States.
Lyndon, Kan. —(U,P)— Wealthy stockman O. W. Hess went to trial a second time today on charges of cattle theft.
Hess Trial Resumes; Cattle Theft Charged
The first trial last November, moved to Lyndon from Alma on a change of venue, resulted in a hung jury for the Wabaunsee county cattleman.
Two counts were dismissed in the first trial by Judge A. K. Stavely for lack of evidence. Two others remain.
A venire of more than 100 persons was called to obtain a iurv.
Weather
Gradually fairer weather for northeast Kansas was the outlook today. According to Ronnie Rungie-
weather man. "Spring is really on the way, all right." To morrow's weather should strengthen the trend toward clearer skies and higher temperatures that began after the end of m u g y y weather whi ch
ICE CREAM
WWW.SHUTTERSTONE.COM
early last week HOT COOL BAD COLD
Sunday Rated Kansas' Deadliest Day of Year
By UNITED PRESS
Sunday produced the bloodiest one-day batch of traffic accidents in Kansas in one year, the Highway Patrol reported today.
Seven persons were killed in six accidents-five of them involving only one car—to bring Kansas' highway and city street fatalities this year to 130.
One year ago the weekend toll was 11, as six persons lost their lives in a railroad crossing accident near New Cambria.
Despite the half dozen fatal accidents, Kansas motor vehicle deaths this year remain behind the pace of 1953. A year ago today the toll was 144.
Loss of control of his car cost 19- year-old James Lauderback his life south of Emporit on K-99.
A head-on collision north of Great Bend took two lives—Robert E. Robertson, 21, Great Bend, and Donald Siebert, 25, Pawnee Rock, two others were hurt.
James Goodsheller, 24, McPherson, was killed when his car veered from a country road on a return trip from a fishing excursion. Gerald Livengood, 22, also of McPherson was injured.
Wichita's fourth traffic fatality of 1954 was Mose Lucas, a pedestrian, hit early Sunday. He was standing by his parked car.
Raymond Shields, 20-year-old Fort Leonard Wood soldier home on leave, was killed near Parsons. He collapsed on a highway and was hit by an oncoming car after he had struggled back to the road from his own wrecked vehicle.
Lucille Lavonne Seeer, 17-year-old high school student, was killed when thrown from a car which went out of control on a gravel road near Loring.
Parks Dies In Kansas City
John Parks, former teacher of design died last week in St. Mary's hospital, Kansas City.
Mr. Parks was an artist, teacher, and aspiring author. He taught at KU from the fall of 1951 until the end of the spring semester last year. "Tree Climbers," an oil and tempera painting done by Mr. Parks while he was in a hospital, was shown at the Mid-America show held recently in the Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City.
A half completed book, which Mr. Parks had not titled, was found in his hospital room.
Mr. Parks was 32 in February. He was graduated from North High school, Wichita, in 1869, and his first art training was a course sponsored by the Wichita Art association
Mr. Parks served with the Marines in the Pacific during World War II, and he was graduated from the Chicago Art institute. Surviving are his father, Alfred N. Parks; a sister, Mrs. Arnie Holland; and two brothers, Alfred N. Parks Jr., and Robert R. Parks, all of Wichita,
French Hit Red Positions Near Vital Dien Bien Phu
Hanoi, Indochina—(U.P.)—French Union forces stormed from their foxholes today in a second counter-attack against Communist forces who have made six desperate but unsuccessful efforts to win back a strategic hill overlooking Dien Bien Phu.
Close-quarter fighting was in progress around the hill which overlooks both the besieged fortress and the Communist positions east of Dien Bien Phu. It is only half a mile from the French command headquarters.
(There is a University Daily Kansan story from United Press on our foreign policy toward Indochina on page 7).
It was the second big French Union counter-attack of the weekend. In the first Col. Christian De Castries sent tanks to the hill to save the French and loyal Viet Namese troops who had beaten back five battalion-size Communist attacks.
French artillery went into action from the strategic height against the enemy but the Communists mounted a sixth attack during the night. It failed and the French moved out of
their foxholes with hayonets fixed
their fortresses with payonets fixed.
Communist troops have tunneled ever closer to the heart of the besieged fortress for the past week and French sources said the enemy slashed a trench through the southern French airstrip today, rendering it useless.
The Communists already had brought the two airstrips under heavy artillery fire, making it impossible for Col. De Castries to evacuate his hundreds of wounded
The International Red Cross appealed to both belligerents today to respect the Red Cross symbol. The French, who have made two unsuccessful appeals to the Communists for a cease-fire to evacuate the wounded, have accused the Reds of firing on planes bearing the Red Cross symbol.
PANEL: Should the Kansan Criticize Productions
Recently the Kansan has received censure for its reviews of musical and drama performances on the Hill. Telephoned and personal charges of "unfairness," and "lack of qualification and ability on the part of the reporter to evaluate," are becoming common around these quarters.
Here are opinions of the performers, directors, sponsors, and other persons criticized along with statements from reviews—some of them concerning the persons quoted.
This is an age of re-examination of policy by all manner of agencies—and especially by newspapers. More and more, responsible papers are publicly explaining their policies and inviting public examination and evaluation.
Our newspaper exists, logically enough, to disseminate news. So, the question may be raised: In the eyes of a competent reporter, is the goodness or badness of a student production news? Reviews of performances and criticisms of them certainly are news in the eyes of almost every other newspaper we have read—and we have no other criteria by which to judge.
So, in a way, this is a bid by the Kansan for inclusion among the ranks of responsible papers. Here is our policy—and here is why we review. Is it good or bad? That's for you to decide.
If it is news, then, does the reporter have a right to express his opinion? It is acknowledged by law and usage that anything offered to the public for its commendation or approval is also offered for its disapproval. A play or musical falls into the above category of "anything offered to the public" and since the "public" is taken to mean all the public, including the newspaper, the ethical and legal right of the newspaper to print criticism can hardly be questioned.
It can't be questioned IF the newspaper doesn't publish with malice or publish criticism of material not offered to the public—such as on the private life of the star.
There is justification—we think—in another area. The majority of the productions criticized are made up of persons who are trying to develop their skills. Often, a newspaper account is the only completely objective report he can get as to the merits of his performance. Friends and relatives too often say he's just great—and the director may have worked with him so long that the element of objectivity suffers and perhaps lessens.
But the above is speculation. A third reason for reviews is intensely real and for our purposes, quite practical. We are here to learn to write by writing, and to learn to report by reporting. Since "writing" embraces all facets of that particular skill, we criticize. We're training for future jobs—just as the lawyers, doctors, nurses, and engineers are doing—and we're training for all the possible jobs in our field. Thus, if one of us is called into the editor's office in 1956 and he says, "Sam, go review the play tonight," then we won't be caught without experience of this type at all.
We are here to learn to express our opinions honestly—on paper. And we're here to inform the students via the Kansan. A welltrained reporter can inform the students honestly about a play, production, performance—and the students are free to take or leave the writer's word for it.
These are our views—but they are not entirely unchangeable.
Send us yours. —Letty Lemon
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
TV SCHEDULE
POOL SCHEDULE
DEBT SCHEDULE
GIRL SCHEDULE
FUNNY BOOK
J-36
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 12. 1954
"Our class would like to know how much you and Bollivar would take to enroll in American Government—Snarf grades on the curve and he always flunks two."
SOAP ONLY OVER
Page 2
ONE MAN'S OPINION
"Both students and parents soon forgot their ages and grown up troubles and drifted along to the make believe theme."
"Last night's University Theatre production of Antigone, though making aggressive strides in the right direction, was not quite convincing enough to lift free will above law and order and lacked the conviction to prove that free will is superior—as surely as Jean Anouilh intended."
Our Critics Laud, Attack Performances
"Bill Means, business senior, was an appropriately bourgeoisie contrast to the powdered and satined Miss March and Revnolds."
"The solos of Olga Zilbooq, cellist, and Dale Moore, baritone, were completely performed on the whole, although not unmarred by technical blemishes."
The following collection of "one man's opinions" was compiled from reviews appearing this year in the Kansan:
"... 'Scherazade' was spottily performed at best."
"Dick seemed to lack the stoicism usually associated with an English butler."
"The University Symphony . . . rose to the occasion in giving an eloquent reading. . . The carols, sung by a small choral ensemble . . . gave just the right effect."
"It is difficult to write a review on a performance as superb as that given by the Albeneri Trio last night without sounding like an advertisement for a Hollywood extravaganza."
"But the weakest point in the play was the lifeless performance of Robert Londerholm, who played Haemon. Antigone's lover."
"David Rosario, fine arts sophomore, scored beautifully as an engaging and very, very, inebriated turkey."
"The familiar overture to the opera 'William Tell.' by Rosini, opened the program. This selection was well suited to the instrumentation and the ability of the band."
"Horribly, hideously villaneous, John Pearson, college senior, slunk menacingly about the stage, leered and mugged at the audience, cackled "heh-heh-hehs" and turned in another of last night's best performances."
but highest praise must go to director J Ann March, college senior."
"Stravinsky's 'Fire Bird Suite' was the big crowd-pleaser of the evening, and the orchestra did a creditable job, considering that this was not a large enough orchestra to perform well, and spirit which it demands. The performance was marred somewhat by a mediocre brass section."
"Adele, the capricious and saucy chambermaid, was played by Merrily Coleman, fine arts freshman, Miss Coleman's solos as well as her acting displayed refreshing versatility."
Daily Hansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., Associated College Press Assn., University Press Association, Sterling Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. Mail Subscriptions rates: $3 a semester or less (incl. insurance and courtesy). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University week. Accepted for university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act 8
of March 3, 1879.
Those Criticized Say: 'Review-But Know How'
When asked if the Kansan should review and criticize, the following people, the majority of whom have had their work criticized, replied:
"My 30 years in the theater, we followed the policy that reviewers should go ahead and say what they want to. But, I don't think that just anybody should review a show. I think persons have a right to review productions and criticize them. That was always our policy. If there is someone who is reasonably intelligent, let him go ahead and review."
Dr. Allen Crafton, head of the Department of Speech and Drama
"I personally feel that we should have reviews in the Kansan of all our student productions. But I think these reviews should be backed up by a sound knowledge of the subject under review, and I also think that any person reviewing should bear in mind that student productions are not professional productions and should be treated in the same spirit."
Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra and director of the University Symphony.
"Although I am not directly connected with the theater, I think reviewers should furnish opinions, and judgments, but reviewers should learn criteria for judgment and talk to as many people as possible to learn what they are trying to do. They should have yardsticks by which to judge—such things as background, etc. Somebody once said 'You must have informative reviews if you're going to have interest on the part of the public—but you can't have informative reviews without informed reviewers.'"
William Conboy, instructor of Speech and Drama
Why not? Aren't they, after all, performing a function similar to our dramatic students? If we are going to suddenly start demanding professional reviewing from our student reporters, then we should also start demanding professional acting from our actors. If it comes to that, we'll get professional reporting quicker than we'll get professional acting. And if that's what we're asking, doesn't it defeat the purpose of University drama productions as well as the purpose of the Kansan? Remove the student learning situation in either case and you remove the educational objective of a university.
B. James Wright Director, Studio theater
---
The year's first play included in the cast a former KU instructor in drama with professional theater experience. Of course, there was a disparity in talent.
Daily Kansan reviews of this year's University Theatre plays have been intelligent and sincere efforts in perhaps one of the most difficult and thankless fields of writing. One oft-heard criticism of the reviews can be illustrated.
The Daily Kansan critic emphasized this difference in ability, comparing the professional effort with that of the students. A more careful criticism would have evaluated the students as student actors —not as "also-rans" compared with the professional.
Drama critics, who are themselves students, are especially pledged not to judge other students by professional standards. There are many examples of poor student acting which should be criticized. Such malfunctions can be corrected at the student level.
Robert Londerholm 3rd year law
Liberace Builds Following Makes Fortune-But How?
Viewers either adore or abbor his piano playing and/or singing, but the controversial television performer, Liberace, again this year is well on his way to grossing another cool half-million dollars.
Perhaps because his weekly half-hour TV show is carried on 164 stations clear across the nation. Perhaps because his 4-record album made last year is near the top among Columbia Records' best - selling albums. Perhaps because this hard-working performer last year gave 24 concerts that netted him $310,000.
Why has one 34-year-old pianist, born Wladziw Valentino Liberace, created such a stir in America?
Last September he played in Carnegie hall in New York, but overflow crowds made him reserve Madison Square Garden for his next New York City appearance next month.
These are the cold, hard facts which prove that Liberate does have a following even though some claim it to be of old women and persons who do not know the meaning of real music.
On his program the scene opens with the virtuoso in white ties and tailed poised over a keyboard. On his piano is the ever-present cande-
His technique?
labrum which one cannot help noticing.
He plays his way through seven or eight familiar sounding numbers, occasionally adding a mild baritone vocal solo to some of the compositions. An unseen orchestra of three other musicians, including "my brother George," accompany him. Then he goes into his rendition of "I'll Be Seeing You" and the program is over.
Compression is one of Liberace's neatest tricks. He reduces the best of them—Bach, Brahms, Griech, Chopin, et al—to manageable length, plus a bit of "modernizing" re-ranging. In his words, he "re-creates" old masterpieces for modern audiences
When numbers are too compli-
cate, he simplifies them when too-
s simple.
There are critics who say he is nothing more than a parlor pianist who ought to be kept hidden in someone else's parlor. They can point out numerous musical flaws in his style. —Stan Hamilton
Page 3
On Capitol Hill.
McCarran-Walter Act Revision Considered
Washington—(U.P.) A drive to revise the McCarran-Walter immigration act got underway in both houses of Congress today.
Three Republican senators and five House members announced that they intend to introduce legislation to revise the law along the lines suggested by President Dwight D. Eisenhower last year.
Other Congressional developments
Other congressional developments: McCarthy-Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R.-S.D.). temporary chairman of the Senate investigating committee, called the group into a closed session to decide upon the ground rules for its hearings on the fight between the Army and Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis). He said he also hopes to select additional staff members to aid special counsel Ray H. Jenkins.
Indochina—Sen. Lister Hill (D-Ala.) urged the Administration to spell out its Indochina policy so that Democrats and Republicans can unite to strengthen President Eisenhower's "hand and voice" in the crisis. He said the nation should be told everything "within the limits of security and prudence."
Communism—Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., went before the House judiciary committee to explain the Administration's views on anti-Communist legislation. The committee is considering a number of proposals to outlaw the Communist party.
Price—Rep. Melvin Price (D-III.) accused President Eisenhower of "gross misrepresentation" and "pure nonsense" in criticizing Democratic foreign and military policies. He also said that Vice President Richard M. Nixon came close to slander when he implied in a recent speech that Democratic Secretaries of State were unwilling to "stand up" to the Communists.
University Daily Kansan
Health—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Dinn.) urged the Senate Labor and Public Welfare committee to back up his bill for voluntary health plans. His measure would grant low-interest loans to persons who form voluntary health organizations in areas devoid of adequate medical facilities.
Socialists Win Belgian Elections
Brussels, Belgium — (U.P.)—Belgian voters toppled the Social Christian party from its four-year majority rule today by giving Paul-Henri Spank's Socialists a commanding voice in the government.
Weary election officials announced shortly after noon (7 a.m. CST) thirte Catholic Social Christians, led by Premier Jean Van Houtte and Foreign Minister Paul Van Zeeland, lost 14 of the 108 seats they held in the 212-seat Chamber of Deputies. Nine went to Socialists. Belgium thus returned to the tradition of coalition governments it knew before and immediately after World War. II.
City Elections OK Cleaner Streams
The Kansas "clean streams" program received a big boost in Tuesday's municipal elections, says Dwight F. Metzler, chief engineer for the State Board of Health at the University.
Professor Metzler said at least four cities approved bond issues for sewage treatment facilities. The majorities were substantial enough to represent votes of confidence in the anti-pollution program, he commented.
The four were Manhattan, $360,-
Great Bend, $630,000; Beloit,
$197,000; and Osborne, $107,000.
In recent years since the State Board of Health has vigorously pushed anti-pollution measures, 128 cities have built new sewage treatment plants, he said.
According to experiments, bees recognize honey-yielding flowers first by color and secondly by scent.
Calvin A. Vanderwerf, professor of chemistry, has been named chairman-elect of the division of chemical education of the American Chemical society. Dr. Vanderwerf, who currently is secretary of the division, will take office next January.
Vanderwerf New ASC Head
KDGU Schedule
6:30 Allen Jones
7:00 Bookstore Hour
8:00 Great Moments in Music
9:00 Dancing in the Dark
9:30 News
9:35 Jazz Junction
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News and Sign Off
Monday, April 12. 1954
Shirley June Mize, college sophomore, was reported in fair condition today following an emergency appendectomy Friday in Watkins hospital.
Miss Mize's Condition Fair
Marilyn, Home Again, Returns to Work
Hollywood — (U.P.)— America's No. 1 glamour girl went back to work today.
Marilyn Monroe reported for work at 20th Century-Fox studios for the first time since she refused to appear in "Pink Tights" in January and eloped with Joe DiMaggio, former New York Yankee baseball star.
The agenda for Marilyn's first day back on the job called for rehearsal
of a new Irving Berlin musical,
"There's No Business Like Show
Business," in which she sings a song
written especially for her, "The Girl
on the Calendar."
The blonde star walked out on "Pink Tights" because she didn't like the script. She was immediately suspended by the studio, but reinstated again after her marriage to the Yankee Clipper in San Francisco a week or so later.
Today's CHESTERFIELD is the Best Cigarette Ever Made!
"Chesterfields for Me!" Robert Kenninger Purdue Univ.'56
The cigarette tested and approved by 30 years of scientific tobacco research.
6
A. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
"Chesterfields for Me!"
Deborah Kerr Star of the Broadway Hit "Tea and Sympathy"
The cigarette with a proven good record with smokers. Here is the record. Bi-monthly examinations of a group of smokers show no adverse effects to nose, throat and sinuses from smoking Chesterfield.
"Chesterfields for Me!" Jon Withrow University of Oklahoma '54
"Chesterfields for Me!"
Jon Withrow
University of Oklahoma '54
The cigarette that gives you proof of highest quality—low nicotine. For the taste and mildness you want—smoke America's most popular 2-way cigarette.
Chesterfield
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CHESTERFIELD BEST FOR YOU
Copyright 1954, Liogett & Mills Tobacco Co.
KU to Open Home Baseball Season
By DANA LEIBENGOOD Kansan Sports Editor
After completing one of its most successful southern baseball swings in several years, winning three out of four games, the Kansas baseball team takes on Arkansas today and tomorrow and Kansas State on Wednesday and Thursday in four games on the KU diamond.
Although Kansas beat Arkansas 7-4 and 9-5 last week, Coach Floyd Temple isn't at all optimistic about the team's chances in the return series, for he won't be able to use Bob Allison and Bob Conn in these two games.
Allison and Conn will report for spring football practice and will be available for only the games played on Friday and Saturday. However, both will play in the opening conference games with Kansas State, and it is probable that they will play in the Oklahoma series on May 12-13 which falls on a Wednesday and Thursday. All of the other conference games are scheduled for Friday and Saturday.
Not only will Allison and Conn be unavailable, but also pitchers Dick Wogan and Fuzzy Martin and catcher John Handley. Spring practice puts Coach Temple's pitching staff in a tight squeeze this week, for Martin and Wogan would have done some pitching in the game tomorrow.
Lefthander Wayne Tiemeier, who pitched eight-hit ball to beat Tulsa 10-1, will face the Razorbacks today and Ben Dalton is the probable pitcher for the game tomorrow.
Bob Shirley and John Brosse will pitch the Kansas State series, and Tiemeier will do the relief pitching if any is needed in those two games. Tiemeier pitched the final two innings in relief for Shirley in the 7-4 victory over the Porkers and relieved Brosse in the eighth inning of the second game at Fayetteville.
"On the whole the boys surprised me in these first four games," Coach Temple said "The pitchers were an exceptionally pleasant surprise, for none of them had pitched more than six innings, but Shirley pitched 7 2-3 innings, Brose pitched 8 1-3 innings, and Tiemier pitched nine innings."
"The biggest disappointment is in the team's offense, for without Allison and Conn, the team lacks scoring punch. Third baseman Forrest Hoglund is a good fielder but a weak hitter as is shortstop Harold Bergsten. If we play Heitholt at shortstop, we have plenty of hitting at that position but not much fielding."
The Tulsa series which KU split, losing the first game 16-12 and winning the second game 10-1, saw some unusual baseball. KU scored 12 rams on only four hits, but had the benefit of 23 walks in a game which lasted three hours and 45 minutes. The KU pitchers in this game allowed 14 hits and gave 13 walks.
Either Dave Carpenter or Charlie Bogan will probably start for Arkansas today. Bogan and Bob Mitchell pitched Friday when Missouri beat them 18-0. Carpetter pitched the second game of the series at Fayetteville and was tagged for nine runs on nine hits in three innings. Bogan came in in relief and allowed only three hits in the last six innings.
In the second game of the series KU pulled a triple play. It occurred in the fourth inning when Tulsa had scored one run and had runners on first and second. The play started when the Tulsa right fielder, Milt Lairmore, hit a line drive that Hoglund speared. He fired to Bill Pulliam at second to double Ray Wrona, and Pullium threw to first to John Trombold tripling Bob Latch off of first.
Coach Temple plans to start Pulliam at second base, Heitholt in center field. Perry in left field, Trombold at first base, Aungst will catch, Hoglund at third base, Bill Blair in right field, and Bergsten at shortstop, until he has the use of the football players again.
Bat. Avg. Ab H Pct Po A E Rb
Brose 2 1 .500 0 3 0 0
Shirley 4 2 .500 0 1 0 0
Handley 2 1 .500 0 0 0 0
Heoltth 9 4 .444 3 4 2 1
Allison 16 7 .438 8 1 0 5
Pulliam 16 6 .400 10 12 1 2
Tiemeir 5 2 .400 2 3 0 0
Trombregt 19 6 .316 24 4 0 3
Conn 18 5 .278 6 0 0 8
Aungst 17 3 .176 0 0 2 5
Perry 17 2 .118 6 1 2 4
Hoglund 15 0 .000 8 7 0 2
Bergsten 7 0 .000 8 7 0 1
Dalton 3 0 .000 0 1 0 0
Wogan 1 0 .000 0 0 0 0
Pitching W L W Ip R Ho So Bb Er
Shirley 1 0 7 4 10 9 1
Brose 1 0 8½ 5 9 3 5 5
Tiemeil 1 0 12½ 5 9 3 5 1
Dalton 0 1 4⅓ 10 10 1 7 10
Wogan 0 0 2⅓ 3 3 3 3 3
Martin 0 0 1 3 1 0 1 3
Bums, Bosox Citrus Champs
By UNITED PRESS
The Dodgers and Red Sox were crowned the Grapefruit league champions today, while the Yankees and Phillies wound up with the "booby prizes" for finishing at the bottom of the heap.
Brooklyn, which won the National league's spring title with a record of 23 exhibition victories and 11 defeats from a .676 percentage, concluded the training grind with a 5-2 victory over the Yankees yesterday.
Jackie Robinson batted in three runs and Gilhodges the other two as the Yankees finished their poorest spring in years with a record of 15 victories (including seven against the Giants and nine minor league clubs), 19 defeats last place in the American league's citrus standings.
The Red Sox, who won the league crown with 18 victories and 12 defeats for -a .600 percentage, wound up their spring affairs with a 5-2 triumph over Milwaukee.
Despite a 1-0 decision over their city rivals, the Athletics, Steve O'Neill's Phillies showed undisputed possession of last place in the National league with a 12-20 spring record and a .375 mark.
The Cubs rallied for eight runs in the fourth inning to defeat the White Sox, 12-9.
Beginning today and extending through the end of this semester The University Shop will offer a weekly SPECIAL. This special will consist of a category of merchandise which for that week only will be reduced 20% in price. The special for each week will be drawn by one of our customers the preceding week-end and announced in the Monday issue of the Daily Kannounced in the Monday issue of the Daily Kansan. Be watching for these announcements. Fol
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Richards is planning to two-platoon his club, loading the lineup with right-handed hitters when opposing southpaws and with left-handed batters when facing right-handed hurlers.
Manager Paul Richards of the Chicago White Sox is shooting for the American league pennant this year and he hopes to do it by following the system Casey Stengel used when he led the Yankees to the first of their five successive American league championships in 1949.
NOTE It is NOT necessary to buy more than one item.
Chisox Hope to Win Flag Will Use Stengel's System
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 12, 1954
the university shop
1420 Crescent Road
Across from Lindley
Whether it will be successful is problematical because so much depends on whether some rookies come through along with a veteran of the baseball wars, Cass Michaels: Even if they do, it appears likely the White Sox could find themselves in trouble when it comes to power hitting and pitching. They have speed, a fine defensive club and on their 1953 record, the best left-rightly pitching pair in the league in Billy Pierce and Virgil Trucks.
By UNITED PRESS
Pierce won 18 while losing 12 last season and Trucks, who started the year with the Browns, wound up with a 20-10 record, by far his best year in the majors. Baseball men doubt that they will wind up winning 38 games between them again this coming season.
Sandy Consuegra (7-5) and Mike Fornieles (8-7) also will be spotted as starters, with Harry Dorish (10-6) and Luis Aloma (2-0) the bullpen specialists. Al Sima, who won two
But even if they do, the supporting hurling cast is not an impressive one. Bob Keegan, 11-7 in 1953, will be the No. 3 starter, while two rookies are in the running to round out the big four—Jack Harshman, the former first baseman who won 23 at Nashville last year, and 19-year-old Tom Flanagan, a southpaw who was the most impressive pitcher on the team in spring exhibition games.
Ferris Fain, if he can regain his batting eye, will play first with rookie Bob Boyd to understudy him. But Richards is hoping that Fain can play every day so he can use Boyd as part of his two-platoon system. That would put the long-ball hitters in the outfield when right-handers go against the White Sox.
At third, Michaels will start when left-handers are going against the Sox, with Winnie Minoso, who led the White Sox in almost every offensive department in 1953, taking over the bag when right-handers face the club. Otherwise it will be Minoso in the outfield. He will play against all kinds of pitching.
Only two infield positions are set—Nellie Fox at second base and Chico Carrasquel at short. Fox has had trouble with the double play at second but is such a scraper that Richards likes him. But the Sox manager is not too pleased this spring with Carrasquel's efforts. He doesn't think his Latin-American fielding star is hustling like he used to.
while losing three with the Senators last season and Don Johnson, who is up for another try after winning 15 at Toronto, are other possibilities.
When southpaws pitch against the Sox, Richards hopes to use Johnny Groth in center, Bill Wilson, who hit .311 for Memphis last season, in right and Minoso in left. When right-handers go against them, it will be Willard Marshall in left, Jim Rivera in center and Ed Stewart in left.
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CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Thursday. April 15
Thursday, April 15
Page 5
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KU Footballers Begin Spring Practice Today
By DANA LEIBENGOOD
A 105 man squad including 17 lettermen will report today for the opening of spring football practice—the first under new Coach Charles V. Mather.
Kansan Sports Editor
Coach Mather plans to start with a full scale practice of two hours each day; since he assumes that the boys will be in good condition when they report for drills. Naturally the boys in the best physical condition will have a better chance to stick with the squad than those in poor condition, the coach said.
Of the 105 men, more than half of them will be cut according to Coach Mather. In future years he plans to have 22 men from each class on the squad, but since there are only five seniors on the squad this year it will number only about 49 at the close of spring drills. The coach said that a few more men might be carried, but it hasn't been definitely planned as yet.
"This year we will be forced to go with the boys who show the most ability first," the coach said. "We know that we will make some mistakes, but in our position, we can't afford to teach the boys the game from the beginning. We always lose some boys with potential this way, but we haven't got the time to develop it."
"Very seldom does an inexperienced boy improve so much that it will enable him to bent out an experienced boy at the same rate."
The first scrimmage, of about 90 minutes in length, will be held Wednesday afternoon, and movies will be taken of it. The first squad cut will be made after the coaches have a chance to view these pictures over the week end.
Moves will also be taken of scrimmages on April 21 and 23, and two more squad cuts will be made at this time, the coach said.
"Although we have spent some time looking at pictures of last year's team, we have been so busy that we haven't gone over them as
closely as we plan to this summer, the coach said. During the summer practice, the ones taken in spring practice, which are the most valuable to us."
"We don't use our IBM machines in the spring practice, for the record of execution isn't as important as it is during the fall. We always expect the boys to be somewhat erratic during the spring."
During the spring practice, which lasts until May 15, when the Varsity-Alumni game will be played, the coach plans to make 14 position changes. Eleven of these switches will be made to strengthen the line, which was hard hit by graduation. Only Dick Knowles and right end Don Bracelin are returning staters from the 1953 line.
The pre-determined switches are: tackle knowledge to guard, fullback John Anderson to end, left halfback Don Hess to fullback, tackle Bud Bixler to center, tackle George Carter to center, end Gene Blasi to tackle, quarterback Paul Smith to end, quarterback Fuzzy Martin to end, end Mike Rodgers to tackle.
fullback LaVern Fiss to guard, halfback Don Freutenzett to guard
Bob Bentley to quarterback, Bob Loeyrth to quarterback, and halfback Carryer to fullback
Five of the men to be switched,
Knowles, Anderson, Hess, Bixler,
and Forsyth were lettermen last
year.
Six more lettermen are competing in baseball and track. Bob Allison, Bob Conn, and John Handleley are out for baseball, and Ralph Moody, Knowles and Blasi are on the track team.
Other lettermen returning from last year's team are Bob Hubbard, Dick Blowey, John McFarland, Dick Sandifer, Rex Sullivan, and Gene Vignatelli. Guard Jack Uschen, who lettered as a sophomore in 1950, has returned from service and will be out for practice.
Only three practices will be held the first week because or the Kansas Relays. Thursday will be an "off" day every week because of ROTC. After this week it will be a steady four day a week grind.
Kansas' tennis team almost upset highly favored Colorado here Saturday in a dual meet, but the Buffalooes rallied to take the final doubles match after KU had pulled ahead in the first set.
Netmen Lose To Buffs, 4-3
Colorado won the match 4 to 3. Each team had won three matches when the final doubles event got under way. Roger Youmans and Merl Sellers of the Jayhawks moved to a 5-3 lead in games in the initial set, but then Dan Luna and Bob Hunsberger put on a great drive to win the set 7-5. They went on to take the second and deciding set 6-3.
Colorado won the match 4 to 3
The results:
Al Hedstrom (K), def. Carl Huter Jr., 6-2, 6-0.
Jerry Storika (C), def. Dick Hadley, 6-4, 6-2.
Dan Luna (C), def. Don Franklin,
4-6, 6-1, 6-2.
Bob Hunsberger (C), def. Merl Sellers. 6-3, 6-4.
Hedstrom and Hadley (K), def Huter and Storika, 6-0, 6-1.
Roger Youmans (K), def. John Browne. 6-4, 6-0.
Luna and Hunsberger (C), def.
Sellers and Youmans. 7-5, 6-3.
Two matches are on tap for this week, both on the KU courts. Tomorrow afternoon Mankato, Minn. State Teachers college will be the guest team and Wednesday Omaha will provide the opposition.
The Syracuse Nationals defeated the Minneapolis Lakers 65-63 last night to even their National Basketball association playoffs at three games each.
Enos Slaughter, outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals for 16 years, was traded to the World Champion New York Yankees.
Hal Newhouser signed a 1954 baseball contract to play with the Cleveland Indians.
Sixty-one universities, colleges and junior colleges have entered the 29th annual Kansas Relays to date. Several more may be accepted before the actual running this week-end.
61 Schools Have Entered Relays, More Expected
Twenty-two universities with 311 men have been accepted, 28 colleges with 292 men, and 11 junior colleges with 70 men.
Schools entered and the number of men:
Universities—Texas A&M (12)
Marquette (6), Baylor (8), Oklahoma A&M (21), SMU (8), Drake (10), Minnesota 10, Wichita (20)
Notre Dame (13), Kansas 24. Houston 13, Mississippi (7), Arkansas (17), Iowa (16), Iowa State (21),
Kansas State (24), Oklahoma (16).
Nebraska (13), Missouri (31), Texas (15), TCU (3), and Tulane (3)
Colleges—Ft. Hays (21), Bethel (8), Kansas Wesleyan (6), Missouri Valley (14), Loyola of Chicago (12), Baker (12), Ottawa (11), Grinnell (11), Kearney, Neb. (14, Omaha (1), Howard Payne (4), Emporia State (21), Southwestern (9), Compton, Calif., (9), Louisiana Tech (5), Hardin-Simmons (1), South Dakota State (11), Bethany (10), College of Emporia (1), Dana, Neb. (2), Morningside (1), North Texas State (8), Westminster (10), William Jewell (17), Washburn (9), Pittsburg 31, Los Angeles City College (6), and Oklahoma Baptist (11).
Junior colleges—El Dorado (6), Garden City (7), Wentworth (6), Wright of Chicago (8), Kansas City (6), Dodge City (1), Hutchinson (6), Arkansas City (6), Coffeyville (11), Fairbury, Neb., (6), and Parsons (7).
A&M Golfers Beat Jayhawks, $ 8^{1/2}-3^{1/2} $
The KU golf team Saturday lost its first match in two outings to the visiting Oklahoma Aggies, $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ to 8 1/2
The Jayhawks could win but one match on the Lawrence Country club 18-hole course. The Aggies' Joe Walser, who carded a 71, took medalist honors in leading his team to its third victory without a defeat.
The results:
Joe Walser (O), def. Harlan Hise,
3-0.
Bob Richards (K), def. Ben Dickson.
2½ - ¾.
John Nichols (O), de., Pete Rush, 3-0.
Buddy Sprague (O), def. Eddie MacGee, 2-1.
The Kansans of Coach Donn Everett won their first match April 2 over Washburn, 9 to 3, at Topeka. Hise, Richards, and John Prosser picked up triumphs for KU, and MacGee lost.
Wednesday Kansas will host Omaha at the Country club.
The Montreal Canadians scored a 1-0 overtime victory of the Detroit Red Wings to cut the Red Wings' lead to 3-2 in their Stanley Cup hockey playoffs last night.
University Daily Kansan
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The two mile event was the only sweep by Kansas, and the only sweep made by either team. Al Frame won the event in 9:29. Dick Wilson took second place, and Tom Rupp picked up third.
Bill Biberstein won the high hurdles but finished second to Ron Dozier in the low hurdles.
Santee Leads Track Team To Victory Over Bears
With Wes Santee leading the way with victories in the half mile and mile the University of Kansas track team defeated the highly rated California Bears $ 70\frac{1}{2}-60\frac{1}{2} $ in a dual track meet at Berkeley last Saturday.
California showed its main strength in the weight events and the quarter mile. Kansas scored a second and three thirds in these events. Don Smeegas picked up a second place in the javelin; B尼ieder a third in the shot; Morris Kay, a third in the discus, and Frank Cindrich a third in the quarter mile.
Spinner Dick Blair was also a double winner for Kansas finishing first in the 100-yard dash in 9.8 and in the 220-yard dash in 21.4.
Santee's time of 4:05.5 was some what of a disappointment to the fans, but they still cheered wildly for him especially after he won the half mile only 45 minutes after his mile victory. Later he ran the third leg on the winning mile relay team.
Kansas also won firsts in the high hurdles, broad jump, high jump, and the two mile, and scored in every other event. Bob Smith of KU put on a fine showing winning the broad jump at 23 feet 3 inches and tying for first in the high jump with teammate Kermit Hollingsworth at 6 feet 2 inches.
PATIEN
PSY
Nieder's throw of 50 feet 9/4 inches marked the second time in the last week that he has thrown over 50 feet with the college shot
This dual victory was the second brilliant performance given by the Kansas track team during spring vacation, for it had made a spectacular showing in the Texas Relays setting a new world record in the sprint medley relay.
Kansas also won the two mile
and four mile relays with Santee turning in excellent anchor times of 1:49.7 and 4:06.
The results of the California dual meet:
Sneegas and Biberstein won the javelin and high hurdles, respectively, to give the Jayhawks a total of five first place awards, and Santee won the trophy as the most valuable man in the meet for the second straight year.
Mile run—1, Wes Santee, Kansas; 2, Art Dalzell, Kansas; 3, Len Simpson, California. 4:05.5.
Shot put—1, Charles Butt, California (53 ft. 2¾ inches); 2, John Hancock (51 feet; 9 inches; 3, Bill Neider, Kansas (50 feet; 9¾ inches).
440-yd. dash—1, Steve Turner,
California; 2. Don Timmerman,
California; 3, Frank Cindrich, Kan²
sas. 48.0.
100-yd. dash—1, Dick Blair, Kansas; 2, Guy Blackburn, California; 3, Ralph Moody, Kansas. '69.8.
Javelin-1, Dick Righter, California (205 ft. 5 in.;) 2, Don Sneegas, Kansas 184 ft. 5 in.;) 3, Al Norris, California (178 ft. 3 in.)
880-yd. run—1, Wes Santee, Kansas; 2, Lon Spurrier, California; 3, Lloyd Koby, Kansas, and Ed Wilson, California. 1:51.5.
High hurdles—1, Bill Biberstein,
3, Walt Brignon, California, 1496.
High jump-1, Kermit Hollingsworth, Kansas (6 ft., 2 in.); 2, tie; Bob Smith, Kansas, and Robin Sairbairn, California (6 ft.).
Broad jump—1. Bob Smith, Kansas (23 ft. 3 in.; 1). Paul Hunt, Kansas, (22 ft. 4' 1/2 in.; 3). Marshall Celieston, California (22 ft. 31/2 in.).
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University Daily Kansan Monday, April 12.195
Around the World
Puerto Rican Red Released on Bail
San Juan, Puerto Rico—(U.P.Cosar Andreu Iglesias, president of the Puerto Rican Communist party jailed after the shooting incident in the U.S. House of Representatives, was free in $18,000 bail today.
The bail was subscribed by his wife and a cousin of the prisoner, after Judge P. Roman Benitez reduced the sum from $25,000 to $18,-000 yesterday.
Tokyo — U.(P.)— Premier Shigeru Yoshida told the Diet today he opposed Japanese participation in a Pacific conuterpart of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
"The misunderstandings harbored against Japan by the nations of southeast Asia and Australia have not yet been dissolved," he said. "To enter a system for regional collective security at such a time would be unwise from the effect it would have on foreign countries."
Datchet, England —(U.P.)— Prince Nicholas of Yugoslavia, was killed today in an automobile crash while he was driving alone towards London.
He was the son of Prince Paul, former prince regent, and Princess Oiga, a sister of the Duchess of Kest.
Frankfort, Germany—(U.P.)—Beverly Jack, lovely "Maid of Cotton" of El Paso, Tex., arrived yesterday from Paris for a two-day visit and was welcomed by city officials and
clothing representatives at Rhine- Main airport
She turned down a foaming stein of beer offered at the airport but smilingly munched on a frankfurter while photographers flashed away
Taipei, Formosa —(U.P.)— Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-Tung has called a top-level conference of his military and administrative lieutenants for next week, a Nationalist report said today.
The Nationalist sources said Mao wished to map strategy in the face of the U. N. drive for "united action" and that the Peiping regime took the American warning with concern.
Bonn, Germany —(U.P.)— Three U. S. Jewish leaders reported yesterday they had found little evidence of surviving political Nazism in West Germany but that the nation still suffers a hangover of Hitler-inspired anti-Semitism.
The three were national director Benjamin R. Epstein, treasurer Jaecobs Alson and public relations director Nathan C. Belth.
London —(U.P.) The government censured the town of Coventry yesterday for disbanding its civil defense committee because of the hydrogen bomb.
Las Vegas Publisher Levels Libel Charge at McCarthy
Dr. Scott E. Bedford of the University of Chicago will speak at 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. today at Liberty Memorial High school, on the topic, "The Modern City and It's Sociological Aspects."
Three industrial design majors were awarded prizes for designs for home humidifiers yesterday. Robert Grimes, fine arts senior, received a $50 first prize. Second and third prizes of $30 and $20 respectively were awarded to Herbert Schumacher, fine arts senior, and Keith Coffin, fine arts junior.
Design Majors Receive Awards
He will speak on the future of housing in Americas, and will explain the major housing experiments going on in the last few years.
The average depth of U.S. underground coal mines is 190 feet.
Dr. Bedford has made a study of city development and has written several books on the subject. He stresses the need for well-planned cities, as well as for beautiful cities
Las Vegas, Nev.—(U.P.)—Herman (Hank) M. Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, will seek a county grand jury indictment for criminal libel against Sen. Joseph McCarthy, charging the Wisconsin Congressman called him an admitted ex-Communist.
City Planning To be Discussed
Using slides, Dr. Bedford will show how the best features of the great cities of the world can be incorporated into the planning of small cities.
Norman G. Humphreys, president of the Tempmaster Corporation of Kansas City, presented the awards. The winning design for the humidifiers will be produced by the corporation in 1955.
Mr. Greenspun announced his intention to seek the indictment last night. At the same time said he would have his attorneys find out whether there are federal libel laws under which the Republican Senator could be charged.
A hospital spokesman said Mr. and Mrs. Ceel Hartley could take him to their Petersburg, Ind., home whenever they wished.
The baby was hospitalized March 18 when the left head, the baby's speaker side, developed pneumonia. He is in an oxygen tent until last Monday.
Indianapolis —(U,P)— The parents of Indiana's two-headed baby may take him home from Miley hospital today. He has "fully recovered" from a case of pneumonia.
Two-Headed Baby To Leave Hospital
The publisher has announced he will ask the justice department to prosecute all newspapers, wire services, and radio and television stations which used the story of his testimony in the impairment on charges he used the mails to incite "the murder or assassination" of Sen. McCarthy.
The lecture schedule: "Enzymatic reactions at solid interphases and across barriers, 4 p.m. Tuesday, 101 Snow; 'Long range forces', 4 p.m. Wednesday 305 Bailey; 'Biochemical interactions and cooperative phenomena,' 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 210 Blake.
He contends that all news media which sent the story of the indictment through the mails are guilty of violating the same federal statute—that prohibiting sending obscene material through the mails.
Mr. Greenspun charged the indictment was obtained "at the instigation of Senator McCarthy."
KU scientists describe Dr. Rothen as an internationally known figure for his research in stereochemistry, optical activity and the ultra-centrifuge and problems cutting across the lines of biochemistry, physics and physical chemistry. He has pioneered in applying physical chemistry to enzyme activity and immunology.
"I want to see how far newspapers are willing to back up another newspaper that is in danger of being silenced and muzzled because it exercised the prerogative of fair comment," he said. "This not only is a threat to the Las Vegas Sun, but to all newspapers in this country."
The parents said arrangements are being made to build a glass-enclosed nursery for the child
Dr. Alexandre Rothen of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York will deliver three public lectures reporting on research in biology, chemistry and physics at the University Tuesday-Thursday.
"I want to see how far the justice department is willing to carry this thing," the publisher said.
Mr. Greenspun said Sen. McCarthy referred to him as "an admitted ex-Communist" in a speech at a Republican rally here in October, 1952.
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Engineerettes 8. p.m. Oread room Student Union. For wives of engineering and architecture students. Speaker in Wood Newton, "Balancing the Budget."
KU Dames Child study group, 7:30 pm. Great room, Student Union, Speak-up Desk, Computer lab, department. All student invites involved. Alpha Gamma business meeting, 7:30 pm. 312 School Building.
Medical Research To be Discussed
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
**VETS:** 7:30 p.m., Jawahk room. Stats tell students the number of seats for signing of Spring Interurban Homestead Correspondents meeting, $5 Student Union. Short meeting speaker.
We Specialize In MEXICAN FOOD 434 Locust Ph.4199 La Tropicana Club Open Sundays
when rich deserts are on the menu.
The secret of whether they gain or lose weight is in the number of calories they eat a day.
Those who are eating to gain weight are urged to eat at least 2,500 calories a day and women who are eating to lose weight eat only 1,000 to 1,500 calories a day.
They are not starving. Here is what they had to eat last Friday: one half grapefruit, scrambled eggs, toast, and milk for breakfast, corn fritters, green beans, fruit salad on lettuce, aprites, and milk or fried fish mix fruit, molded cherry salad, fruit, and milk for dinner.
Participation in the program is voluntary. They were required to go to Watkins hospital and get a doctor's approval slip before being allowed to go on the diet.
The women are required to eat breakfast. If they miss eating more than two mornings they are disqualified and cannot continue to sit at the diet table. They must drink three glasses of milk a day and are asked to get plenty of sleep.
Dr. Zepplin, said "the right weight is important for both physical and psychological well being and it can and should be maintained through proper diet." She got the idea for a diet program last year when she saw women skip meals to lose weight.
7 Faculty Members Attend Conference
Seven members of the faculty attended the sixth annual human relations conference at Athens, Ohio, last week.
Fifty-six women are eating to lose weight and six girls are eating to gain weight.
The program is directed by Dr. Ruth Zepplin, associate professor of home economics in cooperation with Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University Health service at Watkins hospital; and Miss Ruth Hopkins, North college dietitian. Diane McFarland, and Norma Lou Falletta, college seniors, are helping with the program.
This is the second program of its type to be set up in North College dining room. Last year, students lost up to two pounds a week for a ten week period. Those students trying to gain weight were less successful, but did gain some.
Diet tables are now set up in North College dining room to prove to girls that they can either gain or lose weight on dormitory food.
College Women Lose Weight on Diet Tables
They eat the same food as the other girls in the dorm, except they drink skimmed milk and eat fruit
The diet tables will be continued until the end of the semester.
They were William R. Butler, assistant dean of men; Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology; Marston M. McCluggage, acting chairman of the department of human relations; Edgar L. Sherbenou, instructor in human relations; Charles K. Warriner, assistant professor of socioloy and human relations; W. Keith Weltmer, associate professor of economics, and Hilden Gibson, professor of political science, sociology and human relations.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
es
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gain or
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Here is
Friday:
dred eggs,
i corn
salad on
ilk for
vegetables,
and milk
to gain
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---
United States Policy on Indochina 'Send Our Money-Not Our Blood'
By UNITED PRESS
Washington—The big fact behind Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' urgent journey to London and Paris is the Eisenhower administration's readiness to spend without limit to beat back the Communist invasion of Southeast Asia.
The situation is critical, probably more so than the American people realize. The administration's eagerness to spend money is a fair measure of its determination not to spend American blood.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Mr. Dulles have carried American foreign policy to a new and critical stage in recent weeks. Mr. Dulles' emergency visit to England and France naturally followed British and French reluctance to go along with the new policy.
rms conference that Indochina was a extrordinary, primary importance to the free world. Mr. Eisenhower gave Indochina a priority of importance and significance comparable to that of Korea.
The President alerted the nation to the country's new position about three weeks ago when he told a
Two weeks ago in New York Mr. Dulles spelled it out. He said the United States policy was that Communist domination of Southeast Asia by whatever means should be resisted by united action. That put the United States squarely in the way of Communist efforts to dominate that area either by military or political conquest.
It committed the United States to united action against such domination either through the United Nations or, apparently, by the joint action of free states. These are hard diplomatic facts. They led to questions on Capitol hill and at Mr. Eisenhower's new conferences about the possibility of United States soldiers going into the Indochina battle lines.
the administration repudiated such ideas quickly. Mr. Eisenhower news conference he couldn't imagine any greater disadvantage to this country than the use of American ground forces in meeting each flare-up of violence contrived by Communist pressure around the world.
Mr. Dulles' New York policy statement, however, was broad enough to cover the use of American fighting men in Indochina if necessary. That would be a last resort, however, if at all, and the immediate project is to stiffen the backs of friends and allies against an Indochina sell-out at the Geneva conference scheduled to begin April 26.
The mood in France is for a negotiated peace. Best American judgment is that any negotiated peace the Communists would accept would lead shortly to Communist domination of Indochina and, thereafter, of Laos. There is reason that Geneva might become another Munich.
There is sound military judgment in support of the belief that the Indoochinese war can be won, perhaps in 1956. The American opinion is that it might be won sooner if the French would abandon some of their outmoded colonial policies, widen the limits of inde-
London — (U.P.) U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles held an urgent meeting with British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden today, seeking to win England's approval of a warning to Red China to stay out of Indochina.
Dulles, Eden Seek Agreement
As Mr. Dulles and Britain's top diplomat began their talks at 11 a.m. (4 a.m. CST), laborites demanded that Mr. Eden stand firm against American pressure.
The morning meeting with Mr. Eden was the first of two sessions with the foreign secretary scheduled by Mr. Dulles. They meet again in the afternoon and tonight Mr. Dulles has a dinner date with Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
On his arrival yesterday, Mr Dulles said at the airport that the Indochina situation "is a danger to both our countries, as well as to others."
After his meetings with Mr. Eden and Mr. Churchill, Mr. Dulles will fly to Paris tomorrow for urgent consultations with French officials on Indochina.
Before Mr. Dulles went to the foreign office to begin his talks with Mr. Eden, Pravda, the Communist party newspaper, charged that Mr. Dulles was trying to seize from France the command of the Indochina war.
As Mr. Dulles and Eden met, the French cabinet in Paris held an emergency session to decide on France's policy when the American diplom arrives there tomorrow.
Informed sources said they believed a compromise would be reached on Mr. Dulles' wish to take "united action" against aggression in the Far East now and Mr. Eden's desire to wait until the Geneva conference ends.
The sources said Mr. Eden agreed fully with Mr. Dulles that there must be no "sell out" or "appeasement" of Communism in southeast Asia. The only difference was one of timing.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 12, 1954
Brownell Fights Plan To Ban Communists
Washington—(U.P.)-Attorney opposed legislative proposals to make membership a crime.
Mr. Brownell said such legislation involves "constitutional doubts," would "force the Communist movement underground," and "increase the already difficult investigatory job of the FBI."
He told the House Judiciary committee that after enactment of such legislation it probably would take "at least several years" before a final court ruling on its constitutionality.
Furthermore, he added, the idea that such legislation would mean the quick conviction of a large number of Communists is a "false impression." This job would be a tremendous task," he said.
In presenting the administration's position on such legislation for the first time, Mr. Brownell outlined the government's own proposals to deal with the Communist threat as he presented them Friday night in a television broadcast.
"The sum total of our present laws, plus the early enactment of the measures recommended by the administration, make up a compre- and effective program to destroy the Communist menace," he said.
These recommendations are:
That labor unions or industrial organizations under domination of Communists and in a position to damage national security be required to register under the Internal Security act; permit removal from defense-important industries employees who "because of their sympathies and associations cannot safely be permitted access to such industries; broadening of sabotage laws; extension of the statute of limitations from three to five years in the case of non-capital offenses; make wire-tap evidence admissible in prosecution in national security cases; peacetime espionage be made punishable by death; penalties for harboring fugitives be
General Herbert Brownell today outlaw the Communist party and
creased, and loss of citizenship for Americans convicted under the Smith act of conspiring to advocate the overthrow of the government by force or violence.
Benefit Concert Set for Sunday
A benefit concert to establish student scholarships in music will be sponsored by Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary music fraternity at 4 p.m. Sunday in Strong auditorium.
The University chapter will present a program consisting of two seldom heard works, the "Coffee Cantata" of Bach, and Bohuslav Martiniu's "La Revue de Cuisine." The performers will be members of the music faculty.
Soloists for the "Coffee Cantata" will be Elizabeth Townsy, soprano; Joseph Willkins, tenor, and Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone. Jan Chiapusso, harpsichord; Marcus Hahn, flute, and the University String Quartet, comprised of Raymond Cerf and Milton Steinhardt, violins; Karel Blass, viola, and Raymond Stuhl, cello, will provide accompaniment.
"La Revue de Cuisine" will be performed by Raymond Zepp, clarinet; Austin Ledwith, bassoon; Leo Horacek, trumpet; James Smolko, piano; Raymond Cerf, violin, and Raymond Stuhl, cello. The work is in four movements which show prominent dance influence, especially in the second and third movements titled "Tango" and "Charleston."
Tickets may be purchased in the Fine Arts office for $1, tax included, or at the performance.
Boys Released After 7 Years As Red Captives
Washington —(U.P)— The State department announced today that Communist Romania has freed the Georgescu brothers, Constantin and Peter, to join their naturalized parents in the U. S.
Constantin is 20; Peter is 15.
The two boys had been unable to leave Romania despite repeated attempts of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Valerius C. Georgescu of New York and the State department to get their freedom.
The parents and their boys had been separated almost seven years Constantin and Peter left Bucharest in Munich, Germany, this morning.
The boys talked with their mother in New York by telephone this morning.
State department officials said they will come to the U. S. soon, but were unable to say exactly when.
"Their departure from Romania came about as a result of a long series of approaches by the department in which President Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulies took a personal interest," the State department announced.
The father of the two boys came to the U. S. in 1947 to consult with Standard Oil of New Jersey executives. At the time the father was executive manager for the firm in Romania.
Ex-sailor Now Landlubber
Jacksonville, Fla. —(U.P.)—James L. Haugh of Findlay, O., joined the Navy 22 years ago to see the world. Now Haugh has been discharged after serving in Europe, Asia and South America and plans to find out what his own country is like by traveling around the United States in a trailer.
Lake Superior, longest of the Great Lakes, is 350 miles long.
Counsel Told to Keep Mum
Washington—(U.P.)-The S e n a t e investigating subcommittee today told its new counsel in the Army-McCarthy inquiry to stay off radio and television shows and issue no press statements.
The gag on special counsel Ray H. Jenkins was unanimously voted as the first move of the subcommittee today in a meeting to set ground rules for its hearings on the fight between Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) and the Army.
The same rule will apply to the
rest of the special staff hired for the investigation, temporary chairman Karl E. Mundt (R.-S.D.) told newsmen.
Sen Mundt said the rule was voted at Mr. Jenkins' own request. Mr. Jenkins was present at the meeting.
The Adjutant General's Office—the heart of the Army's administrative operation—receives on an average more than 45,000 pieces of mail every day.
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SUMMER SCHOOL
ENJOY THE
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Two 5-week terms, June 14-July 20; July 22-August 24, offer opportunities for accelerating study, for make-up and for retresher courses. Eight hundred course leading to baccalaureate or advanced degrees. For information, write Director of Summer Session, Macky 326, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
51st Year, No. 123
Tuesday, April 13, 1954
Files Opened In Investigation Of FHA Scandal
Washington —(U.P.)— Investigators dug into Federal Housing administration files today to smash a multi-million-dollar home and apartment loan scandal involving both Republican and Democratic administrations.
A well informed source revealed that President Eisenhower ordered seizure of the agency's files here and in field offices late yesterday after the FHA refused to open them for an investigation.
Albert M. Cole, housing and home finance agency chief and Hollyday's superior, disclosed the scandal yesterday and charged "gross negligence or collusion" by FHA officials. He said Hollyday had condoned "illegal employment."
FBI and additional special agents swarmed over the records seeking fresh evidence of wrong-doing under two Federal Housing programs. Under one program, many home owners have been "fleeced" by high pressure home improvement salesmen. Under the other, FHA-insured loans have been made for $75,000,000 more than the cost of the projects.
Mr. Cole did not identify the others involved but said "most" top FHA officials are under scrutiny. He said some of the cases being investigated go back to the Truman administration and that "some" were in the Eisenhower administration.
Mr. Eisenhower ousted FHA Chief Guy T. O., Hollyday to make way for a full scale investigation of the agency's operations, Hollyday, an Eisenhower appointee, said he was still "most enthusiastic" about the administration but refused to comment on his ouster.
but the truth of the agency who, he said, face "criminal" prosecution.
Mr. Cole said there are 12 top officials of the agency, some hold-overs from the Truman administration or earlier. Mr. Cole upheld approval of the resignation of one of them—Assistant Commissioner Clyde L. Powell—to determine if he is involved in the scandal. Mr. Powell, who decided to quit after 20 years with FHA, denied any knowledge of wrong-doing and blamed his resignation on "politics."
Mr. Cole said the Justice department has already begun prosecution in some cases of "serious irregularities and abuses" under the program's government insurance of loans to finance small home improvements.
an important source of reduced attorneys an area most ready to start action in other cases where exorbitant profits have been realized from excessive government-insured loans on apartment houses. But he said investigators have so far only "scratched the surface" in their look into this program.
Mr. Cole appointed Los Angeles Attorney William F. McKenna, a former congressional investigator, as deputy to direct the inquiry.
Weather
The Kansas weatherman said today "prospects for moisture continue unfavorable." U. S. Meteorologist
WARMER
P. N. Eland said that toward t he end of the week there might be a little rain, however. Traces of drizzle were reported early today at Wichita a n d n Hutchinson. Kansas was in a slow warm-up to d ay that will continue tomorrow. A f-
WARMER.
termoon high readings should generally be in the 70s. The peak temperature Monday was 69 degrees at Hill City, Russell and Salina. This morning's low was 40 at Goodland
100
A characteristic 18th century drawing by Giovanni Agostina Ratti representing an "Allegory on Education" is the masterpiece of the month for April now on display at the Museum of Art.
The rococo drawing is a preparatory sketch for a fresco which Ratti, one of the leading north Italian painters of the 18th century, was commissioned to draw in the Jesuit school in Genoa, the Via Balbi. Enclosed in an ornamental frame, it was made to decorate a wall.
DORIS FLEESON
Museum Displays Ratti Drawing
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
The subject was to be didactic as well as decorative. In the lower zone of the picture, earnest and fatcheeked students dressed in knee breeches, jackets, and waistcoats, with their hair neatly powdered, struggled over the rocky road of learning.
Through their efforts they will reach the middle zone where great poets and thinkers of the past wait to help them on their way. Once acquainted with these great minds and with their creations, the students will be helped onward and upward* toward Parnassus, where Appollo, the god of art and learning, is seated among the nine Muses.
Doris Fleeson Chosen to Speak At Kansan Fete
Doris Fleeson, columnist for the Bell syndicate, will be the featured speaker at the annual University Daily Kansan Board dinner May 15.
Miss Fleeson was graduated from the University in 1923. She is a native of Sterling. She was a political reporter and Washington correspondent for the New York Daily News from 1927 to 1942 and served as a wan correspondent for Woman's Home Companion in 1943 and 1944. She has been the Washington correspondent with the Bell syndicate since 1945.
Miss Fleeson will receive the distinguished service citation of the Alumni association. The citation was voted last summer, but Miss Fleeson has been unable to receive the award until now. The distinguished service citation is an honorary degree, which the University does not grant.
The dinner will be held in the Student Union ballroom. Honors to outstanding students in journalism will be announced at the banquet and certificates awarded for the best work in the various departments of the Daily Kansan will be given. Again this year the William Allen White Foundation will give $50 for the top editorial work.
She has twice been awarded the New York newspaperwoman's club prize for distinguished reporting, The Theta Sigma Phi Headliner award was given to her in 1950 and she received the Distinguished Service Award from the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1951.
Her recent awards include the Missouri Honor Award for Distinguished Service in Journalism last May. Mary Fleeson gave the first Grosman Memorial Lecture at the University of Colorado last year and received an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature from Culver-Stockton college, Canton, Mo.
Miss Fleeson is regarded as the top woman columnist and is one of the leading journalistic figures on the Washington scene.
The Kansan Board dinner is being held in conjunction with the conference and between 300 and 400 are expected for the dinner.
An author who has published 10 novels besides poems, short stories, and sketches in Russian, French, and English, will visit the University next week and will give the fifth Humanities Series lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday. April 20 in Fraser theater.
Former Russian Noble To Give Humanities Talk
One of his books is a critical biography of Nikolai Gogol, the Russian novelist and dramatist who wrote "The Inspector General."
Professor Nabokov, who is also an entomologist specializing in butterflies, will spend three days on the campus, speaking to classes and visiting with students and faculty.
He is Prof. Vladimir Nabokov, born into a Russian noble family, but now a naturalized American citizen and professor of Russian literature at Cornell university. His Humanities lecture, "Gogol-The Man and the Mask," will be the last in the 1953-54 series.
He received the American Academy of Arts and Letters award in 1951, and has twice held a Guggenheim fellowship for creative writing. He has made extensive lecture tours in the United States for the Institute of International Education, and has taught creative writing in several summer conferences. He was a research fellow in entomology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard from 1942 to 1948, and he has published in scientific journals at least 17 articles about butterflies.
To give students and faculty members an opportunity to hear him discuss his own work, the Humanities committee has arranged a tea and program for Monday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. April 19 in the Kansas room of the Union. Professor Nabokov will read from and discuss some of his poems, short stories, and sketches, many of which have been published in the New Yorker, the Atlantic Monthly, and Harper's magazines.
He was born in. St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1899. His father was a Liberal statesman who was elected to the first Duma created in 1905. One of his grandfathers was state minister of justice under Czar Alexander II, and the other was president of the Academy of Medicine. The family escaped from Russia in 1919 and lived in England, Germany, and France.
He was educated in a private school in St. Petersburg, and he later was graduated with honors at Cambridge in England.
Washington—(U.P.)The Atomic Energy commission has ordered famed scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer barred from all atomic work and secrets pending a new investigation of alleged Communist links.
Famed Scientist Suspended by AEC
1. He associated with Communists frequently during the early 1940s. His brother (Frank) was a Communist. His wife had been a Communist.
Dr. Oppenheimer, brilliant physicist who mastermined U.S. development of the A-bomb, was suspended as an AEC consultant Dec. 23 after he refused to resign in the face of the inquiry.
4. He failed for many months to report an attempt by an alleged Communist to get scientific information from him for the Soviet Union, although he rejected the attempt as "traitorous."
The action was disclosed last night only a few hours after an AEC security panel launched formal, secret hearings to determine whether the suspension should be made permanent.
The news struck the capital like a thunderbolt. It marked the first time that the loyalty of a U.S. scientist of Dr. Oppenheimer's imposing stature had been revealed under investigation.
2. He hired Communists or former Communists at Los Alamos during the war.
In suspending Mr. Oppenheimer, the AEC cited information indicating he associated with known Communists in the 1940s, once hired Communists or former Communists for an atomic project, opposed Homb development, and delayed reporting a Red attempt to get secrets from him although he called it "traiterous."
3. He gave contradictory testimony to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about attendance at Communist meetings in the early 1940s.
Most of the charges had been made before and Dr. Oppenheimer had been cleared. In a 43-page statement to the AEC last month, the 50-year-old atomic expert admitted some past associations with Communists but denied he ever was disloyal.
The letter suspending Dr. Oppenheimer was signed by Maj. Gen. K. D. Nichols, general manager of the AEC. It listed these specific charges:
5. He strongly opposed the development of the hydrogen bomb in 1949 and lobbed against it even after President Truman ordered the AEC to proceed with the project. At this time he was chairman of the Atomic Energy commission's general advisory committee.
In his letter, Dr. Oppenheimer assures the charges against him as follows:
1. He had associated with Communists because many of the objectives of the Cqmunist party in regard to humanitarian objectives engaged my interest. His wife had been a Communist. The influence of his brother Frank in recent years had been almost negative.
2. The program of recruitment for Los Alamos was massive and his primary objective was to get responsible scientists for the atomic installation Several scientists were mentioned as possible recruits although he believed their appointments were subject to security investigation.
3. His statements about Communist meetings were made to the best of his recollection. He recalled saying that he could not have been present at a closed meeting of the Communist party "because I was not a member of the party."
4. It has long been clear that he should have reported at once the incident reported as an attempt to get him to provide scientific information for the Soviet Union. He did not name the intermediary because of long-standing friendship and because "nothing would have led me to believe" he was actually seeking information.
5. He never urged anyone not to work on the hydrogen bomb project. His "opposition" to the hydrogen bomb consisted in being a member of the general advisory committee which unanimously opposed initiation by the United States of the program. He said this "opposition" ended once and for all when the President announced his decision to proceed with the program.
Ike Helps Open Baseball Season
President Eisenhower took a brief time out from his golfing activities today to toss out the first ball in Washington to open another major league baseball season.
And once again fans the nation over began to mull over batting average, runs batted in, earned runs, strikeouts, homers, et al, as the New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers try to repeat as champions in the two leagues.
It was predicted that some 215,000 fans would see the eight games today, while many thousands were to watch the Yankee-Senator battle on television. That game is being televised here on Channel 5.
The day was forecast to be generally fair in the eight cities where activity was taking place today, but he lineups of the various squads were not so easy to pick.
Two Students To Visit Europe
The effects of machine controlled sucring, twisting and pulling on steel, paper and wood will be demonstrated by the applied mechanics department as part of its exhibit in the Engineering Exhibition.
Two University of Kansas students, Barbara Becker, education junior, and Joan Reed, college junior, have been accepted to travel in Austria and Switzerland as participants in the Experiment in International Living, for the summer.
Miss Becker will be in Austria, and Miss Reed in Switzerland Under the Experiment plan, which is a non-profit student travel organization, they will stay in one country and know it well, rather than travel all over Europe.
Exposition to Show Crushing Machines
The girls will spend one month living with families in a single community. They will share in everyday family life and visit nearby points of interest. To round out their experience within the country, they will spend the second month exploring the country.
Visitors will see machines that twist, bend and crush materials to reveal their strength and composition.
Films to Be Shown In Museum of Art
Four films will comprise the third set of the Films of Art series at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the lecture room of the Museum of Art. The films, presented by the Museum of Art, are "Il Demoniaco nell'Arte," "The Earthly Paradise of 'Hieronymus Bosch,'" "The Glory of Goya," and "Be Gone, Dull Care."
"The first three films have to do with the fantastic and sometimes also supernatural aspects of art," said Edward Maser, museum curator. The fourth deals with designs drawn directly on film. It is shown with a jazz accompaniment.
E. R. Elbel Receives Award
E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education and director of the Veterans Bureau, was one of eight persons who received an honor award for "outstanding contributions to physical education" at the convention of the Central District Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation in Lincoln, Neb., last week. Mr. Elbel is secretary-treasurer of the association.
Indochina: Another Korea?
A new crisis is in the making in Indochina that could well turn into another "Korea."
For some time France has been carrying the war against the Communist forces on its own hook. And up until recently the French wanted no intervention from other allied countries because they thought they would be able to successfully defeat the Communist front.
As a matter of fact, they were even maneuvering for a show down battle with the Communist forces. This show-down came about with the battle for the fortress of Dien Bien Phu which is still going on at the present time.
The French forces probably would have been able to win the fight if it weren't for unexpected support from the Chinese Communists. And this is where the United States comes into the picture.
In a talk before the House Foreign Affairs committee last week, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said the Chinese Communists were "coming awfully close to direct aggression" in Indochina. Mr. Dulles made public a fresh, top-secret U.S. intelligence report that Chinese Communists had been identified in actual combat alongside the Communist-led Vietminh.
The report stated that Chinese were aiding in transportation and communications in the campaign, furnishing the crews for radar-controlled anti-aircraft guns furnished by the Reds, and that a Chinese general and scores of technical military advisers are aiding the Vietminh leaders.
All this takes on a rather ominous cast when considered in the light of a speech by Mr. Dulles in St. Louis last September warning that the Chinese Communists could not undertake in Indochina the kind of assault they had undertaken in Korea "without grave consequences which might not be confined to Indochina."
Last Thursday, France did an about-face on their "lone-wolf" stand in Indochina and said that
in the event the forthcoming Geneva conference failed to end the hostilities, she would be willing to internationalize the anti-communist front.
At present Mr. Dulles is on an emergency trip to England and France to attempt to gain united front action against the Communists in Indochina. Mr. Dulles wants to establish this united front immediately instead of waiting until after the Geneva conference.
The danger in waiting until after Geneva to take united action is self-evident. France, at present, favors a negotiated peace, and there is great danger that such a peace would lead eventually to Communist domination of all of Indochina.
The loss of Indochina to the Communists would open up the way for possible domination of Southeast Asia.
Two weeks ago in New York Mr. Dulles said the United States policy was that Communist domination of Southeast Asia by whatever means should be resisted by united action. This would mean that the U.S. would resist either political or military conquest in that area.
So, our country stands ready to wind up in the middle of the Indochina dispute in one way or another if the Communists aren't stopped.
The administration has said it is ready to give all out support in Indochina in the form of arms and equipment. As for the use of American soldiers, President Eisenhower says he couldn't imagine any greater disadvantage to this country than the use of American ground forces in meeting each flare-up of violence contrived by Communist pressure around the world.
But the fact remains that among the free countries of the world there exists a philosophy of "let George do it." And in our position of leadership in the fight against Communism, we are "George."
—Don Tice
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 13, 1954
Originally designed to enforce 20 federal laws, the FBI today is concerned with tracking down violators of 130 statutes. Mr. Hoover expanded and improved his crime laboratory, and began collecting fingerprints, and now has more than 124 million of them on file.
In 1924, when Mr. Hoover was only 29, the FBI was formed, and Mr. Hoover was chosen to head it. Mr. Hoover instituted high standards emphasizing schooling in law and business, which still stand.
John Edgar Hoover, head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, long ago established the policy of avoiding public controversy, keeping himself and his agency out of politics. He has kept the respect of both the Democrats and Republicans, who look to him for his honesty and integrity.
Still, the FBI didn't receive much public notice until the 30s. Its fight with Dillinger and "Machine Gun" might hit the headlines, and the glumup.
Hoover Steers Clear Of Publicity, Politics
Congressmen now listen when Mr. Hoover talks. When he asked for $77 million appropriations for general operations this past year—he got it—all of it.
Mr. Hoover, 58, has devoted his life to being a G-man. After graduation from law school in 1917, he went to work for the Justice department. He rose quickly. Within two years, he was prosecuting aliens in a drive to rid the government of post-World War I subversives.
It was only in the recent Harry Dexter White case that he was forced to "take sides," and then not willingly, for the dispute was oozing with politics. His testimony was straightforward and factual, and it was used to political advantage, much to his chagrin.
With the increase, Mr. Hoover is adding 79 agents and 298 clersk and technicians to his force of 5,379 agents and 7,340 clersk and technicians. The increase, Mr. Hoover told Congress, was made necessary
...Letters...
to the editor:
Wes Santee is known as an outstanding athlete to the students of KU, to the people of Kansas, and to sports enthusiasts of the world. To me he is a very thoughtful and understanding young man.
Several years ago I was flying to Kansas with my two small children. The KU relay team boarded the plane in Oklahoma, returning victorious from the spring relays. A quiet, well-mannered boy took the seat across from us without hesitation. He entertained my three children, mansions and a friendliness persuaded her to eat most of her evening meal. I was busy with my baby and was very grateful for his kind assistance.
by the battle against spies and sub-
versives.
Mr. Hoover decided several years ago that the Communist party in the U.S. and its fringe followers constituted a volunteer spy and sabotage net for Soviet Russia. Through the '30s, his men quietly kept tab on the Communists. After Pearl Harbor, FBI activities were given a new job.
It is unusual to find a sophisticated young college man with such mature understanding. It is unusual to find one so famous who will humble himself to serve others in menial tasks.
Enemy aliens were rounded up and the whole task of combating spies and saboteurs within the U.S. went to Mr. Hoover and his men. German agents, specially trained for espionage and sabotage work, were landed from submarines, only to be nabbed, tried and sentenced—quickly. But the FBI still kept a close tab on the Communists, even though Russia was an ally.
Mr. Hoover does not like criticism and is highly sensitive to it. But he has rarely made any rejoinder. Unmarried, he lives simply in a quiet Washington residential district with his widowed mother
After the war, FBI reports on Communists were regularly submitted to the different departments of government. The reports were ignored—because after all, hadn't Russia been our ally?
He is content to let the FBI record speak for itself, And, after the White episode, he has returned to his old policy—silence.
Tom Shannon
Neel Martindale Kuchs Maryville, Mo.
I know the University of Kansas and the state of Kansas are proud to be represented by this fine man of outstanding character and ability. Mrs. D. C. Gilkison Houston, Texas
family of Lawrence I enjoyed it immensely.
To the editor:
Next weekend when many students can't get home for Easter Sunday they will probably remember their premature "Easter" vacation with fond and happy thoughts.
I wish to congratulate you on your splendid centennial edition.
I have read it all and find it is very complete and it is a credit to any edition whether by a town or a school.
being a member of a pioneer
School's no longer out but in. and the time has come to once again dust off the books and grind and study and did somebody say PICNIC? We'd love to!
The main reaction among the big wheels in civil defense over the country seems to be "Whot Hopped?" All of their well-laid plans went down the drain with the H-Bomb explosions.
Daily Hansam UNIVERSITY
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and National Advertising Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, New York. Awarded $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawn). Published in Lawn, Kan., every afternoon during the University of Kansas spring semester university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class master Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawn, Kan., University of Kansas under act
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the university shop
Here's A SPECIAL Announcement FOR OUR CUSTOMERS
Beginning today and extending through the end of this semester, The University Shop will offer a weekly SPECIAL. This special will consist of a category of merchandise which for that week only will be reduced 20% in price.The special for each week will be drawn by one of our customers the preceding weekend and announced in the Monday issue of the Daily Kansan. Be watching for these announcements. Following is a list of sample categories which may be drawn.
1. SHOES and SOCKS
2. JACKETS and SLACKS
3. SPORTSHIRTS
4. WHITE DINNER JACKETS and Tux Trousers
5. SHIRTS and TIES
6. SUITS and SPORTCOATS (regular stock or made-to-measure)
7. BELTS and UNDERWEAR and PAJAMAS
8. SWIMWEAR and TENNIS SHORTS
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
Entire stock of JACKETS and SLACKS 20% off
NOTE It is NOT necessary to buy more than one item.
the university shop
1420 Crescent Road
Across from Lindley
1954
Tuesday, April 13. 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 3
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 13, 195
Spirit, Size, Speed Impress Coach Mather
By JACK LINDBERG
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
Spring football officially began at 4:05 p.m. yesterday when 80 men in full football uniform ran out of Memorial stadium onto the adjoining practice field. Under the leadership of Charles "Chuck" Mather, the new head football coach, the squad began work immediately.
After 10 minutes of calisthenics Mather divided the squad into ends, tackles, guards, centers and quarterbacks, and halfbacks and fullbacks. The linemen began to push the practice sleds around the field while the assistant coaches were stressing proper stance and encouraging the players to drive.
The centers and quarterbacks began practicing centering and proper receiving on sprinting starts from their T-formation positions.
In the dressing room after two hours of practice Coach Mather said he "was pleased with the first workout." He said the boys had good spirit and he was greatly impressed with the "good material," and the "size and speed" of the boys.
In particular the coach singled out Ralph Moody, right halfback, and Gene Blasi, switched from end to tackle.
The biggest thing Mather stressed was the need for additional practice.
In the practice itself, after the squad had pushed the sleds the coaches had them push each other around. The linemen began offensive and defensive blocks, first one man opposing another, then working until entire lines were facing each other.
The importance of Mather's training system was noted immediately. After each lineman had completed his blocks, the coaches had them jog the length of the practice field and return to do more blocking.
Proper stance was still being stressed by the coaches. After the blocking practice came tackling practice. The linemen were told to hit easy and roll, but after a few "easy" hits they took their tackling in earnest.
Mather said that most sessions would last about two hours, with the exception of tomorrow, when he will hold his first scrimmage.
Mather then had backfield units practicing pitchout plays and proper backfield faking. When the backs were running backward sprints,
Snead Wins Masters Title
Augusta, Ga.—(U.P.)-Sam Sneed put in a loud challenge to Ben Hogan's invincibility as the golfer of the era today after his stirring face-to-face victory over the tiring Texas bantam in an 18-hole playoff for the Masters title.
Snead, forgivably cocky after he forced Hogan to wilt before his own tight putting game at the Augusta National course, had a typical hill-billy comment for the occasion.
"The sun don't shine on the same dog all the time," cracked Sammy.
More exactly, the records showed that Snead now has pulled up close to Hogan with seven major world titles to Ben's nine; that he has defeated him the three times they met man-to-man in a playoff or match play; and that Snead is the only three-time Masters winner besides Jimmy Demaret.
Hogan has won the Masters twice and the field had almost conceded his third title after he finished the third round Saturday three strokes ahead of the field. But amateur Billy Jo Patton gummed up the works for the pros by shooting a hole-in-one and a flurry of birds Sunday to alter Hogan's strategy so that he finished in a mediocre 289 tie with Snead as the amateur finally faded.
Both Snead and Hogan set a pulsating pace through the first nine holes in the playoff before 7,500 yesterday with one-under par 35's. Then they made the fateful turn where in 17 previous tournaments the title has been traditionally lost or won in the fourth round of the playoff.
Netmen to Play Mankato Today
Netmen from Mankato, Minnesota State Teachers college will meet Coach Dick Mechem's tennis squad on the Varsity courts at 2 p.m. this afternoon.
Tomorrow KU will be host to the Omaha university tennis team in a meet starting at 1 p.m.
The only change in Coach Mechem's line up will see Roger Youmans playing the No. 4 singles match replacing Don Franklin, who will play the No. 5 match. Al Hedstrom will retain the number one spot. Dick Hadley retain the No. 2 singles, and Merl Sellers is in third spot.
Coach Mechem named Dave Kane to play the sixth singles match for the Mankato meet. Kane won a sixth singles match which didn't count against Colorado last Saturday.
Mankato has a strong, but young, team with two former Minnesota state high school champs playing for Coach Paul Waldorf.
Tomorrow's match with Omaha will have only four singles matches.
Lausee Wins Fourth Fight
Brooklyn, N.Y. — (U,P) — Boston fight fans may get the next look at Argentine middleweight champion Eduardo Lausse, who now is unbeaten in four fights in this country
Charley Johnson, manager or the Pampas puncher, said today he wasn't too pleased with the manner in which Lausse hammered out a split 10-round decision over Jesse Turner of St. Louis, last night in their widely televised and broadcast bout.
But the boxing game's leading importer of foreign talent conceded Lausse needs is more bouts, "and then you'll see a much better fighter."
"My boy hadn't fought since January." Johnson pointed out, "so he got a little tired against Turner. But he's going to remain in this country for a longer spell this time, and I think we'll take him to Boston for his next fight."
Lausese won three bouts by knockouts during a brief stay here last year and was a 74 to 5 favorite against Turner at the Eastern Parkway arena. It was easily Eduardo's toughest battle on these shores.
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Wes Santee, KU's hope to run the 4-minute mile, will get a chance to do that Saturday when he will compete with six other contestants in the Glenn Cunningham mile in the Kansas Relays.
Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service.
The other six milers are Bruce Drummond, the defending champion and a graduate student at Oklahoma, Hulen Hale of Texas, Ray McConnell of Drake, Rich Ferguson of Iowa, Mark McCoy of Tulane, and Bjorn Begurd of Oklahoma A&M.
Santee's best time for the mile run is 4:02.4, which he ran last summer at Compton, Calif. This is the fastest time ever run by an American, and one of the world's record of 4:01.4 set by Gander Haegg of Sweden in 1945.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
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McConnell won the Drake Relays last spring defeating Drummond and Ferguson with a time of 4:17.6. He was second in the Central Collegiate conference indoor mile this spring and was sixth in the C.C.C. cross country last fall.
LINCOLN BRIDGE OE OPTOMETRY
1851-C LARRABEE Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
Santee Enters CunninghamMile For First Time
Drummond won the mile in 4:15.1 last year when he upset Ferguson and Sture Landqvist of Oklahoma A&M.
Hale finished second in the Texas Rales behind Bill Squires of Notre Dame. Bogerud, a freshman finished third in the Texas Rales and ha srum as low as 4:15. McCoy finished fourth in the Southeastern conference mile last year.
This will be Santee's first appearance in the Cunningham mile in closing out his Kansas relays career. He will be trying to break the Relies mile record of 4:10.1, set by Blaine Rideout of North Texas State college in 1940 and tied by Don Gehrmann of Wisconsin in 1949. Santee has run 20 mile races under 4:10.
Besides running in the "open" mile Santee will probably compete in two out of four relays—the four-nile, two-mile, sprint medley, or the distance medley.
Rio Expels Bevo For Cutting Class
Rio Grande, Ohio—(U.P.)-Scooring wizard Clarence (Bevo) Francis, who put little Rio Grande college on the nation's basketball map, was out of school today because of "non-attendance at classes."
Dean W. A. Lewis said last night that the committee on instruction met yesterday and decided to drop Francis because of too many absences and failure to make up some examinations.
Toronto —(U.P.)Canadian heavyweight champion Earl Walls, who says he hasn't any plans for Rocky Marciano's world crown "just yet," was perfectly content today to settle for the "revenge" he got by scoring a one-round knockout over Tommy Harrison of Los Angeles.
Walls Defeats Harrison
Walls stiffened Harrison, the sixth ranking heavyweight, in 2 minutes and 3 seconds of the first round last night at Maple Leaf gardens.
"When I climbed into the ring," walls said after the bout, "I meant to finish the fight fast. I haven't any plans for Marciano just yet—I just wanted to get back at Harrison for what he did to me the first time."
Walls referred to their first meet-
last Jan. 26 when Harrison out pointed him.
Walls, a 194-pounder from Edmonton, Alta., rushed the 183-pound Harrison from the bell. After light leads, he staggered the Californian with a right hook and then raked him with a furious barrage of lefts and rights to the jaw.
Pursuing Harrison around the ropes, Walls finally caught him in his own corner and dropped him for an eight count. When the loser arrose, the Canadian finished the bout with a left hook.
Doyle Parrack, basketball coach at Oklahoma City university, eliminated himself as candidate for a similar position at Iowa State college.
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Page 5
KU Nips Arkansas 5-2 In Home Baseball Game
By STAN HAMILTON
The Kansas baseball team, here yesterday afternoon, used strong pitching by southpaw Wayne Tiemeier, a 2-run home run by John Trombold, and three Arkansas errors to edge the Razorbacks 5 to 2 in a tight game.
Tiemeier, who extended his score-®
The teams will meet here again at 3 p.m. today.
Tiemeiere, who extended his score-
less inning string to 12 before weak-
ening in the eighth, kept the visitors
well under control through the first seven innings, although he allowed 10 hits in all. Kansas got but six. Tiemeiere fanned six and walked two.
Jayhawk third sacker Punky Hoglund broke out of his hitting slump with a line single to left to start off the seventh. He had gone 17 times without a hit. When Francis Long let the ball roll through his legs Hoglund advanced to third. He scored when the next batter, shortstop Harold Bergsten, grounded out, second to first.
Kansas added single insurance runs in the seventh and eighth innings, both made easier by Arkansas errors.
Trombold, Jayhawk first baseman, provided what proved to be the winning run in the sixth inning when he slammed a long home run over the right-center fence with the singling Bill Heitholt on base. Kansas already had gotten one run in the third when Heitholt got on via an error and scored on a long triple by Johnerry.
In the eighth the Porkers finally solved Tiemier for a pair of runs. Leadoff hitter Walt Matthews clubbed a homer on the hill behind right field and then Joe Wilson, after the middle man had struck out, gained second on an error by Hoglund. Tiemier fanned the next man but then Tom Cusak, his mound opponent, hit a hard double to right center to score Wilson.
When the next batter walked, Bob Shirley came on for KU to put out the fire by getting Long to ground firmlylessly to Hoglund.
The Jayhawks came back to get the final run in the bottom of the same inning. Tromboid drew a pass, stole second, and scored on an overthrow at second and a bobble by the centerfielder.
KU now stands at 4-1 for the young season; Arkansas has won two of seven. It was the third KU victory over the visitors.
The box score:
KANSAS
| | AB | R | H | O | A |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Pulliam, 2b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
| Heitholt, cf | 4 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Perry, fc | 4 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Trombold, 1b | 3 | 2 | 1 | 8 | 1 |
| Aungst, c | 4 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 0 |
| Brose, rf | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Hoglund, 3b | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
| Bergsten, ss | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Tiemeter, p | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Shirley, p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Totals 33 5 6 27 12
ARKANSAS
University Daily Kansan
| | AB | R | H | O | A |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nix, 3b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Long, lf | 5 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 0 |
| Bowden, 2b | 5 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 4 |
| Wilkerson, c | 4 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Matthews, 1b | 4 | 1 | 1 | 8 | 0 |
| Thomason, cf | 4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Wilson, rf | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Buffington, ss | 4 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Cusak, p | 4 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
Totals ... 37 2 10 24 10
L-Bergsten, Hoglund 3, Long,
Wilkerson, Thomason, Buffington.
RB1-Perry, Trombold 2, Bergstein,
Matthews, Cusak, 2B-Cusak, 3B-
Perry, HR-Trombold, Matthews.
SB-Perry, Trombold, Matthews.
DP-Dhgland, Pulliam and Trombold;
Pulliam and Trombold; Cusak
and Nix. Lelt-Kansas 3, Arkansas
12. BB-To Tiemier 2, Shirley 1,
Cusak 3. SO-By Tiemier 6, Cusak
1. H&R-To Tiemier 10 and 2,
Shirley 0 and 1, Winner-Tiemier.
Young Rookies Hope to Become Major Leaguers
New York —(U.F.)— This is a day many young men will never forget—the day they became big leaguers.
They hail from all over, big cities and little towns from California to Massachusetts, Washington to Louisiana and from the Midwest and the Southwest. And each is fairly certain to stick in one of the greatest rookie invasions baseball has ever seen.
For five of them it goes beyond baseball. Cardinal pitcher Memo Luna is from Tcaubaya, Mexico. Brooklyn outfielder Sandy Amoros comes out of Matanzas, Cuba. Three are Puerto Ricans, A's outfielder Vic Power from Arecibo, Cleveland pitcher Jose Santiago from Coamo and Cincinnati outfielder Nino o Escalera-from Sanurce.
Three National league clubs are going all out with new talent, the Cards, Cubs and Pirates each starting a trio of rookies. The Cards will have Tom Alston of Greensboro, N.C., at first, Alex Grammas of Birmingham, Ala., at short and Wally Moon, from Trumann, Ark. in the outfield.
The Cubs have Ernie Banks out of Dallas, at short, Gene Baker from Los Angeles at second and Bob Talbot of Vesialia, Calif., in the outfield. Pittsburgh starts Curt Bolt of Ocho at second; Gail Aile of New Orleans at short and Jerry Lunch of Munger, Mich., in the outfield.
Two new faces in the Reds lineup are outfielder Wally Post of St. Henry, Ohio, and third baseman Chuck Harmon of Gloversville, N.Y. Milwaukee believes it has a new star for its outfield in Henry Aaron, up from Jacksonville, Fla.
The Indians will unveil a surprise infielder in Rudy Regalado, out of the University of Southern California, while the White Sox count on Bob Boyd, the small but fleet outfielder from Potts Camp, Miss.
Tuesday, April 13, 1954
Big League Baseball Season Opens Today With 8 Games
New York—(U.P.)-Wake up Americans, it's time to go out to the old ball game again.
Although once again Brooklyn and the Yankees are quoted as heavy favorites to win their pennants, livey races were in prospect for both leagues with returning servicemen and the best crop of rookies since before World War II on hand to improve the chances of some of the perennial also-rans.
Yes, today is the day.
Around 40,000 were expected to turn out at the Polo Grounds to see the Dodgers renew their feud with the Giants. Carl Erskine, who beat the Dodgers three times last year, opposes Sal Maglie, who beat the Dodgers three times. Both teams were at full strength and Carl Furillo was ready to swing at Giant Durocher or Durocher him if Giant pitchers threw him. When the teams last met in the Polo Grounds last Sept. 6, Furillo charged after Durocher and wound up with a broken finger in a dugout melee.
Forget about fuel bills, coffee prices, H-bombs, the McCarthy investigation, Zsa Zsa Gabor, and the Iron Curtain boys—just for this afternoon.
That's what Ike's going to do. He's taking the day off to throw out the first pitch down in the nation's capital where the Yankees play the Senators in the ceremonial Presidential opener. President Eisenhower makes things official at 2 p.m. CST after every other one of the seven opening games has been in progress at least for half an hour, since all are scheduled earlier.
For this bright new season when everybody has high hopes—at least for awhile--there was a promise of bright and shiny weather on all fronts.
There will be upwards of 220,000 fans on hand in person at the eight games with millions more watching or hearing the progress of their heroes via television and radio.
Cincinnati, where opening day always is an especially festive occasion, figured on a sellout crowd of 34,000 including Gov. Frank Lausche of Ohio and Mrs. Dorothy Dolbey,
vice mayor of Cincinnati who will create history of a sort when she becomes the first woman to toss out an opening day pitch.
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Choice of the Champions
Design a Shoulder Patch To Be Worn By: Kansas University A.F.R.O.I.C. Cadets
$50.00 War Bond-First Prize
$25.00 Bond 2nd Prize $10.00 Cash 3rd Prize $5.00 Cash Hon.Mention
Here are the Rules:
1. The contest is open to all university students. No member of the judging committee or the AFROTC faculty may enter the contest. Any contestants may enter as many drawings as he wishes.
3. The drawing must be symbolic of Kansas University and of the Air Force. A jayhawk or facimile in flight is preferred.
2. The patch must be drawn free hand, in full color, on durable paper or cardboard, which must be 12" by 12".
4. The design may be a cartoon or whatever the participant thinks best.
5. The winner will be announced at the Spring Air Force Dance, Friday, May 14.
6. To make the judging of the drawings impartial and anonymous, each contestant will be given a number, and that number will be placed on the drawing submitted.
7. The drawing must be submitted at the Air Science Office in the Military Science Building by Monday noon, April 26, Room 108.
For Further Information Call T. L. Pursley Phone:1956
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 13, 1954
It's Spring-Time To Change the Wardrobe
By KAREN HILMER Kansan Society Editor
The days are getting longer, the grass is turning greener, the lawyers are getting noisier, and the books are getting dustier—it's spring.
This is the time for lazy picnic days, sunbathing, baseball games,
tennis, boating at Lone Star, and it is also the time for the society
page of the UDK to expound a little on the season's fashions for
women.
The slim, trim look is being featured this spring in the way of "wallpaper," princess, and empire waistlines. If it is a suit you will be wanting for Easter Sunday, you will probably be wearing a modern version of the old "box" jacket, known as a "cylinder" jacket.
A brilliant new array of pastel shades such as "orange ice," "honey," and "azales" along with the old standbys powder blue, pale pink, and white are being shown as the predominant spring colors. Many pale pinks and deep reds are being shown together, thus breaking some of the old taboos against that combination.
No longer will the tiny collar adorn the neckline of the spring dress, not since the "1954 Big Collar Look" has entered into the fashion-wise picture. Huge white collars are being shown on navy, brown, and black linen and cotton dresses and suits.
In the blouse department, the short-sleeved man tailored blouse is the predominant style along with the calico-printed blouse with a white collar. There is also a revival of the "middy" blouse due to popular demand. This blouse is entirely shapeless, fitting loose at the waist, worn over the skirt and coming down to the hips. It comes in every shade ranging from the light to the very dark.
Polka dots and stripes are in style this season—shown on dresses, suits, shorts, bathing suits, and shoes. Full accordion-pleated skirts will be featured, worn over voluminous crenolin petticoats.
The common, ordinary shirt dress is a sign that this season will be a comfortable one. This creation has no waistline and is made exactly like a man's dress shirt. It is belted at the waist and is the modern version of the "sack" dress.
These are a few of the fashions we are supposed to be wearing this season, ladies.
Six Girls to Set '54 Beauty Standard
In Grandma's day it was the Florodora Sextette who achieved fame and fortune by setting the standard for feminine beauty, but in 1954 it will be the six prettiest schoolgirls chosen in the Palmolive beauty contest which is now underway and will run until June 15.
Six ladies will be brought to New York, each with a member of her family, where they will live at one of New York's hotels, and taken to see the city's sights from Chinatown to Rockefeller Center, from the UN to Times Square.
They will dine at "21." Toots Shor's, the Stork Club, and go to the hit shows of Broadway. Each girl will receive a $1,000 wardrobe, specially selected for her by a leading fashion designer. They will appear on a coast-to-coast television program, where the grand prize winner will be announced. The most naturally attractive of America's loveliest girls will be awarded $1,000 in cash. The 100 girls who are runners-up will win overnight cases valued at $25.
High school or college girls between the ages of 15 and 23 may submit a photograph which must be accompanied by two wrappers from Palmolive soap. Entry blanks may be obtained wherever you buy Palmolive.
Mather to Give Talk
Charles V. Mather, head football coach, will be the guest speaker at the Presbyterian men's hamburger fry, April 13 at the Presbyterian Student center. Mr. Mather will discuss "ideals and Sports," showing how Christian ideals and disciplines enter into the development of good athletics and good athletes.
D. M. ROMAN
good athletes and good instructors.
While a coach at Massillon, Ohio.
Ann Ogle Engaged
ANN WOOD OGLE
Westminster Council Elects Worthington
Joan Worthington, education junior, was recently elected moderator of the Westminster council. Other officers are James Ragan, college sophomore, vice moderator; Elaine Carlson, college sophomore, stated clerk; Tor Borgerman, college sophomore, treasurer; William Hirsch, college freshman, public relations; Jo Ann Boswell and Beryl Bell, fine arts sophomores, Student Religious council representatives.
Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Wood of Cameron, Mo., announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Ann Wood Ogle. college sophomore, to Allen L. Asher, pharmacy sophomore from Effingham, Kansas. The wedding takes place Sunday, June 6 in Danforth Chapel.
Presidents of each of the Presbyterian student groups also serve on the council. The new officers will be installed at the conclusion of a week-end retreat April 25.
Pi Delta Phi Initiates 3
Pi Delta Phi, honorary French fraternity, recently held initiation for three members. Those initiated are Helen Dowell, college senior; John Griggsy, graduate student; and Carol Terrill, graduate student.
High school, Mr. Mather had a team chaplain, and members of the team attended a non-denominational service before each game.
Elizabeth Wohlgemuth, journalism junior, was re-elected president of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternity, last night. Other officers are Nancy Neville
Theta Sigma Phi Elects
F
vice president; Karen Hilmer, secretary, Amy DeYong, treasurer, and LaVerie Yates, keeper of the Archives. All are journalism reti-
On the Hill
Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Winona George, education sophomore, to William Cunningham, business senior. Miss George is from Pittsburgh and Cunningham from Downs and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Barbara Hampton and Norma Toews, college sophomores, announced the pinning by singing a special version of "On Top of Old Smokey." Miss George's attendant was Fredrica Voiland, fine arts sophomore.
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Kappa Alpha Theta sorority announces the pinning of Julie Underhill, education junior, to Bob Forsyth, education junior. Miss Underhill is from Witchita and Forsyth is from Medicine Lodge and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Raytheon Manufacturing Company
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Sigma Pi fraternity recently initiated Harvey Pie Wertz and Robert E. Hess, engineering freshmen; Gerald Dunn, college senior; Duane Van Gundy and Robert C. Cooney, engineering sophomores; William L. Sanders, Richard A. Houghland, Robert McComb, and Stanley F. Raizynski, college freshmen; and Gerald Knepp, college sophomore.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity recently initiated Larry Gutschs Charles Barry, Loren Wheeler, Larry Manion, Jack Williams, Tom Clevenger, William Carter, and Forrest Cox, all college freshmen; Ronald Denchfield and William Cullen, college sophomores; Richard Murray and Phil Rein, engineering freshmen; John Ryberg, fine arts freshman, and Robert Ferguson, engineering sophomore. Ferguson was honor initiate.
Call your College Placement Office for appointment CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Thursday, April 15
For a Perfect Evening...
K. U. Relays DANCE 9 to 12 - Sat., April 17
Kansan Room & Terrace Student Union
Jim Sellard's Orchestra
Tickets on Sale April 14, 15, 16
Information Booth - Hawk's West - at the Dance
$1 Per couple
100
Ties
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er, secre-
rer, and
of the
ism juh-
Page 7
Q'Connor in Hot Water Over Oscar TV Show Emceeing
Hollywood — (U.P.) — Donald O'Connor lashed back today at the "non-objective and unjustified" critics, including his TV rival, Ed Sullivan, who blasted his job at the Academy awards telecast.
The soft-spoken dancer-comedian found himself the center of a sizzling controversy after he served as master of ceremonies for the recent Oscar presentations. ◎
Some critics called him "inexperienced"; others leaped to his defense. Mr. Sullivan, whose CBS "toast of the Town" program is pitted against Mr. O'Connor on NBC, also is a columnist and criticized Mr. O'Connor's task.
But Mr. O'Connor said if he had to repeat the telecast, "I wouldn't do it any differently."
"How could I? the Academy explained to me the show had to be handled with dignity," he said, "it had to be entertaining, not stuff."
"I had those limitations. The
Oscar derby is like the Hope diamond. To go out and tell joke after joke would make it my show, not the Oscar's.
"Of course the criticism upset me," he added. "Especially Mr. Sullivan's. He knows the risks and hazards of being a master of ceremonies. He showed complete lack of tolerance."
—CLASSIFIEDS—
Phone KU 376
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Mr. O'Connor, now at Universal-
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what he vows will be his last
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (exact time depends on business). Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism blge., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
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AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their are our customers for the shop, anything for fursnips, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. ti
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RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Gieseman at the First Aid Station or call information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tf
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Speaker
France indicated in advance of Secretary Dulles arrival that it would take no firm stand until his proposals are studied in detail.
CHAPLAIN W. J. BRITTON From Topeka Forbes Air Force Base
A number of French cabinet members were reported outraged by Premier Joseph Laniel's decision authorizing France to sign a "integration" into the European army of British land and air units.
Right-wing ministers tried last night to block fulfillment of the pact, but it was signed this morning at a secret meeting with American observers present.
EVERYONE INVITED
These sources said such a body, to which Arabs and Israelis could bring complaints, would be organized separately from the UN. Mixed armistice commission now operating in the Near East.
Britain Signs Pact Proposing European Army
Paris — (U,P)— Britain and the six nations of the European defense community signed a historic convention today that bound Britain closer than ever before to Europe.
The pact, which defines the position Britain will take if the proposed European army becomes a reality, was signed in the calm of a political storm that started at a cabinet meeting yesterday.
Informed London sources said Secretary of State Dulles and Foreign Secretary Eden also explored the possibility of setting up a new United Nations body to umpire disputes in strife-torn Holy Land.
Its signing also preceded by a few hours the scheduled arrival of U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on a mission for a United Western front at the forth-coming Geneva conference.
Secretary of State Dulles and British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden completed work in London earlier in the day on a unified "no appeaement" agreement that closed the gap between U.S. and British aims.
Tuesday, April 13. 1954 University Daily Kansan
Secretary Dulles received assurances from Foreign Secretary Eden that Britain would join the United States in giving the Chinese a warning if the Geneva conference fails to halt the seven-year Indochina war.
Ambassadors and ministers from West Germany, Belgium, Italy, Holland and Luxembourg also affixed their names to the document which has been under negotiation for almost two years and which will come into force once the EDC treaty is ratified by all nations.
William Claus Behrmann, graduate student, is the first University student to receive a Fulbright fellowship for the 1954-55 academic year.
Fulbright Grant Goes To Graduate Student
William Richard Scott, college senior from Parsons, has been announced as recipient of a national Woodrow Wilson fellowship for the 1954-55 academic year. He has elected to take graduate work in sociology at KU.
Behrmann, who is now studying for a master's degree in chemical engineering, will attend the Techno-iversity in Deft, The Netherlands.
College Senior Wins Wilson Fellowship
The Wilson fellowships are one-year awards to young scholars "showing marked promise for the teaching profession and possessing the highest qualities of intellect, character, and personality."
The KU Medical Center recently announced the appointment of four new staff members, John H. Hutton was appointed personnel director, and Miss Mildred Craven was appointed executive director of the new student center. Dr. A. P. Klotz and Dr. Robert A. Jordan were appointed assistant professors of medicine.
Staff Members Appointed
Fred Hall Files Today ForGOP Governor Race
Topeka—(U.P.)—Fred Hall put his money on the line today and filed as a Republican candidate for governor.
The two-term lieutenant governor who has challenged the State GOP administration paid the $150 filing fee at the office of the secretary of state.
He asserted that "the publi response to my announcement i January has been very gratifying.
So far no administration-supported opponent to Lt. Gov. Hall has emerged, but it is an oddos-ow that George Templar US, district attorney, will declare himself in the race in a few days.
Mr. Templar, a veteran state senator, became Kansas' first Republican federal prosecutor in two decades, last fall.
Prospects are for a sizzling sprint for the GOP nomination. Only once in the last 20 years has the nominee failed to become governor.
Also on file as a Republican gubernatorial candidate is a political unknown, automobile dealer Joe Boer of Waverly.
In filing, Lt. Gov. Hall said in a statement: "I sincerely believe the public agrees with me that it is time for a change in many of our state policies and that such changes will be for the best interests of the people of Kansas and the Republican party.
"I am proud to seek the nomination of the Republican party which has honored me with two terms as lieutenant governor and whose record I shall support in the coming campaign."
Fine Arts Senior To Give Recital
James York. fine arts senior, will give a piano recital at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Strong auditorium.
A pupil of Paul Snyder, associate professor of piano, York received the Pi Kappa Lambda award as the outstanding sophomore music major in 1952 and received a similar award during his junior year.
He appeared on the fine arts honor recital in the fall of 1952. In addition to his pianistic ability, he plays the bassoon and has been a member of the University symphony orchestra and the Little Symphony. His program will include works by Mozart, Schubert, and Brahms.
Newcomers to Meet With Mrs. Murphy
Newcomers and the executive board of the University Women's club will be guests of Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy at 8 p.m. Thursday at her home.
Miss Mary Kinnane, assistant instructor of speech and drama, will speak on the topic, "The Speaking Voice," including proper breathing, care and control of the voice. Tape recordings illustrating good and bad qualities of the speaking voice will be played.
The mockingbird is the state bird of Texas.
Speaking Contests To Start Tomorrow
Information speeches will be heard in the first contest tomorrow, demonstration in the second, and entertainment speeches in the third. All speeches will be from 5 to 7 minutes long.
The Annual Intramural Speaking contests, sponsored by the Forensic League, will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, and on April 21 and 28 in Green theater.
Organized houses may enter two speakers in each contest. There are both men and women's divisions, and all students are eligible except members of the Forensic league and the varsity debate squad.
Those who wish to enter should register by the Tuesday before each contest at the speech office in Green hall.
Easter Sunrise Service Set
An Easter sunrise service for all students will be given at 6 a.m. Sunday north of the campanile. The service is sponsored by the YMCA.
The bluebonnet is Texas' state flower.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 13, 1954
Charges By McCarthy Wanted in Writing
Washington—U.(P.)—Senate investigators today sought a written statement of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's charges that the Army tried to "blackmail" him out of investigating Communists.
The Army earlier agreed to submit a detailed statement of its side in the angry fight with the Wisconsin Republican.
The Senate Investigating subcommittee called its regular counsel, Roy M. Cohn, and its staff director, John B. Hankins, to the dispute—40 a closed meeting (at 10 a.m., EST) to request a preview of McCarthy's case.
McCarthy was still nursing a case of bronchitis in Arizona but promised to be in touch with the subcommittee by telephone. Meanwhile, he suggested the group talk with Mr. Cohn and Mr. Carr and postpone its meeting with him until later.
Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens and his counsel, Joseph N. Welch, met for more than three hours with the subcommittee late yesterday and promised to produce a written and detailed list of objections against Carrhardy and his aides. That too agreed to give a list of witnesses they want called and a synopsis of each one's expected testimony.
Ray H. Jenkins, special consell for the investigation, said the main issues in the dispute were set—McCarthy's charge that the Army tried to "blackmail" him to drop his Red probe of the service.
Kansas Relays Dance To Feature Sellards
Jam senardis and his band will play at the Kansas Relays Terrace dance from 9 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, April 17, in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Admission is 50 cent per person.
Student chairmen are John Benson, arrangements.; Joann Swanson, fine arts sophomore, ticket sales;
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Kappa Beta, 5:30 p.m. Myers hall.
KU Dames bridge group, 7:30 p.m.
Card room, Student Union. Refreshments.
KU Dames Child study group, 7:30 p.m.
per session; Mrs. Amit Frankt from psychology
department. All student wives invited.
Zoology club, 7:30 p.m., room 204,
accessed on request.
Alpha Rho Gamma business meeting.
7.30 p.m., 512 Strong.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., Jayhawk room. Student Union. Final plans for Scout visitation April 17. All members be present.
KU Amateur Radio club meeting. 7:30 p.m., room 201, EE lab
TOMORROW
Phi Mu Alpa song practice. 9 p.m.
room 131. Strong. Attendance required
pre-nursing club. 4 p.m. room 8,
public nurses. Robert E. Lom
bath nurse, nursing staff.
Hometown Correspondents meeting, 5 p.m., 303 Student Union. Short meeting, Speaker, Robert Vosper, director of libraries.
History club, 7 p.m. Pine room, Memorial
State University, "The United
States and the Near East."
UVO. 7:30 p.m. Jawahk room. All vacancies for signing of spring intramural sports
Chinese Student club, 7:30 p.m., Oread room, Student Union.
THURSDAY
AWS House meeting. 4 p.m., Student Union.
UNION.
Der deutsche Verein musical program by Harriet King and Dale Moore. 5 p.m. basement of Art Museum. not in 502 Fraser.
Kuki club, 7:15 p.m. Pine room. Studen-
tial library for instruction for initiation.
All must be present.
University Women's Club, 8 p.m.
Guests of Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy at her home. Miss Mary Kinnane will speak: "The Speaking Voice."
Jayhawk Brotherhood. 8:30 p.m., room
305, Memorial Union. Short meeting.
Le Cercle francais se re' unira a 'sent heures et demie dans la saille 113 Strong. Programma: "T Indochine" par Michel Lacombe.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
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2 KU Professors On Study Panel
Two University professors will participate in the National Study Conference of American Childhood Education International in St. Paul, Minn., from April 18 to 23.
Dr. Charles E. Johnson, assistant professor of education, will participate in a discussion dealing with the importance in relation to school problems.
WOLFSON'S 743 Massachusetts
Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, will be discussion group leader of a panel on creative experiences in art for primary grade school children.
Three companies interested in discussing job opportunities with graduating seniors in the engineering school will hold interviews this week. Persons interested should sign an interview schedule in 11 Mavin.
Interviews
The International Business Machines corporation will interview persons for sales and applied science fields. They will also interview men especially interested in engineering.
Tuesday
Wednesdav
The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad company will interview engineering and business administration students.
Thursdav
The Raytheon Manufacturing company will interview aeronautical, electrical, chemical, mechanical and metallurgical engineers and engineering physicists.
Three fine arts faculty members are attending the Midwestern Art association meeting this week in Grand Rapids, Mich. They are Evelyn DeGraw, assistant professor of design; Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, and Carlyle Smith, associate professor of design.
3 Attend Fine Arts Conference
Backers of High Farm Props Ready to Give GroundinFight
Washington—(U.P.)—Senate supporters of high level farm price supports today appeared ready to give a little ground in their fight against the administration's flexible price prop plan.
Influential farm bloc leaders seemed to be leaning toward a suggestion for a one-year extension of the present farm law which guarantees price supports at 90 per cent of parity to six "basic" crops. They previously had talked in terms of a two-year extension.
Sen. Milton R. Young (R-N.D.) said he believes chances are good that President Eisenhower would approve a one year extension of the present law which is due to die in December.
But Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson said yesterday he is "confident" Mr. Eisenhower will veto any bill extending the high support law. If the present program expires on schedule, a flexible law now on the books would take effect.
Under the flexible plan, Mr. Benson would have authority to adjust the support level between 75 and 60 percent of parity in line with supplies.
In another farm development, the House voted tentatively yesterday to add $2.198.635 to the Agriculture department money bill for the coming fiscal year to restore a cut in agriculture research funds voted by the House Appropriations committee. Another vote on the issue will come when debate resumes on the appropriations bill Wednesday.
Male 'Godiva' Rides in Car
Eye
Cambridge, Mass. —(U.P.)—Police watched local streets today for a man-type Lady Godiva. Residents reported seeing a nude gentleman riding around in a two-tone sedan.
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Activities Galore Set for Weekend
Organized houses, Relays committee members, and visiting track teams are winding up preparations today and tomorrow for a busy KU Relays Friday and Saturday.
One of the biggest attractions planned for the event is the annual Relays' parade at 10 a.m. Saturday. The parade this year will be called "The Joy of Effort" and will start between 6th and 7th streets on Kentucky. It will swing south down Massachusetts street to 13th street.
A color guard will lead the marchers followed by the University band. Three ROTC units, the Relays queen, Miss Carol Shellhas, and attendants, will come next, and the floats of organized houses and more bands will complete the parade.
The annual Engineering exposition Friday and Saturday will give visitors a chance to see 22 displays by KU engineers.
About 2,000 prep athletes will represent nearly 200 high schools in Friday's annual Kansas Intercolastic Relays. An estimated 1,000 collegians from nearly 70 universities, colleges, and junior colleges will enter the Relays at Memorial stadium Saturday.
All high school seniors in the state of Kansas will be invited to the University for the Jayhawk Jubilee from 8 a.m. until noon on Saturday. Open houses will be held for parents and prospective students at this time.
Alpha Phi Omega, national Boy Scout fraternity, will swell the number of visitors to the campus by hosting from 300 to 500 Scouts Saturday.
Wes Santee's first-running of the Glenn Cunningham mile is expected to boost the estimated 15,000 to an even larger attendance.
A Relays dance, with music by Jim Sellard's band, starting at 9 p.m. Saturday in the Union ballroom, will conclude the Relay's activities.
French Given U.S. Planes
Hanoi, Indochina —(U.P.)— American cargo planes landed in Indochina today with war materials for the "fighting fools" of Dien Bien Phu, now coping with an ammunition shortage under heavy artillery fire from the Communists.
The two-engine C-47s arrived at Tourane air base, south of Hanoi, with American pilots at the controls. French bull's-eye markings were painted on the planes at Clark field in the Philippines.
The new planes were turned over to French Union forces for use by French pilots. The Americans will fly them on the next planes leaving Indochina.
Communist artillerymen began the 33rd day of their costly campaign to take Dien Bien Phu with a blistering barrage against the French garrison.
Hour after hour shells from 120- millimeter mortars and 105-millimeter howitzers hit the fortress's defense perimeter or exploded over trenches and earth-and-log bunkers.
But Dien Bien Phu's "fighting fools" were ordered to hold their fire to save precious shells, even though some of the Red artillery emplacements were only 1,500 yards away.
The hold-your-fire order was issued in anticipation of a mass assault by the Reds against the fortress.
The weather was good and French-piloted transports took off regularly from Red river delta airbases with food, ammunition and medicine for the garrison.
United Press correspondent Gene Symonds reported from Tourane that the pilots said they flew to Clark field from Korea and Japan under sealed orders and knew their destination only after they had taken off for Indochina. They will return to their outfits on the next planes leaving indochina on airlift duty.
Frosh to Entertain At Record Dance
A record dance will be held in the Trail room of the Student Union from 8-11 p.m. tonight.
Entertainment will be provided by Kent Mueller and Thomas Siegfried, college freshmen.
--med up the farm bloc's dilemma. To vote against agriculture research funds, he said, would be like voting against a "resolution endorsing motherhood." But to increase the bill above administration requests, he declared, might give Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson ammunition "for his plan to lower price supports for farmers."
IM Speeches Start Tonight
Nineteen students and eight houses have entered the informative speech contest to be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Green hall.
The contest, first in the series of the annual Intramural Speaking contests, is sponsored by the Forensic league. Demonstration speeches will be held next Wednesday and entertainment speeches April 28.
Wednesday. April 14, 1954
Those entered tonight:
Alpha Tau Omega—Jack Dusy and John Ball, college freshmen, and Robert Toalson, college senior; Lambda Chi Alpha-R, L Brown, college freshman; William McClure, college junior, and Gary Skinner, fine arts freshman; Kappa Kappa Gamma—Nancy Reese, college senior; Sigma Alpha Epsilon-William Hagerman, college freshman
Alpha Delta Pi—Lois McArdle,
college junior; Louisa Hall, fine
arts junior and Joleen Manning,
college sophomore; Beta Theta Pi
-Don Johnston and David Convis,
college sophomores, and Jerry
Brownlee, graduate; Delta Delta
Delta—Sue Quinn, college senior;
independents—Robert Lynch, freshman in medicine, and Kenneth Plumb, college sophomore.
House Might Vote USDA More Money Than Asked
The comic operas are Burril's Phillip's musical farce, "Don't We All" and Ermane Wolf-Ferrari's intermezzo, "The Secret of Su-
Pair of Comic Operas To Close Theatre Year
I'll just use the text from the image.
Wait, line 2 has "Lady" at the end.
Line 3 starts with "Wendy".
Line 4 starts with "Bernie".
Line 5 ends with "Fred".
Line 6 starts with "Mary".
Line 7 starts with "Susan".
Line 8 starts with "Emily".
Line 9 starts with "Jennifer".
Line 10 starts with "Katherine".
Line 11 starts with "Rachel".
Line 12 starts with "Maria".
Line 13 starts with "Alison".
Line 14 starts with "Lucinda".
Line 15 starts with "Stephanie".
Line 16 starts with "Carolina".
Line 17 starts with "Alexandra".
Line 18 starts with "Ellen".
Line 19 starts with "Grace".
Line 20 starts with "Danielle".
Line 21 starts with "Julia".
Line 22 starts with "Alisa".
Line 23 starts with "Amanda".
Line 24 starts with "Amy".
Line 25 starts with "Jennifer".
Line 26 starts with "Katherine".
Line 27 starts with "Alexandra".
Line 28 starts with "Ellen".
Line 29 starts with "Grace".
Line 30 starts with "Danielle".
Daily hansan
SPRING'S FOR REAL—Kathleen Cortner, fine arts sophomore, apparently has convinced herself that spring definitely has arrived, now that buds are budding, sap is sapping, and all that.
A double bill of comic opera will be the last production of the 1953-54 University Theatre season and will replace the previously scheduled production of Shakespeare's "As You Like It."
51st Year, No. 124
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Washington—(U.P.)—The House appeared ready today to set a precedent by voting more money for the Agriculture department than the administration asked or the appropriations committee recommended.
Rep. W. R. Poage (D-Tex.) summed up the farm bloc's dilemma. To vote against agriculture research funds, he said, would be like voting against a "resolution endorsing motherhood." But to increase the bill above administration requests, he declared, might give Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson ammunition "for his plan to lower price supports for farmers."
Up for a vote as the House resumed debate on the $698 million agriculture appropriations bill was a proposal to add another $2 million for farm research. The increase was tentatively approved Monday.
The moves to boost agriculture spending caught some farm state congressmen in a squeeze. Some were anxious to vote for the increased funds but others feared it would expose farmers to charges of being "grasping and selfish."
Other amendments were pending which would push still higher the money bill for the agriculture department for the fiscal year beginning July 1.
Mr. Benson, meanwhile, turned down a suggestion by Sen. Henry C. Dworshak (R-Idaho) that rigid and flexible price supports be combined to protect small farmers' incomes and curb over-production by large operators. He said the answer to the small farmer problem is larger operations and greater efficiency.
zanne." They will be presented at 8 p.m., May 11, 12, and 13 in Fraser theater.
"As You Like It" due to technical difficulties, Dr. John Newveld, University Theatre director said, has been postponed until March 1955, when it will be giver concurrently with the exhibition of Shakesperiana of the Folger Shakespeareian library in Washington, D.C.
The cast of Wolf-Ferrari's opera will be the same that appeared in the production last December in Kansas City in connection with the 20th anniversary of the Nelson Art gallery, Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, and Miss Elizabeth Townsley, instructor of voice, will sing the roles of Count Gil and Suzanne respectively, and William Wilcox, fine arts special student, will play the part of Sante.
The four leads in "Don't We All" will be sung by Linda Stormont and Dale Moore, fine arts seniors; Sandra Keller, college sophomore, and William Wilcox.
Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts will be the musical director. Dr.Newfield, with the assistance of Charles Loyd Holt, assistant director of the University Theatre, will stage both works.
Dulles, French Confer on Geneva
Around the World-
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles opened talks with the French in Paris today on an agreement that would prevent the Geneva conference from becoming an "Oriental Munich."
Secretary Dulles' busy schedule for the day included conversations with Foreign Minister Georges Bidault, Premier Joseph Laniel and perhaps with Bao Dai, chief of state of the war-torn Indochinese state of Viet Nam.
But the spokesman said Mr. Dul-
A high French official said there was no danger of Mr. Bidault selling out Indochina to the Communists and that Kuwait had been betrayed at Munich.
This official said that as long as Mr. Bidault and other anti-Communist Frenchmen represented France that their country would not abandon Indochina on the field or at the conference table.
alliance. The newspaper said Mr. Dulles was forced to seek this alliance after failing to get Britain to take action against China with a warning now.
Canberra-Australia's P r i m e
Mister R. G. Menzies called for
legislation which would compel
duly-summoned witnesses to testify
before a special commission investigating
the Communist spy ring exposed by a Soviet diplomat who asked for political assult.
Tokyo—The condition of 23 Japanese fishermen burned by radioactive ashes spawn up from the Marshall islands in the March 1 hydrogen blast was reported improving.
London—Evangelist Billy Graham announced he will start preaching April 26 to American servicemen at air bases in Britain. Then he will go to the continent to hold revivals in France and West Germany.
France, however, was reported willing to join the U.S. and Britain in a Far Eastern version of NATO should the Chinese show bad faith in Geneva.
les would make no headway in attempt to get an open warning from France to Red China before the Geneva meeting begins April 26.
Elsewhere on the foreign scene: Hanoi — Communist - led Indochinese rebel artillerymen pummeled Dien Bien Phu with a heavy barrage of mortar and howitzer shells. Defenders of the fortress were so short of ammunition they were holding fire. But a new flight of American C-47 transport planes arrived in Indochina with loads of ammunition which was marked for Dien Bien Phu.
Moscow—Pravda accused the U.S. of trying to "blackmail" Britain into joining an anti-Communist Asian
3-Hour Service Friday to End Religious Series
The service, planned to last until 3 p.m. will be based on "The Seven Last Words" spoken by Christ from the cross.
Seven Lawrence ministers will give brief sermons, each based on one of the seven words.
A three-hour service at the Trinity Episcopal church at noon Friday will climax a week-long series of Holy Week services sponsored by the Lawrence Ministerial alliance.
A series of noonday services began Monday in the Patee theater. The Holy week speaker, Dr. Glenn Olds, will present all five addresses of the series.
The Holy Week series began last Sunday evening in the First Presbyterian church with a talk by Dr. William Keucher, executive secretary of the Kansas Baptist convention.
Dr. Olds has also been giving a series of five evening talks at the First Presbyterian church. Today marks the third talk of the series. The service starts at 8 p.m. Dr. Olds will speak on the subject, "God's Adventurous Love."
