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APRIL FOOL—Kathy Cummings, Rushville, Mo, freshman, (left) and Anthony Daily Kansan editors. All the billfold (center) contained was a note informing the Vierthaler, Halstead junior, both took it lightly when informed that the billfold they luckless but observant finders that they had been badly tricked (Daily Kansan found in Fowler Grove this morning had been "planted" there by some April Fooling photos by Joel Saren)
April Fools' Gags Aplenty
Wayne Replogle, assistant football coach, has a good memory when it comes to recalling past April Fools' Day stunts which were pulled off at KU.
Four other faculty members questioned by a Daily Kansan reporter said they couldn't remember any stunts which occurred on the campus. But Mr. Replogle kept a reporter busy recording his yarns about pranks of times past.
For instance, there was the "water department" gag.
"Several years ago, someone posing as a representative of the city water department called a sorority house, informing the girls that the water would be turned off at 7 p.m. and could not be used until 10 p.m.," Mr. Replogle said.
"After 7 p.m., no one flushed any toilets or turned on water until someone discovered that it was on and had been on all the time."
"It happened to be a date night, and everyone was getting fixed up to go out. They were all hurrying to get water in pails before it was time to turn it off. Girls were running to other houses to wash and dress.
Mr. Replegle recalled some candy that was once passed around in one of his classes:
"The 'candy' was made of tiny chocolate-covered onions," he said. "There were also small red peppers coated with sugar."
In the early 1940's, "Someone went downtown and bought several colorful paper birds, which were fastened in a tree on campus," he said.
Then some local birders ran to the scene with cameras and took pictures, until they sneaked up close enough to see that the birds were not real.
Then some local bird-lovers were called.
"Students don't try many practical jokes in class, probably because they are afraid of retribution on the part of the professor," Replogle said.
But he said he recalled biscuits that were passed around which were hard to chew (they had cotton inside), and pepper-flavored taffy.
An Easter Prayer
And then there was the time some enterprising "real estate agent" posted "For Sale" signs in the yards of some faculty residences. . . .
Our Father, the story of our Savior's suffering at the hands of his foes has touched our hearts with sympathy and sorrow. And yet we know that our sins are to him a fresh crown of thorns, and that our iniquities have nailed him anew to the cross. Help us, we pray Thee, to understand the cost of sin, and to seek to free our lives from the errors of flesh and spirit. May we not hesitate when to us there comes the summons to suffering and service. May we gain our place as children of God by fellowship with our Savior in the redemptive work of his life. We make this prayer in his name. Amen.
—The Daily Alter
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 119
Tuesday, April 1, 1958
Police Find Intruder In Gamma Phi House
Faculty Member, Student Receive Fulbright Grants
Dr. Steinhardt will hold one of approximately 400 Fulbright grants made for lecturing and research abroad. Other KU faculty who will hold Fulbright grants next year are Dr. Charles D. Michener, professor of entomology, who will conduct research in Austrialia; and Dr. Charles Warriner, associate professor of sociology, who will conduct studies in the Philippines.
Dr. Milton J. Steinhardt, associate professor of music history and literature, and Elizabeth Eileen Hoover, Lawrence senior have been awarded United States Educational Exchange awards for foreign study during 1958-59.
Miss Hoover will hold a scholarship for the study of modern German literature at the University of Vienna. Miss Hoover will receive a scholarship covering travel, fees and maintenance. Her award is one of approximately 900 being made to students and which are financed through foreign currencies owed to or owned by the U.S. Treasury.
Dr. Steinhardt, the third KU teacher to receive a Fulbright grant for the coming year, will conduct research in musicology at the University of Vienna and the Austrian National Library, also in Vienna, Austria.
Captured At Lindley Annex After Chase
An unidentified man was captured by Lawrence and campus police about noon today in Lindley annex after he fled from the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house, where he was discovered hiding in the attic. Leroy Simpson, of Lawrence, Gamma Phi Beta houseman, discovered the intruder in the sorority house attic while he was preparing to fix a leak in the roof.
Today Last Issue Before Vacation
Today's issue of The Daily Kansan will be the last one until Easter vacation is over. The Daily Kansan will resume publication the first day of classes, April 8. The staff of The Daily Kansan wishes you a happy Easter vacation.
Local Reporter To Teach Class
Lee C. Sheppeard, local government affairs reporter for the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, has been named lecturer in journalism. He will conduct the remainder of this semester's Reporting II class taught by the late Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism.
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information said that Mr. Shepeard would give on-the-spot orientation and practical work in many phases of local government coverage in Lawrence.
Mr. Shepeard received a B.S. in journalism from KU in 1952. He has worked on the Salina Journal, served in the Army and joined the Journal-World staff in 1954.
Police came after the housemother had called. An air mattress, blanket and a rope hanging from a hole in the roof to the fire escape were found in the attic by the police.
The intruder jumped from the attic to the third-floor hallway when the police tried to subdue him and ran out of the house, across Crescent Road and into Lindley Annex where he was caught by the police.
The intruder was taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital for treatment after he fell down some steps and over a rock wall in his flight. The hospital reported he was in good condition. An officer at the hospital said the intruder refused to give his name or address.
Weather
Tonight clearing east, increasing cloudiness west. Wednesday variable cloudiness with scattered showers and thunderstorms beginning west portion in afternoon and spreading across west and central portions by evening. No important temperature change. Low tonight 35 to 45. High Wednesday 65 southwest and 50 to 60 elsewhere. Low this morning 48, high Monday 61, low 42. The KU weather bureau reported only a trace of precipitation this morning.
Please - Drive Carefully During Easter Vacation
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 1, 1958
Why Do We Believe?
Sunday we celebrate the greatest day in the year, the day which commemorates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is a time for great happiness and rejoicing.
The weekend before Easter has been historically a time for the examination of ourselves, of our relationship to others and, most important, of our relationship to The Supreme Being, whatever we may call Him.
Many of us, since our enrolment in the University, have become skeptical of the existence of a God and of the necessity for religious activity.
Much of our skepticism has been prompted by a culture which is being dominated increasingly by science. This science, unfortunately, is Baconian, rather than Platonic, in orientation. Our associates and our superiors have required that we demand a material and practical proof of everything in our environment. Things of the mind have become unimportant and many times are even ridiculed.
Matters of religion are necessarily things of
the mind. Although we may apply Baconian concepts to religion, it is heresy to do so. In considering the question of whether there is a God or not we must throw away our established criteria for the proof of existence, because they cannot prove satisfactorily the existence of a God.
This weekend would be a good time to try substituting a Platonic approach for a Baconian approach to matters of religion. Instead of stressing how a God rules the universe, we might attempt to analyze why we can believe readily in the existence of a God.
Unless we settle, in our own minds, our relationship with The Supreme Being, any examination of ourselves and of our relationship with others will have no meaning and therefore our lives will have no meaning.
We owe it to ourselves to regain our former childlike belief in a God. Why not begin the task today? Then this Easter really will be a time for happiness and rejoicing.
Soviet Education May Cause Trouble
—Carol Stilwell
The average 12th grade Russian student has a better scientific education than most American college graduates. That's the observation of world traveler John Gunther, who recently returned from a tour of Russia.
Soviet emphasis on science demands grueling effort from pupils, Gunther says in his new book, "Inside Russia Today." Every student preparing for college must take ten years of math, four of chemistry, five of physics and six of biology.
The Soviet child attends school 213 days a year, as against 180 in the United States. Homework assignments requiring from four to six hours work daily are not uncommon.
Being accepted into college is probably the most important single event in a Soviet citizen's life. Gunther feels. The university graduate inevitably wins honor and financial rewards—often much sooner than our own graduates. All that the non-graduate can hope for is a manual or clerical job on a farm or factory.
Moscow University, completed in 1953, is the city's proudest building, Gunther writes. It is, except for the Eiffel Tower, the tallest structure in Europe. It cost $750 million, was greater than the total combined endowments of Harvard, Yale and Princeton.
University standards are severe, but there are many inducements for the student. He is paid by the state to go to college and can earn substantial bonuses if his work is considered above par. In addition, he is exempted from military service.
Careful planning has paid off for the Soviet government, Gunther writes. Of all students enrolled in Russian colleges, 65 per cent aim for science degrees, as against only 10 per cent in the United States.
But impressive as it is, the Soviet educational system has its drawbacks, Gunther reports. Great gaps exist in the knowledge of even the best educated. "The Russians are the most ignorant people in the world about affairs outside their own country," he writes.
He detects a possibility that, in its eagerness to educate the great mass of its citizens, the Soviet government may eventually loosen or change its structure.
"Once a class is created which is taught to think, particularly in scientific terms," he writes, "it will sooner or later begin to think for itself in other fields."
She Uses Process Of Elimination
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—Mrs. Roy Vowell disclosed the method she used in solving tricky crossword-type contest puzzles for a $400 prize.
—Reader's Digest
hard one. I just ask my husband what he thinks.
"I do all the words I think are easy," she said. "When I get to a
"Then, whatever word he chooses,
I use the other one."
The highest point in Kansas is in Wallace County. It is 4,135 feet.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
BOTANY ASSIGNMENT FOR TOMORROW
"I ENJOY A CLASS MORE WHERE TH' PROF HAS A SENSE OF HUMOR."
Letters
Answer Please
Editor:
As we understand it, a person must obtain at least 250 names on a petition before filing for said office. After going through this trouble-some procedure, why would a person withdraw from the election?
In addition to this there have been many rumors concerning pressure politics. How about some clarification on this matter? The undersigned, as students interested in better government on the campus at the University of Kansas, consider it extremely urgent that this matter be resolved
Prior to the recent election Mary Olson, who had been a candidate for A.S.C. vice-president, requested that her name be stricken from the ballot.
John E. Blake
Daily Hansan
John E. Blake
Kansas City, 1st year law
Richard L. Winter
Buhler senior
William Sarantakos
Newburyport, Mass. junior
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904.
triequality 1908, daily jam. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIkling 3-2700
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 afternoon during the University year except holiday holidays, and examination periods. Enforced as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan, post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Quotes From The News
HAVANA — Cuban Rebel Leader Fidel Castro, in predicting the fall by April 15 of President Fulgencio Batista's government:
"The revolution is at hand and the people of Cuba are willing to make any sacrifice to rid themselves of this tyrant they have been saddled with for so many years."
PARIS — Choreographer Serge Lifar, 52, after being pinked in a duel with the Marquis De Cuevas, 72, an old friend;
"I love the marquis, although I did not expect him to be so fast and full of youth."
The marquis:
"I am so sad. It is just like I had injured my child."
JACKSON BAY PARK
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!"and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
A FRAT TO REMEMBER
Every year, as we all know, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Collegiate Fraternities awards a highly coveted prize to the fraternity house which, in its judgment, has done the most to promote and enhance the fraternity way of life. The prize this year—eight hundred pounds of putty—goes to the Alpha Hernia chapter of the South Dakota College of Dentistry and Renaissance Art.
The award this year is exceptionally richly deserved, for the Alpha Hernia house is the very model of all a fraternity should be. It is, first of all, a most attractive house physically. The outside walls are tastefully covered with sequins. Running along the upper story is a widow's walk, with a widow stationed every three feet. Moored to the chinneypot is the Graf Zeppelin.
TODAY'S TICKETS ARE ONLINE AT www.cityoftampa.com. TICKETS CAN BE RECEIVED FROM THE CITY OF TAMPA OFFICE, 100 WEST 5TH ST., FLORIDA, FL 33542 OR BY SENDING A MAILER CARD TO TICKETS@CITYOFTAMPA.COM. ALL TICKETS SHOWN ARE FOR THE USE OF ONE PERSON. NO PARTIES OR EVENTS OTHER THAN TICKETS WILL BE HELD.
...a widows walk, with a widow gladiated every three feet ...
Indoors the house gives an impression of simple, casual charm. The chapter room is furnished in homey maple and chintz, with a dash of verve provided by a carp pool three hundred feet in diameter. A waterspout rises from the center of the pool with the housemother bouncing on the top.
Members' rooms are gracious and airy and are provided with beds which fold into the wall and are never seen again. Each room also has a desk, a comfortable chair, a good reading lamp, and a catapult for skeet-shooting. Kidney-shaped desks are available for kidney-shaped members.
Perhaps the most fetching feature of the house are the packs of Marlboros stacked in heaps wherever one goes. If one wishes to enjoy a fine filtered cigarette in any room of the house, all one need do is reach out one's hand in any direction and pick up a Marlboro. Then one rubs pledges together, lights one's Marlboro, and puffs with sweet content the tastiest smoke the mind of man has yet devised.
The decor, the grace, the Marlboros, all combine to make Alpha Hernia a real gasser of a fraternity. But a fraternity is more than things; it is also people. And it is in the people department that Alpha Hernia really shines.
Alpha Hernia has among its members the biggest BMOCs on the entire campus of the South Dakota College of Dentistry and Renaissance Art. There is, for instance, William Makepeace Sigafos, charcoal and bun chairman of the annual Stamp Club outing. Then there is Dun Rovin, winner of last year's All-South Dakota State Monoply Championship, 135 Pound Class. Then there is Rock Schwartz, who can sleep standing up. Then there is Tremblant Placebo, who can crack pecans in his armpits. Then there is Ralph Tungsten, who went bald at eight.
But why go on? One can see what a splendid bunch of chaps there is in Alpha Hernia, and when one sees them at the house in the cool of the evening, all busy with their tasks—some picking locks, some playing Jacks-or-Better, some clipping Playboy—one's heart fills up and one's eyes grow misty, and one cannot but give three cheers and a tiger for Alpha Hernia, fraternity of the year!
***
$ \textcircled{c} $ 1958 Max Shulman
And, if you don't mind, a rousing huzzah for Marlboro, cigarette of the year, whose makers take pleasure in picking up the tab for this column.
Around The World
Page 3
Decided Against Bomb Halt 10 Days Ago, Dulles Says
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles disclosed today that the United States recently decided against halting nuclear tests so it could perfect development of small "clean" nuclear weapons.
Mr. Dulles, at his weekly news conference, also denounced as pure propaganda Russia's announcement Monday that it is halting nuclear testing on its own without an international agreement providing for inspection.
He said the decision was made at a meeting of President Eisenhower and his top advisers about 10 days ago.
In Washington, the Senate called up for debate today another anticrecession measure, a bill aimed at pumping one billion dollars in federal funds into local public works projects.
It was felt in the administration that Russia had no commitment to provide for inspection and thus the announcement was simply propaganda.
It would provide an expanded program of federal loans for construction and repair of streets, bridges, airports, sewers and other community facilities.
University Daily Kansan
Senate sources said the proposed legislation has a priority label and
the Senate will remain in session until completing action on it today.
Meanwhile, President Eisenhower was under growing pressure to make a decision this month on an anti-recession tax cut.
Government experts predicted as a distinct possibility today that the federal deficit will rise to between two and three million dollars this fiscal year ending July 1.
The insistence of House Speaker Sam Rayburn and Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell conflicted with the advice of high administration officials that the President could wait until late May when he has a full picture of the economic conditions,
The officials also said the President will undoubtedly have to ask the administration for another increase in the federal debt to accommodate a rising deficit in fiscal year 1959 which begins in July.
In Detroit, the Ford Motor Co. chose April Fools' day to unveil a car without wheels.
Apply Now For German Study Tour
Applications for the KU German study tour this summer in cooperation with Students International Travel Assn. must reach SITA's New York office by April 15, Dr. Sidney M. Johnson, assistant professor of German and tour conductor, said Monday.
KU is the only university in the United States that is sponsoring the tour, which will include study at Bonn University during August and an opportunity for students to earn from two to five semester hours of credit from KU.
Dr. Johnson said interested students can get application blanks and information about the study tour at 320B Fraser.
The study tour pays all expenses while students are in Germany. Students pay travel expenses and summer school fees.
THE DOGS' SUNGLASSES
NO MORE STUDIES—A. K. Nine, Dogpatch senior, breathes a sigh of relief as he finishes that last pre-holiday reading. "I'm not woofing when I say that I'm sick and tired of books, cats and the leftovers in the basement of Strong Hall," Nine said as he prepared for the holiday. (Kansan April Fools' photo)
In Montreal, Canada, John Diefenbaker's Progressive-Conservative Party had a national mandate today to launch a massive public works campaign against Canada's recession.
The device demonstrated a ride on what the company calls "jevapads." Tiny jets of air produced by a gas turbine or a turbo jet engine that holds the vehicle just above the ground.
Tuesday, April 1, 1958
More than 6,400,000 voters answered his plea for a working majority in the House of Commons by staging a coast to coast demonstration of unprecedented political unity.
KU will be host to 40 members of the Kansas Oil Men's Assn, Wednesday through Friday for a Petroleum Marketer's Management Institute.
KU Host To Kansas Oil Men's Meeting
The theme of the program is "Helping the Jobber to Help Himself." Topics will be on job problems in finance, supervision, training and advertising.
From Atwood, police are still searching for a 10-year-old girl who was kidnapped by her father yesterday as she stood on the school house steps.
The Conservatives gained 211 seats in the 265-seat House of Commons. The Liberals won about 45.
Special alerts were issued at East St. Louis, where the father, Clarence F. Powers, was living, and at Hannibal, Mo., and Quiney, Ill., where he has relatives. A kidnapping warrant was sworn out yesterday.
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.
Student Union Activities officer and board applications may be picked up in the SUA office in the Union. Applications will be due Friday, April 11.
TODAY
University Senate meeting. 4 p.m.
Swarthot Hall, Music and Dramatic Arts
WEDNESDAY
Nursing Club, 7 p.m., 110 Fraser.
Speaker, Jean Holman, "Rehabilitation."
Alpha Rho Gamma, 7:30 p.m., Bailey
Annex. Business meeting.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 7 a.m.
Trinity Church.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. "Te Deum"; J S.
Crawford Works.
Closing session of Lenten Bible Study,
12-noon, Westminster House. Speaker, Dr.
John H. Patton; Delores Mohler, soloist.
Soup and cracker luncheon.
KU Dames Bridge, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union.
Devotions sponsored by Gamma Delta.
5 p.m., Danforth Chapel, Everyone welcomes.
Look What We're Giving
AUGUST 24, 1953
Giving Away FREE
Q
(the trophies, we mean)
3rd
Daily Kansan Photo Contest Closes April 25
-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 Kansan Office 111 Flint Hall
Page 4
age 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 1. 1958 24 Hours A Day-
NUMBER PLEASE—Mrs. Edward Neustifter (foreground) and Miss Capitola Fletcher are two of the six telephone operators who keep KU phone service operating 24 hours a day. Because calls are increasing, the switchboard and telephone office are due
NORFOLK, NY -- Mr. Nutter, a member of the International Telephone Union's World Telephony Organization, works on a switchboard at his company's headquarters in New York.
for some expansion and remodeling. (Daily Kansan photo)
Hazardous Corners In City Being Surveyed
A project to survey 150 hazardous street corners in Lawrence has been undertaken by six members of the KU Circle K Club, a college men's service club sponsored by the Lawrence Kiwanis Club.
The traffic survey is the club's annual university - community service program and is in cooperation with the Lawrence traffic commission and police dept.
It is one of a series of studies aimed at traffic safety, accident prevention, and solution of parking problems, and is designed to give practical experience in problems of city planning and civil engineering
Edward Reilly, Leavenworth sophiore and past president of the club, said that the corner of University Drive and West Campus Road at KU is considered one of the most hazardous corners." Bushes about four or five feet high block the driver's vision.
Menbers who are working on the project in addition to Reilly are; Gilbert Curtbertson, Leavenworth junior; Thomas Coen, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Larry Middaugh, Meriden sophomore; Roger Douglass, Mullinville sophomore, and Fred Morrison, Colby freshman.
They are working under the supervision of D. D. Haines, associate professor of civil engineering and chairman of the Lawrence Traffic Commission; Kenneth C. Deemer, professor of applied mechanics, and Kenneth H. Lenzen, associate professor of applied mechanics.
NEW YORK —(UP) - The New York Telephone Co. set up its annual watch today on the telephone at the Bronx Zoo.
Zoo Phone Busy Just For Animals
Caters asking for Mr. Bear, Mr. Fox, Mr. Lion, Miss Wolf or Miss Katz will be politely informed that someone must be trying to make them an April Fool.
The phone company said it passed the word to 2,642 callers last April 1
U. S. exports of wheat and flour equivalent in fiscal 1957 were valued at 958 million dollars.
Apply Now For Jayhawker Jobs
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1958-59 Jayhawker are now being sought by the Jayhawker Advisory Board, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University and board chairman, said today.
Applications should be submitted to Mr. Nichols in the office of the chancellor no later than 5 p.m., April 21. The applicant should submit a letter of application and provide three letters of recommendation, of which one should be from an employer. Potential applicants can get additional information from Tom Yoe, adviser, in 222A Strong.
Any student who is eligible for participation in activities may apply. Mr. Nichols said. Each position carries a salary of $65 a month. The Jayhawker Advisory Board, a student-faculty group, will interview each applicant before making selections.
Raymond E. Davis, Neodesha sophomore, has been appointed a summer research assistant in chemistry at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, N. Y.
Brookhaven National Laboratory is the research center for work related to the Atomic Energy Commission. It appoints a small number of outstanding undergraduate university students on summer stipends for research training. The selection of a sophomore is considered exceptional.
Student Named To Laboratory Job
Callers Keep KU Operators Busy
Davis is in the gifted student program of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and is a Summerfield scholar.
Six telephone operators keep busy at the KU switchboard on the second floor of the Buildings and Grounds building, handling the calls of 700 KU telephones, including 400 stations and their extensions.
"When I started working on the switchboard in February of 1929, there were only 169 telephones on the campus," Mrs. Edward C. Neustifter, chief operator, said in a daily Kansan interview.
"A new switchboard position is being added which will add 180 lines to places on the campus," she said.
The dial phones went into use on campus at 9:50 p.m., Nov. 22, 1947. The downtown area didn't have them until 1955," she said.
The telephone office is also being redecorated and will include a kitchenette and lounge for the operators when it is finished, Mrs. Neustifter said.
Mrs. Neustifter explained that it was difficult to say which numbers were called most on the switchboards.
KU had dial telephones before the city of Lawrence.
"Different numbers are popular at different times of the year," she said. "Business to extension 461 (the Field House) picks up when football or basketball tickets are being sold. When students come back to school in the fall, the housing office gets a lot of calls. Many calls go to the fine arts office when concerts plays, or other programs are going to be given."
She said that the chancellor's registrar's and business offices
buildings and grounds, and the office of Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, are also popular numbers.
The operators are specifically forbidden to listen in on telephone conversations.
"If we were to tell something we heard accidentally on the switchboard and it causes grief, we can be sent to the penitentiary up to 10 years." Mrs. Neusiftier said.
One complaint the operators have concerns persons who use the KU phones to dial direct long distance from office telephones.
"Sometimes one of the calls slips through, and the state has to pay the phone bill," Mrs. Neustifter said.
A baby is born in the United States every eight seconds.
?
He's runnin' for home because there's only 1 day till vacation. Fill your car up here before you leave.
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Tuesday, April 1. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
Three Kansas Men Seek Relays Triples
Three Kansas men will be shooting for completion of triples in the 33rd Kansas Relays here April 18-19. The checklist includes Kansas Olympic discus champion, Al Oerter; another Jayhawker senior, Kent Floerke, and Gene O'Conner, Kansas State hurdler.
Plagued by illness through the indoor season, O'Conner failed to win a hurdles championship for the first time in four conference meets in the 1958 Indoor. He won four titles as a sophomore and junior. He likely won't be afforded a revenge chance at Cushman here since the latter is ticketed for full-relay duty.
There is some doubt concerning the last because of a severe muscle pull in the Colorado Indoor Invitational. However, if ready he can go after his third 400-meter hurdles title, an unprecedented feat in Relays history. Floerke will be seeking his third crown in another non-standard event, the hop-step-jump. Oerter, of course, will be going after a slam in his specialty.
Both O'Conner and Floerke were unhorsed by record performances as they sought triple completions last year. The former was nipped by Kansas freshman Clif Cushman who set a stunning record of .51.9 in his first start in this event. As a freshman, O'Connor had raced .53.7 to win, then set a record .52.2 in 1956.
Floerke was sidetracked by Houston's Jack Smyth. Like O'Conner he also saw his record lifted as the latter bounded 49-9 7/8, adding nine inches to the mark the tall Kansan wrought as a freshman. Floerke repeated in '56 at 48-feet 3 7/8-inches and went 48-feet $ 4^{1 / 2} $ -inches last year. However, he set a school record of 50-feet $ 2^{3 / 4} $ -inches two months later in finishing second in the National AAU.
Smyth is returning and already is over 24-feet in the broad jump this spring. He and Floerke collided in this event last weekend at the Texas Relays.
Both O'Conner and Floerke have an extra year in which to salvage triples since their events are among the four Olympic specials which have become fixtures on the Mt. Oread card. Oterter, of course, must collect his in successive years. And there is little doubt that he will add the third jewel.
He won as a sophomore on 170-feet 2-inches, second-longest throw up to that time in Relays annals. He fired 178-feet 1-inch last year to bring down Archie Harris' ancient ceiling of 171-feet $ 6^{34} $ -inches which had endured since 1941 for Indiana.
KU Coed Places Fourth In Intercollegiate Bowling
Rosemary Stebbins, KU sophomore, placed fourth in the high series in the Women's Intercollegiate Bowl last week with a 154-167 score for a two game series.
Other girls on the team besides Miss Stebbins are Polly Smith, Nancy Fugisaki, Sue Ann Moore and Barbara Panzer.
The Men's Intercollegiate Tournament will be held in about three weeks. Although the KU men's teams have never placed too well before, Bascom Fearing, recreation director, said he thought the team would do much better this year.
The teams consist of five men and an alternate. The six men who will bowl for KU are Wayne Hayman, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Wade Lampel, Chase senior; Carl Lauterjung, Colby senior; Ron Clark, Kansas City, Mo. senior; David Stein, Mission senior, and John Woody, Springfield, Mo. freshman. Other members of the team are Keith Harper, Phillipsburg senior; Sam Von Winbush, Jay Thornberry, Lawrence seniors, and William
Red Sox Open Without Top Hitter
The Boston Red Sox, touted by Casey Stengel as the Yankees' most dangerous American League Rival, faced the gloomy prospect today of opening the season without their possible No. 1 battery.
Tom Brewer, the leading Red Sox pitcher last year with 16 wins, and Haywood Sullivan, a husky rookie bidding for the starting job behind the plate, both suffered fractured fingers yesterday. Brewer will be sidelined at least three weeks while Sullivan will be out at least six weeks.
Strickland, Kansas itv. Kan, senior
Strickland, Kansas it is, Kyan, senior. The scores will be sent to Washington University, the Intercollegiate Bowling center this year, where the results will be tabulated and returned to the teams. No trophies or certificates will be awarded.
NEW YORK — (UP) — Bob Cousy and Bill Sharman of Boston, Bob Pettit of St. Louis, George Yardley of Detroit and Dolph Schayes of Syracuse were named today to the National Basketball Association All Star team.
The league announced that Cousy, who won the regular season playmaking honors, was the top vote getter in a poll of sports writers and broadcasters in league cities. He made the All Star team for the seventh straight year.
Woody Sauldsberry of Philadelphia was voted rookie of the year. However, no rookie was voted to the All Star squad.
NBA Names All-Star Five
Khan Downs Azam, Takes Squash Title
LONDON — (UP) — Hashim Khan regained the British Open Squash title by defeating Brother Azam, 9-7, 6-9, 9-6, 9-7, Monday in the final at the Landsdowne Club. The title victory was Hashim's seventh in the last eight years, his only loss being to Cousin Rosham Khan last year.
Dodgers Back To Brooklyn? Ted Friendly? No, Just April 1
NEW YORK — (UP) — Items you won't find in the sportsnews on this April Fool's day:
Walter O'Malley has decided to move the Dodgers back to Brooklyn because "I just don't have any roots in Los Angeles..."
Sugar Ray Robinson is insisting that Carmen Basilio be given "at least" a 30-30 split of the purse for their third middleweight championship fight...
Basketball coach Adolph Rupp of Kentucky has volunteered to play all of Kentucky's future NCAA tournament games outside the state of Kentucky. . .
Slugger Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox has presented friendship rings to all the Boston sports writers. . .
Cus D'Amato, manager of heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson, has signed a contract giving the International Boxing Club exclusive control of Patterson because "Jim Norris is a good friend of mine." . . .
Manager Casey Stengel of the Yankees announced that he's going to stick to the same lineup in every game this season because, "I can't keep track of all them fellas runnin' in and out."
Ben Hogan said he's competing in this year's Masters Tournament "just for fun" because "It isn't winning that counts but the relaxation you get from the game." . . .
H. A. (Jimmy) Jones, Calumet Farm trainer, said the stable won't have an entry in this year's Kentucky Derby because "all our 3-year-olds are allergic to roses."
The Boston Bruins and New York Rangers are holding a mutual tea party tonight "So we can get to know each other better." . .
The Australian Lawn Tennis Assn. is presenting a special award to tennis promoter Jack Kramer
as the "man who has done the most to build up Australian tennis." . . .
Coach Paul Brown of the Cleveland Brown's said his pro football team next season will have a line averaging 154 pounds because, "It's about time somebody gave the little fellow a chance in this game." . .
Mile Star Ron Delany of Villanova said he'll be shooting for a world record in every race from now on because "That's what the fans come out to see." . . .
Manager Fred Haney of the Milwaukee Braves announced there will be no curfew for his players this season. He says he thinks "The boys are entitled to step out for a little fun after night games." . . .
Inficlared Billy Martin of the Tigers thinks the Yankees' George Weiss is the greatest executive in baseball. "He knows just when to trade a guy away," says Billy. . .
APRIL FOOL!
Hoyle Is Pole Vault Favorite
Early pole vault favorite on the 33rd Kansas Relays form chart is a Marquette senior who could do no better than 10-feet 6-inches in high school. The name is Ed Hoyle, who'll be here April 18-19 for the KU Relays, second stop on the midlands' grand circuit.
For the record Hoyle, who is 2-time school heavyweight boxing champion, has what is believed to be the best leap of the national collegiate season, 14 feet, 10 inches. He achieved that new career high in a tie for second at the Chicago Daily News Relays. It placed him in eite company. Sharing the spot with him were post-grads Jerry Woulbourne, Don Laz and Don Bragg. The winner was Occidental's Bob Gutowski, the world record-holder who also has used up his college eligibility.
Hoyle also logged indoor marks of 14 feet, 9 1/8 inches to set a CCC and Western Michigan Fieldhouse record; 14 feet, 8 inches to bag the IC-4A at New York, and 14 feet, 6 1/4 inches for a fieldhouse record at the Michigan State Relays.
A few hours before the last jump, he won an afternoon dual against Eastern Michigan at 13 feet, 4 inches then drove to East Lansing for the big one. He opened the season by tying Welbourne and Michigan ineligible Eales Landstrom at 14 feet, 4 inches in the Chicago Invitational.
All that is for the record. The real story concerns Hoyle himself and the obstacles he has overcome to claim recognition as the next potential 15-footer.
For one thing he must practice during the indoor season off the basketball floor of ancient Marquette Gym. To furnish himself with the 135-foot run he requires for top efficiency he must tie back the arena's double doors so that he may originate his approach from the hall. The box is sunk in the regular basketball floor. The pit is no pit at all, but an elevated pipe
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"Ed used that long run-up because he doesn't have good speed." Warrior publicist Jim King said. "That 135 feet allows him to gain some momentum. He has arms like a blacksmith and does everything right once he gets into the air."
At the IC-4A and Daily News meets, Hoyle was forced to back up on the running track to extend his run. When he came off that he had to run across the base floor of the arenas and then on to the regular pole-vault runway. His coach, Bus Shimek, thinks he'll do 15-feet.
If he does it will be safe to say no pole-vaulter ever worked harder to achieve it. Little wonder he had cleared only 10 feet, 6 inches at Chicago St. Ignatius. He was only a 5 foot 9 inch 140-pounder when he enrolled at Marquette. He moved up to 12 feet that year. As a sophomore he added another foot. Last year he reached 14 feet to tie for second in the Outdoor Central Collegiates at his home stadium.
Last summer Hoyle placed himself on a Spartan-like routine. He worked out two hours daily. Twice per week he vaulted. The rest of the days were given over to weight lifting and calisthenics. He already has been presented the Con Jennings award as Marquette's outstanding athlete of the year.
At least three other 14-footers will be in the field here, two of them sophomores. One of the rookies is Aubrey Dooley of Oklahoma State who tied Missouri's Bob Davis at 14 feet, 2 1/4 inches for the Big Eight Indoor championship. The other, Oklahoma's Larry Neeley, attained 14 feet two
MAUPINTOURS / 1958
ADVENTUREI EDUCATIONI
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Inclusive rates from $1300, from New York. Reservations limited. apply now for sufficient time to secure Russian visa. Write today for descriptive folder. See your travel agent or
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TOUR ASSOCIATES
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Lawrence / Kansas
weeks ago in a second-place tie against Arizona State.
Only two Warriors ever have won Relays titles. The first was Shimek, who won the now-extinct 3000-meter run in 1927. Twenty-six years later, John Bennett won the broad jump at 25 feet 4 inches.
But no Relays pole vault champion save record-holder Don Cooper of Nebraska ever has matched Hoyle's best three jumps of this year. Cooper became the first collegian to clear 15 feet outdoors when he set the mark at 15 feet 1/8 inch here in 1951.
The largest city in Afghanistan is Kabul, the capital, with a population of 206,208.
GAGGED!
Imagine! Living in a land where free opinion is gagged, your newspaper filled with lies, truth and freedom almost gone from your memory! That's just how it is for 70 million people behind the Iron Curtain in Eastern Europe.
You must help with your dollars or freedom will be completely destroyed in these countries. Your dollars keep Radio Free Europe on the air, keep its 29 truth transmitters at work, overpowering Red "jamming," slashing through Red lies, renewing hope that freedom will some day return behind the Iron Curtain.
Why must you give? Because Radio Free Europe is a private organization, supported by the American people. Your dollars pay for its transmitter tubes, its equipment, announcers, news analysts. Keep your dollars coming or freedom will be gagged behind the Iron Curtain! Send your truth dollars today to Crusade for Freedom, care of your local Postmaster.
CRUSADE for FREEDOM
UNIVERSITY
DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSIDAD DE MADRID
DEPARTAMENTO DE EDUCAÇIÓN
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ENGENIERÍA
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ENGENIERÍA
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 1, 1958
Campus Club News
Groups Plan Dinner Convention, Songfest
IRC
The annual Inter-Residence Council Spring Sing will be held Wednesday, April 23 at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The halls participating should submit the titles of their songs by Wednesday.
--will lead open discussions of the factors that influence the forming of values.
KU-Y
Programming, integration and political responsibility will be discussed by about 20 KU-Y delegates at a district conference April 11-13 at Pittsburgh State Teachers College.
Miss Sara Guy, KU-Y program secretary, said delegates from all Kansas YWCA and YMCA college organizations will discuss the theme, "Profile of the College Student," during applied workshops.
T. William Hall of Denver University department of religion, will discuss Phil Jacob's book, "Changing Values in College."
Dr. Hall, former teacher at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia,
The KU-Y delegation will leave in private cars Friday, April 11 and return Sunday, April 13. Any KU-Y member who wants to go may sign at the office at 111B in the Kansas Union.
Joyce L. Cutting, Ottawa and Paul Lewelln, Hutchinson, both sophomores, are co-chairmen for the KU delegation.
. . .
B'nai B'rith Hillel
The B'nai B'rith Hillet Counselorship and the Jewish Community Center will sponsor the celebration of the Seder at the Castle Tea Room at 6 p.m. Saturday.
The Seder is a dinner held annually at the beginning of the Passover. The Passover, which lasts a week, commemorates the exodus of the Jews from Egypt under Moses' leadership. The dinner consists of prayers, recitations and songs.
* Reservations should be made with Robert Sokal, assistant professor of entomology, at VI 3-7185 today.
THE JOURNAL OF THE MARYLAND HERITAGE TRIBUTE
JANET SPAHR
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Spahr, Minneola, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Janet Louise, to Earl Ricksecker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ricksecker, Nickerson.
Couple To Wed In September
Miss Spahr is a junior in the School of Education and lives at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Mr. Ricksecker is a senior in the School of Education
A September wedding is planned.
Phi Gamma Delta
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority held an Easter egg hunt for 33 Lawrence children at the fraternity house Friday.
. . .
Alpha Kappa Alpha
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority has announced the pledging of Iris Edgenton, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore.
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity held a dance at the chapter house after the Beck Chalk Revue Saturday.
Plaids, Stripes In Sport Shirts
What will the best dressed man about campus wear in sport shirts this spring?
The trend toward darker more conservative colors is an influence inherited from the Ivy League styles. Along with the somber tones, this year's spring fashion will feature plenty of plaids and stripes. Vertical stripes and checks are expected to be bestsellers.
The little men from Mars have invaded fashions for male earthlings. Countess Mara shows silk scarves decorated with goblins from outer space and flying saucers.
According to latest information obtained from local stores, the new styles will feature button-down collars, short sleeves, and slightly deeper shades of color.
Pin jeweled and enameled posies on spring and summer outfits. Earrings, pins and necklaces appear in life-like copies of poppies, carnations, cornflowers and roses.
Billed as a boon to both married men and bachelors, the new wash'n'wear fabrics will be featured in increasing quantity. Along with this, the "no-iron drip-dry" fabrics are making rapid headway. In contrast to the slightly darker tones of the shirts, the fabrics will be much lighter in weight.
The easiest way to wear the loose silhouette is in two pieces, says Women's Wear Daily, a trade publication. Bodices are often sleeveless and fall in a lean, straight line to the hips, marked by a contrasting band which is repeated at the collarless, often-squared neckline. Knife-sharp pleats add grace to the skirt and allow for easy movements yet keep the vertical line. The pleats also hold the dress away from the body, making it cooler for summer wear.
Wear Silhouette In Two Pieces
On The Hill
Gamma Phi Beta
Gamma Phi Beta sorority held its Little Sisters' weekend Saturday and Sunday.
Sisters of the sorority members were entertained with skits and were guests at buffet dinners at the chapter house Saturday and Sunday. They attended the Rock Chalk Revue.
--should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or
Chi Omega
Chi Omega sorority will entertain 25 Lawrence children with an Easter egg hunt Tuesday.
Delta Tau Delta
Delta Tau Delta fraternity entertained members of Chi Omega sorority with a dance at the chapter house following the Saturday performance of the Rock Chalk Revue.
***
Alpha Omicron Pi
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority held its Mothers' weekend Saturday and Sunday.
A dinner was held at the Castle Tea Room, and the members took their mothers to the Rock Chalk Revue Saturday.
--should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Chi Omega sorority held a party at the Tee-Pee following the Rock Chalk Revue Saturday.
P
YOUR EYES
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Easter Greetings
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Tuesday. April 1, 1958 University Daily Kansan
1
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
LOST
FENCING JACKET, foil, and Benrus
wristwatch from Robinson Gym. Finder
please call VI 3-4823. Reward for return.
STERLING SILVER the clasp, bowling motif. Lost on steps N.E. of Strong Tuesday morning. Call VI 3-8073 after five p.m. 4-1
WHITE BILLFOLD between Strong An-
d West Campus Rd Phone V-1
4550 4550
FOR RENT
DESIRABLE three room unfurnished ground floor apartment. Convenient to view refrigerator, air conditioner and parking space. included VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1277.
ROOM AND BOARD for one student.
ROOM and Reasonable. 1130 Kew-
fucky, YU 3-1585.
ROOMS FOR STUDENTS or working
at summer rates.
VL 3-3400, after 3 p.m.
FOR SALE
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by LIZZY indexes, over 50 pages, $3.99 each; house representation for call VI 3-7553 IV 2-0771 VI 2-0395 for free delivery.
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, and the popular magazinezines both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
HOUSE TRAILER for sale. Thirty-four foot all aluminum. Birch interior, excellent condition. Ideal for medical student going to Kansas City. Three blocks. City medical school. Lowell Snyder, 3610 Rainbow, Kansas City 3. Kansas. TA 2-8263. 4-1
BUSINESS SERVICES
'35 FORD COUPE, '51 Merc motor,
naugahyde interior, black lacquer, spun
aluminum discs. Bob Hill, DeSoto, Kansas.
4-11
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
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:
Ola Smith
9a4l; Alas, Phi; Vt 3-5263.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and ac-
cociation service. Call VI 3-6833, 1621 wf
20th St.
FLAT TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
Glarece Adamson, Mgr. under the hilt
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
COMPLETE
MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
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. tf
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast, accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers.
Parkeets, 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 accessories etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. ff
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Mass.
Sitting ff
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629. 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, five years experience in typing
theses, term papers, etc. Accurate, prompt
work. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker
Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
LEAVE FILM TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30
Back Tomorrow At 3
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass.-VI 3-9471
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
RADIO REPAIRS
*YPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter if phone. Mrs. Donna Viri, VI if 8660.
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 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
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers,
papers and accuses service wif-
Vi 56177; Mary; Jaeson
1407 Mass. Rogers Launder-R VI 3-3303
[ NEED a ride to Chicago. Call vi 0-6353, Joe. 4-1
WATCH REPAIRS
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N. H. VI 3-6844
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 2-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
WANTED
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass.
VI 3-3055
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI-3843
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Donn. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
SAT. Boarders wanted, good food, reasonable rates. One-half block from union.
Call Bruce Wenger, VI 3-2565, Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 La. 4-11
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Party supplies. cant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. vii 0350
LET'S DANCE! The Dick Stewart Quartet—a real asset to your party. Call VI 3-5130. 4-8
HAVE FOOD, WILL DELIVER. Free delivery, complete fountain and sandwich service ( $1 minimum order ). Jayhawk* Cafe. VI 3-6171. 4-16
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
USED CAR BUYS
833 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.—Ph. VI 3-8074
1951 Chevrolet
Fleetline two door, looks and runs like new. $195.
1953 Plymouth
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-6697
19th & Mass. VI 3-9293
1955 Pontiac Catalina
Hardtop with V8, hydramatic, radio, heater, white wallires. Like new!
Jim Clark
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direction. Perfect all over.
