Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 53
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957
Mitchell Is New KU Coach, Gets $15,000 Yearly
By GEORGE ANTHAN (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
It took the University and Jack Mitchell only five weeks to get together.
KU named University of Arkansas' Mitchell its 28th football coach last Thursday and gave him a 5-year contract at $15,000 a year.
Mr. Mitchell and four of his assistants, Gene Corrotta, former KU assistant under Jules Sikes, George Bernhardt, former Washington assistant, Dixie White, and Bill Pace, arrived in Lawrence at noon today.
Another assistant, Steed White, did not make the trip and Mitchell said it still had not been decided whether he would join the KU staff. Steed White joined the Arkansas staff this fall after coaching at Fort Smith and Little Rock Central High Schools in Arkansas.
Look for Housing
Mr. Mitchell said the immediate problem for the staff was to find housing for their families. After that, he said some of the staff will make a tour around the state to lay the groundwork for recruiting. The new coach said he is anxious to meet the KU team and hopes to hold a squad meeting later this week. The new coaching staff hopes to be installed in the football offices by next week.
The announcement came from the chancellor's office early Thursday morning after interviews with Mr. Mitchell Wednesday and a lengthy athletic board meeting Wednesday night.
"After we get settled, we hope to start recruiting around the state. Then we'll start making plans for a spring practice," Mr. Mitchell said.
Mr. Mitchell, who was considered a top prospect for the job vacated by J. V. Sikes in 1953, has been at Arkansas since 1955. Mr. Mitchell was head coach at Wichita University in 1953 when Chuck Mather was chosen to replace Mr. Sikes.
In contrast to the long search for a coach in 1953 after Mr. Sikes resigned, there was seldom any doubt that Mr. Mitchell was the top candidate for the job this time.
"The decision to leave the fine University of Arkansas was a difficult one, for we have been happy indeed these past three years," Mr. Mitchell said.
"On the other hand we are very proud to return to our home state to join the Kansas University family."
Mr. Mitchell's hiring put to a final end the 4-year tenure of Mr. Mather under whom Kansas football fortunes started at a low ebb but continued to climb until KU reached second place in the conference and Mr. Mather was named the Big Eight's coach of the year by the United Press.
Mr. Mitchell, who will be 33 Tuesday, signed a 10-year, $15,000 a year contract last year at Arkansas and in coming to Kansas clearly indicated that salary was not the main consideration with him.
Oklahoma All-America
Mr. Mitchell was an all-America quarterback at Oklahoma. After graduation he coached the Blackwell, Okla. high school for one year then was an assistant coach at Texas Tech in Lubbock in 1951-52.
He became head coach at Wichita in 1953.
Mr. Mitchell was the first coach to be interviewed by athletic director A.C.Lonborg
Mr. Mitchell's hiring at the
P. P. L. S.
—(D'Ambra photo)
JACK MITCHELL
highest salary ever paid a Kansas coach (Mr. Mather received $11,000) seems to definitely stymie (for a time anyway) administration efforts to play down football here. His salary will be paid out of the athletic fund except for about $2,400 which will be paid by the state.
Reports that fringe benefits such as a TV show and radio commitments were squelched by Chancellor Murphy when he said that $15,000 was the compensation Mitchell would receive and no more. Mr. Murphy said Mitchell was Lonborg's choice and that the athletic board and the Board of Regents have unanimously approved of that choice.
Writer For Kansan Predicted Switch
The report that Jack Mitchell was interested in the Kansas coaching job was published first in The Daily Kansan Oct. 28, three days before Chuck Mather resigned. The story also predicted accurately Mitchell's salary, $15,000 per year.
The report, published in a column by Daily Kansan sports editor George Anthan said, "A new Kansas coach would reportedly be offered $15,000 per, a sum which would put him with the rest of the Big Eight coaches instead of at the tail-end.
"Arkansas' Jack Mitchell seems interested. He sees opportunities at Kansas not available at Arkansas and the Board of Regents may be interested in him."
Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Colder southwest tonight and south portion Tuesday. Low tonight 20 northwest to 25-30 elsewhere. High Tuesday 45-50.
Low this morning was 32. Low Sunday was 30, high 61. Low Saturday was 17, high 48.
Weather
Coed Dies After Jump From Hotel 5th Floor
Campus Chest Concert Tickets On Sale Today
Tickets for the Four Freshmen's concert Sunday in Hoch Auditorium went on sale in the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard this noon. They are also on sale at the Student Union ticket office.
The concert is a part of the annual Campus Chest drive which will begin solicitations Wednesday at the KU-Canisius basketball game.
About 200 solicitors are expected to attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Student Union when they will receive information and instructions about soliciting.
The winner and two runners up will be announced at intermission of the Four Freshmen's concert. The candidates were nominated by the organized women's houses where they are waiters.
Wednesday through Friday, persons may vote for Mr. Campus Chest candidates by putting money in the jar with his name on it in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
No goal has been set for this year's drive. Last year a total of $4,150 was contributed. Rebate slips will be accepted as contributions.
Register For English Exam
Registration for the English proficiency examination to be held at 2 p.m. Saturday began today and will continue through Wednesday.
Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English, said, "This is an examination in composition. The students usually write one or two papers on subjects chosen from a prepared list. The topics are general and consider majors and interests."
All students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Schools of Journalism, Education. Fine Arts, Medicine, and the department of nursing are required to take the examination before graduation.
Students who have reached junior standing may register in the office of the dean of their school. Room assignments for the test will be given at registration.
Memorial Services At 7 p.m. Today In Danforth Chapel
IFC To Nominate Officers Tonight
The election of officers will be held Dec. 16. The national conference was held in Colorado Springs, Colo. Thursday through Saturday.
Nominations for officers and reports by the National Inter-fraternity Conference delegates are scheduled for the Inter-fraternity Council meeting at 9 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Student Union.
A committee of the national conference issued a report naming 63 U. S. college campuses on which it said anti-discrimination "agitation" is practiced.
The body of Virginia Maddox, 18, Tulsa, Okla. freshman, who died at 5:50 p.m. Sunday of injuries suffered in a five story leap Saturday, will lie in state at the Cooper-Warren Chapel from 5:30-9 p.m. today.
The report criticized what it called "planned attempts to reduce Greek-letter societies to a position of importance, if not to eliminate them entirely."
The report was submitted to the general assembly comprising more than 700 college students and alumni who represent 61 national fraternities.
The report rapped the universities of Massachusetts, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington and Kansas City and Lewis and Clark college. They are schools which have announced they will not permit fraternities which prohibit membership on the basis of race, color and creed.
Conference will be given by George Smith, Lawrence junior; Bruce Rider, Wichita, Gene Paris and Stuart Gunckel, both Kansas City, Mo., all seniors.
Reasons For Drop Outs Vary
McCook Break-In To Be Investigated
Campus police officers will begin today to check with residents of McCook Hall to see if anything was stolen after a break-in Nov. 28.
This semester 284 students have quit KU for reasons varying from the dissolving of a car pool to getting married.
Sixty-five freshmen, more than from any other class, dropped. Only eight special students have left.
Officer Victor E. Elliot spotted some broken screens on the hall when he was patrolling that night. He found one window unlocked and lights on in two rooms.
Forty-five were women and 239 were men. Sixty-four of the men were in the School of Engineering and Architecture. The school hit hardest was the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences which lost 71.
The lock on the door to the television room had been broken.
The reasons listed were written by the students in a "drop book"
kept in the registrar's office.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said there is no way to be sure the reasons the students give are valid. He believes many of the students are reluctant to give the real reasons and take the easy way out by saying they are having financial trouble or that they have personal reasons
He said the reasons given are about the same as usual, with the addition of some for "illness" because of the flu outbreak this year.
Forty-seven students gave no reason for quitting. Eighteen said they had "personal reasons." Thirty said illness had made them
fall too far behind to catch up before the end of the semester. Nineteen said they were changing schools and 15 were going to work.
Two left to go into the army. Four women gave their reason for leaving as "getting married," and two said they "want to get married." One married woman quit to have a baby and another because she found it "too difficult to arrange for baby sitting."
Other reasons included, "not ready for mid-terms," "lack of prior preparation," and "the work is too difficult."
Miss Maddox died of brain injuries suffered Saturday morning in a fall from the fifth story of the Eldridge Hotel. The attending physician, Dr. Glenn A. Lessenden, said she was in a severe state of shock following the fall and never quite regained her senses.
She talked to her parents Saturday afternoon and evening but could not remember anything about the fall, the doctor said.
T. M.
MISS VIRGINIA MADDON
The doctor said Miss Maddox improved steadily until 4 a.m. Sunday when she went into a coma. She became worse about 1 p.m. Sunday, he said, and it was evident she would not survive.
Memorial Service Slated For Coed
A memorial service for Miss Maddox will be held at 7 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel, Dr. Alan Pickering, assistant director of the Westminster Foundation and associate pastor to Presbyterian students, will officiate. The Westminster Fellowship will be in charge of the services.
Miss Maddox was a member of the Presbyterian Women's Organization in which she was a member of the spiritual life committee and the prayer fellowship. She was also a member of the Presbyterian Sunday evening fellowship.
The doctor said she died of brain damage caused by a skull fracture. She also suffered a broken pelvis and multiple fractures of the legs.
She Was Found In Kansas City
Miss Maddox was found Friday at the Town House Hotel in Kansas City, Kan., after having been the subject of a wide search since Wednesday when she did not arrive in Tulsa for Thanksgiving vacation.
She had registered in a room on the fourth floor of the Eldridge with her parents about 10 p.m. Friday after returning from Kansas City.
(Continued on Page 8.)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday. Dec. 2, 1957
Jerks Of The Week
We break tradition this week and name an animal group as Jerks of the Week. We thought this over carefully. We realize that animals normally cannot present their side of the issue, but the urgency of the moment compels us to condemn these cads.
The finger of condemnation points at those shabby individuals inhabiting the uppermost reaches of Dyche Museum—the KU pigeons. Their default shall go unrecorded. Suffice it to say they have erred. To err is human, but no one has to forgive a pigeon.
And while we are on the subject, we will list several points in these scoundrels' disfavor. Their outrageous conduct runs the gamut of fowl play.
Their lack of school spirit is notorious. While the students and faculty labor within these ivy walls these rude individuals apathetically flap their way, sans-culotte, from building to building. Have you ever seen a KU pigeon do one iota of work to further KU's cause? When game time rolls around and the team needs cheering, what are the pigeons doing? Cooing, that's what, and we're getting tired of it!
Their general attitude towards campus life is discouraging. Their ungentlemanly demeanor is legend. Have you noticed how the male KU pigeons leer at our coeds? It would put a third-year law student to shame.
Their inane lovemaking is immoral. Any male resorting to gutteral noises and pagan dances to impress his ladylove is half-witted and probably a Communist.
Anyone will agree that attending college is expensive, but there is no excuse for their shabby dress. Day after day they flutter their way over the campus clad in the same blue striped and threadbare feathers, worn to a frazzle. This makes a bad impression and several visiting dignitaries have been overheard commenting on their appearance.
If KU is to retain its distinction, these chaps are going to have to dress decently!
Pigeon hygiene has never been anything to brag about, especially if you are a gargoyle, but these uncourtly ruffians press the limits. Aside from an abysmal disregard of dirt, they make a mockery of us by seeding the campus with cooties. Our feelings were eloquently stated by Abner Terse, a local steeplejack, when he said on his deathbed: "Pigeons with lice, never are nice."
The solution is simple, these fellows are going to have to clean up their manners and their thoughts or out they go!
Vigilante action is the last result. If they don't comply we'll tar-and-put skin on them!
—John Eaton
Socks Replace Sympathy
As winter sets in, women are going to miss the sympathy and respect that men used to have for them during the cold months of the past.
It used to be that a man would look at those poor, frozen, blue legs and get choked up at the bravery and fortitude of the shivering female that trotted between classes, calves bared and raw from the wind.
Now, the knee-high socks have taken this away, and women will get no more pity as they pass small congregations of men on the campus.
How can one show emotion for a pair of thick knitted, black socks that cover the entire leg?
Now, women can amble between classes, paying no more attention to the bitter cold than the men do.
Hooded coats, mufflers, gloves, and now, these knee-high socks, men are becoming dubious about who's what—and should it have the door opened for it. After all, what's so special about an abnormal high pile of cloth?
Bill Farmer
Editor:
Letters To The Editor
About the first of November the KU News Bulletin announced the resignation of Chuck Mather and quoted him as saying, "Last night our staff, with deep regret, came to the conclusion that we cannot solve the football problems at the University of Kansas even by winning the next four games. Therefore we hereby submit our resignation."
If I remember correctly Coach Sikes left KU with tears in his eyes and compliments for KU. Has there ever been a coach at KU in the past
40 years that solved the problems in football to suit the gang that has too much to say about football at KU? If I remember correctly KU had many coaches while Bennie Owens was at Oklahoma about 20 years.
. . .
Hasn't KU had about ten coaches in the past 40 years, maybe more who didn't solve the problems in football? Suppose George Washington had been working for the KU alumni during the Revolutionary War. He would have been fired before he
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
won the war. If Abraham Lincoln had been up for the votes of the KU sports crowd, his defeats would have kept him from being president. If Edison had been experimenting for the KU alumni on the electric light bulb, he too would have been fired before he discovered the electric light bulb.
Columbus discovered Amer. in 1412.
He sailed 3 ships: PINTO, the Santa Barbara.
He was attacking: The Fratuary of youth.
P.29
I was in "Phog" Allen's basketball coaching class in 1922 when he said, "The sports crowd is fickle. You can win a game by one point, and they come by and congratulate you saying what a good game it was. But you may play a better game against a harder team to beat and lose it by one point and they go by with their heads down with no praise for the good playing of the boys."
"LOOK—IF I KNEW ALL THE RIGHT ANSWERS I WOULDN'T BE TEACHING!"
There has been sadness in the departure of so many football coaches at KU that the people of Kansas should take the control of football from the alumni, and give it back to the school authorities.
Roy Knapp.
White City, Ks. Class of 1917
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
bounded by become biweekly 1904,
triviera 1908, doria 1924,
european 1926.
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service 420
Maryland University's national service. United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after-
season. On Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
March 3-4, 1879.
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Short Ones
Bob-Lyle
Management Editor
Mermis, Jim Ringer,
Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant
Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor;
Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant
Counselor;
graph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant
Telegraph Editor; George Antoneau, Malcolm
Applegate; Sports Editors; Mary
Crocker; Martha Crocker,
Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPT.
Harry T. Trett Business Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
The United States has finally beaten the Russians. Just think, an inter-planetary B-B gun.
Larry Boston Editorial Editor
Joshua Elsay DeL Haley, Jim Sledd. .
Associate Editors.
A woman's idea of keeping a secret is refusing to tell who told her.
They have a new deodorant now,
called Vanish. You put some on
and disappear and no one knows
where the smell is coming from.
He who laughs last has found a meaning the censors missed.
College: A four-year loaf baked from the old man's dough.
Diploma: A sheepskin that a graduate uses to pull the wool over some employer's eyes.
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
Free Pickup
And Delivery
BELL'S
Service Station
23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
PLEDGES
!!
I don't know. It looks like a shocked man with his hands on his head.
Now you can pick up house copies of the U.D.K. outside the Kansan Business Office, Flint Hall. Do so!
By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co., Ltd., London
THE ROYAL MUSEUM OF CHINA
FOR A CLOSER ELECTRIC SHAVE
Conditions beard; helps tauten skin, counteract perspiration;
makes it easy to get a clean, close shave. $1.
YARDLEY
Pre-Shaving
Lotion
FOR
ELECTRIC
SHAVING
this
before
this
XO
C
V
bot am of cor Re:
In ave pati Cor sub wh sive stea
YARDLEY OF LONDON, INC.
Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from the original English formula, combining imported and domestic ingredients. Yardley of London, Inc., 620 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C.
---
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Kansas Mental Care Improving
Kansas has risen from near the bottom to national leadership among the states in her program of care for the mentally ill according to a recent Government Research Center publication.
In fiscal 1956 Kansas spent an average of $4.59 per day for each patient, an amount second only to Connecticut. Statistics usually show substantial savings to the taxpayer when patients receive good expensive treatment for a short period instead of life-long care in hospitals.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Sirong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function.
The Proficiency Examination in English Composition will be given Saturday, Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. Students planning to take the examination must register on Monday. Tuesday or Wednesday in the office of the college or school in which they are enrolled.
TODAY
Engineerrettes, 8 p.m., Spooner Lounge Speaker, Dean McNown.
TUESDAY
Jay Sister party, "Flapper Fling."
Three parties, each lasting an hour from 7-10 p.m. Robinson Gym. Everyone bring pencil!
Jayhawk Pre Med Tech Club, nouns Home, Speaker. Dr. Mary Larson. Nouns Home, Speaker. Dr. Mary Larson.
WEDNESDAY
Faculty Fortum, noon. English Room,
Student Union. Discussion, "The Hur-
man Mission," in the Eighth
Science" by Dr. William Argersinger,
professor of chemistry and associate dean
of Graduate School. Phone reservation
Office, KU 227, by Tuesday afternoon.
Social Work - Sociology - Antropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Discussion, "Husband Catching in India." Coffee.
Et Atoco se reune el micróleos a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser. El senor Ken Porter hablara sobre "Un Ano en la Universidad de Madrid."
KU Dames, bridge, 7:30 p.m. Student Union.
In 1956 almost 1,900 patients left the three Kansas state hospitals. Of this number 61 per cent spent less than six months in the hospital and 12 per cent spent from six to 11 months.
The hospital's legal responsibilities ended for 700 of these and 1,176 left for an indefinite period of time but were not discharged immediately. During the same year, 738 of the patients on convalescent leave were discharged and many of the remainder were later re-admitted to the hospital.
Overcrowdedness in the state's mental hospitals is not as bad as it was a few years ago, but there were 1.094 patients in excess of rated capacity in June, 1956.
In 1956, 1,195 of the patients admitted were admitted for the first time and an additional 503 patients were re-admissions.
Figures on the number of resident patients in Kansas state mental hospitals on June 30, 1956 indicate 19 per cent were on the hospital books less than a year, 21 per cent from one to five years, 12 per cent from five to 10 years, 10 per cent from 10 to 15 years and 26 per cent for 20 years or more.
Human Relations Is TV Topic
A graduate student and two professors will be guests of the 10th University sponsored live television show on ruman relations viewed over KARD, Channel 3, Wichita, at 5:15 p.m. Tuesdays.
Appearing will be Clifford Ketzel, assistant professor of political science; John Gulliahorn, assistant professor of business administration, human relations and sociology, and Raja Mohammed Naib, Pakistan.
Fund For Steve Swan Grows As Donations Pass $1,650
At least $1,650 has been contributed to the Steve Swan Student Beneficial fund at Topeka High School, a memorial fund to Steven W. Swan, a KU freshman who died Nov. 17 following an auto accident on the Kansas Turnpike.
Mr. Swan, 18, was a Topeka High School graduate.
E. B. Weaver, principal of Topeka High School, said the fund will be used for worthy purposes where students need special help in their high school studies.
Donations have been received from throughout Kansas and several neighboring states. Mr. Weaver said.
Beta Theta Pi was among those making contributions.
KU Art Magazine Now Available
The fall Register, a scholarly publication of the KU Museum of Art, is now available at the museum office.
This issue, published twice yearly, includes an article on two bronze reliefs in the museum and an article by Ellen Werner, museum curator of decorative arts.
Edward Maser, museum director, said. "We have received many complimentary notes on the publication."
PAT READ
INDIAN TRADER
445 Tenn. St.
Ph. VI 3-1306
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
- Hand Loomed Ties
❤️
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
FLASH!!
Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Ar
Open Evenings By Appointment
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
After December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th Bring 'em in and Save At
摄影师
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP
Don Crawford Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
SUPER-WINSTON PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS
CASABLANK
ADAPTED FROM THE
BEST-SELLING NOVEL
"THE MAN IN THE GRAY
FLANNEL BURNOOSE"
MY SHIP SAILS AT DAWN!
I CAN'T GO. THEY HAVE MY PASSPORT!
IT'S TOO SHRILL, MAN!
نحن مازنة نحن نستطيع أخذنا بك يا أبى.
MATIN YOUR FEZ
DISHUJCHE KAFIRA
HERE COMES INSPECTEUR
LES DEUX - TETES NOW!
I'LL PLY
HIM WITH
WINSTONS!
STILL TOO
SHRILL, MAN!
AH, MERCI! AND HERE'S YOUR PASSPORT. PARBLEU - WINSTON TASTES GOOD!
VOILA -
LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD!
I THINK I GOT IT, MAN!
YOU MUST
REMEMBER
WINSTON
AMERICA'S BEST-SELLING
BEST-TASTING
FILTER CIGARETTE
WINSTON
FILTER CIGARETTES
WINSTON
CIGARETTES
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO..
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.
REMEMBER-WINSTON COMES IN BOTH PACK AND CRUSH-PROOF BOX!
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957
Unprepared To Meet OSU
Seldom, if ever, has Kansas been less prepared to invade Gallagher Hall than it will be for tonight's opening 1957-58 basketball match against Oklahoma State University.
Faced with a Cowpoke team that returns every starter save guard Mel Wright, Kansas will have only Wilt Chamberlain and Ron Loneski as returning frontline men.
"We have accomplished as little in pre-season practice as any year since I've been here," said Coach Dick Harp, "and we are just now beginning to progress a little."
"Perhaps our slow progress is due in part to sickness and injury, but I presume most all the teams we'll play have been having the same sort of trouble," he said.
Loneski, Johnson in Front
Harp likely will pair the 6-5 Monte Johnson with Loneski in the front line with Bob Billings and Bob Hickman in the backcourt. His alternate starters are Al Donaghue, $6-4^{1/2}$ sophomore, at forward, and junior letterman Lynn Kindred at guard.
But Donaghue suffered a pulled muscle in practice Wednesday and Kindred is just back following a heavy chest cold.
Harp said he has run into unusual trouble trying to conduct full-scale sessions since practice opened Oct. 15. Every member of the top ten, save senior guard John Cland, has missed from one to three days under the longest injury and sickness seige the Jayhawkers have experienced since World War II.
"We'll concede that Wilt is the finest basketball player in the country," Harp said, "but no one
single great player in any sport ever carried a team single-handed through a schedule such as we play."
"We fully expect Chamberlain, Loneski, and Billings to be as good as people are saying, but they do not constitute a full team. Until we find one we are going to experience all manner of trouble." he concluded
He said there is some hope, however, because OSU Coach Henry Iba and Kansas State Coach Tex Winter are "as optimistic about KU as they are about their own clubs."
Even Iba Optimistic
Iba traditionally is conservative, but early this year went on record that this would be a good season for his Cowpokes. He has ten of 13 lettermen returning from last season. This will be the 44th Kansas-OSU meeting with the Jayhawkers on the long end of a 25-18 count. However, Kansas has won only three times in Stillwater.
Crow Is UP's Back Of The Year
NEW YORK, —(UP)—John Crow of Texas A. & M., an all-America halftack whose father once told him "don't be anything but the best" was named college football back of the year today by the United Press
Crow received 101 votes in a nationwide poll of 256 sports writers and sportscasters for a better than 3-to-1 margin over his nearest rival. Runnersup in the balloting were the three other members of the United Press all-America backfield—Walt Kowalezyk of Michigan State with 33 votes, Sophomore Bob Anderson of Army with 16 and Clendon Thomas of Oklahoma with 13.
The original faculty at KU had only three members.
Roberto's
Roberto's
710 Mass. VI 3-1086
PIZZA
Roberto's
Mather Named Top Coach
PIZZA
Chuck Mather, the resigned Kansas coach whose team won second place in the Big Eight, was named Big Eight coach of the year by the United Press today.
Jim Letcavits, who followed Mather to Kansas from Massillon, Ohio, was the only Kansas player on the UP's first all Big Eight team.
Homer Floyd, Massillon junior, was named second team fullback. Honorable mentions went to Chet Vanatta, Frank Gibson, Bob Kraus, Paul Swoboda, Bill Burnison, John Peppercorn and Dale Remsberg. Burnison was named sophomore of the year by the news service.
The United Press' 1957 all Big Eight Conference football team:
FIRST TEAM
pos. name school wr. wt.
E Jim Letcavits Kan. Sr. 185
E Don Zadnak K-St. Sr. 190
T Mervin Johnson Mo. Sr. 208
G Bill Krisher Okla. Sr. 213
G John Wooten Colo. Jr. 199
C Bob Harrison Colo. Jr. 206
QB Bob Nichols P-St. Soph. 170
HB Bob Struths Okla. Jr. 188
FB Clendon Thomas Okla. Jr. 188
HB Hank Kuhlmann Mo. Jr. 188
Back of the Year: Bob Stransky, Colorado.
Lineman of the Year: Bill Krisher Oklahoma.
SECOND TEAM
Sophomore of the Year: Dwight Nichols, Iowa State
Coach of the Year: Chuck Mather. Kansas
pos. name school yr. wt.
E Don Stiller Okla. Sr. 200
E Joe Rector Okla. Jr. 198
T Koe Koi Okla. Sr. 228
T Jack Keelan K-St. 228
G Don Chadwick Mo. Jr. 213
G Byron Searcy Okla. Jr. 201
G Ellis Rainberger K-St. Jr. 199
QB Hedie Dove Colo. Jr. 205
HEdie Dove K-St. Jr. 197
R Hald Pfeifer K-St. Jr. 197
FB Homer Floyd Kan. Jr. 168
HONORABLE MENTION
Ends; Dennis and Stuekel, Iowa State;
Boucher and McKinney, Mo.; Nady,
Colo.; Lee and Hawkins, Neb.; Peper-
corn and Ramsbottom, Kansas.
Tackles: Northcutt and D. Jennings, Okla.; Vanatta, Gibson, and Kraus, Kan.; Henson, Harrison, K-State; Ponciun, Iowa St.; Salerino, Salero, Colo.; Rhoda and Olson, Neb.
Guards: Swoboda, Kansas; Munger and Bibl. Iowa State; Oujeszky, Okla., Mondt, Colle.
Centers: Warner, Colo; Falter, Iowa St.; Burnison, Kansas; Cmachalland, Nebraska; Boyd, Boyd; Sandefer and Morris, Okla; Snowden, Mo., Corbin, K-State; Brown, Neb.
Back of the Year: Pfeifer, K-State.
Back of the Year: Pfeifer, K-State.
Lineman of the Year: Harrison, Okla.
Rash, Mo.; and Rainsberger and Zadnik
K-State.
Kenny Lane, top ranked lightweight contender, has won 16 straight fights.
Sophomore of the Year: Burnison,
Kansas; Olson, Neb.; and Swainey and
Stevens.
Coach of the Year: Broyles, Mo;
Myers, Iowa State; Wilkinson, Okla.
Intramural Sports Program Finished
Jim Schultz, Sigma Chi, won the tennis championship, and winners of the tennis doubles tournament were David Coupe and Larry Schooley, Kappa Sigma.
Golf champion was Jim Naylor, Delta Upsilon. Handball champion was Jim Coleman, Phi Gamma Delta, who teamed with his fraternity brother, George Maier, to win the doubles title.
The fall men's intramural sports program was completed just before Thanksgiving vacation when the last of the nine individual championships was decided.
In badminton Salwit Lekagul won the singles tournament, with the doubles title going to Savich Chai-pravat and Dick Laptad, all independents.
Horseshoes champion was Paul Baker, Phi Kappa Tau, and horseshoes doubles winners were Robert McGhee and Dan Welehon.
Nation Wide Career
Nation Wide Career ATLAS UNITIES with
ATLAS
Start Here!
Established in 1912, ATLAS, today, specializes In Industrial chemicals and commercial explosives for mining and construction activities. Our 11 manufacturing units and 4 Research Centers, located in all sections of the country, employ more than 4200 people in an industry that is destined to grow many times larger as our expanding national economy gets into high gear in the early '60's.
That means real career opportunities for you graduates who have the foresight to move into this field while much of our future expansion is still in the planning stage, for in addition to stepping up technical work on our products and processes, we are greatly intensifying long-range basic research to develop knowledge about entirely new products and techniques of importance to ATLAS customers and suppliers. These special openings will have an unusually strong appeal to —
- Chemists
- Physicists
- Chemical Engineers
- Civil Engineers
- Electrical Engineers
- Mining Engineers
- Mechanical Engineers
- Engineers with MBA
Seeking Opportunities In
Technical Sales Research & Design
Tunkhannock, Pa.
White Haven, Pa.
Tamaqua, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
New Castle, Del.
St. Louis, Mo.
Richmond, Calif.
Webb City, Mo.
Memphis, Tenn.
Marshall, Texas
Houston, Texas
Production
Your p. can make an a. now for yr.
Mr. John Stone who will be on your campus on Dec. 5, 1957
ATLAS
POWDER COMPANY
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
OLympia 8-6511
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
Olympia 8-6511
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
urnison,ey and Mo.; bkla.
sports t be- when cham-
arts
won win- inna- Lar-
taylor,
cmpion
Delta,
ernity
n the
won
the
Chai-
inde-
Paul Horsebbert
Mather's Exit Not Void Of Grace
Bv UNITED PRESS
A husky, lean-faced man of 41 begins the unpleasant chore of vacating his office for a successor this week, but for Charles V. (Chuck) Mather the departure will not be void of grace.
After four turmilo-filled years in college football as Kansas University coach, Mather's record reads 11-26-2. Under muffled, but determined, alumni pressures, he and five assistants resigned at midseason, admitting "we cannot solve Kansas' football problems."
Mather has unresolved future plans. No coach-seeking colleges are beating a path to his doorstep.
Yet, the former Massillon, Ohio resident will exit as a winner. The season's last four Saturdays Mather's
Fraternity A champions, Phi Delta Theta edged Independent A champs Jim Beam 6-0 last Monday to win the 1957 intramural football hill championship.
In the A's championship game, the lone scorer was Bruce Lewellyn who took the ball over on a pass play.
Jim Beam Edged, 6-0
At the same time, in Fraternity B championship game, Beta Theta Pi soundly defeated Phi Gamma Delta 37-0 to take that crown.
The big scorer for the Betas in their game was Dudley McElvain who scored 24 points. Other scorers for the Beta squad included Chuck Hotchkiss and Cecil Coleman who each accounted for a touchdown and Frank Ise who scored one extra point.
Volleyball Team Wins Second
The KU volleyball team finished in second play behind the Wichita YMCA in the second annual Jayaawk Volleyball tournament Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
The Wichita team won 12 games and lost one. The loss was to KU, 14-12, in an overtime. The KU team had an 8-5 lost record, losing four times to Wichita and one to Topeka.
IM Basketball Under Way Dec. 9
Dawkins Named Army Captain
Intramural basketball competition will begin Dec. 9 with play in A, B, and C leagues for fraternities and independent dormitories. The deadline date for all basketball entries is Thursday at 4 p.m.
WEST POINT, N.Y.—(UP) -Halfback Pete Dawkins of Royal Oak, Mich., has been elected captain of Army's 1958 football team. He is the first halfback to hold the honor since Glenn Davis shared the team captaincy with Doc Blanchard in 1946.
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or top-coat?
Choose from over 500 fabrics.
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
team scored victories, bearing out his conviction it was a good squad despite injuries and flu sieges.
Those victories reflected 50-odd athletes' esteem for an embattled leader for whom they could easily have quit four weeks ago.
Shortly after Mother's Oct. 31 resignation, there was widespread speculation on how the team would react. Some observers predicted certain defeat in the remaining games.
However, the Kansans won all four contests, three of them after gallant uphill struggle. Two victories came with less than a minute to play. Combined, they gave Kansas its highest Big Eight Conference finish in a decade, second only to Oklahoma. They also caused some doubts in the minds of those previously most opposed to Mather.
The Hopedale, Ohio native was attacked from many sides for his heavy recruiting in Ohio and other eastern areas, his method of rating players through an IBM system, and for hiring allegedly weak assistants.
Most of his aides were associated with him at Washington High School
THE PRESIDENT
such that many Massillon fans rated him superior to the illustrious Paul Brown who also coached at Washington several years earlier.
in Massillon where his teams won six straight Ohio prep titles. His over-all 57-3-0 record there was
CHUCK MATHER
Several Massillon friends predict Mather will remain in football. One long-time friend says Mather is a man of "great pride. Even though he's going out in relative style after those four victories in a row, I don't think he'll want to end things this way. It's still a little early for the coaching jobs to be opening up, but I'd bet he'll be back in football by fall."
Mather is not so sure. He said he is "seeking something stable, something football seldom offers. It's a heck of a thing when your job hinges on the performance of some 19-year-old kid who can somehow carry a football."
Mather said he was "considering" an offer to enter private business with former Minnesota coach, Wes Fesler. "You can just say I'm undecided however. I've always made my living coaching and I love it. I do know that I won't be interested in coaching a small college team or in high school again."
As he talked, Mather glanced occasionally at a sign above his desk. The sign read:
"A sure way to failure is to compromise on principles. Have the courage to face your faults."
It was obvious Mather believed he had accomplished this. Apparent also was that he would leave Kansas soon with perhaps a few unpleasant memories, several nice ones, and no apologies.
United Press Rates Ohio State Tops
NEW YORK—(UP) —The final
United Press college football ratings
(with first-place votes and won-lost
records in parentheses):
Team Pts.
1. Ohio State (14) (8-1) 307
2. Auburn (11) (10-0) 290
3. Michigan State (8) (8-1) 283
4. Oklahoma (9-1) 195
5. Iowa (7-1-1) 192
6. Navy (8-1-1) 177
7. Rice (7-3) 117
8. Mississippi (8-1-1) 81
9. Notre Dame (6-3) 60
10. Texas A&M (8-2) 58
Sticklers!
WHAT IS A CAMPUS AREA WITHOUT LUCKY SMOKERS? ( SEE PARAGRAPH AT RIGHT )
WHAT IS A
CANDY-CHEWING SISTER?
WILLIAM MACURDY,
Nibbling Sibling
DARTMOUTH
SCHOOL ROOF
A boy is playing in a park. There are two benches with trees and buildings in the background.
ANY NORMAL DORM'LL be full of Lucky
ANY NORMAL DORM'LL be full of Lucky smokers! You can count'em by carloads on any campus—and no wonder! A Lucky, you see, is a light smoke—the right smoke for everyone. It's made of nothing but naturally light tobacco... golden rich, wonderfully good-tasting tobacco that's toasted to taste even better. Find a set of dorms without Lucky smokers, and you've stumbled on a mighty Odd Quad! Don't you miss out light up a Lucky. You'll say a light smoke's the right smoke for you!
WHAT IS A LACKADAISICAL MOB?
VOTE FOR EVER
MARJORIE ECKHERT,
CORNELL
Bored Horde
WHAT'S A FLOWER THAT
DIDN'T BLOOM?
FERMILLA
GERALD FEDDERSEN.
RUTGERS
Dud Bud
WHAT'S AN AGILE SECRET AGENT?
PLANS
RONALD RILEY,
BOSTON COLLEGE
Spry Spy
Do you like to shirk work? Here's some easy money—start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get used. Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables.
(Don't do drawings.) Send your Sticklers with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mt.Vernon, N.Y.
STUDENTS! MAKE $25
WHAT IS A GATHERING OF PHI BETES#
Smarty Party
PIERRE VAN RYSSELBERGHE.
U. OF WASHINGTON
LUCKY STRIKE
LUCKY
STRIKE
WHAT IS A MAN WHO
HOARDS SALTINES?
Cracker Stacker
MARYLIN FISHER,
SAN JOSE JR. COLL.
E $25
is some easy
25 for every
is more that
riddles with
words must
LUCKY STRIKE
IT'S TOASTED
CIGARETTES
LUCKY
STRIKE
11 & TUARTED
CIGARETTES
LIGHT UP A light SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!
1 A. T. Co. B
Product of The American Tobacco-Company - "Tobacco is our.middle name"
.2221
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957
SHEWANNE
IT WON'T BE LONG NOW—The first Christmas decorations to appear on the campus are in 17 Fraser, the Extension Library. Here Mrs. Marguerite Cripe Stevenson, director of the children's reading program, admires a wreath which was made by Richard Sweers, Garnett, president of the Kansas State Florists Assn. (Daily Kansan photo)
Union Calms Appetites Of 5,000 Every Day
Feeding many of the approximately 1,000 persons who attend any one of about 30 meetings scheduled in the Student Union on a regular weekday plus over 4,000 students who eat in the Union at sometime throughout the day is the job of the Union catering and food services.
During the regular 16-hour day at the Union, about 1,200 persons are served in the cafeteria, and about 3,000 in the Hawk's Nest for short orders and coffee, according to Bill Williams, Union catering manager.
Union facilities for serving large numbers of persons include four kitchens, the main kitchen in the cafeteria, the Hawk's Nest kitchen and two banquet areas on the upper floors of the building.
Eight University students work part time in setting up, serving and clearing tables for lunch and dinner. Thirty women from Haskell Institute work in the same capacity in the evenings and on weekends. Mr. Williams said. The staff also includes one full-time employee who oversees all work in banquet kitchens and serving areas.
Satellite To Go Up Wednesday
Around The World
The United States hopes to put its own space satellite into an earth-circling orbit this week.
Launching of the first American entry in the space race probably will be Wednesday morning. It will be a six-inch test sphere with a radio transmitter but no scientific recording instruments.
In Florida, unofficial reports indicated at least four missiles, including the Vanguard satellite launcher, rocket, were being readied on the launching pads for this week.
Mid-East Deadlock
The reports listed a Snark ready for firing Tuesday, the Vanguard Wednesday, an Atlas Thursday and a Thor on Friday.
In Jordan, Dag Hammarskjold was reported deadlocked with Jordanian officials today on ways of ending the current tension between Israel and Jordan. Israel also showed no indication of retreating from its position.
Amman dispatches said the United Nations secretary general began the second day if his talks today with King Hussein and other Jordanian leaders but that neither side appeared ready to climb down.
Excellent Recovery
In Gettysburg, Pa., President Eisenhower continued his "excellent" recovery from a mild stroke. He hoped to preside at a cabinet meeting in Washington this afternoon and attend a White House meeting with Congressional leaders and Adlai E. Stevenson tomorrow.
Stevenson Confers
In Washington, Mr. Steven on has been invited to the White House legislative meeting Tuesday in a move to strengthen bipartisanship in foreign affairs.
The administration took the unprecedented step of calling Mr. Steyenson, head of the Democratic Party, to the briefing for Congressional leaders Tuesday on administration plans to beef up NATO against Russia's increasing challenge.
Japs Want Retrial
In Japan, a mass rally adopted a resolution urging the retrial of American G. I. William S. Girard for the firing range death last Jan. 30 of Mrs. Naka Sakai.
AIRLINE TICKETS
All food is prepared in the main kitchen and is then carried to the banquet kitchens for serving, he said. The food service has its own staff of bakers who bake all pastries used in the building.
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat, Sun., Holidays
The Mortar Board Alumni club will give a dinner for the active chapter at 6 p.m. Thursday in the home of Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, 1641 University Drive.
FLASH!!
😐
Mortar Board To Hold Dinner
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
After December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th
Food is bought on the competitive bid basis as needed, Mr. Williams said. Some is bought in quantity lots, but the problem of storage reduces actual savings of buying in large quantities.
Bring 'em in and Save at
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
and CAMERA SHOP
Don Crawford Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Amounts needed for large events and regular use in the cafeteria and Hawk's Nest can be figured by using past records and estimating an expected crowd, he said.
A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg earned letters in three sports, baseball, football, and basketball. Only 31 other Kansas graduates have earned three sports letters.
NO PIZZA DURING VACATION?
No Pizza
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 N. Park VI 3-9111
Better Have One Tonight!
10
Announcing the Addition of
GENE RUDER
to the
Winter Chevrolet Staff
The man to see about the 1958 Renault Dauphine
1958
Dauphine
WINTER CHEVROLET
8th & New Hampshire
VI 3-7700
1958
Dauphine
Monday, Dec. 2, 1957
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Print Hall.
LOST
ID CARD. Susie Kastner, 1339 W. Campus, VI 3-8022. Please contact me as soon as possible. 12-2
SLIDE RULE - Student Union Cafe. Serial # 76941. Reward. Ph. KU 349, Ned Doslin.
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH
Sunday
Nov. 24. Reward. Phone VI 3-12-
606-758-6000.
FOR RENT
ONE ROOM APARTMENT with private entrance and private bath. 1231 Penn.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Clean, large rooms, and recently redecorated 5 room efficiency. 2 large bedrooms, and nice bath. Modern kitchen and dining area with modern furniture. Bath in and bath. Lots of storage. Garage. Nice-yard, screened in porch, lots of shade. Insulated. Water furnished. You pay gas and electricity. A nice home for you only at $40 a month. Two small children. Call VI 3-1979 after 5 p.m.
GOOD STORAGE OR GARAGE space for rent at 1001 Mississippi. Fireproof building with metal roof, size 12 x 22 x 10". $7.50 per month. Call VI 3-1979 after 5 p.m.
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable Washing or ironing or both. 3f Indiana
HELP WANTED
HOUSE at 825 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
TRAVEL ARRANGER. Man or woman to assist manager FIT and escorted tour department in detailed arrangements. No travel fees required. Must have emphasis on Europe, Russia and Middle East. Must be able to type and compose own correspondence. Detail-Mindfulness and capacity to learn well written and/or spoken English. Hand preferred, also reading knowledge of Russian. 5½ day week. If you have above qualifications, please write full resume to TOM MAUPIN TOUR ASSOCIATES, 1235 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas.
FOR SALE
1956 45 ft. GREAT LAKES TRAILER,
excellent condition, 11 ft. refrigerator,
combination, all for $3,600.
Call Baldwin 250 for appointment
or information.
12-2
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, and reports illustrated magazines both new and old. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
We Stock The COMPLETE
COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOCK
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass—Pb VI. 3. 1044
J021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
MGTD 51, excellent condition, new top and tonneau cover. Call VI 3-4664 after inspection.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal opportunity to purchase exhibitions at the ½ price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI S-0124. 12-20
TUXEDO FOR SALE, single breasted Perfect fit for someone about medium size; also white dinner jacket. Phone JimmyBedford KU 254. tf
53 STUDEBAKER V-8 hardtop. Automatic transmission, radio & heater, dual pipes, white walls, two tone paint, low light—very clean. Call VI 31-8093 12-25 5 p.m.
DEEP FREEZE. 22 cu. ft. upright, 1 year old. $1.5 price. Can be financed. 1519 Lindenwood Lane, last street east on 15th. 12-9
BUSINESS SERVICES
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
e.g. eta. Etla eto. Ela Snifft
9411; Mass. Ph. VI T-3-5263.
8411; Mass. Ph. VI T-3-5263.
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-It
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravit's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
725 Mass. Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
WATCH REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-843
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. VI 3-3055
Of California
Standard Oil Company
California Research Corporation and other Subsidiaries
to interview
Representatives Will Be On Campus
December 3-4,1957
Chemists, Chemical Engineers, Electrical Engineers Mechanical Engineers, Metallurgical Engineers
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
Physicists
in California and other areas
For Career Employment
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
TYPIST: Experience; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service Call VI 3-0177. Miss. Jack Larson. tt
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers
Parakeets, all colors, front sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
-beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alli-
ances in our collection.
etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut
Phone VI 3-2921. tt
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing—with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Ph. VI 3-093 and 5994.
12-20
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marion Rice Dance Studio 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
POSTERS MADE TO ORDER by senior in Commercial Art. Any sizes, colors; invitations included if desired. Reasonable rate for one week in advance Jay Fisher, VI 3-2550. 12-4
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tt
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER available to student in Mass. i 3-3465. Prompt service!
1
YOUR EYES
AV
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657,
1400 Tenn. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W. 20th St. tf
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1621 West
19th St. Terr. 12-9
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPIST: Experienced, thesees, term pa-
niciplement. Appt透诊 service. VI 3-7184
1623 West 20th St
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice gold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic party supplies. Anchorage, 6th and Vermont. Phone VT it 8150.
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8600.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464.
We like to say "Yes" (at Beneficial)
Loans $25 to $2000 on signature, furniture or car. Phone, write or come in.
Beneficial FINANCE CO.
$ 8331_{1/2} $ MASS. ST., Lawrence. VI. 3-8074
A Campus-to-Career Case History
I am writing to inform you that the Board of Trustees of the New York State University Medical Center has decided to appoint a new faculty member. Dr. Robert A. Browning is the new faculty member, and he will be serving as the Director of the Department of Pediatrics. Dr. Browning is a distinguished pediatrician who has made significant contributions to the field of pediatrics. He has served on the faculty at various universities throughout the United States and has received numerous awards and honors for his work. Dr. Browning's appointment is expected to bring new opportunities for research and development in pediatrics. Please contact us if you have any questions or wish to inquire further about Dr. Browning's appointment.
After receiving his degree in business administration, Howard joined
Howard's interest in a telephone career dates from his first interview with a telephone company representative. "I looked at all the angles," he says. "We discussed pay and chances for advancement, which looked excellent because of the rapid growth of the Bell System. We talked about many different kinds of work, and about what would be expected of me."
"I looked at all the angles"
Howard R. Winter, B.B.A., Texas A. & M., '51, is now a Commercial Manager with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company in Houston, Texas. He's in charge of 30,000 telephone accounts and a staff of 36 people.
Southwestern Bell's Commercial Department. "It was natural for me," he says. "I have a business background, I like to sell and make contacts.
"My training gave me a really solid foundation in the business. Two years in the Army interrupted it, by the way, but the two years were credited to my telephone company records and count toward all benefits. After I'd returned and finished my training, I was made a business office supervisor. And since February, 1956, I've been a Commercial Manager in Houston. Each assignment I've had has been a real challenge and has presented a tremendous opportunity to contribute to and advance in the business."
Be sure to investigate the career opportunities for you in the 17 Bell Telephone Companies serving all 48 states. On your campus the local company represents the others. For more information about these career opportunities, read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office, or write for "Challenge and Opportunity" to: College Employment Supervisor, American Telephone and Telegraph Co., 195 Broadway, New York 7, New York.
MINISTERIO DE INTERIOR Y COMUNIDADES
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Right To Work To Be Debated
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Dan Hopson Jr. assistant professor and assistant dean of the KU School of Law, will be on the negative side of an audience debate at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater.
The affirmative team will be E. R. Zook, secretary-manager of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, and Gene Courtney, former assistant professor of speech and drama now with the Centron Corp., Lawrence.
The topic of the debate is "Resolved: That Kansas should adopt the right to work bill." This is a proposed constitutional amendment to be voted on by Kansas in the general election in 1958. The bill was passed by the legislature in 1956 but vetoed by former Gov. Fred Hall.
This debate, open to the public, will be co-sponsored by the department of speech and drama and Phi Delta Phi, professional law fraternity. It is the first in a series.
Army ROTC Promotes 32
The KU Army ROTC unit has promoted 31 senior cadets and 1 junior.
Lieutenant colonel-William Harmon, Toukea, Allen Smith and
The promotions;
mon, Topeka, Allen Smith and Lieutenant Colonel — William Harmon, Topeka, Allen Smith and Chester Boterf, Lawrence, all seniors.
Major — James Barbour, Independence, Mo., Kenneth Payne, Kansas City, Kam., Nicholas Classen, El Paso, Tex., Timothy Templin, Minneapolis, Lance Wildermood, Mission, and Thomas Moore, Topeka, all seniors.
Captain — Charles Conrad and Robert Lied, Overland Park, William Gerow, Kansas City, Mo., Claude Kean, Olathe, Colby Rehmert, Jetmore, John Reinert, Park Ridge, Ill., Warren Riekenberg, Topela, John Rodgers, Paradise, all seniors.
First lieutenant—Gerald Dickey, Kansas City, Mo., Woodford Foster and Gary Russell, Kansas City, Kan., Patrick Bolen, Salina, Gary Cooper, Colby, Thomas Graber, and Michael Hyland, Lawrence, Jon Ihde, Hope, Robert Kraus, Massillon, Ohio, William Parsons and Dudley Schmid, Leavenworth, Montgomery Rogers, Mission, Mo., Verlyn Schmidt, Hays, all seniors; Robert Raymond, Overland Park junior.
Journal Dedicates Issue To Beamer
A special issue of the Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society will be dedicated as a memorial to the late Dr. Raymond H. Beamer, former professor of entomology and curator of the Francis Huntington Snow Entomological Museum.
The plan was announced today by the entomology department and the Kansas Entomological Society for an entra large issue probably to be published in April. The memorial edition will contain a biography of Dr. Beamer by Dr. H. B. Hungerford, professor emeritus of entomology and articles by Dr. Beamer's former students and friends.
Dr. Beamer, who was active in establishing the journal and served many years on its publication committee, died Nov. 21. He was widely known for his work in insect collecting, especially for his work with leaf hoppers. He described hundreds of new species and wrote more than 100 papers concerning his findings. Many of these were published in entomological magazines including the Kansas Entomological Journal.
He was largely responsible for the location of the Snow Museum in Snow Hall at KU and making it the largest university collection of insects in the U.S. A large library of materials concerning insects has been presented by his family to the University.
A firefly is not a fly but a beetle.
In Early Day Pranks
Skeleton Danced To Concert
You say you don't have anything to do in your leisure moments away from the books?
In those days the students had to rely on their ingenuity so it's not surprising that many celebrated pranks occurred during this time.
You should have been a student at KU back in the horse and buggy days when there were no basketball games, movies, cars, or radios.
Take for example the skeleton episode that took place during the Commencement exercises in 1873.
While the exercises were under way, a skleton bearing the label of P.R.E.X. was lowered mysteriously through a hole in the unfinished roof of the chapel, and to the accompaniment of the 5th U. S. Infantry band, which was playing a concert at the time, was made to dance and cavort in mid-air to the horror of all present.
Another prank was the telegram hoax of 1880. Two students, in an effort to achieve a day's holiday, caused a fake telegram to be delivered to Chancellor Marvin informing him of the sudden death of Reverend F. T. Ingalls of Atchison, a regent of the University.
Marvin left immediately for the funeral after leaving instructions that a memorial service be held the next day in the University chapel
However, one of the students did return to the University for his degree, and 30 years later appeared on the chapel program giving a talk to the students on how to succeed in life. Nothing was said in his remarks about the use of telegraphs
Another prank, caused by the traditional law-engineer school rivalry, occurred immediately after the engineers learned Green Hall was to be built for the law school.
Janitors were enlisted to form a bucket brigade but the battling factions frightened them asunder and the "memorial" burned down. But not before one lawyer climbed upon the flaming building and delivered an oration.
After a touching eulogy had been given by Professor Snow, it was discovered that Regent Ingalls was still very much alive, and somewhat indignant about the whole thing.
Engineer's hauled to the lot of the present structure a facsimile of an outhouse, filled with hay, but not without opposition from indignant law students—they set fire to it.
The two guilty students got more than the anticipated holiday. In fact, they were suspended from their scholarly activities. Maybe it is of no importance that they both eventually became lawyers.
Coed Dies After Plunge
(Continued from Page 1.)
Miss Maddox ranked in the upper 2 per cent nationally on the national merit tests and was in the upper 6 per cent of her Tulsa high school graduating class. She held a Carter Oil Co. scholarship which covered her tuition.
She apparently got away from her mother, went from the fourth floor to the fifth floor, and jumped out the window. Her father was in conference with Joe Skillman, KU police chief, at the time.
County coroner Byron Walters said Sunday the death was a suicide and there would be no inquest held.
Miss Emily Taylor, dean or women, said the coed had been doing good work until she started cutting classes excessively after missing school because of the flu. School officials did not find out she had been cutting classes until it was too late to help her, Dean Taylor said.
Funeral arrangements are being made by the Cooper-Warren Mortuary here and the Stanley Funeral Home in Tulsa.
After talking with the woman's parents Saturday the KU police said there seemed to be a family conflict which seemed more "strained than obvious."
Was Doing Good Work
Bees from Columbia and Ecuador have been added to the Hymenoptera collection at the Snow Entomological Museum.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning in the First Presbyterian Church in Tulsa. Burial will be in Tulsa.
1,300 GI's At KU Now
The 1,300 veterans enrolled at KU are part of the more than 10,000,000 veterans of World War II and the Korean conflict who have trained under educational programs administered by the Veterans Administration.
Dr. O. Myking Mehus of the Kansas City VA office said that more than 7,800,000 (1/2 of all World War II veterans) of the 10,000,000 trained under the World War II GI Bill. Another 1,800,000 (two out of every five Korean veterans) trained under the Korean GI Bill. Dr. Mehus said he expects the number using the Korean bill to grow since the program does not end until 1965.
New Bees Complete Museum Collection
He said 162,000 disabled World War II veterans and 48,000 disabled Korean veterans have received vocational rehabilitation training.
According to Dr. C. D. Michener, curator of the museum, this addition is of special value because it will complete the collection of bees from North and South America.
The business placement bureau has the following interviews scheduled for this week. Interested students should sign up in 214 Strong.
Firms Schedule Job Interviews
Tuesday-Bonicamp, Koelling & Smith, public accounting majors; The Prudential Insurance Co. of
Overseas Gifts Must Be Mailed By Dec.10
Gifts to be mailed overseas to military personnel must be in the mail not later than Dec. 10 if they are to reach the addresssee by Christmas, Post Office officials said today.
These gifts must be mailed by air now because the deadline for ordinary mail was Nov. 20.
Wednesday—Ford Motor Co., business administration majors.
Maximum size for air parcels is 30 inches in length and girth combined. They must not weigh more than 2 pounds.
America, sales, liberal arts and business students.
Thursday — Montgomery Ward, management trainees; Macy's, executive training, merchandising and home economics.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
The fourth presentation of the KU Film Series, "Die Letze Broche" (The Last Bridge), will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium.
Friday--Roche Laboratories, general business, liberal arts, biology, chemistry, pharmacy, education majors.
Top German Film To Be Shown Friday
It is a German-language film, with English titles. The movie won the international critics award at the 1954 Cannes Film Festival. Admission is free to students and faculty members.
Game Parking To Be 50 Cents
Parking in the areas around Allen Field House for KU basketball games will cost 50 cents this season.
Arthur C. Lonborg, athletic director, said the legislature gave the University permission to charge for parking this year to raise funds for the building of more parking facilities.
Mr. Lonborg said the parking areas on the north and east of the field house and the football practice areas south of the fieldhouse will be used for pay parking. He estimated the areas will hold 1,500 cars.
Student seating in the 17,000 seat building will be in sections 12-22, the same as in 1956, and students will again use the north entrance, he said.
No smoking or drinking of alcoholic beverages is allowed in the field house.
The team opens its home season Wednesday against Caniusus.
Methodists To Meet Here
While KU students are at home enjoying the Christmas-New Year holidays, 3,000 college students and adult religious leaders from the 48 states and 40 foreign countries will be in Lawrence for the sixth quadrennial conference of the Methodist Student Movement Dec. 27 to Jan. 1.
The conference will feature the world premiere of an oratorio conducted by Thor Johnson, conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, New Year's Eve in Hoch auditorium.
Pizza Delivered
VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
WHEN HUNGRY-EAT and Save 10%
This Is How:
MENU
Menu Price Price You Pay By Buying A Meal Ticket
Home made vegetable soup 20c 18c
Home made tomato soup 20c 18c
Home made bean soup 20c 18c
Home made chili, crisp crackers 30c 27c
TODAY'S ENTREES—CHANGED DAILY
Swiss steak 80c 72c
Roast sirloin of beef 75c 671/2c
Baked heart and dressing 75c 671/2c
Beef and home made noodles 75c 671/2c
Spaghetti and meat balls 75c 671/2c
Breaded pork tenderloin 75c 671/2c
Steamed wieners & baked beans 70c 63c
Hot tamales with chili 70c 63c
Served with: Whipped potatoes & gravy, Buttered peas, Apple sauce, Hot rolls, 5c drink
Get Hungry and Eat-But Save Too, Buy a Meal Ticket at
KU
Jayhawk Cafe
1340 Ohio
ku
T but adv
INDEPENDENCE BAY
NEW FOOTBALL STAFF—Jack Mitchell, center, KU's new head football coach, and four new assistant football coaches are in Lawrence house
hunting this week. They are, from left, Bill Pace, George Bernhardt, Mr. Mitchell, Dixie White and Gene Corrotto. (Daily Kansas photo)
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 54
'Russia Not Ready To Attack U.S. Now'
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Bv JACK HARRISON
The U.S. is not in danger of immediate attack by the Russians, but if we don't do something quickly to offset Russia's tremendous advances in science, in 10 years or less we may be in real trouble.
That's the opinion of L.W. Sea-gondollar, associate professor of physics, who has made it his hobby to gather all the information possible on the missile programs and relative strengths of the U.S. and Russia.
"I am not an expert on these matters, but I have studied the problem and it looks to me as if some conclusions can be drawn from the information available," he said.
In an interview with a Daily
Changes Set For Relays
The 1958 KU Relays will feature several changes, with the high school program shortened and other competition to be divided between two days.
M. E. (Bill) Easton, track coach, said the changes are mainly to benefit the spectators.
Events for college, junior college, university and AAU entrants will be held on both Friday and Saturday, April 18 and 19. Previously all these events were on Saturday.
The high school events will no longer be divided into classes, but all high school entrants will compete together. Only about 500 high school athletes will take part, compared to about 1,800 last year, Mr. Easton said.
Entry in high school events will no longer be open to everyone, but only to athletes with specified previous minimum performances.
First, there is the powerful U.S. Strategic Air Command, which would be able to inflict tremendous damage on Russia, even if the Russians launched an all-out Pearl Harbor-type attack.
Second, Dr. Seagondollar said he believes that the Russian missile program to date has been mostly from the propaganda level, and if a full-scale attack were planned, the advances in missile research would not be flaunted as they have been, but kept secret.
Third, the Russians are now gaining ground on the U.S. in the race to train scientists, and they have more to gain by waiting until their lead over the U.S. is even greater
"We've got to make a quick start on a long-range program to improve the intellectual development of our college students," he said.
Generally fair through Wednesday. Cooler extreme west and southeast this afternoon and locally cooler west tonight. Warmer east portion Wednesday. Low tonight 20s. High Wednesday 50-55.
Kansan Reporter Monday Dr. Seagondollar said there are three main reasons why Russia probably is not interested in attacking the U.S. now.
Weather
"We must somehow increase the output of good scientists but our entire educational system should be taken a little more seriously, so that we can train all our students better."
Campus Chest committee chairmen will present progress reports at a meeting of about 200 solicitors and committee members at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union.
Low this morning was 25. Low Monday was 32, high 51.
Chest To Present Progress Reports
The purpose of the meeting is to instruct persons working on the drive.
Jim Davies, Dodge City senior and chairman of the drive, said Monday night, "In the past, the drive has been measured solely by the total amount collected. However, the drive was originally begun to also be an educational process to help the students become acquainted with a Campus Chest and prepare them for their responsibility in the community where they will contribute to a community chest."
"The success of the drive should also be measured by the number of students contacted as against the total contribution. This year we are going to try to reach as many students as possible," he said. "However, the donations go to worthy causes and should not be de-emphasized."
This is the only charity drive on campus this year. Seventy per cent of the funds will go for university organizations. These organizations are World University Service, KU-Y, a travel grant aid for five KU exchange students to England, the National Scholarship Service Fund for Negro students, and the Emergency fund.
Other organizations receiving aid are CARE, and the cancer, tuberculosis, infantile paralysis, and multiple sclerosis funds.
Do You Want New Courses?
ASC To Present Ideas To College For Study
If you have any ideas for new courses in the College, here's your chance.
Suggestion boxes for new courses and changes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences curriculum will be put in the rotunda and basement of Strong Hall from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Services Held For KU Coed In Danforth Chapel
Danforth chapel was filled Monday night for memorial services for Virginia Maddox, Tulsa, Okla. freshman who died Sunday from injuries suffered in a five-story plunge from the Eldridge Hotel Saturday.
Dr. Pickering spoke on the "Reality of Memory." He said that through knowing someone who has gained eternity, we ourselves own a bit of eternity.
Services were conducted by Dr. Alan J. Pickering, assistant director of the KU Westminster Foundation. Members of the Presbyterian Women's organization and the Westminster Fellowship were present. Miss Maddox was active in Presbyterian student work.
He also read the 23rd Psalm and other Bible verses. Delores Mohler, Iola junior sang. Sandra Harding, Lawrence sophomore, was organist Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the First Presbyterian Church, Tulsa. Burial will be in the Memorial Park Cemetery, Tulsa.
Exam Registration Ends Wednesday
Wednesday is the final registration day for the English proficiency examination which will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday.
Students with at least junior standing in the College, Schools of Education, Journalism, Fine Arts, Medicine and Nursing can register in the office of their dean. Room assignments will be made at registration.
The examination is required for graduation in the schools listed.
Asian Students To Get 500 Books
Between 500 and 600 books were collected to be sent to Asian students in the recent drive conducted by Watson Library.
Robert Quinsey, chief of reader services, said, "We considered the drive very successful in that we got a wide range of subject matter from many different sources."
Students, faculty members, the library staff and the Student Union bookstore all contributed and some extra books from the library stacks were sent.
Groups Can Adopt Family For Holidays
Any social organization, church, lodge, or individuals wishing to adopt a family or a single person for Christmas may call VI 3-3551 between 9 and 12 weekday mornings.
The Social Service League is working with the Salvation Army, the County Welfare office, the Red Cross and the school nurse to provide Christmas dinners, parties and gifts for many who might not otherwise be remembered.
ASC Members, Deans Confer
Jason Ott, Wakeeney, secondyear law student and chairman of the All Student Council Committee to Review the College Curriculum, said the suggestions received will be tabulated and presented to the College administration for consideration.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College, said that individual members of the committee have already met with him, Dean George R. Waggoner and Assistant Dean Gilbert Ulmer to discuss the possibility of cooperation between the ASC and the College in passing on student opinion to the administrators.
"We welcome every action by the ASC either directly or through committees in bringing student opinion to us," Dean Heller said.
"One of the things which I would look for from this committee would be an increased understanding on the part of students of the opportunities available to them in the College now," he said.
"I think it will be an opportunity to increase and improve communication between faculty and students of the College."
To Gather Student Opinion
To Gather Student Opinion
the curriculum review committee,
first of its kind on the campus, was
organized by ASC President Bob
Billings, Russell junior, to gather
student opinion about the College
program and present it to the College deans for possible action.
Dean Heller said that all general changes in organization of the curriculum must be passed by the entire College faculty. If the change affects the freshman-sophomore program, it must also be passed by the faculty of schools to which College students transfer for professional training after two years.
"The College has been in the process of curriculum reorganization for several years," Dean Heller said. "The first phase has passed the faculty and further steps will be taken this year."
Quartet Here At 8 Monday
The Fine Arts Quartet of the American Broadcasting Co. will appear as a presentation of the Chamber Music series at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Hall. ID cards will not admit students. $ ^{a} $
For eight years the Quartet has been affiliated with ABC. They have given concerts from coast to coast and were three years in residence at Northwestern University.
The members of the quartet are Leonard Sorkin, violin, Abram Loft, violin, George Sopkin, cello, and Irving Ilmer, viola. The Quartet will play "Quartet in D Major," by Beethoven, "Quartet No. 4," by Bartok, and "Quartet in D Minor" (Death and the Maiden) by Schubert.
Basketball Rally Set For Wednesday
Bob Billings, Student Council president and basketball guard is scheduled to speak at the season's first pre-game rally at 9:50 Wednesday at the east end of Strong Hall.
Head cheerleader Dick Jones, McPherson junior, said cheerleaders will meet Thursday to plan campus rallies before all home games and other special rallies to be held during the basketball season.
68
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
Give Others A Chance
At times one can think of nothing which is more aggravating than a trip to the undergraduate library to read a book that a teacher very kindly put on reserve for his class.
That is, nothing can seem more aggravating till you check out the book and open it to the required reading. There it is. The lesson is done for you. Some kind-hearted soul has underlined the reading.
You begin to copy the underlined material. The farther into the reading you go, the more there is underlined. Suddenly you slow down, look around, read a few paragraphs that are underlined, and think about them. They aren't related to the reading. They aren't important.
You begin again, this time to read on your own merits and labors. But your eyes are continually slowed down and drawn to the irrelevant material: material that stays in your head, while important material not underlined is forgotten.
The further you read the more irked you become. Finally, the reading finished, you leave with little retained, and that of no importance.
The moral: Buy your own comic books to underline.
Leave the books in the library untouched by underlines, cartoons and cynical little comments. Someone may actually want to get something out of the reading.
Lee Lord
Russia And The Bully
In high school you can recall how a bully would strut around boasting about what he could do. However, he would usually confine his aggressive action to little boys who couldn't defend themselves. Seldom, if ever, would he beat up on the boy who had the support of other boys.
This thought was brought to mind after reading about the interview with Communist party boss, Nikita Khrushchev. He declared, or rather threatened, that the United States could be a scene of devastated cities and countless dead.
This, he said, could be the result if the United States attacked the Soviet Union. An old Russian gag is being used again and is following a familiar pattern.
As a bully is prone to do, he will flex his muscles which are the means by which he attained his present domineering status.
He added that Russia has won the arms race. From that it appears that the Soviet Union has never heard of the "90-pound weakling" who developed and exercised his muscles when he felt that his prestige and honor were at stake in the presence of his friends.
But the bully realizes that his opponent is capable of swift retaliation of a nature that would be just as devastating as the one he threatens to inflict upon the United States.
He has good reason to be hesitant about launching the world into an all-out war. Strategic air command bases ring the communist world waiting for them to start something.
The United States has these bases in England, Spain, North Africa, and throughout other areas in the middle east and near east. Former Japanese-held islands in the Pacific Ocean complete the ring of destruction poised for any wrong move that the Soviets might make.
Old western showdowns and gun battles have proved that death-dealing shots can be delivered by a gunman as he falls mortally wounded. Russia realizes this same thing. She waits.
Thus this verbal barrage by Russia, while no means to be taken lightly, should not on the other hand badger America into acceding to demands for a peaceful coexistence on her terms.
—Oklahoma State University Daily O'Collegian
Is It Really Necessary?
ROCK . CHALK . JAY .
The words come drifting across the football field, or basketball court, as the Kansas cheering section follows up the alma mater with the famous Jayhawk Yell.
ROCK ... CHALK ... JAY ...
HAWK ... K ... U. ROCK ...
CHALK ... JAY HAWK ... K ...
U.
Then, following the slow chanting of the cheering section, comes the ear shattering words "HIT IT."
However far we look, however
hard we look, there is little doubt that nowhere in the versions of the Jayhawk Yell will one find the words "HIT IT."
These words spoken by the cheerleaders sound bad enough, but when five thousand students take it upon themselves to tell everyone around them to "HIT IT," the words become slightly obnoxious, and unnecessary.
to say those words, and therefore, we can reason they can count up to two. If they can count up to two, then they can count all by themselves and know when to "HIT IT."
The words are unnecessary as evidenced by the spontaneous response on the behalf of the student body. They all seem to know when
The cheer is beautiful. It is bathed in tradition, which we may have a lack of here at KU. Why ruin the beauty and tradition of a famous old cheer by ad libbing?
Let's be college students who can count up to two instead of high school students who have to be led through cheers. On second thought it might be the college students who have to be led through the cheers. Most high schools seem to have fairly complicated cheers and do them quite well.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
0-58
BOLK
D. BLAKE FLUFFETT KIDS
—Lee Lord
"——WELL, HOWS IT HAPPEN WE FIND YOU'TESTING' UNDER WATER EQUIPMENT ON TH' GIRLS' DAY FOR TH' POOL?"
A single oyster can produce as many as 100 million eggs a season.
Dailyransan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became bachelor's 1904,
founded 1915, © 2012
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service; United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after graduation. Lawrence university昼长 days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class mutter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Marilyn Mernis, Jim Bannan, Richard Brown, Ray Winginson, Assistant Managing Editors: Bob Hartley, City Editor; Robert K. Larson, City Editor; Leroy Zimmermann, Telegraph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthon, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary Crosier, Assistant Marina Crosier, Assistant Society Editor
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager Kent Felz, Advertising Manager Jere Govee, Creative Director George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant Advertising Manager; Ted Winkler, Circulation Manager; Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston Editorial Editor
Jobzite Haley Del Haley, Jim Sledd.,
Editors. Editors.
...Letters ...
I wish to express my personal appreciation and that of the University, for the time, energy and competence of the staff of The Kansas which combined to produce the Homecoming Edition.
Editor:
I have heard many comments from faculty, students and visiting friends
and alumni alike, all of which lead to the conclusion that by this splendid effort you have reflected great credit not only upon yourselves but on the University as well.
Franklin D. Murphy Chancellor
Use Kansan Want Ads
HOLLYWOOD
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!"and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
Let us examine first the most vexing of all gift problems: What do you buy for the person who has everything? Well sir, when you encounter this dilemma, the best thing to do is seize it by the horns. Ask yourself this question: Does he truly have everything? Does he, for example, have a birthmark? A Mach number? A lacrosse net? An I-beam? An S-hook? A U-bolt? A T-square? A Primus stove?
The days grow short, the nights grow long, the north wind doth blow, and a light frost appears on the knees of coeds. Christmas is icumen in, and once more our keen young minds turn to the vexing problem of Christmas gifts.
(There is, incidentally, quite an interesting little story about how Primus came to invent the stove. Before Primus's invention, cooking was rather a hazardous occupation. People just built fires any old place—the floor, the closet, the escritoire—and often as not the whole house would go up in flames along with the dinner. Primus, a goose plucker of Frankfurt-am-Main, kept thinking there must be a more efficient way to cook. Finally, in a flash of inspiration, it came to him: Why not build a device to contain the fire and keep it from spreading?
DECK THE HALLS
拯狱
But I digress. We were discussing Christmas gifts. This year, as every year, a popular gift is the smoking jacket. And what do the smoking jackets smoke? Why, Marlboro, of course—every man jacket of them. And why wouldn't they smoke Marlboros? Why wouldn't anybody with a taste bud in his head? You get such a lot to like in a Marlboro—filter . . . flavor . . . flip-top box.
Speaking of smoking, the year's most unusual gift item is a brand-new cigarette lighter that never needs refilling. You are scoffing. You are saying you have heard such claims before. But it's true, I promise you. This new lighter never, never needs refilling! The fuel supply lasts forever.
Here is no filter to hollow the cheeks and bug the eyeballs; here is a filter that draws nice and easy. Here is no flavor to pale and pall; here is a flavor ever fresh; ever zestful. Here is no flimsy pack to crumble and shred its precious cargo; here is a sturdy box that keeps each cigarette plump and pristine.
...his mistake was in building it out of paper...
Of course, there are certain disadvantages. For one thing, the lighter is rather bulky-170 feet long and three stories high.
(Well sir, he built precisely such a device and named it after his beloved wife Stove. Primus's first Stove, it must be confessed, was less than a triumph; his mistake was in building it out of paper. The next Stove, built of wood, fared hardly better. Not until he made one out of metal could the Stove really be called a success.
(But even then the Stove was not entirely satisfactory. The trouble was that the Stove filled up with ashes and became useless after a few weeks. It remained for Primus's son Frederick to conquer that problem. He invented a mechanism to remove ashes from the bottom of the Stove and was thenceforth known to posterity as Frederick the Grate.)
But look on the bright side: As the fuel runs out, you can rent rooms in it. 1057. Max Shuilman
Good to give, good to receive, at Christmas or any other time is a carton of filter-tip Marlboros, whose makers take pleasure in bringing you this column throughout the school year.
1
University Daily Kansan
Woman Debater Not Self-conscious
Page/3
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
Wanda Welliever, Oberlin senior, the only woman member of the KU debate squad, said, "I never feel self-conscious as the men don't seem to feel I've invaded their field."
Miss Welliever said laughingly, "T'll just have to take a positive attitude when the squad goes on debate tournaments. People sure stared when I, seven other squad members and two debate coaches would walk into restaurants at the recent tournament in Edmond, Okla.
"If there is any prejudice on their part, I certainly can't tell it." Miss Wellerli said. "Everyone is surely fair to me, especially the coaches.
"Most of the men on the team are from high schools where women took an active part in the debate work so they're used to it." she said.
MISS WANDA WELLIEVER
"This didn't seem to bother the men, so it didn't bother me," she said.
Miss Welliever said she feels that something should be done to encourage more women debaters.
TOMMY
"Kansas turns out so many good high school women debaters and they can do just as well in
The students will gain practical experience in mineralogy by visiting such places as a zinc mine in Picher, Okla. said Elliott Gillerman, associate professor of geology
Geology Class To Take Trip
The mineralogy class of the geology department will leave Lawrence Wednesday for a five day field trip in Oklahoma and Arkansas.
From Picher the class will go to Hot Springs, Ark., where they will study quartz deposits, and to Magnet Cove, Ark. Rare minerals, large deposits of lodestone and magnetite, an important iron ore, are located in this area.
Reinforced Concrete Is Engineer Topic
The class will then visit a bauxite mine in Bauxite, Ark.
The ultimate strength design for reinforced concrete will be the main topic of the Structural Engineering Conference in the Student Union Javhawk Room Friday.
G. W. Bradshaw, chairman of the department of civil engineering, will preside at the conference which he expects 125 engineers and engineering students to attend.
college debate as they did in high school," she said.
The statue, a gift of the Endowment Assn. in 1955, is one of only two genuine works of Antonio Canova. 18th century Italian sculptor.
A bronze statue, "Kreugas, the Athlete," belonging to the Museum of Art is featured in a show, "The Age of Canova" at the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R.I.
Four members of the KU administration are in St. Louis today attending a joint meeting of the mid-American district of the American Alumni Council and the American Colleges Public Relations Assn
Most of the other universities and colleges Miss Welleiver is familiar with have women debaters, but she says that women are definitely in the minority. Last year a woman debater from the University of Houston, Tex., was top speaker at the West Point National tournament.
They are Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Assn.; Dick Wintermote, field secretary of the KU Alumni Assn.; Maurice Barker, executive secretary of the KU Greater University Fund; Tom Yoe, public relations director.
Four In St. Louis Today For Meeting
KU Statue In Design Show
The statue is from the collection of Prince Trivulzio of Milan, Italy. It has been part of an art exhibition touring Europe recently. It will be returned to the museum after the present show.
O painting by two members of the oil paintings and painting faculty of the University have been accepted for the 11th annual Missouri Valley exhibition. The show, which ends Dec. 20, is at the Mulvane Art Museum on Washburn University's campus in Topeka.
Faculty Paintings Exhibited In Topeka
Mr. Youngberg is chairman of the American Alumni Council, and is a member of its national board of directors.
An exhibition of plastic paintings, "Form and Substance of Paint," done by classes in architecture is on display in the main lounge of the Student Union.
The picture ideas develop during the painting and are suggested by the paint itself, said Robert E. Johnson, assistant professor of architecture.
Mrs. Homemaker's Forum says placing freshly laundered curtains back on the rod will be easier if you put a finger of an old glove over the end of the rod. Ease the curtain on gently. It will prevent snagging.
Robert Green, associate professor, had two paintings accepted, and Richard A. Schira, and John J. Talear, instructor, one each.
Plastic Paintings Displaved In Union
"By the time young people of this generation reach college age, they will think society is something that looks after them," Prof. Walter M. Kollmorgen, chairman of the geography department, said recently in a Daily Kansan interview.
"As children they were pampered. In school goodie-goodie teachers inoculated them with the ideas of a welfare state. So they are saturated with it."
"Young people have no self reliance. They are getting soft because they are shielded from work."
Fraternity Jewelers
Prof. Kollmorgen, sometimes called "the last of the rugged individualists" by his political geography students, said rugged individualism in the United States was of short duration in the frontier where people had plenty of room.
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts
"As America is beginning to fill up and space is tight, the people are adopting more and more the political programs of Europe, especially the so-called social legislation.
IFPC Elects Officers
"It is reaching the point where people can't make decisions for themselves—they aren't capable of it. When they get hurt they shout,
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Upcoming Generation 'Soft'
Other officers elected were Ronald Broun, Phillipsburg, vice president; Scott Gilles, Prairie Village, treasurer, both freshmen. John Mayer, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, secretary.
NOW!
Philp Ballard. Wichita freshman was elected president of the Interfraternity Pledge Council Monday.
Kermit Dyer, Kansas City, Mo. rush chairman; Charles Gibbon, Hutchinson, scholarship chairman, both juniors. Henry Asbell, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Greek Week chairman; Phil Anschutz, Wichita freshman social chairman.
Phone VI 3-1571
Al Lauter
411 West 14th
"Government used to take care of thieves and wife-beaters," Prof. Kollmorgen declared, "Now it redistributes wealth. But the tendency is to redistribute to groups who regenerate little wealth back into the government.
Jay Sisters To Give Flapper Fling In Gym
'government!' and 'government comes with a panacea.'
"It is puzzling to me that government is suddenly beneficiary when it has been throughout history a 'tyrant' and 'thief' which the people have struggled to throw off."
MURRAY L.
WALTER M. KOLLMORGEN
Prof. Kollmorgen worked for the U.S. government as an agricultural
Flapper Fling will be the theme of three 1-hour parties to be given for the freshmen women by the 87 sophomore Jay Sisters 7 to 10 tonight in Robinson Gym.
economist with the War Labor Board from the late '30's to the middle '40's.
Decoration will depict the 1920's and those attending will wear an article of that era.
One-third of the world's ocean- going tankers are owned by oil companies.
Pressing Cold Weather Questions Need Answers
Cold weather is here, and so is the desire for hot pizza! As it gets cooler outside, more people want to stay inside. But people still get hungry when they stay inside—so more of them have pizza delivered.
One problem: With more pizzas and colder weather, how to keep the pizzas hot?
Answer: Find a new kind of wrapping that keeps pizzas sizzling hot while being delivered.
Another problem: What?
Answer: A new type of bag-heavy
One last question: Where to get pizzas in this new type of bag?
paper on the outside, heavy foil on the inside, a steam vent in the top.
Answer: The place with all the new ideas for fast, hot, pizza delivery—The Campus Hideaway, VI 3-9111.
The bags come in Christmas colors now, but your old friend "Mr. Pizza" will be back soon. Try one for a really hot pizza! (paid advertisement)
The "Playboy" in lightweight Blue-black Dacron* blend fabric is trim, trim and flattering. Satin shawl collar, natural shoulders, center vent, flap pockets, unpleated trousers—all authentic Ivy features! And informal comfort is tailored into every After Six "Playboy", too.
*DuPont's Polyester Fiber
GO FORMAL "100% IVY"
$45.00
in the new and exclusive
"PLAYBOY" tuxedo!
as advertised in PLAYBOY
OTHER "AFTER SIX" TUXEDOS
"Stag Line" $42.50
"Sir Blake" 52.50
"Mr. Formal" 62.50
After Six BY RUDOFKER
ve
Let Us Do Your Gift Wrapping
All gifts purchased during December will be attractively gift wrapped Free Of Charge
the town shop the university shop
KEN WHITENIGHT—DOWNTOWN
AL HACK—ON THE HILL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
German Yule Play Slated For Dec.18
For the 10th consecutive year the German department will present a medieval Christmas play.
The play, to be given in German Dec. 18, mixes the religious Christmas with secular comedy relief in six scenes, varying from the story of Christ's birth to a humorous battle between the devil and the wise men.
Members of the east are: Dorothy Wohlgemuth, Cummings junior, Gabriel; Jane Ziesenis, Lawrence senior, Mary; David Dodds, Lawrence graduate student, Joseph; Arthur Murphy, Geneseo senior, an innkeeper; Carolyn Kreyne, Lawrence freshman, the inkleeper's wife; Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg senior, Conscience; Dennis Lee Brown, South Haven freshman, Herod; Richard Wurtz, Mound City freshman, and Floyd Dillon, Satanta freshman, Herod's servants.
One of the main purposes of the play is to show how the student in German can use the language, according to J. A. Burzle, professor of speech, with Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, directing the choir.
Cast as shepherds are Bruce Wells, Winfield freshman; Charles Herrman, Hutchinson junior; Burley
Channer, Hutchinson senior; Carol Thompson, Mound City freshman; Otto Linenberger, Hays sophomore; and Mary Ann Waddell, Kansas City, Kan. freshman.
The angels are Rosemary Griffin,
Rock Port, Mo. junior; Ilo Henning,
Ottawa senior, and Kay Schweizer,
Overland Park freshman.
The three wisemen are Con Henderson, Stanberry, Mo, sophomore; Kenneth Megill, Independence freshman, and Benjamin Evans, Kansas City, Kan. senior. The devils are Marion Redstone, Parsons freshman; Mary Dodson, Scott City freshman; Rosemary Jones, Timken junior, and Kay Allen, Rock Port, Mo., sophomore.
The prologue will be by Hazel Vaughan, Lawrence special student, and Renate Mayes, Kansas City, Mo. senior. The narrator will be Bonnie Dinsmore, Dayton, Ohio senior.
Second Photo Contest Entries Due Friday
Entries for the second University Daily Kansan photo contest are due at noon Friday in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room. 107 Flint.
The special topic for this contest is football. The Jayhawker will buy the best shot in this category for publication.
Other categories are black and white and color. The black and white field is subdivided into personalities, animals, sports, news children, scenies and travel; and the color field into people, either groups or individuals, and places. Awards will be made for the best pictures in each division.
A best of show trophy is awarded for the best picture in the contest.
be guest judge for the contest. Permanent judges are Jimmy Bedford, instructor of journalism, and Harry Wright, director of the Photographic Bureau.
Leonard Bacon, Lawrence Daily Journal-World photographer, will
Official rules and entry blanks may be obtained in the reading room.
Awards will be announced Monday and the winning photos exhibited in the reading room beginning Tuesday, Dec. 10.
Foreign Students Shown Western Kansas Life
Attending a square dance, watching the harvesting of milo, and eating at a community basket dinner were a few of the "firsts" for 16 foreign students who visited in Dodge City homes during Thanksgiving vacation.
The purpose of the trip was to acquaint the students with American homes and to show them points of interest in Dodge City, the "Cowboy Capital of the World." The trip was arranged by the KU-Y and the Dodge City Council of Church Women. Here are some typical comments by the foreign students:
Rabim Ola Oijikut, Nigeria graduate student—"I expected to see a lot of cowboys, but no one even carried a gun. But I was happy to meet the people who treated us as members of their families. I especially enjoyed the basket dinner they gave for us. All the people brought homemade food and we could eat all we wanted."
ate student—"It was the first time I had had the opportunity to get to know an American family. Our hosts gave us such a warm welcome. They made me love western Kansas even though it is much flatter than Switzerland."
Nadine Dony, Switzerland gradu-
Collette Boyer, France graduate student—"I was particularly impressed by the modern kitchens in the farm homes." Everything on the farms was so modern. They even fed the cattle by a machine."
Other students who went to Dodge City were Helmut Ausderau and Harold Meyer, Switzerland; Allan Lee, China; Manouchehr Pedram, Iran; Alan Brooks, Ivor Shelly, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cridland, England; Johannes Leitich, Austria; Therese Pageau, Canada; Erwin Werner, Germany; Oystein Opdahl, Norway, and Frode Jorgensen, Denmark. All are graduate students.
Birds on a Branch
V13-8855
BIRD TV-RADIO
JACK W. NEIBARGER, Prop.
EVEREADY
908 Mass.
Portable Radio Batteries For All Makes Expert Service and Repair
A student, reading KU's basketball schedule, asked an instructor "Where is Canisius?"
Next Question:
Who Is Canisius?
The instructor didn't know but looked it up and found that the college is in Buffalo, N. Y.
He then took an informal poll of 22 basketball enthusiasts and learned that only four of them knew Canisius is in Buffalo. Other guesses ranged from Philadelphia and Boston to Ohio and Siberia.
The instructor was gleeful—until someone asked him "Where is St. Joseph's?"
He was last seen making out a shotgun test for his students.
(Editor's note: The Daily Kansan knows it's in Philadelphia, Pa.)
**
More playing cards are made in Cincinnati, Ohio, than in any other place in the world.
The cast for the University Theatre production of "The Seven Year Itch" has been announced by Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama and director of the play.
'Seven-Year Itch' Cast
In the east are Duke Howze, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Marvin Carlson, Wichita graduate student; Marilyn Honderick, LaCrosse, and True Binford, Overland Park juniors; Carol West, DetoSoto, Celia Welch, Herington, Ilze Sedricks, Topeka, and Steve Callahan, Independence, sophomores.
The play by George Axelrod will
Children's Paintings In Union
Original paintings by French school children from the "Thursday Academy" in Paris are now being exhibited in the south lounge of the Student Union.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
be presented at 8 p.m. Feb. 12-16 in the theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. It will be the second major production by the University Theatre this year. Tickets will go on sale Feb. 1. ID cards may be exchanged for tickets.
TUXEDO RENTALS and Sales
Place your order early for the Christmas Season
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763
(one door south Jayhawk Cafe)
Complete Wedding Service
Look What We're Giving
1950
Away FREE
Q
(the trophies, we mean).
2nd
Daily Kansan Photo Contest Closes December 6
- 3 DIVISIONS -
Black & White (5 fields) Color (slides or photos)
Jayhawker Publication, $10 (special subject-football)
All Students, Faculty and Administration are Eligible
Entry Blanks and Rules at Journalism Library, Flint Hall
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Kansas Defeats Cowpokes, 63-56
Wilt Hits 30 In KU Opener
By GEORGE ANTHAN (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
WHERE'S THE COWPOKES?—Wilt Chamberlain and an unidentified Jayhawker scramble for a rebound in Monday night's 63-56 KU victory over Oklahoma State. Al Donaghue, Kansas forward, watches from the side. (Daily Kansan photo)
13
STILLWATER, Okla.-Kansas survived a fiery baptism here Monday night and in defeating Oklahoma State University, 63-56, served notice that it would be a contender for national basketball honors.
Once again it was the performance of Wilt Chamberlain, the all American center, who scored, rebounded and played brilliantly on defense. Chamberlain scored 30 points while Ron Loneski, playing his usually steady game, scored 14. A pleasant surprise for Kansas was the very fine performance of junior forward Monte Johnson who scored seven points, fourth highest in the game.
Center Arlan Clark was high scorer for the Cowpokes with 13 points. Forward Joe Crutchfield added eight points, all scored from the outside.
OS Crowd Noisy
To win Kansas not only had to defeat Iba's nationally ranked squad but also the famous sixth man, the violent crowd which gave no verbal quarter to visitors and officials alike.
Chamberlain, the officials, and a disturbed Dick Harp were the main targets of the 9,500 screaming fans which jammed OSU's little Gallagher Field House for the game.
Kansas took an early lead and maintained a four to six point margin until the closing second of the first half.
The game's most heated action came with eight minutes left in the half when Chamberlain was roughed following one of his high leaps to dunk the basketball.
The alleged unnecessary roughness brought a verbal denunciation from Harp who argued with officials, scorers and with everyone in general. Meanwhile, Chamberlain tenderly massaged a slightly injured hand.
Iba's crew had one aim in mind throughout the game—get Chamberlain to foul and it appeared as if they had succeeded during the first half—Chamberlain fouled three times.
The crowd screamed with delight. Harp finally took his seat and Chamberlain quickly subdued the fans into respectful silence when he nonchalantly scored on both free throws awarded him after the personal foul.
That was all, though—he didn't foul in the second half.
The Aggies, although often far behind, played a slow, ball control game and tried to make every shot count.
With time quickly running out and his team 10-15 points behind, Iba charged to his feet often yelling, "Pass the ball, pass the ball," or, "Draw him out, draw him out."
Harp's main pre-season worry, defense, seemed to be a Kansas strong point Monday night. The Cowpokes, unable to work the ball in to the post, shot from the outside time and again and scored with deadly accuracy.
KU Defense Strong
Kansas hit an over-all 50 per cent of their field goals and 57 per cent on free throws for a 54 per cent average. The Cowpokes scored on 46 per cent of their field goals and 55 per cent of their free throws.
The Jayhawkers took their largest lead with eight minutes left in the second half, 15 points, on a full court pass from Chamberlain to Bob Billings who made the score 53-38, KU.
Roberto's
PIZZA
710 Mass., VI 3-1086
Then the Cowpokes scored on six straight field goals, all from the outside. Kansas meanwhile lagged behind with only two dunks by Chamberlain and a jump shot by Loneski in the period. The margin closed to 57-50 with 4:30 left and the roar of the crowd became deafening.
OS Press Fails
A tight half court press was thrown up by OSU with three minutes left, but Bob Hickman of Kansas scored the 60th and 61st KU points and Chamberlain, in the waning seconds, gave a very hostile crowd their final lesson on how a basketball is properly dunked from above.
"Adair and Sutton shooting the ball in so accurately hurt us," he said and added, "the team wanted to win and fought to do it."
Harp, after the game, said Loneski played his best game ever. He had high praise for Wilt and for Johnson and sophomore Alan Donaghue and Bob Hickman.
Kansas University won the Big Eight all-sports championship during the 1956-57 school year to end an 11-year streak of Oklahoma titles.
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets. Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
AIRLINE TICKETS
EUROPE VACATION
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information, end Been.
For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
The Box Score:
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
BHX Score:
Kansas (60) ft ft ft pt pf rh
Johnson, f 3-4 1-2 3 1 7
Loneski, f 5-13 4-6 1 14 7
Chamblen, c 13-26 4-8 2 30 15
Billing, g 2-2 2-5 2 6 1
Billings, g 0-1 1-1 1 6 1
Donaghue, f 0-1 1-0 2 2 1
Hickman, g 1-2 1-1 0 3 1
Totals 2-5-10 13-23 10 63 12
Okla.- St. (56)
Sutton, f 7-12 2-2 3 16 0
Hale, f 1-2 0-0 4 2 1
Clark, c 5-12 4-2 4 13 5
Adair, g 4-12 1-2 4 19 5
Carberry, g 3-7 0-2 1 6 6
Crutchfield, f 3-7 0-1 1 8 8
Walker, c 1-3 0-1 1 2 2
Webster, g 0-1 0-1 1 0 0
25-54 6-11 19 56 26
Conference Teams Score 4 Victories Monday
K totals 25-54 6-11 19 56 26
UTUs 20-34-63 20-34-63
OSU 28-28-56
Officials: Wayne Lichty, Iowa State; Jim Ryan, St. Ambrose.
Oklahoma, led by Don Schwall with 17 points, topped Arkansas 64-52. The Sooners had a comfortable 39-25 halftime lead.
Big Eight basketball got underway Monday night with Oklahoma, Iowa State, Nebraska, and Kansas gaining their first wins, while the Colorado Buffaloes were going down to defeat in their opener.
The Iowa State Cyclones chalked up their seventh straight basketball win over the Drake Bulldogs, this time by a score of 62-55. Veteran forward John Crawford led the Cyclones scoring with 27 points. Crawford also got 17 rebounds.
Colorado State was the only team to gain an opening victory over a Big Eight team as they defeated Colorado 64-55. Two sophomores, center Chuck Newcomb and forward Larry Hoffner led the winners, attack. Newcomb scored 19 points and Hoffner picked up 14.
Nebraska lead only a 31-28 half-time lead over South Dakota, but opened up in the second half to gain a 64-52 victory. Center Bob Mayo scored 17 points to lead the Cornhusker attack.
The first football game played on McCook Field was on Oct. 27, 1892 against the University of Illinois. KU won 26 to 4.
KU's first championship football team was that of 1892. They defeated Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, and the Denver Athletics.
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
Chicago Player In Hospital
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — (UP)—Chicago Cubs first baseman Dale Long underwent minor surgery to correct a glandular ailment in the lower abdomen Monday. Long, who batted .298 and hit 21 home runs during the 1957 season, is expected to be released from the hospital within a few days.
The first intercollegiate baseball game played by KU was with Washburn on April 18, 1880, with KU losing 23 to 29.
SPUTNIKS
Moon Earth Star
... do not use Leonard's gas ... It's Too Powerful!
LEONARD'S Standard Service 9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
New!
New!
Old Spice
SHAMPOO FOR MEN
Old Spice
SHAMPOO FOR MEN
Formulated for a man's hair and scalp. Conditions while it cleans. 1.25 plus ten
Old Spice
SHAMPOO FOR MEN
Old Spice
SHAMPOO FOR MEN
11. (3) 已知 $a > 0, b > 0$,且 $ax^2 + by^2 = 1$. 则 $a + b$ 的值为 ___.
IN UNBREAKABLE PLASTIC!
SHULTON
New York • Toronto
Page 6
---
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
Around The World
Ike Asks Adlai To NATO Meeting
WASHINGTON — (UP) — Adlai E. Stevenson said today that President Eisenhower wants him to attend the NATO meeting in Paris Dec. 16-18.
Mr. Stevenson said after a White House conference that he is deferring a decision for a week or 10 days—until he completes his consultative work at the State Department. He has been serving as a consultant to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on NATO meeting matters.
Mr. Stevenson participated in the first phase of the President's meeting this morning with bipartisan Congressional leaders and members of the cabinet.
Meanwhile, President Eisenhower's advisers told legislative leaders he will ask Congress next month for unqualified authority to share nuclear weapons information with other countries.
He will ask this authority, which he already possesses in other weapons fields, as a step toward perfecting the West's defenses against the Soviet missile-atomic threat.
The President will not, however, ask Congressional authority to give U.S. nuclear weapons to any other country. All he proposes to do is ask amendment of the Atomic Energy Act to remove restrictions on his power to share information on how to make nuclear weapons.
'U.S. Ready For Religious Revival'
ST. LOUIS, Mo.-(UP)- A top protestant official said today America is ready for a religious revival but it hasn't had one yet.
Dr. Roswell P. Barnes, associate general secretary of the National Council of Churches, said Christians have no right to be "compacent" about the "widespread interest in religion" that has swelled U.S. church membership to an all-time high of more than 100 million.
Instead of basking in their own statistics, he said, churches should address themselves to the tremendous task of leading their new members beyond a vague "faith in faith" to genuine "obedience to God and acceptance of his preferred salvation through Jesus Christ."
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
The Proficiency Examination in English Composition will be given Saturday, Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. Students planning to take the examination register on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday in the office of the college or school in which they are enrolled.
Jay Sister party, 'Flapper Fling'
Three parties, each lasting an hour from
7-10 p.m. Robinson Gym. Everyone bring
pencil!
Jaybawk Pre Med Tech Club, noon
Names Home Sweeter. Mry Darlson.
Names Home Beaver.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., 306 Student Union Reger Business meeting
Faculty, Forum, noon. English Room, Student Union. Discussion. "The Humanities in the Environment Science," by Dr. William Argersinger, professor of chemistry and associate deem of Graduate School. Phone reservation to Office, KU 227, by Tuesday afternoon.
Social Work - Sociology - Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11强 Annex E. Discussion, "Husband Catching in India." Coffee.
Et Atenó se reume el microceres a las cuatro de la tarde en 1 Fraser. El senor Kent Porter habilara sobre "Un Ano en la Universidad de Madrid."
KU Dames, bridge, 7:30 p.m. Student Union
Museum of Art Record Concert, 11 a.m. p.m. Dallas Children's Corner, Suite "Saint-Anthes," "Carnival of the Animals," Suite "Suite" Ravel, "Mother Goose, Suit."
German Christmas Choir first rehearsal,
4 p.m. 402 Fraser. Everyone who likes to sing German Christmas Carols welcome.
Jay James, 5 p.m., Pine Room, Student Union. Attendance required.
THURSDAY
Baptist Student Union noonday devotions, 12:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
Poirty Hour, 4 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Student Union. Arvid Shulenberger, associate professor of English. Read the poetry of Rabindranath Tarkey.
KuKu Club, election of officers, 7 p.m.
Student Union.
Hammarskjold Finds Opposition In Israel
JERUSALEM, Israel. —(UP)—A smiling but noncommittal Dag Hammarskjold entered Israel today for talks with this nation's leaders and ran into new charges that Jordan had turned areas around Mount Scopus into an "armed fortress."
At the same time a Jordan spokesman said in Amman that an Israeli civilian who penetrated some 200 yards into Jordan Sunday was believed wounded by rifle fire.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—(UP)
—Navy technicians put the finishing touches today on a slender rocket carrying America's hopes to duplicate Russia's leap into space.
Latest information was that the Navy's Vanguard missile might be fired at any hour or minute Wednesday off Cape Canaveral.
The 72-foot-long, three-stage rocket will attempt to place a six-inch baby moon into orbit. It is a tiny thing compared to Russia's second, dog-bearing Sputnik, but it will send back a radio signal, if successfully orbited, to let the world know the United States has met the challenge.
Navy's Vanguard Girard Free To Go Home
Refrigerate the unused portion of sweetened, condensed milk.
TOKYO—(UP)—Army Specialist third-class William S. Girard, freed by a Japanese court in the fatal shooting of a Japanese woman, packed up today to go home to Illinois with his Japanese wife for Christmas.
Pizza Delivered
VI 3-9111
He was free to leave Japan after Japanese prosecutors announced they would not appeal the suspended sentence given bi mfor manslaugh
Floodwater mosquitoes of the Mississippi River lay their eggs on a stream bank where they cannot hatch until floods raise water over them. Some eggs must wait years before the waters return.
Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park
JAMES A. MICHELER'S STORY
OF LONELINESS AND LOVE!
M-G-M
presents
UNTIL THEY SAIL
JEAN SIMMONS' JOAN FONTAINE
PAUL NEWMAN' PIPER LAURIE
IN CINEMASCOPE
Plus: Cartoon—News Now thru Wednesday GRANADA
GRANADA
tence given hi mfor manslaughter. Mr. Girard was elated by the prosecution decision not to appeal the case. "I feel good all over," he said. Japanese and U.S. officials were relieved. Opposition Japanese socialists and the daughter of the woman Girard killed were incensed.
V
VARSITY
Open 6:45—Curtain 7:00
Feature at 7:20-9:15
NOW THRU WED.
"The Tin Star"
STARTS THURSDAY For 3 Days
JOHN FORD'S the Rising of the Moon
3 ways to say Merry Christmas
MERRY CHRISTMAS
The in the house
ne on the door...
Symbol of never-ending friendship, the circle of holly this Christmas carton of &M's says—here is the welcome gift for all your friends who like to Live Modern
The in the house...
Symbol of life, the fir tree on your Christmas carton of Chesterfields means the perfect gift for friends who like their pleasure big
Jolly old himself!
Merry Christmas To From
OASIS FILTER CIGARETTES with Menthol Mist
Jolly old
Merry Christmas.
To From
OASIS
FILTER CIGARETTES
www.Menthol M
GIVE L&M-CHESTERFIELD-OASIS TO EVERY SMOKER ON YOUR LIST
25 w
STUI
vants
Life,
both
prom
CHIR that Spec facultrate gift-catio year mas
DEE old. Lind 15th.
BIQI
com
entir
nitio
in
c
comp
Ever
cise!
your
TRA inclu
21 ft room
Own
4863.
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1957
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, pop up offers and magnates both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
MGTD 51, excellent condition. new top and tonneau cover. Call VI 3-4664 after 5:30 p.m. 12-5
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make use of these publications at the 1% price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
DEEP FREEZE, 22 cu. ft. upright, 1 year old, ½ price. Can be financed. 1519 Lindenwood Lane, last street east on 12-9
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in other books. Complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 2-0881.
TRAILER. 30 ft., all metal and modern including, thermostatic controlled heat. 21 ft. aluminum awning, carpeted living room, TV and cooler. Priced to sell.Owner moving in January. Call VI 3-4863. 12-9
WANT TO SELL—one RCA Victor Mark
VIII Hi-Fi set. Only $100—like new.
Phone VI 3-7051, Patrick M. Dolan. 12-9
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H. VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-3320
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-ii
1407 Mass.
VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
725 Mass. Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
WATCH REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass.
VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. V1 3-3055
3
ONLY
DAYS LEFT to enter the
DAILY KANSAN PHOTO CONTEST
LOST
Rules in Reading Room, Flint Hall
SLIDE RULE—Student Union Cafe. Serial number 769641. Reward. Ph. KU 349, Need Joslin. 12-5
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH Sunday
Nov. 24 Reward Phone VI 12-12-8
POST SLIDE RULE and pocket book in 401 Lindley, 9 a.m. Dec. 2. Reward. Call VI 3-7212. 12-9
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door. $20 La. tf
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
WOULD LIKE BABY SITTING in even-
nings. 50c per hour, Call Ginny Holder,
VI 3-1945. 12-9
TRANSPORTATION to Binghamton or
NYC. Contact Daniel H. Clark,
Cal Judy Stern, VI 3-322, if not
available.
HELP WANTED
TRAVEL ARRANGER. Man or woman to assist manager FIT and escorted tour department in detailed arrangements. No selling. Be versed in foreign travel, meals on Ramadan, Rio de Janeiro, East. Must be able to type and compose own correspondence. Detail-Mindfulness capacity to learn. Wide knowledge of capacity essential. Hand preferable, also reading knowledge of Russian. 5½ day week. If you have resume and details, please write full resume and details. MUST HURT TOUR ASSOCIATES. 1236 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas.
BUSINESS SERVICES
DRESS, MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tt
BEST QUALITY IRONING. reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tt
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service.Call VI 3-0177.Mrs. Jack Larson.Tf
LIVE GIFTS—Nighttime Calary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alliances, chameleons, hamsters, etc. Everything in net field. Grunt Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Phone VI 3-2001. tt
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
RECORD SHOPPER
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
12 FAVCRITE
CALYPSO SONS
Schwann Cat. List $3.98
12" LONG PLAY RECORDS
First Print - Factory Fresh
Well Known Manufacturer
AUTHENTIC
CARIBBEAN MUSIC
50% OFF
LIST
12 FAVORITE
CALYPSO SONGS
19.8 Each
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629. tf
FULLY GUARANTEED
Mailing and Handling Charges:
309 First Record;
15¢ each addit. Record
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER available to students and faculty. Prompt service. 7291 $_{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5465. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
We Sell All Major Long Play Labels
Every Record from Bop to Beethoven
GUR LOW PRICES: LIST PRICES:
$2.98 $3.75 $4.25 $9.00-$9.48 $9.99-
ALL RECORDS GUARANTEED FACTORY WARRANTY
COMPLETE
MODERN LIBRARY
STEEL BANDS
FROM TRINIDAD
Schwab Cat. List $38
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.35 ea.
Come in and see you.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
We Stock The
Mailing and Handling Charges:
301 First Record;
159 each addit. Record
OUR FIFTH SUCCESSFUL YEAR!
THE RECORD SHOPPER
1650 BROADWAY • SUITE 701
NEW WEST 19, N. Y.
POSTERS MADE TO ORDER by senior in Commercial Art. Any sizes, colors; illustrations that call all I desired. Reasonable bill, call one week in advance. Jay Fisher, VI 3-2550. 12-9
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-831. tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality-alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Ph. VI 3-0993 or 12-2059.
5994
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657, 1400 Tenn.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W. 20th St. tf
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service. VI 3-7181; 632 West 20th St.
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED,
Prompt and efficient service. Regular
rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8609.