Dr. Olds is chaplain at the University of Denver. He spoke in Lawrence last December as a leader and speaker at the Methodist student conference held here during the Christmas vacation.
The company is giving the scholarship to an outstanding undergraduate student in recognition of demonstrated scholastic achievement in combination with exceptional promise of superior attainments in the fields of physical science and petroleum engineering.
Oil Company Gives Award
The establishment of the Atlantic Refining company science and engineering scholarship in the department of petroleum engineering has been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
The chancellor said the company will award $500 annually to either a junior or senior in the petroleum engineering department.
Canuteson to Be Chairman
The first award will be for the academic year starting in September 1954. Selection of the recipient will be made by Dr. C. F. Weinaug, chairman of the petroleum engineering department, and T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the student health service, will be chairman of one of the principal committees for the fourth national Conference on Health in Colleges May 5-8 in New York City. He heads the committee on administration, organization and functioning of the college health service.
Weather
Collision of a shallow layer of warm air from the south and a mass of cooler air bearing down from the
SHOWERS
northwest is expected to provide southern K ansas with some severe th u n d e rstorms tonight. St a t e weatherman Tom Arnold said the m o s t intense storms likely will
be south of Dodge City and Hutchinson and southeastward f r o m Wichita. North of that area the thunderheads probably will be more scattered and less stormy, he predicted, adding, it's hard to say how much rain will be produced by the meeting of the warm and cool air.
8 8 8 2 5 0 1
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 14. 1954
Maybe Kansas too?
Flick Censorship Going Out
Recent court rulings would tend to show a movement toward the relaxing of movie censorship.
Kansas is one of only seven states that has motion picture censorship. The other states are New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and Massachusetts. The power to censorship in Massachusetts is limited to motion pictures to be shown on Sunday. The Missouri case cited pertained to a local ordinance.
The Supreme court decision that New York could not stop the showing of a French film, "La Ronde," and that Ohio could not ban the crime movie, "M." would support this contention, as would Judge Sam Blair's decision in Missouri against the Kansas City, Mo., censorship ordinance.
The Kansas State Board of Review was created in 1917 and was designed to permit motion pictures to be shown in the state only if they were "clean and wholesome." Through the years Kansas has shown a tendency for the legal censorship of public morals. The movie censorship law was passed during the period when the sale of cigarets was prohibited. Another example would be the now-repealed liquor prohibition law.
The Kansas banning of "The Moon is Blue" will be tested with a case in the Wyandotte county district court in the near future. A lawsuit to force sensor board approval of that film was filed last August by Holmby Productions, Inc., and United Artists corporation, the distributor.
Movie censors have a record of attempting to stretch their authority, which has already earned them reversal in the courts. The recent court rulings have expanded this record and the question remains whether the censorship statutes can be constitutionally enforced.
The General Statutes of Kansas read: "the board shall examine films . . . and shall disapprove such as are cruel, obscene, indecent, or immoral, or such as tend to debase or corrupt morals." Qualifications of the board members are "education and experience."
What is needed is repeal of the entire censorship law before the Supreme court rules all the boards of reviews, including Kansas, unconstitutional.
The truth is that this question of censorship has ceased to be a matter of the merits of this or that individual act of censorship. There are inconsistencies between the Kansas censorship statute
and the Supreme court decisions—inconsistencies which appear to make our state law flagrantly unconstitutional.
The Kansas statute as it stands now gives our censors powers which exceed the constitutional limits of film censorship as staked out by the Supreme court. So long as our present board tries to censor on the basis of the present statute it runs a continuous risk of acting unconstitutionally.
Kansas should abolish its censor board because it is ridiculous to think that the legislature could provide a statute that could be constitutionally enforced.
Everyone is entitled to his own choice of entertainment. Let the conscience be the guide in the adult mind. What do we have minds for anyhow? Before young people reach maturity and in formative years parents should instill in their minds what is decent for them to behold and what is not proper for their guidance, according to the family's own code or standard of living.
The board has placed "The Moon Is Blue" in the category of forbidden material. We shouldn't have seen it because now we're corrupted. No, our morals are still the same—good, bad, or indifferent—but the straight-forward and adult presentation of the subject matter was a shock. We could hardly stand it—it make us think! That's bad, we suppose, but we rather liked the adult approach. It made us feel as if someone thought we were capable of handling a strong subject.
People should be trusted to make their own choice. The Kansas Board of Review has placed very little faith in the intellectual capacity of the people to discriminate between what is right and what is wrong.
In the 1952 case of Burstyn v. Wilson the Supreme court held squarely for the first time that "expression by means of motion pictures is included within the free speech and free press guarantees of the First and Fourteenth amendments." The court cited the Burstyn case in knocking out censorship decisions in the New York and Ohio cases. The court's reasoning applies, of course, to the already battered and reeling law administered by the Kansas censorship board.
It is our prediction that, in line with the recent trend, the coming test in the Wyandotte District court will go against the Kansas Board of Review. This eventually will force the abolishment of the whole censorship machinery in our state.
Tom Shannon
Baseball Opener Almost Fills Both Sets of Bleacher Seats
The baseball season is upon us and the eyes of the University are elsewhere.
Our team opens Big Seven play against Kansas State today after opening the campaign with a successful road trip at Arkansas and Tulsa, winning two from the Porkers and splitting a pair with the Hurricanes.
College baseball can draw. The University of Missouri, second place winner in the NCAA two years ago, consistently packs its ball park. The universities of Nebraska and Oklahoma also have good crowds.
Did the student body turn out en masse to greet our conquering heroes as they opened the home stand with another victory Monday? It did not. A few dozen students rattled around on the makeshift stands while hundreds crowded a few steps to the north to watch the football team practice.
port a losing team, but how could a large crowd watch a winning team in bleachers that could, at the most, seat 150 persons?
Generally college fans won't sup-
Why, then, the lack of enthusiasm? Are football and basketball more "thrilling" than baseball? It is our opinion—which apparently is shared by millions of baseball fans who pack the major league parks every season—that a close play at second is ever bit as "exciting" as a 90-yard touchdown run or a 35-foot swisher.
Sure, the game could be played in Memorial stadium, but the fans would rattle around in there, too. The trouble doesn't seem to lie in lack of facilities, for some of the intramural softball games on the drill field draw more than our baseball games. All most intramural teams have are a bat, a ball, and a couple of gloves.
The logical (but not particularly desirable) solution is to put baseball on the same basis (replete with scholarships, crass commercialism, and glamor) as basketball and football. ___ "Tom Shannon
To the editor:
... Letters ...
The University choralle appeared April 7 in a concert, and its splendid program excited the enthusiasm of all who heard it. It's doing a great job proving the University's worth and our small communities are fortunate indeed to have the kind of music that Mr. Clayton Krebiel, the director, and his singers brought us.
Our paper, the Elkhart Tri State News, printed a very fine review of the concert. We had a fine luncheon earlier in the day at which Fred Ellsworth, Admiral Terrrill, and Keith Lawton spoke concerning the progress of the University.
Willard Mayberry Elkhart. Kansas
Almost one-third of all radio sets produced in the United States are used in automobiles.
Slow Drivers Cause Many Speeding Wrecks
If you drink don't drive. When you grow sleepy, pull off to the side of the road. Don't let your foot grow heavy on the accelerator. Drive safely—the life you save may be your own.
Sound familiar? It should—we hear it every day or the year in some form or other. The traffic commission keeps us up to date on how many persons have died already this year in traffic accidents. The newspapers and radios warn us to beware of bad tires, poor brakes, etc. Drinking is terrible, they say—and so is excess speed.
True! Anyone who has seen an automobile accident that caused the death or injury of several persons would never deny that the cause of the accident was terrible—and should be corrected.
However, why is it that so many of the traffic authorities and newsmen appear to be completely unaware of two of the greatest road hazards—the "Sunday Driver" and the one who might be named aptly the "Road Turtle?"
With spring here, the "Sunday Driver" is in his height of glory! Now he can take his wife and kids out for a spin in the family car after dinner-on Sunday of course.
The heavy week-end traffic never bothers him. His taxes helped pay for those roads, and he has just as much right to use them as anyone else. Use the country roads? Not the "Sunday Driver"—his tires are getting old, and besides, he just washed the car that morning. Drive a little faster? No sir! he has his family along—can't take chances on getting them hurt. Besides, he might miss some of the wonderful scenery—and he might forget to show his kids where he saw the accident last year.
He was an eye witness to the whole thing. He was just driving along at about this same speed (30 m.p.h.)—you know, SAFELY! You have to be safe on these roads with a lot of curves and hills.
This out-of-state driver pulled up behind him and made a complete fool of himself. He must have been doing all of 60 miles an hour. He kept honking, and finally, the poor fool had tried to pass on a hill—and smacked head-on into another car. Four people killed. The kids will really get a bang out of hearing how he just stopped in time. Lucky he was going only 30.
Of course the family read all about him being an important witness in the case—in fact, the only live eye witness. He told the Highway Patrol all about the speed demon that had passed him and caused the wreck, and they agreed that he was a mighty fortunate man.
The kids will enjoy seeing the spot again, and if they heed the warnings of the old man, they will probably live to be good "Sunday Drivers" too—and be able to tell their children of accidents that they've seen that were caused by "speed demons."
The "road turtle" is a safe driver too—he'll never run into anyone. The "turtle" is usually 50 or over—been driving cars since the Model "T." He's been driving long enough to know all the safety habits—if you don't believe it just ask him. He knows the accidents are caused by younger fast drivers, and will be glad to tell you so.
No fast driving for him! He has a new car and could show those young punks a few things if he wanted to, but he's a SAFE driver. His speedometer never registers more than 35 day or night. It's more economical too—and easier on the car.
Keep both hands on the wheel, he tells you, and sit straight in the seat. If you get tired that way and let the car wheels wander over into the other lane, that's okay. At 35 you can always get back into your own lane in time. But be sure and keep that left wheel close to the center stripe—don't want to run off the side of the road.
If you hear a car horn in back, don't let it bother you, he says. The driver is going too fast if he wants to pass. Keep him back there and teach him a lesson.
Another thing, he warns younger drivers, keep from getting too close to that car in front. If you see a car in front of you slow down to 20 (that's a safe speed, too). Come to a dead stop if you see anything unusual in the road. Stop right where you are! Don't want to run into anything, you know.
On and on he goes. Plenty of advice to hand out, and when he's done, you'll agree he's a safe driver—to stay away from!
Both the "Sunday Driver" and the "Road Turtle" are numerous on Kansas roads. Each is absolutely sure that he is a safe driver—and appears to be completely unaware that he is a major menace to every other driver.
Unfortunately, there is nothing in the Kansas statutes to penalize the slow drivers on the highways. Also, unfortunately, few of them are ever involved in an accident or appear in a traffic court. They just CAUSE accidents!
-Clay Brandon
POGO
DOG BONE! YOU IS MOLE!
THEN WHO'S I GOT HERE?
WHO,
INDEED?
AN'
WHY,
TOO?
BLESS MY SOFT BROWNEYES ... IT'S BEAU-REE-GARD!
TO THINK THAT YOU, MY FELLOW SLEUTH, IS THE KIDNAPPER --
WHAT?
COWS
39 MES
WALLS
FEED?
ALBERT! YOU SUSPECTS ONE MAN, CATCHES
THE WRONG ONE ANY SO YOU CLAIMS THE
ONE YOU IS GOT IS GUILTY!
JUIS CATCHIN' A MAN
DONT PROVE HE'S
A CULPRIT!
IT'S
A GOOD
START.
AIN'T IT?
WEY
GOOD
START.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 378
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editor Assm. Inland Dially Press Assn. Associated with the Neglegate Press Assn. Represensnts at the Lawrence Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y.C. Mall Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4 a year; a semester if in Lawrence, published every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unlimited commutation periods. Entered second class matriculation periods. Entrated second class matriculation periods. Entrated second class matriculation periods. Entrated second class matriculation periods.
e. Kah, Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor ... Dion Tone
Assistants ... Letty Lemonn
Page 3
250 Pass English Proficiency Exam
Carol Schatzel, college junior, and Delois Shade, education junior, have been awarded honorable mention for the best writing in the English proficiency examination passed by 250 on March 15.
Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences who passed the English Proficiency examination are: freshman; Jack Collins; sophomores: Jean Basham, John Axline, Lester George Bixler, Mildred Clark, Hugh Adair Cox, Victor William Davis, Sylvia Dyck, Billy Elam Eloise Feuerborn, John Lukeert, Ruth Mirick, Sally Wayne Morrison, Audrey Roberts, Elaine Stunkel, and Harry White.
Juniors: Jane Armstrong, Wutliam Arnold, Vonna Dianne Barnhill, Shannon Bennett, Robert H. Braden, Eleanor Burton, James Connelly, Ann Carmichael, Edward Cresswell, Henry Curry, Patricia Cusie, Dale Darnell, Betty Ann Davis, Patricia Ann Davis, James Cox Detter, Mark Devine, John C. Dods, William Doyle, Gerald Dunn, Donald Easter Endacott, Gordon Allen Evy, William Farrar, Kenneth Fendorf, John Fields, Terry Fiske, Kenneth Fligg, Leo Franz, Tom Hall, Karl H. Hanson, David Hardy, Margaret Harms, Lawrence Albert Hedstrom.
Mary Hill, Raymond Hogue, Kenneth Halladay, Herbert Horowitz, George Hotz, Nancy Jamison, Wilbur Janzen, Robert Kasper, Donald Kay, Ann Marie Leavitt, Paul Lyda, Martin Lyle, Michael Maturo, Lois McArdle, John McCall, Ted McCoy, Kathleen McKee, Dorothy Mitchell, Larry Dee Mosby, Albert Mulliken, Joan Mitchell, Ruby Nash, James Edgar Nichols, Julia Oliver, Lloyd Pine, Thomas Richmond.
Richard Ross, Carol Schatzel
Chandler Schaefer, Stanley Shane,
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Margaret Shulenberger, Phyllis Snyder, Lynn Stewart, Byron Springer, Doris Stites, Robert Talley, Ann Terflinger, William M. Thompson, Ann Wallace, LeRoy Watkins, Fern Watts, Jerry Whetstone, Mary Wiebe, Edward Wilson, Phyllis Wood, and John Yulich.
Seniors; Victor Anderson, Donald Belden, Pendleton Camp, John Crowley, John Dougherty, William Doyle, Albert Dunean, Benjamin Franklin Farney, Richard Hadley, Phillip Hanni, George Helmstader, Ronald Holmes, John Jiminez, Thomas Edward Johnston, R. E. Johnstone, Douglas Krys, Bryson Kitchen, Arnold Kottwitz, Jean Letter, Lorene Kottwitz, Forrest Lottman, Alex Mburney, Robert Gene McDonald, Michael McKee, Lloyd McKenney, Patricia Mitchell, Jack Milton Mohler.
Kaye Don Moran, Richard Morgan, Grant Morrell, Nelson Perkins, Louis Petrie, Thomas Pratt, Don Rawson, Waunita Rench, Patricia Schulte, James Sharpnack, Richard Shaw, Martha Taylor, Hugo Teufel, Robert Travis, Robert Warder, Jay Dee Whiteford, Claude Wright, Kenneth Yunker, Theoron Fursley, Kenneth Beck, first year law, and Kenith Howard, second year law.
Students in the School of Journalism passing the examination are, juniors: Jim Cameron, Audrey Holmes, Margot Baker, Leonard Jurden, Leo Hack, Letty Lemon, Taylor Rhodes, William Slamin, and La Verte Yates; seniors: Jean Susanne Berry, and Mary Eetz, Janet Dearduff.
Students in the School of Education who passed the examination are sophomores: Barbara Goering. Sue Harper, Marilyn Kipp, Arlene Lutz, Elizabeth Moran, Edith Sorter, Janice Stone, Richard Thornton, and Charlia Von Guten.
Juniors: Donald Augst, Melba Austin, Barbara Bateman, Joan Bennett, Carol Burchfield, Keith Carter, Signe Click, Fred Coombs, Babette Cooper, Alice Lynn Cox, Diana Cruse, Robert Damkroger, John Dodd.
Curtis Dolllins, Janet Dougherty,
Patricia Duncan, Donald Edwards.
Marjorie Englund, Rita Estes, Mary Eversull, Gene Fotopolos, Dorothy Gerber, Marlene Gray, Lyle Hales, Jack Hamgim, Robert Hantla, Eddie Harsch, June Hereford, Elizabeth Hindley, Robert Hubbard, Edwinna Jones, Helen Kite, Dean LeRoy Kopper, Carol Logan, Janice Meisner, Nancy Moore, Wilma Morton, William Percid, Judith Perry, Tot Patricia Powers, Sandra Puliver, Patsy Raines.
Wednesday, April 14. 1954 University Daily Kansan
Seniors: Sue Anschutz, William Blair, Edwin Gould. Morris Albert Kay, Orville Poppe, Dorothy'Shoup, Ellen Shirley Skinner, Billy Donald Todd, John Towner, and La Verne Wilson.
Dorothy Schumaker, Delois Shade, Janice Skauer, Betty Jean Smith, Dorothy Ann Smith, Fred Tarry, Elizabeth Teas, Jane Underwood, Marie Wellman, Patsy Wiley, and William Woody.
Students in the School of Fine Arts who passed the English proficiency examination are: sophomore, Roger Haig Johnson; juniors: Eleanor Bell, Susanne Brown, Barbara Elam, Louisa Ellen Hall, Wilma Clarie Hudsonpillar, Kathryn Ann Magers, Jo Ann Quistgard, Norma Lee Stranathan, and Sara Buchannan.
Seniors: John Barley, Lynn Burton, Harriet King, Mary Gayle Loveless, Francis Gwinn McClenahan, Jerry Carlos Moore, James Sellards, and Sara Buchannan. Nursing students in the School of Medicine who passed the examination are: juniors, Bonnie Lou Metz, Mary Ruth Purcell, and Mary Taggart; Kathleen Kelly, special student, also passed.
Ellsworth to Attend Meeting
Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, will attend a section meeting of the National Art Education association in Grand Rapids April 12-16. Miss Ellsworth will be discussion group leader on what the art teacher should do to help the architect plan a school building. She will be a member of a panel discussing the problems in training art teachers.
Some tree crops are harvested about every 100 years.
'Hawks' 19-Hit Attack Defeats Arkansas 13-4
Backed by 19 hits by his teammates, Loren Martin, a madeover catcher, struck out 14 men here yesterday as the Kansas Jayhawkers overwhelmed Arkansas, 13-4 to sweep the series.
Martin, a sophomore righthander, gave up nine hits and six bases-on-balls. He was in trouble only once, in the fifth, when he gave up three singles and two runs. His mates played errorless ball behind him.
Forrest Hoglund, third baseman, led the Kansas attack with four hits in six at-bats. Bill Pulliam collected three hits, and John Trombold, Bill Heitholt, Don Aungst, and Martin each chipped in with two safeties each.
The victory pushed KU's record to 5-1, four of the victories over Arkansas. Kansas opens its Big Seven season today against Kansas State on the local diamond. Game time is 3 p.m.
Trombold, slugging first sacker, smashed his second homer of the series in the seventh inning with a man aboard. Both Hoglund and Martin banged doubles, to round out KU's extra base hits.
All of Kansas' 19 hits were charged to Charles Bogan who went the distance. The Razorbacks committed five errors behind Bogan—11 of the runs against Bogan were earned. Had it not been for being hit so soundly, Bogan would have pitched a good game. He gave up only two walks and struck out nine.
Kansas combined four singles, two walks, and three errors for five runs in the initial inning, and duplicated that fete in the seventh via three singles. Martin's double, and Trombold's homerun.
Johnson to Address Teachers
Dr. Charles E. Johnson, professor of education, will be the principal speaker at a dinner meeting of Burlingame elementary and secondary public school teachers tomorrow. The topic of his speech will be "Problems and Trends in Public Education."
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Pre-nursing club, 4 p.m., room 8.
Fitness nurse, 5 a.m., room 8.
health nurse health nurse to Topeka will speak
Hometown Correspondents meeting, 5 p.m., 305 Student Union. Short meeting. Speaker, Robert Vosper, director of libraries.
History club. 7 p.m. Pine room, Mem-
sorium. 10 a.m. The United
States and the Near East."
UVO: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk room. All visitors invited for signing of spring in situ internum palace.
Chinese Student club, 7:30 p.m., Oread room. Student Union
Radio Players and candidates. Trouys of "Last Word." 7 p.m. today and tomorrow. Green hall. Contact Russell Wigglesworth, KDGU. If unable to report.
Record Dance, 8 to 11 p.m. Trail room,
Entertainment, 9 to 11 p.m. Kent
Munster, 10 a.m.
TOMORROW
AWS House meeting, 4 p.m., Student Union.
Der deutsche Verein musical program by Harriet King and Dale Moore, 5 p.m.
basement of Art Museum, not in 502 Fraser.
Kuoku club. 7:15 p.m. Pine room. Studebaker Building for initiation for initiation. All must be pressed.
University Women's Club. 8 p.m.
Guests of Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy at her home. Miss Kinnane will speak: "The Speaking Voice."
Jayhawk Brotherhood, 8:30 p.m., room
205. Memorial Union, Short meeting.
305. Memorial Union. Short message.
Le Cercle français se 're unita a sept
septem et demme dans la saite 113 Strong.
Programma: " I Indochine" par Michel
Lambece.
AGI meeting. 7:15. Activities Lounge, Union.
Psychology club. 7:30 p.m. 9. Strong drama with interpretation by Mies Wieland. $45.
KU Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
300 KU Christian Norbie will speak on "God—and Calvary."
SUNDAY
All-student sunrise service, 8 a.m.
Campanile hit Music by KU choralist,
6 p.m.
+
Services
HOLY WEEK
The Lawrence Ministerial Alliance Invites
all students and faculty to attend the Union Services being held each evening (through Friday) at the First Presbyterian Church at 8:00 p.m.
The Holy Week speaker was chosen with the students in mind. He is Dr. Glenn Olds, chaplain at the University of Denver. He has something to say to students! Don't miss him!
Three-hour Good Friday service, 12:00 to 3:00 p.m. at the Trinity Episcopal Church.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 14, 1954
Yanks, Dodgers Lose Opening Day Games
By UNITED PRESS
Nine out of the last 10 major league pennant winners scored opening day victories and if that means anything the Yankees and Dodgers could be in trouble.
Because both were off on the wrong foot today.
The Yankees went 10 innings in Washington before Mickey Vernon hit a prodigious two-run homer that gave the Senators a 6-4 victory and prompted President Eisenhower to make a special trip down to congratulate him after the game. The blow, a long one as all homers must be in Washington, came off erstwhile Yankee Allie Reynolds, who previously walked Ed Yost.
Of course, the Yankees as usual have an angle in their favor. The only exception in the pattern whereby pennant winners score opening day victories occurred last season when the Athletics beat them, 5-0; for the only opening day loss Casey Stengel had suffered in five flag-winning seasons. In the National league, for five seasons every pennant winner had an opening day triumph, the Dodgers in 1953 and 1952, the Giants in 1951 before they went into an 11-game losing streak, the Phils in 1950, and the Dodgers again in 1949.
In the Polo Grounds, the Giants made only four hits off Carl Erskine but three were homers by Al Dark, Hank Thompson, and Willie Mays and thereby hung the tale of a 4-3 victory. Roy Campanella hit two homers off winner Sal Maglie, who received great one-hit relief help from Marv Grissom in the final 23 innings.
It was a day of heavy slugging, this 1954 inaugural with 12 homers in the National as compared with six last year and nine in the American as compared with four in the 1953 openers. In other National league games Cincinnati outsugged Milwaukee 9-8, the Cubs topped the Cards at St. Louis 13-4 with 16 hits, while Pittsburgh came from behind to defeat the Phillies 4-2. Elsewhere in the American league, the A's defeated Boston 6-4, Detroit blanked Baltimore 6-0, while Cleveland pounded out a 15-hit 8-3 triumph at Chicago.
Cincinnati made 13 hits, including four doubles by Jim Greengrass, coming from behind to win its traditional festive home opener despite two homers by Ed Mathews, the 1953 home run king. Ando Pafko was hit on the head by a pitched ball after rapping three doubles for Milwaukee but was believed to have escaped serious damage because of his protective helmet.
Robin Roberts still has his troubles that plagued him all spring. Going on with the roses, he free-hit shut-out the Pirates opened a kayoed him with a four run rally.
Lefty Harvey Haddix another big winner of 1933, was racked up in St. Louis by the Cubs who were paced by Clyde McCullough with a homer, two doubles, and a single. Rookie
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Gene Baker and pitcher Paul Minner, who hurled six hit ball, also hit Cub homers while rookie Wally Moon of St. Louis hit a homer in his first big league time at bat. Stan Musial also homered for the Cards.
At Philadelphia, the Athletics scored a victory but again lost lefty Bobby Shantz who went out in the sixth inning with the same kind of an arm injury that laid him low last year. Rookies Ozzie Van Brabant and Bill Upton collaborated on saving Shantz' victory while Gus Zernial hit a homer, Bill Renna drove in three runs, and rookie Jacobs made four hits. Sam White and Jack Jensen homeered for Boston.
909 Mass. Ph. 521
Steve Gromek turned in the day's best pitching job, blanking the Orioles, who still look suspiciously like last year Brown.
Remand Wins Easy Victory
New York —(U,P)— W. Hagin Perry's Remand enhanced his Kentucky derby chances yesterday by romping to an easy three length triumph in the $6,000 Springboard purse at Jamaica. Mrs. John Hertz' Double Speed, another Derby hopeful, was all but eliminated from further contention when he soundly beaten for the second straight time. Remand's time for the six furlongs was 1:12 1/5 and the son of Revoked paid $12.30 for $2.00.
Reese Says Dodgers Better Than in '53
New York—(U.P.)—There is no complacency among the Brooklyn Dodgers even though they feel they have a better ball club than last year, captain Feewee asserted today, and "there couldn't be until we beat those Yankees in a World Series.'
Not that the little veteran, starting his 12th season in Dodger flannels, was predicting another Dodger-Yankee classic come October. But you could feel, as the Dodgers opened the season against the Giants, that they are after this pennant with a vengeance.
That continual walloping in the World Series still rankles.
"We know we are in for a tough year," Reese said, speaking like a man who is glad of a stern challenge to fit his team for the big job in the fall. "Those Cardinals were impressive this spring. The Abbey Magie and Larry Jansen in shape, are a fine club, Milwaukee is tough and any of the teams in this league can get hot and hurt you. We've got this thing to win before we worry about any World Series."
But in the back of the Dodger minds, through every game they play this season, they'll be taking dead aim on the Yankees. Most of them are praying that the Yanks
take the American league crown. They want one more shot at the champions in the classic—and they feel this is the club which could finally bring Brooklyn its first World Series triumph.
"This is a better team than we had last season," Reese explained. "The main thing is that we have better pitching. Don Newcombe is going to make a big difference and watch Erv Palica."
Palica, according to Reese, was handled wrong by former manager Charley Dressen.
There are 11 deepwater ports in Texas, all of them man-made.
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Blocking, Tackling Practiced in KU Drill
Football Coach "Chuck" Mather and his assistants ran the KU squad through their second workout yesterday that was similar to the first day of practice.
Linemen and backs alike were practicing blocking and tackling assignments in preparation of the first scrimmage that will be held this afternoon.
The linemen, in particular, were doing the heavy hitting. Line coaches Dick Piskoty, Lauri Wartiainen, and Dave Putts kept constantly shouting at men, urging faster starts, cleaner blocks and tackles, and rolling into the opposing defensive man to complete the block.
Back field coaches Wayne Replogle, Paul Schofer, and Mather had their men practicing blocking assignments from their T-formation positions, along with running quick sorting plays, pass plays, and pass defense maneuvers.
After the session, Coach Mather was asked if he wasn't taking the boys a little too fast. Mather said that a boy had to extend himself in order to learn. He added, "I go as fast as the fastest men can learn, and the rest of the boys will just have to catch up. If I waited for the slower men, we would never learn anything."
Asked about the serimimage that is scheduled for today the coach said he would only play the boys that had the least football experience. He has about 33 boys who are looking pretty good, and he will have these men working out while the remainder are "knocking heads."
Mather said that the squad seem very deep in back field material and he was thinking about moving some of the backs into the line for more speed.
Cutting the squad to a smaller, more workable group is the next big job for the coaching staff. Mas said that he would keep most the boys as long as he could because he didn't want to overlook any talent.
First Day Crowds Top `53 Figures
New York — (U.P.)— Opening day 1954 drew more baseball fans to the parks than did opening day 1953.
Final figures showed that 236,414 fans attended yesterday's major league openers, as compared with 176,269 fans on the general opening day last season. True, there were eight games yesterday and only seven last year, but even so the average attendance increased from 25,181 to 29,582.
Yesterday's largest crowd was at Detroit's Briggs stadium, where the Tigers played host to, and defeated, the Baltimore Orioles, who were returning to the American league after a 52-year absence. But that throng, 46,994, failed to match 1953's top opening day crowd of 53,698 at Cleveland.
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Tennis Squad Posts 9-0Win
A seven man KU tennis squad made a clean sweep of nine matches to defeat the Mankato, (Minn.) State Teachers college here yesterday afternoon. Today KU is meeting Omaha in a dual meet which started at 1 p.m.
The only match that even went three sets was the No. 1 doubles in which Al Hedstrom and Dick Hadley defeated Ronnie Trondson and Henry Dison 4-6, 7-5, 6-2.
Al Hedstrom, K, defeated Trondson,
M, 6-0. 6-2.
The results:
Dick Hadley, K, defeated Dison M. 6-1. 6-4.
Roger Youmans, K, defeated Harold Schoreder, 6-2, 6-1.
Merl Sellers, K, defeated Lowell Case, 6-2, 6-1.
Dave Kane, K, defeated Tom Hanson, 6-3. 6-0.
Don Franklin, K, defeated Nate
Hovland. 6-0, 6-2.
Sellers and Youmans, K, defeated Schroeder and Case, 6-1, 6-3.
Hedstrom and Hadley, K, defeat
Trondheim and Dison, 4-6, 7-5,
6-2
Kane and Ralph Kelley, K, defeated Hovland and Hanson, 6-1, 6-3.
Joe Page, former New York Yankee relief pitcher, signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates yesterday for the 1954 baseball season.
Shantz Injures Pitching Arm
Philadelphia—(U.P.)—The Philadelphia Athletics crossed their fingers today in the hope "muscular spasm" bellwether Bobby Shantz suffered in his pitching arm is not as serious as the arm injury which wrecked his 1953 season.
Trainer Jim Tadley massaged the tiny southpaw's arm and after the session of the rubbing table Shantz said, "it feels real good."
Manager Eddie Joost was so optimistic over Shantz' report that he canceled plans for an x-ray examination of the arm. Joost said he would let the 139-pound hurler "throw a few in New York" tomorrow to test the arm.
"If the arms seems okay, I'll let Bobby limber up over the weekend and maybe him against the regularly held box against the Boxbox in Boston on Sunday." Joost said.
Deep concern ran through the Athletics' squad yesterday when Shantz, the club's most valuable piece of property, gripped his left arm in pain after tossing a called strike to leadoff batter Billy Goodman of the Red Sox in the sixth inning.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 14, 1954
West Awaits Soviet Answer on Disarming
United Nations, N.Y. — (U.P.)— The Western powers looked to Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky today for an answer to whether the Kremlin is ready to enter serious negotiations aimed at halting the hydrogen bomb race.
The United Nations 12-nation Disarmament commission meets at 2 p.m. (CST), when Mr. Vishinsky is expected to give Russia's reply to the West's blueprint on handling what may be a fateful new round of disarmment talks.
If the Russians see no chance of any disarmament progress, it was believed, they may oppose any secret discussions and leave the door open for propaganda.
The Indian plan gives the Russians a good propaganda opening by seeking among other things immediate consideration of radiation injuries suffered by Japanese fishermen in the recent American H-bomb tests in the Pacific.
Britain formally proposed last Friday that the commission set up a subcommittee of the Big Four powers and Canada to conduct the talks-in secret. The United States suggested that India's proposal for a "stand-still agreement" on H-bomb tests be handed over to the subcommittee at once.
Observers believed that Russian acceptance of the procedure outlined by the West would be a good indication that the Kremlin is sincerely interested in progress towards the awesome hydrogen weapons.
Engineers Get Scholarship
The Howard A. Fitch scholarship a scholarship for engineering students, donated by the Kansas City Structural Steel company of Kansas City has been announced.
The announcement said that $500 will be given to a freshman in the civil engineering department for the academic year 1954-55. If the student maintains his grade average he may keep the scholarship for a maximum of five years. In addition he will be offered summer employment with the Kansas City Structural Steel company.
Howard A. Fitch Jr., president of the Kansas City Structural Steel company, said the purpose of the scholarship is to give financial assistance to young men with limited financial resources who will in turn help others later in life.
Selection of the scholar by the chairman of the civil engineering department, Prof. George W. Bradshaw, and the dean of the engineering school, T. DeWitt Carr, will be based on personal qualifications and the need for financial assistance in completing educational courses.
Preference will be given to children of the employees of the Kansas City Structural Steel company and to students whose homes are within a radius of 50 miles of Kansas City.
KDGU Schedule
6:30 Cavalcade of Music
8:30 Cavalcade of Music
7:00 Bookstore Hour
6:00 Great Moments in Music
5:15 Music from Other Lands
1:15 Party Line
2:00 News
3:55 Flip Side
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News and Sign Off
11:00 News and Sign Off
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'Polishing Party To Prepare Plane
A "polishing party" for the University's newly acquired Convair L-13 airplane has been set for 8 a.m. tomorrow.
The plane, now being kept at the local airport, is to be brought to the Aero hut for the "polishing party." All students in aeronautical engineering—especially freshmen and sophomores—who are not engaged in readying projects for the Engineering Exposition are invited to help in the job.
London — (U.P.) — Radio Moscow told Soviet children today that American children are schooled in an alphabet that starts:
Oh You Kids!
A—for atomic.
B-for bomb.
American youngsters, the official Soviet radio said, are trained to be obedient little soldiers "ready to rob other nations."
KU to Participate In Scholarship Plan
The University is one of 40 schools in the nation invited to participate in the scholarship program of the Atlas Powder company, Wilmington, Del., for 1954-55.
The company will award eight $1,000 scholarships to students for their senior year in chemistry, physics or any branch of engineering. Successful candidates also will be offered summer employment in one of Atlas' 12 plants or four research laboratories.
50,000 Maps of State, World Housed in Lindley Library
By JIM HATHAWAY
Lindley library is more than a resting place for tired geologists, for it also houses a carefully developed collection of 50,000 maps, one of the University's more valuable assets for teaching and research.
Under the direction of Prof. Thomas R. Smith, the collection ranges all the way from standard geological and mineral maps to small topographic sheets whose titles vary from "Agricultural Capability of Kansas Soils" to "Sex Ratios of Population in Japan."
"By participating in the Army Map Service Depository Program, the program received 20,000 maps, mostly of foreign areas," said Prof. Smith. However, this program
Prof. Smith explained that the collection has grown chiefly through maps distributed by the U.S. and State Geological Survey, and the U.S. Army Map service.
was discontinued at the outbreak of the Korean fighting.
"The present purchasing program is aimed to obtain all available maps of Kansas, to broaden our coverage of both topographic and special purpose maps for selected foreign areas, and to acquire outstanding examples of contemporary cartographic work," he continued.
The map collection now contains some notable maps. These include "Land Utilization Map of Great Britain," the outstanding land use survey of a nation, and a copy of the rare "Great Soviet World Atlas." Volume 1, Moscow, 1937, which covers the USSR in great detail.
The rocket launching station at Woomera in South Australia has offered so many jobs to workmen that the opal production industry in the vicinity has been seriously curtailed.
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Page 7
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terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted
with the understanding that the bill will
be paid promptly. Ads must be called in
taring the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex-
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Wednesday, April 14. 1954 University Daily Kansan
President Shouldn't Yield To Congress, Truman Says
Fulton. Mo.—(U.P.)—Former President Harry S. Truman believes no chief executive should let Congress ruin over him.
Mr. Truman yesterday deliveret the second of two John Finley Green lectures at Westminster college, where British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill delivered his "Iron Curtain" speech eight years ago.
"Any president who sits idly by
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The former president's topic was presidential papers and their historic significance, but he touched on political questions during a question and answer period after the speech.
what he deserves," he said in answer to a question. "The powers of the president are granted by the constitution and they should be guarded jealously."
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 14, 1954
Students to Vote Tuesday For National Queen Entry
One of the five major queens chosen this year on the campus will be selected in an election Tuesday to represent KU in the National Yearbook Queen of America contest.
In a meeting of the All Student Council senate last night it was decided that the Carnival, Homecoming, Relays, Independent Student association, Greek week, and Military ball queens would be voted on by the entire student body to choose one to represent the University in the national contest.
Sara Starry of KU won the title of yearbook Book of America in 1952.
Since Sue Schmeiderer, college sophomore, was both Carnival queen and Greek week queen only five
women will be voted on. They are Dorothy Jones, fine arts sophomore, ISA queen; Doralyn Humbargar, college sophomore, Military ball queen; Barbara Korn, fine arts sophomore, Homecoming queen; and Carol Shellhaas, college sophomore, Relays queen.
Professor Attends Meeting
Dr. Marjorie H. Richey, assistant professor of psychology, is attending the annual meeting of the American College Personnel association in Buffalo, N.Y., this week. Dr. Richelle will give a demonstration of student counseling techniques on Wednesday.
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Opposition to an alliance of any type with the National Student association and a promise to strive for the re-establishment of Greek political unity are main platform planks of POGO, the Party of Greek Organizations.
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POGO will support work in the ASC for the placing of student activities on transcripts, establishment of a pre-enrollment system similar to that of the University of Missouri, the establishment of a liaison committee from the ASC to the student hospital, and continued opposition to increased parking fines.
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Other areas included in the Greek organizations platform for the coming elections are student welfare, academic affairs, extracurricular activities, and student government, it was decided in a meeting last night.
Other planks include investigating the possibility of getting better dates for homecoming and relays weekends and recommending lights on the varsity tennis courts, building sidewalks and stepping leading from the Military Science building to Jaya hawk drive, and erecting permanent signs marking University buildings.
Dick Meyer, POGO president, said "It is my belief that the adoption of these positive steps will lead to a more effective student government, one that will assist each and every student here at Kansas."
Army Reserve Has Vacancies
Page 8
The 314th Army Reserve Engineering battalion in Kansas City has announced vacancies which can be filled by enlisted men or non-commissioned officers from KU. Commander of the unit, Lt. Tozan B. Dios, said that transportation facilities to the alternate Tuesday meetings in the armory building at Kansas City has been organized. The next meeting of the group is April 13.
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I PICKED CAMELS AS BEST 18 YEARS AGO AND WE'VE BEEN THE BEST OF FRIENDS EVER SINCE! CAMELS' FRIENDLY FLAVOR AND MILDNESS HAVE ALWAYS AGREED WITH ME!
Start smoking Camels yourself!
Smoke only Camels for 30 days — see for yourself why Camels' cool, genuine mildness and rich, friendly flavor give more people more pure pleasure than any other cigarette!
C
CAMELS LEAD IN SALES BY RECORD
50 $ \frac{8\%}{10} $
CAMELS
CAMEL
TURKISH DONATED
BRAND
CHOICE QUALITY
CAMEL
Newest nationwide figures *from the*
leading industry analyst, Harry
M. Wooten, show Camels
now 50 8/10% ahead of
the second-plate brand
-biggest retailer in history
*Published in Printers' Ink, 1954
AGREE WITH MORE PEOPLE
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co,
Winston-Salem, N. C.
THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE
1954
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ka.
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 15, 1954
51st Year, No. 125
—Kansan photo by Gordon Ross
PETRIC
FLORENCE
FLOAT FRAMEWORK—Nancy Garrity, Jeanie McDonald, and Beverly Jackson ready the skeleton for Chi Omega's float, which will compete with 27 others in the Kansas Relays parade on Saturday.
Oratory Contest Finalists Listed
Six students have been selected from preliminary tryouts to compete in the finals of the Delta Sigma Rho Oratorical contest at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
The student speakers and their topics include William Arnold, college junior, "The Turning Point", Hubert Bell, college junior, "Uncontrolled by External Law"; John Eland, college freshman, "The Ghostly Investigation"; Don Endacott, college junior; "Junior Senator from Wisconsin"; Robert Ball, college senior, "The Crisis of Faith," and Robert Kimball, college freshman, "Return to Religion."
Richard Smith, college junior and president of Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary forensic fraternity, sponsor of the contest, will be chairman.
Judges will be the Rev. Hice Lardner, minister of the Presbyterian church of Olathe; Allen Crafton, speech professor, and Mrs. Crafton; Gerald L. Pearson, director of extension classes, and Robert M. Davis, professor of law.
First prize will be a complete 30-volume set of the Encyclopedia Americana donated by Walter W. Ross, Kansas City, Mo. Second prize will be $15 and third prize, $5.
Lehmberg Given Fulbright Grant
Stanford E. Lehmberg, graduate student from McPherson, has been awarded a Fulbright scholarship for study in England in 1954-55. He will study history at Sydney Sussex college in world famous Cambridge university.
Lehmberg's grant is one of 192 the study in the United Kingdom, for which competition is most intense, and one of approximately 1,000 for foreign study next year. The grant covers transportation costs both ways, education fees and board and room. The U.S. State department makes the award.
Cool Weather Brings Rains To Dry State
Indications are for partly cloudy skies turning fair Friday with considerably cooler temperatures. There may be some frost in Northwest and North-Central Kansas tonight, said State Weatherman Tom Arnold,
A low pressure area and cold front which moved across Nebraska last night "will bring occasional showers here today." C. J. Posey, Lawrence volunteer weather forecaster, said.
The rain was brought by a warm, moist air current flowing into the area from the Gulf of Mexico, which left scattered showers over Eastern Kansas and Missouri.
Topeka — (U.P.)— A cool front completed its southeasterly sweep through Kansas today bringing rains ranging from sprinkles to an inch and a half.
The heaviest downpour in this section was recorded at Olathe, where the 1.21 inches brought some relief for a severe water shortage. About 900,000 gallons of water was added to two small lakes at the city of Olathe, with the mayor of Olathe, estimated today, Lawrence received .37 of an inch
The weather in Lawrence will be cooler today and tomorrow. The high here yesterday was 82. The low was 59. The temperature extremes in Kansas yesterday were 40 at Goodland and 83 at Hill City.
Much of Western Kansas was missed completely by the moisture although Dodge City in the southwest measured a third of an inch. The most generous showers were in the southeast.
Independence reported 1.50 inches,
Chanute 56, Walnut 81, Fort Scott
56, Iola 90, LaCygne 63, Quenemo
51, Emporia 16, Olathe 121, Lec-
compton 12, Topeka 07, Wamego
01, Horton 46, Wichita and Hutch-
inson 02, Russell 15, Garden City
and Goodland 03, Hill City
01, and traces at Salina and Concordia.
In the last 24 hours Kansas has minimum temperatures ranging from 37 at Goodland to 64 at Waco mego and maximum between 80 and 95 Cities.
German Movie Set Tomorrow
394 Classes Listed For Summer Term
"Keepers of the Night (Nachtwache)" will be presented by the University Film Series at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch auditorium.
The German-language movie of life in Germany in the early postwar period is the final picture to be shown in the series this semester. It is the story of a young doctor who loses her faith in God when her little daughter was killed in an air raid, and of two men who try to win her favor.
The new pastor of a Protestant hospital, a widower, and the little girl's father, a former Air Force pilot and now a prominent actor whom the doctor believed dead, are both rejected by the young doctor. On a trip to a fair the pastor's young daughter is killed through the actor's carelessness. The actor, who was full of venom against all religion, becomes despondent, and even the pastor feels his faith waning.
A summer session schedule offers 394 courses in 46 departments of the university was released today by Dean George B. Smith, director of the summer session.
Registration and enrollment are June 11-12, followed by eight full weeks of classwork ending August 7. Eight credit hours may be earned.
Twenty-five workshops and conferences for special groups are planned by University Extension in cooperation with the teaching departments. Academic credit may be earned in nine of these workshops.
Dean Smith said the School of Education would offer 66 courses for teachers at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
There also will be large programs in the departments of art and music. Most of those faculties will be present because of the 17th season of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp for high schools age boys and girls.
The credit workshops include advanced clinical practice in problems of hearing, home economics education, elementary school workshop, health education, teaching of English, industrial hygiene engineering, teaching of foreign languages, driver education and improvement of secondary school education.
The schedule provides for entering freshman to the doctoral degree candidate, Dean Smith said.
The music camp, opera workshop and School of Fine Arts will provide numerous concerts. The extensive recreation program includes the university swimming pool and outdoor movies.
Quantrill Raid To Be Relived
A new twist will be added, however—the 1954 edition of the raiders will be met by a welcoming committee and served a special dinner as a part of Lawrence's local centennial celebration.
University of Kansas students will predominate in a group of 40 horsemen who will storm Lawrence May 1 in a repeat performance of Quantrill's famous sack of the city in 1863.
The gang will begin its ride at Spring Hill, near the place where the original Quantrill group gathered. From there they will follow the actual route of the Quantrill gang past Olathe and into Gardner.
The raiders will "steal" a fresh string of horses in Gardner after shooting up the town, and then move on to Eudora where they'll bed down for the night.
Six Win Honors In IM Speaking
Winners last night of the information contest, the first of the annual Intramural Speaking contests, were:
Women's division: First place—Nancy Reese, college senior, representing Kappa Kappa Gamma, whose topic was "Cerebral Palsy." Second place—Lois McArdle, college junior, representing Alpha Delta Pi, who won with "Japanese Dating Customs." Third place—Bettany Stanford, college freshman, representing Foster hall, "Advancement of the Oil Industry."
Men's division; First place-Robert Lynch, freshman in medicine, independent, "Another World Watching." Second place-Jerry Brownlee, graduate, representing Beta Theta Pi, "Our Next War," Third place-John Ball, college freshman, representing Alpha Tau Omega, "21 GI Communists"
Trophies to individual and house winners will be awarded following the next two contests. Demonstration speeches will be held next Wednesday and entertainment speeches April 28.
Lawyers to Attend State Bar Meeting
A group of faculty members and students of the School of Law will attend, the State Bar association meeting in Topeka today, tomorrow, and Saturday.
On Friday a luncheon will be held at the Kansan hotel in Topeka for graduates of the School of Law. Guest speaker for the luncheon will be Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law and Gerald Sawatzky, editor-in-chief of the Law Review, also will speak.
Dean Moreau, chairman of the Legal Education and Admissions to Board committee, will make reports of committee work at the meeting.
Women's Drill Team To Meet
Women's Drill Team To Meet The Air Force ROTC Women's Drill Team will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at the Military Science building.
The Uninvited-
Russians Take Notes on Airplanes
New York —(U.P.)— Officials discovered today that the most interested spectators at a national convention of aircraft specialists here was a group of uninvited Russians who crammed their brief cases with pamphlets about the latest trends in the nation aircraft design.
The Russians, led by an aviation expert from the Soviet embassy in Washington, have been attending meetings along with 1,000 of this nation's top aircraft designers, and executives, an official said, but have been careful not to identify themselves.
Their presence was discovered yesterday when a delegate to the convention suddenly noticed one of them had a thick accent. Another delegate recognized the acent as belonging to Lt. Col. Boris Bogatyrv, assistant air attack at the Soviet embassy in Washington, who
attended the convention last year
attended the convention last year.
Col. Bogatyrv registered last year as an univited guest, but apparently didn't even bother with such trivialities this year. Neither did the small swarm of Russians he brought with him.
For that reason, the Society of Automotive Engineers, sponsor of the convention, decided it had a perfect right to tell the cloak-and daggar Reds to go away if they showed up at closing sessions today and tried a repeat performance.
Smiling and bowing but talking as little as possible, they took down long and detailed accounts of meetings, bought up all technical pamphlets they could find, and now and then even asked a guarded question at one of the 750 exhibits spread through the Statler hotel.
It was the frantic collection of just about everything in sight that
"The Russianian went through the place like locusts. Each time they went outside somewhere they had both arms filled."
finally brought attention to the Russian leader and his thick accent. As one delegate who had watched the operation put it:
Some of the delegates who have had experience with intelligence operations said that "good intelligence is just a matter of having a first-rate filing system." They said that there definitely would be value to masses of fresh details on U.S. aviation even if it was underclassified.
Several meetings at the convention were "confidential" and were addressed by Air Force specialists. But an official said he doubted if the Reds got into any of them because admission was by written invitation only, and positive identification was required.
T-H Law Is Still An Issue
Passage of the Taft-Hartley law in 1947 brought violent protests from union leaders and laboring men, but the demands for repeal of the law have changed to demands for amendment in the seven years that have passed since the bill became law.
Congress had to pass the law, officially known as the National Labor Relations act, over the President's veto. Feeling on both sides was intense, probably because it marked the end of a long line of labor laws that had been favorable to unions and the working man.
Unions were incensed over the provisions of the law, which they soon termed the "slave labor" act. The Political Action committee of the CIO promised to defeat for re-election in 1948 all Congressmen who had voted for the bill, but it was not successful. Sen. Robert Taft (R.-Ohio). co-author of the bill, was re-elected by 500,000 votes.
Probably the law was an outgrowth of a feeling that unions had grown too strong for their own good.
Dave Beck, boss of the AFL Teamster's union, said labor might need its own political party to bring changes in the nation's labor legislation. George Meany, president of the AFL, said the same thing in advocating sweeping changes in the personnel of Congress if something were not done.
And almost anyone will agree that the Taft-Hartley law could be improved. A few years ago it was said either the law should be completely overhauled or left alone.
Over the nation, however, many persons on both sides of the labor-management fence have come to the realization that the Taft-Hartley law is neither the "slave labor" act its opponents called it nor the perfect remedy its friends thought it to be.
Labor still was bitter about the law, but their outbursts were not as violent.
By 1952, however, the lines were not drawn so sharply. The presidential candidate for the Democrats—Adlai Stevenson—was on record for his opposition to the law, but Dwight D. Eisenhower's campaign promises included revision of the controversial legislation.
Almost anyone, employer or employee, will agree that the law did not ruin the labor movement, regulate production standards, or dictate contracts.
Even the Saturday Evening Post, traditionally a supporter of management, was willing to admit editorially that the law had its faults, even though it argued against any major changes.
The question today has become one of deciding what should be amended, rather than one of being either for or against. It is this problem which has held up the revisions promised by President Eisenhower during his campaign.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 15. 1954
There may be more pressure on Congress to produce amendments to the Taft-Hartley law in the weeks to come, however.
Appeasing labor might go a long way toward gaining the support of unions for the Republicans in the elections this fall. The GOP undoubtedly believes it will need all the help it can get, since it has only a slim edge in the House and is in the minority in the Senate.
Recently the Senate Labor committee approved a bill containing all the revisions proposed by President Eisenhower except the amendment dealing with government supervision of strike votes, but it is still doubtful if Congress will pass new labor legislation this session.
Opponents say it would be costly and probably unworkable, as well as causing alienation of labor because of government interference. They add that few union leaders will call a strike unless the workers will go along.
Most controversial of the changes concerns the strike vote, calling for workers to give their opinion for or against a strike in their industry by secret ballot.
On the other side it is argued a vote would reduce the number of strikes if the workers are given a chance to decide themselves. It is also said that workers, reluctant to show opposition to union bosses, generally play "follow the leader."
The proposed change would allow picking of an employer doing work for another employer whose men are out on strike and also allow general picking of construction areas.
For injunctions—now mandatory for the general counsel of the National Labor Relations board if an employer charges there has been a secondary boycott—the proposal would leave the court orders up to the counsel's discretion.
Another major change advocated by the President concerns secondary boycotts, outlawed by the present law.
Another suggested change would prohibit a representation election for four months during an economic strike, and then only on a petition by the union.
In construction, amusement, and maritime industries, unions would be allowed to make contracts with employers before the workers themselves have been hired, and the union shop could be organized in seven days after hiring is complete, as compared to 30 days in other industries.
Other recommendations by the President emphasize the employer's right of free speech, reaffirm the rights of states to deal with strikes affecting health and safety, retain the injunction power and 80-day cooling off period for national emergency strikes, and propose that fact-finding boards be given power to make recommendations in disputes.
Perhaps the Taft-Hartley law will not be changed during this session of Congress. But now that tempers have cooled and the smoke has cleared, the lawmakers can make a much more realistic approach to the problems of labor legislation than they could have a few years ago.
—Sam Teaford
One Man's Opinion
Determined to be well-fortified when he meets head-on with Russia later this month, Secretary of State Dulles has lined up Great Britain and then went to Paris and did the same with France. Tuesday's declaration from London promised a bold and united front—the United States and Great Britain asserted that Communist aggression threatens the peace of all Southeast Asia and suggested that a military alliance be organized to safeguard the region from further Red penetration.
agression in Southeast Asia.
The United States alone cannot save Southeast Asia from communism. Secretary Dulles hopes to get an agreement from Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand, and the three Indochina States to prevent further Red
But the age-old French-German hostility toward each other has bogged down NATO and EDC, which would give Europe a continual army. France is backing down on the pledge and so is Italy.
When NATO was formed, our government stated that the successful defense of Western Europe would depend upon "united action," the assumption by each nation of its proportionate share of responsibility.
If Secretary Dulles fares well in his program, it will be a sweet victory, for past performances of these countries indicates a willingness to join in such a "united action."
The next example of "united action" came in Korea. It consisted of 90 per cent participation by the United States and token efforts by the very nations which now Secretary Dulles hopes will form a "Southeast Asia NATO."
The "greater conflict" which we sought to avoid in Korea is now threatening us in Indochina, where the French have been fighting the Vietnam Communists for more than seven years.
These nations had their reasons for not participating—lack of finances or arms. But the United States was hoping for troops. Isolationist Congressmen didn't help matters when they held that the United States should have no "entangling foreign alliances". Yet the same Congressman cried that we were getting no aid from our allies.
The French are ready to accept any offer the Communists may make at the forthcoming Geneva conference which would enable them to get out of Indochina. Secretary Dulles wants assurance that he will get more participation from our allies than in Korea.
Tom Shannon
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibb
TERM BEGINNING
PROF SNARF
"STOP WORRYING ABOUT GRADES! THEY DON'T MEAN A THING! YOU WONT FLUNK-JUST TRY TO GET SOMETHING OUT OF THIS COURSE."
TERM ENDING
4-39
"GRADES ARE ALL OUT—IF ANYONE WANTS ME I'M OUT OF TOWN FOR A FEW DAY."
U.S. Faces The Problem Of Overpopulation
What has been considered one of the nation's greatest assets appears to be on the way to becoming a liability—slowly but surely!
If the United States' birth rate continues to grow at the pace it has grown during the past half-century, statisticians say that by the year 2000 most of the people in the country will be living under famine conditions unless new methods of producing food are covered before that time.
In 1900, the U.S. had a population of 76 million. In 1930, it was 123 million; in 1950, 150 million, and it now stands at more than 161 million.
For the past seven years in a row, the birth rate has been more than $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ million babies, and in 1953, it reached a peak of 3,967,000 almost four million.
The birth rate is almost the same as if the United States had added the population of a state such as Iowa or Florida to the Union each year.
Americans are becoming parents and grandparents at an earlier age than ever before—and are living longer themselves thanks to new advances in the field of medicine. All of which means that population figures are zooming and will reach the 200 million mark by 1960.
The nation's businessmen are happy over the trend. Business should boom during the next few years. Prosperous years such as we have been going through mean more children. More children means more needs and desires. More needs and desires—more business.
Never before, they say, has a population growth such as ours gone hand-in-hand with the living standards that this country enjoys.
The effect of the birth upsure already is being felt in the nature schools and labor force—with favorable results.
However, on the darker side of the picture, the results are also being shown in the amount of cropland available for each person. In 1900, there were 4.2 acres for each person. By 1940, it had shrunk to 3 acres, and in 1950, it was down to 2.7 acres. It will be 2 acres by 1960—with a constantly growing birth ratio staring us in the face.
Thus far, modern farming methods have been able to keep up with the people's needs. Land formerly used for other purposes is being diverted to food growing, and the government is constantly searching for ways to make more land arable.
POGO
Clay Brandon
LONG AS YOU TURNS OUT NOT TO BE MOLE, I GUESS WE DONT WHACK NOBODY.
YEAH... HOU'N'DOG YOU IS A SPDIL-SPORT!
IT'S A GOOD THING I PACKED SOME OF YOUR GRUB IN YOUR BAG WITH YOUR TRAVELIN' CLOES FOR ME, POGO, 'CAUSE I IS WORKED UP A APPETITE...
QUITE SO.
4-15 POST-HAM SYNDICATION
LONG AS YOU TURNS OUT NOT TO BE MOLE, I GUESS WE DON'T WHACK NOBODY.
YEAH... HOUN'DOG YOU IS A SPOIL-SPORT!
IT'S A GOOD THING I PACKED SOME OF YOUR GRUB IN YOUR BAG WITH YOUR TRAVELIN' CLOEES FOR ME, POGO, 'CAUSE I IS WORKED UP A APPETITE...
QUITE SO.
JUS' THE SAME, MOLE, IF I HAD MY WAY, WE'D SHAKE A CONFESSION OUTEN YOU!---I STILL THINK YOU STOLE THAT POOR LILL--
DID YOU PUT ANY EVERWATCH IN? --
YOU PACKED LUNCH RIGHT IN WITH SOCKS AN' ALL?
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Inland Dally Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press Assn., Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, Mall Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Ken., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251
Ad Room KU 376
JUS' THE SAME, MOLE, IF I HAD MY WAY, WE'D SHAKE A CONFESSION OUTEN YOU!----I STILL THINK YOU STOLE THAT POOR LIL'-
DID YOU PUT ANY HVERWITCH IN...?
YOU PACKED LUNCH RIGHT IN WITH SOCKS AN' ALL?
JUS' THE SAME, MOLE, IF I HAD MY WAY, WE'D SHAKE A CONFESSION OUTEN YOU!---I STILL THINK YOU STOLE THAT POOR LIL'--
-- PUP DOG.
DID YOUPUT ANY LIVERWITCH IN...?
YOU PACKED LUNCH RIGHT IN WITH SOCKS AN' ALL?
-- PUP DOG.
COPR
1954
WALK
FELLY
EDITORIAL STAFF Des Tice
Editorial editor
Assistanta
Letty Leung
Thursday, April 15, 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
15. 1954
Bible
BIRMINGHAM
3-94
115.
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anks to that mark
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ours
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tires
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spaper
KU 376
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Annual Engineering Exposition Opens Tomorrow
The 34th annual Engineering Exposition, sponsored by the Engineering Student Council and the School of Engineering and Architecture, will be from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. until noon Saturday with more than 20 groups participating.
Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will award a trophy to the department with the most outstanding exhibit.
Exhibits and demonstrations include:
Engineering Physics, 110 and 109 Marvin, model of an atomic bomb, three million electron-volt generator, new scintillation counter, and a Geiger counter.
Civil Engineering, 207 Maryin, scale models of bridge structures, and highway construction arranged in four sections representing the eras from 1854 to 1954
Engineering Drawing, 208 Marvin, orthographic projections, descriptive geometry models, and drawings by students.
Industrial Design, 205 Marvin evolution of a humidifier design and approach and techniques of design presentation.
Army ROTC Society of American Military Engineers, 210 Marvin, Hill 284, an authentic reproduction of the defenses in the Chowan area of Korea, model amphibious landing operation, castle of the Corps of Engineers. Guards present will be members of Pershing Rifles.
Mechanical Engineering, 201 and 212 Marvin. model steam power plant, and plant design.
Architecture, third floor, Marvin, geodesic dome, designed and built by students from the theories of Buckminister Fuller; displays of sculpture, painting, and high fidelity sound for the contemporary home.
Civil Engineering, 9 Marvin, concrete testing.
Applied Mechanics, 8 Marvin,
paper and steel tensile testing,
compressive testing of wood, and ap-
piration and use of electrical strain
gages.
mathematics, 426 Lindley, mathematical contest for high school students; application of IBM punch card equipment to the solution of calculation of square root, film of the application of high speed automatic computers in the fields of aviation, atomic energy, ordnance, engineering, business and research and a table model of IBM electronic data processing equipment.
Geological Engineering, 401 Lindley, demonstration of the principles of geophysical exploration using gravimetric, magnetic, seismic, electrical, and radio-activity logging
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State Geological Survey, second floor Lindley, maps and publications, and industrial minerals.
Petroleum Engineering, second floor Lindley, drilling and production tool rig, flowing in miniature cable tool rig, flowing in oil well, and pumping oil well.
Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, 137, 101, 102, and 106 Lindley, control plant of magnetic separator used in the development of "glass sand," continuous melting induction furnace, and metallurgical specimens under microscope.
Chemical Engineering, first floor and basement. Lindley, fashion show to illustrate the uses of dyes, tour of a "dye plant."
Research Foundation, XRD-3 X-ray diffraction unit, ARL spectrograph, and electron microscope.
Aeronautical Engineering, aeronautical engineering laboratories, "L-13" airplane equipped with auxiliary lift devices, supersonic wind tunnel demonstrations of shock waves, cut away view of piston type radar aircraft engine, cut away view of turbojet aircraft engine, helicopter display—working models, aircraft radio control, remote control turret, precision made wind tunnel test—models constructed by design students, and operation landing gear.
Applied Mechanics, Engineering Research building, demonstration of photo elasticity and determination of stress concentration using polarized light.
Electrical Engineering, electrical engineering laboratory, Squee—the robot squirrel, homopolar generator, wireless power, strength machine, talking light beam, induce
tion heating, magic fountain, magnetic pump, network analyzer, analog computer, model atom, and high fidelity equipment.
Mechanical Engineering, mechanical engineering laboratory, tin can heat engine, Jaguar automobile engine, miniature jet engine, stroboscope display, beer bottle organ, monkey motion, right angle power transmission, Ingersoll-Rand air compressor, General Electric steam turbine, Skinner Uniflow steam engine, The Mogul grandad of
laboratory engines, centrifugal force demonstration, and Model 7 Ford.
Applied Mechanics, hydraulic laboratory, safety exhibit courtesy of the Kansas Highway department, model spillway, and impulse turbine.
Shop Practice, Fowler shops,
Chevrolet Corvette automobile,
industrial plastics, miniature cupoia,
metal spinning, automatic induction heat treating, mass production of bench visse, measurements to
one-millionth of an inch, underwater metal cutting, featuring use of aqualing designed and constructed by a student.
Air Force ROTC, 105 and 107 Military Science building, training aids, aircraft instruments, films, and gyroscope instruments.
Navy ROTC, basement of Military Science building, fire control demonstration utilizing 5" gun director, anti-aircraft gunnery demonstration, movies, and seamanship and ordinance display.
Let us tune your car FOR SPRING
KU
Relays
FOR SPRING
Let our experts pep up your car for spring! Our spring change over includes carburetor, distributor, spark plug check and other vital parts, as well as lubrication and oil change. For better driving performance, better mileage, true economy-drive in here today.
Bridge Standard Just south of Kaw River bridge
for HER EASTER CORSAGE
Cabbage
DISTINCTION
CALL
"Your downtown Florist"
ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop
Lilium
Flowers by wire
Phone 363
941 Mass.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 15, 1954
Simmons Blanks Bucks Allows Only Four Hits
By UNITED PRESS
If curving Curt Simmons can keep his big toe out of power mowers, this could be the season when he will become a bigger winner than his Philly team mate, and next door neighbor, Robin Roberts.
A lot of wise baseball men were predicting last year that Simmons might surpass Roberts, but the quiet lefty got his toe tangled up with a mower and after being out nearly a month, never regained top form.
This year Simmons has looked much sharper than the durable Roberts, who has yet to win a game. Robin lost the Philly opener to the Pirates after being cuffed consistently by the hitters in exhibition competition, in which he suffered four defeats, being combed for 53 hits and 45 runs in 43 innings. That's not like the Roberts of old. Simmons, on the other hand, had two victories and a defeat on the exhibition trail before he came up with a bristling four-hit 6-0 shutout of the Pirates in Pittsburgh yesterday.
All of the Pittsburgh hits were singles and Simmons also struck out four. The Philly fans also were elated over the hitting of Willie Jones, who had a two run homer, two singles, and a double, batting in three runs from his new lead-off spot in the lineup. Simmons had two singles himself.
In the only other National league game, the Dodgers got even with the Giants, topping them. 6-4, with a 12-hit display as Don Newcombe limited New York to six hits. The Indians made it two in a row over the White Sox, 6-3, as Bob Lemon pitched a three-hitter. The Yankees scored their winning run without a hit in a 2-1 triumph in the ninth at Washington while Baltimore gained its first triumph 3-2 at Detroit in American league competition. There were no other games scheduled.
Brooklyn piled up a 6-0 lead against the Giants then coasted—almost too much. Newcombe appeared to tire in the late innings and catcher Eba St. Claire stirred things up with a two-run Giant homer in the ninth but Newk ended the rally after that. Gil Hodges hit a homer, double and single, while Newcombe himself drove in two runs with a sacrifice fly and a force out. Junior Gilliam also homered for the Dodgers.
Lemon, after being touched for a pair of first inning runs, settled down and faced only 26 more batters while Cleveland was collecting 14 hits, including four by first baseman Bill Glynn. Wally West-lake hit his second homer in as many games.
Ed Lopat won his 12th straight game over Washington, which hasn't defeated him since June 26, 1951, but he had to do it the nard way. He was involved in a tough duel with veteran Johnny Schmitz and the Nats took a 1-0 lead on a single by Wayne Terwillerig, a sacrifice, and a single by Ed Yost in the sixth. Singles by Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra and Gil McDougald's sacrifice fly tied at 1-1 in the eighth, then the Yankees scored the winning run in the ninth without a hit when Phil Rizzuto walked, Lopat hit to Yost, and Rizzuto went to third when Terwillerig dropped the throw at second. Terwillerig then muffed a pop fly by Hank Bauer as Rizutto scored. Lopat gave up five hits, Schmitz six.
Duane Pillette pitched six hit
ball for the Orioles, who scored all of their runs in the first inning. Sam Mele singled in one run and Vern Stephens singled home two more.
Omaha Loses ToKUNetmen
The Kansas tennis team swept a 3-0 match from Omaha university yesterday in a meet that had no matches running into three sets.
morning, Coach Dick Meier
squad meeting. University of Iowa
of Iowa dual meet.
Iowa brought three stars to the meet. Joe Barnes, former winner of the Big 10, holds the No.1 spot on the visiting team.
A Missouri Valley finalist, A r Andrews, played No. 2 singles, and Carl Nadig, strong tournament favorite in Iowa, played the No. 3 position.
Yesterday's results against Omaha are:
Al Hedstrom, K, defeated Don Blocker 6-3, 6-2
Dick Hadley, K, defeated Carl Carlson 6-1, 6-3.
Roger Youmans, K, defeated Bill Fedderson 6-3, 6-2.
Merl Sellers, K, defeated Don Fisher 6-3, 6-3
Hedstrom and Hadley defeated Blocker and Carlson 6-4, 6-1.
Don Franklin and Youmans defeated Fedderson and Fisher 6-1, 6-1.
Kansas Golf Team Downs Omaha,9-3
The KU golf team scored a 9-3 victory over Omaha university yesterday afternoon on the Lawrence Country club course.
Bob Richards, Kansas, was medalist for the meet with a 74, as he defeated Jerry Morene, 3-0. Dean Wilson, Omaha, had low score for the visitors, a 79, as he defeated Harlan Hise, 2-1.
John Prosser, Kansas, defeated Fred Shiarock of Omaha, 3-0, with a 75 and Ed MacKee, Kansas, won over Emil Radik, 2-1.
Big Don Newcombe pitched seven innings yesterday as the Brooklyn Dodgers defeated the Milwaukee Braves, 8-7.
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Minor Sports, Softball Next In Intramurals
Friday, April 16 - 8:00 p.m.
"The Bible And Evolution."
The next team sports in men's intramural competition will be badminton, handball, golf, horseshoes, tennis, and softball.
CHURCH of CHRIST
1501 New Hampshire
Badminton, handball and horseshoes will be conducted on the single elimination basis.
Golf will be a one day affair, the date to be announced later.
There will be "A" and "B" leagues in softball with fraternities and independents in separate leagues.
The deadline for all entries is today. A meeting of all managers will be held in Robinson gym, room 203 at 4 p.m. today.
In all sports, other than softball, a team will be composed of one doubles and two singles players, with the match going to the team winning two out of three contests. A minimum of four players is needed for a complete team, but more may be entered. The doubles must be played first, and doubles members must be declared before each match. Partners in the doubles game in any one match cannot play in the singles game of that match.
Walt Mikols, intramural director, has asked that players please stay off of the two intramural areas which have recently been seeded, and will not be ready for use until next fall.
16 National Champions Entered in Kansas Relays
Additional entries to the Kansas Relays have pushed the total to 16 national champions that will appear here Saturday for the 29th meeting of the national track and field event.
Wes Santee, Kansas, 1953 NCAA and National AAU mile champion, 1952 1,500-meter champion, 1952 NCAA 5,000-meter champion, and 1953 NCAA cross-country champion.
The champions are:
Rich Ferguson, Iowa, 1953 NCAA two-mile champion.
John Bennett, Marquette, 1953 NCAA Basket jump champion
J. W. Mashburn, Oklahoma A&M,
1853 National AAU 400-meter
champion.
Dean Smith, Texas, 1952 National AAU 100-meter champion.
Neville Price, Oklahoma, 1954 National AAU indoor broad jump champion.
George Adrain, Abilene-Christian, 1952 and 1953 NAIA 440-yard champion.
Al Feist, Fort Hays State, 1953 NAIA two-mile champion.
Dunne Zerger, Hutchinson Junior college, 1953 National junior college 220-yard low hurdles champion.
Russell Nash, South Dakota State,
1953 NAIA mile champion.
Stan Neff, Dodge City Junior college, 1953 National junior college javelin champion.
Leon Leopard, Abilene-Christian
Leon junior AAU 800-meter
champion
Palmer Mai, Baker, 1953 NAIA
220-yard low hurdle champion.
Jim Montgomery, Fort Hays State,
1933 NAIA pole vault champion.
Fred Barnes, Fresno State, 1953 NCAA pault vaule champion.
Tennis Basketball
Jack Ruzetto, San Diego State, 1950 National AUAH high jump champion.
Saco, Me. — (U.P.)—Tom Winston has invented a game he calls tennis basketball. He and friends are manufacturing the miniature basket, net and backboard which—along with an ordinary tennis ball—are all the equipment needed. The single basket is hung seven feet above the floor. Rules are similar to basketball regulations.
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KU Nips K-State, 7-4 In Big Seven Opener
By JACK LINDBERG
BY JACK LENDBERG
Kansas Assistant Sports Editor
Lefthander John Brose pitched and batted the KU baseball team to a 7-4 win over Kansas State yesterday afternoon to run the home victory string to three, and give the Jayhawks their first Big Seven win of the season.
Brose showed perfect control in the rain interrupted and rain halted game, as he struck out nine and didn't issue a single base-on-balls. In the 6th inning, with a man on base, Brose hit a tremendous drive that landed on Mississippi street.
Two other Hawks hit homers, John Perry in the 1st inning with no one on base, and John Trombold in the second with one on. This was Trombold's third homer in three games, but this drive took a bad hop over the head of K-State's centerfielder Jim Logsdon and went for an inside-the-park homer.
Rain halted the game in the bottom half of the 5th inning with two outs and a two-ball, one-strike count on KU's Punky Hogland, and the home club holding a slim 5-3 lead. After a 35-minute delay the contest was resumed with Hogland walking, and Don Augst flying out to end the inning.
The game was finally called with the Jayhawks at bat in the bottom of the eighth.
The KU team, as in previous games of the season, was out hit by their opponent, but by using the homerun to great advantage, and some timely clutch hitting, it has scored without the use of many hits.
Kansas State's big threat came in the 3rd innning, Steve Hennessey, Smith, and Perk Reeitemeir hit singles to load the bases. Brose errored on Whitehead's roller to the mound to let in one run. Prigmore struck out. Then Myers hit a grounder to Harold Bergsten, who threw to second getting Whitehead, and Smith scored on the play. Hartshorn击到 second, but Bill Pulliam let the ball get through into
light field, kicking Kellemeyer, but
he was not ready. He had to third caught Myers trying to get an extra base, and the Hawks escaped without further injury.
KU scored two runs in the first, one on Perry's homer, and another on a walk and two K-State errors. Three runs were scored in the second, two on Trombold's drive, and one on two singles with a sacrifice squeezed in between.
K-State's final tally came in the
eight on two singles, and an error
Page 5
Bergsten and Brose led the KU hitting attack with two hits each, and Hennessey and Reitemeier had two apice for the losers.
Reitemier's pitching was almost as effective as that of Brose, but two costly errors and six bases-on-balls kept him in trouble.
Each pitcher struck out the side in one inning. Bros retired three in a row in the fourth, and Reitmeier fanned three in the sixth, but 'not before KU could score two runs.
The Minneapolis Lakers won their third straight National Basketball association championship last night with an 87-80 win over the Syracuse Nationals at Minneapolis.
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CHICAGO COLLEGE OF
KANSAS
| | AB | R | H | O | A | I |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Pulliam, 2b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Perry, lf | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Trombold, 1b | 3 | 2 | 1 | 9 | 0 | 0 |
| Allison, cf | 4 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Conn,rf | 4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Hoglund, 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Aungst, c | 4 | 0 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Bergsten, ss | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Brose, p | 2 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
Box Scores
1851-C Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois
KANSAS STATE
| | AB | R | H | O | A | E |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Whitehead, 3b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Prigmore, ss | 4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Myers, c | 3 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| Gerstenkorn, c | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
| Hartshorn, 1b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| Logsdon, cf | 4 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Hennessy, 2b | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Smith, lf | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Reitemeier, p | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Totals ... 28 7 8 24 10 3
Totals 30 4 9 21 7 2
K-State 000 030 01—4
Kansas 230 002 0x—7
Snead Enters Rich Event
RBI—Myers, Hartshorn, Perry,
Trombold 2, Hogland, Brsoe 2, HR-
Perry, Trombold, Brose. SB—Perry,
Bergsten, Sac—Pullman, Brose. LOB
—Kansas 9, K-State 6. BB—Reitemei
me 6. SO—Reitemei 10, Brose
9. ER—Kansas 6. HBP—Zellers.
Umpires, Michaels and Edwards.
Great Lakes, Ill. — (U.P.)—Andrews Air Force base, Suitland, Md., boasting former Kentucky ace Bobby Watson, and Great Lakes Naval training station with Billy Preston of Hardin Simmons in the lineup, meet tonight for the inter-service basketball championship of the Armed Forces.
Mather Praises Defensive Play In Scrimmage
In the dressing room, after yesterday's first scrimmage, football Coach Chuck Mather had nothing but good words for the Kansas football squad.
"The boys are really catching on now," Mather said. "They are hitting and blocking hard. This was a real good practice after only three days of work." he said.
The first 33 men on the squad, the lettermen and those with the most experience, worked most of the practice session on offensive plays.
The men with less game experience, mostly freshmen and sophomores, were in the scrimmage.
Freshmen Blaine Hollinger and Harry Solter received exceptional praise from the coach for their long runs during the scrimmage. But the coach was more impressed with the defensive play. "The defense is really doing a good job," Mather said.
The squad is now down to 73 men, after 86 reported for the first practice. Mather said there would probably not be any more cutting of the squad because it is now close to the size he wants it.
Mather also said the varsity-alumni game is scheduled for May 15 at 3 p.m. in Memorial stadium.
Service Cage Title at Stoke
Cleveland, Ohio—(U.P.)—It wasn't the car that hit Fred Mueller, 53, that resulted in the cast he had on his foot today. He got the fracture when he dropped his bowling ball on his foot after he was hit as he crossed the street.
Las Vegas, Nev. —(U.P.)- Masters champion Sammy Snead of White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., agreed yesterday to compete in the $35,000 Tournament of Golf Champions at the Desert Inn, April 22 to 25. Only winners of major tournaments are eligible to compete. Snead's acceptance completed the 20-player field.
Movies were taken of the scrimimage, and the coach expressd a desire to see the films in order to closer look at some of the players.
Strikes Bowler: Gets Sparre
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Thursday, April 15, 1954
Hogan's Inactivity in Golf May Have Cost Him Masters
University Daily Kansan
New York—(U.P.)-Golf's big question since Sam Snead's playoff victory in the Masters is whether time has caught up to Ben Hogan and the answer seems to be that, while Ben is a long way from being a hecker, the clock is gaining fast.
The debate didn't develop be-➊
The debate didn't develop because of Slammin' Sam's fine playoff victory. It started after the fourth and final round of the regular tournament. For who can remember when Hogan held a fat three shot lead with 18 holes to play—and lost?
But you can't give Snead too much hope in the open of this playoff victory over Hogan. After all, this was three victories for Sam in as many head-and-head outings against Ben.
It is true that Ben, making infrequent tournament appearances, has been devoting much time to his new golf club business. But he was on hand at Augusta long before the tournament to sharpen his shots, and when it comes to practice the little killer of the fairways is in a class all by himself.
Yet Ben blew that lead. And, as he did it, he showed for the first time in memory that he actually is conscious of those around him. For years he has been a poker-faced automaton apparently unconcerned with what the other guy was doing. But this time he admitted he had one eye on his closest rivals, and their proximity forced him into a losing gamble.
The slammer walloped Ben years back in the San Francisco match play championship. And, in 1950, he beat Ben in a playoff for the Los Angeles Open crown.
But come the Open, Sam hasn't been able to finish his run.
This crack in the famed Hogan armor of iciness must be of interest to those who will match shots against Ben this June when he goes after his record fifth U.S. Open championship. Particularly, you would benefit from Snead's one unfilled golf ambition is to win that heretofore elusive title.
His trouble there is "rabbit ears"
he plays player expression for a man who knows
"It's different when I can play with him and see what he's doing,"
Sam admits. "It's when I can't see him that he worries me. Sure, I get upset when he's a few foursomes ahead of me and I hear those yells from the crowd which is following him."
Starting the last round, Sam was one shot back of Hogan. He still was one back of Hogan with only 10 points. Then Ben stormed down the stretch to finish with a blazing 33, carding birdies on the two final holes.
That's what happened to Sam at Oakmont last year—when he finished second to Hogan in the Open-
The crowd's cheers came like a thunderclap, and Sam, playing 15 minutes back and within solid earshot, crumbled.
One stroke back with nine holes to play. Sam trailed in disconsequently—six shots back at the finish.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 15, 1954
'The Grand Scale'
Canadian Wilds,Ocean Scotland in New Films
By BILL STRATTON
Activities, in the Lawrence theaters are on a grand scale this week. The Canadian wilderness, the deep sea, the Scottish highlands, and even television are among the elements enlisted as scenery.
"Rose Marie," now showing at the Granada theater, is a refurbished musical heirloom with which almost everyone is familiar. Under the subtitle of "A Glorious Outdoor Musical Adventure," Howard Keel and Ann Blyth are charged with the task of convincing us that the foliage of the north is a nice place in which Royal Mounties can sing to the trees and where Indians are really simple folk who like to stage Hollywood dances. To break up the tune sequences, there are Fernando Lamas, Marjorie Main, and Bert Lahr.
Sunday, the Granada is expected to show the CinemaScopic, technicolored hodgepudge called "Beneath the 12-Mile Reef," with Robert Wagner, Terry Moore, and Gilbert Roland. The story, to use the term wantonly, is concerned with the discomforts of the sponge fishermen on the Florida coast, Working hard to give the film a little substance, the cameramen, when they are not reeling in the sunsets and sails, take to the underwater world to stir up some fright. only to sink into the lower depths in fear devices.
For conflict, Wagner is pitted against unscrupulous rival fishermen, a die-hard fiance, a playful octopus, and the curse of the 12-Mile Reef. Ht is also forced to pair off with Terry Moore, who, as the expression goes, is miscast as an actress. This discordant train of filmed events will be shown several times at the Granada after this Saturday night.
Phil Silvers has returned to the screen after a lengthy absence and his current appearance is in "Top Banana." which begins today at the Jayhawker. This interpretation of a Broadway success has Mr. Silvers in the role of a TV comedy who tries for bygone popularity. Mr. Silvers does well in holding the show together, and it is scheduled to run into next week
The Patee sports a lively feature tomorrow, "Rob Roy" is the title and Walt Disney is the producer. It is a live-action film devoted to the rowdiness of 18th Century Scotland. The team of Richard Todd and Glynis Johns, which flaunted kings and brandished blades in "The Sword and the Rose," returns in somewhat different costume and under slightly different circumstances. However, they are still incensing English royalty but much of their fighting time is taken up by a highly disturbed Scottish clan, "Rob Roy" is scheduled to play the entire week at the Patee.
A Biblical infirmity, entitled "Slaves of Babylon," occupies the screen at the Varsity. Unfortunates
who were hired out for this are Richard Conte and Linda Christian.
Randolph Scott rides in, wearing chic Cavalry Blue and smartly fanning a six-shooter, on Saturday at the Varsity. His latest outing with the bad men is "Thunder over the Plains." Like John Wayne, Randy patronizes the theory of "reacting." He will litter the streets with punctured malfeasants until Wednesday.
Nelson Prints On Display
The William Rockhill Nelson gallery in Kansas City and its director, Laurence Sickman, have loaned the Museum of Art an exhibition of prints by famous artists.
Including such painters as Martin Schongauer, Lucas van Leyden, Rembrandt van Rijn, William Blake, Francisco Goya, and Honore Daumier, the show supplements the current exhibition of Durer prints.
"Notable among the works of art on display is the famous 'Hundred Guilder' print of Rembrandt, often considered his masterpiece." Edward Maser, museum curator, said.
Six Sociologists ToAttendMeeting
Six members of the department of sociology and anthropology will attend the annual meetings of the Midwest Sociological society at Madison, Wis., today through Saturday.
E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology on sabbatical leave, will read a paper entitled "Principles of Constructing Community Indexes;" Waldo W. Burchard, instructor in sociology, will read his report on "The Chaplain and Role Conflict," and Marston M. McCluggage, professor of sociology and acting chairman of the department of human relations, will cover the topic, "Teaching Sociology by the Case Method."
Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department, will participate in the criminology and social disorganization panel and E. Gordon Erickson, assistant professor of sociology, will participate in a contemporary theory section. Orry Walz, instructor in sociology, will also attend.
Nearly 1,100,000,000 household electric light bulbs are sold in this country each year.
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Five new men will be put on the force tomorrow and Saturday, and patrolmen will be stationed at several strategic "snarl spots" around the campus. Chief Skillman said.
The provision is being made because of engineering expositions which will be located in the D parking zone behind Marvin hall.
The Rains Came
Some may have blamed it on gremlins. A few may have been able to do it themselves. Still others (being mostly professors) maybe didn't even notice it was done.
"We are expecting more than 3,000 high school students for the events," he said, "and most, if not all, of these will be strictly pedestrian traffic." He said the conflict between pedestrian and car traffic promised to be the most serious for the campus.
It is only one of the special measures taken by campus police to meet traffic problems expected for the Relavs.
Lawrence police and Douglas county highway authorities will be on hand to give the campus police help should they need it.
All D-zone parking permits will be honored in all zones tomorrow and Saturday, Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said today.
But probably several dozen persons who parked their cars yesterday in Lilac Lane and the Union parking areas were deeply grateful that open windows were rolled up when the rain started.
Bell's
Who did it? Three thoroughly soaked, jeans-clad coeds who made the rounds, doing their good turns for the day.
A supply of campus maps and traffic regulations booklets are on hand at the traffic office, and Chief Skillman said he hoped visitors would get in touch with the traffic office if they have any special traffic questions.
--squared off for a debate on the Eisenhower administration after Humphrey's speech.
He cited the record of past Relays in which there were no major accidents or fatalities, and said he hopes to "maintain the same record this year."
D-Zone Parking Privilege Told
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He declared emphatically "We are not now headed for a depression" but that new jobs must be found for workers who lost their employment because of the sharp cutback in government spending.
703 Massachusetts
Telephone 2764 or 2765
Humphrey's statements were in a major speech prepared for the opening session of the American Society of Newspaper Editors' annual threeday convention.
Humphrey Wants Action On Tax Bill to Aid Economy
Washington — (U.P.)— Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey called today for quick Senate action on the administration tax bill to clear the way for "the creation of thousands of jobs and the vital expansion of our economy."
Action on the tax reform bill, said Humphrey, would have a "tremendously helpful effect upon the economy." The measure, passed by the House but still in a Senate committee, provides a number of concessions to stimulate business.
"Jobs are more important than tax cuts," he said. "... The entire fiscal policy of the government is designed and operated to promote more and better jobs."
House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck (Ind.) and Democratic Whip John W. McCormack (Mass.)
Also on tap for the opening-day schedule is a three-hour visit with top military leaders at the Pentagon. The H-bomb will come up tomorrow at a briefing to be given by Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy commission.
Tau Sigma Tryouts Set
Second semester Tau Sigma try-outs will be held at 7:15 pm. Tuesday, in Robinson gymnasium. Those interested are asked to prepare a one-minute original modern dance.
It Just Gave Her a Pane
Dortmund, Germany—(LP) Erna Seipel, 52, was being questioned today about her "town hall complex." Police said Erna had broken more than 100 windows in the town hall since she lost her job there recently.
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A guy in an Arrow shirt here . . . and everywhere a pretty coed—a typical scene on our college campus and from coast to coast. When asked why they go for men wearing Arrows, the gals agreed that Arrow shirts do more for a man's appearance.
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Page 7
Highway Authorities Advise Caution, Reasonable Speed
By RON GRANDON
Douglas county highway authorities, pointing out some of the more dangerous traffic areas around Lawrence, warned KU Relays visitors that "human failures" are responsible for most of the traffic accidents in the area.
"The bottom of the Pleasant Grove hill south of Lawrence on U.S. highway 59 is dotted with fatality signs," authorities said. "But still, drivers take this hill at speeds which show they don't believe in signs."
The junction of U.S. highways 24-40-59 just north of Lawrence also has been the scene of a few traffic fatalities in recent years.
Accident pictures at the State Highway patrol office in Lawrence show one house on top of the same hill which has been damaged twice by cars carving through the "S" curve there at speeds faster than the posted warning.
The junction has three crossings which could be dangerous at any time authorities said, but the fact remains that the only accidents that have occurred there have happened because of human negligence.
The only traffic fatality in Douglass county this year happened because of drunken driving—stupidity—the officials said.
According to statisties compiled by the highway patrol, most car wrecks occur when people are tired. Accident figures for highway K-10 south of Lawrence leading to Kansas City support this contention.
Most of the accidents on this road
have occurred on a straight stretch when people are rushing home from work—tired, but overconfident of their reaction abilities, according to the statistics.
As for speeding, highway officials said the best advice about this is the Kansas speed 'aw-w-"a reasonable and prudent speed."
2 Air Engineers To Give Reports
Two students from the department of aeronautical engineering will take part in competition on scientific reports at the Institute of Aeronautical Science in Dallas, April 21 to 25.
They are Kenneth Wernicke, and Orvid R. Spoering, both seniors.
The students will be accompanied by E. K. Parks, assistant professor of aeronautical engineering. They will go by chartered plane.
Mrs. Lucy Hololembe Pickens was the only woman to have her portrait put on Confederate currency. Mrs. Pickens' portrait was used on issues of both $1 and $100 bills.
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BYEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, VI. Vt. ft.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, including all new one-step pet shop has everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
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University Daily Kansan
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medium. Bock McCann. P. 3695R. 4-14
PAIR OF GLASSES. Week before vacat- oniBg.I twelfkhalack dcol isemRETTtion. Black frames with gold flecks. Reward. Call Audrey Holmes, 3015. 4-16
COMMONWEALTHS LAWRENCE Drive-in Theatre
FOR SALE
NASH "46." Have to sell. Mechanically
gold. $120. Phone 2377W. 4-19
EX-AIR FORCE officer, 5 feet 9 inches,
160 pounds, wishes to sell gabardine
uniforms, blues and silver fans. Write
in H. Chesky, 550 Louisiana. Will provide
4-19.
BATTERIES: Guaranteed unconditionally for six months. $5 and old battery. Battery Stores Associated, 512 East 9th home-owned. Phone 943. tf
MUSTARD - SEED REMEMBRANCER:
The perfect Easter gift or for any occasion. The beautiful little reminder to have faith. Sponsored by Plymouth Women, Congregational Church. Call 2897 or see at 1603 Louisiana. 4-16
WANTED
THEIS, TYPIST, experienced in typing case citations and similar source material as required for Department of Business and Economics. Write Graduate Student, 3522 Brooklyn, Kansas City, Mo. 4-15
120 Midshipmen Will Take Four Summer Cruises
The flea is the champion jumper in the world. It can high jump six feet, and its body length it can leap 12 inches horizontally, or 200 times its own length.
TYPING OF THEMES, term papers, etc.
TYPING OF THEMES, term papers, etc.
105 Kentucky. Phone 77394.
105 Kentucky. Phone 77394.
About 120 Navy and Marine ROTC candidates from the University will go on summer cruises this year, the NROTC office announced today.
The students will be split in four separate groups. Fifty-four midshipmen will go on the first cruise which leaves Norfolk, Va., Sunday, June 6. They will travel to ports in Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, and Holland, and return to Norfolk Wednesday, Aug. 4. Lt. Warren G. Hopkins, instructor of naval science, will accompany the group and will serve as supply corps instructor.
Commercial Conventional
JAYHAWKER
NEW PARK ROAD CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW thru SATURDAY
The second cruise will leave Norfolk July 11, go to Scotland, Ireland, France, and England, and return Sept. 3. Stewart L. Gordon, midshipman, is the only KU student assigned to this cruise and he will be accompanied by two enlisted men from here, Chief quartermaster Robert L. Soule and Yeoman first class Rex E. Rumbler.
COMPLETELY HILARIOUS Top Banana starring PHIL SILVERS IN COORD BY CORONA CORP OF AMERICA
Eighteen contract juniors on the KU program will journey to ports in Canada and Cuba starting July 19, and returning August 27. Lt. Cmdr. Leland D. Estes, assistant professor of naval science, will be in charge of midshipmen on board a cruiser in the NROTC convoy.
A fourth cruise for regular sophomores in aviation amphibious training will take 36 local students to Corpus Christi, Texas and Little Creek, Va., for a two-month course in air orientation and all phases of amphibious warfare.
Eleven prospective Marine officers from here will participate in training in Virginia this summer.
Red Cross To Give Water Safety Course
Navy offices in Washington estimate that more than 8,800 midshipmen from Naval academy and NROTC units in 52 colleges and universities will participate in the summer training schedules.
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
NOW thru FRIDAY
Richard Conte
"SLAVES of BABYLON'
A 15-hour Red Cross instructor's water safety course will begin at 7 p.m. Monday at the Robinson gym pool.
The course is open to both men and women over 19 who hold a Red Cross senior life saving certificate. Walter Mikols, assistant professor of physical education, will conduct the course.
The Census Bureau reports that your chance of being alive and active after your 65th birthday are 28 per cent better today than they were in 1940.
Thursday, April 15, 1954
Serious, Light Dramas Slated for Next Week
Two contrasting plays, "The Happy Journey" by Thornton Wilder and "No Exit" by Jean-Paul Sartre will be given by the Studio Theater at 8 p.m. next Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, in Green theater.
"No Exit," the heavier of the two one-act dramas, takes place in hell—only hell in this case is a second empire drawing room. Sartre attempts to prove that hell doesn't have to be in any specific place, that life is what you make it. Hell can be found even in a drawing room if you make it that way; he asserts.
The Satrtre play originated in Paris in 1944 and ran for two years. The first production in the United States was in New York in 1946. Alec Guinness, British actor, played in the 1946 London production called "The Vicious Circle."
"The Happy Journey." the curtain raiser, is one of the plays most frequently produced in laboratory theaters. It tells the simple, unpretentious story of a family traveling on a "happy journey." Like "Our Town," another Wilder play, the set has no scenery and uses only the platform, a few chairs, and imagination to show changes in locale.
Fifteen engineering students were initiated into the KU chapter of Tau Beta Pi nationally honorary engineering fraternity at a banquet last night in the Kansas room of the Student Union
The plays will be directed by Bonnie Royer, graduate student in speech and drama. The plays are part of her Master of Arts thesis, in which the problem under consideration is to show the difference in producing a realistic plot in a
15 Initiated Into Tau Beta Pi
John Ise, professor of economics,
was the speaker.
The initiates were Ben A. Dalton, George A. Daniels, Ronald Evans, Robert C. Foster, Walter W. Hauffer, LeRoy M. Herold, Donald P. Higdon, David L. Johnson, Ronald Justice, Robert Lukenbill, Charles P. Peterman, Lewis A. Phillips, Jerry M. Speers, and Larry W. Taylor, juniors, and Donald C. Davis, senior.
SKYLINE CLUB
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Dine AND Dance
Walt Disney's RobRo
Every minute flames with furious action, as Rob Roy fights for love, honor and clan!
Walt Disney's
Rob Roy
THE HIGHLAND ROGUE
Starring RICHARD TODD • GLYNIS JOHN5
An All Live-Action Picture
coat • TECHNICOLOR
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures • Copyright Walt Disney Productions
and
Walt Disney's
25 minute musical comedy cartoon
PECOS BILL
TECHNICOLOR
Re-released by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
from Melody Time
© Walt Disney Productions
And
© Walt Disney Productions
and Walt Disney's
25 minute musical comedy cartoon
PECOS BILL
TECHNICOLOR
Re-released by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
from Melody Time
© Walt Disney Productions
Starts Tomorrow
realistic plot in a realistic setting
Playing in "No Exit" will be
Leonard Leasig, sophomore;
Jo Anna March, college senior;
Marjorie England, education junior;
and Bruce Dillman, college sophomore.
non-realistic setting and a non-
realistic plot in a realistic setting
Two hundred seventy Army chapains won 332 decorations for service during the Korean war.
Sat. & Sun.
Cont. Shows
1-3-5-7-9
Patee
PHONE 1111
Sunset
Mat. Fri. 2:30
Ends TONITE — Audie Murphy in "Ride Clear of Diablo"
Sunset W on 6th St. Ph.3313 NOW SHOWING
Eve: 7:00-9:00
Feat. 7:40-9:40
IT'S ALL NEW
THE ABBOTT and LOU COSTELO
Go To Mars
MARTI BLANCOJARS
Every Wednesday & Thursday Is Bumper Club Night.
Join our Bumper Club —
Drivers Admitted FREE ! !
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Regular Prices !!!
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IN
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Mat. 2:30. Eve- 7:00-9:05
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Granada
Atomic Scientists Speak In Defense Of Oppenheimer
Chicago (U.P.)—Three more atomic scientists in this nuclear research center today rallied to the defense Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. One of them suggested that the persons responsible for Dr. Oppenheimer's suspension should "grow up."
Another said that the nation owes Dr. Oppenheimer a "debt which it can never adequately repay" and the third said that Dr. Oppenheimer's treatment would crush the freedom of thought that built atomic weapons in the first place.
The scientists were Harold C. Urey, Nobel Prize winning chemist, Samuel K. Allison, who helped set off the first A-bomb at Alamogordo, N.M., and Cyril S. Smith, a former member of the Atomic Energy Commission's general advisory committee.
"One of the most unjust things I ever heard of," said Mr. Urey. He said such actions "discourage people from becoming scientists, encourage people not to give their service to the government and will lead to a weakening of our scientific and engineering position."
Official Bulletin
AWS House meeting, 4 p.m., Student Union.
Der deutsche Verein musical program by Harriet King and Dale Moore. 5 p.m.
basement of Art Museum, not in 502
Fraser.
TODAY
Kulu club, 7.15 p.m. Pine room. Studied Union interaction for initialism.
Jiahawk Brotherhood. 8:30 p.m., room 205, Memorial Union. Short meeting
Le Cercle français se ree 'unira a' sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Strong. Programmia: "t'I Indochine" par Michel Lacombe.
AGI meeting. 7:15. Activities Lounge Union.
Psychology club, 7.30 p.m. 9 Strong
relationship indicated by Mrs
Wickham. Everyone in班.
KU Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
"God willn' be Willie need to "God and Calvary."
Radio Players and candidates. Trouys of "Last Word." 7 p.m. today and tomorrow, Green hall. Contact Russell Wigglesworth, KDGI, if unable to report.
Dance Lessons, 7 to 8 p.m. Jayhawker
room: Tango.
Quack-Club, 7:30 p.m. Robinson pool Attendance required.
Delta. Sigma Pi business meeting, 5 p.m., Oread room, Student Union.
Newcomers of University women's club. 8 p.m., guests of Mrs. Franklin D. Kinnane at her home. Miss Mary Kinnane will speak on "The Speaking Voice."
TOMORROW
Good Friday service in seven parts centering on "The. Seven Words of Jesus from the Cross," 12 noon to 3 p.m. Lutheran Church, 17th and Vermont.
Gamma Delta Good Friday Tenebrae Service. 7:33 p.m., 17th and Vermont
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 15, 195
By LEE ANN URBAN
SUNDAY
All-student sunrise service. 6 a.m.
Companion by KU choreo
Sponsor by the XMCA
Hillet Foundation service. 7 p.m.
Myers hall chapel.
Easter Sunrise Service, 6:15 a.m.
Lawrence Drive-In theater. West 23rd St.
Sponsored by Immanuel Lutherar
church.
Gamma Delta cost supper, 5:30 p.m.
Jamal Lutheran church, student, speaker
Kansan Want Ads Bring Results!
Make it a real party—Decorate with
Dennison CREPE PAPER
One of many Dennison Handy Helpers
for Home, School, and Office
Keeler's
bookstore
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call
for appointment. Any lens or
prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
D
Jeeler's
eyes
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Eye
All members of the KU Mountaineering club, they climbed the Owls near Estes and the Maier Rock outside Boulder. They dig some mountain hiking, and several found time to ski.
Mountaineering Club Returns From Colorado Vacation
Bruised but happy, 14 enthusiastic mountaineers returned this week from Estes park, where they spend the spring vacation rock climbing.
Chapin Clark, second year law, was leader of the party. Other members were Edward Ruese, education junior; F. A. Geyer, pharmacy junior; Jerry Clark and Joan Carter, education seniors; Barbara Becker and Barbara Bradstreet, college juniors.
Bert Blanke, Leo Krueger, Bob Kulstad, and Wilhelm Breitfuss, graduate students; Jim Brown, former student from Junction City; Charles Staley, instructor of economics, and James Worthham, professor of English.
Brefuss, a foreign student from Austria, has climbed on the Alps, and Prof. Wortham has climbed Mt Rainier in Washington.
The group put in about eight hours of climbing a day. They stayed in tourist cabins and cooked all but the evening meals.
Members of the KU Mountain- beering club, which was organized in 1949, have outings during the Thanksgiving, Easter, and summer vacations. Last summer they climbed the Tetons in Wyoming. During the year they hold practice sessions at the stadium and at Bonner Springs.
Western Civilization Preliminary Tonight
A Western Civilization preliminary test over units 1-5 and 6-10 will be given today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 101, Snow hall. The test will be scored, but no grades will be recorded.
--make Sylvania, a company of young men where the executive level averages 45 years of age, an ideal place to build a satisfying career in engineering.
Kansas City — (U.P.)—The $600,000 Greenlease city was left in a police car while kidnapper Carl Austin hall was booked, the man who arrested Hall testified yesterday.
Shoulders Talks In Own Defense
Former Lt. Lois Shoulders of the St. Louis Police department testified in his own defense at his perjury trial. He is accused of lying to a Federal Grand jury about what happened to the money, more than half of which is missing.
The husky former policeman broke down under questioning by his own attorney, Henry Morris, and cried, "How much can a guy take?" Lt. Shoulders regained his composure during a 15-minute recess ordered by Judge Albert A. Ridge and was calm during cross-examination.
"Let's go get those bags," he said he told Mr. Dolan after the booking. On his way out, he received a telephone call from June Marie George, whom he has since married, and told her their date was off.
SUA Plans Fete For Prep Stars
From 8-9 p.m. tomorrow the variety show, including a tumbling act and a trampoline act, in which the actors will be on stilts, will take place in the ballroom.
Movies will be shown in the Kansas and Pine rooms showing last year's Relays, highlights of the 1953 football and basketball seasons, and one featuring Chuck Mather, football coach.
A variety show, movies, and free cokes have been planned by the Student Union Activities for the 2,000 high school athletes attending the Kansas Relays this weekend
Members of the K-club will act as hosts.
KDGU Schedule
6:30 Through the Looking Glass
7:00 Backstage, Hour
8:00 Great Moments in Music
9:00 Telfel Tells the News
9:05 Trail Time
9:30 News
9:35 Artistrv in Jazz
9:35 Artistry in Jazz
10:00 In the Music
Pheasants reach their heaviest weight of the year about Dec. 1.
11:00 News and Sign Off
A
THIS IS SYLVANIA...
BIG ... diversified... GROWING
THE IDEAL ENVIRONMENT FOR YOUNG ENGINEERS
In 1953, Sylvania's 40 plants in eleven states produced upwards of $300 million worth of products in more than sixty categories of lighting, radio, television and electronics equipment.
This year will see the completion of additional new plants and laboratories, as another phase of a continuing expansion program which has doubled plant and equipment in the past few years.
A stimulating atmosphere of accomplishment and opportunity — plus size, growth, and diversity
As a graduate engineer, you'll naturally find a wide range of opportunities in every phase of engineering at Sylvania. And you'll find yourself making rapid headway as the company continues to add new facilities, new fields.
For detailed information, see your College Placement Office or send for our comprehensive brochure, "Today and Tomorrow with Sylvania", by writing to Supervisor of Technical Employment.
Opportunities, too, at Sylvania's 16 research and development laboratories.
SYLVANIA
LIGHTING
Sylvania Electric Products Inc.
'40 Broadway, New York 19, N. Y.
RADIO
ELECTRONICS
TELEVISION
Naucas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
4
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 126
New Car, House Shown
A car with an all-plastic body and an experimental type of housing which may be used in the future to cut down building costs are two features that will be shown in the Engineering Exposition today and tomorrow.
Friday, April 16, 1954.
The plastic car, a part of the engineering shop practice exhibit, will be demonstrated in the plastic laboratory, showing the processes involved in its construction. Several sections of plastic automobiles also will be on display.
The experimental type housing is part of the architecture department exhibit. The design for the housing, a geodesic dome, was made by Ronnie L. Young, architecture senior. His design was selected as the best from those submitted by a class in architectural design.
Dean Glasco, architecture senior, who is in charge of the exhibit, said, "In this modern age we are finding it advisable to purchase more and more appliances to put in our homes. The cost of furnishing our homes is causing us to cut down on the building costs. As a consequence we are cutting down on space, but architects are constantly hunting for designs which will allow us to reduce costs without reducing size."
The display will consist of a 24-foot dome enclosing a full house of furniture. Architects at KU estimate that such a house could be built for $1,000. The dome is constructed of wooden trusses and is extremely economical.
Another feature of the engineering shop practice's exhibit will be a demonstration of underwater metal cutting and welding.
Students demonstrating this underwater work will wear aqua-lungs constructed and designed by Ronald Hill, engineering freshman. A miniature foundry in which students will demonstrate metal pouring also will be exhibited.
Campanile Sunrise Service To Feature Music, Readings
Because many students will spend Easter on the campus, the
MCA will hold an All-Student Sunrise service at six a.m. Sunday north of the campanile.
The service is non-denominational and anyone may attend. Parking space will be available on the south side of Memorial drive.
Ronald Barnes, University carilonneur, will play before and after the service. The University Chorale, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education, will sing. The remainder of the service will consist of scripture and poetry reading.
The chorale will sing "The Heavens Are Telling," Hayden; "God So Loved the World," Stainer; "Oh Sacred Head Now Wounded," Bach; "Christ Lag in the Todesbanden," Bach; "Ave Verum Corpus," Mozart; "Alleluia," Thompson, and "Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light" by Bach. Soloist Delcina Guest, fine
arts freshman, will sing "Were You There?"
Selections from the scriptures and poetry of T. S. Elliot, Kahil Gibran, Maxwell Anderson, and J. B. Phillips will be read in both solo and choral readings.
Nancy Reich, college freshman
Joan Guthridge, college senior; Marianne Anderson, college freshman
Shirley Gary, special student in college, Reinhold Schmidt Jr., college senior, Kenneth Morgan, college freshman, Sam Sebesta, graduate student, Carroll Erys, engineering junior, and Jim Mears, business junior, will read.
The Easter service is sponsored by the YMCA and endorsed by the Student Religious Council. Members of the YMCA will serve as authors.
TEXAS
A&M
TEXAS
A&M
TEXAS
A&M
THE TEXAS A&M mile relay team composed of (left to right) Jean Libby, Wallace Kleb, Frank Norris, and Gerald Stull. This队 ran a 3:17.7 at the Texas Relays to place third in the event, and also has been timed at 3:17.9 this season.
29th KU Relays Mark Busy EasterWeekend
Ball Wins First With Talk On 'Crisis Of Faith'
Hubert Bell and William Arnold, college juniors, tied for second place. Bell won with "Uncontrolled by External Law," and Arnold with "The Turning Point."
Robert Ball, college senior, won first place in the Delta Sigma Rho Oratorical contest last night with his speech, "The Crisis of Faith."
Arnold, in speaking of "The Turning Point," asked, "If war begins in the minds of men, is it not in the minds of men that peace must be found?" He stressed that today is a turning point where the American people must turn from war and follow the ways of peace.
In "Uncontrolled by External Law," Bell described the disastrous beginning of World War III, describing an imaginary atomic blast in Kansas City. He contrasted the present scene of the American and Russian conflicting forces with those of Athens and Sparta 2,000 years ago. He urged that America must give up some of its sovereignty to a federation of nations if an international peace is to be established.
In "The Crisis of Faith." Ball emphasized that though the mechanized living of today calls for a great deal of faith, the American people have a lack of faith in things which are not material. He said America is facing a spiritual crisis, that it must have faith in its destiny and its hope for the future.
The three other finalists and their speeches were Don Endacott, college junior, "Junior Senator from Wisconsin"; Robert Kimball, college freshman, "Return to Religion," and John Eland, college freshman, "The Ghostly Investigation."
The University chapter of Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity, will hold a banquet tomorrow to observe the 50th anniversary of the society.
Theta Tau to Hold 50th Anniversary
Jamison Vawter, alumnus and now professor of engineering at the University of Illinois, who is grand regent of Theta Tau, will be the speaker and guest of honor at the commencement degree from the University in 1910 and a graduate degree in 1923, was national treasurer for 27 years.
Weather
Northerly winds after the rains,
will turn Kansas' temperatures from
after the rains,
temperatures from
unseasonable a b able
warmth to a be-
forest rainfall.
The low tonight
will I be between
40 and 45 degrees,
and the high to-
morrow will not
be above the 50s.
Temperatures for the Relays will be warm despite the expected partly clouded skies. A low near 40 is expected tomorrow night.
By RON GRANDON
The 29th annual Kansas Relays officially began this morning, Holy week activities in Lawrence churches were winding up, and campus committees were planning Easter sunrise services.
Approximately 15,000 persons are here for the various events, including about 2,000 high school competitors who were running, hurdling, throwing, and jumping in Memorial stadium by 9 a.m. Final competition for prep athletes from more than 200 schools was scheduled for 1:30 p.m., and track and field events will be finished by sundown.
Or watch the man in the aqua-lung working underwater in the shop practice exhibit.
Exposition: Amazing Show
free popcorn and a plastic car,
underwater welding and a fashion
show, human skulls and an airplane,
scenes from Korea and a
$1,000 house...
In Fowler shops you'll see a plastic automobile fender that has been hit 56,000 times—there's not a dent on it.
These and many more will interest, amaze, intrigue, and perplex you at the 34th annual Engineering Exposition today and tomorrow.
Take a look at the chemical engineer's exhibit. You'll see a women's fashion show, complete with bathing suits modeled by freshmen women.
Start at the beginning and enter the big parabolic arch entrance at Marvin. From here the big show spreads out through the seven buildings on the west side of the campus.
The best efforts of the 15 engineering departments are there for you to see. A trophy will be awarded for the best exhibit.
In competition with the engineers are the exhibits of seven other departments. The ROTC has big weepons on display.
If you want a guide through the Exposition wait for a member of the committee that conducts tours every hour.
The 34th annual Engineering exposition opened this morning with 23 exhibits from all departments of engineering on the Hill vying for the Sigma Tau engineering award. The exposition will continue through tomorrow.
For religious observers, a three-hour louren service today at the Trinity Episcopal church was only one of the day's Good Friday observances. Ministers from seven Lawrence churches gave brief talks on the "Seven Last Words" of Christ.
Dr. Glenn Olds Lawrence Holy week speaker, will give his final week's lecture at 8 p.m., today in the First Presbyterian church.
Tomorrow, as if the collegiate Relays' attraction of 16 top-flight national champions would not give the Hill enough to see, at least five other features will vie for visitors' attention.
The Student Union Activities board kept high school visitors busy during their free time today with sports movies and free cokes in the Union ballroom all day. A variety show is scheduled for the same place and purpose at 8 p.m. today.
Carol Shellhaas, Relays queen, and her attendants in a parade on Massachusetts street at 18 a.m. tomorrow will provide one of the major sideshows, and visits by Kansas high school seniors for the annual Jayhawk Jubilee will be an all-morning event of the same day.
The parade, which starts between 6th and 7th streets on Kentucky, will feature floats of organized houses, the University band, and three ROTC units.
0
SCOURTS
BOB VAN DEE. University of Oklahoma, will be one of the favorites in the discus throw tomorrow afternoon. Van Dee won the discus event at the Texas Relays with a toss of 152 feet, $ \frac{2}{4} $ inches. He is also entered in the shot put, and is a consistent 50-foot putter.
No. JOQOT No.
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16. 195
Parents, Schools Cause Increase in Cheating
The trend today in American schools, while statistics never will be devised to show it, seemingly is toward more and more dishonesty or "get away with all you can to get out."
Dishonesty (cheating, lying, falsifying, or whatever you will) has been with us since the days of Adam and Eve and in all probability will continue until the millenium, but must it increase as it seems to have in recent years?
Even our own KU catalog which is sent to prospective students contains the ominous warning "Infractions (of dishonest work) will be reported to the dean for investigation and judgment," but still it goes on here as (presumably) in most other schools if figures gathered by statisticians are correct.
It actually cannot be proved to be a growing trend—this dishonesty in school work—for, as said before, statistics will not show how many students cheated in 1910 as against 1954. If they did they probably would be so astronomical as to astonish even the most cheating-conscious persons.
Surely the argument of the most naive that they just didn't catch them in the old days is groundless—cheating always has been looked on as bad by those with principle.
But it seems from such recent happenings as the West Point scandals—and the basketball fixes of the recent past that the cheating ogre is gaining new followers.
He attributed the cheating trend to mishandling of so-called progressive education, disrupted family life, and the inordinate attention paid to grades. The Purdue surveyors put the blame on teachers who put too much emphasis on high marks and parents who disillusion their children by explaining their own questionable actions with the theory that the end justifies the means.
But what is worse is that cheating seems, contrary to what some of us more "highly educated" college men and women may believe, to increase in each grade of scholastic advancement. In a Purdue university opinion poll taken five years ago, 68 per cent of the hundreds of ninth graders interviewed said they would cover their papers if they suspected someone was copying, yet only 46 per cent of those in the freshman year of college said they would take steps to prevent copying.
These reasons—and you will notice both placed the finger of blame on over-emphasis on grades—we second.
The former president of the Governing Boards of State Universities and Allied Institutions, Dr. Charles E. McAllister, said in his book, "Inside the Colleges," that he found a marked increase in cheating in 89 colleges that he visited. He reported one dean said his students "apparently do not know right from wrong."
But we will add that we think it boils down to a start in the average U.S. public school. Too many youths come out of high school in this country without having put in as much effort in four years as many college students put in on just one term paper. High schools do not make the students work—instead they have the attitude that everyone is entitled to a high school "education." so almost every entrant is graduated.
The student then comes to KU or any other college from this typical high school expecting to get through four more years on father's money, party a bit with father's money, drive his car with father's cash, and do (or not do) just what he did in high school.
Suddenly he finds the pressure on, and, not used to studying and possibly not having the desire to do the same, resorts to any number of crutches so well known the nation over—files, crib notes, stealing papers, et al. This is the reason cheating will continue to increase.
This trend toward nation wide dishonesty can be stopped in kindergarten. —Stan Hamilton
LOOK! ALBERT, YOU PACKED THE RUP DOG INTO THE SUITCASE ... THAT'S WHERE HE IS BEEN ALL THIS TIME!
AN'T THUNK HE WAS AT DEATH'S DOOR... AM, THAT DEAR LIL' FELLA, I WOULDN'T WANT ANYTHIN TO HAPPEN TO HIM!
4-16 POST HALL PHOTOGRAPHY
LOOK! ALBERT, YOU
PACKED THE PUP DOG
INTO THE SUITCASE...
THAT'S WHERE HE IS
BEEN ALL THIS TIME!
4-16
2015 HALL YORKAGE
AN' I THUNK HE WAS AT DEATH'S DOOR ... AW,
THAT DEAR LIL' FELLA, I
WOULDN'T WANT ANYTHING
TO HAPPEN TO HUM!
CAN'T TELL YOU HOW GLAD I IS YOU DIN'T KIDNAP HIM, MOLE... IT'S GREAT HAVIN' HIM BACK... NOTHING'S TOO GOOD FOR THIS TAD FROM NOW ON!
HOWEVER--- WHAT NO GOOD LI'L BUG ET ALL THE LUNCH WHAT I PACKED IN WITH YOU, PUP?
CAN'T TELL YOU HOW GLAD I IS
YOU DIN'T KIDNAP HIM, MOLE...
IT'S GREAT HAVIN' HIM BACK...
NOTHING'S TOO GOOD FOR
THIS TAP FROM NOW ON!
HOWEVER---
WHAT NO GOOD
LI'l' BUG ET ALL
THE LUNCH WHAT
I PACKED IN WITH
YOU, PUP?
But it seems to us that one of the most important and beneficial aspects of the annual spring track carnival is the high school events the previous day.
The main emphasis and most of the publicity at the time of the Kansas Relays concerns the college and university events on Saturday.
To many high school athletes, the Kansas Relays is the high spot of the track season. Although it may not carry the importance of district and state track meets, the relays present the opportunity for "big time" competition to many youths who will not be able to compete in the big state elimination meets.
Since there are no competitive qualifications set up prerequisite to entering the relays, many youngsters will get the thrill and experience of competition with the best of them that they will remember for a long time.
Prep Aspect Of Relays Not Emphasized
Of practically unmeasurable value is the public relations aspect of the relays for the university. These high school boys are given the opportunity to watch some of the top names in collegiate athletics compete—and they do so as guests of the University.
Our University can be justifiably proud to be able to present such named opportunities for broadening their lives to the youth of Kansas.
And then there is the Engineering exposition, which should by no means be sold short. Many things that students have been reading and hearing about for a long time become reality through the many exhibits of the exposition.
We well remember, in our high school days, having the thrill or running the mile in competition with the great Wes Santee. Of course Santee won and we came in last—but we still ran! —Don Tice
Short Ones
We see where two comic operas are being presented by the University Theatre. We hope they are good, because if they aren't our reviewers will say so and then we'll be "in dutch" again.
The intramural speaking contes has started again. Sure hope the contestants enjoy listening to each other.
Saw a headline that said "Frasn to Entertain at Record Dance." Wonder what kind of record they are planning to set?
Speaking of headlines, we remember one during football season that said "Jayhawk Stiffen for Cat Attack." Well! And then there was another one that said "Cat Practice 3 Hours in Heat."
A Kansan story says the POGO party advocates "getting better dates for homecoming and relays weekends." We do too, those weekends and every other weekend.
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assm., Inland Daily Press Represenated by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 per enceance). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University day. Visits to university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 787
Daily Hansan
of March 3,1879.
Editorial editor Don Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon,
EDITORIAL STAFF
NEWS STAFF
WEST STAFF
Executive editor Tom Stewart
Managing editors Tom Shannon,
Sam Teadford, Ken
Bronson, Stan Hamilton
News Editor Elizabeth Wolhigmuth
Sports editor Dan Beilengood
Society editor Karen Hill
Assistant Nancy Neville
News adviser C. M. Pickett
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
THERE'S FIFTY BUCKS PRIZE MONEY FOR THI' BEST LOOKIN' COSTUME—BETTER GET A DATE FOR THIS DANCE!
ANFULLY SORRY WORTHAL, I HAVE TO STUDY FRIDAY NITE.
HONESTLY - WORTHAL FOR THE LAST TIME - I HAVE TO STUDY!
NO-NO-NO!
TH GAME MAN COSTUME WINS—CONGRATULATIONS!
SO REAL LOOKING-TOO!
SO SHE FINALLY GAVE YA A DATE,
HUHT--WHAT KIND OF COSTUME ARE YOU WEARING?
H-37
Publick Occurrences BOTH FORREIGN AND DOMESTICK
Friday, April 16, 1954
CAMPUS
Rumor has it that the Spring elections this year promise to be as unclean as in years past. And with an aura of mutual distrust in the air, it will be a fight to the finish to see which party watches the other most closely.
But the Allied Greek-Independents party will control most of the All Student Council posts and the class officer positions after the elections Tuesday, winning easily over the Party of Greek Organizations and the Married Students Party.
As the Kansan predicted, George Docking, Lawrence banker, has entered the Democratic gubernatorial race. Another prediction: look for him to win it.
STATE
NATIONAL
Even though Sen. Edwin Carl Johnson (D.-Colo.) is retiring from his post on his homesick wife's insistence, look for him to run for governor of the mountain state. He held that post for two terms (1932-1936).
Even if the government security hearing doesn't prove officially that Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer aided Communists in slowing production of the H-bomb, he will not be reinstated by the Atomic Energy commission. Atomic secrets, as AEC officials know, are too important to take changes on.
Considering what television did for Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), the McCarthy-Army televised hearings starting next week may make Ray Jenkins, the special counsel chosen for the proceedings, a leading contender for the Senate seat now held by Sen. fauver.
Although the public is anxiously awaiting the hearings next week, it seems likely the proceeding will not really settle anything.