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University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
Phone KU 376
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 1, 1958
PETER SCHNEIDER
SIGMA KAPPA DEDICATORS — (from left)
Mrs. Donald Alderson, Mrs. W. Clark Harquiss,
Mrs.
Kansas City, Mo.; Fred Ellsworth, and Raymond Coolidge, Topeka.
Sorority Building Started
Ground-breaking ceremonies for the new Sigma Kappa house at 1325 West Campus Road were conducted Saturday by George Baxter Smith, dean of the University.
About 75 sorority members, alumni and friends attended.
Taking part in the ceremony itself were Mrs. Donald Alderson, chairman of the building committee,
Lawrence; Mrs. W. Clark Harquiss, Sigma Kappa Corporation President, Kansas City, Missouri; Fred Ellsworth, KU Alumni Secretary, Lawrence; and Raymond Coolidge, Architect, Topeka.
Other guests on the program included Mrs. R. G. Mahieu, province president; Rev. Andrew Berry; Laurence D. Woodruff, dean of students, and Donald K. Alderson, dean of men.
Sigma Kappa has occupied a residence at 1625 Edgehill Road for 34 years. The sorority has been on the KU campus for 51 years. The new chapter house is expected to cost $187,000. The B. A. Green Construction Company of Lawrence is the contractor.
Chief Advises Precautions
Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman Monday afternoon offered advice for the KU student to follow during the Easter vacation. Chief Skillman warned members of organized houses to leave someone in charge of their house to prevent any break-ins.
He also warned students to lock up all valuables before leaving. All empty houses should be locked and all water and gas turned off, Chief Skillman said.
For the trip to and from home, he cautioned students to "be alert and be careful."
"Students shouldn't try to outsmart the safety engineers who set up highway speed limit signs. They know what they're doing and the students will be a lot safer if they heed the advice of the signs," he said.
There is a tendency for drivers to increase speed during nice weather, Chief Skillman said. It is important that the student plan ahead and get started on his trip on time, he said, so that such speeding won't be necessary.
Traffic deaths reported by the Kansas Highway Patrol in the last 48 hours,2; March total,27; toll this year,88,and toll this time a year ago.124.
John Coyle, Atchison junior, has been selected by the School of Pharmacy to receive a $300 scholarship next year. The scholarship is given by donations from Kansas retail pharmacists for next term.
Junior Receives Scholarship
DEVONSHIRE, ENGLAND—The Instow Parish Council asked for advice today on a pressing local problem. The bulldogs have been breaking into tradesmen's cash boxes and eating the cash.
Bullocks Pose Problem
50 Cents A Car—
You'll Pay To Park At Union
A coin-operated automatic parking gate will be installed during the spring recess at the entrance of the guest parking lot east of the Union, Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations and chairman of the parking committee, said.
"The 53-car lot, which has been reserved for guests during the day the past two years, will be open to anyone's car on payment of the fee." Lawton said.
Lawton explained the three factors on which the decision to put this lot on a pay-basis was based.
The fee will be 50 cents throughout the 24 hours of the day, with no limit on time.
The Kansas legislature has said clearly that surfacing of parking areas and creation of new lots shall be paid for from parking fees. The lot east of the Union is a preferred accommodation and should be expected to contribute to development of the over-all parking program, Lawton said.
Because of the unevenness of the guest load at the Union, the lot has not had maximum usage. "Although most users are expected still to be those spending most of the day at the Union or nearby buildings, we believe the lot will be useful for students and staff members who have brief but urgent need for preferred
parking." Lawton added.
"We hope to gain experience that will point to better solutions of parking in other areas of the university."
Visitors not caring to use, the payparking lot may still obtain guest stickers that can be used for parking elsewhere.
The meter can be reached from a car window. Only one car will be able to pass through as closing will be actuated by a treadle mechanism. Treadle mechanisms will automatically open the gate for exiting cars. The coin mechanism will reject payments when the lot's capacity is reached.
Lawton said operating procedures would be readjusted if the operating experience so indicates.
Lawton reported that parking fee earnings, mostly obtained at athletic contests, are not sufficient for any large project but he hopes work can be initiated on the first priority project, which is the creation of a large parking lot in the area of the old baseball field, northwest of the Union.
70 Benton Paintings To Be Shown April 12
An exhibit of more than 70 paintings of Thomas Hart Benton will open at 9 p.m. April 12 and continue until May 18 in the Museum of Art.
The exhibit is the second in the museum's series devoted to the three artists responsible for the "American regionalist" movement in painting: Mr. Benton, the late John Steuart Curry and Grant Wood. The opening of the exhibit will continue.
The opening of the exhibit will follow a Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater at which Mr. Benton will speak about "American Regionalism—30 Years After."
In the lecture he will analyze the period of regionalism, discussing his own works and those of Mr. Curry and Mr. Wood.
Mr. Benton was born in 1889 in Neosho, Mo. He has been a teacher, author, and lecturer as well as a painter, and is represented in many of the leading art museums in
Pictures for the exhibit were borrowed from Mr. Benton and museums and private collectors throughout the country.
His murals appear in the Whitney Museum of American Art and the New School of Social Research, both in New York City; at Indiana University, and in the Missouri State Capitol Building in Jefferson City, Mo. He lives in Kansas City, Mo.
An illustrated catalog of the exhibit has been published by the Museum of Art.
America and abroad.
Betsy The Chimp Needs A Helper To Paint
The secret of Betsy the chimpanzee's success as a painter lies in her manager's ability to take the canvas and brush from her at the right time. The "artist chimpanzee" creates nothing by herself, Dr. H. W. Janson, Humanities lecturer from New York University, said at an SUA coffee forum Monday in the Union Music Room.
"Without a human to stop her at the precise moment, the effect would be chaotic. However, very few people have had a chance to take anything away from her. She works awfully fast," he said.
Betsy lives in the Philadelphia zoo; her art is the result of a promotion stunt by the zoo director. Dr Janson said Betsy started painting to raise money rather than for the sake of art, but he said the director must have had an interest in art or he would have thought of another scheme.
Dr. Janson said no animal alone can produce a work of art. Betsy doesn't know what she's doing and therefore needs human imagination to make her daubing become art, he explained.
Dr. Janson said Betsy's work may be classified as art although there is manual activity on the part of the person taking the canvas away. To the extent that a person succeeds in taking it away at the right moment, it becomes legitimate, creative art.
"The human doesn't set a goal in helping Betsy. Merely following a pre-conceived goal produces a work of craft. The element of chance plus imagination enters into every work of art. If you want, you can let the chimpanzee play the element of chance."
Dr Janson said there will ultimately be a change in the direction of art as there has always been in the past. He said it would be impossible to predict what direction art will take in the next 50 years.
"If you eliminate all controls you can achieve an effect you can't get in any other fashion, but the total effect would be chaotic, like a child's finger painting. The extreme abstract character of Betsy's art is produced by human imagination and not her choice of colors or anything else. In fact, Betsy is color-blind," he added.
"The traditional painter stops when he has a picture which looks like the image he has in mind. Other artists don't know where to stop. Betsy wouldn't know."
Dr. Janson lectured to Art classes this morning and afternoon. He will give the Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. His topic is the "Ancestory of Modern Art."
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BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY Summer School
1958 Session — June 23 - August 1
- Coeducational
- For Graduate and Qualified Undergraduate students
- Credit transferable
Institutes in:
FRENCH CIVILIZATION
MUSIC
PSYCHOLOGY
ARCHAEOLOGY
BIOLOGY
ANTHROPOLOGY
- Special Colloquia, Lectures and Concerts
For further information clip and mail to: Brandeis Summer School, Kalman C-15, Waltham, Massachusetts.
Name
School Address ...
Home Address ...
Graduate ... Undergraduate ...
Daily Hansan
Tuesday, April 8, 1958
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year. No.120
CAUTION
DIRECTIONS:
THE MONEY GOES HERE—Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman shows how to use the new coin-operated gate at the Union's parking lot. It now costs 50 cents to park a car in the lot. (Daily Kansan photo)
Will Election Stand? ASC To Decide
The All Student Council will decide tonight whether the Allied Greek-Independent primary will be allowed to stand.
AGI president Joel Sterrett, Topeka senior, said last week he had been asked by party members to appeal the primary because irregularities at the Fraser poll.
Sterrett asked the Elections Committee to discard the primary and allow a new vote, but the committee rejected the plan.
Sterrett then asked for a special session of the Council to consider his request, but ASC Chairman Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior, decided on the basis of the committee decision to hold the question for the regularly scheduled meeting tonight.
Patterson indicated that if the request for a new primary were granted, it might be necessary to hold the general election later than the scheduled April 16.
The Council also has tentatively
KU Seismograph Recorded Quake
Monday's earthquake near the Aleutian Islands was recorded on the KU seismograph, Louis F. Dellwig, associate professor of geology, told The Daily Kansan today.
However, the instruments here at KU are not capable of showing how strong the quake was in comparison to previous ones, he said. The quake was the largest ever recorded on the University of Alaska seismograph.
planned to meet with a member of the Committee for Improvement in Human Relations tonight.
CIHR member Linda Bodle, Plattsburg, Mo. junior, previously asked to meet with the Council, but Patterson was unable to reach Miss Bodle Monday night to set up the meeting.
The Council will also hear a report from the Elections Committee on the primary elections and a report from the Publications Committee on Squat, campus humor magazine.
1. No appeal was made until after certification, although the party had at least two days to prepare its complaint.
2. Even though there was an irregularity in the form of the ballots, due to an inadvertent printing error, no person was denied a chance to vote for a candidate in his district.
The CIHAR has been working on KU segregation problems.
The Election Committee said it feels it should not reverse its previous certification for the following reasons:
3. No evidence was introduced to show that a change in the results would have occurred.
Johnson Placed On Probation For 'Visit'
L. F. Johnson, 25, an unwelcome sorority visitor from Oklahoma, is back home today after spending almost a week in the Lawrence jail.
Johnson pleaded guilty Monday morning in police court to charges of vagrancy and resisting arrest. He was fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days in jail on each count. The jail sentences were suspended and he was put on probation for a year.
It was determined from a polygraph test Saturday that Johnson had been making periodic visits to the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house where he was found April 1.
Johnson, a former student at KU, admitted he cut holes in the attic ceiling "one summer" when the house was vacant so he could view the shower room below.
When Johnson was found in the attic, campus and Lawrence police were called. Johnson was subdued in a women's rest room in Lindley Annex after a short flight from the police.
AUFS Member Begins KU Visit
Richard H. Nolte, a member of the American Universities Field Staff will begin a 10-day visit at the University today.
Mr. Nolte has lived in the Middle East since 1955. While there he studied cultural, social, economic and political affairs. He has visited KU twice under the AUFS program
RICHARD H. NOLTE
A. A. Brennan
He received his master's degree in international relations from Yale University in 1947. He continued his studies in Arabic language, literature, history, and in Moslem social and religious institutions at Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship.
He is now working toward a doctorate degree from Oxford with a thesis on the foundations of administrative law in Islam, with emphasis on modern developments in Egypt. Thursday he will attend a luncheon with the faculty and students of the School of Law. He will also speak to the Lawrence High School world affairs group, the KU History Club, and the Lawrence League of Women Voters during his visit.
FBI To Search For Student
No Word From Him; Missing Since April 1
Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said today the FBI has been called in to help search for John P. Burns, Olathe freshman, who disappeared early last week.
Burns was reported missing April 1 after he failed to keep an appointment at the University with his father.
1965
JOHN P. BURNS
Apply For Draft Test By Friday
The deadline to apply for the selective service college qualification test is Friday, Registrar James K. Hitt said today.
The test will be given by the Guidance Bureau May 1.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said only one test will be given this spring, with no opportunity to make up the test. Application forms are available in the registrar's office.
Mr. Hitt suggested every student registered for the draft take the test, including those in ROTC. He said the test scores could act as a form of insurance with the draft board in the event a student dropped out of the ROTC program.
Jayhawker Goes On Sale April 15
The third edition of the Jayhawker featuring campus activities and organizations will go on sale April 15. Tom Petitt, Topeka senior and Jayhawker editor, said the magazine will be sold at the campus information booth and the Jayhawker office in the Kansas Union. Sales representatives will take orders in organized houses.
The magazine cover has a photograph of a spring scene on the campus with overlaid art work. The final issue featuring senior pictures and queen finalists will go on sale May 15.
Skillman said he had hoped the boy would show up at Sigma Nu, his fraternity house, this morning to start classes, but no news of the missing student had been received at press time.
Skillman said he had no reason to believe there was any foul play involved in the disappearance.
Missed Appointment
Burns was reported missing by his father, George Burns, after the student failed to keep an appointment they had made for March 31. Mr. Burns said their son also failed to make his usual Wednesday night call home.
Mr. Burns was to have met his son at Strong Hall to talk to some of his instructors about classwork. Burns had received three downslips at midsemester.
'Seemed Dissatisfied'
Mr. Burns said his son did not seem despondent over the grades. Some of Burns' fraternity brothers said he had seemed dissatisfied with campus life. Mr. Burns said he and his wife thought the son was happy at KU, "but I guess that wasn't the case."
Burns left most of his clothes at the fraternity house. He cashed checks totaling $58 in Lawrence before his disappearance. Apparently no other checks have been cashed by Burns since the bank has received none.
Sigma Nu fraternity men said Burns talked of finding in Oklahoma or Florida. They said that Burns had a girl friend in Arlington, Va. A police check of these locations produced no results.
Chancellor Presents Retirement Gifts
Dr. Edward H. Hashinger of the KU Medical center, and his wife were presented a painting and bronze seal of the University at a surprise party in the Kansas Union March 31. Dr. Hashinger retired April 1.
The painting, "West End Dunes," a 24x36 original by Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, was done near La Jolla, Calif., where the Hashingers will make their new home.
Weather
Mostly cloudy east, increasing southeasterly winds and cold rain west portion this afternoon. Colder Wednesday. Low tonight 30 northwest to 50 southeast. High Wednesday 40s west to 50s east.
Counseler Applications Due
Application deadline for counselor positions in men's residence halls for the 1958-59 school year is April 19.
In addition to counseling, those selected will help keep resident discipline, advise hall government and student activities, and report maintenance needs.
The qualifications include upper-
class or graduate status, good academic standing and an interest in working with other students. Counselors must have a planned class schedule allowing time for staff meetings as well as advising duties. The salary is $337 per year.
Applications may be obtained from the Dean of Students' office, 228 Strong Hall.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 8, 1958
2016-04-23 17:20:50
These Long Vacations
Now we're back at the old grind after heading home for a few (very few) days of much-needed vacation time.
The brief respite from the daily routine of books and classes was officially known as spring vacation. Most students called it Easter vacation. In reality is was just a long weekend; three days of vacation forced upon us by the administration.
Since we had such a long vacation, everyone planned on having a wonderful time. With all the time allowed it was possible to take extended trips to Kansas City, Tonganoxie, and other similar exotic vacation spots. With a little luck, some of us were even able to get home in time for Mom to get our laundry ready to take back.
Some students might have gotten so bored with all the time they had on their hands, that they resorted to studying. This seems rather improbable, but with time so abundant, some students might have taken drastic steps to relieve the boredom.
Seriously, this spring vacation seemed exceptionally short. Since it was the only vacation during the spring semester, it seems that the administration could have been a little more generous with the time allowed.
A student who lives on either coast and drove home, probably got home just in time to start back. Of course not all students live that far away, but plenty do live a considerable distance. If they were lucky, they were able to spend a three-day weekend at home.
Such a short vacation has a few side effects. It caused students to cut classes to get a little more time. It caused people driving long distances to drive straight through, without rest, which is not the safest driving practice in the world.
In former years spring vacation has extended over a complete week of classes, giving the students two weekends, or nine days. This year it was supposedly cut down so that the school year would be shorter. And the school year is shorter, one day shorter. And that couldn't be avoided; because the first Sunday after finals is on June 1 instead of June 2 this year.
—Del Haley
Another Fast Move
The Russians have managed to pull another fast one on the United States. The announcement April 1, by Foreign Minister Gromyko that the Soviet Union is halting all hydrogen and atomic tests really put us on a spot.
Even though we have dismissed the proposal as "mere words," this announcement will give the Russians plenty of propaganda material. The Soviet Union also gave itself future propaganda material when it warned that it will be free to resume its tests if the West does not follow suit in stopping tests.
Of course, educated people should be able to see through this plan and realize that it is nothing but propaganda. But the Russians aren't aiming this latest fallacy at educated people. They aimed it at the uneducated millions who are still susceptible to the lure of Communism.
To these people Russia hopes to look like the
one peaceful nation among nations of warmongers. They will say, "Look at us, we are the first nation to stop nuclear tests. We are the only nation that really wants peace." And it is not impossible that a few, maybe many, people will be convinced.
Maybe the United States would have been ahead to have been the first to ban nuclear tests. But of course we had no assurance that Russia would follow suit, and we hesitated to take chances with the national security. And even now we have no assurance that Russia will stop tests, only their word. We will stop tests only if the ban is supervised.
The United States seems to be waiting for a perfect situation before it will commit itself. If we haggle long enough, we may get the perfect situation, and we may end up with nothing at all.
—Del Haley
Sorry
Letters To The Editor
On March 27 the twenty-second annual Noble P. Sherwood honorary lecture was given by Dr. Heinrich Necheles in Bailey Auditorium. Approximately sixty-five people heard Dr. Necheles tell of some startling experimental discoveries, involving, among other things, a suspected nutritive function of human nerves.
We are extremely sorry that more people who would have been vitally interested in this lecture were not appraised of it. For some season, known only to some staff members of The Daily Kansan, you chose to publish no story of the lecture whatsoever, except for a brief announcement of all places, the society column.
This in spite of a well-organized publicity committee which spent many hours working together and
with your reporters explaining the purpose of the lecture, the honors Dr. Sherwood has brought the university, the high esteem in which the medical profession and the world's physiological societies hold Dr. Necheles. The Lawrence Daily Journal-World, the Topeka State Capital, and the Kansas City Star realized the stature of these two men and each ran a well-written, factual story on the lecture, including a borrowed picture which the publicity committee had furnished The Daily Kansan, and they had not used.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
R.H.
"JUST IN TIME TO INTRODUCE YOU TO BEAM—HE TEACHES A WONDERFUL CLASS I KNOW YOU'LL WANT TO TAKE."
If you will not, we would like to take this opportunity to apologize to the many people who would have liked to have been there, if they had known it. For the benefit of these people, there is a recording of Dr. Nechecles' talk available at the Phi Beta Pi fraternity.
Donald A. Potts, Lawrence
Don H. Berkely, Tescott
James D. Sawyer, Dresden
David Auchard, Lawrence
Freshmen, School of Medicine
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904. triviews 1908, daily Jan 16, 1912.
1908.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association,
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
Service Madison Ave., New York, News
service: United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
shure notices may be sent non 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.
Dick Brown Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler ... Business Manager
John Clarke, Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston, National Advertiser
Manager; Irvine, Classical
Advertiser Manager; Tom Keehn,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager.
Quotes From The News
WASHINGTON—Deputy Defense Secretary Donald A. Quarles, in a CBS radio interview:
"I would be surprised if the Soviets in the last few months haven't tested the possibility of an atomic warhead on long-range missiles."
LOS ANGELES — Ex-mobster Mickey Cohen's attorney, Cornell Ridley, in closing argument to a jury which convicted Cohen of misdemeanor charges in a fight with a nightclub waiter:
"People love Mickey. He is a fine and generous man."
BRUSSELS — A Russian Embassy Spokesman on the death of a guard at the Soviet world's fair pavilion:
"The man died from a heart attack while at work."
"I know what a bullet wound looks like and also what a bullet looks like. Solotowski was wounded by a bullet."
A Belgian doctor, who treated Nicolai Solotowski at Bruggman Hospital:
NEW YORK — Former President Truman saying he wouldn't take a walk before catching an 8 a.m. train for New Haven, Conn:
"In giving the reporters a break as I feel it would be too early for them to get up."
"If you know anyone who wants armaments, we'll exchange them for tractors."
LOS ANGELES — Costa Rica's President-elect Mario Echandi jokingly explaining to newsmen his country's economic problems and the illegal stockpiling of arms by his predecessor;
The total population of Chile, estimated in 1950, is 5,800,000.
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Comment Varies As Hall Again Tries For Governor
(Compiled from United Press)
Varied comment whirled through Kansas today following Fred Hall's resignation from the State Supreme Court to run for governor again on the Republican ticket.
Schuyler Jackson, dean of the Washburn University Law School, was sworn in Monday to succeed Mr. Hall on the bench and thus became the first Democrat in 20 years to serve on the high court.
The March unemployment figure rose 25,000 to 5,198,000. The February unemployment figure was 5,173,000.
In Washington, unemployment slowed appreciably in March, while total employment showed the first over-all gain since the downward trend in jobs began last year, the government reported today.
Some Republicans said that Mr. Hall will bring upheaval to Kansas GOP hopes, while others doubted that this would happen. Many Democrats said that Docking could defeat Hall or anybody else.
Administration officials took the new figures as a heartening sign in their battle against the recession, even though March is normally a month in which unemployment decreases from 100,000 to 200,000 rather than increasing.
In Kansas, the number of jobless in Kansas declined by more than 2.000 in a two week period ending April 5, the director of the State Employment Security Division said today.
John Morrison, director, said unemp employment stood at 5.7 per cent as of April 5, compared to 6 per cent at the end of March 22.
Unemployment in Kansas, however, was still running higher than a year ago when the April 5 figure was 11,412, or 2.9 per cent jobless.
President Eisenhower today called on Russia to join the United States in banning the production of atomic
weapons. He proposed that nuclear materials be manufactured "only for peaceful purposes."
He brushed aside Premier Nikit Khrushchev's statements and note of last Friday proposing an immediate halt to nuclear test explosions.
The President said that the "timing, wording and manner of the Soviet declaration cannot but raise questions as to its real significance."
Tuesday, April 8. 1958 University Daily Kansan Page 3
In Milwaukee, a Labor Department expert said today that the housewife can look forward to lower food prices starting in late spring.
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. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Public lecture, May Sarton, poet and novelist, 10 a.m. Fraser Theater. "Sense and Sensibility in the Modern Novel: the Middle Ground." Public welcome, 4 p.m. Fraser Theater. "The Holy Game." A lecturesy as the poet sees it. Public welcome
TODAY
Sasnak, 7:30 p.m., Trophy Room, Union Panel discussion, "The Status of the Physical Education Teacher in the Pal." All majors and minors welcome.
Society for Advancement of Management, 8 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Union Speaker, Willard Murphy, Kansas City area representative of the AFL-CIO. "The Union and its part in community activities."
He said that the spring crops will reduce the prices of fruits and vegetables which have been at an alltime high because of the crop freezes in the South.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Schutz, four small sacred
concerto and four symphonie sacrae.
Palestinian pieces performed by
linea Choi
Public Lecture. May Sarton, 3 p.m.
313 Fraser. Miss Sarton will read and
discuss her poetry at a coffee hour sponsored by graduate English Club. Pub-
welcome
WEDNESDAY
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Pine Room, Union, Manuscript reading.
Fire from an undetermined cause destroyed contents in a mop closet in Fraser Hall at 9:45 a.m. Monday. Firemen estimated the damage between $300 and $400.
Fraser Hall Fire Destroys Mop Closet
The fire was confined to the closet. The building was relatively undamaged.
HE LEFT WITH OUR GAS
ROCKET BOAT
Hope you'll use it too.
LEONARD'S
Standard Service
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Winning Books To Be Displayed
Winning books in the design and topography competition sponsored by the Midwestern Books Committee will be on display in Watson Library from today through Saturday, April 26.
Anna" was designed by Donald von Ruydsael Drenner, Coffeyville printer. He composed and printed the book by hand and designed the binding.
One of the winning books, "Anna.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
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After Easter CLEARANCE SALE
Spring Dresses Reduced 40%
Spring Coats-Were $45, Now 21.88
Spring Wool Skirts Reduced 40%
One Group
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One Group Blouses $2.00
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Banquet Speaker: Bill Moore
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Dance Music by Dean Perry
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Dance - 9-12
Engineering Assn. members
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Friday, April 11
Kansas
Kansas Union
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 8, 1958
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Jayhawkers Again Dominate Relays
KU's Al Oerter set a new unofficial world record in the discus throw and broke the magic 200-foot barrier to overshadow all other performances in the Arkansas Relays Saturday.
Oerter, with his toss of 202-feet 6-inches became the first man in history to break into that magic circle of track greats. He also won the shot put with a 54-foot 9-inch heave to become the only man in the relays to win top honors in two events.
Kansas dominated the meet, winning four of the seven relays events, taking five individual firsts and sharing top honors in the high jump.
Oklahoma State won three short relay races and two individual titles. Arkansas the host team, took only one individual first.
Oerter's teammate, Ernie Shelby, took first place in the broad jump with a 25-foot 9-inch jump, one of the best of his career. The world record in this event is held by Olympic great, Jesse Owens, who leaped 26-feet $8\frac{1}{4}$-inches in 1935. Bill Tillman gave KU a first place finish in the 120-yard high hurdles with a clocking of: 14.4.
Kansas' 4-mile relay team of Barry Crawford, Verlyn Schmidt, Don Greenlee and Jerry McNeal put forth one of their best times. 17:42.4. to take first in that event.
Jim Londerholm won the javelin for Kansas, tossing it 207-feet 4-inches.
KU's 2-mile team of Clif Cushman, Dale Lubs, Tom Skutka and Bob Tague won first in that event with a 7.50:8 clocking.
The sprint medley team of Ray Wyatt, Verne Gauby, Charlie Tidwell and Tague took first with a 3:27.2 showing.
The distance medley team of John Davis, Lubs, McNeal and Skutka won first with the time of 10:38.5.
KU's Bob Cannon and Dick Keith tied Pittsburgh State's George Daniels in the high jump with leaps of 6-feet -2 inches.
The next meet for Kansas will be a dual with Oklahoma State at KU Friday.
Southern Ran Only Two 440's Before This Year
Most amazing item on Texas' Eddie Southern, who could set a new world 440 record any time out, is that he ran only two competitive open quarters in his college career before this year.
Furthermore, he won neither of them, clocking :47.2 behind Ohio State's Glen Davis in the Meet of Champions last year and :47.1 behind Jim Lea and J. W. Mashburn as a freshman in the 1956 Modesto Relays. Lea set the present world mark of :45.8 that night as Southern ran a fine early pace.
Now a mature junior. Southern will be the most electrifying runner going to the post in the 33rd Kansas Relays here April 18-19. If anyone needed further conviction that he is a serious threat to Lea's mark they got it in the Texas Relays when Southern ran a :45.3 anchor carry to pull the host Longhorns within a second of the ancient national collegiate mile relay record of 3:09.4.
Although that unofficial figure represents Southern's best effort to date, it should have surprised no one. Two weeks ago at the Southwestern Recreational he tied Herb McKenley's intercollegiate standard of :462, then came back in :458 for his mile relav anchor.
How come such good marks so early? Southern had great talent all along. So much so, in fact, he earned an Olympic intermediate hurdles berth as a freshman, chasing Davis to a world record of :49.5 in the final trials and sharing the Olympic mark with him at :50.1.
"It's the fact he's concentrating on the 440 this year," points out Steer Publicist Wilbur Evans. "Last year, you'll recall, he was running the hurdles and on our relay teams, of course. He wasn't working enough overdistance for the quarter. Now
Southern was something special in high school, of course, setting a national schoolboy mark of 46.7. As a freshman he set Southwest conference records of 20.5 in the 220, and 14.1 in the 120 Highs.
Just a year later, he chased Davis in 149:7 as both broke the world record in the Trials at Los Angeles. Only bad weather or an injury can keep Texas from toppling the 3:11:6 Kansas Relays mile record. The Steers didn't even have regular leadoffer Wally Wilson when they set that 3:10:4 at Austin. He had kinked a calf muscle opening night.
he's out of the hurdles and is aiming at the quarter. He's got more confidence too."
Southern, who had run two flights of highs and a 440 relay carry previously, gave way to Wilson in the anchor leg here last year with the result that the favored Longhorns were beaten by Kansas, Colorado and North Texas in a blanket finish. Eddie had run the No. 2 leg on the 440 quartet which blazed a new world mark of 39.9.
Four other Kansas marks were bettered at Texas from entrants expected here. Oklahoma State spun a surprising 1:22.9 in the 880, more than a second under Texas' 1:24.2 here last year. Oklahoma clocked 9:45.4 in the Distance Medley, almost ten seconds under the 10:04.3 Texas scored here a year ago. KU's Al Oter reached 188-feet 2-inches in the discus, and another Javahawk. Ernie Shelby, bounded 26-foot $3^{1/2}$-inches in the broad jump. This is impressive even in front of a 5 mph wind against the ancient 25-feet $4^{3/4}$-inches Relays standard Iowa Olympian Ed Gordon erected in 1931.
In the Defenestration of Prague in 1419, the Hussites threw the burgomaster out the window of the city hall.
Casey Stengel Unsatisfied
All spring long Casey Stengel has been complaining that his New York Yankees "ain't doin' enough hitting," but now that they have staged springtime's biggest slugfest, is Casey happy?
No, he isn't. Because the fractured wrist suffered by Harry Simpson took a lot of joy out of the 20 to 1 walloping the Yankees handed the Philadelphia Phillies Monday at Greensville, S. C.
Simpson's right wrist was fractured in the fourth inning when he was struck by a pitch thrown by Phils southpaw Curt Simmons. The wrist was placed in a cast and he will be out of action about four weeks. He was due in New York today for further examination.
The Yankees really slugged like the "bronx bombers" of old in Monday's rampage and the leading man one again was Bill Skowron. The former Purdue football star slammed two of the six homers, giving him a grapefruit-league leading total of 10 for the spring—
including seven in the last five games.
Mickey Mantle, Elston Howard,
Don Larsen, and Bobby Del Greco
hit the other homers and Mantle
added three doubles and a single
in a five-for-five day.
Larsen get back in the running for the opening day hurling assignment by shutting out the Phils on four hits for the seven frames he worked.
Two other pitchers turned in seven shutout innings Monday—Johnny Antonelli of the San Francisco Giants and Lindy McDaniel of the St. Louis Cards.
Southpaw Antonelii, striving to come back from a poor season, dolled out four hits in his seven innings as the Giants beat the Cleveland Indians for the third straight time, 7-0. Paul Giel allowed two singles in the last two frames while Jim King's solo homer led the Giant attack. The Giants got a scare when Willie Mays was hit on the elbow by a pitch thrown by rookie Chuck
Curn, but he escaped serious injury.
McDaniel worked his seven scorceless frames in the Cards' 8-0 victory over the Chicago White sox. Brother Von McDaniel and Hern Wehmeier cleaned up the 5-hitter.
In the other exhibitions:
Hank Aaron, who hit a right-field homer off lefty Johnny Podres earlier in the game, drove in the winning run with a sacrifice fly in the eighth inning as the Milwaukee Braves downed the Los Angeles Dodgers, 3-2.
Jim Lemon drove in three runs, two with a homer, to lead the Washington Senators to a 7-3 win over Cincinnati despite back-to-back ninth inning homers by Frank Robinson and rookie Vada Pinson.
Ronnie Kline became the third Pittsburgh pitcher to go the full route, allowing the Boston Red Sox four hits in a 4-2 victory.
And the Baltimore-Chicago Cubs game was called after one inning because of wet grounds.
Catalina
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803 Mass. terrill's LAWRENCE. KANSAS
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Fewer Prep Participants Emphasizes Relays Quality
This all means that the state's six or eight best prep performers, regardless of their school's class, will be running in the same race or competing in the same field event.
The mile run may bring together two of the state's all-time best schoolboy milers, Concordia's Bill Dotson and Wichita East's Archie San Romani Jr. The setting would be ideal, since San Romani handed Dotson his last defeat in winning a 4:26.5 duel in the Junior Olympics on the same KU Memorial Stadium track here last June.
The streamlined 1958 edition of the Kansas Interscholastic Relays won't have the thousands of high school participants as in recent years but the cutdown in quantity undoubtedly will result in better quality.
Dotson came back last fall to deal San Romani a smashing cross-country defeat. The Concordia senior now ranks as the state's second fastest schoolboy miler in history after his 4:24.6 clocking in the State Indoor meet late last month.
San Romani all-time best was in the Junior Olympics here last June. Heromed in with a 4:29.6 effort in the State Indoor, breaking his old record by some six seconds.
Only three individual running events—the 120-yard high hurdles, the 100-yard dash and the mile run—have been retained from the old Interscholastic lineup. These races along with the six regular field events, will be conducted in only one class.
Aim For State Record
Both milers will be aiming for Billy Mills' all-time state record of 4:22.8, set last April. The former Haskell Institute sensation also holds the KU Interscholastic record of 4:28.7 set last year.
There's some doubt at this stage whether San Romani will be entered against Dotson here. Wichita East coach Bob Timmons has hinted he may use San Romani
But it may be, too, that Dotson doesn't need San Romani's competition to run a great mile. He didn't have any competition at all in running the 4:24.6 indoors and he's determined enough to break 4:20 this year that he may do it by running all alone.
If San Romani doesn't run in the mile here, then Dotson's top threat will come from Washington's Fred Robinson. The Kansas City runner finished second at the Indoor meet after burning out under a fast early pace. He clocked 2:01.8 in the prep 880 at the Big Eight Indoor and is capable of dipping into 4:30 in the mile.
The best of the little school class is Linn's muscular Dave Ohlide. The long-striding senior won the indoor in 4:42.3 and is aiming to break 4:30.
in a two-mile relay team in an effort to break the national interscholastic record for that event.
Other Milers Expected
Other top milers expected to enter here are Haskell's John Thomas, Wyandotte's Tom Cunningham, Shawnee Mission's Bill Hayward, Oskaloosa's Rich Wellman, Hutchinson's Forrest Tennant and Maize's Phil Bricke.
In the other two individual running events, competition should be keen. These are several standouts but no favorite.
The hurdles will draw such stars as Arkansas City's Lloyd Buzj, Junction City's Charley Smith, Great Bend's Clarence Peterson, Emporia's Garv Robinson, Highland Park's Charley Anderson, Shawnee Mission's Bob Bradley, Leoi's Jerry Hooker, Belle Plaine's Terry Wegmett, Wakefield's Larry Lynch, Quinter's Jim Boone and Plain's Russell Vail
Buzzi and Smith captured the Class AA indoor hurdles titles while Hooker and Lynch won both flights in Class A and B, respectively. Peterson and Vail may be the best of the lot, however, since neither competed indoors.
In the century, two of the three class champions from last year return to battle it out in the single race this time. Hays' Dale Alexander and Douglas' Tom Ferguson won the A and B titles, respectively, last year.
Alexander, a junior, could be one of the state's all-time great sprinters. He won State Outdoor titles in the two shorter sprints as a sophomore and appears set for a great year this spring. Ferguson was nosed out in the Indoor '60' but he is known to be better at the longer distance.
Other Sprinters On List
Shawnee Mission's Dave Butts, the Indoor Class AA '60' winner, Garnett's Duane Rankin and Arma's Jan Kalusha head the list of remaining sprinters. This list should also include such standouts as Leaventworth's Frank Robinson, Emporia's Ne O'Mara, Wamego the Bob Morgan, Clay Center's Kelly Rankin, Dwight's Harold Haum, Augusta's Kent Adams and Topeka's Larry Wynne.
The three running events all are scheduled for Friday afternoon. This year's program integrates the high school program with the college and university relays and gives the preps two days of action instead of one.
Besides these events, Friday's schedule also calls for finals in the shot put, javelin, pole vault, high jump, and two-mile relay. Saturday morning's program lists finals in the discus and broad jump with the afternoon being devoted to the remaining relays—sprint medley, quarter mile, half mile and mile.
Weimer, Belisle Sign With Kansas
Kenny Belisle, all-area halfback from Derby, and Larry Weimer will accept football scholarships to Kansas next autumn, Jack Mitchell announced.
Belisle is a 5-foot $10\frac{1}{2}$-inch 165-pounder. In addition to earning all-area honors, he was selected on
Officials of KU and Kansas State have agreed to stop revealing names of prospective football candidates, it was announced Saturday.
Won't Reveal Prospects
The announcements from KU have stated that the boy had agreed to accept a football scholarship, although the school can't actually offer the scholarship until the boy has graduated from high school with sufficiently high grades. The scholarship committee must also approve the scholarship.
Officials have stated that a school is subject to embarrassment when a boy changes his mind, which he has a right to do.
the all-state squad. He also is a double letterman in track and a triple monogram winner in basketball.
Officials have had the pact because they say announcing the intentions of a player puts pressure on the boy to follow through, even though the announcement in no way binds the player.
The agreement isn't a new one, but a renewal of an old agreement between the schools. The original agreement was made eight years ago. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and President James A. McCain announced the pact had been renewed.
Kansas coach Jack Mitchell was apparently unaware of the agreement. He has announced the names of more than a dozen boys who are expected to accept scholarships at KU.
The announcement of the renewal came shortly after Mitchell had announced that Lawrence High School All America back John Hadl had decided to accept a scholarship at KU. Hadl had offers from 15 schools throughout the country, including Oklahoma University and others. It was reported Oklahoma's Bud Wilkinson had planned to visit Hadl in the near future.
K-State had apparently waited before finally releasing names of some of the boys they had recruited. K- State named five men in about a 4-day period.
Weiner, all-area fullback from Clay Center also is a letterman in basketball and track. He plans to enroll here in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Houston Nips KU
Gary Russell was the losing pitcher. Ravford Hamil was the winner.
Houston came up with a run in the 10th inning in Houston Monday to win a 7-6 decision over Kansas in the first game of a 2-game series.
Hamil began pitching in the bottom of the eighth and didn't allow Kansas on base the rest of the game.
Hamil also picked up the hit in the 10th inning that put the winning run on base.
The Jayhawkers collected just six hits on starter Charles Pieper who lasted 71/3 innings. Houston had 14 hits. The Cougars made six fielding errors, the Jayhawkers two.
Each team collected four extra base hits, three doubles and a homer for Kansas and three homers and a double for Houston.
The rattlesnake is the most widely distributed poisonous reptile.
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Ruby Sterlin, Chi Omega, holding her new Hoohawk from the Student Union Bookstore.
The Hoohawk
Southern Kansas cousin of the KU Jayhawk has flown north for the spring.
Now he roosts in the Student Union Bookstore with drooping eyes and a dissipated expression, waiting for someone to carry him home.
Get a Hoohawk for yourself or for a gift. You'll like this new addition to
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KU STUDENT Union Book Store.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 8, 1958
Campus Club News
Clubs Plan Meetings Initiates Announced
Pi Lambda Theta
Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education fraternity for women, has announced the initiation of Nancy Smith, Liberal, Mary Thornton, Clay Center, both juniors.
Theta Sigma Phi
Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternity for women has announced the initiation of six members.
The initiates are Martha Crosier, Lawrence, Mary Alden, Hutchinson, Pat Swanson, Newton, Niki Economy, Kansas City, Kan., Clydedne
Boots, Isabel, Eleanor Wilson,
Mendle, all juniors.
Following initiation ceremonies installation of officers was held.
Young GOP, Demos
KU's chapters of the Collegiate Young Democrats and Young Republicans will hold a joint meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room to discuss the special legislative session.
'Shimmy' Shift In Night Wear
"Shimmy" shifts, influenced by the chemise, are the new look in bedtime wear for the modern miss.
Each club will have a state senator to debate the partisan sides of the issues which will face the legislature. Names of the senators have not been announced.
"Shimmy" shifts, shorty night gowns modeled after the flapper dresses of the Twenties, are being shown in cotton and nylon tricot. The shifts consist of short, or three-quarter length nighties, with mock waists around the hips and pleated or gathered skirts.
Many "shimmy" shifts are being shown in large floral prints, which will be very popular this spring. Some of the shifts have straps, while others have scoop or V neck lines. The "shimmy" shifts are accented with nylon lace and bows.
"Baby doll" nighties are also a great favorite. The favorite "baby doll" style consists of short nighties with puffed sleeves, scoop necklines, and short full skirts with bloomers to match. "Baby doll" nighties come in plain colors, stripes or small floral prints.
More Felt Used In Men's Hats
Crushable felts will be popular choices in men's hats this spring. This headwear style accompanies the orderly, responsible look in fashions for men.
The center crease will continue to be the most favored blocking.
Snappy effects will be achieved by use of nylon and fur felt blends, two-tone felts and silk finishes. The crushables will go well with the season's short coats.
Most hats will be styled along casual lines. The general outlook calls for small shaped, narrow brimmed and low crowned pieces.
Continuing last year's sales surge, the telescope hat with a new soft fold will appear this spring. The crown will be higher in front than in back, and some peaks will be pinched.
Summer should see crushable straws and the popular boaters take hold. Lightweight Milans will reappear, also.
Caps for campus and sports wear will receive wide attention. Muted ivy-league stripes will be the most sought after. Corduroy with its excellent utility and appearance will be a dominant material.
Rough textures and fresh styles mean added popularity for men's hats in 1958.
Freshman Women To Visit Sororities
Freshman women will be guests of twelve social sororities at open houses Saturday and Sunday.
Seven parties will be held at the sorority houses from 1:30-5:25 p.m. Saturday, and five parties will be from 2-4:45 p.m. Sunday. Each party will last 45 minutes and will include skits presented by the sororities.
Freshman women will attend the parties according to the floors they live on in the freshman dormitories.
... On The Hill..
Sharon Hoover, Wichita sophomore, has been elected president of Douthart Hall.
Douthart Hall
Other officers elected were Elaine Piper, Columbus, vice-president, Sandra Ackerman, Leavenworth, treasurer, both sophomores; Delores Villarreal, Pratt junior, house manager.
Lynn Lamb, Macksville, secretary; Beverly Penka, social chairman. Miriam Schwartzkopf, assistant social chairman, both of Larned; Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg, Inter-Residence Council representative. All are freshmen.
Sigma Pi
A 'Far Away Places' costume party was held by Sigma Pi fraternity recently in the chapter house.
Mrs. D. H. Buie, Mrs. Sestos Hughes, Mrs. Sebonia Hancock, and Mrs. Stella Atkinson, housemothers were chaperones.
A good dip for seafood canapes is made by blending 1/2 cup each of sour cream and mayonnaise with 2/3 crushed garlic bud, 1 teaspoon salt, 1/3 cup chili sauce and 1/4 teaspoon pepper. Makes 1 1/3 cups.