West 12-9
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1631 West
19th St. Terr. 12-9
PRIVATE SECRETARY will do typing of all kinds. Fast, neat and accurate. Regular rates. Call Mrs. Ingels VI 3-264 between 12 and 1:30 p.m. 12-9
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Virri, Vr I 3-8660. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
PHILIP MORRIS HLI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3- 3464.
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies, ant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI if 0350.
We like to say "Yes"
(at Borgfinat)
Loans $25 to $2000 on signature, furniture or car. Phone, write or come in.
Beneficial FINANCE CO.
$8331\frac{1}{2}$ MASS. ST., Lawrence VI. 3-8074
Your Clothes Reflect Your Personality
botonimo Hominoides
For the best reflexion, give your clothes Independent care
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
1903 Mass.
740 Vt.
VI 3-4011
Also at Rowlands, 1241 Oread
K
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Dec. 3, 1957
10
MILITARY BALL QUEEN FINALISTS—One of these women will reign over the Military Ball Saturday. From front row: Peggy McCormick, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega; Margie Critten, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall; Fawn Hooker, Independence, Mo. freshman, Sellards Hall; Barbara Maritt, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore, Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Second row: Val Drube, Russell sophomore, Alpha Omicron
Pi; Kay Winegarner, Arkansas city junior, Gamma Phi Beta; Dana Haglund, Wichita junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Judy Vancil, Abilene sophomore, Pi Beta Phi. Third row: Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeyville senior, Alpha Phi; Shari Hudson, St. John senior, Alpha Chi Omega; Sandra Scroggin, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Alpha Delta Pi; Judy Allen, Topeka sophomore, Chi Omega. (Daily Kansan photo)
Candidates Nominated Monday For IFC Offices
Nominations were made for second-semester officers at the Interfraternity Council meeting Monday night. Officers will be elected at the next meeting, Dec. 16.
The nominees are: president— Gene Paris and Stuart Gunekel, Kansas City, Mo., Bruce Rider, Wichita, seniors; Hulen Jenkins, Kansas City, Kan. junior.
Vice president — George Dodd
Oceanlake, Ore junior. Treasurer
Dick Jones, McPherson junior. Sec-
retary—Steve Hill and George
Smith, Lawrence juniors.
Executive council—Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., Lynn Miller, Dodge City, juniors; Gary Pack, Wichita, Don West, Salina, Mike Johnston, Independence, Mo., Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb., Joe Reitz, Kansas City, Mo., sophomores.
Melodrama Slates Extra Showings
Because of the demand for tickets, the University Players melodrama "Crock of Gold" has been scheduled for additional performances, Ken Baker, Helmetta, N.J. junior and president of University Players, said today. ID cards will not admit students.
The play will open at 8 p.m. Dec.
10 in the experimental theatre of
the Music and Dramatic Arts
Building. Two performances at 7
p.m. and 9:30 p.m. will be given
Dec. 11, 13, and 14.
Ise To Help Sachem Probe Life At KU
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will start Sachem off on an analysis of educational life of KU when he speaks at the organization's initiation banquet at 6 p.m. Thursday in the John Steuart Curry Room of the Student Union.
Sachem, senior honorary organization, which has taken on the problem of analyzing the educational aspects will probe the relative merits of such things as college fraternities and sororities, extra curricular activities, intercollegiate athletics and scholastic curriculum of the university.
KuKus To Elect Officers Thursday
KuKu Club officers for 1958 will be elected at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union. The club will also play basketball season activities at a business meeting.
Bob Plain, Garnett senior and president of the men's pep club, said a new, president, vice president, secretary, treasurer and card section chairman will be elected.
Other officers will be appointed by the elected president to plan club activities, train pledges and head committees for special day athletic events.
NEW YORK—(UP)—Clare Booth Luce, playwright, onetime Congresswoman and former U. S. Ambassador to Italy, was named today as the recipient of the third annual Cordell Hull Award for leadership in building U. S. foreign economic policy.
Mrs. Luce Receives Award
Archimedes, 3rd century Greek mathematician, worked his geometry from figures drawn in the ashes or in the after-bathing oil smeared on his body.
It's All In How You Look At It
A college woman, her boy friend and her roommate drove past a drive-in movie one night.
The college woman looked knowingly at her escort and, nodding to the rows of cars, murmured, "There's old passion pit."
The boy friend chuckled, but the roommate leaned over, glanced at the screen and blurred, "Looks like a western to me."
Ireland To Speak To K-State Geologists
H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, will give a talk Thursday to the Kansas State College geology department.
His subject will be geology and oil development in the Middle East. Prof. Ireland traveled through the Middle East while on sabbatical leave with a Fulbright scholarship.
Jayhawker Sold In Houses Today
House distribution of the 1958 Jayhawk magazine will continue trough the week. The magazine is also being distributed in the information booth on Jayhawk boulevard and in the basement of the Student Union.
Anyone who has not received a binder for the four issues of the magazine may get it with the first issue Tom Pettit Topeka senior and editor said.
Roberta's
Robertto's
PIZZA
710 Mass.
VI 3-1086
35 ROTC Cadets Get Appointments
Seventeen senior Army ROTC cadets have been appointed Distinguished Military Students and 18 cadets have been appointed to non-commissioned officer rank.
The DMS award, made by Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science, is given for outstanding academic achievement and ROTC performance.
The non-commissioned officer appointments were given to outstanding cadets who previously had no rank, said M. Sgt. Paul Westernman, assistant instructor of military science.
Two KU faculty members had articles printed in the November issue of the Kansas Teacher magazine.
Two Write For Magazine
David Paretsky, associate professor of bacteriology, wrote an article about the KU Science and Mathematics Camp, which was held last summer for the second year.
Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, wrote of the foreign relations project which was recently introduced as a supplement to foreign relations study in U. S. high schools.
Business Careers To Be Discussed
Banking, industrial finance, brokerage and insurance will be discussed at the career conference at 7:30 tonight in Bailey auditorium. This is the second in a series of career conferences sponsored by the School of Business to acquaint students with the daily life and opportunities in career fields.
Bruce Adamson, cashier of the Columbia National Bank will talk about the banking field. William W. Martin, vice president of Martin Tractor Co., will speak on finance in industry. The work in brokerage houses will be described by Howard H. Fitch, president of Barrett, Fitch, North & Co.
There are 171 different kinds of fish in Ohio waters.
The DMS appointments:
James Barbour, Independence, Mo., Nicholas Classen, El Paso, Tex., Omar Conrad, William Gerow, Kansas City, Mo., Robert Kraus, Massilon, Ohio, Robert Lied, Overland Park, William Harmon, Thomas Moore, Topeka, William Parsons, Leavenworth, Kenneth Payne, Kansas City, Kan., Colby Rehert, Jetmore, John Reinert, Park Ridge, Ill., Chester Boterf, Dale Gerboth, Allen Smith, Lawrence, Timemplin, Minneapolis, Lance Wildermood, Mission.
The non-commissioned officer appointments:
Sergeant, first class—John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., Howard Crotchett, Louisburg, Thomas Kennedy, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, all juniors.
Sergeant—Joseph Branda, Pennsville, N. J., Harold Miller, Langdon, Jasper Revere, Lexington, Mo., all juniors; Leon Roulier, Colby senior; Gustave Kropff, Mission, Melvin Schmidt, Topeka, both sophomores.
Corporal — Robert Breedlove, Lawrence, Richard Reitz, Council Grove, Louren Wood, Richland, Mo., James Henley, Olathe, William Witt, Garden City, all juniors; Melvin Gruber, Kansas City, Kan., Charles Curtis, Great Bend, Ronald Davis, Topeka, Larry Robinson, Peabody, all sophomores.
New Shipment
CORD SUITS
tailored by College Hall loden green
$37.50
diebolt's
843 massachusetts
TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BB'lee
18 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS VACATION Get Your Travel Reservations
at
The First National Bank of Lawrence
8th & Mass. TRAVEL AGENCY Phone VI 3-0152 Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
AIRLINES—FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
C
(tax included)
| From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | 1st Class |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Boston | $127.60 | $165.11 |
| Portland | 165.00 | 218.24 |
| Des Moines | — | 25.63 |
| Minneapolis | 49.28 | 61.60 |
| New Orleans | — | 98.89 |
| Memphis | — | 52.69 |
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year. No. 55
Campus Chest Drive Opens
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
4 Freshmen, Trophies, Contests, Highlight Week
The Campus Chest drive opened today with the Mr. Campus Chest contest, solicitations within organized houses, and fraternity pledge classes soliciting from students not living in organized houses.
Robert N. (Jim) Davies, Dodge City senior and chairman of the drive, said it was decided not to solicit at the game tonight because "we felt we have enough avenues of solicitation this year to canvas the campus.
"We don't want to take away from the rest of the drive," Davies said. Some students might feel their obligation was fulfilled when they gave at the game and we want to encourage them to support the other areas of the drive."
Mr. Campus Chest Vote Begins
Voting for Mr. Campus Chest candidates began at 8 a.m. Persons may vote for Mr. Campus Chest until 5 p.m. today and from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday in the rotunda of Strong Hall. Money votes should be dropped into the milk bottle with the candidate's name and picture on it.
The organized house, sorority, fraternity, dormitory or professional fraternity with a house, which contributes the most money per capita to the drive will receive a 30-inch high traveling trophy. In 1956 Phi Sigma fraternity won the trophy.
The person with the most money in his bottle will win. The winner and two runners-up will be announced during intermission at the Four Freshmen's concert, 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium.
Pledges Solicit
A trophy will also be given to the freshman women's dormitory which collects the most money. Corbin-North College Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson's Hall freshmen will be competing for this trophy, in addition to the traveling trophy.
Fraternity pledge classes will begin today soliciting from the 2,500 students not living in organized houses. Each man will be responsible for soliciting from four of these students. The pledge class collecting the most money per capita will also receive a trophy.
"This is an opportunity for the fraternity pledge classes to assert themselves." Davies said.
Contributions will be collected in the activities lounge of the Student Union from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday, Friday, Monday and Tuesday.
Student Union bookstore rebate slips will be accepted as contributions. Last year over $1,000 were collected through rebate slips.
Registration Ends For English Test
Final English preficiency examination registration deadline is 5 p.m. today.
Students with junior standing on above in the College, Schools of Education, Journalism, Fine Arts, Medicine and Nursing can register in the office of their dean. The examination is a graduation requirement in the above schools.
The fall examination will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday. Room numbers will be assigned at registration.
Pictures of the candidates will be taken Monday through Wednesday. The candidates will be dressed in a short-skirted Santa Claus costume
Miss Santa Contest Opens
The names of candidates for the Miss Santa contest, sponsored by the University Daily Kansan, must be turned in by Saturday noon to Steve Schmidt, Salina senior and promotion manager of The Daily Kansan, or Ted Winkler, Spring Hill senior and circulation manager of The Daily Kansan.
These pictures will be posted in the bulletin board of the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard Dec. 12-13. Students may vote for one candidate at the information booth.
Each organized house may nominate a candidate. A woman not living in an organized house may be nominated by a petition signed by 25 persons.
The winner of the contest will be announced in The Daily Kansan picture supplement Dec. 18 and she will be guest of honor at The Daily Kansan Christmas party.
Last year Miss Santa received about $200 worth of merchandise contributed by local merchants. The amount of this year's gifts is not yet known.
Generally fair and warmer tonight. Thursday increasing cloudiness and mild. Low tonight 28-35. High Thursday 55-65.
Low this morning 25. Low Tues-
25. high 41.
Weather
ASC Discusses Addition To Student Union
By DOUG PARKER (Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
The million dollar addition to the Student Union, the further study of a new name for the Student Union, and specific suggestion for changes in the University's curriculum were discussed by the All Student Council Tuesday night.
Brooks Becker, Emporia graduate student, reported on the action taken by the Student Union Operating Board and described the northside addition to the Student Union as in the "financing stage."
He said construction is expected to start at least by late fall in 1958 and should be completed about February 1960.
The Student Union is now checking bond houses to find out which ones are willing to buy commercial bonds. When this is decided, it is expected a federal loan will guarantee part of the money needed.
The operating board also reported that a new name for the Student Union, the "Jayhawk Union," was sent back from the Board of Regents for further consideration.
The name was suggested to the Board of Regents, Becker said, in an effort to get an official name for an aluminum-lettered nameplate to be placed on the building.
New Name Sent Back
Similar nameplates are planned for all University buildings to replace the blue signs now in the lawns in front of buildings. The plan was proposed about three months ago. Nameplates will go on Snow, Malott, and Strong halls and Allen Field House in about a month.
Curriculum Change Suggestions
The Committee to Review the College Curriculum, headed by Jason Ott, Wakeeney second-year law student, asked for specific suggestions from ASC members on changes desired and received many.
Suggestions included a physics course that taught scientific thought and methods and cutting down some of the freshman-sophomore requirements so that a student could start working in his major field sooner.
Also suggested were a junior seminar in humanities, a course in American civilization for engineers, a labor education course, and a rule that foreign students would not have to take a foreign language course.
FRED WILSON
KEEP IT UP MEN-Al Donaghue, left, and Monte Johnson review a newspaper clipping of Monday night's 63-56 Kansas victory over Oklahoma State. Much of the success of this year's Kansas basketball squad depends on these two athletes after heavy losses were suffered through graduation last year. Both performed well in the opening game, and, with continued improvement, are expected to give Kansas another top team. (Daily Kanson photo)
(Daily Kansan photo)
KU Plays Canisius In First Home Tilt
A young, but surprisingly strong Kansas basketball team will open its home season tonight when it faces a short but potent team from Buffalo. N.Y., Canisius.
A crowd of 12,000 is expected to watch the Jayhawkers tip off their home season after they won their first game of the season Monday night in Stillwater against Oklahoma State.63-56.
" Their past record indicates they have a fine team," Kansas Coach Dick Harp said, "and we have the utmost respect for them. In addition to the returning regulars Canisius has back, it also has several fine sophomores playing for the first time this year."
With a starting lineup averaging only 6-foot, 1-inch, Canisius will be at a decided height disadvantage against the Jayhawkers. Kansas has slightly over a 6-foot, 4-inch team average.
This will be the first meeting between these two clubs and marks the season's opening game for Coach Joe Curran's Golden Griffins, a team which has reached the Eastern NCAA Regional tournament three straight years.
Two sophomores, up from a freshman team which compiled an 18-2 record, will be in Caniusi's starting five. Joe Rauh, 6-foot, 4-inch center, was the leading scorer on last year's
Where To Go About Problems?
By LARRY BOSTON (Daily Kansas Editorial Editor)
Where can the student go to talk out his problems?
That's the question facing University officials, who, shocked by the death Sunday of Virginia Maddox, Tulsa, Okla. freshman, think better student counseling methods are needed.
Representatives from the offices of the dean of men and dean of women, the Student Health Service, the Guidance Bureau and class advisers were to meet at noon today in the Student Union Pine Room to discuss the problem.
Here's what troubles the University guidance workers.
The Problems
1. Although the University has an abundance of guidance activities, students are often unaware they exist and are sometimes reluctant to use them.
2. At least five separate counseling agencies exist on the campus, but there is little or no coordination of
their activities.
3. If caught in time, personal problems need never develop into severe depression, but getting in touch with the troubled student is often difficult, if not impossible.
Where To Go
A student can go to several places to talk out his troubles. The offices of the deans of men and women are staffed with personnel capable of discussing most problems connected with schoolwork.
The Student Health Service has a full-time clinical psychologist, a full-time psychiatrist and assistants from the Meningen Clinic in Topeka waiting to consult with the student on problems of mental adjustment.
In addition, there is the Guidance Center, student advisers in dormitories, and the student's own pastor. "We haven't grown into the 20th century in some of our attitudes toward mental health," said Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women.
First Step Up to Student
First Step Up to Student The first step in guidance is up to the student, who must want help, she said.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, Student Health Service director, estimates that at least one-third of the organization's services are for personal adjustment problems.
What is the solution to the guidance problem at the University?
"I think we will solve a lot of problems when this newly formed group gets together," Dr. Canuteson said. "The University is well equipped to handle advisement problems. What we need is better coordination."
(Related editorial, "Virginia Maddox," Page 2.)
Rounding out the starting five for Canisius will be junior guard Jimmy Mackinnon, who possesses an excellent jump shot; Jim Springer, a junior forward; and senior captain Greg Britz, who averaged 14.6 over last year's 28-game route.
freshman club. George Swift, a 6- foot, 4-inch sophomore forward, is expected to be the team's best rebounder.
The Jayhawkers, of course, are expected to be fueled by their 7-foot all-America junior center, Wilt Chamberlain. Chamberlain opened the season Monday by scoring 30 points.
But Chamberlain got steady help from several other Kansans against Oklahoma State. Junior forward Ron Loneski scored 14 points and nailed down 7 rebounds for the Jayhawkers. He played what Coach Harp termed "his best game ever."
Bob Billings, junior guard, scored four points for KU against Oklahoma State and played his usual steady floor game.
Rounding out the starting five for Kansas will be junior forward Monte Johnson and senior guard John Cieland.
Also expected to see much action for KU in their home opener are two sophomores, Al Donaghue and Bob Hickman.
Student's Son, 3, Dies
Michael Thomas Mueller, 3, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Mueller, 5B Sunnyside, died Tuesday in the Lawrence Memorial Hospital after a short illness.
Mueller is a graduate student and technical assistant in the chemistry department.
Funeral services will be at 7 p.m. today in the Immanuel Lutheran Church.
He is survived by two brothers, Rudy, 5, and Jonathan, 10 months; the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wehmeier Sr. of Navasota, Tex., and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Mueller of Fort Wayne, Ind.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 4. 1957
Virginia Maddox
While the rest of us were relaxing on a long Thanksgiving weekend, a tragic drama was being played out here in Lawrence.
The climax came Saturday morning, when, after a tense discussion with her parents, a pretty University woman leaped from the 5th-story window of a downtown hotel. She died the next day.
Thus ended four unhappy days, during which Virginia Maddox was reported missing, then was found at a Kansas City hotel. Virginia and her parents came to Lawrence where they had a long, long talk in their hotel room. The talks and Virginia's future were cut short when she walked up to the next floor, opened a window, and plunged to the sidewalk below.
A lot of reasons have been advanced as to why Virginia Maddox chose to die. Everything from low grades to unpopularity have been given as the motivating factors. But whatever the individual problems which faced her, they added up to a mighty unhappy girl.
We don't remember seeing Virginia Maddox. Yet, we may have passed her a dozen times on the way to class, her face lost in the swirling mass of students which crowd the campus each
day. The University is large, and its size sometimes seems to shut out individual recognition.
Do you suppose that if we had seen her and smiled that it would have prevented Virginia's death? A lot of girls have poor grades which might have been improved by doing homework with Virginia. And where is the guy who couldn't find a date last week? He might have asked Virginia; they could have seen a movie, and laughed a little.
We come here, 9,000 strong, from farms, small towns and cities. It's tough sometimes to adjust to the new life. When you're just out of high school and away from the folks for the first time, Lawrence, Kan. seems a long way from home.
For most of us, the four years at the University turn out to be among the happiest of our lives. For a few, college is a bitter memory of failure and frustrated hopes. But it shouldn't mean death for anyone.
Eighteen is too young to die. At that age, the whole cockeyed world lies ahead. It's not always rosy, that's true, but there is a lot of living left to be done. It is up to us to help each other enjoy doing it.
Larry Boston
The Cyprus Question
Cyprus, one of Britain's last colonial outposts, a forlorn remnant of what was once an empire upon which the sun never set, is again threatening to explode into new violence over the fiery self-determination issue.
The prospect of more violence in the Mediterranean island rears its head as the issue of Cyprus' future comes up soon before the General Assembly of the U.N.
EOKA, the underground group on the island which favors union with Greece, has threatened "total war" against the British if nothing constructive results from the Greek appeal to the U.N. for the island's self-determination.
Britain seems more willing now to talk things over. Such a talk can end in only one way—Cypriot union with Greece plus some salvaged prestige for a harrassed Britain which has, since World War II, seen vast colonies and power slip away.
Cyprus proved of little military value to the British during the campaign against Egypt's Nasser and now, contrary to previous British views, England is trying to find some face-saving way of gracefully bowing out.
But in the past the British have not been noted for their grace in dealing with like matters and in the Cyprus case they face the very stoic Turkish government of Adnan Menderes on the one hand and Athens on the other.
The Ankara government claims that if there is to be any change in the status of Cyprus, the
island should revert to Turkey.
Eighteen per cent of the island's population are of Turkish origin and 82 per cent are of Greek descent.
Cyprus is closer to Turkey than to Greece and herein lies the Turkish argument.
But Turkey, in 1947, did not object to the transfer to Greece of another group of islands, the Dodecanese and Rhodes, all closer to Turkey than Cyprus.
But that, of course, was in 1947 when the Turks were in no position to offer an opinion on anything because Western opinion had not forgotten that Turkey had remained neutral in World War II while Greece fought with the Allies.
Now the squeeze is on.
Turkey believes she can use the Cyprus situation to squeeze economic concessions from the United States. Both Britain and the U.S. fear to irritate the Turks lest Ankara go the way of Egypt and Syria in the game of chess between the United States and Russia.
But for Britain and an aloof United States, there is no escaping the choice that must be made—the choice of making oneself unpopular with Turkey or with Greece, or both.
Cyprus is another in a long line of problems—problems like Jordan and Israel, dealing with two factions, both friendly with the West but unfriendly toward each other.
—George Anthan
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
PROF SNARF
"OH, COME NOW-YOU KNOW VERY WELL WHAT I MEAN BY AN ORAL EXAMINATION."
Have you noticed that the letter sweater wearers on campus have changed from the shorter, heavier type to the taller, more slender type? In the spring the wearers are so fast you can't see them at all.
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1899, became bweekly 1904,
and continued until 2006.
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
National Advertising Service 420
Madrid University Service.
Service. United Press. Mail subscription
rates; $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published
in Lawrence, Kansas, every after-
Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays,
and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
March 3, 1879. post office under act of
March 3, 1879.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Telephone Vlking 3-2700
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Bentley,
Brown, Ray Winginson, Assistant;
Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor;
Braden wanson, Lee Lord, Assistant;
City Editor; Nancy Harmon, Graph
Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant
Telegraph Editor; George Anchun, Malcolm
Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary
Crosser, Martina Crosser; Martha
Crosser, Assistant Society Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Business Manager
Kent Perk, Advertising Manager
Glover, National Advertising Manager;
George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant Advertising Manager; Ted Winkler, Classified Manager; Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager
FDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston Editorial Editor Javier Matez Del Haley, H Jim Sledd, Associates Editors.
In the South Dakota Badlands fossil bird eggs have been found so perfectly petrified that scientists can measure the shell thickness, and tell the yolk from the white.
There is only one active volcano in continental United States—Lassen Peak in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California, the National Geographic Magazine says.
TUXEDO RENTALS
$6.00
Coats and Pants
OBER'S
821 Massachusetts
Try A Pizza In A Foil-Lined Bag!
Ky Pizza
They're The Hottest!
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY
106 N. Park VI 3-9111
Is Coming!
The
NUMBER
JUMBLER
Thursday, December 5
WEATHER FORECAST:
ADD
Anti-
Freeze'
NOW
SNOW!
Tire Chains
for
SAFE DRIVING
That's what we'll be having any day now. So don't wait until it's too late! See us for tire chains and anti-freeze today.
MORGAN-MACK
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
714 Vermont Dial VI 3-3500
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957 University Daily Kansar
Page 3
1967
IS THAT I?—Ken Gilmore (right), draws a caricature of one of the members of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. Dale Hoyt, Mission (left), and Fulton Warren, Tulsa, Okla., freshmen, look on. (Daily Kansan photo)
A Man Of Faces
He Has 8,000 Of Them
Ken Gilmore answers to 8,000 faces. After two academic years his work would stretch a gallery much more than a mile with distorted faces of college fraternity men.
Caricaturist Gilmore travels with his wife on a profitable cross-country college circuit and has harbored at KU fraternities during the past month. A native of New Orleans, he modestly claims he makes more money in a month than most street painters there make in a year.
"College boys are the most susceptible customers," he says.
"They're the most curious too."
Probably every fraternity on the Hill has Mr. Gilmore's recipe for successful caricaturing. He said these are the ingredients in a capsule:
Accuracy—"The average beginner draws preconceptions and misconceptions as to what things look like. But every human and ape has the potential to reproduce accurately and he can't caricature until he learns this."
Simplicity — "My contemporary, Oscar Berger, has compared the caricature to a telegram: it tells a message with expressive punch with the greatest economy of lines."
Sense of humor—"Essential. Genuine dignity can't be injured by satire."
Sense of proportion—"I don't distort faces to a grotesque degree. And I don't make human noses look like animal snouts and beaks unless they really do."
Mr. Gilmore can sketch about 30 heads in a good day. The men without ready cash can usually add the charge to their housebills. The fraternity treasurer hands him a check upon leaving.
But the biggest advantage of his job is that he and his wife can travel when summer comes. He likes the idea of being his own boss all the year around and says he'll never work for anyone again.
Only the upside-down hours are unattractive but going to bed at 3 am. and getting up at noon is a hangover from the days he was a newspaperman. He turns down invitations at fraternity houses to eat with his wife, who plays bridge with friends five nights a week.
One winter morning he complained to his wife at breakfast, "I don't feel like drawing caricatures today. I'd rather go to Mexico." Wide awake and quite seriously she said, "Let's go." They did.
Structural Engineer To Talk
Milo S. Ketchum, consulting structural engineer from Denver, Colo. will lecture on structures at 3 p.m. today in 205 Flint at 6 p.m. in the Student Union Pine Room. Both lectures will be illustrated and are open to the public.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Official Bulletin
The proficiency examination in English composition will be given 2 p.m. Saturday. Students planning to take the examination must register today in the office of the college or school in which they are enrolled.
Social Work - Sociology - Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Discussion, "Husband Catching in India." Coffee.
TODAY
Et Atenco se reune mi ercoles a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser. El senor Kent Porter hablara sobre "Un Ano en la Universidad de Madrid."
KU Dames, bridge, 7:30 p.m. Student Union.
Museum of Art record concert. 11 a.m.
"Carnival of the Animals"
Corner Suite." "Suite, Bergamasque"
Saint-Antes." "Carnival of the Animals"
Suite Suite." Ravel. "Mother
Goose Suite."
Greeks, KU In Accord
German Christmas choir first rehearsal, 4 p.m., 402 Fraser. Everyone who likes to sing German Christmas carols welcome.
The KU administration and Greek organizations are in close agreement as to who makes the membership rules for fraternities and sororities on the campus, two deans told The Daily Kansan Tuesday.
Jay Jane, 5 p.m., Pine Room, Student Union. Attendance required.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Student Union. Arvid Shuenberger, associate professor of English, we read the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore.
KuKu Club, election of officers, 7 p.m. Student Union.
The matter of selecting membership standards is left up to the fraternities themselves, according to Laurence Woodruff, dean of students.
German Club. 7:30 p.m. 402 Fraser.
Ski Club. 10:30 a.m. 600 Fraser.
Play everyone bring a 25-cent gift.
Compose a poem or song and attach to
gift. Everyone studying German invited.
Baptist Student Union noonday devotions, 12:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
The question of authority was raised at the National Inter-fraternity Conference in Colorado Springs, Colo., last week. A committee report denounced schools which have announced they will not permit fraternities which prohibit membership on the basis of race, color and creed.
Newman Club, no executive council meeting tonight. It will meet Dec. 11 in the
Engineering Faculty To Visit Power Plant
THURSDAY
Thirty-six engineering faculty members from KU and Kansas State will tour the Tecumsah plant of the Kansas Power and Light Co. in Topeka Thursday.
Dean McNown and Dean Durland of the KU and K-State schools of engineering will lead a discussion on problems of interest to schools and industry at a dinner in the Jayhawk Hotel Thursday.
"I am against discrimination, but I respect the right of anyone to choose his own friends and associates," Dean Woodruff said.
Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, said "Membership selection in sororities is a private affair, but no sororites on campus have restrictive clauses."
Gene Paris, Kansas City, Mo., senior and president of the KU Inter-fraternity Council, said the report may be considered a policy decision of the representatives of the of the national fraternities.
Have a WORLD of FUN!
Travel with SITA
Unbelievable Low Cost
Europe
60 Days from $585
Orient
43-65 Days from $998
Many tours include
college credit.
Also low-cost trips to Mexico
$19 up, South America $99 up
Newell Study Tour $498 up
Around the World $198 up
Ask Your Travel Agent
332 S. Michigan
Ave., Chicago 4
HA 7-2557
25th
Year
SITA
WORLD TRAVEL, INC.
SUSPENSION STORY—Chuck Steger, M.E. '52, probing dynamic properties of new Air Spring developed by Von Polhemus (L). A nationally recognized authority on suspension systems, Mr. Polhemus directs Structure and Suspension Development Group of GM's Engineering Staff, helps guide Chuck in his professional career.
Because engineering is a profession at GM we offer you a career-not a job
ONE REASON engineering standards at General Motors are so high is that GM recognizes engineering as a profession. And the men who engineer the many different products made by General Motors are respected for the profession they practice.
That is why, when you are invited to join General Motors as an engineer, you don't simply take a job-you start a career.
It is a career that is rewarding both professionally and financially-starting on your first day of association with General Motors at any one of its 35 divisions and 126 plants in 70 cities and 19 states.
During your early days at GM, for example, you work with a senior engineer who guides your career along professional lines.
You are given the opportunity to obtain professional recognition through participation in engineering society forums, presentation of technical papers, winning of patents and other recognition of your accomplishments.
You are also actively encouraged to pursue your education towards an advanced degree. For we at General Motors recognize that, in doing so, you will become more valuable to us and the engineering profession.
And you are also encouraged to take an active role in your community's affairs--because a truly professional man is a good citizen as well as a good engineer.
All this is for a reason—and a good one.
---
Many of the men who will fill the key positions at GM in the future are the young engineers joining GM today. This is not theory, it is fact. For 14 of our 33 Vice-Presidents are engineers, 23 of our 42 Division General Managers are engineers, too.
Today we are looking for young engineers such as you—who may fill these positions tomorrow. The rewards-both professional and financial-are substantial. If you feel you have the ability, write us. It could be the most important letter of your life.
June graduates!
A General Motors Representative will be on-hand to answer questions about job opportunities with GM.
DEGEMBER 11 and 12
GM positions now available in these fields:
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING • ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING
AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING • CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
CERAMIC ENGINEERING • MATHEMATICS
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION Personnel Staff, Detroit 2, Michigan
Page 4
University Daily Kansun Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957 Don't Complain
TANKS
CHARLESTON, ANYONE?—These five Jay Sisters model the costumes they wore at the Flapper Fling. They are, left to right, Helen Lorson, Jan Rodgers, Marietta Miegs (on piano), Jan Cameron and Kala Mays. (Daily Kansan photo)
Cameron and Kala Mays. (Daily Kansan who
400 At Flapper Fling
Gay costumes of the 20's were worn at the Flapper Fling party given for freshman women by the Jay Sisters Tuesday night in Robinson Gymnasium.
The 400 freshman women who attended the hour parties between 7 and 10 p.m. wore at least one article from the flapper era. The Jay Sisters wore flapper dresses.
freshmen were included on the program.
Songs by a quartet, "The Triads and Jan," and a skit of the 20's by
Guests were Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, members of the Associated Women Students Senate, and Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant dean of women, Jay Sister adviser.
In charge of the party were Jan Cameron, Clay Center, JoAhn Swenson, Rossville, Kay Allen, Rockport, Mo., Marietta Meigs, Mission and Judy Duncan, Overland Park, all sophomores.
"Are you going to accept a career or are you going to accept a job?" Fort Zaekary, general agent for the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., asked students at the insurance and finance career conference Tuesday night.
Students Hear Career Men Give Tips On Employment
"Pay, fringe benefits and working conditions are only half of the picture," he said. "The most important thing is the challenge of your job. Even if you make a false start, you have 30 or 40 years to make a career.
"It is not the pay but the inner growth of you which is actually important 5, 10 or 20 years from now. You should be able to plow back profits and knowledge into your job."
Howard H. Fiteh, president, Barrett, Fiteh, North & Co., said, "It is good that you are looking at different fields before you decide which to enter. I hope you look at many others. You may not make a career of the first job you try. The secret is to know when you have made a wrong choice."
Six To Evaluate Wichita School
Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education will be general chairman of a 6-man team for the North Central Assn. of Colleges and Secondary Schools which will evaluate Wichita Southwest High School Dec. 13. The high school is applying for admission to the association.
Other members of the team from KU will be James K. Hitt, registrar; E. Gordon Collister, director of the Guidance Bureau; Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education; Alvin H. Schild, associate professor, and Fred S. Montgomery, assistant professor.
William W. Martin, vice president of Martin Tractor Co., and spokesman for industrial finance, emphasized that the employee's ability and stature in his job strongly influenced companies which were asked to lend money to the employee's firm.
Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education, was appointed national chairman of the committee on methods of working with the public of the National Council of Teachers of English at its 47th annual convention in Minneapolis, Minn. Nov. 27-30.
Named Chairman Of Teachers' Unit
This committee is to prepare a 48-page pamphlet to show school officials and English teachers associations how "to make better use of mass media communication to bring communities the objectives and accomplishments to be desired in a modern program of teaching language arts." Prof. Haugh said.
Greek, Botany Required In 1866
Students complain about the western civilization, biology and foreign language requirements but students in the early years of the University had no choices until their junior and senior years.
Prof. Haugh was also chosen by the commission on English curriculum to be a contributor to Vol. 5 of the NCTE curriculum series on preparing for teaching of the language arts.
The 1866 college catalogue included courses in the classics, mathematics and philosophy. The second semester of the junior year the student finally got a choice between Greek and botany.
The students at least had a choice of what set of courses of study to follow. In 1867 a scientific course was added, in 1870 civil engineering, and in 1874 chemistry and natural science were added. In the professional courses the first two years were still alike. All of them required mathematics through analytics, political economy and philosophy for completion, however, neither Latin nor Greek were required for the scientific courses.
In 1885 the analytics requirement was changed except for scientific courses to read 'analytical geometry or zoology and laboratory practice."
The elective system began in 1880 when juniors and seniors in the general scientific and modern language courses were permitted to choose two optional courses each semester from the rather limited groups of studies. Before they could take these courses though they had to petition the faculty in writing.
In 1895 juniors and seniors could take anything in any of the 20 departments of the college provided a student did not take more than 4 courses under one instructor.
By 1903 the only courses specifically required for graduate were rhetoric, hygiene and physical education. Freshmen and sophomores had some requirements to fulfill but most of them could be satisfied if the student had had the required study in high school.
The second largest marble dome in the world adorns the Minnesota state capitol in St. Paul. The largest is St. Peter's in Rome.
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat, Sun., Holidays
Nation Wide Career
Nation Wide Career ATLAS TUNITIES with
ITIES with ATLAS
Nation Wide Career
OPPORTUNITIES with ATLAS
Established in 1912, ATLAS today specializes in industrial chemicals and commercial explosives for mining and construction activities. Our 11 manufacturing units and 4 Research Centers, located in all sections of the country, employ more than 4200 people in an industry that is destined to grow many times larger as our expanding national economy gets into high gear in the early '60's.
That means real career opportunities for you graduates who have the foresight to move into this field while much of our future expansion is still in the planning stage, for in addition to stepping up technical work on our products and processes, we are greatly intensifying long-range basic research to develop knowledge about entirely new products and techniques of importance to ATLAS customers and suppliers. These special openings will have an unusually strong appeal to —
• Chemists
• Physicists
• Civil Engineers
• Mining Engineers
• Chemical Engineers
• Electrical Engineers
• Mechanical Engineers
• Engineers with MBA
Seeking Opportunities In
Technical Sales Research & Design Production
Your placement office can make an appointment now for you to see our Mr. John Stone who will be on your campus on Dec. 5, 1957
ATLAS
POWDER COMPANY
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
OLympia 8-6511
OPPORT
Start
Here!
Your placement office can make an appointment now for you to see our
Mr. John Stone who will be on your campus on Dec. 5, 1957
ATLAS
POWDER COMPANY
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
OLympia 8-6511
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
OLympia 8-6511
Page 5
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Around The World
Weather Delays Satellite Send-Off
Compiled from United Press
Bad weather today at Cape Canaveral, Fla., threatened to delay efforts to launch this nation's first satellite until at least tonight. The American moon launchers insisted there had been no mechanical failures in their efforts so far and that the weather was the only thing holding them up.
He said he felt administration proposals do face up to the military challenge posed by Russia's space satellites, but he apparently feels they do not adequately emphasize the need for meeting Soviet economic threats and for better Western political coordination.
In Washington, Adlai E. Stevenson jolted administration bipartisan planning for the Dec. 16 NATO meeting Tuesday night when he said he would not attend unless "compelling developments" arise to change his mind.
A gusty storm front moved into the Cape Canavaler area this morning and since the Vanguard missile, a slender 72-foot long three-stage rocket that will transport the $3\frac{1}{4}$ pound American moon, cannot be safely launched in winds over 20 to 25 miles an hour, the launching hour was delayed.
Mr. Stevenson said he does not fully support administration plans for the meeting and since he would not have authority to help make decisions at Paris he was declining the invitation to attend.
Teamster Ouster
Adlai Won't Go
In New Jersey, The AFL-CIO Executive Council was ready today to recommend expulsion of the 1,500,000 member Teamsters Union from the federation. They were expected to follow president George Meany's advice to prepare for the ouster of the giant truck union at the AFL-CIO convention opening tomorrow.
Sense Of Crisis
In Washington, Democratic Congressional leaders complained today that the Eisenhower administration still has not shown the sense of crisis needed to answer the Soviet challenge to leadership in the space age.
Beginning in January KU will have a department of mortuary science.
KU Will Train Morticians
The appointment of Paul R. Keenan, former dean of the Canadian School of Embalming, to direct the program was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
D. M. K.
KU will be the fourth university in the United States to offer a mortuary science department. The other three are Minnesota University, Wayne University in Detroit and Temple University in Philadelphia.
PAUL R. KEENAN
The pre-mortuary science requirements are equivalent to three years of full-time college study.
In addition the student must have
The latest illness of President Eisenhower's has again called attention to a major loophole in the Constitution of the United States. It is the recurring problem of who has a right to judge the President incapable of his duties. Now only the President can judge himself incapable.
Asked about this problem by The Daily Kansan, three members of the political science department agreed that some action should be taken immediately.
What If President Can't Carry On?
They agreed that a committee of some sort could be set up to help judge the competency of the President in case of illness. They agreed that the committee should be made up of competent medical men to give a medical report and elected representatives to make the final decision.
"In the light of Congress' inactivity in President Eisenhower's past illnesses, I don't expect them to act this time unless the President's health would take a turn for the worse," said Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science.
"I would suggest that the speaker of the House, leaders of the Senate and chief justice of the United States, and key members of the cabinet might sit in on a committee hearing on findings of competent medical authorities," Prof. Laird said. "They would be empowered by law to rule that the President is incapable of continuing his duties."
John G. Grumm, assistant professor, said, "Unless this plan was carried out with careful attention to medical facts, the stakes are so great that considerations other than strictly medical disability might enter in," he said. "There's a strong danger of politics. This is not to attribute dishonesty to them, but just that people's judgment is sometimes warped by the politics you have. It would be extremely im-
the approval of the state board of embalmers in the state in which he desires to be licensed.
The department will open Jan.
6 if enough students have applied
by Dec. 15. If not the program will
begin in October, Mr. Keenan said.
Fees for the nine months will be
$450 or $580 for nonresidents.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Christmas GIFT HEADQUARTERS
Do your Christmas shopping now! Here in Lawrence you can find a complete selection of gifts for everyone on your Christmas list. Shop with these Lawrence merchants and avoid the last minute rush in your home town. By shopping in Lawrence now you will have many more items to choose from than after Christmas vacation starts. Shop now, here.
GIFT SHOP
VICKER'S
GEORGE'S PIPE SHOP
McCOY'S
ELRING'S
S. U. BOOKSTORE
GIFT SHOP
CAMPUS WEST
PAT READ
important that the findings be scientific."
Points Un Problems
Rhoten A. Smith, assistant professor, pointed up the seriousness of the problem by citing a case where a chief executive would be suddenly stricken unconscious by some illness. There would be no way of anyone taking over as President unless he resigned, which he couldn't do if he were unconscious.
Smith said that President Eisenhower submitted a plan to Congress whereby the cabinet could decide if he became incompetent. Congress has failed to act on this and Prof. Smith attributes the inaction to the feeling of not wanting to give too much power to a small group of men.
Pizza Delivered
V13-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
h.i.s
SPORTSWEAR
Don't envy H.i.s. wear them
HOODED BAVARIAN COAT
Continental styling for warmth, comfort and fashion. Genuine Leather Toggles, zip-off hoed, inside zipper closure. Both the coat and the hood lined with deep Orlon pile. Outer fabric is durable Klondike Cloth.
Only $27.50
Let Us Do Your Gift Wrapping
All gifts purchased during December will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
the town shop
DOWNTOWN
the university shop ON THE HILL.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
Kansas Swimming Team Returns Only 3 Lettermen
Kansas can count on only three lettermen when they open their 1957-58 swimming season against Southern Illinois this Saturday at Carbondale. The three include Captain Jon Poort, Bill Matthews and Steve Hill.
Some of the top sophomores coach Jay Markley will be counting on include John Jeffrey, Jared Piety and Ed Poort.
The squad lost four lettermen from last season's squad.
The schedule:
December 7—Southern Illinois at Carbondale.
December 13—Missouri Mines at Lawrence.
December 14—Pittsburg State at Lawrence.
December 21—Jayhawk Relays at Lawrence.
January 11—Nebraska at Lawrence.
January 15—Kansas State at Manhattan.
February 8—Oklahoma at Lawrence
February 15—Nebraska at Lincoln.
February 21—Iowa State at Lawrence
February 22—Emporia State at Lawrence
February 28—Air Force Academy at Denver,
March 1—Colorado at Boulder
March 7 and 8—Big Eight at Ames
KU Starting Strong For All-Sports Title
Kansas is getting off on the right foot in defense of its Big Eight all-sports championship.
The Jayhawkers were first in cross country, their 11th consecutive title, and finished second in football, their highest position since their tie for first with Oklahoma in 1947.
About 96 per cent of the U. S. farms and ranches are family operated, the same proportion as 30 years ago.
Wichita Tops Wyoming
WICHITA —(UP) Both teams made a lot of mistakes, but Wichita University cashed in Tuesday to take its opening basketball game, 66-54 over Wyoming.
Wichita made fewer miscues as Joe Stevens scored 23 points to lead the Kansans' attack. The Shockers led 34-26 at the half, but had a battle on their hands for the first 10 minutes of the second period when Wyoming came up with 10 straight points to go ahead 37-35—five minutes after the intermission
But Wichita bounced back to a 39-37 lead and never trailed the Cowboys again, although the Wyoming club was often just two or three points behind.
Top scorer for Wyoming was John Bertolero, a sophomore making his first varsity appearance. He netted 13 points.
Wildcats Down Texas Western 78-31 In Opener
Kansas State all but blasted Texas Western out of Ahern Field House at Manhattan as the Wildcats took their season opener 78-31 before 9,000 fans Tuesday.
By UNITED PRESS
The University of Missouri Tigers started slowly but came through with an easy 73-62 win over South Dakota.
Missouri's superior height and the deadly shooting by Sonny Siebert and Rodger Egelhoff handed the Dakotans their second straight setback.
Siebert tallied 21 points and Egelhoff backed him up with an 18-point effort.
K-State Coach Tex Winter cleared the bench as it was obvious from the start that the smaller Texas Western team was no match for the Wildcats.
The K-State mainstays-Jack Parr, senior center and Bob Boozer, junior forward—led the Wildcat scoring with 18 and 11 points respectively.
life stride.
life stride.
THE YOUNG POINT OF VIEW IN SHOES
Black Suede
High or
Mid High
Heels
a masterpiece
of slimness
the fair lady pump
A tapered pump that is pure flattery
to the foot that wears it. Slim and beautiful
... on Life Stride's new pencil-thin,
unbreakable heels. $10.95
McCoy's
SHOES
813 Mass. St.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds!
M.Coy's
SHOES
813 Mass. St.
GIVE A GIFT HE WILL ENJOY
George's
Offers You These Suggestions For the man in your life
New Butane Lighters advertised nationally on TV
Ronson's
Vara Flame
Schick's
Riviera
"a complete line of smoking supplies"
Shop
George's
along the
JAYHAWKER
trail
PIPE
727 Mass.
2
445 Tenn. St.
INDIAN TRADER
PAT READ
BY MALCOLM APPLEGATE (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
- Hand Loomed Ties
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment
"The team wanted to win and fought to do it." Coach Harn said.
The Kansas basketball team seems to have taken up right where the Jayhawker football team left off. In their season's opener Monday night they displayed the same spirited drive which lifted the football team out of a seemingly miserable season and enabled them to chalk up victories in their last four games.
After watching the poor showing the KU varsity made against the freshmen Nov. 22, it seemed that the loss of such stalwarts as John Parker, Maurice King, Gene Elstun and Lew Johnson might be too much for this year's team to overcome.
Improved Monday
Forward Monte Johnson chipped in seven points and rebounded well in his first starting assignment. A newcomer at guard, John Cleland, displayed skillful rebounding talent and played an outstanding floor game.
But the new Jayhawker strength didn't stop here. Two sophomores, Al Donaghue and Bob Hickman, filled in like veterans against the Cowpokes. Donaghue exhibited excellent rebounding ability and Hickman's defense handeuffed his opponents when he was in the Kansas lineup.
Guard Bob Billings, an alternate last year at the end of the season, proved that he has the ability to furnish Kansas with the essential playmaker that every good team must have.
Two Sophomore Sparks
But Monday night they proved that it might not be. They faced a team which last year dealt Kansas one of its three losses during the season. Oklahoma State had four regulars back this year to spark their attack.
Of course, any team which has all American center Wilt Chamberlain leading the attack, is bound to be above average. Ron Loneski also proved his ability as a regular last year.
But other than these two, Kansas is starting almost from scratch this year. It takes more than two men to make an outstanding basketball team.
If the Jayhawkers can continue to improve and display the same desire and spirit they showed in their first game, by the time the tough conference games roll around, KU might once again have a veteran team which will overpower its opponents.
Select an Unusual Gift from Elring's
--the be gan in wri tiv
OS sit fic
There is something for everyone on your list. Our gift wrapping is free. We'll even mail it for you!
Elring's
924 Mass.
GUIDE to CHRISTMAS VALUES
6.3.1.1
Page 7
Along the JAYHAWKER trail WITH GEORGE ANTHAN
University Daily Kansan
Wilt Chamberlain will again this year experience more roughing under the basket than any other pivot man in the Big Eight.
Monday night in Stillwater when the Cowpokes took a few pokes at Chamberlain was just a preview of things to come.
A worthy successor to Hoch is OSU's Gallagher Hall where the situation is pretty dead if the official's whistle can be heard.
Since the move to Allen Field House Kansas fans, now farther from the scene of action, have taken a more detached attitude.
R. E. Peters, executive director of the Big Eight, disturbed over crowd behavior in some of the football games and concerned about the same in the coming basketball season, wrote a letter to faculty representatives and athletic directors urging
Clyde Lovellette and B. H. Born could testify as to the elbows that accidentally find their way into rib cages or the feet that stray atop a center's foot just when he's going to dunk.
Monday night in Stillwater Chamberlain had no trouble getting into the air but his landings were aided by Cowpokes who sought to break his fall or his leg.
Of course such unmentionable tactics are not employed deliberately and most basketball games in the Big Eight are played in an atmosphere of gentlemanly behavior by players and fans as any Kansas students who attended games in Hoch know.
that steps be taken to insure good crowd behavior.
"Control and behavior of the crowd is the full responsibility of the administration of the institution," Peters said.
He appealed to administrations to avoid any crowd trouble by advance planning.
In any event Hank Iba and his team certainly had the assistance of the sixth man Monday night—a friendly crowd with very definite verbal opinions.
EMPORIA — (UP) — College of Emporia downed Southwestern of Winfield Tuesday night 65-52 after a see-saw battle that saw the lead change hands 13 times.
C of E Downs Southwestern
Crude glass lamps were manufactured in Peabody, Mass., as early as 1638.
IM Basketball Entries Must Be In Thursday
All entries for men's intramural basketball must be in by 4 p.m. Thursday.
All intramural managers will meet with Mr. Mikols at 4 p.m. Thursday in 204 Robinson for a briefing on regulations of the basketball program.
Competition will begin Monday. Walter J. Mikols, assistant professor of physical education and director of men's intramural athletics, said today.
Any team entered in intramurals must have at least ten men on its roster.
Basketball competition will be held for three classes of both fraternity and independent groups. Each house (fraternity or independent) will be limited to one "A" and one "B" team, and as many "C" teams as it wants.
Card Chatter
We know how much fun you've had sending our contemporary cards for all occasions during the year—now we have these same cleverly created cards for Christmas sending! Hope you'll drop in soon to make your selection. There is still time to have your cards imprinted with your name.
Open Thursday till 8:30
Vicker's
Vicker's Gift Shop (Across from the Granada)
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
SMU Appears Weaker
By UNITED PRESS
It appears the loss of Jim Krebs has wrecked Southern Methodist as a big power as the Mustangs, who were rated fourth in the country last season when they compiled a 22-4 record, suffered a second loss in 24 hours when they were beaten 65-60 in overtime by Iowa Tuesday.
The pre-season dope was that the loss of the 6-foot 8-inch Krebs would mark the end of Southern Methodist's three-year reign in the Southwest conference—and the dope appears to be standing up.
The Mustangs, who dropped a
66-52 decision to Minnesota on Monday night, led 38-32 at halftime but were forced to stage a late rally to gain a 56-56 tie at the end of regulation time. Then, Molden Gentry scored six points in the overtime period for an Iowa victory.
Campu WEST
Reduction $ _{1/3} $
- Group of Cashmere and Lamb's wool Sweaters
- Group of Cotton Blouses
- Group of Wool Skirts
- Group of Slacks
Entire Stock Not Included—All Sales Final
Private Parking On Naismith Road
For Your Christmas Giving
Students!
Students! we have the new pen sensation
Parker
"21"
Parker "21"
Special
Parker "21"
Special
ONLY
$500
Set,
$8.75
An extraordinary pen value by the creators of the famous Parker "21". The New "21" written and looks like pens at twice the price.
Uses fast-drying Superchrome or any ink. Marvelous 8-metal Octanium point, 4 colors, choice of point styles.
Has the new Electro-Polished Point
Parker,Sheaffer's Waterman
All colors . . All models . . A wide range of prices. Come in today and see them while our collection is complete.
... A complete selection to delight everyone on your gift list.
See Our Complete Collection Of Pen Sets
STUDENT Union Book Store
SANTA
A gift for everyone
Sheaffer's
NEW SNORKEL PEN
GIVE THE ONLY MODERN PEN! Solve all your gift problems with Sheaffer's new Snorkel Pens and you'll delight everyone on your list! Genuine Sheaffer features include clean "no dunk" filling, choice of custom-fitted points, innerspring safety clip and fast one-stroke filling action. But hurry—come in today while our assortment is still complete!
Sheaffer's Valiant Ensemble, $27.00
Valiant Snorkel Pen, $19.75
Valiant Pencil, $7.25
World's only clean filling pen
Sheaffer's Sentinel
$22.50
Sheaffer's Statesman
$15.50
Sheaffer's NEW SNORKEL PEN
SWEAFITTERS
Sheaffer's Valiant Ensemble, $27.00
Valiant Snorkel Pen, $19.75
Valiant Pencil, $7.25
World's only clean filling pen
SAMFHC
14X
Page 8
University Daily Kansas Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
GIGANTIC 3 DAY
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE!
Sale of Jack Norman Sport Coats-Suits-Trousers & Sportshirts in a 3 day event Merchandise from our regular stock and from our Kansas City Store - For 3 DAYS ONLY
3 Days Only-Thursday, Friday, Saturday December 5th,6th,7th
Ivy League Wool Flannel Trousers
8
all colors
Group Regular Price Sale You Save Up to
A 12.95 & 13.95 8.99 4.96
B 14.95 & 15.95 10.00 5.95
C 16.95 & 17.95 12.49 5.46
cuffing free only
cuffing free only
Ivy League Khakis Polished Cottons
Tans, Blacks EXTRA Reg.5.95 SPECIAL Sale Price $3.99
Limit 2 to a Customer
Already cuffed; sorry, no other alterations
Ivy League Sport Coats
Reg. Price Sale Price You Save Beautiful 35.00 24.50 10.50 Imported 39.95 26.45 13.50 All Wools 42.50 27.50 15.00
Ivy League and Conventional Model Suits
flannels-tweeds-worsteds sharkskins
Group Regular Price Sale Price You Save
A 55.00 44.50 10.50
B 59.50 44.50 14.50
C 65.00 47.50 17.50
D 69.50 50.00 19.50
E 75.00 52.50 22.50
SORRY: cash and carry only-no alterations on any suits due to these extremely low prices
Ivy League Sportshirts
Plaids - Checks - Stripes - All Cottons in button down Ivy Models
Reg. $5.00 & $5.95
$4.49 3 for $12.50
- Give him 3 for an ideal Christmas gift.
On The Hill A Step From The Campus
JACK NORMAN
JACK
CASUAL SHOP FOR MEN
1237 Oread Ave.
VI 3-0883
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Missionary Says Indians Enjoy Life
"One of the outstanding things about the villagers of Assam, India, is that they manage so beautifully without material things and enjoy life," said Muriel Nielsen, Ruthtown. Minn. special student, who has been a missionary teacher in India for five years.
"The tribes are, generally speaking, illiterate but not unintelligent," Miss Nielsen said. "They may not be able to read and write their own language but they learn to speak many languages."
Irene B. Hester
MURIEL NIELSEN
Supervises 200
Miss Nielsen was supervisor of a school of about 200 students between kindergarten and the 12th grade. It is in the midst of the jungles and rice plains south of the Himalaya mountains. She did not have anything to do with actual church work unless she was asked
The national and state governments in India want to teach the jungle people many skills and give quite a few scholarships for further study, Miss Nielsen said.
"About the only fields open to women yet are teaching and nursing," she said. "The men seem to think its all right for a woman to have a little knowledge but not too much. They want to tell the women what to think and do. The only exception is an old woman who can be as powerful as the King of Siam if there is no older man. Age is respected.
Parents Arrange Marriages
She said that in one of the tribes the girls weave a handkerchief for the bridegroom and he decides from this if she is good enough for him to marry. He may not even see the woman.
Parents Arrange Marriages "Marriages are arranged by the parents but the girl can say no. The man and woman see each other once or twice before the wedding, under supervision, for exchange of gifts and business concerning the wedding."
Due to the short life expectancy, 29 years for men and 30 years for women, the parents often die before they can arrange the marriage of their children. This sometimes causes trouble in the family as to who is next in line to make the decision, Miss Nielsen said. She has arranged a few of these marriages herself.
"They are very careful in their match making," she said. "If the man has only one eye they will try to find a woman with only one eye so that neither will have a greater affliction than the other."
2 'Foreigners' Travel Far To Attend KU
Do you like KU well enough to travel several hundred miles to attend school here? There are many students on the campus who have decided against attending a school nearer home and have chosen to travel the many miles to KU.
Barbara Ekland, Summit, N.J. sophomore, is a former Topeka resident and wanted to return to the state to finish her education.
"Also, there are not too many good state universities in the Summit area," she said. "Most girls go to private girls' schools and I wanted to go to a co-educational school."
"Ive found that the best way of getting back and forth is by plane," Miss Eklund said. "The first time I went home last year I was on a train for 27 hours. The plane takes only four hours and is about half as expensive."
"I prefer a smaller university such as this to Michigan with 30,000 students or Michigan State with 25,000 enrolled," he said. "Also, my family originated in Kansas and I have a lot of relatives who attended KU."
Mitchell Foster, Birmingham Michigan junior, thinks that the schools in the Michigan area are too big.
"It seems that students in this part of the country are more casual in their dress. They wear more levis and that sort of thing." Foster said, "Also the students are more friendly and talkative on the campus.
"The Greeks are not as strong in that area as around here, also," he said. "Another difference is that the girls are not dated up as far ahead as in the East. It's a much healthier situation for the men on campus."
Magazine To Show Allen Field House
Pictures of Allen Field House will be included in the Dec. 9 basketball issue of "Sports Illustrated" magazine.
The special issue will include pictures of field houses at the University of Maryland and Ohio State University as well as KU.
The winners of the Quill Club manuscript contest were announced Monday. The winning entries will be published in the Quill Magazine which will go on sale after the Christmas vacation.
Quill Winners Announced
Poetry division — Ray Volpe, Bronx, N. Y., graduate student, first place; Nancy Donaldson, Chanute sophomore, second place; Kay Reiter, Simpson sophomore, third place, and honorable mention; Hester James, Independence, Mo. senior, honorable mention.
Prose division—Steve Callahan, Independence sophomore, first place; William Summers, Wichita senior, second place; Janet Jackson, Lawrence sophomore, third place; Steve Callahan, Independence sophomore, honorable mention.
The winners are:
German War Film To Be Presented
A German film depicting World War II, "Die Letzte Bruecke," (The Last Bridge), will be shown at the KU film series Friday night.
All other entries may be picked up at 311 Fraser.
"This movie looks impartially on both sides of the battle, in a deeply moving commentary on the tragedy of war," said Dorothy Masters, critic for the New York Daily News.
If you see a yellow streak in the sky over KU soon, it may be the two-seater airplane bought, by the Jayhawk Aerial Club Saturday.
Maria Schell won the "best actress" award at the Cannes Film Festival for her portrayal of a German nurse in the film. The film won the international critics award at Cannes in 1952.
The yellow Aeronca Chief, a fabric covered plane, was bought at a car dealer's in El Dorado. A customer had traded it in for a new car.
Flyers Buy Airplane For Club Use
While you're gaping at the Aer-onca Chief performing in the sky, one of the members of the new aerial club will be receiving flying lessons.
The plane was bought by the club to provide a less expensive way of flying for club members. Edward L Martin, Kansas City, Mo. senior and vice president of the club, said the plane was expected to arrive in Lawrence this weekend. The plane will be kept at the Lawrence airport.
Lawrence airport. They will not have to pay for the use of the plane which will decrease the cost of lessons.
Members taking flying lessons will hire an instructor from the Erhart Flying Service which operates the
The plane is being paid for by the initiation fees and membership dues
of the club. Only 15 members will be permitted in the club in order to provide enough time for each member to use the plane.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Roberto's
PIZZA
710 Mass. VI 3-1086
Roberto's
Look What We're Giving
THE WEEKLY NEWS
Giving Away FREE
Q
(the trophies, we mean)
2nd
Daily Kansan Photo Contest Closes December 6
- 3 DIVISIONS -
Black & White (5 fields) Color (slides or photos)
Jayhawker Publication, $10 (special subject-football)
All Students, Faculty and Administration are Eligible
Entry Blanks and Rules at Journalism Library, Flint Hall
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
FREDERICKA MORGAN
CHERIE WRAY
Two Couples Announce Engagements
The engagement of Cherie Elaine Wray to Gordon Haley Smith has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Grayce Patrick Wray of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Smith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Smith, also of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Wray is a senior in the school of education and is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Smith is a senior at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.
No date has been set for the wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hicks of Liberty, Mo. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Elaine, to John Kaye Lonborg, son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Lonborg also of Liberty.
Miss Hicks is a junior in the School of Education and lives in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Mr. Lonborg is a junior in the School of Business and is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
The couple is planning a January wedding.
Sororities Tell Winter Pinnings
Wilson-Mills
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority has announced the pinning of Anna Wilson, Wichita senior, to Belden Mills, Lawrence graduate student, and member of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.
Dawson-Billings
The pinning of Patricia Dawson, son, Emporia sophomore, to Bob Billings, Russell junior, has been announced by Pi Beta Phi sorority. Billings is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Fink-Anderson
Pi Beta Phi, the sorority of Marcia Fink, Topeka junior, has announced her pinning to a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, Bob Anderson, Salina junior.
The first patent for chewing gum was issued in 1869 to W. F. Semple of Mount Vernon, Ohio.
Flattering Hair-dos Frame Your Face
Although it's a poor policy, people are always taking things at face value—including women. You may have a pretty face, or you may not, but the least you can do is frame it with a flattering hair-do.
Don't run the risk of hiding your true face values with a hair-do that is being currently worn by everyone else. Your hairdo should be suited to you, to do the most for you.
The five recognized facial types are heart, oblong, diamond, square and round. No one hair style will look right on all of these shaped faces so look at yourself closely to see which shape your face is. Then choose your style.
Heart-shaped Face
Heart-shaped Face A heart-shaped face is flattered by low, straight bangs which disguise the forehead expanse. By turning the ends up crisply, the sides of the face achieve fullness and the chin seems less pointed.
To disguise the length of an oblong face use bangs as an important feature and hide the ears beneath soft folds of hair that trail into a page boy finish.
The square face looks less severe when there is a lift to the hair on top and an upward, slanted lift to the hair at the sides. The squared brow is camouflaged by introducing a large curl below the hairline at the
Sally Wilen Chosen Fraternity Sweetheart
Sally Wilen, Manhattan junior and member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, was elected national sweetheart of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity for the month of December. Each Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter throughout the United States submitted candidates and twelve women were selected, one for each month.
Lawrence Welk, an alumnus of the fraternity, made the selections.
Heat a 17-ounce can of cream-style corn with the same amount of milk, $ \frac{1}{2} $ teaspoon salt and $ \frac{1}{2} $ teaspoon chili powder. Serve piping hot with warm rolls filled with deviled ham and cream cheese.
for
TUX RENTALS
and complete formal accessories
go to
diebolt's
843 massachusetts
FILMS FINISHED F-A-S-T
24 hour service
See us for Kodak color and black-and-white films, too
side of the head. A waved pony tail, falling just to the neckline, is also flattering.
Don Crawford • Bob Blank
Kodak
Kodak
Telephone
Picture Frame
With Screen Proof
VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP
Exchange dinners will be held between independent residence halls and sororities during the months of December, February and April.
24 h
A diamond-shaped face often has a prominent chin and it can be minimized by a long bob, disciplined by deep waves, full curled ends and a sweep to the right side of the forehead. This gives a greater width across the top and by placing the end flare below the ears, facial proportions are changed.
Round Face
721 Mass.
Casual bangs veil the forehead of the round face and the sides are worked close to the head near the face, but fan out to greater width above the temple. The top of the ear is covered, for complete exposure of the ears tends to enlarge the circle. The back is worn in close-to-the-head fashion with ends up-turned casually and close.
Tentative dates of Dec. 10, Feb. 6, and April 15 have been set by the women's Inter-Residence Assn. and the women's Panhellenic Council, sponsors of the dinners.
Women Schedule Exchange Dinners
When you recognize what your best features are the advantage of them and plan a good frame for that "face value" picture.
摄影
The six independent halls to participate will be Gertrude Sellards Pearson, which has been divided into two sections for the exchange dinners, and the four scholarship halls, Sellards, Douthart, Miller and Watkins. Hodder Hall will be included with Gertrude Sellards Pearson.
All twelve sororities will participate in the dinner.
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority held a mock pinning party recently at the sorority chapter house. A dance was held at the Stables following the party.
... On The Hill . . .
Phi Kappa Psi
Alpha Delta Pi
***
Alpha Delta Pi sorority had as its dinner guests recently Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Miss Peg Hardman and Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant deans of women.
Phi Gamma Delta
Mr. and Mrs. T. DeWitt Carr were recent dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house. Mr. Carr is the former dean of the
Phi Kappa Sigma Elects Officers
Mike Klein, Mission junior, was recently elected Alpha for Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. Other officers are John Meicher, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Beta; Don Hoelscher, Topeka senior, Pi; Kendall Harrington, Parsons senior, Iota; Dave McDonald, Beloit senior, Tau.
Henry Jeffries, Kansas City, Mo. junior, Sigma; J. R. Fultz, Mound Valley senior, Upsilon; George Smith, Lawrence junior, Psi; John Hoeelscher, Topeka senior, housing Theta; Larry Jones, Milford junior, athletic Theta; Gary Hale, Atwood senior, activities chairman, and Tom Thompson, Urbana, Ill, sophomore, librarian.
JAMES A. MICHELER'S STORY OF LONELINESS AND LOVE! M-0-M
GRAPHIC
UNTIL THEY SAIL
JEAN SIMMONS *JOAN FONTAINE*
PAUL NEWMAN *PIPER LAURIE*
Plus: Cartoon—News Now thru Wednesday
GRANADA
Delta Delta Delta
School of Engineering and is now the consultant for the research foundation.
--please state size, sweater color and monogram color.
Chi Omega had as its guest recently Mrs. Winnie Bowker, Little Rock, Ark., national treasurer. She was guest of honor at a dinner and spoke to the chapter members on Chi Omega purposes.
Delta Delta Delta sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity recently held an exchange dinner at the chapter houses. The chaperones were Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow and Mrs. H. W. Jenkins.
Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold an exchange dinner Thursday at the chapter houses. The chapersones will be Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie and Mrs. H. W. Jennkins.
Chi Omega
Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pledging of Dianna Dicks, Kirkwood, Mo., and Linda McAllister, White Plains, N. Y., both Sphomores.
Sorority Announces Pledges
Use Kansan Want Ads
V
Open 6:45—Curtain 7:00
Feature at 7:20-9:15
NOW THRU WED.
"The Tin Star"
VARSITY
STARTS THURSDAY For 3 Days
JOHN FORD'S the Rising of the Moon WB
may
Monogramme Shetland $13.98 by
Connaught
Nothing more popular than this 100% imported Shetland-Nothing more personal than the monogram. Each one a Christmas thrill. Red, Light Grey, Navy or White. Sizes 34- 40. Any color monogram. Ten day delivery.
WHEN ORDERING BY MAIL
汽车运输
CO
C
Richard Mindlin's COACH HOUSE Sportswear Accessories
On The Plaza 220 W.47th
On Brookside
6312 Brookside
STUDI
vantag
Life,
both
promp
MGTD and to 5:30 p
On The Campus Lawrence
CHRIS that i
Specia faculti
trated
cation
year
mas d
1019
837
943 1
1119
1200
-
1100
SI
1
613
1407
913
725
743
A. B. C. D.
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957 University Daily Kansan
and re r at ones and
Page 11
gma
nold
the
ones
ddie
re little She and on
CLASSIFIED ADS
es
an-
nna
inda
ooth
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Buy pop-up magazines both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
MGTD 51. excellent condition, new top
auction cover. Call VI 3-4064
5:30 p.m. 12-5
SERVICE DIRECTORY
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal opportunity to catch some of the 15 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon
1119 Mass.
VI 3-3330
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. V 1-3414
Roger's Launder-II 1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
725 Mass.
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. V1 3-3055
DEEP FREEZE. 22 cu. ft.
old. $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. Can be
Lindenwood Lane, last
15th.
upright, 1 year
financed. 1519
street east on
12-9
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions in course material, diagrams found in course material, study guide, complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 2-0084.
TRAILER. 30 ft., all metal and modern including thermostatic controlled heat. 21 ft. aluminum awning, carpeted living room. TV and cooler. Priced to sell. Owner moving in January. Call VI 3-4863. 12-9
WANT TO SELL—one RCA Victor Mark VIII H1-Fi set. $100--like new Phone VI 3-7051, Patrick M. Dolan. 12-9
LADY'S WHITE GOLD WATCH with ex-
pansion band. Hamilton watch found near Fraser. Ask secretary at 103 Fraser. 12.6
FRIGIDAIRE, 6 cubic feet. Perfect working condition. $42. Contact Arthur Cridland at 1646 Tennessee after 6 p.m. or Ph. KU 481. 12-6
F.M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good
condition. Times bates 10-22.
1308 Mass, VT, 3-4852
16-12
HELP WANTED
FOUND
TRAVEL ARRANGER Man or woman to assist manager FIT and escorted tour department in detailed arrangements. No experience in foreign trade emphasis on European travel Middle East. Must be able to type and compose own correspondence. Detail-Mindfulness and capacity to learn, wide range of skills necessary, hand preferable, also reading knowledge of Russian. $5½ day week. If you have above qualifications, please write full resume to TOM MAUPIN TOUR ASSOCIATES. 1235 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas.
We Stock The
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
1021 Mass—Ph. VI 3-1044
THE BOOK NOOK
Come in and see us soon
MODERN LIBRARY
COMPLETE
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
WOULD LIKE BABY SITTING in even-
ings, 50c per hour. Call Ginny Holder.
VI 3-9145. 12-9
TRANSPORTATION to Binghamton or New York City Christmas vacation. Call Judy Saarl, VI 3-3224, after 6 p.m. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice beverage. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plnic, party supplies. Art, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST.
Group saving most empty Mariboro.
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
YTISTP : Experienced, thesees, term pa-
sitioned to occura service ceil V 3-0173. Mrs. Jaday
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Camary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hamsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's phone is 1218 Connecticut. tt phone VI 3-2921.
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
FLAT, TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
Under the banner of the bill
Clarence Adamson, Migr.
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Phone VI 3-2001.
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. ff
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
tf
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER available to students and faculty. Prompt service. $ 729_{1/2} $ Mass, VI 3-5465. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Martion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6838.
POSTERS MADE TO ORDER by senior in Commercial Art. Any sizes, colors; materials. If desired, Reasonable rates. Call one week in advance. Jay Fisher, VI 3-2550. I2-4
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing—with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Ph. VI 3-0989 or IV 3-5994.
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6857, 1400 Teem. tt
SEXPERIENCED TYPIST Prompt and acco-
service Call VI 3-6033, 1621 W
10th St.
TYPIST. Experienced; theses, term papers,
annual report, exempt service VI 3-7185
West 20th st. NYC
DYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED
Prompt and efficient service. Regular
rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8600.
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1621
19th St. Terr. 12-9
PRIVATE SECRETARY will do typing of all kinds. Fast, neat and accurate. Regular rates. Call Mrs. Ingels VI 3-2686 between 12 and 1:30 p.m. 12-9
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna VIRI, Vir 3-8660. tf
We like to say Yes
[at Bespival]
Loans $25 to $2000 on signature, furniture or car. Phone, write or come in.
Beneficial FINANCE CO.
$8331/2$ MASS. ST., Lawrence. VI. 3-8074
SLIDE RULE—Student Union Cafe. Serial number 769841. Reward. Ph. KU 349, Ned Joslin. 12-5
LOST
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH Sunday
Nov. 24, Reward. Phone VI 3-6733
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
ROOM FOR TWO available anytime. Present occupants are pledging a fraternity. Excellent location, single bedrooms, comfortable. PV VI 3-1999 115 Ohio 12-10
ONLY
2
DAYS LEFT
to enter the
DAILY KANSAN PHOTO CONTEST
Rules in Reading Room, Flint Hall
Only Viceroy gives you 20,000 FILTER TRAPS R THAT SMOOTHER TASTE
---
Half as many filter traps in the other two largest-selling filter brands! In Viceroy, 20,000 filtertraps ...twice as many... for smoother taste!
AN ORDINARY FILTER
---
---
FLIP-OREN BOX
THE VICEROY FILTER
These simplified drawings show the difference . . . show that Viceroy's 20,000 filter traps are actually twice as many as the ordinary filter!
FLIP-OFF BOX
VICER
Filter
CIGARET
VICER Filter CIGARET
Aurelius Aurelius
Aurelius Aurelius
Twice as many filter traps as the other two largest-selling filter brands!
Compare! Only Viceroy gives you 20,000 filter traps twice as many as the other two largest-selling filter brands-for that smoother taste!
Plus-finest-quality leaf tobacco, Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness!
Get Viceroy! Get 20,000 filter traps, for smoother taste!
图示为胸部皮肤纹理的观察结果。
VICEROY
Filter Tip
CIGARETTES
NOW AVAILABLE IN NEW CRUSH-PROOF FLIP-OPEN BOX OR FAMOUS FAMILIAR PACK
© 1977, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1957
JULIA C. JACKSON
PEGGY McCORMICK
C. H. K.
DANA HAGLUND
THE FASHION STORY OF LYNN RUSSELL
MARGIE CRITTEN
1 Will Be Crowned Military Queen
The Queen of the Military Ball and her two attendants were chosen Tuesday night by an ROTC student-faculty selection committee after a formal reception at the Castle Tea Room where twelve finalists were judged.
The winner will be announced at the dance Saturday in the Student
Union Ballroom. crowned by special Smith, dean of the
She will be guest George B University.
The three candidates chosen are Peggy McCormick, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega; Dana Haglund, Wichita junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Margie Critten, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, Ger-
Flu Epidemic Subsides Dr. Canuteson Says
There are no Asian flu cases at present in Watkins Hospital as the number of hospital patients finally returned to normal, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said Tv
Dr. Canuteson said 200 persons came to the hospital Tuesday for treatment, while at the peak of the mild flu epidemic there were about 350 persons coming to the hospital.
He added that only one person was admitted Tuesday while during the epidemic they were admitting close to 40 persons a day.
"If the number of patients had subsided during vacation we would say it was because everyone was away," Dr Cauteson said, "but the number of patients started to drop the week before vacation.
"That probably indicates that what the students need are more Thanksgiving vacations," he concluded.
He said that the Asian flu is subsiding over the entire state, but he still believes there is a good chance of a reoccurrence of the flu after the first of the year.
The hospital reported there had been 10 Asian flu shots and 49 booster shots given so far this week. Also there were 25 polio shots given this week. Dr. Canuteson said there were probably about 4,350 persons who have taken first flu shots this year.
Watkins Hospital May Give Your Pajamas To The Needy
The Christmas presents from Watkins Hospital are all wrapped and ready to be sent to the needy, even though they may be gifts from needy persons.
During the last several years, the hospital's own lost and found department goes out of business at Christmas when unclaimed articles
Sorority Basement Damaged By Fire
The study room of the apartment occupied by houseboys was burned, and wiring, clothes, books and notebooks were destroyed.
A small fire caused unestimated damage to the basement apartment of the Chi Omega sorority house about 6 p.m. Tuesday.
The fire was discovered when smoke began seeping into the dining room during dinner. Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie, Chi Omega house mother, said the cause of the fire has not been determined.
The houseboys who live in the apartment are Gary Creamer; Springfield, Mo. junior; Victor Graves, Topeka sophomore; Jerry Halderman, Wichita, and Bob Terrill, Kansas City, Kan., seniors
are sent to the Social Service League to be distributed.
trude Sellards Pearson Hall.
Roberto's
PIZZA
710 Mass., VI 3-1086
In a large brown cardboard box in the hospital office the belongings of past patients are kept, waiting to be claimed. All the articles are wrapped in brown paper with an identifying name of the article written in red ink.
The inventory of the lost goods runs from 2 pairs of blue striped pajamas to one package marked Janelle's toilet articles.
Also left for claiming are 2 hair brushes, a suede leather jacket, a raincoat with a slit sleeve, a white nylon jacket, socks, shirts, towels, gym shoes, a necktie and 2 terrycloth robes. One radio was claimed Tuesday.
Water from the Amazon River freshens the Atlantic ocean as far as 100 miles out to sea, the National Geographic Magazine says. The Amazon's discharge is greater than that of the world's three next largest
The Ball, open only to ROTC students, faculty and guests, will begin at 9 p.m. and will feature the music of Les Copley and his band.
At 6 p.m. Saturday the Scabbard and Blade, honorary ROTC society will sponsor a dinner in the Student Union Kansas Room for members and their dates, the queen and her attendants, Dean Smith, the three ROTC staff commanders and three ROTC staff advisers.
MEN
Choir To Give Concert Sunday
A man playing with a drum
MEN
SHOES HALFSOLED
THE INVISIBLE WAY
Come in and See
PATTI SHOE SERVICE
1017 Mass.
(Next to Varsity Theater)
The 80 member KU A Cappella choir will present a concert at 3:30 Sunday afternoon in the theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education, will direct the choir.
The choir will sing Palestrina's "Pope Marcellus Mass"; Britten's "Ceremony of Carols"; and will conclude the program with four Christmas carols.
Mr. Krehbiel said that the music was significant of the Christmas season and that anyone who enjoys choral music should enjoy the program.
The "Ceremony of Carols" consists of a group of nine separate carols joined by a processional and a recessional. The lyrics of the carols are middle English. Margaret Ling, harp instructor, will accompany this number.
Use Kansan Want Ads
Right-To-Work Debated Tuesday
Does compulsory union membership violate the fundamental right of free membership in a private organization or should the nonunion employ benefit from the advantages brought about by collective union bargaining with management?
These were the basic arguments of the affirmative and negative in an audience debate Tuesday on the question Resolved: "That Kansas Should Adopt the Right-to-Work Amendment."
A capacity crowd in Fraser theater heard Gene Courtney of the Centron Corp., Lawrence, and E. R. Zook, secretary-manager of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, debate the affirmative, John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Dan Hopson, Jr., assistant dean of the School of Law, spoke for the negative.
The right-to-work amendment will be voted on in the 1958 state general election.
Speaking for the affirmative. Mr. Courtney said that compulsory unionism is harmful. It denies a man the right of freedom of choice.
The proposed constitutional amendment is the best solution because it provides for members
and nonmembers of unions.
and nonmembers of unions.
The amendment, if passed, would be workable, he said. It doesn't violate the right of the union members.
Mr. Zook said that the main issue is forcing any American to join a private organization with the threat of loss of livelihood.
In the negative argument, Dr. Hopson said that the unions have the problem of union security. They want to have the right to a continued flow of membership and income.
Dr. Ise said that this country would have an industrial dictatorship if there were no labor unions. It is necessary to have more than the individual to bargain with the huge capital interests in this country, he said.
"The working man would soon realize that in a union bargaining shop he could get the same benefits in the plant if he did not pay to the union," he said.
New Lighting Plan
The beginning of a new campus lighting system has started with the completion of the new array of aluminum lights surrounding Allen Field House.
And furthermore, the modern lights are described as "nothing like it this side of the United Nations building in New York City."
The 54 lights, which are an original design, are the culmination of over a year's work.
C. G. Bayles, superintendent of building and grounds, said that with the field house built and the Music and Dramatic Arts Building being built one year ago, it was apparent that a new section of the campus would probably be strung out southwesterly.
He then suggested to Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy that instead of building the 30-year-old lights that the rest of the campus has, it would be better to try something more modern.
"We had to go looking for the new lights, since they were not for sale anyplace. Neither Westinghouse
Nine of every 10 women in the United States have worked, are working or will work sometime during their lives, the New York State Commerce Department reports.
nor General Electric had anything like the ones we wanted so they were designed and fabricated especially for us," he said.
"There are no lights like these as far as I know except around the UN building," he said. He has never seen the lights there, he said, but has been told they are similar.
Devine, Inc., of Kansas City, Mo. designed the lights and supplied the light heads to fit on the spun aluminum poles made in New Jersey. Robert R. Bayles & Associates, Mission, Mr. Bayles' brother, designed the layout and specifications for the lights.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
"IVY" STYLE TUXEDO
the prettiest co-eds go for the man in the
Girls, girls, girls, all around the man in this "smooth" tuxedo! No wonder . . .
it's authentic "IVY" styling (from natural shoulders, flap pockets, center vent and pleatless trousers). If girls interest you,
this is the formal. Black worsted with black satin floor-level lapels. 45.00
YA
CUMMERBUND OR
CUMMERVEST SETS
5.00
After Six BY BUDDOKER
Ober's
he
FT
Yule Lights A KU Tradition
Christmas Decorations To Be Up By Dec.15
Traditional Christmas lights are now being put up on the campus and will be turned on about Dec. 15.
Multi-colored lights will be used in front of Strong Hall, Hoch Auditorium, the chancellor's residence and on the Chi Omega fountain, according to C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds.
"The lights have been a tradition for many years." Mr. Bayles said. "They have grown from 1927 when one tree in front of Blake hall was decorated and students sang carols around it."
The large cross on the back of Watson library, formed by lights in windows in the stack section of the building, will not be used this year. Installation of new windows has necessitated the end of the tradition, Mr. Bayles said.
Reindeer, a Santa Claus and a Jayhawk were placed on the roof of the Student Union this week. Christmas trees will be decorated in the lobby, the cafeteria and the Hawk's Nest early next week. Wreaths will also be hung on doors in the building.
Several organized houses are planning outdoor decorations. Members of Delta Chi fraternity are stringing lights on the edge of the roof, Greek letters and trees in front of the house.
Sigma Chi fraternity will put up its traditional lights and Christmas scene. Sigma Nu fraternity is planning to decorate the house and lawn.
Foreign Students To Meet Truman
Foreign students will have an opportunity to visit an American industry, meet a former United States president, and see Kansas City's famous Country Club Plaza Wednesday as part of a field trip sponsored by the foreign student office.
A bus will leave at noon from the information booth and return by 6 p.m. Box lunches will be available. The first stop will be at the Buck-Oldsmobile-Pontiac assembly plant in Kansas City, Kan.
They will then go to Independence, Mo., to meet former president Harry S. Truman and see the new Truman Memorial Library. From there they will ride through the Plaza.
Reservations for both the field trip and box lunches should be made in the office of the dean of foreign students in 228 Strong by noon Monday.
Clark Coan, assistant to the dean of men, will accompany the group.
Murphy Urges Contributions To Campus Chest
"One of the most important hallmarks of a free and democratic society is voluntary effort, and of all such efforts carried out in the U.S. none is more significant than the various Community Chest drives," said Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
Speaking of the Campus Chest drive the Chancellor said, "It is my earnest hope that each member of the student body will understand his personal responsibility by contributing to this most worthwhile cause."
About 1,100 tickets had been sold for the Four Freshmen concert by 5 p.m. Wednesday. The concert, sponsored by the Campus Chest, will be at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Tickets may be purchased at the Student Union ticket office or at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard.
The candidates for the Mr. Cumous Chest contest are nominated by the women at organized houses where they serve as waiters.
Leaders in the Mr. Campus Chest contest by 5 p.m. Wednesday were Tom Rinehart, Liberal, Delta Gamma; Jerry Elliott, Hutchinson, P贝Bahi; Dick Murray, Kansas City Mo; Sellards Hall; Elwood Armstrong, De Soto, Miller Hall. All are seniors.
Mr. Campus Chest Leaders
The contest closes at 4 p.m. Friday. The winner and two runners-up will be announced at intermission at the concert Sunday.
About That Degree...
Persons may vote for Mr. Campus Chest from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
Topeka Sports Writer Dies
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. —(UP)—Stu Dunbar, 55, the dean of Kansas sports writers, died last night of a heart attack while attending the mid-winter baseball convention.
He said that whenever this information is needed, the students are asked to come into his office a few at a time.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said the cards are filled out by all seniors in order to let his staff know the exact name which the student wants on his degree and the specific degree for which he is working.
"If any seniors are in doubt about
Seniors who will be graduated this spring are being called into the registrar's office now to apply for their degrees.
In the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences seniors fill out these cards when they enroll, and in several of the schools it is handled differently.
their standing at this time, they are welcome to ask us about it," Mr. Hitt said.
Accident Record 28 In 2 Months
Campus police reported a total of 28 traffic accidents from Sept. 5 to Nov. 25. None has been reported since then.
In the same period last year 25 accidents were reported, with the same afterwards. The next reported accident last year was on Dec. 10 when bad weather hit the campus and only three more occurred during the rest of December.
This year a rash of accidents occurred in November, with six accidents reported in nine days.
THE
FESTIVE AIR—The campus will look much like a Christmas card picture by Dec. 15. Most decorations should be lit by then. Hoch Auditorium
is one of several buildings that was trimmed with garlands of outdoor lights last year. (Daily Kansan photo)
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
55th Year, No. 56
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957
Jason Ott, Wakeeney, second-year law student and chairman of the All Student Council Committee to Review the College Curriculum, said his committee will meet today to review the suggestions received and present them to the College deans next week.
ASC Gets Curriculum Ideas
The general areas covered in the suggestions were for making the curriculum more specialized, having more liberal arts in the engineering
About 40 suggestions for changes in the curriculum of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences were received Wednesday by the All Student Council through suggestion boxes put up in Strong Hall.
curriculum, and specific changes in courses.
Ott said his committee will use several methods to achieve their goal of broadening the students' understanding of the curriculum of the University this year.
They plan to have open forums to allow the students to discuss the curriculum, gather student opinion through use of suggestion boxes, and improve communication between the administration and the students about the curriculum.
The curriculum review committee was organized by Bob Billings, Russell junior and president of the student body.
Topeka Man Dies At Game
His two companions told campus police that after they entered the west door of the entrance, Workman fell, hitting his head on a handle of the door. Dr. Dean Peterson, of the Student Health Service, was called and a few minutes later an ambulance from Rumsey Funeral Home and the coroner arrived.
A 34-year-old Topeka man suffered a fatal heart attack in the north lobby of Allen Field House a few minutes before the Kansas-Canisius basketball game Wednesday night.
Kenneth W. Workman, office manager of the Farwell Construction Co., was pronounced dead due to a heart attack by Douglas county coroner Dr. Byron Walters.
Accompanying Workman to the game were LaVerne W. Miller and L.R. Lindawood, both of Topeka, who said Workman had a heart condition since birth.
Weather
Mostly cloudy through Friday Snow northwest and extreme west Friday and rain beginning southeast late tonight or Friday. Warmer east this afternoon and tonight. COLDER northwest tonight and over state Friday. Much colder west Friday. Low tonight 20s extreme northwest to 40s East. High Friday 30s northwest to 60 east.
Low this morning 40. Low Wednesday 25, high 63.
KU To Face Cambridge In Debate Tuesday
An international debate between the University of Cambridge, England, and KU will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Strong auditori...
John Eland, Topeka second-year law student, and Lee Baird, Newton senior, will debate for KU against the Cambridge team of David Ritchie Fairbairn and James Neil Crichton-Miller.
The debate question is "Re- $ ^{9} $ solved: That the United States has to prove her capacity for world leadership."
Fairbairn, 23, a student of classics
YOUNG
and economies, received his bachelor of arts degree from Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
NEIL CRICHTON-MILLER
Crichton-Miller, 24, was a Foundation Scholar at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and a Harmsworth Scholar at Middle Temple, London law center.
Cambridge is the only debate
10
DAVID FAIRBAIRN
team from abroad which will visit the campus in 1957 or 1958. The debate will be open to the public.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Dec. 5, 1957
Adlai And The Conference
The forthcoming NATO conference in Paris seems to have only a slight chance of success, whether President Eisenhower or Vice President Nixon attends. The one light bright enough to turn the conference from failure to some degree of success, Adlai E. Stevenson, has decided, temporarily at least, not to attend the conference.
During the past few weeks Mr. Stevenson has been consulting with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on conference proposals. After reviewing the proposals Tuesday, Mr. Stevenson said he could not go along with some of the administration's plans.
If Mr. Stevenson should change his mind before the conference gets under way—and there is a possibility of this—his impact on the conference could give the U. S. a boost in foreign affairs.
The European delegates who will attend have lost some of the deep confidence they once had in President Eisenhower. It is doubtful if his appearance would change European sentiment.
Vice President Nixon would be greeted with unsettled emotions. Because he has assumed few roles of leadership, the European nations have not yet formed an opinion of him.
Mr. Stevenson is well liked by Europeans. The former governor of Illinois has not been in a position to offend them and they look at him with some ray of hope. His appearance at the conference could draw the countries closer together in negotiations.
Although Mr. Stevenson has not said so himself, there may be another reason, along political lines, for his not attending the conference. If he had accepted, the administration would have had nothing to lose and much to gain.
No one can criticize the administration for giving nonpartisanship a try. Yet few Presidents have been successful in previous attempts. Had it worked—and it still may—it could become powerful political material in future political campaigns.
Mr. Stevenson, on the other hand, has nothing to gain and everything to lose. It could hamper his party considerably to have to counteract the propaganda advantage the Republicans might receive.
If he should change his mind, he would join Harry Stimson and Sen. Arthur Vandenberg as titans of nonpartisanship. Stimson, a Republican, served as Secretary of War under Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Vandenberg, also a Republican, was a U.S. representative to the first United Nations conference at San Francisco in 1945, although he and Roosevelt did not get along.
We don't know what it will take to change Mr. Stevenson's mind. It is doubtful that the administration will alter the NATO proposals just to please a twice-defeated presidential candidate,
If he should reconsider and go to the conference, he will not be given much authority or power. But his appearance might have a positive effect on a conference that has already taken on a negative appearance.
Legion Faces Communism
—Bob Hartley
We're happy to see that the American Legion recently reversed its position in regard to teaching communism in American schools.
It's all right now, the Legion says, if teachers want to talk about communism. Until a few weeks ago, the Legion was known far and wide for its militant stand against even the mention of communism in our schools.
There was no need to compare communism to democracy and capitalism, Legion headquarters used to say. Communism was a dirty word, and the less said about it the better.
This was a silly notion, and it caused the old vets in the overseas caps no end of ridicule. It's all right to be against communism; commendable, in fact. But until recently, the American Legion was hiding its head in the sand as to the best way to combat the communist danger.
Examined by a well-trained teacher, the doctrine doesn't stand a chance when compared to democracy and capitalism. Supposedly one of the reasons we Americans are as democratic as we are is because we have been trained since childhood in the values of freedom.
The best way to fight ignorance is with education. The best way to fight lies is with a generous dose of truth. It follows that one of the best ways to whip communism is to stand it up in school under the glare of a schoolma'rm and a bunch of bright kids.
Larry Boston
Comments On Ike's Illness
V. M. Newton Jr., Tampa Morning Tribune—"This country is being taken for a ride by high-level press-agentry. It's a perfect outrage, at a time of crisis, with all the problems we face right now, to let these press agents mislead us about who is running the government."
Newsweek magazine polled 20 leading news editors following President Eisenhower's recent illness on what action should be taken in connection with the President's duties. Following are comments presenting both sides of the problem.
John Cowles, president, Minneapolis Star and Tribune—"I wish President Eisenhower would issue a statement that...he is temporarily delegating to him (Nixon) full power to make decisions as his representative."
Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher, Denver Post—"Nixon must be encouraged to act swiftly and resolutely in the President's name..."
Don Maxwell, editor, Chicago Tribune—"Eisenhower pledged the country when he ran again that if he were unable to carry on he would resign. He is a man of his word. We depend on him."
John S. Knight, editor and publisher, the
Knight papers—"... Pressing domestic and international problems requiring immediate and bold decisions must be left in the hands of others. Vice President Nixon has been superbly trained on the highest administrative level."
William Randolph Hearst Jr., editor-in-chief, the Hearst papers—"I have faith in the intellectual capacity of the President to make his own decisions."
Marshall Field Jr., editor and publisher, Chicago Sun-Times "Mr. Eisenhower demonstrably is able to make the decision himself..."
Lenoir H. Chambers, editor, Norfolk Virginian-Pilot—"The decision as to the President's future should be deferred until the (Eisenhower post-illness) rest period has passed."
Norman Chandler, president, Los Angeles Times—"It would be wise if we immediately moved toward an amendment to the constitution covering ...disability to the Chief Executive."
Ben McKelway, editor, Washington Star— "The people should insist that Congress enact appropriate legislation next year to govern temporary delegation of executive authority..."
Short Ones
We would like to see some of the suggestions to the College Curriculum committee which will probably end up in the waste basket. One like: I suggest the All Student Council keep its nose out of what the College employees get paid to put their nose in.
Daily Transan
A recent rumor has it that nowdays a man can tell more about a girl from her handwriting than from her kiss.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vikking 3-170.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Member Inland Daily Press Administration,
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Publisher: Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Diversity holidays, and examination periods are as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Banman, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor; Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant City Editors; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegram Editor; Geoff Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Geoff Colm Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary Colm Noyes, Society Editor; Martha Crosier, Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Kent Paul Advertising Manager; Jere Glover, National Advertising Manager;
George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Ted Winkler, Circulation Manager; Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston Editorial Editor
Brooms and brushes are often made form zakaton, a tough grass found in southwestern United States.
The Yazoo is a river of western Mississippi which flows into the Mississippi river. It is 30 miles long.
CUP WINNER
Make It A Strike Everytime
"O.
With This
O
"One-Two Punch"
5-D PREMIUM GAS
with
- Anti-Carbon
- Anti-Rust
5-D 10w-30 OIL
- Increases Gas Mileage
- Increases Engine Power
- Upper Cylinder Lubricant
- Decreases Knock and Pre-Ignition
- Extra-High Octane
- Decreases Oil Consumption
- Decreases Engine Wear
You'll Notice the Difference
CITIES
△
CITIES
FRITZ CO.
SERVICE Phone VI 3-4321
△
SERVICE
8th and NEW HAMPSHIRE
AIRFILM Singled Out for Approval by National Foot Health Council
AIRFILM
Singled Out for
Approval by
National
Foot Health
Council
APPROVED
FOR DETTER FOOT CARE
$15.95
used
exclusively
used exclusively in
PATENTED
AIRFILM
SHOES
MID-STATES
SHOE CO.
CA 0189 SQUARE DIV.
"Airfilm" is a registered trademark of Airfilm Corporation.
DISTANCE AND MOVEMENT DIAGRAMS
Only one shoe cushion . . .
AIRFILM . . . has been selected for approval by the National Foot Health Council, the recognized foundation for better foot-care.
... And why was AIRFILM chosen? Because, since it's pneumatic, you really walk on air . . . a fact accepted by the U. S. Patent Office in patents granted.
Completely nailless...completely air-cushioned heel-toe- Airfilm shoes provide outstanding comfort plus smart good looks. Let us show you our wide selection of attractive styles.
HAYNES & KEENE
819 Mass.
Open Thurs. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
'Firm Cyprus Stand Needed'
Page 3
The United States should take a more positive stand about democracy and freedom concerning the Cyprus situation, said Constantine (Costas) Kazazis, Athens, Greece graduate student, in a Daily Kansan interview.
Dulles Unpopular
"John Foster Dulles is one of the most unpopular persons in the country, because at the time of the rioting in Istanbul over Cyprus, the United States sent identical notes to both Greece and Turkey recommending moderation, friendship, and 'taking it easy.'
"While there is little anti-American feeling among Greeks there is disappointment in the American government's handling of certain points in the Greek situation.
"While it was the Turkish government which permitted the rioting, the Greek government got a scolding too."
"Many Greeks favor walking out of NATO and following a national Greek policy and not one of the allied powers," Kazazis said.
"The demand for such a policy is not absolutely unjustifiable. We Greeks have a tendency to dismiss our national pride just to please the allies."
"There is not a favorable attitude toward the United States as a government, but as a people, yes," he said.
"Every man in Greece is grateful for United States aid, although many people realize that she did not do it out of purely unselfish motives.
Greeks Grateful For Aid
On the lighter side, Zazazis said he admires the efficiency of young people in the United States.
American Youth Responsible
"They take responsibility earlier in life than most Europeans. Many American students work although they don't have to. I wish I had come to this country when I was 18. I would have been inspired by that American attitude, but it's never too late!"
He dislikes American uniformity and conformity.
"There is strong individualism in
Around The World
U.S. Satellite May Be Launched Friday
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., a leaking fuel valve and high winds caused Vanguard scientists Tuesday night to postpone the United States' first attempt to put an artificial satellite into orbit. No test is planned today but there is a possibility another attempt will be made Friday, if the kinks are ironed out and the weather is favorable.
Compiled from United Press
Officials at the launching site said there were no major technical difficulties, but that they were plagued by a series of minor things.
In Jakarta, Indonesia, the Indonesian government ordered all Dutch consulates throughout Indonesia closed down and the expulsion of the 50,000 to 60,000 Dutch Nationals in the Island Republic.
In Washington, D. C., Republican Congressional leaders took an optimistic view of the administration's chances of balancing the next federal budget despite planned increases in missile spending.
The stern measures capped a week-long anti-Dutch campaign touched off by the long simmering
dispute over West New Guinea,
held by the Dutch.
Their reports indicated President Eisenhower's aides are trying to find savings to offset the prospective budget increases. However, no clear picture has yet emerged of what economies the administration will propose next month when it sends Congress the budget for the fiscal year beginning next July 1.
my country. In the United States something is done because 'everybody else does it'. Americans realize this, though, and criticize it."
put IVY SMARTNESS
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page
Music Schools Re-Elect Gorton
in your night life!
as advertised in PLAYBOY
The new "PLAYBOY" Tuxedo combines the comfort of featherlite Blue-black Dacron* blend fabric—with the smartness of satin shawl lapels, natural shoulders, Rip pockets, center vent, unpleated trousers... in the best Ivy tradition!
$45.00
After Six BY RUDOFKER
*DuPont's Polyester Fiber
Other Tuxedoes
Other After-Six Tuxedoes
$42.50 - 52.50 - 62.50
the town shop DOWNTOWN
the university shop
Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts was re-elected vice president of the National Assn. of Schools of Music at the 33rd annual meeting in Chicago Friday and Saturday.
A charter member of the organization, Dean Gorton last year was a member of the graduate commission and chairman of a committee for revision of the association's bylaws and regulations.
ON THE HILL
The organization includes 231 music schools and is the official accrediting body for collegiate music schools.
Young Democrats To Hear John Ise
KU Young Democrats will hear John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, give a talk at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Oread Room of the Student Union.
After their missions thatched roof caught fire three times, the friars of San Luis Obispo de Tolosa—founded in 1772—decided to rebuild with tile, setting the traditional style for California missions.
Kenneth Davis, national committee for the Young Democrats, will give a report of state activities and the recent convention in Reno.
The number of working women has risen nearly one million annually during the past five years, with women now making up one third the nation's working force.
TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
16 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS VACATION Get Your Travel Reservations
at
The First National Bank of Lawrence
8th & Mass. TRAVEL AGENCY Phone VI 3-0152 Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
AIRLINES—FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
| From K.C. Via Air to: | (tax included) |
|---|
| tourist | 1st Class |
|---|
| Boston | $127.60 | $165.11 |
| Portland | 165.00 | 218.24 |
| Des Moines | —— | 25.63 |
| Minneapolis | 49.28 | 61.60 |
| New Orleans | —— | 98.89 |
| Memphis | —— | 52.69 |
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
And come up with the World's Finest Pizza!
We've Tripled Our Doubles!
La Piza
AIRPLANE
La Pizza
NEXT
it was two delivery boys for still faster deliveries
FIRST
it was two kitchens for faster deliveries
Kix Pizza
To Pizza
No Pizza
No Pizza
No Pizza No Pizza
La Pizza
NOW
it's two phones in each kitchen so you won't get any busy signals!
Still the same phone number—but no busy signals
Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park VI 3-9111
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957
15
GRAB IT KANSAS—Ron Loneski, left, and Al Donaghue of Kansas scramble for a loose ball in Wednesday night's KU-Canisius game. James Shea (31) and Gregory Britz (15) of Canisius watch as the two Jayhawkers go high in the air. (Daily
Kansan photo)
2nd Half Splurge Sparks KU Victory
After a close first half, KU veteran Wilt Chamberlain started showing his all-American type of basketball and helped give the Jayhawkers a 66-46 victory in their first home game of the 1957-58 season.
It was a game that was marked with sloppy play in spots as the Golden Griffins from Buffalo, N.Y., played a ball control game of cat and mouse in an attempt to hold down the high scoring Kansans.
Chamberlain scored 32 points before being taken out of the game with about two minutes left in the game. He also grabbed 21 rebounds.
The Jayhawkers, after playing an erratic first half, open up the start of the second half and in the first 11 minutes scored 19 points while holding the visitors to three.
Hickman A Standout
One really bright spot of the game, the same as in the Oklahoma State game, was the play of Coach Dick Harp's sophomores. It was sophomore Bob Hickman who was a standout among the sophomores. Just before the half he hit for six points in a little over one minute. His 10 point total tied him with Jim Springer of Canisius for third high scorer.
Another standout for Kansas was Ron Loneski, whose 13 points were second only to Chamblein. Loneski also grabbed 12 rebounds.
The Jayhawkers started off on what promised to be a high scoring game with Chamberlain dunking the ball with only seven seconds gone. However, Canisius began their ball control tactics and shut out any hope of a high scoring game.
With five minutes gone in the game, Greg Britz hit to tie the score, 4-4. A minute later he hit again to put the Golden Griffins ahead for the first and only time in the game. It was Wilt who brought the Jayhawkers back on top to stay. 7-6.
With the first period half over, Briz hit a free throw, John Rauh hit for two points with Britz following suit and the Golden Griffins had
the score tied 11-11. It was tied just once more, then the Jayhawkers, with nine minutes left in the first half, went ahead to stay.
Half Ends, 28-24
With Canisius playing cautious ball and making sure of each shot, the remainder of the half dragged by, ending 28-24.
The second half opened with the Jayhawkers showing the same style of basketball that won them their season's opener at Stillwater.
Kansas' zone defense kept the visitors out from under the basket much of the game, with only an occasional shot being worked in under the goal.
The Box Score:
Kansas (66) fg ft pf pt rb
Louisiana, f ... L-1 0-0 0 0 0
Kindred, f 0-1 0-0 0 0 3
Loneski, f 5-15 3-4 1 13 12
Johnson, f 1-2 0-1 3 2 2
Donaghue, f 1-2 0-1 3 2 2
Brown, cumm. c,11-19 10-14 32 12
Mowry, c 0-0 0-0 0 0 1
Hickman, g 4-6 2-4 1 1 10
Billings, g 1-2 1-1 1 3 1
Cleard, g 0-2 2-2 1 3 1
Taylor, cumm. c,15 16-22 65 47
The Box Score:
Canisius (46)
F. Rojek, f. ... 1-2 1-2 0 1 2
Shea, f. ... 4-10 1-1 3 9 6
Springer, f. ... 5-20 0-2 1 6 6
wilf, f. ... 1-6 1-1 3 2 2
Rauh, c. ... 2-7 0-0 2 4 0
Ruska, c. ... 0-7 0-0 0 0 0
Britz, g. ... 3-13 2-4 5 8 6
MacKinnon, g. ... 4-11 0-0 1 8 1
McCullough, g. ... 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Myszewski, g. ... 1-1 1-1 2 3 5
Totals. ... 10-48 6-11 19 46 31
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES
New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
KU Team Dissatisfied
A coach and team with mixed emotions. This was the case of the Kansas basketball squad following Wednesday night's 66-46 victory over Canisius. The Jayhawkers were happy over the win, but disappointed over the showing they made in gaining the victory.
Bv BOB MACY
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
It was a game that was marked, at least for the first half, with sloppy playing on the part of both clubs. During the first half, the Golden Griffins played a game of strict ball control, making sure of each shot before they took it. And it was the general opinion of players and coaches alike that they would have to improve if they were to hold their own with Northwestern Saturday night.
Harp Praises Hickma
In the dressing room following the game, Coach Dick Harp left little doubt that he was proud of the job that sophomore guard Bob Hickman had done. He said that Hickman's play Wednesday night had won him a starting berth for the Northwestern game Saturday night at Evanston, Ill.