And expect the hearings to cause one of the greatest housewives' sit-down strikes in history. The World Series never had an audience so great!
Columnist Walter Winchell has stuck his neck out in the polio vaccine dispute. Government leaders, whom Mr. Winchell said were only 99 per cent sure of the new treatment, will come out for the drug soon and mothers can be back at ease.
Since Congress won't relax trade barriers against free-world imports very substantially and new grants and loans to needy countries also are unpalatable, don't expect much argument from Congressmen if these countries begin all-out trade with Russia.
Expect soon the assignment of United States generals to Indochina to bolster French strategists.
Don't be surprised if Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) enters the farm parity price fight. He will hold out for 100 per cent parity for Wisconsin dairy farmers.
INTERNATIONAL
Although allies of the United States are becoming more and more reluctant regarding this country's foreign policy, it seems likely they will string along with us on all major issues out of sheer necessity.
.
bler
Fridav. April 16. 1954
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Roundup Shows Changes In Campus Politics
By TOM LYONS
Each year elections in April, but crusades ganizations have taken past semester which
roll around and re-or- place this would turn
Joe McCarthy green with envy. First was the dissolving of Pach-acamac-NOW which took place when six dissatisfied Greek organizations seceded. They set up a new
City Club's invitation to good going...
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NOTHING TO BUY—ENTER NOW. SIMPLE RULES OF THE CONTEST:
1. In 25 words or less tell why "I like City Club Shoes . . ."
2. Send in as many entries as you wish, but each must be on a separate piece of paper. Print your name and address clearly.
3. It is not necessary to use an Official entry blank but handy entry blocks may be procured at your City Club Dealer (they carry an extra charge).
4. Mail all entries to Peters Shoe Company, Dept. C4, Box 5995, Chicago 77, Illinois.
5. Contest starts March 15—ends May 15, 1954. All entries postmarked before midnight. May 15 and received by May 22 eligible.
6. Entries will be judged on originality, aptness and sincerity by the Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. Judges' decision final. Duplicate prizes in case of ties. No entries returned. Entries and ideas then become prizes for Shoe Company to be used as it sees fit. Winners will be notified by mail.
7. Contest open to all residents of continental United States and Canada. Contest not open to employees of Peters Shoe Co., of City Club Dealers, of their Advertising Agency, nor their families.
SEE your City Club dealer. Or for name of your nearest dealer, writes Peters Shoe Company, St. Louis, Missouri
organization which was designed to include both Greek organizations and independent students. The Allied Greek Independents, as they called themselves, were of the opinion that there should be two strong political parties on the KU campus instead of one.
Second, FACTS dissolved three weeks ago and threw its support to AGI.
It seems this new party meant well, but they received criticism when they didn't accept the petitions of twenty Greek organizations which wanted to jump on the bandwagon. If they accepted these organizations for membership, the purpose they began with would be defeated, they thought. There
Final Film Tonight
"Keepers of the Night" (Nacht-
wache) will be presented at 7:30
p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
The German-language movie of life in Germany in the early postwar period is the final picture to be given this semester by the University Film Series.
wouldn't be two strong organizations, but only one with the same problems Pach-NOW had had.
While all of this was going on, the petitioning parties which were turned down weren't sitting on their hands. A few were accepted for membership by AGI. The others organized a new party and called themselves POGO (Party of Greek Organizations). Their theme was "save the Greek system." They called for all Greek organizations to rally to the support of the party before the rebels got completely out of hand.
Make It The Union Cafeteria for your Easter Dinner
Choose from This Special Easter Menu
Roast Turkey and Dressing
Prime Round of Beef Au Jus
Baked Ham with Fruit Cocktail Sauce
Married Students party, was also introduced into KU politics this year. It is also planning the big jump into the political ring next week.
Choice Leg of Lamb with Mint Jelly
and a wide selection of salads,frozen vegetables and deserts
After all the flurry of activity died down and both parties had nominated students for the election April 20, some really good campaigning began. A third party, the
Let's Have A PICNIC
- Plates, Forks
- Crushed Ice
- Ice Cream
- Beverages
- Potato Chips
A car driving on a road
American ServICE Company ICE PLANIT
6th & Vermont
Phone 48
Lovely Easter and Spring Accessories
The
for the prettiest girls at the Kansas Relay weekend.
Adelane's DRESS SHOP
823 Massachusetts
Welcome
to
the 29th K.U. RELAYS
You'll spend an exciting weekend watching the parades, the crowning of the Relays Queen, and the contests—the dashes,the discuss,the decathlon and all. You won't want to miss any of them. So off to the biggest and most exciting K.U. Relays yet!
HOLYMOUNT
We know you'll enjoy your stay here at Lawrence and the university, and we extend to you our best wishes for the most thrilling weekend you've ever had. And when you come downtown don't forget to drop in and see us. We're only too happy to serve you.
Shaffer & Son Mobilegas
600 Mass. Phone 2002
Tee Pee Service Station
Tee Pee Junction Phone 2043
Shields Standard
846 Vermont Phone 2021
Bridge Standard "Just South of the Bridge"
Leonards Standard
9th & Indiana Phone 3342
Hartmans Standard
1300 Mass. Phone 3342
Parker Buick Lash Sinclair
700 New Hampshire Phone 402 725 N. 2nd Phone 2069
Altic North Side Service
805 North 2nd Phone 2071
Patronize These Loyal Kansas Backers
Friday, April 16, 1954.
University Daily Kansan
By NANCY NEVILLE
Page 5
Greenery, Bird Baths Are Past Senior Gifts
The footprints of former seniors can be seen by merely taking a look around the campus. Things we pass every day were donations by previous senior classes.
The custom of the senior gift began with our KU grandfathers—the four members of the first graduating class. In appreciation for their alma mater, the group presented a framed engraving of "The Temple of Karnak," an ancient Egyptian temple. For many years, it hung on the first floor hallway in Fraser hall, but since then has been taken down.
The class of 1874, composed of three members, give a companion picture, "Vue de L'Lie de Philoe", the island on which the temple stands. The following class also gave an engraving, "The Roman Forum."
A small elm was placed as the "senior tree." However, the juniors jokingly gave it a chemical bath, retarding its growth. A box elder was substituted, and the ceremony continued.
Other classes continued the landscaping idea. The class of 1915 provided for the plantings in front of the old Student Union; in 1927 vines for the Union were given, in addition to furniture for the buildings; crabapple trees were planted all over the campus as a gift of the class of 1945, and landscaping around Lindley hall was donated by the class of 1947.
Many classes have added to the campus' beauty by planting trees and shrubs. In 1877, Chancellor Marvin appointed a "tree planting day" during which the underclassmen set out trees in what is now Marvin grove, while the seniors planted trees on the campus.
The bulletin board now setting next to Green had had a hard time getting located. Donated by the Class of 1915, it first was placed where it is now, but soon was tied in front of Robinson gym.
What locality was not popular, and so after several other movings, it was placed right back where it had started. However, a new bulletin board has replaced the original one.
Other bulletin boards with benches, in front of Watson library, were provided by the Class of 1931.
Other well-known sights on the campus which were gifts are the bird baths next to Green hall, class of 1902; the stone benches on the campus, class of 1914; the Seth Thomas clock in the library, class of 1908; the Alcott Union, class of 1919; the base for the Pioneer statue behind Fraser, class of 1920, and the chime clock in the Union, class of 1922.
Watkins hospital received a diathermy machine, for heat treatment of tissues, from the class of 1914, and the Class of 1917 bought $319 worth of war bonds to be used later for hospital equipment.
The Student Union would not be the building it is today if it were not for senior gifts. The Class of 1928 provided furniture, encased photographs of 129 KU men and women who died in World War I, tapestries, and a trophy case.
A piano was purchased for the Union by the Class of 1929, and an elevator was installed by the Class of 1920. The Pine, English, Kansas, and Michigan were completed by the Classes of 1936, 1938, 1939, and 1951, respectively.
An organ was given by the Class of 1942, and last year's seniors gave the furniture on the balcony of the
$1,400Scholarship Goes to Engineer
A $1,400 scholarship has been awarded to a senior in aeronautical engineering.
Kenneth Wernicke was given the scholarship for graduate study by the National Science foundation of Washington, D.C. The cash award, in addition to tuition and fees, is for the 1854-55 school year.
Wernicke belongs to Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternities and Sigma Gamma Tau, national honorary aero-naitional engineering fraternity.
Robert Vanatta, basketball coach at the U.S. military academy, was named coach at Bradley university yesterday.
The dance floor at the Potter lake recreational area was given by the class of 1943. The information booth, (how did we ever get along without it?) was a gift of the 1950 senior class.
Union. A new wing, rooms, fireplace and stage in the old Union, and the interior completion of the new Union were other gifts.
Not only the steps leading to the campanile, but the stage curtain in Fraser theater as well was provided by the class of 1948.
Besides all of these tangible gifts, many classes donated scholarship and loan funds.
'College Try' Helps Job of Relays Chairman
Bv RON GRANDON
A bit of the "Rock Chalk" school spirit is needed by student and faculty KU Relays committee chairmen when this event rolls around each year.
It takes more than a profit motive to make this committee the smooth-rolling and functional organization that it is, and senior committee chairmen Clarke Keys, journalism, and Bob Ball, college, are in agreement that at least part of the reason behind the success of the committee's work is the clear-cut results which are shown so clearly by today and tomorrow's KU Relays events.
The whole thing starts before most people even remember that there is such an event as the KU Relays. It started this year with a meeting by Dr. Elbel, Coach Easton,
Dr. E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education, and Coach M. E. "Bill" Easton direct the work in a supervisory capacity of the only all-student Relays committee in the nation.
Keys, and Ball and the other committee members to send out the first invitations to the many universities and the more than 300 high schools whom they hoped would be able to compete in the Relays.
Then, for the next six weeks, a special room is reserved in the afternoon in Robinson gym for the committee, which keeps a man or more there every week day (during spring vacation, too) to keep up with the work that starts to pile up.
It takes plenty of experience as well as enthusiasm to put an event like the Relays over. Dr. Elbel, general director of the Relays, has just that. Coming to KU in the fall of 1928, Dr. Elbel has been around KU sports in the capacity of physical education professor, loud-speaker announcer, intramural director, and later Relays director since that time, except for a four-year stretch in the Army Air corps during World War II.
And the other faculty adviser, track coach "Bill" Easton counts
long on the experience score, too. Since Easton came here, KU teams have dominated the conference. Winning three consecutive NCAA championships with his cross-country runners while at Drake university, Easton turned out another one here at KU last fall. He is serving his fourth term as secretary-treasurer of the national track coaches association, and is past president of the CCC and NCAA cross-country associations.
But these men are only the advisors. KU has the only Relays which are actually run by students of the sponsoring school. Clarke Keys, a 21-year-old Lawrence product, and Robert R. "Bob" Ball, a fourth-year history major from Garden City, are in charge of the student side of the Relays' planning.
At least it has given us senior chairmen which have turned out a monumental KU Relays product for the 29th year.
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16, 1954
AUFS Program Explains World Trouble Spots
By AMY De YONG
The fourth speaker representing the American Universities Field Staff at the University this semester will begin a nine-day series of lectures Tuesday concerning Iran, the area in which he has become a specialist.
Phillips Talbot, director of theAUFS, will observe operation of the program Tuesday and will consult with University members in charge of the program here. The opportunity KU has in participating in theAUFS program, and thus obtaining the services of Edward A. Bayne, specialist on Iran, and other members of the staff, had its origin in 1950
In Christmas of that year at a New Delhi, India, conference, Mr. Talbot
and former KU Chancellor Deane Malott discussed the need for keeping U.S. schools reasonably up to date about remote parts of the world.
From this and similar discussions, there evolved the Field Staff, developed in 1951 with seven universities as charter members, representing the pattern of different schools. The representation is selective-KU being the only state university in the group.
The Institute of Current World Affairs, formed in 1925, recognizes and attempts to answer "the increasing need for men with knowledge of foreign areas." It was hoped that in time "a corps of men, each thoroughly familiar with a major area of the world" might be built up and share knowledge with others. This was the goal of the AUFS.
"The AUFS is corporately distinct from the Institute of Current World Affairs," Mr. Talbot said at a conference, "having its own trustees, of whom the bulk are the chief executive officers of the sponsoring educational institutions."
"The AUFS is entirely a nonprofit inter-university venture, it expects that some of the men trained under Institute auspices may qualify as AUFS members. The Institute has provided the services of some of its men and has written some of the expenses of AUFS operations during the initial development period."
Charter members of the AUFS were the California Institute of Technology, the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, Tulane university, Stanford university, Carleton college, Brown university, and KU. Michigan State college now has been added to the membership.
The first experimental speaker to
introduce the program at KU in the fall of 1951 was Edwin S. Munger who returned to the campus this semester to deliver another series of lectures. A geographer, Mr. Munger has specialized in African affairs south of the Sahara.
Richard D. Robinson, a specialist on Turkey, was the first regular speaker, lecturing here in the spring of 1951. He also was one of the four AUFS speakers on the campus in 1952-53, along with Lawrence W. Witt, whose field is Brazil; Richard H. Nolte, who spoke on Middle Eastern affairs, and A. Doak Barnett, specialist on China.
In addition to Mr. Munger and Mr. Bayne, two other men representing the AUFS complete the schedule for the University this semester.
ku
BROWN'S TOGGERY First Door South of the Patee Theater
GIBBS CLOTHING CO.
811 Massachusetts
THE CHUCK WAGON
Around the Corner
South on Highway 59
REEEVES GROCERY 900 Mississippi
ORDER AT TIME SC
Morning Events Saturday, April 17, 1954
Morning Events
Saturday, April 17, 1954
Event No. Time
110-Meter Hurdles (Decathlon) 9:00
Discus Throw (Decathlon) 9:15
Pole Vault (Decathlon) 9:50
Shot Put (Preliminaries) 10:00
120-yard Hurdles (Preliminaries) 10:00
1. Javelin Throw (Prelims. & Finals) 10:00
100-Yard Dash (Preliminaries) 10:20
A.A.U. 400-Meter Hurdles (Prelims.) 10:45
Javelin Throw (Decathlon) 10:50
A.A.U. Hop, Step, & Jump (Prelim.) 11:00
2. Discus Throw (Prelim. & Finals) 11:00
120-Ward Hurdles (Semi-Finals) 11:00
100-Yard Dash (Semi-Finals) 11:00
100-Yard Dash (Semi-Finals) 11:05
1500-Meter Run (Decathlon) 11:25
AFTERNOON PROGRAM
Opening Ceremony—K.U. Band ... 1:15
3. 120-yard Hurdles (Finals) ... 1:30
4. College Two-Mile Relay ... 1:40
5. 100-Yard Dash (Finals) ... 1:55
6. University Four-Mile Relay ... 2:00
7. College Half-Mile Relay ... 2:20
KIRBEY LUNCH
616 Massachusetts
Friday, April 16, 1954 University Daily Kansam
Page 7
Free Popcorn Features One Of Many Engineering Shows
Corn popping, plastic-bodied automobile, and a miniature foundry are some of the many demonstrations at the 34th annual Engineering exposition today and tomorrow.
15
30
40
55
00
20
The department of mining and metallurglary engineering is featuring a corn popper exhibit in Lindley hall, showing the corn as it pops in hot air in a glass tube. The corn is fed into the tube with a gun feeder, falling down in the tube to a screen floor. The hot air is forced through the screen and pops the corn..
Automatic feeds fill a kiln with salt and pop corn oil, producing the
Dale Trott, engineering junior, in charge of the exhibit, said that visitors will be served the fresh pop corn.
corn fully seasoned and ready to eat.
By LEE ANN URBAN
The shop practice department is showing plastic-bodied automobiles in Fowler shops. Demonstrations of the making of automobile bodies are set up in the plastic laboratory.
Faculty Club Serves 335
"A comfortable clubhouse where members can meet one another, enjoy a good meal, discuss what interests them, relax, and have a good time." is exactly what the faculty house is providing for approximately 335 members of the KU Faculty club.
room, card room, library, lounge, game room, and sun deck for the faculty's use and enjoyment. A television set, radio-phonograph, piano, and pool table are furnished for entertainment.
bers of the club and visitors to the campus. Once a month the program is for children. Miss Muriel Johnson, instructor in home economics, is in charge of the programs.
This was the purpose stated by Roy A. Roberts, 08, president of the Kansas City Star company, when the former high school building was remodeled for faculty use in May, 1951. Mr. Roberts was the chief donor of funds for the redecorating of the building.
The faculty house is located on the East slope of Mt. Oread behind the Union parking lot.
In addition to parties, dances, and bridge games held in the house, Sunday night buffets are served for the faculty members and their families. These are preceded by programs participated in by mem-
The house provides a dining
Meals are served every day for faculty members only. Professional cooks and a dietitian, Miss Mary June Carter, instructor in home economics and dietitian for Watkins hospital, are hired by the home economics department, which took over the club's operation June 1, 1952. The house is open during the summer session but closes during August. It remains open during vacations, but meals are not served.
Any faculty member with the rank of instructor or above is entitled to membership in the Faculty club. Members meet twice a year, but the officers, who manage the faculty house, meet weekly.
F EVENTS
and
HEDULE
8. Kansas City H. S. 880-Yd. Relay ... 2:30
9. University Quarter-Mile Relay ... 2:40
10. A.A.U. 400-Meter Hurdles (Finals) ... 2:50
11. Presentation of Queen ... 3:00
12. Glenn Cunningham Mile ... 3:05
13. University Two-Mile Relay ... 3:15
14. College Sprint Medley Relay ... 3:25
15. College Invitation Sprint Medley Relay ... 3:35
16. University Sprint Medley Relay ... 3:55
17. Junior College Sprint Medley Relay ... 4:10
18. College Distance Medley Relay ... 4:20
19. University Half-Mile Relay ... 4:35
20. A.A.U. 3000-Meter Steeplechase ... 4:50
21. University Distance Medley Relay ... 5:05
22. Kansas High School Mile Relay ... 5:20
23. College Mile Relay ... 5:25
24. University Mile Relay ... 5:30
25. Outstanding Athlete Award
25. Outstanding Athlete Award Closing Ceremony
FIELD EVENTS
26. Pole Vault (Prelims. & Finals) ... 1:30
27. Shot Put (Finals) ... 1:30
28. Broad Jump (Prelims. & Finals) ... 1:30
29. High Jump (Prelims. & Finals) ... 2:00
30. A.A.U. Hop, Step, and Jump (Finals) ... 3:30
THE SPOT Fat John - JG, Bish,
Leon the Peon
DINE-A-MITE 23rd & Louisiana Phone 845
KU
A
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
Sales, Service, Rental
710 Mass. Phone 13
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK
647 Massachusetts
Phone 33
FRED FREY and SKIPPER WILLIAMS
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 16, 1954
Tear Gas Used in Peace Movements of 30's
By GENE SHANK
An almost pathetic realism shadows the peace movements that were prevalent on the KU campus during the '30s. Clippings in the Daily Kansas files indicate that peace demonstrations, strikes, orations and polls began to spring up in the latter part of 1934 and were increased in number and fervor by 1940 when World War II seemed more and more real.
---
more and more inevitable.
The white smoke released from the bomb blew over the crowd, but the speaker, Kenneth Born, "36, kept the crowd from dispersing by saying. "You will face worse than this in war."
Probably the most dramatic of the peace movements was interrupted temporarily by a tear gas bomb thrown at 800 demonstrators who met April 22, 1936, around a speaker's platform erected north of Fowler Shops (now the journalism building).
The bomb was regulation army type, and it was believed to have been obtained by a student from the summer camp of the National Guard. A student, August Anneberg, was charged with throwing the bomb His case was taken before the newly-formed Student Court, but apparently nothing came of it.
The Fowler grove demonstration was a student mobilization for peace that took the form of a walk-out, since the University did not give it official sanction. The demonstration was actually a student strike that took place at 10:30 a.m. when the 800 students simply picked up their books and left their classes.
The movement was in conjunction with a nation-wide peace strike which was expected to bring out a half-million students in the United States. The fundamental resolution of the University demonstrators contained the following: "We wish to keep the United States out of any war under all circumstances. We believe that youth, as potential fighters, should make a definite protest, and only through mass organization can such protest be effective in deterring those in power from taking steps which may involve us in war. A peace mobilization is a symbol of that resistance to war which we intend to make when the crisis comes."
A previous student strike against war, held on April 12, 1935, kept the campus alive with controversy. The Daily Kansan opposed the strike editorially, saying that it wrong method means wrong response. The UDK, reasoned that "the strikers were weak and cause peace more harm than intelligent stay-at-homes who, in their hearts, sincerely worked for peace."
William L. White, son of William Allen White, writing in the Emporia Gazette, said, "Without wishing to butt an obtrusive nose into the affairs of a great center of learning, we're for the strike. If the coming generation, who will fight that next war doesn't take the time, trouble, and the brains to head it off, no one will do it for them. It's their job."
On Nov. 17, 1935, more than 2,000 students met for the first all-student convocation in the history of the school in an orderly demonstration against this country's entering any future war. From that time on the University became host to a series of organized conferences, contests, forums, debates, and Peace Action Committee discussions that reached their peak in '39 and '40.
Student peace polls were extremely popular in "35" and "36", the most comprehensive being the Literary Digest poll of college students throughout the country. With
Official Bulletin
Good Friday service in seven parts centering on "The Seven Words of Jesus from the Cross," 12 noon to 3 p.m. Lutheran Church, 17th and Vermont.
TODAY
Gamma Delta Good Friday Tenebrae
School Library Foundation service
p.m. 8:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m.
Boulder, CO 80209
211 signified their willingness to do so.
All-student sunrise service, 6 a.m.
Companion by KU chorale
Companion by the YMCA
SUNDAY
Easter Sunrise Service, 6:15 a.m.
Lawrence Drive-In theater, West 23rd St.
Sponsored by Immanuel Lutheran church.
Gamma Delta cost supper 5:30 p.m.
Jammanuel Lutheran School
Immanuel Lutheran school, seeker
1150 KU students casting their ballots, their votes were largely indicative of the sentiment of the country.
Probably the most discussed question was left unsolved, 698 students believing that the United States should enter the League of Nations and 418 advising the country to remain out of foreign entanglements.
On the general question as to whether the United States could remain out of another world war, 769 students cast affirmative ballots and 360 students believed it impossible. Eight hundred ninety-eight students believed they would take up arms if their country were invaded by an aggressor, while 211 students were conscientious objectors. There was a complete reversal of opinion when 908 students declared they would not assist in the invasion of a foreign country and
FEARLESS FOSDICK
by AL CAPP
STOP, ANYFACE!!-IF YOU SAW ME
IN HALF, ILL STARVE TO DEATH.
ONE CAN'T LIVE ON MY SALARY,
MUCH LESS
TWO!!
HAW!!-NOW, YOU'LL ONLY GIVE ME MALF AS MUCH TROUBLE!!
YOU MEAN TWICE AS MUCH!! STICK 'EM UP!!-
Y-YOU'RE NOT GOING TO SAW ME IN HALF, ARE YOU, FOSDICKS?
- ONLY AN INHUMAN BEAST WOULD DO THAT!!
RIGHT!!
WE ARE MERELY-
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TOMMY HALL
AT THE RELAYS
OR ANYWHERE ELSE
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Friday, April 16, 1954. University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Come to Church Easter
The Assembly of God Church
13th & Massachusetts
J. J. Krimmer, pastor
9:45 a.m.—Easter Rally
[Illustration of Jesus with a radiant halo, extending his arms outward in a gesture of blessing.]
Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont
First Christian Church
1000 Kentucky
H. M. Sippel, minister Robert S. Bates, minister to students services—8 and 10:45 a.m.
Dale E. Turner, William B. Bryant ministers services—9 and 11 a.m.
A
Trinity Episcopal Church 1011 Vermont
R. C. Swift, rector 7 and 10:00 a.m.—Festival Eucharist and sermon
First Methodist Church 10th and Vermont Dr. A. F. Bramble, minister Dr. E. F. Price, minister to students
St. John's Catholic Church
1229 Vermont
Father Towle, pastor
masses—6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 a.m.
Immanuel Lutheran Church 17th and Vermont Norman Brandt, pastor service----11 a.m.
Easter Sunrise Service
6:15 a.m.
at Commonwealth
Drive-In Theater
(South of Town on 23rd St.)
First Presbyterian Church
9th & Vermont
Albert G. Parker III, pastor
John H. Patton, University pastor
services—9:30 and 11 a.m.
Chaplain William J. Britton, from Forbes Air Force Base
First Baptist Church
801 Kentucky
H. B. Lundgren, pastor
E. E. Klein, University pastor
services----11 a.m.
17 49
Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 16, 1954
Orioles Beat Chisox In Home Opener
All 16 major league clubs were in action yesterday but the big news was in Baltimore where the Orioles won their first American league home game since 1902. This is the first year the Orioles have been in the league since that year, however.
Homerunes by Clint Courtney and Vern Stephens, and a stout 7-hit pitching performance by Bob Turley gave the Orioles a 3-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. Approximately 350,000 Baltimore hopefuls watched a morning parade in downtown Baltimore in honor of the transplanted St. Louis Brown, and 46,354 paid their way into the game. This was the White Sox third straight loss, and the Orioles second win in three games.
The World Champion New York Yankees, behind an 8-hit pitching job by Tom Morgan, blanked the Philadelphia Athletics 3-0. Outfieldier Hank Bauer, and rookie first baseman Bill Skowron homered for the Yanks. Lefty Alex Kellner allowed the champs just six hits but was tagged with the defeat.
In Boston, the youthful Red Sox spoiled Bob Porterfield's 1954 debut, as the Red Sox defeated the Washington Senators 6-1. Young Bill Henry held the Nats to three hits, one a homerun by Roy Seivers in the fourth. Sammy White of the Red Sox also homered in the fourth with two men on base. Henry struck out six and walked six in opening game at Boston.
Left hander Ted Gray and right hander Ralph Branca combined
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
Kiddies Always Free
TONITE & SATURDAY
Robert Mitchum
Jane Russell
"MACAO"
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Dick Haymes
EASTER EGG HUNT
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COMMONWEALTH LAWRENCE
Drive-In Theatre
their pitching talents to stop the Cleveland Indians 3-2 at Cleveland, with former Dodger, Brance getting the win. American league homerun king, Al Rosen, hit his first four base blow of the season in the sixth inning with no one aboard. The opener in Cleveland drew 40.-421 customers to see the Indians lose their first game of the new season.
The National league champs, the Brooklyn Dodgers, who defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates in 20 out of 22 games last season, began right where they left off by downing the Bucs 7-4 at Brooklyn. Three Dodgers, Jackie Robinson, Junior Gilliam, and Roy Campanella, and Pire outfielder Frank Thomas homered in the Brooklyn opener. Russ Meyer and Jim Hughes shared the mound duties for the Dodgers with Meyer getting the victory. Three Pirate hurlers, Max Surkont, Cal Hogue, and Nelson King couldn't halt the Dodger 10-hit attack, and Surkont was charged with the loss.
COMMONWEALTH LAW DEFENCE Drive-In Theatre
Jim Greengrass' grand slam homer in the seventh inning helped the Cincinnati Reds defeat the Chicago Cubs 11-5, in the Cubs home opener Gus Bell also homered for the Reds, and Hank Sauer and Randy Jackson hit four baggers for the Cubs. Fred Baczewski was the winning pitcher for the Rhinelanders, but he needed help from Herman Wehmier in the seventh when the Cubs rallied for four runs. The Cubs sent five pitchers to the mound with Bob Rush being charged with the loss.
In Milwaukee, 39,963 fans watched the Braves win an 11-inning thriller from the St. Louis Cardinals 7-6 in the Braves first home game of the season. Stylish southpaw Warren Spahn went all the way for the Braves in picking up his first win of the season. Harvey Haddix, who came into the game in the ninth, was charged with his second loss. Vic Roschi started for the Cards and was chased in the second. Stu Miller and Al Brazle followed him on the mound. Sal Yars pinch-hit a homer for the Cards in the ninth, and Joe Adcock homered for the Braves.
The Philadelphia Phillies made only three hits off New York Giant pitcher Johnny Antonelli, but Murry Dickson was able to shut-out the Giants 3-0. Dickson was continually in trouble, with men on base, the 37-year-old right-hander bore down. Rain halted the game with the Phillies batting in the last of the eighth.
Sunset 1/2 MILE W. OF LAWRENCE ON Hwy. 40
SUNDAY and MONDAY THE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR See it in a Drive-In Theatre to get the most enjoyment from this picture
8 Academy Awards
1. Best Picture
2. Best Screenplay
4. Best Supporting Actress
3. Best Direction
5. Best Supporting Actor
6. Best Editing
7. Best Black & White Cinematography
8. Best Sound
THE BOLDEST BOOK OF OUR TIME...
Honestly,
Fearlessly
On the
Scream
FROM
HERE TO
ETERNITY
DUNT LANCASTER
MONTGOMERY CLIFT
Wildness Drives Barney Out of Baseball
New York—(U.P.) It was only one paragraph but it held a volume of heartbreak for a young man who might have been one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history.
Rex Barney, it said, had given up 12 walks and made two wild pitches or St. Paul in one and two-thirds innings. Between walks he struck out the side in one inning, like the old kid.
It read like the obituary of a hope- ul comeback.
The wild man from Omaha, it showed, still can throw the ball as
But Barney said, A full year of rest, he figured, might have faded from his mind and his pishing style all the freak remedies and methods which had been forced on him in the swift slide down. At 29, he knew he was young enough. And that strong right arm had never beore sore.
fast, if not faster, than any pitcher in the game. But it was additional testimony that he still can't find the plate.
Few people realize the bitterness and despair which that one paragraph must bear for Barney. That wildness forced him out of the big leagues where he once pitched a no-hit game. It drove him from the minors all the way down to a semi-pro team in Herman, Neb. It caused him to retire completely from baseball last year to work as a laborer.
But Barney still had hopes
been so.
It simply was the wildness which always had been a curse from his first days in organized baseball. That very first year of 1943 was a classic example.
WELCOME
to the
29th Annual
KANSAS RELAYS
RUSTY'S & COLE'S
KU
CITY BUILDINGS ON A MOUNTAIN
EVERY MINUTE FLAMES WITH FURIOUS ACTION!
REBEL, LOVER, OUTLAW...
Chief of the clan of fight-
ing MacGregors...His true exploits dwarfed the deeds of fiction!
Walt Disney's Rob Roy
THE HIGHLAND ROGUE
RICHARD Starring GLYNIS
TODD • JOHNS
An All Live-Action Picture
colors by TECHNICOLOR
Produced by Pierce France
Directed by Harold French
Screenplay by Lawrence E. Woskin
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Copyright Walt Disney Productions
And A Rip- Roarin' Riot!
Walt Disney's
25 minute musical comedy cartoon
Pecos Bill
color by TECHNICOLOR
Re-released by RKO Radio Pictures,
Inc. from "Melody Time"
starring ROY ROGERS
and Trigger,
smartest horse in movies
with SONS OF THE PIONEERS
© W. D. P.
RICHARD Starring GLYNIS
TODD • JOHNS
An All Live-Action Picture
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
Produced by Force Pearce
Directed by Harold French
Screenplay by Lawrence E. Workin
Distributed by RICO Radio Pictures
Copyright Walt Disney Productions
And A Rip- Roarin' Riot!
Walt Disney's
25 minute musical comedy cartoon
Pecos Bill
color by TECHNICOLOR
starring ROY ROGERS and Trigger, smartest horse in movies with SONS OF THE PIONEERS
© W. D. P.
STARTS TODAY
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Continuous Sat. & Sun. from 1:00 --- Features Start at 1:25, 3:30, 5:35, 7:35, 9:40 Also Latest News Events
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
'Country' Still Bitter But Set to Help Yanks
New York—(U.P.)—The hurt and the bitterness still showers today in the clear blue eyes of Enos Slaughter but the country boy from Carolina was "ready and able" to prove that the St. Louis Cardinals made a mistake when they traded him to the New York Yankees.
"The last time I was here I was with a champion—and here I am with a champion again."
As the Bronx Bombers came home to Yankee stadium, there was "Country," big as ever in his Cardinal life and twice as ready. And as he ran his eyes over the huge ball park, he said slowly:
But to Enos Slaughter the 12 intervening years mean nothing, just as does the parting inference of the Cardinals that he is about "through."
That "last time," he recalled, was "just a little while ago" when he led the Cardinals to a World Series victory over these same Yankees. The ear, actually, was 1942.
"Ive got a lot of time left," he snorted, running his big hands over the unfamiliar Yankee flannels. "I feel as good as I ever did, no aches and no pains. I'm still 185 pounds, right on the button, and I can hit and run as good as ever. I'll prove it, too."
That, you might think, is a brash statement from a man who two weeks hence will be 38.
But, then, Slaughter is no ordinary ball player, nor even an ordinary man. He conquered a lot of tough breaks through the years because of his bulldog drive, blows which would have beaten many another. Things like shattered collarbones, persistent fevers and a three-year hitch in the air force never could halt his enrush.
They thought he was done in 1951 but in 1952 he had a magnificent season. It was typical of Enos, when they lauded his "comeback." that he sported:
"Comeback? Why, I've never been away."
But his trade away from St. Louis floored him—momentarily. For 13 years he had been a part of the Cardinal legend and he thought that because of his current value, and not just gratitude alone, they'd let him play it out with the Red-bird on his chest.
bird on his cross.
"It was one of the roulgesh things that ever happened," he explained in a low voice. "They called me in and out of a clear sky said I had been traded. I asked them 'do you think I'm through?' They said no, but they were going with the young guys and had to give them a chance.
"trading me," he said, "was the only way they could have gotten me out of the outfield. If I was still there, I'd still have my job.
"Now I'm going to show them that I'm far from through," he said.
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Ends Tonite 7-9
Richard Conte
"SLAVES OF BABYLON"
Starts SATURDAY for 4 days
IN THE HEAT AND DUST
A prairie town waited. A storm was brewing . . .
A storm named Dave Porter.
. . . and when he hit,
it would rain nothing but lead.
DON'T MISS THIS 1st RUN HIT!
KU tennis team fought two deciding matches into extra games but lost to an Iowa university net quad 4-6 in ten matches on the varsity courts here yesterday.
Iowa is expected to repeat as Big 10 conference champs this year with three strong performers, Joe Barnes, former Big 10 tourney winner, and Art Andrews, and Carl Nadig, strong tourney favorites this year.
Iowa Netmen Beat KU, 6-4
RANDOLPH
SCOTT
WARNER BROS.
"THUNDER OVER"
THE PLAINS"
WARNERCOLOR
LEX BARKER - PHYLUS KIRK
HUGHELL HUDSON - AMREE DKNOTM
Kansas' depth kept KU in the match as it won the fifth, sixth, and seventh singles matches and in the third doubles match.
Barnes, I, defeated Al Hedstrom,
K, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4.
Andrews, I, defeated Dick Hadley. K 8-6; 7-5.
The results are;
Howard Hill, I; defeated Roger Youmans, K, 6-4, 6-4.
Continuous Shows Sunday—1:00 p.m. on
Nadig, I, defeated Merl Sellers,
K. 6-2. 6-1.
Don Franklin, K, defeated Jim Norman. L 6-2. 6-1.
Dave Kane, K, defeated Bob Fletcher. 1,6-2, 9-7.
Dave Edwards, K, defeated Bob Ogensen, L. 6-2, 3-6, 6-2.
Barnes and Andrews, I, defeated Hedstrom and Hadley. K. 6-4 10-8
Hill and Nadig, I, defeated Sellers and Youmans, K. 6-3, 6-2.
Franklin and Kane, K. defeated Ogesen and Norman, I, 6-3, 6-4.
Rocky Castellani scored a ten round decision over Pedro Gonzales at Cleveland last night. All three officials voted for Castellani in the toe-to-toe sluggage event.
The Detroit Red Wings and the Montreal Canadians play the final game of the 1854 Stanley Cup hockey playoff tonight at Detroit. Both teams scored three wins in the seven game playoff series.
Golf Team to Play Wichita Tomorrow
Comfort Suites Conference!
JAYHAWKER
NEW PARK RANCH CUSHIONTO CHAIRS
TODAY and SATURDAY
COMPLETELY HILARIOUS!
BIGGEST BARGAIN ON THE SCREEN
Top Banana
IN COLOR BY
COLOR BY NIPPON AMERICA
starring
PHIL SILVERS
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
Coach Donn Everett and his KU golf team will travel to Wichita tomorrow to play the Wichita university Shockers in their fourth golf meet of the season. Everett is expected to play Bob Richards in the No.1 position, followed by Harlan Hise, John Prosser and Ed MacGee.
BIGGEST BARGAIN ON THE SCREEN Top Banana
SHOWS Today—2.30-7.9 Sat.-1-3 and 7-9
Prevue Saturday Nite
Open 11:00 Start 11:30
SUNDAY
The golf team, thus far, has scored two wins in their three matches. They opened the season with a 9-3 victory at Washburn. Oklahoma A&M defeated the KU team at Lawrence 72-43, and last Wednesday the Jayhawks defeated Omaha university 9-3 at the Lawrence Country club.
CASANOVA'S BIG NIGHT
Credit by TECHNICOLOR
BOB HOPE
JOAN FONTAINE
PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Friday, April 16, 1954
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Continuous Shows Sunday 1:00 p.m. on
KDGU Schedule
KU Nine to Play Huskers
6:30 Four Knights
6:30 Four Knights
6:45 Keynotes by Carle
7:00 Bookstore Hour
8:00 Great Moments in Music
8:10 Hawk's Nest on the Air
9:30 Nursery
9:35 Dixie's Doorstep
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News and Sign Off
With six victories in seven games and a four game winning streak going, the Kansas university baseball team will tackle the powerful Nebraska Cornhuskers in Lincoln on Monday and Tuesday.
Coach Tony Sharpe has 11 returning lettermen including his top three pitchers from last year, Ray Novak, Charles Wright, and Claire Mallette. All three pitches have lettered the last two seasons.
Sunset1
Sunset 1
W. on 6th St. Ph. 3313
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
SUNNY BARBARA
TUFTS BRITTON
Novak is the outstanding pitcher on the team. He had a record of 6 victories and 0 defeats and an earned run average of 1.17. In addition he hit .308. Hofmaier had a record of 3 victories and 1 loss for
This will be the toughest test of the year for the Jayhawks who have won four games from Arkansas, one from Kansas State, and one out of two from Tulsa. This will be especially tough for Kansas since it will be playing without its football boys, who will be practicing football.
THE UNTAMED BREED
PLUS --with BILL WILLIAMS-JEAN PORTER and introducing JIMMY BOYD
SMUGGLER'S ISLAND
TECHNICOLOR
Starring JEFF CHANDLER - EVELYN KEYES
PHILIP FRIEND - A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
MIDNITE SHOW SATUR-
DAY — "DEADLINE
FOR MURDER"
Outfielder Jim Cederdahl and third baseman Virgil Gottsch are both back this season. Gottsch hit 343 last year and Cederdahl was one of the team's top power hitters with four home runs and 24 runs batted in while hitting .338.
SMUGGLER'S ISLAND
TECHNICOLOR
JEEF CHANDLER-EVELYN WEVES
Granada
Granada
PHONT OJ
TONITE & SAL
Thoroughbreds Both...
A horse called "Mr. Marker" And A Boy Named Davey!
IN SUPERCOLOR
Racing Blood
Shows Tonite 7:05-9:00, Feat. 7:35-
9:30, Saturday Continuous Shows from
1:00 p.m.
STARTS SUNDAY
OWL PREVUE 11:15 SAT.
CinemaScope breaks through the fearful boundaries of the last unknown . . . where men challenge the ocean floor for booty, for power, for love!
20th CENTURY-FOX presents
Beneath the
12-Mile Reef
TECHNICOLOR
in
CINEMASCOPE
YOU SEE IT WITHOUT SPECIAL GLASSES!
ROBERT WAGNER • TERRY MOORE • GILBERT POLAND
20th CENTURY-FOX presents:
Beneath the
12-Mile Reef
TECHNICOLOR
in
CINEMASCOPE
YOU SEE IT WITHOUT SPECIAL GLASSES!
ROBERT WAGNER·TERRY MOORE·GILBERT ROLAND
Open 12:30 Sunday Continuous Shows, Features at 12:45, 3:03, 5:19, 7:37, 9:53 Regular Prices.
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PHONE 943
EXTRA!
EXTRA!
"Vesdvius Express"
"Tschaikovsky's Symphony No. 4" in CinemaScope.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 16. 1954.
...
Archway To New Horizons
The image shows a large metal arch bridge with multiple trusses. The bridge is set against the backdrop of a large, multi-story building that appears to be constructed from stone or brick. Snow covers the ground around the base of the bridge, indicating it might be wintertime. There are no visible people or animals in the scene.
34th ANNUAL
Engineering Exposition
Engineering
DISPLAYS DESIGNED AND CONSTRUCTED BY STUDENTS AND SHOWN WITH LABORATORY AND COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT FROM THE FOLLOWING DEPARTMENTS:
Aeronautical Engineering Applied Mechanics Architecture Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering
Engineering Drawing Engineering Physics Geological Engineering Industrial Design Mathematics Mechanical Engineering
Military Science (ROTC)
Mining and Metallurgical Engineering
Petroleum Engineering
Research Foundation
Shop Practice
State Geological Survey
VISIT THE ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
Entrance: Marvin Hall, West End of Campus Friday, April 16, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, April 17, 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon
Great Field Here for 29th Relays
I am a native of New York City and I have been a professional wrestler since 1983. I have competed in the Professional Wrestling Association (PWA) and International Wrestling Federation (IWF) throughout my career, including three world championships in the European Championship and the World Wrestling Federation (WF) division. I am known for my strong athleticism and commitment to excellence in the sport.
PETE MAYEAUX OF TEXAS A&M
KANSAS
WES SANTEE
Beerline Holds Record Threat
With defending champion Glenn Beerline, formerly of the University of Nebraska, returning in the hop, step, and jump, the record of 47 feet 2 inches set by Jim Gerhardt in 1952 is in danger.
Beerline jumped 48 feet 3/4 inches last year, but he record didn't stand because of the wind. Beerline is now in the Army, but was granted permission to compete in the Relays.
The other men entered in this race are Quanah Cox and Neville Price of Oklahoma, Wally Krone of Morningside, Bob McLurken of Compton, Mickey Wilborn of Oklahoma A&M, Jim Kent of Iowa State, and Hank Philman of Iowa State.
Wilborn has jumped 45 feet one inch in practice this year, and McLurken jumped 45 feet in winning the Southern Pacific AAU championship last year.
Price is the Big Seven indoor broad jump champion. Cox is a consistent 23 feet broad jumper, and Kent was third in the Big Seven indoor broad jump with a leap of 22 feet 11 inches. Philman finished third here last year.
Krone has jumped 44 feet 6 inches in practice this spring.
Last year Veryl Switzer of Kansas State took second place in the event jumping 44 feet $10 \frac{1}{2}$ inches
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
Friday, April 16, 1954
51st Year, No. 126
A
Mile Run in 1878 Won 'Great' 6:41
No matter how slow the mile is run in the Kansas Relays tomorrow, it will be run considerably more than two minutes faster than it was run in an impromptu track and field meet held here in 1878.
One Saturday afternoon in 1878, several men at the then young University of Kansas, held a track meet, in which the mile was won by W. G. Raymond in the "sensational" time of 6:41. The second place finisher, C. L. Davidson, ran the distance in 7:13.
The winner was a junior in civil engineering, but didn't receive his degree. He died a few years ago at Iowa City, Iowa.
JOE SPRINGER
Mr. Davidson was a student in the college and was later a contributor to the Memorial Union stadium fund.
MU Has 31 Men in Relays
Even though the University of Kansas is the host school to the Kansas Relays, it doesn't have the largest number of men competing in the university class of he Relays. That honor goes to the Missouri Tigers of Coach Tom Botts who have entered 31 men.
Annual Event Expected to Draw 15.000
One of the finest fields of performers in the history of the Kansas Relays is expected to attract a crowd of more than 15,000 persons, if the weather is good, to the 29th running of the annual spring classic.
The feature attraction of the day wil be the Glenn Cunningham mile to be run off at 3:05 p. m. with Wes Santee, KU's great distance ace, competing for the first time. This race, will see Santee make another bid to break the famous four minute field which includes the defending Relays Champion, Bruce Drummond of Oklahoma, furnishing the opposition, Santee is expected to turn in one of his best performances.
Twenty-two universities have entered 311 men, the 28 colleges have 292 men entered, and the 11 Junior colleges have 70 men competing.
The more than 2,000 high school athletes got a 24 hour head start on the college and university track men. The high school enterants started at 9 a.m. today when the preliminaries were run off, and the Interscolastic finals are being run off this afternoon. Ten individual champions and co-champions are attempting to defend their titles in the 50th anniversary of the event today.
The weather is the key to the performances which can be expected tomorrow. The past two years the weather has been poor so the law of averages figures to supply a fairly good day tomorrow.
Seven Relays records are in danger of being broken. Between them Kansas and Texas ran below four existing records at the Texas Relays two weeks ago. The Texas quartet ran the 880-yard relay in 1.248, while Kansas won the sprint medley in 17.15.6, the four mile relay in 17.15.6 and the two mile relay in 7.34.1. These Kansas quartets were all anchored by Santee, and at least one of them will have a slower time tomorrow since Santee will only run in two of them.
John Bennett of Marquette will go after one of the oldest records in the books, Ed Gordon's 25 feet 4/4 inches leap in the broad jump. Bennett went 25 feet 8 1/4 inches in the Texas Relays. Five high jumpers, Jack Razzuto, and Joe Pace of San Diego State, Bernie Allard of Notre Dame, Bill Bobillings of Texas, and John Whatley of Hardin-Simmons, all jumping in the 6 feet 6 inches to 6 feet 8 inches bracket will endanger the high jump record of 6 feet 8 3/16 inches set by Bobby Walters of Texas in 1949.
The decathlon men get a jump on the rest of the college class when they run off five events, the 100-meter run, broad jump, shot put, high jump, and 400-meter run, to-day.
Host of National Champions Entered in Events
Nine national champions of various denominations will go to the blocks here tomorrow when athletes from the Big Ten, Midwest, and Southwest unwind the 29th Kansas Relays at Memorial stadium.
The role call includes:
Wes Santee, Kansas—1953 NCAA and National AAU mile champion; 1852 1,500-meter champion, 1952 5,000 meter champion; 1953 NCAA cross-country champion.
Rich Ferguson, Iowa—1953 NCAA two-mile champion.
John Bennett, Marquette-1953 NCAA broad jump champion.
J. W. Mashburn, Oklahoma A&M—1853 National AAU 440-room champion, then running for Oklahoma.
Dean Smith, Texas-1952 National A ATT 100 meter champion.
Neville Price, Oklahoma — 1954 National AAU indoor broad jump champion.
George Adrian, Abilene-Christian
—1953 and 1952 NAIA 440 champion.
Al Feist, Fort Hays State—1953 NAIA two-mile champion.
Santee, Mashburn and Smith are undergraduate holdovers from the 1952 United States Olympic team. Mashburn ran fourth in the final Olympic 440 meter trials. Smith tied for third in the 100 meter finals. Both, thereby, qualified for duty with American relay teams. However, neither was used at Helsinki although they took part in post-Olympic tours. Santee did not qualify in the 5,000 meters, hitting too fast an early pace and finishing thirteenth in the second heat, the only time on record he failed to rise to a supreme challenge.
Each has gained considerable luster since the Finnish games. Santee is a five-time national champion and holder of no less than four American records from two-thirds of a mile through one mile. Including relay carries he now has dipped below 4:10 no less than 18 times in the latter race, his latest effort a 4:06.0 in anchoring the Jayhawkers to the four-mile championship at Texas.
By installing their feather-footed flyer as cleanup man here the Kansas will become automatic favorites in any haul they care to enter from the sprint medley through the distance medley, two mile and four-mile. The Mt, Oread affair being a one-day meet, the Jayhawkers, of course, will be forced to forego at least one of these events.
Mashburn has proved several times American Olympic brass erred in not wiring him into its 1,600-meter relay team at Helsinki. Among other things, he whipped both George Rhoden, Jamaica's Olympic 400-meter king and world record holder, and Jim Lean, USC's NCAA 440 champion last year at the Coliseum Relays and Compton Invitational, respectively. He blazed 46.8 at Los Angeles, 47.1 at Compton.
He won the AAU title at Dayton in 471, again beating Lean. He is defending champion in the decathlon here, but will by-pass that for the 400-meter hurdles. The cotton-tatched Oklahoma Cityan was a state 180-yard low hurdles champion in high school. It is notable
that he ran the 110-meter highs in :15.4 here last year in decathlon competition.
Smith ran :10.5 as a sophomore to bag his AAU title. He won the Southwest and Texas Relays century crowns that spring and finished fourth in the NCAA. Scholastically ineligible last year, he has notched his first major title of the spring by winning the 100 at Texas. He also is leadoff mar for those record-breaking Longhorn sprint relay quartets, which will jeopardize both the 440 and 880 baton marks here.
Bennett unrebelled the nation's best
Ferguson was unable to compete in the Big Ten indoor this winter, but won the Eastern Canadian two-mile title two weeks ago in 9:09.0, his second best performance of the season. He is a two-time Big Ten two-mile king and won the 1953 NCAA flag at Lincoln. He upset Georgetown's Charlie Capozzoli for the latter crown with a nifty 9:02.7. He won the 3,000-meter steeplechase here last year and ran second in the Glenn Cunningham mile. He will go after one, or both, titles, this year,
collegiate jump last year, 25 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ in winning his NCAA flag at Lincoln. He already has exceeded that leap with a jump of 25-8 $ \frac{4}{4} $ at Austin. He bounded 25 feet 4 inches with a tailwind to win the Relays crown last year.
Price went 24 feet 61 inches to win his indoor flag at New York in February, then reached 25 feet 2 inches behind Bennett at Texas. This would have been good enough to have won all but two previous Longhorn championships.
Adrian ran on four winning relay combines at Austin as ACC slammed the college division. He anchored the 440 and 880 units, led off for the sprint medley champions, and ran No. 3 for the mile kings.
Feist ran 9:47.6 in winning his title at Abilene, Texas last year. He is expected to anchor Tiger bids in some combination of the distance medley, sprint medley, and two-mile.
Nash ran 4:23.7 to bug his title,
also finishing third in the two-mile.
He'll anchor State in the distance
and sprint medleys.
Friday, April 16, 1954
'Needles' Nieder Depends on Stitches
If Bill Nieder, Kansas' new weight giant, doesn't come apart at one of his 148 seams, he likely will become the best shot putter in Jayhawk history even before his sophomore year runs out.
Fact is, you can repeat that statement for the discus also. He raised some eyebrows at the Texas Relays with a 51-1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ cast to bag a surprise second in the shot. He went unplaced in the discus, but threw 142-5 in his first competitive effort with the college platter.
But what of the seams? By actual count Nieder has acquired 148 stitches during his career. This started with an 18-stitch fall down a grade-school fire escape when Nieder was an 11-year-old in New York city, the family's former home.Latest was the 44-stitch job on his right knee following a severe football injury in last autumn's opener against TCU.
Certainly, this projects Nieder as the most embroidered athlete outside a professional hockey rink.
Here is the play-by-play box score on the big sophomore's major darning jobs;
44 itches right knee-operation following football injury against TCU last month.
18 scalp—fell off fire escape as 11-year-old.
5 left wrist -plunged arm through glass door in high school scuffle.
11 right wrist—compound fracture as senior in high school when he entered the prompt leap-for-distance contest out of swings at South park in Law-
rence.
3 right knee—fell on gravel on day of game, as high school senior. Played game.
5 cheek-kickoff collision, spring football. 1953.
9 right elbow—slipped off back of chain in Junior high school printing class.
9 right arm—lacerated on sideline marker, spring practice, 1953.
9 left wrist - fell through back door of
suitcase. Right wrist - he stumbled
with shot in hand.
Upon the first item of this list hangs Nieder's current shot-put tale. The 6-2 210-pound Lawrence native was under surgery seven hours following that opening fractas in Fort Worth last September. He was hospitalized so long he dropped out of school during the first semester. When he started indoor workouts he could bend his right leg—the
University Daily Kansan
power leg since he is a right footed shot-putter—no more than 20 degrees.
When he fired that 51-½ heave at Austin in the Friday preliminaries he still was bending his right leg no more than 85 degrees. Furthermore he is getting only 61-per cent power out of the hinge. He is now up to 55 pounds of lift in Trainer Dean Nesmith's resistive exercise program. He can hoist 90 pounds with his left.
Nieder's peg not only was almost three feet beyond his best previous competitive mark, but it was within six inches of KU's all-time outdoor record of 51-7, which Elwyn Dees, a sawed off husky from Lorraine, set 20 years ago.
Oddly, Nieder, like Dees, is a one-time holder of the national prep record. Bill held the mark at 60-9/2 for two weeks before Leon Patterson, then of Taft, Los Angeles, high now of USC, moved it out one-half an inch. Dees' prep throw of 58-10 in 1930, survived for 14 years, and still is the Interscholastic Kansas Relays standard.
Nieder not only is rangy, with long arms and legs, but he owns a tremendous powerful upper body. You can take a step either direction on his shoulders, or stand in the shade cast by one of his hands. His forearms are thick despite their length.
No wonder Coach Bill Easton was moved to remark on the plane trip home . . . "If Bill continues to improve, and that knee comes around, he'll be the best weight man Kansas ever had. Maybe he'll be the best The Big Seven ever had."
Nieder's discus effort at Austin also was his all-time collegiate best, and within eight feet of his top high school throw, with the lighter platter, of course.
Two items have changed Nieder's form, from the standard sideways approach, to a modified lay-back style employed by such current greats as Darrow Hooper, formerly
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The O'Brien-Hooper form calls for the rear foot to be pointed directly away from the direction of the throw. When the forward kick is started, the rear leg is turned only 90 degrees. This is a minimum twist of the knee, far less strain than Nieder's former technique. Because he cannot bend his leg even 90-degrees Nieder must compensate for the long layback with a backward rocker step before he explodes forward.
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Nieder picked up several tips from Hooper in their informal clinic last spring. Since then he has studied stills and movies of the mighty Cadet.
One of his stablemates, Morris Kay, last year's football co-captain, it tutoring the big rookie in the discus. Kay attended summer school at Minnesota last year, where he worked out under Jim Kelly, the silver-haired Gopher coach who tutored such greats as Bob Fitch and Fortune Gordien, present world record holder. Kay learned the Minnesota-whirl from Kelly and now is teaching it to Nieder and his other two mates, Dick Knowles, and Gene Blasi.
Don Cockell, British empire heavyweight champion, today rejected a $25,000 offer to meet Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson.
Page 2
Mashburn Threat to Hurdles Record
J. W. Masburn, former 440 great at Oklahoma and now enrolled at Oklahoma A&M, is the heavy favorite to win the 440-meter hurdles and possibly shatter the Relays record of 52.5 set by Lee Yoder of the University of Arkansas in 1952.
Mashburn ran the 440 as low as 46.8 while competing as a freshman at Oklahoma. He is also the national AAU 440 champion, was a member of the 1952 Olympic team
but didn't compete in i and KU decathlon champion. Also competing in the event are Bil Duncan of Missouri, Dick Fowler of Iowa, Jerry Mills of Drake, and Jay Chance of Oklahoma Baptist.
Duncan was second in the Missouri valley AAU last year. Fowler was fourth in the event here last year; Mills finished third in the Drake Relays last year in 54.5.
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Friday, April 16, 1954 University Daily Kansan
---
Page 3
For a track man...
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THE FUNNY FANATIC
Page 4
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16, 1954
M
BOB MASSENGLE OF MISSOURI
K.U. Extension Hires Course Coordinator
Newton Lewis of Kansas City, Kan., has joined the University Extension staff as a coordinator for short courses in the office of E. A. McFarland, manager of the bureau.
Mr. Lewis, who received a B.S. in business from the University in 1941, has been employed the past two years in the personnel department of the Owens-Corning Fiberglas company in Kansas City. He previously was with the Unity Publishing company in Kansas City, Mo.
Music Benefit To Be Sunday
Members of the University chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary music fraternity, will appear in a benefit concert at 4 p.m. Sunday in Strong auditorium, the proceeds of the concert to be used in setting up student scholarships in music. Tickets may be purchased for $1 at the Fine Arts office or at the performance.
Rookie Joe Frazier hit two home runs and Stan Musial and Red Schoenienst one each yesterday as the St. Louis Cards defeated the Chicago White Sox, 7-4.
The Shawnee-Mission Indians are favored to upset the Wichita East Blue Aces, winners of 10 of the 11 interscholastic meets, in the class AA high school relays being run this afternoon.
Indians Favored in Class A A Today
Shawnnee-Mission, the only other team to win a championship in the last 11 years, defeated East by 16 points in the Ottawa Relays. Shawnee-Mission is expected to win on its depth, especially in the field events, even though it doesn't have the number of individual stars that East has.
Hurdler Don Jordan, 440 men
Gene Ekiss and Bob McDowell, and
880 men Leon Matassarin and Tom Rodda are all possible winners and should place high for East. Jordan is expected to battle Henry Wiebe of Newton for first place in both hurdles races, and a new record could be set in either or both
Larry Youngblood gives the Indians a definite edge in the dashes. The Indians have a fast 880-yard relay team and the second best railer in the state. Jim McHenry has run the mile in 4:38.8 which has been bested only by Julius Lincoln of Topeka who has run 4:35.8.
Shawnee's best weight men are John Burke, who has thrown the
shot 47 feet 9$\frac{1}{4}$ inches. Tom Jovem
who has thrown the discus 14$^{\textcircled{2}}$ feet
10 inches, and Jim Londerholm, who
has thrown the javelin 17$^{\textcircled{2}}$ feet
1 inch.
1 men.
Some of the outstanding boys competing today are Sonny Bailer of Manhattan, Kent Hummer of Garden City, Jere Potts of Ottawa, Tommy Davis of Arkansas City, Dick Easton of Lawrence, and Bidry Dryer of Great Bend.
Ballard has jumped 6 feet $ \frac{5}{4} $ inches and Hummer has jumped 6 feet $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch making them the favorites in the hugh jump.
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Friday, April 16, 1954
University Daily Kansan
Page
Texas Sprinters Pose As Real Relays Lure
Kansas' four-motored distance fliers, anchored by Wes Santee, will have a companion lure in the 29th running of the Kansas Relays tomorrow. It's Texas in the two sprint relays.
Clyde Littlefield's boiling forces smashed both the 440 and 880 records at their own meet in Austin. Records in the short hauls always are more difficult than in relays over 880, because the technique of baton-passing means considerable. Nothing short of a dropped stick can hurt distance clubs.
It is significant, then, that the Longhorns assuredly will imperil both records here, even though they have been hammered down through 28 Mt. Oread games. At Austin, they lowered the quarter to 40:8, the half to 12:48. The same combination Dean Smith, Jerry Prewitt, Alvin Frieden, and Charlie Thomas, wrought both the clockings.
Consider that both figures were bed without benefit of a chute. Here the Longhorns will be pump-out of a 220-yard straightway, which means curve running will be reduced to one turn in the 440 and three in the 880.
The Longhorns' 440 burst, around two turns, dipped within three-tenths of a second of the world record of 49.5, which also happens to coincide with the Kansas standard, although Iowa's surge here in 1935 never reached the official books. Their 880 performance, around four turns, was four-tenths below the current Kansas listing which Texas' 1952 foursome shares with Iowa's 1935 crew (Jim Owens, Wilson Briggs, Andrew Dooley, and Carl Nelson).
Smith and Thomas were members of that record-tying brigade of two years ago, and again are running lead-off and anchor, respectively.
The extent of the Steers' feats can be drawn even more sharply into focus when these facts are considered: No Kansas winner in history,
save Iowa's record-holders have taken 41.0 here in 28 previous meets. Only Texas' 1952 foursome, which included Ralph Person and Jim Brownhill in the two middle carries, has dipped as low at :41.0.
No Texas Relays winner, ever has reached at 41.0 until last weekend. And, at Drake third stop in the major Midwest wheel, only Texas' 1941 team of Billy Seay, Carleton Terry, Fred Ramsdell, and Lonnie Hill, has reached as low at 41.0.
No champion in any of the three big carnivals . . . and this goes back 44 years for the Des Moines event . . . ever had broken 125.0 for the 880, until Texas accomplished it last weekend. Fact is, only three Kansas winners, Iowa of '35; Oklahoma A&M in '50, and Texas in '52, ever have bettered 126.0. Only the 1936 and 1952 Steer units, had spun this feat in Austin, and only the 1951 Drake quartet, Texas 1947 crew, and Ohio State's 1942 foursome, ever have punctured that barrier at Drake.
There is no mystery in the Longhorn's unprecedented successes. Smith, Thomas, and Frieden ran 1-2-3 in the open 100 at Austin, and all were caught under 10.9. Smith won the Southwest conference century in 1952 as a sophomore, betripping scholastically last year, and Thomas is a two-time Southwest furlong king.
This team already has demonstrated it needs no pressure save the watch. Contenders were so far back in both races at Austin, their anchor-men couldn't have hit Thomas with a hurled baton.
Every other Texas champion in both relays divisions . . . Abilene Christian scored a grand slam of four in the college class * . . . will move up for the Kansas Games.
By CAROL KELLER
A little more than 200 years ago George Frederick Handel began his oratorio, the "Messiah." Handel, who had been bankrupt twice, did not realize when he had finished it that it would bring King George II of England ashore to court to their see. They first heard the thrilling "Hallelujah!"
Handel's Music Heard at Easter
Handel began the "Messiah" when he was 56, and completed it in 24 days. The words were not written by Handel, but by Charles Jennens, a wealthy aristocrat who thought Handel incapable of composing such a masterpiece.
It was not until Handel began his performances in aid of the Foundling hospital that the "Messiah" came into its own. After that, extra presentations were given each year.
The first performance was given in 1741, in Dublin, Ireland, for a charity organization. Then is was a presented in London in 1743, at the Convent Garden. Although it was a success it did not cause any stir.
In 1784, 25 years after Handel's death, it was given in Westminster Abbey with a huge orchestra and a chorus of more than 500 singers. It was requested that the ladies not wear hoops so there would be room for more persons.
Since 1923...
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We wish you Good Luck in 1954
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WELCOME to the RELAYS
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You're in for a busy weekend of sports, parades and parties; But take time out to enjoy a wonderful seafood, steak, or chicken dinner at Duck's Tavern. It will be a highspot of your vacation!
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University Daily Kansan Friday. April 16. 1954
Cooperation Key to Broad Jump Fight
If two fine broad-jumpers maintain their unrehearsed spirit of cooperation, one of them may erase the second most ancient record on the Kansas Relays books when they meet here tomorrow.
Bennett's effort here was wind-blown. It grazed Ed Gordon's long-standing mark (since 1931 by $ \frac{1}{4} $ of an inch, thus taking rank as the second longest in Mt. Oread annals). But he was happy, for it was 13 inches beyond his previous best.
Page 6
-
The photographer got his shot of "the champ" all right, but it wasn't Price. Purely by accident he had chosen Bennett to pad out the picture. Bennett won at 25-4, just a fraction under the record. Price was third at 24-9]. The lensman scored too, for he was able to present his boss with a unique picture of the favorite and the un-ranked new king.
There was a humorous twist too. Bennett was publicized as Marquette's first Kansas Relays king in
The men in question are John Bennett, Marquette's tiny NCAA champion, and Neville Price. Oklahoma's three-time Big Seven king. It will be recalled that last year Price was a heavy favorite to win his favorite event. Bennett was unhairled, rating a bare mention on the pre-meet form chart, but he was happy to pose with the vet-crowned Oklahoma champion for at least one press photographer. It was a cold day . . . Price, a South African, spent much of the afternoon huddled in his sleeping bag. . . and the lensman wanted to get away with a picture of "the champ" before his fingers became too stiff to level the camera.
Once again Price unknowingly played a helping role; since he helped Bennett measure his stride. With the little Milwaukeean holding the steel at the pit, Price walked up the runway to mark off the distances. Bennett shot down the cinder stretcher for his winning jump.
"Later, relates Maury White in the Des Moines Tribune, "Bennett remeasured, and he found the distance 10 feet short. Bennett had yelled 65 at Price, but the mustached Sooner thought his rival had yelled 55."
Bennett has progressed from that point. He was undefeated in 10 Scandinavian meets last summer, and he won five indoor meets in as
history. When his coach, Bus Shimek, read this, he howled, for the old NCAA two-mile champion (1827) won the 300 meters here in 1927. That event was carried on the Mt. Oread card only briefly and now is extinct. Shimek's feat, therefore, was not listed in the record book. Bennett had to yield the initial honor, but his jump was the best in American collegiate circles throughout 1953.
Almost three months later, the 5-7, 14-pound Hill-topper proved his Kansas leap was no fluke. He bounded 25-3% off the Nebraska runways at Lincoln to snare the NCAA title, and there was no friendly wind in this one.
many starts this winter. Enroute he established a new Drake fieldhouse record of 23-5½ in a dual against the Bulldogs, and reached his all-time indoor best of 24-6½ in winning the Michigan State Rejays.
Bennett's success traces to two physical attributes . . . (1) His native speed, and (2) his tremendous leg spring. While in Scandinavia last spring he frequently trailed Kansas State's Thane Baker in the 100 and 220. At the 1953 indoor CCC he high-jumped 6-5, eight inches over his head, in pushing Drake's Arnie Betton to a new record. He still holds the North Dakota . . . his home is Grand Forks . . state high school record at 6-3].
Meanwhile, what of Price, who has been the casual victim of Bennett's successes? He retained his Big Seven indoor title in February at 24-41. He won the National indoor AAU at 24-53, a figure second nationally only to Bennett's Michigan State leap, on latest NCAA tabulations.
College Life Is Looking Up
Marshfield, Mass. — (U.P.) — Paul Barry, 19, a student at Boston University's College of Industrial Technology, commutes by plane between his home here and his classes. He says it's a lot easier than driving an automobile.
College Life Is Looking Up
The spare Sooner owns an all-time high of 25-24, which he used to bag the 1952 Texas Relays, and twice last year was within an inch of 25-0.
The pair met at the Texas Relays for the first time since the NCAA last July. Bennett jumped $25-8_{1/2}$ to set a new Texas Relays record, and Price took second with a leap of 25-2.
George's Happiest in Crowd Boston — (U.P.) The Boston Athenaeum has 553 portraits and engravings of George Washington. It also has the bust of Washington which, until 1826, graced Thomas Jefferson's dining room at Monticello.
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A Complete, Original Collection of Kansas Relays Programs! 1923-1954
Phone 905
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CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
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Read and Use the Kansan Classified Ads.
Welcome Newcomer!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT EXTENDS A HEARTY AND CORDIAL WELCOME TO EVERY HIGH SCHOOL, JUNIOR COLLEGE COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY COMPETITOR WHO WILL VISIT OUR CAMPUS THIS WEEKEND.
KU
To The 29th KU Relays
PETER S. KOEHLEY
ARTHUR C. "DUTCH" LONBORG University of Kansas Director of Athletics
Page 7
MARSHALA MARSHALA
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Yale, founded in 1701, conferred honorary degrees on many of the great leaders of the American Revolution. Men who received these Yale degrees include George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John Hancock, Benjamin Franklin, and Roger Sherman.
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Oakland, Calif. — (U.P.) A transocean air lines DC-4 will take off for Pusan, Korea, Monday with 200,580 passengers. The "passengers" include 200,000 bees, 500 rabbits, and 80 goats being sent to Korea as a project of the Church World service.
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Nashua, N. H.,—(U.R.)—In the address space of a report on Alexander B. Clark, police wrote, "floater," and with some justification. When arrested in New Hampshire, Clark produced a Maryland driver's license, said he lived in Maine, and was driving a car that was registered in Connecticut. Clark's $5 fine for operating an improperly registered motor vehicle was suspended.
The asteroid Amor, discovered in 1932, comes within 10,000,000 miles of the earth's orbit.
Relays Program
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1:00 Bomb to officially open Houya.
1:15 Queen's entry.
1:23 Presentation of E. A. Thomas.
1:25 National anthem.
1:30 First event—high hurdles.
1:40 College 2-mile relay.
1:50 100-yard dash.
1:50 University 4-mile relay.
1:60 College 880-yard relay.
1:65 Kansas City high school relay.
1:65 University 440-yard relay.
1:70 400-meter hurdles.
1:75 Presentation of queen.
1:80 Glenn Cunningham mile run.
1:85 University 2-mile relay.
1:85 College sprint medley relay.
1:85 College invitation sprint medley
1:85 University sprint medley.
1:90 Cuco sprint medley.
1:90 College distance medley.
1:95 University 880 relay.
1:95 Steeplechase.
1:95 University distance medley.
1:Kansas high school relay.
1:25 College mile relay.
1:30 Outstanding athlete presentation
Relay Facts
Referee—E. A. Thomas, Kansas State High School Athletic association commissioner.
letter—Bill problems.
Starting time—1:30 p. m. tomorrow.
PA announcer—Max Falkenstein. Broadcasts: KU Sports Network, originating KANU, Lawrence (Merle Harmon); KLWN, Lawrence; KJCK, Junction City; WHKH, Hutchinson; KVGB, Great Bend; KANS, Wichita (Dave Wilson)
Chicago —(U.P.)— Admiral corporation said it sold more room air conditioners in the first three months of 1954 in Alaska than in either Jacksonville, Fla., or San Diego, Calif.
Man, Those Eskimos Are Cool
He Was Warned
Friday, April 16. 1954
New Haven, Conn. — (U.P.)—A friend warned a liquor store proprietor, Alex Kegeles, there was a suspicious character outside the establishment. "He might be a hold-up man," his friend said. Kegeles laughed it off. After the friend left, the man entered and robbed Kegeles of $25.
Gold Streets
Keene, N.H. — (U.P.)— Motorists got the impression Keene was the richest city in the world one night after a snow storm because the street seemed gold-plated. City officials investigated. The "gold" turned out to be sand and salt, reflected by Keene's new mercury-vapor street lights.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16, 1954
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Friday, April 16, 1954
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University. Daily Kansan
Page 10
Friday, April 16, 1954
1954 Entry List Far Cry from 1923
By DANA LEIBENGOOD Kansan Sports Editor
Tomorrow many colleges and universities will compete in the Kansas Relays. The number of schools entered for the 29th running of the relays is a far cry from the handful of schools which were represented in the first Relays on April 21, 1923.
More than a score of colleges and universities accepted invitations, which KU had issued the year before, to attend the first event. All of the Missouri Valley schools were represented, the Big Ten and Southwest conferences sent several schools, and even the University of Pennsylvania sent a team.
The relays were the cherished dream of Dr. John Outland, a former KU football great. Dr. Outland played football at KU in 1883-94 and then went to the University of Pennsylvania, and was an all-American there for two years. It was during his years as a student at Penn that the famous Penn Relays were started. He was very impressed with this meet and believed that it would be a valuable addition to college athletics in the middle west.
After returning to Kansas some years later, he explained the idea to Dr. F. C. Allen, then director of athletics, who was just as enthusiastic about the idea as was Dr. Outland.
In the spring of 1920 plans actually started for the first KU Relays. Track coach Karl Schlademan acted as general manager of the meet, and had students from all four classes working with him. This was the beginning of the Student Relays committee.
As might be expected, the strong Kansas track team dominated the first relays, winning the 440- and 880-yard relays, the high jump, broad jump, and finished second in the mile relay and third in the two-mile.
Times and performances in the field events were generally unspectacular due to the sloppy track. Almost every event was run in steady rain, but the day was warm which made things a little more pleasant.
Drs. Allen and Outland had to meet almost every problem imaginable such as finances, dressing room and living accommodations for the athletes, and the arrangement of the program in organizing the relays.
The business men of Lawrence organized the Kansas Relays club through which they materially aided in promoting the Relays.
For his work on the first Relays Dr. Outland is appropriately called the "Father of the Kansas Relays," and Dr. Allen is considered "The Founder of the Kansas Relays."
The referee for the first Kansas Relays was Louis C. Mederea III of the University of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Outland served as referee the following year.
Three outstanding football coaches served as referees in some of the early meets. Fielding Yost, former KU football coach, was the referee of the 1926 relays, Knute Rocke served in 1925, and A. A. Stagg in 1932.
After the Relays success the first year there was little question that it would be an annual affair even though it still had problems to face.
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all of the Indian's expenses for the journey from Mexico.
Prof. Davis described the men as "muscular giants, extremely husky, with a tremendous chest expansion, wearing only a scanty pair of shorts and carrying a short walking stick in their hands as they ran."
These Indians had gained vast experience in distance running from the ancient tradition of serving as human express carriers, and frequently ran for days at a time while delivering packages by the relay system.
1952 Endurance Showing Likely to Last
Although several brilliant times will probably be recorded in the Kansas Relays tomorrow, it is doubtful if the record of racing endurance set in the 1925 Relays will ever be broken.
rub themselves with grease carried in leather pouches around their waists.
In 1925 the University athletic department arranged with a representative of the Mexican government to bring three members of the Tarahumara Indian tribe and their wives to KU for a cross country race
The men started in Kansas City and the women in Topeka, and the first to reach the stadium was to be declared the winner. The men started the 45-mile run with a dramatic send-off, and stopped only to
The men entered the track just as the half-mile was starting and run out on the track and completed the 880 with the rest of the racers. The exact time it took the men to run from Kansas City was never recorded.
The KU athletic department, of which Dr. Davis was a member, paid
The women entered the stadium somewhat later and were considerably less spectacular, according to Dr. W. W. Davis, professor of history and one of the organizers of the race.
The natural colors of cotton are brown, green, cream and white.
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University Daily Kansan Page 11 He's Cooling in the Cooler
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The wholesale value of motor vehicles produced in 1952 was estimated at $9 billion.
Elizabeth, N.J. — (0)P—Bartender Anthony Damato spent the weekend in jail to regain control of the temper he lost when his boss told him he was fired Saturday night. Police said the husky, 35-year-old Damato smashed 25 bottles of whiskey, a plate glass window, and three partitions at the Shamrock Bar & Grill.
Manhasset, N. Y.-U.P. - Burgars with big ideas broke into a swank department store here and stole a truckload of women's apparel valued at $25,000. The loot included suits, coats and sweaters. In every case the small and medium sizes were ignored and the racks were stripped of the large sizes.
Next Time, Go by Plane
The international Astronomical Union at Cincinnati, Ohio, has listed more than 1,500 asteroids.
Quinney, Mass.—Girl--Two members of the Navy's air branch have decided to stick to flying after a brief taste at sea. Richard J. Greer, 21, and Joseph F. Forti, 22, lost an oar while rowing in Dorchester bay yesterday and were drifted seaward when Quinney police came to the rescue.
The famed wheat-producing state of Kansas last year mined 1,350,000 tons of bituminous coal.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1954
Gross Hopes to Shine With Hooper Shadow Gone
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Darrow Hooper is departed, but Texas A&M has come up with another discus-thrower who may stretch the Cadet chain to five consecutive victories here Saturday when Midwest and Southwest spiked-shoe hopefuts unravel the 29th Kansas Relays.
The name is Bobby Gross. You may not recall it since he labored deep in the shadow of Hooper in both the discus and shot put throughout last season. He already has exceeded his 1953 ceiling four times with the brass-rimmed platter. Gross finished third here last year behind Hooper and Nebraska's Cliff Dale.
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shot.
But Oklahoma sophomore Bob Van Dee has stamped himself as the big threat. He won the Texas Relays at 159-3. Other Big Seven muscle-men like Dale, and Kansas' football duo of Dick Knowles and Morris Kay, are likely to project themselves as 150-footers.
Gross' best peg, is his winning cast of 156-9]$^4$ at the Border Olympics. He threw 154-7]$^4$ in a triangular against Texas and Houston, opened with a 151-10 toss against LSU and Rice, and had his poorest showing at the Texas Relays with 151-4.
inaugurated the current Aggie streak in 1950, was one. Hooper attained the charmed circle last year. Minnesota's Byrli Thompson hit 161-10% with his 1949 victory. And Archie Harris, Indiana record holder, spanned 171-6% in 1941.
Nick Spillios of Houston will be another to watch. He also has improved his best 1953 performance of 149-31. He whiried 156-0 behind Gross at Laredo and 155-2 at Texas. He is defending Missouri Valley
The latter heave was three inches beyond his 1st 1953 effort of 151-1. Continued improvement would lift him into the 160-foot class, which only four men have attained in Relays history. George Kadera, who
champion in both the discus and shot.
If Gross is able to win here, he will hoist Col. Frank Anderson's weight brigade into a tie with Minnesota for the most consecutive Mt. Cread discus crowns captured by one team.
The Gopher's five-year skein is somewhat tainted in that Thompson, last in a lengthy line of tremendots flingers, copped his first gold medal in 1946 while representing Camp Grant. Bob Fitch, one-time world holder, opened the string in 1942 with a cast of $158-9\frac{1}{2}$ up until then the second-best on the Relays books.
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Oaklyn, N.J.(U.P.)—There wasn't a cop in sight yesterday when a thief broke into the South Jersey Suburban Police association training barracks and escaped with $135.
Dallas—(U.P.) A thief attended the East Dallas Christian church yesterday but his motive was anything but saintly. While worshippers were attending services the thief fled with the $161 collection.
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Friday. April 16, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 13
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Track fans may wish there was a way to insure against bad weather for tomorrow's 29th running of the Relays such as was done in 1925, but a check of past years shows that the chances for nice weather tomorrow are better than average.
Weather: Sunny For Relays, Records Say
But back to the '25 track carnival. For some reason or other, long since forgotten, the Relays were insured against the possibility of unfavorable action by the elements. The Relays were insured for $4,000, but the day came, the weather was perfect, and both the Relays officials and insurance agent were happy.
By STAN HAMILTON
In past years, however, the weather has figured strongly in the annual track and field event. Last year 45-degree temperature and gusty winds kept all records safe, and in 1952 fans had little to complain about in respect to the climate.
In 1951 the weather, by a consensus of opinion, was lousy, but still a new collegiate record of 15 feet, $1-inch was set by Nebraska's Don Cooper in the pole vault. This writer can recall that year—he sat beyond the uppermost row in the stands, huddled under a blanket next to the top wall, and did his best to keep warm and dry.
Thus, in the past seven years, only two years have been what could be termed "stay-at-home" days.
But in 1950, '49, and '48 the weather was near perfect. In 1947 the day produced the worst rain and cold in the history of the event.
Time and again the question of changing the date of the Relays has come up in hopes that a later date might result in better weather.
With the scheduling as it now stands, many athletes compete here, stay a day or two, and then journey on to Drake, some even on to Pennsylvania. If the dates of these two championships (KU and Drake) were farther apart some schools might not participate here or at Drake—or at either!
Now, if it rains tomorrow we may join with you and say "Who cares?"
Over-all, past records, while incomplete in some cases, show the weather has been "goo!" more than 60 per cent of the time.
But if the time were to be pushed back even as much as a week the caliber of performances here would suffer because of the annual Drake Relays. That event could not be pushed back, either, because of the large Penn Relays, which usually trails the Des Moines show by a week.
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16. 1954
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2 Milers Rank As Top Names In KU Annals
Two great milers, Glenn Cunninghom and Wes Santee, with very similar records are by all odds the two most famous individual performers in the history of Kansas track.
Cunningham is the only performer in the history of the Big Six or Big Seven conferences ever to win a berth on two American Olympic teams. He finished fourth in the 1,500 meter race in 1932 and second in the same event in 1936.
Santee appeared in the 1952 Olympics, and will probably tie Cunningham's record by appearing in the 1956 games. In his first appearance he failed to qualify for the finals of the 5,000 meter race.
Cunningham dominated the midwestern track picture as no runner has ever done. He won six consecutive mile championships, three indoor and three outdoors, during the 1932-33-34 seasons. He held the league outdoor records in the half-mile and mile with times of 1:5.2 and 4:14.2 and he still holds the record in the 1,000-yd. run with a time of 2:11.1.
He accomplished another feat no other Big Seven runner has ever approached—winning the 880, mile, and two-mile at the conference meet the same afternoon. He accomplished this twice, in 1933 and 1934.
Santee has won the cross country championship twice, the indoor mile three times, and the outdoor mile twice. He also holds the school records in the half-mile and the mile, running the mile in 4:02.4 at Comppton, Calif, last summer, and the half-mile in 1:50.8 at the Big Seven outdoor meet last year.
While Santee's fastest time is 4:02.4, Cunningham's best time in the mile was 4:06.7 outdoors and 4:04.4 indoors. He made the outdoor record in 1934 and simultaneously held the indoor and outdoor world's records.
Cunningham's: 4.04.4 mile is the fastest indoor performance in history. He set this time in 1938 on Dartmouth's 6]-lap track in a paced race, four years after he had graduated from KU.
While Santee has run as low as 4:02.6, it was as anchor man on the distance medley team and not in an open mile. His fastest time in an open indoor mile is 4:04.9 run on the dirt track in a triangular meet with Michigan State and Illinois.
Other than the fact that both men were great milers, they were completely different.
Cunningham had to overcome a severe handicap in becoming an
outstanding runner, for he was badly burned when he was 8 years old in a fire which killed his older brother Floyd. He started running to get the full use of his legs. They continued to bother him throughout his track career, for the scarred issue required a long warmup period before he could get the proper circulation for a race.
Santee has never had to overcome such a terrific handicap.
Another way in which the runners differ is in their physical makeup. Santee is tall and slender.
standing 6-1 and weighs 150 pounds. Cunningham was a powerfully built runner, standing 5-2 and weighing 165 pounds.
While Santee has been primarily a one-sport athlete, even in high school, Cunningham was an all-around high school athlete, lettering in football and basketball as well as track.
Cunningham was the first miler given a chance to break the four-minute mile, but since he didn't accomplish it, it is very likely that his successor may do it.
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Welcome to the 29th annual track and field meet
1954 K.U. Relays
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Friday, April 16, 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 15
E.A. Thomas, Widely Known Official, to Be Referee
By TOM LYONS
E. A. Thomas of Topeka, commissioner of the Kansas State High School Activities association has been selected as referee for the 29th annual Kansas Relays here tomorrow.
Mr. Thomas is widely known in national prep and collegiate track circles. For 25 years he has been a member of the National Track and Fields rules committee, and the past 20 years has served on the National high school football rules committee.
He has been referee and starter for the state high school track and field meet and the interscholastic division of the Kansas Relays for the past 20 years.
Mr. Thomas has served as an official at National Collegiate Athletic association and Big Seven meets as well as working as referee and starter of numerous Big Seven duals and triangulars.
Early Stages
Mr. Thomas assumed his present position 27 years ago after a high school coaching career at Quenemo and Williamsburg.
Boston—(U.P.)—In 1800 no fewer than 26 stagecoach lines operated out of Boston. Each week, 116 coaches arrived at or departed from Boston. The running time between Boston and New York was 40 hours. Today, airlines make the trip in 55 minutes.
E Reno, Okla.—(U.P.)-Jenks Simmons, high school basketball coach, is famous here for remembering sports statistics, but he has trouble remembering dates. Simmons took his team 65 miles to Enid for a tournament, then started back immediately. The tourney wasn't to start until the next night.
Date Trouble
Early Whalers
Oh, Come on, Horse, Whoa!
Boston—(U.P.)-Records show that in 1578 no fewer than 400 European vessels were engaged in whaling and fishing along the New England coast. This was 42 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth.
Atlanta, Ga. — (U.P.)—Pine Hill Stables was sued for $50,000 damage because it was alleged to have guaranteed one of its horses would halt at the command, "Whoa!" Sue Lord, 17, was injured while riding the animal because it failed to do so.
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Mr. Thomas has been one of the editors of the National high school Federation Track and Field guide, and has written articles on rules, starting, and running of track meets. Many articles written by Mr. Thomas have appeared in the Track and Field guide.
He was first commissioner of the Kansas State high school Activities association when the organization
was founded and has been with the group continuously since time
of her retirement.
Louis C. Mederia III, 1923, Penn;
Dr. John Outland, 1924, KU-Penn;
Knute Rokne, 1925, Notre Dame;
Fielding Yost, 1926, Michigan; Harry
Gill, 1927, Illinois; Tom Jones,
1928, Wisconsin; Maj. John L.
Griffith, 1929, Big Ten commissioner;
Avery Bruntard, 1930, National
AAU president; Ossie Solem, 1931, Drake.
A. A. Stagg, 1932, Chicago; Henry Schulte, 1933, Nebraska; George Bresnahan, 1934, Iowa; Clyde Littlefield, 1935, Texas; C. N. Metcalf, 1936, Iowa State; Henry Schulte, 1937, Nebraska; Maj. John L. Griffith, 1938, Big Ten commissioner; Frank Hill, 1939, Northwestern; Jim Kelley, 1940, Minnesota; Tom Jones
1941, Wisconsin; Glenn Cunningham,
1942, Cornell college; George
Bresnahan, 1946; Iowa; John Jacobs,
1947. Oklahoma.
Frank Potts, 1948, Colorado; Ward Haylett, 1949, Kansas State; Dr. Garfield Weeade, Pittsburg State Teachers; Ralph Higgins, 1951, Oklahoma A&M; Ed Weir, 1952, Nebraska; and Tom Botts, 1953, Missouri.
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Friday, April 16, 1954 Page 16 University Daily Kansan
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Daily hansan
Friday, April 16, 1954
51st Year, No. 126
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
By AMY DE YONG
WomenChoose Own Hair-dos
The well-known woman's privilege of changing her mind extends this spring to the variety of new hair styles. Coiffures have entered the "as you like it" era, with the highest fashion a becoming hair style.
Rather than follow a dictated mode, which often may not be flattering, coeds are finding the most attractive hair cut, and each girl chooses her own favorite. This trend is evidenced by the many different lengths in contrast to the monotony of previous years when everyone copied the current fad.
Short hair, cooler for the warmer days and often more easily managed, is in the majority. However, there is a wide variety in just how brief a cut to choose. Italian styles are attractive for the girl whose face lends itself to a severe cut, but these are often modified by a slight wave.
Coeds may choose a shoulder-length bob, an extremely short "boy cut," or any length in between, depending on which is most becoming. They may elect a soft wave, tight curls, or a very straight mode.
Especially favored by the campus girl is the "roommate special," though it is wise to see examples of the friend's handiwork before completely trusting oneself to her scissors and imagination Many college girls seem to have a knack for trimming each other's hair expertly, though.
A small spray of spring flowers slipped among the curls will add a lovely touch to many hairdos, and many girls should note especially the advantages of a hat which follows and accents the hairline.
Perhaps the most desirable and practical style is a moderate length which may be varied by several different sets for classtime or for special occasions.
How ever you choose to wear it—wear it as you like it!
Women in Sports Play Their Part
"Anything you can do, I can do better." seems to be the cry of American womanhood—and believe it or not. the girls are good tracksters too!
The women sprinters and runners of America have had some good records, with the great Mildred "Babe" Zaharias doing a big part in the 30s. Two Pennsylvania girls, Stella Walsh. of Philadelphia, and Catherine Hardy, of Harrisburg, have made excellent sprinting records, as did Jean Lane, of Ohio, in 1952.
The American women didn't do so well in the world events, but sometime an Olympic team is bound to bring home the trophy.
At this University, the coeds don't seem too inclined to run, with cars and all—they'd just as soon watch Wes Santee come running in. But if the girls don't race up the hill in the early morning in track shorts, they do play a part in the relays—and will be out to cheer the men on at relay time.
Teens Go Crazy Over Bright-Colored Pants
New York — (U,P)— Those slim- cut, colorful pants the teen-agers love are getting crazier by the season.
The latest "crazy" pants fairly scream with bright pink and red harlequin cheeks. Some of the spring ones are decorated with outsize fish prints and dollar-size coin dots.
Even the tot-size children are taking to the fad. And although mothers may have to wear blinders when the children come into the room, there is this to say for the pants—most of them are of sailcloth and other sturdy fabrics which wash easily.
Rita Hayworth
FOR THOSE SPRING FORMAL DANCES—Carolyn Pearson, college sophomore, adds the last touch as she prepares for the big occasion—the spring formal. Carolyn is wearing a ballerina length dress accented with a wide waistband of sequined hearts. The tiny bows at the shoulders add a fashionable touch to an up-to-date formal ensemble.
Science Building Adds Beauty, Utility to Campus
In connection with the laboratories are balance rooms, apparatus rooms and supply and record rooms. Adequate space has been allotted for offices for the senior staff, chairmen and laboratory directors. Study rooms are available for graduate students.
By KAREN HILMER
Have you stopped to notice the huge structure in the area south and slightly west of Robinson gymnasium and Haworth hall lately? Sure—the new science building!
This addition to the University affords an opportunity for greater scientific expansion accommodating the chemistry, physics, and pharmacy departments, and replacing Bailey and Blake halls, formerly the homes of these departments.
Included in the building are laboratories, classrooms, research facilities, new apparatus and a big scientific combined library of all three departments. The shape of the building is an "E" with three prongs protecting southward.
The basement under the east wing and the center section contain apparatus for research in radio chemistry. Four basement rooms will be kept at a constant temperature for research and storage of perishable supplies.
The department of physics will have the entire west wing-basement and four floors. The entire east wing-basement and five floors and a storage attic—and the basement and first two floors of the center portion will be assigned to chemistry.
The School of Pharmacy will have the third, fourth and fifth floors of the center portion of the building.
Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Gerber, of Leavenworth, Kan. announce the engagement of their daughter, Carla to Edgar L. Vinson Jr., of Abilene, Kan. Miss Gerber lives at Monchonsia hall, and Vinson is a member of Don Henry Co-op. Both are college sophomores.
The science departments have been moving equipment into the building ever since last Christmas and expect to be completely moved in by next September. "Moving will continue gradually but at the close of the semester, moving to the building will proceed at an accelerated pace." R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry, said.
The estimated cost of the building is three and a quarter million dollars. It covers 160,000 square feet of space.
"Some classwork will be conducted in the building this summer. Certain rooms will be ready for use at that time." Prof. Brewster said.
Go down and take a look at this modern, beautifully designed addition to the campus—it will be well worth the walk!
The Unusual Season Brings Antics Galore
By KAREN HILMER
Dances, picnics, swimming, horseback riding—all for your enjoyment, compliment of the beautiful, lazy spring weather we are having on the Hill!
Yes, its that time again—the time when its so easy to forget about the next day's assignment—the time for the seniors to pull cute goaway tricks on the underclassmen. Those who are witnessing the spring student antics on the Hill for the first time have many surprises in store for them.
On those hot, sunny, late May afternoons when there is nothing to but study, a popular sport is to spend the day at Lone Star lake or the local swimming pool. Of course we take our books along, contemplating final week when there will be more days spent in trying out a different dive or swimming stroke.
A very popular joke about this time of year is to bodily carry frantically tossing and turning girl or boy to Potter lake and dump them—shoes and all. It sounds awful but its really a lot of fun—if you are doing the dumping.
Then there is always the race between the coeds to see who can look more like a boiled lobster. This is done on those same lazy afternoons—first the girl buys all sorts of sunitan lotions and baby oils, then dons the newest fashion in a bathing suit—takes a beach towel and sits on the sundeck for four or five hours. What a life!
Did someone say picnic? Sure did, so let's go. Grab the essentials—all kinds of food from potato chips to baked beans—enough to last all day—blankets, radio, swim suits, towels, plenty of sun and time.
If you notice students, seniors in particular, looking a little stary-eyed and lackadaisical, be patient with them—four years is four years and the campanile hill looks mighty good to them now. If they do strange thinks such as throwing all of your clothes into a suitcase and shipping them off to heaven knows where—be patient and laugh it off—or they will ship them further than you expected.
A favorite topic of conversation among the coeds is the many spring dances in the offing—the hustling around to borrow a formal or show off your new one. Then off to an evening of music- dancing and fun.
There are so many unusual things typical to a KU spring season. Take it from those who have experienced it—it's great living—the best!
The Interior Design club recently elected Gene Schanze, fine arts junior, president.
Other officers are Connie White, fine arts junior, vice president; Kaye Siegfried, fine arts junior, secretary; Shirley Denniston, fine arts senior, public relations; Dan Linsay, fine arts junior, job chairman; and Tom Wilson, fine arts junior, parliamentarian.
Arvid Jacobson, head of the Interior Design department is sponsor of the organization.
On the Hill
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pining of Marilyn Stueck, college sophomore, to Dick Klassen, business senior. Miss Stueck lives in Kansas City, Mo. Klassen, a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, is from Nickerson.
Attendants were Joan McKee and Ann Leavitt, college juniors, and Phyllis McClelland, college sophomore.
Members of Beta Theta Pi fraternity entertained Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at an informal lawn party Tuesday evening.
Robert Delp, engineering freshman, recently pledged Triangle fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Humphrey of Beverly, Mo. announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha Jane, fine arts sophomore, to Roy Baker, business junior, son of Mr. L. E. Baker of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. William Davey of Hoskins, Ore. The wedding date is set for June 5 in Danforth chapel.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity entertained members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at an exchange dinner last Tuesday.
Delta Sigma Fi professional business administration fraternity, announces the appointment of Paul Hedrick, business senior, as chancellor for the remainder of the year.
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold its annual spring dance from 9 to 12 midnight April 23 in the Gull room of the Eldridge hotel. The chaperones will be Mrs. James Hollingsworth, Mrs. Hazel Hawbecker, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough, Mrs. R. A. Mayher, and Mrs. Edward Turner.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity announces the pledging of John Hedley, journalism junior; Herbert Protzman, college freshman, Niel Schimke, engineering freshman; and Richard Radley, engineering sophomore.
Nineteen women were recently pledged to Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority. They were selected on scholarship, and music ability.
They are Kay Brua, Mary Sharon Cole, Merrilyn Coleman, Carolyn Craft, Veda Driver, Martha Sue Gewinner, Mary Ann LeMoine, Dorothy McClure, Kathryn Meredith, Marjorie Roark, Mary Ella Symes, Lynn Tingeleff, Sharon Tripp, Mary Jo Wooffer, fine arts freshmen; Teresa Cartwright. Marliyn Curt and Rita Estes, education juniors, and Carol Cunningham and Jolene Oakes, fine arts sophomores.
Alpha Delta Pi sorority announces the pinning of Gloria Ann Savage, fine arts sophomore from Kansas City, Mo. to Ray Crissman Lawrence, engineering senior, from Kansas City, Mo.
[Image of a large, multi-story building with numerous windows and a stone facade. The building is surrounded by empty land.]
Religious Groups Name Officers, Observe Easter
Following the YMCA Easter sunrise services, members of the Lutheran Students association will go to the Trinity Lutheran church, 1245 New Hampshire St., for breakfast. The Sunday evening meeting at 5:30 in the church will include a cost surover and the showing of slides about the Holy Land.
Bishop G. L. DeLapp of the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints, Independence, Mo., will be guest speaker at the Easter morning services at 11 a.m. at the local church, 12 and Vermont Sts. The service is sponsored by the Liahona fellowship.
The executive committee of the Disciple Students fellowship will meet Sunday evening in Myers hall at 5:30 for supper and a program of fellowship and worship.
Breakfast will be served to members of the Disciple Student fellowship Sunday in Myers hall. It will begin immediately following the sunrise service on the campus. Fern Watts and Shirley Samuelson, college juniors and Shirley Litton, fine arts junior, are in charge of the breakfast.
Celebrating the Passover, members of the Hiliel foundation will hold a Seder at 6:30 Sunday evening in the Lawrence Community building. Seder is a dinner commemorating the deliverance of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt.
Sam Wiles, graduate student, will read the services.
The final lecture in a series of discussions on "Worship and the Church" will be presented at the Sunday morning meeting of the Canterbury club, which will follow collegiate mass at the Trinity Episcopal church, 10th and Vermont Streets. The lecture will be given by Dr. Franklyn C. Nelick, assistant professor of English.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16, 195
The faculty advisory board of the YMCA will meet at 8:15 Tuesday, April 19 in the Union. Further considerations of the hiring of a full time executive secretary for the organization will be discussed.
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The foreign student project of the YMCA began yesterday. The project includes the writing of letters to foreign students entering KU next fall. One member of the organization will be assigned to each student. He will meet the student when he arrives at KU next fall, aid him in registration and enrolling and acquaint him with the campus. The YWCA will cooperate in the project, and write to the foreign students. Carrol Esry, business junior, is in charge of the project.
. . .
Nancy Simmons, administrative secretary of the National Student association of the YMCA and YWCA, New York city, will be on the campus Monday and Tuesday to assist the local chapters in making arrangements for the National Student assembly of the organization which will be held here Dec. 27 to Jan. 2.
Dr. John Patton, campus minister to Presbyterian students, will speak on the "Crucifix and the Cross" at the Sunday evening fellowship following supper. The meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Student center.
. . .
New officers of the Presbyterian Women's organizations were recently elected. They are, Edith Jochims, college sophomore, president; Roberta Hinds, college freshman, vice president; Judith Jaeschke, college freshman, treasurer; Kay Lowis, pharmacy junior, corresponding secretary, and Jacqueline Smith, college junior, recording secretary.
Wesley foundation will hold a breakfast following the YWCA sunrise service Easter Sunday. In charge of the program are Gary Kastor, Marion Boldt, college freshmen, Mary Ann Taylor and Mary Frances Poe, college sophomores.
Department chairmen are, Donna Spotts, education senior, program Sally Heindel, college junior, world service; Jo Ann Boswell, fine arts sophomore, fellowship; and Joan Worthington, education junior, nominating chairman. Edith Jochims was also elected representative to the state Presbysterial which will meet April 30 in Emporia.
The group's Sunday evening program at 5:30 p. m. at the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont will include supper and a student discussion of the significance of Easter, past and present.
Holy week services are being conducted by the Lawrence Ministerial Alliance daily. Services are at 12:30 p.m. in the Patee theater, and the evening services are at $ p.m. in the First Presbyterian church, in the Clement Glenn Olds, chaplain of the University of Denver, is the guest speaker.
A three hour observance of Good Friday begins at noon today in the Trinity Episcopal church, 10th and Vermont.
Newman club members will have a breakfast following 10 a.m. mass, Sunday at St. John's Catholic church, 1229 Vermont St.
Five members of the group will attend the District province convention April 23 to 25 in Lincoln, Nebraska. They are Richard Butler, education senior, Ethan Smith, college sophomore, Shirley Revers, fine arts sophomore, Rosine Galdoni, fine arts sophomore, and John Wren, first year law.
Members of the Roger Williams fellowship will have a picnic and egg hunt Sunday at 5 p.m. at Potter lake. Devotions will be given by Ina Mae Brewster, college sophomore. Group singing will be led by Carroll Smith, graduate student.
Members of the Mennonite fellowship will hold a communion service at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel of the Plymouth Congregational church, 925 Vermont St. Rev. Marvin Hein, Kansas City, Kans., will officiate.
Page 2
On The Hill
Theta Tau, national engineering fraternity recently elected Karl Arden Davenport, electrical engineering junior, regent; Norman B. Gates, industrial management junior, vice regent; Beverly Date Trott, mining and metallurgical engineering junior, scribe.
The Theta Tau pledge class elected Carol Harm Shaw, mechanical engineering sophomore, president; LeRoy Worley Felzien, mechanical engineering sophomore, vice president; Kenneth Keith Keller, electrical engineering junior, secretary-treasurer.
Pearson hall recently entertained members of Alpha Chi Omega sorority at a dessert dance.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity recently elected Dvight Harrison, engineering junior, president for the coming year. Other officers are Henry Cate, college junior, recording secretary; Allen Sweeny, college sophomore, corresponding secretary, and Ben Dalton, engineering junior, historian.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 16, 1954
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Friday, April 16, 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
KU
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 16. 1954
1968
Kimball-Howes Plan Summer Wedding
Mrs. Jessie Kimball of Independence, Mo., announces the engagement of her daughter, Gwenn, to Frederick M. Howes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Howes of Mather, Penn.
GWENN KIMBALL
Miss Kimball, college senior, and Howes, an education senior are graduates of Graceland Junior College in Lamoni, Iowa. The wedding is planned for August 21 at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Independence.
Most of the developments that make up modern grinding came about in the past 50 years, according to Electro Refractories & Abrasives corp. As harder metals and alloys are discovered, harder and more efficient abrasives are needed. These developments led to new, man-made abrasives, which are among industry's most vital tools.
(1)
BARBARA BOWDISH
Bowdish - Houghton Engagement Told
Miss Bowdish is a business senior and a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega social sorority. Mr. Houghton received his degree in 1952 and is a third year law student. He is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity, and Alpha Tau Omega, social fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bowdish of Hanover, Kansas announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Jane, to Mr. James Lowell Houghton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Houghton of Concordia.
The wedding will take place June 5.
Only female mosquitoes bite people. The males have poorly developed mouth parts. They drink water and feed on flower nectar.
The Easter Egg Is Here Again
An egg can mean many things to people—something to go with ham, whether fried, scrambled, or poached, something a hen lays, or the proverbial question of which came first. But at Easter time, eggs mean only one thing, objects to dye and decorate.
Monks ornamented them with emblematic designs, after which they were blessed and eaten ceremoniously.
Great originality and skill was found in the decoration of Easter eggs throughout Europe. In England eggs were stained, decorated with cupids and other emblems of affection, and given as presents. Easter was a visiting day in Germany and Russia, and there people gave their decorated eggs to friends.
During the years, the religious meaning of the Easter egg declined, and children found a favorite pastime in the egg dying.
But have you ever wondered just where the custom of dying eggs for Easter originated? The egg stood as a symbol of the birth of mankind thousands of years before Christ. At one time they were taken to church Easter Sunday to be sprinkled with holy water and blessed by the priest.
We now dye. Easter eggs many colors, but originally they were stained a brilliant red, typifying the blood of Redemption.
Today our eggs are decorated less elaborately than in ancient days. Odds and ends around the house go into the making of interesting designs on the eggs. Sequins, beads, ribbons, flowers, cotton, and crepe paper can be fastened with cellophane tape or paste, producing table decorations, party favors, and the center of attraction in Easter egg hunts.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
NGG
OMM-PAH-PAH—Walter Logan, who makes and repairs glass equipment for the University, is shown working in his shop in Bailey hall. Mr. Logan has done this delicate type of work for many years. His reputation is so firmly established that occasional requests for work comes from any places other than departments of the University.
250 AFROTC Students Fly In Olathe Training Program
By RON GRANDON
About 250 Air Force ROTC cadets have flown Olathe Air base planes so far this year in a flying indoctrination program of the campus AFROTC
Col. Thomas B. Summers, profes- $ ^{ \textcircled{3}} $
sor of air science and tactics, said all of the cadets who have flown at stairs in the past. "Three hours in the air. 'On long trips all the boys get a chance to sit in the co-pilot seats and handle the controls,' he said.
Purpose of the program. Col Summers said, is "to acquaint the cadets with what it means to fly."
A typical trip for the cadets includes observation of every stage of the flight including mission briefings and the final report.
The first detail of the pre-flight planning includes a check with the weather department to check the latest weather maps which show cross winds, air currents, and amount of overcast.
Then the trip is drawn on the map with a line called a "magnetic heading" showing the true compass bearing and the air waves which the line crosses are estimated for speed and direction.
Then the flyers take a quick briefing on what is called a "radio facilities chart" which tells the number and location of airports in any specific area, the radio or "beam" frequency of these airports, and the identification signal of these fields.
Stages of the flight are put on "planning cards" and these cards are taken to the operations officer for clearance. Next the cards are taken to the flight control department, composed of officials from the Air Force and the Civil Aeronautics administration, to get final clearance. Here the pilot must specify altitude and is given certain check points which he must contact during the flight.
This usually winds up the preflight planning, and, according to Col. Summers, it is within the next three hours when the cadets really find out whether they like to fly.
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KU Has Its Own Glassblower
By VALERA TEBBEN
Walter Logan, 1747 Tennessee, glassblower for the chemistry department, makes and repairs all the complicated glass equipment used in the chemistry department as well as other departments on the Hill.
Working one summer as an apprentice, Mr. Logan learned the fundamentals of the art from Mr. Fred Rustenback, who for 20 years had been glassblower for the chemistry department. Since he was leather-leased by experience, and now he can make almost anything.
Considerable patience and skill is required in heating and blowing the glass to exact proportions and shapes. The glass must be heated to the precise degree of melting, and manipulated and blown at the exact instant when these operations can best be done.
"The most important thing to consider when working with glass is to know what parts to put on first, so that the other parts will not crack when heat is applied." Mr. Logan explains, "the size, must be considered in relation to their rate of expansion when heated."
Working from sketches or drawings which give the required dimensions, Mr. Logan relies on his own knowledge and skill to accomplish the task.
Pyrex tubes come ready-made, as small as 2-100 mm in diameter and approximately 2 feet in length. Joints (smaller and shorter tubes) also come in sizes, as do the ball and socket joints.
A small rotary, power-driven glass saw is used to cut the glass tubing to the required length. During this process, a white, milk-like liquid (soluble oil mixed with water) is allowed to run on the glass. This cools the glass and aids the cutting process. Without its use, the saw would only scratch the glass.
A blast lamp is used for heating and melting the glass. Oxygen and natural gas are used to heat soft glass or pyrex. However, to heat quartz glass, which is very hard, hydrogen and natural gas are used because this combination gives a much hotter flame. A hydrogen-fed flame is so hot that dark goggles must be worn to protect the eyes.
After the glass has been "worked," it is placed in a large annealing oven and left overnight at a temperature of 510° C. (more than twice as hot as the same degree of heat in Faren-
heit, with which most of us are more familiar). In the morning, the heat is cut off but the glass equipment left inside to cool gradually as the oven cools. This process takes the "strain" out of the glass, preventing its breaking if some parts should cool more rapidly than others.
For example, when a ring seal is placed on a glass tube (a process similar to welding two pipes together), the glass in the seal area is thicker at that point than is the rest of the tube. If the glass were not left in the oven to cool very slowly, the thin portion would cool faster than the ring portion, and would break.
Several KU graduates now located at other colleges send orders for both new and repair work to Mr. Logan. He is paid for the work and then reimburses the University for the material used.
Danforth Business Trend Lots of Weddings Coming Up
For the couples who wish to be married on the campus, the only problem involved in securing the chapel is to make the reservations at least three months in advance. The reservations, which are free, are made through the registrar's office. They are available to all students who have attended the University, faculty members, and employees.
Since the chapel was built in 1946, 441 couples have marched down its walls. And now, in Dunfortshire he become a symbol—a climax to campus romances.
The evidence of spring is everywhere—but the most obvious sign is the bustling activity in Danforth chapel. The traditional April-May-June rush on weddings has begun.
The spring demand on the chapel makes the scheduling of four ceremonies in one day not uncommon.
In its matrimonial history, the chapel has been tested in many ways. The seating capacity of 96 is frequently overlooked by guests as the well-wishers stand, crowd in or simply wait outside. Oriental trees have been erected as decorations and candles have been placed in every possible place. Several weddings were even held in the chapel before it was completed.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1954
Who Will Kiss The Relay Queen? Strange,Nobody Seems To Know
By SAM TEFORD
Strange things people have to worry about these days.
Along with the H-bomb, Indochina, and high taxes, there are also a few problems about the kissing of queens.
Here at the University it is still doubtful who will have the honor of kissing the queen of the Kansas Relays at her presentation Saturday afternoon, but the University of Minnesota has banned queen kissing for its "E-Day" affair.
The co-chairmen of the Relays committees—Clarke Keys, journalism senior, and Robert Ball, college senior—almost had the problem settled. One was to present the flowers and then kiss the queen-Carol Shellhaas, college sophomore—while the other was to bestow the crown and then kiss the queen.
Then it developed there was no crown for the Relays queen.
At present Keys is favored by local bookmakers as the best choice to do the kissing, primarily because Ball is married.
But a compromise, short of flipping a coin, eventually may be worked out. It happens that the queen will have two attendants, thereby making it possible for a consolation prize, if kissing two Relays attendants can be called that.
Engineering seniors at Minnesota, however, have no hope at all, since the chairman of "E-Day" ruled against kissing queens. Traditionally all graduating engineers had the privilege of kissing them.
Editorially, the Minnesota Daily f o u n d sociological implications, claiming some engineers never see a coed after orientation week and arguing that denial of such an opportunity might leave them unprepared to go out into the world to meet women again.
Proposing a solution, the Minnesota newspaper said there should be 10 queens instead of five, making the ordeal less strenuous for the girls.
Concluding, the editorial exhorted engineers to fight for their rights, inalienably granted by the constitution, to restore the tradition.
JIM HENSON
ANDREW BERRY
Officers of Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, recently elected Ben McAllister, college and medicine senior, president; Fred Thompson, medicine freshman, vice president; William Harrin, medicine freshman, social chairman; Robert Lynch, medicine freshman, secretary-treasurer; Robert Reed, medicine and college senior, house manager.
Former KU Student To Become Deacon
Andrew W. Berry, graduate of 1950, will be ordained, deacon, at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in the Trinity Episcopal church, 1011 Vermont st
Following completion of graduate study at General Theological seminary New York city, Mr. Berry will assume the duties of chaplain to the Episcopal students at the university.
Rev. R. E. Swift, rector of Trinity parish, will present Mr. Berry for ordination to The Rt. Rev. Goodrich R. Fenner, Bishop of Kansas, Topeka. A former sector of the parish, now of Seguin, Tex., Rev. Don Weatherby will preach the ordination sermon.
A parish luncheon honoring Mr. Berry will be held after the ordination service. The Rev. John Shoemaker, dean of men of the University of Arkansas, will speak at the luncheon on the subject "Strategy
YOUR EYES
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass.
of the Church in its College Work" Dr. Frankin Murphy, chancellor will reply with an address entitled "The University's Welcome to Church's Ministry."
At the beginning of the Christian Era, pagans of northern Europe offered human sacrifices to their gods and buried them in bogs. In many cases the tannic acid of the bogs has preserved the remains in lifelike fidelity.
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KANSAS RELAYS - 1954 For Your Convenience we offer you the Relays Schedule
ORDER OF EVENTS AND TIME SCHEDULE
MORNING EVENTS, Saturday, April 17
Event Number Time
110-Meter Hurdles (Decathlon) 9:00
Discus Throw (Decathlon) 9:15
Pole Vault (Decathlon) 9:50
Shot Put (Preliminaries) 10:00
120-Yard Hurdles (Preliminaries) 10:00
1. Javelin Throw (Prelims. & Finals) 10:00
100-Yard Dash (Preliminaries) 10:20
A.A.U. 400 Meter Hurdles (Prelims.) 10:45
Javelin Throw (Decathlon) 10:50
A.A.U. Hop, Step & Jump (Prelims.) 11:00
2. Discus Throw (Prelims. & Finals) 11:00
120-Yard Hurdles (Semi-Finals) 11:00
100-Yard Dash (Semi-Finals) 11:05
1500-Meter Run (Decathlon) 11:25
AFTERNOON PROGRAM
Opening Ceremony—K.U. Band ... 1:15
3. 120-Yard Hurdles (Finals) ... 1:30
4. College Two-Mile Relay ... 1:40
5. 100-Yard Dash (Finals) ... 1:55
6. University Four-Mile Relay ... 2:00
7. College Half-Mile Relay ... 2:20
8. Kansas City H.S. 880-Yd. Relay ... 2:30
9. University Quarter-Mile Relay ... 2:40
10. A.A.U. 400-Meter Hurdles ... 2:50
11. Presentation of Queen ... 3:00
12. Glen Cunningham Mile ... 3:10
13. University Two-Mile Relay ... 3:20
14. College Sprint Medley Relay ... 3:30
15. College Invitation Sprint Medley Relay ... 3:40
16. University Sprint Medley Relay ... 4:00
17. Junior College Sprint Medley Relay ... 4:15
18. College Distance Medley Relay ... 4:25
19. University Half-Mile Relay ... 4:40
20. A.A.U. 3000-Meter Steeple Chase ... 4:55
21. University Distance Medley Relay ... 5:10
22. Kansas High School Mile Relay ... 5:25
23. College Mile Relay ... 5:30
24. University Mile Relay ... 5:35
25. Outstanding Athlete Award
Closing Ceremony
A B
FIELD EVENTS
Time
26. Pole Vault (Prelims & Finals) 1:30
27. Shot Put (Finals) 1:30
28. Broad Jump (Prelims, & Finals) 1:30
29. High Jump (Prelims, & Finals) 2:00
30. A.A.U. Hop, Step, and Jump (Finals) 3:30
A man in a running pose leaping over a horizontal bar.
Another Service of . . .
Lawrence National Bank
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
The winning player holds the trophy aloft.
Kansan photo by Richard Collins
SMILIN' WES—Wes Santee, who's 4:03.1 timing in the Glenn Cunningham Mile Saturday set a new Kansas Relays record, holds the trophy, emblematic of supremacy in the race. Santee, who later was named the meet's outstanding performer, is shown here with the trophy after it was presented to him by Mr. Cunningham.
The latter float showed "the little engine that could" puffing over a hill pulling a coal-car labeled '54 and a little red caboose.
Second place winners in the men's and women's divisions were Alpha Chi Omega sorority with a giant book and pen expressing the theme, "As the Great Scorer writes your name, he writes not how you won or lost, but how you played the game," and Triangle fraternity with a giant red and silver revolving sporial showing the KU "squiral to victory."
Track, Exposition, Parade Included in Relays Weekend
Both of the winning floats carried out a locomotive theme with the Alpha Phi "express" driven by a giant Jayhawk and the Beta Theta Pi float drawing the applause of the audience with its "Easton-Wes" express.
bined efforts of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Third place winners were Chi Omega sorority and Delta Chi fraternity. A special award for the day went to the float showing the com-
Saturday's collegiate Belays attracted approximately 16,000 persons to the campus to see the efforts of 16 national champions. The nation's fastest miler, Wes Santee, put on a two-event show which won him the meet's most valuable performer award. He set a new meet record with 4:03.1 in the Glenn Cunningham mile race.
A YMCA Easter sunrise service on the Campile terrace brought between two and three hundred students out at an early hour yesterday morning. The KU Chorale provided music for the sunrise worship.
Saturday was also open-house time for prospective students with the Jayhawk Jubilee starting at 8 a.m. and lasting until noon.
The doors to the 34th annual Engineering Exposition were thrown open on Friday morning and a two day welcome sign gave visitors a chance to see some 18 special-project exhibits in all departments of engineering. The civil engineering department won the Sigma Tau trophy which the honorary engineering fraternity awards to the outstanding exhibit of the exposition.
The busy weekend started with the high school portion of the Re-lays on Friday morning. Wichita East High won class AA honors for the meet, beating a favored Shawnee-Mission squad. Haskell won the class A, and Lewis won the class B.
The Kansas Relays, the Engineering Exposition, the Relays parade, dedication of an Oregon Trail marker, the Jayhawk Jubilee, and an Easter sunrise service all combined to make last weekend one of the most eventful of the year.
Bank Officers to Meet Here
Moore, Christman Get Fulbright Scholarships
The Trust division of the Kansas Bankers association will hold a Bank Managers clinic at the University June 8 to 10. About 300 senior managing officers of banks in Kansas will attend the three day discussion of problems encountered in the field of banking.
Two University graduate students have been awarded Fulbright scholarships for the 1954-55 academic year.
Alpha Phi sorority and Beta Theta Pi fraternity won top float honors from among the 25 houses which had entered floats in the parade. Judging was on the basis of originality, craftsmanship, choice of motif, expression of float idea, and general effectiveness.
Dedication of an Oregon Trail marker in front of Lindley hall and an hour-long parade on Massachusetts street started a busy Saturday rolling.
As loan officer of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Mr. Bayne headed survey missions to Iran and Iraq.
Topeka—(U.P.)—April showers and thunderstorms are expected in Kansas tonight and tomorrow, the state
During World War II, Mr. Bayne was a member of the Office of Var Information and the Foreign Economic administration.
Weather
The third American Universities Field Staff speaker to visit the University this semester tomorrow begins a series of lectures on Iran, from where he has recently returned.
+
Iran Situation To Be Discussed
weatherman said today. The moisture areas likely will be scattered across Kansas tomorrow except in the drouthriden Southwest, said P. N. Eland, US meteorologist
He is Edward Ashley Bayne, son of a former superintendent of public schools in New York City. He began an editorial career and became managing editor of a pamphlet series and magazines published by the American Association for Adult Education.
Mr. Bayne returned to the United States before the Mossadegh period. He was economic adviser to the Point Four program in the Middle East and Africa for a year, and in June 1952 was appointed director, resident in Paris, of U.S. Mutual Security programs in all European colonial territories.
SHOWERS
A few isolated thundershowers were reported in North-Central and and Northeast Kansas this morning, but the only measurable moisture was .07 at Salina.
51st Year, No. 127
Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, was host to 1,200 Boy Scouts and leaders from three states at the 12th annual Scout visitation to the Kansas Relays Saturday.
Daily hansan
Moore received the bachelor of music degree in February. He has participated in many student musical productions, among them "Die Fledermaus," "The Merry Widow," "The Well," "The Prima Donna," "The Old Maid and the Thief," "The Bad Amen" and the "Pink Lady." He also has been a frequent soloist with the concert band and symphony orchestra, the A Cappella choir and the University chorus.
1,200 Boy Scouts Attend Big Weekend
Christman is a member of Phi Alpha Theta, national history honorary society; Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity; and Pi Gamma Mu, national social science organization. He is a frequent contributor of feature articles for the Kansas City Star and a regional correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor.
Moore is a member of Sachem senior men's honor society; Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary music fraternity, and Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity.
The students receiving the scholarships are Dale K. Moore, graduate student in voice, and Henry M. Christman, graduate student in journalism. Moore will study at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria and Christman will study political science and journalism at the University of Sydney, Australia.
The Scouts saw the Relays parade, the Engineering Exposition and the 29th Kansas Relays.
Christman received the A.B. degree in history and government from the University of Kansas City. Part of his graduate work here is a study in mass communications for KU and Community Series Inc., of Kansas City, a non-profit research organization.
School of Fine Arts Postpones Concerts
---
The School of Fine Arts has announced the postponement of two concerts originally scheduled for this week. The recital of Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority, is postponed one week. It will be held Monday, April 26, in Strong auditorium. The University Glee club program scheduled for Wednesday will be held, instead, on Thursday, May 6.
Democrats charged Mr. Nixon encouraged the French to abandon the Indochina war and demanded that President Eisenhower tell Congress if the vice president spoke for the administration.