To save the unused pimento, once the can is opened, put the contents in a small jar, with lid. Add a few drops of vinegar to the liquid.
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Tuesday, April 8, 1958 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. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 8, 1958
TOLEDO, N.Y. -- Mr. David L. Blankenship, the owner of Woodworking Machinery Inc., has been an important figure in the industry for many years. He is known for his commitment to quality and innovation in woodworking machinery. Mr. Blankenship was born on July 14, 1932, in New York City and graduated from Fordham University. He began his career at Woodworking Machinery Inc., where he worked as a machinist and eventually moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where he continued to work in the machinery sector. Mr. Blankenship is also a board member of the American Woodworking Association and a member of the National Machinery Association. He is known for his expertise in woodworking machinery and his dedication to improving the manufacturing process. Mr. Blankenship is also a frequent attendee at trade shows and conferences throughout the world. He is known for his knowledge of various woodworking machinery and his ability to provide expert advice and guidance to clients. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his strong sense of humor and his willingness to work hard and make mistakes. He is always looking for new opportunities to grow and improve his business. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his kindness and generosity to customers. He is always willing to help others and be a positive influence on their lives. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his love of music and his ability to create beautiful music. He is also known for his love of travel and his ability to explore new places. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his love of art and his ability to create beautiful artwork. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his love of nature and his ability to observe and appreciate the beauty of the natural world. Mr. Blankenship is also known for his love of music and his ability to create beautiful music. Mr. Blankens
THE CAT'S WHISKERS—George Young, taxidermist for the Museum of Natural History, attaches modeling clay to a skeleton to form the body of a specimen of the cat family. The work takes lots of patience (see below).
Taxidermist Needs Skill, Patience
By DIANA JOHNS (Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Taxidermy, the art of preparing and preserving the skins of animals and stuffing and mounting them in lifelike form, calls for skillful and painstaking work. At KU, this work is done on the top floor of the Museum of Natural History.
"There is a big difference between mounting small and large animals." George Young, taxidermist for the museum, said.
"A small animal is skinned, and' the legbones are left attached to the skin. An artificial body, made of excelsior, is wrapped over wire to the approximate size of the carcass," he said.
The body is modeled into a position decided on ahead of time. Muscles are modeled from tow or jute (hemp fibers) and wrapped with thread to hold them in place.
An artificial skull is made of clay, and glass eyes are put in place before the skin is pulled over the skull and the artificial body.
"The evelids, nose, etc. are painted a natural color, and the small animal mount is complete." Mr. Young said.
"Large animals are an entirely different story," he said. "When a large animal is collected in the field, its measurements are taken both before and after is has been skinned." he said.
To mount a large animal, the skin is usually tanned, and the skeleton is cleaned and set up in the desired position. Mr. Young said.
The skeleton is used as a frame over which modeling clay is used to make a model of the carcass, he said. The skin is then fitted to this model.
When the clay model is finished a plaster mold is made. This mold consists of three layers of burlap, each layer of which has been dipped
KU Jazz Group To Play At Emporia
The Don Conard quintette, campus jazz band, will be guest performers today at a concert sponsored by the student council of Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia.
The "Jazz For Spring" concert, with two Emporia bands, will be broadcast over radio station KUOE, Emporia. The proceeds from the concert will be used for a music scholarship.
in plaster. When the mold is removed the tanned skin is glued and sewn over the plaster model, Mr Young said.
There is very little difference in the way birds and small animals are mounted, he said.
"For fish, if we want to use the skin, a two-piece plaster mold is made before skinning," Mr. Young said. "The mold is removed, and the fish is skinned by making an incision in the back side of the fish where it will not show."
From this mold a cast is made of either paper mache or burlap and plaster, over which the fish skin is glued and sewn. The fish skin loses its color and must be painted to give it a natural appearance under artificial light. Mr. Young said.
Book Collection Finalists Named
Seven finalists were chosen in the second annual Taylor student book collection contest which ended March 31. Judges will meet April 16 to choose the two best collections.
MAUPINTOURS/1958
ADVENTUREI EDUCATIONI
RUSSIA
TRAVEL! SUMMER 1958I
The finalists and the collections they entered are Robert M. Worcester, Kansas City, Kan. special student, politics and government; Kent H. Wilson, Fort Worth, Texas, entomology; Robert L. Packard, Lawrence, North American mammalogy; Barbara Solomon, Lawrence, poetry and drama; E. Bruce Holmes, Lawrence, vertebrate evolution. All are graduate students.
Carlos M. Campuzano, Kansas City, Mo. senior, travel in Spain, Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth junior, Civil War.
Robert L. Quinsey, assistant director of Watson Library and contest chairman, said 14 bibliographies were submitted. He said variety in the collections is comparable to last year.
Mr. Quinsey and Earl Farley, cataloger in the preparations departments, chose the finalists. The seven students will bring their collections to the library today.
The judges will be Jerome Cushman of the Salina Public Library, Dr. C. Frederick Kittle of the KU Medical Center and John Edward Hicks of the Kansas City Star.
The contest is sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, Kansas City, Mo. book collector.
Mr. Quinsey said the size, worth, age and rarity of the books will not be of primary importance. He said the contest is intended to stimulate book collecting and will be judged on the content and quality as it reflects the student's interest.
Join a special American-directed, student/takeover tour through the Soviet Union. Choose from six departure dates... travel w/eldom-visited cruise such as Kiev, the Ukraine, Odessa, Sask., Tolstil, of Soviet Georgia, Kharkov.
enjoy a Volga River or Black Sea cruise... see Leningrad and Moscow, visit Warsaw Prague and the Brussels (World) plus extensions to the European Capitals.
The prize winning collections will be displayed either in the library or the Kansas Union.
Inclusive rate from $1369, from New York. Reservations limited, apply now for sufficient time to secure Russian visa. Write today for descriptive folder. See your travel agent or
地球
Tom Maupin
TOUR ASSOCIATES
1236 Massachusetts
Lawrence / Kansas
Data on star observations are provided to the world's timekeepers,survevors,and map makers by five observatories of the International Latitude Service.
Even if there were no cherry blossoms blooming in Washington, D. C. for the annual Cherry Blossom Festival, the atmosphere was gay and lively for Sharon Lynch, Salina senior, who represented Kansas at the annual celebration in the nation's capital.
Celebrities Attend Cherry Festival
, who was personally*
Sharon, who was personally asked by Sen. Frank Carlson to represent Kansas, was one of 53 princesses who represented the states and territories at the festival.
The Kansas State Society, of which Sen. Carlson is president, honored Sharon with a dance the night of her arrival in Washington.
"Meeting Vice President Richard Nixon was probably the most exciting thing about my whole trip; but just being in Washington for such an elaborate round of parties was a wonderful experience." Miss Lynch said.
That same day the princesses were served tea at the home of Amoassador and Mrs. Asakai, and presented Japanese fans. Sharon was later escorted by Sen. Carlson to a luncheon and fashion show at which Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower and Mrs. Richard Nixon were present.
Opening ceremonies for the Festival officially began Wednesday, March 28, with the traditional lighting of the Japanese lantern on the Potomac River by Japanese Ambassador Koehira Asakai. The lightening commemorates the gift to the United States by Japan of the famous cherry trees which decorate the tidal basin near Jefferson's Monument.
At the Cherry Blossom Festival Ball Friday, March 28, the queen was chosen by spinning a wheel of fortune with each state and territory designated on the wheel. Mrs. Nixon spun the wheel, which stopped incidentally, at Maine—right next to Kansas.
The princesses were presented individually in a pageant at the tidal basin Saturday morning, March 29, and the queen was crowned with a traditional $100,000 pearl crown by William Bendix, movie star and
master of ceremonies
A 4-hour televised parade was held Saturday night with illuminated floats, 35 bands, drill teams and majorttes, comedy and mounted units, and led by grand marshall Michael Ansara, television star who plays Cochise. Each of the princesses and the queen rode in special cars.
On Sunday a repeat of the Cherry Blossom pageant was staged again at the tidal basin, with the queen being crowned by Ambassador Asakai.
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His friend replied, "What do you mean? You never did any advertising."
"I know," was his answer, "but my competitors did."
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100 Bands Invited To Relays Parade
The Saddle and Sirloin Club, Kansas City, Mo. riding club, and several high school bands have entered the Kansas Relays parade, scheduled for Saturday morning, April 19. About 24 organized houses are expected to enter.
Invitations to the parade have been sent to 100 Kansas high schools, but entries usually come in so late that the line-up will probably not be complete until April 18, the first day of the Relays, said Raymond H. Dean, student chairman.
The University of Nebraska Kansas State, Oklahoma University and Missouri University have entered candidates in the Relays queen contest. Two queen finalists, one chosen from the KU entries and one from the other schools represented, will reign over the Relays. Judging is Sunday.
Daniel L, Casson, queen contest chairman, said he expected queen entries from the rest of the Big Eight schools.
The queens and their attendants will either be on a float or will ride in open sports cars in the parade About 35 members of the Kansas City club will ride decorated horses and drill teams will also take part Queen candidates are welcome to be in the parade, but have not yet decided if they will.
The Student Union Activities Relays dance will be from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, April 19, in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets are on sale today at the Union ticket counter and will be on sale at the campus information booth next week. Groups may reserve tables now.
The Relays' theme, "Sports in a Scientific World," will be carried out in decorations at the dance. Harlan Livingood and his band will play for the semi-formal dance.
General chairman of the dance is Larry Lee Marshall, Salina sophomore. Committee chairmen are Wesley M. Witt, Garden City freshman, publicity; William Fricke, Jefferson City. Mo., junior, tickets; and Judith A. Childecoat, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, decorations.
KU-Y To Sell Buttons As Relays Souvenirs
Red and blue Kansas Relays buttons will be sold by KU-Y members at the Engineering Exposition and at the stadium during the KU Relays, April 18-19.
Nancy Parker, Bartlesville, Okla. junior and sales committee chairman, said the buttons will have a Jayhawker in the center, "Kansas Relays 1958" will be printed around the edge. Proceeds from the souvenir badges will go into the KU-Y general treasury.
Girls Have First 'Brush With Law'
From their post on the Green Hall steps the lawyers served as an unofficial welcoming committee for high school girls taking part in the district music festival.
Most of the young musicians, in full-skirted frilly spring dresses, appeared shattered at their first "brush with the law," but others were obviously thrilled by the experience.
One of the girls was heard to remark, "I'm glad we didn't wear those sedate black uniforms."
304 Entries In Speech Festival
There are 304 individual high school entries and 35 1-act plays entered in the Lawrence division of the annual State Speech and Drama Festivals to be held here Friday and Saturday.
The individual events will include extemporaneous speaking, original oration, manuscript reading, plus humorous and dramatic readings. There will be 77 high school participating in the festival, and medals and certificates will be awarded to winners.
Among the other activities planned is a dinner for the coaches on Friday night and a luncheon on Saturday. Both are to be in the John Steuart Curry room of the Kansas Union. Events also will be held in Dodge City as a part of the festivals.
Supervisors of the Lawrence festival are E. A. McFarland, director of the Lawrence center of extension, Dr. Jack Brooking and Wilmer Linkugel of the department of speech and drama.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No.121
Another graduate student near the laboratory where the explosion occurred said he thought overheating of the chemical caused the explosion.
The explosion occurred while McDaniel was working on a research project in the production of rocket fuel.
Only a few articles were damaged in the laboratory and two other students in the laboratory were injured.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of student health services, said McDaniel would be released in a couple of days. McDaniel suffered shock plus cuts in the face, chest and both arms. His eyes were not damaged.
Wednesday, April 9, 1958
125 Applications Received For Camp
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Applications from 125 high school students for admission to the third annual Science and Mathematics Camp at the University have been received by the director, David Paretsky, associate professor of bacteriology.
Robert McDaniel, Torrington, Wyo graduate student, is in the campus hospital with about 100 small cuts from broken glass. The injury was received in an explosion in a research laboratory about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Elections Are Valid Council Declares
The camp, which will enroll 75 students, will be on the KU campus from June 15 to July 3. Dr. Paretsky expects the camp to be completely filled.
for spring. The machine is used to spray trees and has a high pressure nozzle. (Daily Kansan photo)
MOTORMAST
Student Suffers 100 Small Cuts In Explosion
IT'S NOT THE ARTILLERY—Buildings and Grounds personnel spray the trees as a part of their work in getting the campus in shape
ASC Hears Report On Local Race Discrimination
The All Student Council upheld that the primary elections were valid by an 11-5 vote in its meeting Tuesday night, after the Allied Greek-Independent party had asked the Council to declare the AGI primary invalid.
Nobel Winner To Give Lecture
Dr. Wendell M. Stanley, a Nobel prize winner from the University of California, will present the 10th annual E. C. Franklin memorial lecture at 8 p.m. Friday in Bailey Auditorium. He will speak on "New Concepts Regarding the Nature of Viruses."
DR. WENDELL M. STANLEY
Dr. Stanley is a professor of biochemistry, chairman of the department and director of the virus laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley. He was awarded the Nobel prize in chemistry in 1946 for his work on the crystallization of tobacco mosaic virus.
The lecture is sponsored by the K U. chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry fraternity, in honor of Dr. Edward C. Franklin, former professor of physical chemistry.
He received his Ph.D. in chemistry in 1929 from the University of Illinois and has received honorary degrees from several universities including Harvard, Yale and Princeton.
After a year in Munich as a National Research Council Fellow, Dr. Stanley joined the staff at Rockefeller Institute in 1931. He has received the Nichols, Gibbs and Franklin medals and the Presidential Certificate of Merit.
He is a member of the council of the National Academy of Sciences, the advisory panel on virus diseases of the World Health Organization and advisory councils of the U. S. Public Health Service. He is a member of Phi Lambda Upsilon.
Snow ending northwest and occasional light rain remainder of state today. Tonight light rain or drizzle east and central portions. Clearing most of state Thursday. Warmer west portion Thursday, otherwise no important change in temperature. Low tonight 30 northwest to 45 southeast. High Thursday 50 to 55.
Weather
AGI wanted the primary revoked because the phrase "Vote only for the candidates in your own district" was printed on the ballots.
The practice in primaries has been to allow party members to vote for the entire ticket, although the Elections Committee said the ASC constitution indicates the "district only" rule is to apply to primaries and the general election.
Joel Sterrett, Topeka senior and AGI president, said the party would not contest the primary further, and would run the list of candidates as "certified in the AGI primary."
Reiected for 3 Reasons
AGI had the option of naming any candidates it wished, regardless of the results of the primary.
1. No protest of the election was made until after the committee had certificated the voting.
John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior and Elections Committee chairman, said the committee had rejected AGI's request on three grounds;
3. AGI presented no evidence to show that any elections results would have been changed by the phrase objected to.
2. Even though there was the irregularity in voting instructions, no one was disenfranchised from voting for all party candidates.
The Council also heard Linda Bodle, Plattsburg, Mo. junior and chairman of the Group for Improvement of Human Relations, who told the Council of the work GIHR has done this year.
Misa Bodle said most of the group's work had been without publicity until recently, while working with the University administration and the Lawrence City Council toward desegregating Lawrence restaurants.
Miss Bodle said the group has concentrated this year on discrimination against Negroes and students of Haskell Institute.
The typical response from restaurant owners, she said, was "Personally, I'd be glad to serve them, but we'd lose business..."
About 10 of Lawrence's 50 restaurants are open to all races, Miss Bodle said. She added that apparently none have lost business through the change in policy.
She told the ASC that student government will not have any influence on the problem unless it takes action, such as an ASC statement of its policy on segregation.
Student Directory Loses Money
Student Directory Loses Money The Council heard a report on the finances of the Student Directory, which was printed and sold at a deficit of $38.59, less than the usual loss on the directory. The Council voted to make up the deficit from its contingency fund.
In other action, the Council heard the second reading of an amendment classifying the Student Bar Association, so it can apply to the Council for funds.
A report on Squat, campus humor magazine, was presented by its executive staff, and a first reading was held of an amendment which would remove Squat as KU's official humor magazine. A complaint was raised at the Feb. 25 meeting against the quality of the magazine.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 9.1958
Too Much Of A Good Thing
Remember the juvenile delinquent shepherd who always cried "wolf, wolf, wolf" to scare the villagers into running to their sheep to protect them from the wolf.
After several false alarms the villagers tired of the delinquent's antics and sat still one day when the shepherd let out his cry. The result was the loss of some sheep.
Nowadays we have similar false alarms, though cried out not by shepherds, but the man in charge of queens of some affair.
As each affair pushes into the limelight, the committee for the affair meets, and to get the ball rolling a plan for a reigning queen is completed.
Multiply this scene by a dozen or more times
and you do indeed have a situation of "training queens." And as each affair shows its queen to the villagers—or nowadays the students—they stand in awe, the awe lessening a little at each presentation of a queen.
Soon the students tire of the cry of reigning queen, and one day they get so tired they don't care if they see another queen.
On that day we find the currently reigning queen standing alone with only the committee that presented her. They are forlorn, bitter, a victim of their own doing.
So remember, suggesters of queens, the cry of "queen, queen, queen" sooner or later will liken you to the juvenile delinquent shepherd.
—Doug Parker
Sounds Like A Winner
Here's a plank for one of the two political parties preparing to fight it out in the coming general elections: beer in the Kansas Union.
It's not such an outlandish idea, since some colleges are doing it or contemplating doing it. And think what a trend it would start in the parched state of Kansas!
Quoted in the Michigan Daily, Walter B. Rea, dean of men, said a taproom serving beer in the student union might not be a bad idea there. "If students are to drink and learn to drink like ladies and gentlemen there might be a better way than having to go off campus to drink," Dean Rea said.
No minor can drink at the university without breaking some rule, he said, and a responsible group can start a move to change the rules.
After the dean's comments were published, the students had a few things to say:
"Drunkenness wouldn't be much of a problem. Social pressure would keep most from overstepping limits."
"We came here to study, not to drink."
"Fabulous—but there are many questions on how it would be run."
"Excellent—there's quite a bit of drinking any how and it seems ridiculous not to have it at the union."
Our situation at KU may not be the same as at Michigan, but think of the votes a political party would get if it dedicated itself to the propagation of beer in the union! One could almost predict a mass appeal in the beer platform.
However, one can equally predict another Carry Nation rising up on our campus. It would indeed be interesting.
The Army Has The Answer
Doug Parker
A Catholic priest whose "parish" covers 13 states said today that the U. S. Army has the answer to some of the nation's juvenile delinquency problems.
Col. John K. Connelly, 52, is boss chaplain for the 5th Army area. A combat veteran of World War II and Korea, Connelly wears the purple heart as a souvenir of four years of jungle warfare and a streak of gray hair, perhaps as a token of listening to the woes of thousands of GIs.
"We don't have any delinquents in the Army, juvenile or otherwise." Connelly said in an interview at 5th Army headquarters where he arrived last week to begin his command.
"I just finished serving three years at Fort Dix, N. J.," Connelly said. "We've gotten some very tough young men from the sidewalks of New York, and you know how they ended up after they spent a few days with us? Like the good soldiers we made them. The Army doesn't have time for misfits. They shape up or else."
Connelly, a native of Berkeley,
Calif, got into the Army after serving the boys in the old Civilian Conservation Corps in Idaho, Montana and Utah.
Connelly was saying Mass at Fort Shafter, Honolulu, when the Japanese bombs fell on Pearl Harbor. He subsequently landed with American troops on Buna, Guadalcanal, Munda, Luzon and Leyte. His purple heart was awarded for a shrapnel wound on New Guinea. He also wears the bronze star with four oak leaf clusters.
"I've been in the Army 23 years," Connelly said, "And I've seen just about every kind of soldier you can imagine in just about every kind of condition. And I can say without doubt the Army's morals stack up with the best of the civilian morals, and maybe better.
"Oh, we get hold of some bums sometimes. We get some real bumps. They come to us from civilian life, often from homes where they've been pampered half to death. Sometimes we can't do anything with them. But most times we can. We turn them into men."
"What's the most typical problem the men bring us chaplains? That's easy. They don't like being in the Army. It's our job to remind them they're not wasting their time the years they spend with us. We do as well as we can. We've got a big shortage of chaplains. An Army chaplain could work 24 hours a day and still not finish all his work.
"No, as far as I have observed there's no religious discrimination in the Army. It's against the regulations for one thing. Here's something I'm real proud of---"
The chaplain displayed an award received last fall from the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America for "outstanding contributions to the spiritual and moral welfare of Jewish servicemen and women."
Telegraphic Tabloids
United Press
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Joe Campbell made his debut as a professional golfer yesterday and won $5, which exactly covered the tournament entrance fee.
LONDON-Mrs. Lola Blackall, whose home in suburban Hornsley has been burglarized twice in the past few months put this ad in the local newspaper:
MIYAZAKI, Japan—Housewives here inaugurated a "Let's Talk Circle" club open only to women with one or more of the following problems:
"Please, I have nothing left to pinch."
Ugliness, poor cooking, a dislike of husband, being a bad mother, too much housework, being unsocial.
ATLANTA—Fire Chief Roy O.
Colston can't figure why his brick and concrete fire station is swarming with termites. "These isn't a thing around here for them to eat," he said.
NOTTINGHAM, England-A youth charged with shopbreaking told police:
Mammoth Spring in north Arkansas is one of the largest springs in the United States, flowing at the rate of 215 million gallons a day.
"I did it to get money to pay a fine."
.. Letters ..
Thanks
About half of the national territory of Venezuela lies south of the Orinoco River in a region known as the Guiana Highlands.
Editor:
In canvassing the city of Lawrence for the 1958 Multiple Sclerosis Drive, KU sorority members collected a total of $1,622. Additional contributions from the KU faculty are still being received. The grand total for the campaign so far amounts to $1,798.
What makes this project such a fitting one for college students is that they themselves are just reaching the susceptible age. In 70 percent of all cases the onset of multiple sclerosis occurs between the ages of 20 and 40. It is the commonest of grave neurological diseases, and no cure is known. That is why discovering the cause of MS is so important.
We wish to thank all who have so unselfishly helped in this campaign, particularly the girls who canvassed; Joyce Elliott, the project chairman, for her efficient management and planning; Mary Claire Purcell, the Greek Week chairman, and all the many donors. We are indeed grateful.
The 1958 Multiple Sclerosis Campaign committee
The 1936 Multiple Sclerosis Campaign committee
Milton Allen
Charles Springer, co-chairmen
Walter Sandelius
Ruth Quinlan
Edgar Wolfe
Daily Hansan
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Managing Editors; Douglas Parker, City Editor; Martha Ostler, Jack Harrison, Assistant Editor; Emily Gaynor, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Assistant Sports Editor; Pat Swanson, Society Editor; Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
How Do You Explain It?
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley ... Editorial Editor
Some of the strangest things happen on the campus with little logic involved.
During Easter vacation spring tree trimming took place on the campus. Workers swarmed over the trees on the south side of Jayhawk Boulevard, the side where there is never any parking.
When the 8,500 students returned to the campus the tree trimming emphasis was put on the trees on the north side of Jayhawk Boulevard. How do you explain it?
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Wednesday. April 9, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Father, Son May Each Get Degrees
Stewart Newlin, editor of the Wellington Daily News, started an 8-week practice teaching stint last week which will enable him to graduate from KU this June with his son Harve.
The editor, who says he doesn't "plan to do any teaching," is observing and will teach classes in junior and senior English in the Wellington schools. He is also observing in a physics class under the supervision of the regular teachers. Physics was his minor at KU.
If he completes his qualifications for a degree, he will graduate from the University exactly 30 years after he received his high school diploma. His degree will be a bachelor of science in education.
Newlin said that the fact his son will graduate "spurted me ahead," to get my degree. If he completes the requirements, he will participate in commencement exercises June 1 and 2.
Harve will graduate from the School of Business in June and will report June 19 for flight training as a second lieutenant in the Marines.
Started College in 1928 The elder Newlin attended KU for three years beginning in the fall of 1928 when he studied journalism. He took an extended trip to Europe, entering the University again in the spring semester of the 1931-32 school
year. He dropped out of school before completing work for his degree
In the fall semester of the 1951-52 school year, Mr. Newlin commuted daily from Topeka to Lawrence to complete all of his necessary courses except the practice teaching requirement.
Dr. Oscar Haugh, professor of education and Mr. Newlin's adviser, said, "He planned to go on and get his practice-teaching out of the way the next fall, but he took advantage of another opportunity he could hardly turn down."
Opportunity in Washington
That opportunity was in Washington, D.C., where he became publicity director for the Eisenhower-for-President national headquarters prior to the Republican national convention.
Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education said that the procedure of letting a person take his practice teaching so far away from KU was unusual, but this was a deserving case.
Dr. Haugh said that he would be making several trips to Wellington to talk with Mr. Newlin's teachers and work out teaching procedures with the newspaperman.
Around The World
The President also said today that he would very seriously consider suspending U. S. nuclear tests if the forthcoming series in the Pacific provides the United States with scientific data.
Eisenhower Says Tax Cut Not Necessary For Economy
President Eisenhower said today that he sees no need for a decision on cutting taxes.
After the 1958 tests are completed, the President said, U. S. scientists will tell them if they provided most, if not all of the information they sought.
He told his news conference that economic figures he has seen including those on unemployment Tuesday in his opinion do not require a tax cutting decision at the moment.
The Labor and Commerce Department reported Tuesday that March unemployment rose 25,000 to 5,198,000 while employment rose 323,000.
The President said he is keeping the tax matter under constant study but indicated that it could be several months before a decision is made to cut taxes—if that becomes necessary.
Meanwhile, British scientists said today that they blamed Soviet nuclear tests for the sharp rise in the amount of radioactivity in the world in the past few weeks.
In Kansas City, Mo., a geneticist charged Tuesday night that the United States is willing to risk the lives of 200,000 children to perfect the H-bomb that it wants.
Dr. Irwin Herskowitz said that officials should tell the world that H-bomb tests will cause from 100,000 to 200,000 leukemia cases plus untold numbers of cancer cases through indirect radioactive fallout in the next 10 to 30 years.
"To ignore that fact is the crime the government and the medical profession have been committing," he said.
In New York, the Broadway adaptation of Thomas Wolfe's novel, "Look Homeward, Angel," has been chosen the best American play presented in the 1957-58 season by the New York Drama Critics' Circle.
In Washington. Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield assured today that a special commemorative stamp will be issued in January,
City Managers Train For Future Positions
Fifteen states are receiving the services of 41 city managers who are graduates of the KU city management training program.
The program, sponsored by the political science department and the Governmental Research Center, was started in 1948 with a financial grant from the Carnegie Corp. Since 1954 the program has been sponsored by the University and cooperating cities.
Since the program started in 1948 100 men have been accepted. A panel of political scientists interviews each applicant. This year 11 applicants were accepted, according to William Cape, visiting professor of political science, who is in charge of the program.
Bachelor's Degree Needed
During the first two semesters of the 2-year program the students entoll in graduate courses. These courses emphasize general techniques of municipal government, administrative management and human relations.
A bachelor's degree is required to be eligible to apply for the program
Upon completion of two semesters work, the students are required to serve a 9-month internship under an experienced city manager. During this time the students are enrolled in a seminar for apprentices. They are also expected to complete a thesis on some problem they have worked on in their cities.
Intern Jobs Vary
Prof. Cape said some interns may serve as administrative assistants to the city manager while others may serve as assistants to different department heads.
Topics which would confront a city manager such as public relations or police organization, are discussed and a city manager attends the seminar.
Prof. Cape bases the success of the program on the fact that 80 per cent of the graduates are currently employed in municipal government and 90 per cent have remained in some form of public service.
Upon satisfactory completion of the program the students receive degrees of Master of Public Administration
Joie L. Stapleton, professor of physical education, has been elected vice-president elect of the central district of the American Health, Physical Education and Recreation Assn. at a meeting this week in Kansas City, Mo. Prof. Stapleton will take office in 1959.
Professor Elected President
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Male Singers To Organize
Barbershop singers, previously unorganized in the Lawrence area, will have an opportunity Thursday to form a chapter of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America.
Charter membership in the group s open to all male students or faculty members who are interested in joining.
Robert W. McEldowney, Lawrence businessman, a member of the committee organizing the chapter, announced the organizational meeting would be at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Community Building.
"This is an opportunity for a community service," Mr. McEldowney said. Members of the chapter would be available for community functions, he added.
The chapter will also produce a program of barbershop quartet singing here in May, he said.
Registration began Tuesday for the Western Civilization examination on May 17.
Western Civ Test Registration Starts
Students taking the test are to apply at the registrar's office before April 30.
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1961 to honor the 100th anniversary of Kansas statehood.
'Future' Book Reviewed
Summerfield also said that 14 new postoffices are now under construction in Kansas now or will be by fall.
NEW YORK — (UP) — The New York Herald Tribune printed on page one today a review of an April 1 publication entitled "From the Earth to the Moon, and a Trip Around It" by one Jules Verne, original publication date, 1865.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 9. 1958
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
Tennis Team Wins Golfers Lose One
The Kansas golf team dropped matches to the University of Houston and Texas Christian University last week on its first competition of the year. The tennis team defeated Washburn last Wednesday.
Houston defeated the Jayhawkers 6-0 on Friday and TCU won over the squad, 4-2 on Saturday. "In both matches the men played good enough golf to win a lot of matches, but we are just behind Texas teams this year," said Jerry Waugh, golf coach.
In defeating the Jayhawkers, the fourth man on the Houston squad was four under par on a difficult course, Waugh said. Houston has been NCAA national golf champion for the last two years.
Today the team plays Wichita University in a dual meet at the Lawrence Country Club.
The Kansas tennis team defeated Washburn University in their first match of the year last Wednesday, six matches to one.
"The team will have two matches this weekend," said Denzell Gibbons, Kansas tennis coach. It meets Oklahoma State University Friday and Wichita University on Saturday. Both matches are at 1:30 p.m. on the home courts.
Monday IM Deadline
The deadline for entering spring intramural sports competition is Monday, April 14 at 4 p.m. Information was sent to intramural managers during the spring vacation and a managers' meeting will be held Tuesday, April 15 at 4 p.m. to discuss playing fields and conditions. Softball competition will begin Wednesday, April 16.
K-State Drill Will Begin Thursday
Walter J. Mikols, Intramural Director, said that he hoped to have a playing schedule set up by the time the manager's meeting was held.
MANHATTAN, Kan. — (UP)— Football coach Bus Mertes will send his Kansas State Wildcats to the football field Thursday instead of today, as previously planned.
Mertes said the shift was made so the workouts would end May 16 when the K-State coaching staff plays host to a Kansas high school coaches clinic.
The final Wildcat drill will be under the lights on the practice field in conjunction with the clinic. The annual Alumni-Varsity game is slated May 10.
Arkansas State Stops Missouri
JONESBORO, Ark. — (UP) — Arkansas State stop Missouri University, 3-1 Tuesday after Don Riggs scored on Bill Caldwell's long line drive to center field to break up a pitcher's door.
Braves, Bums May Lose Stars
The winning run came in the bottom of the 10th inning. Missouri had beaten Arkansas State 13-2 Monday. A. L. Gatewood of Arkansas State was the winning pitcher and Missouri's Hauss was loser. Both gave up 3 runs.
The Milwaukee Braves and the Los Angeles Dodgers today faced the possibility of opening the 1958 season without star outfielders Wes Covington and Duke Snider.
By UNITED PRESS
Covington, who sparked the Braves to victory over the Yankees in last year's world series, twisted his left knee in an exhibition game against the Dodgers at Austin, Tex. Tuesday and may miss next Tuesday's opener against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Hampered previously by a pulled thigh muscle, Covington injured
Snider's trouble also is centered in the left knee, which was operated on last December. There has been some swelling in the knee this spring and Duke told one reporter Tuesday "I think it'll have to be drained."
his knee as he slid home on the business end of a squeeze play in the 13th inning that gave the Braves a 5-4 victory.
However, he later declared, "There may not be any need for that (draining)" and added he "will try to play" in today's game against the Braves at Dallas.
The San Francisco Giants, meanwhile, received good news when x-rays revealed Willie Mays suffered
only a mild hemotoma (bruise) just above the elbow when struck by a pitched ball in Monday's game against the Cleveland Indians at Austin.
Mays sat out Tuesday's game at Corpus Christi, in which the Indians rolled to an 11-7 victory over the Giants, but will be back in center field for the season opener.
In other Tuesday Exhibitions, the Phillies edged the Yankees, 3-2; the White Sox turned back the Cardinals, 5-4; the Senators rolled to a 10-3 victory over the Redlegs, and the Cubs downed the Orioles, 6-5, on Dale Long's 10th inning clutch single.
Long Toss Earlier Than Expected
Olympic discus champion Al Oerter said Sunday he had expected to throw over 200 feet but he hadn't expected to do it this early in the season. Oerter was reflecting on his performance at the Arkansas Relays Saturday when he surpassed the world discus record three times and, on one throw, became the first man to break through the magic 200-foot barrier.
It may be some time before it is known whether Oerter's toss will go down as the official world's record. His discus was one ounce over the required minimum and meet officials said they thought the field where he made the throw would
In his record throw, Oerter became the first man to break that famed barrier. Just as the 4-minute mile has been run and the 7-foot high jump has been conquered, Oerter's name will go down in track annals as the first to conquer this imaginary barrier.
Celtics Minus Russell In Crucial Game
BOSTON —(UP)— The Boston Celtics will call on veterans Jack Nichols and Arnie Risen to replace the injured Bill Russell tonight when they clash with the St. Louis Hawks in the fifth game of the all-even National Basketball Assn. playoffs.
Russell, the league's rebounder, is lost to the Celtics for the rest of the series with a sprained ankle and a chipped ankle bone.
That leaves it up to the 6-foot 7-inch Nichols, now in his ninth pro season, and the 6-foot 9-inch Risen, in his 13th campaign, to do the board work for Boston as it tries to break the 2-2 series deadlock.
probably meet the slope requirements. His toss of 202-feet 6-inch bettered the record held by Fortune Gordien by exactly eight feet.
Kite flying is a favorite sport on the Maldives Islands.
Oerter says his throwing is still in the 190-foot range. That in itself is quite a range, according to track standards.
Oerter said Sunday he is anxious to meet Southern California's Rink Babka.
The order of events in the various meets has helped the husky thrower, he admits. He said in both meets he has thrown in this year he has had the shot put preliminaries first, thus enabling him to warm up for the discus.
Olerter won the discus throw in the Olympic games at Melbourne in 1956 with a toss of 184-feet $ 10^{\frac{1}{2}} $ -inches. He had bettered that mark in the NCAA games last year with a 185-feet 4-inch throw.
Until the meet last weekend, Oerter's best throw was a 188-feet-2-inch throw he made at the Texas Relays one week previous.
Oerter said recently his extra work on weight lifting and running, as well as his knowing more about just how to throw, were going to help him this season. He said there is a possibility he could break the 200-foot mark again before the NCAA games later in the season.
Just for the fun of it...
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COLLEGE MEN
Earn $1500 to $1800 during the summer if you have access to a car and can attend a 2 hour training class on the campus for the next 5 weeks. Send your name, college address and phone number to Box 518, Shawnee Kansas for a personal interview.
Page 5
Wednesday, April 9. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Hall's Effect On Gubernatorial Race Is Difficult To Predict
Three political science faculty members were reluctant Tuesday to predict just what the entry of former Gov. Fred Hall into the Republican race for governor would mean in the general elections in November.
Chester A. Newland, assistant instructor of political science, said Hall's entry will "stir up a great deal of interest in the election."
Could Be Exciting
Newland added he was sure Hall would try to unite the Republican party.
"If the Republican primary doesn't turn into a lot of name calling. Hall's entering the race will be a healthy thing," Newland stated.
"Thus far the Republican party's campaign hasn't gotten off the ground. This may be just what it needs." Newland added.
Newland pointed out that this would make a very exciting primary and possibly a very exciting general election.
"As to what this will mean in the general election, I don't know," he added.
James E. Titus, assistant professor of political science, said Hall's announcement is sure to "muddy the waters" in the Republican primary.
Asked if he thought it was possible for the candidates to conduct a campaign free of name calling.
Derby Day Set For April 26
A sack race, an egg-throwing relay, and several other events are on the agenda for the fifth annual Sigma Chi Derby Day track meet for women in organized houses. The Sigma Chi Derby Day band will open the meet at 1:30 p.m. April 26 at the fraternity's tennis court, and an "eternal smudge pot" will be lighted. Four hundred persons are expected to attend.
Lines Are Drawn
Prof. Titus said he thought that was "hardly possible in Kansas."
"One thing seems evident. The lines are drawing. With Hall's entrance into the governor's race, we may be getting closer to a 2-party battle in Kansas," Prof. Titus said. He explained that with the lines clearly dividing the two candidates, there was a better chance for an even election in November.
Auditions will be held April 26, May 3 and 10, for students wanting to participate in the KU Summer Theatre program, beginning June 9.
Theater Tryouts To Be Held
For further information and to arrange appointments for auditions, students should contact Prof. Goff at 315 Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The auditions, which consist of a 10-minute presentation of drama previously prepared, are to be judged by Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the KU Theatre, and members of the Summer Theatre staff.
"On the basis of these auditions, the casting for some of the productions also will be done. This will enable the students to begin reading for the plays immediately." Prof. Brooking said.
Students enrolled in the summer session will be able to carry a maximum of 10 credit hours.
Burzle Presents Paper
J. A. Burzle, chairman of the Germanic languages department, spoke today at the American Personnel and Guidance Association meeting in St. Louis. He presented a paper on "U. S. Students and Foreign Study Opportunities."
Prof. Titus added that Hall had shown great strength west of highway 81.
Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science, said it would be hard to predict how Hall's entrance will affect the general election in November for two reasons.
First, he said, was because it wasn't clear at the present time what factions of the Republican party are supporting which candidate. Second, he said, the outcome would depend on who won the Republican primary.
Young Demos Go To Topeka
Members of the KU Young Democrats club will attend Jefferson-Jackson Day celebrations in Topeka Friday and Saturday, according to Ed Chapman, second year law student from Leavenworth,
The group will attend a reception at the governor's mansion at 8 p.m. Friday. Following the reception will be a dance at the Kansas Hotel sponsored by the Shawnee County Young Democrats.
Chapman said anyone wishing to attend the 2-day meeting would be welcome to go along. He said those needing rides should call him at VI 3-1300.
Saturday the group will take part in various meetings.
Get Announcements Now
The deadline for ordering senior announcements is Tuesday, Dianne P. Hays, Kansas City, Kan. senior and chairman of the senior announcements committee, has announced. Sales of the announcements have been slow so far, and late orders will slow up delivery, she said. The announcements may be ordered at the KU business office.
Engineers To Sponsor Banquet, Dance Friday
Bill Moore, staff correspondent for The Kansas City Star, will speak at a banquet preceding the Engineering Student Council dance Friday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The banquet will begin at 6:30 p.m. and the dance at 9 p.m. Gary Pack, Wichita sophomore and publicity chairman for the council, said both events are open to all University students.
The queen who will reign over the dance and the Engineering Exposition April 18 and 19 will be crowned at intermission.
Mr. Moore, a 1931 KU graduate, has been a staff member of The Star for 25 years. He returned in February from one of two trips made to the Antarctic in recent years.
Finalists for the title are Suzanne Kastner, Salina sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta; Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman, North College, and Marilyn Erickson, Mission junior, Alpha Delta Pi.
11 tickets for the banquet and the
dance will go on sale Thursday in the information booth on Jayhawk Blvd. and in Marvin Hall.
Deadline Friday For Civil Service Jobs
Applications for electronic technician, accountant and auditor positions in the Washington D. C. area will be closed Friday according to the U. S. Civil Service Commission's Student Trainee Announcement 9-7.
Engineering and metallurgy options, however, will remain open until further notice, the commission said. Applications may be obtained at the post office.
A damp wine stain can be removed from cloth by rubbing salt into the spot.
2
Let the Winds Blow
if you've
Lingerie to Show
from
Ober's Jr. Miss
821 Mass.
Elevator up from Men's Store
SUPER-WINSTON PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS The WRECK of OL' FIVE-ELEVEN
GIVE ER MORE COAL, JOE, WE'RE LATE NOW!
MEANWHILE,
A FEW MILES
AWAY!!
DEAD MAN'S GORGE
MEANWHILE,
A FEW MILES
AWAY!!
STOP!
GORGE
STILL
AHEAD
PUFF PUFF...
RELAX, HAVE A WINSTON!
PUFF!
SAY...WINSTON TASTES GOOD!
LIKE A CIGARETT SHOULD!
THERE WAS SOMETHING ELSE I WAS ABOUT TO MENTION...
SAY... WINSTON
TASTES
GOOD!
LIKE A
CIGARETTE
SHOULD!
THERE WAS
SOMETHING ELSE
I WAS ABOUT TO
MENTION...
I KNOW
THERE WAS
SOMETHING...
SAY... WINSTON TASTES GOOD!
LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD!
THERE WAS SOMETHING ELSE I WAS ABOUT TO MENTION...
I KNOW THERE WAS SOMETHING...
KERRAASH!
HE PROBABLY MEANT TO MENTION THAT WINSTON IS AMERICA'S BEST-SELLING, BEST-TASTING FILTER CIGARETTE!
I KNOW THERE WAS SOMETHING...
KERFLASH!
WINGED SICK
Winston
FILTER CIGARETTES
FILTER FILTER-
FILTER STYLE
KING SICK
Winston
FILTER CIGARETTES
PINER FILTER
TINT FILTER
TAVOR
Winston
CIGARETTES
PINER FILTER
TINT FILTER
TAVOR
E PROBABLY MEANT TO MENTION
THAT WINSTON IS AMERICA'S
BEST-SELLING,
BEST-TASTING
FILTER
CIGARETTE!
HE PROBABLY MEANT TO MENTION
THAT WINSTON IS AMERICA'S
BEST-SELLING,
BEST-TASTING
FILTER
CIGARETTE!
Winston
CIGARETTES
R. J. REYNOL
WINSTON-SAL
HE SHOULD'VE MENTIONED THE NEW CRUSH-PROOF BOX,TOO!
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 9. 1958
Chemise Invades Fashion Scene
There is an old expression that if a woman saves her clothes long enough they will come back in style. That's what happened this year as the chemise has invaded everything in women's wear from overcoats to nightgowns. ___
It is essentially the same thing that was worn in the mid-twenties, the only difference being that the sleeves of today are tailored and short rather than long and blousy as they were in 1925.