He also praised the play of three other sophomores and commented that the play of the sophomores in the first two games has "given us hope of a good season."
Harp was not too optimistic about the coming two-game road trip that starts Saturday .
"We will be entirely satisfied to come home with a win in one of the two games we play this weekend."Harp said.
As far as ranking play Wednesday night with their opener at Stillwater. Harp said there was "no comparison."
"We had no hustle the first half. We adjusted a little better the second half to the type of ball they were playing," he said. "It's hard to play a game where the team is playing cat and mouse with you."
Harp commented that at the present time they weren't too interested in doing a lot of work on the fast break. He said he hoped by the time conference play came up they would have more of a chance to work on it. He said at the present time they were just interested in getting the ball down court and when a chance for a fast break came they took it, but right now they weren't good enough to use it effectively.
No Fast Break Work
Guard Bob Billings said he thought that the team was "not mentally ready" for the game.
"The guys were all looking forward to the Northwestern game," he said.
game, he said. Forward Ron Loneski agreed the Jayhawkers didn't play as well as they should have.
"We just weren't up for the game like we were for Oklahoma State. I also think the boys were tired from Monday night," he said.
All-America center Wilt Chamberlain indicated that Northwestern would rank within the top five of teams they will play this year.
Chamberlain pretty well summed up the feelings of players and coaches alike by commenting, "It's a good game to get over with. We just weren't up for it."
Curran Praises Kansas
Canisius coach Joe Curran had nothing but praise for the Kansas Jayhawkers after his team had taken a 20-point loss from KU Wednesday.
"KU has a really great team, and with (Wilt) Chamberlain in there at center, there's almost no stopping them," he said.
"We've played some of the best teams in the nation the past couple
of years, including Bradley, North Carolina, St. Louis, and Dayton, and KU is every bit as good as any of them," he continued.
But Mr. Curran didn't believe that his team was as good as it has been in recent years.
"We lost a lot of boys from last year. Our showing tonight was just about what I expected," he said.
Be A SANTA To Your CAR
Santa Claus
Winter Driving and changing weather conditions are hard on a car. With regular service by us, your car will be and stay in tip-top shape. Be a Santa to your car, bring it in today.
HARRELL
TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
SERVICE
Phone VI 3-9897
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
ONLY
1
ONLY
1
DAY LEFT
to enter the
DAILY KANSAN
PHOTO CONTEST
Rules in Reading Room,
Flint Hall
1
Santa says:
...if you want
to be right
Give
Samsonite
$44.50
plus tax
2 pieces
only
For Men
Quick Tripper $19.50 plus tax
Two-Suiter $25.00 plus tax
For Women
O'Nite, $19.50 plus tax
Wardrobe, $25.00 plus tax
6 amazing better-than- leather finishes (wipes clean with a damp cloth, defies wear and tear)
- Pack more clothes — wrinkle-free—in less space.
No Money Down Pay $1 Weekly
E
Your I.D. Card Is Your Pass To Credit
E
Wolfson's WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD*
I sch wo rep
L first
Stat coa
in t
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957
University Daily Kansan
5
Page 5
NELSON HUNTER
RON LONESKI—Kansas basketball veteran, Ron Loneski, displays his talents as disc jockey for campus radio station KUOK. Loneski also exhibited his ability on the basketball court against Canisius Wednesday night when he scored 13 points and nabbed 12 rebounds, which put his game totals in these two departments second only to the Jayhawkers' Wilt Chamberlain. (Daily Kansas photo by Rex Parsons)
Basketball Future Bright, Says Loneski
KU's star forward, Ron Loneski, had high praise for Kansas as a school and also said he thought Jayhawker basketball fortunes would be high again this year in an interview with a Daily Kansan reporter Tuesday night.
"When I was a little kid in grade school I always used to follow Kansas," Loneski said. "I always dreamed of coming here but I never thought I could. I had a chance to go to North Carolina, but I thought I'd have the best future at KU."
He said that KU's former basketball coach, Phog Allen, talked to his folks about his coming to Kansas.
"They were really impressed with Phog and also with Dick Harp," he said. "I think that what makes Harp such a great coach is his sincere desire to win and his method of building character.
"I think we're going to have a real good ball club this year," he said. "We thought that we had a long way to go, but since Monday night we feel we can get the job done. Our sophomores have come through a lot better than we'd ever hoped for. Our feeling now is to play each game as we come to it, but we're sure going to do our best to win one."
Praises OS
Loneski had high praise for KU's first opponent this season, Oklahoma State, and said that he thinks their coach. Hank Iba, is one of the finest in the nation.
"We felt they would really give us a good game," he said. "All the boys who had played down there last year when we lost by one point in the closing seconds were really looking forward to going back."
Loneski said he thought the Cow-
pokes were tougher this year than last year and attributed the victory to the fact that every player did "the best job he possibly could."
Loneski, a 6-foot, $4\frac{1}{2}$-inch junior from Hammond, Ind., played four years of football and basketball at Bishop Noll High School. To see him it is much easier to imagine this 215-pound starring on the gridiron rather than on the basketball court, but this imagination is cut short when one sees him maneuver on the court. He is fast, a good rebounder, a top scorer and one of the most aggressive players Kansas has.
Last May, according to rumors which were circulating around the state, KU was faced with the threat of losing not only Wilt Chamberlain but also Loneski.
Likes Kansas
In reply to these rumors, Loneski said, "I couldn't leave here because the people of Kansas have been too good to me."
In return, Loneski has and probably will continue to be a big reason Kansas has been one of the top basketball teams in the nation.
"Deep down inside we are looking forward to playing in the NCAA championships again this year," he said, then cautiously added, "but you just don't know. Right now it's sort of questionable. The thing we're working for right now is to be ready for conference play."
Karras Is Best Lineman
NEW YORK - (UP) - Alex Karras, Iowa's hard-crashing tackle,
was named today by the United Press as college football's "lineman of the year" for 1957.
Roberta's
Roberto's
PIZZA
VI 3-1086
710 Mass.
Track Team Starts Indoor Workouts
The Jayhawk track team has moved indoors for many practice sessions before the opening meet of the indoor season on Feb 8.
Retiring from the cross country season after setting a new record of 11 straight conference victories, Kansas will have what Coach Bill Easton terms, "one of the finest indoor schedules we've ever had."
Easton is putting together another formidable squad despite the lack of a pole vaulter and a shortage of high hurdlers. The Kansas team will be going for its seventh straight indoor title this season.
Opening with Oklahoma here, they will face Michigan State in East Lansing, then return home to face the Wolverines here, followed by arch rival Missouri here and then the Big Eight Conference meet in Kansas City Feb. 28-1.
"We want to have anyone who is interested to come out and try for the indoor team," Coach Easton said.
Another Top Squad
Thirteen lettermen return from last season, Bob Cannon, a high jumper scholastically ineligible last year, and Jim Londerholm, javelin thrower, who was sidelined with a bad elbow will return to the squad after a year's layoff. Eleven were lost through graduation.
Most noticeable improvement will occur in the dashes and low hurdles with Charlie Tidwell eligible after low grades held him back last year. He had a time of :60.1 in the 60-yard dash and a :69.7 for the 100-yard dash.
He'll be joined by Ernie Shelby, two-time NAAU broad jump champion, who also excels in the sprints and low hurdles. He was ineligible last year due to the junior college transfer rule.
Junior lettermen Bob Lida in the 60 and 100-yard dashes and John Davis and Verne Gauby will give KU added strength.
Tillman Gives Strength Bill Tillman, who gained a third in the conference outdoor low hurdles, will join Tidwell in the low hurdles. Tillman will also compete with Dave Freeman, senior veteran, and Bob Henderson in the high hurdles.
Tillman Gives Strength
One loss will be felt from the lack of the Stroup boys, Larry and Lou, who were place winners in the 440 yard dash.
Taking up the slack in the 440 and 880-yard dashes and mile run will be Mike Cummins; Ray
Wichita Defeats Texas Western, 71-48
WICHITA — (UP) — Wichita employed the zone defense's greatest antidote, torrid outside shooting, Wednesday night to win its second straight hardwood victory, a 71-48 decision over Texas Western. The Shockers, touted as the school's strongest representative in at least three seasons, pulled away to a 20-10 lead midway in the opening period and used substitutes freely the rest of the way.
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or topcoat?
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
coat?
E
Choose from over 500 fabrics
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
Wyatt, 1957 440 indoor champion,
Hal Long, two-time outdoor mile
champion; Cliff Cushman; Bob
Tague; Tom Skutka, Big-Eight
cross country winner; Jack Schroeder;
Brian Travis; Den Greenlee,
and rookie Dale Lubs.
The two-mile event will include Jerry McNeal, two-time league two-mile indoor champion; Berry Crawford; Verlyn Schmidt; Bob Harrison, and Travis.
Kent Floerke and Shelby will give Kansas a one-two punch in the broad jump. The graduation of Dave Tams and Bob Lewis left Kansas without a pole vaulter. As for the relays, with all the talent, Easton should be able to get together an adequate crew.
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
TOM MAUPIN
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat, Sun., Holidays
Use Kansan Want Ads
YOUNG MEN-WOMEN STUDENTS-TEEN AGERS
Fabulous 45 RPM record offer. All the latest hit recordings including POPULAR, ROCK-N-ROLL, COUNTRY & WESTERN, RHYTHM & BLUES, etc., can be yours now during our new membership drive at a fraction of their regular retail price. During this membership drive the HOLLYWOOD RECORD CLUB to acquaint you with our records will send you FOUR (4) currently popular hit recordings for the amazingly low price of only $1.00 plus 15c to cover the cost of postage and handling. If after receiving and playing your recordings you are not completely satisfied, simply return to us and your $1.00 will be refunded. Each month you will be sent a list to choose from. You are under no obligation in receiving this list. To receive your first four (4) records send $1.00 plus 15c today and your recordings will be forwarded to you immediately.
Mail to:
RECORDS
6625 Delmar Blvd. Dept. 313 University City 5, Mo.
Keep expenses down
PUT YOUR MONEY
IN A LOW-COST
BUDGET
BUDGET
CheckMaster
CHECKING ACCOUNT
CheckMaster CHECKING ACCOUNT
YOUR NAME printed on every check.
✓ No minimum balance required.
✓ No monthly service charge.
✓ Checkbooks free — No advance payment.
✓ Any amount starts an account.
✓ Only a small charge per check used.
The LAWRENCE ESTABLISHED 1865
NATIONAL BANK
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957
A Cappella Choir To Sing Sunday
The KU A Cappella choir will present their annual fall concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre, featuring two major works
The first is the "Pope Marcellus Mass." This is the most famous of Palestrina's 91 masses and one of the great masterpieces of the 18th century.
The second work is by the contemporary British composer, Benjamin Britten. The piece, "Ceremony of Carols," was written in 1942 for treble voices and harp.
Soloists in the "Ceremony of Carols" will be Beverly Runkle Pittsburg, Wausley Sharp, Kansas City, Mo., Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeyville, all seniors; Martha Crowley, Pittsburg junior; Rosemary Nation, Chanute, and Judy Buck, Kansas City, Kan., both sophomores. Margaret Ling, instructor in harp, will accompany.
The final group on the program will consist of four traditional Christmas carols arranged by Shaw-Parker. They are "Masters in This Hall," "So Blest a Sight," "Christ Was Born On Christmas Day," and "Here, 'mid the Ass and Oxen Mild.'"
He Never Fails To Look Ahead
A journalism faculty member (the one noted for his cheerful disposition) was observed poring over Tuesday's University Daily Kansan late that night, wincing every now and than.
He glanced up and remarked
drivy:
"You staff members shouldn't boast, about knowing that St. Joseph's College is in Philadelphia. Some reader may point out that it's also in West Hartford, Conn.; Collegeville, Ind.; Emmitsburg, Md.; Brooklyn, and Yonkers, N. Y."
Muttered the assistant managing editor from St. Mary's; "I'll bet he looked those up first just to impress us."
Husband, Wife Combination To Present Voice Recital
A husband and wife combination will present a recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Mrs. Marie Wilkins, soprano, and Joseph Wilkias, tenor, professor of voice, will present duets from Mozart's "Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail" and Puccini's "La Boheme." Mr. Wilkins will also sing groups of early 19th century Italian songs and German heider. Mrs. Wilkins will sing two arias from Handel's "Julius Caesar" and a group of songs in English.
He has appeared in leading roles with various opera companies in Italy, with the St. Louis Municipal Opera, and in such touring Shubert productions as "Blossom"
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to Daily Karsan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m., Music and Browsing Room. Student Union Arvid Shu-leberger, associate professor of English, and the poetry of Rabinadamah Tanure.
Kuki Club, election of officers, 7 pam Student Union.
German Club, 7:30 p.m., 402 Fraser.
St. Niklaus Feier, a type of Christmas play. Everyone being a 25-cent gift, with the option to buy for everyone. Everybody studying German invited.
La reunion de Noel du Cercle Francais n'aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a sept ombre à partir du mercredi. Il est d'Union Building, Ceux qui desient apprendre des noels français sont invites a les enter avec le choeur a quatre ombres en avril et micredré dans la salle 131 Strong
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 pm
Danforth Chapel Everyone welcome
SATURDAY
Baptist Student Union annual foreign student Christmas party, 4-H Fair-
SUNDAY
Wesley Foundation Christmas dinner-
program, 5:15 p.m. (Note earlier hour.)
THE UNHOLY WIFE
PRODUCED BY Diana Dors
ROD STEIGER
PRODUCED BY TOM TRYON
AR BAG BAUER PICTURES • A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL RELEASE
Time," "The Desert Song," and
"Die Fledermaus."
STARTS TODAY
Mrs. Wilkins was a teacher-artist on the KU Fine Arts faculty from 1946 to 1949. She has sung with the Metropolitan Opera Co. in New York and made her debut by replacing Lily Pons in "Lakme." She has appeared in recitals in Town Hall, New York, and has been soloist with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, at the Lindsborg and Asheville Mozart festival and at the University of Michigan.
GRANADA
Quartet Has Famous Artists
3 Young Republicans To Attend Convention
Three members of the KU Young Republicans will attend a convention in Topeka Friday through Sunday. The delegates are Kent Pelz, Des Plaines, Ill. senior, chairman; Joan Stafford, St. Joseph, Mo. junior, secretary; and W. F. Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo. sophomore.
Members of the Fine Arts Quartet, which will present a concert at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall, in the Music and Dramatic Art Building, have individually had distinguished musical careers.
Leonard Sorkin, first violinist, is concertmaster of the Saidenberg Symphony and of the orchestra of the American Broadcasting Co. in Chicago. He has also appeared as soloist with the Chicago Symphony. Mr. Sorkin plays a violin made by Stradivarius in 1729.
Second violinist, Abram Loft is a faculty member of the Manhattan School of Music and holds a Ph.D. degree in musicology from Columbia University. Mr. Loft's violin was made by Balastrieri in 1772.
Violist Irving Ilmer has served as concertmaster of the San Antonio Symphony. He plays an instrument made in the late 16th century by Gaspar da Salo.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
George Sopkin, cellist, is a former member of the Pro Arte Quartet and plays a Gofriller cello made in 1725.
Jazz Club Panel To Study Trumpets
"An Analysis of Jazz Trumpets" will be discussed by a panel at the KU Jazz Club at 8 tonight in the Student Union Trophy Room.
On the panel will be Jay Fisher, Marion, chairman, Charles Molina, Lawrence, Don Conard, Garden City, seniors.
1
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
Free Pickup And Delivery
BELL'S
Service Station
23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
VARSITY
V
.
Open 6:45—Curtain 7:00—Feature at 7:30-9:25
NOW Thru Sat.
A proud, passionate, perfect picture . . crowded with laughter, drama, conflict and beauty . . . from the man who gave you "The Informer," "How Green Was My Valley" and "The Quiet Man.
JOHN FORD'S FINEST FILM!
JOHN FORD'S
WB
the Rising
with Players from the Abbey Theatre Company INTRODUCED BY TYRONE POWER Screen Play by Frank S. Nugent Produced by Michael Killinan Directed by John Ford Presented by Warner Bros.
the Rising of the Moon
Artist To Exhibit Wall Hangings
Filmed in the Emerald Isle itself
Wall hangings of textiles made by Lili Rankin, Lawrence artist, will be displayed in the Spooner Thayer Museum of Art beginning Sunday.
Also: World News—Cartoon—Novelty
Museum of Art beginning Sunday.
Mrs. Rankin uses textiles of all qualities and varieties in embroidery, applique and a wax dyeing technique to create the hangings.
Materials range from burlap to silk and from hemp rope to silk thread.
Mrs. Rankin has studied in Switzerland, Austria, Germany and at KU. She has had exhibitions in the United States and Europe. She recently won a contest to produce wall hangings for a pavilion at the coming Brussels World's Fair.
Joal Roberts Poinsett, for whom South Carolina's Poinsett State Park was named, died in Stateburg near the park and is buried in the Church of the Holy Cross Cemetery in that community.
A fear or hatred of strangers or foreign people is called xenophobia.
- crew neck
- cardigan
New
Sweaters-
$7.95 to $29.95 for the best selection
see
diebolt's
843 massachusetts
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571
See Us For PROMPT SERVICE On
Portables, Record Players, Car Radios
BIRD TV-RADIO
JACK W. NEIBARGER, Prop.
Sparrow
VI 3-8855 908 Mass.
THE TIME IS NOW.
Freshen up your clothes for the
Christmas Parties.
Send Them To-
New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPROVAL
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
25 w
DEE old. Lind 15th
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
's
CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, a pop-up library and magazineziness both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
MGTD 51, excellent condition, new top and tonneau cover. Call VI 3-4644 1234
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal package for special occasions at the $1/2 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
DEEP FREEZE, 22 cu. ft. upright, 1 year old, $2 price. Can be financed. 1519 Lindenwood Lane, last street east on 15th. 12-9
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in the course material. Complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 2-0681.
TAILER, 30 ft. all metal and modern including thermostatic controlled heat 21 ft. aluminum awning, carpeted living room, TV and cooler. Priced to sell. Owner moving in January. Call VI 3-4863. 12-9
WANT TO SELL—one RCA Victor Mark
Hi-Fi Hi-fi set. Only $100—like new.
Phone VI 3-7051, Patrick M. Dolan. 12-9
FRIGIDAIRE, 6 cubic feet. Perfect working condition. $42. Contact Arthur Cridland at 1646 Tennessee after 5 p.m.
ph. PKU 481. 12-6
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape, $70. Used six times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass., VI 3-4952. 12-12
BEVERAGES-All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic party supplies. Ant, 6 and Vermont. Phone VI. if 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST
Group saving most empty Marlboro
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
MISCELLANEOUS
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
9411" Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263. tf
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service. Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
Use Kansan Want Ads
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop 943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers. Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all kinds of canaries, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. ff
Gravit's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
Roger's Launder-It
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
WATCH REPAIRS
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629. tf
Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
725 Mass.
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER available to students and faculty. Prompt service. 7291' Mass, VI 3-5465. tf
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. V1 3-5055
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1621 West 19th St. Terr. 12-9
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very quality—diline, glowing—with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor Samples to show. Ph. VI 5-0943 or II 3-5994.
DAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterna-
tions on men's and women's clothes. Also
fraps and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657,
1400 Tenn. tf
FYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service. VI 3-7184; 1632 West 20th St.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W. 20th St. ff
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED
Prompt and efficient service. Regular
rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8606. iff
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8311. tf
PRIVATE SECRETARY will do typing of all kinds. Fast, neat and accurate. Regular rates. Call Mrs. Ingels VI 3-226 between 12 and 1:30 p.m.
FYPING; Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Vrii, VI 3-8660. ff
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgert. tf
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
ROOM FOR TWO available anytime.
Present occupants are pledging a frater-
rent Excelent location, single bed,
room and comfortable, Ph. 12-
3-1909 1115 Ohio 12-10
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric range, refrigerator and steel built-ins. refrigerator and steel business desk Adults only, 742 Ohio 12-11
COMPLETE
MODERN LIBRARY
We Stock The
WANTED
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH Sunday Nov. 24. Reward. Phone VI 3-6733. 12-9
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
SHEAFFER'S EVERSHARP PENCIL: Obtain by calling VI 3-8308, identifying and paying for this ad. 12-9
WOULD LIKE BABY SITTING in evenings. 50c per hour. Call Ginny Holder.
VI 3-9145. 12-9
WANTED student laundry. Reasonnable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
TRANSPORTATION to Binghamton or New York City Christmas vacation. Call Judy Saari, VI 3-3224, after 6 p.m. if
LOST
LADY'S WHITE GOLD WATCH with expansion band. Hamilton watch found near Fraser. Ask secretary at 103 Fraser. 12-6
FOUND
SLIDE RULE - Student Union Cafe. Serial number 769641. Reward. Ph. KU 349, Ned Joslin. 12-5
We like to say 'Yes' (at Bowfawal)
Loans $25 to $2000 on signature, furniture or car. Phone, write or come in.
Beneficial FINANCE CO.
Win KUOK'S Big
$ 8 0 3 1 \frac {1}{2} $ MASS. ST., Lawrence. VI. 3-8074
NUMBER JUMBLER CONTEST
It's Fun . . . It's Easy . . . Anyone Can Enter!
17 24 8 16 11 15 4 25 17 10 16 11 18 9 21
10 13 19 5 23 7 18 12 23 14 7 15 25 14 6
21 7 9 15 16 3 13 8 5 1 22 4 13 3 8
8 11 25 12 4 22 6 2 19 9 3 8 23 18 15
15 7 14 18 14 9 20 10 4 6 17 2 12 10 20
20 4 6 10 1 17 3 8 24 11 5 21 16 14 7
9 2 5 12 19 11 5 13 1 19 1 13 3 24 5
6 24 12 3 7 2 1 20 3 24 5 7 1 4 2
14 10 1 21 4 25 9 2 1 16 22 2 9 23 19
19 17 3 15 2 13 19 6 17 14 12 20 6 8 10
8 1 24 11 20 7 22 2 5 25 15 4 18 5 22
22 5 18 9 17 3 10 16 13 9 21 10 23 4 16
11 16 20 12 23 6 4 20 8 2 15 1 17 12 8
13 25 15 7 5 12 8 3 6 3 1 22 7 25 18
18 14 6 21 3 10 24 14 11 2 4 9 19 13 11
Win These Prizes!
- A beautiful WATERMAN FOUNTAIN PEN from the Student Union Bookstore.
- A $12.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE from Rowlands Disc Den.
- TWO FREE STEAK DINNERS at the Wagon Wheel Cafe.
- A GIFT ASSORTMENT from the Wagon Wheel Magazine Shop.
- TWO NEW LP ALBUMS from KUOK's big record library.
FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE RULES:
1. Start on any side of the above diagram and draw one continuous line thru it to the opposite side.
2. Your line does not need to be straight, but it may pass thru no more than 15 adjacent squares.
3. Total up the numbers in the squares you have crossed with your line. All prizes go to the person with the highest total.
4. In case of a tie, the earliest postmark will win.
5. Enter as often as you wish. Each entry must be
submitted on this official contest form and postmarked no later than December 14, 1957. Mail all entries to:
NUMBER JUMBLER
KUOK
Flint Hall, Room 207
Name ...
Address ___
Total ...
KUOK - "The Voice of Mt. Oread"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957
Students Say...
Question: It has been said that the KU athletic program is aimed at the paying customer. What is your opinion?
Dale Guilged, Wellington senior —"Emphasis on sports in general is for the paying customer. But that is not of prime importance. Most important are the scholarships available for boys."
ALEXANDER LONDON
Explosion Kills 14 In Georgia
Gulledge
A. B. ROSS
Burgess
PABLO MAYORAL
Gary Burgess, Ottawa sophomore — "I believe that is probably true although KU track isn't a paying sport and yet it offers a number of scholarships."
Robert Macy, Hutchinson junior — "I think it is. If it wasn't we wouldn't worry so much about having a winning or losing football and basketball team.
VILLA RICA, Ga. —(UP) A shattering blast ripped through the business district of this town today, killing at least 14 persons. Rescuers feared that more bodies would be taken from the five buildings ripped apart by the explosion of a gas main.
M. E. ROMAN
Macy
An average cow will drink 15 gallons of water daily.
Ted Tidwell, Mission sophomore — "It seems to me the tendency to charge for athletic events is increasingly becoming more of a money-making proposition."
Tidwell
J. Thomas Adams, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student-"I think they're quite right, but it's one method of getting funds for athletic scholarships."
Oliver, Dennis Dahl, Nancy Dahl,
Albert Humbertson, all Lawrence;
John Adams, Kansas City, Kan;
Lorelle Angeloety, New Orleans, La;
William Berg, Lindsburg; Donna
Fitzroy, Prairie Village; Harriett
Haubenstock, Brooklyn, N.Y.; O.M.
Henson, Topeka; Ellen Ordway,
New York, N.Y.; Kent Wilson, Fort
Worth, Texas; John Lenz, McPheron;
Peggy Stewart, Raleigh, N.C.;
Jerry Tash, Covington, Ind.; Marilyn
Bailey, Kansas City, Mo., all
graduate students.
PETER HENDERSON
29 Join Biology Society
Roberto's
PIZZA
710 Mass., VI 3-1086
Roberto's
A. H. SMITH
Adams
Miss Littrell
Miss Huston
Nancy Robb, Kansas City, Kan. junior-"I think students should be given more consideration. For example, we should be given better seats at football games."
Carol Ann Huston, Kansas City, Mo., senior — "I think it is to a certain extent. They're cutting down the number of our seats and pushing the student section down.
Mary Ann
P
Martha Littrell, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore—"To me it isn't aimed at either the paying customer or student in particular. That's not the whole purpose. KU has a good enough program that a paying customer can get benefits. If we didn't they wouldn't come."
Twenty-nine students and faculty members were initiated into Phi Sigma, honorary biological society at a meeting Wednesday.
Following the ceremony, A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology and Robert W. Wilson, associate professor of zoology, spoke on "The Advantages and Disadvantages of Doing Research in Europe." Both men studied in Europe in the past year.
A. S. K.
Miss Robb
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Initiates are Kenneth Armitage assistant professor of zoology; Albert Benedict, associate professor of bacteriology; Zafarullah Cheema, pharmacy research associate; Julie Lindstrom, bacteriology technical assistant; and Robert Quinley, water laboratory employee, and Leon Richards, botany research assistant. Clarence Buller, Peabody, and Takeo Kasahara, Honolulu, Hawaii, seniors.
Russell Carlson, Claredon Hills,
Ill; Don Lee, Neodesha; Richard
Guschausky, Zion, Ill; Franklin
Howell, Salt Lake City, Utah; James
Lectures On Oil Set For Geologists
The owner of a Wichita oil drilling company will give two lectures to the geology department Tuesday.
Robert F. Walters, of the Walters Drilling Co., will speak on "Solution as a Subaerial Erosion Agent" and "Migration and Accumulation of Oil in Central Kansas."
The talks are sponsored by Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honorary geology fraternity, and the Geology Club.
Western Civ Test Registration Begins
Students taking the western civilization examination in January, may begin registering for the examination Monday in 130 Strong. No registrations can be made after Dec. 31.
The examination will be given at 1 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 11, in Bailey auditorium. Students enrolled in the College, School of Education and School of Journalism must pass the western civilization examination in order to graduate.
Color TV In Union For 'Twelfth Night'
Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" starring Maurice Evans will be featured at the third Hallmark "Hall of Fame" television viewing party from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Dec. 15 in the Student Union.
Color television sets loaned to the Union by Hallmark Cards, Inc. will be placed in the south lounge, main lounge, Kansas room and ballroom.
TUXEDO RENTALS and Sales
Place your order early for the Christmas Season
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763 (one door south Jayhawk Cafe)
Complete Wedding Service
Atomic Gas!
Leonard's Gas Contains Atoms
LEONARD'S Standard Service
9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
1-2-3 at L.L. & D.C.
APPROVED
SANITONE
SERVICE
SANITONE famous for superior Dry Cleaning
2
Finest shirt finishing anywhere! Collar carefor longer wear. Gentle yet thorough laundering
J
OK
Individual attention to every laundry bundle. Your clothes are in expert hands at
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-3711 - You'll Be Glad You Did!
gia A in the today, accusers d beipped main.
k 15
Rocket Fails; 'Prestige Hurt'
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — (UP)—A satellite-carrying U.S. rocket exploded on the ground today in a fresh failure of American efforts to meet Russia's Sputnik challenge.
The department announced its personnel and scientists at the scene escaped injury.
Defense Department sources said this morning it probably will be at least a few weeks before another attempt will be made at launching a test satellite.
An orange ball of flame and billowing black smoke engulfed the gleaming silver Vanguard Navy missile at the moment it was fired-10:45 a.m. Kansas time. The rocket blew up on its launching stand.
"We know the carrier rocket fell over the United States," Khrushchev said. "But they do not want to give it back to us."
Nikita Says U.S. Holds Red Rocket
MOSOW —(UP)— Soviet Communist party chief Nikita Khrushchev said today that the carrier rocket of the Soviet Sputnik I plunged to earth over U. S. territory Saturday but “the Americans will not give it up to us.”
Krushchev said this to foreign correspondents at a Finnish embassy reception.
"We relied on their decency, but they did not live up to it."
Dr. John P. Hagen, chief of the satellite project, said in Washington that the trouble developed two seconds after the rocket was fired. A spokesman said there was a "loss of chamber pressure in the first stage" of the 3-stage 72-foot rocket.
All was thought to be in readiness today for a successful takeoff. An hours-long final checkoff of parts in the rocket started at midnight.
The Army is readying its own attempt to launch a satellite, but it got a late start and isn't ready yet to fire.
Well. He's Honest About It
TOPEKA —(UP)— Gov. George Docking said today he wanted to be "taken off the hook" with a "no comment" about the failure of the U. S. satellite launching. "I make enough mistakes myself without commenting on someone else's" Gov. Docking said.
Six of ten students interviewed by The Daily Kansan this morning said the announcement of the launching time of the U.S. satellite and its postponement were damaging to the satellite's propaganda value.
The strongest comment was by Colby Rehmert, Jetmore senior. He said: "It seems the United States is falling head-over-heels trying to impress Russia and our allies that we can do anything better than Russia. I think Russia has set an H-bomb off under Washington's ego and it is still burning."
Other Chapters
Johna Aderholdt. Wichita sophomore,
"How should I know? I've been studying."
Other comments:
Gretchen Griswold, Silver City, N. M. sophomore—"Americans and others have faith in the government and still know that we are the best."
Marcia Fink, Topeka junior — "I don't think it has hurt us much, but we should fire it soon."
Glen Brown, Ottawa sophomore— "It is a detriment to our propaganda value because there are too many it's in it. Any failure now will be highly amplified in propaganda value."
William Wolfe, Lawrence senior—"It definitely had an adverse effect on foreigners. They must think we are considerably further behind than it appeared before the announcement and postponement."
John Walz, Bonner Springs senior —"It looks as if the announcement was a little premature."
Howard Phillips, Lawrence junior —"It could be terribly humiliating for the American people."
Nancy Smith, Liberal junior—"It makes us look as if we are pretty careful in our preparation."
Toll Rises To 93 In London Wreck
LONDON — (UP)— Steelworkers searching for four to nine more bodies cut foot-by-foot today into the last crumpled railroad car remaining at the site of Wednesday's disastrous train wreck.
The first body brought out this morning, mangled almost beyond recognition, brought the death toll to 93. Another 177 were injured, 110 of them seriously.
Early today emergency crews hauled away the steam locomotive of the train that plowed into a jampacked electric commuter special in inky fog two days ago.
The Student Union opened on time this morning with only a faint trace of the powerful stink that drove about 400 persons from the building Thursday night.
Although the source of the odor has not been found, building officials and a University chemist believe that it was caused by a sulphur stink bomb placed outside the building. The building was closed at 9:30 p.m. Thursday after the fire department left the scene.
Does The Union Own A Skunk?
It was first believed that a leaky gas line had caused the trouble, but after hurried observations, officials at the scene diagnosed a stink bomb.
About fifteen organization meetings in addition to the usual Studen Union activities were interrupted
Derwood McCabe, building engineer, said that the person or persons responsible probably dropped the bomb near the marble entrance of the building or on the roof.
and headaches were reported but none of the victims had to be treated at Watkins Hospital.
Several cases of upset stomach
The smell was detected as far north as 11th Street and as far east as Kentucky Street, mostly because of the strong southerly wind. One fire officer remarked, "We could smell it as we turned the corner at 12th Street. It was really strong. "It reminds me of opening the hold of a ship and smelling spoiled onions," another officer said, recalling his service days.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 57
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Students may vote for one candidate Dec. 12-13 at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. The winner will be announced in a Daily Kansan picture supplement Dec. 18 and she will be guest of honor at The Daily Kansan Christmas party.
Restore Budget Cut, Regents Ask Docking Miss Santa $334,214 For Raises Included In KU Slash
out how their dollar will be divided for the Campus Chest fund. This poster is on display in front of Flint Hall. (Daily Kansan photo)
Friday, Dec. 6, 1957
Colder tonight with rain changing to snow east portion. Saturday clearing west, snow ending east in forenoon, colder east. Low tonight 15-25 west to 30s east. High Saturday 35-45.
OPEN YOUR HEARTS AND YOUR POCKETS TOO!—Martha Crosier, Lawrence junior, and Ken Wagnon, Wichita sophomore, are finding
Weather
Miss Santa Nominations Due
Each dormitory, sorority and fraternity may nominate a candidate. A woman not living in an organized house may be nominated by a petition signed by 25 persons.
Names of candidates for the Miss Santa contest, sponsored by The Daily Kansan, are due by Saturday noon.
Entries are being taken by Steve Sehmidt, Salina senior and promotion manager, or Ted Winkler, Spring Hill senior and circulation manager of The Daily Kansan.
WORLD
UNIVERSITY
SERVICE
POLIO
MULTIPLE
SCLEROSIS
N.S.F.N.S.
K.U.
Y
CARE
T.E.
HEART FUND
CANCER
K.U.
TRAVEL FUND
FOR
EXCHANGE
STUDENTS
K.U.
EMERGENCY
FUND
Low this morning 51. Low
Thursday 40, high 66.
The Board of Regents today asked Gov. Docking's budget makers to restore as much as possible of a $822,815 cut made in the KU budget.
The regents asked for $10,258,623 to operate KU next year. This was trimmed to a recommended $9,435,808.
$221 Starts Off Campus Chest
Approximately $221 had been turned in to the KU Campus Chest drive by 5 p.m. Thursday. About $150 was turned in by organized houses, while $71 had been contributed through the Mr. Campus Chest contest.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall had the highest contributions for organized houses. Corbin-North College Hall was second; Alpha Phi sorority, third, and Alpha Delta Pi sorority, fourth. Most of the contributions from organized houses were given through Student Union book-store rebate slips.
Each candidate for the Mr. Campus Chest contest was nominated for the contest by the organized women's house where he works as waiter.
The contest will close at 5 p.m. today. The winner and two runners-up will be announced at the intermission of the Four Freshmen concert at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
For the first time KU exchange students will benefit directly from the Campus Chest drive.
Present leaders in the contest and the sororities nominating them are Jerry Elliott, Hutchinson, Pi Beta Phi; Tom Rinehart, Liberal, Delta Gamma; Larry Ball, Cunningham, Kappa Kappa Gamma, seniors; Eugene Bryee Planienstel, Salina, Alpha Delta Pi and Robert H. Davis, Leavenworth, Alpha Chi Omega, sophomores.
"We need an organization to support these traveling expenses." J. A. Burzle, professor of German, said. "This would be possible through the Campus Chest drive if the total contributions are high enough." he said.
"The University has 12 direct exchange scholarships to other countries which is proportionately more than any other large University. These scholarships are to Germany, Switzerland and Great Britian.
"Private foundations pay the traveling expenses to Germany and Switzerland, but not to the five schools in Great Britain," he said.
Included in the $822,815 cut was about $334,214 which the regents asked for to raise faculty salaries five per cent.
The regents asked for $6,651,-148 to operate the KU Medical School in fiscal 1959. This was trimmed to a recommended $6,-601,836 which is slightly under the current budget.
Gov. Docking said he did not plan to recommend the salary increase to the Legislature. He said the blame for the cut in the regent's budget request should "rest on my shoulders."
University officials could not be reached for comment on Gov. Docking's stand. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy was unavailable for comment. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University; George Smith, dean of the University, and Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education were in Topeka for the meeting.
Governor Takes Blame
Budget hearings for the University will continue today. The regents placed its budget needs at $33,913,287 to operate the state's five colleges and the University. Gov. Docking's budget makers trimmed it to a recommended $131,320,873, less than half a million dollars over the current budget.
Regent McDill Boyd, Phillipsburg,
said Thursday "We are liable to
suffer irreparable damage to our
top teaching staffs unless the raise
is granted next year."
Regent Urges Raise
During the budget hearings Mr. Boyd said, "If we can't pay salaries comparable to other states we will lose our best teachers and wind up with the culls and provide inferior' educations."
The salary fight will now move to the Legislature which convenes Jan. 14. One legislator said Thursday he would be glad to hear the chancellor and college presidents present their requests during the session
Several legislators attending the hearing declared they believed the salary increases are necessary for "good education in Kansas."
10 Per Cent Granted in '57
10 Per Cent Granted in 57. The governor said that he cut out the five per cent increase because the 1957 Legislature had granted a 10 per cent increase. He said the colleges can keep their faculties by "improved internal operation of the colleges."
Gov. Docking said that his major (Continued on Page 3.)
University Daily Kansan Friday. Dec. 6. 1957
One Way Or Another—
It Costs To Drive
For several years Kansas has had a "financial responsibility" law. During its last session, the Legislature went to work to strengthen this law and also take a stride toward ridding the highways of irresponsible drivers.
What is the Safety Responsibility Law?
Whom does it affect?
It is an act of the Legislature to protect everyone in Kansas against financially irresponsible owners or operators of motor vehicles who become involved in accidents.
It affects all motor vehicle owners and operators, including non-residents, when they are involved in an accident injuring a person or damaging property in excess of $100.
What must you do after an accident?
Within 24 hours after a motor vehicle accident resulting in death, injury, or property damage in the extent of $50, the operator of every car involved must file a written report with the Motor Vehicle Department.
In the event the accident results in death or injury to a person, or property damage exceeding $100, a form on insurance information must be completed.
Remember: You must report the accident, regardless of who is to blame. If the operator of a car involved is physically incapable of reporting, persons who are riding in that car must report.
If there is any question about the amount of property damage, file a report and be on the safe side. Failure to report such an accident is punishable by a fine, imprisonment and suspension of your driver's license or non-resident's operating privilege.
Can you lose your motoring privileges?
Yes, both your driver's license and registration plates can be suspended under this law. Within 60 days after receiving a report of an accident, the Motor Vehicle Department must suspend your driver's license and registration plates unless it has received satisfactory evidence that you: (1) have been released from liability, (2) proved not to be liable, (3) executed an acknowledged written agreement providing for the payment of all claims not exceeding $11,000, resulting from the accident, or (4) deposited with the Motor Vehicle Department security sufficient to pay claims up to $11,000.
How can you avoid this penalty?
The law does not apply to an owner or operator, after filing the report.
(1) If the vehicle owner or operator had in effect a motor vehicle liability policy with respect to the vehicle involved.
(2) If there is in effect an automobile liability policy or bond with respect to operation of a vehicle not owned by him.
Vehicle liability insurance must be issued by an insurance company or surety company authorized to write vehicle liability insurance in Kansas and must provide the following minimum coverage:
1. $5,000 for injuries sustained by one person.
2. $10,000 for all personal injuries resulting from one accident.
3. $1,000 for property damage.
Remember, for the average person of college age it is much easier to pay a small premium for vehicle liability coverage, than it is to dig upseveral thousands of dollars in the event of a serious accident.
—Bob Hartley
Blasts Schools
TOPEKA, DEC. 5—(UP)—A layman told professional educators today that "inferior education schools should be eliminated" as the first step toward turning out better qualified teachers.
Dr. W, F. Bernstorf, a medical doctor from Winfield, said teachers should police their training programs and "raise entrance requirements."
Speaking to delegates attending the annual Governor's Conference on Education in a crowded House of Representatives chamber here, Dr. Bernstorf said many years ago the medical profession took a "critical view" of its schools and cut the number from more than 600 to 62.
He said standards were raised by weeding out the inferior medical colleges and putting the emphasis on quality in the remaining ones.
Dr. Bernstorf, paraphrasing Will Rogers, said "There definitely is nothing wrong with being ignorant —unless you refuse to do something about it."
He called for better undergraduate and graduate schools of education, higher salaries for career educators and "more emphasis in our high schools on mathematics and sciences."
He said we are in a "worldwide scientific revolution." He called the Soviet Union's forced education of the masses in the sciences the "greatest experiment the world has ever seen."
"We should curtail the elective subjects in high school and make math and the sciences required courses," he said.
A New World
The Asian Student reprinted this from the Hong Kong Standard; Here is a suggested addition to our dictionary:
Sputnik v. t., - niked, -niking, 1 to outmart. 2. to steal a march. To surpass in cunning. As in: He sputinked me and got a date with Mary. Syn., see Frustrate.
Chancellor Murphy was graduated from KU in 1936 and received his M. D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1941.
The underpaid ladies and gentlemen who teach America's children are under fire again.
It seems that in addition to being unable to read, "Johnny," the trade name of today's schoolchild, can't work problems in atomic physics, either.
The emphasis on scientific training has been growing for some time. Not the least among the advocates of more science in school have been military men, who say that America, in order to be strong, must have more scientists.
The military boys may be right. But sincere advocates of additional science courses in our schools have been joined by a whole troupe of alarmists who think the classroom ought to be turned over to the slide rule and the test tube.
Frightened by recent Russian missile progress, these crying critics think America ought to use the same methods as Russia in turning out scientists. Everything from compulsory enrollment in physics to eliminating recess has been advocated in the name of scientific progress.
We needn't be ashamed of our schools. In general, they are of high quality, from grade schools on up. Perhaps it is a just criticism that some public schools don't make their students work as hard as they should.
But we are treading on dangerous ground when we compel students to study subjects in order to further what some think is the national interest. Abandonment of liberal arts training, or even a slackening of interest in it, serves neither a nation nor its citizens.
Larry Boston
During the Christmas vacation, 3,000 or more individuals are to invade the campus as guests of the University. Naturally, under normal circumstances, we welcome any contingent of visitors and extend to them every courtesy worthy of visiting groups.
... Letters
However, when their visit occurs during our absence from our various dormitories and they occupy these dormitories without our individual permission and among our personal possessions, then the courteous welcome will have exceeded all rationality.
Editor:
It is utter absurdity for the University to abuse their "authoritative will" by forcing this act of encoachment upon members of independent dormitories.
Daily Transan UNIVERSITY
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889 by bleweber 1904,
died daily Jan. 31
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news
David Wake
Kansas City, Kans., senior
Extension 376, business office
Member of the National Association
Associated Collegiate Press, Represented
Extension 251 news room
Extension 276 business off
Hospital Gets Grant
by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $1 a semester or $4.50 a year. Publisher: University Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
OSAWATOMIE, Kan. — (UP) — chronic schizophrenia was an-
A $20,000 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for the first year
of a three-year study on evaluation of treatment methods for watomie State Hospital.
SPECIAL Burger Basket
one of our juicy hamburgers served with a full order of French Fries.
Usually 55c, Now
45c
Clean Surroundings Quick Service
CHATEAU DRIVE-IN
1802 Mass. VI 3-1825
71 40
Don't Get Stuck
Don't take a chance on your car not starting!
ATLAS BATTERIES as low as $10.55, exchange. No charge for road service or pickup & delivery!
Bridge Standard Service 601 Mass. VI 3-9849
Friday. Dec, 6, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Vespers Welcome Christmas Dec.15
The Christmas season will be welcomed at KU with the 33rd annual presentation of the Christmas Vespers, Dec. 15 in Hoch Auditorium. Performances will be given at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m.
All departments of the School of Fine Arts plus 400 students and faculty members will participate in the program. Included are the A Cappella choir directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education; the University Symphony Orchestra led by Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra; Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur and instructor of music history; a choral ensemble directed by Edwin Foot Jr., Washington, D.C. graduate student; and a horn ensemble led by John Hill, instructor of music education.
Approximately 6,000 persons are expected to attend the Vespers. There is no admission charge.
A recital on the Memorial Carillon by Mr. Barnes, and Christmas carols by a brass ensemble led by Mr. Hall will precede the programs at 2:45 and 6:45 p.m.
Following an organ prelude by Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory and University organist, the traditional ceremony of lighting the candles will be held.
The A Cappella choir will present six selections, "Fanfare for Christmas Day," "I Saw Three Ships," "Carol of the Drum," "Three Kings," "Bulalalow" and "Glory to God in the Highest."
The University Orchestra will play two Brahms choral preludes. "There Is a Rose in Flower," and "O God, Thou Hollest," and Corelli's "Christmas Concerto."
Four tableaux have been designed by Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting, and Robert Sudlow, assistant professor of drawing and painting. They are "Anunciation," "The Angel of the Lord," "Three Kings," and "Adoration."
In the tableau "Anunciation" the Madonna will be portrayed by Kav Cunningham, Metairie, La., freshman, and the angels by Carolyn Yates, Kansas City, Mo. senior, and Barbara Jane Everly, Eudora junior. James Hamil, Kansas City, Mo. senior will portray the angel in "The Angel of the Lord."
In the third tableau, "The Three Kings." Miss Cunningham will be the Madonna and Bill Burnison, Ontario, Calif. and John Book, Kansas City, Kans. sophomores, and Bob Ebendorf, Topeka freshman, will be the kings.
In the tableau, "Adoration," Jerry Krause, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Jay Fisher, Marion, and Richard Berger, Kansas City, Kans. seniors, will be the shepherds. Miss Cunningham will again be the Madonna.
Restore KU Cut, Docking Asked
(Continued from Page 1.)
"I would never hesitate to give a good professor a good salary," he said.
interest is to see that such things as salary increases are handled on a "scientific basis."
Mr. Boyd said KU has 32 vacant faculty positions which can't be filled and which the University cannot even get applications for.
Mr. Boyd told the hearing that even the proposed 5 per cent increase would put Kansas State College faculty salaries 19 per cent below the national average.
Mr. Nichols said Thursday it would take a 20 per cent increase in salaries to bring those at KU up to the level of pay in the Big 10 schools.
Below National Average
At the hearing Gov. Docking asked how Kansas salaries compared with the Big 8. Hubert Brighton, regents secretary, said KU ranks third in professorial pay, first for associate professors, second for assistant professors, and fourth for instructors.
"But, we aren't in competition with other Big 8 schools for faculty members," Mr. Nichols said. "We are in competition with the Big 10 and the southwest schools."
Place Order For Tickets
Students who want tickets for the Big Eight pre-season basketball tournament in Kansas City Dec. 26-30 can now place their orders with the athletic department.
Earl Falkenstien, business manager of the athletic department, said his office has ordered 1200-1500 tickets, which should get here in a week or two.
He said these tickets are reserve seat tickets, and must be bought for all four nights of play.
Tickets not sold in the 4-ticket sets will be sold individually at a later time. The KU athletic department will also have about 600 general admission tickets.
During the tableaux, a choral ensemble directed by Mr. Foot will sing "Salutation Carol," "While Shepherds Watched," "Kings in Glory," and "Lo, How a Rose."
HEY GANG!
TGIF
AT THE PIT
"Best Music in Town"
Jerry Taylor's
The Southern Pit
1834 Mass.
If It's a BIG STEAK and a LOW PRICE You Want, We Just Don't Think You Can Beat This
10
14 OZ. RIB STEAK
And French Fries for $1.00
Tonight Only 5-6:30
Because of the Cafeteria's Special purchase on these Steaks your dollar brings you an unusual value in Eating Enjoyment.
Treat yourself to a Steak Dinner You'll be glad you did!
STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 6, 1957
35 Jayhawkers Earn Letters
Eleven seniors, 12 juniors and 12 sophomores filled out the list of 35 football players who earned letters for the 1957 Kansas football season. The Jayhawkers compiled a 5-4-1 record for second place in the Big Eight conference.
Lettermen are;
Seniors — Jerry Baker, Minneapolis; John Francisco and Frank Gibson, Massillon, Ohio; James Hull, Wichita; Robert Kraus and James Letcavits, Massillon; Lynn McCarthy St. Peter, Minn.; Walter Strauch, Elmhurst, Ill.; Paul Swoboda, Dupo, Ill., John Traylor, Massillon, and Charlie McCue, Lawrence.
Juniors — William Blasi, Pratt;
Larry Carrier, St. John; Ron Claiborne,
Amarillo, Tex.; Don Feller,
El Dorado; Homer Floyd, Massillon;
Robert Marshall, Warrensburg, Mo.
Larry McKown, Oil City; H. C.
Palmer, Atchison; Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio; Tom Russell, Grove City, Ohio; Walter Schmidt, East Greenville, Pa., and John Wertzberger, Lawrence.
Sophomores — Ray Barnes, Tacoma, Wash.; William Burnison, Pratt; David Harris, Washington, D. C.; Donald Hermick, Mentor, Ohio; Dick Lewis, Barnesville, Ohio; Gerry Merritt, Ellis; Grant Miller, Elmhurst, Ill.; Duane Morris, Salina; John Peppercorn Mission; Dale Remsberg, Iola; Richard Rohlf, Kirkwood, Mo., and Chester Vanatta, Bartlesville, Okla.
45 Frosh Get Numerals
Forty-five first year football players earned 1957 freshman football numerals. The team lost their only two games of the season to K-State and Missouri.
They are Edward Alberg, Topeka; William Allen, Kansas City, Mo.; James Baker, Raytown, Mo.; David Bright and Myron Right, Greenville, Pa.; Jerry Brown, Hutchinson; James Broyles, Evanston, III; Leon Brunton, Perry; Richard Carlson, Ellinwood; Ralph Caster, Raytown, Mo.
Mike Cavanaugh, McPherson;
Harry Craig, Lawrence; Joseph
Doolittle, Tarzana, Calif.; Dwight
Fickbohm, Watertown, S. D.;
James Goodrich, Sedalia, Mo.;
Paul Grant, McCune; Richard
Hall, Gary, Ind.; Roger Hill,
Augusta; Harry Jolley, Topeka; Stanley
Kirshman, Jefferson City, Mo.
Terry Kiser, Omaha, Nebr.; Joseph Lupo, Edbrooke, Ill.; Norman Mailen, Clay Center; Larry Martin, Wakefield; Rudolph Mauser, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Ron Michaels, Hiwata th; Theodore Mikalin, Nanticoke,
KU has won 61 and lost 28 basketball games with Oklahoma in a series that began in 1920.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN
Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
S:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat, Sun., Holidays
Pa.; Phillip Miller, Wathena; Stephen Newcomer, Omaha, Nebr.; Allan Radka, Hoisington.
Jim Ragan, Lawrence; James Sanders, Kansas City, Kan.; James Schartz, Ellinwood; Doyle Schick, Lawrence; Geoffrey Schwerin, Kansas City, Mo.; W J. Sprekelmeyer, Ft. Worth, Tex.; James Spry, Centralia, Mo.; Joe Spurney, Belleville; William Teague, Chapman; Charlie Thurston, Coffeville; William Tourtillott, Newton; Bud Woolery, Kansas City, Kan.; Donald Wrench, Lawrence; William Zager, Arma and Sam Zickefoose, Rossville.
IM Basketball Opens Monday With 150 Teams
The intramural basketball season will start Monday with 150 teams entered in the fraternity and independent A, B, and C divisions.
Walter J. Mikols, assistant professor of physical education and director of men's intramurals, said the A division teams will play in Robinson Annex and the B and C divisions will play in Robinson Gymnasium.
The games will consist of seven minute quarters with both teams having their men under their defensive basket on free-throws. With these two exceptions, the rules will be the same as in high school basketball.
He said games will be played in both divisions at 4:15, 5:15, 6:15 and 7:15 each week day afternoon. The season will end about Feb. 5.
Minnesota Edges Iowa State, 67-66
Although Iowa State's Lyle Frahm and John Crawford continually stole the ball from bewildered Gophers, Minnesota still edged the Cyclones 67-66 in Minneapolis Thursday night. A full-court press enabled the Cyclones to tie the score in the second half, but they could not move ahead at the end. Frahm was the leading scorer of the game with 21 points.
ALEXANDRA DUNN
I GO FOR A MAN WHO GETS HIS GAS FROM POTTER'S 66
You can be sure you are getting the best in Automotive Service at Potter's
Potter's 66 Service
Our pledge to you—is Service
1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891
KU Faces Two Tough Road Tests
Victorious in their first two games of the season, the Jayhawker basketball team faces a stern test this weekend in out-of-town encounters with Northwestern and Marquette.
The KU Sports Network will broadcast both games over radio stations KANU-FM and KCMO. The broadcasts will begin at 7:55 p.m. Monte Moore will give the play by play accounts.
Bob Hickman, 6-foot, $1^{1 / 2}$-inch sophomore guard, will be in the starting lineup against Northwestern Saturday on the basis of his two fine performances in KU victories over Oklahoma State and Canisius this week. He will replace senior John Cleland.
Also named as starters by coach Dick Harp were Bob Billings, 5-foot, 11-inch guard; Wilt Chamberlain, 7-foot center; Monte Johnson, 6-foot, 5-inch forward, and Ron Loneski, 6-foot, $4\frac{1}{2}$-inch forward. All are juniors.
Left Thursday
The team left Lawrence Thursday night to go to Evanston, Ill., for the Northwestern game. After that they will travel to Milwaukee, Wisc., to face Marquette Monday, then return to Lawrence Tuesday morning.
Northwestern has played one game this year. They defeated Western Michigan 97-78 Monday, Last year KU won over the Big Ten team 87-69 in the season's opener in Allen Field House.
Chamberlain had a field day in last year's game, his first as a collegiate varsity player, as he set three school records by hitting 52 points, 20 field goals and grabbing 31 rebounds.
Northwestern and KU have met three times with KU now holding a 2-1 edge. In 1951 Northwestern won by a single point, while in 1956 and 1957 KU won by sizeable margins.
Harp Could Hit .900
If KU wins Saturday coach Dick Harp will have a percentage of .900 as a college coach. Last year his NCAA runners-up had a 24-3 record. This year they have won two.
KU also defeated Marquette last year by a score of 78-61. It was the first time the two schools had met on the basketball court. The KU game will be Marquette's fourth contest of the season.
Rogers
Kingerie
Rogers
lingerie
A nylon tricot short shortie like a little jewel. The top is gilded with glittering new paisley embroidery over the yoke and bow-tie ... edging the sheer puffed sleeves ... and ending off the wide, wide whirl of fullness. Little bloomers complete this delightful young sleeper.
White/Gold
32-36 at 10.95
Ober's Jr. Miss
(elevator from men's store)
(elevator from men's store) 821 Mass.
GUIDE to CHRISTMAS VALUES
Th only 47-y
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Friday, Dec. 6, 1957
1545
13
1545
WILT. CHAMBERLAIN
FAN
Along the JAYHAWKER trail WITH GEORGE ANTHAN
The University of Oklahoma had only three basketball coaches in a 47-year period, from 1908 to 1955.
It took Wilt Chamberlain only seven seconds to score in Wednesday's Canisius game, a game marked by ragged play, mostly on the part of Kansas.
Kansas took only eight offensive rebounds and nine defensive rebounds during the first half while Canisius, a team which was three inches per man shorter, took 12 offensive and six defensive rebounds.
Kansas got behind in a game for the first time this season when Canisius took a 6-5 lead with 13:45 left in the first half but the lead was short-lived.
The second half, however, saw Kansas play a much smoother all-around ball game. An example of the better play was the fact that KU took a total of 37 rebounds in the game compared to 31 for Caniusus.
The superior rebounding which gave Kansas its edge early in the Oklahoma State game was not at all evident in Allen Field House Wednesday night during the first half.
The Jayhawkers, who committed only nine fouls in the game compared to 19 for Caniusis, did not commit a foul until almost 10 minutes were gone in the game.
An example of KU's ragged play was the four bad passes in the first eight minutes of play. Canisius, on the other hand, passed frequently and waited for the perfect shot while Kansas concentrated mainly on getting the ball in to Chamberlain who scored on 11 of 19 field goal attempts.
The Kansas height advantage showed up best in the tipoffs. Canisius failed to receive the ball after a tipoff until only 9:40 was left in the game.
Chamberlain drew 10 fouls in the game, mainly because the visitors found there was virtually no way to stop him from scoring once he was on his way up under the basket.
Kansas, although playing somewhat better than in the varsity-freshman game, exhibited a ragged style that was not so evident in the Oklahoma State game. It may mean Kansas is not yet ready to become a serious competitor for Big Eight or national honors since a steady game-after-game performance will certainly be a requirement for the championship of the Big Eight's pre-season tournament in Kansas City, Mo.
Swimmers To Face Southern Illinois
On the basis of the results of a freshman-varsity swimming meet Tuesday, John Jeffrey should be KU's main threat in the team's opener with the University of Southern Illinois at Carbondale Saturday.
Jeffrey won both the 200-yard butterfly and the 200-yard breaststroke event. His time of 2.36.5 in the butterfly event bettered the existing pool record of 2.38.1.
Jared Piety, swimming in his first varsity meet, is expected to be a KU mainstay. He also won the 440-yard freestyle in the freshman-varsity meet Monday.
He will swim the 220-yard freestyle and the 440-xard, freestyle
20-yard freestyle.
Jon Poort, team from two firsts in the freshman-varsity for the 220-yard freestyle in 2:27.3 and the 60-yard freestyle in 322.2.
Other KU entries will be Stephen Hill, Edward Poort, John Adams, Lloyd Ferrell, Hal Krehbiel, William Mathews, Donald Morris, Wayne Nyberg and John Pritchard.
ANOTHER SATISFIED USER of dairy products from Lawrence Sanitary! The Phi Kaps know the value of healthful milk for cooking and drinking. It comes in handy individual size cartons too!
MILK
Phi Kappa "Fraternity of the Week"
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM CO.
202 W. 6th
VI 3-5511
It's Easy to Look Your Best When You Send Your Clothes to ACME
We Guarantee The Following Services:
1. Personalized Service
2. One Day Service
3. Individual Cleaning of Light Color and Fragile Garments
4. Two Shirts Laundered FREE If We Miss Replacing a Button on Your Shirt
ACME Bachelor Laundry And Dry Cleaners
SAVE 10% ON CASH & CARRY CLEANING
1111 Mass. VI 3-5155
100% cotton.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. Dec. 6,1957
Awarded Medal For Rifle Firing
Middleton Tompkins, Long Beach,
Calif. sophomore, was awarded a medal Wednesday for outstanding rifle firing at the 1957 national matches (Army) at Camp Perry, Ohio, in August.
Tompkins was chosen for the expert team of the enlisted men's trophy match. He placed first among all ROTC rifflemen representing the 13 states in the 5th U. S. Army area and second among all ROTC entrants representing the six armies of the ContinentI Army Command.
The Camp Perry matches were an Army-wide competition with high power .30 caliber rifles.
Tompkins was the top scoreer on the 1956-57 KU Army ROTC rifle team and is leading the team scoring again this season.
Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science, presented the medal at a drill period Wednesday. Col. Hanchin said the match is normally open only to juniors and seniors but Tompkins was selected because of his outstanding record.
ROTC Rifle Teams In National Match
Rifle teams from the KU Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC units will enter competition next week in the National ROTC Rifle Matches.
Each team will fire on the University range and send its score to ROTC headquarters where the high scores will be determined.
The high team in Army, Navy and Air Force units will each receive William Randolph Hearst trophies. These teams will then fire against each other for the ROTC championship and the William Randolph Hearst Defense Trophy.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
SATURDAY
Baptist Student Union annual foreign
student Christmas party, 4-H Fair-
grounds
SUNDAY
Newman Club regular meeting after 11 a.m. Mass.
United Student Fellowship, 5 to 7 p.m.
Congregational Church. "Unto Us a navel
of strength." Sunday service.
Associate minister of Plymouth Congregational
Church. Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
Wesley Foundation Christmas dinner-
program, 5:15 p.m. (Note earlier hour.)
Disciple Student Fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Myers Hall. Movie. Everyone welcome.
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House, Breakfast
follows
Episcopal Student Vestry meeting noon, Canterbury House.
terbury House, "Faith of the Church."
Undergraduate Math Club and Seminar.
4 p.m. 203 Strong, Speaker, Harley Stafford.
"Periodic Decimal Fractions."
Pizza Delivered
VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
5 GREAT ALBUMS by the FOUR FRESHMEN
4 Freshmen & 5 Trombones
4 Freshmen & 5 Trumpets
4 Freshmen & 5 Saxes
Voices in Modern
Freshmen Favorites
On 33 and 45 rpm
Disc Den in Rowlands, 1241 Oread
Bob Billings, Russell junior and Tom Russell, Grove City, Ohio junior, who have toured the conference while participating in Kansas athletics, disclosed their ideas concerning KU spirit and sportsmanship to a Daily Kansan reporter Thursday.
How do KU students rank in the Big Eight conference in sportsmanship and spirit?
Does KU Have Spirit?
Billings, a guard on the basketball team, said, "I would class Kansas around the bottom of the conference when it comes to school spirit."
Unable to account for the reason for the lag of spirit, Billings said that Iowa State, Oklahoma and Kansas State have the most school spirit in his estimation.
"As for KU sportsmanship, it is as good or better here than in any school in the conference," he said. "Missouri is the poorest when it comes to sportsmanship," he said, "but I think they tear us up because of Wilt."
"Spirit is something really hard to judge unless you're actually at that particular school," he said.
Russell said he believed that Kansas fans are on par with other schools in sportsmanship.
B
Bowlers-
You'll like to bowl at spacious, modern PLADIUM! Twelve lanes, A.M.F. automatic spotters. Close to the campus.
Pladium Lanes
BOWLING
Open bowling every afternoon; Fri., Sat, Sun--all day & evening 901 Mississippi
901 Mississippi
give her a convertible
...a
LADY BUXTON Convertible
Convertible . . . because the photo case removes completely for separate use. A "Flickbar" lets her add extra windows if she wants! Convenient...because of the "Magic Purse" that lets her drop in coins without unsnapping. Choice of leathers and colors.
CARTER'S STATIONERY
1025 Mass. VI 3-6133
Are you hungry?
Are you thirsty?
Would you like something nice to eat?
Don't be bashful!
Don't be shy!
Come to 1246 Oread Street!
Graduate Wills KU $25,000
THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA ACTIVITIES WILL BE GLAD TO SERVE YOU.
This ad sponsored by the vacationing pledge class
Miss Edith M. Clarke, KU graduate of 1895 and former KU librarian, who died Nov. 2 at the age of 90, willed most of her property to the KU Endowment Assn.
All proceeds from the sale of her real estate, valued at $25,000, will go to the Endowment Assn. to
establish a permanent fund, the Martha Cook Clarke Scholarship Fund.
The association will receive $2,500 from her personal property. Profits from $1,000 of this money will be used for the Clarke Lectureship in poetry.
CHRISTMAS VACATION BEGINS!
SANTA CLAUS
Yes, in just two weeks vacation will begin. Don't take chances with your car. Come in before that long trip home and let us winterize your car. We're anxious to serve you.
MORGAN-MACK
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
714 Vermont Dial VI 3-3500
The most WONDERFUL Entertainment that ever captivated your heart!
20
PAT BOONE
SHIRLEY JONES
April Love
CINEMA SCOPE
COLOR by DE LUXE
Hear PAT sing!
APRIL LOVE
CLOVER IN THE MEADOW.
DO IT YOURSELF
GIVE ME A GENTLE GIRL
BENTONVILLE FAIR.
co starring DOLORES MICHAELS · ARTHUR O'CONNELL
PRODUCED BY DIRECTED BY SCREENPLAY BY
Now & Sat. "UNHOLY WIFE"—Diana Dors
GRANADA Starts SUNDAY
Now & Sat. "Unholy Wife"—Diana Dors
0
the rship
Friday, Dec. 6, 1957
2,500
rofits
il be
ip in
University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days. 75c; five days. $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
FOUND
Page 7
LADY'S WHITE GOLD WATCH with ex-
pansion band. Hamilton watch found near Fraser. Ask secretary at 103 Fraser. 12-6
BUSINESS SERVICES
SHEAFFER'S EVERSHARP PENCIL: Obtain by calling VI 3-8308, identifying and paying for this ad. 12-9
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable
rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass Vanity VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinelli Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Beamman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y. VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn. VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risks Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-It 1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. VI 3-305
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tt
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service.
Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call Vi 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. If
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
-bed, clothes, etc. Sure we have alligat-
fish, fish, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Mou., VI 3-6838. tf
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6557, 1400 Tenn. tf
PATRONIZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
THE BOOK NOOK
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER available to students and faculty. Prompt service. $ 729_{1 2} $ Mass., VI 3-5465. tf
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1621 West
19th St. Terr. 12-9
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing—and soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Ph. VI 3-0993 and 12-20594.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W.
20th St.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service. VI 3-7184; 1632 West 20th St.
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8600.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8311. ff
PRIVATE SECRETARY will do typing of all kinds. Fast, neat and accurate. Regular rates. Call Mrs. Ingels VI 3-264 between 12 and 1:30 p.m. 12-9
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type them, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Viri, VIII 3-8660. tf
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
WOULD LIKE BABY SITTING in evenings, 50c per hour. Call Ginny Holder.
VI 3-9145. 12-9
TRANSPORTATION to Binghamton or New York City Christmas vacation. Call Judy Saari, VI 3-3224, after 6 p.m. tf
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH Sunday. Nov. 24. Reward. Phone VI 3-6723
LOST
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
83315 Mass-Ph. VI 3-8074
LOST: Woman's purse containing all
personal belongings, at Allen Field
House about 9 p.m. Wed. Phone VI 3-
0830. 12-12
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic. party supplies, fourth, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI II 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST.
Group saving most empty Mariborlo,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464.
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Pay half price on new magazines both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
MGTD 51, excellent condition, new top and tonneau cover. Call VI 3-4664 after 5:30 p.m. 12-5
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal discount for students or students' occasions at the 1/2 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
DEEP FREEZE, 22 cu. ft. upright, 1 year old, 1$ price. Can be financed. 1519 Lindenwood Lane, last street east on 15th. 12-9
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found on the course shotgun or add notes, complete cross-index over 400 rows. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 2-0608.
WANT TO SELL—one RCA Victor Mark VIII Hi-Fi set. Only $100—like new Phone VI 3-7051, Patrick M. Dolan. 12-9
FRIGIDAIRE, 6 cubic feet. Perfect working condition. $42. Contact Arthur Cridland at 1646 Tennessee after 6 p.m. or Ph. KU 481. 12-6
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape. $70. Used six times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass.. VI 3-4952. 12-12
TRAILER. 20 ft., all metal and modern including thermostat controlled heat. 21 ft. aluminum awning, carpeted living room, TV and cooler. Priced to sell. Owner moving in January. Call VI 3-4863. 12-9
THETA RUMMAGE SALE: Many used clothes, low prices. Open to public. Come right in to 1433 Tennessee for huge savings on clothing. All day Saturday and Sunday. 12-6
MUST SELL IMMEDIATEILY — 1957 RCA portable TV, 17" screen, $50. Also Webcor HP-HI table model phonograph $6. Call VI, 3-8120 Friday Sunday. 12-6
SAVE ON YOUR LAUNDRY! Men's
shirts picked up, washed, ironed
and delivered. 15c each. Two day service.
Call VI 3-3120. 12-6
LEAVING TOWN—must sell furniture-
chairs, $10-$15), sofa, $20; bed, $10;
refrigerator, all five items.
just bargains. Phone VI 3-3120 Friday
and Sunday.
TUXEDO, size about 42. Fine quality,
practically new. Also white dinner jacket.
938 Missouri. 12-12
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. **tt**
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door. 520 La. tt
ROOM FOR TWO available anytime.
Present occupants are pledging a frater-
niture location, single bed-
room is large and comfortable. Ph.
3-1909 1115 Ohio
3. ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric range, refrigerator and steel built-ins. Cabinets in business district Adults only, 742 Ohio. 12-11
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
Campus Chest Presents
The Four Freshmen
Sunday- Dec.8 7:30 Hoch Auditorium
Tickets On Sale At Information Booth And Student Union
Reserved Seats $1.75 $1.50
General Admission $1.25
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Dec. 6, 1957
AUGUST 10, 1975
"CROCK OF GOLD" STRANGLEHOLD—Paul Culp, 1957 KU graduate portraying Simon Jennings, strangles Aunt Bridget, as played by Donna White, Wichita junior, in a rehearsal scene of the melodrama. (Daily Kansan photo)
'Crock Of Gold' Opens Tuesday
"Tis mine this night, the honey crock, the precious Crock of Gold," says villain Simon Jennings of the University Players production of the "Crock of Gold."
The melodrama will open at 8 p.m. Tuesday night and will run through Saturday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday two performances will be given, one at 7:30 p.m. and the other at 9:30 p.m. The production will be given in the experimental theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The play was described by one of the Players as having five acts and one hatchet. It is, however, a 19th century play written seriously but played with a humorous intent.
This is the sixth year for a melodrama to be given by the University Players.
This production by the Players is rather unusual as melodramas go. It is produced on a U-shaped stage whereas they are usually staged on a proscenium stage before a roll-up curtain.
During intermission and before the show, "hawkers" will sell popcorn and cokes, the proceeds to go to the treasury. At intermission articles of interest will be auctioned.
The Players are using simultaneous staging. This means a series of scenes is in view at once, with the lighting and action selecting the scene.
Extension Director To OSU Meeting
The director of the University extension, Howard Walker, will give the opening address at the annual Southwest Adult Education Assn. meeting Dec. 8 at Oklahoma State University.
Mr. Walker will dussuc the responsibilities of the university in the total adult education program.
A Cappella Concert Sunday
The University of Kansas A Cappella Choir will present its first concert of the season at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The group of 95 students is directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education; Margaret Ling, harpist instructor, will assist.
Two major works will be featured on Sunday's program. The first, the "Pope Marcellus" Mass of Palestrina is the most famous of the composer's 91 masses.
Soloists in the Britten work will be Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg senior; Wansley Sharp, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Rosemary Nation, Chanute sophomore; Martha Crowley, Pittsburg junior; Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeville senior, and Judy Buck, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore.
The second is "Ceremony of Carols" for treble voices and harp by the contemporary British composer, Benjamin Britten. Written in 1942, the work consists of nine carols set by the composer on a group of poems, puls an a cappella procession and recession and an interlude for the harp.
The final selection will consist of four traditional Christmas carols arranged by Shaw-Parker: "Masters in This Hall," "So Blest a Sight." "Christ Was Born on Christmas Day," and "Here, 'Mid the Ass and Oxen Mild.'"
The concert is open to the public without charge ___
Butter can be made from the milk of zebus.
Roberta 's
710 Mass.
VI 3-1086
Pizza
Heroes
WE DELIVER!
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
THE CENTER FOR ADULT DEVELOPMENT
DAVID SCHALKER
By Appointment to 1958 JAYHAWKER Hixon's Studio
for all official . . .
- Senior Pictures
- Application Pictures
- Portraits by Photography
Don Crawford ● Bob Blank
摄影师
HIXON STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
Santa Says...
Cold Weather is coming and that means it's
Chili Time
At Blue Hills
Come on out to the Blue Room and enjoy a big bowl of Chili. Lots of meat makes it really delicious. It's Blue Hills for the Best in Food and Service.
Open
Fri. & Sat.
11 a. m.-
12 p. m.
The Blue Hills Drive-In
& Blue Room
1601 E.23rd
Open
11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Sun. thru
Thurs.
Daily Hansan
0
55th Year, No. 58
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
ALEXANDRA MAYER AND ANNE BURKE
TO THE QUEEN,THE SPOILS-Marcia Hall,(right) presents a favor to Peggy McCormack,1957 queen. (Daily Kansan photo)
Sophomore Crowned Military Ball Queen
Peggy McCormack, a raven-haired, 5-foot 2-inch Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, was crowned queen of the 35th annual Military Ball Saturday by George Smith, dean of the University.
Cormack represented Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
She was escorted to the bandstand for the crowning under an arch of sabers formed by members of Scabbard and Blade, ROTC honor society. Marcia Hall, Coffeyville junior and queen of the 1956 Military Ball, assisted Dean Smith in the crowding.
Landscaping On Schedule
Carillon To Play Christmas Carols
The landscaping construction at the Music and Dramatic Arts building is progressing on schedule and should be almost completed by midwinter, Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for operations, said today.
The service drive, to go from Hoch Auditorium behind the Music and Dramatic Arts Building to Nalsmith Drive, cannot be put in until after cold weather is past.
All the work involved in the project, with the exception of running an asphalt service drive, should be done within six to eight weeks, he said.
The project includes water lines, steam tunnels, contour grading, drainage pipes, service drive and sidewalks and is being done by the Kansas Construction Co. of Lawrence at a cost of $74,506.
Beginning Monday, Christmas carols will be played on the carillon in the campanile. They will be played every noon until Christmas vacation. They will also be played during the 45 minute concerts, 7 p.m. Wednesday evening and 3 p.m. Sunday.
The carols will include the traditional ones such as "Silent Night" "O Come All Ye Faithful" and "O Little Town of Bethlehem" and carols from other countries.
The queen's attendants were Margie Critten, Kansas City, Mo. freshman from Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall, and Dana Haglund, Wichita junior from the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.
About 1,000 ROTC cadets and their dates attended the ball, which was started in 1923, when two Army units were training on the campus.
Before the ball, the three finalists were guests at a Scabbard and Blade dinner in the Student Union Kansas Room. Dean Smith spoke at the dinner, which was attended by Scabbard and Blade members and their dates, ROTC staff advisers, and the ROTC staff commanders.
Tonight partly cloudy. Not so cold east and central portions.
Tuesday mostly cloudy strong shifting winds and turning colder.
Low tonight 30-40. High Tuesday 50s south to 40s north.
Weather
Low this morning 23. Low Sunday 29, high 40. Low Saturday 23,
high 46.
Examination Class Schedules To Be out Soon
The schedule for final examinations has been made up by registrar James K. Hitt and will be announced as soon as it is approved by the University Senate.
Mr. Hitt said this schedule should be out before Christmas vacation begins. Probably sometime next week copies of the schedule will be available in the registrar's office, 122 Strong.
Mr. Hitt has also been working on class schedules for the spring semester. He said the schedule booklets should be available soon after vacation.
If any student wants to plan his spring semester schedule early he can use the typed copy of the schedule on the counter in the registrar's office.
Vandals Hit Jimmy, AOPi
Jimmy Green got a new coat of paint, a sign of the mystery fraternity, TNE, was left at the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, and a student had his coat stolen over the weekend, campus police reported today.
The Jimmy Green statue received a coat of buff and white paint at about 3:10 a.m. today, Charles Eberwain, night watchman in that area, told police he saw two boys walking toward the statue as he was going into the Student Union but they were not carrying anything. The prakksters left the paint cans and brushes at the statute.
Police found a cloth sign with black letters spelling TNE tacked on the sorority door at about 4:10 this morning.
William G. Daut, Arkansas City freshman, reported to police Saturday that his grey car coat had been stolen from the dressing room in Robinson Gymnasium.
A soft drink deliverman apparently became perturbed with students seeking free cokes from the machines. A note posted on one of them reads:
The Line Forms To Your Right
Keep slugs out of this machine and it will work. If you are too D-- - - - tight to put a nickel in it, don't ruin it for someone else. Come tell me and I'll give you a coke free.
Cokeman
GO MEN—The Four Freshmen, Ken Albers playing trumpet, Ross Barbour drums, and Bob Flanigan bass, display their versatility. (Daily Kansan photo)
N. A. H. F. S. C.
Four Freshmen Attract 2,000
Versatility and an easy, relaxed manner marked the performance of the Four Freshmen Sunday before about 2,000 persons in Hoch Auditorium.
Although they were 30 minutes late due to plane trouble in New York, N. Y., the four did not let their rushed trip, made with a police escort from the Kansas City, Mo. airport, bother them, and held the audience's attention with their music and light chatter.
Campus Chest Bestows Title
Tom Rinehart, Liberal senior; nominated by Delta Gamma, was crowned Mr. Campus Chest at intermission of the Four Freshmen concert Sunday night. Jerry Elliott, Hutchinson senior, nominated by Pi Beta Phi, and Elwood Armstrong, De Soto, senior nominated by Miller Hall, were runners-up.
The men were nominated for the contest by the women's houses where they work as waiters. The winner was chosen by the amount of money placed in a jar with his name on it in Strong Hall. A total of $352 was contributed to the Campus Chest drive through the contest.
The total amount of money collected for the drive was about $1800
the drive was about $1800.
About $450 has been turned in by
organized houses by Sunday night,
Most of this was in the form of
Student Union bookstore rebate
slips.
About $1000 had been made for the drive in advance ticket sales for the Four Freshman contest.
Don't Drive With Peephole
(Editor's note: This is the first in a series of three articles about winter driving conditions, traffic laws and care of an automobile in cold weather written by Douglas Parker, Daily Kansan reporter.)
Long lines of waiting cars, sliding tires and frustrated drivers will soon appear when snow and ice cover the campus. At this time the campus police adopt the motto, "Be Prepared."
Chief Joe Skillman suggests common sense laws and precautions will keep all drivers out of trouble.
"The real problem is the guy who tries to come up the hill with snow tires and a little peephole in his
window," he said, "and then gets tied up on the hill because he can't move his car on the ice and traffic becomes snarled.
"He not only slows himself down but causes other persons to get in a hurry and drive dangerously," Chief Skillman said.
A must for every winter driver are chains and snow tires, he said. A working defroster and a window scraper are important, too, he added.
3. Bad Months
December, January and February are the worst months for driving, he said, so drivers should start getting tools by October to be prepared for winter driving.
"Snow tires work fairly well and are good equipment to have in the
Chains Needed For Ice
winter months, but the snow tire has very little effect under icy conditions."
"This is a bad time of the year for accidents, but if a person observes all the rules in preparing for this kind of weather, he could lower the accident rate below that of any other month."
"Under icy conditions chains should always be used on the campus if a person expects to get around," he said.
Chief Skillman said there are no special winter campus laws for driving, but many civil laws are broken by people who do not break police laws.
(Continued on Page 8.)
While the audience waited for the Four, Freshmen, Roger Brown, Topeka senior, sang ballads.
The Four Freshmen, Ross and Don Barbour, Ken Albers and Bob Flanigan, showed great versatility by playing a number of different instruments as well as singing. Members of the group even exchanged instruments during a song. Ross Barbour and Mr. Flanigan kept up a steady stream of humorous conversation between numbers.
KU was the last stop for the group on a 40-day tour which included 31 1-night engagements. The men live in Los Angeles and they will be there making records and a few special performances until they go on tour again in February.
"We play colleges mostly," he said. "It is our chosen field. In night clubs there are always a lot of people talking and many people go there just to drink. In concerts like this one the people who aren't interested don't come."
"We usually spend about 40 weeks a year on the road," Ross Barbour said "We usually tour for a month and then take a 9-day vacation."
The group originally started singing together "just for fun" while in school at Butler College in Indianapolis, Ind in 1948. They were all studying to be music teachers. In 1950 Stan Kenton saw them and gave them their inspiration to become professional singers. The group is the same except for Ken Albers who joined the group about a year ago.
Each To His Own Note
All their early arranging was done by car. "Everyone just chose his own note," Ross Barbour said. "Please Remember" was their first recording. Most of their arranging is now done by Pete Rugolo and Dick Renolds.
The group left immediately afterwards to get another plane out of Kansas City. The group said they hoped to make the trip to Kansas City a little slower.
Quartet To Perform Tonight
The Fine Arts Quartet will play in the chamber music series at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. ID cards will not admit students.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
May Need Fourth Shot
When next spring rolls around and thoughts of Asian flu shots have vanished from the college student's mind, it will again be polio time.
For those of us who have had the series of three polio shots, the required number for maximum protection from paralysis, a fourth shot may be necessary.
Dr. Lewis L. Coriell, a doctor at Pennsylvania University, is urging all persons under 40 who haven't done so, to complete the three shot course and then add a fourth.
He said he was recommending a fourth "booster" for persons who have previously received the usual three shots, because of "observation that some paralytic cases have occurred in triple vaccinated children."
In a report prepared for the eleventh clinical session of the American Medical Assn. he also said:
"Three years of increasingly widespread use of polio vaccine have coincided with unprecedented reduction in reported cases of poliomye-
litis. A particularly low incidence and low paralytic rate are the outstanding features of the 1957 season."
He said estimates suggest that protection against paralytic disease approached 90 per cent in patients who received "three or more" properly spaced injections of vaccine, and 75 to 80 per cent in those receiving less than three shots.
He added, "It seems logical to predict that poliomyelitis will be reduced even more drastically in 1958 provided the vaccination program is continued, including a full course of three properly spaced injections for all persons under 40 years of age and a fourth booster dose in the spring of 1958 to all who have previously received three or more injections."
Undoubtedly Dr. Coriell knows what he is talking about. It is essential that everyone get at least the three polio shots. Certainly, it would not be a waste of time to get that fourth shot either.
—Bob Hartley
Problem For The Nation
While Mr. Eisenhower suffered a "strokelet," Wilson, while he campaigned in the United States for the League of Nations, suffered a "real" stroke.
Despite the denials of the medicine men that President Eisenhower's illness was a stroke, the condition resembles the ones which struck Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Wilson was confined to bed and a wheel chair during the remainder of his term, while the vital decisions concerning peace in the world, and the government, were left undecided.
It was a similar condition that plagued Roosevelt and ultimately caused his death while still in office.
Typical of some of the wool-pulling done by White House aides and press secretaries, Roosevelt's difficulty was blamed on a new set of false teeth. It was a "real" stroke that brought his death April 12, 1945.
He suffered a number of strokes in 1944 and 1945. The last one before his death was after the Yalta conference. Roosevelt also had a speech impairment like Mr. Eisenhower's. When FDR addressed the nation following the Yalta conference, it was evident that he was having difficulty with his enunciation.
One of the most important factors in the President's health and in his continuing to be able to perform his duties is his age. At 67 the chance of reoccurrence of a cerebral condition is high. If he remains in office to the end of his term, he will be the first President to reach 70 in the White House.
The President seems to be on his way to a rapid recovery from his most recent bout with poor health. However, history proves that he is not the first President to have cerebral trouble.
Regardless of how much he is liked and how much we want him to have good health, it is not easy to overlook the observation of one private physician who said the odds of a reoccurrence in the President's case are high.
—Bob Hartley
Since several daily papers around the country have commented on the National Inter-fraternity Conference last week, perhaps it's time to take a look at the issues in question.
No Problem Here
The Des Moines Tribune says "If colleges and universities decide that fraternities with discriminatory rules have no place on the campus, this
is their right." That may be true in Des Moines, but it isn't the case here.
The administration here has stated that membership rules of Greek organizations are the affair of the Greeks, and not of the administration.
The point of the resolution at Colorado Springs was not a pitch
for discrimination itself; it was a statement that the fraternities should have the right to decide their rules, without advice or interference from the shoals.
Undoubtedly, there are groups—and possibly powerful ones—among the Greeks which prefer to keep racial clauses in their bylaws or charters. This is not the point.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
STUDENT
INFIRMARY
MEMO.
BUY 30
TONS
OF
ASKIN
The question is simply this: does the fraternity or the University make membership rules for the fraternities?
At KU, there is no problem. The administration and the fraternities agree that in this, at least, the Greeks are independent.
"DO YOU EVER HAVE ANYTHING ON YOUR MIND BESIDES GIRLS?"
Alan Jones
Letters...
Oops! Sorry
With this letter I would like to reassure those of my friends who saw "my" photograph in Thursday's Daily Kansan. No, I did not grow a mustache and neither have I undergone an operation that changed my features so much. It was just an error. The picture was that of a Turkish student.
Editor:
Perhaps the staff of The Daily Kansas subscribe to the Greek point of view over Cyprus so wholeheartedly that they hold that even a Turk would not mind lending his face to an interview where that point of view is exposed.
Costas Kazakis Athens, Greece graduate student
(Editor's note: We are sorry that we made Mr. Kazazis a Turk. It was unintentional, a case of too many pictures being shuffled too much. We hope his friends were not too startled, and realized an error had been made.)
Daily Hansan
UNIVERSITY
University of Kansas student newspaper
journal of college life bywebwes 1904,
trinity.edu 1908, duluth.edu 1917
Extension 251, news room
Extension 276, busyroom office
Extension 378, business office,
Memphis Inland Daily Press Office.
Associated Inc. of New York presented by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published on Sundays. Keep every moon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Bmanman, Richard Brown, Ray Winginson, Assistant Managing Editors: Bob Hartley, City Editor; Mary Berman, City Editor; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegraph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editors; Many Booth Editors; Martha Crosler, Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager Ken Elz Advertising Manager; Jere Gloves Artistic Assistant George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Ted Willett Advertising Manager; Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larris-Boston Editorial Editor John Eaton Del Haley, Jim Sleda, Adam
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th AI Lauter Phone VI 3-1571
FAST 1 WEEK COLOR FILM SERVICE
摄影
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP
Don Crauford ● Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
THE GARDEN
Planning on Dining?
Dinners Banquets Weddings Coffee & Tea Parties
The Castle Tea Room
1301-11 Mass. St. VI 3-1151
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
Campus Weekend Is Relatively Quiet
It was a quiet weekend on the campus—one of the quietest since school began—except that Jimmy Green received a new coat of white paint. Workmen were busy this morning cleaning it off.
With only four weeks of classes left this semester, perhaps students saw the need for some earnest studying.
The basketball team played out of town Saturday night, and may students tuned in the game on their radios from 8 to 9:30 p.m.
The Student Union was, as usual, the busiest spot on the campus, returning to normal operation after a stink bomb forced an early closing Thursday night.
But compared to the three weekends just before Thanksgiving vacation—when three home football games brought large crowds to KU—the Union seemed almost deserted.
The Campus Chest drive kept rolling along during the weekend. Contributions were taken up at houses and dormitories and the Four Freshmen gave a Sunday concert sponsored by the Campus Chest.
It also seemed to be a good time for walkouts as pledge classes kicked over the traces for a few rebellious hours of freedom.
Christmas decorations were seen going up over the campus. The usual weekend visitors found it surprisingly easy to drive or walk across the campus without battling huge crowds.
Some students hiked up to Heck Auditorium Friday night for the
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Phi Beta Kappa meeting, 5 p.m., Oread Room, Student Union.
Undergraduate Math Club and Seminar 4 p.m., 203 Strong. Speaker, Harley Stafford,
"Periodic Decimal Fractions."
La reunion de Moel du Cercle Francais
nura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a sept
jours après la réunión, au départ de l'Union Building. (Eux qui desirent
apprendre des noels français sont invités
a les rencontrer une le choeur à quatre
ans et meurèd dans
la salle 113 Strong.
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast follows.
Theatre staff meeting, noon, Green Boom, Music and Dramatic Arts Build-
Episcopal study group, 3 p.m. Canterbury House. "Holy Scriptures."
Russkii libri sobirbiirsta v tovtornik 10 vo dekibira 1957 g. V 4 chasa v Samuula 10 vo dekibira 1957 g. N 121 Loudeira uiliisa. Budem pet', pit, chaf vesellistra. Miliosi prosim!
La reunion de Noel Cercle Francais aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre ou sept ombre sur le 1er samedi de l'Union Building. (eaux puis desirent approuendre des noels français sont invites a les repérer arec le choeur au quatre merdi, et mercredi dans la 12 thme).
WEDNESDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Debussy 'Petite Suisse,' 6:15 p.m. Beethoven 'Garnison gaugouse,' 7:15 p.m. Sainte-Savanne 'Carnival of the Animals,' Ravel 'Mother Goose Suite.'
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast follows.
Faculty orum, noch Stuhlstaff mit Charles Leone and Calvin Vanderwert, "Faculty Concerns with Athletics." Phone reservations to office (KU 227) by Tuesday afternoon.
Episcopal study group, 4 p.m., Canterbury, House. "Worshipl"
Radio and TV meeting, 3 p.m., 222 Flint, Hall.
La reunion de Noel du Cercle Francais aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a sept ombre de la journée à l'unité de l'Union Building. (eux ou desrent apprendre des noels francis sont invites a les repeter arec le choeur au quatre heures mercredi dans la salle 113
Social Work-Sociology - Anthropology Club. 4 p.m.. 11 Strong Annex E. Informal discussion and coffee. Everyone interested welcome.
El Ateneo se reune a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser.
Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7 p.m.
Curry Room. Student Union. Films.
"Paranoid Conditions" and "Sizophrenia."
H婆兘phrenic Type." Discussion
group."
KU Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m.
Oread Room. Student Union. Speakers,
Kenneth Davis. National committeeman.
and Dr. John Ise.
Circle K Club. 7:30 p.m.. 306 A-B
Student Union. All interested in Kiwanis
sponsored college men's organizations
are welcome.
German Christmas mixed choir rehearsals, 5 p.m., 402 Fraser.
American Institute of Architects. 7.30
Structure in Archi- tecture on Student Union. "Structures in Archi- tecture on Student Union."
Film Series presentation, a German war movie, which apparently disappointed few.
Robinson Gymnasium resounded with countless basketball over the weekend as intramural teams speeded up their practice schedules in anticipation of the opening of their competition today.
KU Santas Help Needy Children
Christmas parties for underprivileged children of Lawrence will be given by 12 organized houses during the next two weeks. Other houses will collect toys to give to needy children.
Santa Claus will reign over almost all the parties, handing out presents to children from 3 to 9 years old. Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity has talked to the parents of the children who are coming to its party Saturday and are getting the children what they have asked for for Christmas.
The 25 children at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity pledge class party Monday will also see cartoon movies. They will receive stockings filled with toys and will munch on pop corn balls.
The 35 children who will attend the TKE party will be picked up in a Lawrence fire truck. At the party they will help decorate two Christmas trees and see some cartoon movies.
Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will put on a few skirts such as "The Three Bears" for the 20 children at the party they give with Phi Delta Theta fraternity Monday at the Phi Delt house.
The first of these parties will be given Wednesday night when Delta Gamma sorority and Delta Upsilon fraternity entertain 31 children at the Delta Upsilon house.
Sunday is the most popular day for these parties with Chi Omega sorority and Delta Chi fraternity combining to entertain 40 children and the Delta Tau Delta, Phi Kappa and Triangle fraternities also giving parties. The pledge classes of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will combine to play host to 35 children Tuesday, Dec. 17.
Nearing the end of its live television series on human relations, the University Extension will present the 11th show of a 12-show series Tuesday in Wichita with two deans and two students appearing.
Two Deans On TV Show
Jack Steele, associate professor of business administration, will be the host for the program. The final show will be Dec. 17.
Guests will be Dean George Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Francis Heller, associate dean of the College; Ray Nichols, Lawrence sophomore, and Lelia Mayfield, Hutchinson freshman.
The movie, "Human Relations and the Role of Youth," will be shown over KARD. Channel 3 at 5:15 p.m.
Mademoiselle Contest Entries Destroyed
Around The World
All entries in Mademoiselle magazine's College Board Contest received before November 29 have been destroyed by fire, according to a report from the Mademoiselle offices.
College women who entered the contest before that date can qualify without rewriting their tryout by sending a note of application to Mademoiselle's College Board Contest. 575 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N.Y.
Bakery Union Ouster Delayed
AFL-CIO officials decided today in Atlantic City, N.J., to seek a delay until March 15 in the ouster of the 160.000-member Bakery Workers Union on corruption charges.
The delay may head off a clash between rival factions in the Bakers and also allow the union to choose a successor for its president, James G. Cross, main target of AFL-CIO objections.
British Want Control
In London, Britain is asking U.S. Defense Secretary Neil H. McErlroy for greater political control of British based American nuclear weapons. Mr. McErlroy has been in London since Saturday conferring on plans for planting America's frontline rocket defenses in Europe.
In Buenos Aires, 61 persons were reported killed when an Argentine air liner carrying tourists to a summer vacation resort crashed and burned in a violent storm Sunday night near Bolivar.
In Kettlewell, England, one of six boys and girls trapped all weekend in a flooded cave 300 feet below the lonely Yorkshire Moors was rescued today by spelunkers and frogmen. The other five were reported in "good shape" and were to be rescued quickly and taken immediately to a hospital for treatment.
In Cincinnati, Ohio, the School
and Society Educational Journal reported that college enrollment hit an all-time peak of 2,415,214 students. The number of women attending college full time jumped 5.2 per cent compared to a rise of 1.5 per cent for men.
In Washington, a spokesman for the U.S. space satellite project denied today that the exact cause of Friday's embarrassing rocket fizzle was known and said that experts need "several more days" to determine the cause.
Continue Shipping Food
Government officials also said today that the United States expects to continue shipping substantial quantities of food and fiber to Yugoslavia next year. The statement came in the wake of reports from Yugoslavia that Marshal Tito may turn to Russia and other countries including Britain for military aid to replace U.S. arms shipments.
Informed sources in Belgrade said Marshal Tito has decided to do without U.S. arms because America
Pizza Delivered
V1 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
is making too many "reappraisals" of its policy on arms to Communist nations.
KU Woman's Art On Display
Ethings, engravings and wood cuts done by Carol Smith, Wichita senior, are being displayed in the Colorado University Fine Arts center. The pieces are part of a student art work show. Miss Smith is an art education major.
Fresh Glazed
Doughnuts
for your Christmas Parties or Study Snacks
5c each
JOE'S BAKERY 412 W.9----VI 3-4720
LAST CALL For Formal Wear
There's still time to get that "After Six" tuxedo and accessories for this weekend's dances if you hurry.
We Feature
After Six BY RUDOFKER
The "Stag Line" $42.50
The "Playboy" 45.00
(Ivy-Styled)
Others --- $52.50 - 62.50
plus
"After Six" Formal Shirts Collar Sizes 14 to $16_{1/2}$ Sleeve Lengths 32 to 36
$6.50
the university shop ON THE HILL
ALEXANDRIA C. JONES
the town shop DOWNTOWN
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
along the JATHAMKER trail WITH ANTHAN
While the United States' top candidate for outer space honors, the Vanguard, was travelling only four feet straight up before exploding and the Russians publicly chortled over Ike's kaputnik, one Frank Broyles decided that elbow room at the University of Missouri was a bit cramped.
Broyles, whose reasons for leaving MU were partly because of that school's restrictions on recruiting, is now in a state where the elbow room is adequate (Arkanas) for all but revenoowers, out-of-state recruiters and anti-Faubus radicals.
Both Broyles and one of his assistants, Jerry Claiborne (who resigned last week to work with Bear Bryant at Alabama) felt that Missouri would not be able to compete with other Big Eight teams by relying on in-state recruiting, especially with the lack of emphasis on sports by many Missouri high schools. MU recruits players from Missouri only.
Bryles moved to Arkansas because he considered it a "definite advancement"—about $1500 per year more advancement although MU alumni and officials agree that Bryles was offered an increase to $15,000 but it was too late.
Broyles, 33 and definitely outspoken on such matters as the letter of intent for the Big Eight and on alumni pressure on Kansas' Chuck Mather, did not seem like the type of coach, once he has proved that he could win, to sit around and wait for the state of Missouri to produce an occasional top football player.
Arkansas is certainly the place for a coach with a future. The Razorbacks play some of the country's top teams and their athletic facilities include a fine new athletic dormitory, a renovated stadium, a new field house with new dressing room and movie facilities.
Missouri has some new practice fields which were not completed in time for Broyles to use this fall. There was no place to take the Tiger team for closed-door workouts and no dressing room facilities have been provided on the new field.
Broyles had a 5-4-1 record at Missouri. He started the season by tying Vanderbilt, then went on to defeat SMU, Iowa State and Colorado while losing to Texas A & M. The team then lost three straight, however, to Oklahoma, Kansas State and Kansas.
A hint that something may have been amiss in the Missouri athletic department was dropped by William A. Toler, a member of the university's board of visitors when he said, "I knew of no friction within the Missouri athletic department but everything is very confusing at this point."
It seems that what has become a highly deplorable situation involving player recruiting among the big schools has now extended to coach recruiting.
The school offering the most lucrative "fringe benefits" has the upper hand.
The situation is progressing to the point where a school, after enjoying one or two good football seasons, can look forward to a new coach—their present one either moving to greener pastures or back to his home state, a job he has always sought but never been in a position to contend for.
So the merry-go-round continues and to top it all off Chuck Mather was reported in Columbia over the week end.
Rosewall Downs Hoag
SYDNEY, Australia—(UP)—Ken Rosewall scored a 5-7, 6-2, 6-3 victory over Lew Hoad and Frank Sedgman defeated Pancho Segura, 6-4, 6-0. Sunday in professional tennis matches.
League Teams Post.700 Mark
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UP) Big Eight teams posted a respectable .700 mark in the first week of play, winning 14 of 20 games with not a single team dipping below the .500 mark.
Kansas, as expected, led the way with three straight victories while Kansas State won two straight. Both toppled Big Ten foes Saturday night, while Missouri and Nebraska bowed to Big Ten teams. Over all however, Big Eight teams have split 3-3 with the Big Ten in the intersectional games.
One thing that can be deduced from the first week of play is that Kansas found adequate replacements for four departed seniors. Coach Dick Harp came up with a sophomore, Bob Hickman of Terre Haute, Ind., (Clyde Lovellette's home town) who may turn out to be one of the top players of the season.
Harp didn't have to replace Wilt Chamberlain, however, and the "big dipper" has hit for an average
of 29.6 points in his first three games,
the same as he averaged all last season.
Hickman, a hustling 6-1
guard, got a starting assignment
against Northwestern Saturday night
and took 12 rebounds as well as
hitting eight points. Kansas won, 71-
65, after a 30-30 halftime tie.
Dozen Games On Tap
KU Found Replacements
Big Eight teams have an even dozen intersectional games scheduled this week, starting with three tonight — Kansas at Marquette, Kansas State at Purdue and North Dakota at Missouri.
Purdue defeated Missouri, 76-49,
Saturday while Michigan topped
Nebraska, 81-57, for two losses to
the Big Ten. Kansas State defeated
Indiana 66-61 for the other victory.
In other games, Oklahoma State defeated
Texas Western, 65-43, Colorado
topped Montana State 77-60 and
UCLA defeated Oklahoma, 65-53.
ALL GAMES
The Standings:
souri 2 1 .667
Abraska 1 1 .500
Iowa State 1 1 .500
Colorado 1 1 .500
Oklahoma State 1 1 .500
THE SCHEDULE
TODAY
Kansas at Marquette
Kansas State at Purdue
North Dakota at Missouri
THURSDAY
Iowa State at Brigham Young
SMU at Oklahoma
FRIDAY
Oklahoma St. at Washington
Clyde Lovellette of KU set the Big Eight the season individual scoring record by averaging 25 points per game for a total of 899 points from 1949 to 1952.
Roberta's
710 Mass. VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
ALL GAMES W L Pct.
Kansas 3 0 1.000
Kansas State 2 0 1.000
Oklahoma 2 1 ..667
Roberta's
Roberto's
710 Mass. VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
Now! The one cigarette in tune with America's taste!
Hit Parade has all you want!
e
the tobacco... the tip... and the taste!
"TOBACCO IS OUR MIDDLE NAME". *THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY ©A.T.CO*
FILTER TIP Hit Parade CIGARETTES Hit Parade e Hit Parade ZE Hit Parade
The tobacco you want . . only the choicest grades of quality tobacco. And it's all 100% natural tobacco!
The tip you want
. . . developed exclusively for
Hit Parade. And it really does
right by the flavor!
The taste you want . . . the freshest, liveliest taste of any filter cigarette!
New crush-proof box or familiar pack
At historic Williamsburg in Virginia and all around the U.S.A. more people are smoking Hit Parade
Page 5
Monday. Dec. 9, 1957 University Daily Kansan
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Kansas Seeks 'Bonus Game'
Kansas, sporting a 3-0 record, will move into Milwaukee tonight to face the Marquette Warriors who have lost three straight games this year.
The KU sports network will broadcast the game over radio stations KANU-FM and KCMO at 7:55 p.m. The Kansas team will return to Lawrence Tuesday dav morning.
Goal Was Two Victories
Harp will probably start the same five players that started against Northwestern: Wilt Chamberlain, Ron Loneski, Monte Johnson, Bob Hickman and Bob Billings.
Coach Dick Harp's team, coming from a hard won 71-65 victory at Northwestern, faces Jack Nagle's squad that had eight lettermen return to the lineup after a last year season record of 10-15.
Harp, who said last week he would be happy to win one of the two games of the intersectional road trip, will evidently be going for a bonus game with Marquette.
Moran Is Kev To Marquette's Chances
Chamberlain, who is shooting at a 29.6 point average per game, scored 27 points in Saturday's match. He was followed by Loneski and Johnson with 13 apiece.
The key to Marquette's chances depend mainly on Mike Moran, 6-8 center. Last year he was the team's top scorer with 470 points and was second in rebounds.
Another standout is Jim McCoy, 6-6 forward, who scored 27 points against Kansas last year as a sophomore. An outside shooting threat, McCoy was third among the team's scorers last year with 341 points.
Unique Defense Almost Trips KU
KU beat down repeated rallies by a stubborn team of Northwestern University Wildcats Saturday night to take a 71-65 victory at Evanston. Ill.
The score was tied 30-30 at the half, but KU pulled away to a 41-30 lead early in the second half. Then the home team cut the Jayhawker lead to two points, at 67-63, with about a minute left in the game, before four straight free throws established the final margin. It was the unique Northwestern defense that almost tripped Kansas. It was the combination of 6-foot 9-inch Joe Ruklick behind Chamberlain and 6-foot 6-inch Willie Jones in front of him that stymied KU.
Wilt Chamberlain scored 27 second half.
All the Jayhawkers who played contributed to the point total, as the balanced scoring attack showed 13 points each for Ron Loneski and Monte Johnson, 8 apiece for Bob Hickman and Bob Billings and 2 for Al Donaghue.
Ruklick scored 25 points, mainly on book shots.
Ruklik took 18 rebounds to lead both teams in that department. For KU Loneski had 15 rebounds, Hickman 12 and Chamberlain 10.
Wildcat Rebound Edge
Northwestern held a slight edge on rebounds, collecting 53 to KU's 47. By controlling the backboards, the Tigers were able to take 94 shots from the field, while KU got away only 78.
The difference in the statistics was free throws, as KU hit 13 of 24 and Northwestern 5 of 8. Northwestern fouled 20 times, KU seven.
Outside shooting gave KU a 20-15 lead in the first half, with Hickman hitting a basket, Chamberlain two and Billings one. KU had 5-point margins twice, at 26-21 and 28-23, but Northwestern took the lead at 30-28 just before the half. A last-second shot by Monte Johnson tied the score at 30-30 at the half.