Monday, April 19, 1954
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Washington — (U.P.)— Democratic congressmen today stepped up their attack on Vice President Richard M. Nixon's statement that American troops might have to be sent to Indochina if the French pull out.
Nixon Statement Riles Democrats
The thundering controversy over the possible use of American troops in Indochina was certain to come up for discussion in Augusta, Ga., where Secretary of State John Foster Dulles reports to President Eisenhower today on his recent London and Paris talks.
Diplomats here guessed Mr. Nixon's off-the-record but later much-publicized speech Friday may have an unsettling effect on Secretary Dulles' effort to achieve a united allied front on the eve of the Geneva meeting with Russia and Red China.
Meanwhile, a Navy spokesman said a U.S. aircraft carrier is due in Indochina momentarily with a load of Corsair fighters for the French forces. And South Korea formally announced it will attend a meeting, meaning all 16 allies now are signed up and ready to go.
Democratic Sens. Paul H. Douglas (Ill), Estes Kefauver (Tenn), and Albert M. Gore (Tenn) all called Mr. Nixon's remarks "unfortunate."
Campus Elections To Be Tomorrow
A. Every student may vote.
B. To vote, one must have his ID card.
C. Every voter will receive three ASC ballots:
1. One corresponding to the voter's "school district."
2. One corresponding to the voter's "living district."
3. One presidential ballot
D. Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors will receive also:
4. One class officers' ballot.
E. Every voter will also receive a ballot to pick the University's entrant for the National College Queen of America contest. (Pictures of the candidates are in the Information booth display case).
F. There will be nine polling places:
1. Lindley hall.
2. Marvin hall
3. Strong hall rotunda.
4. Strong hall basement.
5. Fraser hall.
6. Green hall.
7. Student Union lobby.
8. Hawk's Nest.
9. Strong hall basement.
Because their smaller enrollments make it impractical to keep a supply of "school district" ballots at all polls, ballots for certain "school districts" will be obtainable only at particular places. Business students, to vote for candidates from the business school, can find the needed ballots only at both the polling places in Strong hall and in the Union. Fine arts polling places; Marvin hall. Strong hall rotunda and basement, and the Union. Education polling places:: Strong hall, Fraser hall, the Union. Engineering polling places: Lindley hall, Marvin hall, the Union. Law polling places: Green hall, the Union. Pharmacy polling places: Strong hall rotunda and basement, the Union. Medicine polling places: Strong hall rotunda and basement, the Union. Journalism polling places: School of Journalism, the Union.
Foundation Members Named
The names of eight new trustees of the William Allen White foundation have been announced by Burton W. Marvin, director of the foundation and dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The trustees, elected recently by the foundation board, are:
J. Montgomery Curtis, director of the American Press Institute, Columbia university.
Don Davis, president of radio and television stations WIB in Kansas City.
Henry B. Jameson, business manager of the Abilene Reflector-Chronicle and former war correspondent of the Associated Press.
Earl J. Johnson, vice-president and general news manager of the United Press Associations, New York City.
Ernest W. Johnson, editor and publisher of The Chanute Tribune and a University alumnus.
Grove Patterson, editor of The Toledo (Ohio) Blade, past president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors and William Allen White lecturer in February at the University.
Senator Saltonstall Called A Bipartisan Republican
(Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of editorials examining prominent senators up for re-election this year).
In Massachusetts, always a border state politically, Senate Republican Whip Leverett Saltonstall, one of the original Eisenhower for President leaders, is up for reelection this year and hopes to garner more than the mere 50.5 per cent majority vote he received in 1948.
Sen. Saltonstall, who has been in the Senate since 1945 when he was picked by Massachusetts constituents to fill the unexpired term of Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., who resigned, will be 62 on Sept. 1, and has been plagued the past several years with illness.
He has been a keen supporter of the United Nations and the North Atlantic Treaty organization and is known as one of the most bipartisan members of the upper house of Congress. On bipartisan bills in the present session of Congress, Sen. Saltonstall has voted in accord on 85 per cent; on matters of party line he was with other Republicans on only 62 per cent of the measures brought to vote. In his previous four sessions this ratio has been almost the same.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 19, 1954
A strong New England liberal, his main claims to senatorial fame are his chairmanship of the Senate armed services appropriations committee and the position of party whip—the man who is responsible for rounding up votes for roll calls.
Six years the governor of Massachusetts before moving on to the Senate, the tall, gaunt Sen. Saltonstall is a vigorous opponent of socialized medicine. In his words: "If doctors become beauracrats they lose their initiative, and advancement of medicine diminishes."
Insisting that the proposal in no way meant he was for all-out socialized medicine, Mr. Saltonstall, with a Democrat and four other Republicans, in 1947 introduced a bill to improve the health of American children. The provision was that childrens' health would be in the hands of state authorities so "children can get proper care for defects before they reach maturity."
On the subject of foreign aid he is strongly in favor of U.S. dollars overseas.
He went with most of the GOP in voting in 1951 to send more troops to Europe and in 1949
cast his "aye" vote for the Mutual Defense administration bill, which provided more arms for NATO nations. In 1947 and 1948, respectively, he favored the European Recovery program and aid to Greece and Turkey. In 1952 when a bill to cut aid to Europe was brought to a vote on the floor, he went against his party majority, cast his vote against reductions, and was on the winning side.
On internal affairs he long has been a vigorous foe of the high cost of government, is opposed to price controls, and is in favor of public housing.
"We must keep the functions of our government within the ability of our citizens to pay," he said in a 1946 speech. "If we do not, then we are not properly carrying out our ideals of government. We cannot expect to pass on forever to our children and our grandchildren the obligation to pay for the services that we currently enjoy."
He voted against the successful Commodity Credit corporation bill of 1950 which increased the borrowing authority of the CCC, and in labor management has shown that he is for federal regulations. He voted for the controversial Taft-Hartley labor-management relations bill of 1947, and was announced in favor of the Federal Mediation act of 1946, which established a board for strike settlement.
This man, said to have one of the most distinctive faces in U.S. public life, helped in 1952 to pass a law to reorganize the Internal Revenue bureau. Also in that session he voted to cut meat price controls in 1951 and to end all controls June 30, 1952. In the National Housing act of 1949 he was for the successful bill to provide slum clearance and low-cost housing on a five-year basis. Another similar bill passed in 1952, again with Mr. Saltonstall's support.
As chairman of the armed services appropriations committee, he just last week told his committee that its investigation into a limited field of "security risks" had put unwarranted black marks on the entire armed services.
He himself was a field artillery lieutenant in World War I. One of his three sons (he also has three daughters) was killed in combat in World War II.
-Stan Hamilton
Indochina May Remain Unsolved at Geneva
What to do about Indochina has become one of the bigger problems of the day, and it's a problem that probably won't be solved at the Geneva conference late this month.
One of the most important difficulties standing in the way of a settlement is the tremendous gap between the points of view of the U.S. and its allies.
France, the nation directly involved, wants out of the war. On March 9 their National Assembly voted to instruct the Geneva delegation "to take and seek all solutions to bring about as quickly as possible a cessation of hostilities . . ." in Indochina.
Other Western European nations generally follow the French line of reasoning. Britain, for example, probably would agree to admitting Red China into the UN as a concession toward peace in Indochina.
Such attitudes aren't being accepted by the U.S. to any great extent. The idea of appeasement of any kind brought forth loud protests from congressmen as soon as it became known there would be a Geneva conference.
While our allies are talking wistfully of peace in Indochina, the U.S. is considering moves that would be anything but peaceful, including air and naval support for French forces. Sending American troops to the area is not an impossibility, either.
As long as the U.S. thinks about direct intervention of one kind or another, there is not much chance that this nation will agree to pay the high price Red China will undoubtedly demand in return for calling off the dogs in Indochina.
Public sentiment in this country does not incline toward appeasement of a nation whose troops were killing U.S. soldiers only a few months ago in Korea.
But how can an agreement with Red China be reached if major concessions are not offered? It may be true that the country needs both trade and recognition from the West, but it is not Red China who is losing the war in Indochina.
Apparently the U.S. has decided to back the French in Indochina, even if it means turning the situation there into another Korea.
If that has become the official policy, rather than a blu/ frighten the Communists into an agreement, it is hard to see even a ray of hope for a solution to the Indochina problem.
Meow - Cat Session Centers Around Kittens...
It's a pretty usual occurrence for persons of the fairer gender to be accused of being catty—and catty is what a bunch of us were the other evening. For we talked about fuzzy, furry felines; the kind all of us had harbored, nurtured and loved as we were young and addicted to that sort of thing.
One of the young ladies, fondly clutching a stuffed prototype of the animal to be discussed, brought the whole thing to pass by mentioning she was seeking a Siamese cat to present to her current gentlemen friend.
A rash of reminiscences followed. This writer recalled a trio of cats maintained some years ago in a back-yard orange crate. The little ones were unwittingly named Fluffy, Tuffy, and Muffy. All were snow-white angoras, but one—Muffy, as a matter of fact—was deaf as a post. I recalled that I was most crushed by Muffy's apparent disregard of my care for her. I would call her sweetly and she would walk obliviously away. However, my parents told me of her unfortunate infirmity and I was mollified.
Muffy, however—doubtless due to a psychological reaction to her defeat—became more and more of a
problem. One day she was gone.
I cried, wept, stormed, called,
sought. But Muffy would not come back.
A few months later our family was motoring around the countryside (for that's what they used to call it then) when we found occasion to draw up to a gasoline station and stock up on petrol. From out of a dim corner of the station wandered a dirty white blur. It was Muffy. I screamed shouts of joy and embraced her and brought her back to the homestead where she lived a pleasant—if sullen—existence. It wasn't until years later I learned that Muffy had been planted
there by my disparing mother and disgusted father.
One discuasant—the others had gone to sleep—jumped into the conversation with a tale of two kittens which had afforded incalculable amusement to her family and friends. They were sweet, affectionate, ideal pets. Then one day they produced six others of their kind. As the narrator put it, "there was all kinds of heck to pay." Being rather unlettered in things in general and innocently four years old, the story teller had named one cat Madeline and the other Martha.
Martha was rechristened Marvin and life went on.
After being rudely awakened by a pillow in her face, a third chimed in with her kitty cat story. It seemed that when she was a freshman living in North College hall, she was smuggled a feline into the dormitory where she was kept from the wary but unknowing counselor.
Very, very slyly, her corridor mates crept from the dormitory dining room bearing saucers of milk. Very, very surreptitiously, the kitty was made comfortable under her benefactor's bed on a blanket and pillow stolen from the
corridor lounge. Very, very casually the cohorts began to mew, kitty-fashion, in front of the counselor so the counselor wouldn't suspect the new resident if the new resident mewed. For nearly two weeks the kitty was hidden from the powers that be. By the time it was discovered, they were glad to get rid of the thing.
People began remembering cat names. Sir Reginald had been owned by one of the conversants, Ambrose had too. So had Chloe. So had just about every name in Webster's dictionary of Christian names. There were even a few decidedly un-Christian names.
After one of the young ladies revealed her great enthusiasm for the animals, saying that she intended to remain unmarried and live in a great huge house with at least 10 kittens, we decided to forget it and get some sleep.
She couldn't have elaborated anyway—she had a phone call. In fact, she had two at the same time. And, she probably would have had more but the other phones were busy.
We deemed it unlikely she'd live alone with her cats and stopped talking. It was about time.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 374
Member of the Kansas Press Assm., National Editor Asm., Inland Daily Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, 11011. Published by Ackley Publishing. $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University of Kansas spring semester. University holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Don Tie
Assistants Letty Lemon,
POGO
—Letty Lemon
THEM LI'L NOT ROPS!
4-10 TONY HALL STUDIOS
HOT THE ROD
AN SPOIL THE
CHILE---
VERY CLEVER...
A LOT OF
FOLKS WOULDN'T
UNDERSTAND
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LIKE
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LIKE ME!
PHAPH...
YOU GOT ANY MORE WORMS ON YOU?
COMES MICHEL WHAT TIME?
Page 3
DOROTHY E. BURKE
KIDNAPED DEAN — Law students, whose statue, "Uncle Jimmy" Green, is traditionally the victim of the law-engineering feud, found the carnival atmosphere of the Engineering Exposition worked to their advantage Saturday when they "borrowed" the bust of the engineering school's first dean, Dean Marvin. The bust-kidnapping took place at about 1:30 p.m. A Daily Kansan photographer, sworn to secrecy, was allowed to make this picture of the captive dean. The dog in the picture was not identified, because it was feared that engineering students might attempt to injure members of his family.
Ohio GOPs Throwing Mud In Search to Replace Taft
neering students might attempt to injure members of his family.
Columbus, Ohio—(U.P.)—Ohio Republicans today plunged into the final two weeks of a bitter primary contest to name their candidate to succeed the late Sen. Robert A. Taft.
The Republican organization, in hopes of avoiding a primary battle, broke from precedent this year and endorsed a slate of candidates with R. Rep. George H. Bender of Cleveland the candidate for senator. The GOP in the past endorsed only incumbent candidates in primaries.
Three weeks before the deadline for entering the May 4 primaries, William Saxbe, speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, jumped into the contest. He called Mr. Bender "the old-fashioned type of ward heel politician the Republican party has tried to get rid of for years."
With the two men hurling charges and counter-charges, Democrats, who have no contests for top offices, have listened for campaign material for Sen. Thomas A. Burke, Democrat appointed to succeed Taft, Mr. Burke, former Cleveland mayor, is unopposed in the primaries but has been getting around the state for weekend speeches.
Mr. Saxbe has been endorsed by the Cleveland Press and Columbus Citizen, the Akron Beacon-Journal, the Toledo Blade, and the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram.
IFPC to Sponsor 'Indigo Abstract'
The Inter-fraternity Pledge council will sponsor a semi-formal dance, "Indigo Abstract," in the Community building.
IFPC members several weeks ago hung signs in all the freshmen women's dorms, reading "Who Will Be the One?" with a list of girl's names under the signs. From the list, the queen and her attendants will be chosen, and announced at the dance.
Almost 81 per cent of all vacation trips in the United States are by automobile.
the university shop
announcing
this week's
SPECIAL
entire stock of
SHOES & SOCKS
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The orchestra of Dodge City High school will present a public concert in Hoch auditorium Thursday at 3 p.m.
The School of Fine Arts annually invites an outstanding high school orchestra to play a concert here. Pratt, Winfield and Wyandotte of Kansas City have previously been represented.
Mr. Cohn said in New York that an announcement about these would be made. But Sen. Mundt said he doubts whether the statements would be made public immediately even though the Army's brief has been published.
Dodge City Group To Perform Here
Among the issues up for discussion (11:30 a.m. CST), were Sen, McCarthy's demand for the right to cross-examine all witnesses and his complaint about the premature release of the Army's formal charges against him.
Washington —(U.P.)— The Senate investigating subcommittee called a secret meeting with Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy today to try to settle some preliminary rows so the Army-McCarthy hearings can get going on schedule Thursday.
Today was Sen. McCarthy's first meeting with the subcommittee since it picked a special counsel for the investigation. The Wisconsin Republican returned only yesterday from an extended vacation in the Southwest.
There also was a chance the subcommittee would ask Sen. McCarthy to submit a formal, written statement of his side of the case—possibly by a certain deadline—as the other principals in the case are doing.
Temporary subcommittee chairman Karl E. Mundt (R-SD.) said he expected subcommittee counsel Roy M. Cohn and executive staff director Francis P. Carr to submit their statements today.
McCarthy Meets Investigators in Secret Meeting
University Daily Kansan
The Dodge City orchestra, directed by Max Conner, boasts an unusually complete instrumentation and strong string sections among its 75 members. The high school orchestra plays about four concerts a year. The KU program includes works by Brahms, Grieg, Wagner and Luigiini.
Topeka—(U.P.) Elmer Curtis, who last week wound up a 24-year career as a radio newscaster with WIBW in Topeka, today announced his Republican candidacy for Congress.
Radio Announcer To Enter Politics
Mr. Curtis said he is for "a composite flood control program of holding the water where it falls." He said he favors building dikes and flow-ways and is for the watershed development program.
He became the fifth man seeking the GOP nomination for the Northeast Kansas first district place now Democrat Rep. Howard S. Miller,
Official Bulletin
Kappa Phi girls must get their senior tickets at the Wesley Foundation on Monday.
Engineerettes, 8 p.m., room 305, Student Union. For wives of engineering students, the "Flower Arrangement" by Mrs. Smith, owner and operator of the Smith Floral
YW Cabinet meeting, 12 noon, Student Union.
Student-Faculty coffee, 4 p.m., browsing room. Student Union. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy: "A Science of the Universe. Everyone is invited."
Quill club, 7:30 p.m., Chi Omega house. Initiation of new members.
Quill club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Student Union. Speaker: Vladimir Nabokov.
Monday, April 19, 1954
KU Dames, Interior decorating group,
4pm. Pond, room. Student Union. All
members.
Al Elenoye y Tertulia se reuniran a las cuatro y media en 113 Strong el mienlos. 21 de April. Programa de bailes latinoamericanos. Que benjamn todos.
He blamed the delay on "disappointing developments" and arguments about facilities.
H-Bomb Scientist OK Ex-AEC Head Says
Washington—(U.P.)—Sumner Pike, former Atomic Energy commissioner, insists there was never any indication Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer tried to slow up development of the hydrogen bomb.
Mr. Oppenheimer, one of the nation's top atomic scientists, is under suspension by the AFC on Thursday. The man board is investigating the case.
Mr. Pike, a Maine Republican businessman and AFC member from 1946 to 1951, said doubts cast on Mr. Oppenheimer's loyalty were "incredible."
"I almost wonder if there isn't some other motivation behind the apparent one in bringing these charges at this time," he said.
Chairman Harold H. Velde of the House un-American Activities committee said it is "entirely possible" that Mr. Oppenheimer "contributed" to a delay in construction of the H-bomb. He said the AFC should develop that point fully in its investigation.
The Illinois Republican also revealed in a television interview yesterday (NBC "Youth Wants to Know") that his committee is "considering" the public release of secret testimony given by Mr. Oppenheimer in 1949.
Mr. Oppenheimer has allegedly been accused of naming a fellow scientist as a former Red at the Velde committee hearings in order to protect himself.
Rhee Endorses Geneva Parley
Seoul, Korea — (U.P) — President Syngman Rhee agreed today to send South Korean delegates to the Geneva conference but predicted the April 26 parley would prove the uselessness of trying to deal with the Reds.
The South Korean president said that war and not words was the only language the Chinese Communist understands but voiced hope that his divided country would be united peacefully.
Mr. Rhe has said before he would never agree to a coalition government with the Communists and would settle only for removal of North Korean premier Kim Il Sung's Red government and incorporation of all Korea under the ROK flag. •
Some cottons grow on small trees.
Mr. Oppenheimer has said he originally opposed development of the H-bomb but that he dropped his opposition when former President Truman ordered its construction in 1950. He has also denied he ever was a member of the Communist party.
When the presidential go- ahead on the H-bomb came, Mr. Pike said Mr. Oppenheimer did a good deal of work of a highly scientific nature on the project. "I think Mr. Oppenheimer is a first class man and I would go his bond for any amount," he said in a New York television interview (CBS "The American Week.")
In another development, Mrs. Sylvia Crouch, an admitted former Communist, offered to testify again that she attended a Communist meeting once with Mr. Oppenheimer at the scientist's home in 1941.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 19, 1952
Santee Sets Record In Cunningham Mile
Bv DANA LEIBENGOOD
Kansan Sports Editor
Wes Santee put on a brilliant showing in his last appearance as a collegiate performer in the Kansas Relays to win the mile in 4:03.1 and anchor the distance medley relay team to victory after Kansas was trailing by 80 yards when Santee took the baton.
For this performance he was awarded the plaque as the meet's most valuable athlete, and thus became the first man in history to win the award twice. He had also won it in 1952.
Santee's 4:93.1 was the second fastest mile that he had ever run. His fastest was the 4:02.4 run at Compton, Calif., last summer. Santee's unofficial quarter times in the race Saturday were 59.5, 61.5, and 58.6.
In the spotlight with Santee was the University of Texas 440-yard relay team which was clocked in 49.3 and broke the Kansas Relays and world records. It will be counted as a new Kansas Relays record, but it may not be counted as a world mark because the race was run around only one curve and the wind, which ranged from eight to gusts of 25 miles an hour, was behind the first two Texas runners.
From the KU point of view the most thrilling relay was the distance medley in which Santee came from 80-yards behind and won by 40-yards with a time of 4:12.6 Frank Findrich ran a 48.5 unofficial first quarter to take a lead into Lloyd Koby. Koby added to this give a 30-yard lead to Art Dallzell However, Dalzell, evidently tired after carrying the anchor leg of the four-mile relay team in an unofficial 41.7, faded badly and was in last place when he handed the baton to Santee.
Sentee finally caught Missouri anchor man Jack Hodges in the back stretch of the final lap and won easily.
Two other KU athletes made their finest showings of the year to post victories. Don Sneegas won the javelin with a throw of 196 feet 9½ inches. The champion, the last two years, Wes Ritsch of TCU, finished fourth with a heave of 191 feet 1 inch. Leon Wells jumped 6 feet 6½ inches to the Bob Billings of Texas for first place in the high jump.
Neville Price of Oklahoma defeated the defending champion, John Bennett of Marquette in the broad jump. Price jumped 24 feet 9½ inches while Bennett was taking second place, three inches back.
Glenn Beerline, formerly of the University of Nebraska and now running unattached from Fort Sill, Okla., was upset in the hop, step, and jump finishing fourth. Last year Beerline jumped 48 feet $ \frac{4}{3} $ inches which broke the old record of 47 feet 2 inches, but the mark didn't count because of the wind. Saturday Beerline jumped only 45 feet 6 inches while Erwin Cook of Oklahoma was jumping 46 feet $ \frac{8}{3} $ inches to win the event.
In the high school relay Friday, Wichita East upset Shawnee-Mission to win its 11th class A title in 12 years. Haskell won the class A champion, and Lewis won the class B. The outstanding athlete in the meet was Charles Tidwell of Independence who won the 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, and 180-yard low hurdles, to score 15 of his team's 17 points.
The Relavs summary:
Discus—1. Robert Van Dee,
Oklahoma, 153-9; 2. Bobby Gross,
Texas A&M, 152-2; 3. Jerry Helgeson,
Minnesota, 150-3; 4. Bob Thamm,
Drake, 147-3/4.
Javelin—1. Don Sneegas, Kansas,
196-9/8; 2. Marion Hudson, Dana
college, 192-5/1/16; 3. Pete Mayeaux,
Texas &M, 191-8/1/16; 4. Wes Ritchey,
Texas Christian, 191-1.
120 high hurdles—1. Bill Curtis,
Texas Christian; 2. Bill Biberstein,
Kansas; 3. Ronnie Fruit, Houston;
4. Arnold Hudson, SMU; 5. Jim
Buchanan, Pittsburgh State. Time
14:46.
Shot Put—Cordon Holz, Minnesota, 51-5; 2. Bobby Gross, Texas A&M, 51-1; 3. Bill Neider, Kansas, 50-7; 4. Kea Reiners, Nebraska, 50-23.
100-Yard Dash—1. Dean Smith,
Texas; 2. Alvin Frieden, Texas;
3.
Charlie Thomas, Texas; 4. Kirby Jett, Houston. Time : 09.6.
Four-Mile Relay—I. Kansas (AI Frame, Dick Wilson, Lloyd Koby, Art Dalzell); 2. Texas A&M; 3. Missouri; 4. Oklahoma A&M. Time 17:34.8.
440- Yard Relay -1. Texas (Dean Smith, Jerry Prewitt, Al Frieden, Charles Thomas); 2. Houston; 3. Baylor; 4. Minnesota. Time :40.9 (new relays record. Old time :40.5 Iowa 1935). Also betters world, American and intercollegiate records of :40.5 by Southern California, 1938.
Pole vault—1. Fred Barnes, Fresno State (14 feet); 2, 3; and 4, tie, Nick Piper of Iowa, Frank Dickey of Missouri and Joe Springer and Jim Harrington, Notre Dame, all at 3-1¹/₃.
3,000 meter steeplechase—1. Rich Ferguson, Iowa; 2. Bruce Drummond, unattached; 3. Eugene Hart, Iowa State; 4. Tom Rupp, Kansas. Time 9:20.4 new relays record, old record 9:27.0 by Tom Deckard, Indiana in 1927.
University distance medley relay-1. Kansas (Frank Cordrich, Koby Kowalski, Marvin Swanete) Missouri, Missouri; 3. Arkansas 4. Oklahoma A&M, Time 10:26.4
1-mile college relay—1. Abilene Christian (George Adrian, Burt McCoy, Don Conder, Leon Lepard). 2. Compton; 3. Emporia State; 4. Southwestern. Time 3:16.2. New Kansas relays record, old record 3:16.8 by Abilene Christian in 1950.
1-mile university relay-1. Southern Methodist (Ad Bartek, Al Bartek. David Weaver, Don Morton) 2. Iowa: 3. Missouri. Time 3:15.8.
Broad jump—1. Neville Price, Oklahoma, 24-9; 2. John Bennett, Queque, 24-6; 3. Earl Smith, 23-10; 4. Bob Kansas, Kansas 23-8).
University spirt medley relay-
1. Southern Methodist (Don Morton,
Delbert Barte, Tommy Armstrong,
Dave Weaver); 2. Notre Dame;
3. Oklahoma A&M; 4. Baylor.
Time: 3:26.6
AAU 400-meter hurdles—1. Jay Chance, Oklahoma Baptist; 2. Bob Chance, Oklahoma Baptist; 3. Ray Russell, Kansas State; 4. Jerry Parks, Drake State; 559.
Glenn Cunningham mile -1. Wes Santee, Kansas; 2. Bjor Bogerud, Oklahoma A&M; 3. Bruce Drummond, unattached; 4. Ray McConnell, Drake. Time 4:59. (New Kan. old.) Old. Held held by Blaine Rideout, North Texas State, 1940, and Don Gehrmann, Wisconsin, 1949).
Hop step and jump—1. Erwin Cook, Oklahoma, 46-8; 2. Roy Vallery, Louisiana Tech, 45-7; 3. Glenn Beerling, unattached (Fort Hood), 45-6; 4. Quanah Cox, Oklahoma, 44-8].
University 880-yard relay —1
Texas (Dean Smith, Jerry Prewit,
Charles Thomas), Houston
3. Baylor, 4. Missouri.
Time 1:25.5
MARS
WES SANTEE set a Kansas relays record with a 4:03.1 mile run. Santee is pictured breaking the tape on his record breaking performance. Santee also ran a 4:12.6 mile anchoring the Kansas distance medley relay team.
High Hurdles Champion Nearly Failed to Compete
Relav Sidelights:
By CLARKE KEYS
One 1954 Kansas Relay champion nearly failed to even compete in his event Saturday. Texas Christian's Bill Curtis, the greatest hurdler to ever compete in Oklahoma high school circles, was scratched from the 120-yard high barriers Friday night at the drawings when his coach failed to appear or send word.
When Curtis came onto the new Saturday morning for the preliminaries, he found the five heats completely filled and no spot open for him. Relays officials agreed to let him run IF one of the other runners who had said they would run would happen to scratch at the last minute.
But luck ran true for Curtis and a scratch enabled him to enter the preliminaries. He went on to win the event in the afternoon and dethrone defending champion Bill Biberstein of Kansas in the process.
--through with flying colors was Roger Ruth, an instructor at Lawrence Junior High. Ruth, a former athlete at Emporia State college, occasionally gives KU Coach Bill Easton a hand with the pole vaulters and high jumpers.
The name of one of the competitors in the 3,000 meter steeplechase might have sounded familiar to many of the 16,000 assembled for the meet Saturday, but it is doubtful that many realized they were watching the drum major of the KU band running the grueling course.
Glemm Opie, who likes to work out with the Jayhawker cindermen as a hobby, decided about a week ago to give the steepechase a try. It was his first try at competition and although he finished sixth in the field of seven, he earned the admiration of many who realized his accomplishment.
Another local resident who came
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Eskridge Will Return to KU For Grad Work
Jack Eskridge, a KU basketball player in the late 1940s, resigned his basketball coaching position at Atchison High school effective in June, and announced that he would return to the University to do graduate work.
Speculation as to whether Eskridge would assume a coaching position at KU arose immediately, but Dick Harp, present assistant basketball coach said Saturday that he would remain at the University. Harp said that Eskridge could be given a part-time job in the athletic department, and that he (Eskridge) might help the football and basketball staffs.
Eskridge was graduated from KU in 1950, and coached at Shenandoah, Iowa, before going to Atchison. He coached at Atchison two years and his team last year won the school's first Northeast Kansas league title.
Reds Trade Hatton For Lipon, Cash
Detroit—(U.P.)-Grady Hatton, who played every position except pitcher and catcher during eight seasons with the Cincinnati Reds, was hailed today as the solution to the Chicago White Sox' troublesome third base spot.
Frosh Baseball Meeting Today
The 32-year old left-handed hitting infielder was acquired by the White Sox in exchange for infielder Johnny Lipon and between $20,000 and $40,000.
KU freshman baseball players are to report to assistant coach Dick Gilman in the KU dressing room for a meeting at 2:30 p.m. today. Coach Gilman will work out with the freshen for about two weeks as he did last year. Special attention will be given to the boys who will help the team next year.
5. 460 points for runner-up honors in the 5-man field.
---
Included in his showing was a winning pole vault leap of 13 feet.
The meet this year was one of the swiftest in history. Several times races had to be held up because the time schedule was ahead by as much as 15 minutes and athletes were going by the established schedule for their warmups.
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Page 5
AEXA
CHARLE THOMAS of Texas is breaking the tape on the anchor leg of the world's record 440-yard relay team which won in 40.3, breaking the existing record of 40.5. Thomas also placed third in the 100-yard dash, and anchored the Texas mile relay team.
By STAN HAMILTON
Santee Peeved at Track Runs Poor First Half
Wes Santee, who was married almost exactly 24 hours after he had turned in the second swiftest mile ever run by an American, said after the Saturday race that had he "had the urge to run the last half well" he might have cracked the "magic" four-mile bar-
"I was just peeved with the track and the wind, so I didn't think I could do well," he said after he had run. "I heard my time and tried to do that last 880 real well. I ran a poor first half (2:01 unofficially) because I didn't feel like running."
The tanky Jayhawk, who ran the Glenn Cunningham mile for the first time, said before the start of the race that because the track was in poor condition he was going to run just hard enough to win whether or not he set a record.
"The track there (the south curve and a 150-yard stretch on the east side) is loose on top and is sandy," he said.
But the man for whom the race is named, Cunningham, said prior to the run that "this is about as perfect a day as I've seen for a KU Relays, don't think the wind will warm. We know it will wind will be a hindrance. If he ever does it he ought to be able to do it to say."
Santee admitted surprise at his good time of 4:03.1 and said the rolling had helped him considerably.
Then just before the race, KU coach M. E. "Bill" Easton had Louis Stroup one of his frosh trackmen, roll the track. He made two complete tours of the oval on the power-driven roller and went over the east straightaway three extra times.
Easton said he thought that although conditions as the wind and high temperature were not "ideal," Santee had run a great race. He stressed that he thought another aid was the constant cheering of the partisan home crowd.
Although Santee, voted most valuable man in the Relays, disapproved of the way he had run Curteichingham opined that he ran correctly.
"I saw wrong wrong with his race," the ex-KU great said. "I thought he had it timed just right, but a little water might have helped bit. I still think the mile will be in four minutes or less."
What does it feel like to run against such an individual?
In the words of Bjorr Bogerud of Oklahoma A&M, the second place unisher by about 100 yards, "He purses me so I could do anything about it."
Santee took the lead in the first turn of the initial lap and increased the gap throughout.
Unofficially, Santee's quarter times were 59.5, 61.5, 63, and 59.9. Three official watches had these times for the race: 4:03.1 by Reeves Peters, Big Seven executive secretary; 4:03 by Marion Miller, Missouri Valley AAU executive, and 4:03.3 by Louis House, track and football coach at Southwest High of Kansas City, Mo.
The wind, according to Bill Buck, a sophomore Relays student committee member and caretaker of the anemometer, varied from 4 to 8 miles per hour during the running.
After Cunningham presented the trophy to Santee, Cunningham offered to safeguard the award so the runner could get warmed up for another race to follow, but the 22-year-old senior handed it to a policeman in the stands who in turn gave it to Miss Danna Lou Denning, now Mrs. Wes Santee. She is from Elkhart, Cunningham's original home town.
The defending title holder, John Bennett of Marquette, found when he was on the way here that his right jumping shoe had a broken spike, so he purchased a new pair in Milwaukee.
He used the new shoes for the first time in his preliminary and first three final jumps, then had to switch back to the old pair because the new ones were too tight.
An upset of some proportion occurred in the broad jump because of both a new pair of shoes and an old pair.
He taped up the broken spike as best he could but it was not enough as Neville Price of Oklahoma outdid him by three inches to win. Bennett won last year with a leap of almost seven inches better than Price's winning effort Saturday.
Righthanders Redlegs Needed Were on Bench
Most persons in the stands did not know that J. W. Mashburn of Oklahoma A&M had only that morning run the first hurdle race in his collegiate career.
By UNITED PRESS
The right-handed pitching when Cincinnati was seeking to become a strong first division contender may have been sitting on the bench in full view of Manager Birdie Tebbets all the time.
"We can be pretty tough as we are, but give us a little more right handed pitching and we could give everybody trouble," said Tebbetts as he praised the Cincy power hitting.
The blond former Oklahoma uni- is still in use at Watch Hill, R.iversity student and one of the Originally it was turned by a dra flavors in the race pulled uphorse.
Well, thus far, right handers have started every game but one and Cincinnati is tied for first place with the Phils at four victories and one defeat.
Big Jim Greengrass was a genuine heavyweight at bat, driving in four runs with a three-run homer and single in a 6-4 first game victory, then driving in two more in the 5-3 second game sweep at Milwaukee before he went out with a pulled muscle in his back. However, he said he felt fine later and it was believed he would not be out of action for long.
In the iner, Howie Judson, who had been cast as卧但 was brought back from the minors after winning 11 straight games without a defeat at Tulsa last season, gained the victory with relief held from Herman Wehmeir. They combined to give Milwaukee six hits. In the second game, Bud Podielban pitched 7 1/3 innings for the win, after which big Frank Smith protected his margin. Ed Bailey, rookie catcher for Cincy, hit his first big league homer while Jack Dittmer homered for Milwaukee.
The Phillies, who have been getting phenomenal pitching, swept to 6-0 and 7-1 victories, over the Pirates as Robin Roberts scored his first victory with a four hitter and lefty Curt Simmons followed with a seven-hitter in the second game. The Giants topped the Dodgers, 6-3, as Sal Maglie beat them for the second time, while the Cardinals won, 6-4, from the Cubs after which the second game was called after two innings of scoreless play because of darkness.
In the American league, the Senators pounded out 13 hits for a 9-3 win over the Yankees, while Chicago cashed in on three homers to defeat the Indians 5-2 in a six-inning rain-shortened game. Steve Gromek pitched his second straight victory for the Tigers over the Orioles, 8-3, while at Boston, rookie Bob Trice hurled the Athletics to a 6-4 victory, then the Red Sox retaliated with a 4-3 victory in 13 innings in the second game when Jackie Jensen broke it up with a homer. Jensen also hit a first game homer.
Earl Torgeson supplied Roberts with a three-run homer in the first inning of the opener at Philadelphia while Del Ennis was the big batsman in the second triumph driving in five runs with two homers.
The Cardinals scored all of their six runs in the seventh inning as rookie Tom Alston hit a three-run homer and Stan Musial blasted "two" doubles. Umpire Lee Ballan-fant called the first one foul and Manager Eddie Stanky howled himself out of the game. Then Musial drove in the first run of the rally with a second blast which Ballanfant ruled fair.
after falling over the fifth barrier in the 400-meter hurdle event. He also hit the ground after clearing the second hurdle.
While he had been a high school hurdler, he said the qualifying race he had run Saturday morning was the first hurdle race he had run in college. It might be noted, however, that Mashburn, who won the decathlon here last year, did have to run the 110-meter hurdles as one of the 10 events in that event.
Monday, April 19, 1954
University Daily Ransan
S
FRED BARNES of Fresno State is shown clearing the 14 foot mark to win the pole vault at the Kansas Relays. Barnes attempted three jumps at 14 feet 6 inches after winning the title, but failed in all attempts.
KU Golfers Lose to Wichita $ 4^{1 / 2}-13^{1 / 2} $
Results:
Coach Donn Everett's golf team dropped its second dual meet in four starts when it lost to the University of Wichita on the Shockers' home course on Saturday $ \frac{4}{3}-13\% $
Sam Sadler, W, defeated John Prosser. K. 3-0
Bob Richards was KU's only golfer to win his match. He shot a one-under-par 70 to defeat Dick Gardner 2-1. Rickard sank three 15-foot putts on the last three holes to win over Gardner, who shot a 72.
Fritz Probst, W, defeated Ed Mac-
Gee, K-3, 0.
Joe Korst, W, defeated Noel Rooney, K, $ \frac{2}{3} - 1.$
Sadler and Gardner, defeated Richards and Prosser, 2-1.
Probst and Korst, defeated Mac-
Gee and Rooney, 2-1.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 19. 1954
Former Russian Noble Is Humanities Speaker
"Gogol—the Man and the Mask" will be the topic for a discussion by Prof. Vladimir Nabokov, former Russian noble, in the fifth Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater.
Professor Nabokov, author of A novels, poems, short stories, and sketches in Russian, French, and English, is a naturalized American citizen and professor of Russian literature at Cornell university.
He has written a critical biography of Nikolai Gogol, the Russian novelist and dramatist, whose comedy, "The Inspector General," was first produced in 1836. American audiences saw the movie version in 1948. starring Danny Kave.
Nikolai Gogol noticed the short-comings of people and showed them in an amusing light. He died in 1852 and was buried in Moscow, His novel, "Dead Souls," was published in 1841.
A tea at 3:30 p.m. and program at 4 p.m. will be heard today in the Kansas room of the Student Union, so students, faculty members, and their friends can hear Prof. Nabokov discuss his works, which have been published in the New Yorker, the Atlantic Monthly, and Harpers magazine.
The Cornell author and lecturer, also an entomologist specializing in butterflies, is spending three days on the campus. He addressed a class in Masterpieces of World Literature II this morning and spoke to classes in Feature Writing and Writers' Workshop this afternoon.
At 7:30 p.m. Wednesday he will participate in a discussion and coffee with the English and Quill clubs in the Student Union.
Prof. Nabokov will visit the entomology department at 2 p.m. tomorrow afternoon and will speak to a class in Contemporary French literature at 1 p.m. Wednesday in 396 Fraser.
The lecturer received the American Academy of Arts and Letters award in 1951 and has twice held a Guggenheim fellowship for creative writing. He has made U.S. lecture tours for the Institute of International Education, and has taught creative writing to several summer conferences.
Prof. Nabokov's family escaped from Russia in 1919 and lived in England, Germany, and France. The professor, his wife, and his son came to the United States in 1940.
Educated in a private school in St. Petersburg, the lecturer was later graduated with honors at Cambridge in England. He has been on the Cornell faculty since 1948, and has taught courses in writing and in Russian literature at Harvard, Stanford, and Utah universities and at Wellesley college.
ALMORE
PROF. VLADIMIR NABOKOV
His published works in English include two novels, "The Real Life of Sebastian Knight," and "Bend Sister;" the biography of Gogol; "Conclusive Evidence," memoirs published by Harper Brothers in 1951 and a collection called "Nine Stories," published by New Directions.
In Russian, Professor Nabokov has published eight novels (all have been banned by the Soviet government), two plays, three books of verse, and two volumes of short stories. In French, his works include a short story and several articles. One of his Russian novels, "Camera Obscurea," has been translated and published in French, Swedish, Czech, English, Italian, and Spanish.
'You Drive - I've Had Five Ounces'
New York - (U.P.) - Science put together a handy whisky-plus-time chart today for the guidance of drinkers. It could be printed on cocktail napkins or posted in bars, but probably won't be.
An average person who drinks 30 ounces of whiskey, in an hour (and retains it) can expect to die promptly of paralysis of the respiratory center. That's at the top of the chart.
But a person who drinks only three-quarters of an ounce—the usual bar drink is about one ounce—in one hour will feel and show little or no effect. That's at the bottom of the chart.
The critical measurement is in the alcoholic concentration in the circulation blood. Three-quarters of an ounce will produce a 0.01 per cent concentration. One ounce in an hour will step that up to 0.02 and now, according to the chart, the drinker feels warm, pleasant, and sociable.
Two to three ounces in an hour raises it to 0.05 per cent and now it is high enough to work on the cerebral cortex, that portion of the brain which makes man superior to animals.
The effect is to make him think he's more than he is—and otherwise mess up his judgments. Now he's likely to argue with cops.
Five to six ounces in an hour raises the concentration to 0.1 per cent which will depress the brain's motor area enough to make him fumble his glass and have trouble pronouncing s'.
Eight ounces in an hour depresses the motor areas more deeply and now he is drunk and no doubt about it. Ten ounces extends the depression to the mid-brain, the blood concentration is up to 0.2.
Sixteen ounces raises it to 0.3 per cent; the sensory area of the cerebellum is taken in, and he's in a stupor. Increase it to 0.4 to 0.5
Housing, Wages, Advisers Included in AGI Platform
The Allied Greek Independents party has announced a platform that includes support of the housing survey, adoption of a minimum wage of 65 cents an hour for students, and action to establish an improved advisory system.
AGI has nominated Bob Kennedy, engineering junior, and Marjorie England, education junior, for president and vice president of the All Student Council.
The planks in the platform support continuation of the annual housing survey as a step towards improving housing conditions, working through the budget committee and the State Legislature toward adoption of the recommendations of the labor committee for a minimum student wage of 65 cents an hour and action through the ASC scholarship committee to establish an improved University advisory system supplemented by qualified students acting as advisors.
Under student activities there are planks that ask a more intensive effort by the ASC to record the extra-curricular activities of students on their transcripts and that the calendar committee establish a central registry of all campus functions.
A student government plank provides that a means be established through a committee whereby appointment to administrative positions on ASC committees can be made on the basis of merit, rather than politics. There is also a plank
Among planks which concern student rights are an affirmation of the student's right to express himself freely and to vote as he pleases in elections and on the ASC, and the right to support, or participate in, the political party of his choosing.
opposing confiscation of the Rock Chalk Revue or any similar private student activity by the ASC.
Lent by the William Rockchick Nelson Gallery in Kansas City the exhibition consists of 16 prints and was made possible through the cooperation of Laurence Sickman, gallery director.
The AGI advocates, and will continue to practice, a party primary in which every individual member of the party has the right to vote
Woodcuts and engravings by Albrecht Durer, German Renaissance artist, are exhibited this month in the Museum of Art.
German Woodcuts Engravings Shown
Among the prints shown are Durer's portrait of Erasmus; "Melancholia," an engraving; the "Madonna of the Pear," and the "Rhiaceros."
per cent and that puts him in a coma. Thirty ounces brings the concentration up to 0.6 or 0.7 per cent and that is enough to produce death.
Scientists said the chart would vary from individual to individual according to the psychological situation, temperment, and the contents of the stomach. For measuring purposes, they considered three to four ounces of wine or two glasses of beer about the same as one ounce of whisky.
AOPi Sight Drive Starts
Douglas county residents who own discarded eyeglasses, as well as any broken jewelry with salvagable gold or silver, will have the chance this week to give them further usefulness by donating them to New Eyes for the Needy, volunteer social service which has for 21 years been supplying new glasses and artificial eyes for those who could not afford them.
Lawrence alumnae of Alpha Omicron Pi are conducting the collection as a service activity. Contributions are to be left in designated containers at one of these places this week: Lawrence Journal-World, New York Cleaners, Rusty's or Cole's markets, Stowits Drug store, and the Student Union.
No money is solicited for this cause. Funds to supply those in need of eye helps are derived solely from the salvaged metal of broken jewelry and rims of old eyeglasses.
First the sunglasses, simple magni-fiers and cataract glasses will be distributed through charitable organizations, hospitals, and clinics. Then metal frames and jewelry scraps are to be sent to a large refinery to be melted and redeemed for cash.
After the material has been collected, the Alpha Omicron Pi alumnae will send it to New Eyes for the Needy, where it will be carefully sorted.
Up to 1952 the organization has helped more than 70,000 persons in need of sight aids.
KDGU Schedule
7:00 Aren Jones *
7:00 Bookstore Hour
8:00 Great Moments in Music
6:00 in the Dark
9:30 News
9:35 Jazz Junction
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News and Sign Off
'Glasspox' Moves East With Pitted Windows
A "glasspox" epidemic of mysteriously pitted automobile windshields spread eastward across the nation today from the Pacific Northwest where hundreds of car windows have been pocked in recent weeks.
By UNITED PRESS
Cause of the so-called "ghostly" phenomenon had not been determined but, whatever it is, one atomic scientist said it is not radiation.
It was likely that some of the latest reports came from persons who—excited by publicity—took a hard look at their windshields and found old pits caused by gravel or little boys with B-B guns.
In the Seattle, Wash., area, where hundreds of windshields were mysteriously pitted, the epidemic was evidently ending and complaints of damaged windshields were dropping off.
Miss Shellhaas Was 20th Queen
By NANCY NEVILLE
When Carol Shellhaas, college sophomore and a member of Delta Delta sorority was crowned Saturday, she became the 20th queen to reign over the Kansas Relays.
The tradition began in 1934 when Betty Lou McFarland was selected as the first KU Relays queen. She was chosen by Gene Venzke, middle distance runner of the University of Pennsylvania.
Ted Husing, radio announcer, selected the second queen, Mary Margaret Manary.
Miss Isabelle Perry became the third consecutive member of Pi Beta Phi sorority to reign as the queen. She was chosen by Sophie Tucker, vaudeville and radio star.
In 1937 the method of selecting the queen was changed. A participating track队 was allowed to name the queen. The first queen was Bash, a member of Gamma Phi Beta.
Teams from Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, and Minnesota chose the queens for the following years. Betty Martin, Kappa Alpha Theta, Helen Johnson, Kapua Kappa Gamma, Ruth Rodgers, Delta Gamma, and Virginia McGill, Kapua Alpha Theta, were the girls chosen to present the trophies for the next four Kansas Relays.
When the Relays were resumed in 1946, Carolyn Campbell, Pi Beta Phi, reigned. Her successor to the throne was Elizabeth Esterle, Delta Gamma.
Washburn university was the first school other than Kansas to have the queen reign over the Relays. Nancy Lindemuth held the honor from that school in 1949.
The 13th queen, Kappa Kappa Gamma's Diane Stryker, was again a KU student, as was Lynette Oberg, Delta Delta Delta, queen in 1951. Liebert of Pittsburg State Teachers college, was the 1952 queen.
Margaret Louise Allen, a college freshman, reigned last year. Her attendants were Charleen Dunn of Kansas State college, and Vivian Graber of Wichita university.
Jayhawk Jubilee Draws 330 Seniors
Approximately 330 high school seniors were on the campus Saturday for the second annual Jayhawk Jubilee.
The group did not include the approximately 2,000 high school athletes which were for the KU Relays and the five high school bands which marched in the Relays parade Saturday morning.
Eye
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Over the week-end reports of unexplained windshield damage were made in such widely scattered areas as Wisconsin, Texas, Illinois, North Carolina, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and British Columbia, Canada.
As in Seattle, an oily ash or dust deposit was sometimes found in the pits, raising the possibility that an airborne agent was responsible for the pitings. The windshields were not broken by the force of a blow in Washington state, but merely cracked or pocked mysteriously.
15
University of Wisconsin Professor Farrington Daniels, who worked on atomic bomb projects, said he doubted that any form of radiation could cause the pock marks.
Ross N. Kusian, director of air pollution research at the University of Washington, began experiments today on dust films found on many of the pitted windshields. An Illinois state entomologist, H. E. Brown, said that insects and their body wastes could pock paint but not glass.
"I'd say those cars had been driving through a dust storm," he said.
Most of the new reports, from Cleveland to Chicago, had the same ring. Small pits suddenly and "mysteriously" appeared, motorists said.
However, some of the new reports were markedly different. Mrs. Mary Baldwin, a Springfield, Ill., probation officer, said the rear window of her car "looked like it had exploded" after being parked out all night. "There were about 100,000 little pock marks on the rear window." she said. "I'm sure it wasn't vanalism."
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Page 7
University Daily Kansan
Around the World:
Indochina Rebels Capture Airstrip
By UNITED PRESS
Communist Indochinese rebels gained more territory today in their drive toward the heart of the French-held garrison at Dien Bien Phu.
Jumping off from an outpost which they seized in violent fight- with French and loyal Indo-Chinese troops Sunday, the Reds drove the defenders of the northern end of the main airstrip.
Brig. Gen. Christian De Castries, Dien Bien Phu, ordered the area abandoned to the Reds because the cost of keeping it was too great in supplies and manpower.
But the French said the loss of the northern part would not disrupt the dropping of parachute reinforcements and supplies because the defenders control the southern end of the strip.
As the Reds inched forward, time ticked off against Red Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, whose forces must take Dien Bien Phu before the Geneva conference starts a week from today if the Communists are to win a propaganda battle.
Moscow radio broadcast again an offer by Ho Chih Minh, bearded leader of the insurrection in Indo-China, to negotiate a truce with the French. French officials ignored Ho's previous offers because they were not sent through official channels.
Other international developments:
Other international developments: Seoul — President Syngman Rhee ended his holdout against the Geneva conference and dispatched an eight-man delegation headed by the Swiss minister, Mr. Rhee Tae to the Swiss city, Mr. Rhee Tae to the conference would fail to unify Korea, necessitating the use of force to return the country to democratic rule.
Canberra — Four Russians hustled the wife of a reformed Soviet spy to an airport in Sydney where she will fly back to Moscow with a one-way ticket. The woman's husband, Vladimir Petrov, surrendered to Australian authorities almost two weeks ago, bared a Soviet spy plot and asked for asylum. The Russians would not honor his request to say farewell to his wife.
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London — Left wing Laborite Aneurin (Nye) Bevan received new support in his fight for leadership of the British Labor party. Britain's largest union offered a resolution opposing German membership in the European army and the Cooperative party annual conference backed Mr. Bevan by voting to oppose rearming of the Germans.
Vienna — At least 22 persons were reported dead or missing in the Austrian clips, where new avalanches have been reported. Ten of the missing persons are school children.
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More than 600,000 books are now in the libraries at the University and 5,000 new books are added each month." Robert Vosper, director of libraries, said in an address to hometown correspondents recently
Libraries Have 600,000 Books
Most of these books are in Watson library. Other books are in the law, mathematics, music, geography, geology, and the medical libraries, Vosper said.
KU is nationally known for its outstanding collection of books on birds, economics, and Kansas history, Mr. Vosper concluded.
Accused Rustler To Testify In His Own Behalf
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will hold a picnic from 6 to 9:30 p. m. tonight at Lone Star lake. The chaperones will be Mrs. I. J. Hollingsworth, Mrs. L. L. W, Williams, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, and Mrs. Fanny DeLozier.
He said that after the steer was shot by his son, and placed in an old pump hole, "there was an awful lot of scurrying around at night on my land."
Lyndon, Kan—(U.P)—O. W. Hess, wealthy Alma, Kan., stockman, was expected to resume testimony in his own defense at resumption today of his second trial on charges of cattle theft and cattle embezzlement.
He told of finding cigaret butts and packages in feed troughs, of tire marks left in feed lots where his truck never went, of someone disturbing his cattle, and of finding "the strange critter" in a pasture with another client's steers at shipping time.
"It was very obvious." Mr. Hess said, "that the sheriff of Wabaunsee county was heading a conspiracy of some kind to ruin me. So I decided to dispose of the decoy. I tired of feeding that kind of a steer."
Mr. Hess has testified for three hours, and was still under direct examination by Defense Attorney Ed Rooney, when the court recessed for the week-end.
The 67-year-old cattleman traced the trouble that brought his arrest and told of spending two nights in a hay mound trying to catch the man he said planted a steer in his herd.
The defense began presentation of its case after District Judge A. K. Stavely over-ruled a defense motion to dismiss the charges.
Mr. Hess said that a year before charges were filed, he began hearing rumors "that I was going to be arrested for cattle rusling."
The 1939 United States stamp commemorating the Panama Canal was first issued aboard the U.S.S. Charleston, which was at the Canal Zone.
Monday. April 19, 1954
Ousted Commissioner Scheduled Witness
The pledge class of Delta Delta Delta, social sorority, entertained 25 children from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday. The children hunted Easter eggs on the lawn of the sorority house, and gifts were presented to them. Kay Wasson, college sophomore, was the chairman.
Washington—(U.P.)—Ousted federal housing commissioner Guy T. Hollyday was scheduled as the lead-off witness today as the Senate Banking committee opened public hearings on the multi-million-dollar housing scandal.
Groups Sponsor Easter Parties
Four University groups sponsored Easter egg hunts for selected Lawrence children last week.
Alpha Delta Pi, social sorority, and the Veterans organization composed a hunt for approximately 40 children Sunday. Transportation to the sorority house was supplied by teams of sorority members, veterans' wives and dates, and UVO members. Transportation to the campanile hillside was donated by the Lawrence Rapid Transit company.
At the sorority house the guests were entertained by refreshments and a marionette show performed by the sorority members. Meanwhile the veterans hid 12 dozen eggs in the vicinity of the campanile. Prizes were awarded to each child participating in the event.
Fifty children were entertained by Chi Omega, social sorority, Wednesday. The Easter eggs were hunted in the sorority house, and games were played afterward.
Joseph Foraker, graduate student,
and Donald Nelson, college freshman,
of NVO, and Teena Maduros,
college junior, of Alpha Delta Pi,
we co-chairman.
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$\textcircled{1}$ Chairman Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind.) said he would demand to know why Commissioner Holiday and Assistant Commissioner Clyde D. Powell—also called to testify—didn't stop the irregularities.
"Our aim at the moment is to see if we can find out enough about the abuses to be able to amend the housing law to prevent further irregularities," Chairman Capehart said. "Afterward, we'll try to fix responsibility for the scandal itself."
In other congressional developments:
McCarthy — The Senate Investigating subcommittee called a secret meeting with Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) today to try and settle some preliminary rows so hearings on the Army-McCarthy fight can get off on schedule Thursday. Issues up for discussion include McCarthy's demand for the right to cross-examine all witnesses and his complaint about the "premature" release of the army's formal charges against him.
Taft-Hartley — Informed sources predict the house labor committee will pigionhole Pres. Eisenhower's plan to revise the Taft-Hartley labor law, Chairman Samuel J. McConnell Jr., conceded the vote on the plan will be "very close." Cause of the trouble is a highly-controversial proposal to transfer unfair labor cases from the National Labor Relations board to the federal courts.
Indochina — Democratic Congressmen charged Vice President Richard M. Nixon encouraged the French to withdraw from Indochina when he said there is a possibility American troops might be present if the French pull out. Democrats demanded that President Eisenhower tell Congress if Mr. Nixon spoke for the administration.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 19, 1954
IT TAKES TWO PILLARS TO SUPPORT A ROOF
STUDENT GOVERNMENT In The Interests of ALL
GREEKS
S
For PRESIDENT
PETER GREGORIUS
BOB KENNEDY
President of Sigma Nu
Chairman of the 1954 Engineering Exposition
2.8 grade average
Vice-president of Forensic League
Owl Society
Sachem
Tau Beta Pi
Sigma Tau
Scabbard and Blade
Secretary-treasurer of the Engineer-ing Council
Debate
General Electric Scholarship
PLATFORM
Student Welfare
1. To work through the budget committee and the State Legislature toward adoption of the recommendations of the Labor Committee for a minimum student wage of 65c per hour.
2. Continuation of the annual housing survey as a step toward improving housing conditions; responsible action through the Housing Committee on the problem of housing for married students.
3. Action through the ASC Scholarship committee to establish an improved University advisory system supplemented by qualified students acting as advisers.
Student Activities
4. That a more intensive effort be made by the ASC Department of Student Activities to record the extra-curricular activities of students on their transcripts.
5. That the Calendar Committee establish a central registry of all campus functions for the purpose of better co-ordinating them.
For VICE PRESIDENT
PENNEDY RIDGE
MARJIE ENGLUND
Song leader for Kappa Alpha Theta
President of Corbin hall
2. 0 grade average
2.0 grade average
A. Cornellia Chain
A Cappella Choir
YWCA
ASC Disciplinary Committee Radio Players
Secretary-treasurer of University Players
Lead in No Exit
Vice president of Lutheran Student Association
Student Government
6. That a means be established through a committee whereby appointment to administrative positions on ASC committees can be made on the basis of merit, rather than politics.
7. That we oppose confiscation of the Rock Chalk Revue or any similar private student activity by the ASC.
Student Rights
8. An affirmation of the student's right to express himself freely and to vote as he pleases in elections and on the ASC.
9. The right to support, or participate in, the political party of his choosing or to refuse to participate in any.
10. The AGI advocates, and will continue to practice, a party primary in which every individual member of the party has the right to vote.
that these planks of our platform will receive more consideration than just being read at the first meeting of the ASC.
We Promise
VOTE
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
2
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, April 20,1954
51st Year, No. 128
TROFANI, B. A., S. R. C. AND M. A. D.
—Kansan photo by Ken Bronson
VOTIN' TIME—Bob Derge, college sophomore, gets voting instructions from poll worker Gary Brabeck, college freshman, this morning at the Strong basement voting booth.
Red Pressure Forces French to Reorganize
Hanoi—(U.P.)—The defenses of beleaguered Dien Bien Phu shrank today to less than three-quarters of a square mile under constant Communist pressure.
The Communists were within 700 yards or less from the heart of the fortress.
The French high command said Brig. Gen. Christian De Castries had completed a radical reorganization of his isolated garrison. Pulling his troops back from several saliens. Gen. De Castries blocked out a rough circle around five positions for a do-or die stand against a third Communist attack.
Packed within the compressed aren were 11,000 French Union soldiers, dependent for supplies and reinforcements entirely on parachute drops which must be carefully aimed at the center of their narrowing defense position.
Against them are pitted at least 40,000 Communist rebels, well supplied and reinforced over bombblasted but still open roads leading from the Red Chinese frontier.
The French high command said the consolidation of the French forces in the smaller defense area was carried out during a hull in today's ground fighting. But Red 120 mm mortars and 105 mm howitzer harassed the defenders as they dug into their new positions and strung new barbed wire.
With the week-end abandonment of the two French northern outposts, Red gunners were looking down the throat of the garrison in its little, shell-churned valley.
The rebels hold about 300 yards of the now-useless 1,200-yard French airstrip. Another auxiliary airstrip to the south has been criss-crossed with Red trenches.
Humanities Lecture Set Tonight at 8
--weatherman asked for a n other chance. On lny Doniphan county, in the extreme northeast, received and rain. U.S. meteor o ol g is t Tom Arnold said it's simply a mat-
The fifth Humanities lecture will be given at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater by Prof. Vladimir Nabokov, professor of Russian literature at Cornell university. Prof. Nabokov has written 10 books, including a critical biography of Nikolai Gogol, the Russian novelist and dramatist whom the lecturer will discuss.
--weatherman asked for a n other chance. On lny Doniphan county, in the extreme northeast, received and rain. U.S. meteor o ol g is t Tom Arnold said it's simply a mat-
Russia Defied By UN Group
United Nations — (U.R.)— The United Nations Disarmament commission defied the threat of a Russian boycott yesterday and overrode Soviet proposals that Communist China, India, and Czechoslovakia be admitted to a subcommittee on disarmment.
The Pre-nursing club will visit the Medical Center Saturday on a conducted tour. Those interested in going should contact Juita Marie.
Soviet delegate Andrei Vishkishny threatened to boycott the subcommittee when he warned that "difficulties for the Soviet Union as regards its participation" would result if the plan for a five-member subcommittee were adopted. He called the West's proposal, which excluded India, Czechoslovakia and Communist China, "one-sided."
Applications for the Associated Women Students Memorial Scholarship are now available at the office of Aids and Awards. The applications must be returned by 5 p.m. Monday, April 26.
The commission voted instead for a Western Powers proposal that Russia join the U.S., Britain, France and Canada in private talks on world disarmament.
The commission voted nine to one to set up the five-nation subcommittee. Russia voted against it and Lebanon and Nationalist China abstained.
The scholarship, given in memory of women students who lost their lives while enrolled at the University, will pay the tuition and fees of a woman student for the fall and winter semesters next year.
Pre-Nurses to Med Center
AWS Scholarship Blanks Now Available
McCarthy-Army Fight Expected To Draw Millions
Washington — (U.P.)— The Senate Hearings on Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's row with the Army are expected to draw the largest television audience ever to watch a governmental proceeding.
Only about 450 persons—including upwards of 150 reporters — will be able to squeeze into the red-carpeted Senate caucus room when the hearings open Thursday morning.
Television will take tens of millions to the scene. All networks cancelled regular programs in order to give full treatment to the "McCarthy show."
Each witness at the hearings will be aware of this concerted effort to let the public know.
The radio audience is also expected to be tremendous.
Balloting Steady As Election Opens
Balloting in the general election was steady this morning and by 10:30 more than 500 students had voted at the eight polling booths.
The Strong hall rotunda booth fee all others with more than a hundred votes cast. Fraser hall, with 80. Marvin 70, and Lindley with 65 had had more voters than the other four booths at the Union lobby, the Hawk's Nest, Green hall, and Strong basement.
An Editorial-
Campus fraternities and sororites had turned out the heaviest vote for the House of Representatives with about 400 Greek votes cast by 10:30. The fraternity vote exceeded the sorority tally by almost 250 votes.
In Senate voting, nearly 200 members of the College had voted by 10:30 to lead voters from all other schools. The School of Engineering had the second highest with about 75 votes.
There was no registration by party at balloting booths, but voters were required to state their class, living district, and school in which they are enrolled.
Ballots for certain school districts are obtainable only at designated booths, except that all students can vote at either Union ballot box.
Business students voting for candidates from the business school can find ballots in Strong, fine arts students in Marvin and Strong; education students in Strong and Fraser; law students in Green; engineering students in Lindley and Marvin; pharmacy and medicine students in Strong and journalism students in the Union.
Voters also received a ballot to pick the University's entrant for the National College Queen of America contest. Pictures of the candidates are in the information booth display case.
Art Authority to Talk In Spooner-Thayer
Class officer elections saw the heaviest balloting among the junior and senior groups with each of these classes registering about 125 voters by survey time. About 80 sophomore voters had voted.
James Roth, resident conservator of paintings at the William Rockhill Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City will talk on "Conservation and Restoration of Old Master Paintings," in a public lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in the lecture hall of the Museum of Art.
Smutty Relays 'Floats' Call for Crackdown
The so-called "Age of Reason" began some 150 years ago. But events even today would tend to make one wonder if it still persists.
There is no denying that college students must have some method by which to blow off steam. Maybe it would be by writing letters to the Kansan; maybe by getting drunk; maybe by listening to jazz or a concerto; maybe by even participating in a "secret" group, for nothing builds up the ego like having something that everyone can't have.
But unlike many of the previous situations that bordered on the present one, the administration now has a lead to work on. Let's hope it keeps the ball rolling. —Clarke Keys
However much one might scoff at the idea that a University is continually being scrutinized, it is true. The action by several groups of entering floats that were in poor taste for the Kansas Relays parade Saturday did this University a great harm.
From the top of the administration—Dr. Franklin D. Murphy—down to many freshmen, the acts were considered uncalled for. And they would all be glad to see something done about the situation.
A University administration must put up with much that normally would not be tolerated in a normal society. But even a University administration must finally put its foot down. That time has come at the University, and the administration has given every hint that it intends to do just that.
McGrath to Address Honors Convocation
Dr. McGrath was U.S. commissioner of education from 1949 to 1953. He received the doctor's degree from the University of Chicago.
Dr. Earl James McGrath, president of Kansas City university, will speak at the Honors convocation at 9:20 a.m. tomorrow in Hoch auditorium.
The upper 10 per cent of the senior class in each school and the top student or students in freshman, sophomore, and junior classes of the schools will be announced at the convocation.
Students elected to honor societies will also be announced. The honor man of the year, if one is chosen, will be announced during the covocation.
The schedule for the morning:
8 a.m. classes at 8:00-8:30, 9 a.m.
classes at 8:40-9:10, convocation,
at 10 a.m. classes at 10:40-11:10,
and 11 a.m. classes will meet at
11:20-1:50.
1.
Indochina Seen 'Not Hopeless'
Washington — (U.F.)— Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.) said today after a congressional leadership conference with Secretary of State John Foster Dales that the situation in Indochina looks "gloomy but not hopeless."
Sen. Bridges, chairman of the Senate Appropriations committee, was one of the 15 Republicans and Democratic congressional leaders who took part in a lengthy private meeting with Secretary Dulles on the Indochina situation and the forthcoming Far East conference.
Sen. Bridges told newsmen as he left the State department that it was "not in the wind" now to send American forces to Indochina. But he said no one could tell what the situation will be in the distant future.
Informed sources said Dulles arranged the bipartisan meeting to assure the lawmakers (1) that there will be no "appeasement" of Red China at Geneva and (2) that he considers it unlikely that American troops will be needed in Indochina. Following the congressional conference, Secretary Dulles scheduled a noon meeting with diplomatic representatives who fought in the Korean war.
Thundershowers previously forecast were conspicuous by their absence today in Kansas—but the state
Weather
THE NOWS
ter of delay. The moisture should arrive tonight, with a scattering of thundershowers, mostly in northern Kansas. Arnold looks for additional widely spaced rains tomorrow in eastern and central Kansas. A lot of ground will be missed, but some sections should get appreciable moisture.
Tuesday. April 20,1954
Evangelists Revive Revivals
Old style evangelistic crusades which used to be called revivals, in the last few years, have been staging an impressive comeback.
Some of this type of religion has been seen in the nation's larger cities. Some has been seen here in Lawrence with evangelists drawing large crowds at least once or twice a year.
In Boston, the Rev. Byron Green, canon of the British Cathedral in England, has conducted prolonged crusades filling the 10,000-capacity Mechanics hall. Especially effective with young listeners, Angelican Green caused many of his 600-odd converts on a typical night to scream and cry.
In Washington in 1950, the Federation of Churches bought full-page newspaper ads to trumpet, "It's God's Hour for Greater Washington." The federation imported a preaching team of 30 Protestant ministers and laymen to evangelize Washingtonians at a 6-day session of some 300 breakfasts, luncheons, dinners, lectures, and services.
At the mission's opening ceremony in 10.000 capacity Uline arena,250 black-robed local ministers joined with visiting preachers in a "festival of faith."
But most indicative of the swing to sensational religion is the phenomenal rise of black-browed, hawk-nosed, intense, and staccato-speaking William Franklin Graham.
In 1949, nobody had ever heard of Billy Graham. Today, almost five years later, he has preached to some 8,000,000 persons in gigantic rallies from coast to coast. Now he has taken his message to London and the European continent.
Last June, he drew 75,000 people to Dallas' Cotton bowl to hear his message of sin and salvation. His radio and television audience adds up to some 100,000 regulars not only in this country but also in Canada, Alaska, Panama, India, Africa, Formosa, Hawaii, and areas reached by Radio Luxembourg and the Voice of America.
Britishers didn't think they were going to like the American upstart when he announced his intention of visiting them this spring. Their prejudice was a result of their glimpsing a press release (not meant for their eyes) which quoted Billy as saying "postwar socialism had managed to demoralize Britian where all Hitler's power had failed." Billy pacified them by saying "socialism" was a misprint and should have been "secularism." The change didn't quite ring true, but they let it pass.
And they love him now. He has been drawing 11,000 Londoners at a stretch, and a matinee engagement had to be added for the overflow of crowds.
Mr. Graham's book, "Peace With God," which Doubleday published last November, has sold nearly 150,000 copies. His newspaper column. "Mv
Answer," now appears in 73 papers reaching another 15,000,000 people.
In short, his popularity has been incontestible. Others have been popular in the past, but Mr. Graham has geared his methods—and his message—to the immediate present. "From birth to death, God has His projector turned on you," he says. "He keeps you on his television set until the day you come to His Kingdom."
the day you come to him. His showmanlike gestures—with stabbing forefinger—his restless pacing of the platform (he has covered as much as $1\frac{1}{2}$ miles during a sermon) and his dramatization of the old Bible stories are heartily approved by a majority of the 7,600,000-member Southern Baptist convention, of which he is an ordained minister. But despite this showmanship, Billy Graham has never been as theatrical as other evangelists that public taste has swept to fame.
Often, she passed clotheslines dotted with clothespins down the rows for offerings (removing any possibility of getting anything but dollar bills.) Both she and the ex-ballplayer Billy Sunday were said to have made fortunes out of preaching the Gospel, and many of the regular clergy disliked their tactics.
The late Aimee Semple McPherson was likely to appear in football togs carrying the ball of the Foursquare Gospel, or ride down the aisle of her temple in Los Angeles on a motorcycle dressed as a traffic cop; lap off, throw up a white gloved hand, blow a screech on her whistle, and shout: "Stop! You're speeding to Hell."
Again, Billy is different. He never opens a crusade in any town unless he is invited by local ministers. They run the campaign, and collections are taken up only to meet local expenses. Then an audit prepared by a certified public accountant is published. Mr. Graham draws a flat salary of $15,000 a year which is donated to his cause by interested businessmen.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
And, perhaps the greatest difference between Mr. Graham and other revivalists is that he insists on an intensive follow-up program. Those coming forward to be saved are invited backstage where they sign "decision cards" and talk over their problems with trained counselors. All cards are referred to local ministers, and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Inc., keeps a check on their progress for as long as six months to a year.
"I belive that a great return to revival is sweeping the U.S." he was quoted as saying last year in Time magazine. "I am only part of it. My feeling as a worker in the vineyard is that there is a great upsurge of faith in the country which seeks a way back to Christ," he said. "That is my sole mission—to hold a beacon light for the soul-sick, hopeless, and repentant to seek their way back to the comfort of Christ." —Letty Lemon
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
A B C D E
PROF SNARE
"The only reason I'm giving you a BARELY PASSING MARK is that I can't bear the thought of having you in my class another year."
See where a fellow in Finland has won a London Times contest by giving 726 synonyms for "drunk." And one college senior is thinking of giving them all a try.
Short Ones
Things are supposed to be brighter now that spring is here. But instead it has just added another worry to our list, which now includes the H-bomb, McCarthy, Indochina and the St. Louis Cardinals.
And when you stop to think about this Finnish fellow, wonder just how he knew so much about the drinking game?
New cars are advertised as having, "the multimillion-dollar look." You have to pay about that much for the look. too.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Nebraska Assn., Oklahoma Assn., Associated College Press Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, Subscription Address, 450 10th Ave. in a maier if in Lawrences. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Unavailable for publication on campus. Enter second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act
I want to commend those individuals who have protested the selection of Good Friday for the relay races. The excuse offered by the responsible officials is without merit as it was known one year in advance when Good Friday and Easter would come. A genuine excuse might exist but I have not seen it presented.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Dion Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon,
To the editor:
Right in line with the selection of Good Friday for the relays were the editorials for March 31st, entitled "McCarthyism" signed by Sam Teaford and Don Tree. I found them both disgusting but at least Mr. Teaford made a pretense of presenting both sides. The editorial of Mr. Teaford reminded me of articles by Drew Pearson, Doris Fleason ( I believe the spelling is correct on those names) and similar national columnists.
...LETTERS...
The column by Tice is completely false or at least written to leave a false impression with the casual reader. I was unable to find any truth, by a careful reading, after I left the first paragraph which conseced that the Senator had some friends. It was apparently designed to deceive the uninformed and hide the truth.
The author used questions such as, "can we say, then, that McCarthyism is false accusation?" and then proceeded to answer them as though they were true. Any person who has carefully studied what Mr. Tice calls "McCarthyism" knows that the answer to that and each succeeding question is NO.
Ever since the members of Congress, beginning in the late 30's have started to expose the actions and activities of the communists in America the persons doing so have been under heavy attack from the "liberal" columnists and "liberal" thinkers throughout the nation.
They used to attack the investigators but after Hiss was sent to prison the fact that the Russian Government did have spies in Washington was so thoroughly publicised that these persons did not dare attack the aim of the investigations. They were stumped for a while but they soon figured out that if they could not attack the manner in which the investigations were being conducted and perhaps that way succeed in doing indirectly what they dared not try to do directly, namely stop all investigations of Communist infiltration into the federal government. Thus was born what is called "McCarthyism."
For close to four years now the Communists and their friends have been screaming that the manner in which Senator McCarthy conducted his investigations (even though he didn't have a committee with which to conduct an investigation until 1953) has been unamerican and unfair.
These accusations are absolutely
I
raise but, unfortunately, they have succeeded in convincing many patriotic and loyal people that these charges are true and these persons have begun spreading the charges, thus shielding the traitors who started the whole thing.
We should consider ourselves fortunate to have a fine Christian Statesman like Joseph R. McCarthy. Their are not many men who would be willing to stay in public life and take the abuse, and the lies and slanders (like the editorial signed by Tice), and the deliberate misrepresentations which have been spread about the Junior Senator from Wisconsin. We need more men like him in the United States Senate.
We should not be fooled when they say that it is only the "methods" of McCarthy that they are opposed to for these same "liberal" columnists and radio commentators have attacked every member of Congress who has ever tried to do anything about the danger of Communist subversion and treason.
If they get rid of McCarthy they will then concentrate on Senator Jenner, then on his successor and then any other Senator who dares to oppose the wishes of the American Communist Party just as these same persons have attacked, libed and slandered the motives, character and actions of every chairman of the House of Unamerican Activities Committee beginning with the first one. Martin Dies of Texas.
These "liberals" forced Dies out of Congress in 1944 (after he had the termerity, for several years, to say publically that the Russian Government had spies in our federal government influencing American policies and stealing our military secrets).
Rather than condemning Senator McCarthy for his actions he should be praised by all of us who put our loyalty to Washington rather than to Moscow. We should all pray to God that the hand of Senator McCarthy be strengthened so that he may continue his investigations and so that many of our fellow citizens sincerely patriotic but deluded and fooled about the whole issue of "McCarthyism", will have their eyes opened to the truth about the Junior Senator from Wisconsin and the fine work he has been doing insite of the slanders and lies which have spread about him.
He is an example of what all members of the U S Senate should be.
Howard L. Lydick 1st Year Law
The federal government is going right along with this de-centralization idea for civil defense. At least they are keeping the chief executive hidden in the peace and quiet of the isolated South with 18 handy holes to jump into in case of a hydrogen bomb attack.
SEEM LIKE YOU ISN A MOOD TO MAKE WEIGHTY REMARKS... SAY SOMETHIN' HEAVY PORK.
FOURTEEN TON OF BI-TOOIM INOUS COAL.
SEE--YOU POKES RUN AT ME--WHEN I WANTS TO BE SERIOUS, EVER'BODY JES' GO: HA HA---
CAN'T BE SERIOUS PURIN' WORKIN' HOUSES.
SEEM LIKE YOU IS N A MOOD TO MAKE WEIGHTY REMARKS... SAY SOMETHIN' HEAVY PORKY.
FOURTEEN TON OF BI-TOOM- INOUS COAL.
SEE--YOU POKES
RUN AT ME--WHEN
I WANTS TO BE
SERIOUS, EVER'BODY
JES'GO: HA HA...
CAN'T
BE
SERIOUS
PURIN'
WORKIN'
HOURS.
WE COULD STEP AHIND OF THIS TREE AN' HAVE A SERIOUS DISCUSSION---NOBODY D' GEE US----GO AHEAD---- SAY SOMETHIN' WEIGHTIER' N WHAT YOU DID.
FIFTEEN TON OF BI-TOO-MINOUS COAL.
I GOT A MILLION OF 'EM
1954
心
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
they nator and dares neri-these oeled acter on of vities first
out and the so sayvern- gov- pol- se-
when the they same com-very ever dan-
natoror
our than
may to Mc
and may
ae of
Jun-
the idp
have
ydick
at all should
going ultrali-
At exe- and
with 18
case of
us
Expedition to Mexico Brings Back Animals
Specimens of three types of small animals never studied by science were brought back to the Museum of Natural History last week by a four-party KU expedition which spent about two weeks in the desert regions of Mexico.
A tiny mountain chipmunk, a rare type of rabbit, and a small type of rat from isolated mountain forests in the Mexican state of Caahuila were brought back for placement in the School's museum.
Rollin H. Baker, assistant professor of zoology, and assistant curator at the museum, led the expedition into three states in search of the tiny cheek-striped chipmunk.
J. Sheldon Carey, professor of design, went with the group to study Mexican village pottery craft.
Tuesday, April 20, 1954
Spencer Wolfe of Wichita went with the party. The three were joined in Mexico by Robert Dickerman who is working full-time for KU studying mammal life of Mexico.
Two previous KU expeditions had made trips across the desert country in attempts to find the rare chipmunk, but this last expedition was the first to catch the well-camouflaged animal.
Dr. Eaker said the chipmunk lived in the oak forests which grow on isolated mountain ranges within the desert. "The desert puts these forests in isolation allowing the wild life of the regions to develop along individualistic lines," he said.
The expedition camped out during their stay in the mountains and desert. "An extreme drouth in the region made it necessary to keep our camp close to the car so we could drive back for water," Dr. Baker said. "The drouth also made the wild-life of the region extremely scarce."
The expedition collected almost 200 specimens ranging from the smallest, a big-eared bat, to a bob cat.
Anti-Pollution Seen Water Problem Aid
Anti-pollution measures have multiplied the scarce municipal water supplies of many Kansas communities, according to Prof. Dwight F. Metzler, chief engineer for the State Board of Health at the University.
In this period of below normal rainfall, conditions would be much more critical if 115 Kansas cities and numerous private businesses had not built sewage treatment and industrial waste disposal facilities in recent years, Prof. Metzler said in a recent address before the Lions club of Arkansas City. He described a joint local-state program for abating pollution of the Walnut and Arkansas rivers.
In its first year, 1,383 contributions totaling $41,188.50 were made to the Greater University fund of the University, Ray Evans of Kansas City, chairman of the advisory board, said today.
University Fund Given $41,188
Evans described both the total and number of givers "most heartening. Approximately four per cent of KU's living alumni and former students contributed. The amount does not include gifts to any of the University's previously established funds, contributions made in the campaign for the continuation study center and student union at the Medical Center or anything for athletic grants in aid."
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said the development of the Greater University fund was one of the most satisfying things that has happened since he came to KU.
He mentioned support for library acquisitions and pure research as two areas in which private gifts are needed. Predicting a student body of 12,000 by 1970, the chancellor described support for student housing as an essential.
The fund was set up last spring by the KU Endowment and Alumni associations as a vehicle by which many gifts, large and small, could be pooled for purposes beyond the power of single gifts.
The highest average gift came from the class of 1910. The class of 1904 led in percentage of class participating, 7.6 per cent. The class of 1928, which included its silver anniversary reunion fund, gave the most and had the most donors.
Talk Set on Scotch Geology
Dr. O. C. Fraquhar of the department of geology will give an illustrated talk on Scotland and its geology at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 426 Lindley. Dr. Fraquhar was a member of the staff at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, before coming to KU. He is a working geologist, and has visited several continents.
The Army Signal Corps saved approximately $1,700,000 in fiscal 1953 by adopting a new method of doubling the circuit capacity of long-range radio equipment without using additional frequencies.
'If Elected I . . . '
Kennedy Praises Transcript Plank
He emphasizes the idea of getting good men on the ASC who will do a good job. "I believe that no matter how the elections come out, I would like very much to see the ASC run efficiently with a minimum of waste time," he said.
"I hope to see the ASC carry out its functions efficiently and in the best interests of the students and thereby prove that it is capable of assuming more responsibility." Robert Kennedy, engineering junior and AGI candidate for president of the All Student Council, says.
He believes that the split in the political parties will not hurt the Greek system. "It is very good to see the change which has occurred in the past month," he said.
Putting a student's activities on his or her transcript, Kennedy believes, is a very good practice. He thinks that to get the true, overall picture of a student's college life, activities should be placed where they may be seen, for they might be an explanation of poor grades.
It was difficult for Kennedy to decide which plank of the ACI platform he considered the most important. "All of them are important—that is the reason they are there." he said, mentioning minimum wages, housing, and activities placed on a student's transcript.
Kennedy is president of Sigma Nu fraternity, was chairman of the Engineering Exposition, is vice president of the Forensic League, has a 3.00 average, and many more extra-curricular activities including debate, Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Tau, engineering fraternities. Owl society, and Sachem. He is from North Kansas City, Mo., and has attended the University for three years.
Here Are Your Candidates
"If we do get a strong two-party system, the students as a whole will gain for it," he said.
"Trends of Social Security" will be a speech given by Dr. Dominico Gagliardo, professor of economics, at the annual dinner of the social work department May 3 in the ballroom of the Student Union.
Trends in Security Set for Discussion
Students, graduates, and members of the staff of the Social Work agency of Kansas and the greater Kansas City area will attend the dinner.
The length of the cotton fiber may be from 1,000 to 3,000 times its diam eter.
Married Students Demand Housing
"We feel that instead of just dormitories, the University could build efficiency apartments for married students which would be paid for by the renters." This is the main plank in the platform of the Married Students party, which is running candidates in the All Student Council election today.
The party has nominated Cliff Holland, graduate in law, and Bob Kay, engineering junior, for president and vice president, respectively, of the ASC.
Holland has attended KU since 1947 except for two years in the Navy. He is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity, Pi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, is treasurer of Phi Alpha legal fraternity, and is a member of the KU Law Review. In 1951 he went into the Navy and later was released a lieutenant junior grade. In 1953 he was married and returned to KU.
Kay, who is probably best known on the campus as the student representative for Chesterfield cigarettes, is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha and is past pledge trainer of the organization. He has also been a member of ASTE and ASME engineering clubs.
AUFS Head Confers Here
Phillips Talbot, director of the American Universities Field staff, will watch his program in action at the University today when Edward A. Bayne, fourth AUFS speaker to visit the University this semester, lectures on Iran, the area in which he has become a specialist.
Mr. Talbot will attend the lectures and will consult with University members in charge of the program on the campus. The schedule for Mr. Bayne today and tomorrow will be as follows:
Today; 8 a.m., Marriage and Family Relationships, 110 Fraser, "The Middle Class in Iran"; 10 a.m. Marriage and Family Relationships, 110 Fraser, "The Middle Class in Iran"; noon, luncheon with the political science faculty; 4 p.m., graduate seminar, School of Business and department of economics.
Tomorrow: 10:40, American Economic Development, 206 Strong; "Point Four in Iran"; noon, lunchroom with the economics faculty; 3-5 p.m., graduate seminar, Problems of World Order, 202 Strong; 6:15-7:30 p.m., Radio Round Table.
Rice Tells Need Of Point System
Fred Rice, POGO (party of Greek organizations) candidate for president of the All Student Council, was campaigning hard yesterday in support of the point system, which, by allotting a specific number of points to all organized houses, would enable a distribution of student government offices held by Greeks and Independents.
Rice is a business junior, a member of Sigma Chi, and comes from the politician-breeding town of Abilene. The point system, Rice said, is the thing that started him off on his political career on the hill. He headed the old United Hawaiian school he is the direct relative of POGO, because it had the point system, which Rice feels is the only way to get a good representation of houses into governmental activities.
The United Hawks flirted with the idea of joining up with Allied Greek Independent party, but since the AGI didn't adopt the point system, POGO was born last month. Rice estimated the party strength to be around 1,200 votes.
The party platform, which Rice said is "pretty strong," advocates the listing of activities on transcripts, pre-enrollment for upper classmen, and a liaison group between the ASC and Watkins hospital. It opposes the $5 parking fee on Rice, the opposition platforms AGI, and the Married Students party have much the same platform, with the exception that POGO alone advocates the point system.
Rice has held many offices, and has been a member of ASC for two years.
Wichita Alumni To Hear Helen Hoopes
Helen Rhoda Hoopes, retired professor of English, will address an alumni meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Plymouth Congregational church in Wichita.
Frank Burge, director of the Student Union, and Richard Wintermute, field secretary of the alumni association, will also attend. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy discussed "The First Annual Report on the University" at a meeting of the Shawnee county alumni Thursday in the Kansas hotel in Toneka.
An alumni dinner for Buffalo county, New York, was held in Buffalo last week.
The planet Jupiter has 11 known moons, more than any other planet.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 20, 1954
Huskers Hand KU First Conference Loss, 12-1
The Kansas Jayhawkers lost their first conference game of the season, and the second in eight starts, when they lost to the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln yesterday 12-1.
Commissaries at the Commissary of Nebraska. The Jayhawkers got only three hits off of Fran Hofmaier, who went all the way for Nebraska. Meanwhile the Huskers were nick-
Bob Sidley for 11 hits.
Nebraska, co-favorite with Oklahoma for the Big Seven baseball championship, jumped off to an early lead. Two walks, a wild pitch by Shirley, and Jim Cederdal's double scored two runs in the first inning.
Three singles, a walk, and two fielders' choices brought in three more runs in the second inning and clinched the game for Nebraska.
This was the second conference game for Kansas. Last week it beat Kansas State 7-4 and the second game of that series was called off because of wet grounds.
Four errors, three by Bob Allison and one by Bill Pulliam, and seven bases on balls off Shirley aided the Nebraska attack.
Cederdahl got three hits in as many times at bat to take batting honors for the game. Pulliam, Allison, and Bob Conn each got a hit for KU.
Kansas plays Nebraska again today and either John Brose or Wayne Tiemer will pitch.
The box score:
Kansas (1)
Pulliam, 2b AB H O A
Conn, rf 4 1 1 0
Trombold, 1b 4 0 8 2
Allison, cf 4 1 2 0
Berry, if 4 0 1 0
Aungst, c 3 0 6 1
Bergsten, ss 2 0 4 0
Heitholt, ss 0 0 0 1
a-Hixon 1 0 0 0
Shirley, p 3 0 2 0
Totals ... 29 3 24
Nebraska (12) AB. H. O..A
Poolest, ss 2 0 1
Coufal, ss 1 1 2
Gottsch, 3b 3 1 1
Seger, 2b 5 2 4
Cederdahl, cf 3 3 2
Novak, 1b 4 1 11
Mallet, rf 4 2 1
Becker, rf 0 0 0
Giles, lf 4 1 0
Backus, c 2 0 2
b-Brown 1 0 0
Lohrb'g, c 1 0 2
Hofm'er, p 4 0 1
Totals 34 11 27 14
a-Struck out for Bergsten in 8th b-Hi- into double play for Backus
Kansas 000 000 010—1
Nebraska 203 102 04x-13
E—Shirley, Allison 3, Rolston, Hofmaier, Seger, RBI-Pulliam, Seger 2, Cederdahl 2, Novak 2, Giles. 2B —Cederdahl. SB—Holston, Seger. S —Cederdahl. DP—Shirley, Bergsten and Trombold. Left—Kansas 4, Nebraska 7. BB—Off Shirley. 7 SO
Mather Pleased With KU Drill
Kansas football Coach Chuck Mather continued to be pleased with the progress which the team is making in spring practice. Last week he said that the practices were very satisfactory, and yesterday he was pleased with the way the team ran the basic offensive formations.
The KU team will hold two scrimimages this week, one on Wednesday and the other on Saturday.
No more cuts were made in the squad over the week-end as had been previously planned, because the coach said that all of the players worked well in the scrimmage last Wednesday.
Mather does plan to cut the 73-man squad to 66 in another week, and he plans to have about a 60-man squad by the end of spring drills. Films will be taken of the Wednesday and Saturday scrimmages to help determine those to be eliminated from the squad.
The only injury which resulted in practice yesterday was a dislocated shoulder suffered by freshman halfback Harry Solter. This was the same shoulder which he had injured last fall.
Oliver, Bevo May Join Globetrotters
Rio Grande, Ohio — (U.P.)—Newt Oliver, talkative basketball coach of little Rio Grande college, said "no comment" today about reports he and high-scoring Clarence (Bevo) Francis will team up with Abe Saperstein of the professional Harlem Globetrotters.
Oliver did say he hailed in his resignation at Rio Grande today, to be effective Sept. 1. Asked what he would do next fall, the coach said "that will be decided next Monday."
Meanwhile, Saperstein said in Chicago he had arranged to meet Oliver in New York next Monday to talk about a contract. The Globetrotter owner said he had done nothing about the matter as yet, but "that doesn't mean I won't."
By Shirley 1, Hofmaier 4. R-ER-
Shirley 12-9, Hofmaier 1-0, HBP-
Novak (by Shirley). WP-Shirley.
PB-Aungst.
Alpha Kappa Lambda, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Pi Kappa Alpha won opening games in intramural softball competition yesterday.
Hitters Star As Intramural Softball Starts
The AKL's, although outbit by the Phi Delts, won by a score of 7-5. Don Williams, Glen Davis, and Hugh Bowden each had two hits for the winners. The Phi Delts made ten hits with Mac Stevenson and Bob Ball getting two apiece. Bowden did the pitching for the AKL's. Ball started for the Phi Delts and Bob Richards came on in the fifth in relief.
The Sig Eps collected twelve runs on eleven hits to defeat the Acarias, who made seven runs on five hits. Dave Schwartz of the winners and Stan Hamilton of the losers each got three hits. Schwartz and Bruce Sears did the pitching for the Sig Eps, and Bob Keefer went all the way for the Acarias.
The Pi K A's made the most of their opportunities and defeated the Kappa Sigs 8-5. Kappa Sig, while losing, outstaff the victors 13 to 9. For the winners, Holt Denman went all the way on the mound, and James Hyatt handled the pitching chores for the losers.
Today's schedule, all games starting at 4 p.m.:
Field I, Phi Psi vs. Sigma Chi.
Field II, Sigma Nu vs. Phi
Kappa Sigma.
Field III, Phi Kappa Tau vs. Delta Upsilon.
KU Playing Cats In Tennis Today
Coach Dick Mechem's tennis squad is in Manhattan today playing the Wildcats in the third conference meet of the season.
Kansas State will feature Max Blakely as their No. 1. Man blakely, a freshman from Wichita, beat out last year's No. 1 Larry Penner. Stan Burnett, last year's No. 2 Wildcat, is in the No. 3 spot this season.
The two teams beat a visiting Omaha team by the same scores, but K-State lost two more matches to a Mankato, Minnesota team than did KU.
K-State and KU both lost to a strong Colorado U team, and both teams had a 1-1 record before the meet today.
Mechem will take five men to the match with Al Hedstrom retaining the No. 1 position. Dick Hadley is in the No. 2 and Merl Sellers is in 3 on the squad. Roger Youmans will play the fourth singles match, and Don Franklin will be the No. 5 man
Blakely was a strong tourney favorite in Kansas high school tennis
Dorish Has Cosmic Pitch Working Again
Rv UNITED PRESS
Relief apart Harry Dorish once again has his "cosmic pitch" in perfect working order, which should be a big boom to the White Sox pennant chances.
The favorite pitch of the 30-year-old righthander confounds him as much as it does the batters. He has no idea why it acts as it does. He personally calls it a "slip ball". His grateful teammates hung the "cosmic" tag on it.
Johnny Groth drove in two runs
It was dropping perfectly Monday and so were the Detroit Tigers when he relieved rookie lefty Jack Harshman in the third inning with the bases loaded and one out and pitched shutout ball the rest of the way for a 5-1 victory. He struck out Walt Dropo and nailed robie Aaline on a routine that only four singles to gain his first triumph. Last season, pitching in 55 games, Dorish won 10 and saved many others.
"you throw it from the same motion as a fast ball but it just goes up to the plate and dies," he explains.
"If the hitter is expecting a fast ball it can be a little confusing. Some time it darts off in one direction or the other but usually it just drops."
In other American league games, Jim McDonald of the Yankees pitched a one-hitter to defeat the Red Sox, 5-0, after Boston took the morning game of a Patriot's day doubleheader, 2-1. At Washington, Eddie Host hit a homer in the last of the ninth to give the Senators a 4-3 victory over the Athletics.
In the National league, Pittsburgh took advantage of a five-run third inning in which it got only one hit to defeat the Giants 7-5, while the Dodgers defeated the Phillies, 9-7 and the Cardinals beat the Gators, 6-3.
with a homer and a single to lead the White Sox batters in their third straight victory.
Willard Nixon struck out 14 Yankees, including Mickey Mantle and Gil McCoqald three times each in his five-hit triumph in the opener at Boston. The Yankees scored only in the ninth when, with the bases loaded, Ellis Kinder ended the game by striking out Mantle a fourth time. Jackie Jensen hit his fourth homer for Boston. In the afternoon game, Rookie Harry Agganik hit a second inning single to spoil McDonald's bid for a no-hitter. Hank Bauer hit his third Yankee homeer and Mantle also polled one as the Yankees gathered 11 hits—their high for the season.
Jackie Robinson, with four hits in as many times at bat, drove in three runs with a homer, double and two singles in a Dodger night victory which snapped the Phillies' four-game winning streak. Pee Wee Reese also homered as the Dodgers pummeled four Philieh hurleurs for 18 hits. Southpaw Johnny Podres relieved Don Newcomb in the third inning and gained the decision.
Back-to-back homers by Stan Musial and Ray Jablonski in the sixth inning helped the Cardinals to their night win over the Reds, Harvy Haddix was the winner but he needed the help of Stu Miller and Al Brazzele when the Reds picked up their final run in the ninth.
Pittsburgh took a 2-0 lead on Gail Henley's first inning homer, then put together four walks, a hit batsman and catcher's interference which gave another man his base in the weird third inning. After Jim Hearn loaded the bases, reliever Don Liddle forced home three straight runners, and Gair Allie drove in two more tallies with a single. Monte Irvin and Whitey Lockman homered for the Giants. John Hetki pitched one-hit relief ball for Lockman hit him for a three-run homer in the fifth for his first victory.
Faculty Fossils' Return To Intramural Softball Scene
Thirteen University faculty members are throwing old age and creaky bones to the four winds and have banded into a softball team known as the "Faculty Fossils."
The team, whose combined age total would probably stagger the national debt, will compete in the Independent "A" league of the KU intramural program—uniforms and all.
"The student body win promptly to laugh us out of the league, but they're in for a surprise of the first magnitude," explains Nino Lo Bello, instructor in sociology and first baseman and manager of the squad. "We not only plan to win the divisional championship and the league championship, but we are out to nab the hill title."
Two years ago the Fossils did win the divisional flag in the "A" competition with a 9 and 1 record, but lost out in the semi-finals for the league flag.
"Our left fielder—now teaching on the Pacific coast—made an error that cost us the game," alibis Manager Lo Bello.
The faculty's infield consists of Richard F. Harp, assistant basketball coach at second base; John Reardon, instructor in English at shortstop, and Walter J. Mikos, assistant professor of physical education at the hot corner. The outer gardens are patrolled by George M. Beckmann, assistant professor of history in left field; Joseph H. Davidson, instructor in anatomy in center field, and Ray Verry, book store manager in right.
Pitching is in the veteran hands of William Conboy, instructor in speech, and John H. Patton, professor of religion, the latter serving as relief hurler. J. Robert Fevurly, bacteriology lab assistant, handles the catching. Other squad members include George J. Edberg, assistant instructor in romance languages; Elliott Valenstein and Harold R. Dickman, assistants in psychology.
Aside from the regular league contests, the Fossils have scheduled a number of Sunday morning practice games. Teams who will pit themselves against the Faculty nine are the graduate students in psychology, the governmental research bureau, the KU varsity basketball team, and the graduating class of June '54.
The team has been practicing every Sunday since early March, and according to Manager Lo Bello, "we're up to sniff-snuff."
"Weye it up." He got an air tight infield and a hard-hitting outfield." Manager Lo Bollo says." Conboy has his fast ball, drop, and in-curve working with emphatic precision. It's going to take more than wristcracks and jokes at our expense to make us eat humble pie. I think we'll show some folks that a man who can knock out a good lecture in his field can also knock out a line drive on the field.
Black No Davey Both M-S Grads
New York —(U.P.)—Gerald (Jed)
Black wants the fight world to know
today that he is no Chuck Davey—and
he has the nose to prove it.
There are, however, dissimilarities. Davey is a fancy Dan type. Black is an aggressive puncher who loves to mix it up. Davey flashed briefly and extravagantly across the welterweight horizon before Kid Gavilan put him into almost total eclipse. Black, well on his way to the top, figures he has the equipment to last in almost any leather pushing company.
Black is the 24-year-old welterweight who tackles Joey Klein of New York in Friday night's televised bit of fistfuls from St. Nicholas arena. There is one similarity between him and Davey.
Fin Wins Boston Marathon
Boston (U.P.)—Foreign domination in the Boston A.A. marathon continued for the ninth successive year today as Veikko Karvonen, 28-year-old postoffice mail sorter, carried the winner's laurel wreath home to his native Finland.
WASH YOUR 50c OWN CAR For CHUCK Mc BETH CONOCO SERVICE at 9th and Indiana
50c
Whitfield Set To Assault Mile Record
New York—U.O.P.)—Mal Whitfield,
along with every deskbound
schoolboy, hopes for warm, sunny
weather next Saturday.
That's the day Whitfield, king of the middle distance runners, takes his liquid-smooth stude into track's biggest project—the quest for a four-minute mile.
He'll race New Zealand's Murray Halberg and U.S. distance stars Horace Ashenfelt, and Fred Wilt in the Benjamin Franklin mile during the Penn relays at Philadelphia's Franklin field. It will be Mal's first mile since he was a freshman at Ohio State.
"And let's just hope it isn't rainy and cold." Whitfield said as he discussed his chances. "Each year I must set a goal and this year it's the mile. I couldn't wait for the indoor season to end."
Franklin field spectators will see a superable-conditioned combination of ambition, talent training, and confidence in the hawkfaced Whitfield.
He considered his 600, 800, and 1,000 yard indoor races this year as little more than conditioners for his attempt to challenge the established milers outdoors.
"I've been running paced quarters and 660's at the Los Angeles Coliseum. I've trained faithfully for my first mile and I'm ready for it," he said.
that means Mal is ready for another chapter in the track story that began when he watched the 1832 Olympics at Los Angeles as a boy of seven and dreamed of representing the United States in the games.
That dream, combined with the training of Coach Larry Snyder of Ohio State and his own ability and determination, gave Whitfield 880-meter victories at the 1948 and 1952 Olympics plus scores of other triumphs and five world records in 1953.
Whitfield's effortless running style is his own adaption of the sprint form of his friend, Jesse Owens, and the distance stride of Sweden's Gunder Haegg, world mile record holder. Last summer, he began planning to try it in the race for the four-minute mile.
"I began running 1,000 meter races in Europe last summer to see how the longer distance would feel," he explained.
He could have added that he set a world record of 2:20.8 for 1,000-meters in Sweden last August. Switching to the mile will be more difficult.
But Whitfield already has indicted that, no matter where he finishes, the Benjamin Franklin will not be his last mile.
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Excellent clinical facilities.
Athletic and recreational activities.
Dormitories on the campus.
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Chicago 14, Illinois
Page 5
Long Walk to Chat With Carilloneur
By R. L. CHESKY
The only difficult thing about a chat with Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur, is the 70-step spiral staircase which leads to his office somewhere near the top of the campanile. After the ascent has been made and one's breathing has returned to normal, it's most enjoyable to examine the intricacies of the carillon and to talk to Mr. Barnes about himself and his massive instrument.
Two rooms of limited size, one directly above the other atop the campanile, house the tools of Mr. Barnes' unusual occupation. The lower cubicle is a combination office and practice room, containing a practice clavier (carillon keyboard) and an arranging piano-plus some ordinary office furniture.
The arranging piano is a device equipped with tiny bells which correspond in sound to the large bells of the carillon. Its uses are obvious—Mr. Barnes couldn't very well tinker with new arrangements on the carillon itself without disrupt-manner loosely comparable to the ting civilization for miles about. The practice keyboard exists for the same reason, and is an exact duplicate of the clavier attached to the 53-bell carillon.
To approach the clavier which plays the carillon, one follows the winding staircase 20 to 30 steps higher to the second chamber located directly under the bells. The clavier itself is arranged in a manner loosely comparable to the arrangement of an organ keyboard, with a system of levers and pedals that would strenuously exercise a person with eight arms and legs.
Mr. Earnes disposed of two wild rumors at the outset of the conversation. First, he does not sit in a plush office in Frank Strong hall and manipulate the bells by remote control. And second, he does not have to stuff his ears with cotton, wear earmuffs, or tape his ears shut in order to protect his sensitive hearing organs from the sounds of the bells.
"As a matter of fact," he said, "I'm looking forward to warmer weather when I can open up the windows of the cubicle to hear the bells better. It's just like any other instrument--very difficult to play if you can't hear the sounds you're producing. Most of the sound goes out over the campus rather than down on me, anyway."
Mr. Barnes began his experience as a carillonneur at the First Plymouth Congregational church in Lincoln, Neb., where he served as assistant organist from 1946 until 1951. He taught himself the fundamentals of the instrument on the church's 48-bell carillon. "Of course," Mr. Barnes said, "I had been playing the piano since the age of 7, and had pretty thorough grounding in both piano and organ by that time." He considers knowledge of these instruments, plus a background in composition and theory, a necessary part of training for the carillon.
Mr. Barnes' first formal training on the carillon was a summer's study under Robert Donnell, dormon carillonneur for Canada. Mr. Barnes considers this training to have been of great value in supplementing his self-instruction in Lincoln. He then spent a year as university carillonneur at Stanford university before coming to Kansas in 1952.
Asked about the music he plays Mr. Barnes confessed to arranging a good bit of it himself, "There's a very real shortage of arrangements for the carillon in the United States," he said, "And we carillonneurs have to do a great deal of our own work and trade our arrangements back and forth."
In earlier times, Mr. Barnes said, most of the arrangements were done in the Belgian National Carillon school, which, for a time, was the only school in the world in which the carillon was studied. Three American schools, including KU, now teach the carillon, and the literature for the instrument is rapidly becoming more extensive in the U.S.
Mr. Barnes "creed as a carillon was stated firmly and simply: I believe," he said, "that the carillon is a musical instrument—not a noise maker. It can be played with sensitivity and restraint—and with a decent regard for the sensibilities of its 'captive audience'."
Calling the carillon at KU "the best I've ever played" Mr. Barnes praised the "exceptionally fine tuning of the bells" and the "refinement of the mechanism." He also added the testimony of one of the world's leading carillonneurs: "There is only one carillon in North America, and that one is at the University of Kansas."
Even if the carillon is now the best in North America, it's soon to have an added feature. Mr. Barnes said that an automatic device would soon be installed in the campanille which would sound the hours of the day on the bells of the carillon.
Everything sounds almost perfect,
doesn't it? Now, if they would just
put in an elevator . . .
Debaters Off To West Point
William Arnold and Hubert Bell college juniors, will leave tomorrow for West Point where they will represent KU at the national debate tournament.
The team will be among 32 teams from all over the country who will be debating for the national championship.
So far this year Arnold and Bell have had 23 wins and 5 losses. The tournaments they have won are the Southwestern and St. John's tournaments at Winfield, and the regional elimination tournament at Midland college, Fremont, Neb. They received a superior rating at Nebraska university.
Both debaters are members of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, and tied for second place in the Oratorical contest last Thursday.
KU's previous record at the West Point national tournament goes back to 1948 when KU's team went as far as the semi-finals. In 1951, KU entered the quarter-finals, and in '49, '50, and '53, teams entered the pre-quarter finals.
City Manager School Slated
The seventh annual City Manager school conducted by the University Governmental Research center will be held tomorrow through Saturday in the Pine room of the Student Union.
Thirty-five city managers from the five state area of Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Missouri, and Oklahoma will attend 27 hours of instruction during the school. Several KU staff members are participating in the program.
Cheerleader School to Begin
Leland J. Pritchard, professor of finance, will speak on "Economic Outlook for the Next Year—Its Relationship to Municipal Programming"; George M. Beal, chairman of the architecture department, "Fire Problems: Building Codes and New Construction Materials"; Fred Sharpe, lecturer, "We Want to Know"; Anthony J. Smith, professor of psychology, "Techniques of Supervising—The Problem of Motivation."
Featured speakers will be George Barton, traffic engineering consultant, Northwestern University Traffic institute, "How to Analyze Your Traffic and Parking Problem," and Arthur Naftalin, associate professor of political science, University of Minnesota, former executive secretary to the mayor of Minneapolis, "Politics in a Non-Partisan City"
Cheerleaders school will be held in the Union ballroom from 4 to 6 p.m. Monday for those interested in trying out for cheerleader. The school will be taught by last season's cheerleaders, headed by Jack Byrd, business senior. Anyone interested may attend the school.
Izvestia Hits U.S. Papers
Moscow —(U.P.)—The Soviet newspaper Izvestia today accused "American reactionary newspapers" of "assiduously spreading fables about the Communist menace."
It said American propagandists were raising this "obviously tendentious hullabaloo" to conceal facts about the proposed American-led Pacific military alliance.
Izvestia said the Pacific plan was a project "for the establishment of one more imperialist bloc headed by the U.S., designated for the suppression of the national liberation movement in the peoples, for the preservation of the colonial domination of the imperialist powers in the Asian countries."
"Taking advantage of their intervention in the hostilities, the American monopolies are trying on the quiet to establish their domination over that country and its peoples," the paper charged.
The government organ said U.S. business "monopolies" were following closely behind the military in moving into Indochina.
Nursesto Give Musical Show
Caduces' Capers, a musical comedy satire on ideal hospital life as viewed by a student nurse, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday at the Medical Center in Kansas City.
Leading roles in the show will be taken by Rocelin Roney, Marietta Shannon, Georgia Dirking, Orinne Gray, Mary Gayle Sievert, Bonnie Metz, and Jo Wampler.
The show, entirely a student presentation, will be a variety show. Written and directed by Terry Hanlon and Orinne Gray, the show is composed of two acts of two scenes each.
The show will initiate the new student union as a sounding board for student projects.
Sun Soothing For Ike Rest
Augusta, Ga. —(U.P.)— President Dwight D. Eisenhower took advantage of clear, warm weather today to loll restfully in the sun at the National Golf course.
Mr. Eisenhower was expected to handle only routine duties during the last two days of his Easter vacation at the golf course retreat.
A short bout with paper work kept the President indoors at his temporary office here for only a short period today. The rest of the time he was outside.
The weather was expected to continue warm tomorrow.
Official Bulletin
Student-Faculty coffee. 4 p.m., browsing room, Student Union. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy: "A Glimpse of the Universe. Everyone is
Kappa Phi girls must get their senior dinner tickets at the Wesley Foundation office in Myers hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday.
YW Cabinet meeting, 12 noon. Student
TODAY
Phi Mu Alpha meeting, 9 p.m., room.
Short business meeting and
sound practice.
Public lecture, 8 p.m. Strong and
loud; Between India and the United
Indias. Between India and the United
Quill club, 7:30 p.m., Chi Omega house. Initiation of new members.
Alpha Phi Omega meeting, 7.30 p.m.
300 South 4th Street, all activities and bids present.
Quill club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Student Union. Speaker: Vladimir Nabokov.
CUNEX board. 4 p.m., information center, Student Union.
Tuesday, April 20, 1954 University Daily Ransan
KU Dames, interior decorating group,
gym, Cread room, Student Union. All Welcome.
El Ateneo y Tertulia se reunirán a las cuatro y media en 113 Strong el mienoles, 21 de Abril. Programa de balles latinoamericanos. Qe bengan todos.
Quack club, 7:30 p.m., Robinson gym,
Swimming.
THURSDAY
Geology club, 7:30 p.m., 426, Lindley Dr. O. F. Carquafarq of the geology department will present a 50 minute illustrated talk on Scotland and its Geo
Kuku club, 7:30 p.m., in front of Green hall. Initiation.
Der deutsche Verein has a kaffe-
klarisch and folk dancing in p. 502,
p. 503.
The official flower of the state of Michigan is the apple blossom.
Supreme Soviet Meets To Hear Malenkov Talk
By UNITED PRESS
Russia's Supreme Soviet assembled in the Kremlin today to hear another "state of the nation" speech by Premier Georgi Malenkov
Premier Malenkov attended the opening session in the Kremlin's grand palace but there was no indication that he would go to the rostrum before the end of the week when major policy speeches are to be made.
An anxious world eagerly awaited Premier Malenkov's newest utterances on the eve of the Geneva conference on Far Eastern affairs.
Premier Malenkov last spoke to a Supreme Soviet-Russia's highest legislative body—last August. He talked for five hours, mostly on domestic policies and problems, but digressed long enough to say that Russia had the hydrogen bomb.
It was certain that Malenkov would comment on the war in Indochina and American Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' proposal for a defensive union of free Asian nations.
Ivestia, the government newspaper, set the stage for a blast against the United States' efforts to prevent the Communists from seizing all of Indochina.
The newspaper accused the United States of "intervention in the hostilities" in Indochina and said American newspapers had been "spreading fables about the 'Communist' menace."
Diplomats and Western newspapermen were invited to attend the session and hear Malenkov's address.
Darwin—Australia issued orders permitting Mrs. Vladimir Petrov to join her husband, former Soviet Embassy third secretary, in political asylum. Her freedom was granted at a Darwin airport after Australian police disarmed two Russians who were attempting to take her back to Russia. The Russian ambassador has demanded her return. Petrov surrendered about two weeks ago, turning over documents that exposed a Soviet spy network in Australia.
Hanoi — Communist besiegers of Dien Bien Phu inches closer toward their goal, the heart of the French-held fortress. They dug new trenches on one-fourth of the main airstrip, indicating they will try to seize more of the runway and completely cut off Dien Bien Phu's only source of supply.
Tehran-British and Iranian authorities opened direct talks on compensation for nationalized oil properties in Iran. More than $5 million in British investments made in Iran before Former Premier Mohammed Mossadeh nationalized the oil fields was up for discussion.
Vienna — Radio Bucharest announced that Romanian Prime Minister Gheorghe Gheorgiu-Dej stepped down as Secretary General of the Romanian Communist party in a major change in party leadership.
Brussels — King Baudoin has asked veteran Socialist Leader Achille Van Acker to form a new Belgian government to succeed the Social Christian cabinet which was a victim of the April 11 general election. Van Acker accepted the bid.
Hitt to Registrars Meeting
James K. Hitt, registrar, will attend the 40th national meeting of the American Association of College Registrars and Admissions Officers today through Friday in St. Louis. Mr. Hitt is secretary of the group.
It requires about eight tons of coal to produce a ton of magnesium.
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Class Rings Mark Grads Of University
The gold class rings with the ruby center has become a tradition on the KU campus. These rings, bought by students in their senior year, identify them later as KU alumni.
Since 1947 the ring design has remained the same. Made of karat gold, the ring has the seal of the University with two large sunflowers on one side, and the date and a Jayhawk on the other side. Around the oval ruby stone on the top of the ring are the letters "University of Kansas—1866."
Class rings are one of the newer KU traditions. The class of 1947 was the first to order rings. Ray Evans, president of the senior class met with a ring committee of four other students and three faculty advisors to decide on a design for an official KU ring.
Every year the senior class has received a refund from the L. G. Balfour Company for every ring which is sold. In 1947 the class received a dollar for every ring; this year the senior class receives $2.50 for very ring sold.
Students may buy rings in various finger sizes. The price of the men's size ring is $27.50,and the women's size is $21.50. Since April 1, students ordering rings pay the tax instead of the former tax, instead of the former 20 per cent. A 2 per cent sales tax is also added.
Seniors who wish to receive rings by commencement time in June should order them from the business office immediately, Mr. Swartz advised.
Jayhawker Seeks Business Manager
Money Sent to Reduce Debt
Applications for business manager of the Jayhawk, a position which is open to any student in the University, should be submitted before May 4. Jack Rein, business senior and business manager of the yearbook, said today. The applications are to be sent to Karl Klooz, bursar. Further information about the applications or the job can be obtained from Rein.
Hartford, Conn. —(U.P.)— The Rev.
Fletcher D. Parker of the Immanuel Congregational church has sent Gov. John D. Lodge a contribution of $100 to be forwarded to the U.S. Treasury to reduce the national debt. The national debt now stands at about $270,000,000,000.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 20. 1954
Ralph W. Moore
MRS. J. HOWARD SHELLHAAS
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Wellborn Weds Shellhaas
Miss Joyce Wellborn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Wellborn, of Lyndon, Kan., became the bride of Lieut. J. Howard Shellhaas, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Shellhaas of Junction City, Kan., in a double ring ceremony which took place at 3:30 p.m. April 4 at the Baldwin Methodist church in Baldwin, Kan.
The Rev. Clair Hayes officiated,
Mr. Reinhold Schmidt, professor of
voice, sang "How Do I Love Thee,"
"the Ring," and "The Lord's
Prayer," accompanied by Miss
Megerle Garanniky, organist.
The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a floor length princess style gown of white Swiss organdy. Her short illusion veil fell from an embroidered fitted cap and she carried a white muff tulle accent with pealets, feathered white China Chrysanthemums and ivy centered with a white orchid.
The mottions of honor were Mrs. Robert Dillon, Pomona, Kan., and Mrs. Verlyn Norris, West Lafayette, Ind., sisters of the bride. They wore ballerina length princess style gowns of purple organdy and they she carried a white muff accented florets, vanda orchids and ivy strands.
The bridesmaids were Carol Shellhas, college sophomore, sister of the bridegroom; Mary Gayle Loveless, fine arts senior; Jeanne Johnson, fine arts junior; and JoAnne John, college junior. Barbara Swisher, education junior, and Lucy McKeithan, fine arts sophomore, lighted the tapers.
Arthur James Graves, education senior, was the best man. The ushers were Tom Pratt, college senior; John Grieser, college senior; Robert Connell, and John Westfall.
A reception was held in Fellowship hall at the church. The couple left for a honeymoon in Excelsior Springs. They will leave for California the last of the month, where Lieut. Shellhaas will report to Parks air force base for assignment.
Music Sorority Elects Swisher President
Berbara Swisher, education junior,
was elected president of the Mu Phi
Epsilon, national honorary music
sorcerry for the coming year.
Emily Wolteron, education junior,
was named vice president, Delores
Myers, education senior, correspond-
ent and editor of the newsletter
junior, corresponding secretary.
Barbara Barnes, education junior,
treasurer; Edwina Jones, education
juniar, historian; Barile Mallory, fine
arts junior, warden; Patricia Howell,
college senior, chaplin; Edith Nichols,
education junior, song leader, and
Fredrica Volland, fine arts sophomore,
rush chairman.
Foreigners honored on American postage stamps include the Revolutionary War Generals Pulaski, Voz Steuben, Rochambeau, De Grasse and Lafayette.
Girls Have Divorce Woes
Sydney — (U.P.) — Justice Stanley V. Toose, retiring as a judge of divorce courts, said present laws made Australian girls easy prey of "foreign wolves" who marry them here and then leave.
Because the girls take their husbands' nationality and domicile, according to law, they must seek divorces in their spouses' own country. Deserted Australian wives frequently are unable to afford to travel to and establish residence in a foreign country. There is now no way for these women to get a divorce.
Justice Toose cited the case of two sisters married to U.S. Navy officers who rejoined their ship after the honeymoons. The girls never saw them again, didn't know where they came from, and couldn't be sure the men had even used their right names.
"The girls' mother came to see me," Justice Toose said, "and told me. I'm going to advise my daughers to commit bigamy."
JANE E. WILSON
Dorothy Thompson, internationally known columnist, author, and lecturer, will speak at the Matrix table of the Kansas City. Mo. alumnae chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority, at 7 p.m. April 30 at the Muehlebach hotel in Kansas City. The event is in observance of the founding of the sorority.
Dorothy Thompson To Be Guest Speaker
DOROTHY THOMPSON
As a special feature, the chaptei will honor ten women of the area who are outstanding in their fields of activity. Reservations for the dinner may be made with Mrs. R.S. Mead, 7841 Summit, ave., Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism at the University, will be hostess for the Lawrence group attending the dinner.
To Marry or-
Not to Marry
Do you promise to do your share of the housework, washing, ironing, cooking, budgeting, putting up with the whims of your spouse and go to work every day? Our公司 said that they did. Let's take a book and see how they do it.
A bride was asked how she found time to study and do housework.
"You wonder how you'll get everything done but when you get your time scheduled you do the most important things first and do as much as you can. You get to be an expert at fixing quick meals. Grocery shop once a week and trv to clean the house on weekends and make it last all week. We do our washing on weekends too—there's no time during the week, when we're studying and going to classes," she said.
when asked about expenses she said that it is less expensive to be married than to be single except that the married couples have to pay their own expenses with little or no help: "Is married life what you expected
"Is married life what you expected it to be?"
"Yes—its wonderful to have someone to do everything with. When you are in school most of your interests are the same. You're both working for a common goal—to finish college in the short run, and build for a home in the long run," she said.
"There isn't much time for pure recreation except on vacation. We usually visit our folks, play cards, watch TV, or go to the movies. If you're working and going to school you don't have much time for more than that and you can't afford anything more than movies," she said.
"Have your grades been higher or lower since you were married?" "My grades have been higher since I've been married than any other time—his are too. When I study I can concentrate instead of thinking about somebody else I would like to be with or waiting for a phone call. I get more done even though I have less time to study," she said.
"Does he help you with the cooking ing and housekeeping?"
"No, not the cooking but he helps me clean the house and straighten things. Oh yes, he helps me with the dishes—that's about as far as it goes. He is also training for every husband, otherwise they might never learn!" she said.
Our bride had to admit that married life and going to school at the same time is not easy—but we have made it much easier with intelligence andlege student expects it to be Utonia
It seems to be quite the fad these days. We think it sounds like a pretty good arrangement — what do you think?
More Than a Smile Needed For Career
New York —(U.P.)— A skirt /is no help in getting ahead in the business world. It's actually a handicap, says a woman who has built a fabulous career against masculine competition.
Eleanor Le Maire, an attractive woman who in the last 20 years has designed everything from lollipops to baseball parks and railroad cars, said the career-minded girl might as well face the facts. A girl needs more than curves
"Things won't come your way because you're a woman," said the interior designer. "Being female you'll find you have to work twice as hard for what you want, or get."
A girl needs more than curves and a cute smile to be successful.
The career woman also will find that the professional breaks usually
"At least they did in my case"
said the auburn-haired Miss Le
Maire.