The chemise still retains the tailored style at the shoulders, bust and hipline, but it leaves the waistline free with the possible exception of a half belt in the back.
Popularity of the chemise is attributed to the comfort it provides and the variety of accessories that are fashionable with it. Spring accessories include a special chemise corsage with long flowing ribbons and a multitude of bracelets, pins and necklaces. Small or large jewelry can be worn with the chemise. Pins of various sizes can be worn in front or back. Heavy beads and bracelets are especially complimentary to the tall girl.
Necklines are scoop, bateau or square shaped. For formal occasions, necklines are the lowest ever seen.
Hemlines Are Shorter
Hemlines keep getting shorter. 18 inches from the floor and higher. This hem is often the final touch to a gently tapering full "cocoon" flare in the back.
The chemise is the answer to a tall girl's prayer because it gives a sophisticated look to her height. But, if she wishes to minimize her height she might add pockets, half belts or button effects. Straight coats with push up sleeves are perfect for the tall girl, and the shoes this year seem to be designed especially for her. The pointed toes with the small heel have a slenderizing effect. The
colors are sure to blend with the rest of her costume.
Along with the chemise, the shirtwaist dress will return this spring, with only slight variations. The three quarter length sleeves and stand-off collars will add a new touch.
For those who prefer a less distinctive style than the cocoon chemise, there is the semi-chemise. A straight skirt is accented by a bloused top with a long bodice on a low hipband or drawstring.
6
Bright Colors Appear
Brighter colors and prints will be featured this spring in everything from sportwear to silk cocktail ensembles.
Prints will range from splashes of gaudy flowers to rows and rows of bright polka dots. Making the choice of patterns even more difficult will be further selections in plaids, stripes, checks and jacquard weaves.
No matter what dress style the lady may choose, the footwear will be accented by straps and pointed toes. Duo-tones are back in style while heels are getting increasingly narrower and lower to give that streamlined look.
Piano Instructor To Give Recital
Miss Margaret Louise Barton, instructor of piano will appear in a faculty recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Miss Barton's program will include two sonatas by Scalatil, Fantasia in C minor by Mozart, the third sonata of Hindemith, Ravel's "Valses Nobles et Sentientales," and the Schumann G minor sonata.
FOLLOWING
MARY LEE HARRIS
1942-1957
JUDITH HOOD
LAVENA BROWN
Engagements Announced
Hood-Nitz
The engagement of Judith Hood to Gary Nitz is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Hood, Rochester, N. Y.
Miss Hood is a junior in the College and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Nitz, the son of Mr. Gilbert Nitz, Goodland, is a senior in the College and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Brown-Hansen
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brown, Colby, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Lavena Mae, to Paul Hansen, son of Mrs. and Mrs. Gerhard Hansen, Wamego.
Miss Brown is a junior in the School of Education. Mr. Hansen is a senior in the College.
The wedding date has not been set.
... On The Hill . . .
Alpha Kappa Alpha
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority has announced the initiation of six women. Olivia Batteaste, Chicago, Ill. senior, was named outstanding pledges and Jean Elson, Topeka sophomore, was honor initiate.
Other initiates were Tolan Bowser, Topeka, Elaine Browne, Nyra Harvis, both of Kansas City, Kan., and Rhoda Smith, Des Moines, Iowa, all sophomores.
串 串 串
been elected president of Watkins Hall for the coming year.
Helen Owen, Kinslev junior, has
Other officers elected were Jo Wiens, Belle Plaine, secretary; Georgia Dillon, Garden City, house manager. Both are juniors.
Carol James, Mayetta, treasurer;
Marilyn Bell, McPhrerson, vice-president;
Marilyn Shaw, Galena, social chairman;
Carol Sparks, Kansas City, Mo., Inter-Residence Council representative. All are sophomores.
Virginia, Bonhan, Coffeyville freshman, freshman counselor.
UNDERWOOD'S
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Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
GRANADA NOW SHOWINGI
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As a college graduate, you will be given priority consideration for the Air Force Aviation Cadet Program. While openings are limited, you will be tested and advised immediately of qualification status. Find out if you measure up. Paste the attached coupon on a post card and mail it now.
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Wednesday, April 9. 1958 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. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All adms 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.
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Ola Smith
p41½ l Mass. Ph. VI 3-2633.
FLAT TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
Clarence Adamson, Mgr. under the hill
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast, accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tehn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by ex-perfenced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
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20th St
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Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs beds, harnesses, toy cars, chameleons, hamsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tt
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
1971-1971 Singer, Center, 927 Mass.
ttf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
TYPIST, experienced and fast. Reason-
mation: New York, NY 10025. Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. Iff
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter. Phone Ms. Donna Virt, VI 3-8660.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service. Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
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5-12
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 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
Rogers 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 3-3055
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
USED CAR BUYS
DESIRABLE three room unfurnished ground floor apartment. Convenient to refrigerator, air conditioner and parking space included. VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1277.
YOUNG ADULT. man or woman. Typing, filing, mimeography, mailing, messenger. Must have driver's license. 5½ day week. Permanent. Substitute. typwriter. Educational and employment background. P.O. Box 571. Lawrence, Kansas. 4-15
ROOM AND BOARD for one student,
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Sanders Motor Co.
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ROOMS FOR STUDENTS or working
at summer camp
V 3-13400 after 3 p.m.
4-10
EXTRA NICE four room furnished basement apartment. Private entrance, private bath. $65 per month, all bills paid. Phone VI 3-1764 afternoon or evenings.
WANTED
1951 Chevrolet
1959 Fountain Catalina
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WANTED student laundry. Reasonable
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1955 Pontiac Catalina
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1-15
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1953 Plymouth
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LEAVE FILM TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, phone supplies plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350
EAT. Boarders wanted, good food, reasonable rates. One-half block from union. Call Bruce Wenger, VI 3-2565. Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 La. 4-11
HAVE FOOD. WILL DELIVER. Free delivery, complete fountain and sandwich service ($1 minimum order). Jayhawk Cafe, VI 3-6171. 4-16
FOR SALE
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over new office phone number house reunitive or call VI 3-7583 VI 2-0736 VI 2-0395 for free delivery.
BABY SITTING. Young mother of two wishes to care or teach a pre-school child in home. Faced with plenty of toys. Noon meal included and regular rest period. 510 W 6th. VI 3-4765.
STUDENTS AND FACULTY: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Print new magazine magazines both new and renewals. Masspromptly. Call VI 3-0124. **tf**
TUXEDO, size 39, with shirt, $25. White
n宴衣 jacket, size 39, $15. VI $3-6302
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY 296 Titles at $1.65 ea. 80 Giants at $2.95 ea. Come in and see us soon THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-1044
for JR., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
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CASH LOANS ON YOUR
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RUGER .22 semi-automatic pistol, with two clips, leather holster, and cartridge belt. Also 550 rounds of .22 ammo $45 takes everything. Call Kermit Kroyer. VI 3-2542 between six and seven p.m. Wednesday or Thursday evening. 4-11
NICELY LANDSCAPED split level home. Large cathedral type living room. Two twin beds with separate third bedroom. Full bath on second level. Kitchen has Thermador stove, oven, exhaust gas garbage hood, and washer. Garbage unit, full-size wood-burning fire places, and basement garage with shop space. New location close to Kid Show by appointment only. Call Kid Show. Mildred Hess, II 3-3847 III 3-1782
1
YOUR EYES
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass.
VI 3-2966
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
Earn $50 a Week Part-Time
House and Home Corporation of Kansas City will offer one man the opportunity to earn at least $50 per week selling various cleaners, waxes and polishes on an exclusive franchise basis to residences, fraternities-sororities-dorms, etc. Applicant should plan to be in Lawrence this summer and next fall. No investment required. For information call W. J. Honan JO 2-9157.
A Favorite Much-Read Page Am I I Rent,I Find I Sell,I Buy
Whenever you want to rent, find, sell or buy merchandise or services, on or off campus, you will be rewarded by consulting me. My services are low cost too-Can I find something, sell something, maybe, for you?
ROOM for 2 or 2 boys, extra large clean quiet lounge furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2981 or see 1022 Albana.
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ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the stairs. Have two rooms built front and immediate possession.
PARTMENTS for students. Private bath and Louisiana or call 2-8
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girls Phone VI 2-6
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ROOM for 2 or 2 boys, extra large clean quiet lounge furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2981 or see 1022 Albana.
BUSINESS SERVICES
YPIST. experienced in thesis, birth orders, reports. Fast and accurate. Student rules. Mrs. Betty Vequisil. 1935 Parker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001.
YPIST. Experienced in thesis, student rules. Mrs. Betty Vequisil. 1935 Parker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001.
THRILLING. DRESS MAKING. Shirts on men's and women's skirts. Also dresses and slip dresses. OLVI 2-6057, 1106 Lo.
EXPERIENCED TECHNICIAN. Former secretary will type in paper papers. Goes Fast. Service at regular retiring hours. 2-8268.
WORKING IN ENGLISH Review human sentence structure, outline paragraphs and theme structure. HV VI 3-7401.
FOR SALE
LIVE GIFTS NIGHTSale Courses. Perakeen all videos. Complete stock of food foods and other dope boots.
University Daily Kansan Want Ads
Kansan Business Office,111 Flint or Call KU 376
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 9,1958
Poetry Is Alive A Way Of Life'
Poetry as a game is "active and alive." Poetry as a holy game is "a way of life and a very peculiar craft."
This description of poetry as the poet sees it was expressed by May Sarton, poet and novelist, in a Phi Beta Kappa sponsored lecture Tuesday in Fraser Theater.
"Certain words in certain combinations with other words make magic." Miss Sarton said. "The manipulation of words to produce this effect makes poetry a game."
It is a holy game, she said, because it is a way of disciplining the writer's life so that he may see everything with an open eye.
The Holy Grace
Tues
MAY SARTON
"The poet must keep the door open between his conscious and his subconscious," she said. "This is where the creative process happens."
This is not all there is to writing poetry, she said. After the poem begins to form in the mind it must be analyzed and put down on paper.
In writing poetry the writer takes the abstract image or experience and makes it concrete, thus bringing the reader into the experience, she added.
"To do this the poet must not only have had the experience, but he must have understood it," she said.
Poetry comes from silence, Miss Sarton stated.
"A good poem has silence flowing through it. A very good poem has a long period of silence after it," she said.
She demonstrated points in her discussion by reading poems to the audience.
"Notice the silence," she said after
Four Faculty, Staff To Discuss Education
A Conference on Learning Difficulties of the Emotionally Disturbed Child will be held April 25 in the Kansas Union Ballroom by the Kansas Institute for Research in the Education of Exceptional Children.
Speakers will include: E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the music education department; George Frankl, assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and pediatrics, Harry G. Giannau, director of the Child Study Unit, and Roger Moon, instructor, all of the KU Medical Center.
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 of not bring material at the Public Relations Office. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Men's counselor position open: Triple-cate applications for men's residence hall counseling positions for 1958-59 are available. Please note the dean of students, 228 Strong Hall.
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room, Union, Manuscript reading.
Newman Club, 7:30 p.m., Castle. Executive meeting.
THURSDAY
Le Cerulee Francais se reunira jeudi a quatre heures dans la salle 11 Fraser. Caucherie sur La Suisse par Mlle Nadine Donn de Lausanne
Jayhawk Aerial Club, 7:30 p.m., 119
Stonegate, interested in becoming a member welcome.
FRIDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Schutz, four small sacred concer-
tion and four symphony琴。Palestina:
pieces performed by the Sistine Choir.
Dr. Birkmaier To Speak Here
Dr. Emma M. Birkmaier, one of the nation's leading authorities on teaching foreign languages in public schools, will give a public lecture at 4 p.m. Monday in Bailey Auditorium. Her topic will be "Teaching of Foreign Languages in the Public Schools."
reading one, "A poem creates silence around it and inside it."
"The game of writing poetry is not played for material stakes," she said. "It is played for joy.
"The joy of creation is not given. It is earned only through discipline in 'The Holy Game,' " she said.
The oldest golf course in continuous use in America is located in Foxburg, Pa., where members of the Foxbury Country Club have been playing since 1887.
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It's Still Raining, Sod's Still Slipping
1342 Ohio (one door south Jayhawk Cafe) VI 3-876'
During class breaks and the noon hour, students have been seen walking up to the edge of the knob between Flint and Malott halls and peering over the edge.
What they see is a large piece of Mt. Oread turf that's slipped its moorings. Measuring about 100 by 50 feet, the sod on the slope northeast of Malott broke loose about two or three weeks ago, and has now started to fold itself over at the bottom.
10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
"The Case of the Sliding Sod" has drawn the attention of a few KU students for the last few weeks.
Until a landscaping crew performs a little sod surgery, the geology majors will have a practical demonstration of geological forces in action. Meanwhile, be careful walking downhill—you might convert the campus into Oread Valley.
ITS GOING FAST—Jim Bedford, instructor in journalism measures the sod that is slipping down hill on the south slope of the campus. (Daily Kansan photo)
The slippage is not severe in the area where the slope is contoured to match the steps and sidewalks.
At the top of the slide is a foot-deep fissure where the sod broke loose. At the bottom is a fold that resembles the edge of a rug that's been thrown carelessly on the floor.
The sod apparently soaked up too much water from the above-average rain and snow during the winter, and the weakened ground parted.
The sod slippage stops at the steps that lead from Malott to the top of the hill, although the ground has separated slightly from the cement steps.
Sulphur is used in converting wood pulp into rayon, phosphate rock into fertilizer, and soft rubber into hard, the National Geographic Magazine says.
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11 Seniors Get Awards
Eleven KU seniors have been named recipients of Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1958-59.
The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation makes the awards to outstanding seniors interested in college teaching careers in the humanities, social sciences and certain sciences.
A grant from the Ford Foundation, supplementing programs already devised by the American Assn. of Universities and the Carnegie Corp., made possible the granting of 1.080 fellowships nationally.
The 11 Woodrow Wilson fellows named from KU are John Beam, Ottawa, Donald Coyne, Hutchinson, Marcia Fullmer, Mission, Donald R. Hopkins, Kansas City, Kan, Elizabeth Hoover, Lawrence, Frederick B. Misse, Jr., Highland, Joy A. Yoe, Mannattana, John F. Zoellner, Tonganoxie, Dale M. Brethower, Nevis, Minn, Joanne Beal, Lawrence, and Arlan B. Ramsay, Dodge City.
Awards are $1,400 plus fees. Winners were selected after nomination by faculties of their own institutions and interviews by district committees. Dr. Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science, is a district committeeman.
Scarab Will Hear Resident Sculptor
Bernard (Poco) Frazer, sculptor in residence, will speak to Scarab, professional architecture society, on "Sculpture and Architecture" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Oread Room.
Mr. Frazer, who created the doors on the Campanile and did the sculpturing over the entrance to Lindley, will illustrate his talk with pictures of work he has done on buildings and churches in Kansas.
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Benton To Deliver Humanities Lecture
Thomas Hart Benton will deliver the Humanities Series lecture, "Regionalism—Thirty Years After" at 8 p.m. Saturday in Fraser Theater.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will introduce Mr. Benton, who will have an exhibition of his works shown at the Museum of Art for the next five weeks.
The paintings were borrowed from leading museums and private collectors in the country and from the artist. An illustrated catalog of the exhibition has been published by the museum.
Fredrik Bengtsson
A unique feature of the catalog is a chronology of the artist's life written by Mr. Benton, significant both for its autobiographical material and for Mr. Benton's distinctive mode of presentation.
THOMAS HART BENTON
Mr. Benton's lecture will be an analysis of the idea of regionalism. He is the sole surviving member of the three regionalist painters. The other two were John Steenart Curry and Grant Wood. He will discuss his own works and the art of Mr. Curry and Mr. Wood during the 1920's and 1930's when the "Regionalist" movement began.
The Museum of Art presented an exhibition of John Steuart Curry's works in April and May, 1957. Edward Maser, director of the Museum, said he hopes to arrange an exhibition of Mr. Wood's paintings next year.
Mr. Benton has illustrated limited editions of "Green Grow the Lilacs," "Grapes of Wrath," "Tom Sawyer," "Life on the Mississippi," and "Huckleberry Finn." He has received many honors, including the Doctor of Arts degree from the University of Missouri, the Doctor of Letters degree from Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo., and honorary membership in Phi Beta Kappa.
May Park Cars In Baseball Lot
The KU traffic office may issue permits to park "out in left field" if future plans for a 400-car parking lot on the present baseball diamond materialize.
Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, told The Daily Kansas Wednesday, "We are hoping to make a parking lot on the field west of the Kansas Union when the baseball team moves to the new diamond near the field house."
Mr. Lawton said the new space would definitely ease the parking problem, but it may not be a reality for quite some time. He said surfacing and other construction work would be paid for with present parking lot operations and receipts from the new meter in the Kansas Union lot.
"Parking would be by permit during the day," Mr. Lawton said. "It could be open to the public after hours. The regulations would have to be decided later. There is no target date for completion yet—all I can say is that we would like to have the new lot. Right now it is only a possible future lot."
A big event of the sorority's social season was the brother-son banquet.
Hand Is Quicker Than The Eye
The darkened dining room was softly aglow with candlelight. As one of the young women acted as a charming hostess and conversationalist she reached for her roll.
Two queens and four attendants will be chosen Sunday to reign over the Kansas Relays April 18-19. Judges will choose one queen and the attendants from 20 KU women representing organized houses. The other queen will be chosen from women representing other Big Eight schools.
"My goodness, our cook certainty bakes soft, fluffy rolls," she said as she looked at her hand which held, not a roll, but a white mound of mashed potatoes.
KU's candidates will meet with judges at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Kansas Room. After a general discussion the women will go to the John Steuart Curry room for group interviews.
Relays Royalty To Be Chosen
The Big Eight queen will be chosen from pictures sent to contest co-chairmen, Clayton Krehbill, associate professor of music education, and Daniel L. Casson, Topeka junior.
One entry has been received from each of the following Big Eight schools: University of Missouri, University of Nebraska, Kansas State College and Oklahoma State University. Casson said they expect to hear from the remaining three schools today.
Both queens and attendants will be announced Sunday evening, KU finalists will be presented at the Relays banquet April 17. Both queens will reign over the Relays parade April 19 and the SUA Relays dance April 19.
The judges are Landon Laird of the Kansas City Star; Paul J. Adam, Kansas City, Mo.; A. D. Weaver and Arthur Wolfe, Lawrence, and Stanley Stauffer of Stauffer publications, Topeka, and John Mize, Atchison.
Thursday, March 10, 1958
Two members of the Kansas Legislature will debate that body's special session in a joint meeting of members of the KU Young Republicans and Young Democrats organizations The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m Tuesday in the Kansas Union cafeteria.
Sen. Joe McDowell (D-Kansas City) will discuss the Democratic point of view and Sen. Don Hults (R-Lawrence) will speak for the Republicans.
Casson said KU finalists will be given engraved silver trophy bowls and flowers Sunday. The Big Eight representative will receive a trophy and flowers Friday.
The special session, scheduled to start April 21, will be the first in Kansas history to be called for work on the budget. The regular session ended in a partisan stalemate.
Legislators Will Debate
Each senator will present the views of his party and an informal debate will follow with club members participating.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 122
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Nonpartisan Views Given
ASC Elections Near
I have lived as an independent and in an organized house. I realize that the problems of the students are not confined to any specific living group, but to all students.
Here at KU it has become the policy of campus politicians to draw up a list of specific campus problems at election time. These issues have become the foundation of party platforms.
Therefore, I shall take into strong consideration those independents and organized houses which have never had a voice in government. There have been a few organized houses and a select group of people who think it is their right to control campus politics and activities.
I will not use time-worn problems and issues as a basis for my platform. I firmly believe that all students, and especially those elected representatives of the student body, should be concerned with these problems as long as they are at KU. These issues should not be headlined just at election time.
A. A.
I strongly feel the responsibility of the office in making appointments only to those with the proper ability and qualifications.
I am running for president as a nonpautisan. By not being connected with any political party I feel I can serve the students without party pressures or influences.
ED PRELOCK
If I get the support of all those students who want nonpartisan and representative government. I shall answer those questions with action and efficiency.
Richard H. Nolte, American Universities Feld Staff expert on the Middle East will be the guest speaker at a Student Union Activities-sponsored current events forum at 4 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Music and Browsing Room.
People have asked what good is the ASC and what are its functions.
I think it is time to break this monopoly. I believe in more representative government and with your support I will campaign on that basis.
- Ed Prelock
Forum Will Feature Middle East Expert
Mr. Nolte's topic at the informal coffee which is open to the public, will be, "Current Events in the Middle East." Judith Anne Heller, Pittsburg junior is forum chairman.
Topics for the weekly discussions of world news hot spots are chosen by Miss Heller and Thomas M. Gale, instructor of history.
Political Activity Speeds Up As Election Nears
Political noises have started to fill the air as campus parties prepare this week for Wednesday's general elections.
Joel Sterrett, Topeka senior and president of the Allied Greek-Independent party, announced a party meeting for 7:30 tonight in 306A Kansas Union to work out a final party platform.
Although AGI lost in its try for a new primary, Sterrett said he feels "the party is satisfied" since the protest had been made.
AGI appealed to the Elections Committee and the All Student Council to invalidate the AGI primary because of confusion in instructions printed on the ballots. The committee accepted the elections, however, and the ASC accepted the committee report Tuesday.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of the Vox Populi party, indicated Vox would present its platform today or Friday.
Meanwhile, both presidential tickets presented their platforms to The Daily Kansan.
Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior, is running without a vice-presidential candidate on a nonpartisan basis against AGI candidates Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior (for president) and Susie Stout, Witchia junior (for vice-president).
If Prelock is elected a student body vice-president will be appointed by a two-thirds vote of the ASC. Prelock said he felt he would not be hampered by the lack of a vice-presidential candidate.
KUOK Presents Service Award
Jerry Bailey, Humboldt junior, received the first annual KUOK campus radio Radio Staff Service Award at the fifth annual Radio-TV Banquet Wednesday evening. Bailey, who was voted the award by members of the KUOK staff, is manager of the station. Victor Hyden, instructor of speech, drama, and journalism, made the presentation.
Olaf Soward, a newscaster at WIBW-TV in Topeka, received the second annual Broadcasting Service Award, presented by Bruce Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism. He was chosen for the award by a radio-TV committee of University faculty members.
Guest speaker at the banquet was Grover Cobb, president of the Kansas Assn. of Radio Broadcasters and manager of radio station KVGB in Great Bend. John Ball, Kansas City, Kan. senior, was master of ceremonies at the banquet.
English Examinations Nearly Completed
Grading of the English proficiency examination papers is nearly completed, according to David Dykstra, instructor of English and chairman of the English proficiency examination committee.
"We expect to have the results by the middle of next week," Dykstra said.
He said the names of students who passed the examination will be published in The Daily Kansan. Those who failed will be notified by letter.
AGI Leaders Cite Plans
If elected, we pledge:
1. To promote a coordinated effort in our student government through joint independent and Greek participation.
2. To make appointments in the
JOHN J. KLEIN
DICK PATTERSON
executive branch that will be representative of the entire student body. These appointments would be made on the basis of interest and qualification as shown in application.
4. To make the student body more aware of the functions of student government.
3. To evaluate the effectiveness of all student government committees to the end that only those which have a definite purpose and function efficiently will be retained.
5. To determine student opinion on all issues concerning students and represent this opinion to the administration.
6. To stimulate greater student interest and participation in determining the educational process.
7. To stimulate greater interest in national and international affairs.
8. To establish definite duties and responsibilities for class officers.
9. To work with the ASC in planning legislation in the best interest of the student body.
10. To promote a high level of publicity concerning the University of Kansas among the other Big Eight schools and to stimulate interest concerning the University.
—Dick Patterson, Susie Stout
Alumni Begin Drive For Funds
Five thousand KU alumni in greater Kansas City have begun a campaign to raise money to supplement the Greater University Fund.
Money received from the campaign will be used to acquire art objects and rare books, provide student scholarships, and endow chairs for faculty members. The campaign will end April 30.
Proceeds from the annual drive would accomplish for the University what state funds are not permitted to do, said Byron C. Shutz, general campaign chairman.
Weather
Partly cloudy to cloudy tonight and Friday. Warmer over state Friday. Low tonight 30 northwest to lower 40s southeast. High Friday 55 to 60.
Low Wednesday, 45, high 54.
Low this morning 40. Rainfall, .25 inch in last 24 hour period.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 10, 1958
Freedom Of The Press?
An item came over the United Press wire service which makes our blood boil. It stated that the editor of the Mississippi State College Student newspaper had been fired because he urged that both sides of the race issue be represented in Mississippi publications, it was revealed.
"The Student Council ousted L. E. Miller, a 20-year-old junior from Baldwyn, Miss., because of his determined editorial stand favoring 'freedom of speech and inquiry,'" according to U.P.
One of the two Council members who voted against the ouster said the firing resulted from the work of campus "junior spies" for the White Citizens Council. The student, who declined to be identified, said the disputed editorial was a "calm plea for freedom of speech and inquiry on Mississippi's college campuses."
Now it is one thing, we think, to fire a man
from his job because he is incompetent or because he has failed to present the facts of a story accurately.
However, we feel that we are taking a long slide backward when a newspaper editor is fired for expressing his opinion, which as an editor he has the right and the duty to express. Is freedom of the press, one of our constitutional guarantees, going down the drain at Mississippi State College?
The race issue in Mississippi is a hot one, and the fact that the students have formed an organization like the White Citizens Council is indicative of narrowmindedness and bad taste, but to jeopardize the ideals of our country by strangling freedom of the press is unthinkable.
Evelyn Hall
The Students Must Pay
Education costs are high and going up. And who will pay when all else fails? The Cornell Daily Sun gives this answer.
The tuition raises listed at Harvard and Columbia Universities and the increase in faculty salaries listed at Harvard point up dramatically the present financial crises for colleges and universities throughout the nation.
Harvard announced a tuition raise from $1,000 to $1,250 (making its tuition again, the highest in the country), and a concordant salary raise which puts full professor pay at an average of $15,000. Columbia announced a tuition raise from $900 to $1,100, with increased faculty salaries for the near future.
The student must pay; there is no question about that. For, as Columbia president Grayson Kirk says, "Educational costs have risen sharply, the necessity for increases in faculty salaries for the maintenance of the highest teaching standards has become more pronounced, and the
nation's need for trained leaders has reached what is virtually a state of emergency."
To meet these rises, the national administration is trying to create the first major federal educational program, private companies and foundations are putting a great deal of money into colleges, and alumni are being continually pressed for giving—yet the fact remains that these three sources are not enough. It is the student that must make up the deficiency.
We hope that the American student will recognize this, will appreciate this, when his tuition costs go up, as they are sure to do within a few years. It is an undeniable trend in American education, one that will eventually put the nation's colleges—and, equally important, the nation's facilities—in their proper place. For it has been too long that higher education has occupied a secondary place in the mind—and pocketbook—of the American public; it is time that its true worth is recognized and, hard though it may seem, paid for.
Associated Collegiate Press
Quotes From The News
"We might have just made it to the Portuguese coast if we had carried on flying, but it was too marginal."
LAJES AIR FORCE BASE, Azores — Brig. Gen. William E. Eubank Jr., who landed his Air Force stratos-tanker here Tuesday after a record non-stop flight from Tokyo on which he had hoped to reach Madrid:
CRANFORD, N. J. Joseph Welch, whose 15-year-old son found in the family attic a letter which experts believe bears the authentic signature of George Washington;
"The letter was in such good shape that I didn't think it was more than 10 or 15 years old."
MADISON, Wis.—Dr. K. C. Atwood III of the Oak Ridge, Tenn., atomic laboratories, on a new drug which may improve man's resistance to radiation;
"It may be possible to develop resistance to radiation up to perhaps five times the normal tolerance of a human."
CHICAGO—Paul Robeson, politically controversial Negro singer, celebrating his 60th birthday, was asked if he is a Communist:
"I refuse to answer your question. In 1947 I said I wasn't, and I resent the insinuation that I am a Communist. I know a lot of Communists."
Nathan Joined Church
Dramatic critic George Jean Nathan, who long proclaimed a disbelief in "The Ambrosia of the Gods, the lovely angels, eternal blue skies and peace, the music of the golden harps," became a member of the Roman Catholic Church six months before his death yesterday, it was disclosed.
Nathan had declared himself a hedonist, a believer that pleasure is the highest good. He once wrote that there was no other reward for life's travail and pain "except for those still sufficiently aboriginal to believe in an hereafter."
It was announced after his death, at the age of 76, that a requiem will be offered for him at St. Patrick's Cathedral.
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Butterflies belong to the Lepidoptera order which means "scale wing."
The aardvark is not used as a beast of burden in North America.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Dailu Transan
UNIVERSITY
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 251-6948
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
Service for University of New York.
Madison Ave., New York. News
service. United Press. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
nish on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
noon during the University year except
Saturdays and Sundays. University holi-
dayes, and examination periods. Entered
Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of
March 3, 1879.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Managing Editors; Douglas Parker, City Estates; Josster, Jack Harrison, Assistant City Editor; Martha Frederick, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Assistant Sports Editor; Pat Swanson, Society Editor; Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
TORITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Hale, Editorial Editor
Evelyn Hall, Martian Mermis, Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Eores
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Students Love Contests
Ted Winkler ... Business Manager
John Clarke, Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston, National Advertis-
tion Manager; Irvine, Classified
Advertising Manager; Jim McGrath,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager.
In a Branding Iron "Special." University of Wyoming student Don Bettis surveys the campus contest situation.
University students love contests. Wherever human talents or defects can be found, a contest will be established to decide who is the best or worst.
Beauty, ugliness, beards, bicycles— not to mention innumerable athletic events figure in students' challenging each other.
Outside of major sports, most competition is centered around the femme fatale.
Associated Collegiate Press
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Page 3
Thursday, March 10. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Ike Plans Pentagon Fight
(Compiled from United Press)
President Eisenhower intends to take his case for Pentagon reorganization to the American people in an all-out fight against congressional opposition to the plan. $ \diamond $
The President, who usually tries to avoid clashes with Congress, left no doubt at his news conference Wednesday that he is in a mood to fight and will use every means at his command to put his plan over.
Mr. Eisenhower said "it just happens" he (Ike) has had "a little more experience in military organization and directing of unified forces than anyone else on the list.
The Eisenhower plan would give Defense Secretary Neil McEloyre greater power over military spending, organization and strategy.
Another measure would allow the state to give financial aid to the white citizens councils to cripple operations of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
All-Out Drive Unlikely His supporters welcomed the President's fighting determination, but even an all-out drive by Mr. Eisenhower appeared unlikely to win the approval of the entire plan as now outlined.
The Mississippi Legislature today studied a series of anti-integration bills, among them a measure that would segregate the blood of Negroes and whites in blood banks.
All-Out Drive Unlikely
The NAACP was also under fire again in Alabama. The state sought contempt action against the outlawed group, charging it is penetrating in the state once more through other organizations.
In New York, attempts to settle the strike of 1,300 Columbia Broadcasting System cameramen and technicians were stalled today, apparently over the question of who
has the power to bargain for the striking union.
Most Shows Continue
The network's amateur camera and control crews, supervisory workers who had received earlier training for such an emergency, kept nearly all shows on the air with increasing skill as the strike approached its fourth day.
NEW YORK — (UP)— A "button man" is defined in a sober report of the State Legislative Watchdog Committee as:
The Schlumberger Foundation of Houston, Tex., has renewed its scholarship program at the University for 1958-59, with a $500 scholarship to a student in either electrical mechanical or petroleum engineering or geology; and a matching grant of $500 to the University for promotion of student research. The Schlumberger scholar will be chosen later in the spring.
In Havana, Cuba, rebel bombs blasted Havana through the night, heralding the start of the second day of the rebels long-threatened "total war" against President Fulgencio Batista's government.
In Paris, failure of the Anglo-
American "good offices" team to end
What Is A 'Button Man'?
Scholarship, Grant Renewed
"A promising young mafia member who has distinguished himself by performing a difficult task for the society, such as performing, organizing or directing an assassination . . ."
Reconnaissance and concessionaire are the longest English words written without looped letters either above or below the line.
the Franco-Tunisian dispute and a rising tide of labor difficulties brought new threats today to the government of Premier Felix Gailard.
Conservative deputies put Mr. Gaillard on fresh notice they would overthrow him at the first sign of "appeasement" in trying to end the Tunisian stalemate even though the National Assembly Easter recess does not end until April 29.
"Gate of Hell," a Japanese picture in color will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium as the last presentation in this year's KU Film Series. The film has English subtitles.
The movie, set in 12th century Japan, tells the story of a warrior who falls in love with a woman who has helped him in an inter-clan revolt. He finds the woman is already married, and his attention causes her such shame and sorrow she finally commits suicide.
Film Series Finale Set For Friday
"Gate of Hell" won the Grand Prize at Cannes in 1954, and is particularly praised for its photography.
The story is an interpretation of "an old Japanese tale about a faithful wife."
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor and chairman of the Film Series committee, said the committee is now collecting suggested films for next year's series.
Suggestions for film titles should be made in writing to a committee member before their meeting next week. Mr. Nichols said pictures to be used in the Film Series must be available on 35 mm film, and must have English subtitles in the case of foreign films.
Committee members are Mr Nichols; Sam Anderson, instructor of German; J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages; Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre; Bruce Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism; Edward Maser, director of the Art Museum; F. S. Montgomery, director of visual instruction; Judy Dold, Wichita senior and James Steerman Emporia senior.
Code Has 'Sobering' Effect
Film Series Titles Needed
WASHINGTON — (UP)—Federa Communications Commission Chairman John C. Doerfer, under congressional questioning about his and fellow commissioners' expense accounts, said yes indeed the FCC has a code of ethics.
Its primary purpose, he said, is to get employees to stay sober in public.
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 of Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Men's counselor positions open: Triple-
cate applications for men's residence hall
counseling positions for 1958-59 are avail-
able at the office of the dean of students,
228. Strong.
TODAY
Le Cercle Franceis se reumira jeudi a quatre heures dans la salle II Fraser. Causeur sie sur la Suisse par Mlle Nadine Donv de Lausanne.
Jayhawk Aerial Club, 7:30 p.m., 119
Staples Avenue, unrested in becoming a
member welcome.
Delta Sigma Pi, formal pledging ceremony, 7:30 p.m. Union.
ACME
FRIDAY
Pearty hour, 4 p.m., Music and Browsing Room, Union. James Seaver, associate professor of history, will read late Latin poetry.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Schutz, four small sacred concert, and four symphonies. Palestrins, piece pieces performed by the Sistine Choir.
*Museum of Art* public opening of
of museum at 10 a.m.
Exhibition, 9 to 11 p.m. Refreshments
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Baxel—Danhuis et Chine.
United Student Fellowship, 5-7 p.m.
Congregational Church. Speaker. Dr.
Lawrence Bee. professor of home eco-
logy and education. Enjoy Your Marriage." Everyone welcome.
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The New York Times
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 10, 1958
Unrecorded Facts Concern Botanists
Unrecorded information, that which was formerly unknown to man, is the main concern of the research in the botany department. This is their aim as described by Ronald C. McGregor, associate professor of botany.
Prof. McGregor said that the botany department is studying a wide range of subjects with botanists in various parts of the world on field trips, both short and extended.
Ivan V. Bohnenko
RONALD C. McGREGOR
For example, he explained, one man is in South America studying a fungus which grows on coffee and another is studying fossil plants in rocks.
These researchers are not necessarily trying to effect cures for the fungi or to plot the course of an oil company with the knowledge of rocks. Rather, he said, it is their intent to simply add to the known material on each subject.
There are two types of people performing research work in botany, he said.
Some scientists are working purely as fact-gatherers, supplementing man's limited knowledge of some species. Others approach study as a process whereby they work toward creating some practical public value from the present knowledge on the subject.
To illustrat Prof, McGregor said, "You can't control harmful plants—athlete's foot, a fungus—unless you first get the basic knowledge about the plant."
He added that one either accrues or reads the knowledge on hand about the subject before beginning experimental work.
Each individual must know the how and why of a harmful plant before it is possible for him to begin work on the cure, he said.
A plan to allow men a choice between military service and serving as technical assistants in programs in foreign countries is being worked on by the KU Foreign Affairs Council with the help of the U.S. State Department.
Prof. McGregor concluded, "There is so much unknown, that each of us realizes that he will only be able to scratch the surface of many subjects."
KU Council Views Plan
The plan is still in the early stages, but the State Department is working with the KU group in trying to work out a suitable plan that could be presented to the lawmakers.
The meeting was to elect officers and also to formulate mock policies represent the U. S. and applying to the Middle East.
The plan was formulated at the national convention of The Assn. of International Relations Clubs. It also would give a man, when he becomes eligible for the draft, a chance to work in giving technical aid to other countries.
national Relations Clubs. The results of the election won't be known for several days.
Don Gaumer, Oberlin first year law student, was nominated for president of the Assn. of Inter-
About 370 students from 111 colleges and universities attended the four day convention in Washington D.C. Four students from KU attended the convention.
Representing KU at the conference were: Scott Jarvis, Winfield sophomore; N. T. Mills, McPherson senior, and Gaumer, Jim Hodge, Jessup Maryland, freshman, attended the convention as an observer.
Yugoslavia is composed of six "republics": -Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Macedonia.
The highest peak of Killimanjaro,
in Tanganyika, is 19,340 feet.
Student Attending Advertising Meeting
Steve Schmidt, Salina senior, was chosen to represent KU at the eighth annual "Inside Advertising Week" in New York City.
The 5-day program which began Saturday and lasts through Friday, for students from about 60 colleges and universities provides on-the-spot orientation on many phases of the advertising business. The program is sponsored by the Assn. of Advertising Men and Women of New York, with the cooperation of numerous advertising agencies.
The U. S. flag flies over the capitol building day and night ever since the World War I. It is floodlighted at night.
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COLLEGE MEN
Earn $1500 to $1800 during the summer if you have access to a car and can attend a 2 hour training class on the campus for the next 5 weeks. Send your name, college address and phone number to Box 518, Shawnee Kansas for a personal interview.
Thursday, March 10, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Parr Cuts Wrists During Breakdown
By BOB MACY
(Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan)
Jack Parr, 6-foot 9-inch center and forward who helped Kansas State win two Big Seven titles in his three years of play, is resting today in the Topeka State Hospital after a severe emotional breakdown. Parr arrived at the hospital at 9:20 p.m. Wednesday after a series of outbreaks that climaxed a long period of intermittent stages of depression.
The trip to the Topeka hospital was the latest development in a series of happenings which started 32 hours previously. Among these happenings were; Parr purchasing a gun at a local pawn shop after making threats about certain persons, a stay in the Riley County Hospital, Parr becoming violent and being barricaded in his room after he attacked several officers, tear gas being used in an attempt to control him, Parr tearing apart a metal chair and breaking out all the windows in his room and slashing his wrists with the glass.
Parr was finally persuaded out of the room and taken to surgery where his wounds were worked on.
In an interview with The Daily Kansas, Sue Goss, editor of the Kansas State Collegian related this series of events.
Parr Depressed
She said Parr had been going through stages of depression recently. Many factors entered into this depression. Parr, after starring as a sophomore with K-State had shared the spotlight the last two years with junior Bob Boozer. In his final year at K-State Parr had watched Boozer walk away with the honors in a great many of their games.
Parr and Boozer were involved in a controversy just before they took part in the NCAA playoffs in Louisville, Ky. The two had a small scuffle that was blown out of proportion by some papers. Parr was accused of being a segregationist by some sports writers. He is from Richmond, Va. Miss Goss said some papers in Oklahoma had made accusations that Parr had segregationist leanings. Parr seemed especially concerned about the statements made by some of the Oklahoma papers, Miss Goss said.
Parr was carrying 18 hours of study on campus plus six hours of correspondence work. Miss Goss said Parr was very conscientious about his school work.
Suicide is Feared
Suicide is Feared Miss Goss said Parr told his landlady he was going to buy a gun and left about noon Tuesday. She called
officers and expressed fear Parr would commit suicide. When Parr returned to his room, the officers met him. He tried to slip a clip into a gun he had with him, a 38 Colt. A campus police officer wrestled the gun away from him.
Parr was then taken to the Riley County Hospital where he seemed to improve. Herbert J. Wunderlich, dean of students at K-State, visited Parr later in the day. Miss Goss said Parr was remorseful that the incident had occurred. He was put in seclusion and seemed to be in very fine shape. His father was called in Richmond and said he would be in Manhattan within 48 hours.
At 1 p.m. Wednesday Dr. Donald Cooper, a member of the staff at the student hospital, visited Parr to give him a sedative. Parr knocked the syringe out of Dr. Cooper's hand, saying he wanted to stay in a clear state of mind.
Miss Goss said Parr then became "quite violent" and attacked officers who tried to calm him. She said none of the officers were hurt seriously. Officials then locked one door to Parr's room and barricaded the other.
One wing of the hospital was evacuated of other patients as doctors and attendants tried to bring Parr under control.
Parr Slashes Wrists
Parr then proceeded to tear apart a metal chair in the room and use the leg to break out all the windows in his room. He took glass from one of the windows and slashed his wrists. Tear gas was tossed into the room in an effort to subdue him.
Finally, $5\frac{1}{2}$ hours after the ordeal started, County Attorney Dick Rogers, and Rev. Samuel George, pastor of Manhattan's First Presbyterian Church, talking to Parr through one of the windows, persuaded him to come out. Parr staggered into the hall and was rushed to surgery where his wounds were taken care of. The injuries were not serious.
Miss Goss said Parr was taken to Topeka by ambulance later in the evening. She said he was taken there because officials thought the Topeka hospital would be able to take better care of him.
The Library of Congress has 250 miles of book shelves.
RICHARD H. NOLTE, American Universities Field Staff
Friday, 4 p.m.
Current Events Coffee Hour
Topic- CURRENT EVENTS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
STUDENT UNION
Speaker-
KANSAS
33
STATE
The Victoria Falls on the Zambesi River in Southern Rhodesia carry as much as 100 million gallons of water a minute during the rainy season.
JACK PARR
K-State Reacts To Parr Illness
Kansas State students and faculty members were quick to react to the announcement of the emotional breakdown of basketball player Jack Parr. Miss Sue Goss, editor of the Kansas State Collegian, said the paper had been deluged with calls inquiring what the students could do to help Parr.