11-Point Barrage by KU
KU broke loose with an 11-point scoring barrage to start the second half. Chamberlain scored 7 and Johnson 4.
KU pulled away again, and it was 65-55 with 4½ minutes to play. Ruk-
points, 19 of them coming in the
lick made three more field goals before fouling out. When he left the game, the score was 67-63 with 1:17 left to play.
Bill Jones hit a field goal to make it 67-65, and the 10,500 fans
Markley told The Daily Kansan Sunday night that the swimmers won a lot of first place honors but just didn't have enough seasoned performers to round out the scoring. The Jayhawkers scored first in six of the 10 events.
It was KU's John Jeffrey who put in the outstanding performance for the meet. His time of 2:31:5 in the 200-yard butterfly lowered both the
Swimmers Win Many First Place Honors But Lack Depth
The Kansas swimming squad lost its first meet of the season Saturday to Southern Illinois at Carbondale, 48-38. The loss was attributed to a weakness that coach Jay Markley had pointed out before the season started, that of having good front-line men but not much depth.
Southern Illinois pool record and the KU varsity record by seven seconds. Jeffrey also took second place in the 200-stroke breaststroke.
The Kansans were especially strong in the relays, picking up first place in both the 400-yard medley relay and the 400-yard freestyle relay. The time on the medley relay was 4:39.5 while the freestyle relay was clocked at 3:56.6.
KU Strong in Relay
Jared Piety won first place honors in both the 220-yard freestyle and the 440-vard freestyle.
Bill Matthews took first in diving and second in the 200-yard backstroke.
His time for the 220 was 2:28.1, for the 440 it was 5:28.
Frank Enna rolled 223 and Ron Clark 587 for the high 10 and high 30, respectively last week in intramural bowling.
Brothers Place High
Clark was the main force for the Stars in the Sunday Mixed league as they won three of four points from the league-leading Whiz Kids and moved within three points of first place.
Enna's 223, as part of a 559 series, enabled the Club 520 II team to win three points from the Panthers and retain the lead in the Jayhawk league.
The other league leaders:
Brothers Place High Jon Poort took second place in the
Enna,Clark Top Bowlers
Alpha Epsilon Pi, the Crimson league; the Freeloaders, the Blue
league; F.D.A., the Rock league;
Alpha Tau Omega, the Chalk league;
the Big 4, the Sunset league; Sigma
Kappa, the Prairie league; Stephenson,
the Top Jay league; the Top Hats,
the Hill Top league.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
YOUR EYES
107
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
50-yard freestyle and his brother Ed took third in the same event.
Steve Hill took third in the 100- yard freestyle.
AIRLINE TICKETS
The varsity will have a heavy schedule this weekend, meeting Missouri Mines Friday and Pittsburg State Saturday.
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations see
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
Winner of the race was John Macy of the University of Houston's track club. The New York Athletic Club retained its team championship. The race was approximately 61% miles.
Skutka Ninth In AAU Meet
Tom Skutka, Hibernia, N.J. sophomore, was ninth in a field of 60 in the National AAU 10,000 meter cross-country meet Saturday in Chicago.
Skutka won the Big Eight cross country title earlier this fall.
Billings. Hickman Foil Strategy
With 49 seconds left Tiger captain Nick Mantis deliberately fouled Billings, to give Northwestern a chance to get the ball on the rebound of the free throw.
jammed into the Evanston, Ill. gym began to roar.
But Billings calmly pushed through two free throws to give KU a 4-point lead. Hickman was fouled as he rebounded a Tiger shot, and he added two more free throws to make it 71-65.
PAT READ
445 Tenn. St.
INDIAN TRADER
- Hand Loomed Ties
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
Open
9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M.
Open Evenings By Appointment
A
---
By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co. Ltd., London
THIS AFTER SHAVE LOTION CONDITIONS YOUR FACE, TOO
Invigorates and softens the skin; soothes razor burn after any shave, electric or lather . . . $1.10, plus tax
YARDLEY
After
Shaving
Lotion
YARDLEY OF LONDON, INC.
Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from the original English formulae, combining imported and domestic ingredients. 620 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
Photo Contest Winners Named
Jim Sledd, Lawrence senior, was awarded the best of show trophy in The Daily Kansan Photo Contest for his black and white photograph portfolio "press conference" and Kim Ong, Malaya graduate student, won the Javhawker award.
Sledd will receive a slide viewer, given by Mosser-Wolf Inc. Ong will receive the $10 Jayhawker award for his football photograph.
The photographs will be on display Tuesday in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room, 104 Flint.
In the black and white field Sledd won first place in the personalities division, and Paul Hansen, Wamego senior, won first place in the feature pictures and animals division. Sledd also won first place in the news picture division and first and second place in the children's division. Luther L. Hoell, Kansas City, Kan. senior, won first place in the scenic and travel division.
In the color field Arthur Shaw, Lawrence graduate student, won first place in the people division, Alan Syverud, Lawrence graduate student, won first place in the places division.
Judges for the contest were Leonard Bacon. Journal - World chief photographer; Jimmy Bedford, instructor in Journalism, and Harry Wright, director of the KU Photographic Bureau.
558 Take English Test
A total of 558 students, the largest number ever registered, took the fall English proficiency examination Saturday.
The names of those passing the test in composition will appear in The Daily Kansan after Christmas vacation. Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English, said those who fail will be notified by letter.
The two papers written by each student in the examination will be read at least twice by full-time members of the English department. If the paper is failed by either of the graders, it will be read by a third.
"The papers must be passed by two graders to pass and failed by three graders to fail." Mrs. Calder-wood said, "If the break is two failures and one passing, still a fourth person grades the paper."
Mrs. Calderwood said that the graders do not know whose paper they are reading because all identification is by number.
3 Films On East Wednesday In Bailey
Three documentary films on the Middle East and Far East will be this week's film feature at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey.
Films to be shown are "Promise of Pakistan," "Middle East, The Crossroads of Three Continents," and "Indonesia: The Land and the People."
Rotary Club To Hear Storer
N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, will be a guest speaker Thursday night at the Bonner Springs Rotary Club meeting. His subject will be Sputnik and space travel.
Use Kansan Want Ads
Jay Watchers Need Leaders To Reorganize
Has anyone been wondering what happened to the Jay Watchers?
Last year this group was incorporated to promote telecasts of KU out-of-town basketball games. It helped in getting three NCAA tournament games televised. $ \textcircled{*} $
But this year the group is anything but its former vigorous self. There are apparently no student leaders of the organization, and with basketball season well underway nothing at all has been done.
Members of the corporation at its founding were three KU students, all graduated last spring, and three businessmen, Otto Schnellbacher, Topeka; Gene Morgan, Kansas City, Mo. and Roy Borgen, Lawrence.
Mr. Borgen said the businessmen who aided the organization last year would like to see it back in the hands of the University or a group of students.
The businessmen said they believe the corporation can be very productive, and they are willing to advise the student leaders, but they would rather not handle it themselves, Mr. Borgen said.
Bill Lyons, another Lawrence businessman who advised the Jay Watchers last year, said the student
Sign Up Now For Rides Home
Need a ride home or someone to ride home with you to help share expenses?
If so, sign-up sheets for the Student Union Activities travel bureau are now posted in Strong, Snow and Fraser Halls and the Student Union. Deadline for signing is 5 p.m. Saturday.
Arrangements for expenses can be made between the passenger and driver after car assignments are made.
Drivers going to Oklahoma and Texas are needed, the travel bureau said.
Career magazines describing company job opportunities will be available to Engineering and Business School seniors from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday in Marvin Hall and Strong Hall basement. The magazines will be distributed by members of Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity.
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
VIRGINIA'S DAD
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or top-
1
coat?
Choose from over 500 fabrics
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
- Weddings
* Pre Parties
* Dinners
- Luncheons
Party? why sure!
Party House
East 23rd Street
VI 3-8791
co-chairmen left some of their records with him when they graduated.
However, the records he has are incomplete and his attempts to get in touch with the ex-chairmen by writing letters have failed.
Mr. Lyons said he can't tell for sure from the records he has how much money the organization has, but he is certain it still has some money left over from last year.
The Marine Reserve's 1957 "Toys For Tots" drive will begin Tuesday with the placing of donation barrels in campus buildings.
Toys Drive Begins Soon
Most of the toys collected will be distributed by the Marines to underprivileged children of the Lawrence area for Christmas.
Alpha Phi Omega, KU service fraternity, is assisting the Marines in the Lawrence program. The fraternity will place barrels in all fraternity and sorority houses, dormitories, Fraser, Flint, and Strong halls, and the Student Union.
1st. Lt. Wesley Santee, a member of Marine Fighter Squadron 215 at Olathe Naval Air Station and a KU graduate, is in charge of the Lawrence program.
PAT BOONE
SHIRLEY
JONES
April Love
CINEMASCOPE
COLOR by
DELUXE
20
Walt Disney Cartoon - News
Now! See It Today!
GRANADA
SUSPENSION STORY—Chuck Steger, M.E. '52, probing dynamic properties of new Air Spring developed by Von Polhemus (1.). A nationally recognized authority on suspension systems, Mr. Polhemus directs Structure and Suspension Development Group of GM's Engineering Staff, helps guide Chuck in his professional career.
Because engineering is a profession at GM we offer you a career-not a job
ONE REASON engineering standards at General Motors are so high is that GM recognizes engineering as a profession. And the men who engineer the many different products made by General Motors are respected for the profession they practice.
That is why, when you are invited to join General Motors as an engineer, you don't simply take a job--you start a career.
It is a career that is rewarding both professionally and financially—starting on your first day of association with General Motors at any one of its 35 divisions and 126 plants in 70 cities and 19 states.
During your early days at GM, for example you work with a senior engineer who guides your career along professional lines.
And you are also encouraged to take an active role in your community's affairs—because a truly professional man is a good citizen as well as a good engineer.
You are given the opportunity to obtain professional recognition through participation in engineering society forums. presentation of technical papers, winning of patents and other recognition of your accomplishments.
you are also actively encouraged to pursue your education towards an advanced degree. For we at General Motors recognize that, in doing so, you will become more valuable to us and the engineering profession.
All this is for a reason—and a good one.
Many of the men who will fill the key positions at GM in the future are the young engineers joining GM today. This is not theory, it is fact. For 14 of our 33 Vice-Presidents are engineers,23 of our 42 Division General Managers are engineers, too.
Today we are looking for young engineers-such as you-who may fill these positions tomorrow. The rewards-both professional and financial-are substantial. If you feel you have the ability,write us. It could be the most important letter of your life.
June graduates!
A General Motors Representative will be on hand to answer questions about job opportunities with GM.
DECEMBER 11 and 12
GM positions now available in these fields:
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING • ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING
AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING • CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
CERAMIC ENGINEERING · MATHEMATICS
CERAMIC ENGINEERING • MATHEMATICS
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION Personnel Staff, Detroit 2. Michigan
25 wor
WOMAN day N
LOST:
person
House
0830.
SHEA tain b paying
PHILI Group Phillip packag
BEVEI cold.
closed
Ice pla:
0350.
WANTrates. Indian
WOUI nings. VI 3-9
TRAN New Judy
ONE
trip t
over
VI 3-1
HOUS nished famili Cleane
3 RC with range. Conve Adults
FIRST for bo private Dec. 2 or see 520 L4
C
for
CLEA
ets, b
No dr
BEN
---
837
943
1119
Monday. Dec. 9, 1957 University Daily Kansas
Page 7
S
SCOPE
OR by
ELUXE
CLASSIFIED ADS
A
25 words or less: one day. 50c; three days. 75c; five days. $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. ff
LOST
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor or show. Ph. VI 3-5049 12-20 5994.
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—bees, harnesses, etc. Sure we have allladybugs! Just one of everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
WOMAN'S GOLD WRIST WATCH
Sunday. Nov. 24. Reward. Phone VI 3-8723
LOST: Woman's purse containing all personal belongings, at Allen Field House about 9 p.m. Wed. Phone VI 3-0830. 12-12
FOUND
SHEAFFER'S EVERSHARP PENCIL: Obtain by calling VI 3-8308, identifying and paying for this ad. 12-9
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice beverage. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Ice bucket. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI . 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro.
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
PRIVATE SECRETARY will do typing of all kinds. Fast, neat and accurate. Regular rates. Call Mrs. Ingels VI 3-216 between 12 and 1:30 p.m. 12-9
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
WOULD LIKE BABY SITTING in evenings. 50c per hour. Call Ginny Holder. VI 3-9145. 12-9
ONE MAN to fill vacant seat on car trip to Mexico City and New Orleans over Christmas vacation. Call Opdahl, VI 3-5552. 12-13
TRANSPORTATION to Binghamton or New York City Christmas vacation. Call Judy Saarl, VI 3-3224, after 6 p.m. tf
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $30 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door. 520 Lau. tf
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric laundry room, steel building Convenient to KU and business district. Adults only, 742 Ohio. 12-11
CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT: Closets, built-ins. For married couple only.
No drinking. 511 Ohio. 12-13
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
832% Mass.-Ph. VI. 3-8074
We Stock The
COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
SERVICE DIRECTORY
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
BEAUTY SHOPS
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H. VI 3-6035
RADIO REPAIRS
Marinello Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. 3 I-4141
Beamman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna VIRI, VI 3-8660. tf
Roger's Launder-it
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
725 Mass.
WATCH REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. VI 3-3055
ROOM FOR TWO available anytime
Present occupants are pledging a fraternity
Excelent location, single bedroom
and comfortable, private Bed-Pl
3-1909 1151 Ohio 12-10
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED HOUSE, all one floor. Two car garage, newly furnished. One spare room and machine furnished. For a couple or two boys. Ph. VI 3-7803 after 5 p.m. 12-13
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, power and paper magazines, both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal gift—your choice of any of these publications every year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
DEEP FREEZE. 22 cu. ft. upright, 1 year old. $3 price. Can be financed. 1519 Lindenwood Lane, last street east on 1519. 12-9
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in other textbooks, complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7583 or VI 2-1094.
WANT TO SELL—one RCA Victor Mark
JIII Hi-Fi set. Only $100—like new
phone VI 3-7051, Patrick M. Dolan. 12-9
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape, $70. Used six times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass. VI 3-4352. 12-12
TRAILER. 30 ft., all metal and modern including thermostatic controlled heat 21 ft. aluminum awning, carpeted living room, TV and courier. Priced to sell. Owner moving in January. Call VI 3-1863. 12-9
TUXEDO. size about 42. Fine quality,
practically new. Also white dinner jacket.
938 Missouri. 12-12
PRACTICALLY NEW PORTABLE record player with 3-inch saliences. Mj P-2-109-2-13
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
FLAT TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
9411% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
FYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service.
Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHIR available to students and teachers. Prompt service. Cass TSI d3465
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tt
RENT A SINGER SEWING machine by the
Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Sewing
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports,必要时. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tehn. Penn. VI 3-1240. tf
SEWING: Phone VI 3-4717, 1621 West
19th St. Terr. 12-9
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629. tf
LEARN TO DANCE for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8600.
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING. alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657.
1400 Tenn. tf
TYPIST! Experienced, theses, term pa-
ments. Acceptt service VI 3-7-181
1632 West 20th St
Free Pickup And Delivery
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W 20th St. tf
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
BELL'S
B
Service Station
23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
ATTENTION
Housemothers-Housemanagers- House Owners
SERVICING
You can have it perform wonders RIGHT ON YOUR FLOOR
CLEANING
KARPET-KARE
BIGLOW
Rugs - Carpet
Bigelow's New On-Location Carpet Cleaner
. takes only one day
- retards resoiling
- properly applied, will not shrink
. leaves no unpleasant odor
NewYork
926 Mass.
NewYork Cleaners
Merchants of VI 3-0501 Good Appearance
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 9, 1957
Singers 'Inspiring,' Says Choir Critic
By NANCY STUTZMAN
(Of The Daily Kansas Staff)
The University A Cappella choir presented an inspiring $1\frac{1}{2}$-hour program Sunday afternoon in the theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education, directed the group.
Before the appearance of the choir, one was a little shocked at the setting. Tall wooden planks set up around the risers offered a rather poor back-drop for the intended production. But as soon as the choir appeared in its blue robes and white stoles and began to sing, all that could be noticed was the magnificence of the voices.
The program consisted of two major works and four traditional Christmas carols. The choir began with Palestrina's "Missa Papae Marcolli" sung in Latin. Palestrina is regarded as the greatest church music composer of the late Renaissance.
Although the Mass was long, the music was so beautiful that the length was barely noticed.
The second portion of the program
(Continued from Page 1.)
Thumbs Down On Peepholes
"Many persons believe that if you are cleared in a police case you'll be cleared in civil court. This is wrong," he said.
He said a driver may have his windshield covered with snow except for a peephole and get by the police, but if an accident results through negligence, a civil suit can be brought against the driver.
He said if a person leaves a car with its motor running he is not breaking a law, but it is bad practice since a civil suit can be brought if something results from a person's negligence.
Most persons know that under normal conditions a car should be followed at a reasonable distance, but forget that in the winter conditions are worse and the car should be followed at a safer distance, he said. Here's where a driver can run into trouble with the police, he said.
New Building Bids Slated
The next big construction project on the campus, the 1.3 million-dollar School of Business and department of economists building, should be out for bids this week.
Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for operations, said the state architect has almost finished the plans for the building. The next step is to call for bids.
Preliminary plans call for construction to begin by Jan. 1, 1958, and the building to be in use by fall. 1959.
It will be built north of Sunnyside Avenue, east of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Firms Schedule Job Interviews
Business firms have scheduled the following interviews:
Monday Kansas Power and Light Co., management training; International Harvester Co. sales.
Tuesday — Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. sales.
Wednesday Connecticut General Life Insurance Co., group sales representative.
Chemistry and pharmacy majors should sign up in 327 Malott for Wednesday interviews with Parke, Davis and Co.
featured Britten's "Ceremony of Carols." This was sung by the women members of the choir, accompanied by Miss Margaret Ling, instructor of harp. The carols were Middle English poems set to music.
A Wyoming law says only a man's mother, daughter, sister or the girl he is engaged to may wear his fraternity pin.
This number was intriguing to listen to. It ranged from slow moving pieces to those which raced along with such rapidity that at times the choir seemed to have difficulty in forming words.
The final group of selections were Christmas carols arranged by Shaw-Parker. They were "Masters in This Hall," "So Blest a Sight," "Christ Was Born on Christmas Day," and "Here," 'mid the Ass and Oxen Mild."
Answering dozens of questions, explaining why she isn't a Mrs., and being told all the family secrets, are daily routine for one coed who is practice teaching in a nearby kindergarten.
Another Way To Go Wrong
"My parents went to a party last night," a pigtailed 5-year-old told the student teacher. "My daddy must have the flu because he's been sick all morning. But my mommy doesn't even care."
"Your mother cares if your daddy is sick," the coed said.
"Oh no she doesn't," the little girl insisted. "She keeps telling myaddy that it serves him right."
Film To Show How To Wrap Gifts
A color movie demonstration of gift wrapping will be shown at 4 and 7.30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union Trophy Room.
An actual demonstration of wrapping techniques and refreshments will follow the showing.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Natural History Staff Collects Specimens For Research
Staff members of the Museum of Natural History collected specimens of mammals for research on two recent trips to Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Thirteen species of 75 different mammals were collected in Gage county, Nebraska, by Sidney Anderson, instructor of zoology; J. Knox Jones, Lincoln, Neb., and Wendell Minckley, Lawrence, both graduate students.
The collection included a woodland vole which had never been captured in that part of the state. Discovery of the animal extended its known range of habitation 50 miles northwest, Mr. Anderson said.
Army Freshmen Outshoot Navy
The Army freshman ROTC rifle team defeated the Navy ROTC freshman team 1,634 to 1,620 Thursday. Navy team member Robert Nolop, Leavenworth, shot 363 of a possible 400 for the high score.
George Cartlich, Kansas City, Mo., was high for the Army team and second high for the meet with 348.
The agency for indoctrinating youth to the theory of the communist party and the support of it is called Komsomol.
John W. Hardy, Murphysboro,
Ill. Max Thompson, Udall, Robert
Wimmer, Topeka, and Emil Urban,
Milwaukee, Wisc., all graduate students,
went to the Black Mesa area of Cimmaron county, Okla.
Hardy studied the behavior of jays at this time of year. Specimens of 55 mammals and 10 birds, including a wood rat were collected.
Skins of animals collected for study are prepared for observation and from them, museum staff members get information on rainfall, vegetation and other conditions in different parts of the area in which the animals live. Mr. Anderson said.
Roberto's
PIZZA
710 Mass., VI 3-1086
Stickl
Sticklers!
e
LUCKY STRIKE
LUCKY
rs!
LUCKY
STRIKE
IT'S TOASTED
CIGARETTES
DON'T JUST STAND THERE...
STICKLE!
MAKE $25
DON
Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (No drawings, please!) We'll shell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that never see print. So send stacks of 'em with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe Lucky, Box67A, Mt.Vernon, N.Y.
WHAT IS
A SWITCH
TO LUCKIES?
( SEE PARAGRAPH BELOW )
SWITCH from Texas to Wyoming . . . that's a range change. Switch from the Army to the Navy . . . that's a braid trade. Switch to Luckies—and you're taking a Hep Step! Nothing tops a Lucky for lightness—nothing can touch it for taste! It's all cigarette . . . all naturally light, golden rich, wonderfully good-tasting tobacco. And Luckies' famous tobacco is toasted to taste even better. Don't just sit there, shift for yourself! Try Luckies right now. You'll say a light smoke's the right smoke for you!
WHAT'S A MAN WHO PAINTS
COLORED TOOTHPICKS?
BRUCE MACGREGOR
HARWARD
Splinter Tinter
WHAT IS A FRANKENSTEIN COSTUME?
JAMES REDOATE
HOLY CROSS
Brute Suit
WHAT IS AN INEPT PILOT?
JOHN LUCEY
QUEENS COLLEGE
Hangar Banger
WHAT IS A POET PROTECTOR?
RICHARD NOPKINS
U. OF ARIZONA
Bard Guard
WHAT IS A HORSELAUGH?
VIRGINIA MAE DAYS
U. OF CAL.
Gay Neigh
WHAT IS A GERMAN COWBOY?
COMRAD HAZEM
EMORY U.
Shootin' Teuton
WHAT IS A BADLY RATTLED CHEF?
BUFORD CRAIN
MIDDLE TENN. STATE
Shook Cook
LIGHT UP A light SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!
(☑ A. T. Co.)
Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name"
ts
been
state,
ended
n 50
said.
boro,
obbert
rban,
stu-
area
or of ments clud-
l foration mem-
unfall, inns in
which said.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 59
20-Foot Tree Tops Yule Decorations
A 20-foot rotating tree in the rotunda of Strong Hall adds to the Christmas atmosphere at KU.
A smaller tree, decorated by members of the art ed is on the drop ceiling in the foyer of B
The white birds and gold bells on the tree were made by students in art classes for elementary education majors taught by Mary Fuller, instructor of education.
Other Christmas decorations include lights on Hoch Auditorium, the Student Union and the trees in front of Strong Hall, Danforth Chapel and the Chancellor's residence.
A collection of Christmas cards belonging to Maude Ellsworth, chairman of the art education department; is on display in the hall between 109 and 110 Bailey.
The collection includes commercial and handmade cards designed by personal friends of Miss Ellsworth.
The display will be changed to show different cards throughout the Christmas season.
The Museum of Art is featuring an 18th century Neopolitan manger scene which is the most famous of its kind in the United States, according to Edward Maser, museum director.
The scene, located in the lower gallery, contains many figures dressed in actual costumes of the time of Christ's birth.
Also included in the museum Christmas displays is a painting of the holy family's flight into Egypt by the 17th century French painter, Sebastien Bourdon.
Several sculptures of the Madonna and Child are included in the museum's standing collections. Most outstanding of these are a piece of 13th century Italian work and a statue by the 15th century German sculptor, Tilman Riemenschneider. The museum will be open throughout the Christmas vacation. It will close on Christmas and New Year's days.
KU To Debate Cambridge
Debating for Cambridge are David Ritchie Fairbairn and James Neil Crichton-Miller.
John Eland, Topeka second-year law student, and Lee Baird, Newton senior, will debate for KU against a team from the University of Cambridge, England, at 8 tonight in Strong Auditorium.
The question is "Resolved: That the United States has to prove her capacity for world leadership."
44 MU Signatures On Mather Petition
COLUMBIA, Mo.—(UP)—A Missouri graduate student, Clifford Hayes, is circulating a petition seeking ex-KU Coach Chuck Mather as the new University of Missouri coach. At last count, Hayes had 44 signatures on the petition.
MU Athletic Director Don Faurot said today that about 20 applications had been received for the job vacated last Saturday by Frank Broyles. Mr. Broyles is now coach at Arkansas University.
It was not known if Mr. Mather was among the 20. Mr. Faurot did not name the applicants, but said he would release the names of some of them late today.
Mr. Faurot reiterated today that the university plans to continue the so-called "Missouri Plan" of recruiting high school players from Missouri.
Flood Control Plans Reviewed
Col. L. E. Laurion, Kansas City District Engineer, reviewed flood control plans for the Kaw River Valley at a public meeting in Lawrence Monday.
Col. Laurion outlined recommendations which the engineers plan to submit to Congress for eight additional reservoirs. These, originally announced last summer, would be on Turkey Creek, three miles south of Abilene; on Chapman Creek near Chapman; on Lyons Creek southwest of Junction City; on Clark's Creek, four miles east of Junction City; on Rock Creek six miles northwest of Wamego; on Vermillion Creek nine miles south of Onago; on Soldies Creek 15 miles northwest of Topeka; and on the Wakarusa River five miles southwest of Lawrence.
The Kansas Water Resources Board will begin studying the proposals immediately, Arno Wind-scheffel, chairman, said.
Col. Laurion said 18 reservoirs have been authorized for the Kaw Basin, with 11 completed or under construction.
Panhell Names Seven Chairmen
Women's Panhellenic Council named seven committee chairmen for its projects during the year at a meeting of the Panhellenic Council Monday.
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
Those named were Mary Claire Purcell, Kansas City, Kan. junior, Greek Week co-chairman; Julia Nicholson, Lawrence junior, Interfraternity Sing; Joyce Elliott, Independence, Mo. junior, work project.
Mary Alden, Hutchinson junior, scholarship dinner; Sandra Blankenship, Great Bend junior, dance; Jean Elson, Paola junior, queen elections, and Mary Sanborn, Chapman senior, panel discussions.
The council voted to set a date for the rush chairmen to be seated in Panhellenic Council beginning next year. Betty Lou Douglas, Kansas City, Kan. senior and president of the council, said that this change would enable the rush chairmen to become Panhellenic members at the same time so a training period can be held.
Guided Missile Film To Be Shown
"Challenge of Outer Space," a 60-minute film describing guided missiles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today, Wednesday and Thursday on the second floor of the Military Science Building.
Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science and tactics, said the film will explain the mechanics and uses of the guided missile for 50 minutes, then there will be a filmed question and answer period with Dr. Wernher von Braun, director of the guided missiles division of the Redstone Arsenal, Huntsville, Ala. The film is distributed by the Army Signal Corps.
The film is open to the public. There will be seating space for 75 to 100 persons each night.
Have faith and stay in school men, and you will probably miss the draft until after you are graduated.
Draft May Wait Until Graduation
James K. Hitt, registrar, said Monday that there is little danger of students being drafted while in school, because draft quotas have been low for the last year and don't appear to be increasing.
Deferment now exempts the student from the draft for the entire school year and not only for a semester as in the past, Mr. Hitt said. The only time a student might be drafted during the school year is when he is called after having been deferred once, he added.
A report from the Lawrence Selective Service office Monday said they haven't had a draft call since September and don't know when to expect another one.
Docking Ponders Replacement For 2 Regents
Gov. George Docking today indicated that he will not re-appoint Mrs. Elizabeth Haughey, Concordia, to the State Board of Regents when her term expires Dec. 31.
"She is a nice woman and I admire her, but I can't see that she has done much." Gov. Docking said.
Gov. Docking also said that he is "thinking about replacing" A. W Hershberger, Wichita. Both Mrs Haughy and Hershberger are Democrats.
The governor described Oscar Stauffer, Topeka, also up for reappointment, as a "very capable man."
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, when asked his opinion this morning, said, "No comment." George B. Smith, dean of the University, also said, "I have no comment."
Docking praised McDill Boyd, Phillipsburg, whose term will not expire this year. He singled him out to say that "he has done some good work and a lot of it."
Other members of the Board of Regents are Claude C. Bradney, Columbus; Ray Evans, Kansas City, Kan., Clement Hall, Coffeyville; Lawrence Morgan, Goodland, and Harry Valentine, Clay Center, Hubert Brighton, Topeka, is secretary.
Business Groups To Hear Talks
Two Business School groups will hear talks on their special fields to tonight and Wednesday in the Student Union.
The Accounting Club will be addressed by representatives from two accounting firms on their work on the national and local levels. The meeting will be at 7:30 tonight in the Javhawk Room.
The Marketing Assn. will hear Berndt L. Kilker, head of the Economics Studies Group of the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo., at 4 p.m. in the Curry Room. Mr. Kilker's topic will be: "Can Marketing Research Solve Distribution Problems?"
Allen Field House Pictured
'A double color picture of Allen Field House appears in the latest copy of Sports Illustrated magazine. The caption says, "Colorful and fitting showcase for the towering Wilt Chamberlain is the University of Kansas' 17,000-seat Allen Field House in Lawrence."
Polio Injection Cost Reduced
Hospital Lowers Price On 1st,2nd;3rd,4th Free
Campus Chest Drive Extended
A bargain sale on polio shots at Watkins Hospital will start today. Ralph L. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said Monday that 700 doses of the vaccine will be available at reduced prices to students taking first and second shots and free to those taking their third and fourth shots.
The Campus Chest drive will be extended through Wednesday, Robert N. (Jim) Davis, Dodge City senior and chairman of the drive, said Monday. A total of $2,250 had been collected by 10 p.m. Monday.
Davis said the drive was being extended so the solicitors would have more time to turn in their money.
"Things are moving satisfactorily," Davies said. "The Four Freshmen concert and the Mr. Campus Chest contest brought in more than expected. If the solicitations from the student body are what we expect, it looks as if we will have a record drive."
Approximately $1,150 was cleared on the Four Freshmen's concert Sunday. The Mr. Campus Chest contest brought in $352. Organized houses have turned in $748. Hodder Hall has turned in the most money per capita and Gerturde Sellards Pearson Hall is second.
Foreign Student Tea Is Thursday
An annual foreign student tea, sponsored by the Associated Women Students House of Representatives, will be held between 4 and 5 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union Kansas Room.
George (Buzz) Hunt, Chicago, Ill
sophomore will sing folk songs
Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant dean of women, and Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, have been invited as special guests.
Weather
Cold wave warning east portion. Few snow flurries northeast this evening. Much colder tonight with temperature drop reaching cold wave proportions east portions. Continued strong northerly winds 25-35 miles per hour diminishing by morning. Low tonight 10 northeast to 15 southwest. Fair and cold Wednesday with highs 25-30 east to 35-40 west.
Low this morning 39. Low Monday was 23, high 57.
Must Be Used By Jan. 1
The shots, which usually cost $1.50, will be offered to students taking their first shot for $1. The second shot will cost 50 cents. Dr. Canuteson said.
Dr. Canuteson said the 700 doses will not be safe to use after Jan. 13, so the hospital had to try some way to see that the vaccine was used. Students may take advantage of the bargain price if they have taken their previous shots at the hospital,
"Public health agencies are recommending that a fourth shot be taken six months after the third shot," Dr. Canutesan said.
Don't Forget About Flu
Don't Forget About Dr. Canuteon also said that students are not taking advantage of flu shots. He said that the hospital was having an unusually quiet period since the Thanksgiving vacation.
"Wait until after Christmas," he said. "We will probably be back above normal then and that's no time for anybody to get sick, with final examinations so close."
The number taking flu shots this year is practically unchanged from last week's 4,350. Dr. Canutson said absenteeism in Kansas public schools has dropped to a near normal 6,000 from the 35,000 at the peak of the flu epidemic.
"Our problem is not having enough flu vaccine, but how much to buy," he said.
There were two nudes in the magazine, both in advertisements. One ad for a cleaning firm showed a woman from behind with the words, "Don't be caught with your backside bare, let us clean the clothes you wear."
All The Nudes Fit To Print?
COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UP)—The University of Missouri humor magazine, Show Me, came out today and the director of student publications immediately said it showed too much—of nude women.
Director Fred Robbins ordered the magazine off news stands and banned street sales.
Another ad for men's clothing showed a woman from the front, with several strategically placed "toy" signs. The words said, "Ooops, sorry, we aren't in the toy business but we've got just what you need in the way of Christmas clothes."
The Board of Student Publications has a regular meeting scheduled for tomorrow and will discuss the magazine at that time, Mr. Robbins said.
Ike Fitness To Attend NATO To Be Checked
Doctors this afternoon were to pass on the fitness of President Eisenhower to travel to Paris for next week's NATO "summit" conference.
Only a firm veto by the physicians is expected to keep the President from personally trying to rally the NATO nations to meet Russia's space age challenge.
In view of his apparently rapid recovery from a mild stroke Nov. 25, a negative verdict would come as a surprise. Vice President Richard M. Nixon will head the U. S. delegation if Mr. Elisehower is not allowed to attend
A KU professor of physiology told The Daily Kansan in an interview recently that reducing the
President's workload won't necessarily decrease his chances of having another stroke.
Prof. Kenneth Jochim said: "There is no way of fortelling whether the President will have another stroke or not. He might go for years without one. "The stroke doesn't seem to have left any permanent bad effects. Only a small part of the brain was involved and apparently the blood supply has been restored."
"Of all the organs in the body, the brain is least able to withstand interference of the blood supply. The fact that he has one such stroke means that the probability is greater that he will have another."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
It's No Laughing Matter
9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1-phift. That humorous little line appeared as a headline on a large area newspaper. Other newspapers also had humorous comments.Many people smiled, some laughed almost hysterically.
It's wonderful that the American people can see the humorous side of almost anything. But it is going a bit too far when the failure of the United States to launch an earth satellite becomes the butt of a nation-wide joke. Laughing at the failure of something as important as the satellite shows ignorance of what consequences the failure could have.
The most apparent consequence of the failure to launch a satellite is the loss of world prestige. The United States lost some prestige when Russia launched Sputnik I and II. Now that our own efforts have failed, Russia, in the eyes of the world, has a big lead in the space race. This in turn can lead the world to believe that Russia has a lead in every other field.
When other countries come to the realization, real or imagined, that Russia is scientifically superior to the United States, they may reappraise their global affiliations. This would be true especially of the smaller countries who are still undecided about Communism. This could cause an exodus to the permanent "safety" of the Iron Curtain.
In this age of atomic warfare, the United States can ill-afford to lose any allies. One thing that keeps Russia from starting a war, is the realization that she wouldn't be fighting one country alone, but many, and some within easy striking distance of her.
Nothing about the failure of the Vanguard rocket to get above four feet off the ground is hilariously funny. But the publicity that the launching received was ridiculous. The scientists knew that the odds for failure on the first attempt were high, but that didn't stop the attempt from receiving more advance billing and on-the-spot coverage than the World Series. Someone remarked that it was the world's best publicized failure.
It's asinine to ballyhoo something that could be, and in this case was, a flop. Russia didn't make a three ring circus out of their launching. They waited till the satellites were in their orbits, then told the world. They may have failed many times before they were successful. But nobody knows for sure.
Few people laugh when they're hurt, but the American people are laughing at something which could hurt their country very much. The failure to achieve something so important and the resulting loss of prestige is no laughing matter.
—Del Haley
Dark Age For Intellects
The swift rise in living standards and consequently the rise in population through the past two hundred years was caused by the industrial and agricultural revolutions. Now that same technology has the duty to solve the Frankenstein it created.
Through increase in productivity of the land to feed the dissatisfied bellies, birth control to reduce the rate of population increase, and development of mass production to facilitate the availability of comforts, science has sought to lessen mankind's miserable state.
Now in this world that science is forced to mechanize and control to take care of the teeming peoples, society is becoming spoiled by too many things run off the assembly-lines and discrimination becomes difficult.
Technology needs trained workers. This, education has neatly done. Now the plea is for more technicians, more "idea men" who think up new designs in tooth-brush holders and bomb detonators. There are all kinds of science fairs and curricula to stir high school pupils' interests toward science careers.
But what has happened to the intellectual who would prefer to choose the classic studies for his life's devotion? The poor fellow finds
himself an unwanted oddity with an equally scorned book of verse under his arm.
Since Latin was pronounced dead and the school doors of general education were flung wide open to every kind of student and curriculum, the pattern has been, sneer at the "brain." He is forced to join or be shunned.
Despite the number of advocates of a liberal education, there is now a dangerous undertone for complete overhauling of education in favor of practical schools. Society, which likes its mechanical comforts over a good book, is whitttling away at the value of language, including its own, and literature.
Let it never be said that scientists themselves do not enjoy a classic. Einstein and Schweitzer enjoyed and participated in the arts, but they are famous geniuses. Unknown scientists like Mozart on a quiet evening too.
It is the undiscriminating, medioelement of society, created by too much of plenty, that has already, to some small degree, and will to a larger one, force the "laughable egg-heads" to retreat again to some "monastery" with the manuscripts of their mother-culture, where they will wait through another dark age.
Carolyn Davis
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
APPLY FOR A SCHOLARSHIP
MAKE YOUR SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION HERE!
ALMOST ANYONE CAN GET A SCHOLARSHIP!
MAKE YOUR SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION HERE!
ALMOST ANYONE CAN GET A SCHOLARSHIP!
"WHY. YES—I HAVE YOUR APPLICATION HERE SOMERACE."
Things are looking up in the queen department. If the crowning continues at the present rate, we are going to run up a pretty impressive total by the time the semester ends.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
rounded up 1904,
trusted 1905, duly signed 8, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service 420
Telephone Number: (866) 757-3900;
service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after
Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
post office under act of March, 1879.
Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office
Telephone VIking 3-2700
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Banman, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor;
Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant City Editor; Nancy Harmon, Telegraph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Society Editor; Martha Crosier, Assistant Society Editor.
Short Ones
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Kerry Glover Advertising Manager
Glover, National Advertising Manager;
George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant
Manager; Advertising Manager; Ted Winkler,
Schmidt, Promotion Manager; Steve
Schmidt, Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston Editorial Editor
Jamie Stern Del Haley, Jim Sledd,
Associate Editors.
Some instructors are always complaining that their students don't have the right attitude. It could be that the student's attitude is a reflection of the instructor's own attitude.
Why is it that instructors of two hour courses seem to think that their courses are the only ones of importance and the other 14 or more hours that the student is taking are just supplementary.
V
Drive but don't drink.
Cruise but don't booze.
YOUR EYES
A2
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
Roberto's
Roberto's VI 3-1086-Pizza WE DELIVER!
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Will Heaven Protect A Felon's Daughter? See "CROCK of GOLD" TUES.-SAT.
A A A
a beautiful wedding... and every highlight captured in wedding candids by... HIXON come in or phone now for your appointment
BENETT & MARGARET
Don Crawford • Bob Blank
S
HIXON
HIXON STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
MAKE THIS
His
Christmas
TO REMEMBER
MAKE THIS His Christmas
---
PRINCE GARDNER REGISTRAR $ ^{*} $
Removable pass case with Add-A-Pass Bar for adding
covered duplicate key slots. Bill divider
with concealed money flap. Extra stamp and ticket pockets. Handsome leather, his colors.
Get your money's worth for your money
give PRINCE GARDNER
from
$500
plus tax
*protected by
"AN INVISIBLE STITCH"®
Complete assortment of Prince Gardner Billfolds, Key Gards, Pocket Secretaries.
905 Mass.
Carl's GOOD CLOTHES
VI 3-5353
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
KU Photos Taken For Magazine
A professional photographer has been on the campus taking pictures to be used in a spring publication of the American Alumni Council.
His pictures included the German, speech and Western Civilization classes, several in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, and of Stouffer Place, married students housing development.
Some of the pictures will probably be used in a spring supplement put out by the national alumni group, to be used as a supplement to alumni magazines all over the country.
James Gunn, managing editor of the KU Alumni publications, said the 32-page supplement would go to magazines with a total circulation of over a million.
The publication will feature a survey of American education. About 3,000 pictures will be taken at over 30 colleges, with 20 to 30 pictures being used.
The photographer, Eric Hartman has worked chiefly for Fortune magazine.
A 1921 graduate has been appointed vice president of The Macmillan Co., one of the world's largest book publishing companies. The alumnus, Henry B. McCurdy, joined the company as a field representative in 1922, was elected to the board of directors in 1931 and since 1947 has been executive editor of the college department.
KU Graduate Gets Book Publishing Post
University Players Initiate 6
The University players initiated six members at a meeting Sunday. They are Loring Henderson, Mission, and Roger Stanton, Marysville, freshmen; Ann Bigbee, Hugoton, and Roger Potter, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores; Caroline Ransopher, Manhattan, and Sara Davis, Kansas City, Mo., seniors.
There are more than 5,000,000 head of dairy cattle in Australia.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Russkii kssl do sobiritsa vo vtoritik 10 vo dekabira 1957 g. V 4 chase um Suamila Andreevichina 1957 g. Adres: N. 1236 Miltasba, Busten pit, pjt chat, veselishin, Miliosi protsi
La reunion de Noel Cercle Francais aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a septième de l'Année, le 14 novembre de l'Union Building (eux puis desrent apprendre des noels francais sont invites à ses repeter arec le choeur a quatre noes merdi, et merciéd dans la 113 Strasse.
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast follows.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m., Debussy "Petite Suite"
children's program, Saint-Saens "Carnival of the
Animal" Ravel "Mother Goose Suite."
WEDNESDAY
Faculty forum, noon, English Roöm,
Sachs and Claudius, Calvin Vanderwerf, "Faculty Connexions with Athletes." Phone reservations to KUY office (KU 227) by Tuesday after-
Episcopal study group, 4 p.m., Canton,
Houston, Worship
Radio and TV meeting, 3 p.m. 222
Print Hall
La reunion de Noel du Cercle Français aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a sept ans après l'ascension de la T Union Building (eux qui desrent apprendre des meols français sont invites à les repeter arec le choeur au quatre heures mercredi dans la salle 113
Social Work-Sociology - Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Informal discussion and coffee. Everyone interested welcome.
El Atencio se rune a las cuatro de la tavo en el Feraser.
Jay James, 5 p.m., Pine Room. Student
lion. Attendance required.
Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7 p.m.
Curry Room, Student Union, Films,
"Paranoid Conditions" and "The Schizophrenia
Heberephren Type." Discussion
Room.
KU Young Democratis, 7:30 p.m.
Oread Room. Student Union. Speakers.
Kenneth Davis, National committeeman,
and Dr. John Jse.
Circle K Club, 7:30 p.m. 306 A-B.
Student Union. All interested in Kiwanis sponsored college men's organizations are welcome.
Delta Phi Delta, 7 p.m., 1642 Indiana.
Election.
German Christmas mixed choir rehearsals 5 p.m. 402 Fraser.
American Institute of Architects, 7-30
Room A, Rooms B and C. Present户. "Structures in the structure."
THURSDAY
Episcopal morning prayer. 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast
follows.
Around The World
Reds Seek 'Invisible' Missile
Compiled from United Press
Russian scientists are working on a device to make the intercontinental ballistic missile "invisible" to radar. If perfected, the weapon would be undetected from takeoff to the point of explosion.
Western scientists also are working towards the same end and may have a good lead on the Russian research, a London informant told the United Press.
Russia is also building a super television satellite capable of controlling the world's communications and jamming out the vital U. S. early warning radar defense system, atomic expert Rep. James T. Patterson (R-Conn) said today:
Rep. Patterson, a member of the House Armed Service and the joint Congressional Atomic Energy committees, said "authoritative sources" also told him the Soviets are making Sputniks which may be used as bomb carriers.
To Try For Speed Record At Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., the Air Force expected its power
Best Designed Books Displaced
Nineteen winners from the Midwestern book competition in which books were judged on their design, printing and binding are on display in the second-floor showcase of Watson Library.
The books were submitted by 12 printers, publishers and designers, said Robert Quinsey, director of library reader services. The winning books are on a tour of 30 college, university and public libraries throughout the country.
Student Teachers Confer
Mid-term conferences for 27 student teachers were held Saturday morning at Bailey Hall. The students conferred with their advisers after a general meeting in Bailey Auditorium.
F-1014 fighter-bomber to break the British-held world speed record of 1,132 miles an hour today and win the Thompson trophy. The Navy's Regulus II guilded missile also was to be fired for a 29-minute flight under simulated shipboard conditions.
In New York City, the government may have to drop its perjury case against Teamsters President-elect James R. Hofla as a result of the U. S. Supreme Court ban on the use of state-obtained wiretap evidence in federal court trials.
If the perjury counts against Mr. Hoffa are dismissed, it would mark the second time that the Teamster official has evaded conviction on federal charges. A jury in Washington, D.C., acquitted him in July on charges of bribing Senate Aide John Cye Cheasty to obtain secret government documents relating to his union.
To Report On Indonesia
In Washington. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles has sent J. Gordon Mein, director of the State Department's Office of Southwest Pacific Affairs, to Indonesia to get a first-hand report on the Indonesian-Dutch dispute following the Netherlands' refusal to give New Guinea to Indonesia. Monday Indonesian Prime Minister Dijunda
ordered all Dutch-owned plantations placed under government control.
Bakers' Ouster Near
In Atlantic City, N.J., the AFL-CIO executive council said today it would expel the Bakery Workers Union this week unless it complies with AFL-CIO clean-up orders. Federation President George Meany said the AFL-CIO would have to charter a rebel bakers' group if the ouster goes through.
Bakers' Union President James G. Cross boycotted the hour-long council meeting this morning. He has refused repeatedly to resign, the main demand made by the AFL-CIO executive council.
MAD!
PASSIONATE!
COMPELLING!
"CROCK of GOLD"
TUES.-SAT.
Robertio's
Rol.
710 Mass.
rte's
VI 3-1086
P
PIZZA
We Deliver
Miss Santa Is Coming Your Way! Vote for
"Miss Santa"
Thursday, Dec. 12 - Friday, Dec. 13
At The INFORMATION BOOTH ON JAYHAWK BLVD.
Choose YOUR Favorite Miss Santa
Pictures on Display at the Information Booth
VOTE BY BALLOT - ID CARDS REQUIRED
MISS SANTA WILL RECEIVE GIFTS FROM THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS
Ober's Jr. Miss Hixon's
---
Carter's Stationery Weaver's
Kaleidoscope
Campus Hideaway Corn's Beauty Shop
Allison-Thomas Royal College Shop
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE Large Size Color Prints - $1.00
Limited Quantities
SALE BEGINS 8 A.M., WED., DEC.11
Limited Time
Originally Published at Prices from $2.50 to $10.00 - Now All $1.00
G428. Audubon: Mallard Ducks
25% x19 . Pub. at
$5.00 ___ Sale $1
G425. Audubon: Ruffed Grouse.
G546. Bos: Still Life With Ket-
25% x19 . Orig.
$5.00 ___ Sale $1
$3.00 ---------- Sale $1
G549. Bos: Still Life with Pottery
Jug and Peaches. 19 x 17
Pub at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G484. Bradbury: Sierra Morn.
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G309. Braque: Nature Morte (With Marble Table). 28"x22".
Orig. $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G586. Brueghel the Elder: Landscape. Rocky coast and ship building yard. 28"x22". Pub at $3.00 Sale $1
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G402. Cezanne: Pommes et
Oranges 28 x 22
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G591. Cezanne: Pot de Fleurs et
Orig. $3.00 ------ Sale $1
G630. Chagall: Clown on a
G648. Ch a g all; L'Acrobate.
scape. Farmland dotted with hay-
G598. Curry: Wisconsin Landscapes. Farmard dotted with hayricks, cattle and farms. 26"×20". Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1
G630. Chagall: Crown on a White Horse. 22"x281/4".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
22"x273/4".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G552. Da Vinci: Mona Lisa.—
a magnificent reproduction of the original in the Louvre. 17$1/2" x241/2". Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1
AUTHENTIC BULLFIGHT POSTERS
Imported from Spain. Giant sized, full of flashing action and brilliant color—the ultimate in sophisticated decoration. 3½ feet high by 1¾ feet wide, ideal for playroom or office.
Pub. at $2.50 ___ Now $1, each
B501. Bullfight Poster - Madrid
B502. Bullfight Poster - Barcelona
B503. Bullfight Poster - Salamanca
B504. Bullfight Poster - Valencia
B506. Bullfight Poster - Granada
B509. Bullfight Poster - Cordoba
B512. Bullfight Poster - Sevilla
Pub. at $2.50 ___ Each
G306. Degas: Ballet Encore.
25"x19". Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1
Pub. at $2.50 ___ Sale $1 each
G300. Degas:Dancer With Bou-
Pub. at $3.00 ------ Sale $1
G342. Degas: The Dancing
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G301. Dufy: Normandy Tree.
25"x29". Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1
G585. Dufy: Saint Jeannet.
28"x22". Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1
PANELS! THEY'RE THE RAGE!
Long, narrow, stunning . . . the most sophisticated decorating accent in years!
G533. Japanese Panel: M琴. M guitar.
Twirting dancer in gorgeous kimono, accompanied by moon guitar player. 12"x32".
Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1
G535. Japanese Panel: Tea House. Two dancers in brilliant gowns perform their ceremonial dance, "12"x32". Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G534. Japanese Panel: White Cranes. Two
Crane Panels with white and with white
12/42*2''. Pub. of $3.00. Scale 51
B12/42*2'. Pub. of $3.00. Scale 51
G532 Japanese Panet: Zither Exquisite
dancers, dang dang Zither player pub. lub. $8.00 Sale $1
Balloon fan!
G343. Dufy: Mannequins at the
Race. 28 x 24 .
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G566. Fra Angelica & Fra Lippi:
century. 19/2 x25/2 .
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
The Adoration of the Magi. 15th
G492. Gasser: Solitude. 28"x
22". Pub. at $4.00 ---- Sale $1
G401. Gauguin: Les Meules.
28"×22". Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1
G447. Gauguin: Nevermore.
27 3/4"x22".
Pub. at $3.00___ Sale $1
G516. Gauquin: Woman with
Mango. 20' x 27'.
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G658. Hiroshige: Birds in Flight
Orig. $3.50 ___ Sale $1
G600. Homer: Eight Bells. 26"x
20". Orig. $3.00 ---- Sale $1
G361. Lautrec: The Clowness.
22/8 x 26 :
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G411. Lautrec: Moulin Rouge
(La Goulou). 28"x25".
Pub. at $10.00 ___ Sale $1
G539. Lautrec: Profile of a Woman. 22 x28 .
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G346. Leger: Two Women. 24"x 28". Pub. at $4.00 ---- Sale $1
G518 Matisse: Blue Nude. 27"x
20". Pub. at $3.00 ---- Sale $1
23½" × 20"
Pub, at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G640. Marin: From the Bridge.
G629. Matisse: The Idol. 26"x
221/4". Orig. $3.00 --- Sale $1
G572. Miro: Fragment. 2014"x
26". Pub. at $3.00 ---- Sale $1
G644. Modigliani: G v p s v Woman with Baby. 21 1/4"x27 3/4"
Pub. at $3.00 ----- Sale $1
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G514. Matisse: The Purple
Pub. at $3.00 ------ Sale $1
G607. Modigliani: Woman with Red Hair. 22"x28". Pub at $3.00. Sale $1
G538. Monet: Boats at Argen-
feuil. 28"x22".
Pub. at $3.00 -------- Sale $1
G317. Monet: Chrysanthemum.
Pub. at $4,00 ------------ Sale $1
G615. Monet: *Pe o n i e s.*, 24"x
28", Pub. at $3.00 --- Sale $1
G505. Picasso: Children Reading. 20"x26".
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G608. Picasso: The Lovers. 22"
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G515. Picasso: Mother and Child.
Orig. $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G302. Picasso: Pierrot. 221/4"x
Pub. at $4.00 ___ 'Sale $1
FAMOUS OLD MAPS IN COLOR
Large, individual maps of indescribable charm and beauty, reproduced from priceless originals. Each measures 26x 20 inches.
G364. Map of North America. Matthew Seutter. Colorful pre-Revolutionary map of those surrounding the Mississippi. Pub. at $3.00 ------------- Sale $1
G365. Map of America. Michael Mercator. Both continents, with embellished borders and cornerpieces. Pub. at $3.00 ------------- Sale $1
G366. Map of the World. Nicolao Visscher. 17th century global map, decorated with symbols of earth, water, fire and air. Pub. at $3.00 ------------- Sale $1
G367. Map of North and South America. William Blauw. 17th century map of Americas, framed with signettes of natives, ships and old cities. Pub. at $3.00 ------------- Sale $1
G398. Picasso: Still Life with
Antique Head. 28"×27"
Antique Fred. 20 X22
Pub. at $3.00 -------- Sale $1
G565. Picasso: Three Musicians.
G565. Picasso: Three Musicians.
26"x27".
Pub. at $10.00 ___ Sale $1
G660. Picasso: Vase of Flowers.
Pub at $3.00 — Sale $1
G486. Pike: Bearsville Store. 28"
Orig. $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G439. Pike: Water in the Flat-
G349. Rouault: Le Chinois
Pub. at $3.00 ------ Sale $1
25/18 27/18 Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G350. Rouault: H.ea d of a
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G357. Rouault: The Old King.
G499. Bull by "Sekkyo." 18th
century Japanese woodblock print. 18¾"x25".
Pub. at $5.00 ___ Sale $1
G494. Shumaker: Mountain Re-
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G479. Shumaker: Peaceful Val-
Manhaker: Peaceful Valley. 28"x20". Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G427. Sisley: Covered Bridge.
30"x24". Pub. at $8.00 Sale $1
G433. Utrillo: Church of Saint-
G393. Utrillo: Eglise de Banlieue. 28"x22".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G454. Utrillo: Le Agile in Win-
G384. Van Gogh: Dutch Land-
G410. Utrillo: Montmartre. "La
G454. Utrillo: Le Agile in Winter.
32" x 26".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G410. Utrillo: Montmartre. "La
Galette." 31 1/8"x251/4".
Pub. at $8.00 ___ Sale $1
S
G384. Van Gogh: Dutch Landscape. 28"x25".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G438. Van Gogh: Field at Arles.
Orig. $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G373. Van Gogh: Peachtrees in
Pub. at $3.00 ------ Sale $1
G304. Van Gogh: Restaurant of Sirene.
28 1/4" x22 3/8".
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G622. Vlaminck: Bridge at Meu-
lan. 27'78"×21'78".
Orig. $3.00 ----------------- Sale $1
G355. Vlaminck: Landscape.
G385. Van Gogh: Sunflowers.
22"x2" Orign. $3.00 -- Sale $1
28" x 24"
Pub. at $4.00 ___ Sale $1
G536. Vlaminck: Landscape.
G617. Vlaminck; Still Life with
28"x22".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
Fruit. 28"x24".
Pub, at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
E
G555. Wood: Along the Pacific
G555. Wood: Along the Pacific
28"×20".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G554. Wood: Majestic Peaks.
28"x20".
Pub. at $3.00 ___ Sale $1
G589. Utrillo: Panel I. Montmartre in spring greenery with gay promenaders, 10" x26". Pub at $2.50 * Sale $1
G590. Utrillo: Panel II. Companion piece to Panel I: a brightly colored bistro front under a clear spring skyl, 10" x26". Orig. $2.50 * Sale $1
G431. Wveth: Marshall Point
Light, Maine. 24" x 19¼".
Pub. at $3.00 ------ Sale $1
STUDENT Union Book Store
Page 5
University Daily Kansan
Slow But Sure
Breaking an arena scoring record, Wilt Chamberlain scored 40 points Monday night to lead the Kansas Jayhawkers to a 82-62 victory over Marquette. Kansas started slow but there was never any doubt once the outside shooters found the range.
It was the fourth straight basketball victory for the Jayhawkers without a loss. It was the fourth straight defeat for the Warriors this year plus 10 straight losses last year.
Another record was broken when 9,300 persons crowded in to see the game in Milwaukee. Chamberlain collected 15 field goals and 10 free throws to top the old record of 36 points set last year by Charlie Tyra of Louisville.
Wilt is now shooting at a 32 point average per game. He scored 39 points against Marquette last year and has collected 129 points for the Jayhawkers so far this year.
Covering Chamberlain with three men sometimes, Marquette in the early minutes of the game took a 9-1 lead, but finally Kansas began to zero in and tied the score at 9:15 in the first half.
After the game was tied up on Wilt's dunk shot, the lead then changed hands until, with about two minutes to go in the half, Kansas poured in 12 points while the Warriors could only score once.
Don Dibelous, Marquette guard, finally broke the ice for the Warriors by pushing in a jump shot with 5:05 gone in the half. By that time the lead was so great that any Marquette effort would have been futile.
Kansas led at the half 33-24. For the first five minutes of the second half, Marquette didn't score and Kansas was collecting 12 more points.
Ron Loneski scored 16 points to be second in scoring honors for the Jayhawkers. Bob Billings was third with 9 points. Chamberlain was taken out in the waning seconds of the game after committing his third foul of the game.
Big Eight Teams Trim Foes
Most Big Eight teams trimmed their non-conference foes to size last night as Wilt Chamberlain led the parade by racking up 40 points against Marquette.
Kansas State used its height to advantage to overpower Purdue of the Big 10----70-73.
Missouri had an easy time as it walked away from North Dakota 78-40. Only Nebraska of the Big Eight ran into trouble. The Cornhuskers lost out to Notre Dame, 69-56.
K-State's Bob Boozer, 6-8 forward, scored 25 points to lead the Wildcats to their third consecutive win. After a halftime mark of 43-40 Kansas State, the lead changed six times before the Wildcats pulled tway to stay.
A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, holds three KU punt return records; most yards punts returned in one game, most yards punts returned in one season and most yards punts returned in career.
NEW YORK-(UP)]-The University of North Carolina Tar Heels tarheeled the opposition today in the first weekly ratings of the 1957-58 season by the United Press Board of basketball coaches.
Tar Heels, Jayhawkers Top Poll
The coaches, rating the teams on their performances during the first week of the season which ended Saturday, gave the defending national champions 325 of a possible 350 points.
Kansas, runnerup in the ratings with 283 points, drew 10 first place ballots. Two coaches rated San Francisco on top while Kentucky, Kansas State, Michigan State and St. Louis each drew one first-place vote.
The ratings:
Schoolsv Points
1. North Carolina (19) (1-0) 325
2. Kansas (10) (3-0) 283
3. Kentucky (1) (3-0) 210
4. Bradley (1-0) 177
5. Fulton (1) (2-0) 177
6. Kansas State (1) (2-0) 165
7. Michigan State (1) (2-0) 153
8. Temple (2-1) 88
9. UCLA (2-0) 57
10. Notre Dame (2-0) 43
Tuesday. Dec. 10, 1957
(Won-loss record through Dec. 7)
Attention IM Scorekeepers
The Daily Kansan's policy concerning intramural basketball is to print a substantial story about all "A" games and the scores of "B" and "C" games. However, in order to properly cover "A" games scorekeepers must include first names of all players on the score sheets. If no first names are included on "A" game score sheets The Daily Kansan will print only the scores of those games.
IM Basketball Under Way, 26 Teams Play
Intramural basketball got off to a fast start Monday night with 26 teams seeing action.
Fraternity A score cards were not turned in, therefore no scores will be printed. Also, since all but two managers failed to turn in first names with scorecards, only last names will be given in this story.
Alpha Kappa Lambda defeated Lambda Chi 39-24. H. Stewart was the high scorer for both the game and the winners, accounting for 16 points. Wilson hit eight points for the losers.
Sigma Epsilon crushed Tau Kappa Epsilon, 40-23, with Applegate picking up 11 points for the winners. Hanson was high scorer for the losers and also for the game with 12 points.
Honors for the lowest scoring contest for the evening went to the Phi Kappa Tau-Alpha Phi Alpha teams. Alpha Phi Alpha won 24-13. T. McClain hit 10 points for the winners while J. Smarsh accounted for nine of the losers' 13, points.
Delta Upsilon downed Phi Kappa Sigma, 39-30. Greer, Delta Upsilon, picked up 11 points to lead the scoring for both teams. High point man for the losers was Smith with nine.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Acacia, 40-22, with Eichhorn scoring 15 points for the winners. J. Lindstrom scored 12 of the losers' 22 points.
Biggest victory of the evening was a 51-12 decision with Phi Gamma Delta over Theta Tau. Don McNichols was top scorer in the contest, hitting for 14 points. Don King topped the losing side with four points.
Phi Delta Theta ran away with the Sigma Nus, 30-14. Scoring was pretty evenly distributed in the game. Sisson, Allen and Cartmell tied for top scorer in the game, each scoring seven points. For the losers, Hamilton, Lind and Brookman all scored four points. Phi Koehler Taught at 16:45 PM.
Phi Kappa Tau lost a 17-32 contest to Alpha Tau Omega with Stiles and Olsen picking up nine points each for the ATO's. Coble and Moore tied for high scoring for the losers with six point contributions.
Kappa Sigma won the closest game of the evening, defeating the Delta Tau Delta B squad 29-23. Howard Blendon, Kappa Sigma, was high point man with nine points,
Todav's Games:
Fraternity A: Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Nu, 4:15; Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda, 5:15; Phi Delta Theta vs. Delta Tau Delta, 6:15; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Upsilon, 7:15.
The above games will be played in Robinson Annex.
In Robinson Gym
Fraternity B: Sigma Chi vs. Kappa Alpha Psi: 5:00.
Independent B: Nu Sigma Nu vs.
Don Henry, 5:00; Delta Function vs.
McCook, 5:45; Boosers vs. NROTC,
5:45; Grace Pearson vs. Nuggets,
6:30; Stephenson vs. Liahona, 6:30;
Carruth O'Leary vs. Chemical Engineers,
7:15 and Hicks vs. Grace Pearson, 7:15.
IT'S A CROCK
"CROCK of GOLD"
Real Melodrama
TUES.-SAT.
GREAT DRAMA!
UNIVERSITY PLAYERS
Present
"CROCK OF GOLD"
SHOWS START PROMPTLY
Tuesday: 8:00
Wednesday: 7:00-9:30
Thursday: 8:00
Friday: 7:00-9:30
Saturday: 7:00-9:30
50c
OPENS TONIGHT!
I. D.'s Don't Admit
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
Principals To Talk With Freshmen
By JACK HARRISON
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Frank and intelligent criticism of high school and college methods will be the purpose of the ninth annual Principal-Freshman Conference Wednesday.
Two special meetings on mathematics will be held by the department of mathematics in connection with the conference.
About 150 high school princi-*
About 150 high school pals and instructors from 72 Kansas and 10 Missouri schools will attend. Most of the 1,700 KU freshmen will have an opportunity to meet with their former principals.
James K. Hitt, registrar and chairman for the conference, said faculty members have been notified of the conference and freshmen should check with their instructors about being excused from class.
Designed To Hela Freshmen
Designed To Help Freshmen The conference is designed to help freshmen through the transition from high school to college, Mr Hitt said. He said the conference has been an excellent source of information both to the University and the high schools in evaluating their programs.
Registration will be from 8:30 to 11 a.m. in the main lobby of the Student Union. The meetings of principals with their former students will be between 9 and 11:45 am. in various rooms on the campus.
Dean Albert E. Meder Jr., of Rutgers University will speak on "New Developments in High School and College Mathematics" at 10 a.m. in the Student Union Pine Room.
Murphy, Meder 10
Dean Meder and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak to the educators at a luncheon at 12:45 p.m. in the Student Union Kansas Room.
Murphy, Meder To Talk
At 3 p.m. the principals will meet to discuss morning conferences. A coffee at 4 p.m. will end the conference.
The other meeting on mathematics will be at 7:30 tonight in the Student Union Pine Room to consider
Career Conference Set For Tonight
An industrial training program will be described at the Business School's career conference on management, production and personnel at 7:30 tonight in Bailey Auditorium. James T. Sparks, manager of $ ^{f}$ industrial relations for Ford Motor Co. in Kansas City, Mo. will be the guest speaker.
Factory management will be discussed by Charles Briggs, vice president in charge of engineering for the Marley Co., Kansas City, Mo., and personnel work by John Modlin, personnel manager for Jensen-Salsbury Laboratories, Inc., Kansas City, Mo.
Watkins Awards To Be Increased
An increase in the Elizabeth M. Watkins scholarships and the Watkins summer scholarships for junior staff members for the coming year has been authorized by the Endowment Assn. executive committee.
The Elizabeth M. Watkins scholarships were increased from $10,000 to $12,500 and the summer scholarships from six to eight. Each is for $800.
the advanced placement programs in some of the strongest high schools in this area.
"Beginning in September, 1958. KU will be prepared to offer credit for college-level courses taken in high school," said G. Baley Price, professor of mathematics and chairman of the department. These courses will be calculus and analytic geometry.
The advanced placement will be described by William S. Putman, assistant headmaster of the St. Louis Country Day School and a member of the College Board advanced placement biology examination committee. Dean Meder will describe the operation of the advanced placement program in mathematics.
To Describe Placement Program
Other visitors at the meeting tonight will be Prof. H. G. Ayre of Western Illinois University, James W. Scott of the Kansas City Star and Edward Rosenbaum of the Scientific American magazine.
3 Publish Articles
Articles by Dean Geroge R. Wagoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education, and Leland H. Erickson, assistant professor of education, are included in the fall issue of the KU Bulletin of Education.
Dean Waggoner's article is about program for gifted freshmen and sophomores in the College, and Dean Anderson's is on the exceptional high school and college student. Prof. Erickson is co-author of an article entitled "Are Kansas High School Students Falling Short in Mathematics?"
8
GLORIOUS SHOWS "CROCK of GOLD" TUES.-SAT.
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES
New or Used
Auto Wrecking And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
CAR RADIO REPAIR
PROMPT SERVICE
Jack W. Neibarger, Prop.
see
BIRD TV - RADIO
MARA'S BIRD
Murphy To Talk At Tax Meeting
908 Mass.
VI 3-8855
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak on "The Trained Mind" at a noon luncheon Friday as part of the seventh annual tax conference in Topeka.
The conference, to be opened Thursday by Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business, is being sponsored by the school and the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants.
John G. Blocker, professor of business administration, Jack Steele, associate professor, and Sherwood W. Newton, assistant professor, will moderate the panel discussions. Richard H. Lashley, assistant professor, Ben Simpson, instructor of business, and advanced accounting majors will also attend.
students. About four or five pretty important companies have cancelled their interviews," he concluded.
W. Keith Weltner, associate professor of business administration, L. Martin Jones, assistant professor, and LeRoy Baker, instructor of business are on the planning committee.
Longitude, or east-west distance, could not be measured exactly until 1740, when the chronometer was invented.
"The employment picture isn't as bright as it was," A. F. Knapper, director of the business placement bureau, told a Daily Kansan reporter,
Jobs may be more difficult to find than you expect this year, especially if you want to work in the oil, airplane, electronic or public accounting fields.
Several of the companies have laid off personnel. This is especially true of companies that had defense contracts, Prof. Knapper said.
"C students will find it more difficult to get a job. Companies are becoming more and more selective. However, students with high averages will have no trouble at all, I am sure," he said.
He added, "It is the whole economic picture. Although the number of job offers has been decreasing gradually, we really began to feel it in November. However, it hasn't become alarming yet."
Job Offers Decrease
"Some of the companies may hire one or two top students whereas in past years they were hiring several
PAT BOONE
SHIRLEY JONES
April Love
CINEMA SCOPE
COLOR by
DELUXE
20c
Walt Disney Cartoon - News
Now! See It Today!
GRANADA
GRANADA
MILAN
LA FIRE ALTITUDE
Jay SHOPPE
835
Mass.
Sv
From
Jay
Be
V
She'll Love
]
A Smart
Bulky
Knit Sweater
From The
Jc
B
Jay Shoppe
Beautifully Gift
Wrapped For
You At No
Extra Charge
Collared and cabled . . .
Bobbie Brooks
bulky wool slip-over
Perennial pet... Bobbie Brooks 100% wool bulky sweater... cabled stitched to catch the eye... and enhanced with a split ribbed collar. Fast path to fashion in white and pastels... sizes 34 to 40 10.98
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
25 words.
LOST:
personal
House a
0830.
SHEAFF with gol Doroth eward.
BEVERA
Cold.
Closed p;
Ice plant
0350.
PHILIP Group :
Philip packages
WANTE rates. W Indiana.
ONE M trip to over CI VI 3-551
STUDEN vantage Life, an both promptl.
CHRISTI
that is
Special
faculty
trusted
vocations
yean
mas de!
TUXED
practica
938 Mi
PRACTI ord play trol. Wi
F. M.E. shape. 1308 M.
APPLES
Hammo
Come
our ad
STUFFI
Christm
VI 3-39
CLEAN ents, buil No drin
FIRST for boy private Dec. 22 or see 520 La.
SI
ROOM
tempor
and dien
W two in
Open f
1019
837 N
943 M
1119
1200
1100
SEE
Ri
613 V
1407
G
913 N
725 M
743
A
612 N
623 N
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
Page 7
pretty cancelled.
distance, tly unter was
ES
e
SCOPE
COLOR by
DE LUXE
news
A
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the ball will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST: Woman's purse containing all
personal belongings, at Allen Field
House about 9 p.m. Wed. Phone VI 3-
0830. 12-12
MISCELLANEOUS
SHEAFFER SNORKEL PEN—burgundy with gold and silver top—name inscribed —Dorothy L. Trickett. Call VI 3-1100. reward. 12-13
BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th and 4th Vermont. Phone VI. 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Marlboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
ONE MAN to fill vacant seat on car trip to Mexico City and New Orleans over Christmas vacation. Call Opdahl VI 3-5552. 12-17
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sport Military magazines; watch the films and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make use of these publications at the ½ price fee of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape. $70. Used six times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass., VI 3-4952. 12-12
TUXEDO, size about 42. Fine quality,
1983 mourniss. Also white dinnerware
1984 mourniss. 12-12
PRACTICALLY NEW PORTABLE record player, 3 speed Magnuss—tone control. Will sacrifice. Ph. VI 2-0056 12-13
IMPORTED SKI SWEATERS for sale at reduced price. Ph. VI 2-0256 at www.montereyski.com 12-16
APPLES, PEARS AND APPLE CIDER at Hammonds Orchard 8 miles Southeast.
Come out at all times whether you see our ad or not. 12-16
STUFFED ANIMAL TOYS, make lovely
mountable, reasonable price.
YI-3241 after 1 p.m. 12-16
FOR RENT
CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT; Close-
ship 3.5 to room; Couple couple of
NDrinking, Ohio. OHIO
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath. private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
ROOM in a private residence (contemporary design, large swimming pool and diving board) catering to young men. Will have room for one in January, two in February. Kitchen privileges. Open for appointments. PH. VI 3-218
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-it
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6344
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric chair, refrigerator and steel built-ins. Convenience RU, RU and business dining Adults only. 742 Ohio 12-11
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgard. tt
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED HOUSE, all one floor. Two car garage, newly furnished. Two office space, machine furnished. For a couple or two boys. Ph. VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-13
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, private entrance & bath, garage, utility room washer furnished, newly decorated, close to KU. Boys or couple, very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-16
ROOM FOR TWO available anytime.
Present occupants are pledging a fratern-
Excellent location, single bed-
room, large and comfortable. Plex
3-1909. 1115 Ohio. IV-12
TWO ROOM FURNISHED ABART-
MENT, utilities paid. Ph. VI 3-4984
before 5 p.m. and VI 3-1871 after 5 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 2-8568. tf
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service. Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt, Mrs. Betty Veqslist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
RENT A SINGER Sewing machine by the
Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singr
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Teen. Penn. VI S-1240. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629.
tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties; Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Martion Rice Dance Studio 908 Mo., VI 3-6838, tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Prompt and ac-
count service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W
20th St.
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular
rates. Ikk, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8660.
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr, Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Ola Smith
9411)质杉. Ph. VI 3-5263.
Walter Smith
9411)质杉. Ph. VI 3-5263.
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
8331 J. Mass—Ph. VI 3-8047
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass—Pb. VI 3-1044
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. ff
AIRLINE TICKETS
EUROPE VACATION
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958 Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
-beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alli-
ments to keep them happy and entertain
etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8831. tf
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality-alive, glowing with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technol- es to show. Ph. VI 3-0993 or VI 3- 15994.
TUTORING IN GERMAN by wife of
tUCTURING instructor, a native German,
formerly on KU faculty herself. Will tutor Geranium at any level including preparation for Ph. D. language requirement.
Call VI 3-3369. 12-16
TYPIST! Experienced; theses, term pa-
ticipants; required service VI 2-7181
1632 West 20th St
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at
regular rates. Will type themes, term
papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna
Virri, VI 3-8660 ff
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822 1-20-59
MURDER, LOVE
ROBBERY
TRUE TRAGEDY
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
"CROCK of GOLD"
TUES.-SAT.
Newlyweds!
JUST MARRIED
Get there in a hurry. . Use Leonard's Gas!
LEONARD'S Standard Service 9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
Of Days Gone By
The image shows a brick structure with two vertical walls, each composed of bricks. The wall on the left appears to be in a state of damage or disrepair, with visible cracks and holes. In the background, there is a tall building with a distinctive architectural feature: a set of stairs leading up to its top. This building is relatively modern, with a sleek design and large windows. The landscape behind the buildings is green and hilly, suggesting a rural or suburban setting.
The old Bailey Hall chimneys no longer stand, but Independent is still around to serve your cleaning and laundry needs.
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
1903 Mass.
740 Vt.
VI 3-4011
Also at Rowlands, 1241 Oread
K
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1957
22 Nominated For Miss Santa
Twenty-two women have been nominated for the Miss Santa contest sponsored by the University Daily Kansas.
Pictures of the candidates, who will be dressed in a short-sleeved Santa Claus costume, will be taken Monday through
The pictures will be posted on the bulletin board on the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard Thursday and Friday and students may vote for one candidate at that time. Student identification cards will be used.
The contest winner will be announced in The Daily Kansan picture supplement and will be guest of honor at The Daily Kansan Christmas party Dec. 18.
The winner will receive merchandise prizes from Lawrence merchants including two steak dinners, a portrait photograph and a gift certificate.
The candidates are Sue Smith, Arkansas City, Kappa Alpha Theta; Diana Dicks, St. Louis, Mo.; Holder Hall; Joanne Hardten, Wichita, Alpha Omicron Pi; Barbara Panzer, Lincoln, Miller Hall; Janet Williams, Wichita, Delta Gamma; Katie O'Neil, Kansas City, Mo., Gamma Phi Beta; Elizabeth Robinson, Cedar Vale, Delta Delta, and Sally Mader, Lawrence, Alpha Phi, all sophomores.
Judith Neil, Abilene, Alpha Delta Pi; Sonya Driskel, Wichita, Chi Omega; Margaret Owens, Parsons, Douthart; Bernadette Dlabal, Wilson, Gertrude Sellards Pearson upperclass; Judy Chambers, Leavenworth, Alpha Chi Omega. All are sophomores.
Heather Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., Corbin-North College Hall; Ethelyn Kay Carothers, Stafford; Gentrude Sellards Pearson freshman; Sandy Day, Kansas City, Mo., Sigma Phi Epsilon; Donna Matzek, Andale, Grace Pearson Hall; Romona Townsend, Kansas City, Kan., Alpha Kappa Alba; Margaret Behan; Oakley, Sellards; Jane Dean, Prairie Village, Pi Beta Phi. All are freshmen.
Lucy Wachter, St. Joseph, Mo.
junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ruth
Ann Pyle, Armstrong, Mo. senior,
Watkins.
KuKus Promise Big Card Section
A larger ppel club precision card section was promised Monday by Dave Wilson, Leawood junior, newly installed president of KuKus, upperclass men's ppel organization.
Other officers are Tom Gee, Leaventworth junior, vice president; Al Gardner, Masterson, Tex, junior, recording secretary, and Charles Henning, Ottawa junior, treasurer, Glen Bickle, junior and Paul Brown, sophomore, both of Kansas City, Mo., were appointed to head card sectionsections.
Wilson said that there will be longer slogans and new drawings for the 1958 football season. Cochairmen will begin now to study formation problems and make drawings and slogans.
Club members also discussed a drive to obtain members active in other phases of campus life. Committees for a membership drive will be organized at a meeting Dec. 19.
Having guest speakers from the KU athletic program for business meetings was also discussed.
Chemistry Professor To Chicago Meeting
Paul W. Gilles, associate professor of chemistry, will attend a high temperature research meeting in Chicago Wednesday through Friday.
He will discuss the problems of chemical reactions in the vaporization processes in oxide systems. He has been directing research at KU in this field.
Application Deadline For Army Project Set
The Army will not accept applications for "Project 200," a program offering regular army commissions to 200 civilian scientists, after Jan.1,1958.
The program offers commissions at all ranks, from second lieutenant to colonel, depending upon the degree held by the applicant and upon his practical experience. The duty required by the program is research and development work, with no command responsibilities.
Congress authorized the program in 1955 to compete with private industry for scientists.
"Project 200" offers all regular Army benefits, including a 30-day paid vacation each year, working hours similar to those in private industry, and the usual Army retirement pay.
To Discuss Student Teaching
Four students who did their practice teaching during the first quarter this fall will be on a panel to discuss "Making the Most of Student Teaching" at the Student National Education Assn. meeting at 4 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium.
Members of the panel will be Linday Simpson, Salina, Artelia Jackson and Don Nease, Lawrence, and William Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Mo., all seniors. Karl Edwards, associate professor of education, will be moderator.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
To be eligible for consideration for "Project 200," the applicant must have a Ph.D. degree in, or directly related to, one of the 20 selected fields of specialization; a master's degree directly related to one of the 20 fields, plus three years of post-graduate experience in the field; or, a bachelor's degree plus five years of post-graduate experience.
The fields are aeronautical engineering, bacteriology, chemical engineering, chemistry, civil engineering, communications engineering, electrical engineering, electronic data processing, electronics engineering, guided missiles, health physics or radio biology, hydrology, mathematics, mechanical engineering, meteorology, nuclear effects engineering, nuclear physics, operations research, physics, psychology
Applicants should write to the adjutant general, Department of the Army, Washington, D.C., or see or call Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, KU's professor of military science and tactics.
SEDUCTION OF THE INNOCENT
See
Although playing over 1200 miles from home in their game with St. Joseph's College in Philadelphia Saturday, the basketball team will have a cheering section of 500 fans.
It will consist of members of the KU alumni clubs from Philadelphia, New York City and Washington, D. C. The KU athletic department had 500 tickets for the game, and all went to the eastern alumni organizations.
A pre-game rally and buffet dinner will be sponsored by the Philadelphia Alumni Club Saturday at St. Joseph's College.
Eastern Alumni To Attend Game
"CROCK of GOLD"
From 200 to 300 will attend the buffet, Dick Wintermote, field secretary of the KU Alumni Assn., said today. Chairman for the event is Jack M. Kendree, 1948 engineering graduate and president of the Philadelphia Alumni Club.
Real Melodrama TUES. SAT.
Wilkinses To Give Recital Wednesday
Prof. Joseph Wilkins and his wife Marie will give a faculty recital at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Prof. Wilkins is chairman of the voice department.
Mrs. Wilkins will sing two arias from Handel's "Julius Caesar" and a group of songs in English.
The concert is free to the public.
For Root Of Evil See Play Tonight
At 8 tonight the University Players will prove that money is the root of all evil when the melodrama "Crock of Gold" opens in the experimental theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Marvin Carlson, Wichita graduate student will direct the eight performances.
The play is produced in 19th century style and the audience is expected to hiss the villain, Simon Jennings, played by Paul Culp, 1957 KU graduate, and cheer the dauntless hero, Roger Acton, played by Steve Callahan, Independence, Kan. sophomore.
At crucial points in the show, selections will be played on a piano equipped with tacks on the hammers so that they hit the strings to give the piano a rinky-tink sound. Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb. sophomore, will play the piano.
The total height, with rapids, of Yosemite Falls in California is 2,525 feet.
Pizza Delivered VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park
Ken Baker, Helmetta, N. J.
junior, president of the Players
said that box seats have been set
up on the ends of the U shaped
stage. These seats are for invited
faculty members and guests.
The work on the melodrama has been entirely done by University Players. Richard Borgen, Lawrence junior, is in charge of lighting; Ann Bigbee, Hugoton sophomore, properties; Kay Moreland and Ruth Hicklin, Kansas City, Mo. juniors, costumes, and Ken Baker, scenery.
HELP!
Cheer The Hero
Boo The Villain
"CROCK of GOLD"
TUES.-SAT.
EE ME
Graduate Engineers
A STUDENT IN A MASTER'S DEGREE.
DON'T STICK YOUR NECK OUT!
AC-GENERAL MOTORS REPRESENTATIVE
on your campus
Wednesday, Dec. 11, Thursday, Dec. 12
Your Future depends upon Permanent Security. GM's continuous, long-range Design and Development Program in all fields of engineering and manufacturing . . GM's policy of decentralization . . GM's facilities . . GM's working conditions . . GM's wage advantages . . create individual opportunity for advancement and permanent security.
It is why we repeat "Don't Stick Your Neck Out" until you see the AC representative.
CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITIES IN
Avionics
AC
- Inertial Systems
- Computers
- Missile Guidance
- Jet Engine Fuel Controls
Please contact your Placement Director today to arrange for interviews with AC-General Motors recruiting representative
AC SPARK PLUG
THE ELECTRONICS DIVISION
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
MILWAUKEE 2, WIS. FLINT 2, MICH.
s the n the ding.
per-
J. J.
ayers in set
appped lited
"
a has
ersity
rence
Ann
prop-
Ruth
niors,
ery.
KU Budget Hearing Set
Ways And Means Group To Hear Murphy, Nichols
KU administrators will have a hearing with the Ways and Means Committee of the State Legislature next month to present their budget requests.
Raymond F. Nichols, executive secretary of the University said he and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will meet with the committee. The budget session of the Legislature convenes Jan. 14.
The regents recommended that 40 more faculty members be added at KU next year to meet the increased enrollment, but the budget division recommended only 22.
McDill Boyd of Phillipsburg and vice chairman of the Board of Regents, said in the board's conference with the governor last week that it would do calculable damage to the University and colleges if the raises are not granted.
The regents requested a total KU budget of $33,358,787, but the budget division of the state, under the governor's recommendations, suggested $31,117,373. It is now up to the Legislature to pass the budget legislation.
Sen. August Lauterbach (R-Colby), chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said last week he will be glad to hear the chancellor and college presidents present their requests to his committee.
The state Board of Regents recommended a 5 per cent increase in faculty salaries at KU and other sate colleges, but Gov. George Docking said he would not request this increase.
Deans To Study Course Changes
Suggestions by students for changes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences curriculum will be presented to the College deans Thursday by a committee of the All Student Council.
Jason Ott, Wakeeney second-ear law, and chairman of the All Student Council Committee to Review the College Curriculum, said his committee will meet with the deans at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in 229 Strong.
Christmas Music To Be Heard Outside
George Waggoner, dean of the College, Francis Heller, associate dean, and Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean, will consider the ideas which the committee received in suggestion boxes put up Wednesday. Dec. 4.
Yep, It's Really Cold!
Christmas music will be heard from loudspeakers outside the Museum of Art from 4:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Missouri and Kansas shivered under a gusty northern cold front again today, but the 5-day forecast promised a return to normal temperatures.
The coldest winds to come down from Canada this season dropped thermometers near the zero mark in scattered locales in the 2-state area Tuesday night. Kansas' low mark was seven above zero at Hill City.
Blustery winds of better than 55 miles an hour in Kansas City, Mo. added to personal discomfort and caused scattered property damage.
The forecast:
Generally fair tonight and Thursday. Not so cold tonight with lows 20-25. Warner Thursday. Low this morning 9. Low Tuesday morning 24, high 51.
A
STRONG WIND—Gary Leonard, Smith Center sophomore, rests a hand on the broken glass of one of the newly installed doors at the entrance to the undergraduate library as Milton Ham, Kansas City, Kan, junior, looks on. The window was blown out Tuesday by the gusty north wind which whipped through the campus. Another victim of the wind was the Campus Chest sign
in front of Flint Hall. (Daily Kansan photo)
2023
YULETIDE GLOW—Two evergreen trees in colored lights to add to the Christmas spirit. front of Strong Hall have been decorated with (Daily Kansan photo)
Daily Hansan
55th Year. No. 60
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957
Vesper Concert To Be Sunday
Over 460 students and faculty members will take part in the annual Christmas Vespers program to be presented at 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Music organizations presenting the program will be the A Cappella choir directed by Clayton Krebbiel, associate professor of music education, and the University Symphony Orchestra, directed by Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra.
The program will also include a choral ensemble led by Edwin Foot Jr., Washington, D.C. graduate student, and a horn ensemble directed by John Hill, instructor of music education.
Four tableaux have been designed for the program by Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting, and Robert Sudlow, assistant professor of drawing and painting. They are "Annunciation," "The Angel of the Lord," "Three Kings," and "Adoration."
Before the Vesper programs, Ronald Barnes. University carillonneur and instructor of music history, will present a Christmas recital on the Memorial Carillon.
Chest Drive Ends At 10 Tonight
A total of $3,429.75 was collected in the Campus Chest drive by 11 p.m. Tuesday. The drive ends today.
Organized houses turned in $939.59 Tuesday bringing the total collected by them to $1,687.75. Hodder Hall has contributed the most per capita, averaging $4.55 per person as of Tuesday.
Phi Beta Phi sorority was second averaging $2.50 per person, Phi Delta Theta fraternity was third averaging $2.02 per person, Chi Omega sorority was
Big 8 Athletic Heads Meet
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP)Big Eight Conference faculty representatives opened a regularly scheduled two-day meeting here Wednesday.
Athletic directors and baseball coaches also were attending. It was believed the groups would discuss the "letter of intent" and the possibility of having five officials, instead of four at football games.
fourth, averaging $1.89, and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity was fifth,
averaging $1.67 per person.
Students not living in organized house are being solicited by fraternity pledge classes. As of Tuesday they had contributed $135 with only 12 of the 27 fraternity pledge classes turning in money.
Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity pledge class has collected the most per capita, averaging $1.42 per person.
Fraternity pledge classes can turn in the money they have collected between 7:30 and 10 p.m. in the All Student Council office in the Student Union.
Members of the faculty had contributed $105 as of Tuesday.
The Mr. Campus Chest contest raised $352 for the drive and about $1,150 over expenses was made on the Four Freshmen's concert Sunday.
Think When You Drive
(Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles about winter campus driving conditions.)
By DOUGLAS PARKER
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
The campus police, who make their living seeing that traffic moves smoothly, offer this advice before you even move your car in the winter; Think.
How to get on the campus and then how to drive safely are problems often confronting student motorists during the winter months.
Some Roads Are Blocked
Chief Joe Skillman said recently that in bad weather it sometimes becomes necessary to block off some roads, and before a driver starts for the campus he should realize that some streets may not be accessible.
"The west approaches to the campus under rough weather conditions are considered the best."
The City Helps
Chief Skillman said, "and 12th and 14th streets are not good approaches."
For clearing streets and sidewalks, the department of building and grounds has a grader, two tractors with brooms, another small tractor grader and a sand spreader.
Often the southwest approach on Naismith Drive is a good road in the winter, he said, but if any doubt arises in the mind of the driver, it would pay to go a few blocks more and come to the campus from the west.
Chief Skillman said, "The graders and snow brooms are used immediately and sand is put on intersections and hills as quickly as possible after a storm. Also the city sands city streets approaching the campus."
He said parking spaces are sometimes shut off, but usually are cleared as fast as the streets. A person should drive at a rate of speed that wouldn't cause any
"Once you slam down on the brakes and you start sliding, it may throw your car out of control."
emergency braking. he said. When a person brakes his car he should take short light pumps on his brakes instead of one hard thrust, he said.
'Don't Slam Brakes'
When moving the car from a stop, a person should never race the motor, he said. "It will heat your tires and melt the ice and you'll never move."
The car should be started slowly in low gear, and shifted quickly into second gear after the car is moving, he said.
When going downhill the driver should make sure his car is under control, and then slip into a lower gear that will give the car braking action, he said.
"The guy who doesn't have his defroster working and doesn't have his tire chains in place, is considered a hazard in bad weather," Chief Skillman said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday,Dec. 11. 1957
The Crow And The Firecracker: A Modern Fable
Once upon a time there was a very rich and talkative crow named Yank Crow that lived in a forest not far enough away. The crow talked in the daytime and in the nighttime. He talked all the time. In addition to his wealth, he had the biggest set of crow muscles in the woods and he talked about them too.
The crow was always losing friends because of his high-toned ways.
Now there lived in this same forest a chicken hawk named Ivan Chicken Hawk who was the enemy of the crow and when the crow lost friends they would become the chicken hawk's friends. This bothered the crow because he wanted to be well liked but didn't know how. So he hired a starling named John Foster Sillybird to go to all the denizens of the forest and try to buy their friendship.
Mr. Sillybird was quite a sight as he flew all over the giant forest with his fat sack of money. The little animals would take the money, then they would laugh at Mr. Sillybird and draw moustaches on pictures of Mr. Sillybird in magazines. This didn't bother him. He felt they were all dumber than he was and it didn't matter if they laughed. Well, things got progressively worse till Ivan Chicken Hawk was out-thinking and out-propagandizing Yank Crow from dawn to dusk.
One day Yank Crow was moping around trying to figure out how to win back his friends, when he had a brilliant idea. He decided he would build a huge firecracker and invite all the animals to the explosion. He knew it would take him some time to make the firecracker so in the meantime he talked about what an explosion it would be and what a good firecracker maker he was.
Some of the animals thought if Yank Crow spent more time working on the firecracker and less time talking it would be a better forest to live in. But that wasn't Yank's opinion. He talked in the daytime and in the nighttime. He talked all the time.
One day shortly before Yank Crow was due to set off his firecracker he heard a tremendous explosion from over the hill, near Ivan Chicken Hawk's perch house. Soon all the little animals came running back and told Yank Crow that while he had been talking, Ivan Chicken Hawk had built the most fantabulous firecracker ever. Some of the little animals didn't even bother to come and see Yank Crow, they just sniggered.
Well, that didn't bother Yank Crow. He blithely shrugged his shoulders and said it didn't matter, that it was the science of firecracker making that mattered, and anyway, just wait until his went off.
The day arrived when Yank Crow said he would set off the firecracker. All the little animals were listening. Yank Crow had a flair for the dramatic so he sat in the top of the biggest tree in the forest and started what he called the count-off—this was a kind of P. T. Barnum way of saying, "I'm going to light the fuse." Well, the stunt didn't work so well the first day because the wind kept blowing Yank Crow's matches out.
So, not to be outwitted by the weather, Yank Crow said that at exactly such-and-such a time in the near future he would strike a match and all the animals would hear the big bang. Some of the little animals thought this was a dodge and a stall but they decided to listen at such-and-such a time anyway.
Not one to save his breath. Yank Crow ballyhooed the firecracker some more. He talked in the daytime and in the nighttime. He talked all the time.
The big day arrived. The wonderful firecracker was sitting on a big rack and Yank Crow had a pocket full of wind-proof firecracker lighters. All the little animals, and even a few big ones were gathered around waiting for the big bang. Yank lit a wind-proof firecracker lighter and set fire to the long fuse of the beautiful firecracker. The fuse popped and sputtered and everyone got ready for the tremendous bang.
The fuse burned shorter and shorter. Yank Crow was still talking. All the little animals were listening. Pretty soon the fuse burned completely down and everyone, except for a stuttering beaver, put their hands to their ears. They waited and waited. Nothing happened.
Yank Crow began to talk. Everyone said, "I didn't hear nothing nohow." That is, everyone except the stuttering beaver. He said, "I heard it. It went s-s-nap. How's come it didn't go B-B-Baroom?" Yank Crow told him to shut up.
The crowd of little animals began to break up and some left for Ivan Chicken Hawk's perch to tell him about the fiasco. Yank Crow began to talk, but no one was listening to him. So he called in John Foster Sillybird and gave him another sack of money.
Moral: Much outcry, little outcome.
—John Eaton
College Educations Too Specialized?
The college has received a grant of $100,000 from the Carnegie Foundation to establish the courses for a three-year program. Three such courses will be offered. One will be conducted in each of the college's three divisions—the humanities, the social sciences, and the physical sciences.
CLAREMONT, Calif. - (IP) - In answer to the contention that college educations are becoming too specialized, Pomona College has launched an experiment this year with divisional courses for its seniors.
Gettysburg College Adds Honor System
GETTYSBURG, Pa. — (IP)— All examinations, term papers, reports, laboratory work, and homework are included in the newly installed honor system, according to a report by the Gettysburg College honor commission.
Fraternity files will now include only past examinations. The faculty will not proctor any tests unless it is necessary. Professors will make themselves available for any questions at the beginning of the exams and then inform the class where they can be contacted during the exam for questioning. The commission suggests the professor then retire to his office.
The oldest known map is a clay tablet made in Babylonia about 2300 B. C., according to Rand McNally's Atlas of World History.
The first U. S. patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins of Burlington, Vt., July 31, 1790 on a process for making pot and pearl ashes.
Only a senior will be eligible to take one of the courses, and he may take only the course offered in the division in which he is concentrating. The courses will offer three units of credit per semester.
from the 1880's to the 1930's will be considered in the humanities course, "Turning Points of Western Culture." The social science seminar on "The Individual and the New Leviathan," will be devoted to problems of large-scale organization in economics and government and the individual's relationship in the changing society. The natural science course on "Turning Points in Physical Science" will consider the evaluation of scientific theory.
The courses will cross boundaries of academic fields. Instructors of history, English, and art will teach the courses in the humanities division. Economics, government and philosophy faculty will teach the social science course, and philosophy, physics and chemistry teachers will instruct the natural sciences course.
The cultural history of Europe
The courses will concentrate on raising questions in the student's mind, rather than on giving him all the answers. Instructors will insist on making comparisons between fields to challenge beliefs which have been uncritically taken for granted. The courses will emphasize that lines of demarcation between academic fields are tentative and conditional.
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trieweekly 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 1912
Dalilu Transan
UNIVERSITY
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
National Advertising Service. Service
Madison Square Garden. New
service: United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
nishment noon during the University year except
Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays,
and examination periods. Entered
as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle ___ Managing Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Banman, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors: Bob Hartley, City Editor; Carol Miller, City Editor; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegraph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary Bray, Sports Editor; Martha Crossler, Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Keneltz,elz, Advertising Manager; Jere
Glover George Pester, Classified Advertising
Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant
Classified Advertising Manager Ted
Winkler Caiman Manager; Steve
Schmidt, Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Yes, we have a studio where you may make recordings for Christmas Presents.
Larry Boston ... Editorial Editor
Jason Del Haley, Jim Siedd, Ass-
sociate Editors.
Solos or Groups
V1 3.4916
Audio House
P.O. Box 2018
New Hampshire
10111 LANE, NEW HAMPSHIRE
L AWRENCE, MASSA
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
M
A Hallmark
COLOR MOVIE
"The Art of Gift Wrapping"
will be shown at 4 P.M. AND 7:30 P.M. THURSDAY, DEC.12
Student Union Trophy Room FREE ADMISSION-FREE REFRESHMENTS
---
Merry Christmas
Night of
Nations Ball
Student Union Ballroom 9-12 Friday, Dec. 13th.
Tickets per Couple
At the Information Booth & Student Union Ticket Office Sponsored by the International Club
$1
---
2 Things To Do Before Vacation:
BRAKE
SERVICE
21
Let Morgan-Mack check the brakes on your car. If tightening or relining is needed, our trained mechanics will do the job well.
TIRES
Let them check the tires for alignment, cuts,and possible breaks. Remember - play it safe on the highway.
MORGAN-MACK
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
714 VERMONT DIAL VI 3-3500
---
Page 3
Around The World
University Daily Kansam
Unemployment Up To 3,200,000
(Compiled from United Press)
Unemployment in November rose by 700,000 to a total of 3,200,000 the highest November figure since 1949-the government reported today in Washington.
The Commerce and Labor departments reported most of the drop in employment came in agriculture, where unusually bad weather accentuated the normal seasonal decline.
In Washington, U., S. officials today dismissed Russia's surprise proposal for high-level East-West peace talks as a "clever propaganda move" to torpedo the NATO summit conference in Paris.
The seasonally adjusted rate of unemployment climbed from 4.6 per cent in October to 5.1 per cent for November, highest the rate has hit since the 5.3 per cent of February, 1955.
Meanwhile, President Eisenhower's decision to attend the NATO summit conference gave new heart to West European diplomats dismayed by Soviet scientific successes and faced with a new Russian propaganda campaign.
At Edwards Air Force Base, Calif,
the Air Force today planned a new assault, possible on Thursday or Friday, on the British-held world speed mark. The Air Force fighter bomber F-101A, the Voodoo, failed to qualify a record-shattering performance Tuesday because a camera which recorded part of the jet's performance failed and prevented official recognition of the flight.
Russian Note Called Propaganda
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., an Army Redstone, the third missile of the week, blasted off in a successful flight Tuesday night. The successful firing of the Redstone came after two smaller missiles were launched earlier in a week of accelerated activity after the failure of the Navy Vanguard to put a baby moon into orbit.
In Manila, the Philippine government announced drastic belt-tightening measures today in an apparent effort to lay the groundwork for a big U.S. stabilization loan.
Philippines Tighten Belts
In a step aimed at slowing the alarming drain of U. S. reserve dollars, the Central Bank suspended bank credit, halted the import of non-essential goods and banned sending dollar profits out of the country.
RECORD SHOPPER
RECORD SHOPPER
12" LONG PLAY RECORDS
First Print — Factory Fresh
Well Known Manufacturer
AUTHENTIC
CARIBBEAN MUSIC
50% OFF LIST
12 FAVORITE
CALYPSO SONGS
Schwann Cat. List $3.98
STEEL BANDS
FROM TRINIDAD
Schwann Cat. List $3.98
FULLY GUARANTEED
Mailing and Handling Charges:
30° First Record;
15° each addt. Record
ALSO:
We Sell All Major Long Play Labels
Every Record from Bop to Beethoven
OUR LOW PRISES:
LIST PRICES:
$2.98 $3.75 $4.25 $9.98 $4.98 $5.99
ALL RECORDS GUARANTEED FACTORY FRESH
Mailing and Handling Charges:
30° First Record;
15° each addt. Record
OUR FIFTH SUCCESSFUL YEAR!
THE RECORD SHOPPER
1650 BROADWAY • SUITE 701
NEW YORK 10 N.Y.
198 Each
Denver Engineer To Visit Campus
Milo S. Ketehum, consulting structural engineer from Denver, will visit KU today and Thursday.
Mr. Ketchum will speak on the subject, "We, Too, Can Build Shell Structures," at 3 p.m. today in 205 Flint. He will lecture on "Structure in Architecture," at a meeting of the KU chapter of the American Institute of Architects at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Union Pine Room.
Mr. Ketchum will meet with architecture classes Thursday and will be guest speaker at a staff dinner of the department of architecture at 6 p.m. in the Student Union.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to regularly Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Episcopal study group, 4 p.m., Canterbury House, "Worship."
TODAY
La reunion de Noel du Cercle Francais aura lieu jeudi le 12 decembre a sept jours après le 14 avril de l'Union Building. (eui qui desent apprendre des noels français sont inimputés repeter arec le choeur à quatre heures mercredi dans la salle 113 Strong)
Social Work-Sociology = Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Informal discussion and coffee. Everyone interested welcome.
Jay James, 5 p.m., Pine Room. Student Union. Attendance required.
El Atenco se reune a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser.
Undergraduate Psychology Club. 7 p.m.
Curry Room, Student Union, Films,
Parents, Conditions" and "Schizophrenia: Hebephrenic Type." Discussion will follow.
The Quill Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Mr. Rotherwell's home, 1400 Indiana St. to meet the students for manuscript transcriptions will be furnished from the Student Union at 7:15 p.m.
Elected Art Club President
Philip Henderson, assistant professor of design, was elected president of the Kansas Federation of Art for next year and re-elected to the board of trustees at the annual meeting in Lindsborg.
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957
KU Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m.
Oread Room. Student Union. Speakers,
Kenneth Davis, National committee,
and Dr. John Ise.
Circle K Club. 7:30 p.m.. 306 A-B-
Student Union. All interested in Kiwanis
sponsored college men's organizations
are welcome.
Delta Phi Delta, 7 p.m., 1642 Indiana. Election.
German Christmas mixed choir rehearsals. 5 p.m. 402 Fraser.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m., Music and Browsing Room, Student Union. John Meixner, instructor in English, will read poetry of Whit Waltheim.
THURSDAY
American Institute of Architects, 7:30 p.m.
Student Union. "Struc-
bBRKH" for ArchitecTs."
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast
follows.
Episcopal study group, 11 a.m. Canterbury House. "Christian Living."
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Domnerstag um 5 Uhr 402 Fraser. Kaffee klatsch und singen. Alle herzlich eingeladen.
Speech I seminar, 3 p.m. 134 Strong
La reunion de Noel d'Cercle Francais
au lieu jeudi 12 decembre a sept
heures du samedi da la salle Jayhawk
d'J Union Building.
Debate squad meeting, 7:15 p.m., 134 Strong.
Delta Phi Delta, 7 p.m., 1642 Indiana.
Election.
Newman Club Executive Committee Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Castle.
EUROPE VACATION
KuKu Meeting 6:30 p.m., Pine Room,
Student Union. Important meeting to organize committees. Attendance required.
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat, Sun., Holidays
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
The Marlboro Man
A lot of man...a lot of cigarette
"He gets a lot to like-filter, flavor, flip-top box."The works. A filter that means business.An easy draw that's all flavor.And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes.
(MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A PRIZED RECIPE)
NEW
"SELF-STARTER"
Just pull the tab
slowly and the
cigarettes pop
up. No digging.
No trouble.
POPULAR FILTER PRICE
Page 4
University Daily Kausan Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957
AUTHORITIES
"TVE FOUND IT!"—Steve Callahan, Independence sophomore, who is the hero in the melodrama "Crock of Gold," discovers the crock as
Vera Stough, Lawrence senior, playing the hero's daughter, looks on. (Daily Kansan photo)
A total of 16 men's houses have volunteered to give blood to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
16 Houses Give Blood To Lawrence Hospitals
The campus blood donation program started about a month ago at the request of the hospital who wished to have a number of types of blood ready when needed.
Representatives from the hospital will come to the houses to type the students blood in a few weeks, Dick Dowell, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore, said Tuesday.
Dowell and John Suder, Cincinnati, Ohio sophomore, are organizing the program for Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, which had given blood for a few years and was called by the hospital to get the program underway.
"The program has progressed quite well in the past few weeks," Dowell
said, "but there is still a need for more houses to join."