An interior designer is sort of combination architect and decorator. Miss Le Maire plans the interior layout as well as color schemes, furniture and hangings, and believes she is the only woman who does the whole works.
Designing lollipops is part of her work for a New England candy
Eye
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I am so very sad to hear that you are going home. I love you deeply and will miss you always. I hope you have a great time with your family. I want you to be happy and healthy. I will miss you a lot. Thank you for everything.
CONNIE HIGH Connie High Engaged, May Wedding Planned
CONNIE HIGH
Mr. and Mrs. O. W. High of Wichita announce the engagement of their daughter, Connie, to John Wynkoop, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Wynkoop of Wichita.
Miss High is a fine arts junior and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Wynkoop attended KU two years, majoring in engineering and is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. He is now in the Armed forces, stationed at Camp Chaffee. Ark. A May wedding is planned.
McClure Engagement told, Wedding Set
Mr. and Mrs. M. W. McClure of Wichita, Kansas, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Lieut. Pinkney B. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Newton Smith, of Spartanburg, South Carolina.
Miss McClure was graduated from Wichita High School East, and attended the University of Wichita where she was a member of Zeta Phi Eta, professional speech arts fraternity.
Lieut. Smith was graduated from Spartanburg High school and attended Wofford college in Spartanburg, where he majored in business administration. He is presently stationed at McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita, where he is an instructor pilot.
She is a senior here at the University where she will receive her degree in Speech and Drama this spring. She is a pledge of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism scority, and is active in the Roger Williams Baptist club and the radio curriculum of the University.
The wedding will be an event of July 25, in Wichita.
Vaughn Engagement Told
The Rev. and Mrs. Everett J. Vaughn of Bucklin, Kan announce the engagement of their daughter, Leah May, to Richard Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fay P. Ross of Burron, Kan. Miss Vaughn is a fine arts sophomore and Mr. Ross is an engineering junior at Wichita university. A summer wedding is planned.
manufacturer. And she and her 50-member staff currently are planning the redecoration of 110 branches of the Manufacturers Trust company banks.
On the Hill
Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Mary Ann Kaaz, business junior, to Stuart Conklin, business senior. Miss Kaaz is from Leavenworth and Conklin, a member of Sigma Chi fraternity, is from Hutchinson.
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Joan McKee, college junior, to Phillip Stiles, college sophomore. Miss McKee is from Wichita and Stiles, a member of Sigma Chi fraternity is from Hutchinson.
Attendants were Janice Skaer education junior; Virginia Roenbaugh and Milyn Stueck, college sophomores, and Rita Carey, fine arts junior.
Pi Lambda Theta, national honorary society for women in education, announces the initiation of Carol Miller McCleenahan, education junior from Lawrence, and Rosanne Drake, education senior from Nevada, Mo.
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Irene Coonfer, college sophomore, to George Six, engineering sophomore. Six is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Both are from Lyons. Attendants were Virginia Roenbaugh, college sophomore; Roberta Brandenburg, business junior; and Dorothy Parshall, fine arts junior.
Five members of Kappa Sigma fraternity were recently honored with a dinner at the chapter house for maintaining high grade averages. They are Steve O'Brien and Tom Church, business seniors; Marvin Carter, engineering senior; Jean Schanze, fine arts junior, and Myron McCleenny, personal administration senior. They received awards from the fraternity endowment fund.
Guest speakers were Registrar James Hittt, fraternity alumnus; Laurence Woodruff, dean of students; and D. K. Andersan, dean of men. Dean Woodruff presented the awards.
Theta Tau, national engineering fraternity, held a banquet Saturday at the chapter house to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the fraternity. Jamison Vawter, grand regent, and alumnus, spoke after the banquet.
Phi Delta Theta held a picnic Saturday at Lone Star lake, Chapel-rones were Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Dean Alt, and Miss Vita Lear.
Sigma Nu fraternity held a picnic with members of Gamma Pi Beta sorority after the relays Saturday at the Sigma Nu house. Chaperones were Mrs. Andrew McKay and Mrs. Rabb Park.
Corbin, Foster, North College, and Hodder halles held a dance from 9 to 12 midnight, Saturday, in the Student Union ballroom. Miss Betty Lou Hembrough and Miss Lenore Thornton were chaperones.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Herbert Schumacher of Kansas City announce the engagement of their daughter, Winifred, college senior, to Douglas Hawkins of Tulsa, Okla. Hawkins is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Hawkins and attends Oklahoma A&M where he is a member of Sigma Nu social fraternity and Alpha Phi and Phi Eta Sigma, honorary fraternities. The wedding date is set for July 30.
Airline Hostesses Representatives of
BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS
will be on the campus Wednesday, April 22, to interview applicants for classes beginning in June. If you are between 20 and 26 years of age, 5'3" - 5'7" tall and single, we invite you to talk with Miss Marianne Snyder about this most fascinating of all careers for young women.
Some of the many advantages of being a Braniff hostess are paid vacation, sick leave, group insurance, and an opportunity to travel to the glamorous countries of South America on vacation. Interview appointments may be arranged through
Mr. Jack Heysinger in the Business School Office
University Daily Kansan
Dulles Won't Appease Indochina, Red China
Page 7
Washington—(U.P.)—Secretary of State John Foster Dulles called in congressional leaders today to assure them he will fight against any appeasement regarding Indochina or Red China at next week's Geneva conference.
The secret session at the State department came amid a thundering controversy over possible use of American troops in Indochina and considerable uneasiness about what might happen at Geneva.
If pressed, it was learned, Mr. Dulles was prepared to tell the congressmen it is unlikely U.S. troops will be sent to Indochina since the French are not expected to pull out.
Officials said, however, that the Secretary hoped to devote most if not all of the meeting to outlining his plans and soliciting advice for the momentous Geneva talks with Russia and Red China.
One congressional leader, Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.), called last night for "unequivocal cooperation" from U.S. allies since the hour of decision is called "Southeast Asia and" "they must stand up and be counted or run the risk of disastrous division of the free world."
In a speech at Grand Rapids, Mich. Senate GOP Leader William F. Knowland declared it will not be necessary to send American troops to Indochina since there are 600,000 South Koreans and 500,000 Nationalist Chinese who could be used in an emergency.
Mr. Dulles leaves tonight for the North Atlantic Council meeting in Paris this week-end and the Geneva conference beginning next Monday.
The secretary considered the advance session with congressional leaders essential to exchange views
since congressional observers are not going to Geneva as they have to other conferences, and to enlist support for administration strategy despite congressional fears that Geneva might lead to a "Munich" settlement in Indochina and Red China's admission to the United Nations.
Pathologist's Speech To Spark Meeting
An address by Dr. Henry S. N. Freene, professor of pathology at Yale University will highlight the fifth annual medical student research day, May 7, in strong hall. The Russell Haden medal and $100 will be presented at this meeting.
German Club Hears Songs
A musical program of German songs was given at the last meeting of the German club in Spooner-Thayer museum. Dale Moore, graduate, baritone, and Harriet King, fine arts senior, mezzo soprano, gave vocal solos in German of selections by Mendelssohn, Schumann, Schubert, Brahms, and Chopin. Virginia Vogel, fine arts freshman, was the piano accompanist.
Money-saving ideas submitted by civilian employees of the Army's Transportation Corps saved the government more than $270,000 during fiscal 1953. The saving resulted from the adoption of 317 employee suggestions.
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone KU 376
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Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. except in order to attend to the University. Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism blge., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
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Send the Daily Kansan Home!
Sunset 1
Mr. Fatzer contended one company in Topeka and two in Kansas City were illegally requiring borrowers to "pay inflated premium charges for unwanted insurance policies as a condition to receiving loans of small sums of money."
Sunset 1
It Made a Contribution May 50
Now Showing
A WHITE GODDESS...
SHE RULED A NATION OF SAVAGES!
TRADER HORN
From M-G-M's Hall of Fame!
Topека — (U,P) — Attorney General Harold R. Fatzer's campaign against what he terms "loan sharks" reached a peak today with suits to test the tie-in of insurance with small loans in Kansas.
A WHITE GODDESS ...
SHE RULED A NATION OF SAVAGES!
TRADER
HORN
From M-G-M's Hall of Fame!
Fatzer Moves To Bring Suits Against 'Sharks'
The defendant companies are the New Method Co., of Topeka and the New Way company and Intercity Loan company of Kansas City.
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Through assistants, Mr. Fatzter requested the Shawnee county and Wyandotte county district courts for permanent injunctions against the practice. He also requested appointment of receivers to take over operation of the loan firms.
District Judge Beryl Johnson in Topeka issued a restraining order to keep the New Method company from "disposing, assigning, altering, or concealing records, books, accounts, contracts or insurance papers and from violating Kansas usury laws."
A summons was served yesterday in Kansas City on P. H. Molior, who Mr. Fatzer said owns the defendant companies.
It was the first time during the attorney general's nine-month drive against lenders that his office had been able to serve Mr. Molitor with a summons. Mr. Fatzer said Mr. Molitor is widely interested in Kansas small loan companies.
Named with Mr. Molitor in the suits were the Continental Casualty company of Chicago, the Transportation Insurance company of Chicago, Ben Wargon and his insurance agency in Denver, and insurance agents Sam Freedman of Wichita, and J. D. Vance and Cliff Taylor of Topeka.
Girls accepted for training as hostess candidates will spend three weeks in school at the airline's base in Dallas before being assigned to flights.
Qualifications require that applicants be between 20 and 26 years old with a minimum of two years college or the equivalent. Height ranges from 5 feet-3 inches to 5 feet-7 inches with weight in proportion to height. Maximum weight is 130 pounds.
Students interested in careers as airline hostesses will be interviewed at 10 a.m. tomorrow, by Braniff Airways' Hostess Marianne Snyder.
Braniff to Interview Hostess Hopefuls
A female fly lays its first batch of eggs in less than a week after it is hatched.
Tuesday, April 20. 1954
Lyndon—(U.P.)The defense may complete its case late today in the trial of O. W. Hess, wealthy cattleman charged with cattle larceny and embezzlement.
Comforts Courteneau
JAYHAWKER
CUSHIONED CHAIRS
COMING
DON'T MISS
THIS BIG HIT!
ABOUT
THE FIERY ROMANCE OF
THE MAIL ORDER BRIDE
ABOUT
MARABUNTA
NATURE'S DEADLIEST
FORCE
THE NAKED
JUNGLE
Hess Defense To End Today
Defense Attorney Ed Rooney made that indication after Mr. Hess completed more than eight hours of testimony yesterday.
The cattleman said that he lost the use of about 4,000 acres of grazing land to a competitor since his arrest in Feb., 1953.
The state took four days and 21 witnesses to present its case. It is Mr. Hess' second trial. The first last November ended in a hung jury.
THE NAKED
JUNGLE
Mrs. Hess testified four hours Saturday and was recalled to the stand when the case reconvened yesterday after a weekend recess.
Mr. Hess identified the competitor, who now is leasing the grazing land that Mr. Hess had leased for 30 years previously, as Dale Bohn, another Wabaunsee county cattleman.
Another defense witness, Ross Palenske, a farmer south of Alma, testified that Mr. Bohn came to his farm house in Jan., 1953, to rent a 520-acre tract which Mr. Palenske formerly rented to Mr. Hess.
He's Converted 16,726 Britons
London — (U.P.)— The Billy Graham organization announced today the American evangelist has spoken before 714,000 persons since his London crusade began seven weeks ago. So far 16,725 persons have made decisions for Christ, the announcement said. Mr. Graham will begin a tour of U.S. Air Force bases in England April 26.
Mr. Bohn had a county map with him, he testified, and it was marked to show the land Mr. Bohn was going to lease for that season.
STARTS TONITE
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
Adventure
the inspiration
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OWEN HAWK
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MARK DROUGAS
MARY MARVIN
ELIZABETH THREATT
ARTHUR HUNNICUTT
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Adventure...
the Invention of the Downtown Wagon?
NEWARK BOOKS
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ELIZABETH THROATT
ARTHUR HUMMOUTT
STARTS TONITE
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
ADVENTURE
at the Theatre
of the City
Worthing
THE BIG SKY
MARK DOUGLAS
DEWEY MARTIN
ELIZABETH THREATT
ARTHUR HONNICUTT
COMMONWEALTH'S LAWRENCE
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NOW...Ends Thursday
BOLD ROMANCE, FURIOUS ACTION
Rob Roy
THE HIGHLAND ROCHE
TODD • JOHNS
EXTRA ADDED
Disney's "PECOS BILL"
Shows at 7:00-9:00
Next — STARTS FRIDAY
"RHAPSODY"
TECHNOLOGY
Elizabeth
TAYLOR • GASSMAN
COMMONWEALTH'S LAWRENCE Drive-In Theatre West 23rd. st. - Phone 260
Patee
PHONE 221
BOLD ROMANCE, FURIOUS ACTION
Walt Disney's Rob Roy
THE HIGHland ROGUE
From The Grave
TODD JOHNS
EXTRA ADDED
Disney's "PECOS BILL"
Shows at 7:00-9:00
Next — STARTS FRIDAY
"RHAPSODY"
TECHNICOLOR
Elizabeth
TAYLOR · GASSMAN
BOLD ROMANCE, FURIOUS ACTION
Luke Perry's
Rob Roy
THE INHALIAM ROOGUE
Next —
ends
Tonite●
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Students with ID Card 50c
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CASANOVA'S BIG NIGHT
Page 9
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 20, 195
Russian Writers Exiled Because of Free Ideas
The history of Russia shows a constant movement of the authors toward freedom and as a result all the great Russian writers have been exiled, Prof. Valdimir Nabokov, author and professor of Russian literature at Cornell university, who was forced into exile in 1917, told the Humanities committee at a tea in his honor yesterday afternoon.
"As for myself, I have no hope of ever being permitted to go back to Russia, however, I have no desire to. I now consider America to be my home," said the former Russian noble, now a naturalized American citizen. He came to this country in 1940.
"The new generation is being brought up in ignorance of the rest of the world." the professor continued. "Young Russians believe America is a land of gangsters and beggars."
"In the old days the Russian people would rise up from the fields with pitchforks and revolt. They can't do that today because pitchforks are no match for machine-guns."
Proof. Nabokov said his first attempt at writing was at the age of six when he translated the "Headless Horseman" into French. At the age of 15 he published his first poem in a Russian magazine, "The Messenger of Europe." He continued to write and two years later was forced to escape from Russia.
One novel, "Laughter in the Dark" has been translated into nine languages. He has sold the rights to this novel to Hollywood twice. Prof. Nabokov said he did not believe that this novel will ever be made into a picture because of its adultery theme.
Prof. Nabokov will give the fifth Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater on "Gogol—the Man and the Mask."
He spoke in the entomology department at 2 p.m. today and will speak to a class in Contemporary
Psychologist Talks Tomorrow
"A Long Range View of Relations Between India and the United States" will be the topic of a speech to be given at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Strong auditorium by Dr. Gardner Murphy, director of research at the Menninger foundation.
Dr. Murphy, a past president of the American Psychological association, is the author of a number of articles and books of social psychology, personality and parapsycology. His most recent book, "In the Minds of Men," is a report of an extensive inter-disciplinary study. In 1949, the government of India requested the aid of UNESCO in setting up a project in social tensions. Dr. Murphy was selected as research consultant responsible for developing and integrating the research plans of the cooperating Indian universities.
Dr. Murphy received his Ph.D. degree at Columbia in 1923 and has taught at Harvard, Columbia, and the City College of New York, where he was chairman of the psychology department from 1940 until moving to Topeka in 1952.
French literature at 1 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser.
Wilson Believes Russia Afraid Of U.S. Power
Washington, (U.P.)-Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson believes the Russians are "much more afraid of us than we are of them."
He said his analysis would indicate the Soviet military buildup has been mainly defensive.
In congressional testimony made public last night,Mr.Wilson also said he considers the American people "reasonably secure" from an enemy atomic attack.
He told a House appropriations subcommittee early last February that he does not believe the Russian leaders "are going to start a war by dropping a bomb on us when they know there is going to be immediate and massive retaliation."
Asked by Rep. George D. Mahon (D.-Tex.) if he considers this country "highly vulnerable" at the present to an atomic attack, Mr. Wilson said. "No . . . I think it is vulnerable but not highly vulnerable."
The defense chief repeatedly refused under persistent questioning to estimate the number of enemy bombers which might succeed in breaking through perimeter defenses to drop bombs on U.S. cities.
"It would depend partly on the time of day they came," he said. "It would depend upon how much warning we had and . . . upon whether they did it now, or three years from now."
He said Russian planes are not as good as American planes.
L. R. Lind to St. Louis Meeting
L. R. Lind to St. Louis Meeting
Prof. L, R. Lind, of the department of Latin and Greek, will attend the Fiftieth anniversary meeting of the Classical association of the Middle West and South at St. Louis, Mo., Thursday and Friday.
Mr. Lind is vice president for Kansas and a member of the committee on Educational Policy of the organization.
On Capitol Hill-
Col. Richard E. Scarborough, law officer for the court, ruled that the evidence would be received on Bard's promise to prove the connection later.
Washington—[U.P.]—Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., asked Congress today to give him unfettered authority to tap wires for evidence to prosecute spies and subversives.
Brownell Asks Congress For Wiretapping Right
Bard said he also plans to call as prosecution witnesses some of Dickenson's fellow prisoners on whom he is accused of squealing in order to obtain favored treatment for himself.
Army Launches Dickenson Trial
Washington — (U.P.) — The Army offered the transcript of a Communist propaganda broadcast today in an effort to show that Cpl. Edward S. Dickenson was an informer and collaborator while a prisoner in Korea.
Col. C. Robert Bard, chief prosecutor in court martial of the young Cracker Neck, Va., soldier, promised he would prove a direct connection between the broadcast and the defendant.
Tau Siigma Holds Tryouts
Retired Col. Guy Emery, civilian counsel for the defense, argued vigorously against admitting such evidence on the grounds that there was no proof Dickenson made the broadcast. He suggested the possibility of voice impersonation.
Second semester Tau Sigma tryouts will be held at 7:15 p.m. today in Robinson gymnasium. Those interested are asked to prepare a one-minute original modern dance.
In testimony before a Senate Judiciary committee, he objected to provisions in a house-approved bill which would require him to get a court order to tap wires for evidence in the future.
The requirements, he said, might prove "so restrictive in practical operations as to be fatal to the primary objectives of bringing our traitors to justice."
"It is . . . my opinion," he said, "that the wiretap technique would be attended by greater secrecy, speed, and better supervision by Congress if no court order was required."
The House bill, approved by 377-10 vote, was a compromise between the administration's request for full control over wire-tapping and opponents' insistence on court procedure to prevent an infringement of public rights.
Other Congressional developments:
McCarthy—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and his aides are expected to file their formal counter-charges against the Army today. Informed sources said the McCarthy charges would be brief but "noisy."
Housing—Democrats on the Senate Banking committee have demanded that Federal Housing chief Albert M. Cole produce details of reported gambling and payoffs among officials of the scandal-rocked Federal Housing administration. Mr. Cole was slated to appear before the banking committee as Internal Revenue Commissioner T. Coleman Andrews was called before the Joint Committee on Federal Spending, headed by Sen.
How a star reporter got started...
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MARGUERITE HIGGINS says: "I was born in Hong Kong, Spoke only French and Chinese' till 12. When my family returned to America, I studied journalism at California and Columbia. My fluency in French got me my big chance – war correspondent in Europe. I covered Buchenwald, Munich, Berlin – then Korea — and I'm still covering the world."
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 129
Wednesday, April 21, 1954
Presidential Election Voided
McGrath Tells Students To Use Intelligence
"You students owe it to yourself and to your community to use your intellectual abilities to their fullest," Earl J. McGrath, presidet of the University of Kansas City, said this morning at the Honors
convocation.
Mr. McGrath said there is a close relationship between professional success and high academic standing and that trained intelligence was never in greater demand than it is today.
Mr. McGrath cited the shortage of trained persons in engineering, teaching, and medicine, but stressed the necessity for a broadly based liberal education.
He was introduced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, who told the honored students that they represent the things in which the University is primarily interested, education and leadership.
Students elected to Phi Beta Kappa, the Torch chapter of Mortar board, the Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, and those presented other awards were announced.
Students elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in liberal arts and sciences, include Carl Ambler, Robert R. Ball, Marcia Anne Black, Donna G. Davis, Jonah G. Gagliardo, Barbara Allen Gard, Richard H. Gier, Carlos J. Guzman-Perry, Benjamin D. Hall, Edward D. Halpin, Leslie Marie Henchee, Wayne R. Knowles, Jerome P. Lysaught, Donald H. McCleland, Joseph C. Meek, Edwin J. Moore, Carol Ann Morgan, Kathryn E. Mueller, John L. Nieman, James F. Peterson, William R. Scott, Alice Anne Shearer, Richard R. Sheldon, John N. Simons, Mendel Small, Donnalea Steeples, Nancy C. Tietz, Claude R. White, Robert E. Wildin, and Martin Wollmann.
Women students elected to Mortar Board, national honorary society for senior women include Barbara Becker, Joy Brewer, Mary Demeritt, Margaret Jann Duchoshoe, Marjorie England, Frances Hanna, Alberta Johnson, Peggy Jones, Marilyn Az, Leilly Winfred Meyer, Julia Ann Oliver, Tot Patricia Powers, Althea Rexroad, Wanda Sammons, Dorothy Ann Smith, Mary Ellen Stewart, and Barbara Swisher.
Students elected to Sachem. national honorary society for senior n. include William R. Arnold, James F. Duncan, Donald E. Endacott, Darrell D. Fanestil, Jimmie A. Gleason, Dwight H. Harrison, Merile A. Hodges, Delbert M. Jones, Robert S. Kennedy, Llovd Lee Kirk, Gary W. Padgett, Harlan S. Parkinson, Charles P. Peterman, Frederick D. Rice, Jean W. Schanze, Wernon D. Schrag, Ludwig A. Smith Jr., Norton R. Smith, John S. Trombold, and Roger L. Youmans.
Kenneth W. Dam, School of Business, was awarded the Alpha Kappa Psi key, the Delta Sigma Pi key, and the Wall Street Journal award.
Barbara Bowdish, School of Business, received the Chi Omega Service award and the Phi Chi key.
Harriett King, fine arts, received the Sigma Alpha Iota award.
French Society Initiates 8
JACOB HENDERSON
La Confrerie, honorary French society, recently held initiation for eight new members. Those initiated Jane Heyle and Judy Jaeschke, college freshmen; Ina Mae Brewster, Anne Howland, Rosemary Ise, and Beverly Lander, college sophomores; Beverly Phillips, fine arts sophomore and Mary Ellen Stewart, college junior.
EARL J. McGRATH
Honor List:
The University honored 185 of its top scholars at the 31st annual Honors convocation in Hoch auditorium this morning.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy presented to the all-student gathering the upper 10 per cent of the senior classes of the nine schools of the University Dr. Murphy also singled out for recognition the top-ranking student or students in the junior, sophomore, and freshman classes of each school. The names of the 142 seniors and 43 underclassmen were printed in the convocation program and the students were seated in a special section of the auditorium.
Following are the 142 seniors honored:
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Carl D, Ambler, Marlene Moss Ball, Robert Ball, Margaret A. Black, John W, Brand, Donna Davis, Helen E, Dowell, Westley B, E.bwank, John Gagliardi, Barbara Gard, Richard Gier, Carlos Guzman-Perry, Benjamin D, Hall, Edward Halpin, Marilyn Hawkinson, Lessie Hinchee, Charles Keith, Walter J. Kennedy, Wayne Knowles, Arnold Kottwitz, Kay Lambert, Nancy Landon, Jerome Lysaught, Dobert Lytle, Ben McCallister, Donald McClland, Paula McFarland, Joseph C. Meck, Donald Montgomery, Edwin Moore, Carol Ann Morgans, Kathryn Mueller, Frank Newby, John Nieman, James Peterson, James A. Ross, Charles Schroff, William Richard Scott, Marjorie Sereda, Alice Shearer, Richard Sheldon, John Simons, Mendel Small, Donnaele Steeples, Emmet L. Terril, Nancy Turk Teitz, Ann Rita Werth, Claude R. White, Robert Wilden, Allen Wolf, Martin Wollman.
School of Business: Frederick N. Bettage, Barbara Jane Bowdish, George E. Breckenridge, James E. Burgess, William A. Chance, Kenneth W. Dam, Hubert M. Dye, Delbert L. Fillmore, Ralph E. Hite, Jerry C. Ivo, Joie Ia Kaez, Frederick S. O'Brien, David M. Olson, Henry H. Springe Jr., Vernie J. Theden and Warren A. Zimmerman.
School of Education: Nancy Flo Adams, Heidi G. Bloesch, Jane E. Book, Marilyn R. Button, Joan Squires Campbell, Nancy G. Canary, Eletta R. Covalt, Connie E. Eikeberger, Billie Jean Jones, Lois Clough Merriman, Phyllis A. Nehrass, John C. Newton, Harry H. Schanker Jr., Dorothy D. Shade, Ellen S. Skinner, Bertha A. Smith, Susan W. Tougau, Barbara L.
Lusk to Perform At Record Dance
(Continued on page 7)
Douglas Lusk, college freshman,
will perform at a record dance in
the Trail room of the Student
Union at 9:45 p.m. today. The
dance will begin at 8 p.m.
---
'Happy Journey, No Exit' Start Three-Day Run
Two one-act plays will be presented by the Studio Theatre at 8 p.m. today in Green theater and will run tomorrow and Friday nights.
They are "No Exit" by Jean-Patu Sartre and "The Happy Journey" by Thornton Wilden.
"No Exit" pictures hell in a drawing room setting, attempting to show that life is only what is made of it. "The Happy Journey" is a light drama of a traveling family.
The productions are directed by Bonnie Royer, graduate student in speech and drama, with Ned Rose, fine arts freshman, as technical director, and Sally Six, college junior, as stage manager.
The cast for "Happy Journey" includes Mary Patton, college freshman, Ma; John Pearson, college senior, Pa; and Nancy Reich, college freshman, Beulah. Galen Murray and Carol Freeman, students in the Lawrence Junior High school, will take the role of Arthur and Caroline, and David Horr, college freshman, is stage manager.
Committee Asks New Vote For Top ASC Positions
David Rosario, fine arts sophomore, will play the part of Garcin in "No Exist." Other members of the cast are Jo Anna March, college senior, Inez; Marjorie Englund, education junior, Estelle, and Bruce Dillman, college sophomore, valet.
Yesterday's presidential and vice presidential elections of the All Student Council have been invalidated by a six-member elections committee of the ASC which met this morning. The committee also voted to consider appeals from any districts in the senate and house elections.
The controversy in the approximately 2,000-vote election arose because of 63 ballots which had not had the numbers clipped from the corner when the counting started last night.
Dana Anderson, elections committee chairman, declared the 63 ballots invalid before the original counting, resulting in the election of the Party of Greek Organizations' (POGO) candidates, Fred Rice and Nathan Harris, but the elections committee decided at noon today that because of the controversy over the ballots, a new election would have to be held.
With the 63 controversial ballots, total election returns numbered 2111.
Had the 63 ballots been counted in the election, Allied Greek Independent candidates Robert Kennedy and Marjorie England would have taken the president and vice president positions.
In the original counting AGI gained a majority in the house of representatives, and POGO won the majority in the senate.
One unaffiliated student won a seat in the house.
POGO took 11 seats in the senate, 7 in the house; AGI took 9 seats in the senate, 9 in the house. The Married Students' Party won three seats in the senate and one in the house.
Harlan Parkinson, college junior,
was elected president of the senior
class. Other officers of the senior
class are Gene Schanze, vice pres-
ident. Martha Nienstedt, secretary,
and Dianne Miller, treasurer.
Officers of the junior class are Ralph Moody, president; Carol Mather, vice president; Beverly Jackson, secretary and Phil Coolidge treasurer.
Janice Ijams was elected president of the sophomore class with John Eland, vice president; Dave Leslie, secretary, and Ann Straub, treasurer.
Dick Myers, president of POGO, has registered two protests concerning yesterday's election with the Student court. Gary Davis, president of the MSP, has registered one protest.
The three protests were made because the two party heads believed there might have been ballot snatching at some of the polling places. One of the polling places where Myers said he found a discrepancy was in the Journalism building.
Results of ASC house and senate elections are on page seven.
Korn Chosen KU Candidate
Barbara Korn, fine arts sophmore, was chosen yesterday in the all-school election to represent the University in the College Queen of America contest.
Miss Korn, the 1953 Homecoming queen, was selected by the student body from four major queens on the campus.
The candidates were Sue Schmiederer, Carnival and Greek week queen; Dorolyn Humbarger, Military Ball queen; Shirley Jones, Independent Student Association queen, and Carol Shellhaas, Relays queen.
Sara Starry, former Jayhawker queen, won the College Queen of America contest in 1852.
FINAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
Thursday, May 27,1954, to Thursday, June 3,1954, inclusive.
Classes meeting at: Will be examined at:
8 A.M., MWF sequence* 8:00- 9:50 Wednesday June 2
8 A.M., TTS sequence** 8:00- 9:50 Thursday June 3
9 A.M., MWF sequence* 10:10-12:00 Friday May 28
9 A.M., TTS sequence** 10:10-12:00 Wednesday June 2
10 A.M., MWF sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Tuesday June 1
10 A.M., TTS sequence** 8:00- 9:50 Tuesday June 1
11 A.M., MWF sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Wednesday June 2
11 A.M., TTS sequence** 3:40- 5:30 Tuesday June 1
12 Noon, MWF sequence* 3:40- 5:30 Thursday May 27
1 P.M., MWF sequence* 10:10-12:00 Monday May 31
1 P.M., TTS sequence** 3:40- 5:30 Wednesday June 2
2 P.M., MWF sequence* 10:10-12:00 Saturday May 29
2 P.M., TTS sequence** 10:10-12:00 Thursday June 3
3 P.M., MWF sequence* 10:10-12:00 Tuesday June 1
3 P.M., TTS sequence** 1:30- 3:20 Thursday June 3
4 P.M., MWF sequence* 3:40- 5:30 Thursday June 3
4 P.M., TTS sequence** 1:30- 3:20 Thursday May 27
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
(All sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday May 29
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
}{All sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Friday May 28
Chemistry 2, 2E, 3, 3E, 7 and 48 (All sections) ...
Physics 5 and 6, 156a and b (All sections) ...
Economics 9, 10, 72 & 73 ...
ROTC (Army, Navy, Air Force, All sections) ...
8:00- 9:50 Monday May 31
8:00- 9:50 Friday May 28
3:40- 5:30 Friday May 28
1:30- 3:20 Monday May 31
and/or
3:40- 5:30 Monday May 31
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 21, 1954
Pro and Con on Legalization of Wiretapping A Step in the Right Direction An Infringement on Rights
The bill to legalize wiretapping evidence in national security cases is a step in the right direction. Heretofore, evidence obtained in such a manner was inadmissible in court.
A House vote of 378 to 10 sent the legislation — something of a compromise—to the Senate two weeks ago. The bill provides that federal courts must give their permission before wireset evidence can be used in future cases.
This Democratic-sponsored provision was a disappointment to the administration, which had asked that discretion be left entirely to Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr.
However, the bill has a retroactive clause, under which Mr. Brownell could use wiretap evidence already in FBI files in trying to convict subversives.
Lawmakers said this would permit the government to reopen such cases as that of Judith Coplon, former Government girl convicted of espionage. Her conviction was reversed on grounds that wiretap evidence was used in violation of the law.
Sen. Patrick McCarran (D-Nev.), the ranking minority member, is the author of a bill which would be the most restrictive than the present law.
Members of the Senate Judiciary committee, which will handle the legislation, appeared widely divided.
Sen. McCarran's bill would outlaw wiretapping except in national security cases. It thus would prevent law-enforcement agents from tapping wires to track down criminals such as kidnapers.
Under the McCarran measure law-enforcement officers could not tap wires to break cases. The bill also continues the present ban against use of wiretap evidence in trials.
Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis), chairman of a subcommittee which will hold hearings on various wiretap proposals, said he expects his mit can agree on some legislation. arguments said the issue faces long arguments in longer debate on the Senate floor.
Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.), a judicial committeeman, said he favors legislation such as the House passed "in principle" but predicted it will be controversial.
Sen. Wayne Morse (I-Ore.)—who holds the Senate record on fill-busters, said "I am opposed to all wrietap bills. Now is the time to stand up against police-state methods."
The bill would seem like a sensible compromise between giving the attorney general too much power and not enough. A question of constitutionality has been raised, however, and the Senate's legal lights should satisfy themselves on that before giving final approval to the bill.
The House-approved version permits use of wiretap evidence now on file for the prosecution of espionage and similar-type cases—but, for the future, it permits wiretapping only under a federal court order if such evidence is to be administered. This appears here a sound safeguard against future abuse, and yet does not bar the door to trial of past culprits against whom conclusive wiretap evidence is already in the files.
Administration spokesmen, however, have raised the constitutional question of whether a proper distinction can be made between cases of wires tapped prior to the enactment of this bill and those tapped afterward.
Rep. Kenneth Keating (R-N.Y.) who handled the bill for the administration, observed, "I hate to give those prospective defendants anything more to hang their hats on in legal proceedings than they already have."
Spies or traitors shouldn't go scot-free while the evidence to convict them languishes in FBI files.
But if it is the fear of legal challenge that causes concern, the retroactive feature itself probably will provoke litigations, with or without the attempt to tie strings to the use of such evidence in the future.
We feel, that while the legislation is progressive, it hasn't gone far enough. The legislation should be expanded to include not only national security cases, but all forms of litigation, both civil and criminal. It would be a great help to our law enforcement agencies.
Law officers already do tap wires for "leads" which may develop evidence that will be admissible in courts. Under the present system, these officers don't need permission from anybody.
If wiretapping were legalized to include all phases of law enforcement, it might be construed as an invasion of the right of privacy. Tapping a wire is a process similar to search of a man's premises, except that it is done without the knowledge of the suspect. If law enforcement agents can show cause, a court can issue a search warrant. In a similar manner, the court could authorize the "greater invasion of privacy" involved in wiretapping. We can't see that wiretapping would be "abused" any more than the search warrant is. -Tom Shannon
Moot Court will meet next week. The next logical question is: so what?
The proposed bill to legalize wired-tapping evidence in national security cases is a move toward a dangerous infringment on the rights of the American people as citizens of a "free" country.
The main reason being presented for the legalization of wiretapping and allowing it to be used as evidence in "national security" cases is that it will facilitate the capture and prosecution of Communist agents and Communist sympathizers who "may" be dangerous to our security.
But would this actually help in the catching of Communists? We hardly think so. In the first place, there are probably not many subversives who use the telephone to transact business at the present time since they know that government agents do tap the wires if they are suspected, even if the evidence cannot be used in court.
In the second place, if Communist agents and subversives KNEW that their wires could be tapped and the recording used in court, they certainly wouldn't use the telephone for any business of an incriminating nature. Wiretapping in national security cases is merely getting at the surface effects of subversion, not at the basic causes.
The bill before Congress at the present time has a clause in it that would make wiretapping evidence retroactive and allow the FBI to go back into its files and bring up old cases—cases that have been dead for years—and prosecute them with the wiretapping evidence.
In a few cases this might be beneficial to the government and the people as a whole, but in many cases the FBI would drag "skeletons" out of the closet and prosecute one-time sympathizers who are now useful American citizens.
The passing of ex post facto laws is prohibited in Article I, Section 9, of the Constitution. The retroactive clause in the proposed wiretapping bill would make it an ex post facto law.
If this bill is passed and is allowed to stand by the Supreme court, what happens next?
Would our law-making bodies then be allowed to pass ex post facto
wars in other fields? If this happens every person had better review his past and see if each new law is going to "get" him.
In a companion editorial today, Tom Shannon compares the legalizing of wiretapping and the issuing of warrants for its use with the issuing of search warrants.
In many respects this comparison is valid, but there is one big difference. When a search warrant is issued the person whom it is against knows that he is being searched.
A warrant allowing the government of any police organization to tap a person's telephone would not be made known to that individual He would have no knowledge of such a warrant until it was thrown in his face in a court room.
One of the most serious considerations that comes up in connection with the wiretapping bill is: "Where does it lead?"
Would this be a democratic way of doing things? We hardly think so.
Not just "where does wiretapping lead," but where does the use of such tactics against private citizens lead ultimately?
There is no place in a democracy for police state methods, and spying in secret on private citizens certainly approaches this level. One of the big dangers inherent in a campaign to seek out subversives in a government is that those running the campaign will go too far.
A logical followup to legal wire-tapping would be allowing the law to use evidence from concealed microphones. If this were to happen, there would be no such thing as privacy.
The end of privacy, as we know it, would be the end of democracy, as we know it.
Do we want government by democracy or government by fear? It is a question well worth giving serious consideration. —Don Tice
"Why run anybody unless they can win honestly?" was a question posed a thin, bespectacled individual at ballot counting last night and strangely enough, he had no answer.
... At the above mentioned place
—after about 10 p.m.—counters were
unneasily eyeing their hats and
coats. Why? Nearly everything else
was being stolen. . .
I WAS IN A MOOD TO BE SERIOUS, BUT YOU JEST KEEP CRACKIN' BAD JOKES.
WULL, THAT'S PERTY SERIOUS, AIN'T IT?
CODE DOOR WHAT KEYS
PETE WELLINGTON
WE COULD OF BEEN TALKIN' BOUT LIFE AN' EVER'THIN'
ELSE.
WE COULD OF BEEN TALKIN' BOUT LIFE AN' EVER 'THIN' ELSE.
I WAS IN A MOOD TO BE SERIOUS, BUT YOU JEST KEEP CRACKIN' BAD JOKES.
WULL, THAT'S PERTY SERIOUS, AIN'T IT?
COPR DOG WHAT HELLY
PETE WELLINGTON
4-21
WE COULD OF BEEN TALKIN' BOUT LIFE AN' EVER THIN' ELSE.
IF YOU TALKS 'BOUT LIFE AN' EVER THIN' ELSE--THE EVER THIN' ELSE GOTTA BE DEATH --THAT WHAT WE GONE TALK 'BOUT?
DEATH!? HECK NO!
WILL--YOU CAN'T HAVE ONE WITH OUT YOU GOT T'OTHER.
SEEM TO ME THAT MAKES LIFE A PERTY RISKY BUSINESS.
PETE WELLINGTON
Oregon State Frats Face First Housemother 'Fun'
IF YOU TALKS 'BOUT LIFE AN' EVER "THIN"
ELSE---THE EVER "THIN"
ELSE GOTTA BE DEATH
---THAT WHAT WE GONE TALK 'BOUT?
DEATH!? HEEK, NO!
WILL--YOU CAN'T HAVE ONE WITH OUT YOUGOT T'OTHER.
SEEM TO ME THAT MAKES LIFE A PERTY RISKY BUSINESS.
Oregon State fraternity men prepare to accept housemothers for the first time; a petroleum engineer at West Virginia has cleaned up on a model oil derrick, and deferred rushing for fraternities comes up at Cornell—the highlights across the campuses.
IF YOU TALKS `BOUT
LIFE AN' EVER 'THIN'
ELSE---THE EVER 'THIN'
ELSE GOTTA BE DEATH
---THAT WHAT WE
GONE TALK` BOUT?
DEATH!?
HECK, NO!
PETE WELLINGTON
WILL...YOU CAN'T HAVE ONE WITH OUT YOU GOT TOTHER.
SEEM TO ME THAT MAKES LIFE A PERTY RISKY BUSINESS.
OREGON STATE COLLEGE — Housemothers are about to be installed in all fraternity houses. According to the Dean of Men, this will help restore leadership in the fraternities to the pre-war level. Most of the men resent this infringement on their independence, and claim it will destroy the leadership which is encouraged by a self-governing group. Some claim they no longer need a mother to look after them.
Others insist that the presence of a housemother would not improve their manners, their morals, or their grades, and that the added expenses would be too great for their budget. Some of the people who violently oppose the ruling, sincerely believe that housemothers would be a good thing for their fraternity.
What they really fear is that this is only the beginning of a long line of rules to alter the fraternity system. . men's closing hours, for instance.
The outfit is complete with drilling, fishing, and casing tools, and casing. He has made about $4,000 from rental on the model oil derrick, which has been on display in 38 states in the U.S. and in Cuba, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina and Canada. He built the model in his basement and couldn't get it out
WEST VIRGINIA—A petroleum research engineer at the University has spent 2,000 hours building a model oil derrick on a one inch-to-one-foot scale, including the rig bolts.
until he had removed the basement steps.
CORNELL—The decision of the Faculty Committee on Student Activities this week will have important bearing on deferred rushing for fraternities—one of the many important and most perplexing questions debated on the campus for many years. The plan is to defer rushing for one semester, or better still, for one year.
It is considered a very valuable experience to live as a freshman for one term, before choosing whether or not fraternity life is better, and if so, which particular fraternity is best for the individual.
TEXAS A&M—A world-wide Aggie Muster will be held on Texas Independence day, April 21, paying tribute to those Texans who gave their all for independence and those Texas A&M college men who have died within the year. The parent Muster on the campus is expected to be held before 5,000 persons.
HIGHLANDS UNIVERSITY, N. MEX.-Enrollment for the spring quarter shows an 8 per cent increase over that a year ago. Recent improvements in the school include work on the new boys' dormitory, plans for a botanical garden, and developments in the chemistry and biology departments. The educational program has recently been praised by the State Finance board.
Valera Tebben
One Woman's Opinion
Ah, cometh the much lauded season, spring. Cometh the poems, the ballads, the birds, etc.
Concurrently, cometh beer cans littering the lanes, the waste paper (from popcicles, candy bars, midseemesters) lounging up the campus.
Spring seems to be the season for picknicking—all day long. As a consequence, walks, drives, lawns, flower beds, get quite messy.
As Ralph Waldo Emerson said, everything has its compensation. To really get a bang out of the beauty of our indisputably beautiful campus in spring, we'll have to keep it uncluttered with refuse. The rewards would seem to be worth the effort.
But while many of the students involved in the above mentioned programs received wide—and just—recognition for their work, others are doing worthwhile things all the time, sans the glimmer of popular approval and publicity. Religious organizations work faithfully (no pun) week in and week out to provide meeting places for students and carry on good works of all kinds. Other groups work beaverishly, too. The list is too numerous to elaborate.
Much student time was dedicated to last week's Relays and engineering Exposition. The old saw that "students won't take responsibility" got quite a beating. We should all be proud, it seems to us, of the fine projects that students do initiate and carry out.
Service to the University and to others is to be admired wherever it exists. On our campus, it exists pretty nearly everywhere. We should be glad we have the opportunity for such to be true—and glad 'hat it is true. Doncha think?
Back 't' spring again. Statistics tell us that this is the season for untofthets. It's odd how, at certain times of the year, some things seem to be more prevalent than others. At any rate, a judicious individual will watch his car now that it hatches and coat are put away in meathats.
To be a University student is not to be immune from occupational diseases. Ours is exhaustion. Beef tanners may have anthrax (or whatever it is) and miners may acquire tuberculosis—as Dr. Ise tells us in his Good Book—but nobody knows the troubles we've seen. We know that all the professors from whom we take classes confer weekly on the best time to simultaneously give quizzes, assignments, et al. And we know that each assignment entails five times as much time as there is in the day.
And we know that professors seem to ignore the fact that all work and no play makes you-know-who what. Persecuted, that's what we are. Persecuted! And darn fired.
A fervent editorial plea for comments on a think piece concerning student criticisms of plays brings us no response. Won't somebody please comment. Woncha, huh???
-Letty Lemon
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 378
Member of the Kansas Press Ass. National Editor Assm. Inland Daily Press Assm. Newspaper Assm. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. Represents $4.80 a year (unless he is semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the University of Kansas university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act
EDITORIAL. STAFF
Editorial editor Dion Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon.
NEWS STAFF
Executive editor Tom Stewart
Managing editors Tom Shannon,
Sam Teaford, Ken
Evonson, Sun Hamilton
Elizabeth Welch
Sports editor Dana Leibmann
Society editor Karen Hilmer
Assistant Nancy Neville
News adviser C. M. Packett
BUSINESS STAFF.
Business mgr. Ann Ainsworth
Advertising mgr. Susanne Berry
Nat. adv. mgr. Rodney Davis
Classified adv. mgr. Edmond Bartlett
Circulation mgr. Wendell Sullivan
Adv. adviser Gene Bratton
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Wednesday, April 21. 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Professor Reviews Novel by Gogol
By AMY De YONG
The artist achieved perfection by burning the imperfect design in a blaze of integrity and despair, Vladimir Nabokov, professor of Russian literature at Cornell university, told the fifth Humanities lecture audience last night.
The former Russian nobleman who has written numerous books, short stories, and sketches reviewed Nikolai Gogol's book, "Dead Souls," and introduced the audience to the author's personality and literary techniques. "Gogol's real plot is always in his style," the lecturer said, which is characterized by "a complicated maneuver executed by the sentence which makes of Gogol a magician."
"With this book Gogol lived and traveled all his life, and it is his greatest work," Prof. Nabokov said of *Feud Souls*. The tale of the "chumby, glossy - cheeked Chichikoff" who attempted to buy "dead souls" (deceased peasants) from five land owners, is set in a provincial town in southern Russia.
"Land owners could buy and sell peasants," the lecturer explained, and these persons were called souls, for whom a poll tax was paid to the government. Even a dead soul' was still "alive on paper," as the owner was required to pay for him until a new census was made. he said.
Chichikoff planned to accumulate "dead souls," the professor said, and after paying the tax, he intended to mortgage them as "good live souls," reaping such profits as the privilege of getting land free, which was possible for one who owned souls.
The character is "a rolling stone gathering ghostly moss." Prof. Nabokov said, but "the socially minded critics who saw in 'Dead Souls' a condemnation missed the true point."
"The imaginative surroundings and conditions are perfectly unimportsalt," the lecturer said, adding that "the gusto and wealth of weird detail lift the work to an epic poem." The grotesque names, he said, were in keeping with the influence of Charles Dickens, and the work related back to "Don Quixote," to the medieval romance of chivalry, and to Homer and the Greeks.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
CCUN exec. board, 4 p.m., information center, Student Union
Public lecture, 8 p.m., Strong auditorium. "A Long Range View of Relations Between India and the United States."
Quill club meeting, 1:30 p.m. Student
Upton, Speaker; Vladimir Nabokov.
KU Dames, Interior decoration group,
8 p.m., Orland room, Student Union. All
holidays.
El Aleneo y Tertoria se reuniran a las cuatro y media en 113 Strong el mielnes 21 de Abril. Programa de balles bitomericanas. Que bengan todos.
Record dance. 8-11 p.m. Tall room.
Student Union. Entertainment 9-45-
Dell Laptop.
TOMORROW
Quack club, 7:30 p.m. Robinson gym
Squamish
Geology club, 7:30 p.m. 428, Lindley,
Dr. O. F. Carquafarruz of the geology
department will present a 30 minute
talk on Scotland and Its Geology
Gogol's technique, the professor said, consisted especially of introducing a number of characters for a moment, and showing "even more silent, remote characters behind the story in the course of extended comparisons." The reader must turn a "mental somersault to get rid of conventional literary values." Prof. Nabokov said, in order to follow the author's "superhuman imagination" to the "magic chaos."
Kikui club, 7:30 p.m., in front of Green hall. Initiation.
Der dentsche Verein has a kaffee-
katsch and folk dancing 5, 502,
302
*PI Tau Sigma smoker, 7 p.m., 305 Student Uni-
dition student speaks on the Difference Between the American and German education system. Also film and
video presentations.*
Dance Lesson—Rumba 7-8 p.m. Jaya-
kawker room, Student Union 7-8 p.m.
club club 8-9 p.m. BCL Program:
Repair Team research by John
Dunen and Sam Wilcox
FRIDAY
Sociology club coffee. 4 p.m. Strong annex; room 17. Second session. Record by Future Sociology Club. Record by living sociology club. Record of the American Sociological society.
Crystal Cafe
"A slightly haunted expression" can be seen in an old daguerrotype of Gogol, Prof. Nabokov said. He described the appearance of the author and sketched his life, including a mention of his early works. These were local color stories of his native Ukrainian area, which the speaker said were "trifles, though amusing."
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Gogol traveled in search of an ending to "Dead Souls," Prof. Nabokov said, and died in 1852, "stubbornly brooding over a sequel." In attempt to please a priest who had begged him to give up literature, Gogol tried to reform his characters, the lecturer said, but "when the good characters appear, they are perfect strangers. No real retribution is possible without distortion, and the good people are false," he explained.
Describing the chief character of the tale, the lecturer called him a "creature of Gogol's special brand. The rusty chink in his armor." Prof. Nabokov said, "is his essential stupidity. The criminal is always a fool," he continued, "and Chichikoff is doomed from the start." He mentioned the passage in which the character reters to himself as a "despicable worm."
Phillips Talbot, director of the American Universities, Field staff, who leaves the University today after a two-day visit surveying the operations of the AUFS program here, described his work as "a very exciting educational experience."
AUFS Chief Enjoys Education Work
"In view of American interests, concerns, and responsibilities," Mr. Talbot said, "the AUFS was formed to aid the American educational system in the diffusion of knowledge necessary to a better understanding of world conditions." The University was one of the group of universities and colleges which three years ago founded and now sponsor the AUFS program.
The corps of men who "study at first hand the contemporaneous affairs of significant areas of the world" become, in Mr. Talbot's opinion, "attached to the universities at which they lecture, and will write
Telfel Supervises Lincoln Workshop
For the third straight year, Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, will supervise the newspaper workshop for high school students at the sixth annual Headliner week of the journalism school at Lincoln university in Jefferson City, Mo., today through Saturday. Saturday.
About 150 students from all parts of the United States will attend workshops on the newspaper, the yearbook, and photography, Mr. Telfel said.
The photography workshop will be supervised by Lee S. Cole, instructor in the William Allen White School of Journalism from 1945 to 1950, and now an associate professor at Lincoln university.
The yearbook workshop will be directed by Fred L. Kildow, associate professor in the journalism school of the University of Minnesota.
Automobiles today contain more light bulbs than the average five-room home. Current models have an average of 20 lights, and some have as many as 38.
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U.S.
U.S. Keds.
The Shoes of Champions--They Wash
$5^{85}$ to $6^{85}$
H
Haynes & Keene
819 Mass.
Open Thurs. 9 to 9 p.m. Ph.524
for the universities' information." From his offices in New York, Mr. Talbot said he keeps in touch with the member universities, finds new staff members for the program, and acts as a clearing-house for the exchange of ideas between campuses.
"One of the features of the program at KU." he said. "is the way in which the field staff has been used in a number of different departments at a number of different levels."
Graduated from the University of Illinois with A.B. and B.S.J. degrees,
Mr. Talbot was a member of the Chicago Daily News staff from 1936-38. In 1938 he began graduate studies in London and India under the auspices of the Institute of Current World Affairs, and he served for two years as a Naval liaison officer in Bombay.
After the close of World War II the director became a member of the Chicago Daily News foreign services. He taught political science at the University of Chicago from 1948-50 before taking his present position.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 21. 1954
KU Loses Pitcher Dual To Cornhuskers, 1-0
Coach Floyd Temple's Kansas baseball team lost its toughest game of the season, and its second in a row to the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 1-0. John Brose pitched a brilliant three hit game, but was victim of his own wildness. $ \textcircled{4} $
Nebraska scored the only run of the game in the fifth inning when Jim Cederdahl got a double, the only extra base hit of the game, and Brose gave up three straight walks to force in the run.
Kansas was held without a hit by
lefty Dick Geier, a 18-year-old
sophomore. Geier, a surprise starter
relied mainly on his fast ball to pitch
the no hitter.
The loss gave Kansas a conference record of one victory and two defeats, and a record of six victories and three defeats overall.
Geler struck out 10 men and walked none, and Brose struck out three men and walked four.
The box score:
KANSAS
AB H O A
Pullam, 2b 3 0 6 3
Hogund, 3b 3 0 0 2
Conn, rf 3 0 2 0
Allison, cf 3 0 2 0
Trombold, 1b 3 0 6 1
Perry, If 3 0 3 0
Aungst, c 3 0 3 0
Heinholt, ss 3 0 1 3
Brose, p 2 0 1 3
a-Hiron 1 0 0 0
27 0 24 13
a-Struck out for Brose in 9th.
NEBRASKA AB H O A
Folbert, ss 2 0 0
Courall, ss 1 0 0
Cottsch, 3b 4 1 0
Seger, 2b 3 1 0
Novak, 1b 3 0 10
Giles, lf 2 0 3
Becker, rf 3 0 3
Cederdahl, cf 2 1 1
Backhaus, c 1 0 10
Cieper, p 2 0 0
Taylor 23 3 27
Kansas 000 000 000 00-0
Nebraska 000 010 00x-1
E—Backhaus, RBI-Ralston. 2B-
Cederdahl, S—Backhaus, DP-Hog-
lund, Pullium to Trombold; Backus
to Novak, Left-Kansas 0, Nebraska
4, BB-Brose 4, Geier 0, SO-Sbroe
3, Geier 10, HBP-By Brose, Cederdah,
T-1,42
The St. Petersburg Saints of the class B Florida International league signed Charley Rascher to a rookie contract yesterday. Rascher is 63 years old.
The DU's scored 26 runs on 19 hits and 15 walks to defeat Phi Kappa Tau 26-4 in intramural softball yesterday. In other games Sigma Chi beat the Phi Psi's 8-3 and Sigma Nu won over Phi Kappa Sigma by a forfeit.
DUWins26-4 In Softball
The DU's were leading by a slim margin of 5-4 after the first inning, and by scoring nine runs in the second inning they easily went on to defeat Phi Kappa Tau. The losers scored four runs, but could not make their ten hits count at the opportune times.
No games are scheduled for to-night.
Sigma Chi had a big five-run first inning and went on to defeat the Phi Psi's 8-3 in a much closer game. The winners scored their eight runs on seven hits and eight walks, and the losers scored their three runs on seven hits and sever walks.
McCarthy Celebrated Birthday at Game
Buffalo, N.Y. — (U.P.)— Marse Joe McCarthy, baseball's only manager of pennant winners in both the National and American leagues, celebrated his 67th birthday today in the familiar surroundings of the ball park.
McCarthy, a heavy contributor to the success of the New York Yankees whom he managed to seven world championships as well as winning a pennant with the Chicago Cubs, was "just another fan" once today's Buffalo-Ottawa International league game began.
The heavyweight championship fight between Rocky Marciano and Ezzard Charles, scheduled for Yankee stadium June 17, will not be televised nationally, but only to a closed circuit to theaters throughout the country.
Jones Meets Turner Tonight
Philadelphia — (U,P) — Plodding Bobby Jones meets ranked middleweight Gil Turner of Philadelphia in a 10-round rematch tonight but the Oakland, Calif. veteran again will be the underdog despite an upset triumph in their previous bout.
Jones, a 29-year-old campaigner looking for a place in the middle-weight sun, surprise his younger opponent and a nationwide TV and radio audience by punching out an eyelash, 10-round decision as a 4-1 outsider six weeks ago.
The only consoling feature about Jones' being an underdog a second time is that the odds against him have been shaved to 2-1. The bout will be televised and broadcast.
The odds-makers expect a trim, 23-year-old Turner, who years to return to the welterweight division. He will be widely Jones, father of four children.
Turner, ranked sixth in the middleweight hit parade, probably would have been on the trail of welterweight champion Kid Gavilan now if it weren't for a gnawing ambition to wipe out the humiliation of his defeat by Jones.
Up until his startling upset of Turner, the Jones boy's only other claim to fame was a split decision he dropped to Carl (Bobo) Olson, before the San Francisco battler won his 160-pound crown. Later, he lost an unpopular decision to Willie Troy.
Promoter Herman Taylor is whetting the appetite of both Turner and Jones by dangling a possible match with Joey Giardello of Philadelphia as the winner's reward. Taylor is trying to sign up Giardello for a Connie Mack stadium bout with the winner early next summer.
Trabert in Top Form Plays Again Today
Houston, Tex. —(U.P.) Top-seeded Tony Trabert, who yesterday regained his old form, led a group of "name" players into the third round of the River Oaks Tennis tournament today in a meeting with Sammy Giannmalva, former U.S. junior champion.
Trabert and other favorites won second-round matches yesterday with little trouble.
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Basic Offense, Defense Stressed in Football Play
Blocking and tackling practice was still being stressed in spring football practice yesterday.
Football Coach Chuck Mather also has his squad working on offensive running and blocking assignments in preparation of the second scrimmage session scheduled for this afternoon. Another scrimmage is scheduled for Saturday at 9:30 a.m.
Films will be taken of the two scrimmages to help Mather and his assistants to determine flaws in the players, and to help the staff correct the errors.
This afternoon's scrimmage will give Coach Mather a chance to see his first 44 men in action. The first scrimmage, held last week, was for the men with less game experience.
The coach said after yesterday's practice that everything was real good. Larry Carrier, switched from halfback to left end particularly impressed the coach with his play. Other men who showed well in the practice were Ted Rohde, Leonard Budrich, Tom Webb, and all of the quarterbacks, and John McFarland in particular at quarterback.
Basic line play and basic offense will again be stressed in today's practice before the scrimmage.
The University of Missouri baseball team made 13 hits, as they defeated the Sedalia air base team 24-1 yesterday.
Nocturnal creatures such as owl and tarsiers have abnormally large eyes, the better to catch the night's faint light. So do many fishes and crustaceans living near the lowest limits of the sunlight's penetration of deep sea waters.
Top Golfers Set for Meet
Tourney favorite Sammy Snead arrived late yesterday, but managed to get in one tune-up session. He came in with a three-under-par 69, complaining he played a "very bad" game.
Las Vegas, Nev. —(U.P.)—The top link artists of the nation get in their final practice rounds today before teeing off tomorrow in the west's richest golf tournament, the $35,000 Tournament of Champions.
Others who turned in a 69 yesterday included Ed (Porky) Oliver and Ed Furgol. Lloyd Mangrum who shot a 67 in his opening practice round, had a 71 yesterday with Walter Burkemo. Defending champion Al Bessellink shot 72, and Doug Ford went up to a 74.
The elaborate decorations on the armor worn by knights of the Middle Ages grew out of the necessity for identifying the men behind their all-enveloping garb.
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Page 5
Kellner Hurls One Hit Victory Over Senators
Alex Kellner was named in honor of Grover Cleveland Alexander, and it looks like he may have inherited the "no hit jinx" which plagued that immortal pitcher.
By UNITED PRESS
Certainly there seemed to be a fate working against the crafty Kellner last night when he allowed only an eighth-inning, two-out single by weak-hitting Wayne Terwilliger in hurling the Philadelphia Athletics to a 7 to 0 triumph over the Senators under the arc lights in Washington.
The great Alexander, National league pitching star of the '10's and '20's, reaped just about every kind of baseball glory there is—except a no-hitter. "Old Pete" hurled one-hitters galore; in fact in 1915 alone he tossed four of them for an all-time record. But always the elusive no-hitter slipped through his fingers.
Southpaw Kellner was on the verge of succeeding where the great Alexander failed when Tervillier, only a 252 hitter last season and the No. 8 batter in the Senators' lineup, came to the plate in the eighth.
The 29-year-old Athletics veteran had retired 15 straight batters and seemed to be getting stronger as he went aloerg. But, with the count two balls and one strike. Terwilliger stepped into a fast ball and lashed it cleanly into a center field for a single.
Kellner, whose baseball-conscious father also named Alex' brother Wait (now a pitcher in the A's farm system) in honor of Walter Johnson, got the next batter to hit into a forceout and thus salvaged the distinction of not allowing a single Senators' runner to reach second base. He walked three batters and struck out six.
Vic Power, outfielder obtained from the Yankees during the winter, led the Athletics' 11-hit assault on four Washington pitchers with a pair of doubles that drove in four runs. Chuck Stobbs was the starter and loser for the Senators.
In other night games, the Philadelphia Philss whipped the Brooklyn Dodgers, 6-3, and the Cincinnati Reds outshopped the St. Louis Cards, 13-6, leaving the Philss and Reds tied for first place in the National league. In day games, the New York Giants downed the Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-2, and the Chicago White Sox beat the Detroit Tigers, 7-2. The Braves and Cubs were rained out and the other clubs were not scheduled.
Murry Dickson, age 37, gained his second win for the Phils despite surrendering bases-empty honors to Gil Hodges and Pee Wee Reese. Preacher Rees, age 38, started for the Dodgers, gave up three runs in the third and was kayed by Del Ennis' two-run homer in the fifth that proved the deciding margin.
Andy Seminick, Gus Bell, and Wally Post pounded homers for the Reds in their 16-hit attack on four Card pitchers. Rookie Wally Moon homered for the Cards, but Red reliever Joe Nuxhall easily gained his second win.
Southpaw Johnny Antonelli survived his own wildness and a line drive rapped off his ribs by rookie Bob Skinner to beat the Pirates.
Boros Takes Lead In Carolinas Open
Hendersonville, N. C. (U.P.)—Julius Boros, former U.S. Open champion from Mid-Fines, N.C., takes a one-stroke lead and a sharp greens game into today's second round at the Carolinas Open Golf tournament.
Boros' putts and approaches matched the perfect spring weather yesterday as he shot a four-under-par 67 in the first round to wind up a stroke ahead of Mike Souchak of Durham, N.C., and Dow Finsterwald of Fort Bragg, N.C.
EXPERT
WATCH REPAIR
University Daily Ransan
Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction
Marciano-Charles Fight Won't Be on TV
New York (U.P.)—The Rocky Mariciano-Ezzard Charles heavyweight title fight at Yankee stadium on June 17 will not be televised to home sets but will be shown coast-to-coast in theaters, the International Boxing club announced today.
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However, the New York area and New England will be blacked out for theater television also.
Norris said no decision has yet been made on radio broadcasting details for the fight.
The entire cotton fiber is a single, tubelike cell.
KU Beats Cats In Tennis, 6-1
The Kansas tennis team, sweeping the doubles matches and taking four of five singles matches, defeated Kansas State, 6-1, yesterday at Manhattan.
Al Hedstrom, the Jayhawkers' No. 1 man, defeated Max Blakely of K-State in the feature match.
1 Wednesday, April 21, 1954
The win left the Jayhawkers with a 4-2 mark for the season and a 2-1 Big Seven mark.
The complete results:
Al Hedstrom, KU, def. Max Blakely, K- 8, 6- 0; Dick Hadley, KU, def. Bob Hansen, KS, 6-1; 6-1; Merl Sellers, KU, def. Larry Penner, KS, 6-1; 6-2; Roger Youmans, KU, def. Stan Burnette, KS, 6-3; 6-0; Don Franklin KU, def. Bo Forrester KS, 6-1; 6-4.
Hedstrom-Hadley def. Blakely-
Hansen, 6-4, 6-3; Sellers-Youmans
def. Penner-Burnette, 6-3, 6-3.
Ted Williams, whose broken collar bone is mending rapidly, had an hour and a half workout yesterday, which included several turns at bat against pitcher Willard Nixon and manager Lou Boudreau.
ADPi and UVO
Gratefully acknowledge the help of the following in making the Easter Egg Hunt for selected children a big success
Student Union Book Store
Weavers
Rowland's Book Store
Keeler's Book Store
Rexall
Raney Drug Store
S. H. Kress & Co.
The Stork Haven Montgomery Ward Dixie's Carmel Korn Shop Reuch Guenther Jewelry Rapid Transit Co.
The Surplus Store
Brown's Toggery
Round Corner Drug
Terrill's
Crown Drug
Sportsman Shop
Malott's
Francis Sporting Goods
Read and Use the Kansan Classified Ads.
1957 ON REPUBLIC'S
IT'S 1957 ON REPUBLIC'S DRAWING BOARDS
Visionary Young Engineers Work Years Ahead on Jet Fighter-Bomber Design...
There's drama on the drawing boards at Republic!
A great new jet fighter-bomber is being created, years ahead of its time. Like its famous predecessors, it will be the product of young men of vision, working in an atmosphere encouraging individual initiative.
For, Republic has long believed that its engineers are creative men who cannot be cast into a mold and still maintain the individuality and imagination that are the lifestream of aviation. At Republic, the ability and creativity of the engineer thrives on a diet of challenging assignments that permit him to probe and express new ideas.
This approach has been notably successful. Since 1931, Republic has been a leader in the aircraft industry, and today employs over 27,000 people, with an engineer ratio of 1 to 8. From the first,
all-metal plane to the famous Thunderbolts, Thunderjets, and Thunderstreaks, Republic planes have been pace-setters in aviation. And Republic engineers, sharing in this success, are at the peak of their profession, earning top pay in industry.
Republic engineers know, too, the pleasures of good living. Centrally located on Long Island, with its model suburban communities and abundance of year-round recreational facilities, Republic is less than an hour from New York City and its unparalleled cultural and entertainment attractions.
For further information concerning our training programs, which prepare graduate engineers for positions in aircraft engineering or manufacturing supervision, please write directly to your special Republic representative, Mr. Charles J. Ketson, Employment Manager,
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 21. 1954
In Congress—
Senate to Begin Fight Over Price Support
Washington—(U.P.)-The Senate headed into a showdown fight today over flexible vs. high farm price supports. The issue was joined on the administration's wool support bill. Farm bloc senators hoped to use the measure as a vehicle for extending present rigid high supports on the basic crops for two more years.
Sen, Alien J. Ellender (D.-La.), ranking Democrat on the Senate Agriculture committee, is sponsor of the key proposed amendment. It would extend present 90 per cent of parity support on wheat, corn, cotton, tobacco, peanuts and rice. This program is scheduled to expire in December.
If the move succeeds, it would be a sharp, rebuff for Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson who has gone down the line for a flexible system of price props recommended by President Eisenhower.
The administration wants the present law to die and to substitute a flexible price plan in its place. This plan would permit the agriculture secretary to adjust support between 75 and 90 per cent of parity in line with supply and demand.
Other congressional developments; Risks — Sen. Ellender, who is also a member of the Senate Appropriations committee, said he will insist that Scott McLeod, State Department security officer, give
Skits, Tours To Highlight Home Ec Day
A style show, a skit, and campus tours will be part of the program for 250 to 300 high school girls who will visit the University Saturday for Home Economics day.
The girls will register at 8:30 a.m. in the Union and will be taken on tours of the Home Economics department areas, in Frazer hall, the Home Management house, and the Nursery school. The tours will also include North College hall and the Union.
A style show, featuring garments made by the students, will be given. Students from 14 high schools are expected to take part in the style show, as well as home economies students from the University.
A skit. "What Next, Mary Ann?" will be presented by eighteen University women. Scenes will be in the Jones' home in 1854, 1879, and 1854.
Exhibits and demonstrations will be set up in Fraser for the visitors. Discussion groups will be held during the day to give high school students a chance to ask questions of University seniors in home economics.
Miss Viola Anderson, associate professor of home economics, is in charge of the conference.
Business Group Honors Members
Prof. Allen Crafton, of the speech and drama department, gave an after dinner address "This Is Kansas." Musical numbers were provided by Betty Southern, fine arts sophomore, and Marilyn Curt education junior.
The annual banquet of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, was held last Friday. Honored guests included students elected to membership and their parents.
Donald V. Plantz, assistant professor of economics, was elected president for the coming year. Other officers are Mary Ann Kaaz, business junior, vice president, and Sherwood Newton, assistant professor of economics, secretary-treasurer.
Students initiated were Frederick Bettie, Barbara Bowdish, George Breckenridge, William Chance, Delbert Fillmore, Warren Zimmerman, Henry Springle, business seniors; Harlan Henderson, Colleen Helminger, Jerry Ivie, Mary Ann Kaaz, Edward Miller, business juniors, and Sherwyn Newton, graduate student.
full details on two employees fired for suspected espionage. Mr. McLeod said the two were included in 309 employee "security risks" dismissed from the State department last year. Sen. Ellender said he would question Mr. McLeod about the espionage dismissals at a hearing this morning on State department appropriations.
Detroit's population jumped from 285,704 in 1900 to 1,838,517 in 1950.
Seven fourth-year medical students and four third-year students have been chosen for membership in Alpha Omega Alpha, honorary medical fraternity.
MedicalGroup To Honor 11
Donald Becker, Albert Carlson,
Wallace Holderman, Robert Manning,
Don McIlrath, Don Overend,
William莎hafer were the senior students chosen. Junior students chosen were John Johnson,
Shirley Kauffman, George Langsjoen, and James Loewen.
AOA is an organization of medical students and physicians with the aims of fostering scholarship and research, encouraging better ethics in the professions and asking recognition of attainment for outstanding work in the profession.
The organization sponsors the annual William W. Root lecture which brings many outstanding physicians to the medical center.
The largest known asteroid, Ceres is 480 miles in diameter.
4-Year Grant Awarded To 25 High School Seniors
Sixteen boys and nine girls, all graduating seniors in/Kansas high schools, have been awarded Summerfield and Elizabeth M. Watkins scholarships for four years of study at the University of Kansas.
These scholars, chosen by competitive examinations from among 60C candidates nominated by high school principals, have won the highest honor KU can bestow on an entering student. The scholarships were awarded on the basis of academic achievement, leadership, character, and promise of future usefulness to society.
The financial value of each award will be enough to pay for a four-year course at KU beyond family resources. Some scholars will receive 100 per cent help; others only the honor.
The Watkins scholarships are being awarded for the second time, having been established with a $5,000 annual contribution from endowments created by Mrs. Watkins
who died in 1939. The Summer-
field scholarships are maintained by
a $20,000 annual gift from the
estate of the late Solon E. Summer-
field, alumnus and New York manu-
facturer.
Spanish Clubs to Dance
The tourist season in Germany in 1953 proved the best in her history and included 4,000,000 visitors from outside Germany. an increase of 27.8 per cent, while her night reservations in six months totalled 37,000,000, a gain of 21.7 per cent.
A program of Latin American and Spanish dances will be given at the meeting of El Ateneo and La Tortilia, Spanish clubs, at 4:30 today. The group will meet in 113 Strong and go to Strong auditorium for the program after a short meeting. Spanish students will present the dances and a skit in Spanish.
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
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Around the World:
1954 Russian Budget Biggest in History
Bv UNITED PRESS
Soviet Finance Minister Arseni G. Zverev today presented the biggest budget in the history of the Soviet Union.
Zverev told a joint session of the Supreme Soviet in the presence of Premier Georgi Malenkov that it would cost 571,800,000,000 rubles ($142,950,000,000) to operate the Soviet Union in 1954.
His overall figures was more than double the amount that President Eisenhower recommended for running the United States government in the fiscal year beginning next July 1.
Zuverey set aside 100,200,000 rubles ($25,050,000) for military defense. The U.S. budget earmarked $44,860,000,000 for national security, including $37,575,000,000 for military forces, $4,275,000,000 for foreign aid, $2,425,000,000 for atomic energy, and $858,000,000 for critical stockpiling.
The Soviet of Nationalities, one of the two houses of the Red Parlia-
ment, will meet tomorrow to discuss the budget.
Other international developments:
Hanoi, Indochina — Brig. Gen.
Christian De Castries asked his headquarters at Hanoi for more men,
food, and ammunition for the defenders of Dien Bien Phu. He said
the reinforcements and supplies parachuted into the garrison several
days ago gave his defenders the shock of a "blood transfusion."
Canberra — Soviet Ambassador to Australia Nikolai Generalov collapsed and was sent to a hospital suffering from a stomach disorder. His illness was caused from strain and nervousness. Generalov yesterday accused the Australian government of kidnapping Mrs. Vladimir Petrov, a former Soviet embassy code clerk who chose to join her husband, forer third secretary, in political assylum.
Colombo — Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her 28th birthday in Ceylon. A hard rain fell on Colombo but 200,000 natives braved the weather to sing "Happy Birthday, Dear Queen."
Paris — Secretary of State John Foster Dulles flew to Paris on his way to the Geneva conference, which opens next Monday. He will attend a NATO council meeting in Paris Friday.
- CLASSIFIEDS-
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
FOR SALE
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Additional words ... 1¢
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University of Kansas Student Office. Journals should be delivered 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
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MacGREGOR TOURNEYS—complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University School or call Al Hack at 715 or 325JQ.
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
COMMONWEALTH'S LAWRENCE Drive-in Theatre
West 23rd St. Phone 260
OPEN 63H SHOW AT DUSK
Tweet, Norma M. Wahl, and Sherry Ann Wilson.
NOW • Ends THURSDAY
KIRK DOUGLAS
"THE BIG SKY"
STARTS FRIDAY
AUDIE MURPHY
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Patee
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Richard
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Glynis
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School of Engineering and Architecture: David G. Bartlett, Richard A. Beam, Hugh K. Bowden, Raymon T. Carpenter, Marvin A. Carter, Donald C. Davis, Robert D. Ellermeir, Karl A. Esch, Ronald E. Evans, Virginia D. Fanger, Philip J. Greene, Jack N. Lester, Stuart A. Knutson, Lawrence C. Kravitz, Robert L. Lamb, LeRoy McKeage, Lit Ning Ma, Lawrence J. Merrigan, John R. Neuenswander, Gene L. Rogers, Norman Lee Sheffer, Dina Lee Stucker, Thomas W. Wellman, Kenneth G. Wernicke, James L. White, and William B. Wilhelm.
THE HIGHLAND ROGUE
TECHNICOLOR
ROB ROY
THE HIGHLAND ROGUE
STARTS FRIDAY Love wasn't enough for her —she had to POSSESS!
STARRING
Honor List:
From M-G-M!
TECHNICOLOR!
(Continued from page 1)
"RHAPSODY
ELIZABETH
TAYLOR
Wednesday, April 21. 1954 University Daily Kansan
School of Fine Arts: Marilyn Pollom Adams, Mary Jane Harder, Harriet A. King, Dale K. Moore, Mary Lou Ekland Robinson, Linda L. Stormont, and James York.
VITTORIO GASSMAN
JOHN ERICSON
LOUIS CALHERN
WANTED
TYPING OF THEMES term papers, etc
Bid rates (percentage) rates
1905 Kentucky, Phone 17799
1914 Oklahoma, Phone 17799
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST, experienced in all kinds of student
Veqiat, 1953. Barker Ave., Phi. 2534J.
St. Louis, MO.
William Allen White School of Journalism: Philip Dangerfield, Clarke Keys, Letty Lemon, and Samuel Teaford.
[AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop. You can also stop one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, ins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 31017 evenings.
MTW-v
TRANSPORTATION
BREVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. for parties or picnics see American Service Company, 619 Vt. ft.
FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking,
stores. Fh 1845L-4, 825 N.Y. MWF-L
stores. Fh 1845L-4, 825 N.Y. MWF-L
CABINET-MAKER and REFINISHER:
Antique pieces. Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginhottom. Res. end Shop. 623 Ala.
School of Law: D. Spencer Yohe,
J. Eugene Balloum, Gerald Sawatzky,
and A. Kent Shearer.
TVPIST: Experienced in tneses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1931 Tenn. Phone 1368M. MWF-ft
TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE
Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all schedule airlines. Contact your flight line. Tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature or our Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass Phone 361
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RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamedhips, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day rates Call Miss Rene Glesman and ask for details. Email baird@shmphplants and information for itineraries and reservations. Bt Arm and Phone. 308. tf
School of Medicine: Donald E. Becker, William E. Burkhalter, Albert E. Carlson, Roger P. Halliday, Wallace D. Holderman, Michael W. Justice, Donald C. McIlrath, Robert T. Manning, Donald S. Overend, Arnold W. Shafer, James C. Warren, Margaret Follett Haskins, Walter D. Haskins, and Park W. Wagers.
Comfort Convenience
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Underclassmen honored at the convocation were the following:
College juniors; Bill Arnold,
Henry E. Curry, Sandra L. Dunlop,
Constance Hunter, and Julia
A. Oliver.
"CASANOVA'S BIG NIGHT"
College sophomores: James W Callis, Sara B. Diebert, Jackson L Koon, Robert L. Skinner, and Margaret Jean Smith.
College freshmen: Marianne Anderson, Jacqueline Jones, Shelly Ann Markle, Nancy Jo Moore, Joseph W. Robb, Robert M. Schimke, and Victor E. Viola.
School of Business junior: Mary Ann Kaaz.
School of Engineering and Architecture junior: Delbert M. Jones; sophomores: Dinh Ang Dang, James H. McLaughlin; freshmen: Elmer W. Boyd, Dean L. Smith, Wayne E. Tefft, James C. Tissue, and Douglass S. Wallace.
STARTS
THURSDAY
LUSTY ADVENTURE IN
THE FROZEN NORTH
ROBERT RYAN
JAN STERLING
Alaska Seas
A People's Palette
School of Education junior; Margaret Duchossois, Ann Corne Hartfiel; sophomore: Phyllis A. Springer, and freshman: Thomas E. Slaymaker.
School of Fine Arts junior: Norma Lee Stranathan; sophomore: Mary Ann Curtis, and freshman Leland R. Roberts.
William Allen White School of Journalism junior: Gene Shank.
School of Law second-year: Herbert H. Hopper; first-year: Ronald O. Thomas.
School of Medicine junior: John Richard Johnson; sophomores: John W. Heaton Jr., Robert L. Olson, and freshman: Ben Trump.
AlaskaSeas
Brantley Street
School of Pharmacy junior: Ivan W. Watkins; sophomore: Perry L. Rashleigh, and freshman: Barbara L. Kozer.
Students Elect 40 To ASC Positions
Forty students were elected to the All Student Council house of
ASC SENATE
representatives and senate in yesterday's spring election.
District I—Business, Merle Sellers,
POGO; and Phil Pattel, AGI.
District II—College, Richard Meyers, POGO; John McCall, McGill; Frank Fain, Denchfield, AGI; Alice Wiley, AGI; and Nanev Darnell, POGO.
Nancy B. Bennett
District III—Education, Sandy Puliver, POGO; and Larry Schultz,
POGO.
District IV—Engineering, Ludwig Smith, AGI; Scott Hayden, POGO; Jack Rogers, AGI; and Forrest Hoglund. POGO.
District V-Fine Arts, John Nangle, POGO; and Sally Lindemuth, AGL
District VI-Graduate, Elliot Valenstein, MSP; Jerry Lysaught, MSP; and Pat Reynolds, unaffiliated.
District VII-Journalism, Letty Lemon, AGL
District VIII—Law, Robert Bradstreet, MSP.
District X-Pharmacy, Crandall Melia, POGO.
District IX—Medicine, Charles Kibnatrick, POGO.
ASC HOUSE
Fraternities — Gene Coombs,
POGO: Robert Bush, POGO: Jerry
Whitehead, POGO: Larry Woods,
San Jacinto Monument, Texas (U(J.P).Sen Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) will deliver a "non-political" speech today on this battlefield where Texas won her independence 118 years ago.
McCarthy to Talk In Texas Town
The speech came on the eve of Sen. McCarthy's showdown fight with the Army before his own Senate committee.
The Senator gave no indication whether he planned to use the speech to expand on charges made yesterday that Assistant Defense Secretary H. Struve Hensel began the army charges against Sen. McCarthy in an effort to stop the Senator's investigation into alleged "misconduct and possible law violation" by Mr. Hensel himself.
Sen. McCarthy was scheduled to speak at this Texas shrine 10 miles south of Houston. He spent last night at the house of oil millionaire Hugh Roy Cullen.
Mr. Hensel called the "misconduct" charge a "bare-faced" lie and challenged him to repeat the charge without congressional immunity—thereby laying himself open to libel or slander suit.
There are enough motor vehicles in the United States to carry the nation's entire population at one time, with enough spance left for all the people of Italy.
IRANADA HELD OVER! EXT DAYS
PLUNDERS THE OCEAN FLOOR...for Booty...Power...and Love!
YOU SEE IT WITHOUT SPECIAL GLASSES!
BENEATH THE SEA...IN CINEMASCOPE
"BENEATH THE 12-MILE REEF"
TECHNICOLOR
Robert WAGNER • Terry MOORE • Gilbert ROLAND
EXTRA! "VESUVIUS EXPRESS" in CINEMASCOPE
Matinee 2:30 Eve. 7:00-9:05 • Features 3:00-7:25-9:35
POGO; William Dye, POGO;
George Sheldon, AGI; and Robert
Elliott, AGI.
Sororities—Pat Davis, AGI; Martha Nienstedt, POGO; and Fredrica Voiland, AGI.
Men's Dorms—William Hirsch, AGI.
Women's Dorms-Barbera Fisher, AGI.
Sunset!
Freshmen Women Dorms—Ann Ramsev, POGO.
Unorganized students — Gary Davis, MSP; William Arnold, ACL.
Co-ops, Professional Fraternities Donald Pearson, unaffiliated.
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SHE RULED A NATION OF SAVAGES!
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NATURE'S DEADLIEST FORCE
THE NAKED JUNGLE
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 21. 1954
WHICH ONE WOULD YOU RATHER HAND IN?
The below is an actual English I theme handed in during the FALL SEMESTER,1949,at the University of Kansas. These copies are identical except that the one on the right is typed.
The Benefit of An Open Mind
A person who has not educated himself to have an open mind is hard developed impressively in his attempt to deal with the fellow man if one else as already felted for, if one is bound in the way of themself, it is difficult for him to understand his needs and friendliness. Any should have certain principles and moral ideas fixed in his mind, but still he should be willing to listen to new ideas with the possibility of improving his own organization and customers and a form of elicited manhood. Though hardly free from ad remember how hard it was for them to close to sell his historic hold, or so differently that Henry Food had in selling this "iron heart." Because the people were not open mind, they would and accept the great labor service device. They had been accustomed to reign alone all year of light, and what was good enough for glory was and enough for them. The institution and on the hand, baseball gloves believed it to be bad luck if you gid them, uniforms clad when they guarded by a series of people under a four-ddy clover lush, which others are possibly black cat at seems rather odd, that a little
THE BENEFITS OF AN OPEN MIND
A person who has not educated himself to have an open mind is handicapped immeasurably in his attempt to get along with his fellow man. If one's ideas are already formed, or if one is biased in his way of thinking, it is difficult for him to understand his neighbors and friends. True, one should have certain principles and moral ideas fixed in his own mind, but still he should be willing to listen to new ideas with the possibility of improving his own.
Superstitions and customs are a form of closed mindedness. Think back a few years and remember how hard it was for Thomas Edison to sell his electric light, or the difficulty that Henry Ford had in selling his "iron horse". Because the people were not open minded, they would not accept the great labor saving devices. They had been accustomed to using horses and gas lights, and what was good enough for grandpa was good enough for them. Superstitions are on this same order. Baseball players believe it to be bad luck if they get their uniforms cleaned while they are playing in a series; some people consider a four leaf clover lucky, while others are scared of black cats. It seems rather odd that a poor little black cat can cause someone some bad luck, or that a piece of grass can have something to do with someone's good fortune. Naturally a closed minded person knows these facts to be true. There's no question about it, they're just true, and
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily hansan
51st Year, No. 130
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 22,1954
ASC Throws Out Balloting In Senate, House Elections
300 to Pay Homage In 30th Cervantes Day
The 30th annual celebration of Cervantes Day will be observed Saturday by the department of Spanish, acting as host to about 300 teachers and students of Spanish from other colleges and high schools.
The celebration honors, Spain's Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote, who died on April 23, 1616. The celebration at the University was originated by Jose M Osma, professor of Spanish, in 1923.
The Kansas chapter of the American association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese will hold its annual meeting at 10:15 a.m. in Strong auditorium, with Dr. Anita Martin as the principal speaker. Dr. Martin, who was graduated from the University in 1927 and has spent 15 months in Spain, will lecture on "High Roads and By Roads of Research in Spain." The public is invited.
A Cervantes Day luncheon in the Student Union ballroom will follow the meeting. Prof. Domingo Ricart, assistant professor of Romance languages will give the welcome address, and Prof. Osma will be
toastmaster: Mr. and Mrs. A.V Ebersole will sing a group of Spanish songs.
A variety program presented by more than 100 visiting students of Spanish will be given at 2:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Forty grade school students from Pittsburg will present songs and playlets. Other schools participating include Concordia high school, Wyandotte high school, Kansas City, Kan. Junior college, Lawrence Junior High school, Winfield High school, Nortonville High school, Wichita university.
Pedagogical and scientific literature in Spanish and teaching aids will be displayed all day in 111 and 113 Strong, and the sound rooms in Strong annex F.
A tea for all Cervantes Day participants will close the program.
"ruente Ovejuna," a Spanish film depicting life during the era preceding that of Cervantes, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in Lindley auditorium The film is open to the public without charge.
Lawyers Will Crown Queen Give Awards at Celebration
The crowning of a queen and presentation of awards at the banquet, and a picnic will highlight the annual celebration of Law School Day, tomorrow.
Student Hurt In Car Crash
Alfred Sim, special student in the School of Business, was injured near Columbia, Mo., last yesterday when he was pinned beneath a car driven by his brother, Willie, college sophomore.
The car skidded and overturned while the two were returning to Lawrence from St. Louis, where
Lawrence from St. they had taken a physical examination required by immigration service rules. Both students came to the United States after residence in Hong Kong.
Alfred suffered facial cuts and was reported in "fair" condition at the Boone county, Mo., hospital. Willie, who returned to Lawrence to take Alfred's wife back to Columbia, suffered only a few scratches.
suffered only a slight
The accident occurred when the
Sim car went out of control while
passing another automobile.
Kansas will have considerable cloudiness through Friday with thundershowers in the southeas
Weather
SHOWERS
portion of t h e state this afternoon and over the west portion Friday. It will be cooler in the southeast portion this afternoon and over the west portion Friday.
The southeast will be cooler this afternoon and tonight and warmer in the west and north portions Friday. Lows tonight will be near 40 north to 40s south. The high Friday will be 65-70 southeast to 70 in the northeast.
At noon tomorrow, a picnic is planned at Prof. Charles Oldfather's country home. This will be attended by students of the law school, their families and dates, and faculty members and families. Following the picnic there will be an athletic event.
The queen will be chosen from among three finalists and the winner announced at the banquet. The queen's title will be Miss Res Ipsa Loolitzer, a Latin phrase meaning, "it speaks for itself." The judging is to be tomorrow morning.
Speaker for the banquet will be Chief Judge Joseph C. Hutcheson Jr. of Houston, Tex. Honor guests will be the Justices of the State Supreme Court and their wives and Kansas Federal Judges and their wives.
Judge Hutcheson was graduated from the University of Virginia and earned his LL.B, at the University of Texas. He has served as the Chief Legal Advisor to the City of Houston, Mayor of Houston, and U.S. District and Circuit Judge. Judge Hutcheson is a member of the Order of the Coif and has written many books on law.
The banquet is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom. Program for the banquet is the crowning of the queen and presentation of awards. These awards will be given for outstanding writing in the Law Review, high academic standing of membership in the Order of the Coif, the Moot Court awards, and the class of 1954 gift to the school. The Moot Court is a mock court scene in which the students take the part of all participants in a trial and conduct a trial. Entertainment is planned by the students.
At present, Judge Hutcheson is Chief Judge for the eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.
General Asserts McCarthy Tried To Assist Schine
Washington — (U.P.)— Maj. Gen Miles W. Reber testified today that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) tried repeatedly to get an Army commission for an aide, G. David Schine.
Gen. Reber, former liaison officer between the Army and Congress, was the first witness in the Senate Investigating subcommittee's public inquiry into a months-old feud between Sen. McCarthy and the Army.
Army.
The general testified that he went to work at once on Sen. McCarthy's request but that in the end Schine's application was rejected. Schine, then an unpaid consultant of the senate subcommittee, eventually was drafted.
The present hearing's opened before television cameras in a jammed Senate caucus room, are an investigation of Army charges that McCarthy and his subcommittee chief counsel, Roy M. Cohen, tried by "improper means" to get special treatment for Pvt. Schine. They also involve counter charges by Sen. McCarthy and Cohn that the Army used Schine as a "hostage" to "blackmail" them into calling off investigation of alleged Communist infiltration of the army.
Earlier two Democrats on the disputed Sen. McCarthy's charges that "cleverly laid" plans are being made to block the group's search for subversives.
"I don't know what he's talking about," Sen. John L. McClellan (Ark.) told newsmen. Sen. Henry M. Jackson (Wash.) said he knew of no pending efforts to change the subcommittee's rules.
Sen, McCarthy, in a speech at San Jacinto Monument, Tex., yesterday, said "The plan is to shift and change the rules of the committee under the guise of fair play and make it impossible for the committee to effectively operate."
An hour before the hearing's start the brightly lit caucus room had begun to fill up. Relatives of senators, their friends, and staff members got priority in obtaining seats.
Among those seeking seats were two airmen from Camp Kilmer, N.J., whose commanding general, Brig. Gen. Ralph W. Zwicker, allegedly was abused by Sen. McCarthy. They said they had their personal opinions but didn't think they should speak them.
Wilson Asks Court Review Voting, Committee's Power
The All Student Council elections committee last night threw out the results of the Senate and House of Representatives elections along with the previously invalidated presidential and vice presidential results.
The action occurred last night at a meeting of the elections committee with a 3-2 vote in favor of the action and four members of the committee abstaining from the voting.
But William Wilson, engineering senior, who had been in attendance at all post-election meetings of the committee, has asked for an appellate review of the decision to determine: 1. whether the election committee has the power to make such a move, and 2. whether the election had enough irregularities to warrant the action.
Wilson was president of the ASC in 1952-53 before resigning that post in February.
The election results and the invalidation action will be placed in the hands of the student court next week.
Wilson said he had no party affiliation, and that his appeal was based on the fact that he had seen no 'evidence presented to the committee other than an appeal to Chairman Dana Anderson. This appeal itself was never voted on by the committee; that is, no decision was reached as to whether or not these ballots are correctly voided.
"The student members of the elections committee were obviously biased. Also, I seriously question even the right of the committee to void this election," Wilson charged. Dana Anderson, head of the election committee, has appointed a subcommittee to handle the suit opposing Wilson. Members of the subcommittee are Jocelyn Dougherty, college sophomore, chairman; Ronald Sammons, college senior, and Anderson.
Last night's voting on the invalidate motion saw Sammons, Dougherty, and Robert Pope, graduate student, voting to invalidate the Senate and House elections, and Anderson and Farrel Schell, engineering senior, voting against the action.
A definite date has not been set for the re-election, pending the outcome of the court's action.
Fred Heath, college sophomore. and the three faculty members of the committee abstained from voting.
No Exit Has Excellent Cast
By GENE SHANK
"Hell is other people." Garcin said, and the audience shivered.
And when the curtain was drawn at the close of "No Exit," the horrified audience stopped shuddering long enough to applaud the thrilling performances of an excellent cast.
Three players—David Rosario as Garcin, JoAnna March as Inez, and Marjorie England as Estelle—gave three of the most convincing performances of the year, making the Jean-Paul Sarte play even more compelling and more vivid with their sensitive portrayals.
Bonnie Royer, director kept the already high-strung play in an atmosphere of intense emotion, presenting Sartre's hell as something far more terrifying than the usual fire and brimstone.
The three characters, who cannot and will never be able to live with one another, are thrown together in a drawing room with "no exit." The drawing room is Sarte's version of hell, where people are continually hurting each other. Life to Sarte is only what people themselves make of it, and even in a drawing room, they can make it as horrible and as agonizing as hell.
"The Happy Journey," a curtain-raiser to "No Exit," was a delightful bit of nothing that had very little to say, but said it well.
Engineering Junior To Head SUA Group
Ludwig Smith, engineering junior, was selected president of Student Union Activities by the SUA operating committee last night.
Other officers are Althea Rexroad, education junior, vice president; Rollin Peschka, college sophomore, treasurer; and Suzanne Schwantes, college sophomore, secretary.
SUA board members will be announced May 5 at the SUA honors and recognition dinner.
Honors Program Has Long History
Rv AMY DE YONG
The honors convocation held yesterday was the 31st annual announcement of outstanding students since the first such convocation on May 12, 1924.
At the first program, Chancellor E. H. Lindley said, "The recognition of leadership and intellectual attainment will, on convocation morning, bring to the platform of the gymnasium a considerable number of the students of the University."
An honor man, outstanding students, and new members of Sachem were named at that time, and the program since has been extended to include all of the honorary groups
which were noted yesterday. The ceremonies in which members of Mortar Board cap the newly-chosen students and members of Sachem place blankets around the newly-elected men are highlights of the program.
"The honor men," said Chancellor Lindley, were to be chosen for their "breadth of interest, scholarship, unselfish service, and outstanding achievements." The award has been given in the past to such students as Glenn Cunningham, class of '34, and Raymond Nichols, '27, now executive secretary of the University. Ronald Lee Wingington received the award in 1953. Mr. Nichols said the
program was one of the earliest of its kind.
Preceding Dr. Earl McGrath, president of Kansas City university, in the position of Honors convoitation speaker, have been representatives from Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt, Indiana, Minnesota, Chicago, and Denver universities.
A speaker from India, E. Stanley Jones, addressed the convocation in 1928. Will Durant, Henry J. Haskell of Kansas City, Chancellor Lindley, author Nora Wain, Judge Merrill Otis and editor Roy Roberts of Kansas City, and William Vogt, author and botanist are among the other speakers.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 22.1954
11
Campus Election Called A Farce
Ridiculous and farcial—and besides, cheap.
Descriptive terms never more appropriately applied than to Tuesday's general elections. The skuldugery, ineptitude and confusion that apparently resulted from the election is a blight upon all who participated in any phase of it.
Campus political parties are important groups. They serve a function to enable the student, for whom the University is primarily operating, to have something to say or some manner in which to influence the operation of the state university.
Influence the operation of the class But this right was violated to a terrible degree Tuesday. Possibly only a fraction of under-handed methods employed will ever come to light. No one party or group can be blamed for the disgrace. All must take the blame.
Perhaps if responsible students are not capable or qualified to conduct an election of this importance in a suitable way, they are not qualified to represent student opinion. Perhaps the ASC should be abolished along with class officers and the administration assume the burden of the duties formerly conducted by these groups.
If such a plan should be suggested by school authorities, a wild scream of anguish undoubtedly would arise from the student body. And yet, this same student body was incapable of handling the problem itself.
The entire situation could be humorous—if it weren't so tragic. But the human mind and constitution isn't made to radically change methods overnight. Instead we can expect that those students who handled themselves unjustly in this election matter will continue to do in the future—and many of these students will be holding positions of responsibility throughout the country in less than seven weeks—after graduation.
Woe to the country if this one day is a prelude of what is to come!
—Clarke Keys
...LETTERS...
(Editor's Note: Tihs letter is run without corrections at the writer's request.)
To the editor:
Although I don't know much about recent political developments I want to tell you how much I appreciate reading the words of well informed people on these things like Howard L. Lydick (1st year law) because anything a real conscientious person who does plenty of praying to God has to say about McCarthy, dirty communists or clean government or the world in general has my full support.
A specially well informed friend of mine could back up Mr. Lydicks arguments a hummer per cent and perhaps it is fitting to add some of them to Lydick's artical so we can have a real hummer per cent destruction of all those unamericans which are knifeing the fine Christian Statesman from Wisconsin in the back while he is making investigations for our own good. This trend of mine (who prefers to remain ammonian) tole me that Mr. Lydicks might have mentioned a few specific instances in which McCarthy has been ruthlessly attacked by people like Edward R. Murrow who definitely falls the communist line hook line an macker when he was going to innocent young American students to Rusia of all places when it was already a communist nation. What more proof could you demand? It is also a true fact that McCarthy has had to take abuse even from the president of the United States who said in America a man shouldnt judge himself in his own trial or words to the affect. What I ask is when we going to put a stop to nervvy statements like that?
What this country needs is more reel patriotic servants like McCarthy, Cohn, Schine, Kernel McCormick and others who wont have nothing to do with the enemy from within and wholl have no qwams about cleaning up those dirty so and sos in the US Army, Navy, Air Force, Senate, Atomic commishion, the universities, US over-sized libraries and all these kind of subversive organizations. As Mr. Lyckd said McCarthy is "an example of what all members of the U S Senate should be" and Ill ad to that outside the senate this country needs more hunnert per cent red-blooded Christian americans like Howard L. Lyckd—if he will parden my english.
Peter G. Earle Graduate student
To the editor:
In order to prevent the impression being given that the letter to the editor of a certain first year law student reflects the thoughts of any other KU law student, we, the under signed, without equivocation refute the "thoughts" contained in the letter to the editor of the 20th of April, 1954:
W. J. Kennedy
D. C. Tinker
Don A. Seymour
Eugene F. Gastl
Robert E. Thiele
William G. Palmer
Ronald Q. Thomas
William L. Roberts
Richard J. Reintz Jr.
Bob Schaefer
John Blake
David M. Welsh
Don J. Everett
James P. Johnston
All 1st year law
All 1st year law
We still can't figure out how teachers get off taking off for several days to Mexico to collect rats, while the poor student cuts a class and bro-o-theer!!
Kansan headline—"Fin Wins Boston Marathon." We knew the American dollar was all-powerful, but just look at what a five-spot will do.
Daily Transan
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Published in Lawrence, Kan.
You will receive the year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods
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at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under a
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editorial editor Don Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon,
EDITORIAL STAFF
NEWS STAFF
Kerr Is A Popular Senator
Executive editor... Tom Stewart
Managing editors... Tom Shannon
Sam Teaford, Ket
Bronson, Stan Hamilton
News Editor... Elizaveta W. Bauer
Sports editor... Dana Leibengold
Society editor... Karen Hilmer
Assistant... Nancy Neville
News adviser... C. M. Pickett
BUSINESS STAFF
Business mgr.
Administrative mgr.
Nat. adv. mgr.
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Project manager.
Ann Innisworth
Susanne Berry
Bernard McCall
Edmond Bartlett
Wendy Wenzel
Gerald Bretton
With the recent announcement by Sen. Robert S. Kerr of Oklahoma that he will seek reelection to the Senate in November, attention again centers on one of the most colorful and influential members of the Democratic party.
The last time Sen. Kerr was in the spotlight was early in 1952 when there was strong talk that he would be the vice presidential candidate on the Democratic ticket should Harry Truman seek another term as president. At that time he had become one of Mr. Truman's closest friends, largely because he was one of the few who stood up to be counted on the administration's side when the former president relieved Gen. Douglas MacArthur from his command in Korea. After Mr. Truman announced he would not be a candidate for reelection. Sen. Kerr was considered for a time as one of the leading contenders for the Democratic nomination for the presidency.
In the primary campaign this year, Sen. Kerr will be opposed by former Gov. Roy J. Turner. The campaign should be an intense one, since both men have practically unlimited funds to spend in their quest for the Senate seat.
Robert Samuel Kerr was born in a log cabin in Indian territory in 1896, long before Oklahoma became a state. Furthermore, his parents were poor but honest, he worked his way through college (Oklahoma Baptist university and the University of Oklahoma), and he taught school, three qualifications which endear politicians in the hearts of Americans.
Sen. Kerr is an ardent, practicing teetotaler, one of the few left in Washington, and has been all his life. Alcoholic drinks are never served at his home in Washington or at one of his tables, and he received a lot of attention and public acclaim two years ago when he blasted the practice of the Washington cocktail party in no uncertain terms. He is also a devout, Bible-pounding Baptist, and teaches a Sunday school class each week.
The senator from Oklahoma is the perfect realization of the American dream that any American boy can grow up to be a millionaire. He is at present a multi-millionaire and reputedly the richest man in Congress, surpassing even the late Robert A. Taft. He owns oil and gas lands valued at a total of approximately $100 million.
He is not only the richest man in Congress, he is probably the biggest. He is slightly over 6 feet 4 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds, thanks to strenuous dieting. He is a political spell-binder and an orator of the old school. It has been said of him more than once that he is the reincarnation of William Jennings Bryan.
Mr. Kerr is president of the Kerr-McGee Oil Industries company, which in 1949 reported a gross income of $14,930,150. The company has several contracts to sell natural gas in interstate commerce. He is also a drilling contractor, as well as a lawyer. He received his law degree from the University of Oklahoma.
Although Oklahoma is proud of Sen. Kerr as a pious, deeply religious gentleman, his integrity
The other major incident took place in February 1949, just one month after Mr. Kerr was sworn in as a member of the U.S. Senate. He wasted no time in putting his brother Aubrey in the job of handling RFC law business in Oklahoma. When the RFC scandals were later investigated, the public heard much about a mink coat, and several interesting pieces of patronage were turned up, but little was ever said or heard about the RFC plum handed the Kerr family.
In World War I Sen. Kerr served as a second lieutenant in the First Field Artillery, with nine months of overseas duty. He organized an Oklahoma National Guard at Ada, Okla., which later became a part of the 45th division. In 1925 he served as state commander of the American Legion for Oklahoma.
in political affairs has been questioned twice. Not only did he introduce the Kerr bill, which would have had the effect of increasing the price of natural gas carried in interstate pipelines, he became the No.1 lobbyist for the bill which would have made several hundred thousand dollars for his company by buttonholing senators, urging, cajoling, and demanding that they vote for the bill.
His political career began when he served as Democratic national committeeman for Oklahoma from 1940 to 1948. From 1943 to 1947 he was governor of the state of Oklahoma, and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1948.
Sen. Kerr's voting record in Congress shows clearly he was one of the strongest supporters of the Truman Fair Deal. He voted in favor of high parity for basic agricultural crops, increasing the borrowing authority of the government, and increased economic aid to Europe. He recently voted for extension of the excess profits tax, though he was opposed to raising the amount of exemption for corporations from $25 thousand to $100 thousand. He has generally voted in favor of most government proposals for housing, flood control, and reclamation projects. He is reportedly in favor of Universal Military Training, and opposed to government restrictions on livestock slaughtering and to the St. Lawrence Seaway. One big reason why he wasn't a stronger candidate for the Democracy nomination in 1952 was because of his positive stand on civil rights legislation, which never would have been acceptable to the South.
Robert S. Kerr is one of the most influential and powerful politicians on the scene today. Whether in agreement or disagreement with him on political issues, one can't help liking and admiring his vibrant personality, piety, geniality, and impressive power with words. —Court Ernst
It could easily be said of Mr. Kerr that he is a Democrat's Democrat. In the 81st Congress he voted with his party majority 89 per cent of the time on matters involving party stands and discipline, and was with his party 94 per cent of the time in the 82nd Congress. On bi-partisan matters he voted with the majority 87 per cent of the time in the 81st Congress and 93 per cent of the time in the 82nd Congress.
Short Ones
We should all want to cry if suddenly traded into an almost sure $6.000 cut of the World Series. Guess we can't all be so unlucky as poor Enos Slaughter.
Some wag, when the ballot box that was supposed to be placed in the foyer of the Journalism building did not show up Tuesday, said it probably was already too full at 8 a.m. to be of much service the rest of the day.
With elections over for another year we can relax and watch the three parties work from now 'till next April to win the election.
Lawrence announces it is one of 18 cities seeking the proposed Air Force academy, but even with its devoid - of - skycraper landscape plants still run into each other.
We understand some of the fraternity hot-shots on the Hill aren't going to be around this weekend. That's the date of the annual marble and jacks tournament at Sunflower.
Gloriosky! Smutiness in parades . . . and we thought all that was confined to the little pre- (and post-) parties at formal time.
IF YOU GONNA JOKE 'BOUT
PEATH AN'LIFE AN'ALL, I IS
GONNA BOYCOTT THIS FISHIN'
TRIP.
YOU WAS THE ONE WANTED
TO BE SERIOUS.
MEDGES
COPYR. 1964
HALF KELLY
IF YOU GONNA JOKE 'BOUT DEATH AN' LIFE AN' ALL, I IS GONNA BOYCOTT THIS FISHIN' TRIP.
YOU WAS THE ONE WANTED TO BE SERIOUS.
BUT YOU DON'T GOTTA BE SO GLOOMY WHEN YOU HAS fun ---BESIDES SOME THINGS IS SCAREY.
I WASN'T POKIN' FUN AT LIFE ---JES' AT DEATH.
HEDGES
COPR. 1964
MATT HEWIT
THE HELEN PLASTED HEDGES
IF YOU GONNA JOKE 'BOUT DEATH AN' LIFE AN' ALL, I IS GONNA BOYCOTT THIS FISHIN' TRIP.
YOU WAS THE ONE WANTED TO BE SERIOUS.
COPR. 1064 WILD KELLY
BUT YOU DON'T Gotta BE SO GOODY WHEN YOU HAS FUN---BESIDES SOME THINGS IS SCAREY.
I WASN'T POKIN' FUN AT LIFE ---JES' AT DEATH.
THE HELEN PLAISTED HEDGES
THAT'S WHAT I MEAN!
USUAL US LAUGHS AT THE THINGS WHAT DON'T SCARE US NONE.
DAG NAB! I THUNK US'D HAVE A NICE DAY OF QUARRELIN' AN' SHOUTIN' AN' YOU IS SPOILT THE WHOLE DISCUSSION. --YOU IS GOT ME TO THINKIN'--
SCAREY.
THE HELEN DLAISTED HEDGES
THAT'S WHAT I MEAN!
USUAL US LAUGHS AT THE THINGS WHAT DON'T SCARE US NONE.
THAT'S WHAT I MEAN!
USUAL US LAUGHS AT THE THINGS WHAT DON'T SCARE US NONE.
DAG NAB! I THUNK US'D HAVE A NICE PAY OF QUARRELIN' AN' SHOUTIN' AN' YOU IS SPOILT THE WHOLE DISCUSSION. ---YOU IS GOT ME TO THINKIN'---
DAG NAB! I
THUNK US'D HAVE
A NICE DAY OF QUARRELIN'
AN' SHOUTIN' AN' YOU IS
SPOILT THE WHOLE DISCUSSION
--YOU IS GOT ME TO
THINKIN'--
THINKIN'
Thursday, April 22.1954 University Daily Kansan Page 3
On Capitol Hill:
Farm Block May Lose Power Over SupportBill
Bv UNITED PRESS
Washington—(U.P.)-The Senate farm bloc was warned today it may wreck its own power by the fight it is waging over the administration's wool price support bill.
Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D.-N.H.) hurled the warning at Southern Democrats and Midwestern Republicans who are trying to use the wool bill as a means of extending high price props on other commodities.
Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D.-La.), with strong bi-partisan backing, has proposed an amendment to the wool bill which would extend for two years present 90 per cent of parity supports on the "basic" crops: corn, wheat, tobacco, peanuts, rice and cotton.
The rigid supports on all these commodities except tobacco are scheduled to die in December, and the administration wants to replace them with a flexible support system which could be varied between 75 and 90 per cent of parity.
Other congressional developments: McCARTHY -The Senate Investigating subcommittee opened nationally televised hearings today on the feud between Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and the Army, Ray J. Jenkins, special counsel for the inquiry, promised to drive "fearlessly" for the truth regardless of who is hurt. Acting Chairman Karl E. Murdut (R-S.D.) called on the Army to leadoff the testimony on its charge Sen. McCarthy and his chief counsel used "improper means" to get favored treatment for Pvt. G. David Sobine, drafted side.
Republican Senate Leader William F. Knowland hinted strongly that President Eisenhower would veto the wool measure if the amendment is approved.
HOUSING—The Senate Banking committee today called spokesmen from the financial side of the building industry in its investigation of the multi-million dollar housing scandals. Chairman Homer E. Capehart (R.-S.D.) suggested "blacklisting" from the Federal Housing program apartment buildings who reaped "windfall" profits from excessive government-backed loans. He also proposed that builders be required to turn back immediately any part of a government-insured loan that exceeded the cost of the project for which it was borrowed.
STOCKPILING — Rep. John J. Dempsey (D-NM.) charged that President Eisenhower's new strategic metal and mineral stockpiling program leaves the door open for imports which have been "disastrous" for domestic mines.
HEALTH—The CIO told a Senate Labor subcommittee that Congress has bowed to powerful medical and insurance lobbies and thousands of Americans "are dying and suffering unnecessarily" as a result. It called for action on a National Health Insurance program or, as a minimum, a system of federal aid to health.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Quack club, 7:30 p.m. Robinson gym.
Swimming.
**Geology** club, 7:30 p.m., 426, Lindley. Dr. O. F. Carfaguar of the geology department will present a 50 minute illustrated talk on Scotland and Its Geology.
Kuku club, 7:30 p.m., in front of Green hall. Initiation.
Der deutsche Verein has a kaffee-
kisch and folk dancing. p. 502
mom
*Pi Tau Sigma smoker.* 7 p.m. 305 Students Union, 10th floor, German education skype on Difference Between the American and German education system. Also film and music skype on www.pi.tau.edu.
Dance Lesson—Rumba. 7-8 p.m., Jayahawk room, Student Union. 25c each.
Balley Chemistry club. 8 p.m. 305 BCL.
Program: Research on research by
Airold Air society, 7 p.m., Military science lecture. Important meeting; elec-
tric course.
TOMORROW
Sociology club coffee. 4 p.m. Strong annex; room 17. Second session on "Advice to Future Sociologist." Recorded by Future Sociologist of the American Sociological society.
Der deutsche Verein spring party, 8 p.m., Pinn Stud, Room Union.
SATURDAY
Student Religious council, 4 p.m.
Myers hall. Election of officers.
6 Win Speech Contest Honors
Winners last night of the demonstration contest, the second of the annual Intramural Speaking contests, were:
Women's division: First place—Joan Sherar, college sophomore, representing Delta Delta with "How to Swim"; second place—Frances Haas, education freshman, representing Foster hall with "Stunts and Tumbling," and third place—Betty Jean Stanford, college freshman, representing Foster hall with "How to Make Gift-wrap Bows."
Men's division: First place—Robert Lynch freshman in medicine, representing Beta Theta Pi with "Physiology of Prayer;" second place—John Ball, college freshman, representing Alpha Tau Omega with "How to Play a Uke," and third place—Joe Mueller, college sophomore, representing Beta Theta Pi with "A Bass Viol out of a Wash-tub."
Spanish Study Aid Available
Five fellowships are available for American graduate students to study in Spain from Sept. 1, 1954 to July 1, 1955. Prof. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department, announced today.
Candidates may apply in any field. Each grant carries a stipend of $2,000, allocated approximately as follows: round trip transportation, $500; maintenance for the academic year, $1,100; university fees, $50; books and materials, $50; travel within Spain, $200; health insurance and other expenses, $100.
Candidates must a United States citizen, under 30, and must present proof of demonstrated academic ability and capacity for independent study or research; a bachelor's degree; a plan for advanced study or research at a Spanish university of their choice, approved by the major professors under whom they are studying; a good knowledge of Spanish; good moral character, personality, and adaptability; good health, and the ability to provide for dependents, if applicant has any.
All applications must be filed on or before May 1 with the U.S. Student Department of the Institute of International Education.
German Club to Give Festival Folk and popular dancing will be the keynote of the German club's Spring festival at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Pine room of the Student Union.
Movies Show Varied Livelihood
Cider and doughnuts will be served. Tickets are 25 cents for members and their dates, and 35 cents for non-members.
An interesting range of vicarious livelihood is to be unreeled at theaters this week.
By BILL STRATTON
For further information contact Dr. J. A. Burzle.
German Club to Give Festival
The poor, benighted fisherman of Florida and their wet tales of Hollywood woe persist at the Granada theater in "Beneath the Twelve Mile Reef." This CinemaSopic ragout will not be poured out until Saturday night.
On Sunday, CinemaScope has better material with which to work in "New Faces," a satirical variety film with Eartha Kitt, Ronny Graham, Robert Clary, and Alice Ghostley, all of whom were with the show when it besieged Broadway. Apportioned mockery is made of lecturing explorers, nocturnal Boston, and the play "Death Of A Salesman." These highly amusing sketches are intermingled with several popular songs which are given the wide-screen treatment by singers heretofore unseen. This con-
glomeration of comedy will begin Sunday at the Granada.
The Jayhawker presently is peddling low adventure in the unhealthy north where Robert Ryan and Jan Sterling prove themselves to be sound of heart and steady pulse. The subject is nefarious competition, among salmon fishermen around the pole.
After "Alaska Seas," it is rumored that the Jayhawk will feature "The Naked Jungle." Taken from a short story called "Lenninger Versus The Ants," this picture to do with a rugged plantation owner of central Brazil who marries by proxy and imports the wife in time for a battle with the Marabunta, an army of soldier ants 20 miles long and 2 miles wide.
who disputes their proposed route, and he is affectionately assisted by Eleanor Parker. Theirs is a pretty weird battle, well worth seeing.
For some reason or other, on sudden occasions, these little rascals actually rise and congregate for a predatory march across the country side, and they eat everything but dirt. Charlton Heston is the man
A nevy of oldies is slated for local showing within the next week, and leading them is John Huston's "Red Badge of Courage," adapted from Stephen Crane's novel, and showing lucidly youth's reaction to cowardice and heroism in the Civil War. This begins tomorrow at the Lawrence Drive-In where you can mix libations and mosquitos if you have a clean windshield.
The Patee promises to revive "The Rains Came," with Tyrone Power, while the Varsity is scheduled to show "The Glenn Miller Story" after Sir Laurence Oliver completes his song-and-dance stint with "The Beggar's Opera."
"The Big Sky," sporting Kirk Douglas in a rousing story of the untamed Northwest, plays a final round tonight at the Lawrence Drive-In.
City Managers Meet in Union
The meeting with the Osawatomie Rotary is a forerunner of "Operation Friendship," a KU sponsored field trip set for May 8-9. At that time each foreign student at the University will be invited to be an overnight guest in some home in Osawatomie. Osawatomie business and civic leaders are handling local arrangements, which will include a visit to the John Brown Memorial Park.
George B. Smith, dean of the University, welcomed about 50 persons to the first session of the seventh annual City Manager school yesterday in the Union.
William R. Butler, assistant dean of men, talked of the foreign student program at KU.
"This is a professional refresher school to which city managers from Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas come each year to get new ideas about their profession," said James McDonald, research assistant in the Government Research center. —
The City Manager school is sponsored by the Kansas City Manager association, Government Research center, and University Extension. James Wiggsworth, Lawrence city manager, is president of the Kansas City Manager association.
In an address to the city managers on the economic outlook for the next year and its relationship to municipal program, Leland J. Pritchard, professor of finance said, "We are in a recession and that recession will probably continue and worsen unless the government takes public works measures."
Prof. Pritchard went on to say that he did not believe we would go into a severe depression like the one in 1929, because the present administration is not sleeping on the job. They are watching the economic condition of this country carefully and will take steps to prevent a severe depression immediately if necessary.
Students Discuss Exchange Systems
"The Foreign Student Exchange Program — What It Has Meant To Us," was the topic of discussion of two foreign students before the Rotary club in Osawatomi last Monday. The students, both graduates, were Derek Scott from England and Imitiaz Khan from Pakistan.
India's Culture Literate Says Psychologist
"Americans are in danger of forgetting that the peoples of India have a literate civilization dating back 3,000 years—and that India is not a culturally backward country," said Dr. Gardner Murphy, of the Menninger Foundation, Topeka, in a public lecture at Strong auditorium last night.
"Americans must remember, when thinking of India as a big, relatively unprogressive country, that the United States is very young, having only recently come out of the frontier stage."
Dr. Murphy, who spoke on "Relations Between India and the U.S." was introduced by Dr. Anthony Smith, associate professor of psychology. Dr. Murphy is a psychologist, and has spent six months in India as a research consultant for UNESCO.
"America's youth", Dr. Murphy said can be shown by her literature, which is distinctly European.
In India, literature is old and classic, written about the people and the land. Epic poems, sagas, and other narrative forms abound.
America could understand India, better if her literature and magazines could be more widely distributed here, and Indians could certainly understand the U.S. better if American literary works were distributed over India. This distribution of American literature, the speaker said, was hampered, as literary markets are already flooded with communist and European works.
India, however, does resemble the United States in certain ways. If we are to have understandable relations with her, we must recognize them Dr. Murphy said.
The people regard their children, (whom they laivish with affection), and their independence, with the same respect with which Americans regard these things. Humanitarianism, the appeal to the love of fellow men, is an important factor in Indian civilization. Dr. Murphy said.
The Indian people resent the policy of other nations of "helping them to help themselves and they would like to give back in return."
As for Westernization, Dr. Murphy said that he believed within 20 to 30 years the oriental civilization of India will adopt the Western way.
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Military Society To Initiate 35
Scabbard and Blade, military honor society, will initiate 35 of the top students in ROTC at 7:30 tonight in the Sunflower room of the Union. The new men were nominated by the professors of the three ROTC units.
Those who will be initiated tonight are: Robert Kennedy, John C. Dicus, Roger G. Heiskell, Forrest Hoglund, Douglas Smith, Ronald E. Holmes, William M. Nofsinger, Robert A. Galliart, Robert L. Terry, Edwin D. Peyton, John Elvig, Dwight H. Harrison, and Ronald V. Haught, and Alan D. Levin, engineering juniors.
Lloyd A. Pine, Anthony J. Pitz,
Terry N. Fiske, David Edwards,
Harold J. George Jr., Robert B.
Sears, Ralph W. Grether, Frank H.
Chessy, Donald E. Endacott, Robert
R. Savis, Lowell G. Yadon, Leroy
Harold, Robert F. Little, and William
R. Arnold, college juniors; and
James O. Perkins, Richard E. McEachen, Gad C. Smith, Leon V.
Mason, Harold G. Kraus, Harold V.
Ford, and Gary W. Padgett, business
juniors.
Dean's Hour Host To Insurance Men
The program which offers students an opportunity to meet leaders in business and religious fields will host insurance men at the next meeting. Discussion of the legal aspects of insurance and also health and liability provisions of life insurance will highlight the program.
The Dean's Hour, a panel discussion at which students of the medical center are given an opportunity to meet administrators of the school and specialists in fields other than medicine, will be held April 29.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 22,1954
Turley's No-Hit Bid SpoiledbyRosen,Doby
By UNITED PRESS
Al Rosen and Larry Doby, a couple of Cleveland "spoilers" who combined to break Bob Turley's heart last night, turned around today and paid the Baltimore fireballer the supreme compliment by calling him "the greatest young pitcher in the majors."
The 23-year-old Turley struck out
14 Cleveland batters—only four shy of
bob Feller's all-time record of 18
strikeouts—and held the Indians hit-
less until there was one out in the
ninth.
Then Rosen singled and Doby followed with a 380-foot homer to give Bob Lemon a 2-1 victory over the Orioles and thoroughly crushed 48,333 partisan Baltimore fans who were cheering Turley toward a no-hitter.