She said plans were quickly being made to have a mass card shower for Parr.
The Kansas State basketball awards banquet, scheduled for Friday night, was indefinitely postponed. In postponing the banquet, Athletic Director H. B. "Bebe" Lee said;
Exhibition Baseball
"Jack Parr has meant so much to Kansas State basketball the past three seasons that we want to reschedule the banquet when he can attend."
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Philadelphia (N) 12, New York (A) 8
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Milwaukee (N) 5, Los Angeles (N) 4
St. Louis (N) 6, Philadelphia (A) 3
San Francisco (N) 6, Cleveland (A) 3
Boston (A) 10, Memphis (SOU) 1
Kansas City (A) 8, Little Rock (SOU) 3
Pittsburgh (A), Camden (ham) (SOU),
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The accumulation of pine needles upon rocks creates a chemical action resulting in rock decomposition.
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Aaron Predicts He'll Hit .350
By UNITED PRESS
The Milwaukee slugger socked his eighth home run of the spring and his third in as many games yesterday to lead the Braves to a 5-4 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dallas.
Aaron also had a single, for two of the five hits Milwaukee was able to muster off four Dodger pitchers. Thanks largely to his consistent stick work, the Braves showed a five games to four edge over Los Angeles in their grapefruit rivalry which now is over.
Hammering Hank Aaron thinks he'll hit "around .345 or .350" and at the pace he's going now, rival pitchers will gladly settle for that.
Ain't You Hered
I can't see the text in the image.
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813 Mass.
Open Thursday Nights
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 10. 1950
Big Flowers, Brims Decorate New Hats
Color is the keynote for the 1958 spring hats-solid color, stark white, neutral straw, flowers and bold prints.
Flowers bloom from the chapeau of many a fashionable lady this spring. Big flamboyant flowers—roses, sweet peas, poppies and chrysanthemums, sport colors Mother Nature never created in them.
Colors dominating the hat world are the same as those dominating the whole fashion picture. Brilliant greens, yellows, apricots, electric blues, spicy pinks and beiges will all be an emphasis for the stark black and white.
White color is bolder this year; hat shapes have become softer and draped to complement the lines of the chemise. Draping and manipulation achieve these softening effects. Another soft rock is obtained through big rippling brims.
Besides brims of the rippling variety, brims come rolled up, worn straight and turned down. They vary in size from a narrow ledge around the crown to the large rippling variety.
Salior hats are seen with slightly turned up brims, rolled brims, with round crowns and with square crowns. One type of sailor hat that is making a return this season is the breton sailor. It is worn straight on the back of the hairline, and comes in a variety of sizes. Its turned up brim is the perfect matchmate for the new little boy chemise blouses.
Turbans and cloches are on the way up the scale of popularity. The head-hugging hats complete the 1920's look brought back with the return of the chemise. Silk prints adapt very well to the lines of the turban. Other materials used in the draped hats are straw cloth, mat jersey, felt and braided orgyandy.
Small hats are high on the list of what women want this spring. Tams and toques are seen a great deal. Little tiny hats are made completely with flowers. Bows on a clip are another popular style.
One clever hat trick this season is the matching hat and blouse material. The chemise blouse is made of a floral print and the small sailor or
clip hat is constructed of the same material.
Big floppy - brimmed, square crowned, straw hats do double duty as dress hats and sun hats. Dressed up versions of this style have crowns filled with huge flowers, drapy chiffon bands and streamers, or are made of brightly colored straw. Sun hats merely boast brightly colored ribbon and streamers.
There is no particular style for this season, but a bevy of types to choose from. One can choose the type best suited to her and still be in vogue. With all the variety in style the hat will be an important emphasis this spring.
GAX Elects Officers
Clydene Boots, Isabel junior, has been elected president of Gamma Alpha Chi, honorary advertising fraternity.
Other officers elected were Martha Crosier, Lawrence, vice-president; Mary Alden, Hutchinson, treasurer; Janet Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., reporter. All are juniors.
Joanne Novak, Webster Groves, Mo. sophomore, secretary.
IFPC To Help Aged
The Interfraternity Pledge Council will hold its annual work project Saturday with a planned complete overhaul of the Douglas County Home for the Aged in Lawrence.
Representatives from 29 fraternities will provide the labor, which will begin at 9 a.m. and consist of painting and small odd jobs such as fixing doors and hinges.
For crisper celery stalks, float them in cold water in which a teaspoon of sugar has been dissolved.
You can keep sweet potatoes from discoloring by adding a slice of lemon to the boiling water.
... On The Hill . . .
Delta Sigma Pi fraternity had as its guest before vacation, J. D. Thomson, national executive director of the fraternity. Mr. Thomson met with the officers and faculty adviser to discuss future plans for the KU chapter.
Delta Sigma Pi
The fraternity held a rush smoker recently.
* *
Phi Kappa Tau
* *
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity held an exchange dinner with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority recently.
Delta Sigma Phi
Rollen Anderson. Kinsley junior, has been elected president of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.
Other officers elected were Verlin Meier, Marion junior, vice-president; John Olson, Raytown, Mo. junior, secretary; Ray Rader, Kansas City, Mo. senior, treasurer; Perry Daniel, Sunnyslope, Ariz. freshman, sergeant-at-arms.
Appointed officers are Chuck Converse, Parkville, Mo., historian; Doug Reed, Overland Park, social chair-
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
NEXT PARTY
Get Your White Coat
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man; Jim Rambo, Kansas City, Mo,
house manager; Perry Daniel, rush
chairman; Dan Felger, Mishawaka,
Ind., editor. All are freshmen.
Jim McKean, Phoenix, Ariz. sophomore, scholarship chairman.
Terry Beucher, Lawrence, athletic chairman; Bruce Voran, Kinsley, song leader-chaplain; Phil Knouse, Garnett, pledgemaster; Gene Anderson, Belleville, steward. All are juniors.
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10
MY CLOSEST SHAVE by Elgin Ciampi Skin Diver, Shark Expert, Author
"My closest shave happened under water while baiting sharks to photograph," says shark expert Elgin Ciampi. "My speared bait-fish hid in a hole, pouring clouds of blood around me. Smelling blood, a 7-foot man-eater, unable to find the bait, rushed me. I dodged and started taking pictures. I kept the camera between us while the shark circled hungriily for five full minutes. Then my air supply ran short, so I used psychology: I lunged at the shark with my camera. Startled, he shot away—and so did I!"
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Wheel Pack 2.00
Oil Change 2.50
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BRIDGE
Standard Service
601 Mass.
Phone VI 3-9849
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summer formal!
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Looking for fun ahead?
Then just be sure to look at yourself in one of our new After Six summer formals! Come in and try on a sparkling new dinner jacket in frosty white or Parfait Colors and see what distinctive
After Six
BY RUDOPKIR
ROOM:
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Ivy Styles $28.95
EAT. B
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BEVER cold. closed Ice pla 0350.
HAVE livery,
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Thursday, March 10. 1958 University Daily Kansan
hletic
insley,
mouse,
nder-
e jun-
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
5 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
MISCELLANEOUS
EAT. Boarders wanted, good food, reasonable rates. One-half block from union. Cali Bruce Wenger, VI 3-2565, Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 La. 4-11
FOR RENT
HAVE FOOD. WILL DELIVER. Free delivery, complete fountain and sandwich service ($1 minimum order). Jayhawk Cafe. VI 3-6171. 4-16
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, phone supplies. Bath, 4th and Vermont. Phone VI. ff 0350
ROOMS FOR STUDENTS or working
at summer camp
L-9-3300, after 3 p.m.
4-10
EXTRA NICE four room furnished basement apartment. Private entrance, private bath, $65 per month, all bills paid Phone VI 3-1764 afternoon or evenings
AVAILABLE NOW, three room furnished apartment, private bath, utilities paid. off street parking. Couple only. Call VI 3-1371 for appointment. 4-14
NICELY FURNISHED four room apartment. Moody Apartments, 1343 Tennessee. Immediate occupancy. Phone VI 3-0978. A-15
FOR SALE
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over 50 pages and housed in house or call VI 3-7553, VI 2-0736, VI 2-0935 for free delivery. tt
TUXEDO, size 39. with shirt. $25. White dinner jacket. size 39. $15. VI 3-6303
NICELY LANDSCAPED split level home. Large cathedral type living room. Two bedroom, two bathroom. Full bath on second level, one-half bath and shower on lower level. Kitchen has Thermador stove, oven, exhaust, an garbage can, kitchen cabinet, Loaf rack, multi-lins, two wood-burning fire places, and basement garage with shop space. New location close to KU. Shown by appointment only. Mildred Hess. VI 3-3457 or IV 3-1782
'35 FORD COUPE. '51 Merc motor,
naugahue interior, black lacquer, spun
aluminum discs. Bob Hill, DeSoto, Kansa.
4-11
AS WE have to vacate our duplex at 916 Vermont, we must dispose of six rooms of good furniture. Consisting of davenports and chairs, desks and tables, rugs, lamps,departments, curtains, refrigerators, stoves,dishes, and many miscellaneous items.Starting 8 a.m. April 11th, through April 13th. 4-11
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 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
Rogers Launder-IT
1407 Maggs Launder-IT
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
913 N. H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. Parsons Jewelry V1 3-4731
725. Mass. 1-3-4, 3-4-1, 3-4-1
743. Wolfson's Credit Jewelry VI 1-3, 4-366
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Clyde Grasshopper
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass. VI 3-3055
Fleetline two door, looks and runs like new $395
1951 Chevrolet
USED CAR BUYS
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-697
Cys's Used Cars
19th & Mass. VI 3-9293
Hardtop with V8, hydramatic, radio,
beater, white walltires. Like new.
1955 Pontiac Catalina
1953 Plymouth
1953 Plymouth
Spotless, good tires. 6 cyl. with overdrive. Perfect all over.
Jim Clark
625 Mass. VI 3-3055
RUGER .22 semi-automatic pistol, with two clips, leather holster, and cartridge belt. Also 550 rounds of .22 ammo. $45 takes everything. Call Kermit Kroyer, VI 3-2542 between six and seven p.m. Wednesday or Thursday evening. 4-11
EIGHT STANDARD poode puppies,
black or brown. AKC registered. top
pedigree. Affectionate with children,
accustomed to cat. Sturdy, gay, intelligent,
every one perfect. Sternfeld. VI 3-0763.
4-16
SENIORS; Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
HELP WANTED
YOUNG ADULT, man or woman. Typing,
filing, mimeographing, mailing, messenger.
Must have driver's license. $5 \frac{1}{2}$ day week. Permanent. Submit typewritten app-
lications to educational and environment background. P.O. Box 571, Lawrence, Kansas.
WANTED
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable
Washing or ironing or both. 88
Conn.
BABY SITTING: Young mother of two wishes to care for or 2 pre-school children. Fee included plenty of toys. Noon meal included in regular rest period. 510 W 6th I. V-34785.
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type the terms, term sheets, theses, on electric typewriter desired. Phone Ms. Donna Vanna VI, III 3-860.
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop FLAT TOPS in the Barber shop the hilt Clarence Adamson. Mgr
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833½ Mass.—Ph. VI 3-8074
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith,
941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263.
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EXPERIENCLD TYPIST: Prompt and ac-
service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 f
29th St
TYPIST; Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast, accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
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Sewing ff
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers,
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VI 3-017-1489-2533
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers.
Parkeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock and cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have all of that! Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tf
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Glants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
TPIST, experienced and fast. Reason-
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THE BOOK NOUR
1021 Mass - Ph. VI 3-1044
THE BOOK NOOK
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons., Marion Rice Dance
Studio, 908 Missouri, phone VI 3-6838.
5-13
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-768
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates, wi-fi and land deliver. Mrs. Tom Brady. VI 3-3428 4-16
LEAVE FILM TONIGHT
UNTIL 8:30
Back Tomorrow At 3
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass.-VI 3-9471
Sticklers!
WHAT IS A PIG DOCTOR?
WILLIAM WEBER,
LA SALLE COLLEGE
TOM AND JIM
Squealer Healer
WHAT'S AN OBSTACLE IN A CROSS-COUNTRY RACE?
DAVID BREAZEALE Harrier Barrier
BROWN
IN THE TWENTIES, up-to-date college gals wore raccoon coats, danced the Charleston and smoked Luckies. What's the rage on campus today? Raccoon coats. The Charleston. And Luckies! The conclusions are obvious. 1. Luckies were tops for taste in the Twenties and still are. 2. Smart smokers knew it and still do. So any gal who takes Luckies to a Roaring 20's party is a Dapper Flapper! And by George, the boy friend who sports 'em, too, is a Couth Youth! Prediction: In the 1980's, raccoon coats, the Charleston and light, good-tasting tobacco will still be in style!
Daft Craft
EDWARD JAY.
U. OF CHICAGO
Skiing
WHAT IS A FLAT-BOTTOMED CANOE?
Laugh Staff
LEONARD BUSEN,
U. OF MISSOURI
WHAT IS A LUCKY-SMOKING COED AT A 1920'S PARTY?
ROBERT BUDNITZ.
Fight Site
KALO
WHAT IS A BOXING ARENA?
WHAT ARE A COMEDIAN'S WRITERS?
(SEE PARAGRAPH ABOVE)
WHAT ARE A COMEDIAN'S WRITERS?
😊
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.
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 small riddles with.
STUDENTS! MAKE $25
DAVID PASHLEY
U. OF PORTLAND
Limber Timber
WHAT ARE RUBBER TREES MADE OF?
WHAT ARE IMPOLITE CHILDREN?
GERALD FORT.
U. OF MEMNISOTA
*Rude Brood*
LUCKY STRIKE
LUCKY
STRIKE
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 10, 1958
Mike Dempster
BRUCE LEWELLYN, Hutchinson sophomore, as a huntsman.
'Robin Hood' Here
The Children's Theater production of "Robin Hood" will be presented four times in the experimental theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building April 16-19.
The three-act play, adapted for the 7-14 year age group, will open Saturday evening at Wichita East High School, but will return here for an 8 p.m. performance Wednesday.
On April 17 and 18 there will be 4:15 p.m. performances, and on April 19 there will be 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. performances.
The production, under the direction of Sally Six, instructor in speech and drama, will tell the traditional story of Sherwood Forest's famous character
The experimental theater, seating 80, is designed especially to give an intimate relationship between the performers and the audience, said Gordon Beck, instructor in speech, who is in charge of the theater.
The stage nearly surrounds the audience seated in swivel chairs and
puts them in the middle of the action.
"In one battle scene the fighting said, but added that the Saturday takes place over the heads of part of the audience." Mr. Beck said.
The matinees are to be primarily for the younger audience, Mr. Beek evening performance is being presented more or less for the KU faculty and students.
Robin Hood will be played by Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb. freshman. Nan O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill. sophomore will play Maid Marian. The sheriff of Nottingham will be Robert Moberly, Excelsior Springs, Mo. freshman.
Technical supervision was done by Glenn Bickle, Kansas City, Mo. junior, lighting; Lee Rankin, Birmingham, Ala. junior, costumes, and Gordon Beck, settings.
OSS Provided Interesting Times
This will be the last Children's Theater production for the semester.
The surrender of Germany during World War II marked the beginning of some of the most interesting wartime experiences of Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography.
Dr. Smith had been working in the London headquarters of the research and analysis branch of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) before the surrender. As chief cartographer of the map division, he was concerned mainly with target maps for ground operations and operational maps for purposes of military government.
However, after the liberation of Paris, an OSS office was set up there and soon afterward there were branches in Berlin and Wiesbaden in Germany. It was to the latter city that Dr. Smith was sent in June of 1945.
Dr. Smith, who held the rank of second lieutenant was sent out with a captain and two enlisted men on a map procurement mission.
Interested in Far East
The group was looking primarily for maps of the Far east since the war with Japan was still on, but "it went without saying that we were also looking for Russian maps," he added.
The search for maps was a thorough one and at one time it took the four men down into a salt mine where the Germans had stored a large collection of maps from the Prussian State Library in Berlin.
The mine was filled with smoke from a fire which had been started by a group of displaced persons who had gone down into the mine looking for clothing.
Looking for maps was not the only activity of Dr. Smith's group, however. Soon after they had started their work there was a shift in emphasis from map procurement to intelligence procurement, Dr. Smith said. They discovered work which had been done by German mapping agencies and began to round up the personnel who had been engaged in it.
NEZU
Because Dr. Smith had had a part in drawing up the maps designating the occupation zones in Germanny he knew which part was to be
Activities Extended
THOMAS R. SMITH
Russian. So the group extended its "intelligence procurement" to include the evacuation of important German cartographers and their families from what was to become the Russian zone.
These men whom they brought to the American zone are now working with one of the West German survey organizations, Dr. Smith said.
The summer he spent in Germany was a busy but a satisfying one, Dr. Smith said.
Receives Grant To Study Nerve System
Dr. James Hall, assistant professor of anatomy has received a U.S. Public Health Service grant of $4,887 for research dealing with the autonomic nervous system. His project will be a "Histo-physiological Analysis of the Stellate Ganglion."
The Stellate ganglion is a collection of nerve cells in the base of the neck. Dr. Hall plans to study the degree of metabolic activity elicited in the Stellate ganglion when the ventral roots of isolated thoracic spinal cord segments which contribute to the ganglion are electrically stimulated, and to determine the relative influence of each of these cord segments on the ganglion.
The Danforth Foundation was established in 1927 by the late Mr. and Mrs. William H. Danforth, and was intended for the aiding of the educational needs of young people.
The successful candidates were chosen from 360 nominations provided by the deans of the accredited colleges in the United States. The selection was made on the basis of academic ability, personal qualities promising success in teaching, and religious maturity in the candidate's own area of faith.
Miss Muriel Johnson, assistant professor of home economics, is one of 61 men and women from colleges across the county who have been chosen for the 1948 Danforth Teacher Study Grants.
Poison ivy's clusters of waxy white fruit, resembling bayberry, provide food for more than 50 species of birds.
However he could not help remembering that "If the war had turned out the other way, one of those German cartographers would have been touring the United States just as I was going through Germany. It was a sobering thought."
Color plays an important part in the courtship of butterflies. A male is most attracted to a female bearing its own colors. In two species the scarlet wing patch is a recognition sign. Orange and blue are vital hues for other species.
This is the fourth year that this program of Danforth Teacher Study Grants has been in operation. The award allows a calendar year of graduate study in a university of the candidate's choosing. The stipend is arranged according to the candidate's salary and number of dependents, and may go as high as $4,600.
should
Accompanists will be Jan Morawitz, New London, Mo. senior; Judy Schaeffer, Kingman freshman, and Judith Carr, Junction City senior.
Danforth Grant To Miss Johnson
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call
Six Will Appear In Honor Recital
An honor recital, presenting six students, will be given by the School of Fine Arts at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb senior, violin major; Jack Davison, Lawrence senior, a bass-baritone voice major; Lyle Merriman, Wichita freshman, clarinet; Bonnie Dinsmore, Dayton, Ohio senior, a soprano voice major; Alan Harris, Lawrence junior, a cello major, and James Avery, Burlington junior, a piano major.
The following participating students have been selected by the music faculty for their outstanding performances in a series of informal recitals last semester:
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Squat May Die In ASC Amendment
Squat, campus humor magazine, will be fighting for its life at the next All Student Council meeting.
At Tuesday's ASC meeting, Squat staff members-managing editor Jerry Blatherwick, Mission senior, business manager Stewart Horejsi, Salina junior, and art editor John Martin, Ottawa senior- explained the operation of Squat.
After the three staff members spoke, a proposed amendment was introduced by Dale Brethower, Nevis, Minn. senior, to remove the section of the ASC bill concerning Squat.
The amendment was given its first reading, which means it now goes to a committee and will be discussed at the next ASC meeting. There was no discussion on the amendment.
If Squat was dropped from the ASC bill, it could no longer be published or sold on campus, since magazines published by students must come under the ASC charter.
Editor Cites 3 Justifications Blatherwick named three factors which he said justify publication of a magazine:
1. A need for the magazine among its readers.
2. Educational value to the staff.
3. Financial justification — does it show a profit?
On two of the three grounds, Blatherwick said he was sure of justification. Squat showed a profit for the first three issues this year and Blatherwick said it was effective in teaching its staff about publication.
As to need for the magazine, Blatherwick cited Squat's circulation of 1,200 to 1,600 per issue, with "three or four readers per copy." from a student enrollment of about 8,000.
The original motion to investigate Squat was made by Wendell Wallace, OmahA. Neb, senior, at the Feb. 25 ASC meeting, and the Publications Committee met with the Squat staff after publication of its third issue.
Brethower said Thursday night he felt Squat was not "functioning as a good magazine to represent the University." His main objection is to the content and taste of the magazine.
He said while Blatherwick "impressed me as being quite willing to work to produce a good magazine," he thought "it would be much easier to kill Squat and start another magazine" to improve the situation.
Willing To Accept Changes
Blatherwick said Thursday that at Squat's meeting with the Publications Committee he had offered to accept any changes the committee
M. J. SMITH
JERRY BLATHERWICK
suggested for the staff or the magazine.
He said he thinks if the magazine were considered harmful to the student body, the KU administration would take some action.
No such action has been taken, he said.
Hugh Grant, Hutchinson senior and chairman of the Publications Committee, said the committee was neutral in the dispute. The committee was asked to see how Squat was doing financially and to see if it was operating in accordance with ASC rules.
The committee members are members of Squat's governing board and act as administrators. At the meeting with the staff, Grant said, he advised Blatherwick of the criticisms of Squat so he could be aware of them.
Plans were announced for a bi-partisan rally at 4 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Candidates for both parties will be introduced, and both presidential tickets—AGI candidates Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo, junior, for president and Susie Stout, Wichita junior, for vice-president, and nonpartisan presidential candidate Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior—will give campaign speeches.
Student body president Bob Billings, Russell junior, who cleared the rally with the KU administration, said he had turned the program over to the two party presidents and Prelock.
55th Year, No.123
Billings said there possibly would be demonstrations for the candidates, placards and signs, in the manner of a national party convention—or a combined Democratic and Republican convention.
At the Vox Populi meeting, Jim Austin, president of that political party, said the 5-point Vox platform was kept short because "we don't intend to make any promises we can't fulfill."
"AGI pledges to continue to support a policy of student government based upon cooperation among independents and Greeks. We believe that through this program AGI has given to the students a good administration during the past year. AGI realizes that student government
The AGI platform:
Parties Give Platforms
Vox and AGI selected election workers-poll workers, poll police, and ballot counters.
Party platforms and election tactics were decided Thursday night for both campus political parties as next Wednesday's general election draws nearer.
Dailu hansan
At the meeting of Vox Populi's General Assembly, the party set up its platform, reviewed election and voting rules and gave out campaigning rules for its candidates.
The Forum of the Allied Greek-Independent party met and approved an 11-plank platform, endorsed the platform of AGI's presidential ticket, and heard party leaders outline election work to be done.
Engineering Exposition To Feature Space Travel, Satellite Exhibits
Friday, April 11, 1958
"Frontiers of Engineering," is the theme of the 1958 Engineering Exposition to be held April 18 and 19 in Marvin Hall.
The frontiers theme has been supplemented by department exhibits on space travel, satellites and missiles, new const ion methods and new sources of power.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Space travel will be featured by displays on missile development, human factors in high speed travel, construction of satellites, manufacture of rocket fuels, and rocket launching.
The archway over the doors of Marvin Hall to the entrance of the exposition will feature a 20-foot model of a balance scale. The beam of the scale will be 20-feet long and will extend over the sidewalk leading up to Marvin. Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, built the archway.
In one balance tray will be an 11-foot long slide rule and in the other tray will be a 9-foot missile on a launching platform.
Humanitiies Lecture To Be Held Saturday
Thomas Hart Benton, Humanities Series lecturer will speak on "Regionalism—Thirty Years After" at 8 p.m. Saturday in Fraser Theater. Mr. Benton is a Missouri-born artist who has gained world fame as a regionalist artist. His works will be on exhibition in the Museum of Art for the next 5 weeks.
One department will give away satellite souvenirs while another will actually receive and decode
WASHINGTON — (UP) — Russia agreed today to an ambassadorial meeting next week to take the first step toward a summit conference. But the White House said Russia is still imposing terms that amount to rejection of the western proposals.
Russia Accepts Summit Step
Sam Molen, sportscaster for KMBC radio and TV will be master of ceremonies at the Kansas Relays banquet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union ballroom. Paul W. Brechler, director of athletics at Iowa State University, will be the speaker.
The architectural exhibit will be an experiment with laminated cardboard construction. This is the first such test in the United States and supposedly the first in the world.
Molen To Be MC At Relays Banquet
Visiting coaches, athletes and Relays supporters will be guests. The banquet is open to the public. Tickets are on sale in Allen Fld House.
information being transmitted by the American satellites.
To assure the visitors that the down-to-earth factors will not be missing in the world of tomorrow a display of a car of the future and the roads it will travel on will be
Sources of power—from the water wheel to the atom—will be demonstrated in a display of a model community. Another power source, petroleum, will be featured.
Visitors will have an opportunity to take part in stereophonic sound experiments and in an investigation of extra-sensory perception.
presented.
The Speech and Drama Festival being held on campus today and Saturday, has been an annual event for more than 10 years, according to E. A. McFarlane, manager of the Bureau of Institutes and one of the festival's supervisors.
The event at KU will have some 300 entries from more than 80 Kansas high schools who will compete for medals and certificates.
Speech Festival Opens Today
Fair east tonight, partly cloudy west with scattered showers or thunderstorms extreme west by evening, continuing west portions tonight. Saturday partly cloudy with light rain showers west portion. Warmer over western half tonight. Cooler west portion Saturday.
There will be extemporaneous speaking, original oration, manuscript reading, plus humorous and dramatic readings.
Weather
can be effective only when capable and interested people are elected and offers such a slate of candidates for election. These people are pledged to work toward the realization of the following objectives:
1. To continue cooperation with the faculty in investigating the possibilities of revising College requirements.
2. To more fully utilize the methods of student evaluation of the faculty through the use of a survey system with real results as an end product.
3. To continue support of the foreign student leadership program and to take benefit of the ideas brought out through the program.
4. To support the efforts of the Group for the Improvement of Human Relations and to work for better relations among all student elements.
5. To continue in the position that seating for athletic events must be governed in a manner favorable to
the majority of the entire student body.
6. To support events such as the Big Eight Conference on International Affairs in order that all interested students may have an opportunity for exchange of ideas.
7. To continue to support and take benefit of reports and suggestions from groups like the Little Hoover Commission in order to give the students the best possible administration.
8. To investigate and attempt to prevent excessive charges for certain student housing and to improve existing conditions.
9. To work toward permitting each district to have at least one voting representative.
10. To continue to work toward a more efficient student government within the framework of the recently revised ASC constitution.
11. To welcome at all times the suggestions of all students and to give consideration to all ideas that may originate with any individual or group."
The Vox platform:
"1. The ASC should not be used as used as a springboard from which individuals may promote their personal interests and ambitions.
(Continued on Page 8.)
Queens, Floats, Bands Salute Relays Theme
Bands, fancy horses, drill teams, queens and floats will salute "Sports In A Scientific World" April 19 in a hour-long Kansas Relays parade.
The annual spectacle will start at 10 a.m. from Sixth Street and move down Massachusetts to South Park. Two queens and four attendants, riding in convertibles, will be the feature attraction.
Parade co-chairmen, Skipper Williams, Lawrence businessman, and Raymond H. Dean, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said Thursday that 22 parade entries have been received and at least five more are expected by Tuesday.
Fifteen organized houses have entered floats built around Relays theme.
Women's houses entered floats are Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, both freshman and upperclassmen, Delta Gamma, Alpha Phi and Delta Delta Delta. Fraternity entries are from Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta, Triangle, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta Upsilon, Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi, Delta Tau Delta and Tau Kappa Epsilon. Dean said he expects other houses to enter next week.
Marching groups entered include the KU band, ROTC Pershing Rifles, the Lawrence junior and senior
high school bands and the Yates Center high school band.
About 40 members of the Kansas City, Mo. Saddle and Sirloin Club, dressed in western outfits will parade on show horses. Mr. Williams said the club will also have "three carloads of 'cow girls.'"
Haskell Indian Institute will enter a float, band or Indian dancers. Mr. Williams said.
"By next Tuesday we should have the parade all lined up," he said. There will be several bands, but we may not get as many as we expected because there is a high school band day also on April 19.
The Lawrence National Guard is expected to enter a Civil War colon guard. Mr. Williams said some Lawrence business may enter floats next week.
Dean, the campus parade chairman, said all queen candidates have been invited to appear in the parade.
IM Speech Contest Begins Wednesday
The 11th annual intramural speech contest for all organized houses will begin at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday with demonstration oratory.
The following Wednesday, April 23, will be the informative speeches, while April 30 is the date of the argumentative presentation Both will be at 7:30 p.m.
Applications should be made at 116 Strong.
The contest, which will award trophies to individual winners and to the house with the highest point total, is sponsored by the KU Forensic League and the Speech department.
Brad Lashbrook, assistant instructor in speech, is in charge of the contest.
Another oratorical contest open to all undergraduate students is being sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, honorary forensic group.
The contest, which offers a $300 set of encyclopedias as first prize, will have preliminaries at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 134 Strong. Students are to present a 10-minute oration on any subject they wish. Mr. Lashbrook said.
The actual contest will be held Tuesday, April 22 in Strong Auditorium. There will be cash awards to other winners, Mr. Lashbrook said. Judging will be done by faculty members in both contests.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 11, 1958
Interesting Exhibit
Saturday evening the Museum of Art will open an exhibition that should be of interest to many students. This exhibition will be of the works of Thomas Hart Benton, Missouri artist.
Benton is one of the best known Mid-American painters. He was born in Missouri, and after studying in Chicago and Paris, and working in New York, he came back to Missouri.
Benton is the only surviving member of the so-called "regionalist painters," which included John Steuart Curry and Grant Wood. Curry was born in Kansas and was known for his paintings of Kansas life. Wood was born in Iowa and was famous for his Middle Western paintings.
This exhibition of Benton's paintings, which will include over 70 of his works, was not easily obtained. These paintings were borrowed from leading museums and private collectors throughout the country as well as from Benton himself. It's not a simple task to convince the owner of a painting worth several hundred to several thousand dollars to loan them for exhibition. One painting, a controversial nude, "Persephone," is worth $25,000.
This exhibition is not only very valuable and the paintings well-known nationally, but the artist is an area resident. This should provide a point of interest to the students who are not too art-minded.
This exhibition is the second to be presented of one of the "regionalist painters." The works of John Stewart Curry were exhibited in the Museum of Art in April and May of 1957. Edward Maser, director of the Museum, hopes to present an exhibition of the works of Grant Wood next year.
The students who appreciate such fine exhibitions as Mr. Maser is continually bringing to the Museum of Art are grateful for the chance to view the fine paintings. We feel he should be thanked for his efforts to put together exhibits that will be of interest to the student body.
To the students that don't understand or are unacquainted with art, this five week exhibition will be a good opportunity to get a better understanding of art. And the works of Thomas Hart Benton should provide an interesting source from which to obtain this knowledge.
No Rock Chalk Here
—Del Haley
When KU students and faculty decided to incorporate the phrase "rock chalk" into our student yell 'way back in 1866, little did they know that no authentic chalk existed under the soil of Mt. Oread.
Although Kansas is one of the few areas in North America where extensive chalk deposits can be found, the majority of the fine-grained limestone is located in the north-central and western parts of the state.
According to the State Geological Survey, Kansas chalk is of the highest grade—the only chalk in America comparable to that found in the white cliffs of Dover.
So, even though our Hill doesn't have any rock chalk, we can still proudly chant our famous yell, for the state rock of Kansas is, appropriately enough, chalk.
New TV Hero: The Tax Collector
—John Husar
You've heard of G-men and T-
men. They've been lionized in films
and TV for years. Now comes the
$-man, another federal hero.
Ghastly though it may seem, a new video offering will glorify the exploits of the nation's tax collectors. It's possible the hero will be equipped with a flock of 1040 forms instead of a trusty pistol.
To convince us the tax man is, after all, a sweet character, MCA, which is producing "Special Agent 7" has chosen sweet-faced Lloyd Nolan.
This being income tax season, the soft-spoken actor barely managed a grin when he said he was acquainted with several tax agents ($-men) and they appeared, on the surface at least, to be human. Then he began to ad lib recklessly.
Nolan, whose motives are as guileless as his kisser, is somewhat uneasy about his assignment.
"I think we can sell the public
that the burden of internal revenue really is working for the people, not against them," he said.
"Basically it will be a cops and robbers series." Then, proudly,
"Did you know that Internal Revenue makes 75 per cent of federal arrests while the FBI and other agencies account for the rest."
Nolan feels right at home in a cops and robbers story. He was Detective Martin Kane one season on TV. He portrayed Michael Shane, another sleuth, in a series of nine movies 15 years ago. On two occasions he's been an FBI man, and he's played innumerable city cops.
"I play a roving agent whose duty it is to track down tax dodgers. Some of the villains are criminals, others are ordinary citizens who get too fancy with the tax laws," Nolan said.
As part owner of "Special Agent 7" Noian thinks the chances of selling it will improve after the April
United Press
15 tax deadline. His thinking is that people, sponsors included, have short memories.
There is another illogical move by the School of Fine Arts to go along with other illogical moves on the campus.
The theatres down there brought in professional Jerome Kilty for "King Henry IV," Part I and Virginia Copeland, another professional, to play in "The Saint of Bleecker Street."
How Do You Explain It?
Why didn't the theatre bring in TV professional Richard Greene to play the part he knows so well in "Robin Hood?"
How do you explain it?
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
By Dick Bibler
R-14
"SOME GUYS NEVER HAVE ANY TROUBLE GETTIN' A GIRL."
The national territory of Ecuador is of uncertain area because of recent changes in the boundaries and the lack of precise surveys. It has been computed as 104,510 square miles.
Daily Hansan
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Brown Managing Editor
Larry Barron, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Managing Editors; Douglas Parker, City Editor; Martha Crosser, Jack Harrison, Amanda Huckins, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Assistant Sports Editor; Pat Swanson, Society Editor; Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Martin Hall, Martin Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler Business Manager John Clarke, Advertising Manager; Carol Ann Huston, National Advertising Manager, Bill Irvine, Classified Agent, Matt Mahan, Tom McGarth, Circulation Manager; Norman Beck, Promotion Manager.
Show Business Briefs
Ed Wynn says he has turned down seven publishers who want to print his life story. The aging comedian said he is putting his biography down on tape and will leave it to his son, Keenan.
and has patched up his quarrel at Warner Brothers by agreeing to continue in the video series for another year.
Clint Walter, TVs "Cheyenne" star, gets his first break in a major film role in "Yellowstone Kelly."
It pays to win Oscars. "The Bridge on the River Kwai" reaped its biggest Los Angeles box office take this week, after 15 weeks of showings.
FIGURE 10.3
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and,
"Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
SCIENCE MADE SIMPLE: No. 3
Once again the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, bless their tattooed hearts, have consented to let me use this space, normally intended for levity, to bring you a brief lesson in science.
They are generous, openhanded men, the makers of Marlboro, hearty, ruddy, and full of the joy of living, as anyone can tell who has sampled their wares. In Marlboro you will find no stinting, no stinginess. Marlboro's pleasures are rich, manifold, and bountiful. You get a lot to like with a Marlboro-filter, flavor, flip-top box, and, in some models, power steering.
The science that we take up today is called astronomy, from the Greek words astro meaning "sore" and nomy meaning "back". Sore backs were the occupational disease of the early Greek astronomers, and no wonder! They used to spend every blessed night lying on the damp ground and looking up at the sky, and if there's a better way to get a sore back, I'd like to hear about it. Especially in the moist Mediterranean area, where Greece is generally considered to be.
Lumbago and related disorders kept astronomy from becoming very popular until Galileo, an unemployed muleteer of Pamplona, fashioned a homemade telescope in 1924 out of three Social Security cards and an ordinary ice cube. What schoolboy does not know that stirring story—how Galileo stepped up to his telescope, how he looked heavenward, how his face filled with wonder, how he stepped back and whispered the words heard round the world: "Let them eat cake!"
"LET THEM EAT CAKE!" CRAWFORD
Well sir, you can imagine what happened then! William Jennings Bryan snatched Nell Gwynne from the shadow of the guillotine at Oslo; Chancellor Bismarck brought in four gushers in a single afternoon; Enos Slaughter was signed by the Hanseatic League; Crete was declared off limits to Wellington's army; and William Faulkner won the Davis Cup for his immortal Penrod and Sam.
But after a while things calmed down and astronomers began the staggering task of naming all the heavenly bodies. First man to name a star was Sigafoes of Mt. Wilson, and the name he chose was Betelgeuse, after his dear wife, Betelgeuse Sigafoos, prom queen at Michigan from 1919 to 1931.
Then the Major Brothers of Yerkes Observatory named stars after their wives, Ursa and Canis, and Witnick of Harvard named one after his wife, Big Dipper, and soon all the stars were named.
Astronomers then turned to the question: is there life on other planets? The answer was a flat, unequivocal no. Spectroscopic studies proved without a doubt that the atmosphere on the other planets was far too harsh to permit the culture of the fine tobacco that go into Marlboro Cigarettes . . . And who can live without Marlboro?
***
$ \textcircled{c} $ 1958 Max Shulman
This celestial column—like the author's more earthy ones is brought to you by the makers of Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the long white ash. And in all the solar system you won't find a better smoke.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
IFC To Discuss Rush Rule
An amendment to the Inter-fraternity Council constitution, nominations of officers for next year, a rush week rule change, and a community service award will be items of business at the IFC meeting Monday night in the Kansas Union Pine Room.
The amendment, if passed, will make it mandatory for all IFC representatives to live in their chapter houses during their terms of office.
The amendment was tabled at the last council meeting two weeks ago.
The proposed rush week rule requires all rushees to live in University dormitories with 10:30 p.m. closing hours.
A vote will be taken on a motion to set up a traveling trophy to be awarded each year to the fraternity with the most outstanding record of service to the community and the University.
Nominations for officers will be made. Elections will be held in two weeks.
Sororities To Host Freshmen
The Panhellenic Council, sorority governing body, will give a series of parties for freshman women Saturday and Sunday afternoon.
Twelve social sororities will present skits during the 45 minute parties. Seven parties will be held from 1:30 to 5:25 p.m. Saturday and five parties will be given from 2 to 4:45 p.m. Sunday.
Freshmen will attend in groups from their dormitory floors. Refreshments will be served at one party in each house.
The first open house for freshmen was held in November. Sorority women conducted tours through their houses. The parties this week-end will be to "get acquainted" Phyllis Anderson, Wellington junior and Panhellenic council secretary said.
Under present rush rules freshman women are not allowed in sorority houses except during official times declared by the council.
KU Research Cited In Yearbook
Research with rickettseia by two professors and a graduate student is cited in the significant science progress section of the 1958 Encyclopaedia Britannica Yearbook.
Dr. Cora Downs, professor of bacteriology; Dr. David Paretsky, associate professor and head of the bacteriology department, and Richard Consigli, a graduate student from Brooklyn, N. Y., are mentioned for the cultivation of rickettsiae, minute pathogenic bacteria which cause typhus fever, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, rickettsial pox and fever.
The three KU bacteriologists succeeded in growing the organisms outside a living system for the first time in a medium whose chemical constituents were known. The discovery enables scientists to study the mode of existence of the organisms,
Engineers' Dance Banquet Tonight
"Operation Deep Freeze" will be the theme of Kansas City Star staff correspendent Bill Moore's talk at the Engineers' Banquet at 6:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Mr. Moore was a correspondent on the recent Geophysical Year expedition to Antarctica.
An all school dance, sponsored by the Engineering Student Council, will follow the banquet at 9 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. At the intermission of the dance, the queen of the dance and of the Engineering Exposition April 18 and 19, will be crowned.
There are 15,000 amateur radio operators in New York state. About 4,000 of them are enrolled in Civil Defense.
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 include name, place, date, and time of function.
Official Bulletin
Men's counselor positions open: Triple-campaign applications for men's residence hall counseling positions for 1958-59 are available. Office of the dean of students, 728 Strong.
TODAY
Hillel Friday evening services, 6:45 p.m. Jewish Community Center.
SATURDAY
Museum of Art public opening of Thomas Hunt Benton. Retrospective ENSHOP.
United Student Fellowship, 5-7 p.m.
Congregational Church Speaker, Dr.
awrence R. Dunn
trauma sociology, "Enjoy Your Marriage."
Everyone welcome.
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Bavel-Daphnis et Chloe.
Newman Club meeting, following 11 a.m. Mass
Faculty-student buffet, 5-7 p.m. Canterbury House.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Episcopal Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House
Breakfast follows.
MONDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Ravel-Daphnis et Chloe. Episcopal student vestry meeting, noon. Canterbury House.
Mathematics colloquium 2. p.m., 219 Strong, Speaker, Bernard A. Hodson, Ottawa, Canada, and the Calculus of Stress in Turbine Disks Subject to Gorcous Forces."
Mathematics Club, 4 p.m., 203 Strong Organize for Engineering Exposition.
Sophomore Party Planned For May 3
Plans for a sophomore class party are in the final planning stages, according to sophomore class vicepresident Bob Luce, Ottawa. Lucse said plans have been made for the party to be held at Lone Star Lake, Saturday May 3 from 1 to 5 p.m.
Find It In The Kansan Classified
Seven schools in the Big Eight Conference have entered art in the first annual Big Eight art competition, which will open Saturday in the art gallery in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Prizes totaling $500 will be awarded.
Big 8 Art Show Opens April 12
Because of limited space in the gallery, only three works of student art from each school are allowed. Art work from KU includes "Terra Incognita," an oil painting by Judith I. Hood, Lawrence senior, and "Landscape," an intaglio by Jerry Buchanan, Wichita senior. A piece of sculpture, "The Prize," is by Jim Bass, Topeka graduate. Art work must be paintings, graphic art, or sculpture.
A total of 13 oil paintings, 2 pieces of art done in steel, 2 woodcuts, 1 walnut figure, and one intaglio have been entered from the schools. Only Iowa State did not enter the competition.
Dr. J, Patrick Kelleher, curator of American and European art at the William Rockhill Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo., will judge the entries. First prize is $250; second, $150, and third, $100.