Houses include Sigma Chi, Alpha KappaLambda, Varsity House, Battenfield Hall, Foster Hall, Kappa Sigma, Sigma, Alpha Epsilon, Lambda Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Theta ruth O'Leary, Templin, Phi Kappa Tau, Triangle, Delta Upslion, CarPs1, Phi Kappa Alpha and Phi Gamma Delta.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
M
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Crock Of Gold' Scores Hit
Roberto ' s
710 Mass.
VI 3-1086
We Deliver
PIZZA
By JOHN EATON
(Daily Kansan Associate Editor) Amid hisses at the villain and cheers for the hero, the University Players Tuesday night presented the first performance of "The Crock of Gold," a melodrama, in the experimental theater in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Except for a few common opening-night mistakes, the performance was a success. The weight of the show was borne by the villain, portrayed by Paul Culp, class of '57, and the hero, Steve Callahan, Independence, Kam. sophomore.
The heart-rending plot deals with the tribulations of the hero, a poor toiler, who, through a complicated series of events, gets access to a crook of gold which is burloined by the villain after a foul murder. The evil of money has its wicked effect upon the hero and his family. He turns to drink and is framed for the murder, but justice triumphs in a melodramatic court scene.
Classic Figures
The Tuesday night performance was highlighted by the scenes between Culp and Callahan. Both actors create classic melodramatic figures. Culp is particularly fine as a leering and conniving villain. He has a good change of pace, a sense of the comic, and, if a villain from a melodrama can be believable, is utterly convincing.
Callahan, portraying the hard working, dull and sometimes overly honest laborer, is a good contrast to Cuthn's characterization. Although some of Callahan's scenes with his family are rather tedious, his scenes with the villain are well done and an example of a well-developed character. Callahan has excellent diction, a claim one can't make for all members of the cast.
The Bible-quoting daughter of the hero was well played by Vera Stough, Lawrence senior. The role of the young thing relished by all the males, including the viperish villain, can too easily become contrived. Miss Stough avoids this.
Good Directing
Credit must go to Marvin Carlson, Wichita graduate student for his direction. The opening night performance seemed a little long and slow paced at times, but the play is a director's nightmare, with 4 acts and 19 short scenes.
Most of the scenes are fast paced, but the entire production would benefit from faster scene changes and a quicker pace to scenes set in the hero's household. Carlson has done a fine job in helping the actors create distinct and well-developed characters and in blocking action in the small areas afforded by the experimental theater.
Marilyn Honderick, LaCrosse junior, was charming as a skittish household maid. The hero's bedraggled and nagging wife, who isn't satisfied with her husband's lot, was well portrayed by Joyce Elliot, Independence, Mo. junior.
Makeup was good as was the lighting, except for some obvious rough spots. Costumes were impressive, if for no other reason than that they fit.
The play was fun, in spite of a few faults, including a slow pace and forgotten lines, which we hope will be remembered by tonight. See it.
Have a WORLD of FUN!
FASHION
CLASSIC SUIT
Travel with SITA
Unbelievable Low Cost
Europe
60 Days from $585 Orient
SEE MORE SPEND LESS
Many tours include college credit.
th S ar
43-65 Days from $000
Also low-cost trips to Mexico $149 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tour $498 up and Around the World $198 up.
ASK YOU
ITA
WORLD TRAVEL INC.
SITA WORLD TRAVEL, INC. Ask Yo
*travel Agent*
332 S. Michigan
Ave. Chicago 4
HA 7-2557
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th AI Lauter Phone VI 3-1571
EE ME
Graduate Engineers
GRADUATE
DON'T STICK YOUR NECK OUT!
...until you see the AC-GENERAL MOTORS REPRESENTATIVE
on your campus
It is why we repeat "Don't Stick Your Neck Out" until you see the AC representative.
Wednesday, Dec. 11, Thursday, Dec. 12
Your Future depends upon Permanent Security. GM's continuous, long-range Design and Development Program in all fields of engineering and manufacturing . . GM's policy of decentralization . . GM's facilities . . GM's working conditions . . GM's wage advantages . . create individual opportunity for advancement and permanent security.
CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITIES IN
- Avionics
AC
- Inertial Systems
- Computers
- Missile Guidance
- Jet Engine Fuel Controls
Please contact your Placement Director to arrange for interviews with AC-General Motors recruiting representative
THE ELECTRONICS DIVISION
AC SPARK PLUG
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION MILWAUKEE 2, WIS. FLINT 2, MICH.
me
me
Page 5
[Image of two men in conversation, one pointing at the other. The man on the right is wearing a white shirt and dark pants.]
MEDAL COLLECTION-Ed Tatge, Ramona junior, Joe Spurney, Belleville, and Joe Williamson, Rocky River, Ohio freshmen, lock at Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy's collection of medals, which are in Spooner Thayer Museum of Art. (Daily Kansas photo)
Old Roman Tradition
Chancellor's Medal Collection Displayed
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy's collection of medals of medical men and great Americans are among the permanent display of medals and plaques in the Spooner Thayer Museum of Art.
The medals, a Renaissance revival of an ancient Roman tradition, were self-portraits sculptured in metal and given as gifts or tokens of remembrance by famous persons. The collection includes medals dating from the early 15th century.
An original medal made by Pisanello, the famous 15th century Italian sculptor and painter is on display. The collection also includes tokens given by John Quincy Adams and Thomas Jefferson when making peace treaties with the Indians and a medal made by Elden Teft, assistant professor of design, for the Kauses centennial celebration.
"This is a branch of sculpture that most museums don't have," Edward Mascr, museum director said. "We are continually looking for objects to make more complete this type of collection which is not seen very often."
The seven panels in the display also include several plaquettes, which were used as furniture and wall decorations during the Renaissance. Later they were collected as sculpture pieces to set about the home. Those in the collection are primarily religious scenes.
The medals and plaques are made by casting metal in molds or by stamping metal pieces with the desired design. They are made primarily of bronze, but lead, brass, silver and gold are also used.
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Christmas Gift Ideas!
Imported High-Power
BINOCULARS ... as low as $14.99
MEN'S TWO-SUITERS $13.00
Cashmere Finish
ARGYLE SOCKS .79
Folished Cotton CAR COATS _ with quilted lining $13.95
Two 2-week summer workshops, one for elementary school teachers and one for teachers of the trainable mentally retarded children, are being planned by members of the faculty of the School of Education.
"CRU"-NECK SWEATERS $5.95
Two Workshops Being Planned
DRESS BELTS ... $1.00 up
Teachers attending either of the workshops will receive two Univeriety credit hours.
The workshop for elementary school teachers will be held June 3-13. It will concern improved techniques of teaching. The teachers will pick projects to help them develop curriculum material.
Dr. Simon McNeeley, specialist on health, physical education and athletics for the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, will be a guest speaker at the workshop. He will discuss physical fitness of elementary students.
IVY LEAGUE SLACKS in 8 different fabrics $3.98 up
The teachers may enroll in one of nine categories, mathematics, science, reading, music, social studies, language arts, playground activities, guidance in the elementary school and home-school relationships.
Lawrence Surplus
Your Friendly Army & Navy Store 740 Mass. St.
Every evening the latest instructional films will be shown.
Robert W. Ridgway, associate professor of education, will be coordinator of the workshop. Members of the faculty of the School of Education will act as instructors.
The Teachers Workshop in Curriculum and Methods for the Trainable Retarded will be held June 4-14. Enrollment will be limited to 25 because of staff and space, said Alfred H. Moore, assistant professor of education and coordinator of the workshop.
Last summer it was the only such workshop offered in this area. It has only been within the last two years that programs for the trainable retarded have been begun in this area. Thirteen such classes have been started under a state program and though other schools have wanted to start them there have not been enough teachers available.
Both sexes of the bighorn sheep have horns which are never shed.
The U. S. Department of Agriculture estimates farmers bought nearly 600,000 wheel tractors during 1953. About three-fifths were used tractors.
Toledo, Ohio, is the greatest com shipping point in the world, the Lake Erie port being an export center for coal from Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia.
"scottie"
Colorful Guild moccasin in
authentic Indian style ...
hand-beaded and hand-laced on
genuine soft California
cowhide leather. You'll
love walking on the pancake-thin
wedge heel:
A Guild
MOCCASIN
Also Squaw Boots
Ideal Christmas Gifts
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Mass. Ph.VI 3-9871
Christmas GIFT HEADQUARTERS
Do your Christmas shopping now! Here in Lawrence you can find a complete selection of gifts for everyone on your Christmas list. Shop with these Lawrence merchants and avoid the last minute rush in your home town. By shopping in Lawrence now you will have many more items to choose from than after Christmas vacation starts. Shop now, here.
VICKERS GIFT SHOP
GEORGE'S PIPE SHOP
CAMPUS WEST
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
UNDERWOOD'S
GIBBS CLOTHING
REDMAN'S SHOES
PAT READ
CARL'S
MOSSER-WOLF
TERRY'S
ELRING'S GIFT SHOP
WEAVER'S
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Dec. 11, 1957
10
(Daily Kansan photo)
GET SET, GO—Three women get set for a relay in Tuesday's intramural swimming meet. (Darryl Kaisan photo)
Kappa Alpha Theta Wins IM Swim Meet; Epps Top Star
Kappa Alpha Theta won the women's intramural swimming meet Tuesday night and Peggy Epps took individual honors by gaining three firsts, one of them breaking the old record set last year by her.
The four top teams in the meet beside the Thetaas with $35\frac{1}{2}$ points, include Sellards Hall, 29; Gamma Phi Beta, $26\frac{1}{4}$; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 20, and Alpha Omicron Pi, $17\frac{1}{4}$. An estimated 80 women took part in the meet.
60-yard freestyle—1, Epps, Seliards Hall. 2, Mary Wade, Gamma Phi's. 3, Kay Morgan, Delta Gamma. 41:9.
Miss Epps took first place in the 40-yard backstroke, the 60-yard freestyle and the 40-yard freestyle. In the short freestyle race she had a time of .258 which broke the $ _{27.71/2} $ recod she held.
Summary of events;
Crawl for form—1, Judith Carr,
Thetas. 2, Janice Brown, Delta Delta
Delta. 3, Wade.
40-yard breaststroke—1, Wade. 2.
Jane Flagler, AOPi. 3, Liz Wooster,
Corbin Hall. ;33.8.
Russian Hockey Team Wins
Elring's Gifts
Breastroke for form-1, Teresa Gainey, Kappas. 2, Jane Combes, Jayettes. 3, May Ledgerwood, Sellards.
STOCKHOLM — (UP)— Russia's touring amateur hockey team scored four goals in the second period to overwhelm a Swedish all-star squad, 7-3, Tuesday night in an exhibition game. The Russians recently toured Canada, winning five of eight games.
40-yard freestyle—1, Epps. 2, Martha Maxwell, Thetas. 3, Judy Carr, Thetas. .258.
Open every night next week.
Choose gifts for everyone from our fine selection.
We gladly gift wrap and will mail for you.
924 Mass.
Across from Bell's Music Co.
40-yard backstroke—1, Epps. 2,
Maxwell. 3, Sarah Wilen, Alpha Chi
Omega. 31.6.
40-yard sidestroke—1, Flagler. 2.
Judy Morgan, Kappas. 3, Susie
Thompson, Kappas. 36.
80-yard medley—1,Thetas. 2. Chi
Omega, 3, Tri Delts. 34.6.
60-yard mley—1, Gamma Phi's.
2, Sellards, 3, AOP's. 45.
Omega. 3, Tri Delts. :54.6.
Diving—1, Ellen Welch, Jayettes.
2, Yvonne Schenck, Gertrude Sellards Pearson. 3, Julia Harmer,
Thetas.
WeaverS
Our 100th Year of Service
because she appreciates nice things give her
Santa is flying. He's pulling a sleigh full of gifts down the chimney. They are falling away.
for her purse
Chanel No.5
2
$5.00
the most treasured name in perfume at her fingertips Chanel No.5
Weaver's Cosmetic Shop—Street Floor
Sooners Will Start Workouts Next Week
NORMAN, Okla —(UP)— Daily workouts will start next week for the Oklahoma Sooners in preparation for their Orange Bowl football contest with Duke New Year's Dav
The Sooners opened preliminary practice sessions Tuesday with another drill slated for the Big Eight football champions Thursday.
Seixas, Flam Lead Cup Team
NADS, Flam Lead Cup Team BRISBANE, Australia —(UP)— The United States Davis Cup team once again will call on steady Vic Seixas and unpredictable Herb Flam for the singles assignments against Belgium in the inter-zone finals starting tomorrow.
Surprise Your Family
with an unusual gift—something they have never seen. Round-the-world gifts for Mom, Sis, Dad or Brother and the aunts and uncles too!
Drop in daytime or Thursday evening—we'll be happy to help you with all your gift problems. Complimentary gift wrapping and wrapping to mail.
Vickers Gift Shop
across from the Granada
For Smart Christmas Giving!
Lazyday Pajamas
by PLEETWAY
A man's home is his "castle"—and nobody caters to his comfort like Pleetway! Whether sleeping, lounging or watching TV, you'll enjoy the free, easy styling of Lazyday Pajamas. They're smart-looking—and Pleetway's famous comfort features just can't be duplicated! Striped or plain Basque top in fine combed yarn. Quality broadcloth trousers are slack-tailored with pleats and pockets. Smartly gift boxed. Sizes A, B, C, D. $5.95
Color combinations: Striped or solid color tops with contrasting solid color trousers.
905 Mass. St.
Carl's GOOD CLOTHES
Dial VI 3-5353
Page 7
Team UP) team y Vie Flam against finals
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957 University Daily Kansan
IM Basketball Now In Full Swing
Twelve games were played in intramural basketball Tuesday, the second day of competition, with four games in fraternity A, one in fraternity B and seven in independent B.
Sigma Chi defeated Sigma Nu 40-30 in fraternity A play, as Diz DeHarb with 12 points and Joe Morris with 10 led the winners. Chet Vanna had 12 for SigmaNu.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Delta Upsilon 36-32. It was all Bob Kramer for SAE, as their star forward scored 22 points. Jim Holt had 14 for the losers.
Balanced Attack for AKL
Another fraternity A game ended with a 37-29 Alpha KappaLambda victory over Tau Kappa Epsilon. It was a balancedattack for AKL, with Art Glass and Chuck Elvin each scoring8 and Gary Johnson 7. Wayne Hogan's 10 points was high forthe TKE's and the game.
Delta Tau Delta defeated Phi Delta Theta 27-23 in another fraternity A game. Dave Blackburn had 10 and Dennis Kindsvater 8 for the Delts and for the Phi Delts the scoring leaders were Kent Floerke and Frank Becker with 8 each. Bob Mettlen 7 and Jim Steerman 6.
Other scores:
Fraternity B—Sigma Chi 24, Kappa Alpha Psi 23.
Independent B—Chemical Engineers 44, Carruth-O'Leary 15; Stephenson 17, Liahona 13; Grace Pearson 29, Nuggets 26; Hicks 35, Pearson 9; Boosers 24, Navy ROTC 13; Delta Function 44, McCook 28; Nu Sigma Nu 41, Don Henry 8.
Today's games:
Fraternity A—Phi Kappa Psi vs. Triangle, 4:15.
Independent A—Oread vs. Pearson. 5:15; Jacks vs. ICBM. 6:15; Carruth-O'Leary vs. Phi Chi. 7:15.
All A games are played in Robinson annex.
Independent B—Jolliffe vs. Oread, 4:15, east court; Foster vs. Clods, 4:15, west court.
Independent C—Jolliffe vs. Carruth-O'Leary, 5:00, west court; Pokes vs. 69'ers, 5:00, east court; KHK vs. Jim Beam, 5:45, west court; Cisabs vs. 1800's, 5:45, east court; Navy ROTC No. 2 vs. ASME, 6:30, west court; Army ROTC vs. Hocks, 6:30, east court; Navy ROTC No. 1 vs. Bad Seeds, 7:15, west court.
All B and C games are played in Robinson Gymnasium.
IT'S BRAND NEW- The Baldessa I 35MM CAMERA
- New Type Turn Key Rapid Wind
- Never have to take camera from eye
- Synchronized m-x
- Built in self timer
- Shutter speeds 10 sec. to 1/300 sec.
- Light value settings
- 45mm f/2.8 Baldanar lens
- Small & compact in size
- Imported by Kling Inc., the importers of Linhof Hrriflex-Kilfit & other famous brands
Case 7.95
Camera only 33.75
MOSSER-WOLF INC.
1107 Massachusetts
"across from the courthouse"
Junior Barry Crawford was elected captain of next year's Kansas cross country team at the team's annual banquet Tuesday night in the Student Union.
Distance Team Names Crawford
Crawford succeeds Jerry McNeal, who captained the Jayhawkers to their 11th straight cross country title this year, a distinction which no other team in either the Big Six, Big Seven or Big Eight conference has achieved.
Coach Bill Easton announced seven varsity lettermen. They are McNeal, Crawford, Tom Skutka, Don Greenlee, Cliff Cushman, Brian Travis and Bob Harrison. McNeal is the only senior.
Easton also named four freshman numeral winners. They are Billy Mills, Dan Ralston, Tuck Mason and Nick Marcellino.
Easton also outlined a change in the Kansas Relays whereby all high school participants will have to qualify for each event. They then run in one class only. He said that this would allow for a bigger and better Relays since it will let only the top talent participate and against each other.
Gifts
For Little Brothers and Sisters
It's love at first sight when a little girl (or anyone) sees one of these little animals: Kittens, Poodles, Skunks, all "shampooable," their fur long and soft, their wistful expressions unforgettable. Hurry—they'll go fast! $2.50 up
Jaguar, Austin, Ford, MG—toy imports for small brother!
The "Matchless Matchbox" series of authentic scale cars and trucks is British-built, all metal. Quality toys—made to last... 49c ca.
Games—Dolls—Toys-H-O Train Sets—Paint Kits
UNDERWOOD'S
1215 W. Sixth
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
---
1234567890
it's the talk of the town!
Bernhard Altmann's.
shetland sweater
slacks and shorts with this
Top your favorite skirt—
versatile long sleeved pullover,
in pure solt Shetland wool.
Light Blue, Banker's Grey.
Charcoal Brown, Navy, Poppy Red.
Medium Grey, Natural.
10. 95
Campu WEST
GUIDE to CHRISTMAS VALUES
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957
On The Hill
Spotlight On Holiday Activities
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will hold its Christmas dance Friday evening at the chapter house. Chap- erones will be Mrs. Pauline Warren and Mrs. Douglas Beene.
. . .
Kappa Sigma
Mrs. Edna Stuart, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough and Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie will be the chaperones at the Kappa Sigma fraternity Christmas buffet and dance this evening. It will be held at the chapter house.
Miller Hall
Miller Hall will hold a tree trimming party this evening. Its Christmas formal, Snow Fantasy, will be held Friday evening with Mrs. R. G. Roche, Miss Julia Willard, Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley and Mrs. Edna Ramage as chaperones.
Delta Upsilon
Delta Upsilon fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority will be hosts to the underprivileged children of Lawrence this evening. The Christmas party will be held at the fraternity chapter house.
***
Alpha Gmicron Pi
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and Alpha KappaLambda fraternity held an exchange dinner Thursday at the chapter houses. The chapelones were Mrs.W.R.Banker and Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley.
Members of the sorority attend the annual Founders' Day luncheon Saturday at the Carriage Club in Kansas City, Mo.
***
Gertrude Sellards Pearson
Certrude Sellards Pearson Hall will hold a tree trimming party from 7 until 11 p.m. today. It will be followed by a dance.
...
The pledge classes of Chi Omega
sorority and Sigma Chi fraternity held a tree trimming party Sunday afternoon at the Chi Omega house
Tau Kanna Ensilon
...
The Red Carnation Ball of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity was held Saturday in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel. The chaperones were Mrs. Virginia Brammer, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. Glenn Sewell and Mrs. H. Clay Wallace.
***
Pi Kappa Alpha
The pledge class of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity held a dinner dance Friday evening at the chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Mildred Wogan and Mr. and Mrs. Ralston Forrest.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
***
Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity recently held an exchange dinner. The chaprones were Mrs. Wanda Dick-Pedilie and Mrs. H. W. Jenkins.
Triangle
The winter formal of Triangle fraternity was held Friday evening in the Kansas Room of the Student Union. The chaperones were Mrs. W, R. Banker, Mrs. Anna McDorman, Mrs. Louis Stanley and Mrs. R. F. Cole.
Delta Gamma
Alumnae of Delta Gamma sorority and their children will be the guests of the active chapter at a Christmas party this evening.
***
The sorority will hold its Christmas formal Friday evening at the chapter house. A dinner will proceed the dance. The chaperones will be Mrs. Mary Wigton, Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow, Mrs. Thomas Clark and W. Mildred Wogan.
Members of the sorority will hold their annual Christmas party for the blind of Lawrence Monday evening.
Kappa Alpha Theta
Upperclass women from Gertrude
Sellars Pearson Hall and members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority held an exchange dinner Tuesday Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough is the sorority housemother.
* *
Pi Beta Phi
Pi Beta Phi sorority and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity recently held a brunch at the fraternity chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Gordon Yockey and Mrs. John Skie. The sorority recently entertained members of the faculty at a dessert coffee.
***
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold its annual Christmas tree trimming dinner dance Friday evening at the chapter house.
Thursday the members of the pledge class will be entertained by the Lawrence alumnae at a Christmas tea, and they will also be guests of the pledge class of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity for a tree trimming party at the fraternity chapter house.
The pledge class will hold a coke party Saturday with the pledge class of Alpha Phi sorority.
***
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Alpha KappaLambda fraternity will hold a tree trimming party Thursday evening at the chapter house. The Christmas formal will be Saturday evening with Mrs. Eleanor Mitchell, Mrs. Ross Cole, Miss Julia Willard and Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley as chaperones.
Guests at the fraternity Christmas dinner will be Mrs. Elizabeth Lawson, assistant director of the campus film library, George M. Beckmann, associate professor of history, and G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory.
Kihm-Cookson
Party, Skit Tell Pinnings
***
Announced at the Delta Tau Delta Orchid Formal Saturday was the pinning of Virginia Kihm, Hutchinson sophomore, to Grant Cookson, Green, a 1957 graduate, Announcing the pinning were Bill Wilson, Colby, Jim Cieland, Wakecney, and Ralph Robinson, Humansville, Mo. seniors, and Bob Wagner, Concordia junior.
Everley-Eichorn
A skit was used to announce the pinning of Parbara Everley, Fudora, to Joe Eichorn, Lawrence, both juniors. She is a member of Chi Omega sorority and he is affiliated with Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Thoses announcing the skit were Nancy Harbes, Topeka junior, and Virginia Horton, Wichita sophomore. A pinning party was held at the Dine-A-Mite.
--at
Roach-Ryan
The pinning of two Kansas City, Mo. sophomores, Sue Roach and George W. Ryan, jr., has been announced by her sorority, Alpha Phi. He is a member of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity.
TUX RENTALS &
SALES
Complete formal accessories-
diebolt's 843 massachusetts
Greek House Activities
Sigma Kappa
Sigma Kappa sorority has announced the initiation of Carol Mellinger, Melford; Jo Challman, Galva, Iowa; Barbara Bolander, Fredonia; June Carter, Linecoln Neb.; Mary Jane Carter, Danville, Ill; Helen Glaze, St. Louis, Mo.; Beverly Wilkin, Burlingame, and Jo Evans, St. Louis, Mo. All are sophomores.
* *
Sigma Nu
Ron Claiborne, Amarillo, Tex junior, has been elected president of Sigma Nu fraternity. Other officers are Mike Cusack, Joolin, Mo. junior vice president; Al Higdon, Wichita senior, secretary; Chester Vanatta, Bartlesville, Okla. junior, treasurer; Dusty Barr, Kansas City, Mo. junior, executive council member at large
Tom Rost, Topeka junior, assistant treasure; Roger Hendrix, Coffeyville sophomore, chaplain; Bill
***
Harper, Topeka sophomore, reporter;
Park McGee, Olathe senior, marshal; Mitch Foster, Birmingham, Mich.
junior, sentinel; Larry McKown, El Dorado junior, and Dick Kosar
Concordia junior. Inter-fraternity Council representatives.
Tau Kappa Epsilon
--only
$2.98
Frank Frueckenthal, Overland Park senior, has been elected president of Tau Kappa Epsilon traternity. Other officers are Ken Wainwright, Syracuse senior, vice president; Gary Shields, Great Ben' junior, secretary; Dan Fitzgerrell, Springfield, Mo. senior, treasurer Howard Haselwood, Wichita junior, historian; Jerry Seyb, Iola sophomore, schoohship chairman Jim Beach, Wichita senior, pledga traimer; Philip McCollum, Logar sophomore, sergeant at arms, and George Epps, sophomore rush chairman.
Ph. VI 3-1306
445 Tenn. St.
PAT READ
INDIAN TRADER
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
- Hand Loomed Ties
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
Open
9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M.
Open Evenings By Appointment
Open
Soft Berets Popular
The beret is back again. It is a hat adapted from the baque beret having a round, flat crown of varying width.
When worn off the face (and many of this season's berets are easily manipulated) it can frame the face in a "halo" beret.
When worn flat it is similar to a "pancake" and can be tilted over either ear.
A "mush and milk festival" was held in a Nebraska town in 1873 in order to raise money for a brass band.
Give a Lasting Gift of Jewelry From Terry's
Come in to Terry's to look over our fine selection of quality jewelry
FOR MEN
Watches
Billfolds
Rings
Jewel Cases
Travel Alarms
FOR WOMEN
Diamonds
Fashion Sets
Pearls
French Purses
Clock Radio
914 Mass.
Terry's
VI 3-2572
WHAT CAN I GIVE THE MEN ON MY LIST?
It's Easy!
Select a Gift From These Fine Items
Tobacco Pouches $ .25 to 7.50
Cigarette Cases .25 to 25.00
Pipe Racks and
Humidors 1.00 to 15.00
George's
727 Mass.
Shop
Gibbs
Special purchase of regular $3.95 and $4.95 Sport Shirts.
Give Him Sport Shirts
A wide variety of patterns and collar styles. Plaids, checks and stripes in regular or ivy styles.
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
WILLIAMS
MARGARET THROM
1970
MARILYN LUSK
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Throm, Overland Park, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Margaret Anne, to Richard D. Nordstrom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al Nordstrom, Newton.
Winter Engagements Are Told
Miss Throm is a senior in the College and is a member of Alpha Phi sorority and Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity. Mr. Nordstrom was graduated from the School of Business in 1954 and attended the School of Law. He is affiliated with Delta Upsilon fraternity and Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity.
No wedding date has been set.
To keep popcorn from drying out make a humidifier by cutting out strips of blotter and soaking them in salt water. Then place the strips inside a jar and place the popcorn inside. If the strips dry, soak them in salt water again.
The engagement of Marilyn Lusk to Robert Ruwart has been announced by her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lusk, Jr., Butler, Mo. Mr. Ruwart is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Ruwart, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Lusk is a junior in the College and is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Mr. Ruwart is a sophomore in engineering at Kansas City University.
The couple has not chosen a date for the wedding.
The first ready-to-wear suits for men were made in Boston about 1830 by John Simmons, founder of Simmons College.
Mexico has a record sugar crop this year.
Sorority Pledge Classes Plan Buffet For Thursday
Members of sorority pledge classes will hold a buffet at 3:00 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union Ballroom.
The buffet is sponsored by the Junior Panhellenic Council. Skits will be given by Alpha Phi Omega and Gamma Phi Beta and "The Triads and Jan" will sing.
Special guests at the banquet will be Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Miss Mary Peg Hardman and Miss Pat Patterson, assistant deans of women.
Members of the buffet committee are Nancy Sheehan, River Forest, Ill, Barbara Kellier, Kansas City, Mo., Carol Abernathy, Kansas City, Kan./ and Jan Jackson, Lawrence, all sophomores.
Cardigans Always Good
Wear the traditional cardigan in the traditional way or turn it around and button it down the back. This season, fashion is a matter of individual taste.
When wearing the sweater buttoned in front, add a pin to the hipline or a scarf at the throat. When wearing it buttoned in the back
When choosing a sweater for a plaid skirt it is best to match the predominant color. When combining two colors remember this year's color combinations brown and black, royal blue and black, blue and green.
KU's chapters of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma XI, honorary scientific fraternity, were the first west of the Mississippi river.
On the program committee are Kay Prothman, Kansas City, Mo. Virginia Baker, Wichita and the Sentirey, Hutchinson, sophomores, and Susie Vawter, Kansas City, Mo. junior.
Members of the entertainment committee are Elaine Browne, Kansas City, Kan., Saundra Hayn, Wichita, Jo Novak, Minneapolis, Minn., and Peggy Kallos, Horton, all sophomores.
TED BURKE
GIRLS
SHOES RESTYLED
New style put on old styled heels
Refinished and dyed
PATTI SHOE SERVICE
1017 Mass.
(Next to Varsity Theater)
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
We Are Reordering
Berlioz Requiem
Two 12" LP's Pressed in Vinylite
Reserve Your Copy Now
V1 3.4916
Audio House
1811 New Haven, CT
LARREN E. BANEK
$12 (Sales limited to participants)
Miss Santa Is Coming Your Way! Vote for
"Miss Santa"
Thursday, Dec. 12-Friday, Dec.13
At The INFORMATION BOOTH ON JAYHAWK BLVD.
Choose YOUR Favorite Miss Santa
Pictures on Display at the Information Booth
VOTE BY BALLOT - ID CARDS REQUIRED
Independent Cleaners
$5 Worth of Cleaning
Hixon's
Deluxe Portrait
Ober's Jr. Miss
$5 Gift Certificate
MISS SANTA WILL RECEIVE GIFTS FROM THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS
ITS...
Allison-Thomas Florists Dozen Roses
Carter's Stationery Box of Stationery
Campus West
MacShore Blouse
Student Union Cafeteria Two Steak Dinners
Campus Hideaway Pizza for Two
S.U. Bookstore
$5 Gift Certificate
Corn's Studio of Beauty Shampoo and Set
Weaver's Box of Hane's Seamless Stockings
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Dec. 11, 1957
British Wit Spices Debate
Wit, combined with "that British air" of two English debaters, and a topic of international significance, afforded an evening of high entertainment for a capacity crowd in Strong Auditorium Tuesday night.
The students from the University of Cambridge, England, opposed KU's debate team of John Eland, Topeka second-year law student, and Lee Baird, Newton senior, on the topic "Resolved: That the United States has yet to prove her capacity for world leadership."
References to England as the "island country" and the "red coats" by KU's team and references to
"ivy league" and "sputniks" by the British team added zest to the debate.
Leadership Not Accepted
David Ritchie Fairbairn, the first to debate the affirmative for Cambridge, said the challenge for world leadership has not yet been accepted by the United States.
He said if any country is a leader it is Russia for building up Eastern Europe, China and the Middle East. James Neil Crichton-Miller, the other Englishman, said he didn't think there had been a world leader since the days of Rome.
Keep Nations Happy
strength is so great that they will not attack us or any of our neighbors." KU's Eland said.
Baird said of the United States, "We're the only nation which has gone out, conquered a country and then turned right around and built it up again."
Keep Nations Happy "We must keep the nations on our side happy and at the same time convince the Russians that our
Fairbairn appeared more serious than his partner. Both debaters from Cambridge captured the audience before they even began the debate question.
E. C. Buehler, professor of speech,
acted as moderator for the debate.
Columbus is the largest city area wise in Ohio, the city having almost 100 square miles of land within its boundaries.
U. S. exports of feed grains in 1956-57 dropped almost 20 per cent compared with the 1955-56 marketing year.
FREE Student Union Activities
DANCE LESSONS
Thursday, Dec. 12, 7:30-9 p.m.
Room 305, Student Union FREE REFRESHMENTS
4 KU Debate Teams To Go To Winfield
Four teams of the KU debate squad will participate in the Southwestern College tournament at Winfield Friday and Saturday.
Kenneth Iryb, Fort Scott senior, and Ray Nichols, Lawrence sophomore; Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan., and Lee Baird, Newton, seniors, will represent the senior division.
Larry Ehrlich, Russell, Alan Kimball, Derby, David Rockhold, Winfield, and Brian McCown, Hutchinson, all freshmen, will represent the junior division.
"This is a major tournament of the year," said Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech. "Some of the roughest competition will probably be Nebraska University, Southwestern Missouri State and Southern Methodist."
About 40 schools from five or six states with over 100 teams will be represented at the tournament.
Six preliminary rounds will be held with the eight best teams in each division chosen to go into the quarter finals.
Irby and Nichols won the senior division and Ehrlich and Kimball the junior division in the recent Central College tournament at Edmond, Okla.
Wilmer A. Linkugel, instructor of speech and drama, and Dr. Giffin will accompany the teams to Winfield.
The KU squad won first place in both the junior and senior divisions in this tournament in 1953, second in senior division in 1955, and first in junior division in 1956.
Speech Office Now In Strong
The move of the official office of the speech and drama department from Green Hall to 116 Strong was completed Tuesday. New furniture for the office was delivered today.
Three offices, that of E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech, and Wilmer A. Linkugel, instructor of speech and drama, are now in 116 Strong.
The office of Phil Tompkins, instructor of speech, and three assistant instructors of speech, James Roever, Gary Lehman and Heywood Davis, are located in 301 Strong.
Inge's Play Called'Best'
Another play by William Inge, 1935 KU graduate and Pulitzer Prize winner, opened in New York City Thursday and has been called his best by some critics.
"Dark at the Top of the Stairs," now showing at the Music Box in New York City, "shapes up as a winner on Broadway," in the words of Louis Calta of the New York Times. Mr. Calta said in his column Saturday that the play drew the praise of all the New York critics.
Brooks Atkinson, who reviewed the play for the Times, said it was the best of Mr. Inge's works, which include "Come Back, Little Sheba," "Picnic" for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1953, and "Bus Stop."
The play is directed by Elia Kazan, and stars Teresa Wright, Pat Hingle and Eileen Heckert. The characters are middle class people living in Oklahoma in the early 1920's.
"The scenes reveal the lonely agony of people who live together without really knowing one another, suffering in silence, communicating only when situations are desperate," Atkinson said in his review.
'King Henry IV' Film To Be Presented
The film of "King Henry IV," made by the KU television studios, will be shown at the University Theatre Christmas party at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the green room of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The party is for the theatre staff, student actors, crew members and friends of the University Theatre. Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama, is in charge of the play.
An American ambassador is always addressed as "Your Excellency."
FILMS FINISHED F-A-S-T
24 hour service
See us for Kodak color and black-and-white films too
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP
Don Crauford • Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Kodak
Kodak
NEW-Scanner Plus
New-Scanner Plus
摄像师
for little evenings
for little evenings filled with unexpected drama—
THE DINNER PUMP
D
with unexpected drama—
THE DINNER PUMP
A. White dyeable brocade
B. Vinyl/copper kid
C. White satin
D. Gold or silver kid
B
Priced $9.95 to $14.95
Sizes 4 to 10—AAAA to B
Mid Town Formals
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
c
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957 University Daily Kansan I
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted, with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Delaware Campus.
FOR RENT
CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT: Closets. built-ins. For married couple only. No drinking. S11 Ohio. 12-13
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed睡房 porch, electric wall mounted steel building Compensation to KU and business district Adults only, 742 Ohio. 12-11
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED HOUSE, all one floor. Two car garage, newly furnished. One room machine furnished. For a couple or two boys. Ph. VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-13
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass Vanity VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
RADIO REPAIRS
Driscold Beauty Shop 943 Mass. VI_3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-330
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risks Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. IV 3-4141
Roger's Lauderdale-II VI 3-3303
1407 Mass.
Gravit's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass V1 3-3055
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-818 or see by calling at rear basement door 520 La. t
Private residence (contemporary design, large swimming pool with diving board) catering to young men will have one January and two February vacancies Kitchen privileges optional. For appointment Ph. VI 3-9635. 12-41
HOUSE at 825 Rhode Island, has 2 fur-
ilished apartments. $90 per month. I
families could use it. Contact Acm
Cleaners or see Owen Edgert. t
TWO_BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, private entrance & bath, garage, utility room washer furnished, newly decorated, close to KU. Boys or couple, very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-16
TWO ROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT, utilities paid. Ph. VI 3-4984 be-
fore 5 p.m. and VI 3-1871 after 5 p.m.
19.10
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT. $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3628 after
5 p.m. 1-8-58
SINGLE ROOM, large and well furnished with cooking facilities and garage. Close to KU, $25 a month. Call VI 3-6696.
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service. Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginner's our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio 908 Moe, VI 3-6838. ff
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterna-
tions on men's and women's clothes. Also
drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657,
1400 Tenn. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W. 20th St. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 111 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Admor, Mgr. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED
Prompt and efficient service "Regular
rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8600.
EXPÈRIENCIED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629. tf
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas -
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
etc. etc. Sure we have alligators,
fish, turtles etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
DRESS. MAKING AND ALTERATIONS.
Cp: Alma Smith; et al. Cta. Ola Smith;
1811; Mass. Ph. VI. 3-2663.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8911. tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL, COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing-with soft natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Pn. VI 30953 or 3594
3594
12-20
TUTORING IN GERMAN by wife of
native instructor, a native German,
formerly on KU faculty herself. Will tu-
lor Geraint at any level including preparation for PH. D. language requirement.
Call VI 3-3369. 12-16
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass-Ph. VI. 3804
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
TYPIST Experienced; theses, term pa-
raments; current service. VI 3-7184
*West 20th St*
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type the terms, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Virri, VI 3-8600. tf
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822 1-30sJ
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take ad vantage of one-half price rates on Time based postpaid magazines—both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal way to receive the publications at the ½ price rate of your year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape, $70. Used six times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass. VI 2-4952. 12-12
APPLES, FEARS AND APPLE CIDER at Hammonds Orchard 8 miles Southeast.
Come out at all times whether you see our ad or not. 12-16
STUFFED ANIMAL TOYS, make lovely Christmas gifts. Reasonable prices. Ph. VI-3 3414 after 1 p.m. 12-16 TUXEDO, size about 42. Fine quality, practically new. Also white dinner jacket. 938 Missouri. 12-12
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and define charts and diagrams not found in course material. Complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery For your copy call VI 3-7533 or VI 2-1697-.
We Stock The
COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
PRACTICALLY NEW PORTABLE record player, 3 speed Magnavox—tone control. Will sacrifice. Ph. VI 2-0306. 12-13
IMPORTED SKI SWEATERS for sale at reduced price. Ph. VI 2-0286 after 5 p.m. 12-16
RCA VICTOR 3 speaker tape recorder for sale, 1 year old. Call VI 2-0753 after 3:30 p.m. 12-17
LOST
GERMAN SHEPHERD MALE PUP 414
months old. Papers available.
house broken, price $125 Call Vince Riley at
VI 3-061 to make appointment. 12-13
LOST: Woman's purse containing all personal belongings, at Allen Field House about 9 p.m. Wed. Phone VI 3-8830.
SHEAFFER SNORKEL PEN—burrgury with gold and silver top—name inscribed —Dorothy L. Treckett. Call VI 3-100, reward. 12-13
RUST COLORED PURSE use Tuesday morning in Student Union bowling alley. Need contents badly. Call Betty Harrison, VI 3-6060. 12-13
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic party supplies,lant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-0350
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Marlboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3484.
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Contact Adam and help drive. Dorm, Ottawa University Ph. 1492. 12-18
ONE MAN to fill vacant seat on car trip to Mexico City and New Orleans over Christmas vacation. Call Opdahl, VI 3-5552. 12-13
Robuito's
710 Mass.—VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
A new idea in smoking...
Sal
Salem
em
refreshes your taste
Menthol Fresh
Salem
FILTER CIGARETTES
Salem
- menthol fresh
- rich tobacco taste
- most modern filter
Created by R. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
Salem adds a wholly new quality to smoking . . . refreshes your taste just as a sudden breeze on a warm Spring day refreshes you. Rich tobacco taste with a new surprise softness . . . menthol-fresh comfort . . . most modern filter, through which flows the freshest taste in cigarettes. Smoke refreshed . . . pack after pack . . . get a carton of Salems!
Take a Puff...It's Springtime
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1957
FLINT
HERE'S TO NUMBER 12—Jerry McNeal, Wayzata, Minn. senior, who captained the cross-country team to its 11th consecutive conference title this fall, congratulates next year's captain, Berry Crawford, Boise, Idaho junior, who was elected to the position at the annual cross-country team banquet Tuesday night. Daily Korean photo. Story on Page 7.
(Daily Kansan photo. Story on Page 7.)
KU Line Coach Named
Kansas Athletic Director A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg Wednesday announced appointment of Bobby Goad, former all-conference end at Oklahoma, as line coach on the staff of newly-named football coach Jack Mitchell.
Goad, who played on Oklahoma teams of 1946 through 1949, was head coach at Chickasha, Okla., high school in 1950. During the 1951 and 1952 seasons he was line coach at Texas Tech while Mitchell, also an Oklahoma great, was backfield coach
at Tech.
"Bobby will fit right into our plans." Mitchell commented. "He is thoroughly familiar with our offense and procedures. All the coaches are very glad to have him with us."
The more varied your experience, the more valuable you will be to a company, was the conclusion drawn at the third career conference this fall sponsored by the School of Business.
Hints For Job Interviews
The career conference, which discussed training programs, personnel work, and what the employer is looking for in a new employe, was held Tuesday night in Bailey Auditorium.
If you changed your major, don't worry about what the interviewer will think. Remind him that you have this additional experience to help you on the job. Your educa-
AWS Names 8 To Committees
Eight chairmen of various committees for the High School Leadership Day steering committee were announced at a meeting of the Associated Womens Students Senate Tuesday.
The chairmen are Mary Jo Burke, Topeka, and Betsy Fernie. Hutchinson, freshmen; Gladys E. Knupp, Washington, Iowa, Kathryn A. Hupp, Wichita, Janet Sue Mangan, Prairie Village, Julia A. Herrick, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores; Judith Anne Heller, Pittsburg, and Gretchen Engler, Hutchinson, juniors.
Mary A. Littrell, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, said final selection of the steering committee was made early this week after several weeks of careful elimination by a special committee, which was assisted by the AWS Senate.
The first meetings of the committee are scheduled for Thursday noon in the Student Union and 4 p.m. Friday in the office of Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women.
High School Leadership Day Feb. 22 will provide senior women who are outstanding high school leaders an opportunity to have a preview of the possibility of leadership at KU.
A map made by Ptolemy at Alexandria about 150 A.D. represents only the "habitable portion of the globe" — about one-third of the northern hemisphere.
good
for your
face!
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
virtually impossible to start in personnel or industrial relations work after graduation. Prospective personnel workers must have experience in industry. Production experience is invaluable. However most people begin as clerks.
tion will be broader than that of most people applying for a job, the students were told.
"Don't hedge when talking to the interviewer. Tell him exactly why you dropped out," John Modlin, personnel manager of Jensen-Salsbury Laboratories, Inc., Kansas City, Mo., said. "The interviewer will find out anyway from the references which you furnish him."
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Sincerity, integrity, loyalty, efficiency and generosity of time and work are the most valued characteristics in employes, Mr. Briggs said.
Old Spice
Old Spice AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Before accepting a training program, learn as much as you can about the company by reading about its history, reading its brochures and talking to its employees. Mr. Sparks emphasized. Make sure you know where you will end up after you finish the program. Find out if you will have much opportunity to supervise, to get ahead in the company, and how much the company expects of you.
Refreshing antiseptic action heals razor nicks, helps keep your skin in top condition. 1.00 plus tax
SHULTON New York • Toronto
"There is too much worry about military training," Charles Briggs, vice president in charge of engineering for The Marley Co. in Kansas City, Mo., said. "You can't do anything about it. Neither can the employer. Our company depends on having many good men in the service who will return to the company after their tour of duty."
Pizza Delivered VI 3-9111
"We like people who are on the rebound from their second job," James T. Sparks, manager, Industrial Relations, Ford Motor Co., Kansas City, Mo. said. "Although no company wants a job jumper, a person who has left two jobs, because of disillusionment, will be valuable since he will have learned a lot about working in industry. Often a person is disappointed in his first job."
The students were told that it is
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
it's by puritan
$16.95
striped to perfection BLAZEFIELD COAT in Bulky Washable Orlon
Now, wash Puritan sweaters in WOOLITE — new miracle cold water soap
Here's the season's most exciting new style a bulky, blazer coat-sweater, and it's striped to perfection by Puritan! Inspired from the college campus, this unusual sweater is knit of rugged, yet soft Hi Bulk Orlon. It's completely casual. Choose your favorite color combinations from our wide selection
图
Let Us Do Your Gift Wrapping
All gifts purchased during December will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
the university shop
Across from Lindley
Al Hack
'Indonesia Hunts Trouble By Severina Dutch Ties'
The Indonesian government may be getting into trouble by severing relations with Holland, says George M. Beckmann, associate professor of history.
"The government of president Sukarno cannot handle things efficiently because it doesn't have the qualified personnel, and has demonstrated this inefficiency already," he said in an interview Tuesday.
Mr. Beckmann returned in February 1957 from a trip to the Far East on a Ford Foundation research grant. He was in Japan in 1952 on a Fulbright scholarship and Ford grant, and was also in that area in 1945 as an intelligence officer in the U.S. Navy.
Indonesia, in a quarrel with the Dutch government over West New Guinea, this weekend threatened expulsion of the 46,000 Dutch nationals now in the country, and cut off diplomatic relations with Holland.
"This action is a reflection of the internal disunity of Sukarno's
"government." Prof. Beckmann said
government," Pfor. Beckmann said.
The United Press said today all leaves have been cancelled in the Indonesian army and personnel have been ordered to remain at their posts.
Maj. Harono, the Army spokesman in Jakarta said the orders were given "in view of the present situation." He did not elaborate.
One thousand Indonesian army veterans in Borneo have signed up for a voluntary force to push the Dutch out of the disputed territory, according to reports from Jakarta today.
At the same time, the East Indonesian newspaper The Irian accused the Dutch of having bombed and strafed areas of West New
DONALD R. SCHREIDER
GEORGE M. BECKMANN
Guinea to crush "national movements."
Dispute Goes Back To 1949 Prof. Beckman explained that in 1949, when Indonesia became an independent country, no decision was made on the fate of West New Guinea, and the question was left for future negotiations.
Since then no decision has been reached and when the latest appeal by Indonesia for a decision by the U.N. was turned down, the Indonesians decided to use more violent action.
Some of the Dutch citizens in Indonesia have already left the country and Mr. Sukarno's government has stuck by its ultimatum that all must go. The 5,000 Indonesians in Holland have been ordered to return home and trade with Holland has been stopped.
"Indonesia wants to have its cake and eat it too by expelling nearly all of the Dutch from the country, but keeping the technicians and skilled workers it needs." Prof. Beckman said.
Predicted by AUFS Expert
Mr. Beckmann said that American Universities Field Staff representative Willard A. Hanna, who was at KU in October, correctly predicted that the argument over West New Guinea would be the most critical problem for Indonesia.
A possible development from the recent Indonesian action, could be a matching of forces with the Communist party, the strongest party in the country, against the strong Indonesian army, Prof. Beckmann said.
The leader of the army on Sumatra has said that if the Indonesian government takes on a Communist appearance, Sumatra will set up a separate government and ask for recognition as an independent nation. Prof. Beckmann added.
This is one example of the disunity of the government, with army officials now in control of several small parts of the country, Mr. Beckmann said.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 61
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Your Best Yule Gift: Polio Shot
The best Christmas present you could give a friend is a polio shot, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said Wednesday after only 15 students took advantage of the bargain sale on polio shots.
"For that matter," he continued, "the best Christmas present to get yourself would be protection from polio."
The shots, which usually cost $1.50 started selling Tuesday for $1 for the first shot and 50 cents for the second. Third and fourth shots are being offered free.
"It has been found that three shots are not 100 per cent effective since a few cases of paralytic polio
Tuesday one student started the series of shots, two got their second shot and 12 got their third shot, Dr Cantezos said.
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957
have been evidenced after three shots were given," he said.
"That is why we are trying to impress on students the importance of finishing the series of shots," Dr. Canuteson added.
"If we had a sudden surge of students taking the shots and got rid of all the doses," Dr. Canuteson said, "we would see that the ones who didn't get here quite so quickly would get the polio shot at the same reduced price."
There were 700 doses of vaccine made available at the reduced prices because the vaccine would not be safe to use after Jan. 13, 1958.
Miss Santa Voting Ends Friday Noon
About 100 students will be accepted by the School of Medicine for the 1958-1959 term in interviews Dec.14,15,21 and 22.About 200 will be interviewed.
Voting began for Miss Santa this morning in the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard and will be continued until noon Friday. Students must have their identification cards to vote.
The winner and two runners-up will be announced in The Daily Kansan picture supplement, Wednesday. Miss Santa will be guest of honor at a Christmas party 3-5 p.m. in the The Daily Kansan news-room.
Kenneth Jochim, assistant dean of the School of Medicine, said those interviewed will not be tested on their academic knowledge, but their type of personality.
Medical School Sets Student Interviews
The winner will receive merchandise prizes from Lawrence merchants, including a blouse, flowers, gift certificates and two steak dinners.
Pictures of the 22 candidates are posted on the bulletin board of the information booth. They are dressed in a short-skirted Santa Claus costume.
The Christmas party will be for all those working on The Daily Kansan, pre-journalism students planning to go into the news-editorial or advertising sequence and faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Campus Chest Total $4,552
Amount Largest Ever Donated To Drive
A total of $4,552.22 was collected in the Campus Chest drive which closed Wednesday.
This is the largest amount ever donated to the drive. The 1956 total of $4,150 included the emergency Hungarian relief drive.
Organized houses turned in $753.16 Wednesday, bringing their total to $2.440.91.
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity won the organized house trophy for the second time for contributing the most money per man. The fraternity contributed $243.11, averaging $7.37 a contributor. The trophy will be presented at 6 tonight at the fraternity house.
Hodder Hall will receive the second place trophy for contributing $108.99, an average of $4.55 a student.
Delta Tau Delta Wins Trophy
"We want to get information about the kind of person the student is and his motivations for applying for medical school," he said.
The Delta Tau Delta fraternity pledge class won the trophy for collecting the most money from students not living in organized houses
Weather
A ten-member committee will interview the applicants. Members are Dr. Jochim, Dean W. Clarke Wescoe of the school of Medicine, Dwight Mulford, professor of biochemistry; Max Allen and George Curran, associate professors of medicine; Stanley Friesen, associate professor of surgery; Arden Miller, associate professor of pediatrics; Paul Laybourne and Merrill Easton, associate professors of psychiatry; Charles Hunter, assistant professor of obstetrics.
Students from schools other than KU will be included in the interviews at Kansas City, Kan.
Partly Cloudy tonight and Friday. Warmer east portion tonight, and southeast Friday. Not quite so warm Northwest Friday. Low tonight in 20's, high Friday 45-55.
Tips On Starting A Cold Car
Editor's Note: This is the final article in a series on winter campus driving conditions, traffic laws and care of an automobile in cold weather.
By DOUGLAS PARKER
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Have you ever left the house in the morning, waded through the snow to your car, turned the ignition key on and had nothing happen?
This is the situation encountered by persons everywhere when winter closes in on the campus, and it often keeps the driver from being prompt to appointments, work, classes and numerous other activities.
Elmer Husted, maintenance supervisor of the garage for the department of buildings and grounds, gives some tips on how he keeps his vehicles starting in the winter.
The first thing, and probably the most important, Mr. Husted said, is to get a fall checkup of the car's spark plugs, carburetor, compression and battery.
A lighter weight oil should be put in the crankcase and anti-freeze in the radiator, he said. He suggested that enough anti-freeze should be used for 20 degree below zero weather, which would leave enough room for adding water to the radiator.
When starting the car in the morning the driver should press the acceleration pedal to the floor once, release, and then press half way down.
Poor Ignition Causes Flooding
Poor Ignition Causes Flooding "If the ignition is in good shape there is little danger of flooding the engine," he said. "Most of the trouble of starting results from a poor ignition."
After the car is started it should idle for 10 to 15 minutes before being moved, he said, and after moving the car shouldn't be driven over 30 m.p.h. for a while to let the grease become more fluid. In the winter a person should keep his gas tank as full as possible to prevent water in the gas tank from freezing and clogging the fuel lines, he said.
Watch Tire Pressure
When driving with chains, Mr. Husted recommends that the tire have plenty of air to prevent wear and to get a better grip on ice. He said less air in the tire would be better for slushy snow driving to enable the chains to get a better grip.
The pledge class collected $158.42, averaging $5.28 a contribution. They supplemented their collection by earning money shining shoes and washing cars.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity pledge class was second, collecting $81.35, for an average of $3.87 a contribution. Twenty out of the 27 fraternity pledge classes turned in money.
Tom Cox, Topeka freshman and member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, walked from 11th and Connecticut to 22nd and Barker streets Tuesday in collecting $18.42 for the drive.
Faculty Contributes $113
Members of the faculty had contributed $113 by Wednesday. The Mr. Campus Chest contest raised $552 and about $1,150 over expenses was made on the Four Freshmen concert Sunday.
Robert N. (Jim) Davies, Dodge City senior and chairman of the drive said, "I attribute the success of this year's drive to the wonderful co-operation we have had from all the committees and committee chairmen. We reached more students in this drive than in previous years and this is one of the primary aims of the drive."
Members of the steering committee include Davies, Betty Selsam, Topeka, Sally Rice, Abilene, seniors; Martha Crosier, Lawrence, Leonard Parkinson, Scott City, Annette Johnson, Hutchinson, Betsy Shankland, Kansas City, Kan., William Gochis, Arkansas City, juniors; Thomas Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo., Kenneth Wagnon, Wichita, sophomores.
Wins State Oratory Contest
Horton Curtis, a senior at Independence High School, was named winner of the Kansas Voice of Democracy speaking contest.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday,Dec.12,1957
Indonesia Vs. Netherlands
The angry dispute between the Netherlands and Indonesia may cause trouble at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization "summit" meeting.
At the request of the Netherlands government an emergency meeting of the NATO Permanent Council in Paris was held last Saturday. The Netherlands called for diplomatic support against Indonesia's seizure of its interests. The Council decided to refer the issue to the NATO governments.
The Netherlands has asked the support of its 14 fellow-members of the NATO Alliance against Indonesia's attempt to force it to give up Western New Guinea.
But when the leaders of the NATO countries meet in Paris on Monday, the Netherlands demand is pretty sure to play a part in discussions. Especially, the United States will be asked to take an unequivocal stand on the Netherlands side.
If the United States agrees, it will mean a shift in American policy.
African and Asian countries introduced a resolution in the United Nations last month calling for negotiations between the Netherlands and Indonesia on Indonesia's demand that it be given Dutch West New Guinea. The Netherlands opposed the resolution on the ground that a favorable vote would constitute support for Indonesia's claim.
The resolution failed because a two-thirds vote in its favor was required.
The UN vote was 41 in favor of the resolution and 29 against, with 11 countries abstaining.
In this vote, the United States was one of those countries which abstained. It did so because it did not want to "offend" Indonesia and possibly incline its "neutralist" government toward Soviet Russia.
—Charles M. McCann
U. P. Staff Correspondent
Civilian Or Military?
The critics of such practice point to history for their facts. It is a paradox, but throughout history military men have usually been in the background in weapon design. From the catapult to the guided missile, weapon design has rested predominantly in the hands of civilian scientists.
Our unsuccessful missile effort has aroused many questions. One question, not a new one, concerns the advisability of leaving the responsibility for military supremacy in military hands.
Any veteran of our services is aware of the vast, illogical and frequently emotional tenor of our military bureaucracy. From the petty promotion of an undeserving functionary to decisions involving the design and manufacture of super weapons, there is often too little variance of method.
In recent years the military man and, consequently, his mind, has stepped to the fore in weapon design and manufacture.
Creative effort is needed, and must be encouraged, if new steps are to be taken in basic weapon design. The smothering atmosphere of the military is hardly the environment sought by the creative scientist.
Some of the highlights of military history
would discourage stout souls. The ridicule of Gen. Billy Mitchell when he was predicting the advent of air power is a blemish not easily erased. It is not illogical to assume that individuals such as Gen. Mitchell are at this very time unrecognized. Future generations will pay dearly for this kind of thought—or lack of it.
Again, any observer of the military would have cause to wonder why any creative soul would choose the regimented life. Certainly not for pay. Rarely for prestige. And security doesn't even enter into prospect, no matter what the posters say. The fact remains that the scientist has always chosen the unrestrictive and reasonable atmosphere of his laboratory over service with the military.
This will hardly change. The question is what is the remedy for our plight.
Possibly the solution could be found by creating a civilian organization that would coordinate the efforts of the separate civilian groups doing research. This would avoid foolish competition among the services and possibly increase the presently low profits received by the civilian researchers.
John Eaton
. . .
. . . Letters To The Editor
Editor:
What are the functions of the campus police? Are their only duties to direct traffic once each hour at the central intersection and to distribute tickets for parking violations?
I hope and believe that most of the force members would answer the above with an emphatic "No!" However, there seems to be at least one exception.
On Saturday night I drove to North College Hall to pick up my
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
FEMALE TECH
NOMAN'S H.
B. BAR
1940
date. As we left the parking lot we turned west and started down the hill to the intersection of 11th and Indiana streets. Where these join there was a stalled car. Between me and this stalled car was a campus police car. Obviously this situation could easily cause a traffic snarl, especially at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday.
By Dick Bibler
"SO HE ASKED HIS ADVISER HOW TO IMPROVE HIS GRADES."
What did the gentleman driving the police car do? Well, he pulled out, went around the stalled car and slowly drove up Indiana Street toward the campus. He appeared to be in no hurry.
Now my objection stems not from having to help a person having car trouble. What disturbs me is the attitude demonstrated by this campus policeman. If his attitude is representative of other members of the force, I suggest that it might be well for them to consider the impression they make upon others.
I then proceeded to give the stalled car a push and went on my way.
Rov W. Hartley
Delphos junior
Daily transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trilweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
National Advertising Service. 420
Madison Square Park. Service:
service: United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
launch, Lawrence, Lawrence. ea every day
nondurant. during Saturdays and Sundays, University
holidays, and examination periods. Entered
an second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at,
St. Paul's, post office under act of March 3, 1875.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Rob Larkin
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Wild oat seed can lie in the ground several years without rotting and grow when conditions become favorable.
In Kansas in 1948 by a referendum it repealed its 68-year-old law for bidding the manufacture and sale of liquor.
GIFT BUYERS WHO KNOW THEIR ABC's... ARE MAKING IT AN...
ALL
BULOVA
CHRISTMAS
IT'S EASY AS ABC TO GIVE BULOVA GIFTS
Superb watches, radios, electric razors, all by Bulova—truly fine gifts for everyone on your list!
---
One, low, easy payment of as little as one dollar a week buyus gifts for all! No payments 'til "58!"
AMBASSADOR
17 jewels, self-winding • unbreakable mainspring • shock proofed
$5950
Watches endorsed to show detail
AMERICAN GIRL
Watch and bracelet combined in one glamorous ensemble • 17 jewels • unbreakable mainspring
$5950
Watches enlarged to show detail
You can make it an ALL BULOVA CHRISTMAS for as little as $1 A WEEK
SENATOR
17 jowels • unbreakable main- spring • shock proofed • luxury expansion band $3575
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 EUROMA
You can make it an
ALL BULOVA
CHRISTMAS
for as little as
$1
A WEEK
Built with the precision of a 23-
s475
watch. Ivory or
Charcoal Gray.
without
tradition.
BULOYA Pocket-Size
All-Transmitter Radio
Full room-filling volume.
Bulox TRANSMIT
Tan Leather Texte.
MINISTRY OF EDUCATION
ALBERTA UNIVERSITY
FOR SCIENTIFIC ENGINEERING
52
WE GIVE YOU $10
for your old Electric Shaver
BULOVA Precision
ELECTRIC RAZOR
$49.95 less batteries
MISS AMERICA
17 jewels • unbreakable main-
spring • expansion bracelet
$3575
MISS AMERICA
17 jewels • unbreakable main-
spring • expansion bracelet
$3575
PRESIDENT
New miracle of THIN THIN watch
design • 17 jewels • unbreakable
mainspring • shock proofed (also
available with charcoal dial)
$4950
MARTHA WASHINGTON
21 jewels • 5 precision adjust-
ments • unbreakable mainspring
• expansion bracelet
$4950
PRESIDENT
New miracle of THIN THIN watch design + 17 pound + unbreakable mainspring + shock proofed + also available with charcoal dial)
$4950
Prices incl. Fed. Tax
Your ID Card Is Your Pass To Credit Choose Your Own Payment Plan
Wolfson's
O
If
743 Mass.
VI 3-4366
dum forle of
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Around The World
Page 3
AFL-CIO Expels Bakers, Raps Senate Group
Compiled from United Press
The AFL-CIO expelled the 160.000-member Bakery Union today but held off on chartering a rival union in the bakery industry.
Federation President George Meany said the executive council expelled the Bakers, as authorized by the AFL-CIO convention, and told him to use his judgment on granting a new charter. He said Bakers' president James G. Cross' continued refusal to resign gave the council no choice but to expel the Bakers Union.
The AFL-CIO also denounced the Senate Rackets Committee for "lack of fairness" and "political retaliation" in its investigation of labor-management corruption.
In Washington, D. C. President Eisenhower held a final strategy meeting with the National Security Council before heading for the crucial North Atlantic Treaty Organization conference in Paris Friday.
It is expected President Eisenhower will try to persuade the NATO nations to permit the scattering of atomic stockpiles in European grottoes, caves and mountain fastnesses.
Meanwhile, Adlai E. Stevenson headed back to Illinois after spending a month at the State Department helping the administration plan for the NATO conference.
He left with the feeling his treatment by President Eisenhower and his staff was casual to downright cool. Not so at the State Department, however, where Mr. Stevenson found a welcome mat out from Secretary of State John Foster Dulles.
Mr. Stevenson made no comment on his month's stay in Washington, but is known to feel the administration lacks a "sense of urgency" in meeting the Soviet challenge.
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., Newsmen and photographers waited for the Army's big Jupiter missile and the Air Force's bigger Atlas to blast up from the test center here.
Best guess for firing of the Jupiter intermediate range missile was within the next 48 hours. The Air Force announced the intercontinental Atlas missile is scheduled for a test flight for later this week.
In Paris, Belgium's Premier Achille Van Acker received a letter from Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin paralleling earlier personal messages to the Big Three and West Germany.
This is the beginning of what is expected to be a diplomatic squeeze by the Soviets against the small NATO partners in hopes of frightening them out of agreeing to let the U.S. station 1,500-mile range ballistic missiles on their soil.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
La reunion de Noël du Cercle Francais aura lieu jeudi le 12 décembre a sept heures et demie dans la salle Jayhawk de l'J Union Building.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Student Union, John Meixner, instructor in English, will read poetry of Walt Whitman.
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag um 5 Uhr 402 Fraser. Kaffee klatsch und singen. Alle herzlich eingeladen.
Strong.
Sorority pledge classes will meet from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. Short program and singing following buffet at 5:30.
Debate squad meeting, 7:15 p.m., 134
Newman Club Executive Committee
Meeting 7:30 p.m. Castle
Delta Phi Delta, 7 p.m., 1642 Indiana Election.
KuKu Meeting 6:50 p.m., Pine Room.
Student Union. Important meeting to organize committees. Attendance required.
Christian Science Organization, 7.30 Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome
Kansas chapter of the Archaeology Institute of America, 7:30 pm. Small Museum in R.F. Park, Carlyle S. Smith, professor of Sociology and Anthropology, "Easter Island."
KU-Y all day assignments, Danforth
Chapel. Pick up guide to meditation
guide.
'Episcopal morning prayer, 6 a.m. 45 a.m.
Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St. Anselm's
Chapel, Canterbury House. Breakfast
follows.
In Topeka, Alf, Landon said the NATO meeting in Paris may "take more concessions on our part than Secretary of State Dulles has so for suggested." He said NATO has the single goal of peace, "but not the single control essential to achieving that goal."
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets. Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
HES
Even
Babies
are
Fond
P
of
Leonard's
Baby
BABY IN BATHTUB
Gas!
(Not best for baths though)
LEONARD'S Standard Service 9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
Miss Santa Is Coming Your Way! Vote for
M
"Miss Santa"
'Miss
S
Santa"
Thursday, Dec. 12 - Friday, Dec. 13
At The INFORMATION BOOTH ON JAYHAWK BLVD.
Choose YOUR Favorite Miss Santa
Pictures on Display at the Information Booth
VOTE BY BALLOT - ID CARDS REQUIRED
MISS SANTA WILL RECEIVE GIFTS FROM THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS.
Independent Cleaners $5 Worth of Cleaning
Hixon's Deluxe Portrait
Granada Theatre Free Theatre Passes
Ober's Jr. Miss
$5 Gift Certificate
Student Union Cafeteria
Two Steak Dinners
TS...
Premier Jewelry Shop Pearl Ring
Campus Hideaway Pizza for Two
Allison-Thomas Florists Dozen Roses
Carter's Stationery Box of Stationery
Campus West
MacShore Blouse
S.U. Bookstore
$5 Gift Certificate
Corn's Studio of Beauty Shompoo and Set
Weaver's Box of Hane's Seamless Stockings
Jay Shoppe
$12.95 Bobbie Brooks
Sweater
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957
Donaghue, Johnson Used To Winning Tradition, So Both Came To Kansas
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Two boys who wanted to come to school where they have a winning basketball tradition, and both from a school where there is a winning tradition, is the story of Monte Johnson and Alan Donaghue, Kansas forwards from Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan.
Johnson and Donaghue both pointed out to a Daily Kansan reporter Wednesday night that they came to Kansas with hopes of playing with one of the top teams in the nation.
"The season outcome depends on whether everyone does his best. It will certainly take a tremendous effort to equal last year's record. It will take the combined effort of all the players."
Starting forward Johnson held high hopes for a successful season this year.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
And Always Wanted To Play Here
Johnson said that since he started in high school his one hope has been that he could attend Kansas. His high school career must have furthered his desire to play for a winning college. His sophomore year at Wyandotte the school lost three games, all to Shawnee Mission. Their final loss was to Shawnee Mission in the finals of the state tournament. His junior year Wyandotte's only loss was in the final game of
the finals of the state tournament His senior year Wyandotte won the state tournament although losing two games during the season.
"All around our toughest opponent has probably been Oklahoma State," Johnson said.
As for the future, Johnson felt K-State probably loomed as KU's biggest threat to Big Eight domination.
"Kansas State has built up a fine team. They weren't hurt at all by graduation and Iowa State will probably be rough too. For that matter, the whole conference is going to be tough."
As far as comparing last year's team with this, Donaghue said there was "no comparison." He was quick to add, however. "If everyone puts forth everything they've got we're going to have a
Sophomore forward Donaghue termed the Kansas squad in its present state like "a diamond in the rough." He said, "We just don't have the potential of the other Big Eight schools but we may have the fire that can outweigh this."
'We Really Wanted To Win'
Asked for a formula for the Jayhawkers' success this far, Johnson commented. "We've really wanted to win the games because we knew how much it meant to the coach and also to ourselves. We made up our minds to play our best. We knew a good start would help us later in the year."
good club. If we can just win the conference we should be in pretty good shape for the tournaments."
Donaghue said the deciding factor in his making the trip to Kansas was when he met Jayhawker coach Dick Harp. He said the fact that he'd be playing on the same squad with Wilt Chamberlain also had a lot to do with his decision.
Only Four Losses at Wyandotte During his high school basketball career at Wyandotte teams he played on lost a total of only four games. In his sophomore year the only loss was in the finals of the state tournament. His junior year Wyandotte lost two games but still took the state title. During his senior year Wyandotte's only loss came in the finals of the state tournament.
As for the toughest opponent in view, Donaghue agreed on K-State. He commented they were all fine shooters and added the Jayhawkers just couldn't match the Wildcats in the height department.
Donaghue said he felt "deep down" that the season would start the way it did for the Jayhawkers. He added that a lot of people had felt that the Kansans were too green and would lose their first two or three games before getting started.
He gave a great share of the credit for the record this far to Chamberlain. "Wilt has just been indispensable this far," Donaghue said.
MU Officials To Interview Devine
COLUMBIA, Mo.—(UP)—Missouri University officials Friday will interview Dan Devine of Arizona State College for the head football coaching job at MU.
Thus, the question of who will get the job got another whirl in the rumor mill today—with a few facts thrown in. Missouri is looking for a coach to succeed Frank Broyles who quit to take a job at Arkansas University.
The team lost its first match to Kansas State College, Dec. 6, in the KU Student Union Ballroom, matches to 1. Vie Davis was the only Jayhawker to pull out a victory in the opener for the two schools. He took three straight games from Danny Lee of Kansas State.
Cal Serves Notice On PCC Directors
BERKELEY, Calif. — (UP) — The University of California, smarting from last week's rebuff from the Pacific Coast Conference, has all but served written notice on the conference directors it will strike out on its own come 1959.
California, joined by UCLA and USC, attempted to have the conference revise its scheduling requirements and ease restrictions on aid to athletes.
Devine, who has had three successful years at Arizona State and this past season ranked his team among two unbeaten, untied major college elevens, is the first outsider to be interviewed for the Missouri job. The other top team was Auburn.
Rumbles of secession have rolled out of the golden state since last year's football "scandal," which ended with three PCC schools—UCLA, USC and Washington—barred from the Rose Bowl and ineligibility penalties slapped on the cream of USC's and UCLA's football teams.
Clay Cooper, who has been on the MU staff for 11 years also is a strong candidate for the position.
There was still a petition circulating today for MU to hire Chuck Mather, who left his Kansas University coaching job recently.
Missouri officials said last night it probably will be sometime this weekend before a decision as to who will be the new coach will be made. They said another major school coach will be interviewed, but wouldn't say who he was.
Carrying an 0-1 record, the KU table tennis squad will be aiming for victory No. 1 December 19, when it meets the Kansas City Boy's Club in the Student Union Ballroom. The matches start at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
Don Faurot, Missouri athletic director, also confirmed that Jerry Claiborne, a former Missouri assistant under Frank Broyles, was being considered for the job.
KU Table Tennis Seeks Victory No.1
Claiborne resigned his Missouri position last week to become an assistant coach to Bear Bryant at Alabama.
BELL'S Service Station 23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
Free Pickup
And Delivery
9 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS VACATION Get Your Travel Reservations at
Kansas fans won't have much trouble remembering their new football coach, Jack Mitchell, as a football star. In the 1946 game with KU, the Oklahoma quarterback was the game's second high rusher. In 1947 he caught a 49-yard pass for the touchdown that defeated the Javhawkers. Mitchell is the only quarterback to ever win the conference rushing crown, getting 573 net yards in 1947.
at
TICKETS
AND
RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
The First National Bank of Lawrence
KU Fans Remember Mitchell As OU Player
8th & Mass. TRAVEL AGENCY Phone VI 3-0152 Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
Sooners Praise Notre Dame
NORMAN. Okla.—(UP)—University of Oklahoma football players Wednesday unanimously picked Notre Dame, the team that ended their record victory streak, as the best defensive team they faced all season. Colorado was the choice for best offensive team.
The Sooners also named Notre Dame fullback Nick Pietrosante as the best individual player they opposed and gave four spots on an all-opponent team to Irish players.
AIRLINES—FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
| From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | 1st Class |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Phoenix | $112.20 | $148.50 |
| Sioux City | — | 35.97 |
| Indianapolis | 48.40 | 61.27 |
| Chicago | 41.80 | 54.67 |
| Boston | 127.60 | 165.11 |
| Havana | 188.10 | 201.86 |
Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results.
Pizza at Sportscar Speed!
1
Whizzing by the campanile, Pizza in hand, is Harold DeMoss. Harold is one of the reasons that Hideaway Pizza is delivered hot and fast!
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
VI 3-9111
h t v c
s l s e r
s
all or
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
LAKEWOOD
VOLLEYBALL
HEY, DON'T LET HIM SHOOT—An unidentified Hicks player goes up for a shot against Pearson TOSS-UP-Hicks took ball and game. 35-9. (Daily Kansan photo)
Phi Psi, Oread, Carruth-O'Leary Win
Phi Kappa Psi easily defeated Triangle 59-9 Wednesday in the only fraternity A intramural basketball game in the third day of competition. Twelve other games were played.
Six men had over 8 points in the balanced attack of the Phi Psi's. John Flanagan and Gary Cooper had 12 each, Dick Foreman 11 and Bob McMichael, Jerry Brown and Jim Brownfield each 8. Gary Pack was high for the losers with 4 points, followed by Gary Reed and Dee Conner with 2 each and Ron Gast with 1.
Atkinson Leads Oread
In an independent A game Oread defeated Pearson 41-29. For Oread Charles Atkinson scored 13 points, Kirby Clark 10, Tom Russell 8, Ken Allum 6 and Dale Nowin 4.
Scoring for Pearson were Arthur Henry with 13 points, Dallas Musgrave 6. Charles Platz 4. Peter
Curran, Eugene Crochett and Roger Whitten with 2 each.
Carruthr O'Leary defeated Phi Chi 47-36 in another independent A game. Carruth scoring was by Jerry Macomber with 20, Dick Hall with 14, John McElinhey with 7, Lee Crawford, Wendell Wallace and Joe Sprekelmeyer with 2 each.
Brainard Is High
Bill Brainard carried the scoring load for Phi Chi, as he made 19 points. Bill Connell and P. J. O'Connell had 6 each, Jim Webb 4 and Duane Howard 1.
A scheduled fraternity A game between the Jacks and ICBM was a double forfeit.
Othere scores:
Independent B — Jollie over Oread, forfeit; Foster 31, Clods 26.
Independent C—Pokes 24, 69ers 21, Carruth—O'Leary 19, Jollife 15, 1800's 35,Cisabs 32; Jim Beam 15, KHK 10; Army ROTC 43, Hicks No. 23; ASM3 30, Navy ROTC No. 2, 26;
Jayhawkers Travel To Philadelphia Saturday
2 vs. Phi Delta Theta No. 5, 6:30,
west court; Delta Upsilon No. 1 vs.
Phi Gamma Delta No. 4, 7:15, east
court; Alpha Tau Omega No. 3 vs.
Alpha Kappa Lambda, 7:15, west
court.
Dick Harp, KU basketball coach, said Wednesday that he expects the Jayhawker-St. Joseph's University game Saturday in Philadelphia to be "much the same type" as Monday's game against Marquette.
He said St. Joseph's lost to St. John's University, a powerful eastern team this year, by only 7 points. He expects them to use a zone defense, possibly the 1-2-2 that they used against St. John's.
"The important thing is to get the upper-hand at the beginning of the game, and keep it." Coach Harp said.
He said the Jayhawkers were unable to do this last week, as they didn't get started until after the first 10 minutes.
Schwall Signs With Red Sox
He cited Marquette as having a good team, with a "lot of potential."
Concerning the team's improvement, Coach Harp said he is satisfied with the offense. "We are not very good on defense yet and our lack of speed may handicap us there all season," he said.
KU has won 221 games and lost 95 in conference competition since 1929.
Don Schwall, Oklahoma Sooner basketball star, who quit the Oklahoma team, signed a baseball contract with the Boston Red Sox Wednesday for a bonus, reported in excess of $50,000.
Schwall quit the Sooner basketball squad Monday and said he was considering the offers of five major league baseball clubs. He is now scheduled to report to the Minneapolis club of the American Assn. next spring.
Wilt Chamberlain set a new Big Eight individual season's free throw record last season when he hit 103 of 174.
OU Coach Doyle Parrock said, "I hate to see him leave, but for the kind of money they are talking about, nobody can blame him."
the Sooners' main offensive threat last year.
Schwall's quitting the basketball squad is a big loss to OU. He was
Navy ROTC No. 1 34, Bad Seeds 9.
Games, Today
Kappa Epsilon No. 3 vs. Sigma
Phi Epsilon, 5:45, east court; Phi
Gamma Delta No. 2 vs. Sigma Alpha
Epsilon No. 4, 5:45, west court; Alpha
Tau Omega No. 4 vs. Sigma Chi
No. 2, 6:30, east court; Sigma Nu No.
Fraternity C-Phi Gamma Delta No. 3 vs. Sigma Pi; 5:00, east court; Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 3 vs. Sigma Chi No. 1; 5:00, west court; Tau
Trouble-free weekender this wash 'n' wear
Arrow
Off for the weekend? Here's a shirt that combines rare good looks with amazing handiness the Arrow Glen in wash'n' wear Dacron* and cotton. Collar stays are stitched in, permanently and invisibly They just won't get lost. See too, our Drake button-down model. Your choice, in white or solid colors, just $7.95. All silk tie $2.50. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc.
ARROW first in fashion SHIRTS·TIES
- Dupont's polyester fiber
SCHEDULE
MARRIOTT
SHIRT
They're here in favorite Arrow designs!
Come in and see our selection of trouble-free, wash 'n' wear shirts, the Arrow Glen and the Arrow Drake. Don't Delay. Look in before the campus pace setters buy our entire supply.
From $5
Carl's GOOD CLOTHES 905 Mass.
Page 6 *
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957
Toys For Tots Drive Endorsed
"The 'Toys for Tots' program sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega is a worthy project and deserves the active support of the University. Those who wish to contribute to the Christmas happiness of many children will find in this project a real opportunity." These words from Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, express the feeling behind this drive.
For the sixth year Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, has placed collection boxes in Strong, Fraser and the Student Union for its "Toys for Tots" drive. Used toys are repaired by the Marine reserve and distributed by the reserve with the aid of the Red Cross.
The drive which begins Tuesday will end officially at noon, Dec. 21. Last year's drive provided about 7,000 Christmas toys for needy children of this area. This year, toys will also be sent to Greece for about 100 underprivileged children.
Alpha Phi Omega is an international service fraternity with about 200 chapters in the United States The chapter at KU is the fifth oldest
in the United States. The fraternity is affiliated with the Boy Scouts. The only requirement for membership is that at one time the person must have been a member of the Boy Scouts.
In addition to the "Toys for Tots" drive the fraternity serves KU by exchanging ID's for the games, proctoring exams and taking the concessions stands for Haskell.
"Again we should express appreciation to Alpha Phi Omega for coordinating the campus drive for Christmas toys," Donald Alderson, dean of men said. "As a result of this group's effort and the generosity of fellow students, many children will have a happier Christmas. Sharing gives satisfaction anytime—but especially at this season of the year."
Mountain Climbers Practice On Stadium
"Of course, we climb mountains, or rather stadiums on the KU campus." This statement could well be made by any of the 30 members of KU's Mountaineering Club.
Because of the lack of mountains in the area, club members practice climbing on the seats of Memorial stadium, according to Jack Geyer, Ellis junior.
"We can practice everything but rock, hand and foot holds in the stadium," he said. "We use the seat side of the stadium to practice things like falls and stopping falls." A rock quarry near Bonner Springs and a small bluff near Wakarusa are also used for practice, Geyer said.
The primary purpose of the club is to acquaint members with mountaineering techniques in preparation for outings held during the year. Monthly meetings are used for lectures, and showings of slides and movies about various phases of climbing.
Arrangements are being made for the club's next outing, a climbing and skiing trip to Estes Park, Colo. between semesters.
"We usually go to Estes for outings as the area has an assortment of climbing areas for climbers who have varying amounts of experience." Geyer said.
The group usually stays on an outing six days for about $35. The club has all necessary climbing equipment except climbing boots, he said.
The club was organized in 1948 and had 60 members by 1952. It was inactive from 1953 until Geyer, Dick Wink, 1957 graduate and Raymond Hoponen, associate professor of pharmacy, re-organized it in January, 1956.
"The club is growing and open to anyone interested in climbing." Geyer said. "There is no experience requirement and most of the members don't have any. Our main purpose is to learn techniques for future climbing."
Two Miles Of Steam Tunnels Heat Campus During Winter
As cold weather approaches, the two miles of steam tunnels which run beneath the campus will provide heat for all the buildings on the campus except the temporary buildings built during the war.
The tunnels are inspected every day during the winter season and occasionally during the summer. In the summer steam is used for cooking at the Student Union, for heating water and for laboratory experiments. In the spring the tunnels are used by the mining engineering students for underground surveying.
The tunnels contain pipes which carry the steam for heating from the central heating plant to the buildings, and telephone wires for the campus telephone system. They are 6 feet 3 inches high and 5 and one half feet wide.
The system of tunnels was begun in the.1880's and has been extended as new buildings were added to the campus.A tunnel from the Military Science Building to the Music and Dramatic Arts Building is now being constructed.
The tunnels' highest temperatures are near Bailey Hall and range from to 125 to 130 degrees. Exits are provided every 30 feet and the tunnels are completely lighted.
Principals Talk To Freshmen
The effectiveness of high school teaching methods as shown by the experiences of freshmen during their first few months at KU were discussed at the principal-freshman conference Wednesday.
About 150 high school principals and teachers attended the individual meetings with the freshmen, a luncheon and a meeting to discuss the individual conferences.
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Dean Albert Meder Jr. of Rutgers University spoke at the luncheon.
J. G. Tolpin, lecturer in the "Russian for Scientists" language program at Northwestern University, was to speak at 2:30 p.m. today in Lindley Auditorium before the American Institute of Chemical Engineering meeting.
Auto Wrecking And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
His Topic was "Technical Manpower in Russia."
A naturalized citizen of the United States, he was born and educated in Russia. He studied chemistry at the University of Kiev, Russia; the University of Jena, Germany; and at Columbia University, New York City.
Dean Meder spoke at two meetings of mathematics teachers Tuesday and Wednesday. He and other speakers explained the advanced placement system Tuesday.
George L. Anderson, professor of history, will speak on "The Contemporary Puritan" at the annual reunion and dinner of the Sons and Daughters of New England at 6:15 p.m. Dec. 19 in the Kansas Room of the Student Union.
Guest Lecturer Speaks On Russia
New Englanders Set Annual Dinner
Faculty members and students who were born in New England or who have New England background through residence, heredity or marriage are invited to attend.
Mr. Tolpin is a technical associate in the research department of Standard Oil Co.
Reservations may be made with Thomas A. E. Belt, Lawrence resident and president of the organization, or with Allen Crafton, professor of speech and past president.
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or top-
coat?
TABLE
Choose from over 500 fabrics
HI FI COMPONENTS FOR CHRISTMAS
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
A Sound Way To Everyone's Heart
VI 3.4916
Audio House
1801 New Hampshire Address
LAWRENCE LANE
Equipment Show Room
Manual Completed For Correspondence
928 Mass.
The first manual for instructors of correspondence study has been completed by the bureau of correspondence study of the University Extension.
Donald R. respondence will be used that handle
McCoy, director of con-
study, said the manual
by about 40 instructors
correspondence
Ready for Christmas?
AVO
X
WE ARE!
At The...
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
916 1/2 Mass.
More than 750,000 boat trailers are in use throughout the U.S. according to the Automobile Club of Michigan.
his and hers
his and hers
to cherish always
this once-
in-a-
lifetime
portrait by
A
phone or come in make your appointment now
HIXON
and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford Bob Blank
HIXON STUDIO
F
Don Crauford Bob Blank
721 Mass. V13-0330
25
you can always mail a letter... BANK BY MAIL
N
US MAIL
by me
Mail boxes have no "office hours"; you can bank by mail any time.
Checks should be endorsed to this bank "For deposit." Cash should be sent by registered mail.
You can take money out of your account by check, or a withdrawal slip. We furnish you with supplies and instructions on how you can bank by mail easily and safely. Ask us about it.
The LAWRENCE
The LAWRENCE ESTABLISHED 1865 NATIONAL BANK
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansan
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 7
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, 81.99. Ternus: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Department of Business Office at 601-623-6344.
LOST
LOST: Woman's purse containing all personal belongings, at Allen Field House about 9 p.m. Wed. Phone VI 3-8308. 12-12
SHEAFFER SNORKEL PEN—burgundy with gold and silver top—name inscribed —Dorothy L. Trickett. Call VI 3-1100. reward. 12-13
TWIN PEARL RING in Flint Hall—very
able to owner- reward. Call 12-
237 12-18
RUST COLORED PURSE up Tuesday
morning in Student Union bowling
alley. Need contents badly. Call Betty
Harrison, VI 3-6060. 12-13
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H. VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinocci Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Vt. Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-if 1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
725 Mass
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass VI 3-3055
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in, in water repellent closed paper bags. Bags, party supplies plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3 050
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST
Group saving most empty Mariborc
Philip Morris, Spud and Parlamen
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-346
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Contact Aaron Eystrom Dorm, Ottawa University Ph. 1492. 12-18
ONE MAN to fill vacant seat on car
trip to Mexico City and New Orleans
over Christmas vacation. Call Opdahl.
VI 3-5552. 12-13
NEED A GIRL to fill a vacant seat to Mexico City during Christmas vacation.
Call VI 5-1257 right away. 12-16
EXPERIENCED TYPE1ST; Former secretary will type terms, term papers and notes. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service. Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
3-1971 Singe
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable
phone. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
- ADVERTISERS •
PATRONIZE YOUR
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657. 1400 Tenn. tt
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality, Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 2-6838. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-633, 1621 W 20th St. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or IV 3-8600.
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, mfr. tt
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
et al. Dr. Smith et al.
9411'9412'Phi. Ph. VI 3-5263
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629.
tt
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers. Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs. bcds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all these. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. ff
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing with soft, natural beauty comparable to Techno-12 to show. Ph. VI 3-0983 or IV 3-2594.
TYSTIP: Experienced; theses, term pa-
raments. Accepted service. VI 3-7188-
1632 West 20th St
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type terms, theme papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna VriR, VI 3-8660. tf
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO
833% Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8074
TUTORING IN GERMAN by wife of university instructor, a native German, formerly on KU faculty herself. Will tutor Geraint at any level including preparation for Ph. D. language requirement. Call VI 3-3369. 12-16
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822. I-50-58
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, both Sport and renewal magazines both Newspapers and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal gift. Order promptly at the $1 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
F. M.E. TAPE RECORDER in very good shape, $70. Used slx times. Bob Koch 1308 Mass., VI 3-4952. 12-12
IMPORTED SKI SWEATERS for sale at reduced price. Ph. VI 2-0286 after 5 p.m. 12-16
STUFFED ANIMAL TOYS, make lovely Christmas gifts. Reasonable prices. Ph VI 3-3941 after 1 p.m. 12-16
TUXEDO, size about 42. Fine quality,
practically new. Also white dinner jacket.
938 Missouri. 12-12
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in other materials, a complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 2-8498.
PRACTICALLY NEW PORTABLE record player, 3 speed Magnavox—tone control. Will sacrifice. Ph. VI 2-0306. 12-13
We Stock The
COMPLETE
MODERN LIBRARY
THE BOOK NOOK
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
APPLES. PEARS AND APPLE CIDER at Hammonds Orchard 8 miles Southeast. Come out at all times whether you see our ad or not. 12-16
RCA VICTOR 3 speaker tape recorder for sale, 1 year old. Call VI 2-0753 after 3:30 p.m.
FOR RENT
GERMAN SHEPHERD MALE PUP. 4½
months old. Papers. Available.
house broken, price $125. Call Vince Riley at
VI 3-0651 to make appointment. 12-13
CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT: Closets, built-ins. For married couple only.
No drinking. 511 Ohio. 12-13
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED HOUSE,
all one floor. Two car garage, newly
built with 2 rooms. Newly fitted
machine furnished. For a couple or two
boys. Ph. VI 3-7830. For 5 p.m.
12-13
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
Private residence (contemporary design, large swimming pool with diving board) catering to young men will have one January and two February vacancies. Kitchen privileges optional. For appointment Ph. VI 3-9635. 12-16
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $30 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. if
TWO_BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, private entrance & bath, garage, utility room washer furnished, newly decorated, close to KU. Boys or couple, very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-16
TWO ROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT, utilities paid. Ph VI 3-4984 be-
fore 5 p.m. and VI 3-1871 after 5 p.m.
12-16
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT, $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-8-58
SINGLE ROOM, large and well furnished with cooking facilities and garage. Close to KU, $25 a month. Call VI 3-6696.
12-17
APARTMENT for two or three boys, private entrance and bath, available January 1. Call VI 3-1890, 1116 Sunset Dr. 12-18
Roberto's
710 Mass.—VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
Daily Kansan Pho
Jim Sledd (left) receives Best of Show trophy, plus slide viewer from MOSSER-WOLF, from Kansas Promotion Manager Steve Schmidt.
Second Daily Kansan Photo Contest Winners Named
BEST OF SHOW-JIM SLEDD Receives Trophy and Slide Viewer Given by MOSSER-WOLF
$10 JAYHAWKER AWARD - KIM ONG
Black and White
Personalities
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, William Irvine; 3rd, Kim Wiley; Honorable Mention, Paul Hansen.
Feature Pictures 1st Place, Place Paul Hansen; 2nd, Jim Sledd; 3rd, James McMullan.
News Pictures
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, Kim Wiley; 3rd, Kim Wiley; Honorable Mention, Richard Botshon.
Children
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, Jim Sledd.
Scenics 1st Place, Lou Hoell; 2nd, Alan Brooke; 3rd, Richard Botshon.
Color
People
1st Place, Arthur Shaw; 2nd, Kim Ong; 3rd, Kenneth Hush; Honorable Mention, Kim Wiley.
Places
1st Place, Alan Syverud; 2nd, George Denny; 3rd, Arthur Shaw; Honorable Mention,
Alan Syverud.
Third Contest Closes Jan.10
Jan.10
Start Planning Now -- Rules in Kansan Business Office - 111 Flint
.
---
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 12, 1957
Names, Names, Names—
Smith, Johnson Brown, Miller...
Students who want to "keep up with the Joneses" at KU might be interested to know there are 45 students by that name listed in this year's Student Directory.
Smith, however, is the most common name of students at KU, with 84 having that name. Johnson is the second most common, with 62 of that name.
The directory lists 52 Browns, 50 Millers, 47 Davises, 31 Wilsons and White, 29 Andersons, 28 Williams and 25 Clarks.
The first name in the directory is that of Robert Abbey, Scheneetady, N.Y. freshman, and the last is that of Sam Zuercher, Wichita senior.
There are 227 students whose families originally came from Scotland or Ireland, because they have last names beginning Me or Mac.
They're Campus Nobility Nobility reigns on the campus with 11 Kings, 4 Queens, 2 Lords, 2 Knights and 1 Earl.
Among the wildlife at KU are four Birds, three Crowes, three Drakes, two Wolfs, five Wolfes, a Hawk, a Lamb and a Fox. Occupations include five Farmers, eight Fishers, six Hunters, four Shoemakers, three Barbers, a Shopmaker, Butler and Butcher.
The colorful student body includes the names of Blue, Black, Green, White, Brown, Gray and Redd.
We Also Have 38 Cents
We Also Have 38 Cents
For the money-diggers around the campus there are seven Nichols and three Pennys. For students who like quiet there is a Hush. If you prefer some distraction there is a Noyes.
Gold In The Hills Sought By KU Student
Pirates may no longer sail the bounding main, but the idea of buried treasure is still a reality for John Gever. Ellis junior.
Geyer and a cousin are planning a trip to California to look for hidden gold. The treasure is indicated on a map found in a 1946 edition of a popular magazine which Geyer refuses to
He has several maps of possible treasure locations that he has gathered from various sources.
"I just watch for things like this. There's always a chance that you might find something," he said.
Geyer has obtained topographical maps of the southern California desert area east of San Diego. He is now waiting for a letter from the author of the magazine article for further verification of the possible treasure.
"If we can make sure that there
is a reasonable chance of finding something, we will go at Christmas or possibly this summer," he said. "However, if we don't hear from the author, we won't go."
The author of the article writes that the treasure indicated on the man is stolen gold buried by Indians.
The proposed search for hidden treasure is not the first such adventure for Geyer. He did extensive prospecting for uranium in Wyoming in the summer of 1955.
Wileys Well Received At San Antonio Concert
Success in the music field is a family affair for Russell L. Wiley, professor of band, and his wife, according to a San Antonio newspaper after their recent appearance there.
On Nov. 23 Mr. Wiley conducted the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra and Mrs. Wiley, known professionally as Charmaine Asher, played the cimbalom. The San Antonio Express and News said that Mr. Wiley "conducted with warmth and style and is a finished artist in this most difficult of all arts."
Mrs. Wiley is recognized as the only person in the United States qualified to appear as a soloist
on the cimbalom, a Hungarian instrument. One of the major orchestral works which Mr. Wiley performed on his tour was the "Hary Janos Suite" by Kodaly which is written with a cimbalom solo.
Because of the scarcity of solo performers in the country the work is usually performed with a piano but there is a great demand for the suite to be played with the cimbalom according to Mr. Wiley.
Mrs. Wiley's cimbalom is over 200 years old and is from Hungary,
First Actor's Workshop Plays In January
The Actor's Workshop scenes will be performed in the Experimental Theatre of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building from 3 to 5 p.m. on Jan. 8 and Jan.10. The performances of the scenes are open to the public, and a discussion of each scene will be held at the close of the performances.
The directors for Jan. 8, are Terrance Sullivan, Harrisburg, Pa. junior, Phyllis Miller, Elwood senior and David Dodds, Wichita graduate student.
The Jan. 10 performances are: a musical excerpt directed by Shirley Andrish, Topeka senior. The other two excerpts are directed by Vera Stough, Lawrence senior, and Maralyn Shackelford, St. Joseph, Mo. graduate student.
Abstract Photos On Display
Examples of abstract photography by four staff members of the Chicago Institute of Design are now on display in the main lounge of the Student Union.
The display includes work by Harry Callahan, Arthur Siegel, Art Sinsbaugh and Aaron Siskind. Mr. Siegault is work in color. The remainder of the collection is in black and white.
Included in the show are pictures of soap bubbles, textures in brick and textures in peeled paint. The display will close Dec. 20.
Sophomore Elected Business Club Head
Ruth Milam, Overland Park sophomore, has been elected president of the Future Business Leaders of America.
Other officers are Dorothy Wigfield, Chillicothe, Mo. junior, vice president; Mary Antenen, Bazine junior, secretary; Sharon Shineman, Olathe freshman, treasurer, and Pat McGuire, Gower, Mo. junior reporter.
The highest percentage of farm accidents occur during the late morning and mid-afternoon hours when fatigue becomes a menace to safety.
TUXEDO RENTALS and Sales
Place your order early for the Christmas Season
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763
(one door south Jayhawk Cafe)
Complete Wedding Service
Flu Shots At Standstill
For the first time since Watkins Hospital started giving Asian flu shots, the hospital went a day without giving a shot.
Tuesday the hospital reported that 14 Asian flu booster shots were given. Dr. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said that apparently the extent of students who wish to take care of their health has been reached since the only ones to take shots are the ones who have seen that they have had the first shot.
The number of students to take shots in one day has slipped gradually from about 100 a day during and shortly after the rash of Asian flu, to no one taking shots as evidenced Tuesday.
The total number of first shots given this year still remains at about 4,350. Dr. Canuteson said that public health agencies are still expecting a second wave of Asian flu around the first of the year.
CORRECTION
Elring's Gifts
Gifts
Elring's
Open tonight and Saturday this week.
Choose gifts for everyone from our fine selection. We gladly gift wrap and will mail for you.
924 Mass. Across from Bell's Music Co.
10 IBM Machines Process KU Records
Ten international business machines, rented at a cost of almost $1,000 per month, are used by the statistics service to process records for several University offices.
There are 7 full-time employees operating the machines daily and 10 part-time employees who work during rush periods, Jerry Davis, supervisor of the statistics service, said Tuesday.
Mr. Davis said about 60 per cent of the work the service does is for the University business office, 20 per cent is for the registrar's office, and the rest is for various research projects.
He said the biggest single job the service does is the processing of student schedules and class rosters after enrollment. With the use of the part time help the job can be done in three days, he said.
The statistics service uses seven types of machines. Three key punches and two verifiers are used in preparing the cards; sorter machine arranges them, a collator machine matches decks of cards; a reproducer makes duplicates; an interpreter machine prints the code of the key punches on the cards; and the tabulator is a brain machine that makes reports from cards.
CHECK THAT PORTABLE
Do The Batteries Work?
EVEREADY—FRESH STOCK
Birds on a Branch
BIRD TV—RADIO Jack W. Neibarger, Prop.
VI 3-8855
Rob.
Robertso's
710 Mass.
rtle's
VI 3-1086
P
We Deliver
PIZZA
W
"The Art of Gift Wrapping"
A Hallmark
COLOR MOVIE
will be shown at 4 P.M. AND 7:30 P.M. THURSDAY, DEC.12
Student Union Trophy Room FREE ADMISSION-FREE REFRESHMENTS
1
Merry Christmas
Night of Nations Ball
Student Union Ballroom 9-12 Friday, Dec. 13th.
Tickets per Couple $1
At the Information Booth & Student Union Ticket Office Sponsored by the International Club
$1
---
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Don Fambrough, one of KU's football stars and for six years a coach here, will return as an assistant to head football coach Jack Mitchell. A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, athletic director, said today.
Fambrough Named To Football Staff
Friday, Dec. 13, 1957
THE WINNER-Jim Davies, on the right, presents the Campus Chest organized house trophy to Dave McDonald representing Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. This is the second straight year that Phi Kappa Sigma has been awarded the trophy for contributing the most money per man to the fund drive. Late donations to the Campus Chest drive Thursday brought the campaign total to $4,600.60. (Daily Kansan photo)
J
Mitchell said Fambrough would work with KU linemen and said that "Don's acceptance fills our coaching staff with one of KU's finest men. We are very happy to obtain a coach of his experience and background."
Conceerning the other post up for appointee Jan. 1, now held by a republican—Topeka publisher Oscar Stauffer—the governor said it was under consideration.
TOPEKA—(UP)—Gov. George Docking today named George B. Collins, Wichita attorney and a Democrat, to a 4 year term on the Board of Regents, effective Jan. 1.
The new appointment Mr. Collins, was president of the Wichita Bar Assn, this year and is a member of the American Bar Assn.
55th Year, No. 62
The KU varsity football staff now has George Bernhardt as first assistant, Fambrough and Bobby Goad as line coaches and Bill Pace and Gene Corrotto as backfield coaches, Mitchell said he believes that no KU head coach had had the benefit of better assistants.
The governor has one more Democrat and a Republican to name to the 9 member bi-partisan board, which governs the state's five colleges and university.
Mr. Collins replaces A. W. Hershberger, Democratic attorney from Wichita.
New Regent Appointed
Fambrough won all Big Six honors on the KU co-champions of 1946 and the Orange Bowl team of 1947. In 1948 he assisted the coaching staff and a year later became a full-time member of the staff. He was freshman coach, then became line coach and first assistant to J. V. Sikes.
The 33rd annual Christmas Vespers will be presented at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts.
Fambrough went with Sikes after the latter resigned from KU in 1953, to East Texas State College at Commerce, where he was first assistant during the 1954-56 seasons.
ASC Plans System For Course Ideas
Choral and instrumental music and a series of tableaux have been prepared by members of the drawing and painting department. Also included in the program will be a recital of Christmas music on the Memorial Carillon.
Dates Set For Opening Bids
33rd Christmas Vespers Sunday
Dates have been set for opening of bids on the proposed School of Business building and a new men's dormitory.
The state will open the School of Business building bids Feb. 14. The 4-story aluminum curtain building, to be located southeast of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building on Sunnyside Avenue will cost about $1,-250,000
The tentative date for receiving bids for construction of L. N. Lewis Hall, a 7-story dormitory at 15th and Iowa streets has been set for Feb. 4.
Student-Administration Suggestion Channel Shaped
Campus police estimated total damage at $150 in an automobile accident at 7:50 a.m. today at Jayhawk Boulevard and Poplar Lane.
Max A. Thayer, Lawrence senior, who was parked before Hoch Auditorium, opened the car door to get out when a car driven by Thomas D. Herlocker, Winfield sophomore, hit Thayer's door.
The right fender, headlight and parking light were damaged on Herlocker's car. Damage to each car was estimated at $75. No one was injured.
There should soon be a permanent arrangement for student suggestions on changes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences curriculum.
The All Student Council Committee to Review the College Curriculum decided this at a meeting Thursday with the deans of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. They outlined plans for developing a suggestion channel from students to the administration.
Car Crash Costs $150
Yep, It's Friday The 13th
Superstition? Of course not! Nevertheless, everyone is a little more careful of black cats, ladders and the like on this supposedly ill-fated day. Friday the 13th.
Actually, the whole idea of this being an unlucky day is a combination of two old superstitions, the idea that the number 13 is jinxed and that Friday is a bad day because of the crucifixion of Christ on Good Friday.
The unlucky 13 idea originated with those prolific creators of custom and myth, the Greek gods. Twelve gods had a banquet one evening. The god of strife and mischief appeared, making 13. Immediately one of the favorites in the group died.
The three students in the picture below seem to think there is
some truth in the superstition as they stare grimly at the announcement on a blackboard. From left: Kent Wilkinson, Kansas City, Kan. junior; Julia Rayl, Hutchinson sophomore, and Anna Wiley, Lawrence freshman.
On one occasion when both of these indications of bad luck fell together, passengers sailing on a boat from Southampton, England, demanded that the trip be postponed until 12:01 a.m. the next day.
Here are a few of the things that custom and superstition advise even the most sensible to avoid today.
First and most important, don't go courting or get married. Any drastic romantic commitment on Friday the 13th is certain to be ill fated.
It's not a good idea for servants to take a new job today or for anyone to cut fingernails if he really wants to insure safety during the hexed hours.
If you see that you are one of 13 persons in a room, get out fast or one of you will die within a year. Don't be too anxious about it, though, for insurance predictions say that this happens anyway.
Our forefathers exhibited an unusual amount of common sense when they designed the Great Seal of the United States. It has 13 stars, 13 bars, 13 feathers in the eagle's tail, 13 darts in his claw, 13 leaves and 13 olives on the olive branch and 13 letters in the motto, E Pluribus Unum.
riday 13
Quiz Today
chapter 9-13
- "The deans and representatives
The deans and representatives of the College administrative committee were impressed with the sincerity, reasonableness and the amount of work which students had put into their suggestions." said Jason Ott, Wakecney second-year law student and chairman of the committee.
The committee received some suggestions through boxes set up in Strong Hall Dec. 4. These were presented to the deans at the meeting Thursday.
To Consider Proposals
Under the present system for circuiculum changes, proposals are made—usually by faculty members—to the administrative committee, which studies the proposals and makes changes.
Ott said that after Christmas vacation his committee will consider several proposals for establishing a permanent method of receiving students suggestions.
As an example of how the administrative committee functions, Ott said that in the next two weeks it will decide whether to adopt a regulation which would waive the foreign language requirement for foreign students who already know one of the languages offered.
The suggestions included having more humanities courses in the engineering curriculum and having graduating seniors meet with the faculty of their department for an evaluation of the department.