Turley, who has less than 90 days experience in the majors and did most of his pitching last season with the Brooke General Hospital team at Fort Sam Houston, Tex., was more disappointed over losing last night's game than he was over losing his no-hitter.
In other American league games, the Senators trampled the Athletics, 13-1 and the Yankees defeated the Red Sox, 5-1, while in the National League, the Dodgers beat the Phillies, 6-3, the Cardinals topped the Reds, 4-2, in a game which Cincinnati Manager Birdie Tebbets protested, the Pirates nipped the Giants, 5-4, and the Braves humbled the Cubs, 7-3.
Jim Busby was the big man in the victory over Philadelphia, smashing a triple, double and two singles to go with Bob Porterfield's three-hit pitching. Clyde Vollmer and Mickey Vernon each homered for Washington.
Home runs by Gil McDougall, Mickey Mantle, and Yogi Berra helped Eddie Lopat to his second victory of the campaign as the Yankees defeated southpaw Leo Kiely of Boston. Bera paced the Yankees 11-hit offensive with a pair of singles in addition to his homer.
Three Phillie errors in the first inning helped the Dodgers jump to a three-run lead at the expense of Steve Ridkiz and Brooklyn was never headed. Billy Loes made his first start of the season and was the winner although he needed Jim Hughes' help in the ninth. Hughes struck out two pinch hitters to end the game.
Gerry Staley's eight-hit pitching, plus a three-run rally in the sixth, helped the Cards to their triumph over the Reds. But Tebbettets protested the game because St. Louis Manager Eddie Stanky refused to remain inside the third base concession stand at New York City and ordered him to do so. Stanky was ejected from the game in the third inning.
Whitey Lockman's fumble of a pickoff throw in the eighth inning allowed Toby Atwell to score with the run that gave the Pirates their victory. It was a disastrous night all around for Lockman who lost a two-run homer in the fifth because teammate Monte Irvin had called
time. Frank Thomas hit a three-run homer for the Pirates and Max Surkont gained the victory.
Eddie Mathews' three-run homer in the fifth, which carried Cub center-fielder Bob Talbot into the bullpen with it, powered Milwaukee to its triumph. Joe Adcock also hit a two-run homer for the Braves. Warren Spahn scattered eight hits and was the victor.
Golfers Drop Washburn
With Bob Richards shooting a three-under par 69, the Kansas golf team defeated Washburn university $14\frac{1}{2}-3\frac{1}{2}$ on the Lawrence Country club course yesterday. Richards' sub-par was just one stroke over the course record.
The results: Richards, K, defeated Murphy, W. 3-0; MacGee, K, defeated Stigall, W. 3-0; Prosser, K, defeater Barter, W. 3-0; Rooney, K, tied Willis, W. $ \frac{1}{2} $ -1; Richards and MacGee defeated Murphy and Stigall. $ \frac{2}{3} $ -1; Prosser and Rooney, tied Willis and Barter. $ \frac{1}{2} $ -1.
Julius Boros shot a three under par 68 yesterday to retain his one-stroke lead in the Carolinas Open golf tournament with a 36-hole total of 135.
Girls Softball Has 7 Teams With No Loses
First division winners in the women's intramural softball league were the Tri Delt's, Pi Phi's, Chi O's, Locksley - Monchonsia, Jayettes, Sigma Kappa's and Kappa Alpha Theta's.
In the first games of the round robin tournament, played last week the Tri Delt's defeated the Alpha Phi's 20-4; Pi Phi's beat Gamma Phi Beta 45-3; Pi Omega outscored the A D Pi's 22-2, and Locksley-Monchoria hit the Alpha Chi's 9-7.
The Jayettes have won two games, defeating Delta Gamma 28-14 and the Kappa's 26-13. Sigma Kappa and Kappa Alpha Theta won their games as a result of forfeits by Alpha Phi and Corbin hall.
In games played Tuesday, Locksley-Monchonys defeated the Theta's 19-1, for their second win of the tournament and the Tri Delt's won their second game at the expense of Sellards hall 20-1.
The rained-out first division between Sigma Kappa and A O Pi, and Miller-Watkins and North College will be scheduled at a later date.
Second division games to be rescheduled is Delta Gamma-Miller-Watkins.
Today's schedule is Alpha Chi Omega and Corbin, and A D Pi and Pi Beta Phi.
The British Boxing Board of Control ordered Randy Turpin to defend his British middleweight championship against Johnny Sullivan by September 30.
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BaseballTeam Returns Home For Games With Cyclones
20304
Suffering two straight defeats at the hands of the Nebraska Cornhuskers, the Kansas baseball team returns to the local diamond for two games with the Iowa State Cyclones tomorrow and Saturday.
The Cyclones, coached by (Cup) Tumm for 17 season, have been the starting lineup excluding pitchers, and three lettermen to head the pitching staff
Bucky Weeden and Dave Campbell are returning to the Iowa State outfield this season. Infielders returning are captain Dick Severson at shortstop, Bob Taylor at second, Al Macher at first, and Ray George at third. The pitching staff is headed by three lettermen righthanders Dick Gardell, Bob Hermmann, and Bill Postma.
Another letterman Coach Timm can put into the lineup is Charlie Rasmussen. Last season Rasmussen played second, third, short, and catcher, and this spring he has been practicing for an outfield position. Iowa State is rated along with Oklahoma and Nebraska as one of the teams to beat for the Big Seven title this season.
Bobby Jones won a TKO victory of Gil Turner in the 10th round of their scheduled 10 rounder in Philadelphia last night.
Joe Adcock, first baseman for the Milwaukee Braves, will report for a selective service physical examination on May 28 in Milwaukee.
The Brooklyn Dodgers released four pitchers to their farm clubs yesterday. They are Tom LaSorda, Ken Lehman, Ed Roebuck, and Ray Moore.
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Page 5
On the Hill
Foster hall announces the pinning of Katherine Cannon, education freshman to Harold Hixson, engineering junior. Miss Cannon is from Little Rock, Ark., and Hixon, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity, is from Evanston, Ill.
Sue Bird, education junior, was recently elected president of Templin hall. Other officers are Pat Artman, college junior, vice president; Diane Legant, education junior. secretary; Sara Deibert and Ruth Mirick, college sophomores, treasurer and house manager, and Barbara Fischer, education junior, social chairman.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pinning of Shirley Tinsley, college senior, to Dennis Lynch. Lynch attended KU two years and is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and is from Frankfort, Kan. is now in the Armed forces. Missansly is from Leavenworth.
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Patricia Williams of Lawrence to John Carey of Independence, Mo. Miss Williams was graduated from KU last spring. Carey, a member of Triangle, engineering fraternity, is an architecture senior.
Gamma Alpha Chi, national advertising vectoring孝 recently elected officers for the coming year. They are Deanne Murray, president; Margaret Porter, fine arts junior, secretary; Sue Epperson, fine arts junior, treasurer; Mary Lou Rickman, fine arts junior, reporter; and Opal Smith, college junior, social chairman.
James Miller, engineering sophomore was recently elected president Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity. Other officers are Richard Browning, college freshman, vice president; Robert Rannie, engineering junior, secretary; Barney Raborn, college freshman, corresponding secretary; Stuart Elliot, engineering sophomore, treasurer; Loyde Hales, education junior, historian and John Curry, engineering freshman, sergeant at arms.
Those to be initiated May 15 are Sue Epperson, Dennie Murray, Norm Stranathan, Margaret Porter, Lynne Burton, fine arts senior, and Anne Reitz, fine arts junior.
Phi Chi, medical fraternity, will hold its annual Hypo Hop tomorrow at the Dine-A-Mite from 9 to 12 pm. Chaperones will be Mrs. Joe Hope, Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Hotton, and Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Metcalf
The pledge class of Gamma Phi Beta will hold its annual dinner dance tomorrow at the chapter house in a western atmosphere.
Unaperones will be Mrs. Ralph Park, Park, M. L. L. Williams, Mrs. Andrew C. McKay, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, and Mrs. E. J. Wilson.
Alpha Chi Omega will hold a formal dinner dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Chapelrones will be Mrs. Agnese Underwood, Mrs. Hazel Hawbecker, Mrs.
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Matthews - Lambert Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bradley announce the engagement of their niece, Lenore Matthews to Clifford Lambert. Miss Matthews is a fine arts junior from Wichita and Lambert is a college sophomore from Kansas City. A June wedding is planned.
For Appointment
James A. Hooke, and Mrs. Ross Cole.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will hold a dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Saturday at the Eldridge hotel.
Sigma Pi fraternity will hold a dance from 9 p. to 12 midnight Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Cletus Rosebrough, Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Mrs. H. H. Jenkins, Mrs. L. L. Williams, Mrs. R. A. Mayher, and Mrs. Dana Anderson.
Hodder hall will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight Friday in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Chaperones will be Miss Virginia Tinker, Miss Betty Hembrough, and Miss Lenore Thornton.
Delta Gamma sorority will hold a dance from 8:30 to 12 midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth, and Mrs. E. R. Ranley.
Phi Delta Theta fraternity will hold a dance from 6 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Joseph File, and Mrs. A. C. McKay.
Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight Friday at Lakeview Lodge. Chaperones will be F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, James Barclay Smith, professor of law, and
Масagrion
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Graves of Long Beach, Calif. announce the engagement of their daughter, Ila, to Joe T. Jones, son of Mrs. Lucille Jones of Oakley, Kan.
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Graves Engagement Recently Announced
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will hold a formal dance from 6 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at the Student Union. Chaperones will be Mrs. Thomas Stuart, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs. Arthur H. Little, Mrs. Charles H. Wentworth, Mrs. Ralph Park, and Mrs. North Wright.
University Daily Ransan
Charles Oldfather, associate professor of law.
Delta Sigma Theta and Kappa Alpha Psi will hold a spring party from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday in the Student Union. Chapersones will be Mrs. Arvella Young, Mrs. Newman, Mrs. C. Lapez, and Mrs. Mitchell.
Sellards hall will hold a picnic from 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday at Tonganoxie. Chaperones will be Col. and Mrs. B. M Atwood, and Mr. and Mrs. David Rux.
Miss Graves is a college freshman and a resident of Foster hall. Jones attended KU before being employed by the University Press. No date has been set for the wedding.
Theta Chi fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at the Country club.
Acacia fraternity will hold a "Depression" party from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at Lone Star lake.
Stephenson hall will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at the hall.
Sigma Nu fraternity held a rush party in Topeka last night.
Pearson hall will hold a dinner dance from 6:30 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday at the hall.
Clean and peel fruits and vegetables on paper for easy disposal of the peelings. No mess to clean from the sink.
Thursday, April 22, 1954
Spies Solve Mystery of Student Union Rolls
By NANCY NEVILLE
Assistant Society Editor
The UDK society editor has sent spies to the Student Union the last few weeks to discover a special formula known only to a select group.
When dough is light, roll $ _{14} $ inch thick, brush with melted butter, and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Roll like a jelly roll and slice with a sharp knife.
Then place the rolls on a greased baking sheet one inch apart. When light, bake in hot oven (425 F) about 20 minutes.
The spies concentrated their elf forts in the bakery of the cafeteria and were soon rewarded by obtaining this formula, so here it is—the recipe for those delicious sweet rolls made and sold in the Student Union!
Undoubtedly this recipe would bring untold wealth to the possessor if he were to auction it off to the highest bidder. However, in the interest of the public health, and well-being, we are going to follow the example set by Madame Curie who refused to patent her discovery of radium and gave it to the world. This is our gift to posterity.
Recipe for sweet rolls a la Union
When the rolls are cool, spread frosting on. This recipe should make about two dozen rolls.
Recipe for sweet roils a flipped Union Mix: $1 \frac{1}{4}$ cups of milk; 2 tablespoons of butter; 5 tablespoons of sugar; $1 \frac{1}{4}$ teaspoons of salt.
Beat the two mixtures together for five minutes in mixer.
When the first mixture is cool, add the second mixture. In preparing the second mixture, first add one-half of the flour, then the egg, and then the remainder of the flour.
Dissolve; 1 oz. yeast; 2½ tablespoons of water; 4¾ cups and 2 tablespoons of flour, sifted; and 1 large egg.
Allow the dough to rise to twice the size of the mass, press it down, and allow it to rise again. Then roll it out.
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Quill Club Magazine Now Being Sold
It will be sold for 25 cents in the Hawk's Nest, the Information booth, and Fraser hall.
Trend magazine published by Quill club will be on sale today, and Friday according to John Barber, managing editor.
Sigma Chi Derby For Women Set
The sorority and the individual with the most votes will be awarded trophies, and all winners will receive citations.
Twelve sororites are competing in the first annual Sigma Chi Derby day Saturday. The various races are placed on a series of courts of the Sigma Chi house.
The girl's skill will be tested in the following races; pony express relay, ping-pong ball throw, grape-fruit relay, sack race, one-legged race, three-legged race, candle race, egg in spoon relay, and leap frog race.
Dan Dibble, business senior, is chairman of the Derby day committee. Other members are Dave Cleveland, college sophomore; John Brown, college junior, and Steve Schmidt, college freshman.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 22. 1954
Page 6
Religious Groups Hold Retreats. Elect New Officers
Twenty underprivileged children of Lawrence were guests at an Easter egg hunt sponsored by Liahona fellowship Sunday at the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints, 12th and Vermont sts.
Sunday, the group is sponsoring a box supper at 6:30 p.m. at the church. Joe Bayless, business senior, is in charge of arrangements.
Gamma Delta. Lutheran student group, will hold its annual alumni banquet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Immanuel Lutheran church, 17th and Vermont sts. The dinner will honor both alumni and graduating seniors. Guest speaker will be Walter K. Hilmer, Topeka, who will discuss Christian symbolism.
Norma Wahl, education senior and Mary Sweedlund, college freshman, are business delegates to Little Ashram, the retreat of the Lutheran Students association in the midwest, this weekend at Covenant Cedars, near Stronsburg, Nebraska.
A talk on Catholicism in Germany will be given by Heinz Serlemann, foreign student, at the Newman club meeting immediately following 10 am, mass at St. John's Catholic church, 1299 Vermont st.
Kappa Beta. Disciples women's club, recently elected Mary Valentine, education junior, president;
Janie Schaake, college freshman, vice president; LaJuana Stoops, education junior, secretary and Ann Armstrong, education sophomore, treasurer.
The new officers will be formally installed at a banquet May 7 in the Union. Final meeting of the group will be a picnic at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at Potter's lake.
The Sunday meeting of the Disciples Student fellowship at 5:30 p.m. in Myers hall will consist of a cost supper followed by recreation and worship services.
The organization's service and social action committee will conduct a program of entertainment, recreation and worship at the County Convalescent hospital, Lawrence, at 2 p.m. Saturday. Shirley Holmes, college senior, is in charge of the program.
Maurice Hamm, college senior.
Domingo Ricarte, assistant professor of Romance languages, and a member of the YMCA advisory board, has been appointed chairman of the arrangements committee for the National Student assembly of the YMCA and YWCA, to be held on the campus Dec. 27 to Jan. 2. Mr. Ricarte will also act as the liaison between the university extension division and the offices of the YMCA and YWCA.
retiring moderator, will open the spring retreat of the KU Westminster fellowship at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Presbyterian Student center.
In the afternoon, Dr. John H. Patton will lead a discussion on the task the group has on the campus, and an evaluation of the past year's work. The Saturday portion of the retreat will be concluded by Joan Worthington, education junior, moderator-elect, in a worship service. Formal installation of new officers and communion service will be held at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in Danforth chapel. Chairman for the service is Jean Ann Scupin, education junior. Scripture readings will be given by Reinhold Schmidt, rJ., college senior. John Barber, college senior, will give the evening prayer.
Wes Santee. education senior. accompanied by Mrs. Santee and Dr. John H. Patton, will fly to Ashland, Kans., Saturday to participate in a building fund campaign for the university Presbyterian student center.
Santee will assist in the pulpit Saturday morning when Dr. Patton preaches at the Ashland Presbyterian church.
Edith Jochims, college sphomore will attend the Topeka Highland Presbyterial of the Presbyterian church, Emporia, April 30th. She will be accompanied by Mrs. John H. Patton.
--ed under the tree. Joan Guthridge, college senior, is program chairman, and Kay Rogers, fine arts sophomore, is supper hostess.
Members of the Presbyterian Women's organization will have an April fool Christmas tree at their meeting Tuesday. They will bring gifts for foreign missions to be place-
Wesley foundation members will see slides on the Anda Work camp, a Methodist mission project in Manilla, P.L. at their Sunday meeting at the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont sts.
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Page 7
University Daily Kansan
Baptists Organize New Group
Baptist Student union, composed of students belonging to the Southern Baptist convention, is the latest addition to the religious organizations on campus.
Plans for forming the group were made early in the year when Miss Estelle Slater, associate secretary of the Southern Baptist convention, Nashville, and Mr. Ray Gillihand, state secretary of religious education, Wichita, visited the campus and met with students interested in participating in the organization.
The group is under the auspices of the Calvary Baptist church, 10th and New York sts., and the Antioch Baptist Church. Community bldg.
Current activities include short devotional services at 12:30 p.m. each Monday and Thursday in Danforth chapel. Members are also sponsoring a "Student Weekend of Revival" tomorrow through Sunday at the Calvary Baptist church. Rev. Harry G. Albright, pastor of the Dixon Baptist church, Oklahoma City will be the main speaker.
officers of the organization are,
Brian Stewart, college junior, president; Richard Goldsbay, college freshman, devotional vice president; Thomas Downs, college sophomore, enlistment vice president; Darryl Spena, engineering sophomore, social vice president; and Eugene McLachlan, graduate student, sponsor.
Three members of the University faculty are attending the annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley Historical association in Madison, Wis., today through Saturday.
George Anderson, professor of history, who is chairman of the membership committee of the association and a member of the committee for the preservation of historic sites, will present a paper, "The Board of Equitable Adjudication," as part of the session devoted to "Public Land Policies."
3 From Faculty Attend Meeting
W. Stitt Robinson Jr., assistant professor of history, and Robert Taft, professor of chemistry, are also attending the convention.
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Dodge City Group To Present Concert
MacGREGOR TOURNEYS-complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University School or call Al Hack at 715 or 3250J. 4-22
BULOVA WRIST WATCH near 14th and Ohio streets. Gold case, second hand missing, gold link band, Reward. Call Don Pearson, 86. 4-28
LOST AND FOUND
The Dodge City High school orchestra will present a public concert at 3 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium under the auspices of the School of Fine Arts.
Honored as "the Kansas High School Orchestra of 1854" by the School of Fine Arts, the Dodge City city will be the fourth Kansas orchestra to receive this annual tribute and perform here. Recognizing the vital role of the secondary schools in training accomplished musicians in the orchestral instruments, the School of Fine Arts distributes the honor each year as a means of encouraging young performers, particularly in the stringed instruments, Thomas Gorton, dean of the school, said.
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Phi Delta Kappa Elects Officers
George Brooks, graduate student, has been elected president of Phi Delta Kappa, men's honorary education fraternity.
Other officers elected include Charles Yeokum, vice president; Albert Nelson, secretary; Ralph Kron, treasurer and Robert Miller, historian, all graduate students and Karl Edwards, assistant professor of education, faculty sponsor.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 22,1954
Around the World:
Nehru Refuses U.S. Right to Fly Over India
By UNITED PRESS
India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru posted a 3,000-mile detour sign today in the path of American pilots ferrying French troops from Paris and North Africa to Indochina.
Mr. Nehru added the extra mileage to the longest airlift in history by refusing to permit the giant C-124 Globemasters to fly over India on their way to the war-torn Southeast Asian nation.
If the Globemasters stop at Karachi, in Pakistan next door to India, the pilots will have to take the circuitous route around the subcontinent. They cannot take a northern route from Karachi without flying over Red China.
American Air Force authorities met in Wiesbaden, Germany and announced later that Nehru need not fear. None of the planes would fly over or land in India, a spokesman said.
Other international developments:
CANBERRA - Victor Antonov, described as the key man in a Soviet spy ring in Australia, was hiding out in the Soviet embassy. Antonov, a correspondent for the Soviet news agency Tass, disappeared from his apartment in Sydney two days before Soviet Spy chief Vladimir Petrov asked Australia for asylum and produced evidence of the ring's existence.
PARIS—British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden flew to Paris for conferences with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault before going to the Geneva conference on Far Eastern affairs.
NAPLES —Atomic Scientist Bernard J. Peters denied a statement attributed to U.S. atomic Wizard J. Robert Oppenheimer that he is "quite Red and a dangerous man." Mr. Peters, now attached to a Bombay institute, said he is not and never has been a Communist or a member of a left-wing organization.
LONDON—American-hating Aneurin (Nye) Bevan charged that the United States wants war because its military power is greater than its diplomatic influence. The left-wing labor party leader said that because of this the Geneva conference beginning next Monday may become a "carefully arranged failure."
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Initiates Four
SDX Elects;
Most of the School of Law boys were seated, as usual, on the front steps of Green hall engaged in the customary practice of hooting at the girls, when a student drove by, clanging the Bermuda carriage bell on his car.
Crazy, Man, Crazy.
"Now," commented one of the legal eaglets, "we know 'Who Stole the Ding-Dong.' "
Ken Bronson, journalism junior, last night was elected president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity.
and Tom Lyons, both journali juniors, were named associate editors.
Other officers elected include Stan Hamilton, vice president; Dana Leibengood, secretary, and Court Ernst, treasurer. Hamilton and Leibengood are journalism juniors and Ernst is a college junior.
In pre-election ceremonies, Ernst, Grandon, Leibengood, and Lyons were initiated into the fraternity.
Ernst also was elected editor of the Sour Owl and Ron Grandon
The Army maintains elementary and high schools for dependent children in four major overseas commands dispersed throughout the world over an area of approximately 250,000 square miles.
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 131
Friday, April 23, 1954
World Understanding Our Goal, Ike Says
New York—(U.P.)—President Eisenhower said last night that America must take the lead in developing the genuine understanding among the peoples of the world that will lead to an enduring peace.
"Nowhere on this planet today is there an impregnable fortress, a continent or island so distant that it can ignore all the outer world," he said. "If this is not to be the age of atomic hysteria and horror, we must make it the age of international understanding and coopera- peace.
"Even the most rabid Marxist, the most ruthless worshipper of force, will in moments of sanity admit that. International understanding, however, like domestic unity, depends—in large part—on the free, full flow of information and its balanced presentation."
This also applies, he said, to magazines, radio, television, and the newsreels.
The President spoke at the concluding event of the 68th annual convention of the American Newspaper Publishers association — the annual dinner of the ANPA Bureau of Advertising. He called on the newspaper publishers to provide the framework of world understanding and of domestic strength by giving all the facts in balance and in their truthful perspective.
"The malignant germs of misunderstanding and misinformation are at work in the minds of men 24 hours of every day," Mr. Eisenhower said. "To combat them challenges the study and the effort of any individual who occupies any position of influence on public opinion."
Mr. Eisenhower "began his address by recalling that he addressed the same group eight years ago when Americans were feeling a repulsion for war that could have destroyed the country's military strength. Fortunately, he said, the newspapers did not permit the country to forget the "ever-present reality of aggressive threat."
Law Faculty Picks Finalists
Four girls were chosen this morning in Green auditorium to compete for the title of Law queen.
The finalists were Joane Manney fine arts sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta; Barbara Bowdish, business senior, Alpha Chi Omega; Beverly Taney, fine arts sophomore, Alpha Phi, and Barbara Curtis, college junior, Delta Delta Delta.
The girls were judged on poise, hair style, stage presence, figure and personality. Three faculty members of the School of Law were judges. The queen will be announced at the annual law banquet tonight in the Student Union ballroom.
Owl Society Elects 18 New Members
Election of 18 members to the Owl society, honor group for junior men, was announced today.
The new Owls, all of whom will be juniors next year, are Henry William Buck Jr., Robert Conn, Dwight Allen Frame, John Hawkinson, Fred Heath, David Hill, Walter Joseph Muller, John Grant Napier, Perry Lee Rashleigh, George Remsberg, and John Simpson, college; Robert Crisler, Walter Scott Hayden, and Jack Rogers, education; William Brainard, Jeremy Alyn Matchett, and Richard Rees Reynolds, pharmacy, and Samuel Van Meter Jr., fine arts.
The Spring issue of the Jayhawker will be distributed Monday in the information booth and the Jayhawker office in the Union. Students may purchase the four-issue book for $5.75.
McCarthy Attempt To Aid Schine Told
Next Jayhawker Out Monday
6th Memorial Chemical Talk Set at 4 Today
Dr. Hildebrand's teaching technique developed a new type of general science course. Rather than performing laboratory experiments for nothing more than to prove the statements in textbooks, his students used experiments as a means of explaining and understanding these statements.
The Franklin lectures are in honor of the late E. C. Franklin, former professor of chemistry at the University. The event is sponsored by the local chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry society.
(Picture On Eighth Page)
(Picture On Eighth Page)
Dr. Joe H. Hildebrand, president-elect of the American Chemical society and emeritus professor of chemistry at the University of California, will deliver the sixth annual E. C. Franklin Memorial lecture at 4 p.m. today in 305 Bailey hall.
Dr. Hildebrand's subject will be "Acids and Bases." He will approach the topic from the standpoint of one acquainted with recent advances in his field.
Washington—(U.P.) Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens said today that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy asked him to get an officer's commission for G. David Schine several weeks after the Army had turned down Schine as unqualified.
--class this morning.
P art l y cloudy skies will prevail in the northeast portion of t he state this afternoon with the temperature expected to climb to about 70 de-
Groups Must Sign For Fall Activities
All groups planning activities during orientation week next fall. Sept. 8-16, are asked to register activities in the dean of men's office before Thursday.
Girls to Model Own Fashions
Seventy-six girls from 17 schools will model dresses which they have made themselves in a fashion show presented as a feature attraction for Home Economics High school day, which will be held here tomorrow.
The commentator for the show,
"Fashions from Hollywood Presented
by Johnny Jayhawk," is Diane Worthington, college freshman; master of ceremonies is Bill Crews,
business senior and Johnny Jayhawk is Jack Buchanek, college junior.
The student members of the planning committee for the fashion show include Opal Smith, college junior; Shirley Tawney, college freshman; Ruth Miller, college freshman; Patsy Dlabal, college sophomore; and Shirley Hunsinger, college senior.
KuKu's Paddled, Sprayed in Initiation
THE RULES OF THE GAME
—Kansan photo by Jim Baird
DOWN. BOY—Courtney Sloan (with paddle) uses pan of water to quell a KuKu pledge "revolt" on the porch of the Pi Beta Phi sorority house as an unrehearsed portion of the pep club's initiation.
By MARY BESS STEPHENS
Paddle boards hitting on pillow-stuffed back ends made a terrific "wham," KuKu club pledges found last night at their initiation.
KuKu actives, after paddling the pledges a few times for good luck, lined up the pledges and marched them down to Miller hall, where the pledge class speed was tested in a relay race down Lilac Lane. The last-place finisher was rewarded with a little more paddling. The pledges ran in place with knees held high, and then straddle-jumped, both to the chant of "I Want to Be a KuKu," and "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk."
"Blindfolds were put over the pledges' eyes, and a meal of unknown properties was eaten—some pills, sawdust with a "kinda bitter taste," to quote a dismayed pledge, made up the fare. The boys also got a little lubrication, possibly because they were a little rusty in the races. Fish oil made the pledges scented, if not pretty.
About this time, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy drove by and said "good evening" to the boys.
In single file, the boys, still blindfolded, were taken down the hill to the Kappa Alpha Theta house, where they were given a wet welcome, via the garden hose.
Then, still in single file, the boys duckwalked to the Alpha Chi Omega house, where again they were sprayed.
At the Pi Beta Phi house, the water hose act went into reverse—the pledges took over, and sparing the girls, gave the actives a shower bath.
Secretary said the request was made Sept. 16, 1953, in the New York hotel apartment of Schine's wealthy parents.
Secretary Stevens, under questioning in the second day of hearings on the McCarthy-Army dispute, said he went to the Schine apartment in the Waldorf Astoria towers to discuss with Sen. McCarthy the Senator's plans to investigate alleged Communist infiltration of the Army in the New York area.
Secretary Stevens said Schine was present and that he also met his mother. Mrs. J. Myer Schine.
( "I told him I didn't think it possible, especially for a young man of draft age," Secretary Stevens testified.
He also said that he "remembered very clearly" that Sen. McCarthy asked him at the hotel why he couldn't make use of Schine's "special qualifications" as a special assistant to himself or a special assistant in the Army's G-2 Intelligence division.
Secretary Seteven's testimony on the incident was developed under questioning of Ray H. Jenkins, special counsel for the Senate Permanent Investigating subcommittee which is conducting the hearings.
Schine at that time was an unpaid consultant to the McCarthy committee, and was about to be drafted. He had been brought to that post by his close friend, Roy M. Cohn, Sen. McCarthy's counsel.
Secretary Stevens said he knew at the time that the Army already had turned a commission for Schine. The investigators received considerable testimony yesterday about efforts by Sen. McCarthy and Cohn to get a commission for Schine.
Schine, son of the wealthy hotel and theater family, later was drafted and has been on duty at Camp Gordon. Ga. He is a private.
Secretary Stevens said when Sen McCarthy brought up the commission question directly with him at the New York meeting. "I moved away from the subject as rapidly as I could."
He said he knew Sen. McCarthy and Cohn earlier enlisted the aid of Undersecretary of State Walter Bedell Smith and Maj. Gen. Miles W. Reber, Army liaison officer with Congress, in futile efforts to have Schine commissioned.
Secretary Stevens said he first met Sen. McCarthy last September 8, four days after he learned of the senator's intention to investigate the Army. He read about it in a newspaper in Montana, where he was spending a Labor day holiday.
He said he contacted Sen. McCarthy immediately on returning to Washington and met him in Sen. McCarthy's office the next day.
Mr. Jenkins later asked if Stevens' recollection was clear or hazy" with Stevens (1983) quoting commission for Schine at the Sept 16 meeting in New York,
Weather
A light drizzle, which ended before noon, accompanied students to
CLOUDY
grees. Tomorrow also will be cloudy with occasional showers in the east and central portions.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 23,1954
Flick New Look Grows But Answer is Quality
The average moviegoer can't help being somewhat confused over the current revolutions now taking place in the motion picture industry, as are the movie men themselves. Hardly a week goes by without at least one new method or process of making motion pictures announced.
The "new look" in motion pictures began late in 1952 when producer Arch Oboler turned out a quickie entitled "Bwana Devil" in 3-dimension. Everyone agreed the picture was an example of Hollywood at its worst, but theaters were jammed wherever the picture played by people eager to see and participate in this wonderful new experience in motion pictures.
The result was that producers and studios began making 3-D films as fast as they could, and not a one of the films was held in high esteem by the film critics, even up to the present.
Somewhere along the line stereophonic sound came into existence, a method of using a separate amplifying machine and several loudspeakers placed around the theater so that sound could overpower the moviegoer from any direction desired.
However, 20th Century-Fox was quick to realize that Cinerama could never be used on a mass basis because of the expense and time involved. The studio seized upon a new anamorphic lens system whereby a wide-angle area of action was "squeezed" by the camera lens on a strip of 35 mm. film and expanded back to normal size by a lens on the projector.
Earlier there was Cinerama, in which three projectors and three cameras were used to film and project three overlapping areas of action side by side, all but encircling the fan with both sight and sound.
Fox technicians developed a new magnetic sound system whereby it was possible to put four separate soundtracks on the film, two on each side of the picture frame, dubbed the entire system Cinema-Scope, and hurriedly began filming "The Robe" as its first venture in the new medium. Shortly after the production began, Fox decided to convert its entire studio to the new process and produce CinemaScope films exclusively.
Being one of the two biggest studios in the world, Fox was able to quickly convince other studios they should use CinemaScope at least partly.
Paramount remained aloof from the process, asserting that the 2.55 to 1 ratio used by CinemaScope was not the most desirable for most films. Recently Paramount announced its own new system of VistaVision, in which the mechanism in a standard camera is arranged so that the film negative passes the lens horizontally instead of vertically, thereby exposing approximately two and one-half times the amount of negative which normally is used to photograph a scene.
The newest of the systems is known as SuperScope, and it employs an amorphic lens on both camera and projector which can be adjusted easily to any size or ratio desired. Another new system is the Todd-AO process, and the first film in this medium, now in production, is Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Oklahoma!"
So the wheels of revolution in Hollywood go around and around, and where they stop nobody knows. The public can only hope that some semblance of standardization comes about soon.
Oddly enough, in respect to CinemaScope, some of its best features have been most apparent in musical prologues and short subjects rather than in feature films. The 4-track magnetic sound system is most appealing when it is used in the performance of a musical composition. The music is both fuller and richer when heard over the high fidelity system.
—Court Ernst
LEMME TELL YOU MY KIND OF A JOKE...
SEEMS A MAN WAS TALKIN' TO A MOTH
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N.Y. HALL
204 QUINCY ST.
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COPYRIGHT 1950 KOLT
OL FRANK SIDEBOTHAM
Maybe only stamp collectors care about such things, but something out to be said about the Kansas territorial commemorative that'll be turned loose on the nation following its first day of issue May 31.
Wagons, Oxen Overworked For Stamps
The postage stamp, as illustrated in area newspapers, show a ghastly covered wagon drawn by oxen—sort of a "Ghost Riders in the Sky" theme. Wheat fields and farm houses that arose on the plain occupy the lower portion of the stamp.
Certainly the issue is not as cluttered as some in the past—the Colorado statehood commemorative showed the state capitol in Denver, the state seal, the state flower (columbine), a cowboy, and the Mount of the Holy Cross. But the theme of the covered wagon, we'd say, is getting a bit old. Witness:
1936-Oregon territory commemorative, covered wagon.
1947—Utah territory, covered wagon (rear ends of fat oxen prominently shown).
1948—Another Oregon territory, covered wagon.
1948 - Swedish pioneers, covered wagon.
1945—Fort Kearney, Neb., covered wagon (ghostlike cows, too.)
1949—Minnesota territory, Red River ox cart (looks like covered wagon).
1950—California statehood, covered wagon.
1953-Gadsden purchase, covered wagon.
1953-Washington territory, covered wagon.
Just a suggestion to the stamp designers—why not the Kansas sunflower springing up in the middle of the stamp, flanked by portraits of John Brown and Carry Nation?
-RD
Progressive Politics
If every vote cast Was done honestly
If every
Was done honestly
It would come as a wonder
And surprise to me!
Each man has the right
To face another
But that doesn't mean
Again and again!
John P.
John Barber College Senior
Short Ones
Two tennis players have agree to serve underhanded when playing each other. They might get some campus politicians to do it for them, however, they've had more experience at that sort of thing.
It was once said "in spring a young man's fancy turns to love." It looks like on this campus it turned to politics, and a few young men got too fancy for their own good.
A Kansas headline included two play titles, "Happy Journey" and "No Exit." Who would complain at a deal like that.
Barbara Korn was chosen in the election to represent the University in the College Queen of America contest. But this is the Wheat State!
Daily Hansam
--or March 3, 1879.
EDITORIAL STAFF
University of Kansas Student Newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 387
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU are Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editor Assn. Inland Daily Press Assn. Associated Collegiate Press Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Association, Avenue N, Y. City, Mall Subscription interest $4.50 year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University's annual university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act
Editorial editor ... Don Tice
Assistants ... Letty Lemor.
NEWS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Executive editor Tom Stewart
Managing editors Tom Shannon
Sam Tekaford, Ket
Bronenbach, Hamilton
News Editor Elizabeth Wohlstein
Sports editor Dana Leibengood
Society editor Karen Hilmer
Nancy Neville
M. Puckey
News adviser
BUSINESS STAFF
Business mgr. Alainah Meyer
Advertising mgr. Susanne Berry
Nat adv. mgr. Rodney Davis
Classified adv. mgr. Edmond Bartlett
Recruiting mgr. Wendell Sullivan
Publick Occurrences BOTH FORREIGN AND DOMESTICK
Friday, April 23
CAMPUS
Ballot-box stuffers, beware! Something will be done in the runoff All Student Council election to Insure (with a capital I) fair and honest voting. We predict there will be official poll watchers.
STATE
With the recent announcement that Topeka has approved installation of an air raid warning system for the city many other Kansas communities will follow suit in short order.
Now that state elections are nearing, look for Attorney General Harold R. Fatzer's campaign against "loan sharks" to get hotter and hotter.
NATIONAL
Expect other states to follow Texas' lead in declaring the Communist party illegal.
The government, faced with charges that the automobile "glass-pox" in the western states is due to atomic rays, soon will conduct an outright scientific investigation to quell possible panic.
Don't be surprised if Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) campaigns in Illinois for Joseph T. Meek, who is opposing Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D.-III.) in the fall elections.
The defeat of J. Parnell Thomas in Tuesday's bid for a return to Congress on a pro-McCarthy platform is a clue to a probable trend in the fall election. Voters will be likely to discriminate against any candidate who claims to be a "1,000 per cent supporter" of the Wisconsin senator.
INTERNATIONAL
Insiders say the Japanese have found evidence that Russia may have exploded an H-bomb device shortly after the March 1 test by the U.S.
...LETTERS...
Although Vice President Richard Nixon may think it possible, the U.S. will not send ground forces to take an active part in the Indochina fighting unless massive Chinese units also are sent into the war.
We, the undersigned students of the University School of Law, wish to make clear that the "Weakly" columns which have been appearing under the heading "Letters" on the editorial pages of the University Daily Kansan, and which are signed by one who characterizes himself "1st Year Law," do not represent the opinion of the law school as a whole.
(Editor's note: Because of the number and length of the letters received on this topic we are unable to run them all in those entirely. Therefore we are printing excerpts from several letters with the names of the writers included.)
We suspect that said "1st Year Law" student has been employed by those who inhabit Marvin Hall for the purpose of casting discredit upon the School of Law, and we suggest that the University Daily Kansas henceforth and forevermore refuse to be a party to said dastardly conspiracy.
To the editors:
Signed by 39 law Students
To the editor:
After reading the letter by Howard L. Lydick, First Year Law, in the Daily Kansas, I can't help but feel he hasn't yet come to his course in Logic I. Perhaps that comes in Second Year Law. At any rate, he has fallen prey to that ridiculous syllogism:
McCarthy opposes Communism
Carthy opposes Communism Liberals oppose McCarthy Therefore: All liberals are
Communists
Such fallacious logic is the essence of McCarthyism and is a slick way of sidetracking the real issue—McCarthy himself. This, I notice, Mr. Lydick avoids. All he says is that the accusations against McCarthy are false; but he doesn't bother to show us why they are false. As a prospective lawyer, Mr. Lydick should know better.
The next time Mr. Lydick feels the urge to attack those nasty liberals, I suggest, that unlike Senator McCarthy, he come armed with some facts.
Broderick Orrmont KU Alumnus
Because of limitations on my time and a scarcity of space in the Daily
To the editor:
In response to the April 20 article concerning Senator McCarthy which was written by Mr. Lydick of the Law School:
Kansan I shall not endeavor to refute the barrage of charges made by Mr. Lydick. Nor will I condescend to affiliate Mr. Lydick, or Senator McCarthy and his supporters to the neo-Nazi movement.
There is something patently fallacious about calling anti-McCarthy people "communists" or committing them to categorize fallacious to categorize non-communists as "reactionaries" and McCarthy supporters as "Facists."
After reading the letter of Mr. Lydick's (whom I consider to be a friend) I am reminded of Bryce's penetrating words: "Ignorance, apathy, and excessive partisanship are the greatest enemies of democracy."
In closing I want to reiterate a statement made by Adlai Stevenson during the 1952 campaign that seems apropos at this point. "Too often sinister threats to the Bill of Rights, to freedom of the mind, are concealed under the patriotic cloak of anti-companionism."
I venture to add that it takes something more than anti-communism to make a good American.
James P. Johnston 1st year law
To the editor:
It was both with interest and nausea that I read Mr. Lydick's letter. His intense and hysterical praise of the senator caused the other effect. Obviously Mr. Lydick thinks "Joe" is purer than Ivory soap, I and apparently many others disagree.
The senator, too, often hides behind his Senatorial immunity when he utters his "proof-positive" charges. Today the assistant secretary of defense called him a liar (without immunity) and dared the "Great Exposer" to repeat statements without immunity. We all know the reply.
In closing permit me to urge all, whether pro or con in this matter, not to allow a religious bias prejudice their viewpoint. This moment in no way refers to Mr. Lydick, but is prompted by discussions that the writer has witnessed
Gilbert Koff Graduate student
Friday, April 23, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 3
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 23, 1954
TEAMS
DON SNEEGAS
Sneegas Aiming for Slam At Drake Relays Tomorrow
The experts who maintain you can't mix sports won't believe this, but Don Sneegas, Kansas, new javelin sensation, has built his throwing arm through baseball and softball.
"Pitching can't help but build up your arm," says the 6-1, 180-pound Lawrence native who will be aiming at a grand slam of the Midwest relays spear championships this weekend at Drake.
"I through the last four summers I've averaged three games a week pitching baseball or playing the infield in softball." Sneegas points out, "I've never had a sore arm, either because of baseball or the javelin."
Sneegas must have something. His winning cast of 196 feet $ \frac{9}{4} $ inches here last Saturday represented more than a 40-foot improvement over his first sophomore heave, a fling of 136-0 against Nebraska in a dual here last spring.
He threw 189-4 for an upset victory at Texas three weeks ago, thereby becoming the first Jay-hawker in history to capture this event at either Texas, Kansas or Drake.
This means Sneegas will be shooting for the sixth javelin slam in the annals of the Midwest wheel just a year after he failed even to earn a spot on KU's traveling squad.
Fact is, Sneegas broke into prominence on his very first road trip last May when he threw 184 feet 4 inch for second behind teammate Jim Swim to give Kansas a surprise 2-1 finish at the Big Seven meet at Ames. There was nothing mysterious about Swim's title, but nobody had heard of Sneegas. He was worth eight points in the Jayhawkers' second consecutive landslide.
His cast at Ames represented the trim local's all-time best until his stummer at Austin early this month. At the latter carnival he beat, Pete Mayeaux, Texas A&M's defending Southwest conference champion, and Wes Ritchie, two-time Kansas Relays king.
Here last Saturday he kept Ritchey from being the first man in history to win three Kansas spear crowns in succession. He again victimized Mayeaux and beat back a new challenger, Marion Hudson of Dana. All four place winners were grouped within six feet.
Now an athlete who didn't even report for track as a freshman two years age . . . serving instead as the Jayhawkers' batting practice pitcher . . . is shooting for the second grand slam ever achieved by a Big Seven competitor. Nebraska's Herb Grote is the only league thrower now within this magic circle. And he is the last of only five who have spun such a triple.
As a high school senior, Sneegas threw 179-10, still a Lion record. As a junior he hit 165-0. He started inauspiciously as a sophomore at 148.0. He tripled as a pole-vaulter and high-jumper.
He credits 10 extra pounds and improved technique for his successes this year, along with that strenuous summer baseball-softball routine.
"The most important thing for me is to keep my eye on the point of the javelin." Sneegas explains, "Coach (Bill Easton) finally has pounded that into me. If you don't watch the point from the beginning of the delivery until you let it go, you jerk your head away and down too soon and either slice or pull. By keeping your head straight you can get the javelin off in a straight line which is the main thing. I've also managed to increase my speed on the run-up."
Sneegas will run into three new and prominent challengers at Drake. Most formidable of these is Benny Garcia of Tempe State. His best throw to date is 189-4, but he fired 213-1 last year. LSU's Bob Childress, who pitched 195-11 for second at the Border Olympics and Joe May, of the same school, who spanned 185-10 at Loredo, are the other two.
Sneegas is an easy well-coordinated pitcher who presses the spear carefully aloft as if he were launching a model airplane.
Lloyd Mangrum and Ted Kroll fired 68's yesterday to take the first round lead in the $35,000 Las Vegas Tournament of Champions.
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By UNITED PRESS
What manner of men are these new Pittsburgh Pirates?
Well, in the first place they're really boys, not men, and if you want to find out something about them, don't go to the Pirate roster—because a number of them are such greenhorns they weren't even listed earlier this spring.
And even though they don't terrorize the other clubs in the National league this season, they sure have the Giants scared to death.
It was a typical Pirate starting lineup that Manager Fred Haney sent on the field Thursday loaded with six rookies including Pitcher George O'Donnell, who was making his first major league start. But were they scared? No sir, they made three runs in the first inning, kayoed Giant pitcher Ruben Gomez with three more in the third, and coasted to a 7-4 victory.
Another thing—they like fresh air no more of this living in the cellar for them, at least not for awhile. Sixth place was their niche today and they could go higher.
Young Pirates Terrorize Giants
O'Donnell held the Giants to eight hits, stranded eight men on base, and would have escaped with only two runs scored against him had no rookie shortstop Gair Allie
committed two errors in the eighth inning.
Hat Rice, one of the three veterans in the lineup, drilled a three run homer in the first inning, scoring rookie Bob Skinner, who had singled. Skinner, who recently came out of military service and who never before played anything higher than class D baseball, collected a pair of singles a double and a triple for a perfect day at bat.
Allie, before committing his errors, had connected for his first major league home run. Rookie second baseman Curtis Roberts drove in two runs with a basesloaded single, continuing the timely hitting that he has delivered since he broke in at the start of the season—the first Negro ever to play for Pittsburgh. The sixth rookie in the lineup, Gail Henley, who once was in the Giant organization but never saw the Polo grounds, delivered one hit and drew a walk.
It was Pittsburgh's third victory in four games with the highly-rated giants this season. O'Donnell, who was "rookie of the year" with Hollywood of the Pacific Coast league last season, showed good control, walking only two men. He generally was ahead of the hitters.
In the only major league game scheduled Thursday, The Orioles
defeated the Indians at Baltimore, 4-1, on five-hit pitching by Duane Pillette, who gained his second straight victory. Pillette was given a working margin in the first inning when Baltimore scored three runs off starter Mike Garcia, sending him out of the game.
Whitfield to Run Mile at Penn Relays
Philadelphia—(U.P.)—The 60th annual Penn relays, spiced by the bid of Mal Whitfield for a mile championship, open at Franklin field today with a record 3,212 contestants from a record 511 colleges and schools entered in the 91 events spread through today and tomorrow.
The test of champions begins with the very first event, where Josh Culbreath of Morgan State defends in the 400-meter hurdles.
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A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORY
P. R. B.
"There wasn't a dull minute!"
DICK WALLNER, '52, left a trail of work as he whirled through a year of telephone training. Here he recalls the variety of his training jobs,
(Reading time: 36 seconds)
"Training can really be interesting. I found that out when I joined A.T.&T.S Long Lines Department after getting my B.A. at Cincinnati and my M.A. at Michigan in '52. Long Lines is the organization specializing in Long Distance communications. I was put in the training program, and there wasn't a dull minute.
"For instance, one of my jobs in the Traffic Department was estimating the exact number of calls that would be placed in a city on Christmas Day. My estimate was off by only 68 calls!
"Then in the Plant Department, I made a study of damage done to a certain cable. Found out that the most damage occurred in an area used by hunters. Some special public relations work among hunters helped improve that situation.
"And in the Commercial Department, I helped analyze the communication problems of one of the largest textile companies—it had widespread offices and plants. The recommendations made are now in use.
"The variety in my training has carried over to my regular job here in Cincinnati. My job is to see that good service is maintained for private line customers pipeline and power companies, theater TV and the like. Every day is different
"As far as I am concerned, I've found my career."
. . .
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Like so many college people who have joined the Bell System, Dick has a job he enjoys. There are also job opportunities with other Bell Telephone Companies, the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. This is a good time to see your Placement Officer for full details.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
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Along the JAYHAWKER trail
We enjoyed the interscholastic relay last week, but we think possibly some changes could be made in the high school meet which would speed things up and make things more enjoyable for the spectators.
By DANA LEIBENGOOD Kansan Sports Editor
It would have been better to have had the 12 or 15 teams with the best teams enter the race instead of having any team, that wanted to, enter. The relays of course are for any boy who wants to enter, but it would be much better to have just the "cream of the crop" running.
For instance there were 55 Class B teams entered in the 880-yard relay and 77 teams entered in all three classes. With 55 teams it necessitated having five heats with 11 teams to a heat. This in itself is bad to have that many teams ina race at the same time.
We can only remember one or two heats when there were more than four or five teams actually in the race, leaving the other six men to get in the way of the teams which did have a chance.
We have heard considerable criticism the past few days on the number of boys entering the high school events. A great many boys were entered in races who had absolutely no chance of winning.
In the open mile and 880 the same situation existed, a great number of runners with only five or six having a chance to win the event.
With so many teams entered it makes the relays drag even when everything is run off on time, as it was last week.
In the future it would be a good idea to screen the teams entering the race, especially in class B, to get the teams which do have good times. This could also be done in Class A, but it probably wouldn't be necessary, at least in the relay events, to do that in Class AA because the number of schools entered is much smaller.
Anyone wanting to help a worthy cause and have a good meal beside should plan to attend the breakfast tomorrow starting at 7 a.m. in the Community building. The breakfast is held every year to raise money for the junior legion baseball team. The menu includes bacon or sausage, pancakes and coffee, and the price is only 50 cents. We can highly recommend this breakfast on the basis of past experience.
I-M Schedule
Saturday
Saturday
Independent "A"
2 p.m. (G-1) Mox-Battenfeld
3:30 p.m. (G-2)AFROTC "B"-Sig O
3:30 p.m. (G-1) Phisics-Fac. Fossils
Fraternity "A"
3:30 field 1, Kappa Sig-Sig Eps
3:30 field 2, Pi K-A Phi Delts
Fraternity "B"
2 p.m.(G-2) A T O -Delts
2 p.m. field 2, Kappa Sig-DU
2 p.m. field 3, Phi Psi-Beta
2 p.m. field 1, Delta Chi-Nu Sig Nu
Sunday
Independent "A"
2 p.m. (G-2 AFROTC "A" Shockers
3:30 p.m. field 1, Ster-Oliver-698s
3:30 p.m. field 2, Joliffe-U V O
Fraternity "A"
2 p.m. (G-1) Sig Nu-Phi Kap Tau
2 p.m. field 2, Phi Psi-Phi Kap Sig
2 p.m. field 3, Sigma Chi-DU
3:30 p.m. field 3, A T O- T K E
3:30 p.m. (G-1) Delta Chi-Delts
3:30 p.m. (G-2) Bettas-Phi Kap
Fraternity "B"
3:30 p.m.
University Daily Kansan
Page
Friday, April 23, 1954
2 p.m. field 1, Sigma Chi- Phi Delts
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KU Relay Teams Favored at Drake
Des Moines, Iowa—(U.P.)—Slim Wes Santee, Kansas' hope for a four-minute mile, leads two fast Jayhawk relay teams into the Big 45th Drake Relays today and records seem almost sure to fall.
A huge field of 739 athletes from 72 colleges and universities filled the infield of Drake stadium and several are expected to set new Drake or American collegiate marks in the two-day meet.
But relay officials kept a sharp eye on the weather forecast. Mild, partly sunny weather was expected to prevail today, then give way to cool April showers or thunderstorms.
Santee, 22, who has run a 4:02.4 mile and still working toward his prime, will run in four or five relays here rather than in the open mile. The Kansas teams could crack records in every relay they enter.
Kansas had a good chance to beat the American collegiate record of 3:22.7 and the Drake time of 3:23 in the university sprint medley today. The KU sprint medley team is composed of Frank Cindrick, Dick Blair, Ralph Moody, and Santee. The Illinois team is also loaded with
speed, and has a chance at both records.
The Jayhawks also were favored to win the four-mile university relay with milers Lloyd Koby, Art Dalzell, Al Frame, and Santee. They've already run it in 17:15:6—3 seconds under the Drake mark.
Santee and Kansas will be favored in the University two-mile and distance medley relays. Santee will be joined by Cindrich, Koby and Dalzell in the distance medley, and Frame, Koby, and Dalzell in the two-mile. Southern Methodist Illinois, Iowa, and Texas A&M all have a good chance in these events.
Four Texas sprinters—Dean Smith, Jerry Prewit, Al Frieden and Charlie Thomas—could set new world records in the 440-yard and 880-yard relays tomorrow. They've already cracked the 440 record at the Kansas Relays last week with 40:3.
Rich Ferguson of Iowa was expected to beat the Drake two-mile record of 9:10 today. He had run it in 9:02.7 earlier. Denny Meyer of Washington was rated his strongest competitor.
rated a good chance of setting a new Drake record in the 440-yard hurdles. He already has run 1.1 seconds under the record of 524.1.
In a pair of other finals today, John Bennett of Marquette and Neville Price of Oklahoma has the best previous in the broad jump and Bob Van Dee of Oklahoma has the best previous record in the discus throw.
Saturday's 100-yard dash shapes up as the hottest here in years. Willie Williams of Illinois, who twice has done 9.4, will fight it out with the Texas trio of Smith, Thomas, and Frieden. he first two have run 9.5 and Frieden 9.8 Drakes record is 9.5.
Lee Yoder of Louisiana also was
Ron Mitchel of Illinois could set a new high jump mark tomorrow. He's leaped 6-9/4—an inch and a quarter above the Drake record.
Two Grid Drills Tomorrow
The KU football squad will have two practice sessions tomorrow. A scrimmage is scheduled for 9:30 a.m., and another practice is set for 2 p.m. Films will be taken at the morning scrimmage.
Golf, Net Teams To Play Huskers
The Kansas tennis and golf teams will be in action today and tomorrow on road trips to the University of Nebraska and Omaha university.
The golf team plays at Omaha this afternoon, and will be shooting for its second win over the Nebraska team. On April 14 the KU golfers defeated Omaha 9-3 on the Lawrence Country club course.
On Saturday the golfers will travel to Lincoln for a meet with the Cornhuskers. Nebraska has two returning lettermen, Tom Tolen and Dick Lauer, and a returning squadman, Roger Gohde, on this year's team.
Bob Richards, John Prosser, Ed MacGee, and Noel Rooney are expected to play the first four positions in both golf matches for Kansas.
The tennis team will be in Lincoln on Saturday too. The Husker net team has two senior lettermen, Jim Campbell and Roy Colson, and two freshmen lettermen winners from last year, Norman Veiter and Marshall Becker.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Friday, April 23, 1954
$1,800 Given To Youths For Study Here
The award of $1,880 in cash scholarships to nine Kansas high school senior girls and one boy for study at the University next fall was announced today by Myron M. Braden, director of the aids and awards office.
N.Y. Architect To beLecturer
Howard T. Fisher, architect and construction industry consultant of Chicago and New York, will be at the University Wednesday and Thursday.
The Women's Self-Government association honor scholarship of $300 will be held by Joyce Klemp, of Leavenworth.
Eight girls will receive $160 each as Donnelly honor scholarships from a trust fund established by the late Jennie M. Donnelly of Kansas City, They are Martha Leona Andrews of Wichita; Janie Jackson of Kansas City, Margaret Jean Maddox of Lawrence, Basia Miller of Manhattan, Ethel Matel Porter of Kansas City, Dorothy Ann Robins of Halstead, Margaret Ann Saxe of Wichita, and Norma Sue Walling of Kansas City.
The Fora S. Boynton scholarship of $300 will be given to Charles O. Christensen, of Kansas City. The award was set up by gifts from former Summerfield scholars in honor of Mrs. Boynton, who for many years was secretary of the Summerfield committee.
He will give a public lecture at 3 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium, then talk to several architecture classes and conduct interviews with students and faculty in the department.
Mr. Fisher is a graduate of Harvard university and a former teacher there. Since 1931 he has been in private practice and specializes in large scale housing development, shopping centers, and government projects.
In 1932 he organized General Houses, Inc., then became a government consultant for the United Nations, Pan American Union and National Union of Columbia. In 1952 he was the United Nations, U.S.A., and American Institute of Architects delegate to the Pan American Congress of Architects in Mexico City.
Interviews
Two companies wil hold job interviews for engineering students next week. Persons interested may sign the interview schedule in 111 Marvin.
MONDAY
The Reed Roller Bit company will interview mechanical and petroleum engineers and geologists. They are also interested in mechanical engineers for summer jobs.
THURSDAY
Procter and Gamble company will interview chemical, mechanical, electrical and civil engineers for summer jobs.
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
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Miss Canary Lauded
Mrs. Martin Jones, retired president of the American Association of University Women, yesterday presented Nancy Canary, education senior, with the Senior Woman award in recognition of outstanding achievements. The award was given at a coffee for senior women from 9:30to 11 a.m. in the Kansas room of the Union.
Frye Takes 2nd In Paper Contest
George J. Frye, engineering senior, won second in the student paper competition of the regional Institute of Radio Engineers held Wednesday in Kansas City.
Frye was competing for the John A. Costello Award. A student from the University of Arkansas won first prize.
Frye read a paper on "Receiving Systems Employing Intermittent Frequency Application."
Another University student, Robert S. Lukenbill, engineering senior, will be at Kansas State college today to compete in the paper convention of the American Institute of Electrical engineers.
For sandpapering irregular surfaces, Popular Mechanics Magazine recommends that the abrasive be wrapped around a scrubbrush. The bristles permit enough "give" to allow the sandpaper to follow any curvatures in the surface.
The 12th Western Books exhibition will be on display at Watson library until May 3.
Famous Books On Display
Representing the best work done in 1952 by printers in the western U.S., the exhibit is composed of 43 books, which range in subject matter from a cook book to poetry. The basis of selection was quality of design and printing.
By sponsoring this exhibition each year, the Rouncee and Coffin club of Los Angeles hopes to stimulate high standards of book design and printing in the West, and to present to the public an indication of the quality of books published by Western printers.
Judges for this year's exhibition were Theodore M. Lilienthal. San Francisco book collector; Dr. Marcus E. Crahan, book collector and member of the Los Angeles Zamorano club; and Richard J. Hoffman, instructor of Graphic Arts at the Los Angeles City college and chairman of judges for the Rounce and Coffin club.
Eye
YOUR EYES
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YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
James Roth, resident conservator of paintings at the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City, will speak tonight on "Conservation and Restoration of Old
Conservator to Tell Restoration Methods
Master Paintings" in the lecture hall of the Museum of Art. He will illustrate his talk with colored slides. The lecture is open to the public.
Master Paintings" in the lecture hall of the Museum of Art.
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Coming Soon "LUCKY ME" in CinemaScope
Make your own "proving ground" test.
The new 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door sedan. With 3 great series, Chevrolet offers the most beautiful choice of models in its field.
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'Conserving Paintings Discussed by Mr. Roth
Page 7
By RON GRANDON
"It is not possible to restore a painting, only to conserve it agains further deterioration," James Roth, resident conservator of painting at the William Rockhill Nelson gallery in Kansas City, told a small audience in the lecture hall of the Museum of Art last night.
Mr. Roth gave an illustrated talk' on the topic, "The Conservation and Restoration of Old Master Paintings." He is nationally known as the discoverer of an early 10th century Chinese wall painting—the only one in the world.
University Daily Kansan
"Works of art will not last forever because the materials with which they are made decompose in the air we breathe," he said.
Some of the things damaging a painting are the decay of the fabric itself, the extreme dryness of old paint, the warping of the wood frames, and the yellowing of the varnish which is on the surface of the picture. he said.
"Modern science is helpful to the conservator." Mr. Roth said.
commended were the use of ultraviolet light to tell a picture's age, the use of x-ray to determine the authenticity of a picture, and spectrographic analysis to determine the type of pigments used in the painting.
Some scientific devices which he
"Three steps of the conservator's work which are analogous to the work of a doctor are the hygienic, remedial, and clinical studies which are used in conserving a painting," he said.
"The Golden Glow of Rembrandt has become a fallacy." Mr. Roth said. He showed several colored slides which demonstrated the whiteness which was under the yellow varnish of several pictures.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Sociology club, coffee, 4 p.m., Strong annex; room 17. Second session on "Advice to Future Sociologists." Recording of the American Sociological society.
TOMORROW
Gamma Delta, Lutheran student group, 6:30 p.m., 17th and Vermont. Alumni banquet, Speaker; Walter K. Hilmer, Topeka—Christian Steward-
SATURDAY
Der deutsche Verein spring party, 8 p.m. Fine room, Student Union.
Jayhawk Brotherhood meeting 3 p.m.
Spokesman posted.
Student Religious council, 4 p.m.
Myers hall. Election of officers.
MONDAY
Gamma Delta cost supper. 5:30 p.m.
17th and Vermont. Everyone welcome.
'Rifles' to Drill Tonight
The Pershing Rifles drill team will go to Kansas City tonight to drill at the Shawnee-Mission Relays. Carol Fluhardy, college sophomore, and a member of Delta Delta Delta and candidate for national Pershing Rifles queen, will accompany the cadets.
An autonobile radiator throws off enough heat, on a day when the temperature is zero, to heat a 6-room house.
CLASSIFIED ADS
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST: Experienced in tines, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF=t*
FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking.
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TYPING: Quick, accurate typing Rea-
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eight o'clock.
TYPIST, experienced in all kinds of students. Yeqiulat, 1953; Barker Ake, Ph. 2525j (t) for Dr. T. Rudolph.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the field. Their needs are ours. Our furs, their everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Phone. Conn. 418
EVERYAGE, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American ServICE Company, **616 Vt** fc.
TRANSPORTATION
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Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines. Get cheap airline fares, tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature on your Summer vacation. TOM MAUIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone 3661 tf
RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day festivals. Call Miss Rose Gleseman the Fiesta Information and for samples and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tr
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BULOVA WHIST WATCH near 14th and Ohio streets. Gold case, second hand missing, gold link band. Reward. Call Don Pearson, 86. 4-28
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SUNDAY SHOWS — 1:00 - 3:02 - 5:04 - 7:06 - 9:08
FEATURE TIMES — 1:24 - 3:26 - 5:28 - 7:30 - 9:32
Friday, April 23, 1958
Rock Chalk Director Needed for '54-'55
Friday, April 30, is the deadline for applications for the position of director for next year's Rock Chalk Revue, Courtney Nason, college sophomore, announced today.
Applications are to be in written form, giving full listing of previous experience in producing or acting in theatrical productions. Applications should be submitted to the YMCA office, room 111 of the Student Union basement.
'Too Young to Tango?'
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
South American dance lessons are being taught by Miss Shirley Hughes from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursdays in the Jayhawkroom in the Student Union. The dance steps to be taught are the tango, rhumba, samba, and mamba. Each lesson costs 25 cents.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 23, 195
P. S. BACON
FRANKLIN LECTURER—“Acids and Bases” will be the title of an address given today by Dr. Joel H. Hildebrand, sixth annual E. C. Franklin Memorial lecturer. Dr. Hildebrand is president-elect of the American Chemical society. (Story on page 1).
Elections Unit Members Feel Justified in Action
A student and a spokesman for the faculty gave their reasons for abstaining from voting yesterday when the All Student Council elections committee threw out the results of the Senate and House of Representatives elections along with the previously invalidated presidential and vice presidential results.
The election results and the invalidation action will be placed in the hands of the student court next Friday.
No date has been set for the second election pending the outcome of the court's action.
Fred Heath, college sophomore said, "I abstained from voting for a new election because I was not acquainted with enough concrete evidence to enable me to make a decision. Therefore, I felt I was unqualified to vote one way or the other."
Jack Heysinger, assistant professor of business, when asked the reason for the three faculty members abstaining, replied, "We ordinarily abstain from voting because we have the authority should run their own government."
He said that the faculty member could legitimately vote on the committee, but added that he couldn't remember an instance when the faculty members had ever exercised this power.
"If an election got completely ou-
tired, suppose the faculty men be-
tend to send it."
In yesterday's decision Ron Sammons, college senior, Jocelyn Daugherty, college sophomore, and Robert Pope, graduate student, voted to invalidate the Senate and House elections. Dana Anderson, college junior, and Farrell Schell, engineering senior, voted against the action
Heath, although he abstained on the House and Senate question, said he voted in favor of a new election for the president and vice president. The results of the ASC presidential and vice presidential voting was invalidated by the elections committee Wednesday morning.
Heath said that "since the margin between the two candidates was only six votes with 63 ballots remaining uncounted, some because they were invalid but others valid except for the technicality of not having the numbers clipped off, and since the election would have turned out one way without counting these and another by counting them, it was a question of whether the result of the count reflected the real choice of the students."
Gary Davis and Robert Bradstreet now are drawing up a formal petition for presentation to the court.
Seniors to Plan For Convocation
Final plans for a senior convocation to be held Wednesday will be made at a meeting of the chairmen of committees of the Class of '54 at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Pine room of the Student Union.
All seniors will be excused from class during the convocation by request of the Chancellor, said Nancy Canary, education senior and president of the class.
The convocation is set for 10 a.m. in Fraser theater.
Besides reports from committee chairmen, Miss Canary said, business to be handled at the convocation will include:
1. Deciding on a gift to be presented to the University.
2. Distribution of the Senior Reminder, a timetable and information booklet designed to clarify and list the activities of commencement week.
3. Discussing the class breakfast, a part of the yearly graduation festivities.
Twelve sororities are competing in the first annual Sigma Chi Derby day Saturday at 1:30 p.m. The races will take place on the tennis courts of the Sigma Chi house.
First 'Derby Day' To Be Tomorrow
4. Planning Senior day.
Two major problems facing Iran today are a strongly developing Communist party and the need to make an oil settlement pay enough to balance the budget dencit and support an economic-social program. Edward A. Bayne, American Universities Field Staff specialist, said in a group interview yesterday. Negotiations began two weeks ago in Iran to attempt to reach an oil settlement, but the Communist party has continued to grow.
Reds, Oil-Iran's Problems
The women will test their skill in the pony express relay, ping-pong ball throw, grapefruit relay, sack race, one legged race, three-legged race, candle race, egg in spoon relay, leap frog race, and backwards race.
Trophies will be awarded to the sorority and the individual with the highest score. All winners will receive citations.
Dan Dibble, business senior, is in charge of the Derby day committee. Other members of the committee are: Dave Cleveland, college sophomore, John Brown, college junior, and Steve Schmit, college freshman.
Mr. Bayne cited three considerations which will be of importance in the re-establishing of Iranian oil production. The price and amount of oil to be marketed, the problem of investment, and the degree of compensation to be paid to the Iranian government are of prime importance, to the settlement. The Middle East has 55 per cent of the world's oil reserves, he added, and of these Iran holds 20-25 per cent.
An interesting contrast in oil production between the U.S. and Iran was cited by Mr. Bayne. He quoted the 17% million ton production from 27,000 wells in the East Texas field as opposed to 30 million tons produced in 23 Iranian wells in one year.
The Communist Tudeh party has grown steadily in Iran, Mr. Bayne noted. Iran has the longest Russian border of any country in the Free World, but there is "no great love between any Iranian and Russia," he added.
the country "may easily be maneuvered by Communism if there is no counterforce."
"Tran represents a basis for instability." Mr. Bayne said. A very primitive country where 75-85 per cent of the people cannot read or write, it is an "easy target for mobs and propaganda." Seventy per cent of the population are found in isolated villages, and in the urban areas only 25 per cent of the people are productively employed," he said, illustrating his statement that
Mr. Bayne described Iran as a country which had known 5,000 years of greatness and had several times ruled the world, yet "had retained its ethic purity and historical sovereignty." With such a background, the country naturally "presented being squeezed between Russia and the British. The impairing of their sovereignty caused resentment in the people," he explained.
The policy of the United States in Iran has been one of general moral support, and there were two purposes for the Point Four aid given to the country, Mr Bayne explained. An immediate direct impression of the U. S. as a friendly country was accomplished by medical aid and improvement programs. A need also existed for a "voice of the West" in Iran, and the American policy was aimed at a device to obtain an effective spokesman for the Free World.
To the many Iranians, a foreigner is still called "Rum," a term dating back to the ancient visits from Romans, Mr. Bayne said. Although the people are grateful for aid, he reasoned, they cannot feel the gratitude or mutual relationship of an educated people. As realists, "they do not want the U. S. per se," but they are interested in the industrial processes which could aid their production.
The basic economy is built on scarcities. He said he felt that Iranians must adapt their philosophy in order to improve their conditions. "Time and the greater exchange of ideas," he predicted, "will accomplish this progress."
The new Shah is very progressive and has done a great deal for the country. Mr. Bayne informed the
students. He described the ruler as "a well-educated, gentle fellow, unlike his father." Since he became King in 1942, the Shah, who is very fond of hunting, has made great improvements in the primitive villages which he has passed, Mr. Bayne said.
Although he cannot be an executive officer himself, the Shah can urge the government toward constructive policies. The government, he said, is "strong so long as the army is obedient to it." He predicted that the present cabinet will not live long after it makes an oil agreement, if it does so.
FilmTonightOpens CervantesDayFete
A Spanish film, "Fuente Ovejuna," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium in connection with the Cervantes day celebration tomorrow. The film is open to the public without charge.
The festivities tomorrow will include a Cervantes day luncheon for 300 participants in the celebration, a variety show presented by students from visiting colleges and high schools, an all-day display of Spanish literature and teaching aids in 111 and 113 Strong.
The Kansas chapter of the American association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese will meet at 10:15 a.m., with delegates from various schools in the state attending.
A tea for all Cervantes day participants will close the program.
A total of 55,700,000 turkeys were raised in the United States in 1953. Synthetic soil conditioners have been found to combat "problem soil" in the garden that's tight and heavy.
A. J. H.
When Everything Looks SO Good!
See the wide choice of delicious food at your Student Union
It's Hard to Decide
When Everything Looks SO Good!
See the wide choice of delicious food at your Student Union
CAFETERIA & HAWK'S NEST
Kansas State Historical Society Topcka, Ks.
3 4 5 6 7 8
-Kansen photo by Larry Tretbar
BUT DAHLING!-At the crucial point in a grapefruit race are Lela Raines, education junior, and Sally Lindemuth, college sophomore. The race was one of the relays of the first annual Sigma Chi fraternity Derby Day. At the right is an unidentified official.
100 Sorority Girls Compete at Derby Day
Derbies, a six-piece band, crazy costumes, and a smudge pot for the Olympic "eternal flame" made up the first annual Sigma Chi Derby day Saturday on the tennis courts behind the fraternity house.
More than 100 contestants, representing their sororities competed, while approximately 300 spectators comprised of housemothers and fellow sorority members, cheered their teams on.
Chi Omega won first place, accumulating 12 and one-half points. Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Phi tied for second and third, each having nine and-one-half points, and Kappa Alpha Theta took fourth. A traveling trophy was given to Chi Omega.
Francile Aronhalt, education sophomore, representing Alpha Phi was the individual winner for the day. She was awarded a trophy. Certificates naming the contestant and the event wore were given to all place winners.
The Derby day began when Freebie, business junior, in shorts, derby and sweat shirt, carried the torch which lit the "eternal flame" a smudge pot. Welcome flags flew over the bleachers and Olympic winner stand.
May 18 has been set as the date for Senior day, Max Murray, business senior and chairman of the Senior day committee, last night told chairmen of other class committees:
Class to Discuss Senior Day Plans
Murray will explain all Senior day plans at the class convocation at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater. All members of the Class '54 have been excused for the convocation by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
Monday, April 26,1954
Nancy Canary, education senior and class president, said other materials to be taken up at the meeting include making a decision on the class gift, an explanation of the financial standing of the class, and important information concerning events occurring about the time of graduation.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
Test Evacuation Held in Spokane
Spokane, Wash. —(U,P)— The 70-block downtown area of this city of nearly 180,000 was virtually emptied today amid the sounds of war in the nation's first test evacuation of a city.
About 18,000 persons took part in the drill as federal and city observers looked on, hoping to obtain information which may set a national pattern of defense against atomic or H-bomb attack.
The drill began with the "yellow alert" which started a "snowball" telephoning of civil defense workers to man their posts. Radio stations broke into broadcasts to announce the warning. Then "red alert" sounded and "Operation Walkout" began.
As the air raid sounded, rail and motor traffic was brought to a standstill and clerks and customers streamed out of stores to join persons on the sidewalks in walking out of the "destruction zone."
51st Year, No. 132
All-U.S. Tournament Goes to KU Debaters
Bidault Asks Truce to Remove 1,000 Wounded
The anxiously-awaited 19-nation attempt to find peace for both Indochina and Korea narrowly had averted disaster at its outset by a last-minute compromise of Russia's demands that Red China be seated as an equal to the Big Four powers.
Geneva, Switzerland — (U.P.)— French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault appealed dramatically today for a truce to enable evacuation of 1,000 French wounded in besieged Dien Bien Phu in Indochina.
Mr. Bidault recalled that France had agreed to a Communist Viet Minh truce request for removal of wounded but said that all her own appeals for one had been ignored by the Communists.
The conference was opened in the former council chamber of the defunct League of Nations, overlooking Lake Geneva.
"I address today a solemn appeal to the conscience of the civilized world." Mr. Bidault added, "that the laws of war cease to be violated in this manner."
In an "appeal to the conscience of the civilized world" issued as the Geneva Far Eastern peace conference met in opening session, Mr. Bidault declared:
It marked the first time Red China had sat down with representatives of the western allies in a major world parley.
"It would be inconceivable that a conference meeting in Geneva should not open with a gesture to save from the hazards of combat the men who no longer can take part in it because they already have shed their blood. May my appeal, issued from this high place of peace, be heard."
Bidault's appeal was published after the conference's first meeting, to which newsmen were not admitted.
They agreed to rotate the chairmanship among the foreign ministers of Thailand, Britain and Russia.
A KU debate team won the highest honor that can be awarded a college team last week when it won the national debate tournament at West Point, N.Y.
The winning team was composed of William Arnold and Hubert Bell, college juniors, who competed against 32 top teams from all over the nation.
The teams that the KU team defeated in their quest for the championship were as follows:
ponsibility
In the final round, Florida university; semi-finals, Central State College, Oka; quarterfinals, University of Vermont; pre-quarterfinals, U.S. Military academy, and the preliminary rounds, Wilkes college, N.C.; Howard university, Washington, D.C., and the University of Illinois.
The team lost two preliminary rounds to the U.S.Military academy and George Washington university.
So far this year Arnold and Bell have had 24 wins and 5 losses. The tournaments they have won are the Southwestern and St. John's college tournaments at Winfield, Kan., and the regional elimination tournament at Midland college, Fremont, Neb. They received a superior rating in a tournament at the University of Nebraska.
Both debaters are members of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, and they tied for second place in the oratorical contest this year.
years.
KU's previous record at the West Point national tournament goes back to 1948 when KU's team went as far as the semi-finals. In 1951 KU entered the quarter-finals and in 1949, 1950, and 1953 teams entered the pre-quarter finals.
The national question debated this year was, "Resolved, that the U.S. should adopt a policy of free trade."
in commenting on the win Dr. Kim Giffin, debate coach said, "I think the team should be commended for the tremendous amount of hard work they have put in this year. I think their long preparation has had more to do with their winning than anything else—unless it was their will to win."
The Sigurd S. Larmon trophy signifying the national championship, was awarded the KU team at Grant hall at West Point.
Winning first place in the tournament this year assures the KU debate squad of an invitation to the national tournament next year, Dr Giffin said.
Stevens Both Praises, Blasts Fort Monmouth Investigation
Washington — (U.R.)—Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens admitted today that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's investigation of Fort Monmouth, N.J., "speeded up" the army's suspension of some personnel, but he said the inquiry caused "a lot of harm in a lot of ways."
He said the way the investigation was conducted was "not fair to the Army, and not fair to the American people."
Secretary Stevens made the statement in his second day of testimony at the Senate Investigating subcommittee's televised hearings on the Army-McCarthy dispute.
Subcommittee Counsel Ray H. Jenkins turned the questioning to the Fort Monmouth investigation, which Sen. McCarthy conducted last fall, in an effort to establish that C. David Schine was engaged in "vital" work at the time he was drafted into the Army as a private last Nov. 3
Secretary Stevens said a number of times that the Army had "a close
relationship with the FBI' on the Fort Monmouth situation before Sen. McCarthy began his investigations.
He conceded, under examination by Mr. Jenkins, that Sen. McCarthy's hearings may have "speeded up" the suspension of some Fort Monmouth employees as possible security risks. He said that the Army was already conducting its own investigation and "ultimately" would have ferreted out all the security risks.
He denied that he had tried to stop or discredit the McCarthy investigation.
Mr. Jenkins tried repeatedly to get Secretary Stevens to say that Sen. McCarthy and his committee had performed a "vital" or "invaluable" national service by investigating Fort Monmouth. Secretary Stevens refused to make such a sweeping statement, and finally said:
Schine was an unpaid consultant to
Sen. McCarthy's group at that time.
The Army has accused Sen. McCarthy, subcommittee counsel Roy M. Cohn, and others of bringing extreme pressure on the Army to get special treatment for Schine.
"I think it would have been fat more effective if he had not pursued publicity tactics that were used" at Fort Monmouth. He added that the publicity at Fort Monmouth "did a lot of harm."
"A great deal of misinformation and excitement was caused," he said.
Secretary Stevens said the alleged espionage that Sen. McCarthy and his staff investigated at the Signal Corps laboratory at Fort Monmouth, N.J., was "a greatly over-exaggerated situation."
Indochina Aid By U.S.Hinted
Geneva — (U.P) — Authoritative American sources said today that President Eisenhower may ask Congress "in the very near future" to approve U.S. intervention in the Indochinese war if necessary to prevent military disaster.
In Washington. Rep. Alvin M. Bentley (R.-Mich.), a member of the House Foreign Affairs committee, said he believes the President will request and get congressional approval to send U.S. troops to Indonesia if it turns out there is no other way to save the country from Communist conquest.)
These sources said the President is studying the possibility of addressing a special message to a joint session of Congress, requesting permission to order U.S. air and sea power to strike at the Communist forces in Indochina.
According to these sources, the special presidential message would be dispatched if the U.S. leaders decided to act and if the situation still warranted it.
The message would cite actions taken by the U.S. government in 1947 to guarantee the independence of Turkey and Greece and President Truman's order for intervention in Korea in 1950.
The proposal was reported laid before Mr. Eisenhower following an urgent warning by French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault to Secretary of State John Foster Fulles and British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden in Paris on Saturday.
Mr. Bidault warned that unless U.S. air power was thrown into the fighting immediately, not only the beleaguered garrison at Dien Bien Phu, but the entire Red river delta area around Hanoi might soon be lost to the armies of the Communist Viet Minh.
Spring Jayhawker Distribution Started
The Spring issue of the Jayhawker will be distributed today. Students may get their copies at the information booth or in the Jayhawker office by showing subscription cards, or they may purchase the four-issue book for $5.75.
A traveling trophy will be given to the organized house having the highest percentage of Jayhawk purchasers. May 15 is the deadline for house percentages to be turned into the Jayhawk office. In case of tie, the house turning its percentage first will be the winner.
Weather
Kansas early today rounded out a full week of rain, with some moisture falling somewhere in the state
RAIN
on each of seven straight days. More is in prospect, said weatherman Ric h a r d Garrett. There were unofficial reports of a fine two- inch rain at Satanta. Charleston, between Garden City and Cimarron, had an unofficial inch and a half rain during the night. The forecast is for the showers to shift to Eastern Kansas tonight and tomorrow. Kansas temperatures yesterday ranged from a maximum of 92 at Hill City down to the 80's in eastern areas.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 26, 197
Election Melee Recalls Another
The to-do in the recent campus election over certain ballots that should have been clipped but weren't brings to mind what was perhaps the most controversial of all election quarrels, the Hayes-Tilden dispute of 1876.
Samuel Tilden, the Democratic candidate, received a clear plurality in popular votes. Not counting 22 contested electoral votes, Tilden led the Republican candidate, Rutherford Hayes, 184 to 163.
An electoral commission, however, voted on strict party lines to give Haves all 22 of the disputed votes and the presidency.
The dispute arose when four states—Oregon, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida—all filed two different sets of electoral returns.
There was no precedent to follow, and there was nothing in the Constitution about it, so Congress decided to choose an electoral commission to make the decision. Apparently no one considered invalidating the election, as was done by the All Student Council elections committee this week in the University dispute.
Ten congressmen and four Supreme Court justices were chosen for the commission, but seven were Democrats and seven were Republicans. To break the tie the four justices picked another member of the court, a Republican who had not expressed any prejudices in the matter.
South Carolina and Oregon, according to the popular vote, should have gone to Haves, and it was so decided by the commission.
Florida and Louisiana, however, had given more popular votes to Tilden. Furthermore, a Republican counting board had rejected several thousand Democratic votes in Louisiana, and the Democrats clamored for correction of what they called an injustice.
The commission upheld the Republican viewpoint that the state action was final, ruling that interference by the commission might be an invasion of state sovereignty.
Then, as eight Republicans voted in favor and seven Democrats opposed, the commission gave all the electoral votes from Florida and Louisiana to Hayes, making him the President by the margin of one electoral vote.
There was much excitement over the nation following the decision. Democrats claimed Tilden should have won, but the losing candidate advised his party to accept the decision.
Even today many historians contend that Tilden, not Hayes, was entitled to become president of the U.S.
They may be right. But if an injustice were done, not much can be done to correct it. It's a bit too late to call for a new election.
—Sam Teaford
...SHORT ONES...
The rains came just in time this past week for the annual campus political mudsling contest.
We now know why the drum major stepped so high and fast at the football games this past fall. He was in training for the steeple-chase.
Psychiatrists should investigate these persons whose car window stickers tell us they have been everywhere from Signa Phi Nothing to Provo, Utah. A suggested name for those suffering from the malady: decalcomaniacs.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
THE TEACHER'S
CREED!
PROF NEWBLOOD
By Biller
"He's worried about breaking up his beautiful Teacher-Student friendships—He has to turn in final grades today."
I wish to express to Mr. Peter G. Earle, graduate student, my heartfelt appreciation for his wonderful letter endosing my defense of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy. It is the steady, firm, unwavering support of fine, upstanding, patriotic Americans like Mr. Peter Earle that makes it possible for Senator McCarthy to carry on his work inspite of the terrific abuse that is heaped upon him.
...Letters...
To the editor:
Respectfully yours,
Howard L. Lydick
1st Year Law
I hope that my next statement will be taken as it is meant, as a sincere and well meaning constructive suggestion. With all due respects for Mr. Earle and his supra-suggestion, I would like suggest that he see a professor in the University English Department about his punctuation and spelling.
To the editor:
(And especially to Mr. Clarke Keys)
There is a limit beyond which no one with any respect for the democratic ideal can keep his mouth shut. Mr. Keys has gone over the limit.
If he honestly wants clean student government, he as a newspaperman as well as a student could and should have been doing something about it long before this. Editorial fire and brimstone is a little tasteless when it's manufactured out of the ashes of a corrupt mess.
It's a little late, Mr. Keys.
Respectfully, Jim Baird journalism sen
To the editor:
I have just read in the new issue of "Trend" magazine that the free film series has been abolished for next year.
This strikes home to me, since I am one of the many University students working their way through college who cannot often afford to spend the 60 or 70 cents and up for downtown movies.
The free films are to us luxurious entertainment and I have enjoyed them more than anything else I have attended on the campus.
I certainly hope this decision may be retracted before next fall rolls around, so we can again have the opportunity to making forward to these Friday nights.
I especially enjoyed the last film, "Keepers of the Night" and the many Walt Disney wild-life films.
Doris Cherniak
Ed. Note: Rest assured. The Film series is continuing.
We predict that Correlation will be scratched from the Kentucky Derby. After the horse won the Wood Memorial Saturday, he was described as "raw-boned." That was the adjective applied to that man Sears, proposed special counsel for the McCarthy-Army hearings, and look what happened to him.
Elmer Curtis, Topeka radio announcer who is bidding for a Republican nomination to Congress, says he plans to campaign in a large hat, boots, and a bright shirt. And when he gets to Washington, he can encee a rodeo show featuring that new woman senator from Nebraska who we understand, ropes calves.
Also, we would look nice for the Life photographer, if he should ever come our way. Remember those Notre Damens?
Not only that, they (the teeth) will be easier to find after they're knocked out.
Our football coach tells the players how to brush their teeth. We wonder if he told them about standing for the Alma Mater.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper.
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 379
Member of the Kansas Press Ass. Na-
tional Ass. Admin. of the Kansas Press
Ass. Associated Collegiate Press Ass.
Represented by the National Advertising
Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City,
Chicago, IL. Published daily for $4.50 a
year (oil) at a semester if in Lawrence).
Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University
of Kansas event. Publicity holidays and examination periods
Entered second class master Sept. 17, 1910,
at Lawrence, Kan.- Post Office under ac
Or March 3, 1879.
UNIVERSAL STATE.
EUTORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Dont Tie
Assistants Letty Lemon,
MISTILY MEANDERING
UPON A MONDAY MORN
I MAUNDERED OUT
TO MANDALAY
WHERE ALL THE DAWNS
ARE BORN...
THE CHIRPING OF A
CHICKADEE
WHO RODE A RONDELAY...
REPLITE WITH WRYLY
RUEFUL RIFE
UPON THE ...
POST.HALL GYNOICATE
wowp!
WOWP!
STOP CROWDIN! THERE'S ROOM FOR ALL!
COORD WATER POOL PLAIN
STOP CROWDIN!
THERE'S ROOM
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COBB
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WATER
PARK
Flashbacks in History From the Daily Kansan
In 1944, the U.S. and the University were in the midst of wartime living. In 1929, the events and personalities were much the same as today; march units, film censorship, the Relays, and John Ise.
Several hundred ASTRP students arrived at the University on July 1 to begin training, the War Department announced. The total number will depend upon the number of 17-year-olds who qualify for the program. Kansas came out second best in a dual track meet with Oklahoma over the weekend. Score: $70_{1/2}$, $60_{1/2}$.
10 Years Ago
On the European front, between 750 and 1.000 U.S. bombers were over Berlin early this week, and the Red army is fighting desperately to regain Sevastopel.
Forty-two class A and B high schools have signed up to attend the 40th Annual Intercollegiate Track and Field Meet over the week-end. 1,110 RAF planes have bombed Cologne, and the Germans are broadcasting that invasion of the continent is imminent.
The campus is having a drive to collect tin cans, and a Kansan editor has decided that collegiate life is a thing of the past.
More than 8,000 rebels have engaged in a pitched battle with some 8,600 federal troops in Sonora, Mexico. Five KU women have been invited to watch the steeple-chase at Fort Riley this weekend.
Top grip of the week was directed at the ROTC drum and fife unit that chose 5:30 Saturday morning as the time to march up and down the Campus drives.
Installation of a large reflecting telescope will be installed at the University observatory. It will rank twelfth in power in the United States and will have a 27-inch reflecting mirror.
25 Years Ago
Tom Churchill of Oklahoma has established a new Decathlon record at the Kansas Relays. Kansas came out with three seconds and two fourths in races.
Kansas motion picture, censors have no authority to censor the spoken word in "talkies," the Attorney General says, but the board can pass on all scenes depicted.
I will do that for you. Let me know if there's anything else you'd like me to help with.
Take a Look at Our Elders YoungPeopleTooApathetic?
Many are the words that have been uttered in disgust by our elders concerning the fact that this "younger generation" refuses to take anything serious and doesn't pay any attention to the affairs of the world.
We would like to take issue with this for a moment. It would seem to us that it isn't indicative of a complete apathy toward world developments that causes students to pack the lobby of the Union to watch the McCarthy hearings on television.
Another indication of the feeling concerning such subjects is the reaction, pro and con, to editorials in the Kansan on that illustrious Senator.
Much of that comment, we admit, was caused by a letter taking issue with the Kansan and supporting McCarthy, but the fact still remains that the interest is there.
For another example, the interest shown in the CCUN would seem to indicate that students are interested enough in what is happening to our world to spend considerable time and effort figuring things out.
If we are truly the lost generation, it is yet to be proven to us. After all, if you want to look at it this way, our elders aren't handing us such a "bed of roses" to play in when we take over from them.
—Don Tice
Page 3
University Daily Kansan
with ave end. the ited
French Paratroopers Join Tiny Garrison
Hanoi, Indochina—(U.P.)—French Union volunteers were parachuted into flaming Dien Bien Phu today to reinforce the garrison which the Communist attackers had sworn to "finish off" in a new vicious attack.
12 Music Shows Set for May 2-13
Twelve performances by University of Kansas musicians and musical organizations will be presented during the annual University Music festival May 2-13.
In addition, two guest artists, Claramae Turner, contralto, and Gadette Sorel, pianist, will present musicals, the latter as an offering in the annual Young American Artist program.
The festival will open next Sunday at 4 p.m. in Hoch auditorium with a performance of "The Creation" by Haydn, presented by the 300-voice Festival chorus accompanied by the University Symphony orchestra. Clayton Kreibhl will be the conductor; and Elizabeth Townsley, soprano, Joseph Wilkins, tenor, and Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone, of the KU voice faculty will appear as soloists.
The University of Kansas band, under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, will present a concert in Hoch auditorium 8 p.m., Monday, May 3.
May 4, Miss Turner will offer a University Concert course recital in Hoch auditorium. Miss Sorel will perform May 5 in Strong auditorium.
The University Glee clubs will present their spring concert May 6 under the direction of Clayton Krebhiel.
Krehbel.
May 11, 12, and 13, a double bill of one-act comic operas in English will be presented in Fraser theatre Joint productions of the Fine Arts school and the University theatre, the operas are "Don't We all?" by the American composer, Burrill Phillips, and Wolf-Ferrari's "The Secret of Suzanne."
The University Little Symphony orchestra will accompany the performances under the direction of Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts, and Dr. John Newfield will be the stage director.
Four special recitals will be played by Ronald Barnes on the carillon at 3 p.m. May 2 and 9, and 7 p.m.
May 5 and 12. Special musical programs will also be presented at meetings of the Lawrence Rotary and Kiwanis clubs by students of the School of Fine Arts.
Outdoor Art Show Set for Weekend
Oil paintings, sculpture, drawing water color, and miscellaneous items will be included in the outdoor display.
Delta Phi Delta, honorary art
legitimity, will hold its annual art
festival Sunday and Monday in
Fowler grove.
Entries will be judged by a committee and awards presented. The exhibits will be offered for sale to the public. All persons interested in art are urged to enter.
Entry blanks are available in room 329 Strong, in Marvin hall, and Watson library.
The parachutists were believed to number less than 100 men. Military observers pointed out it was a daring move to attempt to parachute even one man onto the constricted battleground.
An undisclosed number of reinforcements tumbled from low-flying transport planes into the mist which shrouded the shrunken and surrounded defense.
French bombers and French naval fighters from the aircraft carrier Arromanches strafed and bombed the Red positions around Dien Bien Phu in an effort to silence the Red artillery during the parachute drop.
A spokesman disclosed that another reinforcement unit of 90 men had been parachuted to Dien Bien Phu Friday and hundreds of pounds of needed supplies had been air dropped yesterday and today.
Miss Katharine Carr has joined the staff of the Student Union as student activities adviser. She succeeds Mrs. Betty Liexich Dixon, who requested replacement after her recent marriage.
The area into which the men can be parachuted, it was explained, now is so tiny that only two "sticks" of men—each comprising five soldiers—can be dropped on each run. The planes cross the drop zone in 10 seconds and the jumpers must leap in those 10 seconds or fall into enemy hands. Even so, they come down at the extreme southern end of what remains in French hands of the former airstrip of the fortress.
The French spokesman would not discuss unconfirmed reports that one entire group of paratroop reinforcements had fallen behind enemy lines and had been annihilated.
The fortress commander, Brig. Gen. Christian de Castries, had instructed that no large scale reinforcements be dropped, partly because of the hazard of the operation and partly because of the extreme crowding of the small area left to the French defenders.
Miss Carr Replaces Mrs. Dixon at Union
French headquarters said the transports dropping the parachutists were forced to make several runs over the tiny drop zone.
Communist trenches were reported only 550 yards away from Gen. de Castries command post.
Miss Carr comes from the staff of the student union at the University of Nebraska. Her home wasolder, Colo., where she attended the University of Colorado.
Phi Beta Kappa Sets Dinner, Initiation
The initiation will begin at 5:15 p.m. in the Sunflower room, and the banquet will be held at 6 p.m. in the Kansas room.
The initiation and annual banquet of Phi Beta Kappa will be held in the Student Union May 13.
A little oatmeal adds flavor and richness when used as a soup thickner.
A new approach to the famous Blairney Stone has been completed enabling visitors to salute it conveniently, and gain the famous magic of its touch, according to the Irish Tourist Bureau.
Capital Parley Planned on Dust Problems
Washington —(U.P.) Governors of five drought-stricken states were invited to the White House today to confer with federal officials on ways of combatting the dust bowl threat on the Great Plains.
An Agriculture department spokesman said the governors of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico and Colorado will be asked for their views on the type of federal aid that may be needed this year.
"We learned a lot from last year's aid programs and believe some im-provements can be made this year," he said.
While some areas in the Panhandle have virtually been flooded out by recent rains, the drought till has continued—in some places it's now in the fifth year—in southwest Kansas, southeast Colorado, eastern New Mexico, western Oklahoma, and much of Texas.
Last year, using money from the President's emergency fund and money appropriated by Congress the Agriculture department offered special livestock stock, made government-owned feed available at cut-rate prices, offered emergency loans to drought-area farmers and helped pay the cost of transporting hay into drought areas. Much of the funds will be depleted by this summer.
Just last month, Agriculture Sec. Ezra T. Benson offered to loan the drought states $2,500 million to cover the cost of "chiseling" and other farm practices aimed at tying down the soil. So far Kansas, which borrowed $200,000, is the only state to take a loan.
Sec. Benson told reporters at a recent news conference that soil conservation service officials estimate that about 3,500 million acres planted to wheat and cotton in a general drought and dust-blowing area covering 82 million acre should never have been plowed up.
Called to the White House meeting were Benson, Undersecretary True D. Morse, Assistant Secretary Ross Rizley, K. L. Scott, director of Agricultural Credit services. Mr. Eisenhower was not listed as a participant.
participant.
When Pres. Eisenhower invited the governors to the drought meeting, he said his concern extended "not only to measures to alleviate suffering and protect property, but to measures which will meet the problem on a long-run basis."
He said they estimate about 8 million acres in the area should be "considered for retirement from crop production."
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Mormon Leader Sees Fall of Communist Rule
Madison, Wis.—(U.P.)The world leader of the Mormon Church predicts that Communist rulers will fall if they continue to rob people of their free choice between good and evil.
Elder David O. McKay, 80, Salt Lake City, said yesterday he believes persons under Communist domination will revolt because their leaders have tried to take away their most valuable possession —free will.
New Dance Group Formed by Weber
"Vic Weber's Orchestra," a new group to play at campus dances, has been built around guitar player Warren Tuckness, education freshman, and pianist Veda Driver, fine arts freshman.
Tuckness and Miss Driver recently appeared in solo entertainments at the Rock Chalk Revue. With the orchestra, they will play as part of the group and serve as vocalists. Tuckness will also do intermission entertainment and be master of ceremonies.
Walter Weber Jr., engineering junior and leader of the orchestra, plays trumpet; William Maxwell Jr., engineering sophomore, plays trombone; James Lowe, college sophomore, is the group's drummer; and the saxophone players are Robert Pearce, engineering sophomore; Benjamin Evans, college freshman, and James Anderson, fine arts freshman.
Docking Tours N.W. Kansas
Wakeeny —U.P.)- George Docking of Lawrence, Democratic candidate for governor, today began a tour of northwest Kansas with a "coffee meeting" in Wakeeney. He also is scheduled for visits in Oakley and Colby today.
Speaking at the dedication of a new Madison Branch chapel, the president of the "Church of Latter Day Saints said "no power on earth can take this freedom away." He said the Communists are trying to, but will not succeed.
The white-haired spiritual leader of, 1,500,000 Mormons, described free will—the freedom to choose between right and wrong—was one of the four means by which individuals may find peace with God.
The other ways, he said, are through a clear conscience, the power of self-mastery, and reverence for sacred things along with respect for fellow men.
"When a group claims that you and I are not free as individuals, you may rest assured that their philosophy is on a sandy foundation," he said.
Elder McKay, who recently completed a 30,000-mile world tour, dedicated the chapel before a crowd of some 500 persons, many of whom helped build it. The church leader offers an open-minded and for the education and spiritual development" of its members.
Isaac Smoot, head of the church's Northern States missions, described how the Mormon church developed from the time of its first prophet and leader, Joseph Smith. He called the pioneer Mormon movement to Salt Lake City, a "great exodus."
"They built the West, they built an empire." Mr. Smoot said.
Elder McKay and his wife, who will take part in the "Mother of the Year" selection at New York next month, left for Chicago and New York following the dedication.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 26, 1954
KU in Thick of Race After Beating Cyclones
By DANA LEIBENGOOD and STAN HAMILTON
The KU baseball team picked up two victories over Iowa State here Friday and Saturday to get back into the thick of the Big Seven loop race with a 3-2 conference mark.
The Jayhawks, powered with a tremendous 350-foot home run by first baseman John Trombold, defeated the Cyclones 6 to 1 Friday, and then scored three unearned runs without the benefit of a hit in the eighth inning Saturday to win 3 to 2.
Kansas next will meet Missouri®
Friday and Saturday at Columbia.
Friday and Saturday at Cordova.
Bob Shireley, who allowed five hits, walked two, and fanned 10, earned the Friday decision, and lefty John Brose won Saturday. Brose, who was lifted for a pinch hitter in the eighth inning, gave the visitors only eight hits and one base on balls. Southpaw Wayne Tiemeier hurled the final inning and, except for a walk with two out, retired the side in order.
The triumphs gave the Kansans an 8-3 season record. Iowa State, which played its first league games, has won three of seven over-all.
The Jayhawks collected 11 hits Friday, with Bill Pulliam, Trombold, John Perry, and Punky Hoglund getting two apiece. KU sewed up that contest in the fifth inning when Shirley opened with a single. Two more singles by Pulliam and Bill Heitholt scored Shirley. Then Trombold blasted his home run onto Mississippi street to end the scoring.
The Cyclones got their lone tally in the second on two free passes and a single by right fielder Dave Campbell.
In the Saturday game the visitors got single runs in the second and third innings, both helped by KU errors.
An error by Hoglund allowed first baseman Al Machmer to gain second to lead off the second. After a force out the Cyclone came in on a line single to center by center fielder Bucky Weeden.
Pitcher Dale Drum led off the third with a one-base hit but was picked off on a quick tosst from Dun Ausg, catcher, to Trombould. Second baseman Bob Taylor followed with a single and then was caught off first by Brosse, Pulliam, on the rundown and Taylor made second from where he scored an out later on another single by Ray George.
Kansas had trouble soling Drum's pitching and got only three hits, one of them a scratch single by Trombold. But in the eighth the theretofore Cyclone tight defense collapsed to throw away apparent victory.
Harold Hixon pinch hit for Bill Blair and was hit with the first pitch. A ground out advanced him to second. A walk, an error on Pulliam's almost-sure double play grounder, and another base on balls brought Hixon in with run No. 1.
Then Bob Hermann, who had relieved Drum after the first walk, bobbled a grounder to let Shiley, who had walked for Brose, score. When Trombold grounded out Palliom scored the winning run.
The box scores:
box scores.
Kansas AB H O A
Pallium, 2b 4 2 5 1
Heitholt, cf 4 1 1 1
Perry, if 4 2 3 0
Trombold, 1b 4 2 7 0
Brose, rf 4 2 7 0
Aungst, rf 3 1 0 0
Hoglund, 3b 4 0 11 1
Berg'tn, 3b 4 2 0 0
Shirley, ss 4 0 0 3
Mach'm, 1b 2 1 0 2
Totals 33 11 27 8
Iowa State AB H O A
Weeden, cf 3 0 1 0
Taylor, 2b 4 1 1 1
Sav'sn, ss 4 2 2 3
Mach'm, 1b 4 1 8 0
George, 3b 3 0 2 0
Skrie, lf 3 0 1 0
Campbell, rf 3 1 3 2
Baker, c 3 0 6 0
Postma, p 2 0 0 0
Kost'ks, p 1 0 0 0
Iowa State 010 000 000—1
Konroe 001 140 000—1
E—Pulliam, Tavlor, Campbell.
RBI-Heitbolt, Perry, Trombold 3,
Hoglund, Campbell. 2B-Pulliam.
HR-Trombold. SB—Campbell. DP—Campbell - Machmer, Machmer (unassisted), Bergsten - Pulliam-
Trombold. Left-Kansas 5, Iowa
State 5. BB-Shirley 2, Postma 1.
Kostakos 1. CO-Shirley 10, Postma
4. Kostakos 1. HPB—Weeden by Shirley. Hits off—Postma 8 in 4 1/3.
Kostakos 1. SO—Shirley 10. Postma
Kansas AB H O A
Pulliam, 2b 4 0 4
Hoglund, 3b 3 1 1 3
Heitholt, cf 4 0 0 0
Trombold, 1b 3 1 15 3
Perry, lf 2 0 1 0
Aungst, c 4 0 3 2
Blair, rf 2. 0 0 0
Hixon, rf 0 0 0 0
Bergsten, ss 3 0 3 9
Brose, p 2 1 0 7
Shirley-x 0 0 0 0
Tiemier, p 0 0 0 0
Totals 28 3 27 28
Iowa State AB H O A
Taylor, 2b 4 2 1
Sev'sn, ss 4 0 2 1
George, 3b 4 1 0 7
Mach'mr, 1b 4 1 11 2
Kost'k, 1f 3 0 2 1
Weeden, cf 4 1 2 0
Campbell, rf 3 1 2 0
Fleek'stn, c 3 0 3 0
Drum, p 2 2 1 0
Hermann, p 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 8 24 12
x—walked for Brose in eighth.
Iowa State .011 000 000-2
Kansas .000 000 03x-3
E—Taylor, Hermann, Pulliam,
Hoglund, RBI—George, Weeden,
Hoglund, Trombold, B2—Machmer.
DP — Brose-Bergsten— Trombold.
Left—Kansas 6, Iowa State 4, BB-
Brose 1, Tiemeir 1, Drum 2, Hermann 2,
SO—Brose 2, Drum 2.
HPB—Hixon by Drum. Hits off—
Brose 8 in 8, Tiemeir 0 in 1, Drum
3 in 7 1/3, Hermann in $ \frac{1}{3} $ , W—
Brose. L—Hermann.
Correlation Favored In Kentucky Derby
Agua Caliente, Mex. — (U.P.)—Odimsmakers grapped California-bred Correlation as an 8 to 5 favorite in the Kentucky Derby today, according to the final line of Agua Caliente's future book on the annual classic.
The odds dropped from 2 to 1 on Correlation after his Saturday victory in the wood memorial. Determine was a second choice with Fisherman at 5 to 2, and James Session was pegged at 10 to 1.
The National Basketball Association's directors ruled yesterday that Bevo Francis will not be eligible for professional basketball for two more years.
Australia's John Landy ran the three-quarters of a mile in 2:58.4 yesterday to better the world's record for the event by two seconds.
21 Games Played In Intramural Softball Leagues
Twenty-four softball games were scheduled over the weekend in three intramural leagues. All but three were played, the three being forfeits due to a lack of sufficient players. There were two games decided by one run difference and the rest were more one sided. The largest score of the program was in a game won by the Phi Psi over Phi Kappa Sigma 44 to 7 in 5 innings.
Here are the scores of the week end games;
FRIDAY
Stephenson 1, KHK 0 (forfeit)
Pearson 5, Nine, Old Men 4
Fraternity "A"
Phi Gam 5, Theta Chi 0
SAE 15, Triangle 10
Lambda Chi 12, Alpha Phi Alpha 9
SATURDAY
independent "A"
*Pentem "A"*
Battenfeld 16, Mox 9
AFROTOC “B” 24, S-O T 12
Faculty Fossils 14, Physics 6
*Fraternity "A"*
Kappa Sig 8, Sig Ep 3
Pi KA 9, Phi Delt 7
*Fraternity "B"*
Delts 19, ATO 8
Phi Psi 14, Beta 13
DU 25, Kappa Sig 15
Eu Sig Nu 4, Delta Chi 2
**Independent "A"**
Jolliffe 27, UVO 26
Shackers 23, AFROTC 12
Sterling-Oliver 1, 69ers 0, (forfeit)
"**"**"**"**
SUNDAY
Beta 14, Phi Kappa 1
ATO 9, TKE 6
DU 10, Sigma Chi 9
Delta Chi 1, Delta 0 (forfeit)
Sigma Nu 21, Phi Kappa Tau 10
Phi Psi 44, Phi Kappa Sigma 7
**Fraternity "B"**
Phi Delt 11, Sigma Chi 7
Phi Delt 11, Sigma Chi 7
Big Time Tennis Not for Savitt
Houston, Texas — (U,P) — Former Wimbledon tennis champion Dick Savitt said today his surprising victory in the coveted River Oaks tournament would not prompt him to return to big-time tennis.
THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK
Savitt, who is only 27 years old, provided an amazing climax to an upset-studded tournament yesterday when he rallied to defeat fifth-seeded Ham Richardson of Baton Rouge, La., in the final round, 4-6, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5. It was the first time in the tourney's 20-year history that an unseeded player won the crown. Savitt, now an "apprentice oilman," said he plans no further tournaments this year although he showed most of his old power in dominating his match against 20-year-old Richardson, who holds the
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White Sox Move Into First WithTwo WinsOver Orioles
Manager Paul Richards of the White Sox said that one of the "musts" for a successful season this year would be a comeback by first baseman Ferris Fain and at the moment it is no coincidence that the curly-haired Californian is red hot and Chicago is in first place.
By UNITED PRESS
Last season Pain was in Rich-ards' dog-house so much that the wisecrackers said he even barked for his breakfast, but he isn't in the kennel club any more.
Sunday, as the White Sox scored 3-2 and 4-3 victories over Baltimore to take over undisputed possession of first place in the American league. Fain hit a bases-loaded single in the bottom of the ninth to bring home the winning run in the second game. It was his third hit, boosting his runs batted in to 12, tushes for the league. His hits also put his batting average at .333. In the opener Virgil Trucks pitched seven-hit ball for his second victory as Sherman Lollar hit a homer for the margin of victory. Al Carrasquel hit a second game Chicago homer.
Jim McDonald gained a six-hit triumph for the Yankees over left Alex Kellner in the opener at Philadelphia which featured hurriers who had tossed one-hitters in their last starts. McDonald was backed up with homers by Jerry Coleman, Phil Rizutto, and Bill Skowron. In the second game, lefty Morris Martin held the Yankees to five hits in eight innings. The Athletics rallied in the curfew-shortened game when a walk, singles by Gus Zernial and Don Bollweg, and Bill Renna's sacrifice fly produced two runs.
The Yankees topped the Athletics 6-1, then lost 4-2, while Cleveland beat Detroit 10-9 in 10 innings and Washington defeated Boston. 5-1.
In the National league, the Giants made it three shutouts in a row over the Phils by blanking them 3-0 and 5-0 as Sal Maglie gave up five hits and Johnny Antonelli delo out three. Pittsburgh topped Brooklyn 9-3, then lost 4-2, while Chicago pounded out a 9-2 conquest of Cincinnati, then suffered a 3-2 setback. St. Louis defeated Milwaukee 7-6 in 12 innings.
Dave Phillie hit a two-run homer in the 10th in Cleveland's victory after Wally Westlake paced the Indians earlier with two homers accounting for four runs.
Lefty Chuck Stobbs scattered seven hits to gain his first victory for Washington, but had to walk on eggs (goose-eggs that is) until the Nats scored five runs in the eighth. Roy Sievers' two-run double was the big blow of the inning.
Maglie pitched his third straight triumph for the Giants in a battle with lefty Curt Simmons which went scoreless until Don Mueller singled home a run in the seventh of the opener. In the second game, two-run homers by Monte Irvin and Hank Thompson and a runscoring single by Whitey Lockman provided Antonelli all the margin he needed for his second triumph.
Pittsburgh batted around in two big innings, the first when they scored four runs and the seventh when they made five, in the opening triumph over Brooklyn in which Frank Thomas hit a three-run homeer and Curt Roberts drilled a three-run double. Vern Law struggled to a 12-hit victory. In the second game lefty Johnny Podres tossed a three-hitter and contributed a run-scoring triple. Gil Hodges singled in two Brooklyn runs.
At Cincinnati, Bubba Church of the Cubs pitched six-hit ball against his old mates while Randy Jackson pegged his major league batting average at .500 with a homer and two singles and rookie Ernie Banks had three singles and a triple. The Cubs made 14 hits good for 23 bases. In the second game, rookie Art Fowler pitched four-hit ball as lefty Howie Pollet forced home the winning run. Hank Sauer and Dee Fondy hit homers for the only Chicago runs. In the opener Ralph Kiner also homered for the Cubs while Ted Kluszewski and Wally Post homed for the Reds.
Jim Pendleton dropped Red Schoendiest's fly with the bases loaded in the 12th and two out to give St. Louis its victory. Ed Mathews hit a two-run homer in the ninth for Milwaukee to send the game into extra frames. Hank Aaron of the Braves and Stan Musial of the Cards also hit homers.
5 WAYS TO FLUNK A COURSE!
1- Arrive 45 minutes late to class once a week.
2 - Don't show up the other times.
3- Hand in assignments when Prof. is handing them back graded.
4-Hand in term papers after finals.
4
5. Be 2 hours late to course FINAL.
YES, timeliness is important for a good grade point average. So remember you have no parking or traffic worries, just hop off the bus into class.
RAPID TRANSIT
Your City Bus Service
Phone 383
Monday, April 26, 1954 University Daily Ransan Page 5
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By KEN BRONSON
Don't look now, but the Kansas baseball team may have two of tomorrow's top stars performing.
John Trombold, a third string all-American choice last year, and Bob Allison, the football-playing centerfielder, are two men in Big Seven baseball circles who are currently drawing praise from major league scouts.
Trombold, a first baseman, performed last summer with the Boeing Bombers, the Kansas non-pro champion. He's not very large but he's got powerful arms and enough speed to make him definite big league timber.
Allison is amazingly fast for his size and has the power to hit the long ball. He's also a good fielder and his arm is one of the best in the Big Seven.
Incidentally, the only other Big Seven performer in which scouts say they are interested is in Kansas State's Dick Myers. Myers, a catcher, has been handling the Wildcats' backstopping duties for three years.
Don't look now, but this may be the year for Kansas to defeat Oklahoma in football.
-KU-
Don't laugh. The Sooners have been going along for so long now that the law of averages is going to catch up with them sooner or later. And looking over their schedule for next fall, make's a person realize that if they are going to get beaten, it will have to be at Kansas.
And that's not taking anything away from Coach Charles "Chuck" Mather. Not anyone could do it but we believe that Kansas, come next October 16, will field a team that will do it.
Incidentally, the Kansas football schedule for next fall shows the Jayhawkers playing host to Texas Christian, UCLA, and Colorado on successive weekends. The next contest finds the Jayhawkers going to Iowa State.
Oklahoma is here Oct. 16 and then come road trips to Southern Methodist and Kansas State. Nebraska is here Nov. 6 for homecoming and then the season closes with games at Oklahoma A&M and Missouri.
-KU-
Short Shots—When the Kansas tennis team runs up against Washburn Wednesday in Topeka, they will be playing a team that hasn't been beaten in dual competition since Kansas did it in 1952 . . .
hasn't been beaten in final competition. Everyone has been bawling out the Kansas Interscholastic meet lately because of the number of athletes performing. Sure it's a big meet but that's what makes it the No.1 track meet in Kansas, barring none.
To be sure, some of the high schoolers should never be entered but who is to say that they shouldn't get the chance to run and the chance to see some of the country's finest athletes running the next day.
We caught a Class B miler, who finished last, with a time of 6:26.6. Now that is hardly worthwhile. Yet that boy probably learned a lot that day and who is to say that he should not have run.
Let's leave the Kansas Interscholastic meet the way it is and instead of hoping the number of participants will dwindle, hope they will continue to rise and make the meet the largest high school affair in the world.
KU Sets American Records In Distance, Sprint Medley
Coach M. E. "Bill" Easton's KU track team put on a brilliant showing in the Drake Relays winning four relays and setting new American records in two of these events.
The Jayhawkers won the distance medley in 9:50.4 breaking the record set by Michigan in 1952 of 9:56.3. The sprint medley team for the second time this year went under the recognized American mark of 3:22.7 set by NYU in 1950. Its time Friday was 3:21.4, and earlier it had run in 3:20.2 in the Texas Relays. KU completed its distance relays sweep by taking the two mile and four mile relays.
Bill Biberstein took second place in the 120-yard high hurdles. Dick Blair took fourth, and the 100-meter took fifth. And Al Fram took third place in the open mile.
The distance medley team won by 95 yards over Georgetown. The unofficial times for the race showed Frank Cindhrick ran a 48.7 quarter-mile; Lloyd Koby followed him with a 1:53.3 half-mile; Art Dellzell ran a 3:01 three-fourths of a mile, and Wes Santee anchored the team with a 4:07.4 mile.
The weather, which was the prime topic of worry for Drake officials turned out to be mild. On Friday the temperature was 63 degrees with an overcast sky and a wind up to 15 miles an hour, Saturday the temperature rose to 84 degrees.
The four mile relay victory was by far the most lop sided victory as the Jayhawkers won by 110-yards
In the sprint medley, Kansas was trailing Illinois until Santee took over for the anchor half-mile. Cindrich ran the leadoff 440 in 48.4, the fastest time he has ever run a 440. Ralph Moody and Blair ran the 220 carries and Santee anchored with an unofficial 149.7.
over the second place Missouri Tigers. Al Frame gave Kansas a lead of 35 yards at the end of the first mile, and Dick Wilson, Dalzell, and Sante added to this lead.
Frame ran the fastest mile of his career in 4:15.9, as he finished third behind Dennis Meyer of the University of Washington and Rich Ferguson of Iowa. The winning time in the event was 4:15.
Blair's time in the 100-yard dash was an unofficial .10J. Dean Smith of Texas won the race in .097. Willie Williams of Illinois, the defend-
THE LAKE HOUGHTON TEAM PLAYS IN THE DIVISION OF THE WESTERN PACIFIC LEAGUE IN CALIFORNIA.
Kansan photo by Larry Trettoar
A BIG HOLE—Dick Reich, KU fullback, finds a big hole in the line and goes for several yards in the scrimage held Saturday afternoon in Memorial stadium. Other players in the picture are unidentified.
Born, Kelly Selected In NBA Player Draft
B. H. Born and Al Kelley were two of the four Kansas basketball players chosen in the National Basketball association's annual player draft Saturday, Jesse Priskoof of Kansas State and Benny Peters of St. Benedict's were also selected.
title, and went on to the NCAA finals, and the 1953-'54 team that was co-champion of the Big Seven.
Born and Kelley were standout performers on the University basketball teams for two years. They were both spark-plugs on the 1952-53 team that won the Big Seven
Other players from the area who were drafted are Bob Mattick, Oklahoma A&M, Milwaukee; Arnold Short, Oklahoma City university, Fort Wayne; Bill Johnson, Nebraska, Boston, and Bob Waller, Oklahoma, New York.
Kansas Tennis Team Beats Nebraska 7-0
The KU tennis team won a 7-0 victory over the University of Nebraska tennis team at Lincoln, Saturday, to boost the Jayhawk conference record to three wins and one loss.
Al Hedstrom beat the No. 1 Cornhusker Wray Calson 6-0, 6-1. No. 2 KU netman Dick Hadley won 6-1, 6-1, and Merl Sellers won the third singles contest 6-1, 6-1. Don Franklin of Kansas won his watch 6-0, 6-1, and Roger Youmans won 6-0, 6-0.
Tomorrow, the KU squad will tackle non-conference foes at Washburn university in Topeka.
ing champion, was second, and Al Frieden of Texas was third.
Bill Curtis of TCU beat Biberstein for the second straight week in the nurdles. The winning time for the event was 14:6.
Michigan State pressed Kansas in the two mile relay as Kansas won the event by only 14 yards. Wilson, Koby, Dalzell, and Santee ran for KU.
To protect charging outfielders the Boston Red Sox have cushioned their fences and rightfield bull pen with expensive foam rubber padding. The idea is to prevent injuries.
The first race at the Churchill Downs spring meeting in 1899 was appropriately n a m e d "Opening Scramble."
Eye
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LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Eye
Patton Rated First In Amateur Tourney
Pinehurst, N.C.—(U.P.)-Billy Joe Patton, the lad who came within two strokes of winning the coveted Masters tournament, was ranked as the favorite today as the field teed off in the qualifying round of the 54th annual North and South Amateur Golf tournament.
The Morganton, N.C. youth startled the links world when he finished only one stroke behind Sammy Snead and Ben Hogan at the end of the regulation distance in the Masters.
The Falmetto is the state tree of South Carolina.
Football Team 'Much Improved' In Scrimmage
The Kansas football team climaxed a week of grueling practice with a scrimmage Saturday afternoon in Memorial stadium which lasted about 90 minutes. This ended the second week of KU spring practice.
While two teams were scrimming, the rest of the men were working on the practice fields east of the stadium.
Bob Conn, Bob Allison, Dick Reich, Dick Blowey, and John Handley were all impressive with their running. They made several long gains during the afternoon, as the offense completely overshadowed the defense.
"I thought that everybody tried hard, our spirit was good, and we were much improved over our Wednesday scrimmage." Coach Chuck Mather said. "Our technique is weak, but that can only be improved through constant work."
The KU team will practice today, tomorrow, Wednesday, and Friday and will have another scrimmage session 3 p.m. Saturday.
Quarterbacking the first three teams in the Saturday session were Bev Buller, John McFarland, and Dick Sandifer. Although Buller worked with the first group, Coach Mather said that all three boys are even at the present time.
Golfers Beat Omaha, NU
Coach Donn Everett's KU golf team won both dual meets on a road trip last week-end, beating Omaha university 15-3 on Friday and Nebraska 7-5 on Saturday.
Bob Richards of Kansas was the medalist in both matches, shooting a 74 in both meets. Harlan Hise of Texas shot a 76 in both his matches.
KU meets Kansas State at Manhattan today in a meet starting at 1 p.m.
The results of the Omaha meets Bob Richards def. Dean Wilson, O, 3-0; Harian Hise def. Jerry Norene, O, 3-0; John Prosser def. Fred Shiarock, O, 3-0; Ron Fox, O, def Pete Rush, $2^{-1/2}$; Richards and Hise def. Norene and Wilson, O, 3-0; Prosser and Rush def. Shiarock and Fox, O, $2^{-1/2}$.