The art work will be on display until May 18. It is open to the public.
The first meeting of the class of 1959 (next year's seniors) will be an informal meeting with candidates for class offices at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Class Of 1959 To Meet
Six entries have been received in the William Herbert Carruth poetry contest which ends April 14. W. D. Paden, professor of English, is in charge of the contest which is sponsored by the English department.
6 Enter Poetry Competition
All students are eligible to enter.
A first prize of $100, second of $50
and third prize of $35 will be given.
The prize money is from contributions given to the KU Endowment Assn. by former students of the late Mr. Carruth.
Each entrant may submit three poems. Writers' names should be placed on a sheet of paper inside an envelope on which a pen name is written.
Entries should be submitted t
Prof. Paden at 309 Fraser.
The contest judges will be poet Donald Hall, University of Michigan, Miss Geraldine Hammond, professor of English at Wichita University, a KU alumna, John A. Meixner, instructor of English.
Correction
Nine out of every 10 of the Ottoman Turkish sultans were poets.
In Wednesday's paper an article which said that seniors could order announcements at the Business Office should have read the announcements are on sale at the Kansas Union Book Store.
Dick Patterson
for
Susie Stout
President Vice-President of the
STUDENT BODY
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 11, 1958
Along the JAYHAWKER trail WITH GEORGE ANTHAN
A sport is defined by Mr. Webster as "any activity that gives enjoyment or recreation; pastime; diversion."
Since this definition seems to define nicely the function of student government at a state university we feel a passing comment is in order.
This sport in which the local politicos are so interested is in reality a factory which manufactures bigger and better BMOCs.
It is the production of BMOCs that keeps the fraternity and sorority system flourishing and provides queens and student body presidents to escort those queens to the kissing circle on the football field during homecoming.
Little impresses a rushee more than a glimpse of the pipesmoking ivy-leaguer who is known wherever good Greeks gather for his fearless stand in the ASC on paying the Jayhawker editor more money.
To say that student government in a state university is a farce would be an understatement. The administration has the point of view that "anything you can do I can do better."
Current candidates are Dick Patterson and Ed Prelock.
Top office offering the most BMOC points is student body president.
Patterson is the chairman of the ineffectual ASC. His main claim to fame lies in the fact that he helped revise the ASC constitution. But neither he nor the ASC remembered to change the clause that limits candidates for student body president to ASC members—a nice way to keep everything in the family and well-qualified Vox candidates out of the running.
Patterson's platform has 10 points which aren't worth the space to print them—they are about the same points expounded in other years by other BMOCs.
Prelock isn't going to let the student in on the students' problems until after he's elected. He's counting on the curiosity of thousands of students breathlessly awaiting the outcome of Wednesday's elections.
Neither of the candidates appear able to do much more than make nuisances of themselves during dinner at the organized houses.
We feel a write-in candidate is in order. Our candidate is fully qualified to take over the reins of student government. He truly has the interests of the students and the University at heart.
Our candidate for student body president—Dr. Franklin D. Murphy.
Isn't he already?
Banks, Mays In Fence-Busting Mood
Ernie Banks and Willie Mays, two of the National League's finest hitters, were in a fence-busting mood today as they approached the final weekend of the spring training grind.
Banks virtually wrapped up the pre-season home run hitting title Thursday as he unloaded his 13th—tons for both leagues—in sparking the Chicago Cubs to a 7-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
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KU, K-State Renew Old Rivalry
Former KU and K-State basketball players will renew old rivalries in a benefit game at Great Bend Saturday night. A tour of Russia by some top players will prevent Jayhawker coach Dick Harp from assembling three of the former KU stars he had planned on. Al and Dean Kelley and B. H.Born, now playing with the Peoria Caterpillars, will be among a group of AAU stars who will make up a team to tour Russia. The group assembles in the east Saturday.
K-State coach Tex Winter will not be playing with one of the men he counted on. Jack Parr, 6-foot 9-inch center, was expected to start the game at center. He will not be in action due to a nervous breakdown Tuesday.
Harp said he would probably start 6-foot 5-inch Bill Hougland at center. Hougland is now with the Phillips 66 squad. Starting forwards for the Jayhawkers will probably be 6-foot 3-inch Gene Elstun and 6-foot 4-inch Bill Lienhard. In the guard spot will be Eddie Dater and Ron Johnson, both 6-foot 2-inches.
Long Layoff Didn't Affect Londerholm
Jim Londerholm's winning cast of 207-feet 4-inches at the Arkansas Relays marked his first javelin heave in two years. And it was within seven feet of his all-time best. The 178-pound Mission junior missed last season because of an arm operation. The Jayhawkers may have uncovered a third spear-flinger in Terry Beucher, who etched a new high of 190-feet $11^{3/4}$-inches in finishing second at Fayetteville. Sophomore John Book opened with a 214-foot $6^{1/2}$-inch throw at the Texas Relays, but could not score at Arkansas.
If all lived, the descendants of one female aphid would amount to 1,560,000,000,000,000,000,000 by the end of the season.
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K-State is expected to start 6- wards. Guards will be 6-foot 3-inch foot 3-inch Hayden Abbott and 6- Roy DeWitz and 6-foot Don Rich- foot 5-inch Larry Fischer at for- ards.
Tennis
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Friday, April 11, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Mighty Cyclones Open Here Today
Kansas opens its home baseball schedule at 3 p.m. today, playing host to the defending Big Eight champion, Iowa State. The Jayhawkers play one game today and a doubleheader Saturday.
Going into the game, Kansas has a 2-1-1 record. KU opened its season with an 11-11 tie at Rice. The game was called because of darkness. The Jayhawkers defeated Rice the next day. The Kansans then split their two game series with Houston.
The Cyclones have played only one game this season and that was called before the contest was over because of weather.
Iowa State finished its 1957 season ranked third in the nation. The 1958 Cyclone team has been called capable of repeating the feats they accomplished last year. Oklahoma has been mentioned as the team that might upset the Cyclones for the Big Eight title. KU coach Floyd Temple has said that with a few breaks and some hard work, the Jayhawkers might also contend for the title.
Temple indicated he would probably start one of his top pitchers, Larry Miller, in one of the three assignments.
A's-Cardinals Series Opens
KANSAS CITY. Mo. —(UP)— Missouri's two major league baseball teams play their annual Governor's cup series here this weekend in the last games for both before they open their regular league schedules next Tuesday.
The Kansas City Athletics and the St. Louis Cardinals will meet in a single game Saturday and a doubleheader Sunday. Starting time both days is 1:30 p.m.
A's Manager Harry Craft has nominated pitchers Alex Kellner, Ralph Terry and Jack Urban for the series while Cardinal Manager Fred Hutchinson will counter with Sam Jones, Frank Barnes and Larry Jackson.
premacy series which is now in the hands of the redbirds as a result of a two-out-of-three victory in St. Louis last year.
Last year Gov. James T. Blair Jr.
donated a trophy for the state su-
It will be the last time the rival league teams will play this year unless pre-season predictions are far wrong and they emerge in the world series.
The Cardinals have been picked to roost near their second place finish in the National League last year while the A's fight it out with Baltimore for sixth place.
The Cardinals will open the league season at home Tuesday against the Chicago Cubs. The A's will open on the same day at Cleveland and will play their first home league game Friday afternoon against the White Sox.
UP Picks Don Drysdale Top 1958 Pitcher
NEW YORK-(UP)-Don Drysdale, a 21-year-old fireballer with temper to match, was picked today by the United Press baseball committee to be the National League's outstanding pitcher of 1958.
Milwaukee Braves, the writers gave Drvsdale a tremendous vote of confidence bv giving him twice as many votes as his closest competitor.
Drysdale, who is due to pitch the season's opening game for the Los Angeles Dodgers, was named by 18 of the 50 writers who make up the UP committee.
Passing over the world series hero Lew Burdette and 21-game winner Warren Spahn of the world champion
Bill Easton's 1958 outdoor track squad opens its home schedule with the third annual KU-Okla-home State duel meet Saturday.
Top Stars In KU-OSU Meet
Al Oerter, who one week ago heaved the discus 202-feet 6-inches at the Arkansas Relays, will be moved outside the stadium along with the other discus throwers. Meet officials have found that Oerter has a habit of putting too much behind his heaves and coming close to the running track. Oerter and the rest of the discus men will be throwing on the old football practice field east of Memorial Stadium.
Easton has been plagued by
the weather most of this week. The Jayhawkers worked out on the track Monday and Tuesday but have not been able to get back on since because of rainy weather.
One of the big features of the meet will be Oklahoma State's Orlando Hazley. Hazley ran the 100-yard dash in :09.3 at the Arkansas Relays last Saturday. This did not count on the record books since he had a fairly strong wind to his back. KU's Charley Tidwell finished behind Hazley with a :09.4 mark.
Easton pointed out Thursday the Oklahoma State men would be tough to handle because they are
"spread very well." He said the Cowpokes had good men in practically every event.
The first meet of the season will provide area track fans a good chance to see some of the nation's top track performers in action. Oerter now has the top discus throw in the world. Hazley's 100-yard dash mark last week was one of the top marks in that event. OSU discus threer Clyde Northup is now ranked fourth in discus throws throughout the nation.
KU Second In Big 8 All-Sports
With the start of spring sports, KU is running one point behind Oklahoma University in unofficial Big Eight all - sports standings. Oklahoma leads with $ 31 \frac{1}{2} $ . Kansas has $ 30 \frac{1}{2} $ .
Field events for the meet start at 1:30 p.m. and the first running event will be at 2 p.m.
Both Kansas and Missouri suffer in the standings because they do not participate in all the recognized sports. Kansas does not participate in wrestling. If they did enter that event, they would be assured of at least a tie for first, since last place in each event counts one point.
Missouri does not enter wrestling or swimming. Missouri is at present in last place in the standings.
Two unexpected showings that helped the Kansans this year are their second place finish in football and the third place finish in swimming. The Jayhawkers took first place in cross country and indoor track and tied for second place in basketball.
Exhibition Baseball
By UNITED PRESS
St. Louis (N) 8, Chicago (A) 7
Chicago (N) 7, Los Angeles (A) 7
Chicago 7. Los Angeles (NW) 5.
Philadelphia (N) vs. New York (A)
cancelled, rain
Cleveland (A) 15, San Francisco (N)
14 (10 innings)
Little Rock (SOU) vs. Kansas City (A) A1. condensed rain
Washington (A) vs. Cincinnati (N)
cancelled, wet grounds
Pittsburgh (N) 10, Mexico City Red (Mex) 2.
1954
Special Purchase
Emblem Blazers
$15.50
Because this is the season for blazers, we purchased a quantity at a special price. Regularly $17.98. Lightweight wool. White only. Sizes 8-16
Richard Mindtind COACH HOUSE Sportswear Accessories
On The Campus Lawrence
even last year his heaves bombarded a snow fence and races were postponed while the discus dented the cinder track.
| FB | CC | BB | IT | WR | SW | Total |
|---|
| Oklahoma | 7 | 3 | 312}$ | $5 | 6 | 7 | 3112}$ |
| Kansas | 6 | 7 | 512}$ | $7 | 0 | 5 | 3012}$ |
| Iowa State | 212}$ | $5 | 512}$ | $1 | 7 | 6 | 27 |
| Kansas State | 212}$ | $5 | 7 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 2412}$ |
| Colorado | 412}$ | $6 | 112}$ | $2 | 4 | 4 | 2212}$ |
| Nebraska | 1 | 2 | 312}$ | $6 | 3 | 2 | 1712}$ |
| Missouri | 412}$ | 1 | 112}$ | 4 | 0 | 0 | 11 |
More Room For Oerter And His Discus
Next weekend when thousands of fans will want to see the pending world record holder at the Kansas Relays, the whole infield will be turned over to the discus event and Oerter can aim his heaves down the middle of the football field.
On The Plaza
On Brookside
Kansas City
Al Oerter, the husky Kansas senior whose discus throws are becoming dangerous to life and property, will be moved out of Memorial Stadium and into open practice field for a dual meet with Oklahoma State Saturday.
Kansas City
Oerter last Saturday became the first man to hurl the discus 200 feet and officials remembered that
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 11, 1950
April Showers For June Brides
And what better time is there than this April to try something new or a bit unusual to make the occasion one that will be long remembered by bride and guests alike?
Perhaps the friend you want to fete is one who will be traveling with a husband in the service after she is married. Shower her with items to make her roundthe-world jaunts more efficient and enjoyable.
For the girl who simply loves to cook, a pantry-shelf shower would be appropriate. Containers of her favorite spices and special jams and jellies could help her stock her cupboard. Perhaps she'd like chocolate from Switzerland or Holland. French olive oil or special imported cheeses for those exotic dishes.
You might include luggage tags, a travel iron, a small cosmetic case or the new clothes-washing kits which include detergent, stretchable nylon clothsline and clothes-pins.
Parties With Different Twist
Two inexpensive parties with a different twist are a paper shower or a brush party.
Gifts for the paper shower might include paper towels to match the colors of the bride's new kitchen, stationery, patterned cocktail napkins, waste baskets, note pads or subscriptions to favorite magazines. Brushes come in all shapes and sizes for many household and personal needs. Guests might bring clothes brushes, toothbrushes, a broom, vegetable brush, bottle brush or bath brushes.
Games for showers are always a problem. For this one you might have each guest write her recipe for a happy marriage. These "recipes" should then be given to the bride who will read them to the guests and keep them as memeertes of the party.
If the friend you want to honor now lives in another part of the country and will be married there, why not give her a shower by mail?
Parties With Different Twist
Guests may come to the party with unwrapped gifts. Supply them with gift papers, ribbons and tags. Then hold a "wrapping bee" with a prize for the prettiest or most unusual package.
Have A 'Wrapping Bee'
... On The Hill ...
All decisions on membership eligibility and material to be published will be made by the Quill editorial board composed of Cross, Jordan Crittenden, Wichita, Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth, Lloyd Karnes, Sabetha, Clydene Boots, Isabel, all juniors.
Manuscripts should be given to Bob Cross, Overland Park junior and editor of Quill, before April 23. Cross said that manuscripts can be returned to the person submitting them only if the author supplies his name, address and telephone number.
Delta Upsilon fraternity will hold its annual Two Yard Hop Saturday at the Lakeview Club.
You can assemble them all in one box and send them to the bride-to-be. The gifts should be small and easy to wrap for mailing.
Delta Upsilon
Quill Magazine Price Reduced
The club tentatively has set May 12-14 as the days of sale for the spring issue.
The price of Quill magazine will be reduced from 35 cents to 25 cents, as decided at the Quill Club's meeting Wednesday in the Kansas Union
No manuscript contest will be held for this issue. Anyone interested can submit manuscripts for membership in Quill Club and publication in the magazine.
A gift idea that may have lasting value for the bride and her friends may be combined with any other shower or carried out by itself. Each guest should bring some token of a meaningful experience with the bride. The gift might be a poem, book, record or picture, but whatever it is it should be a symbol of a tie between them.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
--exchange dinner Thursday with the Delta Gamma sorority at the fraternity chapter house.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold its Province Convention Saturday at the chapter house.
Phi Gamma Delta
Following a dinner Saturday night, a party will be held at the Dine-a-Mite.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will hold a buffet dinner Saturday at the chapter house.
Kappa Alpha Theta
Add a special flavor to mashed sweet potatoes by mixing in a tablespoon or two of sherry. A few chopped walnuts also add flavor.
New for evening; long black satin gloves, with black satin evening slippers for a real siren look.
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold a hamburger fry and informal dance at the sorority house tonight
Phi Kanna Psi
Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Psi fraternity held an
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Friday, April 11, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
the fra-
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
ashed in a few vor.
satin ening
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
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WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over, and updated. House representatives on call VI 3-7583 VI 2-0738 VI 2-0395 for free delivery.
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass.—VI 3-9471
AS WE have to vacate our duplex at 916 Vermont, we must dispose of six rooms of good furniture. Consisting of davenports and chairs, desks and chairs, bedding, furniture, end tables, rugs, lamps, draperies, upholstery, furniture, refrigerators, dishes, and many miscellaneous items. Starting 8 a.m. April 11th, through April 13th. 4-11
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicnic, party supplies. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350
MISCELLANEOUS
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HAVE FOOD. WILL DELIVER. Free delivery, complete fountain and sandwich service ($1 minimum order). Jayhawk Cafe, VI 3-6171. 4-16
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CASH LOANS ON YOUR
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 11, 1958
SARA MAYORAL
A TASTY TREAT—Maria Frank, Salvador special student, is shown preparing one of the dishes that will be served at the International Banquet. (Daily Kansan photo)
International Banquet Set For Sunday
The second annual International Banquet, sponsored by the International Club, will offer approximately 20 different dishes representative of foods in 20 different countries.
The food will be served from*
The food will be served from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom at a buffet-style banquet.
"We failed to get the home economics department kitchen as originally planned; however, we are managing to use private kitchens of friends who are eager to help us." said Harald Meyer, Reinach, Switzerland graduate student and treasurer of the International Club. He is in charge of the food for the banquet.
Specialties will include salads and desserts by European students, Chinese fried rice, and Japanese susi.
"I hope many people will be able to come because this banquet is to introduce the cultural aspect of food and to promote international relations," said Franz Ettlen, Switzerland graduate student and vicepresident of the International Club. He is chairman of the International Banquet.
More than 40 students representing the 20 countries will participate in preparing the food and decorating the Ballroom.
Tickets for the banquet can be purchased until Sunday noon at the ticket booth in the Kansas Union and the Information booth in front of Bailey Hall until Saturday noon.
Parties Give Platforms
(Continued from Page 1.)
2. A committee of independent students should be appointed to investigate and correct the problem of student housing.
3. Committee appointments will be made on the basis of petition and the interest of the individuals who apply. All appointments should be made only with the approval of the ASC and not at the discretion of the president or vice-president as the Little Hoover Committee indicated has been the practice in the past.
4. To assure better student government, ASC representatives and committee members must be made fully aware of their duties and responsibilities and must perform them as directed by the constitution.
5. Students should always be aware of ASC meetings and should be encouraged to attend and express their opinions."
Bids To Be Made May 6 For Snow Hall Addition
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today that bids will be made May 6 for a 4 story, air conditioned mammalian genetics research laboratory addition to Snow Hall. The addition will make KU one of the nation's key centers of biological research, according to John Weir, associate professor of zoology and project director.
The U. S. Public Health Service has given the University a three-year grant of $150,000 to set up a mammalian genetics program. The buildings will be financed by an anonymous private gift.
The addition will be of Indiana limestone to match Snow Hall and will be offset about 6-feet from the north side of Snow. The buildings will be connected by corridors.
The mission of the research center will be the preservation of a stock of specially inbred lines of mice which are used throughout the nation for genetics and cancer research.
Topeka Senior Named Top Orator
The KU speech department was notified by telegram today that Ralph Seger, Topeka senior, has won top honors in the Delta Sigma Rho student congress held today and Thursday in East Lansing, Mich.
The congress, sponsored by the honorary forensic fraternity, was a model session of the United States Congress.
Seger won the highest oratory honors as speaker of the house. Wanda Welliever, Oberlin senior, was another KU delegate to the session.
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" 'Amazing scholarship', said the Dean. 'Cheating!" cried my fellow students. But I knew the real reason for my becoming an honor student. My tailored-to-fit Jockey brand briefs were so comfortable that naturally I found it easy to study better and get straight A's."
"If your brand is Jockey, you won't need any ponies", I tell my friends. It's true, too. You see, Jockey—and only Jockey brand—uses thirteen separate pieces to provide a perfectly smooth fit. You feel better—and you study better—when you wear comfortable Jockey briefs."
Jockey briefs are the most copied underwear in the world. Be sure you get genuine Jockey brand—they're tailored to fit.
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Daily Hansan
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Monday, April 14, 1958
55th Year, No.124
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
2 Queens Selected For KU Relays
Kay Winegarner, Arkansas City junior, was selected from 20 candidates as the 1958 KU Relays queen Sunday afternoon.
Sharing Miss Winegarner's reign will be the Big Eight Conference queen from Kansas State College, Emily Mohri, Fort Meade, Md sophomore. Miss Mohri will arrive sometime Wednesday or Thursday.
Miss Winegarner is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, where the visiting Big Eight queen will stay while here for the 33rd annual Relays Friday and Saturday.
Four attendants chosen were Louise Tomlinson, Wichita sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Jayne Allen, Topeka junior, Chi Omega; Judy Carr, Junction City senior, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Sharolyn Hudson, St. John senior, Alpha Chi Omega.
The KU queen is majoring in zoology and sociology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She is 5-feet 6-inches tall and weighs 125 pounds. She has green eyes and brown hair. Her measurements are 35-25-37.
The co-queen, Miss Mohri, is majoring in elementary education and is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. She has honey blond hair, green eyes and is 5-feet 4-inches tall.
The Relays royalty will make several radio and television appearances during the week. Thursday night a Queens banquet will be held where gifts will be given the women. Later that night the queens and their attendants will be presented the annual Relays banquet, attended by coaches, athletes and guests.
Saturday morning all the candidates for the KU queen will take part in the Relays parade starting at 10 a.m. on Massachusetts Street.
Friday and Saturday the queens will present medals to winning athletes at the Relays events. Saturday right the queens will be presented at a Student Union Activities dance and receive more gifts.
The queens will be crowned at 2:30 p.m. Saturday at the Relays.
M. A. C. B.
EMILY MOHRI
Also the reigning royalty will be on hand for the opening of the 38th annual Engineering Exposition Friday.
Judging the queen candidates Sunday were Stanley Stauffer, Staufer Publications, Topeka; Landon Laird, Kansas City Star, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul J. Adam, Kansas City, Mo.; A. D. Weaver and Arthur Wolfe, Lawrence, and John Mize, Atchison.
Schools Get 2nd Payments
Topeka — (UP) — The second-half payment of state aid to Kansas high schools amounting to $2,533,279 went in the mails today. Adel Throckmorton, state superintendent of education, said today.
Downing, Plumb Seek Student Body Offices
She May Not Come Back Again
A group of freshman women were filing out of a sorority house after an open house Saturday. One of the sorority members saw a friend whom she hadn't seen during the party.
The sorority girl ran up to the freshman, embraced her and exclaimed, "Oh Mary, I'm so glad I didn't get to see you."
Robert S. Edmiston, a student at the University of Oklahoma, is winner of the $250 first prize in the first annual KU Big Eight Conference Art Student competition. His entry was a forged head-and-shoulders sculpture titled "Woman."
OU Student Is Art Winner
Second prize of $150 was won by Michael Smith, University of Nebraska, for a large oil painting, "Still Life in Red." James H. Hales, University of Colorado, took third prize and $100 for a welded steel sculpture, "Ancient Warrior."
The judge, Dr. J. Patrick Kelleher, curator of American and European art at the Nelson Gallery in Kansas City, Mo., also gave honorable mention to three works: An intaglio print, "Landscape," by Jerry Buchanan, Wichita senior; a still life, "Color Woodcut," by Dewain Valentine, University of Colorado, and an oil painting on burlap, "Transition," by Margaret McKnight, Kansas State College.
The 20 art pieces submitted for the competition may be seen through May 18 in the gallery of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
RELAYS QUEEN—Kay Winegarner (center) is left, are Sharolyn Hudson, Jayne Allen, Louise queen of the 1958 KU Relays, Attendants, from Tomlinson, and Judy Carr.
THE FASHION SHOW.
Vox Houses To Back Write-in Candidates
Since the March 19 filing deadline for the spring elections, candidates for student body president have been popping up like targets on a pistol range.
The newest candidates, on a write-in ticket, are John Downing Kansas City, Mo. junior, for student body president, and Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, for vice-president.
Downing said Sunday he was resigning as chairman of the ASC Elections Committee in favor of Jack Davis, Topeka senior, a member of the committee.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox Populi, said Sunday that the campaign for Downing and Miss Plumb started in the organized houses supporting Vox, and that Vox has voted "100 per cent support" of the ticket.
Before March 19, it appeared the Allied Greek-Independent ticket of Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and Susie Stout, Wichita junior, would be unopposed. Then Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior, filed for the presidency with Mary Olson, Wichita freshman, for vice-president
Miss Olson Withdrew
Miss Olson withdrew from the ticket, reportedly under pressure, on March 23.
During the past weekend, the movement for Downing and Miss Plumb has sprung up within Vox, which had announced previously
IFPC Does Civic Service
"They did a wonderful job," said Mrs. Eugene Scales, director of the hospital.
Phil Ballard, Wichita freshman president of IFPC, said the County Welfare Agency recommended the job to the council for their service project.
Twenty men, representing the Inter- fraternity Pledge Council, painted, cleaned, and repaired portions of the Douglas County Convalescent Hospital as a community service project Saturday.
"We hope the service project will become an annual event," he said.
Rally Changed
Friday's Daily Kansan printed that a bipartisan political rally would be held at 4 p.m. today in Hoch Auditorium.
"They finished the third floor (a men's ward), painted in our dishwashing room and washed windows."
The rally has been changed to 4 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium, according to All Student Council officials.
Candidates for both parties will be introduced and candidates for president and vice-president of the student body will give short speeches.
Weather
Mostly cloudy with occasional showers east portion and extreme east tonight, otherwise clear to partly cloudy through Tuesday. Locally warmer over state Tuesday. Low tonight lower 29s northwest to 55 to 45 elsewhere. High Tuesday 65 to 70.
Low Sunday 46 and the high 64.
Low this morning 48.
it would not run any presidential candidate.
Party head Austin made this statement:
"The people in Vox houses and independents not living in organized houses have been exposed to both announced candidates. These students felt they did not want to back either Patterson or Prelock.
"John Downing and Carol Plumb have chosen to run on a write-in ballot and the houses in Vox have voted 100 per cent support to them." The two new candidates submitted statements to The Daily Kansan concerning their campaign.
100 Per Cent Support
did not have a personal axe to grind.
It was a great surprise and certainly an honor when Vox informed us it would support our candidacy without strings attached.
Downing—"It seemed to be the desire of a great many of the students to be represented by officers who
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A young man who graduated from the University of Texas in 1952, became a prominent figure in college politics and served as a state representative for Texas. He was also a decorated military veteran and a member of several national organizations.
JOHN DOWNING
"Carol and I feel that, running together as a Greek and an independ-
(Continued on Page 8.)
WILLIAMA HUGHES
CAROL PLUMB
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 14, 1958
In The ASC—
It's Time For A Housecleaning Here's Leadership
The announcement that supporters of John Downing and Carol Plumb were seeking their election Wednesday in a write-in campaign, came as a God-send to the previously muddled political spectrum.
Until last weekend, when the decision to back Downing and Miss Plumb for president and vicepresident of the student body was reached, campus voters were faced with a decision that typifies the gross injustice that has been done to the voter and student in the past two years.
With politics already at the point of saturation in student government, voters were faced with selecting between two mediocre candidates, both of whom seemed to be staging a popularity contest.
Many voters had hinted that they were faced with a "lesser of two evils" situation and would resort to coin-flipping or straw-drawing. There was another group that had decided it wasn't worth their time to vote. A third group said they would vote for other positions and leave the student body ballot blank.
Humorous? Yes, to some. But to others it is an insult to see government slip and slide down hill this rapidly.
Downing, a 2-time member of the All Student Council, has made no wild accusations. He has no skeletons in his closet. Downing does not coddle petty politicians. He has no favorites for influential committees. Downing does have a sincere desire for the position.
Miss Plumb only complements Downing's record. Miss Plumb is in accordance on the major and differs some on minor issues, showing that she will be a force in her own right if elected. No one who casts an intelligent vote wants to see a "yes" man or woman in a position where a certain amount of individuality is to be admired.
Downing told the editors of The Daily Kansan that he is asking the voters for the chance to make the necessary adjustments in student government that will give students cause to place their confidence in the Council instead of ridiculing its every move.
Realizing that the Council makes the final decisions in most cases, Downing has not gone out on a limb and taken stands on issues that can be solved only by meeting the problem with cooperation between the Council and the president.
He said he believes in giving the students the information that they have a right to-not just what a handful of persons think is best for us to know.
Campus politicians are a dime a dozen. Campus politics in the past two years has hit gutbucket bottom. At last we see a way to shed both cloaks and get down to some serious governmental practices.
The Editors
John Downing, Carol Plumb
Because much emphasis is put on candidates' qualifications for president and vice-president of the student body, the question arises, are John Downing and Carol Plumb qualified for the positions they are seeking Wednesday?
The Daily Kansan has compared their qualifications with those of other candidates: what they have accomplished and how they are fitted for the positions. We believe Downing and Miss Plumb are the most qualified.
John Downing—A member of the ASC for two years; chairman of the Election Committee, a member for two years; a member of the ASC Committee on Committees; Greek Week Dance chairman; K-Book editor; Inter-Fraternity Council rush chairman.
Downing was a member of the Jayhawker
staff for two years; IFC representative to the national IFC conference, and a member of the ASC Athletic Seating Committee.
Carol Plumb—A member of the ASC; a member of the Public Relations Committee; vicepresident KU-Y; a member of the cabinet of the Wesley Foundation for three years; a member of the Student Religious Council; vice-president of the Home Economics Club; delegate to the National Home Economics convention in Philadelphia last summer.
Miss Plumb has been song leader for Jay Janes; on the dean's honor roll, and is now on the committee to orientate new ASC members, and chairman of the housing committee for National Student Assn. convention. The Editors
THE MIDDLE EASTERN UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS
CAMPAIGNING—Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox party (second from right), conferred with party workers Sunday night as Vox launched a campus-wide poster
campaign preceding Wednesday's general election. Not listed on Vox posters are John Downing and Carol Plumb, write-in candidates for president and vice-president of the student body.
UX
CANDIDATES—John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. (right) and Carol Plumb, Overland Park, both juniors, examine a copy of the ASC constitution after announcing that they will be Vox write-in candidates for student body president and vice-president, respectively, in Wednesday's election.
Hanky-Panky?
Perhaps you don't give a hoot about campus politics, but if you're among that goodly crowd who feels that there has been some hanky panky going on in the All Student Council, consider these things:
Three organized houses control 33 per cent of the committee memberships of the ASC, yet 29 organized houses have no committee representatives.
If you live in Pi Beta Phi social sorority, Alpha Tau Omega or Phi Delta Theta social fraternity, you're sitting pretty as far as Council representation is concerned. Those three houses have 39 ASC committee appointments, plus five elected Council representatives.
But if you live in Alpha Omicron Pi social sorority, Grace Pearson Hall. Phi Kappa social fraternity or 26 other houses, you're out in the cold as far as representation on ASC committees is concerned. You don't have representative one on Council committees.
This takes on more importance, of course, when you consider that the ASC and its committees control an annual budget of $7.000 plus—of your money.
You may thank Bob Billings, student body president, for the present state of affairs. He's the man who is responsible for naming committee members.
He's under a handicap, of course. It isn't every house that has even one person who is interested in serving on ASC committees. But are there 29 such houses?
Does it take 15 Pi Phi's to effectively staff the All Student Council committees?
It's no secret that under the present leadership, there has been an attempt to turn the All Student Council into a sort of closed society, open only to selected members. For instance, under present rules, you must be an ASC member before you can aspire to the job of student body president. That's nonsense, of course, and political maneuvering of the first order.
Billings and the AGI crowd have almost succeeded in turning the All Student Council into a private club. So it's not merely time for a change over there—it's time for a housecleaning
The Editors
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904.
trieweek 1908, daily dan. 16, 1912.
trieweek 1908, daily dan. 16, 1912.
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 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 classes. 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
Dick Brown Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Managing Editors; Douglas Parker, City Editor, Malcolm Parker, City Editors; Mary Alden, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Dale Morsch, Jim Cable, Assistant Snorts Editor, Jim Sutcliffe, Safety Editor; Bob Miller, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Evelyn Hall, Marilyn Mermis Leroy
Zimmerman, Marilyn Mermis
NESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler Business Manager
John Clarke Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston National Advertis-
ing Manager Advertising Manager; Tom McGrath,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Painters Smear DU House; 16 Trophies Also Taken
Members of Delta Upsilon fraternity woke up about 6:30 Sunday morning to find their front door, walk, and carpets leading to the living room, smeared with blue paint and red lipstick. They also found about 16 brass trophies missing.
Campus police checking the call from the fraternity's president, Jerrad J. Hertzler, Newton senior, found blue paint tracks leading to the Kappa Sigma house and smeared on the steps and handrails of the basement entrance.
Penney Here For Lecture
J. C. Penney, founder and now honorary chairman of the board of J. C. Penney Co. Inc., will speak on "Opportunity As a Way of Life" at 3:30 p.m., Monday, April 21, in the
ALBERT B. COLEMAN
J. C. PENNEY
Kansas Union Ballroom. The lecture is sponsored by the K.U. chapter of
Police found three men stealing on a divan in the Kappa Sigma house. All had blue paint on their shoes.
Two of the men gave their names to police as Richard Goode, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity and Overland Park sophomore, and William Ralston, who told police he was from Wichita University. The third man would not give his name and University officials refused to disclose it.
In the Delta Upsilon house the police found another broken trophy in the hallway, smashed lip stick container in the living room and blue paint foot prints were on the hall and living room carpets.
Find Broken Trophies
Police found seven broken brass trophies from the Delta Upsilon house on the front steps of the Chi Omega sorority house early Sunday morning. Police said the incident must have taken place after 2 a.m. Sunday.
Richard Eugene McClain, president of the Kappa Sigma house, returned the other missing trophies. Several were damaged.
Vandals Agree To Clean Up
Vandals Agree 10 Clean Up
The vandals agreed to clean the paint off the rugs and door, but Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, Richard D. Winternote, Alumni Assn. field secretary and chairman of the alumni board of Delta Upsilon,
the American Marketing Assn. and is open to the public.
Penney, who was born in Hamilton, Mo. in 1875, began as a dry-goods clerk at $2.27 a month in 1895. By 1902 he managed to open his own store in Kemmerer, Wyo. Named "The Golden Rule," the store was the start of the vast J. C. Penney chain which is now the largest dry-goods chain in the world with 1,694 stores throughout the country.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
and the members of Delta Upsilon wanted the cleaning done by a cleaning service. The vandals started to clean the door, but most of the varnish was taken off the door.
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 school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Men's counselor positions open: Triple-cate-
l applications for men's residence hall counseling positions for 1958-59 are avail-
able from office of the dean of students,
228 Strong.
Mathematics Club, 4 p.m., 203 Strong
Organization for Engineering Exposition
TODAY
Public lecture, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. "Teaching of Foreign Languages in Public Schools." Speaker, Dr. Emma Birkmair, University of Minnesota.
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Episcopal Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House,
Broadwell follows.
TUESDAY
Pre-Med Tech Club, noon, Nurses
Honor House,shall, staff member
for campus galleries
SUA art forum, 4 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union, Speaker, Don Jones, psychologist, Menninger's Clinic, Topka, "Psychological Uses of Modern Art."
German art lecture, 4 p.m., Trophy Room, Kansas Union. Speaker, Dr. Klaus Berger, chairman, department of art history.
Nursing Club, 7 p.m. 110 Fraser; Public Health, (student nurses).
Alpha Rho Gamma, 7.15 p.m. Bailey
Abbey Group discussion and business
meeting
Joint meeting of Young Democrats and Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m. Kansas City (Dem—Kansas City) and Senator Don Hults (Rep.-Lawrence). Informal debate on the issues to arise in the special session of the Kansas legislature, Refreshments.
Monday, April 14, 1958
Department of economics, 8 p.m. Bailey Auditorium, Speaker, Mr. Richard Miles, Sr., economic officer, British Information Service, "Monetary Policy & Economic Stability, With Special Reference To British Experience."
Puerto Williams, on Navarino Island south of Argentina, is the world's southernmost town and has a population of 350 persons living only 680 miles from the continent of Antarctica.
Sports Will Be The Word At KU Relays Parade
It may be the space age, but sports won't be ignored in this scientific world in downtown Lawrence Saturday morning. The winners in a race for space, the annual Kansas Relays parade, will have their trophies before the earth-bound track men take to the cinders.
About 10 a.m. the city will be invaded by space ships, rockets, flying saucers and satellites. Their passengers, little green men and monsters, will demonstrate "Sports in a Scientific World" in an hour-long parade from Sixth street to South Park.
The strange sportsmen and their modes of travel will be created by about 19 organized houses working on Relays Parade floats this week.
The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce will award trophies to the two three winners in both men's and women's divisions.
The Delta Gamma sorority women will enter a team from "Crater U."
Smoke From A Crater
Smoke will pour from a moon crater built on a 14-foot-long truck bed while little green men go about their activities. The men are three feet tall with huge heads for dreaming up moon-made sports. The fellows are hunting, fishing, skiing and catching flying saucers in a butterfly net.
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity says "Man is Still the Key Figure"
in Sports and Science." Bill Albright, Hutchinson junior, is designating a modernistic statue of a "stylized version of a human athlete." The 7-foot plaster figure will be shown performing a hammer throw with a satellite instead of the usual weight at the end of the chain. The figure will be surrounded by Olympic rings on a platform.
Batter Up
"Rookies in the Rocket Age" are being created by Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall upperclass women. A mechanical batter and catcher will throw a baseball back and forth from their two worlds on opposite ends of the float.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity plans a molecular chain depicting seven sports. The fraternity will build a cony of the Brussels World's Fair centenille around a model of the Campanile. Spheres radiating from all sides will represent types of sports.
Sorority Torch-Carriers Alpha Chi Omega will send a red and blue rocket out of a cloud to build, "A Stronger America Through Science and Sports."
S. U.A. ART FORUM
Presents Dr. Berger Speaking on GERMAN ART
Tuesday, 4 p.m.
Kansas Union Trophy Room
DON'T MISS OUR SECOND
STEREOPHONIC DEMONSTRATION
STEREOPHON.
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University Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Robert Baustian
Tuesday, April 15 at 4:00 University Theatre
$ For Your Party $
Try Our Hi-Fi Disc Jockey $ Service $ We furnish—operator, equipment, records
You will like this recording better than the December demonstration.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 14, 1958
Miller, Sweep Both Saturday
Four home runs and strong pitching by left-hander Larry Miller gave the Kansas Jayhawkers a double-header victory over Iowa State, 13-4 and 8-3, in Big Eight competition here Saturday.
Catcher Barry Robertson hit three of the home runs and first baseman Jim Trombold added the other one. Robertson hit two in the second game.
Miller started the first game and struck out the first eight batters to face him. He relieved Gary Russell in the fifth inning of the second game with KU holding only a 2-1 lead, and allowed only two hits for the rest of the game.
The Jayhawkers cinched the first victory by scoring 10 runs in the fourth inning on Donaldson's lead-off single, six walks and four Cyclone errors.
Coach Floyd Temple changed the lineup slightly from that which lost the opening game of the series 5-3 to the Cyclones Friday. Ron Wiley was the losing pitcher. Robertson was moved from third base to catcher, the position which he regularly played last season, and this year's starting catcher, Carl Lauterjung, was moved to right field. Temple said Donaldson would probably play third base when Ron Wiley was pitching.
"We are beginning to work better, and our left handed hitting is coming through," Temple said. "The fielding was good in both the games."
The Jayhawkers now have an over-all record of four wins, two losses and one tie. In Big Eight competition they have two victories and one loss.
The team will play a single game with Missouri at Columbia Friday and a double-header with the Tigers Saturday. Wiley, Miller and Gary Russell will be the starting pitchers for these games.
In other Big Eight games over the weekend, Oklahoma State swept a 3-game series with Kansas State, 5-4, 3-1 and 5-0. Nebraska defeated Missouri 6-3 Friday, but Missouri took the double-header Saturday, 9-6 and 12-5. Oklahoma defeated Colorado 2-1 Friday, and split the double-header Saturday, losing the first game 1-0 and winning the second 12-0.
Temple thinks that with good pitching the Jayhawkers can finish high in the standings of the Big Eight. A lot more will be evident after the games with Missouri this weekend. He believes that if Kansas can win two out of the three games, it will be in a fairly good position.
Homers Give KU 2 Victories
The box score:
Iowa State
Kansas
ab h rbl
Sp'ding, ff 4 1
Sp'f, ff 2 0
MN'ty, ss 2 0
Brink, 3b 3 1
Harden, 1b 3 2
3orth, lf 2 0
Baukol, 2b 3 1
Reise, c 1 0
Kud'e, c 1 2
Kud'n'sk, p 1 0
Lamont, p 0 0
Jacobs, p 1 0
b-Meyer 1 0
ab h bri
Muegler, 2b 4 0 1
Robtson, ss 3 1 2
Trumbid, ib 3 1 0
Laughy, 3b 2 3
Laughy, ib 2 2 3
Miller, p 2 1 1
Marshall, cf 4 0 0
Don'don, c 3 2 4
Hanson, If 2 0 0
-a-Nichols, If 1 0 0
Totals 27 6 4 Totals 28 7 9
a—Struck out for Hanson in 6th.
b—Grounded out for Jacobs in 7th.
Towa State 000 0.22 0—
Kansas 210 (10,000)
Oerter Breaks His Own Marks
R—Mnertney, Brink, Borth, Baukel, Mueger, Robertson, Trombold, 2 Wiley Donaldson, Henson 3 E-Peters, Brink, Harden, Baukol, P-O-A-Iowa State 18-6.
Al Certer's 188 foot 2-inch discus heave at Austin not only was a Texas Relays and Texas stadium record—he held both former marks—but was almost a yard beyond his erstwhile career high of 185 feet 4-inches erected in the same park last June at the NCAA. The Texas Relays marked the Olympic champion's first 1958 Outdoor start.
Kansas 21-8. LOB—Iowa State 4. Kansas 7-2B. Harden, R. A. Locker, 3B-Lauterlung. HR—Donaldson, SB—Muegel. Soilding, SF—Robertson.
ip h h r er bb so
Kudlinski (L) 3 5 6 5 6 5 3
Lamont 0 7 0 4 7 4
Jacobs 3 2 0 0 0 4
Müller (W) 7 6 4 4 2 12
The magyars of Hungary are a great and ancient people.
PB-Weise, U-Kratky and Edwards
.