ASC Planning Spring Meeting
Ott said the ASC is planning to sponsor a meeting in the spring at which Dean George Waggoner, the College, will give an explanation of the American system of college education, as compared to the European system. Another speaker will explain the European system.
"If this idea of getting student opinion on the curriculum is proved workable, we hope to provide a permanent mechanical process by which student suggestions can be heard," Ott said.
26 Take Polio Shots
Twenty-six students took advantage of the low priced polio shots at Watkins Hospital Thursday.
The hospital reported that a few students who had not taken their first shot at the hospital had to pay $1 for a third shot.
The shots are $1 for the first shot and 50 cents for the second. The third and fourth shots are free. These rates apply only to those who have taken the first shot at KU.
Weather
Low this morning 26. Low
15. high 44. Fair to partly cloudy
tonight and d Saturday. Little
change in temperature tonight and
Saturday. Low tonight 20-30.
High Saturday 55-60.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. Dec. 13. 1957
Book Barn Needs Remodeling—
It's A Gloomy Place
Comes commencement speech time, every college president worth his salt trots out phrase No. 216; "the heart of our campus is the library."
If that's true, KU is a cardiac case.
Watson Library has a fine stock of books, thanks to an active acquisition program. And in general, the library staff is a helpful group.
But the library building is a book-reader's nightmare. As Robert Vosper, library director, said, Watson Library "looks like a cross between a Gothic cathedral and some town's First National Bank."
He's right, too. Take a look at the main reading room, officially titled the Reference Room. It's a somber-looking place, with a high ceiling to accommodate supposedly impressive gothic windows. Dark, uncomfortable reading furniture is lined up in the room like tables in a mess hall. Light filters down from ceiling lamps, high overhead. The main room of the "heart of the campus" looks like a union station waiting room.
Some other areas are in similar shape. The Education Reading Room, Kansas Room and Green Room all have the same type of "utility" furniture. Unpainted plaster is crumbling off the walls in many places in the stack areas.
Worst of all, library officials are handicapped in rearranging cramped library reading space, for fear of overloading the floors. The library was built with concrete support beams instead of steel girders. Concrete beams usually won't bear as much weight as steel.
Let's face it, we're stuck with an impractical old barn of a library. Perhaps the best solution would be to start all over by constructing a new, modern reading plant. But new libraries cost money, money that might be used to buy more books.
Mr. Vasper and his associates think they have at least a partial solution to the book-and-reader housing problem. As appropriations become available, Watson Library is getting a face-lifting.
The undergraduate reading room was remodeled a few years ago. It's an example of how pleasant reading conditions can be. The room was painted in bright, pleasing colors. Modern furniture and good lighting were installed.
The cost was stiff—$70,000, including air-conditioning—but it's paying off. With a seating capacity of 265, plus 91 seats in the Green Room, the undergraduate reading room has traffic counts averaging 1500-1600 students per day'.
During the next few years, there are plans to:
1. Further enlarge the undergraduate reading room, possibly by building an addition onto the east side of the building and/or moving magazine displays to the second floor.
2. Add space to the main reading room by building a mezza- nine, or balcony, on the west wall.
3. Air-condition the entire library.
4. Redesign the heating system, thus eliminating bulky old steam radiators and adding to stack space.
Eventually, of course, a new library may be built. Mr. Vosper said he hoped such a building would be placed further west on the campus than the present building. This would reestablish the library in the center of the campus, which seems to be expanding to the west and south, he said.
In the meantime, we think the library's remodeling should be pushed at full speed, particularly that of the main reading room. It's a gloomy old place.
THE LIBRARY
—Larry Boston
Career Status For Vets
NEEDS REMODELING—Designed as Watson Library's main reading room, the dark, cathedral-like reference room doesn't get much business. Library officials hope to brighten it with new paint, furniture.
Career Status For Vets
WASHINGTON - (UP) President Eisenhower has signed an executive order making it possible for veterans receiving disability compensation to gain full career status after one year of "satisfactory service" in a civil service appointment.
In the past a three-year period was required following a "conditional" appointment.
POPULAR SPOT—Good lighting and ventilation, plus modern library furniture, make the undergraduate reading room a pleasant study area. Remodeling paid off, for lots of students use the room.
FLASH!!
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
BOSCO ALA
After December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th Bring 'em in and Save At
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Step Aside Lawyers, This Is Ladies' Day
The tables were turned when some coeds beat the law students to their posts on the front steps of Green Hall recently.
Alpha Chi Omega pledges, feeling frisky on their walk-out, ridiculed passing males, who looked up with surprised glances.
The man most surprised was Dean M. C. Slough, of the School of Law, who was counted up the steps.
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trivweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after eighth grade. University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Bannan, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor; Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant City Editors; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegram Editor; Nana Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Gerald Harmon, Malcolm Amplegate, Society Editor; Kevy Beth Noxes, Society Editor; Martha Crosier, Assistant Society Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
TURMUT
Ai F
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston ... Editorial Editor
John Eaton, Dei Haley, Jim Sledd, Associate Editors.
TICKETS
AND
RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Bike
8 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS VACATION Get Your Travel Reservations
at
The First National Bank of Lawrence
8th & Mass. TRAVEL AGENCY Phone VI 3-0152 Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
AIRLINES—FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
(tax included)
| From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | 1st Class |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Phoenix | $112.20 | $148.50 |
| Sioux City | —— | 35.97 |
| Indianapolis | 48.40 | 61.27 |
| Chicago | 41.80 | 54.67 |
| Boston | 127.60 | 165.11 |
| Havana | 188.10 | 201.86 |
Friday, Dec. 13, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Around The World
Ike Flies To Paris For NATO Parley
(Compiled from United Press)
President Eisenhower flew to Paris today to lead an Anglo-American counterattack against the Russian propaganda onslaught aimed at wrecking the NATO alliance and frightening Europe out of setting up U. S. missile bases. ___
The cold snap has been blamed for more than 50 deaths, at least 35 of them in fires as persons overtaxed heating units in an effort to keep warm.
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles flew to Paris this morning and joined British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd who arrived Thursday. They were expected to throw their full weight behind the Anglo-American counterattack.
In the South a sub-freezing cold wave continued to grip Dixie for the second straight night, claiming a heavy toll in lives and damage to crops.
Growers in the Lake Okeechobee vegetable area of Florida reported their crops 50 to 100 per cent destroyed. The 200-million dollar vegetable crop in Florida was the hardest hit by the hard freeze.
In northwest Iran, a series of earthquakes thundered today in a wintry disaster that killed scores of persons and left thousandst homeless in sub-zero weather. One unofficial estimate listed 300 dead and 500 injured. Some of the quakes were reported lasting up to two minutes.
In Hellenikon, Greece, two small time bombs exploded at the U. S. air base injuring four American airmen and a Greek guard. Police were alerted throughout the country, and all American buildings in the area were placed under heavy guard.
I'll try to be more efficient.
Tired of Studies?
Come Out To BLUE HILLS FOR A SNACK And Enjoy "THE BIGGEST BURGER In Town" Or Our Tasty Bar-B-Q
"you can't buy better and you can't buy for less"
Open
Fri. & Sat.
11 a. m.-
12 p. m.
The Blue Hills Drive-In & Blue Room 1601 E.23rd
Open
11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Sun. thru
Thurs.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
A Curtis Magazine
Five Stations To Carry Game
Basketball fans can select from five radio stations to hear the broadcast of the KU-St. Joseph's basketball game Saturday night from Philadelphia.
Carrying the game will be the KU sports network, originating from station KANU, Lawrence, including KVGB, Great Bend and KWHK, Hutchinson, with Monte Morre giving the play-by-play account; WREN, Topeka, Max Falkenstien, announcer; KCMO, Kansas City, Mo., Bruce Rice announcer.
"HOW WE STOPPED WILT (THE STILT) CHAMBERLAIN"
-by North Carolina Coach McGuire!
Kansas' seven-foot wonder, Wilt Chamberlain, had been tearing the collegiate basketball league apart all year. Yet, when they played the Tar Heels for the N.C.A.A. title, the giant was held to six field goals!
Now, in this week's Saturday Evening Post, North Carolina Coach McGuire shows you the bag of tricks that not only bottled up Wilt and the Jayhawks, but kept the Tar Heels undefeated through the entire '57 season.
You'll see why he says, "Basketball comes down to being a game of mistakes"...and how he capitalized on the ones the Jayhawks made. Read "How We Be came the Champs" by Frank McGuire himself.
In all: 8 articles, 4 stories, 2 serials, many cartoons.
Get your copy today!
The Saturday Evening POST
December 14, 1957 - 15c
On Gifts for Mothers-
(A Negative Approach)
SUGGESTION:
DON'T TAKE A COLLECTION OF DIRTY CLOTHES HOME FOR MOTHER.
She'll have enough to do, shopping and cooking and getting Dad to shovel snow. Go home with clean clothes. Send them to Lawrence Laundry
APPROVED
SAMITONE
SERVICE
MOTHER
for the quickest, most careful, best laundering in town. Dry cleaning, too-get ready for the Christmas parties at home, and New Year's. Take your clothes home in the Lawrence laundry packages-easier! Absolutely, you'll enjoy your vacation more while wearing clothes cleaned and laundered at
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
Dial VI 3-3711-You'll Be Glad You Did!
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 13, 1957
Jayhawkers Favored To Win Fifth Straight In Philadelphia Saturday
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
The KU basketball team will be favored to win its 5th consecutive game of the season Saturday night when it meets St. Joseph's College in Philadelphia.
St. Joseph's has won only one of its three games this year, over Westchester State 70-61. They lost two close games to St. John's University and St. Francis College.
Not only does KU have a 4-game winning streak, but 7-foot all-America center Wilt Chamberlain will be playing in his home town for the first time since leaving high school in 1955.
The 4 Jayhawker victories were over Canisius College, Oklahoma State University, Marquette University, and Northwestern University. Oklahoma State and Northwestern came close to upsetting the Kansans but faltered to lose by 7 and 6 points, respectively.
Being favored to win isn't enough for KU coach Dick Charn. He pointed out Wednesday that St. John's defeated St. Joseph's by only 7 points and that St. John's is one of the
stronger teams in the East.
Need Practice Badly
"What we need most of all right now," he said, "is two weeks of practice. Of course that isn't possible, but somewhere before Jan., when we start conference play, we must find a combination that can protect itself defensively against a man-for-man attack."
He said KU's lack of speed might handicap its defense all season.
St. Joseph has only three upperclassmen from last year's team, and will not compare with the Jayhawkers in height. Their biggest man is 6-foot 9-inch sophomore center Bob Clarke, the tallest man ever to play for a St. Joseph team.
Wilt. Loneski Lead Team
As usual, Chamberlain and Ron Loneski, 6-foot, 5-inch junior forward, will be expected to lead the KU offense. Chamberlain has a 32.3 scoring average in the first 4 games and Loneski is averaging 14. The same two are leading the team in rebounds.
Bowlers—
You'll like to bowl at spacious, modern PLADIUM! Twelve lanes, A.M.F. automatic spotters. Close to the campus.
Don Pierce, KU sports publicity director, played professional football in 1942 and '43 with the Brooklyn Dodgers and Chicago Cardinals.
Pladium Lanes
P
Probable starters are Chamberlain, Loneski, Bob Billings, guard, Bob Hickman, guard and Monte Johnson forward. Hickman is the only sophomore in the first five, the others are juniors. Al Donaghue, sophomore forward, is expected to see action.
Bob Boozer and Jack Parr, Kansas State forward and center, last year averaged 40 points per game between them.
Open bowling every afternoon; Fri., Sat., Sun.—all day & evening 901 Mississippi
Fresh Glazed
Doughnuts
for your Christmas Parties or Study Snacks
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out-Kansan Classified Section.
5c each JOE'S BAKERY 412 W.9—VI 3-4720
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN
Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
Jay
SHOPPE
835
Mass.
398
Ship n Shore
A blouse of beautiful simplicity...splashed with a big monogram design. Other perfect touches: refined tapering collar, relaxed roll-up sleeves. So-sudsable combed cotton in white, pastels and deeps... contrast-embroidered. Sizes 30 to 40. Come see more exciting new Ship'n Shores, from 2.98
Ship'n Shore
Memo for Sunday
10:30
3:30
Church with Jim
Christmas Vespers
5:00
Dinner at Cafeteria ( It 's Chili too ! )
5:30 Shakespeare's Twelfth Night color TV in the Union 7:00 snack in Hawkins Neat
7:30 Might go hear Christmas Kespers again if Jim wants to .
Jane Jayhawker 500 Week 11th
STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA AND HAWK'S NEST
Friday, Dec. 13, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
KU Swimmers Face Missouri Mines Today
Kansas' swimming team, still weak from lack of personnel, will meet Missouri Mines today at 4 p.m., seeking its first victory of a still young season. The meet, to be held at the Robinson gym pool, will be open to the public according to swimming coach Jay Markley.
Competition seemed to be building up between two of KU's squad. This will be the first time Jon Poort and Jared Pletty will be racing against each other. Both men will be entered in the 220 and 440 and their practice times have all been within about one second of each other.
Markley didn't have too much information on either team but said he was sure both teams would be tough. He said the Jayhawks were showing well in the 400-yard freestyle relay.
Saturday the swimmers will play host to Pittsburg State at 2 p.m. Markley estimated that both teams would bring 10 to 12 men. At the present time the Kansans have only seven on their squad. This lack of depth is what hurt the Jayhawkers in their first encounter with Southern Illinois last week.
"Neither one is willing to admit defeat so this should shape up to be quite a match," Markley said.
Freshman swimmers held a postal match with Nebraska and Colorado Thursday afternoon. Times will be exchanged by mail and the winner should be known by Saturday Markle- said.
The team scoring record for the Oklahoma University Field House is 102 points, set by Ohio State Dec. 18, 1954.
There are about 277,658 persons gainfully employed in the Columbus, Ohio, area.
FLASH!!
FLASH!!
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
After December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th Bring 'em in and Save at
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
摄影
Independent A—Stephenson vs. Butterballs, 4:15; Rochdale vs. Cats, 5:15; Templin vs. YMCA, 6:15; Radicals vs. Beirwhacks, 7:15.
Games Today
Fraternity C—Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 1 vs. Theta Tau, 5; Delta Upsilon No. 2 vs. Delta Chi No. 1, 5; Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 2 vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 1, 4:55; Phi Kappa Psi No. 5 vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 1, 4:15.
Fraternity C—Alpha Tau Omega No. 4, 28, Sigma Chi No. 2, 14; Delta Upsilon, 37, Phi Gamma Delta No. 4, 18; Alpha Tau Omega No. 3, 31, Alpha KappaLambda 27; Phi Delta Theta No. 5, 25, Sigma Nu No. 2, 20; Phi Gamma Delta No. 2, 39; Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 4, 31; Sigma Phi Epsilon 24, Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 3, 8; Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 3, 28, Sigma Chi 23; Phi Gamma Delta, 1, Sigma Pi, 0.
IM Results
Sigma Na No. 1 vs. Alpha Tau Omega No. 1; 5:45; Phi Delta Theta No. 3 vs. Delta Chi No. 2; 5:45; Phi Delta Theta No. 1 vs. Lambda Chi Alpha, 6:30; Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 2 vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 2; 6:30; Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 4 vs. Deltai Tau Delta No. 1, 7:15; Beta Theta Pi No. 4 vs. Alpha Epsilon Pi No. 2, 7:15.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Hear Our STEREOPHONIC SOUND Recording Of The UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
V1 3-4916
Audio House
founded in 1973 New Hampshire
LAWRENCE, NANAS
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
4:00
University Theatre
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-157
A long list of flavors and consistently high quality make ice cream from LAWRENCE-SANITARY a dessert favorite. Serve it often.
THE RESTAURANT
HAPPY HOURS
Alpha Delta Pi
Alpha Delta Pi "Sorority Of The Week"
Presented by
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM CO.
202 W. 6th VI 3-5511
COFFEE CHEESE
Roberto's
710 Mass.
Pizza
P
VI 3-1086
Heroes
WE DELIVER!
the university shop
MEN'S APPAREL
Presents
Its Annual Christmas
Gift Check List
Why not check the items that might interest you, then come and let us show you our wide selections in those items.
Alligator Belts
Botany & Manhattan Wool Sport Shirts
Towne and King Cardigan Sweaters
Wool Argyle Socks
Manhattan "No-Iron"
Dress Shirts
All December Purchases will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
Bernhard Altmann Cashmere Sweaters
Gloves
Towne & King Matching Sweater and Sock Sets
Izod Imported Wool Jersey Sport Shirts
White Stag Bavarian Jackets
Bar Accessories
All Wool and Cashmere Mufflers
Plymouth Raincoats
Tex Tan Billfolds
White Stag Washable Suede Jackets
The La Coste Imported Knit Sport Shirt
Leather Stud Boxes
Sleeveless Cardigan Sweaters
Flasks
All December Purchases will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
Silk Neckwear
Shields Jewelry
Esquire Slipper Socks
Initial Handerchief Sets
Manhattan Pajamas
Tie and Belt Hangers
Zippo Lighters
Towne & King Bulky Crew Neck Sweaters
Gift Certificates In Any Amount
the university shop
MEN'S APPAREL
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Dec. 13, 1957
Audience Performs In 'Crock Of Gold'
Sometimes an audience can be as entertaining as a production. Such is the case with the audience which views the University Players melodrama, "Crock of Gold."
While action is taking place upon the stage, persons in the audience casually drop hints of impending action and shout rebukes and suggestions to actors.
The actors must bear up under the strain of hisses, applause after a speech, a torrent of pop corn and paper cups, falling scenery, and other interruptions. The audience enjoys heckling because in this way they are allowed to "get into the act."
20 PAT BOONE in April Love
SHIRLEY JONES
CINEMA SCOPE
COLOR BY DE LUKE
NOW & SAT.—
SUNDAY—4 DAYS
Singing!
Fighting!
Dancing!
Romancing!
ELVIS PRESLEY
at his greatest!
Singing!
Fighting!
Dancing!
Romancing!
7
SIZZLING
NEW
BONDS!
MGM
PRESENTS
Jailhouse
Rock
in CinemaScope
An Aux Production
Plus: Tweety—News
GRANADA
GRANADA
The true test of an actor is whether he can get himself gracefully out of any predicament which might arise without the audience taking too much notice. However, when a wall caves in, as it did at the Thursday night performance, the audience noticed and shouted a warning. Marilyn Honderick, LaCrosse junior, saved the day with a light comment about the walls in "this old house."
The audience gloried in the discomfort" caused the villain by the constant peppering of the stage with popcorn.
Those members of the audience seated in the front row are caused a few discomforts. To these fall the poorly aimed missiles sent by those in the back of the theater. Anything from ping-pong balls to paper airplanes have a habit of landing in their laps.
The "Crock of Gold" will be available for two performances at 7:30 and 9:30 tonight and Saturday.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the office. Only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
KU-Y all day devotions, Danforth Chapel. Pick up guide to meditation
TODAY
KU Engineerettes Christmas dance for husbands, 8:30 p.m. Party House.
The Night of Nations' Ball, sponsored by International Club. 9 p.m., Student Union. $1 double tickets. Clyde Byson Orchestra.
SATURDAY
Sacrament of confession, 5 p.m., St. Anselm's Church, Canterbury House
Liahona Fellowship Christmas party,
7 September of Everett Norris, 2008
Fingered Driver
University Women's Club Christmas
Hall, Harrison,
Chairman, Mrs. Ribbon, Smith
Hallmark Hall of Fame color television, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Student Union. Maurice Evans will star in "Twelfth Night." Public welcome.
SUNDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Poulenle "Mass in G." Britten "Ceremony of Carols" Tchaikovsky "Nutcracker Suite."
United Student Fellowship, following
Vespera open house and supper will be
held at Jim Eaxings 2022 Ohio Street.
For more information call: 314-555-6900,
evening's program, Everyone, welcome.
Disciple Student Fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Myers Hall. Following meal group will attend Vespers after which they will go caroling. Everyone welcome.
Don't Take Chances On The Highway
Bring your car in to Morgan-Mack for expert brake, tire, and battery service.
FORD
FORD
CORREO INDUSTRIAL DE LOS NACIONES ESPAÑALES
"Proved and Approved The World Over"
Our service is proved and approved throughout the Lawrence Area.
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
MORGAN-MACK
714 VERMONT
DIAL VI 3-3500
'Family Of Man' Photos Displayed
The Tweed Ring was a group of Tammany politicians who controlled New York City from 1868-1871. The vicuna is a South American cud-chewing animal. It is valuable for its soft, shaggy wool.
Pictures from "The Family of Man" collection by Edward Steichen which appeared in the Dec. 3, 1957 pre-Christmas edition of the Emporia Gazette are on display in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room and Historical Center, 104 Flint.
There are also examples of the regular Saturday page which presents in appropriate typographic form a story from the Bible and a work of art relating to the story.
The use of "The Family Man" pictures show how the paper has departed from the common practices in typography and content.
Ancient Mesopotamians not only wrote on clay, but made clay envelopes to protect valuable documents, says the National Geographic Magazine.
W. L. White, editor and publisher of the paper, in a short explanation of the series, writes that its purpose is to "... gaze on mankind as we really are in all countries ... our hopes, our dreams ... in love, war, birth, death, at work and play ... our beauty andugliness."
AT THE PIT
HEY GANG! TGIF
"Best Music in Town"
Jerry Taylor's
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
WeaverS
Our 100th Year of Service
图
give her the gift she'll treasure
most . . .
Bernhard Altmann's shetland sweater!
$ 1 0^{9 5} $
Top your favorite skirt...slacks with this versatile long sleeved pullover in pure soft Shetland wool. Perfect Christmas gift! Ingrey, beige, white, blue, red.
Weaver's Sportswear Shop—Second Floor
25W
WAI
rates
India
Friday. Dec. 13, 1957
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
SHEAFFER SNORKEL PEN—burgundy with gold and silver top—name inscribed —Dorothy L. Trickett. Call VI 3-1100. reward. 12-13
TWIN PEARL RING in Flint Hall—very
stable to owner–reward. Call
5237, 12-18
WANTED
RUST COLORED PURSE up Tuesday
morning in Student Union bowling
alley. Need contents badly. Call Betty
Harrison, VI 3-6060. 12-13
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable Washing or ironing or both. 15% Indiana
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines. Requests. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal gift; your choice of color, size, or price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
IMPORTED SKI SWEATERS for sale at
imputed price. Ph. VI 2-0286
punched.
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, diagrams, lesson notes, complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7533 or VI 12-7477.
STUFFED ANIMAL TOYS, make lovely
touchable, affordable
VI 3-3411 1 p.m. 12-16
PRACTICALLY NEW PORTABLE record player, 3 speed Magnavox - tone control. Will sacrifice. Ph. VI 2-0306. 12-13
APPLES. PEARS AND APPLE CIDER at Hammonds Orchard 8 miles Southeast. Come out at all times whether you see our ad or not. 12-16
RCA VICTOR 3 speaker tape recorder
42 weeks old year. Call VICT 2-0753
3:30 p.m. 12-17
GERMAN SHEPHERD MALE PUP. 4/12
months old. Papers available. house
broken, price $125. Call Vince Riley at
V 3-6051 to make appointment. 12-13
FOR RENT
CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT: Clos-
age 12. Drinking couple 12-13
No drinking. SIH Ohio.
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED HOUSE, all one floor. Two car garage, newly furnished kitchen and bathroom machine furnished. For a couple or two machines. Ph.vi 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-13
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilizes paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Phi V.3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marineillo Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-3300
RADIO REPAIRS
Beamman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y. VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn. VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-it
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
Parsons Jewelry 725 Mass. VI 3-4731
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 2-8943
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
Private residence (contemporary design, large swimming pool with diving board) catering to young men will have one January and two February vacancies. Kitchen privileges optional. For appointment Ph. VI 3-9635. 12-16
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, private entrance & bath, garage, utility room washer furnished, newly decorated, close to KU. Boys or couple, very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-16
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT. $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-8-58
SINGLE ROOM, large and well furnished with cooking facilities and garage. Close to KU, $25 a month. Call VI 3-6696.
APARTMENT for two or three boys, private entrance and bath, available January 1. Call VI 3-1890, 1116 Sunset Dr.
12-18
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT
with enclosed sleeping porch, electric
range, refrigerator and steel built-ins.
refrigerator, business desk
Adults only. 742 Ohio 12-19
LARGE SINGLE ROOM to young man.
Also basement apartment for two young men. No drinking, no smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Ind. 12-17
4 ROOM APARTMENT: Nice house, private entrance and bath, furnished or unfurnished. $58 a month. Close to KU.
Phone VI 3-6696. 12-19
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT for two boys.
One sleeping room and one study room.
also board. Vacant January 6. Ph. VI 3-
1585, 1130 Kentucky.
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Contact them at West Dorm, Ottawa University Ph. 1492 12-18
ONE MAN to fill vacant seat on car
trip to Mexico City and New Orleans
over Christmas vacation. Call Opdahl.
VI 3-5552. 12-13
NEED A GIRL to fill a vacant seat to Mexico City during Christmas vacation. Call VI 3-1257 right away. 12-16
RIDE WANTED to California, Los
Vasco vicinity. Call James
T. V-3552
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. ff
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service.
Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
TYFIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, phone VI 3-2001. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate Phone VI 3-9373. ff
RENT A SINGER sewer machine by the
3-1971 Singe
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop
Clarence Adamson, Misc.
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657,
1400 Tenn.
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W. 20th St. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8600. `tt`
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629.
tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6828. tf
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers,
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all the items: camelos, hamsters, etc. Everything in the field held Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Church Hill
Phone VI 3-2921. tt
We Stock The
COMPLETE
MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us now
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass — Ph. VI 3-1044
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. ff
DRESS. MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
$941\%_{2}$ Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
PHOTOGRAPH OIL, COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show Ph. VI 5-1093 or 12-2059
5994
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service. VI 5-7184; 1632 West 20th St.
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at
regular rates. Will type the terms, term
papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna
Virri, VIr 3-8660.
tf
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822.
TUTORING IN GERMAN by wife of university instructor, a native German, formerly on KU faculty herself. Will tutor Geranium at any level including preparation for Ph. D. language requirement. Call VI 3-3369. 12-16
MISCELLANEOUS
1-30-58
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI at 3550.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI. CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Morrilo.
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464.
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr, Graduate Students
call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass-Ph1. VI 3-8074
The Bel Air 4-Door Sedan—brimming with bold new beauty!
Come try the quickest combination on the road!
CHEVY'S
CHEVY'S TURBO-THRUST V8 WITH TURBOGLIDE
TURBO
The Bel Air Impala Sport Coupe
-one of two new super sport models!
There's never been an engine-drive combination like this one!
Chevrolet's Turbo-Thrust V8* introduces a radical new slant on engine efficiency with the combustion chambers located in the block rather than in the head. Turboglide $ ^{*} $ -the other half of the team-is the only triple-turbine automatic drive in Chevy's
It takes you from a standstill through cruising in a single sweep of motion. Harness these triple turbines to a 250-h.p. Turbo-Thrust V8-or the 280-h.p. Super Turbo-Thrust*and you step out instantly in any speed range. Nothing else on the road goes into action so quickly, so smoothly. Your Chevrolet dealer has the combination! *Optional at extra cost.*
'58!
CHEVROLET
Only franchised Chevrolet dealers display this famous trademark CH VROLET
See Your Local Authorized Chevrolet Dealer
.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 13, 1957
Zebus make poor house pets for children.
Visit Bloody Lawrence Of Old Days
BARNARD
MY, THAT'S INTERESTING—Jim Sledd, Lawrence senior, looks over some of the items in the Lawrence Room of Watson Library. (Daily Kansan photo)
You can still revisit Lawrence in its bloody, younger days in Watson Library.
Tucked away in a corner of the library's top floor is the Lawrence Room, a real treasure chest of pictures, mementoes and relics of the oldtime city.
The pictures, covering most of the room's wall space, tell the story of the settling of Lawrence, Quantrill's raid on Aug. 21, 1863, and other events which make up Lawrence's history.
The pictures are arranged in historical order, beginning with a large gold-framed picture of Amos A. Lawrence, for whom the town was named. Mr. Lawrence was treasurer of the Emigrant Aid Society which sponsored the first settlers who founded Lawrence. Mr. Lawrence made a $10,000 gift toward the founding of a college on Mount Oread which became the first endowment for KU.
His picture is surrounded by others of Mount Oread at Wosher, Mass. for which our hill was named, the first house in Lawrence and John Brown, Kansas slavery abolitionist.
A John Brown pike, which was a long wood shaft with a pointed steel
head, leans against the wall near the pictures of the abolitionist.
There are marble busts of three persons who contributed to the early history of the city. They were Mr. Lawrence, Charles Robinson, first governor of Kansas, and James H. Lane, first U.S. senator from Kansas. There is an entire display case of things which belonged to Dr. Robinson.
The room also contains a desk and
if you are giving HIM a sweater for Christmas-you had better make your selection from our wonderful assortment
$7.95 to $29.95
chair of Francis H. Snow, chancellor of the University 1890-1901. A call bell, used to warn guests of the Free State Hotel when Sheriff Samuel J. Jones, who led the so-called posse which sacked Lawrence and burned the hotel May 21, 1856, is in one of the display cases.
Two of the most popular items in the room according to Miss Laura Neiswanger, Kansas collection librarian who is in charge of the room, are "Old Sacramento," an old cannon said to have fired the first shot for and against slavery, and a Sharps rifle.
The collection was started in 1927 when the executor of Dr. Robinson's estate presented several of his valuable relics to the library. The collection is still being added to.
The first survey map of "Lawrence City, Kanazas" shows the city as it was laid out in 1855. It is similar to the way the town is laid out today except originally the east-west streets were named for revolutionary heroes.
diebolt's
It was begun by Miss Carrie M. Watson, University librarian from 1877-1921. She placed the picture of
843 massachusetts
Pizza Delivered
VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
Quantrill behind the door because she was a little girl when he had raided the town. The collection was continued by Miss Mary M. Smelser and is now under Miss Neiswanger.
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
By Golly,
I Got a Gift
from the . . .
916 1/2 Mass.
SANTA
Or
Was $1.25 - Now $1.00
Green Pepper Pizza
Chateau Special Was $1.15 - Now $1.00
Chateau Drive-In
Try Our Tangy, Delicious Pizza. It's Made From A Secret Recipe Imported From California.
Clean Surroundings
VI 3-1825
1802 Mass.
Quick Service
- Car Wash
Free Pickup CITIES SERVICE Free Delivery
- Brakes Adjusted
- Minor Repairs
- Lubrication
- Tires and Batteries
Johnny Harrell's Cities Service
Phone VI 2-0606
6th & Wisconsin
Men in the know know true from false
BUS STOP
College grads over forty suffer from a decline in their earning power.
TRUELFALSE
False. In fact the older they get the more money they earn. Statistics show that the average man's earning power declines rapidly after he reaches 45. The college grad's income is still going sharply up at this point.
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY
College educated men tend to be bachelors to a greater degree than average American males.
TRUE
FALSE
False, Recent studies show that Mr. College Grad is no longer avoiding the marriage license bureau the way he used to. In fact statistics now indicate that having a college degree actually lessens the probability of a man leading the bachelor life.
SOCIAL REPRESENTATION
Jockey brand is America's best known brand of men's underwear.
TRUE
FALSE
True. Independent surveys prove that Jockey is not only the best known underwear in the U.S., but also in 98 countries around the world. Just shows how universally men value comfort and fit.
Men on the go go for Jockey underwear BRAND
made only by Coopera®
Coopera®
---
Daily hansan
55th Year, No.63
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
ASC To Select Big 8 Delegates, Vote On 2 Bills
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957
The agenda for the Big Eight student governing conference will be discussed and two bills will be voted on by the All Student Council at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Student Union.
Four delegates to represent the University will be selected to attend the annual conference in Kansas City Dec. 27-28.
The two bills call for a student voice on the University Parking Committee and for qualifications for the selection of the Homecoming queen to be given in advance and not during the selection.
Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Kan. junior and chairman of the ASC, said the parking bill is to replace an old one thrown out when the Traffic and Parking Committee changed names to the Traffic and Safety Committee.
The Homecoming queen bill stems from a ruling earlier this semester that a married student could not be selected queen. Brooks Becker, Emporia graduate student and representative for married students, proposed the bill at the last ASC meeting. It is intended to prevent any discriminatory ruling during the selection of the queen.
Burglar Pilfers AEPi House
Four trophies valued at about $60 were taken from the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, 1247 Ohio, while the house was practically vacant sometime Saturday morning.
Blumenfeld told police the house was probably entered through the front door sometime between 2:30 and 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
Herbert Silverman, New York, N.Y. freshman and a member of the fraternity, said today the fraternity members, except for the house parents and one student, were in Kansas City at a party during the burglary.
Campus police received a call from the Lawrence Police about 1 p.m. Saturday to investigate the burglary reported by Stewart Blumenfeld. Lawrence graduate student and house father of the fraternity.
Campus police estimated the value of the trophies. Stolen were a Brother of the Year trophy an athletic trophy, a KU-MU trophy with the scores of past games, and the top part of an Eric Cole Scholastic trophy.
$665 Donated To Vespers Fund
At the two performances of the Christmas Vespers Sunday $665.05 for the Christmas Vespers Scholarship Fund was collected in free will offerings.
In the afternoon $421.46 was contributed, and in the evening $243.59.
Last year $667.35 was given for the fund, $462.86 in the afternoon and $204.49 in the evening.
Christmas Films To Be Shown
Two color Christmas films will be this week's film features at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey Hall.
The pictures are "The Geesebook," showing 15 pages of a medieval missal, and "A Charles Dickens Christmas," showing the Christmas visit of Pickwick and his friends to Dingley Dell farm.
... AND A DOLLY THAT SAYS "MAMA"— Jolly old St. Nick is his usual patient and understanding self, as his young friend lets her imagination go, dreaming of the many wonders to be found under the tree on that certain morning soon. (Daily Kansan photo)
Yule Vacation Set For KU Employes
State civil service employees, including many KU staff members, will have $1\frac{1}{2}$ days of Christmas vacation—Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 24 and all day Dec. 25-Gov. George Docking announced Saturday.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said today no announcement of vacation for New Year's. Day has come from the governor's office yet.
Regulations for civil service employees do not affect University faculty members, who are hired on a 9-months basis, Mr. Nichols said.
Dense Fog Expected Tonight
The dense fog which blanketed the state, caused two traffic deaths and disrupted airline schedules in Kansas City and Topeka Sunday night and this morning, is supposed to be back again tonight.
The U.S. Weather Bureau said the fog would be in all parts of the state tonight, cutting visibility to zero in central and eastern sections.
The low temperature here this morning was 35. The low Sunday was 38, the high 48.
The forecast:
The forecast:
Cloudy through Tuesday, Scattered drizzle continuing east tonight and Tuesday forenoon. No important temperature change. Low tonight 30 northwest to 40's southeast. High Monday in 50's.
Mitchell Buys Lawrence House
After two weeks of hunting, KU's new head football coach has found and bought a house in Lawrence.
Coach Jack Mitchell said Friday that he had bought the Mike Murphree home at 314 Dakota St. in the Prairie Acres addition.
The house is ranch style, airconditioned, and has seven rooms, including three bedrooms, a large family room, two baths, and a 2-car garage. It is on a $ \frac{3}{4} $ acre lot.
TNE: Banned Bad Boys
Bv MARTHA CROSIER
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Printed signs found on buildings and the cloth sign with the letters TNE painted on it, found on the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority door Dec. 9, show there is still an active chapter of Theta Nu Epsilon, banned drinking fraternity, at KU.
"The organization hasn't had a very good reputation from its beginning," said Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students. "It has sponsored printed signs and painted the campus.
The organization was founded in 1870 and became nation wide. References to it on the KU campus go back as far as 1898. It was banned by the faculty in 1906 but made a reappearance in the fall of 1909. The Board of Regents ordered it "forbidden in the University" March 17, 1910.
In 1957 TNE attempted to get a float into the Relays parade by hiring a person to drive it in after the parade had started but police stopped it before it reached Massachusetts Street. The float depicted a man chasing a nude woman.
The group seems to have been quite active during the 1953-1954 school year. In September 1953 they burned the letters TNE on the football field the night before the KU-Texas Christian football game which was shown over NBC television. The letters were covered by green paint before the game.
In the spring of 1952 the group tore the curtains in Hoch Auditorium and broke several drum heads.
"We have not had quite as serious a problem as Nebraska or Washburn universities have had in recent years but there is an active chapter on the campus," Dean Dean Woodruff said.
The letters TNE were painted on the rocks on Sixth Street highway on Parents Day, 1953, and printed signs appeared on trees and buildings over the campus. On Homecoming, 1953, handbills were distributed by persons hired by the group. They entered a float in the relays parade that year and painted the campus.
"The membership is made up of persons who are accepted and tolerated by their fellow students. It is composed largely of boys who belong to regular fraternities," he said. "When students know about TNE and don't do anything about it they are condoning something that the majority of students don't approve of."
The activity of the group goes in cycles Dean Woodruff said. "We sometimes take pride in being naughty. Social pressure has a lot to do with it. It is a problem that student leaders should be handling but there is not much evidence that they are." he said.
When asked what students should do about the oroblem, Dean Woodruff said, "There is nothing like social ostracism to bring most persons into line."
State Regents Won't Retreat On Salary Hike
The Board of Regents today said it "won't retreat" from a stand for a requested five per cent salary increase for faculty members at the five state colleges and university.
He said science departments, such as chemistry or physics, generally would receive high salaries. Other departments depending on the school involved, might receive lower salary increases, or none at all.
He said the overall effect would be about the same as a five per cent raise at all schools, or about $901,000 for the next fiscal year.
Gov. George Docking cut the faculty salary increase out. He told newsmen he probably would not recommend any increase in his budget. He objected to a blanket five per cent raise, contending it was on a "geometric progression" and was not equitably distributed.
Mr. Boyd said the new request was on a more selective basis. One professor might get a 12 to 13 per cent raise, while another might get none.
About 25 to 30 members of a House Ways and Means Committee today boarded a bus for a week's tour of state institutions.
The first part of the tour will include Atchinson Receiving Home, Kansas City School for the Blind, Osawatomie State Hospital and possibly Chanute, Topeka and Larned institutions.
Each institution will have before these same committee members its detailed spending requests when the Legislature meets in a 30-day budget session Jan. 14.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will take their budget requests to the committee sometime next month, before the budget session.
A Topeka insurance executive, Russell R. Rust, was named to the State Board of Regents Saturday by Gov. George Docking.
Democrat To Regents Board
Gov. Docking also made public a letter from regents member Oscar Stauffer, Topeka Republican, who said he did not wish to be reappointed when his term expires Jan. 1. He said he did not have the time to devote to the job.
Mr. Rust replaces Mrs. Elizabeth Haughey, Concordia, who had been on the board since 1942. The appointment is effective Jan. 1. Both Both Mr. Rust and Mrs. Haughey are Democrats.
Friday Gov. Docking appointed George B. Collins, Wichita attorney, to the board to replace A. W. Hershberger, also of Wichita. Hershberger had been on the board since 1951. He and Mr. Collins are both Democrats.
700 See Hallmark Show
About 700 watched the Hallmark "Hall of Fame" color television production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," starring Maurice Evans, Sunday in the Student Union.
Future programs include "The Silver Skates" on Feb. 9. "Little Moon of Albrin" with Julie Harris on March 24 and "Dail M for Murber" with Maurice Evans on April 25.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957
Who's To Blame?
What's wrong with campus politics? That is a question which is bothering some of the students who are really interested in this phase of campus life.
No one would be so nearsighted as to say the answer to this question is, "Nothing is wrong with campus politics." The apparent lack of student interest would prove this answer to be false. There is definitely a problem to be solved before the student government gains any stature on the campus.
The fault may lie with the leaders of the campus parties. It is apparent that many of them have only one motivation as the leaders of campus political activities, that being personal recognition and gain. There are few who take an active part in these affairs in order to improve them and to motivate the students to take a more active interest in student government.
There is a definite lack of responsibility among the students who could improve campus politics. Dishonesty in campus elections is not uncommon, especially in the counting of the ballots. This has caused the demise of one party recently, and if it continues and becomes more prevalent, it could be a death-blow to the whole campus political system. These political leaders should feel at least a little responsibility for making campus politics something that the students can respect enough to stir their interest.
Since these political leaders are chosen by the
student body, maybe the lack of responsibility lies with the students. If the students, when they cast their ballot, know if the candidates or the issues involved, they have no one to blame for the sad political condition but themselves. If a student were really interested in how well his student government was operated, he would be prepared to cast an intelligent ballot when he arrived at the polling place. Last minute decisions, with selection being based on recognition of the name, social affiliations, or flipping a coin, cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, be called intelligent.
Maybe the fault lies with the student newspaper for not giving the students a good picture of the candidates or the issues involved. A lot of students read The Daily Kansan, and if it presented the vital information needed for the student to cast an intelligent ballot, maybe more of them would be cast.
Then, it may be that there is no one group entirely responsible for our political dilemma. The leaders need student interest to keep them on their toes. The students need good leadership, activity and colorful issues to keep them interested. The Daily Kansan needs something besides the same tired, trite issues to print interesting material for their political-minded readers.
Since cooperative lack of responsibility may be the problem, cooperation may be the solution.
We Have It Lucky
—Del Haley
Boy, have we got it lucky!
When we bring a girl home from a date and deposit her at the front door of the dormitory or sorority house where she lives we are allowed to kiss said girl, and even show emotion.
The poor men and women at Purdue have been limited, at one residence hall, to one short kiss, showing little or no emotion. In fact, a handshake is recommended by the dean of women.
It seems that there are colleges in the United States still in the dark ages. There are many arguments to be said for the good night kiss in front of the door and perhaps the strongest ones are these:
1. By the time we come to college we are supposed to be mature men and women, capable of making major decisions, as to what our career should be, what courses we want to take, when
we want to study and what to spend our money on.
2. Another strong argument is that if the college is to be like home then you should be allowed the privilege of kissing your date in front of the door, just as you would at home before going in.
3. On the practical side, standing out in the open sure beats necking in the dark corners and shadows. Necking is something which one shouldn't be ashamed of and be forced to slink off someplace else for that good night kiss.
4. Many men in college don't have cars, and since they are then presented with the problem of where to do their necking, it seems it would be far better to allow it out in the open.
Our sympathies go to the students of Purdue. Our doors are open to any who would like to get away from the dark ages of Purdue and come to modern KU.
-Lee Lord
... Letters ...
Horrified
To say the least, your editorial "The Crow and the Firecracker," (The Daily Kansan, Dec. 11) is in extremely bad taste. At no time was there a question of winning friends through the generosity of our government. Our help has always been in a spirit of humanity and Christian benevolence. It is a pity that the freedom of press is so taken advantage of by ridiculing the noblest virtue of our government. Furthermore I am horrified to see that one of the noblest of characters ever to represent this nation in foreign affairs, could be slandered in such a shocking piece of ridicule as is written in this editorial.
Regardless of your political views, you should at least show a small item of respect for our representatives. You as aspirants to represent the press would be the first to cry and whine if news you refer to should be withheld from the public. I am sure that a public retraction should be forthcoming from the writer of this article.
F. C. Buchholtz
Buildings and grounds department
Too Commercial
Editor:
I realize that the policy of a state school, especially KU, is to leave religion and God out of the curriculum as completely as possible. This policy seems to have spread to the populace in general with this year's Christmas decorations. Nowhere on
this campus is the nativity scene on display!
displays.
In these times of great stress and strain among nations and ideologies, the cry is for peace. If this is a sincere desire, why do our "intellectuals (?)" insist on striking Christ from Christmas and of not recognizing the Prince of Peace?
When asked if his sister had the flu, he replied, "Yeah, they thought she did, but it turned out to be nothing — just double pneumonia with bacterial endocarditis and conjunctival inflammatory complications."
Just how much lower is this Holly time going to be graded down? The business world is dragging it through the mud now by wringing every last penny out of the occasion. When are the "money changers" going to be driven out of the temple?
Salina senior
Norb Schneider
Short Ones
A girl is not necessarily an artist when she paints and chisels.
The difference between a game warden and a housemother is that the former protects wildlife while the latter prevents it.
And there is the poor student Sunday school teacher who reports on the upsetting experience she had with her class of high school "row-dies." She announced that they would sing Rock of Ages, and one of the "cats" answered, "Crazy man, give us the beat."
To the college professor who says that civilization will last for 40,000 years, one might say. "That's nice, but when will it begin."
Some people are like blotters, they soak it all in, but get it backwards.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded, 1889, became biweekly, 1904,
founded, 1925.
Daily Transan
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University daytime University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
Extension 251, news room Extension 256, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle ___ Managing Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Bannan, Richard Brown, Ray Winginson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Harley, City Editor; Ronald DeLay, City Editor; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegraph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthur, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editor; Mazy Crosler, Society Editor; Martha Crosler, Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner ... Business Manager
Kent Pelz, Advertising Manager; Jerry
Gregory; George Pester, Classified Advertising
Manager; Martha Billsleysum, Assistant
Designer; Ted Winkler, Promotion Manager;
Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston Editorial Editorial
Johnson Debate Del Haley, Jim Sledd, Associ-
Editor. Editors.
United Press Forecasts
Tokyo reports that it will be no surprise if Adm. Arthur W. Radford, former chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, is given a high diplomatic post soon. The word in Tokyo is that it's possible he may be named ambassador to the Philippines if the present envoy, Charles E. Bohlen,
decides to retire. Alternatively, Radford might be appointed to some other southeast Asian ally. Tokyo says some of them (members of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) are feeling neglected. Naming of an ambassador of Radford's standing would be a morale-booster.
Rob
Roberto's
risto's
710 Mass.
VI 3-1086
We Deliver
PIZZA
Christmas Gifts
DEAR FRIENDS:
ku
Time to remember your friends and loved ones with gifts that show your esteem and affection. It will be a pleasure to serve you.
Credit If You Wish
Gustafson
809 Mass. St. The College Jeweler Phone VI 3-5432
your ele
From where I sit...
From where I sit...
clothes dry better
Electrically!
your electric clothes dryer
costs less than
4c a load
to operate!
The convenience of an electric clothes dryer makes it easy to wash more often — so you get along with fewer clothes. Let the kids wear out their clothes instead of growing out of them. You save on cost of operation, too . . . an electric clothes dryer dries your laundry for less than 4c a load! See your dealer now for a money-saving electric clothes dryer!
All year long, she'll still be thanking you!
LIVE BETTER
ELECTRICALLY
THE KANSAS POWERand LIGHT COMPANY
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
RECORDING WORKSHOP
FILMS, FILMS, FILMS—Dewey Schmitendorf, an employee of the Bureau of Visual Instruction, removes a film from the film library to be checked out by an instructor for showing to his class. (Daily Kansan photo)
Bureau Ships Films All Over Nation
"The Adventures of Bunny Rabbit," "Brazil" and the "You Are There" series are among the most popular movies in the rental service of the KU Bureau of Visual Instruction. The bureau sends 100 to 150 films a day to all parts of the country.
The bureau shows movies to classes. It has a special library of about 270 films that are reserved for classroom use.
The demand for films is sometimes so great the bureau can not accommodate them. Thursday, an average day, had 25 films scheduled, six of them to be shown in the projection room and the remainder in classrooms.
Fred S. Montgomery is director of visual instruction and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson is in charge of services for the campus.
The films are kept in a fire proof air conditioned vault. Films are filed alphabetically and by size.
Slide, filmmart and sound projectors and tape recorders are available. Its rental library contains about 6,000 separate titles with duplications of some popular movies. There is a tape library of several hundred tapes.
Selects Bailey Film Series
The bureau sponsors and selects films to be shown in the Bailey film series at 4 p.m. each Wednesday in the projection room. 3 Bailey Hall. The series covers a wide variety of subjects including art, history and architecture.
The bureau has a projection room which seats 80 persons and a preview room which seats 17 persons. The latter is used by professors who want to preview a film before showing it to their class.
Field House Tickets Left
Despite the appearance of two of the nation's top five basketball teams Friday night in Allen Field House, there will probably be seats to spare.
Kansas State's Wildcats, ranked fifth in the nation last week, play the University of California and KU, second in the nation, plays the University of Washington in a double header.
Earl Falkenstein, athletic department business manager, said there are plenty of tickets left for the games, and unless there is a rush for tickets soon, the crowd will be from 12-15,000. Allen Field House holds 17,000.
The formation of a chapter of Alpha Sigma Chi, servicemen's council, and disbanding of the University Veterans' Organization will be discussed at 7 tonight in the Pine Room of the Student Union. A representative from the Alpha Sigma Chi chapter at St. Louis will speak.
Council May Replace UVO
See Us For
HI FI FOR CHRISTMAS
V1 3.4916
Audio House
P.O. Box 120
New Hampshire, COUNTY
LANDSCHILD BANK
Record Playing Equipment
Priced For Your Needs
Around The World
Power Edge Still West's, Ike Says
(Compiled from United Press)
Equipment Show Room 928 Mass.
President Eisenhower told the opening session of the first N summit conference today the West still holds "the margin of r
In his speech, Mr. Adenauer proposed that the West first use diplomatic channels to find out precisely what Soviet Premier Nicolai Bulganin meant in his recent series o letters to Western countries which combined threats with overtures fo appeasement.
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., the Air Force's Atlas pointed skyward, ready for launching today. The U. S. hopes its earth-shaking rocket engines will give a shot in the arm to the NATO talks in Paris.
Also at the first session, West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer called for a renewal of cold war peace talks with the Soviet Union.
However, he said the Western nations "must work to maintain this lead over the Communist bloc" because the triumph of freedom over despotism is not inevitable.
Atlas Ready For Launching
The Atlas is America's largest and most powerful ballistics missile. It is a three-stage rocket designed to span continents with an atomic warhead in its blunt nose.
In Washington, Senate Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson called for an early decision on a proposed new government agency to direct the drive for mastery of outer space.
"We must begin as soon as possible the practical work that is designed to get us to the moon first," he said. "We are a few steps behind in the race already and someone is going to have to take over direction so we can skip a few steps and overtake our competitor."
In Tehran, Iran, the governor of Hamadan province said that at least 2,000 were killed in the series of earthquakes that have hit northwestern Iran since last Friday.
31 Accounting Interns Start Work Dec. 26.
Thirty-one accounting majors will become junior accountants with national and local firms for six weeks starting Dee. 26. The students will complete this semester's class work and take their final examinations before Christmas vacation and then devote full time to the internship program.
The internes, all seniors or graduate students, will be paid at approximately the same rate as junior members of the firms. The students are selected for the program on the basis of academic standing, adaptability for assignment, results on aptitude and personality tests and interviews with the faculty committee headed by Howard F. Stettler, professor of business administration.
AIRLINE TICKETS
EUROPE VACATION
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
In Jakarta, Indonesia, reports indicated that Indonesian military commanders were carrying out their orders to take control of all Dutch enterprises. The Indonesian actions against Dutch interests have been in reprisal for the Dutch refusal to give up West New Guinea to Indonesia.
Indonesians Take Control
TOM MAUPIN Travel Service
In Washington, Vice President Richard M. Nixon called for a full airing of inter-service rivalries to see if competition between the services has impaired the national defense.
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
Commenting on the Soviet Sputniks, Mr. Nixon said three conclusions may be drawn: one, the Russians have developed a rocket with a thrust big enough to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile; two, they can build a tricky guidance system for a satellite, and three, they may have solved the problem of reenerating the atmosphere at tremendous speeds.
Mr. Nixon said the guidance system of an earth satellite, however, is only about one-tenth as accurate as that used on a military missile.
Also in Washington three American mothers are awaiting a go-ahead from the Chinese Reds to pay Christmas visits to their sons imprisoned in Communist China on charges of spying.
The State Department, reversing previous policy, recently agreed to permit close relatives of six Americans jailed in Red China to visit their kin. Thus far the Peiping regime has failed to give the three women permission to enter.
In Topcka, a report of a room-by-room survey of Kansas' five state colleges revealed present classroom space with normal additions could handle an anticipated doubling of enrollments by 1970.
Dormitory Space Needed
However, a special committee of the Board of Regents said dormitory space would have to be expanded. This would necessitate raising the statewide property tax levy an average of 25 cents a Kansan annually, or raising the present mill levy from 4 to one milk.
The group advocated borrowing nine million dollars from inactive state funds to meet the immediate critical period for additional classroom space.
The Regents then noted the real money needs would come for faculty salaries at the five state colleges. The group said that "Kansas is now 19.6 per cent below the national average."
C
"I'm Going Back to the Premier Jewelry Shop for Another Gift!"
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
916 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
the university shop
Presents
Its Annual Christmas
Gift Check List
Why not check the items that might interest you, then come and let us show you our wide selections in those items.
Towne and King Cardigan Sweaters
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
Botany & Manhattan
Wool Sport Shirts
Alligator Belts
Wool Argyle Socks
Manhattan "No-Iron"
Dress Shirts
All December Purchases will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
Bernhard Altmann Cashmere Sweaters
White Stag Bavarian Jackets
Towne & King Matching Sweater and Sock Sets
Izod Imported Wool Jersey Sport Shirts
[ ]
Gloves
[ ]
Tex Tan Billfolds
Bar Accessories
All Wool and Cashmere Mufflers
Plymouth Raincoats
White Stag Washable Suede Jackets
The La Coste Imported Knit Sport Shirt
[ ]
Leather Stud Boxes
Sleeveless Cardigan Sweaters
Flasks
All December Purchases will be attractively gift wrapped free of charge
Silk Neckwear
Shields Jewelry
Esquire Slipper Socks
Initial Handerchief Sets
Manhattan Pajamas
Tie and Belt Hangers
---
Zippo Lighters
Towne & King Bulky
Crew Neck Sweaters
Gift Certificates In Any Amount
the university shop
MEN'S APPAREL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday. Dec. 16, 1957
along the JATHAWKER trail WITH ANTHAN
What started last year in a haphazard, unbusinesslike manner has ended that way.
It was about one year ago that two gentlemen with an idea, Bryce Cooke and Robert Reck, now departed and gone their separate ways, convinced the University and hundreds of others that the way to televise a basketball game was for everyone to donate money into a common fund.
The idea of televising games was, in itself, sound so long as the organization was able to use the money for what it was intended—televising games.
The organization, which was incorporated as the Jay Watchers, did television two games.
Reck and Cooke, however, after reassuring alumni sponsors and donors that the organization would be perpetuated, not only made no plans whatsoever for the group to carry on its activities this year, but, according to Roy Borgen, one of the alumni sponsors, have made no effort to answer repeated correspondence from the alumni.
Early last spring, when the Jay Watchers were being organized, Cooke said, "If the plan is carried out successfully, we hope to be able to spread coverage to football next year and perhaps even to the KU Relays."
But if the organization is to resume operations it must have such essential facts as the bank balance, if any; a statement of profit and loss and some sort of balance sheet showing where and how money was received and spent.
These records are apparently still in the hands of Reck and Cooke.
It was obvious from the beginning that this idea was a flash in the pan. Reck and Cooke were quite willing to work hard on their pet project and, after they succeeded in making it work temporarily, sat back, made a few statements to the press and left a group of alumni holding the bag and an empty one at that.
"I have no idea how much they spent," Borgen said. He added that "I don't know what bank the balance of the organization's money is in either."
The complete lack or organization of the Jay Watchers is displayed by the complete lack of available records.
The alumni, impressed by the soundness of the idea at a time when Kansas was sure to go far in regional and national play, and also impressed by the apparent responsibility of the students involved, were of the opinion then and still are that the Jay Watchers should be left in student hands.
But responsibility of the students involved last year was something synonymous with publicity and when the latter slipped away disinterest took its place as it so often does in student sponsored projects.
It also may be true that the former student chairmen of the Jay Watchers realized the futility of regularly televising sporting events, having to depend on donations for funds.
Aagies Interview Sanders
The Daily Kansan will attempt to contact Reck and Cooke in the hope that the Jay Watchers' records may be recovered and that those persons interested may have something with which to work.
COLLEGE STATION. Tex. — (UP) Texas A & M officials said Sunday night they will interview Henry Sanders, UCLA head football coach, Wednesday as a possible successor of Paul Bryant.
The officials denied however, a report they offered Sanders inducements totaling more than $35,000 to take the job.
The Big Eight individual single-game scoring record is held by B. H. Born of KU, who scored 44 points against Colorado in 1953.
KU Pulls Ahead Late To Defeat Hawks
After trailing until after the half, and not being safely ahead until the last 2 minutes. KU's basketball team won over St. Joseph's College of Philadelphia Saturday night, 66-54.
The Hawks of St. Joseph's were expected to be the weakest team the Jashawkers had met this season, but they played an inspired game and gave the KU team one of its biggest scares of the season.
Wilt Chamberlain scored 31 points before a sell-out crowd in his home
The St. Joseph's team drew the Jayhawkers out of their zone defense early in the game, held Chamberlain by putting 3 men on him and held the ball each time to pick their shots. They got the lead in the first 6 minutes and held it until after ter 3 minutes of the second half.
town to lead the KU victory. He also got 22 rebounds and blocked 9 St. Joseph's shots.
The victory-clinching rally in the last few minutes consisted of 2 free throws each by Bob Billings and
Jayhawk coach Dick Harp benched starter Monte Johnson in the 2nd half in favor of Kindred who scored 7 points, got 5 rebounds, and generally helped pull the team together.
Lvvn Kindred and 2 field goals by Chamberlain.
Only 5 men palyed for KU in the 2nd half, Billings, Kindred, Chamberlain, Ron Loneski and Bob Hickman.
Loneski played his usual outstanding game, getting 14 points and 15 rebounds.
KU outscored St. Joseph's at the free throw line 22, and drew only 11 fouls to St. Joseph's 29. The number of fouls got St. Joseph's into trouble, as 2 of their starting five fouled out after getting only 7 points and 7 rebounds between them.
Playing in his home town of Philadelphia for the first time since high school. Chamberlain was watched by his parents, some of his 9 brothers and sisters, and other relatives.
His parents were interviewed on the air at halftime by Monte Moore, director of the KU Sports Network.
Swimmers In Clean Sweep Of Weekend Meets
Kansas swimmers made a clean sweep of contests over the weekend, winning meets both Friday and Saturday. It began to shed some light on what a few weeks ago seemed to be a dark future for the swimmers. The meets also showed that the swimmers may overcome coach Jay Markley's
one big worry, lack of depth.
The swimmers opened their home season Friday with a dual met with Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Missouri. The Kansans scored firsts in eight of the 10 events, winning 61-25. Saturday the Jayhawks bettered their previous day's mark by defeating Pittsburg State Teachers College 62-24.
In the 20 events over the two davs
of competition, Kansas broke five pool and varsity records. Friday John Jeffrey set a new pool and varsity record in the 200-ward butterfly with a 2:30.6 showing. He bettered that Saturday to establish a new record with a 2:29.5 time in that same event.
James Laidlaw also bettered a record Saturday that he had set Friday. His time was 2:42.6 in the 200-
yard breaststroke.
Jared Piety set a varsity record Friday in the 440-yard freestyle winning it in 5:18.9.
The medley relay team of Bill Matthews, Jim Laidlaw, John Jeffrey and Steve Hill set a new pool and varsity record of 4:31.5.
Zebus are seldom found in riding stables in this country.
Now! The one cigarette in tune with America's taste!
Hit Parade has all you want!
e
the tobacco... the tip... and the taste!
HIT PARADE
CIGARETTES
Hit Parade
e
ZE
Hit Parade
e
ZE
The tobacco you want
... only the choicest grades of quality tobacco. And it's all 100% natural tobacco!
the tip you want ...exclusiveT-7filter,developed especially for Hit Parade,lets you have your flavor,too!
The taste you want . . the freshest, liveliest taste of any filter cigarette. Get new Hit Parade today!
New crush-proof box or familiar pack
SAN FRANCISCO:
In this famous city of the Golden Gate, and all around the U. S. A., more people are smoking Hit Parade
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
YOUNG
IT'S MINE-Three members of the Newman Club team scramble for the ball during practice.
PARKLAND
YOU FOULED—A Chicken Picker fouls Gene Elstun.
Cats, Beirhawks Win Decisively
A 69-29 victory by the Cats over Rochdale Co-op in Independent A competition was the most decisive victory Friday in men's intramural basketball.
Elstun Scores 32
Ron Johnston, a standout on KU's NCAA runner-up team last spring, paced the Cats with 23 points. Jerry Baker had 16, Bob Preston 11, James Kerr 8, Don Feller 4, Moe Courville 3, Bob James and Larry Carrier 2 each.
In another high-scoring Independent A game the Beirhawks defeated the Radicals, 48-35, with Gene Els-
For the losers John Olander scored 11. Bill Stafford 8, Craig Swensen 6, Eldon Good and Jim Samson 2 each.
tun, varsity regular last year, scoring 32 points for the winners.
Also contributing to the Beithawk scoring total were Dick Harrington and Bruce Brenner, 4 each, Russ Carlson, Dick Winter, Mike Kroff, and Bill Allegonolis, 2 each.
Pharmacy defeated Foster, 38-15,
as Dick Kraus seceded 10 for Pharmacy, in independent A competition. Don Peterson had 9 for the winners, Bill Geyer 8, Jack Geyer 7, Gary Adams and Robert Thornburgh 2 each.
Templin defeated the YMCA 42-17, also in Independent A. For Templin Don Allen and Sandy Yates had 11 points each Mike Zakoura 6, E. M. Bentragar, Darryl Warren, 4 each, Norman Krisle, Dale Koehn and Ken Zabel 2 each.
Leading Radical scorer was Les Monroe, with 14 points. Ray Wolkinshaw had 11, Bud Malter 7 and Charlie Swank 3.
YMCA scoring was done by Wayne Robuck with 7, Bill Kentling and Don VonArhen 4 each, Ron Barta 2.
Foster's scoring was done by 3 men, as Rollin Quinn scored 6. Robert Deines 5 and Dave Johnson 4
Butterballs Finally Melt
Butterbads Finally Melt
Stephenson defeated the Butterballs, 30-24, after leading by only one point, 14-13, at halftime. Tom Coe had 10 to pace the winners. Kermit Campbell scored 7, Marvin Zimmerman 5, Dave Leitch and Phil Heinshel 4 each.
Other results:
Fraternity C Beta Theta Pi No. 2 49, Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 2 9; Sigma Nu 26, Alpha Tau Omega 25; Phi Delta Theta No. 3 37, Delta Chi No. 2 11; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 30, Theta Tau 2; Delta Chi 34, Delta Upsilon No. 2 21; Tau Kappa Epsilon 23,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 2 21; Beta
Theta Pi 46, Phi Kappa Psi No. 5 14;
Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 4 43, Delta
Tau Delta 29.
Games Today
Fraternity A—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Theta Chi. 6:15. Robinson Annee
Independent A — Battenfeld vs Blackhawks, 4:15; Varsity House vs. Jim Beam, 5:15. Both games in Robinson Annex.
**Fraternity B-** Phi Gamma Delta vs. Lambda Chi Alpha, 5:45, west court, Theta Tau vs. Alpha Tau Omega, 6:30, west court; Alpha Kappa Lambda vs. Phi Kappa Tau, 6:30, west court; Phil Delta Theta vs. Kappa Sigma, 7:15, east court; Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu, 7:15, west court. These games are in Robinson Gymnasium.
**Fraternity C** — Kappa Sigma vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 3, 4:15, east court; Phi Kappa Psi No. 4 vs. Delta Sigma
Phi. 4:15, west court; Delta Chi No.
3 vs. Delta Tau Delta No. 3. 5:00,
east court; Alpha Epsilon Pi vs.
Delta Upsilon No. 10. 5:00, west
court; Phi Delta Theta No. 2 vs.
Delta Tau Delta No. 2. 5:45, east
court.
Pizza Delivered
V1 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
Names Of Intramural Teams Range From Butterballs To Beirhawks
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or top-
What's in a name? It it's the name of an intramural team, there can be just about anything in it.
coat?
In looking for a team name, players and managers will go to just about any extreme. And some of the names picked verify this. A look at the names of Independent A, B, and C intramural teams will reveal such exotic titles as Clods, Nuggets, Pokes, Cisabs, 1800's, Bad Seeds, 69ers, ASME, Backwoods man. Fig Pluckers, Jacks, ICBM's, Butterballs, Cats, Radicals, Beirhawks, Jim Beams, Blackhawks and Boosers.
A Daily Kansan reporter, in an attempt to bring sanity into this confusion, went looking for explanations of some of these names. Here are the results.
Clods-Mad Magazine, a publication for the college mind, was the originator of this tag. According to the comic book this was an individual who had a corner on the "do no good" market. He was the type who had two left feet and was all thumbs. The team is made
This just goes to prove that it takes imagination nowadays, even if it's just naming an intramural team.
Blackhawks—The comic books also gave birth to this idea. According to team manager Marion Novotny the team took the name of a group of men who are famous for their good deeds. Their members come from different athletic circles. One of their members, Martin Mason, had a 32-point a game average in high school basketball. Another member, Darwin Ashbaugh, averaged better than 20 points a game.
up of freshmen, most of them from Shawnee Mission, who had the habit of calling each other a "stupid clod" whenever they committed a "boo boo" according to team manager Del Weightman.
Fig Pluckers — This is a name which was appropriately "pulled out of the air." It was a group of boys who wanted to get up a team but
ran into a conflict. Most of the players are members of the Law School. Their brother lawyers-to-be had already taken the traditional Law School name of Jim Beam. In order to come up with a different name they "just grabbed" and that's what they got according to manager Chuck Hedges.
Cisabs—This name comes from the devotion of team members to one of their professors. The team, made up of seniors in aeronautical engineering, derived its name from what was termed a "departmental joke" by manager Don Meis. One of their professors is continually stressing basic equations. So in honor of the professor they took basic, turned it around, and had the name of their team.
Chicken Pickers—This was a name a group of students brought with them from their home town about three years ago. What it meant in their home town is not exactly known.
Beirhawks — Sponsored by the Southern Pit. The name is pronounced just like it sounds. No implications of any kind made.
Since the Chicken Pickers took that name three years ago they have won the division championship twice. Last year they were defeated in the finals by the Hookers. This year the Hookers have changed their name to the Cats. The Cats this year have varsity football players Larry Carrier, Jerry Baker and Don Feller. They also have one of KU's past basketball players, Ron Johnston.
Big Eight Teams Playing.750 Ball
The Big Eight Conference teams in their second week of action, were playing about .750 ball after winning nine and losing three games last week. They have won 23 of 31 games so far this season.
Kansas State is 4-0 after humbling Iowa, 86-69. Saturday night.
The biggest surprise was Missouri's 78-73 defeat of Indiana. Iowa State followed in their path by defeating Wyoming.
Saturday night two conference teams fell while four gained victories. Colorado was humiliated by Michigan State, 88-44. Nebraska lost out in the closing minutes to Purdue, 10-61.
Choose from over 500 fabrics
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957
Christmas Parties Fill Social Calendar
Delta Tau Delta
The Orchid Ball of Delta Tau Delta fraternity was held recently at the chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Thomas Clark, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough, Mrs. Hazel Carter, Mrs. Helen Spradling and Mrs. Joe Hope. The fraternity's annual alumni undergraduate dinner dance was held Friday at the Advertising and Sales Executives Club in Kansas City, Mo. Representatives from the Kansas City alumni, Baker University, Kansas State College, Missouri University and KU attended.
---
Aloha Tau Omega
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held its Christmas dinner dance Saturday evening, Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie and Mrs. John Skie were chaperones. The fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will have a joint serenade this evening and Tue.day evening.
* *
Acacia
Acacia fraternity held its Christmas formal Saturday evening in the Big Eight room of the Eldridge Hotel. The chaperones were Mrs. D. H. Buie and Alex W. Donnelly. The pledge class of the fraternity held a tree trimming party Wednesday at the chapter house. Mrs. D. H. Buie served as chaperone.
Delta Sigma Phi
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity held its Christmas formal Saturday evening in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Mrs. H. Clay Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. R. Reighand and Mr. and Mrs. Pence were chaperones.
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Chi Omega sorority held its annual tree trimming party Friday evening at the chapter house. Miss Merle Munson is the house-mother.
. . .
Theta Tau
Theta Tau fraternity held its Christmas formal Saturday evening in the Kansas Room of the Student Union. Chaperones were Miss Walters and Miss Marcia Baty wereters.
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold a Christmas party for underprivileged children this evening.
. . .
Phi Gamma Delta
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained their parents and members of the faculty Sunday at a Christmas tea.
. . .
Grace Pearson
Grace Pearson Hall held its Christmas formal recently at the hall. Serving as chaperones were Mrs. Edna Ramage, Mrs. R. G. Roche, and Miss Julia Willard.
Alpha Delta Pi
A Christmas formal was held Saturday evening at the Alpha Delta Pi chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Virginia Brammer, Mrs. Wilfred Shaw, Mrs. Cecil Clark, and Mrs. R. G. Roche.
Miss Agnes Brady, professor of Romance languages, and Miss Kathleen O'Donnell, instructor of mathematics, will be guests of the sorority at its Christmas dinner.
Douthart Hall
Douthart Hall held its Christmas formal Friday evening at the hall Mrs. Wilfred Shaw and Mr. and Mrs. William Chestnut chaperohed.
Carruth-O'Leary
The annual Christmas formal at Carruth-O'Leary Hall was held Saturday evening. The chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Glifford.
Kappa Alpha Psi
Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity held a Christmas party at the chapter house Saturday evening. Mrs. Irma Stillman and Mrs. Jesse Milan were chaperones.
***
Pi Kappa Alpha
The Pi Kappa Alpha Christmas formal was held Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Mildred Wogan, Mrs. Veva Huntington, Mrs. Pauline Warren, Mrs. Donald MacLeod and Miss Merle Munson.
The annual Kiddie Party of Sigma Kappa sorority was held Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs Anna Mcdorman was the chaperone.
Sigma Kappa
Templin Hall
...
Templin Hall's Christmas formal was Saturday evening at the hall with Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Sam T. Allen and Mrs. Jean Tice as chaperones.
Pi Beta Phi
* *
A pizza pie party was held by members of Pi Beta Phi sorority and Delta Tau Delta fraternity Tuesday evening. The chaperones were Mrs. Gordon Yockey and Mrs. Joe Hope. Tuesday evening the sorority members will entertain underprivileged children.
Kappa Alpha Theta
****
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority's tree trimming party was held Friday evening at the chapter house. Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough is the housemother. Members of the sorority and members of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity recently entertained patients at the state hospital in Topeka.
***
North-Corbin
Toyland Ball was the theme of the North College-Corbin Hall Christmas formal Friday. It was held from 3:30 until 11:30 p.m. The chaperones were Miss Mary Schackelford, director of Corbin, and the dormitory counselors.
Sigma Chi
---
The Sigma Chi Christmas formal was held Saturday evening at the chapter house. Mrs. Fannie Spurrier, Mrs. Glen Sewell, Mrs. Ethel Harmon, Mrs. Judson Smoyer and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nichols were the chaperones.
The fraternity Christmas party will be Thursday at the chapter house.
Delta Delta Delta sorority and members of Sigma Chi held an exchange dinner Tuesday evening. Mrs. Spurrier and Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow were the chaperones.
Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Sam T. Allen and Mrs. Jean Tice were the chaperones for the Jolliffe Hall Christmas formal Friday.
Jolliffe Hall
Sellards Hall
. . .
Sellards Hall held its Christmas formal Friday at the hall. Chaperones were Mrs. Lester Jeter, Mrs. Jean Tice and Mrs. Madge McElhaney.
. . .
Phi Kappa Tau
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity held its Christmas dance Saturday evening at the chapter house with Mrs. Edward Turner, Mrs. C. T. Atkinson, Mrs. Donald MacLeod and Mrs. Sebonia Hancock as chaperones.
Phi Kappa
The Phi Kappa fraternity Christmas formal was Saturday evening at the chapter house. Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough and Mrs. Mary Wigton chaperoned.
Members of the fraternity and the Newman Club held a Christmas party Sunday afternoon at the chapter house for underprivileged children.
Alpha Omicron Pi
* *
Apna Omicron Pi sorority held its Christmas formal Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. W. R. Banker, Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn Nelick and Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Funk. The tree trimming party was held Friday evening.
Alpha Phi Alpha
The annual founder's day banquet of Aljha Phi Alpha fraternity was held Friday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union.
Theta Tau
Theta Tau professional engineering fraternity, held its Christmas formal Saturday in the Kansas Room of the Student Union. A banquet was held before the dance at Happy Hal's Cafe, Mrs. Pauline Walters and Miss Marcia Baty were chaperones.
A Danish manufacturing firm has completed detailed plans for a fishing vessel made from plastic.
Holiday Pinnings Announced
Purcell-Peppercorn Allen-Morris
A double pinning was announced Wednesday at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house. Mary Claire Purcell was pinned to John Peppercorn. Both are Mission junior. Judy Allen, Lawrence sophomore, was pinned to Duane Morris, Salina junior. Both men are members of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Miss Purcell's pinning was announced by Susie Poppe, Kansas City, Kan., and Mary Nell Newsom, Topeka, juniors, and Ellen Proudft, Kansas City Kan. senior.
Announcing Miss Allen's pinning were Barbara Hodgson, Lawrence, and Mary Ann Mize, Salina, sophomores, and Jane Dean, Prairie Village freshman.
****
Allen-Bickley
Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Judy Allen, Topeka junior, to Jim Bickley, first year medical student from Kansas City, Kan. Bickley is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity.
Fritts-Richter
Delta Tau Teila fraternity has announced the pinning, at its Orchid Ball, of Marjorie Friits, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, to Jerry Richter, Springfield, Mo. sophomore. It was announced by Al Craven, Kansas City, Mo., and Ted Haines, St. Joseph, Mo., seniors, and Roger Stanton Marysville freshman.
Theta Tau Pledges, Elect
Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, has announced the pledging of Donald W. Browning, Mission, and James A. Clutz, Rochester, N.Y., freshmen. George G. Dodd, Oceanlake, Ore. junior was elected treasurer.
Salt and water are normally filtered from the blood by the kidney, which excretes an excess of either, or permits reabsorption where there is a deficit.
Daily Kansan Pho
Jim Sledd (left) receives Best of Show trophy, plus slide viewer from MOSSEER-WOLF. from Kansan Promotion Manager Steve Schmidt.
Second Daily Kansan Photo Contest Winners Named
BEST OF SHOW - JIM SLEDD Receives Trophy and Slide Viewer Given by MOSSER-WOLF $10 JAYHAWKER AWARD - KIM ONG
Black and White
Feature Pictures 1st Place, Paul Hansen; 2nd, Jim Sledd; 3rd, James McMullan.
Personallities
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, William Irvine; 3rd, Kim Wiley; Honorable Mention, Paul Hansen.
News Pictures
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, Kim Wiley; 3rd, Kim Wiley; Honorable Mention, Richard Botshon.
Children
1st Place, Jim Sledd; 2nd, Jim Sledd.
Scenics
1st Place, Lou Hoell; 2nd, Alan Brooke; 3rd, Richard Botshon.
People
Places
Color
1st Place, Alan Syverud; 2nd, George Denny; 3rd, Arthur Shaw; Honorable Mention, Alan Syverud.
1st Place, Arthur Shaw; 2nd, Kim Ong; 3rd, Kenneth Hush; Honorable Mention, Kim Wiley.
Third Contest Closes Jan.10
WHIT
TWIN valua 5237.
FIRS for b priva Dec. or se 520
Start Planning Now - Rules in Kansan Business Office - 111 Flint
Monday, Dec. 16, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
nced sor-rcell corn.
Al-was alina-ss of
an-
ansas
New-
Ellen
nior.
nining
ence,
pho-
Vil-
unced peka year City, Delta Beta
has orchidansaschter, t was Kansas St. Roger
neerer-
d the
downing,
Roc-
orge G.
r was
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
hily filie kidleess of orption
LOST
TWIN PEARL RING in Flint Hall—very valuable to owner—reward. Call VI 3-5237. 12-18
FOUND
WHITE ROSARY. Call VI 3-4138; 12-18
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Phi VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 Lau. tf
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
Private residence (contemporary design, large swimming pool with diving board) catering to young men will have one January and two February vacancies. Kitchen privileges optional. For appointment Ph. VI 3-9635. 12-16
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, private entrance & bath, garage, utility room washer furnished, newly decorated, close to KU. Boys or couple, very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 12-16
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT. $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-858
SINGLE ROOM, large and well furnished with cooking facilities and garage. Close to KU, $25 a month. Call VI 3-6636.
APARTMENT for two or three boys,
private entrance and bath, available
January 1. Call VI 3-1890. 1116 Sunset
Dr. 12-18
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT
with enclosed sleeps, porch, electric
range, refrigerator, steel bed
room, KU and business district.
Adults only, 742 Ohio. 12-19
LARGE SINGLE ROOM to young man. Also basement apartment for two young men. No drinking, no smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Ind. 12-17
4 ROOM APARTMENT: Nice house, private entrance and bath, furnished or unfurnished, $58 a month. Close to KU.
Phone VI 3-6696. 12-19
TRANSPORTATION
ROOM AND BOARD for next semester
$50 per month. Ph. VI 5-4385. 12-26
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT for two boys.
One sleeping room and one study room,
also board. Vacant January 6. Ph. VI 3-
1585, 1130 Kentucky. 12-19
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Contact Boyd, West Dorm. Ottawa University. 492. 12-18
NEED A GIRL to fill a vacant seat to Mexico City during Christmas vacation. Call VI 3-1257 right away. 12-16
RIDE WANTED to California, Los
Temple vicinity. Call Alison
12-5522 12-174
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity
1019 Mass
VI 3-6411
Marinole Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-330
Marvin's Beauty Salon
827 N H VI 3-6035
RADIO REPAIRS
Driscoll Beauty Shop 943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. IV 3-4141
Roger's Launder-It
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry 725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass.
VI 3-4366
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal gift your choice of any occasion. Rates are the rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 4th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350.
MISCELLANEOUS
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
FOR SALE
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
IMPORTED SKI SWEATERS for sale at reduced price. Ph. VI 2-0286 after 5 p.m. 12-16
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Print magazines both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST!
Group saving most empty Mariboro.
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
STUFFED ANIMAL TOYS, make lovely
priceable toys VI 2341 after 1 p.m. 12-16
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in the text, complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or II 9-0083.
RCA VICTOR 3 speaker tape recorder
an average year old. Call VI T 2-0755
3:30 p.m. 12-17
APPLES, PEARS AND APPLE CIDER at Hammonds Orchard 8 miles Southeast. Come out at all times whether you see our ad or not. 12-16
26" SCHWINN BICYCLE excellent condition Brown Bear-sweaty bicycle 12-20
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term pa-
cla VL T.3-0177, Mrs. Jack Larson, tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
FOR SALE Brown velvet cocktail suit,
size 9, price $7. Call V11 3-8966 12-20
BUSINESS SERVICES
TAILORING. DRESS. MAKING. alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6557 1400 Tenn. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tehn. Penn. VI 3-1240. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
Singer Center, 927 Mass.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8331. tt
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marlon Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary shangers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hamsters, etc. Everything the pet field. Grant's Pet Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
FLAT, TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop
Clarence Adamson, Mgr.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Prompt and ac-
cident service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W
20th St.
HOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technolite or show. Pn. VI i 6093 and 12-20
5994
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr, Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass—Ph. VI 3-8074
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
$941^{\frac{1}{2}}$ Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service VI 5-7184;
1632 West 20th St. tt
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type the terms, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Virri, VI 3-8660. tf
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph VI 3-4822. 1-30-58
TUTORING IN GERMAN by wife of university instructor, a native German, formerly on KU faculty herself. Will tutor Geraint at any level including preparation for Ph. D. language requirement. Call VI 3-3369. 12-16
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass—Ph. VI 3-1044
good
for your
face!
good
for your
face!
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Old Spice
Refreshing antiseptic action heals razor nicks, helps keep your skin in top condition. 1.00 plus tax
SHULTON New York • Toronto
DON'T MISS OUR
STEREOPHONIC DEMONSTRATION
Of The
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by Robert Baustian
Tuesday, Dec. 17 at 4:00 - University Theatre
Audio House
HIGH FIDELITY
To achieve this effect we used two separate microphones and fed into two separate recording media. On playback the two recordings stay on separate systems and are heard on two separate speakers. The two channels do not mix until they have entered the air from the speakers—just as the original sound was produced. The effect is music spread across the stage and each instrument being heard from its original location producing the highest of Hi Fidelity.
There is still time to make recordings for Christmas
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 16, 1957
Concert Tape To Be Played
The recent University orchestra concert will be played back at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 128 Music and Dramatic Arts Building in stereophonic sound, the newest in the popular recording media.
The public is invited to hear the concert, which is being played back at the regular orchestra rehearsal time. According to Ed Down of the Audio House, Lawrence, the concert will demonstrate the "uncanny realism" of sound, be played in the place where it is originally recorded.
Mr. Down describes stereophonic sound as an extension of high fidelity, which actually means the peak of purity in sound.
"This is definitely the coming thing in sound," he said. "It is now mainly in tape recording units. A few high fidelity owners have units attached to their sets, but they are mostly sets in the $400 or $500 price range."
Mr. Downs predicts that regular stereophonic recording discs and record players will be available at regular prices in about two years.
"It is in the developing stage now and definitely out of the hobby shop," he said.
United Nations Children's Fund Christmas cards, sponsored by the Foreign Affairs Council, are on sale in the Student Union bookstore.
Sale Of Cards Benefits Children
Money from the sale of the cards is used to buy milk and fight disease among children.
Christmas caroling and a worship service will be featured at the December KU-Y campus forum at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Student Union Jayhawk Room.
KU-Y To Sing Christmas Carols
The group will sing at the Douglas County old folks' home and at the hospitals. After the caroling, they will return to the Union for refreshments and for worship led by Dick Kraus, Arlington junior
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin materials only. Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Joint meeting of Mathematics Club, 4 p.m. followed by Mathematics Colloquium, 4:15 p.m., 203 Strong, Speaker, Dr J.-C E Dekker, Institute for Advanced Study, "An Extension of the Number System," Coffee, 3:30 p.m., 217 Strong
Theatre staff meeting, noon, 315 Music and Dramatic Arts Building (Performing Arts Center)
Speech 1 seminar, 3 p.m., 134 Strong Hall
College faculty meeting, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium.
Presstierian Men's Organization
Christmas dinner, 6 p.m. Westminster
Hill
Alpha Phi Omega regular meeting, 7:30 p.m., 306A. Student Union.
KU Engineerettes Christmas party, 80
p.m. Faculty Club. Bring 50 cents for
dance.
Theater party, 7:30 p.m., Green Room Music and Dramatic Arts Building Slides of past productions. People of theater interest welcome.
WEDNESDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m., Poulenc "Mass in G." Britten
"Ceremony of Carols." Tchaikovsky
"Nuteracker Suite."
Faculty forum, noon. English Room.
Student Union Speaker. Prof. Frank
Brown. Water Problem. Phone reservations to Y office (KU-227) by Tuesday afternoon.
Radio and TV committee meeting,
p.m., 22nd Flint Hall
Mathematical Colloquium. 4:15 p.m.
203 Strong Hall. Speaker, Dr. Makoto Otsuka. Involvement inec. Arward. Variation in application to Potential Theory." Coffee at 3:59 p.m., 217 Strong Hall.
Christmas dinner meeting, 5:30 p.m.
Westminster House. Presbyterian women,
bands and musicle with Profs. Reinhold Schmidt and Irene Peabody participating.
By English Teachers
Nonacademic Pasts Revealed
To look at one of KU's English teachers, you would probably never suspect that he once worked in the Omaha stockyards calling pigs and loading bulls, cows and sheep onto freight cars. Yet this was the experience of Dennis Quinn, instructor in English, during one summer while he was in graduate school.
He recalls reciting Ben Jonson's lines, "Queen and Huntress chaste and fair," while supervising the weighing of the unperfumed hogs. Quinn says that this is "about the most unpleasant job you can find, but it's profitable." In his last year at Wisconsin University, Mr. Quinn carried a gun and made the rounds every hour on weekends as a night watchman at a chemical research lab. During the quieter moments, he corrected English themes.
A number of other English instructors and professors are hiding a unique past too.
For several days in 1951, Dr. Walter Meserve, assistant professor of English, was the man who poured asphalt onto new driveways. Ironically enough, he was preparing at the time to write the thesis for his Ph.D. While attending Boston University, Dr. Meserve spent many evenings and vacations in the humble and well-known profession of stockroom boy, which was a change from waiting tables and being responsible for setting up noon-time banquets at the University of Washington's Student Union.
Have you ever heard of one man teaching algebra, English, biology (which he himself had not yet studied), Latin, bookkeeping and economics, not to mention business law all at the same time?
This was Edgar Wolfe's job in a
South Dakota one-room high school where he instructed a total of nineteen students. "I was janitor and coach besides that," Mr. Wolfe, instructor of English, said.
He had played in the Palestra before, and in his last appearance there scored 48 points for Overbrook. One of the two games in Chamberlain's career which his team lost was lost in the Palestra.
Old Fans See Wilt; CheerleaderActive
After getting his master's degree in the midst of the depression when there were practically no opportunities open to teachers, Mr. Wolfe took a door-to-door job selling Watkin products such as floor wax and vanilla.
Another KU instructor, Dana Stevens, has been an assistant to the well-known circus clown, Buzy Potts. Mrs. Stevens, who had never seen a circus before her marriage, became a "spec-girl" in the introductory grand march around the hippodrome.
Philadelphia fans filled the Palestra to its capacity 9,200. They hadn't Wilt perform since his days as a star at Overbrook High in Philadelphia.
Philadelphia basketball fans saw their idol in action Saturday night, when KU's 7-foot all-America center. Wilt Chamberlain, made his first appearance on a basketball court in his home town in three years.
Saturday night's effort was the 20th time he had scored over 30 points in a college game—he has played in 32. His mother, father and eight brothers and sisters watched.
From his next experience as a case worker for the Wyandotte County Relief Office (now the Social Welfare Board), Mr. Wolfe gathered material for his novel, "Widow Man." During World War II, he was in prison teaching illiterates.
Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott senior, and Ray Nichols, Lawrence sophomore, were undefeated in five preliminary rounds of the Southwestern College debate tournament held at Winfield Friday and Saturday, but lost in the quarter finals to Southwest Missouri State, Springfield, Mo.
KU defeated St. Joseph's College 66-54. Wilt showed the home town folks just what can be done with a basketball, scoring 31 points, grabbing 22 rebounds, and blocking 9 shots.
Mr. Stevens sitting at his desk in Fraser Hall, recalled that he also played the drums and acted as press agent for the Al G. Kelly-Miller Brothers' circus. His father, a musician, was their band director for many years. Dana now enjoys collecting data on the history of the circus and each month is a regular magazine contributor on the subject.
Assistant To Clown
Debaters Drop Out In Final Rounds
Irby and Nichols were debating in the senior division as were Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan., and Lee Baird, Newton, seniors, who won two and lost three in the preliminary rounds.
Two teams debating in the junior division, Larry Ehrich, Russell, and Alan Kimball, Derby, and David Rockhold, Winfield, and Brian McCown, Hutchinson, freshmen, each won three and lost two in the preliminary rounds.
The Jayhawker basketball team played on a foreign court far from home Saturday night, but not without the support of a pep section and cheerleader.
Pat Little, Wichita junior and one of the 10 KU cheerleaders, flew to Philadelphia for the game between KU and St. Joseph's College.
"We had to improvise some cheers, since they didn't know the regular ones, but we got along fine," Little said. He also attended a pregame rally and buffet supper organized by the KU Alumni Club of Philadelphia.
He led a cheering section of about 350 alumni in cheers during the time outs of the game.
Sleeps In Open
Dr. Merrell D. Clubb, professor of English, is quite a mountain climber, often going out by himself on foot and carrying all supplies on his back. "I sleep under some over-hanging rock if it rains," he said. This past summer was his fourteenth one in the Grand Canyon.
When asked what his unusual occupation might be, Dr. A. C. Edwards, associate professor of English, claimed that he was not the person to interview because he had "no past." It is known, however, that Edwards played the role of the illiterate, raw-boned father in the film, "Desk for Billie." Equally the "strong and silent" type was Mr. Albert Kitzhaber, who revealed confidently that he once worked in a dairy, but this was nothing which many other people have not done.
School Officials To Hold Meeting
Three University officials attended a meeting of the five state schools to evaluate the work being done in off-campus extension courses.
Attending from KU were George B. Smith, dean of the University; T. Howard Walker, director of University Extension; and Cloy S. Hobson, professor of education.
Mr. Walker said the conference dealt mainly with extension courses for which teachers can get credit toward their teaching certificates or degrees.
KUOK To Present Goff Interview
Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre, will be interviewed by Carolyn Carter, Lawrence junior, and Ardeth Nieman, Independence senior, on their program "On Mike—Special Production" at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday over KUOK.
Prof. Goff will tell about the University Theatre and some of the students who have worked in it and are now in professional theatre work. He will also discuss the advantages of the new Music and Dramatic Arts Building. He will give his views on the University Theatre production, "Henry IV" and on using professional actors in University plays.
KUOK can be heard in Carruth- o'Leary, Grace Pearson, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Corbin, North College and Douthart halls.
Christmas Carols Ring Out
Christmas carols will be played between classes from today through Friday over a public address system on the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard by KUOK, campus radio station.
Carols To Be Presented By German Department Choir
Weihnachtsspiel—the German department's annual Christmas program of music and plays performed in Germany during the middle ages—will again include the music of the department's Christmas choir.
The choir, all students in the German department, will sing a wide selection of traditional and modern German carols at the program to be given at 8 p.m. Dec. 18, in Fraser Theater.
The play, being performed annually for 10 years now, is under the direction of Allen Crafton, professor of speech, and has a cast selected from the students taking the language.
Under the direction of Gerald Carney, associate professor of music education, the choir of 32 students will sing selections dating back over 500 years.
Also scheduled for the musical portion of the program is the recorder group directed by Frode Jorgensen, Chabotten, Denmark graduate student. It will play two
numbers.
The program is being presented with the assistance of the University Theatre.
Sally Six, instructor in speech and drama; Edith Bartosch, Vienna, Austria graduate student, and Beatrice Buller, Lawrence graduate student are in charge of costumes.
Makeup will be by Phillip Oglevie, Bellflower, Calif., graduate student; Margarite Margerstern, and Mrs. Cecil Coleman.
The members of the Russian Communist party have in their control the destinies of nearly a third of the world's population.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Elm Disease Found Here
Identification of Dutch elm disease in the Lawrence area has been made by Dr. Robert W. Lichtwardt, associate professor of botany.
The disease, a fungus fatal to elm trees, was first discovered in Kansas in Kansas City, and will probably spread across the state at a rate of about 50 miles per year.
The finding of the disease in Lawrence has resulted in a barrage of phone calls from home owners to the Entomology Department asking how to treat it.
According to Dr. Lichtwardt and Dr. C.D. Michener, State Entomologist and professor of entomology, the disease is carried from tree to tree by a tiny beetle called a bark-beetle because it burrows beneath the bark of trees to lay its eggs.
The best way to control the spread of the disease is to destroy the beetles by removing and burning all dead limbs in healthy trees, and all elm wood stored in wood piles.
All of this wood must be burned or buried under at least six inches of soil. Storing elm wood in a shed or cellar will not prevent the beetles from emerging in the spring.
Harold E. Blitch, superintendent of the K.U. greenhouse, said the disease has not been found on the campus and that all elms are being sprayed as a preventive measure.
Mr. Blitch said a program of cooperation between the city and campus must be worked out to control the disease completely, but nothing has been done.
Professor Claims Miss Santa Title
One of his beloved students muttered under her breath, "You can't hold two titles at the same time--Miss Santa and Scrooge."
A professor in the Journalism School noted for his humor and even temper entered a student meeting recently with the greeting. "I've just been elected Miss Santa."
'39 Graduate Named Hallmark Treasurer
Mr. Busler, 39, has held executive positions with the Kansas City Power & Light Co. for the past eight years and has served as secretary of the utility since 1955.
Robert Hyde Busler, Kansas City,
Mo., a 1939 graduate of KU, has been
appointed treasurer of Hallmark
Cards
Firms Schedule Job Interviews
the following interviews are scheduled for this week:
Monday, Tuesday — Monsanto Chemical Co. (St. Louis branch), chemistry and chemical engineering majors. Sign up in 224 Malott.
Wednesday — Montgomery Ward, management trainees. Sign up in 214 Strong.
Martin Behaim of Nuremberg constructed the earliest surviving globe in 1492, showing geographical knowledge generally available just before Columbus' first voyage.
Robuto's
710 Mass.—VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
Free Pickup
And Delivery
BELL'S
Service Station
23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
illism andudent street Miss
dents "You samee."
City, is been mark
cutive
Poweight
retary
are
insanto tranch),
engineer-altott.
Ward, up in
emberg
vividing
aphical
le just
e.
CALL
5
m
9645
PEACE ON EARTH—This nativity scene in the court house square in Hays shows the age-old spirit of Christmas—the worshipping of the baby
Jesus. The animals and the kneeling figures of Mary and Joseph depict the serenity of the Christmas season.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No.64
$165,025 Grant Received By KU
Development of improved language instruction for mentally retarded children is the objective of a KU research program made possible by a 3-year grant of $165.025 from the U. S. Public Health Service, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today.
Dr. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research and associate professor of speech pathology, is the project director. Dr. Howard V. Bair, superintendent of the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center, will be associate director.
The research will be conducted at the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center beginning next month. Dr. Schiefelbusch will coordinate the program with support of an advisory committee of staff members from the Meninger Foundation, Parsons State Hospital and Training Center and KU.
Dr. Schieferbusch developed the speech and hearing clinic and training program at KU and was active in the cerebral palsy and cleft palate clinics at the KU Medical Center for several years.
"The central purpose of the project will be to develop the best possible language and communication program for a selected group of mentally retarded children in an institutional setting." Dr. Schiefbusch said.
Dr. Margaret C. Byrne, director of the speech and hearing clinic will be on the advisory committee.
Fog and occasional light drizzle diminishing and ending over east portion early Wednesday. Otherwise mostly cloudy with little change in temperatures through Wednesday. Low tonight 20 to 25 extreme northwest to 45 southeast. High Wednesday 60 southern border, in 50s elsewhere.
Weather
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Low this morning 39. Low Mon-
35. high 45.
U.S. Successfully Launches 'Atlas'
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—(UP)—United States successfully launched an Atlas intercontinental ballistics missile today—a war weapon capable of dropping hydrogen fury on a traget oceans away and a peacetime prospect for obiting an American satellite.
The Pentagon announced the Atlas had been fired successfully—in the third attempt to send up the "Big A" and said it traveled "several hundred miles" to land in the prescribed target area.
"This was a limited range test of several hundred miles," a spokesman said of the missile which has a range of up to 5,000 miles.
There was no elaboration on the distance of "several hundred miles."
Registration for the Western Civilization examination in 130 Strong Hall has been unusually low considering the fact that students must register by the end of this week if they plan to ake the test 1 p.m. Jan. 11, according to the registrar's office.
The registrar's office announced that about 70 students have registered for the exam which is required before graduation in the College, School of Education, and School of Journalism.
Western Civ. Test; Register
Students must register before Dec. 31 if they want to take the exam. Upon registering, the student will be assigned the room in which he will take the exam.
To aid the student in reviewing for the exam, which covers the reading material for the two semesters, the Western Civilization department has set up two review sessions to be given 7:15-9:30 on the nights of Jan. 8 and 9.
Polio Shots Given To 140
About 140 students have taken polio shots since the reduced prices were offered. This leaves more than 550 doses available until Jan. 13.
A total of 97 students received the polio shots over the weekend with 61 of these coming in on Friday. In addition, five first Asian flu shots have been given since Friday morn-ning.
"I think the students are not worried much about polio right now." Dr. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said Monday.
Dr. Canuteson said now would be an ideal time to start the series of shots since students could take their second shot at the end of January and have their third shot just before the spring semester ends.
"Right now they are worried more about quizzes and what to give their girl for Christmas," he added.
This would give as much protection as possible before the polio season starts even though public health agencies are recommending four shots to be sure of protection, Dr. Canuteson said.
He said the hospital was at a "very low ebb" because it has so few patients, but that a few days of bad weather might change the situation.
Miss Santa To Be Named In Kansan
The winner and two runners-up of the Miss Santa contest will be announced Wednesday in the University Daily Kansan picture supplement.
Miss Santa will be guest of honor at a Christmas party 3-5 p.m. in The Daily Kansan news-room
Prizes Miss Santa will receive are a portrait photograph, free theater passes, a pearl ring, pizza for two, two steak dinners, one dozen roses, a box of stationery, two five dollar gift certificates, box of seamless hose, five dollars worth of cleaning, a blouse and a sweater.
Big 8 Student Parley Eyed
National Affairs Plan To Be Proposed To ASC
The Student Council will hear reports tonight on the Student Conference On National Affairs (SCONA) held at Texas A & M College, College Station, last week.
The reports will be made by Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio, and Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., juniors, KU's representatives to the conference. The purpose of the conference was to stimulate interest among college students in foreign and domestic affairs, Prelock said.
A.
ED PRELOCK
Possibilities of speakers would be members of the Atomic Energy Commission, prominent newspapermen, United Nations officials and leading congressmen.
Prelock explained that students to attend would be selected on the bases of school activities, interest in foreign and domestic problems, and the ability to use the experience for the benefit of students.
Prelock will propose to the Council a plan for a Big Eight SCONA conference. It would bring to the host Big Eight school leaders from different agencies of national and foreign governments.
Wants Public To Attend
"We are the future leaders of tomorrow. The more people we can make aware of this, the better government we'll have."
"I wish some of the public would take notice of this (ASC) meeting and attend it," Prelock said. "I would also like to speak to different groups—any organization I can speak to to get the SCONA program before the students."
M. R. S.
DICK LEWIS
Missouria, Colorado Interested
If a Big Eight conference were to become a reality, Prelock said it could be set up at the university best suited to handle it. The national conference expenses are now paid by business men of the area where it is held. This would probably be the way it would be financed if a program were to be put on by the Big Eight, Prelock explained. Such a conference need not be expensive, he added.
Missouri, Colorado Interested Lewis said, "I'm going to present the Big Eight international conference idea at the ASC meeting tonight because I've talked to Missouri and Colorado and they are interested in the plan."
"The SCONA conference stimulates your interest in foreign affairs and you get more liberal ideas by associating with other people with varied opinions."
Lewis said that he and Prelock would try to talk to different clubs on the campus such as the Young Democrats, Young Republicans and the International Club about the proposed conference.
proposed Center Student body President Bob Bil lin's said the SCONA conference is a "real fine program."
4 Tons To Study
The 4-ton corpse of Ararat, popular elephant in Kansas City's Swope Park Zco, will arrive in Lawrence today to be studied by the zoology department.
Ararat, for 27 years a favorite of zoo visitors, was put to death yesterday in an act of mercy after it became apparent that she could not conquer the infirmities of old age. She was 60 years old.
Ararat lay down Saturday and even with the aid of a winch Monday, was never able to get on her feet again. Zoo director William E. Cully decided that there was no choice but to order her death. An injection of a lethal drug was used and she died almost instantly.
Ararat's brain will be the most valuable contribution to research. It will be used in a comparative study of brains and nervous systems.
Nicholas Hotten, assistant professor of anatomy, said today that Howard Matzke, associate professor of anatomy and Floyd Foltz, Lawrence graduate student, will dissect the brain in Kansas City because of its
rapid deterioration after death. The carcass is being transported to Lawrence today on a trailer truck used to haul bulldozers.
College May Set 14-Hour Minimum
Raising the minimum number of hours a student can carry in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences from 12 to 14 will be considered at a College faculty meeting at 4 p.m. today in Bailey Auditorium. Under the present system a student must carry at least 12 hours a semester, or get permission from his dean to carry less. If the new rule is adopted every student in the College must carry at least 14 hours a semester.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
Same Spirit, Same Junk
Once upon a Christmas time there were no sequined fly-swatters, no Jayne Mansfield hot water bottles, no gilt telephone dialers. Not a mouse stirred in a mink-wrapped mousetrap anywhere.
This was the golden, gadgetless era. This was the time when a clock was a clock-not a combination radio, egg-timer, coffee percolator and steak broiler.
Back at the turn of the century the newspaper and magazine advertisements were moral, sentimental and religious in their approach to Christmas giving. The mere mention of a handkerchief case, a pipe cleaner or a doily sent their imagination soaring. Always they emphasized that in giving a gift it was "the thought that counted."
In 1900 gift suggestion lists favored the mottoed napkins . . . "A pretty present though one requiring busy fingers is a set of luncheon napkins with appropriate mottoes like, 'The Cup That Cheers But Not Inebriates,' Twixt Soup and Cheese What Rare Discourse.'"
In polling the tastes of a group of college women in 1908, a newspaper reported that "a red, hooded broadcloth cape to wear across campus at night," brought cries of exultation. The women also admired "a teacloth for a wicker table." They adored a brass tea kettle. Opera bags, boudoir caps, gold lockets and hair ribbons were favorites. In those days everyone was case happy. They made cases for brushes, combs, for cups. A coffee-cozy was a thoughtful item.
At the end of the First World War, most of the magazines recommended useful gifts. The donation of $1 to the Red Cross bought a comfort bag, filled with soaps and shaving equipment and destined for the men overseas. Shoe trees, picture frames and a talcum powder holder were all held in esteem.
The year before fortunes crashed in 1929. Vogue magazine wrote that "every woman likes a gift that will add to the luxury of the breakfast in bed."
When December 1941 rolled around the magazines met the war crises. They were full of "Grand Gesture Gifts for Sergeants, Seamen and Civilians." In 1942 they talked of the giving of hearts and hope, of love and courage.
The gifts advertised in 1957 seem to cater to the man or woman who has everything. But as Bill Vaughn says, this year some of the gifts suggested for the man who has everything wouldn't even please the man who has nothing.
—Marilyn Mermis
... Letters
Helpful
I would like to make a reply to a letter submitted by Roy Hartley (The Daily Kansan, Dec. 12) regarding our campus police. He remarked that a campus police car passed a stalled car that might have caused a traffic snarl. I am quite sure that if this situation existed and the person in the stalled car really needed help, the policeman would have stopped to lend a hand. I would say that what happened was unintentional and that the campus policeman was trying to complete his regular rounds. Mr. Hartley must have forgotten that each organization has different jobs for all personnel and that each campus policeman has a definite territory to cover each day.
I know that with nearly 8,500 students and pretty near as many cars on the campus, that the job of directing traffic at the various intersections is a pretty busy job. With only one main street across the campus and 8,500 students, they would have to double the force to give tickets to our many jawwalking Jayhawkers. The force is also charged with the security of the entire campus, buildings and welfare of the students. They are deputized
by city, county and state, and subject to call as such. They are on duty at all campus functions, operas, athletic events, and if a person has ever stood a mid-watch in the winter he could realize how cold it is directing traffic at basketball games and other winter functions.