The results of the Nebraska meet:
Bob Richards de, Dean Anderson,
N, 2-1; Harlan Hise def. Bob
Moore, N, 2-1; Herb Mayer, N, def.
John Prosser, 2-1; Pete Rush def.
Tom Tole, N, 2-1
Murry Halberg of Auckland, New Zealand, won the Ben Franklin mile Saturday in the Penn relays in 4:10 to defeat Mal Whitfield and Fred Wilt.
Farm Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
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No.1 NewPotatoes 50lb.bag $2.75
Fresh Strawberries, Rhubarb, and Asparagus
Garrett's Market Free Delivery Phone 3560
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 26, 1954
On Capitol Hill—
Wool Bill Amendment Urged by Sen. Young
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Milton R. Young (R.-N.D.) today urged the Senate to amend the pending wool bill to extend present high price supports for basic crops. $ \textcircled{*} $
price supports for base crops.
He made the plea in a prepared speech as the Senate resumed debate on the wool subsidy measure.
Sen. Young said the nation's economy could not stand "the shock" of lower farm prices under the administration's "flexible" support program.
Farm bloe senators have been hoping to amend the wool measure to extend rigid supports and thus defeat the administration's flexible support bill. But administration leaders think they have the power to block the move when the wool measure comes up for a vote tomorrow.
Sen. Young said "very drastic" price drops would result from the administration farm bill now being considered by the Senate Agriculture committee.
He said Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson's belief that lower price supports will curb production and reduce surpluses is "totally" disproved by the record of the past 30 years.
The present program's production controls will reduce surpluses, Sen. Young said.
The wool bill itself proposes a system of subsidies, paid from wool import duties, to support wool prices to meet foreign competition. Other Congressional developments:
Legislation — GOP congressional leaders said President Eisenhower soon may call for a full-scale review of his legislative program. They suggested the move might get underway at the President's meeting with GOP leaders today, Chairman Homer Ferguson (Mich.) of the Senate GOP policy committee said no major part of the Eisenhower legislative program has so far been ruled out for congressional action at this session.
Internal security — The Senate Internal Security subcommittee today published a 200-page pamphlet documenting the dispute sparked by Attorney General Herbert Brownell's charge that former President Truman knowingly promoted a Communist spy to high federal office. Subcommittee Chairman William E. Jenner (R-Ind.) said the published record shows the Truman administration had ignored repeated FBI exposures of subversive activity by Treasury department officials, none of whom were fired.
Economic — Chairman Jesse P. Wolcott (R-Mich.) of the Joint Congressional Economic committee believes the worst of the business decline is over. He said "everything indicates we are approaching stability" and that the nation is going through a transition from "war production to peace production." But Rep. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., (D-N.Y.) foresaw an increase in unemployment after high school and college graduations this spring.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. French reading examination Saturday 9-11 in 102 Strong. Turn in books to Miss Craig, 109 Strong, by noon Thursday.
TODAY
Student Religious council, 4 p.m.
Myers hall. Election of officers.
Radio players and candidates, 4-5 and 7-9 p.m., Radio Players recording room, Green hall basement. Tryouts for "The Black Death," a staged radio play.
Kappa Beta, 5:30 p.m. Myers hall Plenic and installation of officers.
Upstream, 7 p.m., room 306A, Student Union. Important.
OAKLAND
businesstax 7:30 p.m. dining
room: McLennell's Clubbell Rob-
erson on pediatrics
Phi Mu Alpha, 9 p.m., 131 Strong Imperative that all members attend.
WEDNESDAY
Le Cerule Franceis: mercredi a 4 heures et demie, 113 Strong. "Un apresmedi a la Comedie-Franceise —scenes de la Comedie de Mollère." Tout le monde est invite.
The National Safety Council says the hours from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. are the deadliest on the highway. The Council says 38 per cent of all traffic accidents occur during those hours.
3 Attend Sessions On Social Work
Members of the social work department will attend several social work conferences.
Esther Twente, professor of social work, will participate in the public affairs conference of the University of Wichita, Monday through Thursday. The conference is designed to be a self study of Wichita, its children and its youth.
John Bradley, assistant professor of social work, will attend the regional office association in Lincoln, Neb. Monday through Wednesday. While there he will interview prospective KU students.
Engineer Paper Wins $200 Prize
An engineering senior won a second place of $200 in the second annual student competition in technical papers, sponsored by the Institute of Aeronautical Science in Dallas on Wednesday through Saturday.
He is Kenneth Wernick, and his paper was entitled "A Determination of the Boundary Layer, Temperature, and Recovery Factor on a Flat Plate in Supersonic Flow."
Papers were judged on originality, technical content, and presentation. Students also were judged on their ability to answer questions, and first, second, and third place prizes were awarded in each section.
Also competing was Arvid Spoesing, engineering senior. Edwin K. Parks, assistant professor of aeronautical engineering, faculty advisor, accompanied the two students on the trip to Dallas. All expenses were paid by the institute.
There were 17 university representatives, presenting papers in graduate and undergraduate sections.
New York (UP) The first thousands of approximately one million six-to-eight year old children were vaccinated against polio today to launch the biggest medical experiment in history.
Vaccination of 6-8 Year Olds For Polio Experiment Begins
Before June 15, the million will have been vaccinated three times with "shots" of the vaccine which holds the high promise of conquering the crippling and killing disease whose favorite victims are children.
A committee of seven medical scientists gave the go-ahead by unanimously approving the results of elaborate safety testing that proved none of the vaccine could possibly cause polio in a single child. The tests also demonstrated that it could not cause even minor side-effects.
The purpose of the huge experiment was to find out if the vaccine will produce enough anti-bodies to withstand the 'challenge' of the live viruses, and, if it will, to determine how long such a wealth of antibodies remain in the blood stream, making the persons immune to polio.
By June 15 approximately one million children in 44 states will be theoretically immune. June 15 is the
theoretic date when the "polio incidence curve" starts mounting into "polio season" which produces its highest number of cases either in late August or early September. If none or very few of the vaccinated children come down with polio while a sizeable number of unvaccinated children do, the vaccine will be proved and next year a start can be made in vaccinating all the nation's 46,000,000 children.
The mass vaccinations began today in Virginia, Alabama, Florida, Utah, Nevada, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Michigan, and upstate New York. Tomorrow New York City, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Ohio, New Mexico, Illinois, Indiana, and Oregon will begin vaccinating their allotted thousands of kids. The others of the 44 states will follow daily this week and next.
If you use aluminum foil during baking, use a section only slightly larger than the baking utensil. If you cover the entire bottom of the oven with foil, it will cut off the circulation of heat and prevent correct cooking.
??
Case of the dry "oil" well
Not at all unusual, you say? But this well was purposely drilled that way! In fact, precautions were taken to see that the well wouldn't contact oil-bearing sands. It was to be a vital part of an elaborate waste-disposal system built into one of Du Pont's new plants near Victoria, Texas. It is an example of the unusual engineering problems which Du Pont technical men encounter.
The "well" itself is almost a mile deep—4900 feet, to be exact. Waste fluids from the plant are forced down this well, to be absorbed by non-oil-bearing sands—far below the level of any surface water. Piping near ground level is in the form of concentric shells, and fresh water is delivered to the annular opening around the waste pipe. Furthermore, the water pressure is higher than that of the fluids in the
waste section. In this way, any leakage in the pipe system causes fresh water to enter the surrounding sands (or the inside waste system) and prevents objectionable materials from reaching the sands at surface levels.
Other interesting procedures are used throughout Du Pont's many plants to guard against river pollution. For example, scientists were asked to make a complete marine-life census on one river before a plant was built nearby. The company wanted to be certain that no waste would be discharged which would challenge the natural pattern of marine life
Throughout the DuPont Company, wherever there is a need for the services of technical men, there are varied and interesting problems that present a challenge to engineering skill and imagination.
Now available
Now available for student ASME chapters and other college groups, a 16-mm sound color movie—"Mechanical Engineering at Du Pont." For further information, send post card to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.), 2521 Nemours Bldg., Wilmington 98, Delaware.
DUPONT
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING .THROUGH CHEMISTRY
Watch "Cavalcade of America" on Television
9
B
.
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Quake Hits California Leaving Minor Damage
San Francisco — (U.P.) — Widespread minor damage was reported today from a rolling, 20-minute earthquake and a single aftershock that shook up a large area of Northern California yesterday.
Truman-Brownel Dispute Printed
Washington—(U.P.) The Senate Internal Security subcommittee today published a 200-page pamphlet documenting the dispute sparked by Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr.'s charge that former President Truman knowingly promoted a Communist spy to high federal office.
Mr. Truman angrily denied the accusation last November. Mr. Brownell, under pressure, said he did not suggest that the president had been disloyal. But he stuck to his charge that the White House had ample warning before Mr. Truman nominated the late Harry Dexter White to be U.S. Executive Director of the International Monetary fund.
Today's pamphlet consists of records of the subcommittee hearings bearing on the Truman-Brownell dispute, but going considerably beyond it. Subcommittee Chairman William K. Jenner (R.-Ind.) said the record now published would show that the Truman administration had ignored repeated FBI exposures of subversive activity by treasury department officials none of whom were fired.
"No less than 28 such reports were made to key government officials by the FBI on Nathan Gregory Silvermaster before he was allowed to resign in 1946." Sen. Jenner said.
Parsons Man Killed in Crash
Parsons, Kan., (UP) Donald Clarence Watson, 22, of Parsons, Kan. was killed yesterday in a highway accident near Parsons. The one-car accident occurred seven miles east of Parsons on U.S. Highway 160.
The quake centered in the Gilroy- Hollister- Watsonville a rea about 100 miles south of San Francisco.
It cracked windows, plaster and walls, buckled floors, shattered chimneys, broke pipes, tumbled merchandise from the shelves of stores and snapped a flagpole atop a Watsonville building.
Only one injury was reported. A 16-year-old girl was hurt slightly when a crowd of 500 persons attending a dog show in Watsonville panicked and rushed for the outdoors.
The aftershock followed at 2:25 p.m. W. C. Marion, University of California seismologist, said an earthquake of such magnitude "continues to give surface waves for some time."
"It shook the teeth out of everything," said Police Sgt. J. S. Brandon of Watsonville. "It sure caused a lot of excitement around here."
The quake was also felt north of San Francisco at San Quentin prison, where authorities said convicts remained calm, and to the east in the populous Oakland-Berkley area.
But it appeared to be most severely felt in the Watsonville area.
There a rope barricade was placed around a four-story building housing the Bank of America, where a crack opened in the granite facade. The inside walls were laced with plaster cracks. Five stores reported damage of $800 each. A water main sprang a leak. Power was off in neighboring communities. Scores of chimneys toppled.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fiorovich said the jolt knocked them off their feet and moved every piece of furniture in their new ranch-type home six to eight inches. Mirrors, pictures and everything on their walls were shaken off. Plumbing fixes were yanked from the walls. They estimated it would cost $25,000 "to get our house in shape again."
Monday. April 26, 1954
Free Film Series To Continue in Fall
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor and chairman of the University Film series, commented Friday that the Film series would be continued in the fall.
An editorial printed in Trend magazine indicated that the program was to be abolished.Mr. Nichols said that this was incorrectly reported.
--the honorary legal fraternity is comparable to Phi Beta Kappa in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. All three men are in the top ten per cent of their class.
3 Law Students Named to Coif
The elections of J. Eugene Balloun, Gerald Sawatzky, and D. Spencer Yohe, all third year law students, to the Order of the Coif were announced at the School of Law's annual banquet Friday night.
Joseph C. Hutcheson Jr., chief justice of the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, was the principal speaker. He stressed the need for faith in the law and for compromise in the formation of the law.
Joane Manney, fine arts sophomore, Leavenworth, was crowned queen of the School of Law banquet. Miss Manney is a member of Gamma Phi Beta social sorority.
Dean F. J. Moreau presented certificates to the winners of the moot court competition, Ronald Stang, 3rd year law, and Jack Stewart, second year law.
Gerald Sawatzky, editor-in-chief of the Law Review, presented the outstanding underclassman and upperclassman writer's awards to Fred Six, first year law, and Camilla Klein, second year law.
The Romans, with their talents for organization, preserved standard weights and measures in one of Rome's temples. By these standards they maintained a consistent pattern for conduct of business all over the empire.
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Bentley Thinks Troops Might Go to Indochina
TYPING OF THEMES, term papers, etc.
Baltimore Public Library,
1005 Kentucky, phone 719-2643;
www.library.ksu.edu
Washington —(U.P.)— Rep. Alvin4
Washington —00-1- Rep. Aivn M. Bentley (R-Mich.) believes President Eisenhower will request—and get—congressional approval to send U.S. troops to Indochina if it turns out there is no other way to save the country from Communist conquest.
But some congressmen, mainly Democrats, indicate they would flatly oppose such a move.
Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) said the U.S. should not be asked to "pull any chestnuts out of the fire" in Indochina.
Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-Ala.) asserted that terrain and other factors "would make the use of American troops little more than foolish."
Sen. George A. Smathers (D-Fla.) said "Asiatics should man the front lines."
Rep. Bentley, a member of the House Foreign Affairs committee, emphasized that the administration "will do everything in its power not to have to send American boys to fight in the jungles of Indochina."
Sen. William Langer (R-N.D.) said he could not "conceive of the U.S. sending its troops over there to help France keep her colonial empire against the will of the people."
But if there is no other way to keep Indochina from falling to the Communists, he said, "I think the President would ask Congress for the necessary authority and, moreover, he would get it."
His statement came on the heels of reports that France is convinced it cannot continue fighting in Indochina for more than a few months without direct U.S. intervention—regardless of the fate of the embattled fortress of Dien Bien Phu.
Usually reliable sources said they understood the French government gave this view to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles as he passed through Paris last week en route to the Geneva conference.
Annual Show Set By Music Sorority
Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, will present its annual spring musicale at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
There will be no admission charge.
The concert will feature five groups of selections. A vocal ensemble will sing "Teasing Song" and "Only Tell Me" by Bartok, and cellist Dorothy Woodle, fine arts junior, will play Eccles's "Sonata."
Billie Mallory, fine arts junior,
will sing "The Sleep That Flits on
Baby's Eyes" and "When I Bring to
You Colour'd Toys" by Carpenter.
A woodwind quintet will play
"Interlude" by Posdro and "Passa-
cille" by Barthe.
Carolyn Chard, fine arts sophomore, will sing "Transformation" by Watts and "Declaration of Independence" by Daughterty.
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Jap Physicians Ask for Help
Tokyo — (U.P.) — Japanese doctors treating 23 atom-burned fishermen called today for outside medical advice although they once spurned American offers of help.
Japan's atomic bomb injuries investigation committee announced it would "welcome technical information which may be given from within and without this country."
The announcement sharply reversed the earlier attitude of Japanese physicians, who left two American atomic injury specialists cooling their heels in Tokyo for nearly one month without seeing the patients.
The fishermen, burned in the March 1 hydrogen weapon explosion at Bikini, have shown some improvement, the committee said, but added their bone marrow aliment may become chronic.
"It is known," the committee said, "especially from past cases at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that in some cases the condition turns worse in four to six weeks after being injured and the patient dies subsequently."
The U.S. government earlier offered Japan the services of Dr. James Morton, director of the U.S. Atomic Bomb Casualty commission, and Dr. Merril Eisenbud of the U.S. Atomic Energy commission.
South Carolina was the eighth state to enter the union. It ratified the constitution May 23, 1778.
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East, West: KU Grows Down the Hill.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 26, 1954
FORTS CITY, NEW YORK
-Kansan photos by Dick Lloyd
GOING UP—Workmen hoist a section of plywood to be used in the concrete form during construction of the $570,000 men's dormitory on West Campus road. The Carruth-O'Leary hall is slated to hold 200 men and will be ready for occupancy in September, 1955.
T
men and will be ready for occupancy in September, 1955.
SPEEDING UP—Stonemasons have taken over on the $21 million fieldhouse. Scheduled completion date is early 1955. When finished, it will hold 16,000
REINFORCEMENTS-Steel reinforcements are already being tied for the concrete work at Douthart hall, the 48-girl residence being built at 14th and Louisiana streets.
A man stands in the background. He is dressed in a dark suit and appears to be looking at something off-camera. The setting includes a building with large windows, possibly a school or a public institution. The image has a grainy texture, typical of older photographs.
1
STUDENT ACTIVITIES-For Methodist students on the hill will soon be held in the Wesley Student center now under construction. The center is scheduled to be finished in September, and will have cost $155 thousand, with more furnishings to be added later.
UniversityReceives$20,000 For Research in Pharmacy
---
Engineers to Meet Choose Candidates
A convocation for all students of the school of engineering and architecture has been set for 11 a.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater. The purpose of the meeting is to present course representatives to the Engineering Student council for 1954-55.
Music Therapy Meeting Starts
The second annual regional conference of the National association for Music Therapy, Midwestern region, District IV, is being held today in the Student Union.
The Midwestern region, District IV, was organized at a meeting in Topeka in July 1953, and includes members from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
The conference is being sponsored by the National association for Music Therapy and University Extension. About 60 persons are expected to attend, said George Brooks, assistant director of University Extension.
Some of the topics to be discussed at the conference include research in the midwestern area, academic and clinical discussions of music therapy student training, and clinical work in music therapy.
Conference members will visit the psychology and music laboratories at the University.
Dr. J. H. Burckhalter, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, has received nearly $20,000 in grants for research on synthetic drugs during the coming year.
The U.S. Public Health service through its National Heart institute, has authorized $7,128 for Dr. Burckhalter's research in each of the next two years, with probable commitment for a third year. This study will deal with development of synthetic relatives of veratermine, a natural drug useful in treating diseases of the heart.
Parke, Davis and company of Detroit will provide $5,300 for research on synthetic anti-amebic agents and anti-malarial drugs. This will be the eighth consecutive year the firm has supported Dr. Burckhalter's work.
Sam Britton and Cecil Caldwell, both graduate students at the University of Mississippi, will enter KU this summer to become research assistants on the USPHS project. They will be candidates for the Ph.D. degree in pharmaceutical chemistry.
Students under the Parke, Davis grant are Robert I. Leib and William S. Brinigar Jr., both working on the anti-amebic drugs; and Lakshmanan Neelakantan of India, working on anti-malarials. All are graduate students.
New York — (U.P.) A national campaign to raise $10 million to help the Korean people got underway today.
National Korean Aid Drive Starts
The opening of the drive was timed to coincide with the beginning of the Geneva conference, when peace in Korea will be discussed.
AFROTC Sets Summer Camps
About 135 Air Force cadets will take a month's base training at air force bases this summer as part of an Air Force orientation program.
Col. Thomas B. Summers, professor of air science and tactics, said the purpose of the month's orientation is to give the cadets a chance to study every phase of base operations from supply to maintenance operation.
About 30 cadets will go to Hamilton Air Force base in San Francisco, and 30 more will go to Bergstrom base in Big Springs, Tex. Twenty-one cadets will take the training at Webb Air Force base in Waco, Tex., and 14 will train at a Long Beach, Calif. base. Nine cadets will train at Norton Air Force base San Beruandina, Calif.
The program is similar at all of the bases with cadets being taught phases of Air Force discipline, customs, supply, and weather patroling.
Thirty cadets will train at a late summer camp at Bergstrom base, and one cadet will go to the Castle Air Force base in California.
Two KU Engineers To Offer Treatises
The program is a general non-specialist approach to the role of the Air Force in the modern world, Col. Summers said.
Two seniors of the mechanical engineering department are to present treatises today and tomorrow in Tulsa, Okla., at the district convention of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
Barton Hoglund, senior, is presenting his paper on "Availability" and Kenneth May, senior, is presenting "An Instantaneous and Overall Mileage Meter."
Episcopal Students to Hear Chaplain at May 7-8 Outing
Discussion topics at the semi-annual outing for Episcopal students will be "What is a 1954 Christian Churchman?" and "Witnessing to Christianity Through Your Vocation." The Rev. Mr. Grant Folmsbee, chaplain and full time counselor at the Oklahoma Military academy, will lead the discussion sessions. The outing, held at Lone Star lake, is scheduled for May 7 and 8.
THE REV. GRANT FOLMSBEE
PRIEST
Steel Scaffold Falls From Capitol Dome
Topeka —U.(P).A section of steel scaffolding being used inside the Kansas statehouse dome fell today and landed on a heavy brass railing on the second floor.
First reports were that no one was injured.
The scaffolding damaged the railing and the flooring of the second story rotunda.
Father Folmsbee, a native of Binghampton, N.Y., received degrees from Syracuse university and the Berkley Divinity school. Following ordination in North Carolina, he was in charge of organizing the Community church on the Fontana Dam project under the Tennessee Valley authority in a wartime community of 5,000.
During the three years when he was chaplain for Episcopal students at Wentworth Military academy and Central Missouri State college, College of Nursing, the staff of the National Town Country institute at Parkville, Mo.
In 1946 Father Folmsbee became associate rector at Christ church in Dallas, Tex., and soon after accepted the post of Chaplain-Director of the Episcopal Community service for welfare work in Dallas county.
A member of Kappa Delta Pi, honorary educational fraternity,
Father Folmsbee will receive a Master's degree in counseling this summer.
Students who plan to attend the outing should make reservations with Pat Powers, education junior. The outing will begin at 4:30 p.m. Friday, May 7 and conclude the following afternoon. Transportation will be provided for students with Saturday classes.
The rugged Olympic peninsula in northwestern Washington State takes the country's heaviest rainfall, more than 200 inches at some points in wet years.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Photo Tiff Arises As Cohn Testifies
Washington—(U.P.)—Roy M. Cohn testified today that he gave Senate investigators a photograph of Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens and Pvt. G. David Schine without telling them a third person had been cut out of the picture.
Mr. Cohn was put on the witness stand out of turn as a roaring controversy boiled up over the "doctored" photograph taken Nov. 17, 1953, at McGuire field near Fort Dix, N.J.
Mr. Cohn, chief counsel of the Senate Permanent Investigating subcommittee, testified the picture was taken at Mr. Stevens' request.
A moment before, Secretary Stevens had charged that the cut down picture showed that "somebody has taken it upon themselves to edit the information" going before the subcommittee.
Mr. Cohn testified that he did not know, when he gave investigators the picture, that a third person had been cut from the picture. He said he later learned the change had been made by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's staff because they believed the third person—an Army colonel—had no connection with the picture.
The photograph first became an issue when special subcommittee Counsel Ray H. Jenkins introduced it yesterday while cross-examining Mr. Stevens.
Army charges that the Schine-Stevens picture had been "doctored" and was a "fake" kicked off the roughest, noisiest uproar of the hearings to date.
Mr. Cohn, Sen. McCarthy, and Francis P. Carr, his staff director, have accused Mr. Stevens and his associates of trying to get the Wisconsin Republican to call off an investigation of alleged espionage at Fort Monmouth, N.J.
Mr. Jenkins asked Mr. Stevens yesterday if he tried to appease Sen. McCarthy by being "especially nice . . and tender" to Pvt. Schine, who was Sen. McCarthy's aide before he was drafted Nov. 3.
Mr. Stevens denied it. Then Mr Jenkins, introducing the picture, asked if he had not asked to be photographed with Pvt. Schine "alone." Mr. Stevens said he could not remember making any such request.
Today's session began with an unproar when special Army Counsel Joseph N. Welch dramatically told the subcommittee that the Schine-Stevens photograph was "doctored" and a "fake." McCarthy accused Welch of "lying."
Mr. Welch presented a larger picture, showing a colonel greeting Mr. Stevens, with Pvt. Schine in the middle.
Historian to Talk At Centennial History Meeting
A public lecture by Allan Nevins, Pulitzer-prize winning historian from Columbia university, will highlight the Kansas Centennial History conference Friday and Saturday.
Dr. Nevins will speak on "Kansas and the Stream of American Destiny," at 8 p.m. Friday in the Union ballroom. At the conference banquet that evening, Allen Crafton, professor of speech and drama, will give his famous 'humorous lecture on "How Culture Came to Kansas."
The two-day program is sponsored by the Kansas State Historical Society, the Kansas Library association, the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields, and five KU departments.
Fred W. Brinkerhoff of Pittsburgh will be moderator on a Friday afternoon symposium on "Collecting and Using the Materials of Local History." Discussants will be Kenneth Davis, Manhattan; Alan W. Farley, Kansas City, Kans.; Mrs. Garnette L. Street, Emporia, and Dr. James C. Malin of KU.
Three papers on Kansas history will be given Saturday morning, James C. Carey, Kansas State college, will report on "Juniata, Gateway to Mid-Kansas"; the Rev. Peter Beckman, St. Benedicts college, "The Transportation Problem in Early Atchison," and Sister Evangeline Thomas, Marymont College, "Ft. Harker, 1864-72."
George L. Anderson, professor of history, will lead an informal discussion of the place and relation of history in Kansas education and prospects for development of greater interest.
La Tertulia to Meet at 4:30
Comical skits will be presented by two groups of Spanish students at 4:30 p.m. today at a meeting in 107 Strong of La Tertulia, Spanish club. It will be the last meeting of the club this school year.
Indochina Reds Open Attack On Fort Near Dien Bien Phu
Hanoi, Indochina—U.(P.)—Communist troops today opened a new assault on isolated "Isabella" fortress which guards besieged Dien Bien Phu from the south.
The new assault began under cover of heavy artillery fire from guns pulled up to the fringes of the French defense positinos earlier today by Red artillerymen.
Violent isolated storms signaled the approaching monsoon season.
The high command said the fresh pressure was concentrated for the first time this month against the northwestern side of isolated "Isabella," which lies three miles south of the main bastion.
But French planes, including 25 newly arrived Corsair fighters on "loan" from the United States flew through the bad weather to attack rebel rear areas and supply routes.
Incessant fire from the Communist guns threatened the vital airlift to the besieged garrison and made it difficult for the French to launch any immediate counterattacks.
Red attackers pushed within 50
Paul Holden, 32, Greenleaf, Kan. chief pilot of the Civil Air transport airline, suffered severe wounds in the thigh and arm from Red anti-aircraft fire while dropping supplies to the fortress.
The first American casualty of the attack was Dien Bien Phu occurred Saturday.
Tuesday, April 27, 1954
CLOUDY
Weather
Rain ranging from a trace $j0$ an unofficial $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches and hailstones from marbles to golf ball size were
listed today by the K an s a s weather bureau. The latest forecast omitted mention of any more rain in the next 24 hours. Instead skies were predicted to remain partly cloudy. Rounding out a week of April showers and rains.
the moisture soaked some sections of eastern Kansas while passing the west by. Kansas temperatures were lower for the time being, with a warm-up due tomorrow, said U.S. Meteorologist Tom Arnold. The maximums Monday ranged from 72 at Goodland to 86 at Wichita. This morning's state lows were spread from 41 at Goodland to 68 at Olathe.
yards of heavy barbed wire entanglements of the French defenses and defenders sallied out to weaken the rebel flank. Sharp fighting was reported.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No.133
Student Seeks Court Aid in Election Battle
-Kansan photo by Wilson Avars
S
DIAMOND NECKLACE—Richard Collins, second year law student, admires the oral cavity of one of his most recent acquisitions. Collins picked up four diamond-back rattlesnakes on a recent trip to Oklahoma, and plans to lunch on them in the near future.
Snake-Catching Called Rattling Good Pastime
By AMY DE YONG
For those persons who have "more intestinal fortitude than horse sense" the International Association of Rattlesnake Hunters awards membership cards to anyone who catches a live rattlesnake at Waynoka, Oklahoma.
This daring occupation has become a yearly treat for Richard Collins, third year law student, who startled crowds of students yesterday with his four live "rattlers," the largest of which is five and a half feet long. Campus policeman Ted Cox, who was tapping cars in the 30-minute areas, said he jumped into the street when his light tapping aroused the snakes in Collins' car.
Similar reactions occurred among many students who passed the car, but they crowded together to watch with a kind of fascinated horror when they learned that the snakes were housed in boxes with chicken wire across the sides. Collins admitted that he has a "good healthy respect" for the snakes, but he said there is a popular misconception concerning "rattlers."
"The snakes are not so dangerous as people believe," Collins said. "Their unpredictability is the dangerous thing," he continued. "It is difficult to get them to strike, but you never know when they're going to."
Collins has attended the annual snake hunt in Waynoka since 1949. A banquet opens the week-end program, he said, and rattlesnake meat is served to anyone who wishes to
taste it. The hunt is held on Sunday, with a headquarters in the prairie, and several thousand persons attend. The Waynoka Saddle club sponsors the hunt and pays 50 cents a pound for the snakes,
Hunters use a forked stick, a metal snake catcher, or their hands to catch the snakes, the student said. Collins said he caught a three and a half foot snake with his hands Sunday. "If they hear you coming they make every effort to get away," he said. The student said he was holding a smaller snake when he saw the large one going into a hole near him.
"I didn't have the gunny sack we usually keep snakes in," he said, "so I tossed the little snake over the bluff and grabbed the large one by its tail to pull it back out. The snakes are hunted on high, flat bluffs where the gypsum rock caves and cracks make excellent places to hibernate. Collins said the snake he tossed down landed near another party and was quite a surprise to the persons climbing up the bluff.
"The only thing that worries me," Collins said, "is the possibility that a snake might crawl out of the steep bluffs while I'm climbing up." He explained the steep sides require the climber to keep his face very near the bluff.
A law student who was one of those whose recent election to an All Student Council office was declared invalid by the ASC elections committee last week asked the Student court yesterday to declare the committee off-base in its findings, and to declare the election valid.
Gary Davis, second year law, filed a petition with the court. He questions the right of the committee to void an entire election. A member of the Married Students party, Davis said he was elected to the ASC house of representatives after receiving a majority of the valid ballots in the election.
The action in which Davis and all others elected in the polling last Tuesday were declared by the committee not to have been properly elected came after the counting of ballots. The committee decided that the proportion of invalid ballots cast in favor of each of the parties indicated that something irregular had taken place.
In the case of the presidential voting, the election of Fred Rice, college junior backed by POGO, was announced after the first counting of ballots. When the supply of improperly cast ballots was investigated, though, it was found that the AGI candidate. Robert Kennedy, engineering junior, would have won if these ballots had been counted.
The elections committee voted, with some dissension, that none of the ballots for president or vice president should be counted. Later, they also threw out the results of the senate and house of representatives elections.
Davis's petition to the student court yesterday challenged this action of declaring the entire election wordless. His petition states that on April 21, the date of the first committee meeting, the committee came together without having been properly convened, conducted their meeting without the authority of the ASC constitution, and then declared he election void. According to Davis's petition, the committee acted without considering any testimony or evidence.
The court has set Friday night for a preliminary hearing of the case.
Nancy Canary, education senior and president of the Class of '54, said today that this will be the only such meeting of the year, and that seniors who do not attend will have no opportunity to get the Senior Reminder, an information pamphlet with instructions about graduation activities.
All seniors have been excused by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy to attend the senior convocation to be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater.
Seniors Released For Class Meeting
Cheerleading School Now Being Conducted
Anyone desiring to be a cheerleader is invited to attend the Cheerleaders School being held from 4 to 6 p.m. today, Wednesday, and Thursday in the Student Union ballroom, Jack Byrd, head cheerleader, announced today. Tryouts for next year' cheerleaders will be Monday, June 3rd.
Mu Phi to Have Boke Sale
Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, will hive a bake sale from 9 am. to 12 noon Saturday in Hunsinger's garage.
X delo00 indigorein Nm
Dopeng, Nm.
Tuesday, April 27, 1954
'Misquoted' Prof Gets Boot
The question of academic freedom is one that comes up occasionally in the nation's schools. And when it does, the answer each time seems to be that college and university professors aren't at liberty to say what they think.
A recent case involves an ex-assistant professor of political science at the University of California, as reported by the Associated Collegiate Press.
It seems that the professor, in an off-campus speech, made the following statement: "It is all right to be conservative when the juice is dried up in you, but there is something wrong with a young person today, especially in our rich and affluent U.S., who is not idealistically inspired to the point of belonging to a Communist, Socialist, anarchist or similarly inspired group."
At least that's what the Daily Californian reported he said. The professor himself said he had been misquoted, and what he actually had said was this: "I can well understand how in the comparatively rich U.S. during the decades of the 30s and 40s young people were idealistically motivated to join Communist, Socialist or anarchist groups. Conservatism, when the juice is dried up in one's veins, is understandable, but there is something wrong with a youngster who is not motivated by generous compassion for the underprivileged of the world."
There's quite a difference in meaning between the two statements, to say the least.
The Daily Californian said it had checked on the story with the professor before it had been printed, but regardless of who was wrong, he was dismissed from the faculty.
The professor said he was dropped because of political reasons. The University chancellor said the decision was made "on the basis of teaching, research, university and public service, and professional competence."
The chairman of the political science department said the man was a good teacher, however, and he denounced what he called "thought control." And the Daily Californian said that "even if his position were entirely indefensible, he should be perfectly free to say what he wishes."
How about that? Does a college faculty member have the right to say what he believes, even though what he says may embarrass the school administration with charges of communism in the classroom?
To us the important thing is to investigate thoroughly such situations as the affair at the University of California. If an instructor is an avowed supporter of communism, perhaps the school is better off without him. But professors shouldn't be fired because they voted for a socialist in 1932 or prefer vodka to beer or understand what Marx was talking about. —Sam Teaford
If you have ever tried to take class notes on a single sheet of paper, you have probably found, as we did, that the majority of the desks in classrooms on this campus don't lend themselves well to that sort of thing.
Evidently many students, finding themselves too far above the courses in which they are enrolled to take notes, while away the time in class by carving and scratching everything from fraternity letters to obnoxious pictures on the desk-tops.
Taking Notes Can Be 'Rough Everyplace But Myers Hall
There is one building on the campus, however, where one does not encounter this kind of foolishness and destruction—Myers hall, home of the School of Religion.
What is it, we wonder, that keeps students from scratching up the desks in Myers when they do so everywhere else on the campus? Perhaps they feel that the teachers in the School of Religion, most of whom are ordained ministers, feel more strongly about such things than do the rest of the instructors and professors on the campus.
Perhaps they feel that Myers is akin to a church and (we sincerely hope) most students wouldn't go around carving up the woodwork in a church.
But what is the difference between perpetrating such destruction in Myers and doing the same thing in any other classroom? The arm of the law wouldn't be any longer or stronger concerning such acts in Myers than in any other building on the campus, so that must not be the consideration.
It would seem to indicate that many of the students on this campus, and many other people in all walks of life, for that matter, must consider morality a thing to observe only when they feel "someone is watching" them.
Is "someone watching" any less in the rest of the buildings on the campus than in Myers hall? —Don Tice
GOSH, MR. MOUSE, US
AIN'T SFEED YOU IN
SOME TIME...
HI'LO
POGO...
I'SPOSE
YOU WERE
A WITNESS TO
THE BIG
ASSAULT?
4-17
GOSH, MR.MOUSE, US
AIN'T SEED YOU IN
SOME TIME...
H'LO
POGO...
I S'POSE
YOU WERE
A WITNESS TO
THE BIG
ASSAULT?
BIG
ASSAULT?
ASSAULT AN' BATTERY
THIS
SERPENT
SPRING AT
ME...
4-17
BIG ASSAULT?
ASSAULT AN' BATTERY
--- THIS SERPENT SPRUNG AT ME ---
THAT AIN'T NO SERPENT--- THAT'S THE WORM CHILE.
HE LEAPED AN' SNARLED--- FLUNG ME ONTO MY BACK---AN' FELT FOR MY WALLET.
COOP 1934 WHAT PELO?
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 27, 1954
THAT AIN'T NO SERPENT--- THAT'S THE WORM CHILE.
HE LEAPED AN' SNARLED--- FLUNG ME ONTO MY BACK---AN' FELT FOR MY WALLET.
THAT'S PERTY HARD TO 'BLEEVE, MOUSE---
"IS HUH? WELL, I'LL GIVE YOU A DIFFERENT VERSION---WOULD YOU 'BLEEVE HE'S A TIGER IN DISGUISE?"
THAT'S PERTY HARD TO BLEEVE, MOUSE --
'IS HUH?' WELL, I'LL GIVE YOU A DIFFERENT VERSION --
--WOULD YOU BLEEVE HE'S A TIGER IN DISGUISE?
To the editors:
Recent developments in the H-bomb experiments in the Pacific have raised some moral problems as to the feasibility of supporting our country's present policies.
...LETTERS
But the entire situation poses a special problem to the modern Christian, because the possibilities of the disastrous effects of thermonuclear weapons are not the basic issues confronting him.
Perhaps this may exclude some people, but one who is striving to be a Christian disciple must face up to a few realities. He cannot object to our present foreign policy merely because it might bring possible destruction.
What discipline anywhere really believes might shall bring right? He cannot both have Christ as Lord and support construction and stockpiling of destruction and contribution to international armies.
The Christian is called to testify that such a policy shall fail because it is the complete antithesis of the life surrendered to God.
The distinguishing marks of a life striving to be surrendered to God is its loyalty to something above society. Certainly this implies what Peter Coleman said a few years ago, "... Christian teaching teaches you if necessary, to die for your faith, but not to kill for it."
The fact of the matter is that Christ demands his followers to deny themselves to follow him. This is far different from sacrificing to society so as to deny him the claim to our lives.
Let all Christians remember that to do the opposite of God's will is to travel a downhill road, and the fact about a downhill road is that to come back along it is to go uphill.
The corollary to this is that the demands Christ puts on us shall be much greater than those of supporting modern American society; taking his way is not an escape from sacrifice even unto death. But this denial of one's self asked by Him differs from that asked by society in that it is for the purpose of showing where the source and bulwark of our motivations are found—in Him, not man.
This, then, is what the Christian is called to do if he be sincere: He must testify by his life to the fact that there is a third way open to the world. It is not merely a problem of military preparedness and wartime economy versus Communism.
And to him who would think Christ's way impractical, let him stop a moment, look at the world and where it is going, and then ask himself if the present method is a practical way of life.
Phil Hanni college junior
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
CLASS PROPHECY:
"STUDENTS TO DAY—PENSIONERS TOMORROW."
COMPLETE LIBT OF EMPLOYMENT OFFICES
CLASS WILL:
"OUR ABILITY TO STAY AWAKE IN SNARFES CLASSES"
WISE SAYING:
"DON'T LET COLLEGE LIFE MAKE A BUM OUTTA YOU"
CLASS MOTTO:
"OVIDED WE FALL"
"UNITED WE FALL HARDER"
"Don't select one of th' professors for th' commencement * speaker--we're limited for time."
FHA Scandal Slows Fate of Housing Bill
But for the alleged irregularities in the Federal Housing administration that first came to light just two weeks ago, the Eisenhower-backed "omnibus" housing bill's fate might already have been decided by the Senate.
As it is, the bill that incorporates President Eisenhower's request for 35,000 public housing units yearly for the next four years has passed the House of Representatives and is tabled in the Senate banking and currency committee until the conclusion of the FHA hearings.
The bill, introduced in the House Feb. 12 by Rep. Jesse P. Wolcott (R.-Mich.), passed that body April 2 by a roll call vote of 353 to 36. Rep. Wolcott is the House banking and currency committee chairman.
As can be observed by the overwhelming majority by which it survived its test in the lower chamber, the bill is receiving little opposition, even from the Democrats. Most of the few dissenting votes came from southern Democrats, but one Kansan—Rep. Wint Smith of Mankato—cast a "no" vote.
On the other side, though, one of the few southern Democrates who voted with the administration, Rep. William M. Colmer of Mississippi, said, "It would be to the best interest of all concerned, if the federal government should make a straight-out gift (of public housing units) to the proposed occupants. Having the responsibility of home ownership they will no longer be under the compulsion to remain in the low-income class in order to have a place to live. Thus, their initiative would be restored."
Because it directly coincides with President Eisenhower's housing wishes, it has almost his 100 per cent blessing. Rep. Wolcott said the bill contains 99 per cent of what the President wants in his housing program and will make it possible for "the American people to have over 2 million units of housing a year."
A New York Republican, however, said he thought the measure, rather than bettering the nation as most others have said it will, would lead the U.S. into statism.
That amendment, introduced by Rep. Charles B. Brownson (R-Ind.), lowered the proposed minimum down payment on FHA-insured old and/or new houses. Rep. Brownson, in explanation, said the original down payment stipulations were not low enough in view of the rising cost of living. His amendment, one of more than a dozen proposed, passed 102 to 93.
The current bill, which got a surprisingly quick trip through committee and past the entire House, had only one amendment tacked onto it before going over to the Senate.
Now the bill must get through the Senate committee, headed by Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R.-Ind.). Then it probably will be pushed quickly onto the floor because the President wants it passed with all possible haste. —Stan Hamilton.
Daily Hansan
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Tuesday. April 27, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page3
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Major League Races Closest Since 1947
By UNITED PRESS
Teams in both major leagues today were more closely bunched at this first East-West stage of the race than at any time since 1947 in the American league and 1945 in the National.
Although it is much too early for any real re-evaluation of the pennant rances, the play in the first two weeks could be a portent of old-fashioned wide-open stretch battles, which would be a pleasant contrast to last season's runaways by the Dodgers and Yankees.
As play resumed today with Brooklyn at St. Louis, New York at Milwaukee, and Pittsburgh at Cincinnati in National league night games and Philadelphia at Chicago in a day game, the Dodgers were just barely on top in the National with a 7-4 won and lost figure and Cincinnati in second a half-game behind at 7-5. Not since 1945 when war-time baseball was in effect, had National league teams been similarly bunched. In that year at the corresponding time, the Giants and Cubs (who eventually won the flag) were tied for first place with 7-4 marks.
It was much the same in the American league where the White Sox were at New York and Cleveland at Boston in day games and Detroit at Philadelphia and Baltimore (a western team) at Washington in night games. The White Sox, also 7-4 in the won and lost column, were in first place, half a game in front of Washington and Detroit tied for second at 6-4.
Not since the first East-West competition in 1947 had there been an American league leader with such a low percentage at this stage. That year the Yankees were on top with 7-4 and Cleveland was next at 5-4.
In the first two weeks, the White Sox after a slow start have asserted themselves as possible strong challengers to break up the Yankee monopoly and they will meet the five-time World champ face to face in the season's first "crucial series" today. The Tigers, who were picked by most experts to finish seventh or eighth, have been the big surprise although they are expected to level off. Washington could be a genuine dark horse threat all the way, while the Athletics seem stronger than expected with good rookies and a manager, Eddie Joost, who is getting a lot of mileage out of his crew.
Brooklyn is on top in the National perhaps because the early schedule has matched the Dodgers five times with Pittsburgh. The Pirates, who are not the weaklings of last year, lost four out of five to the Brooks, but rared up and beat the Giants, three out of four. The Giants, in turn, rose from those defeats to shut out the Phillies three straight times. That's the kind of a race it has been — up to now. Connecticut played the durdle ordered in the National, while the Cubs, who have been hitting like a collection of hall-of-famemembers, are the big surprise. The Cardinals have been the big disappointment in the National while Cleveland has failed to click in the American.
Neither the Red Sox in the American nor the Braves in the National can be properly evaluated as yet because of the heavy run of injuries and ailments. They are definitely the two "tough luck" teams and may step up their paces later when such stars as Ted Williams, Mel Parnell, Bobby Thomson, Bill Bruton, Andy Pakko, and others are all in shape and playing together.
Among the individuals there have been heartening comebacks by such veterans as Sal Maglie of the Giants, Ned Carver of the Tigers, and Steve Gromek of the Tigers among the pitchers, Maglie and Gromek have three wins apiece and Carver has two. Among the hitters, Willie Jones of the Phillies looks as if he might be the player he was in their 1950 pennant year with a .341 batting average. Vern Stephens of Baltimore is tapping out a .366 tune for another fine comeback.
Golfers Beat Cats, 6 $ _{1/2} $ -5 $ _{1/2} $
The Kansas golf team won its second golf meet of the season from a Big Seven school yesterday as the Jayhawks defeated the Kansas State Wildcats $6\frac{1}{2} - 5\frac{1}{2}$ at the Manhattan Country club. This was Kansas' sixth win of the season against two losses.
Bob Richards, KU's No. 1 golfer, was medalist for the meet with a 72 two strokes over par. Richards defeated John Stretcher 3-0 in their match.
The meet wasn't decided until the 18th hole of the final match, and Pete Rush of Kansas had to win the hole to assure the victory.
Kent Poore of K-State shot a 74 to lead the Wildcat team.
The KU golf team will be host to the Tulsa university golf team tomorrow afternoon.
The results:
Richards, K, defeated Stretcher 3-0.
Poore, defeated Harlan Hise, K 3-0.
John Prosser, K, defeated Hays
Wolter 2-1
Rush, K, tied Bob Skiver, $ 1^{1 2}-1^{1 2} $
Rain Storm Delays Intramural Games
Lack of players and the sudden rain storm were the deciding factors in yesterday's three scheduled intramural softball games. The date for replay of the postponed games has not been set.
In fraternity "A" Phi Gam took a 1 to 0 decision from Alpha Phi Alpha by virtue of a forfeit. Also in fraternity "A" the Lambda Chis were leading Triangle 6 to 5 in the second inning when the game was called because of the rain.
In Independent "A" Don Henry was leading Army 7 to 6 when the rains came in the first half of the third inning.
Today's schedule:
Today's Seminar
Fraternity 'B"
4:00, Field 1, ATO vs. Phi Delt.
4:00, Field 2, Deltas vs. DU.
4:00, Field 3, Sigma Chi vs. K, Sig
Netmen Playing Washburn Today
The KU tennis team travels to Topeka this afternoon to play Washburn university in a dual meet. Washburn, one of the better small schools in tennis competition, hasn't been defeated in a dual meet since 1952.
New swimming stunts and water ballet techniques were practiced during the Quack club meeting held at the Robinson gym swimming pool.
KU tennis coach, Don Mechem, will probably play Al Hedstrom, Dick Hadley, Merl Sellers, Don Franklin, and Roger Youmans against the Washburn team.
Ballet Practiced By Swimming Club
Passing the new techniques is required of members earning their minor and major degrees in the club. Awards are then presented with each degree.
Members recently elected to the club are Lynne Livingston, fine arts freshman; Donna Spotts, education sophomore, and Polly McGinnis, fine arts freshman.
Cyclones to Interview Coach
Fort Collins, Colo. —(U.R.)— Bill Strannigan, basketball coach at Colorado A&M, has accepted an invitation to be interviewed for a similar position at Iowa State, it was announced yesterday. Strannigan will travel by plane to Ames, Iowa, tomorrow.
Cyclones to Interview Coach
Kansas Playing Rockhurst Today In Baseball Game
Coach Floyd Temple's Kansas baseball team is playing the Rockhurst Hawks in a non-conference game on Bourke field in Kansas City this afternoon. Kansas will be bidding for its ninth victory in 13 games.
The Hawks beat Central college 10-3 in their last game played on Saturday afternoon. The Jayhawkers defeated Iowa State 3-2 the same afternoon after they had won the day before by a score of 6-1.
Coach Temple will start either Bob Shirley or Wayne Tiemier on the mound. Arnold Briggs, freshman right hander will start for Rockhurst. He has started all three games which Rockhurst has played and has a record of two victories and no defeats.
The Hawks are a heavy hitting club with a team batting average of .383, and have six regulars hitting over .400. These men are outfielders Ken Kosorog and Gerry Wille; infielders John Williams, Joe Grant-ham, Bert Keys, and Ed Grosidier.
Kansas is expected to use the same line up which it used Saturday. This would consist of Bill Pulliam, second base; Punky Hoglund, third base; Bill Heitholt, center field; John Trombold, first base; John Perry, left field; Don Aungst, catcher, Harold Bergsten, short stop, and Bill Blair, right field.
Broken Hand Hurts Campy
St. Louis —(U.P.) Dodger slugger Roy Campanella today shrugged off the disclosure that he has a broken bone in his left hand and said he'll play in tonight's game against the Cardinals "and go right on playing."
Campanella, the National league's "most valuable player" last season, revealed last night that he has a "chip fracture" of the small bone at the base of the little finger of his left hand.
It's not known just which one of a number of accidents was the one that caused the fracture. Campanella's hand has been somewhat sore ever since the opening game of last year's World Series, when it was struck by a pitch thrown by Allie Reynolds of the Yankees.
"The doctor says that playing won't make the injury any worse," said Campanella. "So I'll go right on playing. He doesn't say when it will heal, and I sure want to miss any eight or 10 weeks or so."
Jackson Defeated In Heavyweight Bout
Brooklyn, N.Y. — (U.P.) — Jimmy (the Spoiler) Slade suffered a deep gash over his right eye while scoring a unanimous 10-round decision over Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson and, to complete Brooklyn's latest screwy sports story, the practically unmarked loser said, "I'm glad I lost."
But after the wild-swinging Jackson of Rockaway Beach, N.Y., had absorbed a boxing lesson, referee Barney Felix gave five rounds to Slade, four to Jackson and called one even. Judge Americo Schiawone favored Slade, 6-4, and Judge Bert Grant favored the winner, 7-3.
Slade, 181⁴, conceded 13 pounds and was a 4 to 1 underdog against Jackson 194⁵, for their nationally contested bout. He went home night at the Eastern Parkway arena.
Cincinnati, Ohio — (U.P.) - Infelder Connie Ryam, a 12-year veteran in the major leagues, today was shopping for a new job after being handed his unconditional release by the Cincinnati Redskins.
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Determine Favored in Trail Final Derby Prep Race Today
New York—(U.P.)—A $30,000 contract to perform as a sideshow to the famed Harlem Globetrotters put the fabulous Bevo Francis and his coach in the chips today—in contrast to their days at Rio Grande college which, they said, left them in tight financial straits.
Record-smashing Bevo and Coach Newt Oliver signed yesterday to play with and coach, respectively, the Boston Whirlwinds—a professional team which will play against the Globetrotters on a 25 or 30 game tour of the nation next fall and winter.
Trotters Sign Bevo, Oliver
Francis, who said that Rio Grande college gave him nothing beyond tuition and books, said he was in such a tough financial spot that he still hasn't paid a $5$ bill sent to him by the college for dental work for his wife. Bevo explained simply, "I couldn't afford to pay it."
Oliver said he also was anxious to find a better position because at Rio Grande, I was only making $3,620 for 12 months work that included coach, athletic director, publicity man, equipment manager, and director of an intramural program."
Louisville, Ky.—(U.P.)-The last of the prep races for Saturday's Kentucky Derby came up today with one of the favored "big three" in it.
The five men came into the hotel more than two hours after the closing curfew of 10 p.m. Thursday. The five men returned to Lawrence on Friday and didn't compete in the relays.
Five KUTrack Men Violate Training
Five Kansas university track men have been suspended for breaking training Thursday night before the Drake relays. The five men are Don Sneegas and Bill Brown, javelin throwers; Bill Nicier, shot man; Leon Wells, high jumper, and Bob Stinson, pole vaulter.
The senior members of the track squad met yesterday to decide what to do about the matter. However, Coach Bill Easton said that it would not be announced for a while what the punishment will be.
Intramural Golfers Will Play May 8
The annual intramural golf tournament will be held Saturday, May 8 at the Lawrence Country club golf course. The announcement was made today by Walt Mikols, director of Men's Intramurals.
Mr. Mikols also said that the deadline for second round play in individual sports is Sunday, May 2. These sports are tennis, badminton, horseshoes, and handball and managers should make these entries as soon as possible and watch for a meeting date, which will be announced later.
Levine Wins Opening Match
Bournemouth, England —(U.P) Mrs. Dorothy Levine of Chicago defeated Miss M. Gell of Great Britain, 6-1, 6-3, yesterday in the opening round of the British hard court tennis championships. Defending champion Doris Hart of Coral Gables, Fla., drew a first round bye.
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That one is Determine, pride of California's turf world and winner of six, consecutive races. Along with Correlation and Goyama, both of whom won their final Derby preps, he makes up the trio from which the Derby winner is expected to come.
Determine is going against seven other Derby eligibles in the $10,000 added Derby Trial, the winner of which for the past two years has gone on to take the big one. He isn't facing too much opposition and as a result was established an even money favorite in the overnight line.
Should he win it, he may go to the post on Derby day as the favorite over Correlation, who won the Wood Memorial at New York's Belmont park last Saturday and Goyama, winner of the Blue Grass States at nearby Lexington on Thursday.
Win or lose, Trainer Willie Molter said Determine would go in the Derby Trial "in the hope it will scare off some other horse."
"If Determine should win the Trial—like Correlation won the Wood and Goyamo the Blue Grass, maybe it will keep the field for the Derby Down," he reasoned. "And I think Determine would have a better chance in a small field—say 12 instead of the 23 who still might go."
Determine's chief threat in the Trial was expected to be Hasty Road, a disappointment after setting an all-time money winning record for two-year-olds. Hasty Road, with Johnny Adams up, was rated at 5-2.
Also in the Derby Trial field were Allied, stablemate of Determine; Sub-Factor, Hot Pursuit, Thunderbird, Sir Chir, and Close Out. The only surprise entry was Close Out, rated a 20 to 1 shot.
Determine and Hasty Road will carry top weight of 118 pounds each with Ray York up on the favorite and Johnny Adams aboard Hasty Road. Allied, in at 111, will be ridden by Steve Brooks and they will team up in the Derby Saturday, too no matter how they make out today.
Hank Moreno, who rode Dark Star to victory over the favored Native Dancer, in last year's Derby, will be up on Hot Pursuit, a 8-1 choice in the overnight line. Sub-Factor was quoted at 5-1, Sir Chris and Thunderbird at 15-1.
Up until two years ago, the winner of the Trial appeared to be jinxed in the Derby. Only Citation, in 1948, ever had won the Trial and then went on to win the Derby. But in 1952, Hill Gail did it and last year Dark Star won them both, too.
Pinehurst, N.C. — (U.P.)— Medalist Ben L. Goodes of Reidsville, N.C., led 64 qualifiers today into the first round of match play in the North and South Amateur Golf tournament, but Billy Joe Patton still was reckoned as the man to beat.
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Tuesday, April 27, 1954
University Daily Kansan
Page
Ericksen Writes Book, Builds Home
Combining literary, carpentry, and academic talents, one University sociologist is now enjoying the fruits of his labors. Dr. E Gordon Ericksen, assistant professor of sociology, rates an "A" for a particularly difficult two-year "course."
Prof. Ericksen did in 24 months what some individuals never even do in a lifetime. He completed a textbook and built a house.
The book, "Urban Behavior," was published last week by Macmillan and is being adopted by many universities and colleges throughout the United States and Canada.
The house, a three-bedroom ranch-type, is at 1645 Oxford road in West Hills. The Erickenses it is, if you believe the final teachers, we put on.
In the text Dr. Erciksen focuses its attention around the central problem, "How do urbanites conceive of themselves as persons and as an organized group?" In 496 pages, Dr. Ericksen demonstrates the impact of history and community organization on personality, the group-making process, and social control.
"I wrote the book largely because I was tired of adopting a 'seed catalogue' type of text in sociology," Dr. Ericksen said. By reporting established research findings the author shows how "democratic city planning leads to the release of human abilities, broadens the field of opportunity, and makes for greater personal liberty."
iently" and within two years, with a little manual help here and there from some of his academic colleagues, the house became a reality.
Dr. Ericksen was living in the Sunnyside apartments when he decided to build his own house after reading some construction plans in Popular Mechanics magazine. He had never used a powersaw, laid concrete or built much of anything in his life, but, he followed the instructions "obed-
Before joining the faculty in 1949, Dr. Ericksen taught at Indiana university and U.C.L.A. He received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago and is the author of several other publications such as "An Introduction to Human Ecology" and "Social and Cultural Features of Southwestern Kansas," in addition to a number of academic and popular articles in journals and magazines.
Democrats to Elect Officers
The University Young Democrats will elect officers and select convention delegates at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Room 106 Green.
The Caroima wen is the official bird of South Carolina.
Sixteen Students In Speech Final
Sixteen students enrolled in Speech I will be heard at 8 p.m. today and Thursday in Strong auditorium when they participate in the finals of the first Fundamentals of Speech Workshop program.
The speakers were selected last night on the basis of tryouts in which 44 students, chosen from 22 Speech I classes, participated. They will give 5-minute speeches on the general topic, "Know Your University."
The speakers and their topics for tonight are:
Nancy Teed, college sophomore,
"Foreign Students"; Mary Dough-
ge, college sophomore, "Sunny-
sade"; Galen Cadle, college freshman,
"Prof. Hopkins"; Georgeanna
Reardon, college senior, "Lawrence Extension Center"; Raymond Roberts,
fine arts freshman, "The Campanile"; Jo Houlton, college sophomore, "Library Card File";
Roger Miller, pharmacy junior,
"Campus Politics", and Tal Streater,
fine arts sophomore, "The Jayhawk."
Thursday, night-speakers are:
Helen Medved, college freshman,
"Uncle Jimmy"; Joan Shear, college sophomore, "Campus Night Life"; Douglass Wallace, engineering freshman, "The Wind Tunnel"; Sharon Theis, college freshman, "Campus Police"; Brooke Collison, college freshman, "The Student Union"; Barbara Froman, college freshman, "Potter Lake"; Richard Parker, engineering freshman, "Bailey Chemistry Laboratory", and Jay Swink, college freshman, "Dyche Museum Panorama."
The chairman tonight will be Betty Lou Watson, college sophomore, and Thursday, Mary Dougherty, college sophomore. Judges will be Prof. E. C. Buehler, Assoc. Prof. Margaret Anderson, instructors James Wright, Eugene Reynolds, Bonnie, Royer, and Dan Palmquist.
The workshop, according to William Conboy, director of the Speech I program, is a required laboratory for all Fundamentals of Speech students who are required to attend at least one of the sessions. He said that major emphasis will be placed upon the workshop as a directed listening experience.
Teacher Association Elects New Officers
Miss Marian Howard of Emporia High school, Saturday was elected president of the Kansas chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. Other officers chosen in the annual meeting held in connection with Cervantes Day were Miss Ella Larner, Leavenworth High school, her president; and Harley Oberhelman, graduate student, re-elected secretary-treasurer.
Largest of the groups from several schools and colleges here for the Cervantes Day program was one of 40 grade school students from Pittsburgh. They presented skirts in the Spanish language variety show.
Kansas High In National ROTC Plan
The total number of ROTC cadets at KU is slightly more than the national average.
According to the April 26 issue of "Time" magazine, about 1/5 of United States college males are in some branch of the ROTC. Almost two-fifths of the KU men are in the program.
According to Lawrence Journal-World photographer Richard Clarkson, journalism senior, KU was to have been featured along with Cornell in the recent Time article. Early in the semester, Clarkson interviewed ROTC officials because of a questionnaire which the magazine had sent him. He said he understood the article was to feature the two schools.
Instead, the educational section of the magazine carried a three column feature looking at the total national program.
KU has about 500 Army ROTC cadets. This compares with 141,600 students in the total Army ROTC program. About 250 colleges and universities are responsible for this enrollment.
Patch Contest Deadline Friday
The deadline for entries in the Arnold Air society shoulder patch contest has been postponed until Friday. It was previously last night.
About 20 entries have been submitted so far, contest chairman Theeron Pursley, college senior, said today. The deadline is being delayed because of knowledge that other patch designs are being readied.
The first place winner of the contest will receive a $50 war bond; and second place, a $25 bond; third place, $10 in cash; and honorable mention, a $5 cash award.
The purpose of the contest is to provide a shoulder patch for Campus Air Force ROTC cadets. The patch must be on 12 by 12 inch cardboard, must be drawn free hand, and should be in full color.
Entries must be submitted at the Air Science office in the Military science building by midnight Friday.
The winning patch will be shown at the spring Air Force dance, May 14. The patch will be worn to identify University cadets at AFROTC summer camps.
Research Institute Formed For Exceptional Children
An Institute for Research and Education of Exceptional Children is being formulated here upon request of the division of special education of the State Department of Public Instruction, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced.
The institute will concentrate on children who are gifted, mentally deficient, crippled, palisied, hard of hearing, partially sighted, socially and emotionally maladjusted, and those defective in speech.
Working through a Bureau of Child Research, the institute will provide special consultative services for exceptional children.
Members of the executive committee are J. H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school; W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine; Cloy S. Hobson, professor of education and Wallace A. Verburg, associate professor of education; Esther E. Twente, professor of social work; Edna A. Hill, professor of home economics; Ethan P. Allen, director of the Bureau of Governmental Research; M. Erick Wright, professor of psychology; Richard Schiefelbusch, associate professor of speech and drama; and Prof. June Miller, Dr. Herbert Miller, Dr. Harry Gianakon, and Dr. David W. Robinson, from the University Medical Center in Kansas City.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Tuesday, April 27, 1954
On The Hill -
Pinnings, Parties, Elections HighlightCampusActivities
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Weckel of Salina announce the engagement of their daughter, Catherine, to Richard Grinage, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Grinage of Salina. Miss Weckel is an education freshman.
Quill club recently initiated Don Tree, journalism junior; Diane Gard, education senior; Sondra Updike, college freshman; F. D. Moon, education junior; Jack Pickering, college senior; Dom Smith, education junior, and Josandra Heyman, fine arts freshman.
Templin hall recently elected Sue Baird, education junior, president for the coming year. Other officers are Pat Artman, college junior, vice president; Diane Legant, education junior, secretary; Sara Diebent, college sophomore, treasurer; Barbara Fisher, education junior, social chairman, and Ruth Mirkrish, college junior, house manager.
Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pinning of Pat Garrett, education senior, to Bob Alpers, college senior. The pinning was announced at dinner by a poem read by Carol Stutz, education junior. Miss Garrett's attendants were Marilyn Marhofer and Joan Carter, education seniors. Alpers is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Joann Pope, college sophomore, to Bo Parkins, engineering sophomore at the University of Colorado. Ann Haggard, fine arts sophomore, Adelaide Miller and Nina Ogden, college sophomores, presented the skit announcing the pinning, Miss Pope's attendants were Shirley Price, college sophomore, and Jo Kincaid, fine arts sophomore. Parkins is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity recently held a picnic at Lone Stu Lake. Chaperones were Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs. Fanny DeLozier Mrs. L. L. Williams, and Mrs. J. I Hollingsworth.
Delta Delta Delta sorority and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity recently held an exchange dinner.
Stephenson hall recently held its Bayou ball costume party. Chaperones were Mrs. Wilma Hooper, Mrs. Lester Jeter, Miss Carletta Nellis, Mrs. R. G. Roche, and Mrs. Edna E. Ramage.
Theta Chi fraternity recently held its annual spring formal, the Carination ball. Chapersones were Mrs. Joe E. Hope, Mrs. W. W. Brown, Mrs. Edward H. Turner, and Mrs. W. H. Cauble.
Alpha Chi Omega announces the pinning of Jill Gilbert, college sophomore, to John Dunn, engineering sophomore. The pinning was announced by Jeanette Ewy, college sophomore, who was dressed as a clown. Miss Ewy read a poem and distributed balloons containing the names of the couple. Attendants were JacKay Phillips, college
Glenn Miller Means Exquisite Dance Music
New York—(U)F—If you are under 25, the name of Glenn Miller probably means little or nothing to you.
But to those now pushing 30, Glenn Miller's name is a synonym for exquisite dance music. That's because such persons were in their teens when Miller made his music. Miller and his band joined the Army and went to Britain early in World War II. On Christmas Eve, 1944, the Army reported that Major Glenn Miller was missing in action on a flight to Paris.
But Miller's music did not die with him. He had made many records in the late 1920s and early 1940s. And he and his band appeared almost weekly before radio microphones.
Now, nine years after Miller's death, RCA-Victor has issued a massive album of his music, with most of the numbers "air-checked" from the broadcasts.
sophomore, and Karen Hilmer. journalism junior. Dunn is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Sigma Phi Epsilon held its annual Mother's Day at the chapter house recently. The mothers received a corsage and had lunchon with their sons.
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual Black and Gold formal dance recently. Chaperones were Mrs. Hazel Hawbecker, Mrs. Cletus Rosebroungt, Mrs. B. A. Mayher, and Mrs. James I. Hollingstworth.
Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority, recently pledged Judy Ferrel, graduate student; Patricia Mitchell, college senior; Ann Kelly, college sophomore; and Mary Bess Stephens, journalism junior.
Delta Gamma sorority gave its annual Pinafore party recently at the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte, Mrs. J. I. Holingsworth, and Mrs. W. S. Shaw.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity held a "Purple Garter" party for seniors at the Castle Tearoom recently.
The Rev. and Mrs. H. M. Sippel of Lawrence announce the pinning of their daughter, Martha, to Leon Mason, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Mason, of Lawrence. Miss Sippel is senior at William Wood's college, Futon, Mo. Mason is business junior and is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
Triangle Fraternity HoldsFounder'sDinner
Jerry Davies, engineering sophmore, 'corresponding secretary; Darrel Sween, engineering freshman, treasurer; Alan Akers, engineering junior, sergeant-at-arms; Charles Periman, engineering sophomore, editor, and Ed Odel, engineering freshman, librarian.
Dr. Shelby Miller, professor of chemical engineering, associate member and past chapter adviser, spoke on his recent residence in England while participating in the Fulbright Lecture Tour program.
District 13 of Sigma Phi Epsilon held its annual convention at the chapter house in Lawrence recently.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Holds Convention
The 11 chapters in Kansas and Missouri comprise District 13. These chapters are at KU, K-State, Baker, Emporia State, Washburn, Missouri, Drury, Washington, Southeastern Missouri State Teachers, Calver-Stockton, and Missouri School of Mines.
The delegates were welcomed by Ken Hausler, president of the KU chapter, and Dean George B. Smith, chapter adviser at KU.
District Governor C. H. Elting of Topeka; John Robson, of Kansas City, editor of the national Sigma Phi Epsilon Journal; Bill Hausler, president of the Lawrence Sig Ep alumni club; Bill Akright of Kansas City, financial adviser to the KU chapter; and alumnus Doug Faddock of Kansas City were speakers.
Panel discussions on chapter administration, rushing, pledge training, scholarship, and public relations were held Saturday.
Colonel Thomas B. Summers, professor of Air Science and Tactics, was guest speaker at a dinner at the chapter house Saturday evening.
Daughters of Rita Under Court Custody
White Plains, N. Y. —(U.P.)—Prince Aly Khan flew into New York from Hollywood today to join his ex-wife, Rita Hayworth, and their daughter, Yasmin, 4, in the suburban home where the child is under technical court custody on charges of neglect.
Miss Hayworth and her present husband, singer Dick Haymes, arrived here last night from Florida to fight "baseless" charges that Yasmin and Miss Haywort's elder daughter, Rebecca Welles, 9, were improperly cared for in the home of Mrs. Dorothy Chambers, a haymes family friend described as the children's governess.
Aly's trip here was planned before the neglect charges were filed last Friday, for the purpose of reaching agreement with Miss Hayworth over custody and financial support of their child. Aly told reporters he was "hoping to reach an agreement" on that matter, which has been in dispute since their divorce more than a year ago.
When You Join The "Men Who Measure" . . .
Yasmin and Rebecca were placed in custody of the Westchester Children's court, but left in the care of Mrs. Chambers, on Friday after neglect charges were brought by the County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. The nature of the charges was not disclosed by the court and a spokesman for the Society refused to "give away my case" before the hearing scheduled for Tuesday.
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--a healthy, rosy glow and above all, it won't be sore. It will not hurt if you purchase a little baby oil or other burn-repellent lotion and apply to the back, face, arms and legs frequently while in the sun for added insurance against a burn.
Sunburns Are Not Fashionable Nor Pretty-Wait for The Tan
By KAREN HILMER
By KAREN HILMER
Kansan Society Editor
"Ouch—why did I ever sit out in the sun so long! Won't I look cute in my new formal I'm wearing to the dance tonight!" said a most miserable and dejected little lady last weekend.
Well, impatient one, we could be sarcastic and say "we told you so" but that would not help solve the problem of how to turn that horrible sore shade of red to a luscious shade of golden brown. You must admit, though, that it is a wee bit on the foolish side to sit for hours in the hot sun, with no shading protection, when you want to look your very best that night for a big social event.
Besides looking like a fugitive from a kettle of boiling water, it is a most unpleasant experience to feel all "burnt up" and not be able to relieve the uncomfortable pain resulting from an excess of an hour or two in the sun.
Of course, there are those extremely lucky coeds with dark olive complexion who can sit under old Sol all day and come in looking three shades darker brown with narry a freckle showing and twice as beautiful in the new pastel spring colors. Needless to say, this article does not pertain to them.
If you are fair-haired with a light complexion, don't be discouraged, for you too can obtain a tan, but over a longer period of time. That the secret of it—if you do burn in a short time, no matter how impatient you might be, take it slow for the first few outings, increasing the length of time you stay in the sun each day. That way, if you do burn, it will be just enough to give you
If you've gone and "done it" and the damage is done, there are a few "don'ts" and "do's" for you不fortunate ones. First of all, don't apply a heavy cleansing cream—it will not relieve the heat or the pain or the redness. D wash in lukewarm water with a minimum of soap. If the burn has resulted in blisters, a little baking power with warm water will do the trick of taking some of the heat away.
Don't sit in the sun again until the remnants of the pealing skin and soreness have disappeared-if you do your skin is likely to become very dry and tough.
These have been just a few small hints to combat that "lobster" look. Take it easy and remember two things - you have the rest of the summer to acquire the much wanted tan, and - take good care of your skin for the rest of the year.
For a different touch to spring meals, add enough grape juice to cream cheese to soften it. Roll into walnut-sized balls and dip in chopped nuts and parsley.
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On Capitol Hill—
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Flexible Farm Supports Face Test in Senate
Washington—(U.P.) President Eisenhower's plan to shift from high level farm price supports to a "flexible" system came up today for a major test in the Senate.
The upper chamber scheduled a vote this afternoon on the administration's wool support bill which farm bloc Senators hope to use as a vehicle for extending high level price props on basic farm products.
The crucial test was expected to come on an amendment proposed by Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La) to continue for two more years the 90 per cent of parity price guarantees on wheat, cotton, tobacco, rice, corn and peanuts. The supports are scheduled to die at the end of this year.
The administration wants the "rigid" 90 per cent supports on all except tobacco to expire on schedule and to place the other five basics" under a flexible price prop plan. Under this system the secretary of agriculture could vary the support level between 75 and 90 per cent of "fair price" parity in line with supply and demand
Senate approval of Sen. Ellender's amendment would be a serious setback for Mr. Eisenhower's farm proposals.
Chairman George D. Aiken (R-Vt.) of the Senate agriculture committee predicted the Senate would approve the wool bill without "damaging amendments." Some supporters of Sen. Ellender's proposal were privately concerned about the outcome. Mr. Ellender himself said he had never before seen so much White House pressure.
Low Bids Announced For MovingEquipment
Low bidders for moving equipment into the new science building are the B. A. Green Construction Company, $18,923 for installing scientific equipment, and the Hetzel Heavy Hauling company, Lawrence $400 for moving shop equipment. The bids were announced by Eugene W. Hiatt, state purchasing director at Toroka.
San Francisco, Calif—(U.P.)—A federal court jury has convicted three men and one woman on charges of harboring Robert Thompson, fugitive "first string" Communist leader, in a California mountain cabin.
Court Convicts Communist Head
Convicted were Sidney Steinberg, 38, former assistant national secretary of the Communist party; Carl Edwin Ross, 41, former Minnesota state secretary of the party; Samuel Coleman, 43, New York and Buffalo party leader; and Shirley Keith Kremen, 21, a former student leader in Los Angeles.
Communist documents seized by the FBI in its raid on the Sierra underground hideout last August referred to the United States government as "the enemy" and admitted the party had been hard hit by Smith act convictions.
All four were charged with two felony counts of being accessories to Thompson's crime of conspiring to barber a fugitive and conspiring to barber a fugitive.
Judge Goodman immediately remanded all four defendants to custody of the U.S. marshal pending sentence and arguments on motions for a new trial Monday morning.
A fifth original defendant, Mrs Patricia Blau, 43, former Communist organized in Colorado, was acquitted by the court last week for lack of evidence.
Thompson, former New York state Communist chairman, now is serving a three-year term at Atlanta penitentiary on his Smith act conviction, plus an additional four-year term for contempt of court in fleeing while out on bail.
—CLASSIFIEDS—
NYLON RAINCOAT in bag. Lost in Mar-
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JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store; we are our business on one-stop pet shop for fur fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
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Fourth Annual Writer' Meeting Beqins June 28
Classified Advertising Rate
One day Three days Five days
$ words or less 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words 1c 2c 3c
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening Phone Jim Sellers. 31031 evenings.
MTW-ff
The fourth, annual Writer conference will be held June 28-July 2 in the Student Union, Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism and conference director, announced today.
FOR SALE
MacGREGOR TOURNEYS. complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University School or call Al Hack at 715 or 3250J. 5-2
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Anyone enrolled for the conference may submit manuscripts under the following conditions: one juvenile manuscript, not to exceed 10,000 words; two short stories or two articles, not to exceed 8,000 words; or seven poems, not more than a page each. Registration fee is $25.
Conference members may submit additional work by paying one dollar for each additional 1,000 words or for each additional 20 lines of poetry. Any adult novel submitted beyond the synopsis and two chapters which exceeds 10,000 wards and is no more than 30,000 words requires a fee of $15; a fee of $25 is required for an even longer manuscript.
Sunset 1
Conference members are not required to submit manuscripts. No University credit is offered..
W. on 6th st. Ph. 3313
Tonight thru Thursday
"SALOME with Rita Hayworth Stewart Granger Charles Laughton
Manuscripts may be submitted any time before June 15th whether allowable under general fee or offered in addition.
Color by Technicolor
Dean Burton W. Marvin, School of Journalism, will welcome the conference members at the opening session. Other speakers will include Dorothy Brown Thompson, Kansas City, author of poems and verse; Betty Finnin, fiction editor of Woman's Day; George McCue, assistant editor of pictures, the Sunday feature article, and picture story section of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch; and Edward B. Hungerford, member of the English faculty of Northwestern university and author of five historical adventure books for boys.
BUMPER CLUB DRIVERS ADMITTED FREE TO THIS PROGRAM
The conference is sponsored by University Extension and the William Allen White School of Journalism.
For further information consult Miss Frances Grinstead, room 203. School of Journalism.
Stewart Gordon, pianist, will be presented by the School of Fine Arts in a recital of works by Maurice Ravel at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Strong auditorium.
Gordon to Give Recital
Mr. Gordon entered the University in 1951 and was graduated last year with a major in speech. He is a graduate of the M.A. degree in music, literature.
Mr. Gordon attended George Washington university and the University of Maryland. His piano study has included three years with Walter Giesekin in Europe and work with Olga Samaroff-Stokowski before her death in 1949.
He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Mu Alpha Sinifonis, Scabbard and Blade, and University players. Presently studying under a Naval ROTC scholarship, Mr. Gordon expects to be commissioned next September.
Micronesia, the name applied to the Marianas, Marshall, and Caroline islands in the Pacific, means "small islands." The largest, Guam, in the Marianas chain, covers only 215 square miles.
A recital of Mr. Gordon's original works will be presented later this spring.
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Hosmer Says U.S. Leads In World Atomic Race
Washington (U.P.)-Rep. Craig Hosner (R.-Calif.) said today that America is "out in front" in the world atomic race.
He denied implying in a recent statement that "we copied our H-bomb from the Russians." Rep. W. Sterling Cole (R.-N.Y.) took sharp exception to this idea in a statement Sunday night.
Rep. Cole, chairman of the Senate- House Atomic Energy committee, said then it is "simply not correct" that the U.S. H-bombs tested recently in the Pacific "are copies of
Governors Meet In Washington
Washington — (U.P.)— State governors gathered here today for a first-hand briefing by administration officials on problems facing the nation, including the touchy international situation caused by the gloomy outlook in Indiachina.
Cabinet members and other leading federal officials were scheduled to speak to the governors during two days of closed door sessions on such subjects as to reign policy, current state defender, federal-state relations, tax and fiscal problems and the national economy.
It was the second such White House governors conference called by President Eisenhower since he took office. The first was held here last May.
The governors and their wives were entertained by Mr. Eisenhower last night at a dinner which White House said was a social affair.
Vice President Richard M. Nixon who said recently he would support a decision to send troops into Indochina if the French pull out, presided and was first speaker at this morning's opening business session.
Business School Plans Internship
The School of Business has approved a program of internship in public accounting for its majors in accounting, Jack Heysinger, assistant dean, announced today.
the internship will involve six weeks of full-time work as a junior accountant on the staff of a firm of practicing certified public accountants. The internee will earn three hours of academic credit. The accounting firm will pay his temp.coe fee and will point the assignment, of the point of assignment, and also pay the approximate wage for junior staff members.
The internship period will be scheduled for the week following Christmas and end the first week in February. The dates for the first training period will be Dec. 27, 1954 to Feb. 5, 1955.
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the Russian test of last August."
the Russian test of last August.
Rep. Cole aimed his statement at reports from former government officials and other congressional sources that the Russians somehow had got the jump on American scientists in developing the hydrogen bomb.
One of the reports he had in mind was a statement Rep. Hosmer made in Long Beach, April 19. Rep. Hosmer said then that the Russian test proved that a principle discarded by U.S. scientists was workable.
"We then proceeded immediately to build our H-bombs along these new simplified lines and are now testing them in the Pacific," he said.
The statement created considerable interest because Hosmer is a former counsel of the Atomic Energy commission who once worked at the atomic laboratory at Los Alamos, N.M.
Rep. Cole, in a letter to Rep. Hosmer dated yesterday, said "it is not difficult to understand how such false impressions can be created, especially in the minds of the public generally which is denied so much information concerning the development programs of Russia and ourselves."
In his remarks today, Rep. Hosmer said his earlier statement "apparently was interpreted to mean we copied their bomb instead of that both nations were independently following the same nuclear theories."
After the Russian hydrogen test last August, there were unofficial reports the Communists had found a new material or triggering method which American scientists had not yet developed. These reports received new currency after the March U.S. test blast in which, according to reliable sources, materials in new forms and proportions were used.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 27, 1954
Students Give Opinions On Election Procedure
Six students were polled on the question, "How can campus elections be improved to the point where the student body feels it has been truly represented?"
On April 21 the All Student Council elections committee threw out the results of the senate and house of representatives elections along with the previously invalidated presidential and vice presidential results.
Since then the elections committee has been trying to come up with a foolproof method of running the election again—pending action by the student court. Here are comments from some of the students:
Jack Rogers, engineering sophomore: "The elections committee should make sure that there are members of both parties present at all times at each polling place. Also a group of student police, appointed by the ASC, could be assigned to check the polling places off and on during the day."
Dick Myers, graduate student: "First, I believe interested people from each party should be at the poll. Second, A clear cut decision on how the ballots will be counted should be made before the election. Third, Faculty members should be present at all times to make sure that ballots stay in the designated counting rooms."
"I believe as long as we have campus elections we should run them legally."
Bob Bradstreet, 2nd year law:
"This election problem is always present where human beings are involved. In order to prevent any corrupt practices which might occur at the polls, the prosecutor of the student court should establish a precedent and a definite policy that violators will be prosecuted.
You know the penalties already provided for are a minimum of $10 in fines and a maximum expulsion from school. Prosecution should be on an individual basis."
John Simons, college senior: "If the students could do the job right, there would be no problem. If the students can't do it themselves then the administration should feel the responsibility of seeing that the election is run correctly and every vote is counted. Every time a voter hands in a ballot it should be valid. This problem could be alleviated by replacing inexperienced poll workers with people who know what they are doing."
"KU should never have to re-run an election. It is a shame to have such a smear on candidates before they take office."
Farrel Schell, education senior:
"A ruling should be made by the ASC elections committee that if a person comes into the room to count ballots, that person should not be allowed to leave until all the ballots have been counted."
Dee Ann Smith, education junior: "First, there should be someone at each polling place who knows how the voting should be done. Secondly, the chairman of the elections committee should either be a faculty member or members from each political party.
Recreation Group Distributes Leaflet
A new guidance leaflet evaluating colleges and universities offering recreation leadership courses recently has been distributed by the National Recreation association to teachers, guidance counselors, public recreation departments, and professional workers.
Lawrence Heeb, state recreation consultant, is a member of the NRA's National Advisory committee on Recreation Personnel, which prepared the leaflet, "How to Choose the Right College for Your Career in Recreation."
Fifty colleges now offer degrees in recreation, according to Joseph Prendergast, executive director of the National Recreation association. A separate degree is not given at the University, but the program can be incorporated with the physical education major.
Initiation,Pledging Held By Tau Sigma
Formal initiation was held by Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, Sunday at the Castle Tea room.
Initiated were Alaine Casebier, education freshman; Lucy McKeithan, fine arts sophomore; Marilyn Underwood, college sophomore; Sandra Cooper, education freshman, and Margaret Donnelly, fine arts sophomore.
Pledged were Barbara Boler, college freshman; Donna Spotts, education sophomore; Mary Schroeder, fine arts sophomore, and Myrna Seaton. fine arts freshman.
A dinner honoring the new members followed the ceremonies.
Official Bulletin
CCUN Executive board, 4 p.m., activities lounge, Student Union. Be prompt Kappa Beta, 5:30 p.m. Myers hall. Picnic and administration of officers.
Upstream, 7 p.m., room 306A, Student Union, Important
TUESDAY
TODAY
Pre-nursing club, 7:30 p.m., dining room
Jacob Mathis and Elizabeth Robinson speaks on pediatrics.
inson speaks on pediatricis
Phi Mu Alpha, 9 p.m., 131 Strong.
Phi Mu Alpha, 9 p.m., 131 St. Trong Imperative that all members attend. Archivist of American institute of Architects, 7:30 p.m., Museum of Art lecture hall
Jay Jones meeting. 5 p.m., Pine room.
Student Union.
**Pi Tau Sigma**, initiation and banquet
room, Union. Cuest welcome.
English room, Union. Cuest welcome.
La Tertulia va a reunirle el 28 de abril en 107 Strange. Buen programa y
ejemplo.
Le Cercle Francais: mercredi a 4 heures et demie, 113强. "Un apres-med." Le Comédie-Français"-scenes le comédie de Mollere. Tout le monde invite.
Der deutsche Veren: Vortrag. Dr.
Geschäftsführer der Klinik, kurzt,
Ließbilderin, 5 p. am, 502 Freser
THURSDAY
Kuku club, 7.15 p.m. Pine room. Student Union. Formal initiation and election of officers. Wear uniform and be prompt
Quack club, 7:30, Robinson pool.
ENTURY
P. I.D. French reading examination Saturday 9-11 in 102 Strong. Turn in books to Miss Craig, 109 Strong, by noon Thursday.
Mountaineering club meeting, postponed until May 19.
Washington — (U.P.)— Administration Senate leaders today claimed enough votes to defeat a determined farm block attempt to derail President Eisenhower's program of "flexible" farm price supports.
Senate Leaders Hope To Defeat Farm Block
The Senate was expected to vote early this afternoon on amendments proposed to the administration's wool support bill to extend present high level price guarantees on "basic" farm commodities and boost dairy price supports.
Sasnak to Hold Its Spring Dinner
Sasnak, organization for physical education majors, will hold its annual spring dinner at 6:30 p.m. to tomorrow in the Student Union.
Coach Charles V. "Chuck" Mather will be guest speaker. Coach Bill Easton and Mr. Floyd Temple, assistant director of athletics, will be guests.
George Michale, business senior, will sing. Wesley Whitney, education senior, is master of ceremonies.
Approval of the high level support amendment would be a sharp rebuff for Mr. Eisenhower's farm proposals. The administration has opposed extension of present rigid high supports on so-called basic crops past their expiration date on Dec. 31. It wants to switch then to a system of flexible—or sliding scale—price pegs.
Chairman George D. Alken (R-Vt.) of the Senate Agriculture committee, vigorous champion of the administration program, predicted the Senate would approve the wool bill without "damaging amendments."
Sen. Alken's prediction echoed previous statements by Senate GOP Leader William F. Knowland (Calif.) that the administration has enough votes to defeat proposals to extend high level supports.
The key amendment, sponsored by Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-Ala.) with powerful bi-partisan support, would extend through present 90 per cent of parity supports on wheat, cotton, rice, peanuts, tobacco, and corn.
IT'S ALL A MATTER OF TASTE
They're all the rage with college kids With gals and men alike. So round,so firm,so fully,packed speak of Lucky Strike!
Barbara Bennett
Lawrence College
When you come right down to it, you smoke for one simple reason...enjoyment. And smoking enjoyment is all a matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.
Two facts explain why Luckies taste better. First, L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco...light, mild, good-tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are actually made better to taste better... always round, firm, fully packed to draw freely and smoke evenly.
So, for the enjoyment you get from better taste, and only from better taste, Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or a carton of better-tasting Luckies today.
The cigarette that really tops The campus hit parade Is Lucky Strike. Enjoy the taste Because it's better made!
Celin Vaernewyck Boston University
THE MUSEUM
LUCKY STRIKE
"IT'S TOASTED"
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
When buddies ask me for a smoke,
What do they get from me?
"Here's finer smoking, pal," I say,
"Cause L.S./M.F.T!."
Ford R. Maddick Kansas University
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily hansan
51st Year. No. 134
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
ASC Formulates New Voting Rules
Wednesday, April 28, 1954
New election rules, providing for a "less complicated" and more "foolproof" method of voting were incorporated into an amendment of the All Student Council elections bill which passed last night if the ASC senate and house.
The ASC election held April 20 was thrown out after discrepancies were found in the number of ballots cast as compared with the number of student voters. The ASC decided last night to call new office by the student action by the student court on the validity of the committee action.
Dick Sheldon, president of the ASC, said, "It seemed to be the feeling of the council that a new
Bacteriology Staffers to Attend Meet
Four papers will be presented by members of the Kansas group. Dr Sherwood will read a paper on work with gamma globulin. Co-authors are Prof. David Paretsky of the KU staff and G. Thomas Truffelli, graduate student. Prof. Metcalf will present a paper on experimental work with rickets, with Prof. Downs as co-author.
Four members of the University bacteriology department will attend the meeting of the Society of American Bacterologists in Pittsburgh, Pa., May 2-7.
Those making the trip are E. L.
Treece, chairman of the department;
N. P. Sherwood, professor
armeritus; Prof. Cora M. Downs,
and Prof. T. G. Metcalf.
Prof. Downs will read a paper written by herself and Max. 'D Moody, '53 graduate, on work with tularemia. A fourth paper, by Prof. Huff and D H Spaddling, '53 concerns antigen-antibody reactions.
The University delegates also will attend a meeting of the Pittsburgh alumni from KU May 4.
Funeral services were held yesterday at the Wagner funeral home for William G. Benjes, engineering junior, and a member of Triangle fraternity. He had been ill for about four months.
6 Faculty Members ToAttendMeeting
Benjes was born in Kansas City and attended Kansas City Junior college. He transferred to the University last fall.
Funeral Services Held for Student
Six members of the political science faculty will attend the twelfth meeting of the Midwest Conference of Political Scientists tomorrow through Saturday at the State University of Iowa.
Dr. Heller will present his paper on the 14th amendment Friday, and Dr. Guild, who is on the research department of the legislative council, will be on the panel of basic aspects of reaportionment.
Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science and director of government research; Kenneth Beasley, instructor of political science; Clarence Hein, assistant director for research; Fred Guild, professor of political science; Francis Heller, associate professor of political science, and Edgar Sherbenow, instructor of human relations, are to attend the conference.
election would be the fairest way to resolve the many disputes. The election of April 20 resulted in control of the senate by one party, control of the house by the other, and an indecisive result in the presidential contest. We hope this new method will be less complicated for the pollworkers and more foolproof than the old rules."
The new rules provide for cutting down the number of ballots which the pollworker will manage from 27 to 3. One ballot will contain the names of the senate candidates, one the names of the house of representative candidates, and a third the names of presidential and vice presidential candidates. Only students enrolled in a school will be able to vote for that school—and no other.
The rules also proved that any ballot whose number has not been clipped off and is otherwise valid, shall be counted.
To prevent ballot peeking, a numbered tab protruding from the upper right corner of the ballot will be used in such a manner that the ballot can be folded with the number visible.
To prevent ballot shortages the number of ballots to be printed for the next election will equal two-thirds of the school enrollment
two-thirds of the school enrollment. To prevent tampering with ballots a provision has been made for a delegation from the elections committee, including members of all parties, will pick up the finished ballots at the printer's and deliver them immediately to a deputy member of the elections committee. This faculty member will keep the ballots until the polls open in the morning. The ballots shall not be delivered to any polls unless all pollworkers are present.
In delivering the ballots to the polls, the delegation of the election committee shall record the numbers of the ballots and the poll to which they are delivered.
To prevent the scattering and loss of ballots, only the five official counters from each party, others designated by the election committee, faculty members, a reporter from the University Daily Kansan, and a reporter from radio station KDGU will be allowed in the counting room. One of the faculty members will keep the key to the room and be responsible for admitting any authorized person in or out of the room.
To provide for competent poll-workers, a briefing session, conducted by the elections committee chairman, will be held before the election. The rules and voting procedure will be explained at this session. No student can work on the polls without first attending this session.
Each pollworker at a voting place (four at each poll) will have a specific job. Pollworker No. 1 will check the student's identification card; pollworker No. 2, the student's school and residence district; pollworker No. 3, will give the student the three properly punched ballots and then punch the student's identification card, marking a cross on the back of the card with indelible ink, and pollworker No. 4 will clip the number of the marked ballot and deposit it in the ballot box.
To prevent ballot box tampering, the pollworkers will be required to seal the opening of the ballot box and sign their names on the tape. As soon as the polls have closed, two members of each party shall collect the ballot boxes.
Schine Had Easy Life At Dix, Stevens Says
Around the World—
Lecturer: Howard T. Fisher, head of an architectural firm of Chicago and New York, will lecture at 3 p.m. today in Strong auditorium and tomorrow night will speak at the annual dinner in the Union of the department of architecture. He will talk today on "Collapsible Shopping Centers," commenting on the shopping processes of the two great Indian markets in Latin America. Tonight he also will meet with the KU chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
C. S. M.
Big 3 Unite on Indochina Plans
Washington—(U.P.)—Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens said today he was told that Pvt. G. David Schine paid fellow soldiers to clean his rifle, did not wear his uniform all the time, and escaped kitchen police duties while serving as a draftee at Fort Dix, N.J.
Bv UNITED PRESS
Mr. Stevens also testified that he received reports that Pvt. Schine had an unusual number of leaves for a drafttee.
Western diplomats at the Geneva conference united today in a move to start Indochina peace talks immediately.
NATIONAL CHAMPIONS—Pictured here on the front steps of Green hall are, from the left, William R. Arnold, college junior, Dr. Kim Griffin, debate coach and Hubert H, Bell, college junior. Arnold and Bell were the winners of the national invitational debate tournament at West Point, New York last weekend.
The Big Three get-together was
Anthony Eden, and French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault lined-up their strategy on getting the Indochina cease-fire talks started without delay at a meeting at French headquarters.
The Big Three machinery was put in motion when it became apparent the conference would make no progress in the scheduled first order of business—the Korean political issue.
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, British Foreign Secretary
Mr. Bidault was reported to have made excellent progress in his Indochina talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov and it was believed the negotiations would start not later than next week. The Big Three got together was
MICHAEL BURNS AND ROBERT MORRIS
an encouraging sign of unity to Western delegates.
Many Western diplomats felt that allied strength at Geneva had been weakened greatly yesterday by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill's refusal to commit Britain to intervention immediately in Indochina if such action was warranted to halt the Red threat.
IM Speeches End Tonight
Entertainment speeches, the last in the series of intramural speaking tests, will be heard at 7:30 p.m. today in Green hall.
Student speakers who have entered and the houses they represent are:
Alpha Tau Omega, John Ball and Jack Dusay, college freshman; Lambda Chi Alpha, Paul Kent, engineering freshman; Alpha Delta Pi, Patricia Dashen, college sophomore, and Jan Holwick, education junior; Delta Delta Delta, Jane Hill, pharmacy sophomore, and Carolyn Husted, education junior.
Beta Theta Pi, Don Johnston,
college sophomore; Edward Freeburg,
engineering junior, and
Thomas Hunt, college senior;
Sellards hall, Coralyn Stayton, college freshman, and 'independents—David Convis, college sophomore,
and Derek Scott, graduate.
Trophies to winning houses and individuals will be awarded tonight.
- Asked about a report that Pvt. Schine told his company commander that he had been sent to Fort Dix to "modernize and streamline" it, Mr. Stevens said he had heard something like that but not in detail.
Mr. Stevens gave the testimony under questioning by Counsel Ray H. Jenkins at the Senate investigating subcommittee's televised public hearings on the Army-McCarthy controversy over Pvt. Schine's military career which began Nov. 3. Army officials have charged that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and his aides brought heavy pressure on the Army to get special favors for Pvt. Schine, a former McCarthy aide. Sen. McCarthy has counter-charged that the Army tried to use Schine as a "hostage" to halt his investigation of alleged Reds at Fort Monmouth, N.J.
Seniors Choose Class Present At Convocation
Seniors decided to landscape an area between the Journalism building and the new science building as the class gift at a convocation this morning.
Alternative suggestions included construction of permanent boxes for the Daily Kansan, drinking fountain in the stadium, and glass doors for the main archway of Watson library. The landscaping suggestion passed by a 2-1 margin.
In other business, the class voted $3 dues.
The 82nd annual commencement exercises will be Sunday and Monday. June 6-7.
Baccalaureate exercises will start at 7 p.m. Sunday with seniors gathering for the procession on the south side of Strong hall to march down the hill for ceremonies in Memorial stadium. The procedure will be the same for Commencement exercises the following night.
A senior breakfast at 8:30 a.m. in the Student Union ballroom will start Monday's activities. A University reception at 3 p.m. in the Student Union will be held the same day.
Tuesday, May 18, will be Senior Class day. Seniors will be excused from afternoon classes. A picnic beginning at 2 p.m., a spontaneous talent show, a turtle race, and a softball game with the Faculty Fossils, are slated as part of the day's activities.
Weather
The Kansas Weatherman. Tom "Rainmaker" Arnold, slipped—but not for long. He said there was no
DONALD J. WILLIAMS
precipitation i n Kansas during the last 24 hours for the first time in a week. Then he added, "We're expecting a shower belt to move into Western Kansas late this afternoon
or tonight. It will move on over into the eastern part of the state Thursday.
Foods No. 50032
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 28. 1954
100 Year History Surrounds St. Lawrence Seaway Bill
In the next few weeks, according to the whims of the Rules committee, the House will be considering legislation on the St. Lawrence Seaway, a project that has been discussed for more than 100 years but which never has progressed further than the halls of Congress
Briefly, the project calls for deepening the channel on the St. Lawrence river and building locks and canals to improve navigation between the Great Lakes and the Atlantic.
As the proposal now before Congress stands, it would create a St. Lawrence Seaway Development corporation with authority to sell bonds to pay for construction of canals, locks, and a 27-foot deep channel in the International Rapids section of the river and dredging in the Thousand Islands area.
Every president from Warren C. Harding to Dwight D. Eisenhower has favored such legislation, but the most progress the Seaway ever has made came in January when the Senate passed the bill. Sent to the House, which never before had acted on Seaway legislation, the bill was approved by the House Public Works committee Feb. 3. It is now in the hands of the Rules committee, which will determine when and if the bill will be brought to the House floor.
Support of the bill, as well as opposition to it, is generally organized on a sectional basis rather than on party lines. In the Senate 25 Republicans and 25 Democrats cast their ballots for the bill.
But it is the appeal for passage of the legislation as a boost to national security that apparently has been having the most effect in moving the bill through Congress after so many years of failure.
That has been the stand taken by President Eisenhower. Sen. Charles E. Potter (R.-Mich.), a senator whose home state adjoins the Great Lakes, said Congress should put aside local economic interests and consider the national security when it considers passing the bill.
For many years the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence association has lobbied for the Seaway. The group is composed of corporations, municipal, state, and county government officials, and other associations.
Opponents of the Seaway claim the project would have adverse affects on their own local economy.
Lobbying against the bill have been the Association of American Railroads, United Mine Workers, coal operators, and the Atlantic ports of Boston, New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, Houston, and Savannah.
Spokesmen for the railroads in 1951 hearings testified the Seaway would be "subsidized competition" not needed for defense because domestic supplies of iron ore were enough.
UMW officials testified the whole thing was promoted as a special privilege for five or six big steel companies, apparently referring to those in the Great Lakes area.
It remains to be seen if the House will pass the Seaway bill, thus leaving only the President's signature as a final step before the legislation becomes law.
If the bill does become law, after so many years of haggling, it may be primarily due to President Eisenhower's leadership. Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R.-N.J.) had opposed the bill for a long time but he decided to support it for the reason that the President had said it would benefit the national security.
In any event no one will be able to say passage of the bill, if it is passed, was not carefully considered.
In 1897 a commission appointed by President Grover Cleveland and the Canadian government recommended construction of a St. Lawrence Seaway as soon as possible. —Sam Teaford
A Topekan alleges he was served a glass of milk with a razor blade in it. Look sharp, feel sharp, be sharp.
AIN'T HE THE SAME WORM CHILE AS WAS LEARNIN' TO BE A SNAKE UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF OL'SNAVELY?
HARD TO SAY...
THEY ALL LOOKS ALike...
NO MATTER HOW YOU LOOK AT 'EM.
4-28
JUST NAM CHARACTERS
AIN'T HE THE SAME WORM CHILE AS WAS LEARNIN' TO BE A SNAKE UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF OL SNAVELY?
HARD TO SAY...
THEY ALL LOOKS ALIKE...
NO MATTER HOW YOU LOOK AT 'EM.
SEEEM TO ME HE FLIPPED YOU ON YOUR BACK TWO FALLS OUTEN TWO...
YOU WAS LEARNIN' HIM JUDO...
IT WAS A FLUKE, WATCH!
SEEM TO ME HE FLIPPED YOU ON YO' BACK TWO FALLS OUTEN TWO... YOU WAS LEARNIN' HIM JUDO...
IT WAS A FLUKE, MATCH!
4.23 JUST MAIL DONNIGATH
EASY NOW...MEBBE IT'S A DIFFERENT CHILE...
MORE POWERFUL.
HAWGH! ACCIDENTS DON'T HAPPEN TWICE.
HA!
GOTCHA! OVER YOU...
GOO.
CORRER WALT BEWY
Geneva Seen as Arena For Reds, Free World
There is much more at stake than a Korean peace treaty and settlement of the Indochina situation. Although these two things are of paramount importance and will be the main points of conflict, along with the question of whether or not to seat Red China, the ultimate effects of the conference could be far reaching.
The 19-nation conference at Geneva, which is going on at the present time, may well turn out to be a turning point in the struggle between Communism and the free nations of the world.
This conference could be a "do or die" attempt at some kind of reconciliation between the East and West. If the issues at stake can be settled with some kind of satisfaction for both sides, the way may be opened for further deliberations and agreements in the future.
But if these talks break down without any satisfactory solution, it could well be the last attempt for some time at trying to gain any progress by means of talk. If this happens, the only alternative left would be the use of force by one or both sides.
One thing that will hamper the conference is a prevailing attitude of pessimism among the delegates of both sides. No great satisfaction has, in the past, been reached through talking, and both sides seem to fear that this conference is going to end in the same vein.
But does it necessarily have to? One big factor that may work for a settlement of some kind—a factor that has been the cause for some optimism from some sources—is the very gravity of the situation.
The ramifications of a complete breakdown in negotiations between the East and West could, and probably would, be disastrous indeed.
The recent demonstrations of the vast power available for war, in the guise of the H-bomb, may well make the delegates from both sides of the issue consider carefully before attempting to break up the conference.
The future of mankind may well be resting in the hands of 19 nations at Geneva. —Don Tice
We propose some sort of medal be given on graduation day to women students who haven't been queen of something or other in their four-year career here.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., Assistant Secretary by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. Mail Subscription rates: $3 a week (if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan.; every afternoon during the University's semester holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan.; Post Office under act
BUSINESS STAFF
Business mgr. Ann Ainsworth
Advertising mgr. Sam Berry
Sales mgr. Rodney
Classified adv. mgr. Edmond Bartlett
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EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor ... Don Tice
Assistants ... Letty Lemon,
NEWS STAFF
Executive editor Tom Stewart
Managing editors Tom Shannon
Sam Teaford, Ket
Bronson, Stan Hamilton
Elizabeth Welch
Sports editor Dana Leibgood
Society editor Karen Hilmer
Assistant Nancy Neville
News adviser C. M. Pickett
George Washington has been portrayed on 57 U.S. postage stamps and Martha Washington on four.
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KNOW WHAT'S COOKIN' ON THE HILL?
DAVID COKER
- What's Goin' On in the Organized Houses-
- What's Goin' On at the Parties-
- What's Goin' On in Activities-
What's Goin' On in Varsity and Intramural Sports-
Know What All Is Goin' On With Everything On The Hill By Reading Your
1954 Jayhawker
Office In Student Union
Phone KU-472
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 28,1954
Reds in First Place On Strength of Homers
By UNITED PRESS
Cincinnati's sluggers are hitting homers at a record pace—and they had better keep swinging if they want to stay in first place because their pitchers are giving up almost twice as many he
Birdie Tebbets' bombers were on top in the National league today on the strength of their 8-7 victory last night over the Pirates but it was of little comfort to him because of the way those lowly Pittsburghers were smashing circuit drives.
Here are some of the vital statistics that keep Tebbetts awake at night:
Cincinnati hitters have blasted 15
hitters in 13 games whereas at this
time last year when Cincy hit an
all-time club record of 166, the Reds
had only eight. Very fine, but—at
the same time Cincinnati pitchers
have yielded 26 homers.
The club's chief "gopher ball" victim, rookie Corky Valentine, was tagged for four last night, two each by rookie Jerry Lynch and catcher Toby Atwell.
That's why Tebbettis was glad that earlier in the game, Ted Kulczewski hit two Cincinnati homers and Jim Greengrass got one to give Valentine a 5-1 lead before the Bucs began making a "comic" out of him. Valentine has yielded seven homers, Fred Baczewski five, Bud Podbielian four, Joe Nuxall three, Art Fowler two, Harry Perkowski two, Ken Raffensberger, Howie Judson, and Departed George Zuverink one each.
The Cardinals, paced by Ray Jablonski who drove in three runs on a double and single, defeated the Dodgers, 7-3, and knocked them out of the lead, while at Milwaukee, the Braves topped the Giants, 3-2 as Johnny Logan singled home the winning run in the eighth. In the only American league game, the White Sox improved their first place margin by defeating the Yankees, 4-3, on the margin of Minnie Minoso's two run homer.
Cleveland at Boston, Baltimore at Washington, and Detroit at Philadelphia were rained out in the American while Philadelphia at Chicago was postponed in the National.
Lefty Preacher Roe, who had a lifetime 27-18 won and lost record against the Cardinals and who beat them three times last year, was tapped for six hits and five runs before being removed in the fifth, victim of his second straight defeat.
Lefty Al Brazle and soft-stuff righthander Stu Miller collaborated to pitch hildess ball after Gerry Stalley was batted out in the fifth, saving the veteran's second victory.
Del Crandall singled home two Milwaukee runs in the fourth inning off starter Larry Jansen, ending a string of scoreless innings by Giant pitchers at 32. The Giants tied the score with single runs in the sixth and eighth, then Logan came through with his game-winning hit after Ed Mathews walked, stole second and Rookie Hank Aaron singled. The Braves had no putouts in the outfield, tying a major league mark.
Wildcats Beat NU In Baseball, 6-5
Manhattan —(U.P.) A home run by shortstop Don Prigmore in the last of the ninth gave Kansas State a 6-5 victory over Nebraska in a Big Seven baseball game here yesterday.
It was the second straight for K-State over the Cornhuskers and left the Wildeats with a 2-1 record in the conference. Nebraska now has a 2-4 mark in the league.
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Gonzales Favored To Retain Title
Cleveland—(U.P.)—Richard (Big Pancho) Gonzales was favored to retain his title today as the fifth annual "World Professional Tennis championships" got underway at the Cleveland arena.
Gonzales, with perhaps one of the hardest services in the game, swept through play last year to win the top money handily. With awards upped to $10,000 this year, however, he might have some formidable opposition from a toucher field.
Entrants include former titleholders Francisco (Little Poncho) Segura and Frank Kovacs and Australian Frank Sedgman. Segura and Sedgman participated the past two winters in the touring group sponsored by Jack Kramer, who is not entered in the event here.
High School Boy To Fight Pat Brady
New Orleans—(U.P.)—Ralph Dupas,
New Orleans high school student
who can fight along with the best
lightweights, and Dennis (Pat)
Brady, glory-hungry New England
Irishman, tangle tone (10 p.m.
EDT) in a nationally televised 10-
round bout at the Coliseum.
Television fight fans will remember Dupas, 18-year-old "darling of the French quarter," as the elusive, flurry-fighting boxer who lost to Paddy DeMarco in a nationally televised fight here Jan. 2.
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ATO, Sigma Chi and Delta Tau Delta wom second round games in Fraternity "B" intramural softball last night.
Haynes & Keene
ATO got 13 runs on eight hits and five walks to defeat Phi Delta Theta who got only 15 runs on 15 hits and 10 walks. The ability to hit with men on base was the deciding factor in the game.
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And in the other game the Delta hit safely 11 times to score eight runs and beat Delta Upsilon 8-1. The Delts did not receive a single bases on balls as the DU pitchers showed good control, but the hitters could not make their four hits and seven walks good for more than one run.
Sigma Chi put together 13 nats and three walks to defeat Kappa Sigma, 5-3. The losers got their 3 runs on 5 hits and 4 walks.
Here is tonight's schedule:
Independent "A"
4:00—Field I, SOT vs. Stephenson
Netmen Beat Washburn, 6-1 For 4th Straight Victory
The KU tennis team won its fourth straight dual meet yesterday by defeating Washburn university 6-1 at Washburn.
It was the first KU victory over the Washburn tennis squad since 1952, and the KU win saw the Jayhawks losing only two sets to their hosts.
The results are:
Tom Davidson, W, defeated Al Hedstrom, K, 6-3, 6-2.
All-College Tourney Signs Eight Schools
San Francisco —(L.P.)— The University of San Francisco has accepted a bid to compete in the All-college Basketball tournament at Oklahoma City, December 20-21-22. The Dons accepted the bid after Santa Clara, runnerup last year, had rejected an offer to compete again.
Other teams invited this year include defending champion Oklahoma A&M, Wyoming, George Washington, Wichita, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, and Baylor.
Fraternity "BF"
4:00—Field 2 Phi Gam vs. Nu Sig
Nu
4:00—Field 3 Phi Psi vs. Delta Chi
Dick Hadley, K, defeated Dan Holcomb, W, 6-2, 6-3.
Roger Youmans, K, defeated Stan Warner, W, 6-3, 11-9.
Merl Sellers, K, defeated Charles Harrison, W, 6-1, 6-3.
Don Franklin, K, defeated Jim
Lvons. W, 6-2, 6-0.
Hedstrom and Hadley, K, defeated Davidson and Holcomb, W, 6-1. 6-0.
Youmans and Sellers, K, defeated
Youmans and Sellers, K. defeated Warner, and Harrison, W. 8-f-1. 6-l-1.
Tomorrow, the KU netraen meet Iowa State on the varsity courts here for the fifth match of the season with conference teams.
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Wednesday, April 28,1954 University Daily Kansan
Page !
Flasty Road Wins Trial Field of 17 for Derby
Louisville, Ky.—(U.P.)—Hasty Road's Derby Trial victory did little to clear the decks for Saturday's 80th annual running of the Kentucky Derby and indications today pointed to a probable field of 17.
Despite the track record-breaking time of 1.35 flat for the mile Derby trial, it looked like Hasty Road, who for the first time as a three year old showed the form which made him the all-time money winning champion of two year olds, had scared off only three of the seven also-rans in yesterday's race.
That left 20 probables for the Derby and chances are that at least three of them will be declared out before the entry box opens on Friday morning.
There was only one thing certain and that was that Hasty Road had joined Correlation, who probably will go off as the favorite; Casumo, and Determine in the list of Derby favorites. You can put in there, too, Fisherman, despite his Wood Memorial defeat by Correlation.
Winner of $277,132 as a two-year-old when he came home in front in six of his nine starts, the Hasty House farm hopeful had been a bust in 1954 up until yesterday. All he had to show for his previous four starts this year was two seconds, for total money of $2,400. But he made up for those dismal showings yesterday as he outraced Determine, the pint-sized California speedster, in a stirring stretch duel.
Determine, winner of six straight and the 3 to 5 favorite, had taken the lead by the start and then fell back to fourth place as Hasty Road, with Johnny Adams up, took over the pace. Soon after they turned for the stretch run, Determine and jockey Ray York took over the lead, but not for long. Hasty Road went in front again and that's the way they raced down the rest of the stretch and under the wire.
Kansas university's bowling team, rolling their first competitive game, came in 12th among 21 U.S. universities and colleges in the Men's Intercollegiate Bowling tournament, conducted last week.
KU Bowling Team 12th In Tourney
Led by Holt Denman, who rolled a four-game series of 738 and a high game of 206, the Jayhawkers rolled a four-game team total of 3,375. Behind Denman came William Kuster with a 728 series, Don Strohmeyer with a 699, Jay Thornburg with a 673, and David Sbur with a 536.
Marquette won the championship with a team total of 3,850. The Hilltopsters also rolled the high single game score -1,037 and the high individual series -808. Kansas (high single game was 871).
Golfers Play Tulsa In Dual Meet Today
Coach Donn Everett's KU golfers are meeting a visiting Tula squad on the Country club course this afternoon.
Four KU squad members are taking part in the competition. They are Bob Richards, John Prosser, Harlan Hise. and Noel Rooney.
Coach Everett said before the match that he expected tough competition from the non-conference visitors.
Pinehurst, N.C.—(U.F.)—Defending champion W. C. (Bill) Campbell of Huntington, W.V., meets freeswinging Billy Joe Patton of Morgantown, N.C., and medalist Ben L. Goodes of Reidsville, N.C. plays
The American golden-eye duck is an export diver and able to remain under water in some cases for nearly a minute.
Top Amateurs Meet Today
Hobart Manley Jr., of Savannah, Ga.
today in second round matches of the 54th annual North and South
Amateur Golf tournament.
In other top matches, unknown
Tom Draper of Birmingham, Mich.
who upset Mal Galletta, Mineola,
N.Y., veteran who was a semi-finalist
here last year, 2 and 1, meets Curtis
Pearson of Memphis, Tenn.; Dick
Chapman of Pinehurst, N.C., plays
R. R. MacKenzie of Cockeyville,
M.; and Donald Hoenig of Putnam,
Conn, tackles Jennings Randolph of
Washington, D.C.
Store Hours Tomorrow 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 28, 1954
Avalanche Might Block Panama Canal Traffic
Balboa, Canal Zone—(U.P.)—Men and machines worked feverishly today in steaming jungle against an ever-increasing threat of an avalanche that could block the vital Panama Canal.
The danger stemmed from a 600-foot deep crack in Contractor's hill overlooking the Canal in the famed Gaillard cut. Officials said the hill could slide into the waterway at any time and that the start of the rainy season intensified the danger.
Maintenance crews, working around the clock, were cutting off the top of the hill on the landslide in an attempt to "relieve the pressure." Canal engineers apparently hoped that by doing so, the slide, if it came would fall harmlessly into the jungle.
Blocking of the canal would force shipping between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans to detour through the Straits of Magellan at the southern-most tip of South America.
KU French Club To Present Play
A French comedy, "Le Medecin Malgré Lui," (The Doctor in Spite of Himself) will be presented today at 7:30 p.m. in 113 Strong at the meeting of Le Cercle Francais, University French club.
The play, written by Moliere and first presented in 1666 with the author and his wife playing the principal roles, will be directed by John Griggsby and David Dimeen, graduate students and assistant instructors in the department of Romance langagues.
Grisby will play the part of a woodcutter who is persuaded to act as a doctor. Helen Dowell, college senior, will play his wife.
Others in the cast are David Dinneneen, college graduate; Howard Adams, assistant instructor of Romance languages; Virginia Hill, college freshman; Paul Danneberg, college freshman; Hubert Dye, business senior, and Gary Sick, college freshman.
A dredge was put on double-shift duty in the canal and two huge cranes have been placed on both sides of the hill on stand-by basis.
The crack was first spotted several years ago, but was so narrow it was possible to step across it. Recently however, it began widening at an alarming rate.
Canal Zone authorities summoned a top U.S. Army geologist last week and he was reported to have expressed grave concern.
Swelltering students may get cool relief in time for finals if the installation of air conditioning units in the Watson library is completed by that date.
Heat Relief Due For Crammers
Scheduled to be finished by the opening of the summer session, the project conceivably could be completed by final week, according to Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations.
The ceiling hung units will cool the entire first floor of the library building, including the undergraduate library, the smoking room, and the photographic bureau.
Installed by Air Engineering, Inc., of Topeka, the air conditioning should relieve some of the final week congestion from the only other air-conditioned study location on the campus—the Union.
Robert Vosper, director of libraries, said he felt the new system would be of considerable value to students for future. summer sessions, spring final weeks, and the first two or three weeks of every fall semester.
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Review Scheduled For Western Civ
Review sessions for Western Civilization students will be sponsored by the department May 10, 11, 12, and 13, Harrison Madden director, said today.
The meetings will be held from 7-9:30 p.m. each day in 426 Lindley, and are open to everyone.
ISA Picnic to Be Saturday
All readings will be covered, with the main emphasis on pulling together the different periods of study, Mr. Madden said. Jack Hines, graduate student, will be in charge.
The first event in a stepped-up program of the Independent Student association will be Saturday, according to the recently elected president of the group, Donald Widdows, college freshman.
It will be a picnic and patio dance beginning at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the Potter lake picnic grounds.
A picnic menu will be dished up at 6 p.m. By a committee headed by Carolyn Stayton, college freshman. The meal will be followed with a program by entertainers from Jolliffe and Miller hills. A
record dance will wind up activities.
Jean Diehl, college freshman and
ISA activities chairman, heads the
program committee. The Jollife
quartet, composed of Thomas
Downs, college freshman; Merwin
Hayes, fine arts freshman; Edward
Jones, engineering freshman, and
Edward Kindley, education junior;
and a group of Miller hall residents led by Emily Wolventon, education junior, will be on the program.
Shelia Haller, college sophomore and the organization's social chairman, has supervised preparations for the event. Widdows is conducting the dance portion of the event.
The National Mother's Pin
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Wednesday, April 28.1954 University Daily Kansan
n and
is the
olliffe
p m as
terwin
yward
and
unior,
resi-
erton,
the
Page 7
omore chairiationsDUCTevent.
Oh Capitol Hill—
House to Consider Indochina Crisis
Washington —(U.P.)— A debate on the Indochina crisis was expected to break out in the House today when it takes up the $28 billion defense appropriation bill.
Rep. Frederic R. Coudert Jr., (R-N.Y.) planned to offer an amendment to the bill which would bar shipment of U.S. troops to Indochina without congressional assent.
Administration leaders thought they could defeat Rep. Couder's amendment. But they were not happy about the debate it is sure to set off in the midst of the Geneva conference.
Rep. Coudert said his amendment was not aimed at President Eisenhower. He said he was sure that Mr. Eisenhower would not take the nation into the Indochina war without consulting congress. But he said it was time Congress reasserted its constitutional war-making powers.
Other congressional developments:
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Housing—The Senate Banking committee resumed its investigation of the multi-million dollar Federal Housing administration scandals this morning with three former FHA officials slated as witnesses. Meanwhile, Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) called on the Justice department to take immediate legal action against any of the "criminally liable" builders who reaped millions in "windfall" profits on government-insured construction loans.
Farm—The administration's Senate-approved wool subsidy bill headed for a House Agriculture committee presents an overall farm bill. Chairman Clifford R. Hope (R-Kans.) said his House Agriculture committee had agreed to act on price supports for all farm commodities in a package bill. The Senate approved the wool bill yesterday after defeating, 48 to 40, a farm block attempt to tack on an amendment to extend high level price supports.
Taxes—Robert Providence, R.I., attorney, has warned that the present "Marxian method of taxation" threatens to push the U.S. into Socialism and urged a Senate Judiciary subcommittee to approve a constitutional amendment to put a 25 per cent ceiling on income tax rates.
Bentley—Rep. Alvin Bentley, the Michigan Republican who was given only a 50-50 chance to live after he was gravely wounded by Puerto Rican fanatics last month, has resumed a "full schedule on a limited basis."
CLASSIFIED ADS
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rei
15 words or less ... 506
25 words or less ... 508
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35 words or less ... 510
Term Call Cash. Phone orders are accepted
with the understanding that the bill will
be paid promptly. Ads must be called in
during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except
Saturday) or brought to the University of
Maryland. The bill should be on an
calm bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the
laay before publication date.
TYPING OF THEMES, term papers, etc.
Telephone: 1779-200
100 Kentucky. Phone 1779-256
100 Missouri. Phone 1779-256
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND NEAR Potter lake. Eye-glasses, dark horn rimmed and gold. Possibly child's glasses. Owner may have been at Kansan office and payed 4-29
LAWN MOVING: Have power mower.
Call 2369J. 4-6
WANTED
HOT ROD. "36 Ford coupe, 2-speed rear ear
end. Hydraulic brakes, 100 h.p. engine,
headers and duals. Upholstery and
work. Must sell. Call 1412R, 1414I
4-30
MacGREAGR TOURNEYS, complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University School or call Al Hack at 715 or 2350J.
TUXEDO, size 38. medium. Double breasted. $12.00. Excellent condition. Also accordion. former made. Weight $60.00. Call R-42, Chain, 817, 5 to 7 p.m.
FOR SALE
An odd insect, found only in New Zealand, turns on a tail light to trap victims for food. Popularly called glowworms, these creatures are actually the larvae of a gnat. In myriad numbers, they attach themselves to the roofs of caves by spinning a spiderlike web. From there they let down sticky threads of the web to pick up flies and midges lured by the glow.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST: Experienced in tneses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn.
Phone 1396M. MWF-ff
FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking,
Phones. Ph 1843L-1, B5S N.Y. MWF-1f
Phones. Ph 1843L-1, B5S N.Y. MWF-1f
TYPING: Quick, accurate typing
Responses:
Call Ms. Merritt. Merritt
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4-28
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TYPIST. experienced in all kinds of stu-
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Veuquisi, 1935 Barker Ae. Ph. 25831, tf
Liepfeil, 1936 Wagner Ae. Ph. 25831, tf
**AYHAWKERS:** Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. For fur friends, for funnies, and feathers, Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1238 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CABINET-JMAKER and d. RefINISHER;
Antique pieces. Bar-tail finish on table
tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E.