Iowa State
| | ab h rb | ab h rb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Spa'ding, rf 4 2 | 2 b | 2 4 2 |
| Peters, cf 4 | 1 | 0 Robson, ss | 4 4 0 |
| M n'key, ss 1 | 1 | 0 Armild, ib | 1 4 0 |
| Harden, 1b | 3 | 0 Lau'jung,rf | 3 1 0 |
| Borth, if | 3 | 1 Mler, If- | 4 1 1 |
| Baukol, 2b | 3 | 0 Marsshall,cf | 3 2 0 |
| R.D.'Ler, c | 1 | 0 Marshall,cf | 3 2 0 |
| R.A. 'Ler, p | 0 | 0 Russell, p | 1 0 0 |
| R.A. 'Ler, p | 0 | 0 Hansan, p | 0 0 0 |
| a-Mever | 0 | 0 Hansan, f | 0 0 0 |
Totals 28 7 2 Totals 28 10 7
iowa State 000 100 2-3
Kansas 110 033 x-8
R—Spaulding, Borth, Meyer, Muegler,
Trombold, Wiley, Lauzinger, Donaldson,
Sohn, Lauterjung, Donaldson,
son, PO-A-Iowa State 18-6, Kansas 21-12.
DP-Russell, Donaldson and Trombold.
OB-Iowa State 19-5, Donaldson.
BO-Borth, R. D. Sacker, BB,
Trombold. HR-Donaldson 2, Trombold.
WP—R. A. Locker, PB—R. D. Locker
U—Edwards and Kratky ___
Halvse (L) lp 5 h r er bb so 1
R. A. Locker 5 5 3 2 2
Russell (W) 42⁵ 5 1 1 0
Janson 0 0 1 0 0
Miller 2³⁵ 2 2 2 1
Arkansas ranked eighth among states in the production of strawberries in 1956 by growing 13,600,-000 pounds.
WASHINGTON —(UP)— The President of the United States went out to the ball game today to inaugurate the 1958 big league season and try to snap out of a personal pitching slump.
Eisenhower Trying To Snap Slump
Dwight D. Eisenhower, a righthander, did the honors by throwing out the ceremonial first ball a few minutes before the Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox started to play for keeps.
Washington has won only two openers under the Eisenhower pitching administration. The President is, in fact, in the midst of a losing streak—he "lost" the last two season openers.
The Charleston Senators eked out a 15-inning, 1-0 victory over St. Paul Sunday night to open the American Assn. baseball season and keep intact its record of never having lost a home opener.
Good baseball weather-fair and temperatures in the upper 60's—s the forecast.
Today is the sixth straight honorary pitching appearance for the Chief Executive, a better than average outfielder in his West Point days, but just a so-so pitcher as President.
Senator String Intact
His prospects of breaking the streak today are slim. Washington hasn't beaten Boston in an opening game since 1932 when another Republican President, Herbert Hoover threw out the first ball.
Whatever the outcome, this is the big moment of the season for Washington which hasn't had a pennant winner in a quarter-century and sees little promise in its baseball future. Though it continues to make good the old joke about "first in war, first in peace and last in the American League," Washington—for today at least—proudly laid claim to being the capital of baseball.
Our Entire Facilities Will Be Closed
Tues. 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. in respect to the memory of SIMON W. HURWITZ
Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Company
The Eisenhower pitching stint—a single toss from the presidential box between home plate and first base—perpetuated a precedent set in 1910 by President William Howard Taft. Every president since then has made at least three appearances as an opening day "pitcher."
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Monday. April 14, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
A's Sweep Over Cards To Win Cup Series
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UP)—Dichard St. Louis fans conceded the Missouri state title to Kansas City today as the Athletics, fresh off three Cardinal conquests, departed for their American League opener against Cleveland Tuesday.
Showing "show-me" state baseball followers in convincing fashion, the A's appeared at the peak of their spring season in defeating
the Redbirds twice in Sunday's prolonged doubleheader. Harry Craft's A's mixed strong pitching, alert baserunning and power to win the exhibition twin-bill 7-1 and 3-2. The A's had won 4-3 on Saturday on Jack Urban's clutch single in the bottom of the ninth inning.
Craft, who plans to throw Ned Garver against Cleveland's Herb Score Tuesday, admitted Sunday
night "the team's looking real good." The former Cincinnati outfielder, starting his first year as a major league pilot, appeared confident the Athletics could continue their improved play as the American League season gets underway.
Jack Urban allowed the Cardinals six harmless singles in the opener as Vic Power, Bob Cerv and Bill Tuttle combined for the bating punch. Power knocked in three
runs, Cerv delivered a towering homer and Tuttle knocked in two more runs with a double.
Tuttle, who had won Saturday's game with a ninth inning single, continued his torrid hitting in the 14th inning finale. The newly acquired Tuttle singled in the 14th and Bob Martyn, on at first, scampered all the way home when Cardinal outfielder Gene Green momentarily bobbled.
Kansas Sets Seven Marks In Romp Over OSU
Sweeping all three places in four events and setting seven of nine new meet records, the KU Jayhawkers had little trouble downing the Oklahoma State track squad, 90-45, in a dual meet here Saturday. Coach Easton's Jayhawkers took all places in the mile and two-mile runs, the javelin throw and the broad jump.
KU's Ernie Shelby and Al Oerter were the meet's two double winners. Shelby was the only performer to set two meet records. He won the broad jump with a leap of 24-feet $6 \frac{3}{4}$-inches and set a new meet record in the 220-yard
low hurdles with a :23.7 timing.
Shelby picked up a total of 11 points by taking third in the 100-yard dash. He, however, had to yield point honors to Oklahoma State's Orlando Hazley. Hazley won first in the 100 and 220 yard dashes and was on the Aggies' winning
Oerter took first place in the discus and shot put, but his throws were far below his record marks. He tossed the discus 177- feet $ 8^{3} \mathrm{~i}-$ inches, which was far below his record throw of 202- feet 6-inches. He threw the shot 54-feet $ 5^{1} / 4$-inches.
440- yard relay team, scoring 114 points.
KU's Charlie Tidwell was edged by Hazley in the 100-yard dash, in a .09.6 clocking, then lost by a larger margin to the Oklahoman who took the 220-yard dash in .21.2.
Tom Skutka both lowered their mile time in that event. McNeal, who was running to warm up for the two-mile run, beat out teammate Skutka by inches. Skutka's 4:12.0 time was three-tenths of a second better than his previous best.
A bad pass kept KU from defeating Oklahoma State in the 440-yard relay. Shelby was barely moving when he took the baton from Bob Lida but rapidly gained on the Aggie anchor man and almost caught him at the tape.
Improved Buff Will Challenge At Relays
A few days before Minnesota's Bud Edelen was running 9:05.4 for fifth in the fastest NCAA 2-Mile field of all-time last June, an unknown Colorado freshman was clocking 10:06.8 for 15th in the Big Eight yearling postal derby.
Fantastic as it sounds, that same Coloradoan will hurl a firm challenge at the Gopher veteran here this weekend when the two meet over their favorite distance in a new Kansas Relays event. The lad's name is Bernie Frakes, a sophomore who ripped out of obscurity six weeks ago when he dethroned Kansas' Jerry McNeal in the Big Eight Indoor Games.
Frakes finished 23rd in this race, after picking off sixth in the conference mill. That was the beginning of the surge that now has carried him steadily downward on the ston-watch.
Frakes ran 9:15.3 that night on the cramped 24-lap layout in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. He twice repulsed McNeal bids in the final 440, outlasting him to the tape to clock the third-swiftest time ever recorded on that track.
"Even Potts has been surprised though, the way Frakes is running. He confessed he never got a bigger surprise than when Bernie beat McNeal for the Indoor championship." Casotti said.
McNeal, it should be noted, is a 4-time conference champion and owns more sub-9:20 clockings than any 2-miler in league history save Herb Semper. He ran as low as 9:01.7 to finish third in the NCAA and was as high as seventh in the NCAA cross-country derby last November.
Running in a terrific field at the Texas Relays, Frakes further reduced his career best with a 9:14.7, finishing behind such notables as Stanford's Maury Graves, Jerry Smartt of Houston and Bob House, California's 1957 NCAA runner-up, now running for Brooke Medical center.
NCAA
When has a sophomore 2-miler paired almost a full minute off his time in less than a year and what is the reason?
"Mostly is was just an adjustment in his running style," explains Buffalo Publicist Fred Casotti. "He was trying to stay up on his toes all the way like a spinner. Coach Frank Potts worked with him all last year and now he's breaking our varsity record just about every time out."
National place-winners in 1958 Kansas Relavs:
100 — Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State, 5th; Hollis Gainey, Texas 6th
440 Gary Parr, Oklahoma, 4th
Joe Vallilleau, Oklahoma, 4th
2-Mile — Jarry McNeal, Kansas,
3rd; Bud Edel, Minnesota, 5th
220 — Ganey, bth
240 — Gary, Pearl, Oklahoma, 4th
Distance men Jerry McNeal and
Mile — Joe Villarreal, Texas, 4t
120 HH — Keith Gardner, Nebraska 5th
JT — Bruce Parker, Texas, 5th
DT — Al Oerter, Kansas, 1st
HJ — Don Stewart, SMU, tie 1st
DT — Al Oerter, Kansas, 1st
SP — Bob Henry, Minnesota, 3rd;
Phil Delavan, Iowa State, 6th
Maybe you should look into the possibilities offered by a life insurance sales career. Among its many advantages are the freedom of being in business for yourself, and no ceiling on your earnings.
The heat of our campus unit will be glad to fill you in on the details.
NAAU
Three-Mile — John Macy, unattached. Houston. 1st
5th Place Good For Record
Steeplechase Jerry Smartt,
Houston, 4th
440 hurdles — Cliff Cushman, Kansas, 3rd; Gene O'Conner, Kansas State, 5th
Can't decide what business would suit you best?
BJ -- Earnie Shelby, Kansas, 1st; Kent Floerke, Kansas, 5th
DT — Al Oertel, Kansas 1st
HSJ — Floerke, 2nd
Although it was no better than fifth in the Texas Relay's field, Kansas' 880 relay unit of Charlie Tidwell, Mike Cummins, Bob Lida and Ernie Shelby, officially clocked a new varsity record of 1:25.8. The former mark of 1:26.5 had been held since 1931 by a quartet of Ray Flick, Ralph, Sickel, Bernie Gridley and Joe Klaner.
Exhibition Baseball
NAIA
BJ — Marvin Wilson, Ottawa, 2nd
SP — Gerald Blansitt, East Texas
State, tie 1st
Tidwell Close Behind
Mile - Ed Vander Heuvel, Central Michigan. 4th
New York at Boston — Larsen (10-4) vs. Nixon (12-13), 25,000, fair and mild.
Kansas City at Cleveland—Garver (6-13) vs. Score (2-1), 32,000, fair, mild, no rain, temperature in upper 50's.
Washington at Baltimore—Stobbs (2-20) vs. Johnson (14-11), 28,000 possible showers.
DT — Ron Anderson, McPherson, lst
Detroit at Chicago — Bunning (20-8) vs. Pierce (20-12), 20,000 partly cloudy and mild.
Chicago at St. Louis (night) — Brosnan (5-5) vs. Mizell (8-10),
20,000, fair and mild, temperature
50-55.
Cincinnati (N) 3, Baltimore (A) 2
New York (A) 10, Philadelphia (N) 5
Detroit (A) 11, Pittsburgh (N) 5
Cleveland (A) 8, San Francisco (N) 5
Los Angeles (N) 4, Chicago (N) 1
Kansas City (A) 7, St. Louis (N) 1
East Cincinnati (A) 3, St. Louis (N) 2
(14 innings)
Rv UNITED PRESS
Los Angeles at San Franisco — Drysdale (17-9) vs. Gomez (15-13), 23,600. clear and sunny.
TUESDAY American League
Kansas spinner Charlie Tidwell clocked a wind-blown .09.4 behind Orlando Hazley's .09.3 century at the Arkansas Relays.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati — Roberts (10-22) vs. Lawrence (16-13), 30,000, possible showers and mild.
National League
Boston at Washington - Sullivan (14-11) vs. Ramos (12-16), 28,000. fair and mild.
TODAY
NEW YORK—(UP) Following are the probable pitchers, attendance and weather for the major league baseball openers:
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Pittsburgh at Milwaukee—Friend (14-18) vs. Spahn (21-11), 46,000, fair and mild with temperature near 60.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 14, 1958
Use Spring Theme For Wedding
Planning an early summer wedding? Then bring the outdoors inside the church. Nature doesn't stop at the door.
Outside new leaves and the first flowers will be making an appearance. Inside there will be more greenery and flowers with the bride in a flurry of white, the bridesmaids in a color of spring.
WHEN WEDDING BELLS RING—Susie Elmore, Stafford sophomore, models a traditional lace and tulle gown from a local department store. (Daily Kansan photo)
It it's a May wedding lilacs can fill the church, not only with their scent, but their color, which can be matched in the dresses of your attendants.
Green for the new bridesmaid dresses, which are cut with simple lines and at street length, will be the highest of fashion.
New Ideas, Designs
If you choose green for your bridesmaid dresses, why not try it in a silk organza, floated over white and perhaps circled with a flower embroidered sash, or in crinkled chiffon sashed with velvet.
Pinks, yellows and other spring flower colors will add to other new stylings of bridesmaid dresses such as the sheath, which has gained considerable attention, and the harem or tucked skirt shown in many styles.
Each season brings new ideas and designs for wedding gowns and bridesmaid dresses in addition to the traditional styling and materials.
Embroidered nylon sheer and silk organzas are favored materials for the bridesmaid, especially with large hairbraid picture hats. Taffeta materials and princess stylings are returning strong this spring.
Green Dresses For Bridesmaids
This spring for the bride it's the new intermission length which has a bouffant skirt and a brush train with the front hem rising 12 to 14 inches from the floor.
Another new style to match your spring theme might be a sheath with a floating back panel or long train. The majority of gowns now are floor length with brush trains.
The very newest in ideas for bridesmaid dresses is the bouffant skirt of organdy with matching organdy flower girl dresses. These are usually embroidered in floral design with accent colors.
Headbands To Match
at the side of the head, tufts of chiffon with very short net in back, or a veil dropped from a flowered chaplet.
Headbands can match your light, spring wedding by being a little bit of nothing—a matched ribbon tied
The contemporary materials in wedding gowns are dominated by the woven fabrics such as silk, or acetate taffetas, peau de soie, silk organza, silk organdy and de-
lustered satin. There will be a great many brides, however, who prefer the traditional all lace, or lace and tulle wedding gowns.
Mother-of-the-bride gowns will be more youthful this season with sheath styling and cap sleeves. Full skirts and three quarter sleeves will appear in silk organizas with beautiful shadings of bright colors.
Use Sugar Rinse For Bandbox Look
NEW YORK — (UP) — White collars and cuffs, which give a springtime touch to dark suits and dresses, must be kept fresh and crisp to be attractive.
After swishing them through soap or detergent suds, you can eliminate the trouble of making starch simply by adding a few teaspoonfuls of granulated sugar to the last rinse water.
The Cleanliness Bureau, a trade organization for the soap and detergent industry, said the sugar solution does the same thing to the white collar that beer rinse does to a girl's coiffure-gives it "body." And the solution is diluted enough to prevent any "caramelizing" during ironing.
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Fashions Should Be New, Flattering
In a season of fashion controversy over the chemise, the famous New York designer, Sophie, has this te av: "Fashion should be changeable—should have newness. But at the same time it must be flattering to the wearer."
"If not flattering," she said, "I don't consider it in good fashion.
"It seems to me interesting to note that year after year, the women listed as the best-dressed...are the women who have found what is most flattering to them and are consistent in their selection of silhouette. Newness in this instance, being expressed primarily in color, fabric and detail."
For best flavor, many cheeses should be room temperature when served.
Dick Susie Patterson Stout for President Vice-President of the STUDENT BODY
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Baby Sitter Needs Pre-Sitting Course
CHAMPAIGN, III.—(UP)—Both the youngsters involved and the baby sitter should have some preparation before children are left in a sitter's care, a child development specialist warns.
It's often wise, says Miss Jeanne Jackson of the University of Illinois, to have the new baby sitter come in during the day and get acquainted with the children. That way, Miss Jackson said, she can find out about the children's habits, routines and problems.
Miss Jackson said the children should be prepared for the sitter's arrival even if they are acquainted with him or her. But it's unwise, she said, to tell them too far in advance because they may be over- anxious.
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Make definite arrangements with the sitter about what time she should come, when she may go home; give clear directions on where parents may be reached in emergencies; and specific directions for meals and baths.
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The students elected were Nadine Harrison, Topeka, delegate-at-large; Mary Olson. Wichita, freshman class representative; Jolene Brink, Ottawa, evangelism and stewardship chairman; Jane Moberly, Wichita, program chairman. All are freshmen.
Chauency Jones, Chicago, Ill., junior class representative; David Skaggs, Pratt, social chairman. Both are juniors.
Hoop Earrings Are Back
Judy Hirsch, Goodland, and Margo Tipton, Kansas City, Mo., delegates-at-large. Both are sophomores.
Episcopal Church Elects Student Vestry
Weavers
The Episcopal Church at KU has elected the Student Vestry for 1958-59.
Jewelry fashions are going around in circles. Hoop earrings are back, reports the Fashion Co-ordination Institute. They go well with the deep, head-hugging hats and hair-dos which tend to cover most of the ear. The hoops range in size from tiny, delicate circles to big, gypsy-like bangles.
Butter from the milk of zebus is a highly nourishing food for athletes.
Our 101st Year Of Service
Clearance of Cashmere Sweaters!
Famous Hadley and Pringle Cashmere Cardigans, Slipovers and Novelties!
Cardigans formerly $29.95 $17.85
Slipovers formerly $20.95 $14.85
Novelties formerly $26.95 to $35.00 $17.85
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Monday, April 14, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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**words or less:** one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
ON
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round back, nation in the hair- of the from gypsy-
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LOST
SLIDE RULE, 12 inch Pickett, on campus
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FOUND
FOR RENT
PAIR OF GLASSES. Owner identify and pay for ad. Phone VI 3-6455, Larry Thorne. 4-15
NICELY FURNISHED four room apartment. Moody Apartments, 1343 Tennessee. Immediate occupancy. Phone VI 3-0978.
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WANTED studebt laundry. Reasonable
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BABY SITTING: Young mother of two wishes to care or teach a child in home. Fenced play area, plenty of toys. Noon meal included and regular rest period. 51 W 6th VI. 3-4785
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type them, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter and Phone Mrs. Donna Viri VI 3-1860.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates and deliver. Mrs. Tom Bradley VI 3-3428 4-16
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
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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 Surveys in guards, gators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hamsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut.
Phone VI 3-2921. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast. accurate service on theses, term papers reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden VI 3-7629 tf
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FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
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RENT A SINGER SENOR machine by the
3-1971 Singing
Sewing Center, 927 Mass
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop
Clarence Adamson, Mgr.
FOR SALE
TUXEDO, size 39, with shirt. $25. White dinner jacket, size 39, $15. VI $3-6302.
NICELY LANDSCAPED split level home. Large cathedral type living room. Two bedrooms. Kitchen on third bedroom. Full bath on second level. Kitchen has Thermador stove, oven, en suite and washer. Lots of built-ins, two wood-burning fire places, and basement garage with shop space. New location close to Shown by appointment.C Andy Mildred Hess, VI 3-3457, 4-15 VI 3-1782.
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black or brown. AKC registered, top
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every one perfect. Sternfeld VI
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NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Live magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over house representative or call VI 3-7533 IV 2-0975 VI 2-0935 for free delivery.
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Between KU and downtown, very reasonable price, quick possession. Phone VI 3-7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-18
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
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 Mass. VI 3-4070
RADIO REPAIRS
Beman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
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Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Rogers Launder-11
1407 Mass. VI 3-3303
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5305 Gunt's Automatic Laundry
913 N. H.
VI 3-6-844
WATCH REPAIRS
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4365
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass VI 3-3055
Special Prices On Gallons & Half Gallons For Parties
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
A & W Root Beer
1415 W 6th
There's only one A&W in Lawrence
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Malts, Burgers, Coneys, Orange, Tenderloins, French Fries, Bar BQ
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MISCELLANEOUS
HAVE FOOD. WILL DELIVER. Free delivery, complete fountain and sandwich service (S1 minimum order). Jayhawk Cafe, VI 3-6171. 4-16
I made an A on my chemistry hour exam
Kathy Hoy. 4-14
USED CAR BUYS
1951 Chevrolet
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622 Mass. VI 3-6697
1955 Pontiac Catalina
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Spotless, good tires. 6 cyl. with over-drive. Perfect all over.
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for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
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UNDERWOOD'S
Flocking—Balsa Models—Trains 1215 West Sixth
Dennison Flameproof Crepe Paper KEELER'S BOOK STORE 939 Mass.
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THE KANSAS POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 14, 1958
Don't Ruin A Ballot
How To Vote
Every year, the ballot counters of KU haul in all the ballot boxes after spring elections and work far into the night counting and recounting the votes.
In their work, a great many votes are thrown out because they are defaced, mismarked, or otherwise voided. The greatest single reason is that students simply don't know how to fill out the ballots properly.
According to the ASC constitution, this is the way to vote:
When you go to the poll, you show your student identification card to the first poll worker. He checks the picture against the person, class standing, and passes the ID card to the second worker. The second worker determines your school and living districts, and worker three punches your districts on the ballots.
You receive a ballot for your class officer candidates, and three others—a white one for presidential and vice-presidential candidates, a blue one for All Student Council living districts, and a pink one for ASC school districts.
On the pink and blue ballots, you VOTE ONLY FOR CANDIDATES IN YOUR OWN DISTRICTS. You use numbers, not crosses, marking your first choice for a position with number 1, the second choice 2, and so on. You may mark as many candidates from your districts as you wish, regardless of the number of candidates to be elected, but you must mark each one from the same district with a different number.
If you mess up a ballot, return it to the pollworkers and get another one.
When you have finished marking the ballots, return them to the fourth pollworker, who returns your ID card. He should clip the exposed number from the corners of the ballots and deposit them in the ballot box. NO POLLWORKERS ARE PERMITTED TO OPEN YOUR BALLOT OR ATTEMPT TO SEE HOW IT HAS BEEN MARKED.
Paint For The Public, Benton Advises Artists
American artists must produce pictures which the public will know and understand if native art is to become a part of our culture. Thomas Hart Benton, Humanities lecturer, said Saturday night in Fraser Theater.
Mr. Benton, a Kansas City, Mo., artist and the last of the three original regionalist painters of the late 1920's and early 1930's, recalled the era which gave rise to regionalism.
After the lecture the crowd of about 700 went to the Museum of Art for the opening of a five-week exhibition of Mr. Benton's work.
In explaining regionalism the Neosho, Mo., native said art must go beyond "mere geometric patterns" and show the three dimensional world that is known as well as seen. The "movement toward pure abstraction" and the "denial of the original pattern" has no meaning for the public, he said.
The original regionalists were Mr. Benton and the late John Steuart Curry and Grant Woods.
"The regionalist move started when the artist ceased to be hired by the public in the 1900's. At that time he made some explorations which might not have been made otherwise. One of these was the movement toward regionalism, he said."
"We created a furor in the 1930s," he said. We believed in painting reality and we believed that reality is what one experiences at the moment. A group of pure art advocates in New York thought art was retrograding with our 'illustrations and showmanship.' Once you went in for illustration in various forms you were not an artist then."
Despite the storms in the mid 30's the regionalists captured the magazines and papers in the country and dominated the United States up until the start of World War II, he recalled.
"The regionalist controversy put the artists in the spotlight and brought publicity to the group. We found people who could exploit the publicity and make money for themselves and for us, so we became successful." he said.
"However." Benton said, "there are various forms of realism. You can never pin down art."
He said regionalism could not be confined to a Missouri scene or a New York street.
"Art cannot ever be fully separated from what goes on in the world."
Surveying recent trends in art. Benton said there may be a return to regionalism, but it would be impossible to predict.
"After the war came this new concept beyond natural boudaries," he said. "Now this abstract art has captured the world."
Mr. Benton, whose paintings are here on loan from collectors and museums all over the world, works with more than a brush and canvas. First he makes clay models then he sketches the models and finally transfers the sketches to a canvas.
Downing, Plumb Seek Student Offices
(Continued from Page 1.)
ent, we will give a greater number of students the opportunity to be represented by student body officers
"Because our ideas of better student government were consistent with those of Vox, we feel that our working with the All Student Council, if elected, will enable the students to have real representation with a division of powers between the Council and ourselves, working together in harmony.
"We do not have an obligation to political machines."
dent. After much careful thought and consideration, it seems to be the best thing to do, as I feel the independents, who compose a large majority of the students, should be represented in the executive branch of their own student government.
Miss Plumb—"It was a great surprise to me to be asked to run as a write-in candidate for vice-presi-
"I have worked closely with the ASC this year and have seen some things accomplished, but see a great need for much improvement."
(Related editorials, Page 2.)
The poet Chaucer, called the daisy "ee of the daie." In Ben Jonson's time the flower was called "Day's Eye" and later became known as "daisy."
The former president of the KU Young Democrats, Jack Sullivan, Lawrence senior, was elected Saturday as chairman of the Collegiate Council of Young Democrats of Kansas.
KU Democrat Gets New Job
About seven students from KU attended the Council meeting in Topeka, which was held in conjunction with the Jefferson-Jackson Day events held there. Three other officers from other schools in the state were also elected.
Sullivan was also appointed as a member of the State Executive Committee of Young Democrats of Kansas.
Hippopotamuses rarely attack people, but enraged bull hippos have been known to lift boats out of water and bite or slash holes in the bulls, the National Geographic Magazine says.
Was He A Frat Man?
A coed was reluctant about accepting a blind date with a Lawrence boy whom her roommate had described as "a rugged blond-haired individual."
"But why don't you go out with him if he's supposed to be such a terrific guy?" the coed asked her roommate.
"I'd love to go out with Hoover, but he's too short for me," the match-maker said. "I feel so sorry for him because he has been hanging around the house all day."
The coed was skeptical about the date proposition, but she finally decided to meet the boy for a coke date.
The next day Hoover arrived for the date. Hoover wasn't bad looking even though he was short and needed his blond curly locks shorn. But the coed decided to decline the date because blond curly-haired Hoover was a COLLIE DOG.
To Speak To Chicago Alumni
To Speak To Chicago Atum...
Charles Leone, associate professor of zoology, will address the Chicago KU alumni at their annual banquet May 7. Prof. Leone is also a member of the KU Athletic Board.
Butter made from the milk of zebus is usually unsalted.
Rock Chalk Applications Due
Applications are being received in the Kansas Union KU-Y office for producer and business manager for the 1959 Rock Chalk Revue. Deadline for the applications is Tuesday, April 22. Interviews with applicants will be held 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday April 23 in the Union.
Look What We're Giving
AUGUST 13, 1950
Away FREE
Q
(the trophies, we mean)
3rd
3rd Daily Kansan Photo Contest Closes April 25
- 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 Kansan Office 111 Flint Hall
Daily hansan
FREDERICK BENNETT
"POCO" AT WORK-Bernard (Poco) Frazier, KU's sculptor-in-residence, chisels on one of his latest works, a religious figure for a Kansas City school. Students assist Mr. Frazier with some of his work (see below).
Tuesday, April 15, 1958
Amid a cluttered, but somehow ordered assemblage of tools, stone, clay and other materials, works one of KU's two professional artists, Bernard (Poco) Frazier. A 1929 KU graduate, Mr. Frazier has returned to the campus as Sculptor in Residence.
KU's Own Sculptor Helps Local Artists
Maintaining a private studio near his house on a former farm area west of the Stouffer apartments. Mr. Frazier works with advanced art students, creates his own projects, and introduces visitors to his layout.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
"As sculptor in residence my job is to bring professional viewpoint and operational methods to the campus to help provide a professional sculpture atmosphere, not only for students of art, but for the uninitiated," Mr. Frazier said.
His two-room studio is too small for the three personal projects on which he is working. In one room he and a group of students are completing a marble statue of St. Francis de Sales which will reach a height of 16 feet, 8 inches and weigh close to nine tons. Built in four parts, only two of the statue's sections can fit in the room. The remaining pieces are housed under a tarpaulin in the yard.
A second project, a concrete cast for the facade of the Bishop Miege High School and Chapel, Kansas City, Kan., is being completed in the other room. The facade, a 60 by 14-foot area, will be cast from a clay sketch.
The sculpture will depict how God's grace helped Bishop Miege in his task of opening up the midwest in the 1850's. It will show a hand of God stretching across the Great Plains from a church in Leavenworth to the Rocky Mountains. The hand will be bordered by the Platte and Arkansas Rivers. Behind the hand will stand the pointing Christ with Bishop Miege kneeling by His side.
Mr. Frazier's final work at the
presen. is a $9\frac{1}{2}$- foot-high statue of the ascending Christ, to be carved from black walnut wood. The figurette will be inexact to the extent that it is asymmetrical; that is, it cannot be cut in half any way and have two similar parts.
In relation to his position he said, "My presence at KU gives students a chance to know that an artist is an ordinary man who goes to work and solves a difficult problem with intelligence, logic, and a great deal of sympathy with the viewpoints and opinions of his fellow man."
The marble statue of St. Francis is the only project on which advanced students are working.
Two Frazier works are at KU. He sculptured the bronze Campanile doors, and his "Mare Colt" is on display in the Art Museum.
55th Year, No.125
Prelock Calls Write-In 'Cheap Political Move'
Must Live In House, IFC Tells Officers
Police departments in the region and the Federal Bureau of Investigation have been working on the case for a week, but no trace of Burns has been found.
All Inter-fraternity Council officers will be required to live in their chapter houses during their terms of office, as the result of an amendment to the IFC constitution, approved at a council meeting Monday night.
The new rush week rule requires rushees to live in University dormitories with 11 p.m. closing hours.
The amendment, which has met with opposition in the past from fraternity members, has been proposed several times in previous years. It was tabled before being brought to a vote at an IFC meeting two weeks ago.
In other action, the council passed a new rush week ruling, approved a fraternity service award and nominated officers for the 1958-59 school year.
Campus police report that no information is available on the whereabouts of John P. Burns, Olathe freshman, missing since April 1.
The nominated candidates for council office will be voted on at the next IFC meeting April 28.
John P. Burns Still Missing
Burns was reported missing after he failed to keep an appointment on the campus with his father during Easter vacation.
Patterson Saves Fire For Convocation
Some campus political leaders reacted sharply Monday to the weekend announcement of a Vox Populi-backed write-in campaign for student body president and vice-president.
Your Income Tax Is Due Today
The write-in candidates, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior; for president, and Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, for vice-president, announced their candidacies Sunday.
This is an exclusive reminder for the moneyed students on the campus.
The United States Bureau of Internal Revenue and the State of Kansas are waiting for your statement of income in 1957.
State and national returns must be postmarked before MIDNIGHT. Things get tough after that.
Jayhawker Issue On Sale Today
The third edition of the Jayhawker, featuring campus activities and organizations, went on sale today. Tom Pettit, Topeka senior and Jayhawker editor, said the magazine will be sold at the campus information booth and the Jayhawker office in the Kansas Union. Sales representatives will take orders in organized houses.
The magazine cover has a photograph of a spring scene on the campus with overlaid art work. The final issue will go on sale May 15. Senior pictures and Jayhawker queen finalists will be featured in that issue.
Weather
Fair through Wednesday. Warmer in the east portion tonight. Low tonight 40 to 50. High Wednesday in the 70s.
The eleventh annual Delta Sigma Rho oratorical contest will hold preliminary rounds at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 134 Strong Hall. First prize in the contest, which is open to all undergraduates, is a $300 set of the Encyclopedia Americana.
Speech Contest Begins Thursday
High Monday was 54, and the low was 39.
Second and third prizes are $15 and $10 respectively.
All entrants will give an original 10 minute speech on any subject. Judges in the preliminaries will be members of the speech and drama department.
Ad Tells Kathy's Joy—'She' Kept Promise
The finals will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, April 22 in Strong Auditorium.
Kathy A. Hoy, Kansas City, Mo. freshman,
"wasn't doing so well" in chemistry. She studied
hard, but "just couldn't understand the stuff."
She had a "C" average but "had to improve,"
she's majoring in medical technology.
"Approach the problem scientifically," they said. Night after night she kept the bunsen burner glowing. She carefully combined a formula of late hours and study to produce a solution.
Test day came. As she left Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall she jokingly said she would "put it in The Daily Kansan" if she got an "A." Friday she knew she had found the solution. She got the
An hour examination was coming up. The girls in her dormitory felt her consternation. They held her hand and wiped her tears as she wailed over electrons and acid tests.
test back with a big red "A" in the corner.
The girls on her floor found it hard to contain their joy—Kathy's too! Eventually all talk of the grade quieted. With a new incentive, Kathy delved into her books—while the girls sneaked to The Daily Kansan. The ad read, "I made an A on my chemistry test. Kathy Hoy."
When Kathy read the paper Monday she screamed—then she laughed. Now she's embarrassed.
"This is just awful. One boy called tonight and wanted me to tutor him. What will Dr. Brewster think? My folks will just have a fit," she said
There were about 26 girls in on the scheme. Kathy is going to "keep smiling" and plan a retaliation to take care of them all.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox, announced "100 per cent Vox support" of the ticket.
Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. minor and Allied Greek-Independent candidate for student body president, made a brief statement to The Daily Kansan Monday night, but reserved his heavy fire for the political rally and convocation at 4 p.m. today in Hoch Auditorium.
Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior and nonpartisan candidate for president, blasted Vox for what he said was a "cheap and petty political maneuver."
Patterson said, "I hope that all the students will turn out for the convocation. Any further statements will be made there.
Prelock, who will also speak at the convocation, salvoed immediately.
"I feel that only by attending the convocation will it be possible for the students to get a true perspective of the political situation facing the campus now, and get a true picture of the qualifications of the candidates."
"In regard to the recent announcement of candidates for president and vice-president, it is a move by Vox to install two individuals over whom they would have complete dominance and who would be used as a tool to further selfish political gains.
"I know that many people—Vox, AGI, and independent—will vote for me for the office, but I believe that due to my failure to comply with Mr. Austin, the controlling hand of Vox, many Vox people will have pressure brought to bear upon them to vote for the candidates of his choice.
"I would like to reaffirm my stand as a nonpartisan. I have not and will not adhere to cheap and petty political maneuvers. All that I ask is that all students will evaluate the candidates running for the office."
For the students, Prelock said, "Vote intelligently if you want good government. The responsibility is now yours."
In a letter to The Daily Kansan,
Alpha Kappa Lambda social fraternity, formerly a "Vox house," announced it was leaving the party.
AKL president Harry Stewart, Mission senior, said in the letter that Vox president Austin had withdrawn AKL member Tom Bath, Mission junior, from its All Student Council slate "without hearing the voice of his party or the opinion of the candidate."
In another letter to The Daily Kansan, Bruce Lewellyn, Hutchinson sophomore, took the paper to task for serving Vox as "a full fledged party organ."
While lambasting The Daily Kansan, Lewellyn said he lived in "one of the three houses that 'controls' 33 per cent of committee membership in ASC."
"Mathematically, 33 per cent is not a controlling percentage, but... we'll excuse your arithmetic and mark it off to political fervor," he said.
(See editorials, Page 2.)
Pick Your Candidates, Cast Your Ballot - Be Sure To Vote Wednesday
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 15. 1958
It's Housecleaning Time—
Let's Restaff The ASC
1950s
The Big Switch
The injustice of three or four of the larger Greek houses dominating the policies that will apply to 8,000 students at KU is finally beginning to strike home.
In the last three weeks there has been a wholesale switch of organized houses from the Allied Greek-Independent party to Vox Populi.
As an example, one of the former AGI houses switching to Vox is Watkins Hall, traditionally the AGI stronghold in independent organized houses. Creta Carter, AGI member and now student body vice-president, was elected as a representative of Watkins last year. She has since pledged Pi Beta Phi sorority.
Nine houses, Watkins, Douthart and Pearson halls, Sigma Kappa sorority, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Nu and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities, representing over 400 votes, have switched since presentation of the Hoover Report last month. The report exposed the inefficiency of the present administration.
AGI has a combined membership of about 1,000 in organized houses, with most of these in the three sororities and three or four larger fraternities.
Against this, Vox has about 2,100 in organized houses, a majority of over 1,100.
Why should a once tightly-knit closed-circle political machine break down? After election last year, AGI stood alone as the only political party representing students on campus.
The crumbling of the AGI machine has come about only in the last few weeks. Lack of leadership in the party is apparent. AGI almost split after spring vacation this year when one faction of the party wanted the primaries thrown out. They protested that there had been irregularities at the polls. However, the dominant faction won out.
A party, using only leaders from only a few Greek houses, should not expect to remain long on the campus political scene. This tight inner circle has bred friction in the party, particularly in the other houses in AGI who want to be represented in the upper circle of the party.
Besides the nine houses that have switched because they were not properly represented, three other houses in the party are wavering. At least one has indicated it would make the switch before the end of the year.
However, in any student election at KU, the independent voter usually swings the election. After all, there are about 5.000 students not living in organized houses. These are the people who are going to have to turn out if the AGI political machine is to be driven out of power.
The Editors
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, triviewed 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIkling 3-2700
Esterbrook 251
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 on Friday and Saturday noon 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.
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Managing Editors, Douglas Parker, City Edits, Assistant City Editors, Mary Alden, Assistant City Editors, Mary Alden, Telegraph Editor, Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor, George Anthan, Sports Editor, Bob Macy, Dale Macy, Editors, Assistant Sports Editor, Editors, Paul Swainson, City Editor, Ron Miller, Picture Editor,
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler Business Manager
John Downing (above, upper left),
Kansas City, Mo. junior and
write-in candidate for student body
president, gets in a little campa-
igning at a Hawk's Nest table
occupied by Walt Baskett (lower
left). Bob Haynes and Betty Miller. (Daily Kansan photo)
Below, Jim Austin (background), Topeka sophomore and president of Vox party, makes a pitch for his party's candidates at a house meeting at Watkins Hall. Vox counts Watkins as one of its voting "strongholds" for tomorrow's election. (Daily Kansas photo)
election. (Daily Kansan photo)
Patterson And AGI
There seems to have been a move in the past few weeks on the part of AGI candidate Dick Patterson to divorce his name and actions from the workings of the Allied Greek-Independent party.
But perhaps he has good reason to get his name divorced from the party's efforts. A crumbling AGI could be a handicap to Patterson and Susie Stout in their bid for the student body's top offices.
Patterson is striving to present a campaign partly divorced from that of his sponsoring organization. He even went so far as to present a separate platform from that of the party.
With the party losing houses from their tight little group, Patterson would indeed be better off without the AGI label behind his name.
Patterson and Miss Stout are counting heavily on the independent vote also. AGI has relied on the freshman women's dormitories for much of their margin before, but with the party apparently in bad shape now, Patterson and Stout will probably try to use only their own names to carry the campaign.
With the Vox tag placed squarely on the campaigns of John Downing and Carol Plumb, they stand a good chance to win, providing they carry enough of the independent voters who want a change in student government.
If they are AGI candidates first and individuals second, their chances are greatly reduced.
Vox is made up of 28 houses. No house or combination of houses holds a control over the party. This large group of house representation, plus a large body of independents, should insure that no ASC committee "packing" will be going on.
Downing and Miss Plumb have said they are just as tired of ASC committee "packing" as a lot of other students. For that reason, among others, we believe they are the best-qualified candidates to do the revamping that the ASC so badly needs.
Can Patterson and Miss Stout make such a claim? With their backing, made up of a smaller number of houses under the AGI influence, we don't think they can. With over a third of the ASC committee appointments now coming from just three AGI houses, it is almost impossible that they can.
The voters have the choice. We believe that John Downing and Carol Plumb as student body president and vice-president, will insure the fairest representation on ASC committees.
We urge you to vote in Wednesday's elections. We also urge you to help clean up the present mess in the ASC.
The Editors
10
Rights And Wrongs
Elsewhere on this page you'll find editorials analyzing what's right with Vox party and what's wrong with AGI.
Simply put, AGI has suffered the illnesses that traditionally beset the "ins" in politics. The party's leaders have taken advantage of their positions to "pack" the All Student Council's committees with partisans of their own side of the fence.
Under AGI leadership, the ASC constitution was revised to include a "private club" provision for electing the student body president. As things now stand, you must be a member of the ASC before you can aspire to the student body president's job.
These are old tricks, of course. Parties in power often use such stratagems to reward the faithful and attempt to preserve their own power.
But any old hand at politics could have told the AGI boys that they were riding for a fall. They were too greedy and their political moves too obvious.
We need three organized houses controlling a third of the committee memberships as much as we need another campanile. And the student body needs a president with ASC experience like Jimmy Green needs more paint.
What is needed is a good housecleaning in the All Student Council. Now is the time for it.
The Editors
Page 3
Examination Schedule
Spring Semester, 1958
Friday, May 23, 1958, to Thursday, May 29, 1958, inclusive
Classes meeting at:
Will be examined at:
8 A.M., MWF sequence*... 1:30- 3:20 Friday May 23
8 A.M., TTS sequence**... 10:00-11:50 Thursday May 29
9 A.M., MWF sequence*... 10:00-11:50 Saturday May 24
9 A.M., TTS sequence**... 8:00- 9:50 Wednesday May 28
10 A.M., MWF sequence*... 8:00- 9:50 Monday May 26
10 A.M., TTS sequence**... 10:00-11:50 Monday May 26
11 A.M., MWF sequence*... 8:00- 9:50 Friday May 23
11 A.M., TTS sequence**... 10:00-11:50 Wednesday May 28
12 Noon, TT sequence**... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 23
1 P.M., MWF sequence*... 10:00-11:50 Friday May 23
1 P.M., TTS sequence**... 8:00- 9:50 Thursday May 29
2 P.M., MWF sequence*... 8:00- 9:50 Tuesday May 27
2 P.M., TTS sequence**... 3:30- 5:20 Tuesday May 27
3 P.M., MWF sequence*... 10:00-11:50 Tuesday May 27
3 P.M., TTS sequence**... 3:30- 5:20 Monday May 26
4 P.M., MWF sequence*... 1:30- 3:20 Thursday May 29
4 P.M., TTS sequence**... 3:30- 5:20 Thursday May 29
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
{All Sections} ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday May 24
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
{All Sections} ... 1:30- 3:20 Tuesday May 27
Chemistry 1, 2, 2a, 3, 28 and 29 (All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Saturday May 24
Physics 3, 4, 5, 6, 156a and b (All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Monday May 26
Business Administration 9, 12, 72 and 73 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Saturday May 24
Business Administration 25 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 23
ROTIC (Army, Navy, Air Force, All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Wednesday and/or May 28
3:30- 5:20 Wednesday May 28
Applied Mechanics 1, 1a, 49, 61 and 61a (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 23
Applied Mechanics 48, 55 and 57 (All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday May 24
Tuesday. April 15, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Around The World
Recession May Have Hit Low, Figures Show
The decline in the national economy showed signs today of nearing or touching bottom.