Their relationship with the many different personalities on the campus is very good. I'm sure that they understand our problems of trying to get an education and are pulling for us as a school and as individuals. If all the present and former students that the various campus policemen have helped would send them a card or a little gift for Christmas or tell them, "Merry Christmas," it would let them know how much we appreciate a job well done.
Jerry Barland
Jerry Barland Beloit graduate student
Hangover; Something to occupy a head that wasn't used the night before.
A pessimist is a man who can look on the bright side of things and complain that the light hurts his eyes.
A tele-prompter unrolls script to television actors unseen to the viewing audience.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
By Dick Bibler
MAD TEACHERS
G. DIEK OLD
POLEK 019
"OK, IN TH' BACK ROW ~ LETS HAVE THAT 'GIRLIE' MAGAZINE UP HERE IN THIS BASKET!"
Quotes From The News
NEW YORK—(UP)—Vice President Richard M. Nixon, saying American parents must assume responsibility for improving public education:
"Whether it takes more classrooms, better teaching, salaries, fewer frills, more algebra and less square dancing, this responsibility cannot be passed by the people to Washington."
PARIS — (UP) — News dealer, Emile Cordy, 48, when asked what he thought about NATO:
"I can't tell you exactly what it is. I don't have time to read the papers, mister."
WASHINGTON — (UIP) — Sen.
Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), calling for a "shakeup at the Pentagon" to get rid of military politics and improve the efficiency of the missiles program;
"There is duplication, waste and overlapping and the result is... where we are now, we were two months ago."
WASHINGTON —(UF)— Rep. Kenneth B. Keating (R-N.Y.), urging a new wiretap law to permit tapping by authorized FBI and state agents and use of wiretap evidence in federal courts in national security cases:
"It is time we brought our wiretap laws up to date so that our law enforcement officials can effectively combat criminals and subversives now operating under the shield of the present statute."
NEW YORK —(UP) —Mayor Robert F. Wagner in a special radio and television broadcast on the subway strike;
"It is the strike of a group which has submitted its cause to an impartial board and now seeks to use economic force to compel the city and the transit authority to overrule the board's decision. The city of New York cannot, and will not, permit itself to be blackmailed into such action."
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, triviewly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 University Drive, New York, NY. Service. United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after the first week of school on Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910. at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of N.Y.C. #281
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Nearly a third of all of Minne sota's dairy cows are now bred ar tificially. Proper insulation of attics will cut fuel bills by as much as 17 per cent.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
A
Jay SHOPPE
The Perfect Gift For Mother Or Sweetheart
Lady Manhattan.
Jay SHOPPE
Lady Manhattan.
Lovely Drip Dry Cottons in Solids, Checks or Stripes-Three Quarter Sleeves or Roll-Ups-All with Fabulous Lady Manhattan Tailoring Qualities. Sizes 10 to 16.
Priced From $4.98 To $10.98
DISCOUNT HOUSE PRICES
Buy Your Hi-Fi At
RCA
The Mark VII. Powerful new High Fidelity "Victrola."® 4-speed record changer. Panoramic Sound from 3 speakers! Featherweight tone arm has new ceramic pickup. Designed to add Stereophonic Sound! Mahogany shown—oak, maple, natural walnut finishes extra. Model SHF7.
V C
- RCA trademark for record players
TH day
A balce four "Am Lorc tion.
A inte
H this ful," ing audi
Check Our Prices Before You Buy Hi-Fi
Th choi Chri flood mak
KRAFT HOME FURNITURE
3, Tc
A and for to |
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Vespers Success Critic Says
By NANCY STUTZMAN
(By NANCY STUTZMAN
(Of The Daily Kansas Staff)
The School of Fine Arts wished a "Merry Christmas to All" Sunday with two presentations of the Christmas Vespers Sunday.
Hoch Auditorium was peacefully lit with a soft blue light. Into this haze filed the A Cappella Choir singing "O Come All Ye Faithful," accompanied by the University Symphony Orchestra. The singing of this season favorite set the stage and warmed the hearts of the audience.
There is something about a choir of magnificent voices at Christmas time which sets forth a flood of warm feelings inside and makes the entire world glow.
A choral ensemble sang from the balcony during the presentation of four tableaux. These were entitled "Annunciation," "The Angel of the Lord," "Three Kings" and "Adoration." They were beautifully done.
A little humor was introduced into the solemn ceremony in the
afternoon when a young cast member in "The Angel of the Lord" stood up, straightened his robe and sat down. The audience chuckled but understood that the young man was interested in how he looked in his first stage appearance.
In the middle of the service, plates were passed for contributions to the Christmas Vespers scholarship fund.
During the collection, the Symphony Orchestra played Corelli's "Christmas Concerto." It was a beautiful thing, and well done.
3,200 Methodists To Visit Campus
About 3,200 Methodist students and adult leaders have registered for the Methodist youth conference to be held here Dec. 27-Jan.1.
There will be 46 KU students representing the Methodist Student Center at the conference which is held every four years.
The conference was held here in 1954 also. The students will stay in vacant organized houses and dormitories.
The theme for the conference to be held in Hoch Auditorium is "Religion and the Arts." At the conference there will be Bible study, guest speakers, discussion groups and religious entertainment.
Edwin F. Price, director of the KU Wesley Foundation, said the previous conference was attended by persons from every state and 37 foreign countries.
Featured in the entertainment will be a world premiere of an oratorio by students on the Wesleys and the Wesleyan movement. There will be an interpretive dance done by the Robert Joffrey Dance Theatre.
IFC Picks Officers New Members
Stuart Gunckel, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Monday was elected president of the Inter-fraternity Council for the second semester.
Others elected are Bruce Rider; Wichita senior, vice president; George Smith, Lawrence, secretary; Hulen Jenkins, Kansas City, Kan. treasurer, both juniors.
Newly elected members of the executive council are Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., Dick Jones, McPherson, Lynn Miller, Dodge City, juniors; Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb. Joe Reitz, Kansas City, Mo. sophomores.
The Twelfth Day, Jan. 6, signifies the official end of the Christmas season.
Alumna Gives Photos To KU
Two framed photographs of the Cathedral of Saint Trophime in Arles, France, have been presented to the Museum of Natural History by Miss Alpha L. Owens, 1329 Kentucky St., who is a 1901 graduate of KU.
The front of Dyche Hall was modeled after the portico of Saint Trophime.
The photographs were purchased in 1920 by Miss Owens during a visit to France.
The photographs will be kept in the front office of the museum.
3 Art Films To Be Shown Thursday
Three art films, one telling the Christmas story with 18th century Italian creche figures, will be shown at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Thursday in the Museum of Art lecture hall.
The film titled "God's Monkey," will feature the Hieronymous Bosch painting, "The Garden of Delights." Edward Maser, museum director, said the painting represents the last influences of medieval culture in the world.
A 45-minute film, "Rubens," shows the scholarly development of the work of the 16th century Flemish painter, Peter Rubens. The film will show and analyze the composition of several of his major works.
Advertising Clubs Plan Tour
Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternities, will tour the Kansas Color Press in Lawrence at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Pizza Delivered
VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
FILMS FINISHED F-A-S-T
24 hour service
See us for Kodak color and black-and-white films, too.
Bodath
Boddath
Architecture Park
FILMS FINISHED F-A-S-T
24 hour service
See us for Kodak color and black-and-white films, too.
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP
Don Craucford • Bob Blank
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
POLICE
U.N. Views Heroes' Trial
Around The World
Hungarian revolutionary sources in Vienna and New York have reported Maj. Gen. Pal Maleter, Maj. Gen. Istvan Kovacs and Col. Sandor Kopacsy have been brought to trial by the Moscow-supported puppet regime of Janos Kadar.
A 5-nation committee met in the U.N. headquarters in New York today to consider the plight of three heroes of the Hungarian freedom uprising on trial for their lives in Budapest.
All three held important government posts until the uprising in the fall of 1956 when they openly joined the Freedom Fighters.
In Paris, the NATO powers were reported preparing a 2-way program that calls for cautious new talks with the Soviet Union and a reinforcement of the Atlantic alliance with the latest weapons, including a stockpile of U.S. nuclear weapons and the establishment of missile bases in Europe.
In Washington, a long court trial appeared likely to keep the nation's largest labor union—the scandal-ridden Teamsters—without effective national leadership for many weeks.
Attorneys for 13 rank-and-file members who are seeking to prevent President-elect James R. Hoffa from taking office, planned to present testimony today to support their contention that election of Mr. Hoffa and other officers at the Union's recent Miami Beach convention was rigged. The trial now is in its third week with the end not in sight.
Meanwhile, four vice presidents
have been suspended without pay by the Bakery Workers Union for heading a movement back to the AFL-CIO. The four officials are setting up a rebel union apart from the parent organization which was expelled by the AFL-CIO on corruption charges. The rebel union was chartered the day of the expulsion.
In Jakarta, Indonesia, the Indonesian government seized Dutch ship cargoes and acted to restore commercial shipping among the nation's many islands.
The Dutch ships have been held in Indonesian ports since the shipping company was placed under government control as part of a reprisal campaign for the refusal of the Netherlands to give West New Guinea to Indonesia.
In New York City, subway trains were running on time today. An 8-day strike of motormen, longest and costliest transit tie-up in the city's history, ended last night and the
motormen immediately reported back to work.
They went on strike Dec. 9 to protest their forced representation by the giant Transport Workers Union. A decisive factor in the motormen's back-to-work vote was the promise of state legislation that would transfer determination of union representation from the city's Transit Authority to the State Labor Relations Board.
U.S. Consul General To Visit Brother
The American Consul General to Greece, Philip W. Ireland, will be visiting his brother, H. A. Ireland, professor of geology Wednesday and Thursday.
Mr. Ireland is on a three months leave after serving two years in Greece. He will meet with Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and a few faculty members during his stay here.
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Party? why sure!
- Luncheons
- Weddings
- Pre Parties
- Dinners
Party House
East 23rd Street
VI 3-8791
Mary Beth Noyes Daily Kansan Society Editor
DAVID HERMAN
Who's Doing What?
Parties, pinnings and engagements—all are taken care of by Mary Beth Noyes and her staff of society reporters. This, however, is only a part of the coverage given the campus social scene. House, chapter, and pledge class elections, pledgings, inititions, exchange dinners, hour dances and other informal gatherings are also covered.
Called society news, which is usually thought to appeal mainly to women, the Kansan coverage appeals to both men and women. Both are interested in the activities of their houses and the students they know. Special fashion features are directed toward the distaff side.
The society page is another feature used by the University Daily Kansan to keep the students informed of campus activities.
University Daily Kansan
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
---
How Basketball Boys Score Grades
When you play a 27-game basketball schedule it's tough not to foul out of school because of low grades. That's why KU basketball players take voluntary and required study hours.
Coach Dick Harp said Monday that the players are given time to study in their hotel rooms and while en route to games.
He said the players' grades are checked after 4,8,and 12 weeks of each semester and those players that are down are required to attend a study hall on week nights from 7:30 to 10 in Allen Field House.
Bob Billings, Russell junior and starting guard, said it is hard to study on a trip because, "When I am getting ready to play a game, I find it hard to think of anything except the game. Most teachers will allow you time to make up back assignments and the Christmas vacation affords a good chance to catch up with back studies," he said.
Practice was dismissed after only 15 minutes Monday in what Coach Harp said was "an effort to help the players catch up in their studies."
Wilt Chamberlain, center, said,
"We all try to keep up on the trips.
The coach requires us to take our books along and we get quite a bit of studying done on the way.
Monte Johnson, forward, said, "It's the worst before Christmas, when we have the longer trips. After that we get into conference play where we have mostly one-day trips."
"An example of this," he said, "was the 6-hour plane trip Sunday from Philadelphia to Kansas City."
Chamberlain said he doesn't use the nightly study hall, but tries to do his work at home.
"I more or less reserve the evening hours for study."he said.
Oklahoma State, admitted to the Big Eight conference last spring, will compete for the conference basketball title for the first time next season.
Bowl Teams Busy Studying
MIAMI, Fla.—Practice opens today for 45 college players scheduled to compete in the North-South Shrine football game in the Orange Bowl on Christmas night.
The entire South squad, and Coach Bobby Dodd of Georgia Tech were scheduled to arrive today, as halfback Dick Lynch and end Dick Prendergast of Notre Dame, both members of the North team.
EUGENE, Ore. —(UP) —Oregon,
described by coach Leen Casanova as
in good physical condition for its
Rose Bowl game against Ohio State,
was busy with term examinations
today instead of football drills.
Casanova said his squad will leave by plane for Los Angeles on Saturday and undergo 10 practice sessions during the 11 days there.
COLUMBUS, Ohio. - (UP)—National champion Ohio State was listed for only one pre-Rose Bowl football practice this week because of final examinations.
Coach Woody Hayes said the Buckeyes would hold a light work-out on Wednesday and will leave Saturday for Pasadena, Calif.
The first two baseball games played at KU were in the fall of 1867 with the Shawnees of Topeka, KU lost the first game 57 to 97, and won the second, but the score is not in the records.
Kentucky Edged By Mustangs
Kentucky's reputation as a first-rate basketball power suffered another jolt Monday from unpredictable Southern Methodist, which looks like a second-rater one night and a world-beater the next.
By UNITED PRESS
The Mustangs were supposed to be "much weaker" this year because of the loss of big Jim Krebs and other regulars through graduation. They lived up to their billing by dropping three of their first five games.
It was an entirely different story Monday night, however, as they handed Kentucky a 65-64 lieging at Dallas, Tex., and became the first Southwest Conference team in history ever to defeat the Wildcats.
The loss was the second of the season for Adolph Rupp's Wildcats, who dropped from third to sixth place this week in the national ratings by the United Press board of Coaches.
Rick Herrscher, a 6-foot, 3-inch senior from St. Louis, was the key factor in Southern Methodist's triumph. He sank two free throws with 40 seconds remaining and grabbed a crucial rebound just before the final buzzer to clinch the victory for the Mustangs and wind up as individual high scorer with 22 points.
Pep Club Members Must Get Seats Early
Pep club members are to be at Allen Field House early for basketball games to form the K in the pep club section.
Kathy Ehler, Kansas City, Mo. senior and Jay Jane president, told members at a meeting Thursday that although the section is reserved, other students will be admitted if club members are not seated early.
The most points scored by an individual in a basketball game in the Oklahoma University Field House is 44, a record set by Robin Freeman of Ohio State in 1954.
A bout with the flu kept junior letterman Lynn Kindred out of the first three KU games this season, but his fine showing against St. Joseph's Saturday proved he should be a mainstay of the Jayhawker team in its bid to retain the Big Eight title.
The 6-foot, $2\frac{1}{2}$-inch guard played a key role in the KU second half rally which saw the Jayhawkers overcome a halftime deficit of three points to win 66-54.
Kindred Should Be Team Mainstay
Kindred scored 7 points, all in the second half, and grabbed 5 rebounds. Coach Dick Harp had counted on him as a leading candidate for one of the guard positions, but he missed a lot of practice while he was sick with influenza before the season began.
Kindred said concerning this year's team, "We have a lot of inexperienced boys on the squad, and what we need more than anything is some game experience."
He is now fully recovered and making a strong bid for one of the guard spots now held by Bob Hickman and Bob Billings. Kindred also plays forward occasionally.
He played last year in 16 of KU's 27 games and received his letter as a guard-forward on the NCAA runner-up and Big Seven championship team.
Kindred played high school basketball at Emporia High, where Jerry Waugh, now KU assistant coach, was then head coach.
"I had always wanted to come to KU, and I was impressed with both Jerry Waugh and Dick Harp, so I decided to try for the KU team," he said.
He was on the freshman team which upset the varsity in the annual freshman-varsity game, with Wilt Chamberlain leading the way.
K-State, Iowa State Are Tough
"It looks like K-State, KU and
the conference will be the top teams
in the conference this year," Kindred said.
He believes K-State should be one of the finalists in the Big Eight preseason tournament, with KU having a good chance to also make the finals, if the Jayhawkers can get by Oklahoma and Iowa State.
"We've certainly got a long way to go if we are going to do as well as last year," he said. "You just can't lose men like Gene Elstun, Maurice King, John Parker and Lew Johnson and not be hurt."
But he believes that this year's team has the potential to be just as good, and if the 1957-58 Jayhawkers continue to improve they should be right in the thick of the conference race.
Suran Relieved Due To Health
Wayne McConnell, head football coach, will take Suran's post for the remainder of the season with athletic director Paul Gross as assistant coach.
HAYS, Kan. —(UP)—Cade Suran, basketball coach at Ft. Hays State College the past 12 years, today was relieved of his duties because of ill health.
"This is a move to protect coach Suran's health," said Dr. Lee Harper, chairman of the division of health, physical education and recreation. Suran underwent two severe abdominal operations early this fall and did not take over his coaching duties until Nov. 1.
Suran said he would never have asked to be relieved "but I knew it would be foolish to refuse the opportunity to regain my health."
McConnel was coach of all sports, including basketball, at College of Emporia before coming to Ft. Hays in the fall of 1956.
Just in Time - December 17 to December 24 PRE-CHRISTMAS SAVINGS
Open Every Night To 8:00 For Your Shopping Convenience Until Christmas
Sport shirts ... 3.50 to 4.95
Parkas Reg. $16.88
$19.95
Reg.$20.95, Now $17.95; Reg.$24.95, Now $21.95
EXTRA SPECIAL THIS SALE ONLY IVY LEAGUE CORDUROY PANTS Light Tan—Black—Loden Green—Antelope Tan
Reg. 6.95 $5.00
Already Cuffed, Sorry No Alterations
Pajama Sets ... 5.50 by Jayson
Tie & Belt Sets ... 3.95 to 5.00 by Paris
Fancy P.J.'s ... 3.95 by Jayson
Ties ... 1.50 to 2.50
Paris Belts ... 1.50 to 3.50
CHECK THESE ITEMS FOR THAT MAN OF YOURS
$25.00 to $34.50
Jayson Dress Shirts $3.95 Large Assortment Of Collar Styles
Large Assortment Of Collar Styles
100% Imported
$8.95
Lamb's Wool Sweaters
V-Neck & Crew-Neck. Ten Colors To Choose From
100% Wool Dress Slacks $9.95 Regular & Ivy Styles From
Suburban Coats
All $19.95
VI 3-8763
CAMPUS SHOP
One Door South Jayhawk Cafe
1342 Ohio
中国国家税务局
ports
age of
Hays
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
Page 5
By MALCOLM APPLEGATE
(Qaily Kansan Sports Editor)
Kansas basketball fans should be proud of the fact they have two of the finest teams of the nation right in their home state.
The Jayhawkers are running No. 2 in the nation in most of the weekly polls, while our up-stream rivals, the Kansas State Wildcats, rank one notch lower in the latest International News Service and United Press polls.
Sooner or later these two teams will play each other. Many fans will be disappointed at the outcome, no matter what it is.
The way the teams are progressing—both have 5-0 records—Kansas and Kansas State will probably both continue their winning until their first meeting of the season, possibly in the Big Eight tournament finals on Dec. 30 if both teams advance that far. But they will clash at least twice this season in regularly scheduled conference games in Lawrence Feb. 3 and in Manhattan March 8.
KU's chances in these "big games" will depend a great deal on the progress of their young team members. K-State has shown tremendous power with a veteran club which has knocked off such tough foes as Texas Western, Indiana, Purdue, Iowa and Arkansas.
KU Impressive Too
Kansas has been equally as impressive in beating Oklahoma State, Canisius, Northwestern, Marquette and St. Joseph's. But the Jayhawkers will have to improve their over-all strength if they expect to cope with the powerful Wildcats. Wilt Chamberlain has been shouldering approximately 46 per cent of KU's scoring load. He has received consistent support from Ron Loneski, but after that Kansas' young players have not been able to jell as a consistent punch.
Bob Hickman and Bob Billings have looked good on defense and fairly impressive in ball handling, but except for short spurts, neither has developed into a consistent scorer. K-State, on the other hand, has two excellent ball handlers and defensive men, plus a fairly strong scoring punch in guards Don Matuszak and Roy DeWitz.
At center K-State has a capable man in Jack Parr, but KU has the great Wilt Chamberlain who can even make Parr play below par. Wilt is too much for the K-State veteran, in fact, too much for almost anyone.
At one forward, a tremendous battle between Loneski and 6-foot 8-inch Bob Boozer can be expected. Both proved their ability as sophomores last year. Loneski will give about three inches in height advantage to Boozer, but it should result in a great individual battle. Both are tremendous shooters and rebounds.
Incidentally, from early season games it appears that Chamberlain, Parr, Boozer and Loneski might easily fill four spots on the Big Eight conference team at the end of the season.
At the other forward, Kansas will probably pit either Monte Johnson, Al Donaghue or Lynn Kindred against the Wildcats Hayden Abbott or Wally Frank. Kansas should be able to match Abbott in ability, but Frank could pose a problem although he is somewhat less talented that Abbott. This 6-foot 8-inch sophomore has improved steadily in early games and scored 18 and 14 points respectively against Purdue and Iowa last week. With two 6-foot 8-inch forwards and a 6-foot 9-inch center in the Kansas State lineup, Kansas would be at a tremendous height disadvantage against the Wildcats.
Kindred Could Help
Kindred, who sat out the opening KU games because of illness, is back in action and should boost KU's team strength, but again he has not proved any serious scoring threat.
At any rate, all Kansas fans should be proud of these two fine teams representing their state in the battle for collegiate basketball supremacy.
Come out Friday to Allen Field House and see the double preview when KU plays Washington and K-State meets the University of California. Then pick your own winner.
KU basketball coach Dick Harp was not satisfied with the play of the Jayhawkers "as a team" in their 66-54 victory over St. Joseph's College Saturday night in Philadelphia.
KU Team Play Not Up To Par. Harp Says
"Individually," he said, "I think Chamberlain played one of the best games of his career. Ron Loneski played a good ball game and Lynn Kindred did a fine job."
When asked if he would start Kindred Friday against the University of Washington, Coach Harp said, "No, we will keep him as a swing man for now, playing him at both guard and forward. He will play forward only when we have to play a man-for-man defense."
"I don't think we played as well against them as a team as we have in other games this year," Coach Harp said Monday.
Starters against Washington Friday and California Saturday, Harp said, will be Chamberlain at center, Loneski and Monte Johnson at forwards, and Bob Billings and Bob Hickman at guards, Kindred at guard and Al Donaghue at forward should see a lot of play, he said.
He said that if Kindred continues to improve as he is, he will probably work into the starting lineup later in the season.
Coach Harp expects both Washington and California to be tough. "Washington gave us two good games last year and they should be just as strong this year, especially with their center, Doug Stewart, back." Harp said.
"California," he said, "has Robinson again this year in the back court. He can give you a lot of trouble. We should have a hard time winning both of these games."
K-State Tops Arkansas,63-48
By UNITED PRESS
The highly rated Kansas State Wildcats continued their winning ways—Monday with a 63-48 victory over Arkansas.
It was the fifth straight victory for K-State. Bob Boozer and Jack Parr scored 19 and 12 points respectively and grabbed 23 rebounds between them to lead the attack. The halftime score was 34-26, K-State. Forward Larry Grisham led the Arkansas scoring with 13.
In other Big Eight games Monday night Nebraska fought back from a 27-24 halftime deficit and beat stubborn Denver University 68-63. Nebraska's Willie Fitzpatrick topped the scoring with 17 points.
Illinois gained its fourth victory without defeat although it had to recover from a case of poor shooting in the first half to down Colorado. 64-46. Halftime score was 27-23. Illinois. The Illini were paced by Roger Taylor's 17 points.
The only Big Eight game tonight finds Oklahoma at Tulsa.
KU Rated Second
NEW YORK—(UP)—The United Press college basketball ratings (first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses):
Team Points
1. North Car. (22) (4-0) 332
2. Kansas (8) (5-0) 292
3. Kansas State (1) (4-0) 222
4. San Francisco (1) (3-0) 199
5. Michigan State (1) (3-0) 162
6. Kentucky (1) (4-1) 116
7. Cincinnati (1) (4-0) 91
8. Seattle (2-1) 66
9. Maryland (4-0) 64
10. UCLA (4-0) 58
University Daily Kansan
AN
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Free Pickup CITIES SERVICE Free Delivery
- Brakes Adjusted
- Minor Repairs
- Tires and Batteries
- Lubrication
- Car Wash
Johnny Harrell's Cities Service
Phone VI 2-0606
6th & Wisconsin
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
The women's bowling playoff for the University championship highlighted bowling activity last week.
The title was won by the Big 4, composed of Charla Staples, Nancy Fujisaki, Barbara Callahan, and Sherrran Nevins. They had a total pin count of 1,666 with a handicap.
Phi Gams Down Theta Chi,52-10
Big 4 Wins Bowling
Pushing in 32 points in the last half of a Fraternity A intramural basketball game, Phi Gamma Delta trounced Theta Chi 52-10 after the losers scored only one basket in the first half.
In Independent A action Battenfeld Hall lost to the Black Hawks 53-29. Leaders for the Hawks were Darwin Ashbaugh with 16 points and Dewitt Lewis with 15 points.
In another Independent A game Varsity House won a forfeit game from Jim Beam.
Lee Meyer led the way for the Phi Gams with 16 points. Lee Dick was second with 12 and John Peppercorn and Wally Strauch each scored 8 points. Fine defensive work by John Hussar and Strauch kept Theta Chi from scoring until a 16-0 lead had been built up by the Phi Gams.
High scorers for Theta Chi were Jim Stankiewicz and Ried Chaffin with four points. Bob Farris completed the scoring with two points
Following close was Jim Schartz with 12 points.
**Fraternity C** — Phi Gamma Delta No. 2, 22, Delta Tau Delta No. 2, 18; Delta Tau Delta No. 3, 29, Delta Chi, No. 3, 22; Delta Sigma Phi No. 34, Phi Kappa Psi No. 4, 20; Kappa Sigma 20, Beta Theta Psi No. 3, 18.
Other scores
Dave May led the scoring for Battenfeld with 13 points. Closest man to him was Dennis Hayes with five points.
Fraternity B—Phi Gamma Delta 67, Lambda Chi Alpha 9; Sigma Phi Epsilon 29, Sigma Nu 24; Alpha KapaLambda B 25, Phi Kappa Tau 14; Alpha Kappa Omega 25; Theta Tau 11.
Following the Big 4 were Sigma Kappa, 1,656, Black Angels, 1,656 and Alpha Omicron Pi, 1,656. Team high game was rolled by Sigma Kappa and team high series was rolled by the Big 4 with 1.502 pins.
Individual one game score was won by Fujisaki with 164 pins. Betty Gene White took high score in the 3-game series with 428 pins.
In league play Alpha Tau Omega defeated Delta Upsilon 4-0 to run their record to 42-2 in the Chalk League. ATO had a high game and series score of 684 and 1,339. Larry Miller paced the match taking the high game and series with 230 and 588.
In the Rock League Alpha Kappa Lambda took the high game and
series with 637 and 1,845 pins. Dave Whalen scored 201 and 514 to take the game and series high score. The victory put Alpha Kappa Lambda four games out of first place.
The Semiholes took the game and series high totals with 635 and 1,815 to make their record 32-12, only one game behind the Blue League leaders, the Freecloaders with 33-11. Bob Williams won the high game with 190 pins. Fred Leport won the high series with 518 pins.
In non-league action, Wade Lambel, bowling a series high of 577 pins, led the Jayhawk Cafe team to win over the Santa Fe Travelers, a Kansas City team.
The Jayhawk Cafe team won the high game and series with 894 and 2,596. Total pins won the match. A member of the HilHop League, the Jayhawk team also includes Keith Harper, Ronald Clark, David Stein and Mark Boxberger.
"We Have A Secret."
She: "Yes, he is taking me to dinner at The Castle Tea Room."
---
He: "She likes to be seen there!
(all women are vain)
I think so.
And even her appetite appreciates the cuisine there?"
The Castle Tea Room
1301-11 Mass. St.
VI 3-1151
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
Duties, Rewards Of A Queen Told
What does it take to be a queen? Most of the coveted titles on campus require personality plus the standard beauty. Several of KU's reigning ladies have found the time spent under the critical eyes of judges very pleasant. $ \textcircled{*} $
Newest queen on the Hill, Peggy McCormack, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, who was crowned at the Military Ball Dec. 7, describes her interviews as a marvelous experience.
"I got to meet so many different people and I really had a good time," she said.
Interviews for Military Ball queen include an informal date for dancing and talking with senior members of ROTC for the 12 finalists selected from photographs.
After a cocktail party with ROTC officers and their wives, the queen and her two attendants are selected.
"My only duty is to keep the pearl and rhinestone crown engraved with the name of each year's queen and present it to the girl selected next year," Miss McCormack said.
Standard Questions
Marcia Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. senior and Homecoming queen, said that standard questions in her interviews were about majors, plans after graduation and home towns.
"Sometimes the judges were very willing to talk, but they also were quiet at times to see if you could carry the conversation yourself," she said.
In addition to her title, Miss Johnson received an engraved silver bowl. She appeared at a Kansas City alumni banquet, the Jayhawk Follies, the homecoming game and dance and on radio and television broadcasts.
Two Interviews for Her
One of the spring queens, Judy Anthony, Kansas City, Mo., senior who reigned over the Kansas
Relays, went through two interviews, one in a street dress and the other in a cocktail dress.
"The first time, we were interviewed separately by the five judges," she said. "They asked us about whom we were dating and what kind of grades we made, but nothing else specific. In the second interview, we went in groups of three and were just looked at for a few minutes."
Engineering Group To Initiate 30 Men
Tau Beta, Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, will initiate 30 junior and senior students at 5 this afternoon in the Student Union Jayhawk Room.
Another engineering group, Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, has initiated six members. They are Porter J. Clark, Independence, Kan., Joe E. Sheldon, Lawrence, George E. Clark, Kansas City, Mo., Melvin D. Bundy, Auburn, John Husser, Meriam, seniors, and Stephen C. Jenkins, Topeka junior.
The initiation banquet will be held at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Room. Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will speak.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day or publication. Do not bring Bulletin man to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Alpha Phi Omega regular meeting, 7:30 p.m., 306A Student Union.
College faculty meeting, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditium.
Miss Anthony also made several radio and television appearances to advertise the relays. She and the Big 7 Relays queen from the University of Nebraska gave trophies to the winning athletes in the track competition. Se also received an engraved silver bowl.
Presbyterian Men's Organization Christmas dinner, 6 p.m. Westminster
Le diner de la Fete des Rols aura lieu mercredi le huit janvier a 5 h. 30 mins l'Union, Ceux qui desirent y assister sont les 8h et les 10h, bureau, 140 Fraser, avant les vacances.
Theater party, 7:30 p.m., Green Room Music and Dramatic Arts Building Slides of past productions. People of theater interest welcome.
8 KU Engineerettes Christmas party, 8 PM. Faculty Club. Bring 50 cents for the party.
WEDNESDAY
Prof. Sandelius' Introduction to Government 30 class will not meet.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m., Poulenc "Mass in G." Britten
"Ceremony of Carols," Tchalkovsky
"Nutcracker Suite."
Faculty forum, noon, English Room, Student Union, speaker, Prof. Frank Foie "The State's Water Problem" by the rewrite office (KU-227) by Tuesday afternoon.
Entomology Club. 4 p.m. 417 Snow Special film, "The Parasite and The Mammal"
Radio and TV committee meeting, 5 p.m., 222 Flint Hall
Sociology-Social Work-Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Speak- John Patton, "Christmas, Sociological and /or Religious Phenomenon" Coffee.
Mathematical Colloquium 4:15 p.m.
Ottobisku, visiting lecturer (J. Hargath)
Ottobisku, visiting lecturer (J. Hargath)
"Gauss Variation in Potential Theory."
Coffee at 3:50 p.m., 217 Strong Hall.
Le diner de la Fete des Rois aura lieu mercredi le huit janvier a 5 h. 30 mens I Union. Ceux qui désirent y assister l'I Union devraient dûmner uneurat 103 Fee pour le dîner.
Christmas dinner meeting, 5:30 p.m.
Westminster House. Presbyterian women and friends. Induction of new members. Lunch with Schmidt and Irene Peabody participation.
Circle K. Club, 7:30 p.m., 306 B Student Union. Special all-membership Christmas program. Speaker, Dr. John Patton. Refreshments.
KU Dames, bridge, 7:30 p.m., Student Union.
German department Christmas Nativity play, 8 p.m. Fraser Theater, Public welc
El Alenco - Reunion extraordinaria y
fiesta de Navidad, a las 4 de la tarde en
Fraser Theater. Auto de Navidad, pres-
presentado por estudiantes de espanol baño
conccion del Profesor Ricart. Finata,
villancio tradicionales. Todos están invitados.
Speech i seminar, 3 p.m. 134 Strong,
Speech and drama department 4-5-30
p.m. 356 Music and Dramatic Arts Building,
Christmas coffee.
Debate staff meeting, 5 p.m., 116 Strong. Le dimitre de la Fête. Le 8 h, 30 mds. 109 Union. Ceux qui desirent y assister 103 Fête. Le bureau de le bureau. 103 Fête. Pavilion des voyages.
THURSDAY
General speech committee meeting noon, Faculty Club.
Debate squad meeting 7:15 p.m., 134 Strong.
- Museum of Art, Films on art, 7.30 and*
* 9.p.m. "God's Monkey" and "Rubens."*
KU Jazz Club. 8 p.m., Student Union.
Sigma Xi, 7:30 p.m., 124 Malott Speaker. Dr. Gardner Murphy, director of reef Manningne Foundation. "Trends in Reseasonal Ecology and Perception" Election of new members.
Roberta's
PIZZA
This is the 10th consecutive year that the German department has presented the program at KU.
The program is based on an old German Nativity play. It is accompanied with comedy scenes and music. Musical selections will be presented as they have been presented in Europe for over five centuries.
We Deliver
The Russian chants will be sung by the students studying Russian at KU.
A wide variety of music, ranging from a German recorder group to a selection of old Russian Orthodox Christmas chants by the Russian class Christmas choir, will be presented at the German department's 16th century Nativity play, Weinachtsspiel 8 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser Theater.
German Carols, Russian Chants
710 Mass.
Choir members are Eileen Hoover, Lawrence senior; James Terrill, Ottawa graduate student; Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, Darwin Sharp, Lawrence, Monty Rogers, Mission, seniors; Donald Brada, Parsons, Charles Hermann, Hutchinson, Jane Idol, Robinson, Richard Lewis, Kansas City, Kans., William McCabe, Zurich, juniors; Richard Marshall, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; Dennes Sharp, Oakley, Robert Warnock, Hutchinson seniors.
'Heilige Nacht, Stille Nacht'
From Missouri, 119 residents applied, primarily from the Kansas City area. Thirty-five received awards with 21 enrolling. A total of 81 Missouri applicants enrolled.
Faculty In Choir
Four hundred and one received awards and 291 receiving them enrolled at KU.
Faculty members also singing in the choir are Mrs. Helga Vigliano, instructor in German; Jorgen Anderson, assistant in economics; and Miss Frances Ingemann, assistant professor of English.
Instrumental music will be played by the German department's recorder group. This will play both solo
Applications totaling 996 were received from 146 Kansas high schools. Three hundred and fifty Kansas applicants were named recipients and 256 of those enrolled at KU.
Scholarship Total Set At $100,000
A total of 1,188 applications were received for scholarships and scholarship hall positions for this semester from freshmen and transfer students, according to figures released by the aids and awards office Monday.
Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards, estimated that $95,000 to $100,000 was awarded these students. He said the awards ranged in value from $200 to $1200 and included the Watkins and Summer-field scholarships.
Applications from states other than Kansas and Missouri totaled 90, with 12 receiving awards, 10 of them enrolling, and 52 of the applicants enrolling.
Fourteen applications were sent from foreign countries. Four received awards and all enrolled. Seven of the 14 applicants enrolled.
Mr. Martin said the awards are usually made to about twice as many men as women.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
"TOP PERFORMANCE!"
M-G-M presents
ELVIS PRESLEY in
JAILHOUSE
ROCK"
CINEMASCOPE
co-starring
JUDY TYLER
Mickey SAUGHNESSY
Dena JONES
Jennifer HOLDEN
numbers and background music for the Nativity play.
In the group are Russel Comer, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Loren Lockwood, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Sam Anderson, instructor in German; Robert Schaaf, Herington senior; Raymond Roberts, Kingman graduate student; Sandra Hammond, Osage City sophomore; Dud Sutherland, Baton Rouge, La., and Judy Kuhar, Lee's Summit, Mo., freshmen. Leading the recorder group is Den
Leading the recorder group is Brode Jorgensen, Chabotten, Denmark graduate student.
Extra: "Tweety"—News Now! See It Today
The German choir, composed of students in the German department, will sing German Christmas carols.
GRANADA
Freshmen singing in the German Christmans choir are Ann Marsh, Minneapolis, Minn; Carol Topping, Sunflower; Patricia Dana, Hering-
ton; Linda Fornelli, Kansas City, Mo.; Geretchen Watkins, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Milliken, Bonner Springs; Fred Morrison, Colby and Nancy Craven, Hillsdale.
Sophomores are Beverly Wilkin, Burlingame; Charles Bentz, Peabody; Carol Owen, Topeka; Sonja Hushaw, Scott City; Dave Pellett, Topeca; Paul Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.; Roger Douglass, Mullinville; Karlon Ison, Overland Park; James Cederberg, Herndon, and Lou Beisner, Natoma.
Juniors are Keith Stewart, Topeka; Laurin Wilhelm, Great Bend; Mike Conner, Dodge City and Stewart Reeves, Louisberg.
Seniors are Laurian Seeber, Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y.; Rhoda Taylor, Topeka; Merrilyn Coleman, Lawrence; Renate Mayes, Kansas City, Mo.; Sharon Rhodes, Wichita; John Beam, Ottawa and Mary Jo Woofer, Colby.
Graduate students are Phyllis Olive, Kansas City, Mo., and Helmut Pfanner, Vorarlberg, Austria.
Howard J. Baumgartel Jr., assistant professor of psychology and chairman of the department of human relations, will be the guest on the program "New Horizons in Human Relations." William Conboy, associate professor of speech will be host.
The show can be seen over KARD, Channel 3, at 5:15 p.m. This will be the 12th show in the series "Let's Get Together." At the end of the series 25 representatives from KU will have appeared.
The final program in the live television series on human relations sponsored by University Extension will have a faculty member as its guest. $ \textcircled{4} $
Human Relations Series On TV Ends Today
The second show in the series, "The Social Scientist Looks At Human Relations," has been offered by KARD as a public service feature and is eligible for the Brotherhood Award.
A kinescope of the program was made and sent to the National Conference of Christians and Jews for the Brotherhood Award.
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
The shows were produced by Tom Rea, instructor of journalism and coordinator for University Extension, and Bruce Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism.
AIRLINE TICKETS
EUROPE VACATION
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN
Travel Service
1236 Mass.
VI 3-1211
Office Hours
8:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
---
PAT READ
INDIAN TRADER
445 Tenn. St. Ph.VI 3-1306
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
- Hand Loomed Ties
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment
1.
$\frac{1}{2}$
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957 University Daily Kansai
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST
TWIN PEARL RING in Flint Hall very
likely to owner- reward Call
5237.
12-18
FOUND
WHITE ROSARY. Call VI 3-4138. 12-18
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Connect at Alan and help Dorm. Ottawa University Ph. 1492. 12-18
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED to California. Los
Victim. Call: James. T-1552
7-860-3552
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tf
FOR SALE
WANTED
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, both open and renewal magazines, new and renewals. Process prompt. Call VI 3-0124.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make many of these publications at the 1/2 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams in course materials, course study notes, course master's index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553 or VI 3-1717
RCA VICTOR 3 speaker tape recorder for sale, 1 year old. Call VI 2-0753 after 3:30 p.m. 12-17
26" SCHWINN BICYCLE, excellent condition. Brown Beaver-dyed Coyote coat, size 12-14. Reasonable. VI 3-5973. 12-20
FOR SALE Brown velvet cocktail suit,
size 9, price $7. Call VI 3-8906 12-20
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode island, has 2 furnished apartments. $30 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgen. tf
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Phi VI 3-3184 or see by calling at rear basement door. 520 Lau. tf
TWO REDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-8-58
APARTMENT for two or three boys, private entrance and bath, available January 1. Call VI 3-1890, 1116 Sunset Dr. 12-18
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT
with enclosed sleeping porch,
range, water closet, state-built-ins.
Adults only. 742 Ohio. 12-19
Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity 1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
837 N. H.
VI 3-6035
Marinelle Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Roger's Launder-If 1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravit's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
LARGE SINGLE ROOM to young man.
Also basement apartment for two young men. No drinking, no smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Inc. 12-17
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
4 ROOM APARTMENT: Nice house, private entrance and bath, furnished or unfurnished. $58 a month. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-6696. 12-19
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT for two boys.
One sleeping room and one study room;
also board. Vacant January 6. Ph. VI 3-
1585, 1130 Kentucky. 12-19
FOR RENT? Would you like a better apartment? It’s nice, new and clean. One room with a flat-screen TV, a mutatic washer, refrigerator and electric range, built-ins. Will accept small child. Monthly rents are $150. January 1 $75 a month plus utilities. Phone VI 3-7655 or KU 402. 12-20
MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD for next semester.
$50 per month. Phi. VI 3-4385. 12-20
QUIET ROOMS for upper class students.
1400 Tennessee, VI 3-6657. 12-20
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliam-
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, phone VI 3-2001, tf
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657. 1400 Tenn. tf
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherw.o.d. VI 3-8931. tf
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
-beds, harnesses, etc. Sure wires to hang
hammers, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular
rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas. VI 3-4573 or
VI 3-8600. tf
TYFIST: Experienced; theses, term pa-
sition Vl CI 3-0177; Mrs. Jack Larson tlf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7629.
tt
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8047
LEONARD'S
HEY!
You Won't Find Any Leonard's Gas In There It's Only At . . .
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
Standard Service
9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing with soft, beautiful beauty comparable to Techno-3
Samples to show Ph. VI 5-1094 or VI 3-
5994.
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson. Mgr. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate Phone VI 3-9373. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accu-
sate service. Call VI 1-6-3633, 1621 V I
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accu-
sate service. Call VI 1-6-3633, 1621 V I
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
In the case eta Gla Smith
9411% Mass. Phi. VI S-3263.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term paper;
Prompt service. VI 3-7184
632 West 5th Street
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna VIR, Irv I 3-8660. tf
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822.
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY 296 Titles at $1.65 ea. 80 Glants at $2.95 ea. Come in and see us soon THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass—Ph. VI 3-1044
Open Sat. Eve Till 8:30
KC
Boyswear
---
FOR DAD AND BIG BROTHER
Shop Ober's Men's Store. Unusual gifts to make them the most happy fellas.
FOR LITTLE BROTHER-
SHOP FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY AT OBER'S
Ober's Boy's Shop offers the most complete selection of clothing and furnishings in Eastern Kansas.
Shop before you leave on vacation and your worries are over! Boy's Shop-Second Floor
15
FOR SISTER OR MOTHER OBER'S JUNIOR MISS SHOP
Second Floor
Christmas Packages Gift Wrapped Free
821 Mass.
Ober's
Phone VI 3-1451
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957
Future Druggist: How He's Trained
By CAROL BURGESS STILWELL
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
A man wearing a white coat smiles through his glasses as you plunk down on the counter a piece of paper scratched with the usual doctor's hieroglyphics.
"Why certainly." comes the reply. "In just a few minutes."
"Mav I have this filled?" you ask.
To most of us the life of a pharmacist means filling prescriptions. But to students in the School of Pharmacy it means many more things.
For some it means a background for medical or dental school. For others it means a chance to earn money on weekends while studying in graduate school.
Many Work in Drugstores
For most it will probably mean a chance to fill one of the many openings in Kansas drugstores this year. (State law requires a pharmacist on duty every hour a drugstore is open.)
A few will work as salesmen for pharmaceutical houses. Still others may enter the field of pharmaceutical journalism.
For women the training may mean a chance to use it after marriage. For other women it can mean a good background knowledge for homemaking.
At KU pharmacy students receive a year of liberal arts background plus three years of technical training. Their courses include mathematics, chemistry, botany, zoology, physics, biochemistry, physiology, and bacteriology, plus speech, accounting, and marketing.
During the summer vacations they work for a week in the pharmacy department at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
5-Year Program Set Up
Starting in the fall of 1958, a 5-year program will permit pharmacy majors to spread their studies over a longer period. Now many students
must take an additional semester or a summer session to complete the course.
In their sophomore year students learn different ways of measuring drugs and the basic and physical principles of pharmacy. In their junior year they manufacture drugs in the school laboratory, and in other courses they learn the nature of drugs. In the pharmacology laboratory they test the effect of the drugs on animals.
In their senior year the students don the white coat of the dispensing pharmacist. They get experience in filling prescriptions in situations similar to those which face the graduate pharmacist.
Uses All Knowledge Gained
The druggist must use all the information gained from his study of the different fields of knowledge when he is compounding prescriptions.
If medical science is to advance, some pharmacists must work in the laboratory to find new drugs to combat disease.
At KU, pharmacy students may do graduate work in pharmaceutical chemistry under Joseph H. Burckhalter, professor of pharmacy. Dr. Burckhalter, while working for a pharmaceutical manufacturer, compounded effective drugs for the treatment of malaria and intestinal and extra-intestinal amoebic dysentery.
He encourages students to be original in their work.
"We think it is extremely important to be unorthodox," he explained. "They should have the curiosity of a child."
Relax, You'll Be Home In Less Than 4 Days
If you're counting the days until Christmas vacation, less than four remain before the holiday officially begins.
Vacation officially starts at noon Saturday and classc
8 a.m. Monday, Jan. 7.
Most of the students will leave Friday, although many will stay for the basketball doubleheader that night. KU plays the University of Washington and Kansas State the University of California.
Dormitory To Be Open
One men's dormitory will be open during the vacation, for any men who will stay on campus. Sleeping accommodations will be 50 cents a night. No meals will be served.
Dormitories will close at 6 p.m.
Saturday and reopen at noon Sunday,
Jan. 5, although some of them
will be used by delegates to the
National Methodist Student Conference
Dec. 27-31.
Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays during the vacation, from 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays and will be closed Sundays, Christmas and New Year's Day.
Women To Attend Alumni Party
Four members of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternity for women, will attend the Kansas City alumni chapter's annual Christmas party tonight in Kansas City, Kan.
Miss Tiara Farrow will show slides and tell about her trip around the world. Members of the KU chapter who will attend are Marilyn Mermis, Hays, Kay Hanson and Carol Ann Huston, Kansas City, Mo., all seniors, and Martha Crosier, Lawrence junior.
Reserve Book Checkout Hours
The basketball team will be busy during the holiday period, playing both Friday and Saturday of this week, then next week in the Big Eight pre-season tournament, and on Jan. 2 Oklahoma State in Allen Field House.
KU employees who are on civil service will be working during vacation, except for the afternoon of Christmas Eve and on Christmas Day, as well as some time for New Year's Day, although this hasn't been announced yet.
Reserve books may be checked out for over the vacation beginning at 10 a.m. Friday. They will be due at 9 a.m. Monday, Jan. 6.
Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing secretary,
said Thursday, apartments for married students are available at prices from $50 to $125 and rooms from $15 to $35 a month.
Apartments and rooms for the spring semester are plentiful now and new listings are being reported to the housing office every day.
Order Your Spring Housing Now
Union, Library Set Schedules For Vacation
Student Union and library facilities, operating on vacation schedules, will be open to students and faculty remaining in Lawrence during the Christmas vacation.
The housing office handles off-campus housing and vacancies in men's dormitories.
Watson Library will be open weekdays, 8 a.m.—5 p.m., and Saturday, Dec. 24 and 31, 8 a.m.—noon. The building will be closed on Sundays, Christmas and New Year's Days.
Departmental libraries will follow similar schedules with any variations posted in the individual libraries, said Robert Quinsey, director of reader services.
SDX Elects President
Reserve books in the education and undergraduate rooms, will be checked out for the vacation period beginning at 10 a.m. Friday and will be due at 8 a.m. Jan.6.
The Student Union will open at 7 a.m. every morning during vacation and will close at these hours: Dec. 22-26 and Jan. 1-5-9 p.m.
Dec. 27-30 -11 p.m.
Larry Boston, Salina senior, has been elected president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity. He succeeds Bob Lyle, Kansas City, Mo. senior, who will be graduated in February.
Christmas Day----5 p.m.
Jan. 31----1 a.m.
Food service in the Union will follow this schedule:
Dec. 21-25 — Cafeteria open, Hawk's Nest closed.
Dec, 26-Jan. 1 — Hawk's Nest
open. Cafeteria closed.
Jan. 2-5 — Cafeteria open, Hawk's Nest closed.
"While we are serving persons attending the Methodist Church Conference Dec. 26-Jan. 1 in the Cafeteria, the Hawk's Nest will be reserved for the student and faculty," said Dwayne Hall, Student Union food director.
Gunshot Victim Reported 'Good'
Harold R. Van Gundy, Chanute freshman was reported in "very good condition" today by Watkins Hospital after receiving some buckshot in the right leg from a .12 gauge shotgun in a hunting accident Sunday morning.
The accident occurred while Van Gundy and two companions, Robert Williams, Lawrence RFD 1, and Ed Pauley, Kansas City, Mo., neither students, were hunting on a farm of Williams' father six miles west of Lawrence.
Van Grundy was brought by Williams and Pauley to the hospital immediately. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said there were no broken bones and little loss of blood. Grundy is expected to be released in two days.
Williams said that while Van Gundy was reaching in a brush pile to get a squirrel, Pauley's gun fired accidentally. The sheriff's office ruled the shooting accidental.
A photographic exhibition depicting examples of the work of Milo S. Ketchum, structural consultant of Ketchum and Konkel Structural Engineers, is now on display on the third floor of Marvin Hall.
Shown also in the exhibit are photographs of the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs and the air terminal in St. Louis.
Photo Exhibit Shows Structural Designs
TUXEDO RENTALS and Sales
Place your order early for the Christmas Season
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763 (one door south Jayhawk Cafe) Complete Wedding Service
Must Pass Physical
Army Plans Flight Program For KU
The KU Army ROTC is making plans to begin a flight program in the spring semester.
Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science and tactics, said Monday the program is designed by the Department of the Army to produce more pilots for the Army Aviation program.
Upon completion of the program a private flying license will be issued. The Department of the Army will pay the cost of the program.
He must pass a physical examination and tests and have the approval of Col. Hanchin and the dean of the school in which he is enrolled. If he is under 21 years of age, he must have his parents' consent.
Instruction will consist of 35 hours of ground school and 36 hours of flight training. It will be given at Lawrence Municipal Airport by civilian instructors.
To enter the program the applicant must be a senior Army ROTC cadet or a senior who has completed the Army ROTC program.
The cadet must volunteer for 3 years of active duty or 2 years active duty, plus additional flight training.
"The Role of the Atom in the Aircraft Industry" will be the topic of a lecture to the student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers at 7:15 p.m. Friday in the Student Union Jayhawk Room.
To Explain Role Of Atom
The guest speaker, G. George Young, a member of the research department at McDonnell Aircraft Corp., St. Louis, Mo., will explain both the destructive and peaceful roles of the atom, using both slides and AEC films. The public is invited.
Graduate To Direct CBS Choir Concert
A 1931 alumnus, Karl H. Bratton, will direct the University of New Hampshire concert choir in its eighth annual Christmas radio concert on the CBS network Saturday.
Mr. Bratton is head of the music department at the school. The choir appears with the Boston Pops Orchestra every year, and has sung for several movies, including "Cinerama Holiday."
Col. Hanchin said the contract for the program is now being drawn up between the Department of the Army and the University.
Quota for Program
"I think it is just a matter of going through the mechanics to get the program underway," he said.
Col. Hanchin said about 12 cadets have shown interest in the program for the spring semester and 15 others for the coming fall semester. He said the quota for the program will probably be set at 15.
It is similar to a program being used by the KU Air Force ROTC unit for the second year and another course which has been offered by the aeronautical engineering department for several years.
Col. Hanchin said that, if the proper agreement is made between the University and the Department of the Army, 2 credit hours will be given for the course.
Rehabilitation Work Gets $4,200 Grant
The United States Office of Vocational Rehabilitation has made a grant of $4,200 to the University to conduct an in-service training workshop for experienced rehabilitation counselors. Dr. William C. Cottle, professor of education, is the director of the project.
The workshop, Jan. 27 through 31, will be attended by 35 counselors from the 7-state area of Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota. Gerald W. Green, instructor in education, will be workshop coordinator. University Extension will assist with administrative details.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Roberta's
Roberta's
710 Mass.-VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
SERVICE MAN
For Cleaning—
—Tailoring
& Alterations
For QUALITY WORK And FAST SERVICE
Take Your Clothes To
New York Cleaners
Merchants of Good Appearance
926 Mass.
FASHION STUDIO
QUALITY WORK
FAST SERVICE
New York Cleaners
Picture Supplement
Christmas Issue
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
presenting...
'Miss Santa'
SUZANNE SMITH
Arkansas City Sophomore
as photographed by
John Lang and
Gordon Sieker
"By this great new building, the people of Kansas have made it clear that they do indeed believe that 'Man cannot live by bread alone' and that their university must play a major role in this regard."
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy
Culture on
THE MUSEUM OF ART
1967
Music Pride
Pictures by Rex Parsons and Jim Linenberger
Bold archi Music and fascinates the 2.4 mi
Besides fut the buildin training st
Among its turntable an experim chairs for rooms;81 and a host and a library
The
Premier Jewelry
Shop
can supply that
Special Gift
916½ Mass.
The
Premier Jewelry
Shop
can supply that
Special Gift
916½ mass.
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR PRACTICE Irving Carlson, Wayne, Neb. freshman practices on his violin in one of the piano practice rooms.
The Violist
IIII
e Kaw:
and Drama Building of the University
natural lines and graceful curves give the new Dramatic Arts Building an enchantment that best photographers, as shown by these pictures of dollar building.
ning photographers with an interesting subject, "incidentally" furnishes unexcelled facilities for ents in cultural pursuits.
atures are: An 1188-seat theatre with a large elevating orchestra pit; a 396-seat recital hall; total theatre with horseshoe stage and 80 swivel ple without swivel necks; four organ practice no practice rooms; 37 music teaching studios; recital halls, offices, classrooms, practice rooms,
...
1970
MEMO WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 18
It's later than you think!! So don't put off buying his Christmas gift any longer. Go to The Town Shop or The University Shop today and see their outstanding selections of:
Bulky Cardigans
Wool Sportshirts
Bovarian Jackets
Cashmere Sweaters
Leather Kits
Bar Accessories
Sweater Shirts
Zippo Lighters
Crew Neck Sweaters
Sleeveless Cardigans
Flasks
Mufflers
Matching Sweaters & Sox
Gloves
Jewelry Sets
Billfolds
Alligator Belts
the town shop the university shop
DOWNTOWN
Ken Whitenight
ON THE HILL
Al Hack
Christmas time at KU
Photos by Jackie A. Jones
DANFORTH CHAPEL-A reminder to all of the true meaning of Christmas.
"AND THE STOCKINGS were hung by the chimney with care." These Delta Gammas get their Christmas king-sized stockings ready "in hopes that St. Nicholas" soon will be here.
MR. SANTA PIZZA CLAUS
Mr. Pizza
Mr. Pizza has gone Christmasy to wish you a happy vacation.Make yourself a present of a delicious Hideaway Pizza before you go!
Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
VI 3-9111
College Base Load Now 14
Some students will have to work harder to remain in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the largest of the 10 schools in the University.
The faculty of the college, in which this fall's enrollment is 2,961, voted Tuesday to raise to 14 semester credit hours the minimum course load that may be carried. The old rule permitted enrollment for 12 hours with anything less requiring the dean's approval. Under the new minimum he may still make exceptions.
Dean George R. Waggoner said that compliance with the new rule, accompanied by examination credit for the Western Civilization course, would assure that a student has reached the half-way point of his college career by the end of the sophomore year.
Associate Dean Francis H. Heller,
reporting for the University Senate Administrative Committee which recommended the 14-hour minimum, said some students had been enrolling for 15 or 16 credit hours and then dropping a 3-hour, or even 2-hour courses whenever they encountered difficulty. Although classified as full-time students, they were not making normal progress toward graduation.
Normal loads for freshmen and sophomores are 15 hours, and for juniors and seniors, 16 hours.
Regulations of the college directly or indirectly affect approximately half the student body, as the college also provides the preparatory work for business, education, journalism, law and medical students.
The College faculty also approved a change in the foreign language requirement, whereby foreign students who already know one of the languages offered will not have to study another.
Foreign students who know a foreign language that is not offered in the College curriculum, will still have to fulfill the language requirement.
Daily Hansan
55th Year. No. 65
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Council Plans Budget Study
By DOUGLAS PARKER (Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
A committee to study the proposed budgets for the five state supported schools was appointed Tuesday night by the All Student Council.
The State Legislature convenes Jan. 14 to consider the budgets.
Brooks Becker, Emporia graduate, chairman, said the 5-member committee is working out a plan before classes start Jan. 6 after Christmas vacation.
"We have ideas but we don't know specifically what we are going to do." Becker said. "We'll certainly have something to say about the study before school starts again."
Vague about what steps must be taken, Becker said the committee does not want to divulge any plans until it is sure something definite can be done.
Committee Members
Committee members are Creta Carter, Jennings, Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Kan., Bob Billings, Russell, juniors, and Ray Nichols, Lawrence sophomore.
The committee's plan was announced after a meeting this noon. The committee was appointed at a closed session of the ASC meeting Tuesday.
The Daily Kansan reporter and two other students were asked to leave the Council meeting room in the Student Union Tuesday night while the committee was appointed and the project discussed.
The committee stayed for further discussion after the close of the Council meeting.
The ruling to clear the room was within Council procedure. Patterson said the ruling was the first in the two years he's been on the Council.
Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior, said after Tuesday's meeting the project is "something we have to be careful about what we do."
"I'm not at liberty to say anything about it right now." Prelock added, "but no one will be displeased."
"Government Week" Proposed
At the open meeting the Council proposed to set up a "government week" next semester, and a resolution to propose to a Big Eight conference on international affairs to the Big Eight Student Governing Conference.
During the government week, proposed by Patterson. ASC members would each give short talks in three organized houses on the purpose and function of the ASC.
Also planned were forums on educational processes and on international affairs, Dr. James McCain, president of Kansas State College, was suggested as a speaker for the educational forum, and a nationally-known figure proposed for the international forum.
The Council appointed four delegates to propose the plan to the international conference at the Big Eight student governing conference in Kansas City Dec. 27-28. The delegates are Patterson, Susie Gaskins, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan. junior, and Janie Dean, Prairie Village freshman.
Robert Davies, Dodge City senior, reported that the final total collected for the Campus Chest is $4,448.
Student Union May Be Named After University
Awaiting approval by the Board of Regents is a recommendation for the Student Union to be officially called the Kansas Union.
The 21-member Memorial Union Corporation board of directors, made up of students, faculty and alumni, sent the proposed name to the Board of Regents two weeks ago in an effort to get an official name for an aluminum nameplate to be placed on the building.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said the meeting of the regents is Jan. 17
L. C. Woodruff, dean of students and chairman of the corporation, said the name was chosen because it is the practice throughout the different colleges to name the union building after the school.
Asked if he thought it would be hard for students to start calling the building the Kansas Union, he said he didn't think so since most students just call it the Union anyway.
Six students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences interviewed this morning agreed unanimously that the new College requirement on minimum enrollment is a good idea.
The College faculty yesterday changed the minimum number of hours a student can carry from 12 to 14.
New 14-Hour Rule Good Idea,6 Agree
George Reida, Topeka junior— "I agree that the College should change the minimum. It will help raise the standards of the University."
The student opinions:
Dale GulHedge, Wellington senior —"It's a fair ruling. If a student comes to college to study, he should take at least 14 hours a semester."
Robert Loyd, Ottawa senior— "Twelve hours is too few for one semester, and the new rule is very good. Even if a student is on probation and trying to bring his grades up, he will be as likely to slack off on a 12-hour schedule as on a heavier load."
Marcia Moran, Prairie Village sophomore—"For the majority of the students 14 is a better minimum. Twelve hours doesn't keep a student busy and working at his potential."
NATO Seen Wary Of Missile Risk
Del DeShazo, Lawrence senior—"If a student carried only 12 hours one semester he will put a strain on himself to work harder later on if he is going to graduate on time."
Sara Coxe, Delmar, N.Y. graduate student—"This is a good rule, provided it is flexible and provides for the necessary exceptions, such as students who must work while attending school."
By BOB MACY (Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Candidates for the Miss Santa contest may pick up a free 8 by 10 copy of their Miss Santa picture in The Daily Kansan business office Thursday.
NATO allies of the United States have decided that the risk is greater than the benefits in accepting U. S. missiles, Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science, and Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor, told a Daily Kansan reporter in interviews Tuesday.
She will be interviewed over KLWN Thursday. No definite time for the interview has been set.
Almost 1,000 students voted in the Miss Santa contest Thursday and Friday.
Both agreed the refusal of some NATO allies and the reluctance of others to have U.S. missiles stationed on their soil is not due to a loss of faith in the U.S.
Prof. Sandelius said he thinks the NATO nations were "being cautious as to where our help is to be placed. There is a definite feeling that the situation is a little delicate."
"Russia has certainly made some strong indications about the conference." Prof. Sandelius said, regarding the recent Russian threats on the NATO meeting.
Miss Smith will be guest of honor at The Daily Kansan's Christmas party from 3-5 p.m. today, and will be presented with about $90 worth of prizes given by Lawrence merchants.
"Although they want us to supply help to the West, they want us to go slow as to just where that help's going to be," he said. "I think they definitely look to the U.S. as the leader of the free world. I feel the other NATO nations are determined not to give in to the Russians."
U. S. Has Tact and Care "I think the West wants a show
Kansan's Miss Santa Named
Suzann Smith, Arkansas City sophomore and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, was announced Miss Santa at the sorority house Tuesday by Steve Schmidt, Salina senior and promotion manager of the University Daily Kansan.
Runners-up were Janet Williams, Wichita, Delta Gamma; Elizabeth Robinson, Cedar Vale, Delta Delta Delta, sophomores, and Lucy Wachter, St. Joseph, Mo. junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Miss Smith was presented with a dozen roses by Ted Winkler, Spring Hill senior and circulation manager for The Daily Kansan. The presentation and an interview with Miss Smith was tape recorded for KUOK, campus radio station, by Jerry Bailie. Humboldt junior.
Miss Santa will be interviewed by Bill Kerwin on a five minute color television show, "Three Star Personality," at 6:25 tonight on KCMO- TV, channel 5.
This was confirmed this morning in an interview with the television station's program director, Ken Heady.
1952
MISS SANTA AND FRIENDS—The 1957 Miss Santa, Suzann Smith, flanked by Ted Winkler (left) and Steve Schmidt. Winkler is handling a bouquet of roses, gift of a Lawrence flower shop, to Miss Smith. (Daily Kansan photo. Another picture of Miss Santa is on Page 1 of today's picture supplement.)
Santa is on Page 1 of today's picture supplement.)
of strength without being belligerent," Prof. Sandelius continued. "We want to show evidence of a strong arm without seeming trigger-happy. The different nations in NATO are concerned that we act with tact and care."
Commenting on the NATO nations' fear that Russia could defeat the U.S. if war came, Prof. Sandelius said, "I don't think our allies feel Russia could walk over us. There is just a general assumption in these countries that, in case of war, we'll all be in it."
He said he thinks the Bulgarian letter to President Eisenhower proposing peace and threatening trouble over the NATO meeting was designed to "deflate" the NATO conference.
"With the nuclear capabilities of the two major powers it doesn't matter who starts the war," he said. "The possibility of eliminating retaliatory power of the other is almost nil. The worth and the need for nuclear weapons are not that they would make victory possible, but that their use in retaliation would make the price too great for any nation to use them."
Prof. Ketzel said, "In the event of a nuclear all out war, it won't make much difference who supports whom. The catastrophic nature of an all out nuclear war will make it hard to tell the victor from the vanquished.
Ketzel; Price of War High
Asked why some NATO nations are shying away from taking U.S. missiles, Prof. Ketzel said, "They have decided that the danger to their country is enhanced rather than minimized by the location of missile launching sights on their territory.
"If there is a missile launching site located on their territory, this would be one of the first things the Soviets would try to eliminate in case of war," he said.
(Related story, "NATO Accepts Nuclear Weapons," Page 6.)
Weather
Partly cloudy east this afternoon. Increasing cloudiness tonight and cloudy Thursday with drizzle or light rain beginning west tonight and spreading over state Thursday. Warmer this afternoon turning cooler central and east tonight. Low tonight 30s, High Thursday 50s.
Low this morning 41. Low Tuesday 39, high 44.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
Indonesia And The Future
Few persons are aware of the potentiality of a rapidly expanding Southeast Asian power, Indonesia. While it has been in the headlines the past month as it goes through the final phases of kicking the Dutch out of the islands, few are aware of the potential of the country as a world power.
This mighty island chain, consisting of 3,000 islands spread over 3,000 miles has 85 million inhabitants and expects over 100,000 by 1965.
No other area in the world is so richly endowed with natural resources. Most of it is derived from the rich lava soil which supports a population density unequaled in the world on the largest island, Java, where 55 million live.
The principal crops are rubber, sugar, coffee, tea and tobacco. Besides the oil, there are large untouched deposits of metals such as tin and iron ore.
The natives are a restless, dynamic group of people, just now beginning to exercise their political muscles after being under Dutch control until gaining their independence in 1949. Politically, things are still very much muddled although President Sukarno is very much the leading political power of the land. The Communists have made some gains and while they
have only a small force working, they have a tremendously closely knit organization.
The country is ripe for exploitation. The population is rapidly increasing but the land under cultivation is not. There is little new employment offered as the people are going through a state of political, economic, military and social unheaval.
Industry has just begun on the islands and while it is of little importance at the present, there is every reason to believe that if the Dutch experts remain to train the natives, the industry will mushroom.
With tremendous natural resources at hand and plenty of cheap labor, Indonesia needs only the technological skill to transform some of the farm population (about 80 per cent of the people live on or near the farm) to industry.
Indonesia is sitting pretty much in the same position as Japan before it began building up its manufacturing in the 1920's. The Japanese were faced with an overflowing population and internal problems before the military came into power and pushed the people into war.
The same thing could happen in Indonesia. The potential is there; all that is needed is a strong leader to build up industrial might. Let's hope that strong man never arrives.
Rally To The Monsters
-Dick Brown
Where art thou gone, ye old time horror movies? It is getting so a body can't get a wholesome scare. In perusing a list of horror movies offered to the citizens recently we noticed there is a lack of good, down to earth, simple, old time, horror thrillers.
We need a renaissance of the monster-werewolf-vampire cult. No more of these science fiction creations; give us a simple creep.
We don't mean to sound stuffy. In fact, some of the recent thriller offerings have sent genuine shivers clear down to our gravity belts. But inwardly we long for the simple life. To be scared by an outer space monster, chased by a thing from a sticky lagoon, and ultimately captured by an incredible shrinking blob is too close to the truth to be funny or terrifyingly entertaining.
Modern scarecums are too complex, too much a product of the imagination and less a product of the fiction laboratory.
The days are past when we can observe a mad Dr. Frankenstein creating his monster in a moldy castle, complete with a matched set of monster assistants. The mid-century monster is never created in a laboratory with electrodes
cracking in the background; he just appears. No reason. He just appears.
We long for the halcyon days when a handsome young man with a clean-shaven look could, within minutes, turn into a raving, hairy werewolf and pursue maid over hill and dale, finally to rest in peace, a victim of a silver bullet.
Nor shall the days of the vampire be forgotten. This is a chap that really chills the blood. This fellow is the product of the most fertile imaginations. Can you imagine dealing with an antagonist that, just when you have him cornered, shrinks into a silly-looking bat and flaps out the castle window. It's ridiculous. What can you do with a guy like that. He doesn't want to place his mind in your body, like some modern creations; he simply wants your body. He is simple and refreshing. Straightforward. Nothing subversive about this chap.
Well, we've reached a conclusion that not only is the world going to pot, but the monster population is too.
What this world needs is less talk, fewer politicians, and a darn sight more monsters.
Petition, anyone?
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
—John Eaton
BILGER P.27
'I HAVE TWO BOOKS FOR MY COURSE. I GET ALL MY LECTURES FROM TH' BEST ONE...TH' LOUSY ONE IS MY REQUIRED TEXT.'
Hofstra college of Hempstead, N. Y. held its opponents scoreless in its first three football games this season.
There are 350,000 primary party units which form the base of the Communist party pyramid in Russia.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vixing 3-z170
Extension 251, news room
Member Island Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Sundays and Saturdays. Universal, half days, exam prep, university. Entitled as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Banman, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor; Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant City Editor; Leroy Zimmerman, Telegram Edition Editor; George Anthan, Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary Beth Noyes, Society Editor; Martha Crosier, Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Kent Pelt, Advertising Manager; Jere
Glover, National Advertising Manager;
George Pester, Classified Advertising
Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant
Classified Advertising Manager Ted
Winkler, Circulation Manager; Steve
Schmidt, Promotion Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Larry Boston ... Editorial Editor
John Eaton, Del Haley, Jim Sledd, Associate Editors.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Congratulations
To Miss Santa
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
These Prizes Will Be Awarded to Miss Santa
Allison-Thomas Florists Dozen Roses
Independent Cleaners $5 Worth of Cleaning
Student Union Cafeteria Two Steak Dinners
Weaver's
Box of Hane's Seamless Stockings
Hixon's Deluxe Portrait
Jay Shoppe
$12.95 Bobbie Brooks
Sweater
Premier Jewelry Shop Pearl Ring
William Northey Subscription to Time, Life or Sports Illustrated
Granada Theatre
Corn's Studio of Beauty Shampoo and Set
Free Theatre Passes
Carter's Stationery Box of Stationery
Ober's Jr. Miss
$5 Gift Certificate
S.U. Bookstore
$5 Gift Certificate
Campus Hideaway Pizza for Two
Campus West MacShore Blouse
Rowlands Disc Den Gift Certificate for Album
Page 3
10 Radio Stations To Air Weekend Games
Four radio stations will join the KU sports network and six others will originate their own broadcasts for the basketball games to be played in Allen Field House and Ahern Field House, Manhattan, Friday and Saturday nights.
On Friday K-State will play the University of Washington at 7:35 and KU will play the University of California at 9:30. Both games will be played in Allen Field House. Saturday the games will be moved to Ahern Field House and KU and K-State will exchange opponents and starting times.
Those joining the KU network:
KVGB, Great Bend; KWHK
Hutchinson; KSAL, salina; KGGF.
An arch of whalebones commemorates the Falkland Islands' entry into the British family of nations, the National Geographic Magazine says. The arch, made from the jaw-bones of two sperm whales, overlooks the harbor at Stanley, the capital and only town of the island colony in the South Atlantic.
Coffeyville. Monte Moore, director of the KU sports Network will be heard over these stations.
Wilt Chamberlain, KU's 7-foot basketball star, is featured in the sports section of the Dec. 23 Time magazine.
Those originating their own broadcasts;
Kansas State sports network, with Frank Jones, originating from KSAC, Manhattan; KFH, Wichita, with Rick Weaver; WIBW, Topeka, with Dev Nelson; WREN, Topeka, with Max Falkenstien; KCMO, Kansas City, Mo., with Bruce Rice.
The story describes Philadelphia fans' reaction to seeing the former Overbrook High School player back in his home town. It also tells of Chamberlain's activities on the KU campus.
Wilt Featured In Time Article
Roberto's
Roberto's
710 Mass. VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
rte's
PIZZA
P
PAT READ INDIAN TRADER
445 Tenn. St. Ph.VI 3-1306
Christmas Gifts That Are Different
- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
- Hand Loomed Ties
The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft
Open
9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M.
Open Evenings By Appointment
--in maintenance and tuition while studying aborad, said J. A. Burzle, professor of German. Students interested in studying abroad should go to 306 Fraser Hall for additional information and application forms.
—SPECIAL—
Duratone Diamond Needles
$15 to $18
---
BELL'S
VI 3-2644
925 Mass.
It seems like the opening of the space age has even the college students in a whirl.
Rocketship Moon Leaving Soon?
The other night a young lady's date at Gertrude Sellards Pearson signed out for her. He wrote in the column marked "Destination." "the MOON." In the column marked "Time Leaving" he wrote, "7:30." The column marked "Expected Return" he left blank.
The next time you happen to be looking at the man-in-the-moon, look for a girl with him. She's from KU.
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957 University Daily Kansam
Next Jayhawker Out After Vacation
The second issue of the 1958 Jayhawker will be distributed on the campus and in organized houses the first week after Christmas vacation. Tom Pettit, Topeka senior and editor, urged students to get each issue as it comes out. No books will be distributed after June 31. "We also want to remind seniors that their pictures must be taken before Feb. 1 to get them in the Senior Section." Pettit said.
German Critic Next Humanities Speaker
A Humanities Series lecture on "The German Theater Today" will be given Thursday, Jan. 9, by Dr. Bruno Werner, cultural attache of the embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Washington.
Dr. Werner has had experience as a theater and art critic for leading German newspapers, is the author of six books, including a novel, and has translated two Shakespearean plays.
Apply Now For Foreign Study
The first white men arrived in Michigan in 1622, only two years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, when the first French voyageurs canoeed out of French Canada across Lake Huron and discovered Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
The deadline for many of the foreign study grants to Austria, Germany, the United Kingdom and France is Jan. 15.
Most of the awards are designed to give the student financial aid
An Entire Page In This Paper Couldn't Say
Merry
Christmas
more sincerely
or more truly convey
our appreciation for
the business you are
favoring us with here a
CITIES
SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES
SERVICE
△
CITIES
SERVICE
8th and New Hampshire
Christmas GIFT HEADQUARTERS
I
Do your Christmas shopping now! Here in Lawrence you can find a complete selection of gifts for everyone on your Christmas list. Shop with these Lawrence merchants and avoid the last minute rush in your home town. By shopping in Lawrence now you will have many more items to choose from than after Christmas vacation starts. Shop now, here.
VICKERS GIFT SHOP
GEORGE'S PIPE SHOP
CAMPUS WEST
BALFOUR
JEWELRY
DIEBOLT'S
UNDERWOOD'S
REDMAN'S SHOES
BELL'S
PAT READ
MOSSER-WOLF
DISC DEN
TERRY'S
WEAVER'S
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
Foreign Students Plan Trips During Vacation
Many of the foreign students enrolled at KU will take advantage of the Christmas vacation as an opportunity to do some traveling.
The International Club will sponsor a trip to Mexico for 37 students. This group will leave Lawrence Friday and return Sunday, Jan. 5.
Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, said about 15 or 20 foreign students will spend Jan. 2, 3, and 4 in Kansas City as guests of the Greater Kansas City Committee for International Students. They will go sightseeing around Kansas City and be entertained by the members of this committee.
Mr. Coan said three foreign students will return to their homes for the holidays. They are from Mexico, Costa Rica and Venezuela.
Individual foreign students will visit many places in the U.S., including Florida, Los Angeles, Denver, New Jersey, Chicago, and New York. Several will go to Canada.
Many of the ones who stay in Lawrence have been invited to have Christmas dinner with families in Lawrence Mr. Coan said.
KU Post Office Adds Help To Meet Christmas Rush
A new man has been added to the staff at the KU post office to help with the Christmas rush of mail.
Andrew M. Smith, superintendent of the KU post office, said a student is now working in addition to the regular staff to take care of the volume of mail, which is now four or five times greater than average.
"Monday we had lines at the windows all day, and I think that particular day we handled about 10 times our usual amount of daily mail," he said.
"Most of the mail is Christmas cards and packages. Even though
we're rushed here, the downtown post office is even busier, and some people come here rather than fight the crowds downtown," he said.
Mr. Smith said the KU post office does not have the facilities to pro- does not have the facilities to process the mail, so it has to be taken
Advanced To Mail Foreman
Grant Eichhorn, a former employee at the KU post office, is now foreman of mails at the Lawrence Post Office. He was advanced to his present position early this month.
The opera chorus for the "Saint of Bleecker Street," by Gian-Carlo Menotti, to be presented March 10-12, has been announced by Clayton Krehbiel, choral director and associate professor of music education.
Students chosen are:
Sopranos: Elaine Knupp, Washington, Iowa, Barbara Coonce, Kansas City, Mo, and Celia Welch, Herington, sophomores; Marva Lu Powell, Topeka, Zoe Ann Kelley, Pratt, Cynthia Hunter, Hutchinson, Jo Wiens, Belle Plains, and Martha O'Dell, Carrollton, Mo., iuniors.
Altos; Diane Hoisington, Paradise,
Vicki Bruner, Sedan, Joyce Maliky,
Baldwin, and Constance Andrews,
Phillipsburg, freshmen; Rosemary
Nation, Chanute, and Jane Carr,
Junction City, both sophomores; and
Martha Crowley, Pittsburg, and
Janice Wanamaker, Stockton, both
juniors.
Tenors: Bill Canfield, Falcon, Mo. Darrell Nelson, Scandia, David Crawford, Prescott, freshmen; Claude Kean, Olathe senior, and Leland Roberts, Kansas City, Kan. graduate student.
Basses: David Starr, Lawrence freshman; James Hnizda, Blue Rapids, and Pat Pitner, Glasco, both sophomores; John Shick, Kansas City, Kan. junior; and Ed Dittemore, Robinson senior.
Apples originated between the Black and Caspian Seas, says the National Geographic magazine. Peaches and oranges came from China, where they were cultivated 4,000 years ago. The Near and Middle East gave us lettuce, carrots, peas, and spinach. The Andes produced the "trish" potato.
Business Society Initiates Students
Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business society, has initiated 15 students. Membership is limited to the upper 10 per cent of the senior class and the upper 3 per cent of the junior class in the School of Business.
The new initiates are Donald Earl, Iola; Donald Eckes, De Soto; Sharon Dye, Bruce Rider, Wichita; Robert Edmonds, Mark McDonnell, Lawrence; Sturmt Gunckel, George Nelson, Kansas City, Mo; Hal Hansen, Robert Mettlen, Hutchinson; John Hedrick, Ellinwood; Joe Mahoney, Ottawa and Jerry McNeal, Wayzota, Minn. All are seniors.
Dale Gerboth, Council Grove and Stewart Horesei, Salina juniors.
In the language of the timberman, softwoods are trees that bear cones and hardwoods are trees that wear broad, deciduous leaves. The terms often mislead the layman, since softwoods such as longleaf pine yield lumber harder than such hardwoods as the tulip tree and cottonwood.
Give a Lasting Gift of Jewelry From Terry's
Come in to Terry's to look over our fine selection of quality jewelry
FOR MEN
FOR WOMEN
Watches
Billfolds
Rings
Jewel Cases
Travel Alar
Diamonds
Fashion Sets
Pearls
French Purses
Clock Radio
Terry's
914 Mass.
VI 3-2572
Slippers
Slippers
TO PUT UNDER the CHRISTMAS TREE
Shoes–Gift Certificates–All Wonderful Gifts
REDMAN'S SHOES Ph. VI 3-9871
815 Mass.
五 faculty members from KU took part in the final Let's Get Together program Tuesday over a Wichita television station.
5 From KU On TV Program
The program, "Future Horizons of Human Relations," was the twelfth of the public service series which began Oct. 1.
On Tuesday's program were Bruce A. Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism, Jack Steele, associate professor of business administration, Tom Rea, co-ordinator
of the University Extension, William Conboy, associate professor of speech and drama, and Howard Baumgartel, assistant professor of business administration, human relations and psychology.
The Let's Get Together program is jointly sponsored by the University, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and station KARD.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
A complete unusual selection of gifts awaits you at Vickers everything from clever, funny little gifts at $1.00 to elegant and fancy ones for your mother or "the living doll." Shop leisurely this Thursday evening till 8:30.
If you like, we'll gift wrap your gifts for you and you'll be all ready to play Santa!
Also—a collection of hilarious, contemporary Christmas cards.
Vickers Gift Shop
across from the Granada Theatre.
W
eaver
Our 100th Year of Service
this Christmas give her vanity fair lingerie!
e
Pretty enough to dance in!
A fantasy of Aleucon lace and net builds a beautiful bodice,
above a wand slim waist whirling into a skirt of wide and wonderful nylon tricot. Sizes 32 to 40,
$8.50
in!
lace and
bodice,
waist
of wide
Weaver's Lingerie Shop—Street Floor
SP
Sij Frat
So Jan Joe Cha son
F don Wol Sea
Al Pi c Albe as, I Jim Dick
La
Tautern
Ohm
Don
and
score burn
In Don
B
Tc
Fr
Delti
Phi
Aca
Phi
Phi
Delti
N hom for and nur wee left
Cster half
Exc
GUIDE to CHRISTMAS VALUES
Page 3
Sigma Chi Tops Pi KA's,56-8
Sigma Chi won easily from Pi Kappa Alpha, 56-8, to highlight Fraternity A men's intramural basketball Tuesday.
Scoring for Sigma Chi were Jan Banker 12, Norman Mailen 10, Joe Morris and Joe Mize 9, Charlie McCue 8, Wayne Swenson 6 and Art Vogel 2.
Also in Fraternity A, Beta Theta Pi defeated Ki Kappa 43-23. Ed Alberg scored 13 points for the Betas, Phil Raisor 10, Gary Reme 6, Jim Jones and Bob Lynch 4, and Dick Endacott 2.
For the losers the scoring was done by Dick Stroud and John Wolfe with 3 points each and Bob Sears with 2.
Sigma Phi Epsilon also won a Fraternity A game, defeating Kappa Sigma 38-33. For the winners Bob Kerr had 9. Jack Leatherman and Mike Swanson 8. Jim Westhoff 6. Larry Flick 5 and Jim Durner 2.
Lambda Chi Alpha defeated Delta Tau Delta 30-25 in another Fraternity a game. Lambda Chi's Bob Ohmart scored 14, H. C; Palmer 11, Don Smalziried 3 and Dave Folkerts and Spencer Evans-lombe 1 each.
For the Deits Dennis Kindsvater scored 10, Pat Pitner 6, Dave Blackburn 5 and Jerry Nelson 4.
Other results:
Independent B—Navy ROTC 35 Don Henry 24.
Fraternity B—Kappa Alpha Psi 36,
Delta Sigma Phi 29; Sigma Chi 27,
Phi Kappa 10; Delta Upsilon 50,
Acacia 32; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 35,
Phi Beta Sigma 7; Beta Theta PI 42,
Phi Kappa Sigma 23; Delta Tau
Delta 36, Tau Kappa Epsilon 31.
Boyd Returns To OU Lineup
NORMAN, Okla. — (UP) — Oklahoma continued its final home drills for the Orange Bowl game Tuesday and Bobby Boyd, who has been nursing a torn cartilage for several weeks, returned to the alternate left halfback post.
Coach Bud Wilkinson had Brewster Hobby running at alternate right half.
Tuesday's practice, the first of five this week, featured pass defense. The Sooner's opponent, Duke, is known as a running team, but it picked up 538 yards and six touchdowns on forward passes during the past season.
Exams Slow Oregon's Drills
EUGENE, Ore. — (UP)—Oregon's football team won't scrimmage until Saturday when it flies to Los Angeles to begin getting ready for its New Year's Day date in the Rose Bowl with Ohio State. Coach Len Casanova said the team will hold a light practice Thursday but will be idle today because the team members are taking examinations.
O
OPEN
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Wed. & Thurs.
December 18 & 19
The Oklahoma Sooners cracked Tulsa's lead to take a 46-38 victory in the only Big Eight action Tuesday.
Sooners Top Tulsa,46-38
Rugged Oklahoma State, a Big Eight member but one that doesn't figure in the competition this season, fought off repeated Oklahoma City University ties and rallies Tuesday to gain a 57-50 basketball victory
By UNITED PRESS
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Oklahoma guard Dennis Price led the late second half rally by the Sooners. He made only nine points all night but they came at the right time. With less than three minutes left, the sophomore scored a quick field goal and free throw and later made good on a drive-in shot to put Oklahoma ahead to stay.
For Your Shopping Convenience
Disc Den
Disc Den
In Rowlands Book Store
1241 Oread
Tulsa went ahead at the intermission 24-19. Two Tulsa players, Jack Pontious and Bobby Goodall, took high point honors with 12 each.
Karras Uncertain On Plans
SAN FRANCISCO — (UP) All America lineman Alex Karras of Iowa, here for a luncheon honoring the members of the East and West squads which will meet in the annual Shrine game, said Tuesday he still is "undecided" whether to sign with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers or the Detroit Lions.
along the
JAYHAWKER
trail
WITH ANTHAN
The Jay Watchers' financial records are here in Lawrence and will be turned over to the University soon. The Daily Kansan learned Tuesday night after a telephone call from Bryce Cooke in Wichita. Cooke is former co-chairman of the organization, which was incorporated last spring to collect money to televise KU sporting events.
The records are in the hands of a local alumnus who prefers to remain anonymous. He said the records were left with him without explanation.
According to Cooke the Jay Watchers now have about $1500 in their bank balance.
Alumni sponsors of the group are now anxious to turn the organization over to the University and if no interested students can be found to prepeteate the organization the money will probably be turned over to the Endowment Fund.
Criticism of the group stems only from the fact that the three student co-chairmen of last year did no planning whatsoever to perpetuate the organization.
Any money remaining in the orzanization's coffers will now probably go to a University fund and not into televising sporting events as its donors intended. In this respect the Jay Watchers did not keep faith with the people who supported them.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Gifts of Good Cheer... For Men of Good Taste
- Gift Wrapped Tobacco Tins
- Complete Selection of Pipes
From George's
- Gift Wrapped Cigars
Stop in to choose a gift from George's fine selection of smoking supplies. Choose a gift he'll really enjoy
10
George's
727 Mass.
Shop
Gifts
Gifts For Little Brothers and Sisters
It's love at first sight when a little girl (or anyone) sees one of these little animals: Kittens, Poodles, Skunks, all "shampooable," their fur long and soft, their wistful expressions unforgettable. Hurry—they'll go fast! $2.50 up
Jaguar, Austin, Ford, MG—top imports for small brother! The "Matchless Matchbox" series of authentic scale cars and trucks is British-built, all metal. Quality toys—made to last. 49c ea.
Games—Dolls—Toys—H-O Train Sets—Paint Kits
UNDERWOOD'S
1215 W. Sixth
Ottawa Edges Central Missouri, 60-57
OTTAWA—(UP)—The Braves of Ottawa University kept a slight edge Tuesday night over Central Missouri State of Warrensburg and went on to a 60-57 win.
Warrensburg tied the score at 47- all with nine minutes left in the
game. Bob McGhee and Wilbur Barnes hit from the field and Ottawa managed to hold a slight lead for the rest of the game. McGhee was high for Ottawa with 19 and Marvin Hill led the Warrensburg attack with 17. Both are forwards.
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Fraternity Jewelers
Order Your Crested Christmas Gifts NOW!
411 West 14th AI Lauter Phone VI 3-1571
GIFTS FOR
YOUR MEN
Beat the rush-get the best selection! open till 8:30-Thursday-Friday-Saturday
diebolt's 843 massachusetts
TIME FOR A NEW
Kodak Camera
wonderful way to invest
Christmas-gift money
JANUARY
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
EMAX
PONY II CAMERA
KODAK Pony II CAMERA
New low price for a genuine Kodak miniature!
Superb miniature styling . . . performance . . . in a color-slide camera priced just a step above a snapshot camera. Anastar f/3.9 Lens, flash shutter, no-thread loading . . . ultra-easy exposure-value settings. Come in and see the simplest, surest most economical . . . fine-miniature Kodak has ever built!
Camera $26.75 Flash Holder $7.50
Mosser-Wolf Inc.
1107 Mass.
---
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
Around The World
NATO Accepts Nuclear Weapons
(Compiled from United Press)
America's NATO Allies today accepted the U.S. offer of nuclear stockpiles and medium range missiles for the defense of West Europe. Of the natural stockpiling on the setting up of missile bases
Details of the actual stockpiling or the setting up of missile bases are to be worked out later in bilateral negotiations between the U.S. and its European Allies.
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., another intercontinental Atlas missile was being prepared for firing as soon as mechanical brains finish their computations on Tuesday's first successful ICBM launching. Sources said the other Atlas which is now standing on its launching tower would be fired before the week is out or early next week.
In Washington, D. C., G. Sumner Whittier was appointed the new veterans administrator by President Eisenhower. The former lieutenant governor of Massachusetts and unsuccessful Republican candidate for governor last year is expected to put the brakes on spending for veterans' benefits not linked with their military service.
In Denver, Colo., a city income tax was defeated in a special election Tuesday by a vote of 57,775 to 46,114. A similar tax was defeated in Kansas City, Mo., last year.
In Topcka, it was announced that for the first time in 26 years, Kansas is ranked second in the nation as a wheat-producing state instead of first. North Dakota replaced it
"TOP PERFORMANCE!" M-G-M presents ELVIS PRESLEY in "JAILHOUSE ROCK"
CINEMASCOPE co-starring JUDY TYLER
Mr. Mickey Straughnessy Dean JONES Jennifer HOLDEN
"TOP PERFORMANCE!"
M-G-M presents ELVIS PRESLEY in JAILHOUSE ROCK'
CINEMASCOPE co-starring JUDY TYLER
with Mickey SHAUHNESSY Dean JUNKS Jennifer HOLDEN
Extra: "Tweety"—News Now! See It Today GRANADA
"I'm Going Back to the Premier Jewelry Shop for Another Gift!"
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
916½ Mass.
GRANADA
A
as the number one wheat-producing state.
In Moscow ousted Marshal Georgi Zhukov was replaced in the party Presidium today with a local Communist leader from central Asia. The party reshuffle was announced on the eve of the Supreme Soviet's December session.
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
Use Kansan Want Ads
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Prof. Sandelius' Introduction to Gov
ermment 50 class will not meet.
TODAY
Sociology - Social Work - Anthropology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex E. Speaker, Dr. John Patton, "Christmas, Societal and/or Religious Phenomenon?" Coffee.
Entomology Club, 4 p.m. 417 Scream Special film, 'The Parasite and The Marmoset'
Mathematical Colloquium, 4:15 p.m.
203 Strong Hall. Speaker, Dr. Makoto Osukawa in setting in potential Theory" Coffee at 3:50 p.m. 217 Strong Hall
Le diner de la Fete des Rois aura lieu mercredi le huit janvier a 5 h. 30 dans l'araume. Il y a plusieurs bains, sont puite de s'insirce dans le bureau. 103 Fraser, avant les vacances. Prox $1.50.
Christmas dinner meeting, 5:30 p.m.
Westminster House. Presbyterian women and friends. Induction. New members. Instructor with Prof. Reimbrick Schmidt and Irene Peabody participating.
Circle K. Club, 7:30 p.m., 306 B Student Union. Special all-membership Christmas program. Speaker, Dr, John Patton. Refreshments.
http://nerresidents.
KU Dames, bridge; 7:30 p.m., Student
a beautiful wedding...
PETER HOWARD
and every highlight captured in wedding candids by...
HIXON
Union.
come in or phone now for your appointment
THURSDAY
El Ateneo - Reunion extraordinaria y flesta de Navidad, a la 4 des de la tarde en Fraser Theater. Auto de Navidad, presentado por estatista de español, bajo el direction de Profesor Ricart Pintar, villanciclo tradicional. Todas en invitados.
German department Christmas Nativity play in Theater. Public welcome. No Choir.
General speech committee meeting, noon. Faculty Club
Don Crawford • Bob Blank
HIXON STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP
721 Mass.
Speech 1 seminar, 3 p.m., 134 Strong
VI 3-0330
Debate staff meeting, 5 p.m. 116 Strong.
Le diner de l Fete des Rois aura lieu
mercédriel le huit Janvier a 5 h. 30 dans
l Union. Ceux qui desirent y assister
sont prie de s'inscrire dans le bureau.
103 Fraser, avant les vacances.
Roberto's
Speech and drama department 4-5:30 p.m. 356 Music and Dramatic Arts Building Christmas coffee.
710 Mass.—VI 3-1086
PIZZA
We Deliver
Merry Christmas
May happiness and
contentment fill your
heart to overflowing is
our Christmas wish to you.
We will transact no business Christmas Day, Wednesday, Dec. 25th.
First National Bank
Member F.D.I.C.
Let's Give Mom a
Christmas Vacation Too!
Don't go home with a laundry bag slung over both shoulders. Dirty clothes means more work for Mom. Let ACME give her a helping hand this Christmas
ACME
ACME Bachelor Laundry
And Dry Cleaners
1109 Mass.
Save 10% On Cash & Carry Cleaning
25 wor
STUDI
vantag
Life, a
both
promp
FOR 9 size 9.
WANT
Mark
rick M
VI 3-5155
WEST
new. c
50 pa
sentat
VI 2-0
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957 University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 7
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days. $1.00 Terms; Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
FOR SALE
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, fees and magazine magnazines both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
FOR SALE Brown velvet cocktail suit.
size 9, price $7. Call $91 3-8966 12-20
WANT TO SELL RCA Mark VII, not a Mark VIII. Like new. $100 Contact Patrick M. Dolan, phone VI 3-9735. 12-20
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over 50 pages per volume, housed in volume VI or call VI 3-7553 II 2-0766 VI 2-0395 for free delivery. 12-26
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Vanity 1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon 837 N. H. VI 3-6035
Marinello Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-330
Driscoll Beauty Shop
943 Mass. VI 3-4070
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. 3 I-4141
Roger's Launder-if
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
725 Mass. Parsons Jewelry VI 3-4731
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
1939 PLYMOUTH SEDAN in good running order. Call Eudora 9215. Cheap.
12-20
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal purchase for Christmas at the ½ price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
26" SCHWINN BICYCLE, excellent com-
parement 12-14. Reasonable. VI 3-5973. 12-26
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers andheses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by ex-perienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING. alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657, 1400 Tenn. tf
TYPIST: Experienced; thuses, term pa-
cal. Call VI 3-0177, Miss. Jack Larson. If
he is not present, call:
LIVE GIFTS — Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all the things you need, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut, Phone VI 3-2921. tf
FLAT TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
the Butler in the hill
Clarence Adamson, Mgr.
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
Use Kansan Want Ads
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports,
etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-
7629. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our specialty. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and ac-
service. Service CV 1 V-3-0933, 1621 W-
20th St.
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
et al. Toona et al. Ola Smith t
9411; Massi, Ph. VI t-5263.
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality -alive, glowing-with soft, beautiful beauty comparable to Technol Samples to show. Ph. VI 3-0931 or VI 3-5994.
12-20
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service. V 3-7184;
1632 West 20th St.
TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Vrir, VI 3-8660. tf
ACCURATE TYPING of the themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822 1-30-55
FOR RENT
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric refrigerator and steel built-ins. Convenience Kit business district Adults only, 742 Ohio 12-19
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments, $30 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m. 1-8-58
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8074
APARTMENT for two or three boys, private entrance and bath, available January 1. Call VI 3-1890, 1116 Sunset Dr.
12-18
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
4 ROOM APARTMENT; Nice house, private entrance and bath, furnished or unfurnished. $58 a month. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-6696. 12-19
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT for two boys.
One sleeping room and one study room,
also board. Vacant January 6. Ph. VI 3-
1585, 1130 Kentucky. 12-19
ROOM AND BOARD for next semester.
$50 per month. Ph. VI 3-4385. 12-20
FOR RENT: Would you like a better apartment? It's nice, new and clean. One bedroom unfurnished except for auto-air conditioning, large range, built-ins. Will accept small child. Short blocks from campus, available. Phone VI 3-7655 or KU 402. 12-20
QUET ROOMS for upper class students
1400 Tennessee, VI 3-6657. 12-20
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable
Washing or ironing or both. 34
Indiana.
YOUR PHOTO - for the very finest in oil coloring. Alive, glowing—with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Agnies Lungteng VI 3-0993. 12-20
RIDE WANTED to New Orleans, La.
Will share expenses. Contact Sebastian
Sucure, VI 3-5552. 12-19
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: ride to central California for Christmas vacation. Willing to share expenses and help drive. Contact Alain Desert, Dorm, Ottawa University Ph. 1492. 12-18
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-1044
THE BOOK NOOK
LOST
TWIN PEARL RING in Flint Hall—very valuable to owner—reward. Call VI 3-5237. 12-18
SHAWL and pair of black boots, mistakenly left in back of wrong car in south entrance parking lot of Allen Field House after Jawhawk Follies Nov. 22. Please contact Victor Young at VI 3-7553. 12-20
LAST SATURDAY NIGHT, lost a small light brown coin purse with Christmas shopping money. Can Identify. Please call VI 3-8895. 12-20
FOUND
WHITE ROSARY. Call VI 3-4138. 12-18
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350.
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Marlboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464.
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets. Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations.
TOM MAUPIN
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Travel Service
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed to Sat., Sun., Holidays
MORE! Little Man on Campus
DIDN'T GET YOUR L.M.O.C.?
If the line was too long, and you went without Dick Bibler's wonderful "More Little Man on Campus," don't despair, your Student Union Bookstore has them!
$1
STUDENT Union Book Store.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1957
They Make Your Selections Easy
The next time you look for one of the 1,375,000 cards in the Watson Library card catalogue, think of the staff members whose job it is to keep the file up to date and in order.
this is just one of the prepara=
This is just one of the preparations department's jobs. Others include classifying all books which come into the library and repairing them before they are used by the public.
(
JOHN L. GLINKA
"We are sort of a link between the acquisitions department and the public service departments," John L. Glinka, head of the preparations department said this week.
The department receives books as purchases, gifts and exchanges, federal documents and bound periodicals. It prepares the books and makes catalogue cards for all departmental libraries on the campus and in Kansas City.
"Everytime you add a book, you have to relate it to the same author, the same subject field and other editions and their call numbers," Mr. Glinka said.
In the fiscal year ending with June 1953, the nine professional librarians, nine library assistants and six students on the department staff recataloged and related 734,000 cards, Mr. Glinka said.
The preparation department is located in the room formerly used
for periodicals. About one-half of the main room of the department is filled with more than 5,000 books which are now being processed.
"We have certain categories of books which are rushed through the cataloguing process, but it will take us about a year to do the books which are now in the room," he said.
Most of the department staff members speak at least two or more foreign languages, he said.
"Recently we received a book written in Chinese," Mr. Glinka said. A Chinese girl on our staff has been able to work out some of it for us."
Book Collections Can Be Altered
"Students thinking about entering the Taylor student book collection contest may want to consider or make additions over Christmas vacation to volumes to be submitted for judging." Robert Quinsey, director of reader services at Watson Library, said today.
The second annual contest, sponsored by Elizabeth M. Taylor, Kansas City, Mo., book collector, offers a first prize of $85 and a second prize of $40. Any graduate or undergraduate student on the Lawrence campus may enter.
When entering, students are to submit a bibliography and a statement including the purpose of the collection, Mr. Quinsey said. The collection will be judged on its quality within the declared field. Finalists will show actual collections after preliminary judging of bibliography lists.
"We are interested in the quality of the collection and how the student has used it to further his own interests and not how old or rare the books are and how much they are worth." Mr. Quinsey said.
Closing date of the collection is March 31. Entries should be given to Mr. Quinsey in 416 Watson.
Think Studying Is Tough? Try Playing Basketball Too
KU basketball players must keep their grades up despite playing as many as three games each week.
The heavy schedule doesn't excuse them from any work, Charles Leone, associate professor of zoology and chairman of the Athletic Advisory Committee, declares. The committee, a faculty group, advises athletes on academic and personal problems.
Prof. Leone said the committee functions for all KU athletes but cited the basketball player's position as extremely hard with the
Watson Vacation Hours Announced
Watson Library will be open these hours during Christmas vacation:
Weekdays, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sundays, Christmas and New Year's Day. closed
Saturdays, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Reserve books may be checked out from the undergraduate and education rooms for the vacation period beginning at 10 a.m. Friday. The books will be due at 8 a.m. Monday, Jan. 6.
Algae, primitive water - loving plants, have been found growing in ice and snow above the Arctic Circle and in hot springs where water reaches 200 degrees Fahrenheit.
heavy game schedule.
Each athlete must pass 12 hours each semester and have a C average in at least 60 per cent of his courses to be eligible.
KU-Y Petition To Be Mailed
Petitions for elective and appointed cabinet positions in the KU-Y will be distributed to members by mail the week following Christmas vacation.
Prof. Leone said there is a study hall held each week night for those athletes who want extra help. On trips the players hold study halls in their hotel rooms.
Any members are eligible to apply and should turn applications in to the KU-Y office, 111B Student Union.
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
YOUR EYES
JGD7
A man and a woman will be elected to each of the following offices: president-vice president, secretary, treasurer and program chairman. Two will be appointed to the following cabinet chairmanships: membership, publicity, house representatives, Christian heritage, personal and campus affairs, international, social responsibility and Student Religious Council representatives.
world smile
About 68,000 samples of insoluble residue from 1,169 Kansas oil wells will be received this month by H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, to be used for research.
Deadline for applying is Jan. 15. Election of the five executive positions will be held Feb. 13. Cabinet members will be selected by the new executive committee.
KU Receives Oil Well Samples
Have a WORLD of FUN!
Travel with SITA
Unbelievable Low Cost
Europe
60 Days from $585
Orient
43-65 Days from $995
SEE MORE
SPEND LESS
The material will be filed with the State Geological Survey. The new samples will give the Kansas Geological Survey the second largest collection in the world. The Missouri Geological Survey is first with two million samples.
The residue material can be used in further discovery of oil by identification of different oil zones from which the material comes, Prof. Ireland said.
Many tours include college credit.
The Gulf Oil Co. gave the material to Prof. Ireland from 30 years of accumulation.
I.
Also low-cost trips to Mexico
ASK YOUR
ITA
WORLD TRAVEL, INC.
SITA
WORLD TRAVEL, INC.
Ask Your
Psychic Perception To Be Discussed
Travel Agent
332 S. Michigan
Ave., Chicago 4
HA 7-2557
Psychic perception will be discussed by Dr. Gardner Murphy, director of research at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, at a meeting of Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific society, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 124 Malott.
This will be the third lecture of the Sigma Xi series of scientific lectures this semester. The title of Dr. Murphy's talk is "Trends in Research in Extrasensory Perception."
Dugan Aycock, president of the Carolinas section of the P. G. A. for 15 years, has two former assistants as top pro golfers. They are Skip Alexander and Clayton Heafner.
Members of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, will begin picking up toys for the "Toys For Tots" drive today from the barrels in
Toys Pickup Begins
Graduate Awarded Geophysical Post
Dr. William H. Courtier, an alumnus of the University, has been appointed chairman of the student membership committee of the Society of Exploration Geophysics. The society has a total membership of approximately 5,000.