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BVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics for American Service Company, **16 Vt.** if
For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified.
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RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day festivals. Visit the National Bank for free pamphlets and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tf
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Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines. Best boarding and cruise lines. Tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature on your Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone 3661
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 28, 1954
Korea Peace Called Doubtful
New York — (IUP)— The retired commander of United Nations forces in Korea is "doubtful" the Geneva conference can work out a peace-
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Upstream 7 p.m., room 306A, Student Union. Important.
Pre-nursing club 7:30 p.m., dining room. Elizabeth Robinson speaks on pediatrics.
Phi Mu Alpha, 9 p.m., 131 Strong
Imperative that all members attend.
KU Student chapter of American In-
stitute, 250 p.m., Museum of Art lecture at 11am.
Jay James meeting. 5 p.m., Pine room.
Student Union.
Pi Tau Sigma, initiation and banquet,
English room, Union. Guest welcome.
La Tertulia va a reunir la el 28 de
marzo 2014 programa y
nrefresco. Quiven tengan todo!
Sasak dinner, 6:30 p.m., Kansas room.
Student Union.
Le Cercle Franceis: mercredi a 4 heures et demie, 113 Strong. "Un apresmedi a la Comedie-Français"-scenes de la Comedie de Moliere. Tout le monde est invite.
Student Union.
AGI, 7:15 p.m., room 305, Student
UVO, 7-30 p.m., Jayhawk room, Student Union.
Foreign Students: All who intend on being in the program on May 1, please attend tonight's practice, 8 p.m. Student Union.
TOMORROW
Der deutsche Verein: Vortrag. Dr.
Karl Eichmann, 8. p.m. 502 Fraser
Liehlichbrun, 5. p.m. 502 Fraser
Kuku club, 7:15 p.m. Pine room. Student Union. Formal initiation and election of officers. Wear uniform and be prompt.
Quack club, 7:30. Robinson pool.
WAA. 4 p.m., Robinson gym . Play
Dav plan.
University Players. 5 p.m., Green Theater, Election.
Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m., 106
Green, collection of officers. Pleas for
new elections.
KU Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
room 206. Student Union. Speaker, Dr Ernest Ackley, "Is It Reasonable to Believe in God?"
Dance Lessons, Samba, 7-8 p.m., Jay-
hawker School, Student Union, 25c each
SATURDAY
Ph.D. French reading examination Saturday 9-11 in 102 Strong. Turn in books to Miss Craig, 108 Strong, by noon Thursday.
ISA Pienie and patio dance 3:50 p.m.
Potter lake Admission is ISA member's
rui settlement of the Korean problem.
Page 8
Publication of Gen. Clark's memoirs coincides with the opening of the Geneva conference at which foreign ministers will seek a peaceful solution of the strike which has split Korea, Gen. Clark, who now is president of a military college, is pessimistic.
Gen. Mark W, Clark, who signed the armistice which ended the Korean fighting last July, expresses his misgivings about the Korean peace conference in a book, "From the Danube to the Yalu," published today by Harper and Brothers.
Gen. Clark, who wanted to carry the Korean war to ultimate victory, writes that he signed the armistice "with a heavy heart."
"I was and am doubtful that any Korean conference would
"I had grave misgivings that some day my countrymen would be forced to pay a far higher price in blood than it would have cost if the decision had been made to defeat the Communists in Korea," he says.
achieve satisfactory results," he writes.
One of the dangers in seeking a negotiated settlement, Gen. Clark believes, is that South Korean President Syngman Rhee "might try to drag us back into another stalmed ground war in Korea.
"With the impatience of the very old, Rhee could try to precipitate a borderline action that might light up the battlefield once more. This we must avoid at all costs."
"Let us announce in unmistakable terms that should Korean sovereignty again be violated as a result of Communist aggression, the full might of American technical superiority will be brought to bear on the aggressor wherever he may be," he writes.
Gen. Clark believes the first move toward Korean peace should be the simultaneous withdrawal of United Nations and Chinese Communist troops.
10,000 Students by 1964 Housing Chart Indicates
Of how close the UN came to using atoomic weapons. Gen Clark's book gives only a hint.
have to be housed in private homes; this is 55.47 per cent of the student body.
"By 1964 housing will have to be provided for about 3,000 more students than at present, either in dormitories and fraternity houses or in private homes in Lawrence, according to a graphic display of the University in the window of the Kansas Power and Light building. Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
According to the Chancellor's office, the 1970 estimate shows a corresponding increase in the number of students that will seek housing in Lawrence private homes. These figures allow for a 5 per cent increase in dormitory, fraternity and sorority housing.
Predicted enrollment for 1960 is estimated at 8,000. The 1965 estimate is 10,000 and 1970 estimate is 12,000, the graphs show. Past high enrollment was over 9,000 during the 1947-48 school year. Present enrollment is listed at 6.-455 for the Lawrence campus.
At the present time, of the student enrollment, 32.04 per cent are housed in Greek letter houses, 6.42 per cent in University housing, 5.59 per cent in scholarship halls, 6.68 per cent in temporary University housing, .67 per cent in temporary scholarship halls, 1.18 per cent are commuting, 6.41 per cent are Lawrence residents, and 41.1 per cent live in Lawrence private homes.
Presently, 2,647 students are housed in private homes in Lawrence. This is 41.01 per cent of the student body. By 1960 it is estimated that 5,214 students will
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 135
Thursday, April 29, 1954
Stevens Denies Drop Of Monmouth Security
Washington—U.P.)—Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens' counselor was accused today of trying to get the commander of Fort Monmouth to cancel recommended security suspensions at a time when Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) was investigating the radar center.
Band to Present Spring Concert
The University Concert band under the direction of Russell L. Wiley will present a concert at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
The concert is the annual spring concert of the band, and is presented this year as part of the annual Music Festival.
Virginia Vogel will be at the celesta during the performance of the "On the Trail" movement from Ferde Grofe's "Grand Canyon Suite."
Featured on the program will be Leo Horacek, instructor of the trumpet, who will play Edwin Franko Goldman's "Scherzo for Trump."
The band will play "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Paul Dukas, the "March" from the opera, "Love for Three Oranges," by Serge Prokoffief, and the "Finale" from "The Algerian Suite" by Saint-Saens.
The public may obtain free complimentary tickets by coming to the band office anytime before Monday evening. Admission price at the door is $50. Students will be admitted on their ID cards.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness w it h strong shifting winds today. Occasional light rain northwest and scat-
COLDER
sered thunderstorms east portion this afternoon a nd evening.
Turning m u c h coldest west portion this afternoon and over state tonight. Freezing temperatures west
and north central tonight. Tomorow partly cloudy and quite cool. Diminishing winds. High today 40 northwest to 75 southeast. Low tonight 20 northwest to 40-45 southeast.
- Cross-examined about the incident, Mr. Stevens denied any memory of ordering such an attempt.
The charge, aimed at counselor John G. Adams, was a highlight of today's session of the Army-Mc-Carthy hearing being conducted by the Senate Investigating subcommittee.
It was produced in support of Sen. McCarthy's charge that Mr. Stevens tried to block his investigation of alleged Communist infiltration at the New Jersey Signal corps laboratory.
Mr. Stevens several times pleaded inability to remember giving Mr. Adams any instruction to ask the Fort Mommouth commandant, Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton, to withdraw suspension recommendations.
The charge was made in a statement by Capt. Joseph E. Corr, Maj. Lawton's aide. Hearing Counsel Ray H. Jenkins, cross-examining Mr. Stevens, said Capt. Corr wrote it out in his presence and in the presence of Maj. Lawton with the general's approval.
Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) remarked during the session that Mr. Stevens looked exhausted after six days on the witness stand, and suggested that the committee excuse him for a while if he felt too tired to testify. Sen. McCarthy promptly objected to the idea, and Mr. Stevens' attorney, Joseph N. Welch, said Mr. Stevens was willing to remain on the stand at least for duration of the morning session in the hope of completing his testimony.
Applications for the 1954-55 positions of Jayhawker editor and business manager must be submitted by Tuesday. Students interested in these positions should call Jack Rein (443) for further information.
According to Capt. Corr's statement, Mr. Adams made the suggestion in a telephone call, and Maj. Lawton's answer was: "I will not. Let the secretary (Stevens) take the responsibility."
Jayhawker Jobs Open for 1954-55
Justice Outlaws New ASC Balloting Plans
-Kansan photo by Dick Lloyd
FELIX A. MEYER
DISHONORS CONVOCATION—"Chancellor" Tom Hunt, college senior, caps John Simpson, college sophomore, as a new member of "Plasterbored," a senior men's organization dedicated to "remaining perpetually plastered instead of perpetually bored." Hunt won second class in the mens' bored.
place in the men's division.
Betas, Tri Delts Capture IM Speech Championships
Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Delta Delta Delta sorority were named winning houses in the intramural speaking contests which ended last night with entertainment speeches.
Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Winners of the entertainment speeches and the houses they represented were:
Women's division: first place—Coralyn Stayton, college freshman, Sellhard hall; second place—Carolyn Husted, education junior, Delta Delta Delta sorority, and third place—Jane Hill, pharmacy sophomore,
Men's division: first place—Dor Johnston, college sophomore, Beta Theta Pi; second place—Thomas Hunt, college senior, Beta Theta Pi and third place—Derek Scott, graduate, independent.
Those awarded trophies for winning first place in one of the intramural contests were: Robert Lynch, freshman in medicine; Joan Sherar, college sophomore; Nancy Reese, college senior; Miss Stayton and Johnston.
Outdoor Art Show To Begin Sunday
An outdoor art festival open to the public will be sponsored by Delta Phi Delta in Fowler grove Sunday and Monday.
Norma Lee Stranathan, president
of the honorary art fraternity, is general chairman for the festival. Ribbon awards will be given to the winners in each of five divisions—oil and allied techniques, water color, drawing, sculpture, and miscellaneous. All divisions are open for entries from the public. Pictures must be either framed or matted, and brought to 329 Strong not later than 4 p.m. tomorrow.
BULLETIN
The ASC elections committee decided by unanimous ballot at noon today to proceed with plans for the scheduled Wednesday election despite an injunction issued by the Chief Justice of the Student court, Kent Shearer, third-year law, forbidding preparation for a new election until the court had reached a decision.
The committee approved unanimously that ballots be prepared now in readiness for the election.
Committee members gave instructions from the committee's parent body, the ASC, as their reason for taking such action, and asked that this reason be given in the press so the student body would be aware of the basis for the committee's action.
12
Kent Shearer, third year law and chief justice of the Student Court entered a temporary restraining order yesterday to keep the All Student Council from taking steps for a new general election. Majority votes in both houses of the ASC Tuesday night had upheld an ASC election committee decision to throw out results of the April 20 balloting.
The new elections were scheduled for May 5, but Shearer asked that the ASC take no steps preparatory to a general election until the case of Gary Davis, second year law, against the elections committee, is decided.
Davis sent a petition to the student court which questioned the legality of the ASC elections committee in its recent action of declaring the election void.
The joint resolution passed in both the senate and the house of representatives is now before Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, but no action can be taken until after the Davis charge is heard tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Green hall.
In setting up temporary legislation for the coming election, the ASC also provides for the same candidates to appear on the ballot for the new election as appeared on the previous ballot.
The resolution also states that no party can spend over $150 between the date of the resolution's final O.K. and May 5, and all funds of each political party must be maintained in the University business office.
ADDITION—Seniors yesterday voted to have the above campus area landscaped as a class gift. This artist's conception is looking northeast from the steps of the new science building with the Journalism building in the background.
—Kansan photo by Dick Lloyd
Creaking Bones to Tangle With Limber Muscles Sunday
A softball game between Phog Allen's cagers and the Faculty Fossils squad has been scheduled for Sunday morning at 10 on Diamond No. 1 at the intramural field.
B. H. Born and Allen Kelley, co-captains of the varsity basketball team, will go on the warpath for the last time Sunday. Their intended victims will be the faculty.
Actually the scrap will be a sort of rubber bag, for the "profs" in the past two years have won one and lost one to the sneakers-and-shorts athletes.
"We lost last year's game to the basketball team when the umpire indiscreetly called a runner out at third on a minor technicality in the last inning," alibis Nino Lo Bello, instructor in sociology and manager-first baseman of the Fossils. "That man was the tying run, but we lost 9-8."
Born and Kelley, who will manage the hoop nine jointly, have announced that their starting pitcher is Dallas Dobbs, a cagey righthander. He will be pitted against the Fossils' star twirler, Bill Conboy, instructor in speech and possessor of a mean fast ball and in-shoot.
.
Manager Lo Bello says the faculty aggregation has a "secret weapon" playing second base. He is Dick Harp, assistant basketball coach. Harp has been scouting the cagenem for years and allegedly has a brochure on each man which he will turn over to the Faculty board of strategy.
"Phog Allen's dribble-pusses have us on age, but that frightens us not one whit," Mr. Lo Bello said. "Remember the old adage—a ball player is as old as he fields."
Bill Chestnut of the Housing office, a former football star here, will serve as the umpire-in-chief.
u1f0o03 IneufoeIH u1f0D uu0003
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 29, 1954
Sen. Douglas May Face Pinko'SmearCampaign
"Illinois and the nation are fortunate in the assurance that the coming Illinois senatorial election will see a candidate with the stature of Democrat Paul Douglas offering himself to the suffrages of his fellow citizens."
So saith the Jan. 6 Christian Century—a magazine that does not make a habit of stepping out on a political limb.
Unopposed in the Illinois Democratic primary, the junior senator will be opposed by Joseph T. Meek, a conservative Republican. Fortune magazine has predicted that Sen. Douglas would face a "pinko" smear campaign in the general election.
What sort of a man is the Senator? One that is hard to classify. He is a writer, economist, professor, liberal, and an ex-Marine. He has proved himself an independent thinker, having more than once locked horns with Democratic policy and former President Harry Truman.
In the latter capacity he attained national recognition. In 1951 Mr. Truman nominated three men for the federal judgeship in Illinois. Sen. Douglas stated frankly that he didn't believe that two of the men were capable of holding the office.
But he had attained recognition in other quarters long before that date. Fresh from a professorship of economics at Chicago university, he made his political debut as a Chicago councilman. After attracting attention for his selfless economy measures on that city's council, he ran for the Senate in 1948.
A talking point for Mr. Douglas was his war record. He enlisted as a private in the marines—and when discharged, he had attained the rank of lieutenant colonel, had been wounded twice, had fought in the Pelelieu and Okinawa campaigns, and had been decorated for "heroic achievement in action."
A prolific writer, he often reviews books for the New Republic magazine, and articles explaining his economic stand have appeared in New Republic, Nation's Business, and others.
With Rep. Richard Bolling (D.-Mo.) he this month filed—again in the pages of New Republic magazine—detailed report and criticism of the President's economic report of Jan. 19. The Senator proposed an increase in personal income tax exemptions of from $600 to $800 and "drastic reductions in excise tax rates."
But though a liberal and greatly in favor of welfare measures, Sen. Douglas has not always gone along with the Democratic party. On what the Congressional Quarterly terms seven "key votes" of the 83rd congress, he voted with the majority of the Republican Senators four times, and with the bulk of the Democrats only once.
Here are the issues.
1. A proposed amendment would have added $400 million to the appropriation for the Air Force. The original request from the Air Force had been trimmed by President Eisenhower from $50 billion to $34.5 billion. Sen Douglas voted against the additional $400 million. It was defeated.
2. The Administration asked for $140 million for soil conservation, then the figure was upped by $185 million by a committee on appropriations. This was acceptable to the Senate, but Sen. Douglas voted against a second increase—to $225 million. The measure was defeated.
3. Sen. Douglas voted with an overwhelming majority (74-13) to confirm the appointment of Charles E. Bohlen as ambassador to Russia.
4. The bill for foreign aid called for a $9 billion appropriation, which a proposed amendment would have slashed by $500 million. Sen. Douglas voted no, and the amendment was defeated.
5. On the heels of the hectic tidelands oil dispute, the Senate confirmed the coastal states' title to the submerged lands just off their shorelines. This reversed the measure passed during the Tru-man administration, which gave the rights to such lands to the Navy. Sen. Douglas voted no on this measure.
6. He also voted against giving the government mineral rights on all submerged lands on the continental shelf just outside the waters titled to the states, but this bill passed.
7. When President Eisenhower asked for a six month's extension of the excess profits tax in the Senate, the amendment to raise the amount of profit a businessman could make before being subject to a tax from $25,000 to $100,000 was defeated. Sen. Douglas voted for it.
One Man's Opinion
As the story indicates, however, financial assistance is but one of several purposes served by the program. Inter-cultural exchange and understanding are or should be valuable by-products of the close association of American students with those from abroad in a residence situation.
Elsewhere in these pages is an account of the Foreign Student Hospitality program, a program of volunteer work by KU students from abroad.
Our position of leadership and responsibility in the international community seems to be neither comfortably occupied on America's part nor gratefully aqueased to by other nations. The American temperament seems ill-adapted to the morally shadowy world of power politics, to the pushing and cailing of other nations, to the responsibility of carrying a shaky world face on national back. To other nations, America seems youthful and irresponsible, brash and neglectful of national sensibilities, both naively idealistic and Machiavellian.
Letty Lemon
Kansans can take justifiable pride in this university's pioneering effort in such a well-conceived and beneficial system. The program could be pronounced a success merely in terms of the aid given students who have needed a boost from some source in order to continue their education. Yet, it seems to this writer that programs of voluntary, private assistance to foreign nations may be profitably viewed in the light of America's place and total impact in the world of today.
In all justice, it must be admitted that the fears and resentments of other nations have some reasonable basis. The U.S. does play power politics, and the means we choose do seem at times to helie the ends we profess. Even our acts of collective generosity, such as the Marshall plan and the Point 4 program, lose some of their luster because our motivations are not entirely disinterested.
Even so, most Americans feel that foreign attitudes toward the U.S. are to some extent unjust and irrational. The reason, this writer believes, is that most Americans as persons believe that they possess none of the characteristics so often attributed to the United States as a nation. Most of us feel, and perhaps rightfully so, that our only motivations are directed toward the peace of the world and a more rewarding life for all peoples.
The problem seems clear-cut The world sees us one way because of our collective actions. We see ourselves another way and resent the world's view because our individual ideas and ideals seem to us largely disinterested. The world, basically, needs reassurance about America's motivations. The American people need a means of expressing their essential idealism—a means not provided by any governmental program.
Few problems could be more urgent. The passage of time seems to bring a rising tide of resentment abroad. And even more important, the American reaction to that resentment may be a frayed national temper and a return to some form of injured withdrawal from the world.
Thus, the importance of private programs with solely humanitarian motivations comes more clearly into focus. If through projects such as the Foreign Student Hospitality program, strong links can be forged
It has taken me an unconscionable length of time to formulate my considered reply to the obviously Red-inspired slander upon the moral courage and political sagacity personified by Howard L. Lydick, 1st year law, who be a He a Green hall fact or a Marvin fiction, has my unqualified endorsement and versus As the law governs two us and Communist persecution is the strong right arm of the junior senator from Wisconsin. Please publish all stanzas of the poem, lest the delicate tone of the work be thereby disturbed. Thank you for your courtesy.
To the Editor:
...LETTERS..
FROM HELL TO ETERNITY
In this monody the author bewails the Ship of State, unfortunately founder'd in its passage on heavy international seas, 1954. And by occasion foretells the ruin of our corrupted Clergy, then in their height. ('After Milton's "Lycidas"') The Communists, dread Commun-
Are slinking all around,
Larking in the tops of trees
Lurking in the tops of trees, Skulking underground.
They're nameless, formless Fiendish. Fears
Like Devils and Demons of otd (Pray God that they will spare my throat
Until my tail be tucked.
Old man no longer probe their
beds.
Until my tale be told.)
In quest of a longed-for-lover.
They probe now for that Fearful-
Thing.—
The Communist Underever. People in trains no longer speak;
In school and club and church and pub
Who knows but that the others are All Fellow Travelers?
The Spirit-Fiends are rife,
From the D.A.R. to Hooligan's Bar To the Bureau of Wild Life.
College football's thrice-corrupted.
Fry up, and down, the nation.
The teams have switched from the Split-T
To an old Left-Wing formation.
And from the shameless Protestant
philosophy.
To an old Left-Wing formation.
Unholy Ruddy wrath spews.
According to the Holy Gospel
According to the Holy Gospel According to St. Matthews.
But like the Lord clearing the temples.
Our 'scrub-mop' gainst the Party Is swinging wild for our salivation. Swishing St. McCarthy!
Drawning the preachers, scalding the choirs,
He'll wash away all Scarlet taint
In, swimmering, purification.
Sheep-dipping the congregations! Three hoops for this belabored man!
Scrub-mop St. McCarthy!
Head Janitor of our blessed Lord;
Quick-rinse of the Crimson Party;
But 'gainst the flood of the Scarlet Flends.
No one mop can always prevail.
They've swamped all over the ship
Rudder and rig and sail.
They're here and there and every- where!
They're slinking all around,
Possessing the secrets of trees,
Glowing underground.
Like thrice-demented Terrors and Horrors
Thank God that they did spare my
throat.
Until my tale was . . .
between Americans and person of other nationalities, the problems encountered at the difficult levels of statecraft can be resolved with an ease and confidence hitherto absent. —R. H. Chesky
One Woman's Opinion
Lately, the POGO political party has been avowing that something needs to be done about the Student Health service—and has provided in its platform for a liaison committee between the ASC and Watkins hospital.
Since it is the duty and privilege of editorial writers to wander out on limbs—we'll take issue with grips about the hospital.
It would be much easier to take issue if we knew specific gipes.
However, it would be more difficult for people to gripe if they knew about our health service here, its aims, and facilities in comparison with others.
An interview with Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson shows that our health program includes many services—far above and beyond the bare minimum—about which the students know nothing.
For instance, we have phys 72 therapy facilities, diagnostic X-ray equipment, speech correction facilities, an audiometer to determine hearing difficulties, and ear specialists who arrive weekly to handle special cases, a consulting dietitian, a regular "diet table" serving people having ulcers, diabetes, allergies; a special room for mentally disturbed patients; a consulting full-time psychiatrist, and doctors on call 24 hours a day.
These are just a few medical facilities. Anyone who has stayed in the hospital has enjoyed programs for patient comfort. Radio apparatus is accessible to each bed—and, since piped through an earphone-like thing—does not disturb other patients. Meals are excellent.
Further, the University—because of its health service—is one of five colleges in the U.S. picked to give training in student medicine, a specialty field. The others are California, Michigan, Minnesota, and Cornell.
The health service pays $12
day to keep an in-patient. The student
nays $3 a day, to stay there.
in fact, our health service is recognized as one of the best in the country, and its director, Dr. Canuteson, is often called upon to lead committees at medical and student health conferences.
All this doesn't mean that our health service is above reproach. It does mean that in comparison with other services in the country—some run by nurses, some with only a part-time staff, some with infirmaries rather than hospital services of any kind—our health service is extremely adequate.
Perhaps specific grievances do exist. In view of these facts they would be necessarily less adequate, however.
What do the students expect from their health service? We're in no position to say. Why don't you?
—Letty Lemon
All of the innumerable Communists choking the KU campus should address their complaints, epithets, lawsuits, and time bombs to cutthroat versifier as follows:
St. Arnold Kottwitz
Morton
Southern Christian Saints and Gentlemen's Club
Rainbow Ridge, Heav'n to Betsy P.S. Please include return addresses on all bombs; will reply in kind as leisure allows. Thank you for your courtesy.
Daily Hansan
Arnold Kottwitz college senior
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assm., Inland Daily Press Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, $4.50 year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 374
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Dion Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon,
THING ABOUT FIGHTIN'
A WORM IS YOU
DON'T KNOW WHICH
END IS WHICH.
MEBBE
WORMS FEELS
LIKE THAT
ABOUT US.
4-29
POSTWALL DRAWINGS
NOW WATCH THIS--HE'S
PICKED UP A LIL' WEIGHT
'AN LAEWNT A Few
TRICKS BUT EXPERIENCE
WILL ALWAYS ---
HOW DID YOU GO?
TUWAF!
WHAT A CHUMP
I AM--I FELL
FOR THE OLDEST
TRICK IN THE BOOK
~HE SHOVED
ME INTO A
CLOSET--
LEMMS OUT.
COOK
YOUNG
WANT
KEEP!
Page 3
Around the World-
16 Nations Reject Red Peace Offer
By UNITED PRESS
Nations that fought the Communists in Korea turned down today the latest Red proposal for permanent peace on the divided peninsula.
Delegates of the 16 nations which came to South Korea's defense in 1950 after the North Koreans had crossed the frontier unanimously answered "no" at a morning meeting at the U.S. delegation's headquarters in the Hotel Du Rhone.
from truce talks, offered a poorly disused scheme for the Communists to take over all of Korea without shedding a drop of blood.
Nam, who served as North Korean negotiator throughout the Pumun-
he catted for Soviet-style "free" elections and an equal voice for North Korea, which has only a fraction of the Korean population, in the unified government.
Nam's proposal, which was endorsed yesterday by Communist China's Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai in a bitterly anti-American speech, resembled Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov's blueprint for uniting Germany at the Berlin conference. The Molotov proposal was turned down as outrageous by the West.
The latest development lessened the chances of serious discussion of the Korean issue at the Geneva conference.
Other international developments: Heidelberg—the U.S. Army announced it has more than doubled its atomic artillery strength in West Germany. A third battalion was brought into Germany recently and more have been added.
Hanoi — Red Indochinese troops moved to within 50 yards of an isolated French outpost sheltering several French battalions which have been cut off from the main Dien Bien Phu garrison.
Canberra—The Soviet diplomats ordered to return to Moscow in a diplomatic break with Australia left for Perth on the first leg of their journey home.
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Der deutsche Verenig: Vortrag, Dr.
Schmidt, Dr. Philipp Kurtur,
Lamplidium, 3,50m, 502 Fresse
Rubu club. 7:15 p.m. Pine room, Student Union. Formal initiation and election of officers. Wear uniform and be prompt.
Quack club, 7:30. Robinson pool.
WAA. 4 p.m. Robinson gym . Play Day plans.
University Players, 5 p.m., Green
Toucher, Election.
Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m. 100
Green election of officers. Plans for
candidates.
KU Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
room 306, Student Union. Speaker, Dr. Ernest Ackley, "Is It Reasonable to Be Able in God?"
Dance Lessons, Samba, 7-8 p.m. Jay-hawker room, Student Union, 25c each
International committee KU YMCA.
meeting. 4:15 p.m., YMCA office. Preparation or symposium on Far East to be held. All members requested to attend.
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Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF
Dig in, Boys— It's Quantrill Coming Again
OPTOMETRY
1851-C Larrabee Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
With guns blasting and horses galloping, Quantrill's raiders will repeat history and again strike Lawrence at noon Saturday.
University Daily Kansan
Reenacting the famous raid of Kansas history, 30 horsemen from the community and the University will kick off the event leading o Lawrence's centennial celebration in the fall.
The group will leave at 5 a.m. tomorrow, journeying by bus to Springhill, Kan. After eating breakfast served by the community, they will mount for the 50-mile ride back to Lawrence.
"The route is nearest, the one Quantrill took, as is possible to ride without a pair of fence cutters." Gayle Mott, director of the raid, said.
Around 10:30 the outlaws will reach Gardner, where they will "burn" one of the buildings and "steal" fresh horses. In the actual event Quantrill's men had rustled 450 fresh mounts by the time they reached Lawrence.
Meals on the trip will be cooked by the riders. Overnight camp will be made one mile south of Eudera.
Hitting the trail again early Saturday, the raiders will ride on into Lawrence. After "shooting it up," they will feed their horses at Winter's Chevrolet garage. The raiders will be served a dinner by the Lawrence Centennial committee at the Chuck Wagon.
To climax the enactment, a ceremony will be held at Pioneer cemetry in honor of the citizens who gave their lives in the raid. A wreathe will be placed on one of he graves.
TOMORROW
Sociology club coffee, 4 p.m.
17 Strong annex E. Topic: "Rolph Linton and his Contribution to Anthropology"
Leader: Pati Cusie, college junior.
ISA Pincie and patio dame, $3.00 p.m.
*better lake* Admission is ISA member-
less.
P.I.D. French reading examination
saturday 9-11 in 102 Strong. Turn in
works to Miss Craig, 109 Strong, by noon
Thursday.
Defeat Likely On Bill to Bar Sending Troops
Hillel Foundation service, 7:30 p.m.
Danforth chapel.
SATURDAY
Washington —(U.P.)— Administration leaders predicted today the House would defeat a proposal which would bar the President from sending troops to Indochina without congressional consent.
They denounced the proposal as dangerous and urged the sponsor—Rep. Frederic R. Coudert Jr., (R.N.Y.) to withdraw it. But Rep. Coudert said he had no intention of doing so and declared the proposal was a "great opportunity" for Congress to reassert its right to make war.
Rep. Coudert offered the ban as an amendment to the $28,680,706,-000 "new look" defense appropriation bill. The House was expected to approve the military spending bill for fiscal 1955 with little dissent on other issues.
Rep. Coudert's amendment would bar the use of the funds to maintain U.S. troops in combat anywhere in the world without consent of Congress, except in event of attack on the United States or its possessions, or on nations with which the United States has mutual defense treaties.
Chairman John Taber (R-N.Y.) of the House Appropriations committee termed the amendment a "monstrous thing" and urged Coudert to withdraw it. Rep. Taber said the proposal was more likely to get the United States into a war rather than keep it out, because the Reds would view it as an indication we were withdrawing.
Other congressional developments:
Housing — Sen. Prescott Bush (R-Conn.) said government-insured home improvement loans may have to be scrapped to end "corruption" in the program. He said the program has resulted in "negligence, carelessness and corruption" and a "complete lack of protection for the home owner." He spoke out as the Senate Banking committee prepared to wind up the "preliminary" stage of its investigation of the multi-million dollar federal housing scandal.
Seaway — The House Rules committee appeared likely to clear the way this morning for the first House vote on the St. Lawrence Seaway project in the more than three decades it has been before Congress.
KDGU Schedule
Thursday, April 29, 1954
6:30 Through the Listening Glass
7:00 Bookstore Hour
8:00 Great Moments in Music
9:00 Telfel Tells the News
9:05 Trail Time
9:30 News
9:35 Artistry in Jazz
10:00 In the Mood
11:00 News and Sign Off
ON 45's & L. P.'s
NEW FACES
Ph. 375
925 Mass.
Haydn's 'Creation' to Open Music Week Observance
Bell's
A performance of Haydn's "The Creation" will open the University observance of Music Week on Sunday.
The University Festival chorus and the KU symphony and soloists, directed by Clayton Krebiel, will present the oratorio in Hoch auditorium at 4 p.m. Admission is free.
Joseph Wilkins, tenor; Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone; and Elizabeth Townsley, soprano, will be soloists. All are from the KU faculty.
Other festival events are the spring concert of the University band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium; the young American artist program presenting Claudette Sorel,
pianist, 8 p.m. Wednesday, in Strong auditorium and the University glee clubs, directed by Clayton Krehbiel. 8 p.m., Thursday, in Hoch auditorium.
Claramae Turner, American operatic contralto, will sing the final University Concert Course attraction Tuesday evening in Hoch auditorium.
The spring festival will conclude with a double bill of one-act comic operas May 11, 12, and 13. These will be in Fraser theater.
The modern American work, "Don't We All?" by Burrill Phillips, will have a cast of Dale Moore, William Wilcox, and Linda Stormont, all graduate students and Sandra Keller, college sophomore.
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The International Plan-
Foreign Student Hospitality Plan Brings KU National Significance
By R. H. CHESKY
Thursday, April 29, 1954
Students and teachers usually are aware of the activities—both athletic and academic—which bring national recognition to their own universities. Hence, it seems surprising how little is known around Mt. Oread about the national significance of KU's Foreign Student Hospitality program.
In operation for the past four years, the Foreign Student Hospitality program is a system of voluntary assistance to foreign students on the part of fraternities, sororites, residence halls, and other organized houses. Conceived and set in motion by a KU professor, the program is the largest of its kind on any American campus. More than 200 foreign students have been able to study here as a result of the program's operations since its inception in 1950. Although its essential features have been duplicated on other campuses, no other school even approaches KU in terms of widespread support of the system.
The program begins each spring with a letter to all organized houses over the signature of Dr. J. A Burzle, professor of German and the man who originally conceived the hospitality program. The letter requests the aid of every house for deserving foreign students during the academic year to begin the following fall.
University Daily Kansan
Houses interested in participating in the program usually agree to furnish room and board for one foreign student each year, although crowded conditions in some houses permit only providing of board. The houses are allowed several choices as to the nationality and age of the student they are to sponsor and entertain. Every attempt is made to adhere to the desires of the houses, and a final choice is made by the houses from a list of applicants submitted by Dr. Burzle.
Finally, and most important, the individual foreign student lives for a full academic year with the group which sponsors him. Thus, the program becomes not only a financial transaction, but a mutual sharing of cultural patterns between Americans and students from abroad.
The university simply needed more funds to aid foreign students," he said. "Yet, we saw at the same time how other than financial aims could be served by a program of this sort. Foreign students, instead of being set apart from Americans, would become part of a living American community. They would come to know America more intimately, and members of our own organized houses would profit from the experience, too."
Dr. Burzle was chairman of the committee on scholarships for foreign students—a position he still holds—when the Foreign Students Hospitality program was begun. At its inception, Dr. Burzle said, the program was regarded as a solution to basically financial difficulties.
Dr. Burzle said he believes the KU hospitality program compares favorably with the "international house" plan favored in some cities and universities.
"International houses, although they do bring foreign students
together in one place, tend to become "foreign islands," he said, "completely divorced from the life of the community in which they are located. It's so much better here, where the students from abroad aren't set apart in a house which everyone thinks of as 'foreign' and besides, our International club on the campus brings the students together so they can become acquainted with other than American students."
Dr. Burzle said he has always been pleased and gratified at the support the program has received from organized houses. Pressure never has been exerted on any house, he said, yet the groups respond each year in ever greater numbers. Only a very small minority of houses have declined to take part in the program, he said.
Twenty-nine organized houses already have agreed to participate in the program next year. They include:
Sororities: Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Kappa, Alpha Omicron Pi, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, and Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Fraternities: Acacia, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha KappaLambda, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Sigma Nu.
Men's residence halls: Jolliffe, Stephenson, and Pearson.
Women's residence halls: Templin, Miller, Sellards, Watkins, and Corbin.
Cooperative houses: Don Henry. Rochdale.
Professional fraternities: Kappa Eta Kappa.
Bates to Attend Church Meeting
Following the meeting. Rev. Bates will attend a student Christian conference and a pastor's conference in Germany.
Rev. Robert Bates, minister to students of the Christian church, is the delegate of the Disciples of Christ of the U.S. to the Ecumenical Student Workers conference, May 24 to 31 in Geneva, Switzerland. He will leave here May 7. The conference is sponsored by the World's Student Christian federation.
During August Rev. Bates will aid in the World Council of
From there he will visit France, Italy and Greece in conjunction with a study of the Christian community as the essential nature of the church. This work is being sponsored by the United Christian Missionary society.
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Class of'29 To Give KU $1,450 Fund
A 25-year gift of $1,450 will be presented to the University by the class of '29 at its reunion in June
The original class fund was used to purchase a grand piano for the Student Union, and the remaining amount was given to an endowment policy. The policy recently matured and provides the class fund for the gift this year, Dr. Robert Carr, Junction City, is chairman of the 25-year gift fund.
Tickertape decorations in memory of the stock market crash of 1929 will be the theme of the reunion luncheon Sunday noon, June 6 in the Student Union. A reunion party will be held Saturday evening, June 5 in the Student Union. The class president is Clarence G. Munns, Topeka, and the secretary is Mrs. Justin Anderson of Lawrence.
Six reunions are planned for June, Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the alumni association, said this week. The classes of '04, '09, '14, '29, and '44 will hold reunions, and a special party will be held for the Gold Medal club of all alumni who graduated before 1904.
Churches Youth department's work camp in Cypress. Reforestation is the major project of the camp. He will return to his regular duties here in September.
The first tea farm in America was at Sommerville, S.C.
WATCH THIS CORNER FOR OPENING DAY AT THE BIG BOY
DRIVE IN SOMETHING NEW IN SERVICE BETTER IN QUALITY
'Register for Next Semester' Hitt Says
Students planning to attend the summer or fall session at the University are to sign up in the Registrar's office, James K. Hitt, registrar, said today.
Mr. Hitt said that very important data can be planned, summer work can be done on the files, and students will not have to stand in lines if they will register now for next semester.
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Nelick to Talk On McCarthy
"A Wisconsininite Looks at Senator McCarthy" is the topic of Dr. Frank C. Nelick, assistant professor of English, who will speak at 3 p.m. Sunday over KLWN as part of the Sociology on the Air series
Prof. Nelick, who received his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin, is a property owner in McCarthy's home state where he lived for many years. He has made a close study on McCarthy's re-election and will discuss that phenomenon as well as a number of other phases solving the Junior Senator and the state of Wisconsin.
Dr. Nelick joined the University faculty in the fall of 1951 and was formerly a correspondent for several newspapers in Illinois and Iowa.
YI
Award to Go To Engineer
A $400 scholarship for a sophomore student in mining and metallurgy has been awarded to the University by the American Society for Metals Foundation for Education and Research.
The scholarship will be awarded this spring to a student in mining and metallurgy selected for outstanding ability both in academic work and in leadership. Purpose of the scholarship is to stimulate increased enrollment of high grade students in metallurgical courses.
Personnel Unit Set for Radio, TV
Establishment by the National Association of Educational Broadcasters of a personnel service to serve the needs of the entire field of educational television and radio has been announced by Graydon Ausmus, president of NAEE.
The project provided for the establishment of a personnel office so that files may be maintained on all qualified personnel seeking positions in the field of educational television and radio.
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Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By DANA LEIBENGOOD Kansan Sports Editor
Although the Kansas baseball team has a fine over all record of eight victories and two defeats and a conference record of three victories and two defeats it has only one regular hitting over the .300 mark; second baseman Bill Pulliam is hitting .325. Bob Allison and John Trombold the team's top power hitters, are just below the .300 level with averages of .296 and .295 respectively.
Trombold is the home run leader with four and the runs batted in leader with 13. Despite the fact they have low averages of .214 and .190, respectively, Bob Conn and John Perry are the runners up in runs batted in with eight apiece.
This KU team is one of opportunist, as it showed Saturday when it defeated Iowa State 3-2. KU scored three runs in the eighth inning of the contest without the benefit of a hit.
The team has enough hitting, especially if Perry begins to hit his stride, and tight pitching, and could win the Big Seven crown. Had it not lost a heart breaking 1-0 decision to Nebraska when John Brose threw a three-hitter, but was the victim of his own wildness, KU could be in a dominant position in the conference.
Oklahoma is in first place in the conference with two victories and no defeats. However, the Sooners have to play Kansas here. If KU could win these two games and win the rest of its contests it probably would end up in no worse than a tie for the championship, for Oklahoma could easily drop at least one contest before the crucial series with KU on May 12 and 13.
Nebraska is already eliminated from contention having lost two games to Oklahoma and two to Kansas State, so it looks like it will be Kansas and Oklahoma fighting for the title.
The team certainly deserves more support from the students than it has been getting. At the start of the Iowa State game we counted only 46 persons in the stands and about half of these were not students. It is inexcusable for the students to ignore a team that has an excellent chance to win the conference championship, or who at the very least will have a big part in saying who does.
The golf and tennis teams have also posted excellent records in their contests thus far. The golf team has won seven of nine dual meets, and the tennis team has won six of seven matches.
Although the Big Seven championships in both sports are decided by the conference tournament, the dual meets do give a definite line on the strength of the teams. Kansas and Iowa State will probably fight for the golf championship, and Colorado, Oklahoma, and Kansas will fight for the tennis title.
The most pleasant surprise as far as golf coach Donn Everett is concerned is the play of the brilliant sophomore No. 1 man Bob Richards. Richards has consistently been shooting around par, but hit his peak yesterday when he tied the Lawrence Country club course record with a 68.
All in all it looks as if the next few weeks "could" produce three more championships for KU teams.
General Disapproves Martin's Discharge
Monterey, Calif. —(U,P)— Mag.
Gen. Robert S. McClure, post commander at Fort Ord, has recommended against, a hardship, discharge for Billy Martin, former second baseman for the New York
Yankees.
"I am disapproving Marfin's application for discharge," McClure said yesterday. "I cannot see that his position has materially changed since his reinduction."
1947
1860-1929
Your Ring Tells Your Story
Always on the job—that's your Class of '54 ring! This beautiful piece of jewelry, the official ring made by Balfour's, tells the year of your graduation, your degree, and—most important of all—marks you as a Jayhawker, part of the KU tradition!
The recent excise tax cuts have brought the price down more than ever. Every ring has a heavy gold setting that guards a red stone. The men's size is $27.50 plus tax, and the ladies' size is $21.50 plus tax.
Some are ready right now, though you may have to wait while your ring is sized.
Phi Gams Win In I-M Play
Order Now at the Business Office
Stephenson and Phi Gam were winners in intramural softball games played yesterday. Stephenson won in second round Independent "A" and Phi Gam won in second round Fraternity "B" competition.
Stephenson won on a forfeit from SOT 1 to 0, and Phi Gam won over Nu Sigma Nu 7 to 5 in a close game. Phi Gam scored their seven runs on ten hits and two walks off losing pitcher Ben McCallister. Jerry Clark, the winning pitcher, gave up seven hits and five walks.
Independent "A"
Today's schedule:
Independent "A"
4:00 Field 1 AFROTC 'B' vs. Faculty
Fossils
Round 2
4:00 Field 2 Physics vs. KHK
4:00 Field 3 Mox vs. Army
Expect Muddy Track For Derby Starters
Louisville, Ky. —(U.P.) Prospects of a muddy track left the field for Saturday's Kentucky Derby more uncertain than ever today with 21 horses, headed by the favored Correlation, still listed as possible starters.
Two of the nominees, For Free and Super Devil, are almost certain to be declared out, even before the entry box for the big race opens at Churchill Downs tomorrow morning.
Amateur Favorites Survive
Send the Daily Kansan Home!
Thursday, April 29, 1954
Pinehurst, N.C. — (U.P.)—Tournament favorites Billy Joe Patton and Dick Chapman led eight survivors today into the quarter-final round of the North and South Amateur Golf championship—but they were the only "big name" players left.
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Page 5
Sportsman's Shop
KU Beats Tulsa In Golf Meet
Bob Richards tied a home course record here yesterday as KU golfers downed a visiting Tulsa university team $ 9_{1}^{2}-2_{3}^{2}. $
With a medalist score of 63, four under par, Richards defeated Jim Pfeifer of Tulsa to give KU an early 3-0 lead. Tulsa golfer Ray Berg's win over John Prosser pulled Tulsa within two points of the home team.
Today coach Donn Everett's squad is playing Iowa State, last year's Big Seven conference tourney winner. Iowa has all four men who won at the tourney back for today's competition.
KU victories by Harlan Hise over Barry Caruthers and Noel Rooney over Gibson Martin put the home team well into the lead.
KU golfers playing today are Richards, Hise, Prosser, and Pete Rush.
Dupas Wants More TV Fights
Cleveland — (U,P) — Defending champion Dick (Pancho) Gonzales clashes with Al Doyle today as play continues in the fifth annual World Professional Tennis championships at the Cleveland arena.
The musk ox of the far north is not really an ox at all, but a member of the sheep family.
Gonzales to Play Doyle
New Orleans —(U.P.)—Ralph Du-pas, 18-year-old New Orleans "whiz kid" fighter, said today he hoped his victorious performance against Irishman Pat Brady in a 10-round nationally televised fight would give him a chance at a "lot more TV appearances."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 29, 195
On The Hill-
HousesHoldFormalDance Dinners, Tell of Pinnings
Sigma Nu fraternity announces the pinning of Pat Lindquist of the University of Arizona, to David Rich, college freshman. Both Miss Lindquist and Rich are from Kansas City. Miss Lindquist is a member of Delta Delta sorority.
Pi Beta Phi sorority announces the pinning of Jann Duchossois to George Lund, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Miss Duchossois is an education junior and Lund is a fourth year architect student.
Watkins hall girls will entertain their mothers this weekend in honor of Mother's day.
Alpha Phi sorority celebrated Father's day last Sunday. A dinner, skits, and musical entertainment were given for the fathers of sorority members.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity announces the pinning of John Welling, business sophomore, to Virginia Baker, a member of Pi Kappa Sigma at Central Missouri Teachers college, Warrensburg, Mo.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will hold its annual Golden Heart Ball from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight, Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Mrs. Cletus Rosebrough, Mrs. Edward Rainey, and Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth.
Sellards hall will hold its annual spring formal from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight, Saturday at the hall. Chaperones will be Mrs. R. G. Roche, Miss Julia Ames Willard, Mrs. Edna E Ramage, and Mrs. Wilma Hooper.
The Independent Student association will hold a picnic and patio dance Saturday at Potter lake. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. L. William Chestnut, Dr. and Mrs. William
Cottle, and Dr. and Mrs. George G
Armakis.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity announces the piming of Dee Halley, geological engineering sophomore, to Margie Scott, Pi Kappa Sigma at Central Missouri Teachers college, Warrensburg, Mo.
Sellards hall announces the pinning of Janet Haden, college freshman, to Lee Johnson, engineering sophomore. Johnson is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Cynthia
JOAN CARTER
Joan Carter Engaged Wedding Date Set
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Carter of Kansas City announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan Marie, to Robert Hantla.
Miss Carter, education senior, is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Hantla is an education junior from Meade. The wedding will take place June 19 in Kansas City, Mo.
Sigma Nu fraternity observed White Rose Sunday last weekend. Members and their dates attended services at Trinity Episcopal church and then had dinner at the chapter house.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity announces the pinning of Garland Reckard, fine arts junior, to vivian Allen, sophomore at Cottey college, Nevada, Mo.
Corbin hall announces the pinning of Judith Shelton, college freshman, to Burton Howell, second year architecture. The pinning was announced at dinner by Grace Rose, college freshman. Howell is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Pi Kappa Tau fraternity announces the pinning of Bill Nicholson, chemical engineering junior, to Pat Flanagan, college junior.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity held its annual Dream Girl formal last weekend in the Big Seven room of the Eldridge hotel. Pat Flanagan, college junior, was crowned Phi Kappa Tau Dream Girl. Chaperones were Mrs. Sebonia Hancock, Mrs. Julin Ames Willard, Mrs. Althelia Galloway, and Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold a "Casino" party from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, Saturday, at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. H. W. Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. John Milliard, Mr. and Mrs. James Perry, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Alexander.
Battenfeld hall will hold a "Gavyneties" party from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, Saturday at the house. Chaperones will be Elizabeth Stanley, Miss Carlotta Nellis, Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Jean Tice, and Mrs. Merle Nichols.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will hold a buffet dinner from 6 to 10:30 p.m. May 5. Chaperones will be Mrs. Ruth File, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. North Wright, and Mrs. H. W. Jenkins.
Alpha Epsilon Pi will hold open
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house from 2 to 5 p.m., Sunday, at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Valenstein.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority will hold its annual spring formal from 9 p.m. to 12 mignight, Saturday, at the chapter house. Chapterons will be Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs. E. M. Stewart, Mrs. E.
Atkins Engagement Told, Wedding Set
Mrs. R. W. Atkins of Kansas City, Kan., announces the engagement of her daughter, Rozanne, to Maurice W. Prather.
Miss Atkins is a journalism senior, a resident of Watkins hall and a member of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority. Prather, journalism graduate, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J.Prather of Kansas City, Mo. He is employed in Lawrence as a photographer for Centron corporation. He is also a member of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity for men.
They will be married at 7 p.m. Aug. 1 at Danforth chapel.
J. Wilson, and Mrs. C. H. Wentworth.
Kappa Eta Kappa will hold a dance from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Dr. William Donoghue, and Mr. Dale Summer.
> Chi Omega sorority will hold a dinner dance from 7 p.m. to 12 midnight, Friday at the Student Union. Chaperones will be Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Mrs. H. W. Jenkins, Mrs. D. H. Buie, and Mrs. John Skie.
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Thursday. April 28. 1954 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Religious Groups Begin Studv Series. Hold Dinners
A presentation of the life of John Wesley, founder of the Methodist church, will be presented before the meeting of the Wesley foundation Sunday night. Arthur Richard Brown, graduate student, will portray John Wesley. Wanda Sammons, college junior, is in charge of the production. The group will meet at 5 p.m. at the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont for a supper preceding the meeting.
"Is it Reasonable to Believe In God?" is the subject of a public lecture to be given by Dr. Ernest Ackley at 7:30 tonight in room 306 of the Student Union. The speech is sponsored by the KU Christian fellowship.
Election of new cabinet officers will be held at an all membership meeting of the YMCA at 7 p.m., May 6 in the Student Union. All members on record as of April 15 are eligible to vote.
New officers and Cabinet members of the YMCA advisory board are, Clayton Crosier; assistant professor of civil engineering, president; Charles F. Peterson; assistant professor of pharmacy, vice president; Walter J. Meserve; assistant professor of English, secretary; Clinton L. Warne, economics instructor, treasurer; Domingo Ricarte, assistant professor of romance languages, Kenneth Deemer, professor of applied mechanics, Lee R. Johnston, assistant professor of business. Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the Plymouth Congregational church, John W. Forman, mathematics instructor, and Rev. Robert Swift, rector of the Trinity Episcopal church, members.
The International Relations committee of the YMCA will present a symposium on the Far East at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk room. Student Union.
Speakers include Dinh Ang Dang,
engineering special student from
stet-Nam; Raden Ismaoen, gradu-
ate Nam; from Indonesia; and
Shin Khiong Chew, college special student from Malaya. Ranen Sinha, graduate student from Calcutta, India, will introduce the speakers.
Following the symposium, films on Switzerland, Malaya and Java will be shown. Jim Mears, business junior, is in charge of the program.
A banquet honoring the staff of the Rock Chalk Revenue will be held May 11 in the Student Union. The dinner will be given by the Cabinet and Advisory board of the YMCA. Each staff member will receive a personal gift from the YMCA in appreciation of his work in this year's production.
Crossroads, Presbyterian group,
will begin a new study series on the
position of the church and the individual member in the community,
and the task of the church, Sunday
at 8:45 a.m. at the Presbyterian student center. Coffee and rolls will be served.
Supper will be served to members of the Sunday evening fellowship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the Presbyterian Student center. Following supper, Dr. John H. Fatton will lead a discussion entitled "Prayer. Its Place in Christian Life." A movie on Switzerland will also be shown.
Members of the Presbyterian Men's Organization will travel to Auburn, Kan. to present a program at 5 p.m. Sunday in the Auburn, Presbyterian church.
The program wil include a social hour with Gary Patterson, pharmacy sophomore, presiding; a community sing led by Thor Borgen, sophomore, pharmacy service conducted by Robert Mitchell, engineering sophomore.
Concluding the program will be the showing of films on the missionary work camp in Cordiva, New Mexico, by Jim Ragan, college sophomore, and Keija Tajima, graduate student. The regular Sunday services at the church are conducted by Reinhold Schmidt, college senior.
The key to the city of Ashland, Kan., will be presented to Wes Santee, education senior, when he arrives by plane Saturday afternoon. Santee is visiting his home town in conjunction with the fund raising campaign for the building of a new Presbyterian student center at KU. He will be accompanied by his wife and Dr. John H. Patton. Presbyterian minister to students. A parade will take the party from the airport
NORMA HORN
Catherine
Horn-Word Announce Engagement Recently
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Horn of St. Joseph, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Norma to Kenneth L. Word, son of Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Word of St. Joseph.
Miss Horn is a college sophomore and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Word attends St. Joseph Junior college and is a business sophomore. No wedding date has been set.
CLASSIFIED ADS
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid proforma within two hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted by 4:54 p.m. the day before publication date.
FOR SALE
MacGREGOR TOURNEYS, complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University Shop or call Al Hack at 715 or 32560. 5-2
CUXEDO, size 38. medium. Double breasted. $12.00. Excellent condition. Also accordion. Hood made, elght chest. Price $60.00. Chain. Ch7, 15 to 7 p.m. 4-29
BEYERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the mix-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, $16.9t vf
CABINET-MAKER and REFINISHIER:
Anique pieces, Bar-t top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom. Res. and Shop, 623 Ala.
BUSINESS SERVICES
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JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are important for fur, funs, and feathers. Give everything for fur, funs, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
TYPIST, experienced in all kinds of stu-
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COMPLETE PRIVACY
The building fund campaign has already passed the $75,000 mark.
Saturday evening films of the Kansas and Drake relays will be shown. On Sunday morning, Santee will assist in the morning services at the Ashland Presbyterian church, of which he is a member.
Sabbat services will be held Friday at 7:30 in Danforth chapel by members of Hillel foundation. Sam Wilen, graduate student, will conduct the service.
An all Presbyterian spring party and picnic will be held Friday evening at Clinton, Kan. The group will leave from the Presbyterian student center at 5 p.m.
YWCA members will have Lawrence High school senior Y-teen girls as their guests at an all membership meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday, May 6, room 306, Student Union building.
A skit pertaining to the activities and meaning of the YWCA will be presented. Carolyn Cook, college sophomore, is the producer of the
skit. After the program the group will go to the Hawk's Nest for refreshments. Nancy Reich, college freshman, is in charge of the program.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 29.1954 At the Movies--
Foreign Students To Hold Festival
A Foreign Student festival, planned by the 130 foreign students, will be presented Saturday in the ballroom of the Student Union.
Nineteen displays by individual countries or groups of countries will be on view from 2:30 to 10:30 p.m. The exposition will include pictures, native garb, handcrafts, art work, books, etc., from the foreign countries. A number of variety acts by the foreign students will be given in a program from 8 to 9 p.m.
Virginia Moreno of the Philippine Islands is producer and director of the program, which is based on an International Carnival t h e m e. Imtiaz Khan is the carnival barker, and Genevieve Villie, France, is the ticket girl. Carnival spectators are Armida Punkay, Peru; Padmini Ramassahen, India; Maria Villegas, Costa Rica; Helen Hashib, Japan; Ding Ang Dang, Viet-nam; Raden Ismaeon, Indonesia; L. Neelakantan, India; and Raymond Wong, China.
The German Choir: Gisela Selzer, Germany; Billie Mallorie, fine arts junior; Eva Petermann, Germany; Mrs. Ingrid Winter, Germany; Gene Azure, graduate; Freddy Genser, Austria; Heinz Grossle, Saar; Helmut Sauer, Germany; and Otto Suhling, Germany.
The performers in the various carnival acts will be:
Intiaz Khan of Pakistan is the chairman of the planning committee, composed of Sirpa Tomari, Finland; Heliton Haydt, Brazil; Herbert Kisler, Austria; L. Neelakantan India; and William R. Butler, assistant dean of men.
Scandinavian Folk Dances: Sif Elghammar, Sweden; Sirpa Tomari, Finland; Adolf Jochick, Sweden; and Karl Kullerstrand, Sweden.
French Medley: Francois D'Hiver, Alain Jacob, and Marc Levy, all from France.
Reading from the Koran: Arif Alamuddin, Lebanon.
Japanese Dance: Mrs. Minoru Akimoto, Masaji Ikebata, Osamu Kanetsui Ryoi Kumagawa, Sachihiro Takahashi, Yoshiko Yoshimoto, Tokashina, and Lillian Yoshiba.
1
Romeo and Juliet: Joyce De Vos,
South Africa; and Derek Scott, England.
Bamboo Dance: Virginia Moreno
and Manuel Reyes of the Philip-
kids
Switzerland versus Schweiz: Claudine Effront, Ejrnd Staehlein, Roll Deppeler, Ernst Schnorf, and Rene Stern from Switzerland; and John White.
Cueca Chilena: Mrs. Anita Burger Chile; and Ricardo Fernandez Peru.
Vienna Waltz: John Shaw, college senior, and Herbert Kisler, Austria.
Mambo: Ricardo Fernandez, Peru.
Venezuelan Dances: Sally Schroeder,
fine arts junior and Miquel
Gonzales. Venezuela.
Eaters-out in our land left almost $450,000,000 in tips for the waiters and waitresses on tables in hotels and restaurants last year, says a Department of Commerce estimate.
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Graduate Receives EastmanFellowship
R. Lynn Cobb, graduate, will receive the Eastman Kodak fellowship in chemistry for the 1954-55 year.
The Eastman fellow receives a stipend of $1,400 for the year, payment of all university fees, and an expense-paid trip to a meeting of the American Chemical society. The University also receives $1,000 for the purchase of equipment and supplies for the fellows's research.
Cobb was graduated from Isabel high school in 1947 and went on to Ottawa university.
Movie Fare to Vie With Spring
The film manifest for the next seven days is loaded heavily for competition with the outdoor lure of spring.
Rv BILL STRATTON
Topping the list is a summary of the scores and activities of the two venerable gentlemen of stage musicality, Gilbert and Sullivan. By way of the Varsity screen, which already flourishes "Gilbert and Sullivan," theater-goers are carried back several years to the noisy times in which the famous team conceived its first productions. Romances are included, as are the many alterations enjoyed by these two, and the excerpts of the finer presentations come through in impressive style. In the lead roles are Robert Morley and Maurice Evans.
Film devotees who are accustomed to the modern frivolity of Hollywood musicals should brace themselves for a different tempo if they manage the 75 cents for this admission.
"The Best Years of Our Lives," a revival scheduled for Friday and Saturday at the Granada, was produced a few years after World War II, and it scooped up a goodly share
of the Academy's blessings for that season. Since the story takes up average problems met by returning GI's, distributors evidently believe it will coincide with the attitudes in the wake of the Korean police action. Fredric March, Dana Andrews, and Myrna Loy are among the several stars who participate in masterfully integrated scenes that reflect with depth the American attitude toward war and the peace that follows.
On Sunday, the Granada features a warlike picture with unwarlike people. The title, which describes precisely the story's ingredients, is "Hell and High Water." Richard Widmark, Bella Darvi, and crew sail by cozy submarine to Arctic waters where they play games with a nasty Russian sub and an inflammable atom bomb. What's interesting about this is how love can develop around the handle bars of a periscope on Navy time.
More action, with destruction on a picayunish scale, is offered tomorrow in "Rails Into Laramie" at the Patee. John Payne and Durasey are the main brawlers in this, and when their foray ends on
monday, we have a revolution in Mexico with "Viva Zapata!" This is another revival, containing the talents of Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn, and Jean Peters, which delivers a message of futility regarding the bush warfare once indulged in by our merry neighbors to the south. Quinn, as a liquored general and Zapata's brother, received an Oscar for his services.
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UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
51st Year, No. 136
Friday, April 30, 1954
A
ROCK CHALK—Pam Barron, freshman, and Irby Hughes, Margie Campbell, and Jim Miller, college sophomores, left to right, practice the famous KU chant at the Cheerleader School in the Union ballroom. Truouts for next year's cheerleaders will be Monday.
Democrat Group Elects Officers
James Swords, college senior, was elected president of the KU Young Democrats last night.
Camilla Klein, second year law, vice chairman of the Young Democratic Clubs of America, was chosen to give the keynote address at the Kansas Young Democrat State convention to be held in Topeka, May 15 and 16. Sen. Estes Kefauver (D.-K.) will also speak.
Other officers elected are Lawrence Loftus, college junior, vice president; Darlene Hunsaker, fine arts sophomore, second vice president; Eloise Feuerborn, college sophomore, secretary; Don Kay, college junior, treasurer; and Joane Manney, fine arts sophomore, and Roger Collins, college sophomore, college council representatives.
The group unanimously endorsed Loffus as its candidate for Kansas Junior National committeeman. Loffus, who already has the support
Franklin, and Douglas county clubs should win the position by a large margin, said Donald Dirks, former president of the Young Democrats.
The club is sending six students to the Missouri Young Democrat State convention today and tomorrow.
Joane Manney and Donaal Dirks received letters of appointment to the rules and credentials committees respectively. The committees will meet during the two day Kansas Young Democrat State convention.
Weather
Showers or thunderstorms in the extreme east and light rain or drizzle in the west and central portions
of Kansas a re expected today. There was freezing drizzle in the northwest t h i s morning, w i t h snow and tempera- tures as low degrees ip
JOHN AVERY
as 28 degrees in Denver. The
SHOWERS
weather tonight and tomorrow is expected to be cloudy, with occasional rain or drizzle in the west portion and east portions by tomorrow afternoon.
Cheerleaders Teach Novices All the Ropes
Rock-Chalk, Jayhawk, Kay-You! This familiar yell could be heard coming from the Student Union ballroom this week. Inside were some 55 students "whooping it up" with the cheerleaders.
This was cheerleader school, held Monday through Thursday to teach students interested in trying out for a next year's cheerleading job the fundamentals of the profession.
By attending the school, everyone who tries out next Monday night will have had, an equal opportunity to learn about KU cheerleading, even though some may have had more previous experience The cheerleaders served as coaches, teaching them the motions of four yells and two songs, and offering points for improvement.
"We also try to teach them how to project their personality to the audience," said Betty Lou Watson, college sophomore, one of the cheerleaders, and this was just as important as knowing the proper motions.
At the end of the sessions most of the student cheerleaders have a chronic case of aching muscles, Miss Watson said. She added that most of them didn't realize how much work there is to cheerleading.
About 35 women students and 20 men students have been attending the sessions. Most of the women are predominantly upperclassmen.
Cheerleading tryouts wil be held at 7 p.m. Monday in the Kansas room of the Student Union.
The substructure of the earth on possible future University building sites is being studied through borings being made by the Raymond Concrete Pile co., Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, said today.
Possible Building Sites Being Studied
The borings are being made west of the Military science building and near Corbin and North college halls.
Student Festiva To Feature Art
The annual Delta Phi Delta Student Art festival will be held at the Student Union Sunday and Monday.
If weather permits, oil paintings will be displayed at the new patio entrance. The remaining art works will be exhibited in the main lounge. The festival previously was scheduled for Fowler Grove, but was changed because of the rain.
Five types of art work will be shown in the festival. Any student or faculty member may enter sculptures, oils, allied techniques, watercolors, drawings, and miscellaneous work. Each contestant will be limited to four entries.
McCarthy Aide Admits Delivering Cut Photo
Shearer Avers 'Law As Guide'
Collins, holder of an International association of Rattlesnake Hunters awards membership card for catching live rattlesnakes at Waynoka, Okla., has decided to put an end to his startling snake exhibitions and eat the four live ratlers he caught this year. The largest is five and a half feet long.
"I think that when you are on the court you should let the law be your guide instead of political affiliations," Kent Shearer, third year law and chief justice of the Student court said in an interview yesterday.
Washington —(U.P.)—A member of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's (R.-Wis.) staff took responsibility today for delivering a "doctored" photograph of Pvt. G. David Schine and Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens to Senate investigators.
"Tye sent out 25 invitations already," Collins said this morning, "but only four indicated that they would eat the main course." He is sending approximately 80 of them in all, but he said he felt that four
"Although everyone on the court has had affiliations with campus political parties, our oath and non-partisan method of our selection of judges require that we be non-partisan in rendering any decision in court." Shearer said.
Shearer was instrumental in drafting the statement of principles of POGO party, but he ceased to attend the regular POGO meetings after the ACI primary when it appeared that his primary interested in Greek unity would be realized.
"To whom it may concern: You are hereby summoned to appear at the Collins and Wilhelm Snake Pit at 1140 Louisiana, second floor, on Saturday evening, May 1, 1954, from 7:00—? The purpose is to enjoy the rare privilege of eating rattle-snakes. We will furnish the snakes and possibly the beer, but you B.Y.O.S.B.R. (Bring your own snake bite remedy)."
"The student court is an individual branch of KU student government equal to the All Student Council and the supreme interpreter of the laws of the council," he said.
Land Snakes Alive But Not for Long!
He said that in the event that any justive exhibits partial tendencies in their work, such action will be taken to the chancellor and he will do as he feels necessary.
By GENE SHANK
To show the fairness of the court in past decisions, Shearer said that in three political issues presented to the court last year over which FACTS and Pachaacamac tangled, in two cases Shearer said he voted with FACTS although politically he was opposed to them.
Shearer was interviewed by the Kansan since the question of the validity of the action taken by the ASC election committee in voiding the recent campus election is to be brought before the student court today.
Somehow it doesn't pay to be a vegetarian—particularly if you're invited to the "snakefeed" that Richard Collins, third year law student, is throwing tomorrow.
But if you are invited, here's the invitation you will receive:
snakes would be sufficient for the number of persons who would eat them.
Collins, who said that rattlesnake meat "tastes like the white meat of a chicken," will prepare his main dish by skinning the snakes, cutting them in sections along the ribs, putting them in salt water over night, shaking them in flour, and then throwing them in a frying pan.
The snakes, though completely
Prospective Meal-This "delectable" creature is seen posing for the picture that appears on the invitations to a gala snakefeed.
unaware of the forthcoming feast, seem to be in strange temperament this week. Collins indicated. He fed them several mice last Wednesday, and the finicky snakes won't even touch them.
The witness was James N. Juliana who was put under questioning at the Army-McCarthy hearings after the Wisconsin Senator announced he was the one person who could best tell the story of what happened to the famous photograph.
Mr. Juliana said two sets of photostats were made from a print supplied by Pvt. Schine. One showed Pvt. Schine, Mr. Stevens, and Col. Jack T. Bradley, commandant of McGuire Air Force base near Fort Dix, NJ.
The other showed only Pvt. Schine and Mr. Stevens, Mr. Juliana said he delivered that version to hearing Counsel Ray H. Jenkins "because I thought that was the one you wanted."
Mr. Juliana testified that after Pvt. Schine delivered the original picture, he asked Don Surine, assistant committee counsel, to have photostat made of the three persons and also showing only Mr. Stevens and Pvt. Schine.
Mr. Juliana testified that when the photostats were delivered, he had mounted on hard white paper the enlarged photostat of just Mr. Stevens and Pvt. Schine. He placed the others in a filing cabinet in the office of Staff Director Francis P. Carr.
"No sir" Mr. Juliana replied.
He said that he then furnished just the mounted photostat of Mr. Stevens and Pvt. Schine to Mr. Jenkins.
He said that he furnished just the Stevens-Schine photograph to Mr. Jenkins because he had believed that was what Mr. Jenkins wanted.
Mr. Jenkins brought out that he had no knowledge that the disputed photograph was a "cropped" or "doctored" photograph.
Mr. Jenkins brought out that he had been advised earlier that a photograph of Mr. Stevens and Pvt. Schine was in existence. He wasn't told the original picture showed a third person.
"Did I say to cut anyone out?" Mr. Jenkins asked.
Jean Diehl Wins Tri Delt Award
Mr. Juliana's testimony highlighted a session during which Special Army Counsel Joseph N. Welch suggested that Sen. McCarthy himself be called to testify out of turn in order to speed up the dragging investigation.
Jean Diehl, college freshman, has been awarded the Delta Delta Delta general scholarship for 1954-55 school year.
A resident of Miller scholarship hall, Miss Diehl learned yesterday that she had been selected from applicants from colleges and universities all over the country to receive the sorority's national scholarship award.
This is the first time the award has gone to a University student.
The local Delta Delta Delta chapter awards a scholarship each year to a University woman.
Nevins to Speak at 8 p.m.
Nevins to Speak at 8 p.m.
The Kansas Centennial History conference is being held in the Memorial Union building today and tomorrow. Allan Nevins, professor of history at Columbia university, will speak on "Kansas and the Stream of American Destiny" at 8 p.m. today in the ballroom of the Student Union.
0.4 0.1 0.2
Friday. April 30, 1954
Election Bill: A Step Toward What?
A big step forward may have been taken by the ASC in formulating a new set of "ironclad" election rules for campus elections. Or has it?
It would appear that the new set of rules is an admission, by the campus leaders, that they are unable to lead the students to an honest way of thought, and are now going to try to force them.
Much has been said regarding the "politicians" who made the last election into a fraudulent faso. But we would like to take issue with that for a moment.
The few "politicians" on the campus could not possibly be the cause of all of the alleged dishonesty in campus politics. A few of them may try to instigate it, but where there is a leader in such an enterprise, there must be followers before it can be a success.
Following this line of thought, who are the followers? Examine yourself closely-you may be one of them.
No person is going to be led into dishonesty unless he wants to take such steps. So does not the fault rest with the student body as a whole?
Another person in campus politics, one who is just as dangerous as the supposed dishonest few, is the person who sits back with a sneer and does nothing.
In many instances there is just as much to a sin
of omission as there is to a sin of commission. The person who takes no part in politics and then sits back and screams his head off when things don't go right is the biggest hypocrite of all.
And then there are people who say there is no use voting because the ASC is a playground for campus politicians and nothing else.
In the first place, the ASC takes care of many administrative details that would, in the absence of such an organization, revert to the administration's hands. This would probably, in the long run, cost you, the student, more money.
In addition, there is more to participation in activities than just being a "glory hog." Experience gained through participation in organizational work with people of your own age can be very valuable in later life, as is demonstrated by the interest employers take in college extracurricular activities of prospective employees.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 30, 1954
A demonstration of ability in one field can very well be considered an indication of ability in others.
Perhaps the people who are sitting back and condemning the people who are doing nothing constructive on the campus level, and the people who say campus politics and campus jobs mean nothing had better step back and take a second look.
They may be missing the proverbial boat! —Don Tice
In the summer of 1948, the nation had its first indication that a political sun had risen in the West—in the form of California congressman Richard Nixon.
A member of the House Un-American Activities committee, Rep. Nixon was elbow deep in the investigation of Alger Hiss. Most of the committee members had decided that Whittaker Chambers was lying—that Alger Hiss had never seen or been associated with the balding paunchy man who had accused him of working with the Communist underground.
But the then Rep. Nixon didn't agree. "I was a lawyer, and I knew he was a lawyer," Mr. Nixon was quoted as saying in Whittaker Chambers"Witness." "I felt he was just too slick. If Hiss was lying, he was lying in such a way as to avoid perjury, with a very careful use of phrasing."
In the second Hiss trial, Rep. Nixon's hunch, coupled with round-the-clock facts gathering, paid off. Hiss was convicted of perjury.
Old Political Sidetrack Is Work Under Nixon
Now, commentators are hailing him as a new and vigorous sort of vice president. One who, at the age of 41, is finally doing something with an office whose promise was unfulfilled even by John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John C. Calhoun, and Theodore Roosevelt.
Although Richard Nixon became a national figure in 1948, he already had compiled an enviable record beyond the public gaze.
Richard Nixon was born in Yorba Linda, Calif. He received his A.B. degree from Whittier college and was graduated second in his class. He won a scholarship to Duke University Law School, where in 1937 he finished third in his class.
Emerging from World War II a lieutenant commander, he returned to Whittier—and promptly was elected to Congress. But he was just another promising young congressman when the Alger Hiss case broke back in 1948.
Successful as a handyman, Mr. Nixon gradually assumed the more important role of stand-in for the President. Last October, accompanied by his wife, Pat, he set out on a 45,000-mile, 10-week, globe-girdling trip to spread good will in the Far East and to find some facts. In the process, he shook hands with close to 100,000 Asians.
Today, he serves as the President's handman and stand-in. In the former capacity, he persuaded Joe McCarthy to call off his investigation of Allen Dulles' Central Intelligence agency and his threat to fight against Senate confirmation of Harvard's President James B. Conant's appointment as German high commissioner.
Teddy Roosevelt referred to his election to the vice presidency as "taking the veil." Today, Richard Nixon has taken the office and is up-grading it into a man-sized job. —Letty Lemon
This is an open letter from the editorial staff of the University Daily Kansan to its readers.
To the students:
As has been stated before, we CANNOT carry letters that aren't signed by the writer. We are responsible, according to the law, for everything printed in the paper. In the case of a letter that is signed, some of that responsibility in spirit if not in law, is passed on to the writer.
It is our policy and our wish, to print as many of the letters received as possible. However, in this we are limited in many instances because students submit unsigned letters.
...LETTERS.
In many cases unsigned letters contain nothing that would in any way endanger the position of the Kansan, but for the sake of consistency we can't carry them either.
Many of the unsigned letters we receive show good thought and subject matter, and contain legitimate gries about campus conditions and many other things.
If a letter is printable, we will honor a request that your name be withheld, but not signing a letter is an entirely different matter.
So if you don't feel your letter is worthy of your signature, don't bother to mail it. You will save us the irritation of not being able to run it, and yourself the irritation of having it ignored.
Don Tice
Editorial editor
To the editor:
A while back I wrote about the deplorable condition of the road leading to the parking lots, in the hope that something could be done about it.
Well, I would like to thank any or all parties who had something to do with getting it fixed. It's a pleasure riding up to the campus now. My car still has the usual amusement of being in peace and contentment, unafraid that I might find the motor in back of me soon.
Don Tice
Saul Lassoff
graduate student
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
CLASS DAY PICNIC
FRESHMAN
SOPHOMORES
JUNIORS
SENIORS
H-18
BRIER
"Well I've always heard a college education 'Broadens' one."
Publick Occurrences BOTH FORREIGN AND DOMESTICK
April 30,1954
INTERNATIONAL
Don't be surprised if Greece soon joins the Yugoslav-Turkish alliance. This agreement will turn the three powers into a formal military alliance invoking automatic military action in the event of aggression against any of the three powers.
Don't look for settlement of the Korean or Indochinese problems at Geneva. Most authorities agree that it is highly unlikely. The Reds can't allow a free election in Korea because South Koreans heavily outnumber North Koreans. Neither can they withdraw in Indochina since it would mean loss of everything they have been fighting for. With the French over a barrel, they probably will not even consider a cease-fire on their own terms.
There will be a temporary cease fire in the Dien Bien Phu area of Indochina soon to let the French evacuate their wounded. Russia will concede on this point in the Geneva talks.
Expect a "Middle Eastern NATO" to be formed in the near future. Recent U.S. arms aid to Iraq would help to form this regional organization of countries south of the Soviet Union. This would be comprised of Pakistan, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, as well as Iraq.
Last week's announcement that there are probably at least three Red Chinese Army divisions ("volunteers" they call them) fighting with the Indochinese rebels can be expected to bring fireworks from John Foster Dulles, once the Secretary of State is free of details at the Geneva conference.
NATIONAL
---
Evidence of fraud in unemployment insurance claims has been uncovered in five states. Nationally, this may total millions of dollars. Look for this to be on the government probe list.
Don't worry about missing a few days of the McCarthy-Army hearings on television. That fiasco will be going on for a long time — you may even get to see some of the closing shots after final week.
SPORTS
Look for the recently suspended tracksters to be reinstated soon. They are badly needed for upcoming meets.
WELL, THERE HE GO...
THAT WORM CHILE SHO'
GOT YO' NUMBER...HE
KNOCKED YO'HAT OVER
YO'EYES AN...
HE
TRICKED
ME~JES'
WAIT'LL
I GIT THIS
OFF..
GIBEY
NOW--
GIVE OUR
REBARDS TO
ENAVELY.
DON'T
LET
HIM GIT
AWAY.
MA!
MICHAEL YONGLEITH
NOW---!
LOOK! LOOK!
HE'S FIGHTIN'
FOUL ALREADY
--GIVE A
LOOK,POGO!
SEE! HE'S
UNBAIR!
WELL--
UH-HUH
HUM-SAY--
WELL,NOW.
UNIVERSITY
Daily Hansam
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 378
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor Assn., Inland Dairy Press Assn., and University Press Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City, Kan. Member of the Horticulture or $4.50 a year (add $1 semester fee). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University weekdays. Member of the university holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under ad
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial editor Dion Tice
Assistants Letty Lemon.
FrenchCommandos Storm Red Post
Hanoi, Indochina—(U.P.)-French troops at Dien Bien Phu surged from their trenches in a tropical rainstorm today and attacked Communist machinegun nests that had been harassing their defensive positions.
Commando-type squads of 12 men each, led by veteran Foreign Legion sergeants and corporals, splashed through knee deep mud to silence the guns covering the area where French and American planes drop supplies.
The French high command said it was too soon to tell whether the attacks ordered by Dien Biu Phu commander Brig. Gen Christian De
The raiding parties, operating in all directions, struck out after a night of sharp and bitter clashes at the edge of the defense perimeter and tore into the enemy machine-gun nests with knives and bayonets.
estries had silenced permanently any of the rebel posts.
When French and native Viet Namese troops succeeded in overrunning a Communist position, some of them unslung shovels to fill in Red trenches while their buddies covered the frantic digging operation against counter attack.
While the shock troops were cleaning out the enemy gun positions a 3,000-man force of French union troops was cleaning out Communist pockets within 20 miles of the besieged fortress.
The French high command has denied the force pushing up from the south was a "relief column," but reports from the front said it was mopping up rebels within a 15-mile radius of the road hub of Muong Khoua, 35 miles below Dien Bien Phu.
Interviews
Two job interviews will be held next week for graduating engineers. Persons interested may get further information and sign the interview schedule in 111 Marvin.
Tuesday
The Bureau of Reclamation. U.S.
Department of the Interior, will
interview civil and electrical
engineers. Friday
The Ohio Injector company will interview any engineering student.
Troop Control Bill Defeated
Washington — (U.P.)— The administration claimed a victory today with the defeat of a bill that would have put limits on the President's power to send troops into embattled southeast Asia.
Speaker Joseph W. Martin Jr. declared "it was a vote of confidence on the part of the House that President Eisenhower will come to Congress before any decisive action is taken to send forces to Indochina."
The proposal, to bar the dispatch of troops abroad without congressional approval, was beaten 214 to 37 late yesterday only a few hours after Mr. Eisenhower condemned it as a move that would hamper his power to act swiftly in uncertain and fluid situations.
The House afterward went on to pass, 377 to 0, the $26,684,250,486 defenses appropriations bill to which the troop ban would have been an amendment. It now goes to the Senate.
Democrats attacked the big money bill as cut dangerously thin, particularly in view of the grave situation in Indochina. But they offered no amendments to fatten it up and voted for it on final passage.
Actually, the measure was cut $1.202,804,514 below what the President request and totaled $5,629,070,514 less than the services got for the current year.
Rep. Frederic Coudert (R-N.Y.) pleaded for adoption of his troop ban to reassert the authority of Congress to declare war. But administration forces denounced the proposal as dangerous and he was able to muster only a handful of votes.
Mortar Board Initiation Marks 42nd Year on Hill
By LEE ANN URBAN
The initiation tonight of 18 members into Torch chapter of Mortar Board will mark it's 42nd year on the campus. Initiation ceremonies will be at 7:30 p.m. in Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy's home.
Last night Mortar Board entertained freshmen women on the dean's honor roll with a Smarty party at Watkins hall. This year's members are planning a retreat for the new initiates at Lone Star lake
EYE
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Torch society, honor organization for women, was founded here in 1912 by nine senior women, but it was not incorporated with Mortar Board until 1924. Since then the organization has grown in size and importance.
Junior women are selected on the basis of outstanding leadership, scholarship, and service by members of Mortar Board. This year a grade point average of 1.92 was required.
For several years Mortar Board was a secret organization. They carried on projects anonymously and announced membership in the spring of their senior year. In 1929 they revealed membership at freshman initiation ceremonies in the fall of their senior year. In recent years the new members have been recognized at the honors convocation in the spring of their junior year.
National Mortar Board standards require that no chapter have more than 20 or less than five members. No sorority house may be represented by more than three members.
Frances Hanna, Mary Ellen Stewart, Winifred Meyer, Barbara Becker, Dee Ann Smith. Joy Brewer, Julia Oliver, and Wanda Sammons, all college juniors; Letty Lemonn, journalism junior, and Mary Ann Kaaz, business junior.
The 1954-54 members are Althea Rexroad, Peggy Jones, Marjorie Englund, Tot Powers, Jann Duchossois, Alberta Johnson, Barbara Swiser, and Mary Demeritt, all education junior's.
Miss Rexroad and Miss Hanna were chosen president and vice president for the coming year by the outgoing members.
Friday. April 30,1954
University Daily Kansau
02
HIT IT!—Keiji Tajima (left) and Sachiko Sugawa of Japan practice a Japanese dance which will be part of the Foreign Students Festival here tomorrow. Exhibitions of handicrafts, pictures, books, and other items from the foreign countries will be on display in the Union ball- room from 2:30 to 10:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Page 3
130 Foreign Students To Present Festival
One hundred thirty foreign students from 44 different countries will participate in a Foreign Student Festival in the Student Union ballroom tomorrow. $ \textcircled{1} $ ___
The festival will start at 2:30 p.m. and continue until 10:30 p.m. A program of international entertainment will be given from 8 to 9 p.m.
The purpose of the festival is to acquaint Americans with the areas of the world which are represented by KU's foreign students. A crosscut of the globe's culture can be seen in the different displays comparing the day-long exhibition.
Handmade trays of bronze from Lebanon, native jewelry made of shells from the Philippines, little Japanese dolls, Swiss cowbells and cuckoo clocks, and kitchen utensils from India will be among the exhibitions.
6 Women Students Join Home Ec Clubs
The Germans will feature "Young Germany After the War" and typical Brazilian plants can be seen in Brazil's display. The exhibition also will include photos, books, and magazines.
Many of the foreign students have received most of their display material from their embassies
Six senior girls in home economies have been initiated into the American Home Economies association and the Kansas Home Economies association, both professional organizations.
Those initiated are, Barbara Moser, LaVonne Godwin, Doris Koker, Patty Soden, Georgiana Flynn, and Dianne McFarland, all college seniors.
Thelma Iden, president of the Home Economics club, was initiated in Topeka at the recent state meeting.
in Washington, D.C., and from their home countries.
Foreign students in their native costumes will guide the visitors at the festival. Music from different countries will be played during the day.
The evening's program will feature a number of international talents. It will include a German choir, Scandinavian folk dance, French singers*, Japanese dancers, an excerpt from a Shakespearean play, a Philippines bamboo dance, a skit about Switzerland, dances from Chile, Venezuela dances, and a Vienna waltz.
The festival is the first of its kind on the campus and has been planned for about two months. Six graduate students have been working on the committee. They are Imtiaz Khan, Pakistan, Sirpa Tomari, Finland, Herbert Kisler, Austria, Heliton Haydt, Brazil, and Lakshmanan Neelakantan, India. William Butler, assistant dean of men, and assistant foreign student adviser, has cooperated with the student group.
at Harzfeld's the DUSTER-RAINCOAT with
the pixie cap.
In Beige, Pink and Navy $1095
AUFS Specialist To Lecture On Far East
A specialist on the Philippines who returns from a year of study in areas of the Far East will be the fourth member of the American Universities Field Staff to give a series of lectures to University classes.
Albert Ravenhot begins Monday a ten-day schedule in which he will speak to students about Far Eastern affairs he has been observing since the beginning of World War II. In 1933 he lived and worked primarily in the Philippines, but he also visited Hong Kong and Formosa.
The speaker visited the University during the initial stages of the AUFS program in 1951. Having spent his early years on a Wisconsin farm, he served as a war correspondent in China, Burma, India, Indochina, and the Philippines throughout World War II. After returning to the United States in 1946, he became associated with the Institute of Current World Affairs.
Mr. Ravenholt took a year of advanced studies in Far Eastern affairs at Harvard university as an Institute associate. He returned to China in August 1948 just at the time that rapid changes took place in Chinese society as the civil war there approached a climax. His work took him to Formosa, seat of the Chinese National government, Hong Kong, and the Philippines before he returned to the U.S. in 1950.
Weaving Conclave Opens on Campus
About 55 persons attended the first conference for Beginning and Advanced Weavers in the Student Union today.
The conference will continue through tomorrow, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, design department, and University Extension.
Several University faculty members are on the program as lecturers and demonstrators. They include Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts; Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design; Miss Betsy Swigart, instructor in design; Miss Marjorie Whitney, professor of design; Dr Edward Maser, curator of the Museum of Art; Miss Helen Ladd, reference librarian in Watson library; Miss Evelyn DeGraw, assistant professor of design, and Miss Ruth Franzen, textiles instructor in home economics.
Program chairman is Miss Virginia Moreno, graduate student from the Philippines.
There is no charge for the festival.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 30, 1954
KU to Meet Missouri In 2 Baseball Games
Coach Floyd Temple's KU baseball team faces its toughest test of the season when it meets Coach Hi Simmons Missouri Tigers in Columbia today and tomorrow.
KU stands in third place in the conference with a record of three victories and two defeats behind Kansas State with a record of two victories and one defeat and Oklahoma with two victories and no defeats.
This series could go a long ways toward determining the final place Kansas will occupy in the Big Seven race. A defeat would almost eliminate any chance for a title, but a sweep of the series would leave KU in a contending position.
Missouri has played only two conference games so far having split with Iowa State. The Tigers finished in third place in the conference last season with a record of nine victories and five defeats and have nine lettermen returning from that team.
The Tigers have an infield consisting of veterans Bob Schoonmaker at first base, Buddy Cox at second base, and Dick Dickinson at short stop. Sophomore Todd Sickel is at third base. Three lettermen patrol the Tiger outfield. Jim Doerr is in left field, Jerry Schoonmaker is in center field, and Vic Swenholt is in right field. Two sophomores Sam Sayers and Bob Musgrave have also broken into the lineup in right and left field respectively.
Missouri has one pitcher who won a letter last season. That is George Beckmann, and the rest of the staff is composed of sophomores. Emil Kammer and Norm Stewart have proved to be the most consistent of the newcomers and have done considerable pitching for Missouri this season.
Of the returning lettermen only one hit over .300 last year, and that was Jerry Schoonmaker who hit .315 and batted in 17 runs.
Coach Temple will probably start John Brose in the game today, and either Bob Shirley or Wayne Tiemeier tomorrow. Broshe has won two games and lost one in conference play, Shirley has won one and lost one, and Tiemeier hasn't figured in a decision in Big Seven games.
The Kansas team will have its regular lineup of John Trombold at first base, Bill Pulliam at second base, Punky Hoglund at third base, Harold Bergsten at short stop, John Perry in left field, Bob Allison in center field, Bob Conn in right field and Don Aungst catching.
KANSAS BATTING AVERAGES
AB H Pct PO A E O
Kaak 1 1 1.000 1 1 0
Aak 1 1 1.000 1 1 0
Mattin 2 5 250 1 0 0
Martin 2 5 400 1 0 0
Brose 13 3 584 9 8 1
Shirley 13 3 533 9 8 1
Shirley 13 3 533 9 8 1
Allison 43 14 326 36 40 4
Allison 78 2 896 13 14 3
Trombold 44 13 295 79 9 0
Trombold 80 3 896 13 14 3
Hekst 36 8 286 13 20 0
Tiemier 8 2 250 3 5 0
Coun 6 8 214 10 0 0
Coun 42 8 194 10 0 0
Bair 6 1 166 0 0 0
Aungst 42 5 119 65 18 2
Bergsten 28 2 071 17 20 1
Bergsten 32 0 000 17 0 1
Wogan 1 0 000 17 0 1
Sedgman, Budge May Meet Two Panchos
Cleveland, Ohio —(U.P.)— Frank Sedgman of Australia and Don Budge were favored today to win quarter-final matches in the World Professional tennis championships tonight and advance to semi-finals berths against the two Panchos—Segura and Gonzales.
Sedgman is matched against Frank Kovaes, the "clown prince" of pro tennis from Oakland, Calif., with the winner to qualify to meet Segura. Budge faces Carl Earn of Hollywood for the right to play Gonzales.
KU Scrimmage Set for Tomorrow
Head football Coach Chuck Mather will put his 60-man squad through their second Saturday-afternoon scrimmage in Memorial stadium at 3 p. tomorrow.
An intra-squad quarterback contest is in store for the scrimmage with Mather convinced that the fight for that position will continue until next September.
Current leaders in the competition are John McFarland, sophomore starter last season, Dick Sandifer and Bev Buller.
Only two first-year men are in the race for a backfield position. Starting with a squad of about 86. Mother has already cut squad numbers to about 60.
Ted Rodhe, former Army footballer, and Blaine Hollinger, pint-sized fullback prospect, are the two surviving rookies. Robhde is testing a knee operation following a mid-season injury last year, and is showing promise as a kicker and runner. Hollinger is also a basketball and track prospect and according to Mather, he can run, play pass defense, and learns football quickly. He has been working out at fullback, where Mather frequently stations his best runner.
Mather can fill other backfield spots with last season regulars and still have a surplus. Ralph Moody, Bob Conn, Bob Allison, and Don Hess are included among the most promising returnees.
Mather said he was pleased so far with the teams' overall hustle, "I am encouraged by the fact we are going to possess decent team speed," he said.
N.Y.
Professional Prospect? John Trombold, first baseman and leading homerun hitter on the Jayhawk baseball team, also leads the team in the runs-batted-in department with 13, and his batting average is a healthy .295.
Golfers Down I-State,11 $ ^{1 / 2}-^{1 / 2} $
Coach Donn Everrett's golf team downed the defending Big Seven champion Iowa State Cyclones 11½-¾ here yesterday. Iowa State won the Big Seven tournament last year and had all four men returning this year.
Bob Richards was under par for the second straight day. Yesterday he shot a 70, two under par, and Wednesday he tied the course record with a 68. Harlan Hise was next low yesterday with a 72.
The KU golf team has not lost a match to a conference team this year. It has beaten Kansas State and Nebraska in addition to Iowa State. The Big Seven tournament on May 21-22 at Boulder, Colo., will decide the championship. KU has an overall record of eight victories and two defeats.
The results:
Richards def. Dan Molyneau 3-0
Hise def. John McGuiness 3-0
John Prosser def. Don Platt 2½-1
Pete Rush def. Don Weber 3-1
21 Horses to Run in Derby
Louisville, Ky.—(U.P.)-The richest Kentucky Derby of them all loomed today for tomorrow's 80th annual running with 21 probables still listed in the field as the entry box opened.
While the advance forecast called for rain and a muddy track, the
Should the names of all 21 be dropped in the box between 7 and 10 a.m. (CDT), it will mean the net value to the winner will be 35. The winner for Derby winsings was set by Cont Turf in 1951 when he picked up $88,050. Even if only 10 of the 14 probables go into the starting gate on Saturday, there will be a new money winning Derby record because the net still would be $88,800.
However, the owners and trainers have until 45 minutes before Derby post time of 5:30 p.m. (EDT) to withdraw. Chances are that a lot of them will wait until the last minute, waiting to see how the track will be.
Track conditions will decide whether all of the 21 go. But it appeared certain that the owners of all those three-year-olds would drop entries into the box. That action calls for a $250 fee; then if they start on Saturday, there is an additional fee of $750.
newest weather prediction said the rain would stop Friday night with clear and cool weather for Saturday. If that is the case, the track should be fast, for Churchill Downs dries quickly.
With 21 probables still in the running, Correlation was quoted as a 5-2 favorite. The winner of the Wood Memorial last Saturday had been quoted at 2-1 in the first Derby odds line.
Goyamo, the Blue Grass Stakes winner, was the second choice in the betting odds at 7-2 followed by Determine, and his stablemate Allied at 5-1. Fisherman, second to Correlation in the Wood, was quoted at 6-1 and then came Hasty Road, who won the Derby trial Tuesday, and his running mate Sea O Erin, at 8-1.
Only the fact that the field may be so large dropped his odds. For when more than a dozen or so horses go for a mile and a quarter racing luck often plays a big part in the picture.
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Roberts Pitches One-Hitter Phillies Beat Braves, 4-0
Robin Roberts took drastic action to combat the batting slump of the Philadelphia Phillies. They weren't getting him any runs so he decided not to give the opposition any hits and he almost succeeded.
Rv UNITED PRESS
Last night at Milwaukee he hurled the third one-hitter of the season, yielding only a double to Del Crandall in the third inning and beating ace lefty Warren Spaln in a pitching battle, 4-0.
Roberts no wha beaten the Braves nine straight times, losing to them last on Aug. 14, 1951. A double by Stan Lopata and a single by Willie Jones gave the Phils the only run Roberts needed in the third but they picked up three more and kayoed Spahn in the sixth on a walk, singles by Del Ennis, Gran Hammer, and Lopata, an error and Mel Clark's fly.
Roberts realized that, if things were like they had been previously, it would take such a superlative effort to win. In 36 innings this spring he has been scored on only in two, but he still lost two games. Last Saturday against the Giants he lost 1-0 when Whitey Lockman sliced a wrong-field homer. And on opening day in Pittsburgh he lost when the Pirates scored all of their four runs in the eighth inning. His only victories were shutouts, 6-0 against the same Pirates and the one-hitter last night.
The ex-Michigan State college bonus star let only four Milwaukee men reach base, the other three on walks, and he struck out six.
Brooklyn outshugged Cincinnati, 7-5, getting five homers, while Pittsburgh defeated St. Louis 4-3, while in the American league the Yankees topped the White Sox, 5-4. Cleveland defeated Boston 6-3, and Baltimore edged Washington 2-1. The other teams had open dates.
The Dodgers pounded five homers, three in the sixth innning, off lefty Harry Perkowski as Carl Erskine gained his second victory with relief help from Jim Hughes in the ninth. Junior Gilliam hit homers in the fourth and sixth innings, giving him a total of four for the year. He hit only six all last season. Duke Snider hit a first inning homer and Dick Williams and Peewee Reese also homered in the sixth. Cincy pitchers now have yielded 31 homers in 15 games.
Dick Cole lashed a two-run single with the bases loaded in the ninth to give Pittsburgh its victory over the Cardinals despite 13 strikeouts by loser Harvey Haddix. Rookie Bob Purkey, with relief help from John Hetki gained his first win. Ray Jablonski hit a Cardinal homer.
Bob Turley struck out nine and gave up only five hits, one a homer
by Roy Sievers, in Baltimore's triumph. It was his first start since he lost a near no-hitter last week to Cleveland on a two-run Larry Doby homer in the ninth. Mickey McDermott also gave up only five hits but wild-pitched home one of Baltimore's two runs in the second. Turley walked eight and hit one batter.
The Yankees cashed in on pinch-singles by their expensive bench men, Enos Slaughter and Ed Robinson to score two runs in the sixth and give lefty Ed Lopat an epocal victory, his 100th as a Yankee, his 150th as a big leaguer. However, Allie Reynolds had to fire three hitless innings, striking out four to save the day after Lopat went out for Slaughter.
Mike Garcia gained his first victory, a six hitter, striking out eight at Boston. Wally Westlake with three singles drove in two runs and Al Rosen with two singles drove in three while Dave Philley homered for the sixth Tribe tally.
5 Teams Win Games In Women's Softball
Sellards, Gamma Phi's, Kappa's Pi Phi's, and North College won second division softball games this week.
Sellards won Monday by a Sigma Kappa forfeit. The Gamma Phi's defeated AD Pi 14-3. Miller-Watkins forfeited Wednesday to the Kappa's and Pi Beta Phi won over the AD Pi's 36-20. In yesterday's game, DeltaGamma lost to North College. 7-16.
Favorite Billy Joe Patton moved into the semi-final round of the North and South Amateur Golf championship by defeating William Hyndman yesterday.
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Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By JACK LINDBERG
The old expression "Die for dear old Rutgers," the code the college athletics used to live by, seems to have disappeared, just like the nickel beer and five-cent cigar.
Many athletes today participate in collegiate sports primarily for what they can get out of it, not for the spirit of play, sportsmanship, team work, and the benefits the school receives.
A high school athlete with any merit at all, receives offers from schools all over the state and region. These offers can range from scholarships, to room and board, actual financial payments. In turn, the athlete gives two or three hours of his time each day during the practice season, and probably a little more during the playing season. Is he working for himself, or is he working for his school?
Recently we have had a couple of cases where the athlete was working for himself. At Rio Grande, the now famous little college in Ohio, Clarence "Bevo" Francis, got everything from the school that he could, and then for reasons not known to most of us, he says financial, the school says scholastic, dropped out to split $30,000 a year with his promoter, Coach Newt Oliver.
And then we have a case a little closer to home. Harold Patterson, an excellent athlete in all sports, stayed in school as long as the University could do something for him, and then he dropped out. Clyde Lovellette, an all-American basketball player at the University, used his three years of collegiate eligibility and moved on. He didn't want to finish his scholastic requirements of graduate. Why did he spend four years here if he didn't want a degree?
The University spends more time and money on sports than all the athletes put together, and then they show their appreciation by dropping out. The sports program at this and other schools seems to be working in the wrong direction in these instances.
Some sort of house cleaning needs to be made. The University of Chicago dropped out of collegiate sports, but that is not the solutoin, far from it. If the University did not make some sort of financial arrangement with the players, this school would not be able to compete with the other conference schools.
There must be some place to draw the line, and it sure would be a feather in someone's cap, if he could figure out just where to draw it.
A "frow" was a tool used by early American settlers to split or rive the boards.
With Wes Sanee's attempt to break the American and world record in the half-mile as the feature attraction, the Kansas track team will compete with Kansas State in a dual meet at Manhattan tomorrow.
Santee to Shoot For 880 Record In K-State Dual
The world half-mile record is 1:48.6 held by Mal Whitfield, and the American record is 1:49.8 held by Ed Burrowes of Princeton. Santee has been under Burrowes time four times in relay carries and once in an open half. He also went three-tenths of a second under Whitfield's mark with a 1:48.3 carry in the sprint medley relay at the Texas Relays.
Even without five men who were suspended from the team indefinitely, the Thursday night before the Drake Relays, the Jayhawkers figure to take the meet easily.
If Santee can break this mark tomorrow, he will try to break the two mile record of 8:58.3 in a dual meet with Drake here next week. The record in the two mile was set by Don Lash in 1936.
Since Santee will be attempting to set a new 880 record he won't run the mile tomorrow. This will mean that the remaining distance power will have to be divided between the mile and two mile. Art Dalzell, Dick Wilson, Lloyd Kbby, Tom Rupp, and Al Frame will run these races with at least one, probably Dalzell, being called on to double in the 880.
This will be, if Kansas wins, the 45th consecutive victory over conference rivals in a string that includes duals, triangulars, and conference meets in cross country, indoor, and outdoor track. It also will be the eighth straight victory over Kansas State.
One of the best races of the day should be the 100-yard dash where Dick Blair will be running against Jerry Mershon of Kansas State. Blair ran a :09.6 time in the preliminaries in the Kansas Relays and has been consistently under :10. Mershon has run the distance in :09.8, and has broken at least two of Thane Baker's records in the 100 and 220.
Page 5
Kermit Hollingsworth figures to score in the high jump, probably with a first place, and Frank Cindrich in the 440. Another sure winner for Kansas should be Bill Biberstein in the hurdles.
Members of Iran's numerous physical fitness clubs exercise four hours a day, six days a week while a drummer beats time and recites poetry. The tradition of these clubs, called "Houses of Strength," goes back some seven centuries.
Dogs and turkeys were the only domesticated animals in North America at the time Columbus discovered the New World.
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Friday, April 30, 1954
Fossils Creak, Groan But Top AFROTC, 4-3
Kansan Sports Writer
University Daily Ransan
By JIM CAMERON
The Faculty Fossils creaked and groaned for seven innings to win a narrow decision over the AFROTC team 4-3. John Reardon was the big gun for the winners with a home run that provided the winning margin and a double. Bill Conboy pitched a two-hitter and walked only two as he took the win. Dave Stein gave up eight hits and four walks as he took the loss.
841 Mass.
In an abbreviated game, Physics won over KHK 30-5. The game lasted only two and one-half innings as the winners scored 22 runs in the second inning and eight in the third. Dan Ling got credit for the win and Carl Cole was the loser.
The Faculty Fossils, Physics, and Army won games in Independent "A" league last night. Fraternity and Independent second round play ends this evening.
The other game had Army winning over Mox 4-3 in nine innings, two over the regulation. Jim Powell, the winning pitcher, gave up eight hits and one walk while his team mates were collecting fifteen hits off losing pitcher John Gernon. Powell also got a home run in the fifth inning to provide his own margin of victory.
INTRAMURAL SCHEDULE
CURRIDAN
Men's Apparel
Fraternity "A"
4.00 Field 1 SAE-Theta Chi
4.00 Field Independent "A"
4.00 Field 2 Pearson-Pattinfeld
4.00 Field 3 Mike Men-Don Henry
SATURDAY
Fraternity "A"
2.00 Field 2 Phi Psi-DU
2.00 Field 3 Sig-PK Tau
2.00 Field G1 Sigma Chi-Sigma Nu
2.00 Field G1 ATO-Delts
2.00 Field G2 TKE-Phi Kappa
2.30 Field 3 Delta Chi-Beta
2.30 Field G2 AFROTC "A"-69ers
2.30 Field 1 Shackers-UVO
2.30 Field 2 Sterling Olver-Jolliffe
SIDAY
Fraternity "A"
2.00 Field G1 SAE-Lambda Chi
2.00 Field G2 Theta Chi-A. Phi Alpha
2.00 Field 1 Triangle-Phi Gam
Induktion "A"
2.00 Field 1 Pearson-Don Henry
2.00 Field 2 Battenfield-Army
Plans for Saturday's play day were completed at the Women's Athletic association meeting yesterday in Robinson. The annual sports event is expected to draw 120 girls from surrounding high schools.
Plans Completed For WAA Event
Registration will begin at 9 a.m.
After a group mixer, each team
will play a game of volleyball,
basketball, and softball. Awards
for the highest scores of the day
will be presented in the afternoon.
Lunch will be served in Robinson gymnasium. Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, and Quack club will each present an act.
High schools which will be represented are Wyndotte, Rosedale, Lawrence, Haskell, Paola, Topeka, Leavenworth, and Atchison.
Plucky Pal Dies in Race
San Mateo, Calif. —(U.P.)—Plucky Pal, a three-year-old son of Black Badge, collapsed in the stretch at Bay Meadows yesterday and died during the running of the first race. The horse apparently suffered a hemorrhage of the lungs and died almost instantly. While running second, he crashed into the fence and then topped over the rail. Jockey Merlin, Wolzke escaped serious injury although he was shaken up.
2:00 Field 3 Nine Old Men-Mox
2:30 Field G2 AFROTC "B"-Stephenson Fraternity "B"
3:30 Field 2 ATO-DU
3:30 Field 3 Phi D.T.-Kappa Sig
3:30 Field G1 Delts-Sigma Chi
92 professional golfers will tee-off this afternoon in the $10,000 San Francisco open.
Tennis Team TopsCyclones For 8th Win
The KU tennis team defeated a visiting Iowa State state yesterday 6-1 to give Kansas its fifth straight victory.
The Jayhawker tennis squad now has a 4-1 record against conference teams, and a season record of eight wins and one loss. Only one match in yesterday's tennis stretched into three sets.
The results:
Al Hedstrom, K, defeated Paul
Moltown 1,6-2 6-1
Roger Youmans K, defeated Lowell Burford, I, 6-8, 1-6, 1-1.
Dick Hadley, K, defeated Tom Earl. I, 6-2, 6-2.
Roger Yountain well Burford, I, 6-8, 6-1, 6-1.
Merl Sellers, K, defeated Ted Hampe, I, 6-2, 9-7.
Ron Sley, K, defeated Don Franklin, I, 6-2, 6-4.
Hedstrom and Hadley, K, defeated Earl and Burford, I, 6-2, 6-4. Sellers and Youmans, K, defeated Mattson and Hampe, I, 9-7, 6-4.
Rosi Favored in Bout
New York —(U.P.)— The odds-makers defy the ratings-makingtons tonight when hard-slugging Paolo Rosi of Italy steps into the ring an 8-5 favorite to beat Orlando Zulueta of Cuba in a nationally-televised 10-round lightweight scrap.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 30, 1954
On Capitol Hill—
Senate Starts Draft Of New Housing Bill
Washington—U.P.—The Senate Banking committee was ready to start drafting the administration's new housing bill today after completing a "preliminary" investigation of the housing scandals.
Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind.) chairman of the committee, said he was opposed to an administration proposal to liberalize the home improvement loan insurance program—one target of the investigation And he said he has a "big doubt" about another proposal to provide housing for low income families
But indications mounted that disclosures of alleged wrong-doing in the Federal Housing administration would hurt President Eisenhower's housing program.
Other congressional developments:
Other congressional developments:
Defense — The administration claimed a victory in the defeat yesterday of a proposal that would have prevented President Eisenhower from sending U. troops to Indochina without congressional consent. The proposal introduced as an amendment to the "new look" defense appropriation bill, was defeated. The House went on to approve the defense money bill 377 to 0.
Seaway—Rep. Charles B. Brownson (R-Ind.) said about 195 to 200 of the 435 House members tentatively plan to vote against federal financing of the St. Lawrence Seaway project when the showdown votes come next Thursday. He said his amendment to require the project to be financed through sale of bonds to the public is gaining strength and that the final outcome now looks like a "toss-up."
Taft-Hartley—Senate Republicans scheduled a closed-door meeting to map strategy for next week's battle over amendments to the Taft-Hartley labor law. The amendments were approved by the Senate Labor committee on a straight party line vote.
The Kansan can be a Daily Letter!
ASCE Meeting Now in Progress
The tenth annual mid-continent conference of student chapters of the American Society of Civil Engineers is in its second day today with the conference windup tomorrow.
The Rev. Dale Turner of the Congregational church spoke at the opening banquet last night, and Prof. D. H. Daines, student chapter ASCE advisor, welcomed the approximately 50 visitors from about 10 schools.
A. C. Little, president of the mid-continent conference, presided at today's sessions at which student chapter reports were read and committee appointments were made.
Prof. G. W. Bradshaw, chairman of the department of civil engineers, spoke at the luncheon meeting today
W. R. Gibbs of Black and Veatch consulting engineers of Kansas City spoke at 3:30 p.m. today on "Your Future in Civil Engineering."
Jerry Friesen from Kansas State college, will preside at a dinner meeting today at which R. N. Bergendoff, consulting engineer of Kansas City, will speak on the topic, "Toll Highways."
A business meeting and election of officers will conclude the conference tomorrow morning.
Abraham Lincoln has been pictured on 12 U.S. postage stamps.
Five graduate students and 59 education seniors recently completed their seven weeks of student teaching in Kansas public schools, the School of Education announced today.
Here's To Your Good Health
A MUG WITH A BOW TIE
And Good Health Is Yours If You Drink Your Quota Of Fresh Milk Every Day.
All students in the School of Education are required to do seven weeks of student teaching before receiving a degree in education.
Graduate students who did supervisory work in small high schools are Charles Brady, Richard Hunder, Dale Hobson, Robert Randel and Floyd Scritchfield.
Try Milk When You Take A "Study Break" You'll Gain Big Dividends In Greater Energy, Calmer Nerves And Better Health.
Five Graduates, 59 Students End Teaching Stint
Seniors in physical education are Nancy Alexander, Charlotte Brokbs, Patricia Garrett, Leslie Hallmark, Morris Kay, Robert McMullen, George Mrkonic, Donald Muir, Susan Perry, Oliver Spencer, Jerry Taylor, Billy Todd, Carolyn Wahlberg, Walter Way, and Frank Wolf.
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Golden Crest Dairy
In elementary education are Iris Barsby, Donna Brandt, Ellison Brent, Sidonie Brown, Nancy Canary, Lois Clough, Anne Conway, Rosemary Gench, Joyce Lundry, Patricia Roney, JoAnn Smith, Janet Stewart, Marjean Sullivan, Durian Swaffer, Dorothy Wandling, Sherry Wilson, Joyce Laybour, and Dorothy Phelps.
In language arts are Marjie Bookwalter, Joan Carter, Janet Joseph, Mary Knight, Mary Anne Ogelvie, and Georgann Vandenberg.
In mathematics are Dorothy Brown and Shirley Smith. In social studies are Marilyn Button, Joyce Cazier, Diane Gard, Richard Howard, Frederick Howes, and Jean Scupin. In music are Erleta Co-
valt, Rosanne Drake, Nina Kay Newman, Mary Beth Shearer, and Christine Wiley.
In science are Dwight Engelland, DuWayne Englert, and Marilyn Sweet. In home economies are Thelma Iden and Thela Vaughn. Patricia Clem is in art, and David Johnson in Spanish.
Coal chemicals produced in 1953
totalled about $388 million in value.
Cops Just Kids at Heart
Yonkers, N.Y.—(U.P.)-John Talk received a letter from Traffic Control Director Saul J. Allen yesterday, returning a $5 check Mr Tallon had sent for a parking violation. Mr. Allen explained in his letter that Mr. Tallon's car had been tagged by children playing policeman with junior officers police kits.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Women Make Puppets in Art Methods Class
By NANCY NEVILLE
Everything from "chore boys" to buttons go into making puppets, the students in elementary education are finding out in their art methods class, taught by Miss Lorita Pendleton, instructor in art education.
Puppets with facial expressions made of buttons and beads, hair made of wood shavings and chore boys, and bodies of almost every kind of material are displayed in room 322 and outside the door on the third floor of the west end of Strong hall. Made in Miss Pendleton's class, they comprise one of the year's projects of the course.
Each student thought of his own puppet character, which could be either a person or animal. Various scrap materials were used.
Ten students in the class presented their puppets in a recent show before the children of the faculty members.
Beverly Brand, college sophomore made a clown; Sally Allen, college sophomore, an opera singer; Jean Gordon, education junior, and Joleen Manning, college sophomore, toyshop characters; Peggy Jones, education junior, a symphony conductor; Barbara Norrie, college sophomore, Little Red Riding Hood; and Sonya Hubbard. Dorothy Brunn, Susan Montgomery, college sophomores, and Joan Worthington, education junior, made Little Women puppets.
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
ENDS TONITE
ENDS TONITE
"SALOME, WHERE SHE
DANCED"
with Yvonne DeCarlo
SUNDAY - MONDAY
MARY O'SHE
MAIN
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MR. MALONE"
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Sunset
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Paul KELLY
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GUNSMOKE
ARTS OF TECHNICOLOR
Audio MURPHY Susan CABOT
Film KELLY
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FLESH and FURY TONY CURTIS MAN STERLING - MONA FREEHMAN
FLESH and
FURY TONY
CURTIS
MAIN STERLING- MONA FREEMAN
MIDNITE SHOW
SATURDAY
BORIS KARLOFF in
" NIGHT KEY "
Sunday & Monday
DAMON RUNYON'S The LEMON DROP KID starring BOB HOPE A Paramount Picture
"The projects during the year are hose which the students can use in their own teaching." Miss Pendleton explained.
"Puppet making can fulfill many needs for a small child besides provide a leisure time activity. It can help overcome physical handicaps, release tensions, and enable the child to express himself."
"We believe that children grow through art, and so study the stages of the child's development in his art work and experiment with different art media." Miss Pendleton said.
Dr. Wright Talks At Psychology Clinic
Dr. Beatrice A. Wright, research associate in psychology spoke at the International council of exceptional children meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio, this week.'
Dr. Wright, who has been writing a book with Dr. Roger Barker, professor of psychology, on rehabilitation and psychological adjustment problems of the physically handicapped, will be a guest at several major rehabilitation centers in Cincinnati and Chicago before her return to Lawrence.
Book Lecture Set for Fall
Peter Murray Hill, an antiquarian bookseller from London, will give the second annual public lecture on books and bibliography, here in October, 1954. The subject of his talk will be "Two Augustan Book-sellers—John Dunton and Edmund Curl."
The Kansan can be a Daily Letter!
As a bookseller, Mr. Hill is well known for his scholarly catalogs which specialize in English literature before 1850. At present he is a member of the executive committee of the Antiquarian Booksellers association.
He is a graduate of the Westminster school and of Trinity college, Cambridge. Until 1948 he divided his interests between bookselling and the theater. As an actor he appeared with many repertory companies throughout Great Britain, playing everything from "Old Heidleberr" to Hamlet."
He has been particularly identified with the role of Captain Hook in "Peter Pan" in which he replaced Charles Laughton in 1837, and which he revived ten years later with his wife, motion picture star Phyllis Calvert, in the role of Peter.
The first in this series of lectures was given in April, 1953, by Elmer Adler of Princeton university.
Alfred Sim, special student in the school of business, who was injured in a car wreck near Columbia, Mo. last week Wednesday was transferred to Watkins hospital. He is reported in fair condition by hospital authorities.
Sim Moved to Watkins
Friday, April 30, 1954
Eden Breaks Social Boycott Against Peiping at Geneva
Around the World—
By UNITED PRESS
Britain's Anthony Eden accepted a Soviet invitation to lunch with Red China's Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai today, breaking the West's social boycott against the Peipin at the Geneva conference.
Mr. Molotov was not obliged to resort to delicate diplomacy in inviting Mr. Eden to hobnob with Chou because Britain alone among the big western powers has recognized Red China.
The handsome British foreign secretary, considered the logical successor to Prime Minister Winston Churchill, received an invitation from Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov to meet Chou.
For several days Mr. Molotov has said the Peiping government is the true representative of China's millions and should be recognized as such.
But U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles has given no indication he even knows Chou and the Chinese delegation are in Geneva.
mr. Dulles has not spoken to Chou since the conference started Monday and on several occasions has turned in head to avoid having
Other international developments:
Hanoi - French commandos at
Dien Bien Phu attacked Communist
CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST AND FOUND
TRANSPORTATION
BLUE PEN north of Chi Omega circle
the ad is Akans Business Office.
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Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines. Business and pleasure ship lines. Tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature your Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1013 Mass. **tf** 3661
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TYPIST, experienced in all kinds of studios. Véquest, 1917. Barker Ave. Ph. 2589J, tl
(AYHAWKER) Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet leid. Their needs are our business for fun, gifts for friends, and products for pets, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CABINET-MAKER AND REFINISHER:
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TYPIST: Experienced in tneses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1368M. MWF-tt
BVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, G16 Vt. tf
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75c $1.00
FOR SALE
additional words in the order of the ones offered are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in person or by a phone call (either at saturday) or brought to the University Daily Daily Business office, Journals, and Public Affairs, 8:45 p.m., the tax before publication date.
--machine gun nests at several points in the enemy area surrounding the fortress.
HOT ROD. '36 Ford coupe, 2-speed rear end. Hydroraulic brakes, 10 h.p. engine, headers and duals. Upholstery and molds. Must sell. Call 1412R. 4-30 Mass.
MacGREGOR TOURNEYS, complete set of 4 woods. Reasonable price. See at University Shop or call Al Hack at 715 or 325JQ. 5-2
For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified.
Comfort Conventional JAYHAWKER CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW thru SAT.
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London — —The British Board of Trade announced that its ban on exporting rubber to Russia and eastern Europe will end Monday. A spokesman said the ban was no longer necessary because the Iron Curtain countries have all the rubber they need.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 30, 1954
Editorial Meet to Host Visiting Newsmen
Awards to Be Given at Business Fete
Editors from Kansas and six neighboring states have been invited to participate in the second annual William Allen White Editorial conference May 15.
sistant dean of the School of Business, will present the awards.
Five awards will be given to outstanding students in the School of Business at the annual Business school day and picnic Wednesday. Picnic festivities will start at 10 a.m. and last until mid-afternoon. A lunch at noon, softball, and the awards will highlight the day's activities. Jack Heysinger, as-
The Alpha Kappa Psi, Delta Sigma Pi, and Phi Chi Theta scholarship keys will be awarded at the picnic. Other awards will be the Wall Street Journal award and the Chi Omega award to the outstanding senior woman in the School of Business.
Tickets may be purchased at the School of Business office.
Portsmouth harbor on the south coast of England has known warships for 16 centuries. Roman galleys, the "long" ships of Saxon raiders, and British fleets have found shelter there.
V. M. Newton, Jr. managing edi- of the Tampa (Fla.) Tribune, will be keynote speaker. Mr. Newton is also chairman of the Sigma Delta Chi committee on advancement of freedom of information.
This announcement was made by Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism and director of the William Allen White foundation, who said that theme for the 1854 conference is "Newspaper Responsibility and the People's Right to Know." The Editorial Conference was started by the foundation to bring more attention to the newspaper editorial, a field in which Mr. White excelled Dean Marvin said.
For the second year, the foundation will award a total of $50 in prize money to the students writing the best three editorsials published in the University Daily Kansan in the 1953-54 school year.
Others taking part in the program include Alvin S. McCoy, Kansas correspondent for the Kansas City Star and past president of the foundation, who will discuss secret committee meetings of the Kansas legislature. Following the luncheon Whitley Austin, editor of the Salina Journal, and State Senator John Anderson Jr., of Olathe, will assist Mr. McCoy in a panel discussion on committee secrecy in the Kansas Legislature.
A second panel discussion will deal with the subject of full news coverage of local governmental bodies, such as school boards, city councils or any other agency. John Chandler, editor of the Holton Recorder and James Leitnaker of the Baldwin Ledger, will work together in leading this part of the program.
Mr. Newton, after graduation from the University of Florida in 1926, started to work as reporter and sports editor of the Tampa Daily Times and moved to the Tampa Tribune in 1930 as sports editor. He has been managing editor of the Tribune since 1943. While at the University of Florida, Mr. Newton played on the varsity basketball squad three years.
A member of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, Mr. Newton addressed that group at the conventions in 1952 and '73 on the subject of freedom of information. He has also spoken to meetings of publishers in Pennsylvania, Texas, Georgia, and Florida on the same subject. He spoke on government propaganda at the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi in 1952 in Denver.
The annual Kansan Board Dinner is scheduled for the evening of May 15, when Doris Fleeson, Washington columist, is to be guest speaker. Miss Fleeson is a native of Sterling and was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1923. She is to receive the distinguished service citation of the KU Alumni association. The Kansan Board dinner is an annual event of the William Allen White School of Journalism when outstanding students are given recognition for work during the year. Both the Editorial conference and the Kansan Board dinner will be in the Student Union.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Sociology club coffee. 4 p.m., 17
fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
and his Contribution to Anthropology
and his Contribution to Anthropology
Hiliel. Foundation service, 7:30 p.m.
Danforth chapel.
TOMORROW
Alpha Phi Omega meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Oread room, Union. Pledge ceremonies
and officers installation. All activities,
and prospective pledges be present.
Ph.D. French reading examination
Saturday 9-11 in 102 Strong Turn in books to Miss Craig. 109 Strong, by noon
Thursday.
Student Religious council, 4 p.m.
Moore hall
TUESDAY
ISA Picnic and patio dance, 5:30 p.m.
cash lake. Admission is ISA membership.
cash fee
MONDAY
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