Dr. Courtier, who received his Ph. D. degree from KU, is chief geophysicist of the Phillips Petroleum Co. and lives in Bartlesville, Okla. In March he received the Erasmus Haworth distinguished alumni award in geology from KU.
Camel drivers in Yemen stuff bundles of fodder into the mouths of their beasts before starting a long journey, says the National Geographic magazine. Drivers say that unless the camels are forcefed, they do not eat enough for a prolonged journey.
Strong and Fraser halls and the Student Union. The drive will continue through Saturday.
"The goal this year is for every student to contribute a toy," said Kenneth W. Rock, Abilene sophomore and publicity chairman for the drive.
The fraternity's pledges will help the Marine Reserves, who sponsor the drive annually, wrap the toys. The toys will be distributed to underprivileged children in the Lawrence area for Christmas.
In charge of the program in the Lawrence area is Ist. Lt. Wesley Santee, a member of the Marine Fighter Squadron 215 at Olathe Naval Air Station and a KU graduate.
Some Sudanese women wear cartridge shells stuck in their lower lips.
Pizza Delivered VI 3-9111
Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park
NO MATTER WHERE YOU'RE HEADED
You'll arrive in better time with a better disposition if your car performs well. Let us check you car before vacation. We'll help make your trip home a pleasant one.
MORGAN-MACK
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
714 VERMONT DIAL VI 3-3500
H
Will Your Car Make It Home?
Don't Waste
precious days of your vacation because you didn't check your car before leaving for home.
Have us check your tires, oil, electrical system, and steering before leaving. We
want to see you spend a MERRY CHRISTMAS at home.
Potter's "66" Service
1401 W 6th
Stu-
tinue
every said pho- r the
Daily Hansan
help
ensor
toys.
un=
Law=
the lesley marine Na-uate.
car lower
Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957
55th Year, No. 66
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Drive Carefully In Holiday Rush
"We urge all students to use extreme caution in order to get home for Christmas safe and sound and not become a statistic," campus police chief Joe Skillman said today.
"A possible exodus of over 8,000 students will be leaving Friday and driving conditions will be most hazardous," he said.
Clearing tonight and colder except extreme northwest. Friday partly cloudy and warmer in the west. Low tonight 20's northwest to lower 30's southeast. High Friday generally in 40's.
The Weather Bureau forecast for tonight and Friday:
"In past years there have been tragic accidents involving students going to and from home and we are trying this year to avoid these tragedies," Chief Skillman said.
He said that there will be extra Highway Patrol and other traffic officers both on Douglas county roads and state highways.
So far in 1957 there have been 532 traffic accidents in Kansas. The December total is 21. In 1956 there were 636 deaths, 76 of them in December. Chief Skillman said that only six per cent of traffic deaths are caused by faulty car mechanism and the rest are caused by drivers.
He also said that all regular parking zones except H, J, and the Student Union guest lot will be open to anyone beginning Saturday noon.
Time and no parking zones on Jayhawk Boulevard will be observed except on Christmas Day, Saturday afternoons and Sundays.
(An editorial, "Don't Crash the Party," Page 2.)
Three Injured, $2,600 Damage Caused In Crash
Two cars driven by KU Students collided about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday slightly injuring three and causing an estimated $2,600 damage.
Injured were Darrell Owen, Great Bend freshman, and Margaret Crawford and Kathleen Archer, Ottawa High School students. They were treated at Lawrence Memorial hospital and released.
Miss Crawford received multiple bruises, Miss Archer a bruised ankle and Owen a face laceration.
The policemen said that the Wagner car, a 1957 Chevrolet going west on 11th Street, hit the Owen car, a 1947 Studebaker going south on Illinois.
Summons were issued to Robert Wagner, Concordia junior, for failure to yield the right-of-way and to Owen for failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, Lawrence police officers said.
Reserve Books May Be Checked Out Friday
Miss Crawford's legs were pinned under the seat of the Owen car.
Books on reserve in the undergraduate and education rooms of Watson library will be checked out for Christmas vacation beginning at 10 a.m. Friday. They will be due at 9 a.m. Jan. 6.
Students may check out one book a course from general reserve if there is more than one copy available. Books on limited reserve with only one copy available will not be checked out.
ASC Letters Support KU Budget Request
ASC Appeals To Docking
The Honorable George Docking
The Governor's Office
Topeka, Kansas
Dear Mr. Docking:
We, the students of today, are constantly aware of the opportunities presented to us by the American educational system. We are also aware of the responsibilities which these opportunities entail. Due to the ever increasing struggle for world leadership which challenges our country, we believe that the highest possible quality of education must be made available to all students if they are to be equipped to meet this challenge.
We, the students of the University of Kansas, realize that in future years we will be competing with graduates of leading colleges and universities throughout this country and the world. Therefore, we are particularly concerned with the quality of educational opportunities made available to us in the State of Kansas. Highest quality must be maintained in many fields.
The highest standard of academic attainment on the part of the instructional staff must be achieved. An adequate instructional staff to meet the rapidly increasing number of students entering higher education should be both obtained and retained. Basic research should be developed to a maximum degree by faculty and graduate and undergraduate students. The finest possible facilities for the education of your young men and women, such as libraries, laboratories, equipment, buildings, and classrooms, must be provided.
From the standpoint of the student who is facing the next 50 years, these points are of vital importance. We appeal to you, who are responsible for the continuing high quality of our educational opportunities, to take the next necessary forward steps.
Sincerely yours,
Richard P. Patterson
All Student Council chairman
Robert G. Billings Student body president
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy issued a statement today commending the action of an All Student Council committee supporting the University's budget requests.
The committee sent letters to Gov. George Docking, the Board of Regents, and the two chairmen of the Ways and Means Committee of the state Legislature. The letters urged that the highest quality educational opportunities be made available in Kansas.
The action was taken by a committee organized by the All Student Council to study proposed budgets of state schools.
"I think it is a fine letter," Chancellor Murphy said. "It is a friendly letter, one concerned not only with salary increases, but with the University."
Chancellor Murphy said he wanted it clear that this was a student action, not sponsored by the University.
"I am happy to see students taking the initiative in a problem of this sort. We sometimes forget that our schools, after all, are for the students' benefit. Certainly no one can take offense at this broadly based, friendly letter."
The Kansas State All Student Council, adopted a resolution Monday, containing four points also aimed at supporting pay raises and a larger budget for state supported schools.
The resolution called for a recommendation sent to Gov. Docking, an appeal to the Kansas State student body to call on their representatives to support pay raises, an appeal to the other schools for support, and that students seek their parents' support for a larger budget,
MASSACHUSETTS
CAROLING IS FUN-Alpha Chi Omega and Phi Epsilon fraternity late Wednesday night. Phi Kappa Psi social houses serenaded Sigma (Daily Kansan photo)
Here's A Committee To Check Committees
A "Little Hoover" committee to investigate student government was organized by the All Student Council cabinet Wednesday.
Student body president, Bob Billings. Russell junior, appointed Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox Populi, Campus political party, chairman of a 6-member committee to investigate ASC committees.
Austin said he would appoint three members to the committee after the Christmas holidays. Billings appointed Barbara Everley, Eudora junior, and Dorothy Wohlgemuth, Cummings junior, to serve on the committee.
The committee will analyse the ASC committees to see if there is any overlapping or some aspect of student government not yet covered, Billings said.
This will give the minority party a chance to correct anything it thinks should be done, Billings added.
Ticket Sales Increase
Ticket sales for the basketball double-header Friday night have increased and there is a possibility that Allen Field House will be filled to capacity.
Earl Falkenstien, business manager of athletics, said a crowd of 14-15,000 is expected, and a heavy sale of tickets at the gate could make it a capacity crowd of 17,000.
Kansas State plays the University of California and Kansas plays the University of Washington Friday. Saturday night the four trade opponents and play in Ahearn Field House in Manhattan.
This is one of the few times during the season that two of the nation's top three college basketball teams will appear on the same court in one evening. KU is second and K-State third in the three major polls this week.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957
Drive Safely—
Don't Crash The Party
EARLY TURN
DOWN THE HATCH—Gary Winfrey, Pratt freshman, demonstrates that a car radiator is a good place to put alcohol while driving. Breathe easy, the bottle was empty.
... Letters ...
Blasts Music
Why compete with the Campanile? The music coming over the Jayhawk Boulevard loudspeaker is too loud to be especially pleasing, but is tolerable—except at noontime.
The campanile program is more enjoyable and more appropriate, so let's hear it!
Lethem Sutcliffe Roden,
Instructor, Romance languages
Thank Students
Student Body.
University of Kansas.
We wish to express our deep appreciation of your kind expression of sympathy in the loss of our daughter Virginia. We will always remember the many acts of kindness by members of the student body toward Virginia and us while we were in Lawrence.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912,
trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912,
We wish also to commend Larry Boston for his very good editorial which appeared in The Daily Kansas of December 4, 1957.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
February 8, 2014
Mr. and Mrs. A. Maddox
We extend our sincere wishes for the best of happiness and success for each of you throughout your college years and later life.
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
National Advertising Service 420
Madison, Wisconsin. New service:
United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $450 a year. Pub-
lished in Lawrences, University every e-
fortnight. Lawrences, University
Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays,
and examination periods. Entered
as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910; at
March 3, 1879.
About one-third of all American families now use commercially frozen vegetables.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Bob Lyle Managing Editor
Marilyn Mermis, Jim Bannan, Richard Brown, Ray Wingerson, Assistant Managing Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor; Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant Coach; Colleen Sullivan, Teach graph Editor; Nancy Harmon, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Malcolm Amplegate, Sports Editors; Mizzy Bovey, Society Editor; Martha Crosier, Assistant Society Editor.
Most sincerely.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager Kenny Carter Advertising Manager Jere Glover National Advertising Manager George Pester, Classified Advertising Manager; Marta Billingstey, Assistant Advertising Manager Steve Winkler, Circulation Manager; Steve Schmidt, Promotion Manager
Larry Boston Editorial Editor
Jasminte Del Haley, Jim Sledd, &
Editors. Editors.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Arizona has more national monuments than any other state. It has 16.
The fellow shown emptying a bottle of joy juice into his automobile isn't daft, he's just illustrating what we all know: when it's time to drive, the best place for alcohol is in the car radiator.
Within a few hours, a lot of us will be on the road. The occasion for the trip is the longest, and undoubtedly the merriest holiday of the year—a time to whoop it up if there ever was one.
We won't presume to regulate your attitudes toward drinking, partly because our own are on pretty shaky moral ground. But it doesn't take a W.C.T.U. member to tell us that hooch and hot rods don't mix.
With the craze upon us to get home for the holidays, the cops will have enough trouble
There were early signs of bad weather in March when Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas suffered from thunderstorms, floods, and tornadoes. It was this area that had suffered only the summer and winter before from crop-killing and economically disasrous drought.
keeping the sober drivers within safe and reasonable speeds. Grim statistics show that a heavy foot on the accelerator is an all too effective killer. It need not be aided by a feggy mind.
While we're staying sober, we might as well stay sensible. Keep that road locomotive within the speed limits. If you're planning a long trip, schedule occasional "breaks" for a stretch and a cup of coffee. Make sure your car is in good mechanical condition.
Most important, just use your rare good sense while driving. Logic says that we young, alert drivers should be the best on the road—a theory that's blasted to smithereens by our disgraceful accident record. Drive carefully on the way home. Don't crash your own Christmas party.
From the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico violent storms played a prominent role in the lives—and deaths—of millions of persons in 1957.
And The Rains Came
Larry Boston
The first single weather tragedy of the year was at Dallas, where more than 1,000 homes were hit by a swirling funnel. The tornado was probably the most documented of the season. Because it struck during the daylight hours, photographers, radio newsmen and newspaper reporters were able to track the funnel from where it was first sighted.
The tornado left over 40 dead.
As the year wore on, bad weather continued in the Southwest and slowly moved north with warm weather. Tornadoes and violent storms first appeared in Kansas during April, but it wasn't until May 20 that the worst weather disaster in Kansas took place.
On that Tuesday afternoon a tornado had been sighted in north-central Kansas. The storm was tracked as it moved north and east until late in the afternoon, when it struck Ottawa, killing two persons. As late evening approached, the storm moved to Olathe and then swept into Hickman Mills and Ruskin Heights, suburbs of Kansas City.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
VILLE
IN CONTRAST—DURING 600 A.D. THE...DURING 600...THE..."
More than 1,000 homes, plus a church, high school gymnasium and shopping center were demolished.
As the year progressed the hurricane season approached in the Deep South and along the Atlantic seaboard. The first big blow of the season was Audrey, which swept into the mainland, killing over 500 persons and inundating small towns in Louisiana and Texas.
the violent storms continued until mid-summer when they subsided. For the rest of the summer —in Kansas at least—tornadoes and vicious thunderstorms were few. The area east of the Mississippi however, suffered from bad summer storms.
So far, winter storms have been at a minimum. However, a severe cold wave swept into the South only last week, causing several deaths from exposure.
It is generally believed that 1957 will go down as a record year of nightmarish storms, which took heavy tolls in lives, crops, homes, and incomes. —Boo Hartley
FAST 1 WEEK
COLOR FILM SERVICE
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford ● Bob Blank 721 Mass. V13 0330
摄影
Santa's sleigh
BEFORE STARTING THAT LONG TRIP HOME—
BE SURE YOUR CAR IS READY
Have It Serviced By Harrell's Texaco
We sincerely hope you have a happy holiday. Drive with care and return to—
HARRELL SERVICE
9th & Mississippi
Phone VI 3-9897
TEXACO SERVICE
Phone VI 3-2897
Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
...
CHRISTMAS PLAY—The three Wise Men are presenting gifts to the Christ Child Mary is
Jane Ziesenis, Lawrence senior, and Joseph is David Dodds, Lawrence graduate student.
German Nativity Play Presented
A choir, singing in the German language, provided the background between scenes of "Die Heilige Nacht," an old German Nativity play, presented by first and second semester German language students in Fraser Theater Wednesday night.
and the choir, the play, and poems and songs by Lawrence public school students were all a part of Weihnachtsspiel, the German department's annual Christmas program. The music and play were representative of performances in Germany during the Middle Ages.
A visit from St. Nicholas during the songs and poems of the school children was refreshing. St. Nicholas, dressed as a German pearant, had his traditional bag of toys which he distributed to the children.
A wide selection of traditional and modern German carols were sung by the choir under the direction of Gerald Carney, associate professor of music education.
The play was a simple presentation of the birth of Christ. Under the direction of Allen Crafton, professor of speech, it followed the lines of the old European miracle plays.
Antiphonal choral singing by a small group of students in the Russian language portrayed Christmas in a Russian village church preceding the play.
Tinkling, delicate music was
played on three blockflutes and a harpsichord by the recorder players. They played Handel's "Fugue." The blockflutes are wooden instruments which sound like flutes, but resemble clarinets. A responsive audience, directed by Mary Jo Woofter, Colby senior, sang four German Christmas carols throughout the program.
29 Students Plan Vacation In Mexico
A group of 29 American and foreign students will leave from the Student Union at 12:30 p.m. Saturday for a Christmas vacation tour of Mexico sponsored by the International Club.
Chairman of the trip is Takis Pamiyotopoulos, Athens, Greece graduate student. Sam Anderson, instructor of German, will chaperone the group.
The group will travel by chartered bus. They will visit Mexico City, San Miguel de Allende, Vera Cruz, and Acapulco. They will leave Mexico City Jan. 3 and will arrive in Lawrence Jan. 5.
Foreign Students Miss Christmas At Home
Christmas more than 4,000 miles from their families and loved ones will be a new experience to many of KU's foreign students.
And not being able to spend Christmas eve gathered around a candle-lit tree and sing Christmas carols is what most said they would miss.
This is the first year many of them will not be with their families on Christmas. Instead they will travel, catch up on school work or spend the vacation with friends.
Helga Sommer, Villach, Austria, graduate student, has been invited to spend Christmas in Chicago with a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
"I was surprised and happy to be invited to someone's home for Christmas," Miss Sommer said. "Not very many Europeans would invite you to their homes."
Miss Sommer has noticed that Americans are much noisier about Christmas than the Austrians.
"What I will miss most is the quiet," she said. "and not being home with my family."
Prettier Decoration Here
Joyce Jurgens, Assen, Holland,
special student, agrees with Miss
Sommer that being with her family
will be missed most. She too will
spend Christmas in an American
home. Miss Jurgens will be in St.
Louis with a female with whom she
stayed earlier this year under the
"People here really do something with Christmas decorations," she continued. "They spend more time and money on decorations which are prettier and more gay."
Experiment in International Living program of her country.
"We always had a party at home on Christmas," Miss Jurgens said. "Gifts were exchanged on St. Nicholas eve, Dec. 5, and we would have nuts and candy and other nice things Christmas eve."
"Americans make more of Christmas," Miss Jurgens said. "They have caroling at hospitals and sing at homes. I think that is very nice. They also have more big parties. In Holland Christmas is more of a religious observance."
Going To Mexico
Frode Jorgensen, Chabotten, Denmark, graduate student, also will miss most not being with his family. He is going with the International Club to Mexico.
"It's nice to see the whole family and have meals of goose and duck. Of course, I'll miss most my fiancee but is would be nice to see the whole family.
"We celebrate Christmas eve. We usually have a tree and sing Christmas carols as we walk around it, eyeing the presents. Then we exchange gifts."
"There's no difference in decorations. If you go downtown in Lawrence or Kansas City you might think it was Copenhagen. You would see the same thing there.
"One of the biggest differences is the many colored lights you see on trees. We just have candles and they're always red and white."
Ursula Klein, Berlin, Germany graduate student, admits she has been so busy she hasn't had much time to think of Christmas. She plans to go to New York to visit friends.
Official Bulletin
Debate squad meeting 7:15 p.m., 134 Strong.
Sigma Xi, Kansas Chapter, 7:30 p.m.
124 Malott Speaker, Dr. Gardner Murphy,
director of research. Meninger Foundation.
"Trends in Research in Extra-
Le diner de la Fete des Rois aura lieu mercredi le huit janvier A 5. h 30 mans Union. Ceux qui desient y assister sont prie de s'ercier dans le bureau, 103 FF.
sensory Perception." Election of new members.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m.
Theater of Dramatic Arts Building. Everyone welcome.
Debate staff meeting, 5 p.m., 116 Strong
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function.
"If I were home I probably would be going to the Bavarian Alps to ski and relax.
KU Jazz Club, 8 p.m., Student Union.
FRIDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Poulenc "Mass in G." Britten "Ceremony of Carols." Tchaikovsky "Nutcracker Suite."
She Likes Candles On Tree
"What I don't like about American trees is that they don't have candles on trees. Our family has had a tree as long as I can remember and nothing has ever caught fire. Very rarely does anything happen.
SUNDAY
*Museum of Art record concert* 2 p.m.
South Beachethnich-Historie*. English
Medieval Medical School
Andre Waldmann, Faris, France graduate student, said is was difficult to say what he would miss most. Waldmann also is going to Mexico with the International Club.
The fourth largest state in the Union, New Mexico, is 350 miles wide (east to west) and 390 miles long (north to south). The altitude varies form 2,820 to 13,160 feet above sea level.
on a family basis. His family also observes the French tradition of the reveillon.
"We had oysters and snails. Tell that to your American readers," he said. "I didn't put shoes by the fireplace. I used boots."
"I miss the general atmosphere.
"Last year I was in Mexico. This year I expect Christmas to be more empty."
In France, Bonnavaud said there is less street and outide Christmas decorating. He said it is done more
Speech and drama department 4-5-20
painting & dramatic Arts Building
Christmas coffee
TODAY
Pierre Bonnavaud, Féletin Creuse, France graduate student, agrees with his countryman that the atmosphere here is different. This is his second Christmas here and he said he plans to work on his thesis during the vacation.
"In France many people go to Christmas Eve midnight mass. Then they have reeveillon, a big supper for the whole family.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
FU
MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR
Independent LAUNDRY & GRY CLEANERS
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Dec. 19, 1957
Nation's Top Teams Here For 2 Games Friday
The University of Washington Huskies and the University of California Golden Bears will bring their basketball teams to Kansas Friday and Saturday to challenge the second and third ranked teams in the country.
Robinson Is Main Threat
Friday night at 7:35. Kansas State, ranked No. 3, will meet the Huskies, and KU, ranked No. 2, will play the Golden Bears at 9:30 p.m. Both games will be played in Allen Field House. Saturday KU and K-State will exchange starting times and opponents and play in Ahern Fieldhouse in Manhattan.
California appears to be the biggest threat of the two West Coast teams, having only lost one of their three games. That loss was to undefeated San Francisco University, 54-66.
tough."
Robinson Is Main Threat
The Golden Bears will be led by Earl Robinson, a 6 foot 1-inch guard who is being talked about for all-America honors by many sports writers and coaches. KU coach Dick Harp showed respect for Robinson's ability Wednesday when he said that 'Robinson on the backline is always
The tallest man on the California starting lineup is 6-foot 6-inch center Don McIntosh. Others are forwards George Sterling, 6 feet 4-inches and Jack Grout, 6-feet 5-inches and guard Al Buch, 6-feet 2-inches.
thems. The Huskies have won only one
of their four games played this season. Brigham Young University, 63 to 52. This victory and a close game played against Oklahoma State are largely due to Doug Smart a 6-foot 7-inch, 225 pound center. Smart scored 49 points in two games against KU last year as a forward. He was moved to center this year
to replace 6-foot 8-inch Bruno Boin who is saving his eligibility for next season when the Huskies will again be eligible for NCAA participation.
Tigers Stun Texas Longhorns, 82-61
The only Big Eight basketball game Wednesday night saw the University of Missouri Tigers hold back a second half surge by Texas to stop the previously unbeaten Longhorns 82-61.
The Big Eight tonight continues a round of single games with Nebraska the only team competing. The Cornhuskers meet Ohio University at Lincoln, Neb.
With Smart, Washington has 6-foot 4-inch forwards Earle Irvine and Al Murphy and guards Dick Crews, 5-feet 11-inches and John Tuft, 6-feet 2-inches.
Missouri came out on top at the half. 38-25.
Missouri held a 26-point lead halfway through the second period last night, but Texas turned loose a fast break to pull within 14 points, 69-55 with three minutes and 50 seconds to go.
Sonny Siebert, who started slowly, paced Missouri with 20 points. John Shaffer scored 13 for the Longhorns. The Tigers now have a 5-1 record. Early season dopesters didn't give them much chance to defeat anybody.
The loss was the first in five starts for Texas.
A punt is a small, flat-bottomed boat used for fishing and ferrying, propelled by pushing a long pole against the bed of a stream.
Friends For a Night
These games will mark the first time in history that KU and K-State have played in an on-campus double header. It also will be the only time this season that the two teams will play under the same roof on the same night.
Both California and Washington are expected to return to the coast having lost two games, KU's combination of Wilt Chamberlain and Ron Loneski and K-State's Bob Boozer and Jack Parr are expected to be too much for either.
Merry Christmas To All
From the "Kansan"!
SANTA CLAUS
A "Happy New Year", too . . . make it a happy year for your family and friends . . . send them the Kansan in 1958
Clip the coupon below and bring or send it to
© 1983 MCA
The University Daily Kansan 111 Flint,K.U.
Please Send A Subscription For The University Daily Kansan To
Name ___
Address ___
City ___ State ___
Enclosed Find Check For
$4.50 For One Year $3.00 For A Semester
Page 5
Indoor Drills Begin
ALEXANDER MCKINNEY
DENNIS SHEFCYK—One of many top frosh prospects.
TKU 14
HERE'S HOW—Bill Easton advises Verne Gouby.
0
JERRY McNEAL—Mainstay on KU's distance corps.
KU Relays Becoming Best In Nation
A "new look" for the KU Relays this spring will make the annual event probably the best in the country from the standpoint of the spectator as well as the participant.
The competition for colleges, junior colleges, universities and AAU entries will be held on two days instead of one and the high school events will be limited to only the contestants who have met certain standards.
One of the most important changes will be in spreading the events over two days, thus giving many individuals and teams the opportunity to be at top strength for several events.
"These changes should make the KU Relays better than the Drake Relays, since we are able to offer events they cannot handle," said KU Coach Bill Easton, head track coach and director of the Relays.
He explained that KU has a steeplechase, 400-meter hurdles, decathlon and hop, step and jump, four events which are not included in the schedule at Drake.
Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Easton said that the 4-mile and 2-mile relays will be on one day and the distance medley and sprint medley relays will be on the other day, enabling a team to enter more races.
"We should certainly have some improvements of the records, with men not being forced to run all their races in one afternoon," Easton said.
The high school portion of the Relays will not be divided into classes this year, but all participants will run in one class. Any boy will have to meet a certain minimum performance before the meet.
"A boy who wins will be truly a state champion, since he will have won over the best competition from all classes of schools. Easton said."
"The Saturday program will be shortened and the college events divided between both days, which should make the Relays more interesting to the spectator." Easton said.
The high school meet will be more of a relay meet this year. There will be 440 and 880 yard, mile, 2-mile and sprint medley relays. The only individual events will be the 100-yard dash, the 120-yard high hurdles, the mile run and the field events.
The Relays, which will be April 18-19, will be the 33rd in the series. A high school meet has been held here for 54 years.
ATO, Phi Delts Win Easily
In the only other Fraternity A game of the night, Phi Delta Theta won over Tau Kappa Epsilon, 45-22. Jim Elliot led the Phi Delts with 16 points and Dale Remsberg was close behind with 13, 7 of them free throws.
Harold Kirkpatrick and Roger Hill each scored 17 points for the ATO's. Ron Gast scored 10 points for Triangle.
Alpha Tau Omega defeated Tri-angle, 72-19. Wednesday night in an intramural Fraternity A basketball game.
The closest game in the Independent B division was Carruth-O'Leary's 35-22 victory over the Hicks. Rudy Mauser was high scorer for the winners with 9 points.
Oread Hall won by forfeit from ICBM in the only Independent A game scheduled.
In other Independent B games Delta Function defeated the Boosers, 35-21; the Newman Club won a forfeit from Liahona; the Air Force ROTC won over Pearson Hall, 32-18; Concordia defeated the Clods 27-11.
The 1800's buried the 69'ers 41-8 and the Naval ROTC edged the Cisabs, 35-28, in the only two Independent C games.
N.Y.C. WRESTLEMAN
BOB HICKMAN-An early start paid off.
Bob Hickman Got Early Start
Bob Hickman, one of KU basketball's starting five, is the kind of guy who really goes all out as far as getting an early start in life is concerned. He started playing basketball when he was in the third grade. This early start in life has paid big dividends for the 6-foot $1\frac{1}{2}$-inch guard from Terre Haute, Indiana. It has won him honors such as being the No.2 high school basketball player in the east and boosted him to a starting berth in his third game with the Jayhawkers.
Hickman's basketball "career" started at Youngstown Grade School near Terre Haute. It was in this little country school that he became a part of a team of 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders. They played a rugged schedule of two games a year. He then played three years of basketball in junior high school.
From there he dribbed his way into Gershmeyer High School in Terre Haute where he lettered all three years. He was team captain both his junior and senior years. These two years he also won all-state honors in a state noted for its top basketball players.
Hickman said he wanted to come to KU because he knew Ron Loneski-another Indiana product—was playing here and also that Wilt Chamberlain would be here. He also attributed much of his desire to attend KU to Jayhawker basketball coach Dick Hart.
Real Praise For Harp
"He is a real great coach. He has the finest morals of any man I've ever met. He helps us solve our problems, not just basketball but others too. He's not just a coach. He's a real fine man along with it." Hickman said.
He also has words of praise for Harp's assistant, Jerry Waugh. "Mr. Waugh has really helped me get started; he's done a lot. I probably wouldn't be starting if it hadn't been for his help."
Although Hickman thought the Wildeats would be hard to handle he was far from forecasting defeat.
He added he thought the Wildcats would be the toughest team KU would meet this season.
Hickman said he felt the Christmas tournament in Kansas City would probably decide the Big Eight champions. As far as meeting Kansas State in the finals he said they hadn't thought about meeting K-State as a team.
"I think we can defeat K-State. They have Jack Parr and Bob Boozer but I think we've got the better all-around team."
"The way we feel now is that we've won five and we've got to win 22 more—then we'll be the national champions. Our goal is not to be No. 1 now but at the end of the season," he said.
Hickman made it clear that the team was taking its games one at a time.
Hickman named Northwestern as his choice for the toughest team the Jayhawkers have faced this far with Oklahoma State running a close second.
Hickman concluded, "I wanted to come out here and play with the best. I thought if I had a chance to make it with the best I'd certainly try."
He tried and he made it.
AUTO PARTS
AND TIRES
New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
OPEN TONIGHT 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Come in and Shop
Disc Den in Rowlands Book Store 1241 Oread
"RING THE BELL FOR SERVICE"
Free Pickup
And Delivery
BELL'S
Service Station 23rd & Naismith—VI 3-9645
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957
JEAN HAHN
MARIA
MARCIA HERRIN
CAROL SMITH
C. W.
M.
DEANNA MILLER
YVONNE HERREN
The couple is planning a June wedding.
Five Couples Announce Engagements
The engagement of Jean Elizabeth Hahn to Richard E. Todd has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hahn, Minneapolis. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Todd, also of Minneapolis.
Hahn-Todd
The bride-elect is a senior in the School of Education and is affiliated with Alpha Phi sorority and Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education fraternity. Mr. Todd attended the University and was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. He was recently discharged after serving two years in the Army.
Herrin-Davis
Dr. and Mrs. Mont C. Herrin, Kansas City, Kan., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Marcia Ann, to Paul Woodson Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clark F. Goodell, St. Joseph, Mo.
Smith-Hite
Miss Herrin is a junior in the School of Education and is a member of Alpha Phi sorority, Mr. Davis is a freshman in the School of Pharmacy and is affiliated with Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. B. I. Smith of Colorado Springs, Colo. have announced the engagement of their daughter,
Carol, to Whitney Hite, son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodard Hite, also of Colorado Springs.
Miss Smith is a senior in the School of Education and is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Hite is a student at Colorado College in Colorado Springs and is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
A summer wedding is planned.
Miller-Sampson
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Miller, Salina, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Deanna, to Dennis Sampson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Sampson, also of Salina.
Miss Miller is a junior in the School of Education and is a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Sampion is a junior in the School of Architecture at Kansas State College, Manhattan, and is a member of Theta Xi fraternity. The couple has not set a wedding.
* *
Herren-Patterson
The engagement of Yvonne Emile Herren, to William B. Patterson has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Herren of Lawrence. Mr. Patterson is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Patterson, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Herren is a freshman in the College. Mr. Patterson is a junior in the School of Engineering and is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
The couple is planning a spring wedding.
AIRLINE TICKETS
... On The Hill . . .
Alpha Phi
Alpha Phi sorority held its winter formal recently at the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. Fannie Spurrier, Mrs. Mary Wigton, Mrs. Edward Dicks and Mrs. Veva Huntington. The sorority's Christmas dinner and party were held Tuesday evening.
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
* *
Alpha Omicron Pi
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority will hold its annual Christmas dinner and party for the children of the alumnae Thursday evening at the chapter house. Members of the sorority went Christmas caroling Tuesday.
***
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
The pledge classes of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority held a Christmas tree trimming party Thursday at the fraternity house. Mrs. H. W. Jenkins was the chaperone.
The fraternity held its annual Christmas dance Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs. Jenkins and Mrs. W. E. Wuthnow were the chaperones.
--chapter house. Patsy Straub, Lake Charles, La. junior, was crowned White Rose Queen by Dick Byrum, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, and fraternity social charisman. the chaperones were Mrs. A. G. McKay, Mrs. Gordon Yockey, Mrs. Thomas Stuart and Mrs. A. B. Stuart.
Lambda Chi Alpha
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity held its Christmas formal Friday with dinner at the Holiday Inn followed by dancing in the Kansas Room of the Student Union. The chaperones were Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. Thomas Clark, Fannie Spurrier, Mrs. Hovey Hanna, Mrs. Thomas Stuart and Miss Veda Lear, Mrs. Stuart and Mrs. McKay were the chaperones at the fraternity's tree trimming party Sunday.
Chi Omega
Chi Omega sorority held its Christmas buffet Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs. Mary Skie, Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie and Mrs. Edna Mitchell were the chaperones. Delta Chi fraternity and Chi Omega held a children's Christmas party Sunday at the fraternity house. Mrs. Ethel Harmon and Mrs. Dick-Peddie were chaperones. Tuesday the sorority and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity held an exchange dinner at the chapter houses. The chaperones were Mrs. Dick-Peddie and Mrs. Virginia Brammer.
Sigma Nu
The 74th annual White Rose formal dinner-dance of Sigma Nu fraternity was held Saturday at the
Phi Kappa Alpha fraternity held its faculty open house Sunday at the chapter house. Mrs. Mildred Wogan, housemother, was the hostess.
Forgy-O'ffill
Pre-Holiday Pinnings Continue
The pinning of Barbara Wurst, Russell junior and member of Chi Omega sorority, to Stan Drevets, Salina junior and member of Sigma Chi at Kansas State College, Manhattan, was announced at the Chi Omega Christmas buffet. Those announcing Miss Wurst's pinning were Roberta Belt, Coffeyville, and Dee Miller, Salina, juniors, and Betty Wurst, Russell sophomore.
Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Betty Lynn Forgy, Wichita sophomore, to Bob Offill, Kansas City, Kan, junior and member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. It was announced at the fraternity Christmas dance. A pinning party will be held at the Dine-A-Mite following the holiday vacation.
Wurst-Drevets
--see
Virginia Church, Coffeyville sophomore, and George Dodd, Ocean lake, Ore, junior, announced their pinning at the Theta Tau Jacquemont formal. Miss Church lives in Hodder Hall.
Church-Dodd
The pinning of Toni Barnes, St. Joseph, Mo. senior, to Jack Goble, Caney senior, was announced at the Alpha Omicron Pi Christmas formal. Gobble is a member of Theta Tau fraternity. Announcing the pinning were Barbara Bailey, Overland Park senior, Linda Baker, University City, Mo. junior, and Ann Cramer, Cincinnati, Ohio sophomore.
Barnes-Goble
--see
Santy Or Sinterklaas They Mean The Same
Santa Claus had many names and many predecessors before he evolved into the plump, jolly little man we know today.
The idea of a special guardian for children, who bestows rewards or punishments to good or bad ones on some seasonal or annual occasions, existed in all early civilizations.
During the Roman Saturnalia, which was observed the next to the last week of December, schools had holidays, trees were decorated and gifts were given.
These traditions were introduced into France and Britain by the Roman conquerors and probably became a part of the customs of these countries when they were converted to Christianity.
The Pilgrims and Puritans forbade the festive celebration of Christmas because it was deemed pagan.
St. Nicholas' name was contracted to Sinterkleaas by the Dutch and Pelznickel or Belsnickle by the Germans. He was a fur-clad, bearded man who left presents at the homes of good children and switches for bad children on the eve of his feast day. Dec. 6.
Father Christmas, or Pere Noel or Kris Kringle as he was called in some countries, was a good, jolly fellow in a red robe.
However, the English who settled in New York were less strict and Father Christmas made his annual visit on Christmas or New Year's eve.
Clement C. Moore is credited with combining St. Nicholas and Father Christmas into one character through his poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas," written in 1823. In the poem Mr. Moore describes his Dutch neighbor Jan Duyckinck as Santa Claus.
Thomas Nast, a German-born cartoonist, used the poem's description of Santa Claus to draw a likeness quite similar to those known today.
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN
Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun., Holidays
CAR RADIO REPAIR
PROMPT SERVICE
Birds on a Branch
BIRD TV-RADIO Jack W. Neibarger, Prop.
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
GIVE GAS!
(Leonard's Of Course)
key to the
FINEST GIFT
LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE
9th & Ind.
VI 3-9830
Thursday, Dec. 19, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m., on the day before publication is desired.
FOR RENT
3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT with enclosed sleeping porch, electric range, refrigerator and steel built-ins. Refrigerator business district. Adults only. 742 Ohio. 12-19
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island. has 2 furnishings apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APART-
MENT. $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-8-58
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath, private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door. 520 Lau. tf
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT for two boys.
One sleeping room and one study room,
also board. Vacant January 6. Ph. VI 3-
1585, 1130 Kentucky. 12-19
ROOM AND BOARD for next semester.
$50 per month. Ph. VI 3-4385. 12-20
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
Marvin's Beauty Salon
843 N.H. VI 3-6035
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 Mass. VI 3-4070
Marinello Beauty Salon 1119 Mass. VI 3-330
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risks Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt. IV-3-4141
Rogers Lounder-H 1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N.H. VI 1-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass VL 1-3055
FOR RENT: Would you like a quiet apartment? It's nice, new and clean. One bedroom, unfurnished except for auto-monitoring system. Large range, built-ins. Will accept small child-blood cells on campus, available January through $75 a month. Phone VI 3-7655 or KU 402 12-20
QUIET ROOMS for upper class students
1400 Tennessee, VI 3-6557. 12-20
LARGE FURNISHED APARTMENT.
suitable for couple or two or three students. Private entrance and garage. Cust.
U. Available January 1. Pn. I-32-6696.
COMFORTABLE ROOM, less than 3 blocks from Union Building. Available now. Very reasonable rates. Ph. VI 3-1909, 1115 Ohio. 1-9
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Send both new and renewals magazines both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE Brown velvet cocktail suit,
size 9, price $7. C'Call VI 3-8966 12-20
WANT TO SELL RCA Mark VII, not a
Rick M. Dick, phone 3-9735 12-20
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by week, indexes, over house reservation or call VI 3-7535; sentitive or call VI 2-0395 for free delivery. 12-20
1939 PLYMOUTH SEDAN in good running order. Call Eudora 9215. Cheap.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal gift for Christmas at the 1% price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
26" SCH WIINN BICYCLE, excellent contour
12-14, Reasonable VI 3-58, 12-20
12-14, Reasonable VI 3-58, 12-20
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-1044
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
8333, Mass.-Phi, VI 3-8074
MINE
"A Dog's Life?"
We will welcome your checking account!
Bills must be paid, of course; but why not start today by handling the job the easy way - with checks, by mail?
The LAWRENCE ESTABLISHED 1950
"Seems to me I have it pretty easy, compared to some people I've seen. On top of the work they do,these folks drag all over town every month,to pay their monthly bills."
NATIONAL BANK
SHAWL and pair of black boots, mistakenly left in back of wrong car in south entrance parking lot of Allen Field House after Jawhawk Feblous Nov.
2. Please contact Victor Young at VI 3-7553 12-20
LAST SATURDAY NIGHT, lost a small light brown coin purse with Christmas shopping money. Can identify. Please call VI 3-8895. 12-20
LOST
FOUND
A BIG RED AND WHITE SUCKER has been turned in at the Kansan Business Office. Will the owner please claim immediately? 12-19
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable
Washing or ironing on both. $15
Indiana
YOUR PHOTO--for the very finest in oil coloring. Alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show Agnes Lungren VI 3-0993. 12-20
MIDE WANTED to New Orleans, La.
to attend expenses. Contact Sebel-
uvi, SIr C., 718-952-6400.
TRANSPORTATION
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers andheses. Fast accurate service at regularates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST; Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tehn. Penn. VI 3-1240. tf
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term paper,
service with VT 3-0177, Mrs. Jack Larson
TYPIST. Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. coattierwood. VI 3-8811. tf
TALORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6657, 1400 Tenn. tt
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
— beds, harnesses, etc. Store we have all
adults available. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut,
Phone VI 3-2921. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson. mgr. tf
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate. Phone VI 3-9373. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Mo.. VI 3-6838. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7529. if
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8600.
EXPERIENCED TYPEP1: Prompt and acc
service. Call VI 3-6033, 1621 wf
200n St.
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
1049141 Mass, Ph. VI S-3263.
1049141 Mass, Ph. VI S-3263.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports. Prompt service VI 3-7184; 1632 West 20th St. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Vriar, VI 3-8660. tf
PHOTOGRAPH OIL, COLORING. the very finest quality -alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor. Suits to show. Ph. VI 4093 or 5094.
5094. 12-20
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses—experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 3-4822
MISCELLANEOUS
PHILIP MORRIS HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-1464.
BEVERAGES - All kinds of skis-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent; closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 914-3550
IF THE PERSON who took the $89.55 white Leather Columbia Transistor Radio, serial number returns, we will use the batteries necessary to operate it. Disc Den, 1241 Oread 12-19
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING
Why not let us make your next suit, sport coat or top-
coat?
DANGER
Choose from over 500 fabrics
the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
THE FRENCH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF IRELAND
George Anthan and Malcolm Applegate
Daily Kansan Sports Editors
Two Game Guys
Everything from football to soccer and back again concerns the sports editors, who, with a staff of reporters, try to do an accurate job of reporting and commenting upon sports at the University.
The job includes attending athletic events both here and away—this is the more pleasant of the sports staff's duties. Countless more hours are spent in writing, makeup and research.
The job of the sports staff is a never ending one as basketball replaces football and is in turn replaced by track and baseball in prominence.
Upon the sports editors and their staff depends 25% of The Daily Kansan's daily news.
University Daily Kansan
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. Dec. 19, 1957
11 Killed, 200 Hurt By 25 Tornadoes
(Compiled from United Press)
A deadly band of late December tornadoes exploded across Illinois, Missouri and Indiana Wednesday night killing at least persons and injuring more than 200.
The damage by the rash of nearly 25 twisters to schools business districts and residential sections was estimated in the millions of dollars.
In Paris, President Eisenhower said today at the conclusion of the NATO conference that he thought the decisions it reached made "want less likely, peace more sure." He said he also felt that the four-day meeting had made for "a stronger North Atlantic Alliance."
Mr. Eisenhower will fly back to Washington after the conclusion of the conference and Monday mornin' he and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles will make a joint radio and television report to the American people on the results of the NATO meeting.
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., the Air Force prepared to fire a Thor missile in the wake of Wednesday night's launching of the rival Army Jupiter.
Jupiter, an intermediate range missile and described as one of the nations best, failed to complete its flight due to "technical difficulties," but scientists said they gained "valuable information" from the test.
In Washington, D. C., it was announced that the Air Force may be bearing a decision on the awarding of a contract to develop a new bomber capable of flying three times the speed of sound.
The plane is the WS-110A or so-called "chemical" bomber, an aircraft which could span continents at 2,200 miles-an-hour at altitudes approaching 100,000 feet.
In Moscow, the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) of the U. S. S. R. convened today. Observers expected a major foreign policy address by one of the top Soviet leaders during the session which would deal at least partially with the Paris NATO conference.
Law School Faculty To California Parley
Five members of the School of Law faculty will attend the annual meeting of the Assn. of American Law Schools in San Francisco Dec. 26 to 30.
Faculty members attending ar M. Carl Slough, dean of the Law School; Dan Hopson Jr., assistant dean and assistant professor of law William R. Scott and William A Kelly, associate professors of law and L. T. Tupy, professor of law.
Correction
The meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will be held at 7:15 tonight in the Student Union Jayhawk Room instead of Friday night as announced in The Kansan Tuesday.
The Little Man Who Never Was
In an attempt to keep her baby sitting job under control, a University coed suggested that the child draw a picture of the Nativity scene.
The coed could recognize the baby, the father, the mother and the shepherds and angels in the picture, but she was a little puzzled about one of the figures.
"Tommy, who is the little fat man in the corner of the picture?" she asked.
"Oh," said the little boy, "he is the man in 'Silent Night,' Round John Virgin."
Houses Open ToMethodists
All 19 KU dormitories and 20 fraternity and sorority houses will house the 3,200 students and adult leaders registered for the Methodist youth conference here Dec. 27-Jan. 1.
E. A. McFarland, manager of the bureau of institutes, said Wednesday the fraternity and sorority houses were contacted because there was not enough room in the dormitories.
He said sleeping accommodations will be provided for the nights of Dec. 27 to 31.
The houses to be used are:
Fraternities: Sigma Phi Epsilon, Acacia, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Chi, Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta, Triangle, Phi Kappa Tau, Theta Chi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Pi, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Chi.
Sororities: Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Delta Gamma.
4 New Courses OKd By College
The new courses are Applied Economic Analysis, Physical Anthropology of Modern Man, Radio and Television Production Techniques, each three hours credit and Sociological Aspects of Medicine, two hours credit.
Four new courses were approved Tuesday by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences faculty for addition to the curriculum.
Permanent approval was given to the Logic of Science and Philosophy and the Rise of Modern Science, both 3-hour courses.
"Some students come up with three examinations on one day, and we're sorry we can't do something about it, but if we started making exceptions to the rules, our whole system would be ineffective," Mr. Hitt explained.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said that if any student has four examinations in one day he can have one of them changed by coming in to see Mr. Hitt.
Final examination schedules can now be picked up in the registrar's office. The examination period for the fall semester will be Jan. 20 to 25.
If anyone wants to request a change in his examination schedule he must send a written request to the Calendar Committee of the University Senate. Mr. Hitt is chairman of the committee.
Examination Schedules Ready
Mr. Hitt said these requests should be turned in to him immediately after vacation, and should be made only in exceptional cases.
A KU professor, explaining the influence that southern climates can on have a person's work habits, gave this example about some of his colleagues:
$34,900 Grant Aids Psychology Program
A $34,900 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for the continuation of the training program for clinical psychologists has been received by the department of psychology at KU Dr. M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, directs the program.
The grant represents an increase of $2,000 over the previous period and is further encouragement for training additional personnel in this area of professional need.
The clinical psychology training program at KU usually requires at least five years of study and special supervised clinical experience past the bachelor's degree. The culmination of the program is the Ph. D. Degree in clinical psychology.
Support for the program is part of the educational effort being encouraged by the National Institute of Mental Health to develop trained professional and scientific personnel who can contribute to the solution of the nation's mental health problem through research, teaching and clinical service.
'We Have Friends In Greece'
"In the heat of the summer they would not do any work at all. They saved all of their work until winter."
Hospitable, industrious and quite anti-Communist is the opinion of the Greek people held by the American consul general to Greece.
Does This Apply Only To South?
During the training period the student works under supervision at the KU Psychology Clinic and spends a year of internship in a hospital, guidance clinic or special mental health agency.
The KU Psychological Clinic emphasizes experience with children's emotional, educational and psychological adjustment problems.
Union Expansion To Be Completed
He described northern Greece as "the land of the uneasy frontier" because of the surrounding Communist countries of Albania, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria. To these three
"There will be increasing emphasis on the problems of the exceptional child and adult in the clinical training program as the social implications of physical disability become more widely recognized." Dr. Wright said.
Philip W. Ireland, who for two years has advised in economic problems in northern Greece, said in "an interview Wednesday the United States has made some very good friends in Greece and they offer a very strong front against communism.
"The Communists recently put on a determined campaign in the political and economic field to influence Greece," Mr. Ireland said, "but American aid and strong traditional ties between the two countries have aided Greece's democracy."
He added, "The training program has been of particular importance to Kansas because many who have received their doctorate degree from KU have remained in Kansas to work in hospitals, clinics and school programs."
Mr. Ireland is visiting his brother,
H. A. Ireland, professor of geology.
He is on a 3-month leave and will
return to Greece for two years.
"Of course," he added, "they taught school, but I mean really work..."
he added Turkey who now has a difference with Greece over the problem of Cyprus rule.
When the planned Student Union expansion is completed by the spring semester of 1960, it will be one of a series of projects since the 1920s to bring adequate social and recreational facilities to the University students.
"I haven't found any Greeks who were not grateful for the aid and assistance that we have given them," Mr. Ireland said.
"Some Greeks go to America and earn a large sum of money, he said, but return to Greece as diplomats for the United States. The common people and the
"But the determination and industry of the hard working Greeks have made the aid effective."
The Greeks are very receptive to American visitors, Mr. Ireland said, but the United States' neutral stand on Cyprus makes them question us as friends.
Northern Greece is a very mountainous area populated with poor people, he said, and it is hard to make a living on the land. He added that once he had to call the American embassy to have a helicopter and food sent up to persons in a mountainous area that couldn't get food.
mountain people are the most demonstrative in their gratitude for foreign aid, he said.
Asked about the potential of Greece as a military force, Mr. Ireland said, "They are tough and good fighters and particularly effective in the mountain area in Greece."
Senior Wins $800 RCA Scholarship
Donald G. Coyne, Hutchinson senior, is one of 31 U. S. college students awarded an $800 scholarship for the 1957-58 academic year by the Radio Corporation of America. KU, as one of the universities maintaining the scholarships, has been awarded a $500 grant by RCA.
The awards were announced Monday by Dr. C. B. Jolliffe, RCA vice president, who said, "The awards enable the undergraduate students to continue their studies in fields directly related to the electronics and broadcasting industries, as well as to the nation's security." Coyne is majoring in engineering physics. The scholarship winners are selected by the respective universities and approved by the RCA education committee.
Medical School Cited By AMA
The dean of the KU School of Medicine said Tuesday the Kansas physician is "more up-to-date" than those of any other U. S. state according to an American Medical Assn. report.
Dean W. Clarke Wescoe made the statement during a tour of the University by some 20 members of the Kansas Legislature.
Dean Wescoe said AMA reports listed KU as the first in the nation in the number of physicians taking post-graduate work. The report further stated, the dean said, that one of every 16 physicians in this country who took refresher training, did so at KU.
The dean said Kansas has one practicing physician per 750 persons. He said this figure was the best mark of any state in this area but that a problem of "distribution" persisted.
TUXEDO RENTALS and Sales
Place your order early for the Christmas Season
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763 (one door south Jayhawk Cafe) Complete Wedding Service
On Nov. 30, 1920, a drive to raise one million dollars was begun with a committee of three, including Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, former KU basketball coach, heading the campaign. The money was to be used to build a stadium, a Student Union and the statue of Jimmy Green.
Contests between the students and faculty, various organizations and sororities and fraternities were used to raise the money for the original Union building. The goal was $40 from each undergraduate student.
On Feb. 23, 1923, the Kansas Senate authorized building of the Union with funds raised in the successful memorial campaign. The building was modeled after the student union at the University of Michigan. The ground-breaking ceremonies were part of the 1925 commencement program. The cornerstone was laid and the building was formally dedicated on April 30, 1926. When opened that year, only the ballroom, main lounge and cafeteria were completed.
An addition to double the size of the original building was opened in 1953. Cost of the addition was 1.5 million dollars compared to the $300,000 cost of the original building. The bonds to build the addition were to be redeemed by a $5-$a-semester levy on student activity fees.
The rooms put in the addition were the present ballroom, music and browsing room, craft shop, activity offices and the bowling and billiards area.
In discussing plans for the proposed 1960 addition, Student Union director Frank Burge said that the need for expanded facilities is consistent with the increased enrollment.
The expansion will include services and areas for which a need has been demonstrated. These include recreation, bookstore, cafeteria, social and Hawk's Nest."
Pizza Delivered VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park
MUSICIAN
By Golly,
I Got a Gift
from the...
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
916 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
A Blessed Christmas And A Happy New Year
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 67
Friday, Dec. 20, 1957
I
YULETIDE TRADITION—Enjoying the privileges of a sprig of mistletoe are Martha Crosier, Lawrence junior, and Steve Schmidt, Salina senior. (Daily Kansan photo)
Wilt, Four Others In Traffic Mishaps
Wilt Chamberlain, 7-foot junior center on the basketball team, was one of five students involved in four traffic accidents in Lawrence Thursday.
Dr. Elin K. Jorgensen, professor of education, was injured slightly when the car in which she was riding, driven by Bruce Loganbill, Newton graduate student, collided with Chamberlain's 1956 Oldsmobile at the intersection of 11th and Ohio streets at about 6:05 p.m. Chamberlain was driving up the hill west on 11th Street.
Campus police estimated damage to the front bumper of Chamberlain's car at about $25.
Loganbill was driving south on Ohio in a 1956 Oldsmobile owned by Mrs. Mervin T. Sudler, West Campus Road. Damage to the car was estimated at $100. No charges were filed.
A parked car belonging to Gary Lee Nanning, Whitewater senior, was struck by a car driven by Robert G. Taylor, 418 Indiana, at 7:15 p.m. in front of 215 W. 6th.
Taylor was charged with having no brakes on his car, a 1950 Ford. Damage to Nanning's 1955 Chevrolet was estimated at $350, and to Taylor's car at about $200.
A 1953 Oldsmobile driven and owned by Richard A. Davenport, Kansas City, Mo. junior, was involved in a collision at 8th and Elm streets at 9:08 a.m. Thursday with a 1956 International pickup truck belonging to the city of Lawrence and driven by Louis M. Stone, 1821 Alabama.
In the fourth accident of the day involving KU students, a 1954 Cheverolet driven by Robert B. Wimmer, Topeka graduate student, collided with a panel truck owned by the Singer Sewing Co.
Damage to the left front fender of his car was estimated at $5.
Davenport was charged with making an improper left turn.
The accident occurred at 13th and Ohio Streets. Wimmer's car was traveling north on Ohio, and received damage estimated at $150. The panel truck was being driven east on 13th by Stanley Kupytv of Topeka.
Greek Week Dance To Star Woody Herman
The annual sorority and fraternity get - together, Greek Week. has been set for March 18-22. Woody Herman's band will play at the Greek Week dance.
Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior, said events are planned on four days of the week. Patterson and Mary Claire Purcell, Kansas City, Kan. junior, are co-chairmen of Greek Week.
Panel discussions on scholarship, rushing and pledge training will start the week on Tuesday. Chairmen of the Greek houses' committees on these subjects will participate.
A scholarship banquet will be held Wednesday featuring a main speaker, as yet not chosen. An interfraternity sing will be held Thursday. Last year awards were given to the top three choruses from fraternities and sororities.
A community project will be held for the fourth time. The project is one with the idea of offering some service to Lawrence and the University. Last year the intramural football field was resodded by the Greeks.
A chariot race will be held Saturday. The race features homemade chariots with a driver and two men pulling them. Woody Herman and his band will play at the dance in the Student Union Ballroom from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday,
Austin Named Regent Member
Gov. George S. Docking Thursday appointed Whitley Austin, editor of the Salina Journal, to a 4-year term on the Board of Regents effective Jan. 1.
Mr. Austin succeeds Oscar Stauffer, president, Stauffer Publications, who asked not to be reappointed. Both are Republicans. Mr. Austin is a native of Emporia. He attended the University of Wisconsin.
Mr. Austin is now serving as third vice president of the William Allen White Foundation, advisory board for the School of Journalism and Public Information.
Gov. Docking had previously appointed two Democrats, Russell R. Rust, Topeka insurance executive, and George B. Collins, Wichita attorney, to the board. They succeeded Mrs. Elizabeth Haughey, Concordia, and A. W. Hershberger, Wichita, respectively.
This Christmas Won't Be White
If you want a white Christmas this year you will probably be disappointed, but at least weather conditions for the homeward trek should be ideal.
It will be partly cloudy tonight a little colder east portion. Saturday generally fair with moderate temperatures. Low tonight 20 northwest to 32 southeast. High Saturday 45-55.
Further south the weather has taken a violent turn with tornado warnings issued early today for north-central Georgia and northwest South Carolina.
Students OK ASC Letter
7 Of 9 Interviewed Approve Council Action
Seven of nine students interviewed by The Daily Kansan Thursday approved of the All Student Council sending letters to Gov. George Docking, the Board of Regents, and the chairmen of the state Legislature Ways and Means committees concerning the proposed state school budget.
One said it was the wrong thing to do and one said it might turn out all right if the ASC takes any further action.
The students were asked, "Why do you think the All Student Council should or should not have sent the letter to Gov. Docking, the Board of Regents, and the committee charimen?"
Ruth Guy. Hutchinson senior—"Yes, the Council was right. It is practically the only way we can show the legislators what the students think, and it is important that they know how we feel. It is important that the University has enough money for good teachers and equipment."
Student comments were:
Ben Blackshire, Kansas City, Mo. junior—"I think it's good for students to be concerned with the welfare of the generations following us."
John Fowler, Kansas City, Mo. junior—"if all they're going to do is write a letter, they're wasting their time. If they're planning any follow-up action, it was a good preliminary move."
Betty Thomas, Kansas City, Kan. junior—"Yes. It illustrates the feeling of everyone at KU and throughout the state."
Paul Gorman, Kansas City, Kan. senior—"It isn't the business of the students to pressure the governor into something he has probably studied and has good reason to oppose."
Melinda Taylor, Topeka senior—"Yes. I think it's good that the ASC takes an interest, but they're not specific enough in the letter."
Joy Yeo. Manhattan senior—"Yes. Many of the best faculty members seem to be leaving KU because of the low salaries paid here."
Lois Krisher, Minneapolis, Kan. freshman-"Yes. We need to keep the budget up. The letter wasn't very strong, but it should serve its purpose."
Gene Young, Kansas City, Mo. freshman—"Yes. I didn't think the idea of cutting the budget was very good, especially where it concerned the University."
And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world should be taxed. And this taxing was first made when Cyrenius was governor of Syria. And all went to be taxed, everyone into his own city.
And Joseph went also up from Galilee, out of the city of Nazareth, into Judaea, unto the city of David, which is called Bethlehem, because he was of the house and lineage of David. To be taxed with Mary his espoused wife, being great with child.
Unto You Is Born A Savior
And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered. And she brought forth her first born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.
And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them; and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be unto all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which shall be Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, "Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace, Good will toward men."
Luke II 1-15
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 20, 1957
One Solitary Life
2
Here is a man who was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He grew up in a small village. He worked in a carpenter shop until He was 30 and then for three years He was an itinerant teacher. He never wrote a book. He never held an office. He never owned a home. He never had a family. He never went to college. He never traveled 200 miles from the place where He was born. He never did one of the things that usually accompany greatness. He had no credentials but Himself. He had nothing to do with this world, except the power of His divine manhood.
While still a young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against Him. His friends ran away. One of them denied Him. He was turned over to His enemies. He went through the mockery of a trial. He was nailed upon a cross between two thieves. His executioners gambled for the only piece of property He had on earth while He was dying—His coat. When He was dead, He was taken down and laid in a borrowed grave through the pity of a friend.
Nineteen wide centuries have come and gone. Today He is the centerpiece of the human race and the leader of the column of
Yuletide Cheer
Clayton Krebbiel, assistant professor of music education, and members of his choral clinic classes have been putting their professional training to work this week.
The groups have been touring classroom buildings on the campus, giving serenades of Christmas carols.
Christmas carols sound good when anyone sings them. We've heard kids sing them, soldiers sing them, old women sing them. Carols sound good even when sung by off-key baritones at an office party. But Mr. Krehbiel and his carolers, with their fine singing, put the finishing touches on the songs of Christmas.
"It is not our intention to unduly disrupt the class procedure of anyone, but merely to spread a bit of Yuletide cheer to you all," Krehbiel wrote in a memo to the faculty.
He needn't have worried about the disruption. The singing was fine, and the Yuletide cheer most welcome.
Best Stories Of The Year
—Larry Boston
The development of the Russian Sputnik and its effect on world tensions has been chosen the outstanding news story of 1957.
The stories were chosen by the editorial class in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The stories were judged on the basis of interest, importance, and their probable place in world history.
The Sputnik transformed the age of space from fantasy to fact and the impact was heavy and world-wide. To the Russians it was a cause for jubilation and increased propaganda activity; to the West it was a warning that Soviet technology was surging and that it was a force that must be recognized with hard work and sacrifice on the part of free nations.
Racial tension stories placed second. The Civil Rights bill for desegregation was debated for long hours in Congress and emerged very modified. Nine Negro students were attacked and kept out of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. President Eisenhower was forced to call out federal troops. The students are now in school, but feeling still runs high against desegregation in some areas.
Nikita Khrushchev's rise to power placed third. In July Communist Boss Nikita Khrushchev emerged victorious as Russia's leader. Four top Soviet officials—Georgi Malenkov, V. M. Molotov, L. M. Kaganovich and Dmitri Shepilov—were accused of activities directed at "breaking up the party" and ousted from the Politburo. Khrushchev is now in full power with his own "men" surrounding him.
The Middle East story was chosen fourth place. This area threatened to erupt many times in 1957, even after the Egypt-Israel incident. The Syrian problem was the biggest news maker this year in this area when they massed troops on the Turkish border. The Arab states and Nassar created big news stories this year also.
The fifth place story concerned corrupt union activities. The November ouster of the International Teamsters Union from the AFL-CIO brought a climax to several months of Senate investigation into union corruption and graft. The investigations have so far prevented Jimmy Hoffa, duly elected president of the Teamsters, from becoming president, and have convicted Dave Beck, president of the union, of taking funds allocated for union use.
Sixth place went to stories on the Asian flu. The flu has posed a health problem to the United States and separate communities. The vaccine developed to control it, however, has lessened its potential effects in many areas. A number of people have died from complications resulting from the virus.
President Eisenhower's "battle of the budget" was chosen seventh place. Before Congress ended its session in August, both it and the President were determined to economize, but on different programs. The President wanted defense cuts; Congress wanted to cut the foreign aid program. The world situation a few months ago was different from the present one and the President felt the nation could afford to cut back on defense expenditure. The Senate and House felt that the foreign aid request of nearly $4.5 billion was too much and swung an economy axe cutting it to $3.4 billion. Disputes over the nation's economy are not uncommon, but the 1957 battle was a vigorous one.
European Elections were eighth. The three chief allies of the U.S. in Europe held elections during the year. England named Harold Macmillan to replace Anthony Eden as prime minister. Eden retired due to poor health.
West Germany elected Konrad Adenauer chancellor with an overwhelming vote. The 82-year old Adenauer is one of the biggest supporters of the U.S. in Europe.
France elected its 24th post war government since the war. Felix Gaillard is the new premier. The young financial wizard is the youngest head of state since Napoleon.
The International Geophysical Year was chosen the ninth most important story. This scientific effort is making the most concentrated effort in history to determine the natural causes, within and without, which affect the world. Sixty-four nations are represented in the research. The year began June 30 and will continue through Dec. 31, 1958. The scientists are concentrating on 11 major fields, they are: meteorology, oceanography, glaciers, solar activity, ionosphere, auroras, cosmic rays, geometism magnetism, gravity, geodesy, seismology.
World disarmament talks placed tenth. They were recessed in September but efforts will be made at the United Nations meeting to resume the talks. If Russia won't continue the talks, the U.S., England, France and Canada may be deputized by the 15-nation NATO to make a direct approach to Russia.
The largest number of accidental deaths on farms occur among the 15 to 19-year-olds, next largest number among children 10 to 14, and then under 5 years.
Daily hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
Madison Avenue and Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.
service: United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
uion on Sundays. Noon during the University year except
Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays,
and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
March 3, 1879
Rob Lyle Managing Editor
Marlyn Mermis Jim Bannan, Richard Crawford Ray Wingerson, aging Editors; Bob Hartley, City Editor; Patricia Swanson, Lee Lord, Assistant Editor; Kero Hammerman, elephant Editor; Harry Haney, Telegraph Editor; George Anhan, Malcolm Applegate, Sports Editors; Mary Joy Moore, Society Editor; Martha King, Society Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Harry Turner Business Manager
Kent Pelz, Advertising Manager; Jere
George Peshtal, Clinical Advertising
George Peshtal, Advertising Manager; Martha Billingsley, Assistant
Advertising Manager; Ted Winkler,
Circulation Manager; Steve
Schmidt, Promotion Manager
Larry Boston Edithial Editor
John Foster, Haley, Hiley, Sledd, As-
sistant
progress. I am far within the mark when I say that all the armies that ever marched and all the navies that ever were built and all the parliaments that ever sat and all the kings that ever reigned put together have not affected the life of men upon this earth as powerfully as that One Solitary Life.
—Phillips Brooks (1835-1893)
. . . Short Ones . . .
PENSACOLA, Fla.—(UP)—Firemen jumped on their trucks when the alarm sounded yesterday, but the trucks didn't go anywhere.
When instructions came, the firemen climbed sheepishly down and used a garden hose to put out a small trash fire behind the fire house.
ATLANTA—(UP)—Detective C. A. Royal got something of a back-handed compliment when he donned a uniform and took his ailing wife's post at a school crossing here.
"Oh, Mr. Royal," said a lady acquaintance, "you look like a real policeman."
CLEVELAND, Ohio—(UP)—Joseph Larysz thought a paper bag his wife left on the kitchen sink was full of garbage and pitched it into the garbage pail. Then he learned the bag contained the Christmas cards he and his wife spent their evenings addressing last week and that his wife had left them out to mail.
VACATION PIZZA!
La Pizza
If you're staying in town don't be without the finest Hideaway Pizza! Delivery too!
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 N. Park VI 3-9111
TO STUDENTS AND STAFF
AT KU
A Very Merry Holiday Season to You and Yours
We at the Jay Shoppe are grateful for your patronage of the past season and hope to serve you again in 1958.
Best Wishes For A Safe Trip And For The New Year.
Mrs. Harry Dauberman
Mrs. J. A. Duffy
Mrs. Leo Eller
Mrs. Jerry Cox
Jay SHOPPE
Miss Barbara Hodgson
Miss Mary Hammig
J. F. Schubert
Page 3
University Daily Kansan
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
Fall Semester, 1957
Monday, January 20, 1958, to Saturday, January 25, 1958, inclusive
Classes meeting at:
8 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Wednesday January 22
8 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 1:30- 3:20 Monday January 20
9 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 1:30- 3:20 Thursday January 23
9 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 1:30- 3:20 Tuesday January 21
10 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Tuesday January 21
10 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 3:30- 5:20 Thursday January 23
11 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 8:00- 9:50 Friday January 24
11 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday January 24
12 Noon, MWF sequence* ... 3:30- 5:20 Tuesday January 21
1 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 1:30- 3:20 Friday January 24
1 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Thursday January 23
2 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Monday January 20
2 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Friday January 24
3 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday January 25
3 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Saturday January 25
4 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 1:30- 3:20 Saturday January 25
4 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 3:30- 5:20 Saturday January 25
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
Chemistry 1, 2, 2a, 3, 28, and 29 (All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Wednesday January 22
Physics 3, 4, 5 and 6, 156a and b (All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Monday January 20
Business Administration 9, 12, 72 and 73 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Monday January 20
Business Administration 25 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Tuesday January 21
ROTC (Army, Navy, Air Force, All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Wednesday January 22
3:30- 5:20 Wednesday January 22
Applied Mechanics 1, 1a, 49, 61, and 61a (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Tuesday January 21
Friday, Dec. 20, 1957
Class Schedules On Rush Order
The state printer is doing a rush job on the second semester class schedules in answer to an unusually large early demand.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said the printer promised that the class schedules would be ready by Jan. 6, when school resumes after Christmas vacation. Students who want to plan their schedules for next semester should be able to pick up the schedule booklets at that time.
There has been a typed copy of the new class schedule in the registrar's office and many students have taken advantage of it. Mr. Hitt said,
"We have had an uncommonly heavy demand for the schedules of classes this year, because it seems that students are just more interested in planning ahead." Mr. Hitt said.
"We usually get the schedules out just after Christmas vacation and there has never been much demand for them before this, but we may have to get them out earlier in future years," he said.
Mr. Hitt believes that the faculty advising system has been responsible, at least in part, for the increased interest by the students in planning their schedules early. Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences agreed that the advising system could be responsible.
"After meeting with their advisers for mid-semester conferences, many students start thinking of next semester's schedule." Dean Waggoner said.
"They often bring up the subject of future plans while talking with their advisers and then go back later to make more detailed plans," he said.
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Schutz "Weihnachts-Historie." English
medieval Christmas carols.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of the meeting. You must not bring material to The Daily Kaysan Notice should include name, place date, and time of function.
SUNDAY
Better Register For That Exam
Students who wish to take the Western Civilization examination must register in 130 Strong Hall before Dec. 31.
The exam, covering two semesters of material, will be held Jan. 11 at 1 p.m. in Bailey Hall. All students in the College, School of Education, and School of Journalism must pass the examination to qualify for graduation.
The Western Civilization department will sponsor review sessions for the test Jan. 8th and 9th, 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium.
Jay Janes Rule On Cheerleaders
Sixty per cent of the working women in this country are married. Only one in four "career girls" remains single.
Jay Jane members who want to try out for cheerleader representative must now be pledged for at least one semester before the try-out date. The new ruling was announced Wednesday night by Jay Jane president Kathy Ehlers, Kansas City, Mo. senior.
Previously there was no eligibility rule about length of membership for prospective representation.
Both the Jay Janes and the KuKu pep clubs are allowed one cheerleader representative.
The chairman of a committee of pep club and faculty members is appointed by the All Student Council to select the Jay Jane representative after try-outs in May. The KuKu cheerleader is selected by club members.
It was also announced Wednesday night that the pep section will sit with the band during Friday night's basketball games. Because many students will leave early for vacations, the sections are being combined to make more room for the public.
Red Peppers and Jay James will practice new cheers using pom poms at 5 p.m. Jan. 8 in the Student Union Jayhawk Room. The Red Peppers, freshmen their pep club, have ordered 900 red and blue pom poms.
Around The World
180 Traffic Deaths Seen For Holidays
(Compiled from United Press)
The National Safety Council has estimated that up to 180 will be killed in the 30-hour Christmas holiday from 6 p.m. Tuesday to midnight Wednesday. The average fatality toll for a similar non-holiday period in December is 80.
In Washington, D.C., Presidem Eisenhower returned from the NATO summit conference in Paris today and began preparations to ready the American people for the sacrifices necessary to meet Russia's challenge to a missile-jittery world. He will report with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles to the American people Monday morning on a joint radio and television program.
Also in Washington, a super-secret report prepared for the White House warns that Russian military might poses so grave a threat to the nation that nothing short of an all-out defense buildup can prevent "catastrophie."
The report pictures the nation "in the gravest danger in its history" and "moving in a frightening course to the status of second-class power." It said even with the enormously expensive military buildup recommended, this country cannot match Russia's missile might before 1960 or 1961.
In Jakarta, Indonesia, speaker of the House Sartono was sworn in as acting president of Indonesia in a brief ceremony paving the way for President Sukarno to leave the country for a rest.
Kansan Board Duties Are Promotion, Policy
The Allied NATO group, in a communique issued at the conclusion of its 4-day summit conference, suggested that arms reduction talks could be instituted through the United Nations or through a conference of East-West foreign ministers. However, the Moscow broadcast branded the proposal as a "maheuver to clear the Western powers of all responsibility for their arms drive."
In Cape Canaveral, Fla., missile firing appeared ended for a day with unconfirmed reports of an Atlas launching to end the week of testing. An informed source said, however, that the intercontinental weapon will not be fired until after the first of the year.
In Moscow, a radio broadcast indicated Soviet Russia would reject a proposal by the 15-nation North Atlantic Treaty Organization for new arms reduction talks.
Promotion ideas, determining policy and selecting students for executive staff positions on The University Daily Kansan are duties of the 21-member Kansan Board.
The board meets every other week and its committees on news editorial and business meet once a week. The committee members discuss finances, circulation problems and ideas for improving the paper.
A student must be at least a junior and have worked on The Daily Kansan for membership on the board. In some cases sophomores may be members if they have had newspaper experience and are recommended by faculty members
The membership committee selects names of candidates and the board votes on them.
Kent Pelz, Des Plaines, Ill., is chairman of the board. Chairmen of the three committees are Bob Lyle, Kansas City, Mo., managing editor, news; Larry Boston, Salina editorial editor, editorial, and Harry Turner, Topeka, business manager, business. All are seniors.
Faculty advisers are Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information; Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, and George Link Jr., instructor of journalism.
MORGAN-MACK
- Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence -
Wishes you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. We have been proud to serve you during 1957, and hope that we will continue to please you during the coming new year.
FLASH!!
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
A fter December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th Bring 'em in and Save At
A
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 20, 1957
"Happy
Holiday" JAYHAWKERS
These Merchants Extend Their Greetings to You
Christmas Carol.
Merry Christmas and a Happy Holiday to one and all!
Harrell Texaco Station
WINTER CLOCK
Jolliest wishes for a Merry Christmas!
Leonard's Standard Service
THE CHRISTIAN MUSEUM OF BOSTON
Wishing you all the happiness of an old-fashioned Christmas—
Morgan-Mack Motor Co.
To all our friends—sur sincere wishes for a joy-filled Holiday!
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Round Corner Drug Co.
Sincerest wishes for a very Merry Christmas to all your friends!
Lawrence National Bank
CHURCH
Greetings we'd like to wish you the gayest of holidays. . .
Golden Crest Dairy
**
We wish you the blessings of this Christmas season!
Corn's Studio Of Beauty
CAROL MAYER
May this Holiday be your happiest ever!
MERRY CHRISTMAS
Bridge Standard Service
Season's Greetings and best wishes to all of our friends this Holiday.
Allison-Thomas Flower Shop
Packing up all our good wishes for your Merry Christmas!
May joy be with you during this Holiday Season!
X
Holiday Inn Restaurant
Gibbs Clothing
Wishing everyone a very Merry Christmas!
+ + + + +
Noel bells are ringing and we'd like to wish you a festive holiday!
Litwin's
MARY
Drake Bakery
CANDY CANE
Best Wishes
Ober's
* *
Merry Christmas to our friends and customers.
MONTREAL
Dine-A-Mite
May all the joys of this happy season be yours on Christmas.
Jim Clark Motors
May the wondrous joy of the spirit of Christmas be yours!
A boy putting on a snowman.
Holiday Inn Hotel
We're bursting with Christmas Wishes for you!
McCoy's Shoe Store
A STAR
Our good wishes for your happiness and a very Merry Christmas!
Ober's Jr. Miss
MATRIX
May the Spirit of Christmas bless you and yours! Carl's
Friday. Dec. 20, 1957 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
COLUMBUS HOCKEY
GENE ELSTUN—Former KU forward sinks a free throw.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail WITH GEORGE ANTHAN
Kansas City gets its share of the basketball spotlight over the holidays by playing host to the star-studded Big Eight tournament.
Kansas Citians will flock into the city's Municipal Auditorium for the 4-day event which begins Thursday and despite laws, tickets will reach as high as $30 for the probable "dream" game between K-State and Kansas.
The tournament, which has in the past featured such great national basketball players as Clyde Lovellette and B. H. Born of Kansas; Dick Knostman of Kansas State, Bob Gengenard and Burdete Halderson of Colorado; Gary Thompson of Iowa State and now Kansas' Wilt Chamberlain, who may surpass them all.
Attention Focused At Kansas City
The Big Eight tournament, with the nation's second and third ranked teams vying for the title, will probably draw more attention than the East's big holiday tournaments.
century than the East's big Kansas is trying for another Big Eight championship but Kansas State feels it's this year or never and base their argument on Bob Boozer and Jack Parr.
Both teams have won five straight and the road has not been smooth.
The slow starts, lack of speed and inconsistency of all but Chamberlain and Ron Loneski may mean trouble for Kansas in tournament play.
Kansas is starting slow, falling as many as ten points behind then depending on a second half spurt to win.
Falling behind has meant the Jayhawkers have had to leave their zone defense for the man-to-man which requires more speed.
Kansas Plays Oklahoma
Kansas meets Oklahoma at 7:30 p.m. Thursday while Colorado plays favored Iowa State at 9:30 p.m.
Friday, Kansas State plays Missouri in the first game and Nebraska meets the Big Eight's final guest team, Princeton.
The winners of Thursday's games play at 7:30 p.m. Saturday with Kansas expected to come out ahead in both games.
Friday's winners meet at 9:30 p.m. Saturday and the finals will be 9:30 p.m. Monday—Kansas vs. Kansas State. As a result one of these two teams will take a dip in the rankings.
No games will be televised.
Wandering Dodgers Still Looking For Home
LOS ANGELES—(UP)—A last-ditch effort to keep the Los Angeles Dodgers from making their temporary home in Pasadena's Rose Bowl comes before the Coliseum Commission today.
Chairman Jim Smith announced a new proposal under which the Dodgers would pay no rent for the 105,000-seat Memorial Coliseum, but would guarantee the Coliseum revenues of $350,000 from concessions.
And as an added inducement, Smith proposed that the Coliseum meet Dodger president Walter
O'Malley's objections to having home plate at the east end of the stadium by shifting the diamond so that the batter would be facing north.
Cats Get 2nd Victory
All games played in men's intramural basketball Thursday were in the Independent A and C divisions, with the Cats, CarruthO'Leary and Pearson winning in A games.
The Cats edged the Chicken Pickers 37-35 in a game which was tied 17-17 at halftime. Scoring for the Cats were James Kerr, 13. Moe Courville 5, Jerry Baker, Bob Preston and Don Feller 4 each, Ed Martin 3 and Larry Carrier and Bob James 2 each.
The plan outlined informally by Smith Thursday was for the Coliseum Commission to retain its 30 per cent gross concession revenues with O'Malley guaranteeing that the stadium's receipts over a two-year period would total $350,000.
Carruth-O'Leary ran away from the Jacks to win 59-22. Jerry Macumber led Caruuth scoring with 16, John McElinney and Dick Hall had 13 each, Jack Dysart 6, Gerald Horish 5 and Lee Crawford and Joe Sprekelmeyer 2 each.
For the losers scoring was done by Bob Krisoo and Dee Brecheisen with 9 each, Chuck Hill, Dick Welty and John Rupp 4 each, Reuben Heatwole 3 and Jim Porter 2.
Pearson produced a second-half rally to defeat Phi Chi 50-39, in a game that stood 22-19 in favor of Phi Chi at the half.
Pearson scoring was done by Arthur Henry with 11 points, Eugene Crochet 10, Dallas Musgrave and Roger Whitten 8 each, Bud Johnson 7 and Pete Curran 6.
Leading Phi Chi scoring is P. J, O'Connell with 14 points, followed by Gene Klingler with 9, Jim Webb 6, Bill Maddix and Rick
Barnes 4 each and Bob Dodson 2.
Phi Games 2.0
After two weeks of competition
Phi Gamma Delta leads Fraternity
A division 1 with a 2-0 record. Sigma
Phi Epsilon is 1-0.
Sigma Chi has a 2-0 record to lead division 2. Beta Theta Pi is 1-0 in that division.
Phi Delta Theta is 2-0 in division 3, followed by Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Kappa Lambda, each 1-0.
Three teams are tied for the lead in division 4. Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Phi Kappa Psi are each 1-0.
In Independent A division 1 Oread and Carruth-O'Leary each have 2-0 records to lead the field.
The Cats are now 2-0 which is good enough for first place in division 2. Stephenson has a 1-0 record.
All six teams have played one game each in division 3. The three winners, and thereby leaders of the division, are Pharmacy, Templin and the Bierhawks.
In division 4 Varsity House and the Blackhawks have each won a game and lost none to share the division lead.
Tarheel Streak On Line
By UNITED PRESS
North Carolina places its 36-game winning streak on the line and 10 other nationally-ranked powers risk their ratings tonight to get the Christmas-week college basketball whirl off to a flying start.
The top-ranked Tarheels, unbeaten since their final game of the 1955-56 campaign, face Minnesota, the country's 16th-rated power, in the opener of the Kentucky Invitational tournament. With sixth-ranked Kentucky facing 14th-ranked West Virginia in the other half of the opening bill, the tournament posed the biggest threat to North Carolina's national rating since it beat Kansas in the finals of last season's NCAA tournament.
The key tournament is the Kentucky Invitational. Should North Carolina advance past this one, it might even take a run at San Francisco's record 60-game winning streak. And, should Kentucky come through as champion, it would erase the stigma of losses
to Maryland and Southern Methodist.
San Francisco's meeting with Seattle features the opening of the Blue Grass tourney which also includes Army vs. rugged Louisville, tall enough to give anybody trouble.
The holiday schedule began Thursday with a collection of games that more or less followed form.
Wisconsin downed Butler, 59-58,
Indiana beat St. Mary's of California,
79-66, Purdue whipped South Dakota,
74-62, western Kentucky walloped Seton Hall, 101-75, and New York University romped over South Carolina, 81-66, in games Thursday.
UP Selects Hank Aaror
MILWAUKEE —(UP) Milwaukee Braves outfielder Hank Aaron has been named Wisconsin's "athlete of the year" by Untied Press radio and newspaper sports editors.
Other scores Thursday:
Independent C—Army ROTC 36
Navy ROTC 20; Backwoods men 43
Carruth-O'Leary 19; Hicks over
KHK, forfeit; American Society of
Mechanical Engineers 39, Jim Beam
15; AIA 22, Joliffe 21.
Newton Tops High School Poll
The ratings, sponsored by the Topeka Daily Capital, showed the top three teams in AA, A, B and BB classifications.
TOPEKA —(UP)— Newton, a perennial powerhouse that is undefeated in four games so far this season, today held the No. 1 spot in Kansas high school basketball in the first poll of the season.
Newton led the AA, followed by Topeka (2-0), and Ward high school (3-1).
Russell, undefeated in four games, led in class A, followed by Medicine Lodge (4-0) and Hugoton (4-0).
Class B also featured three undefeated teams, Inman (4-0) in first, Arma (4-0) and Morrowville (5-0).
Assaria led class BB with a 5-0 mark. Selden (5-0) was second and Mullinville (4-0) third.
AIRLINE TICKETS
Flying home Christmas? Making an interview trip?
an interview trip?
Phone Tom Maupin's for reservations and your airline tickets.
Make your airline reservations NOW for the Holidays. Don't take a risk of being on the "wait-list."
EUROPE VACATION
Join one of the many, varied special interest student vacations to Europe for the summer, 1958. Europe reservations should be made before January 15th to be sure of having the organized, conducted tour you wish. For Airline, Ship and Tour Information and Reservations, see
TOM MAUPIN
Travel Service
1236 Mass. VI 3-1211
Office Hours
9:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri.
Closed Sat., Sun, Holidays
Robe
Robertio's
rte's
710 Mass.
VI 3-1086
Pizza
Open Days During Vacation
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Dec. 20, 1957
Kansas Powers Play Here Tonight
Basketball fans will see one of the best basketball doubleheaders in the nation tonight. Allen Field House will be the scene as the No. 2 and 3 teams in the nation square off against West Coast rivals.
This will also be the first time this season that area fans will have a chance to see the Kansas State Wildcats, favored to win the Big Eight championship, in action.
This will be the first time these two teams have played under the field house roof—under friendly conditions.
Kansas State will open the evening at 7:35 against the California Golden Bears. The Golden Bears have won two and lost one so far this season. Their only loss was to San Francisco, 54-66.
Kansas will play Washington at 9:30. Washington will be coming into the game with a 1-3 record but has great potential.
Move To Manhattan
Tomorrow the four teams will move to Manhattan and switch opponents, with KU meeting California and K-State going against Washington.
Kansas has a 3-0 record in the Washington series. Last year the Jayhawkers defeated Washington 77-62 and 92-78 in a 2-night stand in Seattle.
One Huskie who is likely to give the Kansans much trouble is 6-foot 7-inch center Doug Smart. Jayhawker Coach Dick Harp said Thursday night that Smart was probably "the finest sophomore player we saw all last year." It was Smart who scored 33 points in the final game against the Jayhawkers.
It was all-America center Wilt Chamberlain that did most of the damage to the Huskies. In their first game Washington held Chamberlain to 30 points. In the second game he came back to score 37 points.
The Golden Bears seemed to have upset written all over the court until KU burst ahead in the final minutes of play. It was also the first time of his college career that Chamberlain had been held to less than 30 points. He scored 23.
Saturday, when the Kansans meet California, one of the Golden Bears' main threats is expected to be 6-foot 1-inch Earl Robinson. It was the Californians, under the guidance of Robinson, who gave the Jayhawkers their first real scare last year.
Harp Praises Robinson
He was second high scorer in the game last year with 17 points.
Robinson has been talked up as an all-America candidate. He was described by Harp as a "great all-around athlete."
Harp said the Jayhawkers were looking good in practice sessions
"Robinson really gave us a bad time last year. If they get ahead of us, he could really make it rough for us," Harp said.
We've made some progress. We still must press hard to learn to defend adequately If we improve a little each day and each week we might be in pretty good shape to start off conference play Jan. 7th." Harp said.
The Jayhawkers now have a 7-3 record against California.
The West Coast squads will be running into a rough 1-2 searing punch from both Kansas and Kansas State. Kansas will have Chamberlain with a 32 point a game average, Ron Loneski with a 14 point average for a 46 point a game total. The Wildcats have Bob Boozer, 20.5, and Jack Parr, 18.3, for a 38.8 game average.
This will be the first action that Kansas forward Ron Loneski has seen against these teams. Last year when the Jayhawkers made the West Coast swing Loneski was sidelined with a broken foot.
The 2-night doubleheader is expected to give sportswriters something to go on as far as predicting a Big Eight champion. It also could give the Wildcats a chance to move around the Jayhawkers in national ratings.
BASKETBALL
JAYHAWKERS SCRIMAGE—Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas center, takes a pass from an unidentified KU player whose back is to the camera, as the Jayhawkers finished preparations Thursday to face Washington tonight. Chamberlain is guarded by Dick Keith, while Larry Kelley defenses the player starting to drive for the basket. (Daily Kansan photo)
New Tiger Coach Will Recruit Freely,Says MU's Don Faurot
Shortly after the appointment of Dan Devine as Missouri's head football coach Wednesday, athletic director Don Faurot said that the new 33-year-old coach would be free to make his own policy on recruiting.
Missouri's recruiting policy has been claimed by many to be limited only to Missouri boys, but Faurot quickly denied this.
"Our new man," he said, "will make his own recruiting policy, the same as Frank Broyles did. He'll have a free hand to do what he wants to do about re-
cuiling. That's what Frank had. and it's what every Missouri conch has.
"There never has been any policy here of playing only Missouri boys," Faertu said. "I didn't have that policy when I was coach. Frank didn't have it, and neither will Devine."
Devine will succeed Broyles, who resigned his position as head coach
two weeks ago to take similar duties at the University of Arkansas.
Devine is to receive a reported $15,000 for a three-year contract. The new Missouri coach led Arizona State at Tempe to an unbeaten season last fall. His team was one of the two unbeaten and untied major teams in the nation.
His contract calls for a two-year option, under which, if he so elects, he may extend his contract for an additional two years after completion of the 3-year term.
Here's A Real KU Fan
One of the KU basketball team's most avid fans is Mrs. Margaretta Billings of Russell, whose son Bob is a starting guard on the team.
She has missed only four KUU games in the last two years. She didn't go to the Oklahoma University game at Norman nor did she see the three games played on the West Coast last year.
But she has seen all the other games, including the St. Joseph's College game in Philadelphia last week. Mrs. Billings drives her car to all the games.
PALO ALTO, Calif. — (UP)— Joe Francis, Oregon State halfback, has been named the winner of the Glenn (Pop) Warner award as the "most valuable football player" on the Pacific Coast during the 1957 season. More than 400 sports writers, broadcasters and coaches participated in the balloting.
Pacific Coast MVP Named
On the trip to Philadelphia Mrs.
"She likes to travel and she enjoys watching basketball games, so she made it a hobby to follow the KU team." Billings said.
Billings picked up a friend in Wheeling, W. Va., who accompanied her to the game. She often travels with Mrs. Vera Ingram of Russell.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
YOUR EYES
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Hays Gains Easy Victory,99-65
The Kansans gained into an early lead and held a comfortable advantage throughout the non-conference game. It was 45-35 at the half.
HAYS —(UP) —A fast-breaking Forst Hays State basketball team sped away from Phillips University of Enid. Okla. 99-65 here Thursday.
Allen Panchor of Phillips was top shooter with 26 points. Bill Ehlers got 20 for Hays.
-- a bring JOURNALS
-- and please, dear Santa,
bring me something nice from
Ober's Jr. Miss
821 Mass.
Elevator from Men's Store
Big 8 Tourney Tickets On Sale In Kansas City
The KU athletic department is no longer selling tickets to the Big Eight pre-season basketball tournament, but the tickets are now on sale at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City.
Earl Falkenstien, athletic department business manager, said all unsold tickets were returned today. He said KU sold 12-1400 tickets for each of the four nights of the tournament.
All the tickets which KU had for the last two nights of play at the tournament were sold, but some were left for the first two nights.
25 w
Wesleyan Stifles KansasCity,69-62
Kansas State has 10 lettermen and four regulars back this year from a team which last year won 15 and lost 8 games, and was 8-4 in the conference for second place.
Mallory led the scoring with 23 points. Haines got 10. Wesleyan's Lefty Hixson scored 18 while teammate Rudy Stoochr scored 14.
Heavy accuracy by Gordon Mallory and Joe Haines of Kansas City sliced a 13-point Wesleyan lead to six in the final two minutes.
LINCOLN, Nebr—(UP)—Nebraska Wesleyan stifled a late rally by the University of Kansas City to win a non-conference basketball game 69-62 here Thursday night.
Wesleyan went in front early and let 41-20 at halftime.
FLASH!!
FLASH!!
SAVE YOUR OLD FLASHBULBS!
After December 26th each bulb will be worth 1c on the purchase of a New Flashbulb!
Offer Good Until January 20th Bring 'em in and Save at
HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Don Crawford Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Friday. Dec. 20, 1957
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
for the some ts.
art-
un-
day.
for
raa-
ras-
by
y to
tball
MalCity d to
and
25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
23
van's
eam-
and om a and the
LOST
330
SHAWL and pair of black boots, mistakenly left in back of wrong car in south entrance parking lot of Allen Field House after Jawhawk Follies Nov. 2. Please contact Victor Young at VI 3-7553. 12-20
MISCELLANEOUS
LAST SATURDAY NIGHT, lost a small light brown coin purse with Christmas shopping money. Can identify. Please call VI 3-8895. 12-20
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. gnth, 4th and Vermont. Phone VI. if 0350
PHILIP MORRIE HI-FI CONTEST:
Group saving most empty Mariboro,
Philip Morris, Spud and Parliament
packages wins. John Smith VI 3-3464
FOR RENT
HOUSE at $25 Rhode Island, has 2 furnished apartments. $90 per month. 2 families could use it. Contact Acme Cleaners or see Owen Edgar. tf
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, $45 a month, share bath, utilities paid except heat. Ph. VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
1-8-58
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT furnished for boys. Four rooms and private bath. private entrance, utilities paid. Available Dec. 22, $100 per month. Ph. VI 3-9184 or see by calling at rear basement door, 520 La. tf
ROOM AND BOARD for next semester.
$50 per month. Phi. VI 3-4385. 12-20
FOR RENT: Would you like a better apartment? It's nice, new and clean. One mastic washer, refrigerator and electric range, built-ins. Will accept small child. 2 short blocks on campus, available. 1750 sq ft. $750 per month. VIE PL3-7655 or KU 402. 12-20
QUIET ROOMS for upper class students.
1400 Tennessee, VI 3-6857. 12-20
LARGE FURNISHED APARTMENT,
suitable for couple or two or three
students. Private entrance and garage.
U.S. Available January 1. Ph. NM
3-2696.
COMFORTABLE ROOM. less = than 3 blocks from Union Building. Available now. Very reasonable rates. Ph. VI 3-1909, 1115 Ohio. 1-9
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. ff
TYFIST: Experienced, theses, term paper
telfy C 31-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tcf
31-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tcf
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip coverings. Call VI 3-6557, 1400 Tenn. tf
LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singer
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-
complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh
foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs
-beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all
drapes! Everything in the pet field. Grant's
Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tt
SERVICE DIRECTORY
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
BEAUTY SHOPS
1019 Mass VI 3-6411
TYPIST: Experienced In theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden. VI 3-7529. tf
Marvin's Beauty Salon
843 N.H. VI 3-6035
Driscold Beauty Shop 908 Mass. VI 3-4070
LEARN TO DANCE now for holiday parties. Private lessons given. Beginners our speciality. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Mo., VI 3-6838. tf
TVPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tt
RADIO REPAIRS
Marineillo Beauty Salon
1119 Mass. VI 3-330
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
PHOTOGRAPH OIL COLORING, the very finest quality—alive, glowing-with soft natural beauty comparable to Techneurotec to show. Ph. VI S-1994/ 12-20
5994.
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn. VI 3-7738
ACCURATE TYPING of themes, term papers, theses-experienced with good educational background. Ph. VI 9-4822
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, for new and renewal magazines both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8434
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
8331. Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8074
12-20
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass. VI 3-3055
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated $2 weeks in the year. Special rates available to students and faculty on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines make these an ideal package. Attend the $1 price rate of $4 per year. Order promptly to assure Christmas delivery. Call VI 3-0124. 12-20
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over house house sensitive or call VI 3-7583 VI 2-0746 VI 2-0395 for free delivery. 12-20
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Mess with Eta ola Snutt
111; Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and accurate service. Call VI 3-6035, 1021 fc
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, etc. Phone Mrs. Donna Virri, VI 3-8660. tt
TYPIST: Experienced, theseh, term pa-
sition. Accepted service VI a 1-15fr
1632 West 20th St
1939 PLYMOUTH SEDAN in good running order. Call Eudora 9215. Cheap.
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry
613 Vt VI 3-4141
Rogers Launder-It
1407 VI 3-3033
WANT TO SELL RCA Mark VII, not a
rick Mick Dolan, phone vi 3-9735, 12-20
FOR SALE
TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED.
Prompt and efficient service. Regular rates. Ink, 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VII 3-8600.
BEST QUALITY IRONING, reasonable rate Phone VI 3-9373. tf
26" SCHWINN HICYCLE, excellent con-
trol system 12-20'/14-28'/12-20'
14-Reasonable Wi-Fi 9-39'/12-20'
1021 Mass.—Ph.VI 3-1044
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 345 Indiana. tt
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
YOUR PHOTO—for the very finest in oil coloring. Alive, glowing-with soft, natural beauty comparable to Technicolor to show. Agnes Langere VI 3-0993. 12-20
TELEVISION: 16" table model. Firestone, good condition, new speaker $35. stouffer Place, Building 7, Apartment 12.
FOR SALE Brown velvet cocktail suit:
size 9, price $7. Call V1 3-8066 12-20
THE BOOK NOOK
WANTED
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
PIZZA DELIVERED During Vacation VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway
Best Wishes for a Merry Christmas
And a Happy New Year!
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY
SANSTONE
LIVING
WAREHOUSE
and Dry Cleaners
"Dial VI 3-3711 - You'll Be Glad You Did! "
APPROVED
CANTONE
SERVICE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 20, 1957
George Washington's Christmases
Yule: 180 Years Ago
Do you long for those old fashioned Christmases? Here is how George Washington celebrated some during his lifetime.
The first reference to a Christmas dinner is recorded in Washington's journal on Dec. 25, 1777.
The entry reads: "Christmas Day fine and clear and pleasant, with moderate sea, the continuance of the trade (wind) which by observation had set us in the latitude of 18 degrees 30 minutes. We dined on an Irish goose, beef, etc." He made the entry during a visit to his brother Lawrence, who was ill at the time.
At Mount Vernon, Christmas preparations were always on a grand scale. A few days before Christmas, in 1785, this note appears in Washington's journal: "Brought some carts and cutters from my plantations, to assist in laying in a stock of fire-wood for Christmas."
Preparations of this type were evidently an annual event, for in 1787 this observation was written with Washington's quill: "A hand from each plantation sent to the mansion house, to cut wood for Christmas, the carts from the Ferry, French's and Doque Run accompanying them in order to draw it."
Religious Phase Observed
The religious phase of Christmas was always observed by the Wash- ingtons and other prominent families of the day.
When Washington was president, and living in New York, he entered this Christmas note in his journal: "Friday, Dec. 25th—Christmas Day. Went to St. Paul's Chapel in the forenoon. The visitors to Mrs. Washington's this afternoon were not numerous, but respectable."
A sample menu for a Christmas dinner of that time would have included: hams (home cured, home smoked, and home cooked), roast beef, turkeys, chickens, veal, ducks, quail, apples, nuts, raisins, home-made biscuts, corn pone, and quantities of other goodies.
A cook in those early days always made ample preparations for any number of guests. It made little difference whether they were kinfolks or an indefinite number of neighbors, to say nothing of stray visitors who might accidentally drop in about meal time. Christmas With Me
Animals With The Washingtonians
The following is one record, by a woman, of a Christmas spent with the Washington's at Mount Vernon;
"We reached Mount Vernon the evening before Christmas, and if anything could have added to our enjoyment, it was the arrival of General and Mrs. Pickens the next day, while we were dining.
"To be in the company of so many esteemed friends, to hear our good General Washington converse upon political subjects without reserve, and to hear General and Mrs. Pickens relate what they saw and heard in France, was truly a feast to me."
However, not all of Washington's Christmases were as joyful as the ones mentioned. There was that terrible winter of 1777 at Valley Forge in southeast Pennsylvania, when the troops of the Continental army, lacking warm clothing and supplies, suffered from cold and hunger and only Washington held them together.
Merry Christmas From Kansan Staff
The University Daily Kansan staff extends to all students and faculty members best wishes for a Merry Christmas, a Happy New Year and an enjoyable vacation. The next issue of The Daily Kansan will be published Tuesday, Jan. 7.
Locating a first aid kit in the kitchen is a good practice because of all the accidents which happen there.
You'reReallySanta?
The hardest part of playing Santa Claus is answering the children's questions, because you do not want to destroy their faith in the real Santa, said one of the members of the faculty who has been playing Santa for the last five years.
"Of course, children today see so many Santas. When I was a child there was a Santa in only one store in town. The same man played the part each year and there was no doubt in the minds of the children that he was the real Santa," he said.
When one child asked the faculty member if he was the real Santa he quickly changed the subject.
"I get a big kick when a child says 'gee, thanks Santa,' after receiving a gift," he said. "Some of them are shy and scared at first but when you give them a present their eyes light up like a Christmas tree."
One little girl became quite displeased with him once when she asked for a "bathy-wathy doll" and received instead a comb and brush set.
"I'm always afraid someone is going to recognize me or I won't look real enough," he said. "One afternoon some children waited outside my dressing room for an hour and one-half for me to come out. I had to miss a class but I didn't want them to see me."
The faculty member says he prefers to play Santa for children between the ages of three and five. During the last two weeks he has played Santa for five church groups and will play the role three more times before Christmas.
He said he thinks the prime requisites for being a Santa Claus is to be big, "well padded" and jolly. He thinks he meets all of them.
He uses a borrowed Santa Claus suit but hopes someday to have one of his own.
Cheerleaders Get $950 Allowance
Last April a spokesman for ten zealous and enthusiastic KU students asked the Athletic Department for $900. He told Athletic Director A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg that his group needed clothes to wear to athletic events and money for trips to see KU athletes perform out of town.
They got the money because the spokesman was head cheerleader, Dick Jones, and the $900 was the annual budget estimate submitted for his cheerleader squad.
This year the Athletic Department allowed them $50 more than last year. It is possible, Jones said, that an adjustment might be made by the department at the end of the year if the squad traveled to many extra tournament games. As a rule the cheerleaders meet any additional costs themselves. If there is money left in the account at the end of the year it is divided among the group for dry cleaning costs.
PETER
DICK JONES
ment the funds are put in an account at the Business Office. The head cheerleader writes vouchers to get cash for equipment and travel expenses as needed.
The head cheerleader fils out an itemized budget sheet each spring with estimates based on expenses of the past year. After approval or revision by the Athletic Depart-
The first withdrawal is used to buy uniform sweaters, emblems and megaphones. The sweaters are personal property and the ten regular cheerleaders (five women and five men) are permitted to keep them when they leave KU.
Jones said the remainder of the money is used to help pay travel costs during the football and basketball seasons. Most of the cash is taken out for travel during the first semester because the squad goes out of town for more football than basketball games. There are more games scheduled during the basketball season and because some of them are played during the week the cheerleaders would have to miss school to go to all the games. Jones said however, that they go to most of the conference games. They will go out of town for six games, plus the tournaments, this season.
Although the appropriation covers the major expenses, the yearly costs usually exceed the pre season budget. According to Jones each cheerleader pays 25-30% of his own bills. They buy their own uniforms except for the sweaters.
Don't Fear Exams! Follow These Tips
With this week's posting of the final examination schedule, upper-classmen's thoughts are centered on the coming week of all night coffee and "no-doz" sessions climaxing the semester's activities. Freshmen will be biting their nails, gulping every time a beagle-eyed professor looks at them, and running to their older "sisters" and "brothers" for quick tips on how to "ace" a test in a sure-flung course.
100
MADONNA AND CHRIST - A spirit of Christmas contrasting with the modern version is portrayed by a 13th century Italian statue of the solemn Madonna and Child which has been added to the Museum of Art. The polychromed wood statue from the Tuscan school is of a period and quality rarely found on the art market today. The museum acquired the piece in 1956 in Florence, Italy. The medieval pose portrays the Madonna in a stiff dignified position with a miniature King of Heaven rather than a baby and is a version of an all-powerful God and His Mother.
All sorts of prescriptions may be dispensed by the older and more mature students of the campus, but a Daily Kansan reporter asked for the specially patented techniques of the oldest and wisest "students" on the campus—the faculty.
The recipe of Edward L. Wike, associate professor of psychology, is, "Start early. There's a lot of evidence from experiments that overlearning leads to better retention."
Phillip M. Mitchell, associate professor of German, said, "The best way to prepare for the examination is to have started studying last September."
9
Study As You Go
L. Worth Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, said, "I think the best way is to study the material regularly as you go along. Don't wait until the last night."
Miss Dixie Davidson, instructor of secretarial training, who teaches courses in typing, shorthand and the operation of office machines, said, "In skill courses, little cramming can be done. The best way is to keep up as you go along."
A few professors offered suggestions on how to study during these four weeks before the deadline. Ambrose Saricks, associate professor of history, said, "Plan a review beforehand so that everything is studied rather than cramming the night before the exam. It would be a good idea to start during the Christmas vacation, although that's more of an ideal than something a student will actually get done."
9 Army ROTC Cadets Receive Appointments
Nine KU Army ROTC cadets have been selected for appointments to regular Army commissions as second lieutenants upon graduation.
They were named distinguished military students earlier in the year. They can apply for a regular Army commission rather than the usual ROTC graduate standing as reserve officers.
The men must maintain their high academic and drill performance standings and pass a regular Army physical examination to be accepted in the program.
Those selected:
Omar Conrad, Kansas City, Mo. Basil Frank, Pittsburg, John Hunt, Merrill Steele Jr., Theodore Uhlrich, Leavenworth, Thomas Knorr, Wichita, John Reinert, Park Ridge, Ill., Timothy Templin, Minneapolis and Allen Smith, Lawrence. All are seniors.
The regular Army commission requires the officers to serve a minimum of 3 years on active duty. The reserve commission requires 2 year or 6 months of active duty, with varving lengths of reserve duty.
The regular Army commission is an assurance of a career in the Army, if the officer desires. The reserve commission does not offer this assurance.
The Castle Tea Room wishes you a
Very Merry Christmas
And Happy New Year
1301-11 Mass.
VI 3-1151
X
"I'm Going Back to the Premier Jewelry Shop for Another Gift!"
PREMIER JEWELRY SHOP
916 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.