From this low plateau, economists hoped for upward movement in the not-too-distant future, although no responsible official would predict when the upturn would start.
Industrial production, one of the key factors in the current slump, declined again in March, according to Federal Reserve Board estimates. But the rate of decline was slower than in February.
Administration economists found the slower rate of decline heartening evidence that the next developments in the national picture will be a leveling off, then an upturn.
Congress felt growing pressure today for sales tax reduction although no heavy demand was seen yet for income tax cuts. Several members who spent the Easter recess in their states reported today that constituents favored sales tax cuts.
In Washington. Dr. Wernher von Braun told Congress today that "vigorous action" is essential to overcome Russia's obvious lead in the exploration of space.
Von Braun, one of the Army's top missile men, was the leadoff witness in hearings before the newly created House Space Committee.
He said that this country can meet the challenge of outer space exploration only if they will "discontinue our unfortunate practice of supporting only such research and development that serves immediate military objectives.
In Paris, Premier Felix Galliard took France's dispute with Tunisia to an emergency session of the National Assembly today. Upon the outcome depended the fate of his government and French relations with the United States and its other allies.
present
KU JAZZ and SUA
BIG 8
JAZZ FESTIVAL
FOR '58
K. U., M. U., Kansas St., & Oklahoma St.
8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium
Sunday April 20
EXTRA FEATURE:
Larry Cummings Trio With Pattie Tucker
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 in public. Only Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
German art lecture. 4 p.m.. Trophy Room, Kansas Union. Speaker. Dr. Klaus Berger, chairman, department of art history.
SUA art forum, 4 p.m. Music Room Kansas Union. Speaker. Don Jones psychologist, Menninger's Clinic, Topeka "Psychological, Uses of Modern Art."
Alpha Phi Omega steak fry. 6 p.m.
pump in front of Union Bring knife and fork.
Nursing Club, 7 p.m., 110 Fraser. Public Health (student nurses).
Alpha Rho Gamma, 7:15 p.m. Bailey Group discussion and business
meeting
Joint meeting of Young Democrats and Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m. Kansas to Cafeteria and Chiy) and Senator Don Hults (Rep-Lawrence). Informal de
The Imprial Dam, stretching 3.475 feet across the Colorado River, makes deserts bloom in two states. The dam raises the river's level 23 feet, and gives birth to California's All American Canal and Arizona's Gila Main Canal.
UNDERWOOD'S
Flocking—Balsa Models—Trains 1215 West Sixth
bate on the issues to arise in the special
region, the Kansas legislature.
Refreshments.
Department of Economies lecture, does not meet tonight at 8 pm. but April 22
MAUPINTOURS /1958
ADVENTUREI EDUCATIONI
RUSSIA
TRAVEL! SUMMER 1958I
Inclusive rate from $1399, from New York. Reservations limited, apply now for sufficient time to secure Russian visa. Write today for descriptive folder. See your travel agent or
Join a special American-directed, student/t teacher tour through the Soviet Union. Choose from six departure dates, travel city lists, or a kiev of the Ukraine, Stellngard, Odessa, Yaita, Sochi, Tbilisi of Soviet Georgia, Kharkov . . . enjoy a Volga River or Black Sea cruise . . . see Leningrad and Moscow . . . visit Warsaw, Prague, Warsaw, Berlin plus extensions to the European Capitals.
SEEMS LIKE SOME GROUPS GET ALL THE GLORY-
Tom Maupin
TOUR ASSOCIATES
1236 Massachusetts
Lawrence / Kansas
WE WANT GOOD
STUDENT BODY
OFFICERS
SOME OF US AREN'T EVEN REPRESENTED
WRITE IN
CAROL JOHN
PLUMB DOWNSING
CHANEY
The Chemise LaCoste
Imported Knit Sportshirt Made In France
A new shipment has just arrived. We now have eight colors in stock in small, medium, large and extra large.
- Navy
- Yellow
- Red
- White
- Tan
- Brown
- Lt. Blue
- Black
$8.50
Exclusively in Lawrence
at
the town shop
DOWNTOWN
the university shop ON THE HILL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 15, 1958
Distance Medley Furiously Fought
Most furiously-fought baton chase on the grand circuit of Midlands' foot-racing this season is the distance medley. The three principals, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas, battled through the first round in that order at the recent Texas Relays and now are sighting the 33rd Kansas Relays here April 18-19 for a renewal.
Up to last year, the Jayhawkers helped themselves almost cafeteria-style to blue ribbons in this event at the three stations. Even including last year, they own streaks of 8-of-11 at Texas; 4-of-7 at Kansas and 3-of-6 at Drake. But they were no better than third in their 1957 start, even though clocking a good 10:01.2. Oklahoma, anchored by a 4:05.0 cleanup mile from sophomore Gail Hodgson pared almost two seconds off KU's Austin record at 9:54.4. The Longhorns were second in 9:56.8.
This marked the first time two teams ever had broken 10 minutes in the same race on the Texas-Kansas-Drake circuit. This was another realm in which heretofore private Jayhawker property was invaded. Only last year's Mt. Oread unit and the Wes Santee-anchored combine of '54, which established a then-inter-collegiate and American record of 9:50.4, ever had dipped below five-figures.
The current feud actually began last year. Kansas, getting a 4:12.3 final carry from Jerry McNeal, defeated Texas on its home track, 9:56 to 10:06.6. The Steers reversed this at Kansas, setting a record 10:04.3 as Wilt McNew defeated Hal Long badly in the 1320 carry. The Jayhawkers won the rubber match at Drake in 9:51.7 as Long contributed the finest three-quarters in Mt. Oread history, 3:00.7, to touchoff McNeal with a 65-yard bulge. Texas finished two-tenths faster than it had run at Lawrence.
The city of Chicago, the nation's second largest city, was incorporated March 4,1837.
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Now Oklahoma is crowding into the act with a fleet of exceptional sophomores. Ernst Kleyhans, Hodgson's South African company-
Dennison
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BE IT
GOLF, TENNIS OR BASEBALL Get Your Team Prices Shop our Athletic Department for the Low Price on any Athletic Equipment or Shoes.
TENNIS RACKETS
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Wilson Budge ... 19.90
Wilson Trabert ... 18.75
Wilson Kramer Pro. ... 14.95
Wilson Kramer Per. ... 10.95
Other Rackets From $5.95
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The latter has done better, hitting 4:06.7 last year in open competition. Hodgson already has matched his 4:08.2 national fresh mark in a matched race this year. It is believed that Skutka can get down to 4:08.0. With the personnel each has available ahead of them . . . Bobby Tague ran a 1:50.5 for Kansas at Austin; Eddie Southern a 4:6.8 and Drew Dunlap a 1:51.5 for Texas . . . all three teams could smash the record here.
ion, unwrapped a 3:06.5 N. no. 3 carry at Austin to pull the Sooners back into contention. Bobby Ringo hit 1:54.9 in the half after veteran Gary Carr led off with :49.0.
VI 3-1951
AUTO PARTS
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Most bitter item of Kansas' defeat was not the fact that OU erased KU's meet record, but that the Jayhawkers led by 18 yards going into the anchor mile. Tom Skutka, a 4:11 Big Eight Indoor champion, could do no better than 4:17 that night and fell before not only Hodgson but Texas' great little distance hand, Joe Villarreal, who sped 4:08.9
k.u. relays danc
sat., april 19
union ballroom
$1.00 per couple
music by the
harlan
livingood
band
tion's rated
Tuesday. April 15, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
Bv BOB MACY
A national champion is something a school can be proud of be it basketball, debate, football or track. Along with a national champion in some such event you will also find a backing of national championship calibre. Not so at KU.
About the only thing KU is national champion in is the apathy field. KU had a basketball team that many agree could have whipped the best in the nation if both clubs were at top strength. Yet, many times the students didn't turn out for games the way they could have. (Although going to a game at 6:00 to find the student section almost full can get discouraging.) The before-game rallies were the really pitiful part of the lack of support that was shown for the KU squad. Usually the rallies consisted of the cheerleaders, Sarge and his fellow canines, two men from Buildings and Grounds that happened to wander by, and 10 or 15 students who happened to come upon the scene.
Before the basketball season was over, the students were again showing their lack of concern for top flight sports teams.
The KU indoor track squad was undoubtedly one of the nation's best—if not the top. They ran away with the point total at the Michigan State Relays, where some of the top indoor teams in the nation performed. Yet, the indoor meets in Allen Field House were attended by a very small number of students.
Usually there were more performers and newsmen on the ground by the track than there were in the spacious field house. A record—yes, that should be some kind of a record, although not one to be proud of.
The outdoor track season has started true to form with the other sports at KU; the students just won't come. Last week the students had a chance to see three of the top individual track performers in the nation in the dual meet here with Oklahoma State. One, Al Oerter, has already tossed the discus 202-feet 6-inches for an unofficial world's record. Another, Jayhawker Ernie Shelby, is fast approaching the world mark in the broad jump. The third man, Orlando Hazley, has proven he can come close to tieing or breaking the 100-yard dash mark.
Yet, as usual, Memorial Stadium was nearly bare last Saturday.
In spite of the fact KU students had a chance to see some of the top track stars in the nation, the students just wouldn't show up for the meet.
Why won't students turn out for track meets like they will other sporting events? The big reason most give is that the meets move too slowly and there isn't enough action. Today that just isn't the case. There is still some delay, but meet planners have worked so there is very little time for the spectators to get bored. Spacing of the events, adding other races and many features have made track meets something any sports fan can enjoy.
Kansas has come to be known as the Oklahoma of Big Eight and national track, yet the KU students have fallen far short of presenting a following that can compare with those high ratings.
Washington In First Place Yanks Haven't Played Yet
By UNITED PRESS
No, dear reader, you are not holding your newspaper upside down—Washington is in first place in the American League today.
But you'd better look fast, and manager Cookie Lavagetto better enjoy life while he may. Because this has happened to other Washington teams that won the opening game of the season while other teams were idle, and we all know what happened to them.
But that's a nasty thought to bring up on a day when Lavette and his merry men, particularly Cuban pitcher Pedro Ramos, are the toasts of the game for their stirring 5-2 triumph over the Boston Red Sox in yesterday's traditional opening game before President Eisenhower and a crowd of 23,675.
The last Senators team to win an opener was the 1955 array and they wound up in that familiar home of Washington clubs-last place.
An average of more than 10,400 new residents have settled in the 13-county San Francisco Bay Region every month since 1950, according to the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce.
Class of '61
Remember To Vote For
Tom Ash—President Steve Newcomer—Vice-President Barbara Holm—Secretary Nancy Kinser—Treasurer
Richard E. Dowell, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore and tournament chairman, said there will be two brackets of singles for the elimination. The over-all winners will be the best three out of five in the doubles tournament.
This year's last table tennis tournament will be held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Student Union Activities will give four trophies—two for the team winners and two for the runners up.
Dowell said both men and women students are eligible to enter. Registration is being taken at the information booth in the Kansas Union. He said there are no fees and all equipment is furnished by SUA.
The last tournament, a singles, was held in November. Tonight the table tennis club will play Washburn at Topeka.
Sophomore Class Officers
Trophies will be awarded to champions in four types of billiards played in the Student Union Activities elimination tournament April 21-25. The playoffs for all games will be April 25.
KU Table Tennis Event Wednesday
Ted A. Diehl, Lawrence freshman and tournament chairman, said all
students are eligible to enter. Entry blanks and contest information are available in the Kansas Union Jay Bowl. Deadline for entries is Friday. The tournament games are: call shot (14-1 continuous), three cushion straight rail and snooker.
Lovenquth, Merrit Cut
ST. LOUIS —(UP)— Right handed pitcher Lynn Lovenguth and Lloyd Merrit were cut by the St. Louis Cardinals today, leaving the player roster at the legal limit of 28. The Cardinals said they had not as yet decided to which clubs Lovenguth and Merrit would be sent.
San Francisco's Cow Palace, largest indoor arena in the West, is valued at more than $50,000,000 and can seat more than 17,000.
In addition to his world record peg of 202 feet $ \mathbf{6}!\mathbf{2} - \mathrm{inches} $ at the Arkansas Relays, Kansas discus giant Al Oerter fired five other heaves beyond 190 feet. He thus exceeded his one-week-old career peak of 188 feet 2-inches six times.
Oerter Breaking Own Marks
Casey Stengel when asked about this year's Yankees: "If my guys blow this one, I certainly should have staved a dentist in Kansas City. Those there other fellers got no right in the same ball park and my, ain't it gonna be a nice summer."
.
Amherst Will Try To Speed Up Game
DRESS YOUR PART
Miss Merlows and the women in your life beseech you to keep in step with fashion! City Club makes it easy with a great new exhibition of shoes for dressing. Shop end every day! See for yourself—today!
Marion Merlows, lovely star of radio and television.
CITY CLUB
SHOES FOR MEN
As Advertised in Esquire
AMHERST, Mass. — A test was planned for today to decide if college baseball time should be cut down by one hour.
Yes Casey, It'll Be A Very Nice Summer
The experiment will be tried during the Amherst College-American international game. If successful, Amherst Coach Paul Eckly said it could put to its best use during the sometimes cold weather of April and early Mav.
No infield practice during innings;
any player attempting to stall a game
will be penalized; ball-tossing between outs will be forbidden; pitcher warm-ups will go on while his team is at bat.
Some of the time shorteners are:
CITY CLUB SHOES FOR MEN As Advertised in Esquire
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Supplies for
RELAYS FLOATS
- Spray Paint
- Wire Netting
- Staples
Tools
All other items needed to do the job quickly and well
PHONE VI 3-2981
ZIMMERMAN
HARDWARE
& SUPPLY
1832 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
"STUDENT BODY"
JOHN DOWNING PRES
STRONG GOVERNMENT
NEEDS
FIRM SUPPORTS
CAROL PLUMB V-PRES
"WRITE IN"
DOWNING - PLUMB
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 15. 1958
Campus Club News
Groups Plan Meetings Art Fraternity Elects
Newcomers' Club
Sam Anderson, instructor of German, will speak to the Newcomers' Club on his trip to Russia, at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Art Museum lounge.
Mrs. Mervin Lee, chairman of the hostess committee, will be assisted by Mrs. John Meixner and Mrs. Paul E. Wilson. Mrs. Franklin Murphy will preside at the tea table.
Delta Phi Delta
. . .
Max Griffin. Salina junior, has been elected president of Delta Phi Delta. honorary art fraternity.
Other officers elected were Jan Harper, Winchester, Ill. junior, vicepresident.
Lois VanLiew, Lawrence, corresponding secretary; Wilma Deitcher, Manhattan, recording secretary; June Carter, Lincoln, Neb., treasurer. All are sophomores.
.. On The Hill..
Delta Tau Delta
Delta Tau Delta fraternity held its annual Paiama Party Friday.
A dinner was held at the Dine-A-Mite and dancing followed to the music of Don Rose at the chapter house.
- * *
Alpha Phi Alpha
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity has announced the initiation of eight men. Doss Cunningham, Kansas City, Mo. junior, was honor initiate.
Other initiates are David Brooks, Kenton Keith, both Kansas City, Kan. freshmen; James Perry, Lawrence sophomore; David Wake, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Chaucey Jones, Chicago, Frank Holman, John Tarlton, both of Topeka, all Juniors.
Lambda Chi Alpha
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity had as dinner guests Thursday George Spasyk of the fraternity's office of administration, Indianapolis, Ind. and 1st. Lt. and Roderic Howe. Lt. Howe is instructor of Army ROTC.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
NOW THRU WED.
Joanne Woodward
in
"The Long
Hot Summer"
with Paul Newman,
Anthony Francisosa
Shows 7 & 9
VARSITY
SHOW SHOWING!
TODAY
"St. Louis
Blues"
with
Nat "King" Cole,
Eartha Kitt, Pearl
Bailey, Cab Cai-
loway, Ella Fitz-gerald
Romance Language Department
★★★★★
LAWRENCE
The faculty of French of the Romance Language department will give a dessert-coffee Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Miss Barbara Craig, assistant professor of Romance Languages.
Fats Domino Jerry Lee Lewis in "Jamboree" co-hit... Susan Oliver in "The Green Eyed Blonde"
Invitations have been sent to students taking courses in French who have shown an interest in further study of the language. Information concerning further French courses, requirements for majoring in the department, job opportunities, and opportunities for travel and study abroad will be presented.
Several members of La Confrerie, honorary French society, will help serve.
The pinning of Margaret Green, to George Pohlman, Natoma senior, has been announced.
Couple Tells Of Pinning
Green-Pohlman
Miss Green is employed at the Registrar's Office. Mr. Poblman formerly attended Kansas State Teachers College at Hays, where he was affiliated with Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity.
Wedding Plans Announced
Jane
Miss McMinimy is a sophomore in the College and a resident of Gertrude Sellards Pearson dormitory, Mr. Matthews, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean E. Matthews, Ashland, is a senior in the School of Engineering and a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
MERLYN MCMINIMY
The wedding date has been set for May 31.
The engagement of Merlyn McMinimy to William B. Matthews has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell A. McMinimy, Ashland.
Use turmeric instead of saffron in yeast dough and sauces for a pale golden color.
TWIN ROCK'N RIOT SHOW!
Seven savage punks on a weekend binge of violence!
COOL AND THE CRAZY
Produced by E.C. HODGEN IR - WILLIAM WITNEY
Drawn & illustrated by RICHARD C. SARAFIAN - INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTIONS
Reproduced by AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES
SEE HOT MODS VS.
MOTORCYCLES
SEE THE "BEACH PARTY RUMBLE"
TWIN ROCK'N RIOT SHOW!
Seven savage punks on a weekend binge of violence!
COOL AND THE CRAZY
Produced by E. G. HODGEN JR • WILLIAM MITNEY
Directed by RICHARD SARATIAN - IMPERIAL PRODUCTIONS
Produced by AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES
SEE HOT RODS VS. MOTORCYCLES
SEE THE BEACH PARTY "BREACH PARTY" RUMble!
DRAGSTRIP RIOT
MURDER ... at 120 miles per hour!
Produced by D. DALE IRELAND
Executive by GEORGE HODGINS • TRANS WORLD PRODUCTIONS
Directed by DAVID BRADLEY
Presented by AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES
"Cool" Shown 7:08, 9:41—"Riot" Shown 8:25
WEDNESDAY
DRAGSTRIP RIOT
MURDER ... at 120 miles per hour!
Produced by D. DALE IRELAND
Steven Spielen by GEORGE HODGINS - TRANS WORLD PRODUCTIONS
Directed by DAVID BRADLEY
Presented by AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
"Cool" Shown 7:08, 9:41—"Riot" Shown 8:25
Varsity
WEDNESDAY
4 DAYS
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Varsity
ronite Nat "King" Cole "St. Louis Blues"
CHILLICOTHE, Ill. — (UP) — Mrs. John C. E. Ernst, who likes to knit while riding the bus to her job at a local department store, has solved her problem.
Dropped Stitches Problem Solved
She may have solved one of yours, too, if you like to knit. She has come up with a combination knitting needle-crochet hook.
hook to pick up dropped stitches and tie ends while knitting in the bus. And after she didn't have one in her knitting bag.
Trouble was she needed a crochet
So she had a local gunsmith make the combination needle-hook. Then she had it patented. It went into commercial production early this year. The device is called "Pick Up Stitch."
V
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
THE POSTMAN COMETH
I have recently received several letters from readers which have been so interesting, so piquant, so je ne sais quoi, that I feel I must share them with all of you. The letters and my replies follow:
Maybe you can help me. I came up to college eight years ago. On my very first day I got into a bridge game in the student union. I am still in the same bridge game. I have never gone to class, cracked a book, or paid any tuition. All I do is play bridge.
To explain my long absence and keep the money coming from home, I told a harmless little lie. I said I was in medical school. This made Dad (my father) terribly proud. It also enabled me to keep playing bridge. We were both very happy.
But all good things must come to an end. Mine ended when I came home for Christmas vacation. I arrived to find that Sister (my sister) was in the hospital with an ingrown spleen. Dr. Norbert Sigafoos, the eminent ingrown spleen surgeon, was scheduled to operate, but unfortunately he was run over by a hot-food cart on the way to the scrubbing room.
"HARLOW WILL FIX SISTER" (CRANFORD)
SIR:
"Oh, never mind," chuckled Dad (my father). "Harlow (me) will fix Sister (my sister)."
25 words
Well sir, what could I do? If I told the truth I would make a laughingstock out of Dad (my father) who had been bragging about me all over town. Also I would get yanked out of school which would be a dirty shame just when I am beginning to understand the weak club bid.
There was nothing for it but to brazen it out. I got Sister (my sister) apart all right, but I must confess myself completely at a loss as to how to put her back together again. Can you suggest anything? They're getting pretty surly around here.
Sincerely,
SLIDE R Thursday
YOUNG filing, mger Mus week. Peplication ment baerence, K
PAIR OI pay for Thorne.
ELLIS H Year 1951 in Malot Zohran.
HAVE H
livery,
service
Cafe, V
EXPERI service papers. Maine.
Dear Harlow:
BEVERA cold. C closed p Ice plan 0350.
TYPING regular papers desired. 8660.
Harlow Protein
Indeed I do have the solution for you—the solution that has never failed me when things close in: Light up a Marlboro! Knots untidy as you puff that fine rich tobacco. Shade becomes light as that grand flavor comes freely and friendlily through that splendid filter. Who can stay glum when Marlboro gives you such a lot to like? Not I. Not you. Not nobody.
SIR:
Just yesterday—thirty years later, mark you! I went fishing in Widgiwagan. I caught a four-pound bass. I took the fish home, cut it open, and what do you think I found inside?
Just off the campus where I go to school there is a lake called Lake Widgiwagan. Thirty years ago when my father was an undergraduate here he went fishing one day in Lake Widgiwagan and dropped his Deke pin in the water. He dived for days but never found it.
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You guessed it! Two tickets to the Dempsey-Firpo fight.
Sincerely,
***
Willis Wayde
@ 1958 Max Shulman
This column is brought to you by the makers of Marlboro cigarettes who suggest that if your mail has recently been blessed with some money from home, invest it in the cigarette with the long white ash—Marlboro, of course!
.
Tuesday, April 15, 1958 University Daily Kansan
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Page 8
University.Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 15. 1950
Engineers Hear Moore, Crown Queen At Dance
The engineers went from a discussion of bleak weather conditions at the South Pole to the fair weather activity of queen crowning at their banquet and dance Friday night in the Kansas Union.
Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman, was crowned queen of the dance. Her attendants were Suzanne Kastner, Salina sophomore, and Marilyn Erickson, Mission junior.
"From the people who know something about it, it is the opinion that the Russians are keeping busy," he said.
Bill Moore, Kansas City Star staff correspondent on the International Geophysical Year expedition to Antarctica, spoke at the banquet on "Operation Deep Freeze."
Twelve countries participated in the explorations.
"Alter Russia and the United States the other countries in the IGY project lag pretty far behind," he stated.
He said the United States appears to be slightly behind Russia in the amount of exploratory work being done.
"The spectacular British treks to the South Pole were not a part of IGY activity, he added.
The trip to Antarctica was not a completely pleasant experience, he said. The weather and other conditions prevented its being a luxury cruise.
Mr. Moore was aboard an ice breaker on the way from Capetown, South Africa to Antarctica. The voyage included a 1,000 mile stretch on a 6-to-8-foot-thick ice pack.
At the explorations base things were relatively comfortable, he said.
"We had about everything you'd want. There was beer, movies, and plenty of books. There were no women, of course."
Carlos Campuzano, Kansas City, Mo. senior and president of the Engineering Student Council, presented Mr. Moore with an honorary membership in the council.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
5 Receive Grants For Ad Convention
Five seniors in the advertising sequence of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will attend sessions of the annual ninth district convention of the Advertising Federation of America in Kansas City, Mo., April 18-19, on scholarships provided by the Folger Coffee Co. of Kansas City.
Receiving attendance grants to the "Omnibus of Ideas" meeting are James G. Hohn, Marysville; Carol Huston, Kansas City, Mo; Clydene Boots, Isabel; Kent Pelz, Des Plaines, Ill.; and John P. Clarke, Loveeland, Colo.
Other members of Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, professional mens and women's advertising societies, and Prof. James E. Dykes and George Link, Jr., instructor of journalism, also will attend.
Museum To Show Three Films On Art
Three films in color will be shown in the Museum of Art's Films On Art series at 7:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. Thursday in the Museum lecture hall.
They are "Thomas Hart Benton Making a Mural." "Vincent Van Gogh," and "The World of Utrillo." The Benton film ties in with the April 12 opening of an exhibit of more than 70 of Mr. Benton's paintings, which will be on display until May 18 in the Art Museum.
The hummingbird's wings beat from 75 to 200 strokes per second. They are capable of flying forward or backward.
Revamp Study Of Languages Speaker Says
Dr. Emma M. Birkmaier, professor of education at the University of Minnesota, told an audience of nearly 200 in Bailey Auditorium Monday afternoon to forget all conceptions that the United States is leading the world in scientific know-how and culture.
Dr. Birkmaier was here in connection with a drive to arouse interest in the study of foreign languages.
Mary E. Hobson
DR. EMMA M. BIRKMAIER
"For a long time now, anything the Russians have done to their school curriculum has told us what they intend to do economically and politically. Right now, we are being threatened by Russia in many other areas besides military defense.
"All Soviet youngsters take a foreign language from the fifth through the tenth grades. Of these, 40 per cent have studied English."
Outstanding Prizes For Outstanding Athletes
Prizes given to outstanding athletes, queens and parade float winners in the 33rd annual Kansas Relays will be far more valuable than red, white or blue ribbons.
KU's 'Robin Hood' Opens Wednesday
"Robin Hood," a 3-act play will be presented five times in the experimental theater of the Music and Dramatic Arts building April 16-19. The play is the last Children's Theater production for the semester.
Robin Hood, the legendary herobandit of the Sherwood Forest, will be played by Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb. freshman, Maid Marian will be played by Nan O'Brien, Great Lakes Ill. sophomore.
The play is directed by Miss Sally Six, instructor in speech and drama.
The first performance will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday. On Thursday and Friday there will be matinees at 4:15 p.m. Saturday performances will be at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
What about us? Dr. Birkmaier told the assembly that the United States ranks at the bottom in foreign language study in high school.
"After this, Russian children take another modern language, either Hindi, Arabic or Chinese. These are weapons that they have—they, who are disputing our world leadership," Dr. Birkmaier said.
Fifty-six per cent of our high schools do not offer any modern foreign language," she said.
"The academically talented student will be a leader in tomorrow's world.
"It is unfair to tell a student to learn French so that he can do eventual research in history when he will probably need Chinese much more in the near future. In a like manner, it is wrong to tell a science student to study German for the same purposes for which he will eventually need a fluent knowledge of Russian." Dr. Birkmaier stated.
Watches and clocks, engraved medals and trophies to be given by the KU Athletic Department are on display in a downtown jewelry store. The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce will give trophies to the top three floats in both men's and women's divisions. Nineteen organized houses have entered the parade contest.
The Relays royalty will get their gifts at a queens banquet Thursday night. The two queens, Kay Winegarner of KU and Emily Mohri or K-State, will receive miniature gold track shoes enameled with a red "K." The four attendants, all KU women, will receive miniature silver shoes. The queens will present all the prizes to athletes.
Wrist watches will be given winners in the university relays and individual events. Top men in the college class replays will get electric desk clocks. Second and third place winners in both classes will be given Kansas Relays medals.
Special trophies will go to winners in the Carl Rice high jump, the Glenn Cunningham mile and the decathlon. The winner of the Rice award will receive a replica of the large trophy on display with the other prizes.
The top three winners in the high school class will get Kansas Relays medals which are smaller than those to be given in the College class.
Relavis committee chairmen said tentative plans call for announcing the parade float winners at the Saturday afternoon events. They plan to award the six trophies at the Student Union Activities Dance Saturday night.
Trinidad, the most southerly of the West Indies, is closer to New York than to New Orleans.
Dick Patterson
Susie Stout
President of the Vice-President
Student Body
Qualifications
DICK
Chairman of All-Student Council 1957-1958
Chairman Big 8 Student Government Assn.
Owl Society—Junior Men's Honor Society
SUSIE
Vice-Chairman of All Student Council 1957-1958
Executive Chairman of All-University Curriculum Committee
Dean's Honor Roll
Paid for by Allied Greek-Independent Party
Daily Hansan
Wednesday, April 16, 1958
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 126
STUDENT ELECTION
VOTE
HERE
EARLY VOTING—Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior and nonpartisan candidate for student body president, casts his ballot during the first hour of voting.
Business School Curriculum Altered
Juniors entering the School of Business next fall will have a chance to enroll in the first pilot group section to be offered by the School of Business, Dean James R. Surface of the business school, announced Tuesday.
The section is a series of new curriculum requirements planned by the business school faculty.
The pilot group will coneer only the so called core courses which are required of all business school students regardless of their major. This group will take up 11 hours each semester of a regular class load.
Courses included in the section are business administration practices, marketing, statistics, finance production, and written communication.
"The main thrust is to specify the sequence of courses so that the instructor will know that everyone in class has had the previous courses offered and can build his class to a higher level." Dean Surface said.
One of the major differences between the pilot group and the program that is now in effect is that students will start out in a group and take the courses in regular sequence. They will be working with the same group of students both semesters as it is only possible to enter the section at the beginning of the fall term.
Students who are interested in applying for the section should sign up in 214 Strong, the business school office, by May 1. A meeting in
Strong Auditorium to answer questions about the program wil be held at 4 p.m. April 24.
Political Convocation Draws 300 Students
Law Day Events Include Speaker, Moot Court
The School of Law will observe its annual Law Day April 24 with moot court competition and a banquet address.
The traditional banquet is to be held at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. An address by Harry F. Corbin, president of the University of Wichita, will follow.
Mr. Corbin graduated from the KU School of Law in 1950. He got his A.B. degree from Wichita University in 1936, and a bachelor of divinity degree from the University of Chicago in 1943.
Moot court competition, the first time in its history to be held on Law Day, will convene at 4 p.m. in the new court room of Green Hall.
Four students of Appellate Court Practice, a required second year course, will be selected to enter moot court competition. The top three chosen on April 24 will represent the School of Law in National moot court competition.
Fair and continued mild through Thursday. Low today near 45; high near 76; low Thursday morning in middle 40's.
Judges for the mour court are Walter A. Huxman, retired judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals; Justice Robert T. Price, of Supreme Court of Kansas, and William C. Kandt, district court judge, division I, Sedgwick County.
Senior law students are planning and executing the entire program for Law Day. Dick Foster, Halstead senior, is in charge of the day.
Weather
Patterson Blasts Kansan For 'Smear Campaign'
Tuesday's 2-party political rally nearly turned into a 1-man show, as only one of the three candidates for student body president addressed 300 Vox Populi and Allied Greek-Independent party members.
The lone candidate. AGI's Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior, blasted The Daily Kansan for what he called "the biggest smear campaign ever on this campus."
The other two president candidates weren't at the rally. Vox candidate John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior, was in Topeka on Elections Committee business, and nonpartisan candidate Ed Prelock, Cleve'and, Ohio senior, made no appearance.
Prelock said Tuesday night that since the rally was postponed from Monday to Tuesday he had never been formally invited to speak or attend.
Many Speakers
Vox had about twice as many party members as AGI at the rally and dominated applause.
Both parties got into the act, with speeches by Patterson, his vicepresidential running mate Susie Stout, Wichita junior, Vox leaders Dave Wilson, Leawood junior, and Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore (Vox president), and AGI's Jim Schultz, Salina senior, and Joel Sterrett, Toneka senior (AGI president).
In the opening speech, Wilson reviewed the 8-month history of Vox, saying "a group of KU students headed by Jim Austin set out to organize the best political party KU has ever known.
"Vox spent 10 weeks selecting its candidates." Wilson said. "Each candidate represented a different living group or school district."
Wilson said Vox would not load the ASC or committees with members from one house or a small group of houses.
At the end of his speech, Wilson
Kansas legislators. Standing on the right Sen. Donald Hults (R-Lawrence) and sitting on the far left is Joe McDowell. (D-Kansas City).
POLITICAL DEBATE—The Kansas Legislature's special budget session was debated Tuesday night in the Kansas Union Cafeteria by two
introduced the 25 Vox candidates for the ASC.
Patterson took a phrase from Monday's UDK editorial page to say "If anything has hit 'gutbucket bottom,' it is the principles of journalism at KU."
732 Vote
Voting was unusually heavy this morning with 732 students voting at all polls through 10:30.
Fifty-six students voted for student body president at Malott Hall, 66 at Lindley, 70 at Marvin, 121 at Strong basement, 148 at Strong Rotunda, 76 at Bailey, 159 at Fraser and 72 at the Kansas Union.
A total of 313 votes were cast for junior class officers, the highest of any class. Eighty-five of the votes were cast in Malott Hall.
He listed the major achievements of the ASC this year and said "The results of student govern- mant are a direct result of AGI control of the ASC."
Patterson said "It seems some students at KU take great pleasure in running down campus leaders" rather than emphasizing the good points of student government.
Miss Stout preceded Patterson with a restatement of the ticket's platform, and said "It is a tragedy when a large personalized scandal has to be created to get votes for a political party."
Austin spoke briefly and drew the loudest applause of the day when he introduced Sarge, Lawrence retriever, as the Vox mascot.
Sterrett introduced the AGI candidates, and said the AGI slate was "selected through the true primary."
Murphy, Deans To Wichita Banquet
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, the deans of all KU schools, and other administrators will attend a KU alumni banquet in Wichita April 29.
Chancellor Murphy will be the speaker, and the KU Chorale will entertain. Attendance will be limited to 400 alumni.
Paul J. Adam of Kansas City, Kan national president of the Alumni Association, will attend.
Former KU-Y Head Named Dean
William H. Allaway, former general secretary of the combined YM-YWCA at the University, has been named assistant dean of men at Stanford University, where he had been director of a freshman men's dormitory.
Dr. Allaway headed the KU-Y for several years, resigning in February 1957 to complete work for the doctor of education degree at Denver University.
ASC Governs YOU; Support Your Candidates
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 16, 1958
I'll just say I'm very proud of the team. We have a strong roster, and we are ready to face any challenge. Let's go for it!
SARGE A CANDIDATE?—KU's favorite dog-about-campus went along with the gag when a Vox party banner was pinned on him at Tuesday's convocation. However, political observers on both sides of the fence predicted that Sarge, to retain his popularity, was still strictly nonpartisan. (Daily Kansan photo)
One Last Word
Most of what can be said for John Downing and Carol Plumb as candidates has been said on this page during the past couple of days. In the news columns, each presidential candidate and party has had an opportunity to express its platform and outline programs which it will try to put in next year.
Today, no one goes with you into the election booth and no one will look over your shoulder. After you get within 50 feet of the poll you are the boss; you are the one who makes the decision. No one will know how you vote unless you tell them.
The strength of the Student Council rests on the voter's shoulders alone. It is the voter who "puts them in" and it is the voter who can pull them right back out again.
We ask that you read the political news in the following copies of The Daily Kansan and then draw your own conclusions;
Tuesday, April 15.
Monday, April 14
Monday April 14
Friday. April 11.
Thursday, April 10.
Thursday, April 10
Wednesday, March 26
Friday, February 28.
You will find, after a thorough study of each story about student government, that Downing and Miss Plumb will carry a clean slate into the elections today.
We have criticized other candidates and past student councils because they have not shown us accomplishments to warrant praise. We, like you, look for persons who can take a student government job and produce worthwhile results.
We will be the first to criticize Downing, Miss Plumb and a Council under Vox control if they betray the confidence of the electorate.
However, we have the utmost confidence in Downing and Miss Plumb, and believe we will be able to retain this confidence throughout their terms in office.
The Editors.
Quotes From The News
AUGUSTA, Ga.—President Eisenhower, calling on Congress to approve quickly his plan to extend unemployment compensation benefits to idle workers:
"All of us in government have a special responsibility to act to alleviate the hardships which are being suffered through no fault of their own by these workers and their families."
WASHINGTON — Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, predicted Congressmen who have been talking to farmers at home will find they are opposed to the recently vetoed bill to freeze farm price supports at 1957 levels;
Dailu Hansan
"I think farmers feel as many others that what agriculture needs is a little more of a thaw and less of a freeze."
University of Kansas student newspaper
bounded location became newsweek 1904,
brownstone 1908, dugout 1923.
Telephone VIking 3-2709
Extension 231, 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. Mall subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered matter after March 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Brown Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Hall Hall Martin Leroy
Zimmerman Associate Director
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler Business Manager
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
What Do You Think?
For the past two days, the editors of The Daily Kansan have been hammering away at one theme: the All Student Council needs to be cleaned out and restaffed with competent personnel.
For this purpose, The Daily Kansan chooses John Downing and Carol Plumb, write-in candidates for president and vice-president of the student body, and Vox Populi's slate of candidates for ASC representative slots.
We think the Downing-Plumb ticket represents what's best in the current crop of candidates. From their candidates and their platform, we think Vox party is capable of a far better performance than the record of AGI.
We may wake up in the cold gray dawn tomorrow and realize that we were dead wrong. You, the voter, may make other choices. There is
something, after all, to be said for every candidate.
But it's a cinch that committee representation on the Council needs to be more evenly apportioned.
That rule which requires the student body president to have had ASC experience is hogwash, and should be disposed of as such.
There is no question so important that Council meetings must be closed to the student public.
With these things in mind, we hope you'll join with us in tossing out the present ASC crew.
If you don't like Council committee membership "packing"; if you or a friend would like a crack at the job of student body president without being required to serve on the ASC; if you would like to be admitted to every Council meeting—then you have a case against the present administration.
It's time for a cleanup in the ASC. We hope you'll join with us in getting the job done.
The Editors
Three Suggestions
Here are three things The Daily Kansan feels a good student government should accomplish that the local administration has failed to do this year:
1. Effectively protect the students' rights against the encroachment of the University administration.
An alert student council would have been up in arms when the idea for the high-priced parking lot east of the Union came up. With parking space at 50c a car, not many students can afford to park in their own Union's parking lot.
An alert Council would have protested vigorously when the University sold student seating at the basketball doubleheader in January. That was a regularly scheduled home game and as such, should have been covered by student ID cards. But our Council didn't say boo.
2. Prevent staffs of student publications from becoming entrenched in one house.
Although the Council's publications committee selects the editor and business manager of the K-Book, Student Directory, Jayhawker, Squat, and University Calendar, these publications have a nasty habit of obtaining editors from the same house, year after year.
If the top jobs in these publications were more evenly distributed, more students might take an interest in working on them.
3. Every student on the campus should know when applications are needed for Council committees. The committee members should then be chosen on their merits.
If this is done, the "packing" which now prevails in committees would cease to exist. In the past, some students simply didn't know when vacancies were available on these committees.
The Editors
How To Mark Write-In
To vote for a write-in candidate:
If you choose to vote for a write-in candidate in today's election, you should be extra careful as to how you mark your ballot.
1. Write the candidate's name in the space provided on the ballot. Spell the name correctly. Opinions of election judges vary, but the ballot with an incorrectly spelled name stands a good chance of being thrown
out or counted under a separate tallv.
2. Mark a 1 beside the name just as you would for a name printed on the ballot. Names written on ballots, but which do not have a 1 marked beside them will be tossed out.
POLITICIANS IN A ROW—Looking over their audience at yesterday's convocation are from left, Joel Sterrett. Topeka senior; Jim Schultz. Salina
senior; Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore, and Dave Wilson, Leawood junior. All made speeches at the convocation.
Twice a day the world's highest tides funnel into Nova Scotia's minas Basin, the eastern branch of the Bay of Fundy. The waters may rise 53 feet.
The home of John Harvard's mother at Stratford-on-Avon in England was presented to Harvard University in 1909 as a rendezvous for American visitors.
The National Geographic Society- Palomar Observatory Sky Survey, called the most extensive map ever conceived by the mind of man, charts three-quarters of the heavens.
14
Jazz Festival Here Sunday
The Big Eight Jazz Festival will begin at KU at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium, Donald D. Conard, Garden City senior and president of the KU Jazz Club, announced Monday.
Page 3
Admission is one dollar a person and tickets are on sale at the information booth of the Kansas Union. The event is sponsored by the KU Jazz Club and Student Union Activities.
Jazz groups from KU, Kansas State, Oklahoma State and Missouri will perform six numbers each. There also will be a musical contest. Each group will pay a version of "A Foggy Day," and will be judged upon its interpretation of the song and originality of improvisation.
A professional jazz combo, the Larry Cummings Trio, and jazz vocalist Pattie Tucker, both now appearing at the Embers Club in Kansas City will be featured guest artists. Miss Tucker also is a singer in the Kansas City Jazz Workshop.
The names of the college groups attending are the College Kats Kombo, Missouri; Dale Norris Sexet, Kansas State; The Esquires, Oklahoma State; and the Don Conard Quartet, Kansas.
Each school will provide a judge for the contest. Betty Miller, well-known Kansas City jazz pianist, will be the judge for KU. Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, will present a trophy to the winning groun.
Conard said that jazz concerts of this nature are being planned at other schools of the Big Eight. He said that when problems in transportation are solved, more schools will be represented in future concerts.
Accountants' Day To Be Thursday
Accountants' Day, Thursday, will feature a computer demonstration and speeches by public accountants in various fields.
Accounting students will visit the Computation Center in Strong Hall Thursday morning. In the afternoon Boeing Airplane Company will present a demonstration and talk on "The Accountant in the 21st Century."
A panel will discuss specialized problems in oil, grain milling and utilities. On the panel will be Jack Chism Sr. of Bonicamp, Koelling and Smith, Paul German of Standard Milling Co., and Samuel Holcomb of Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
John Lawler, assistant director of American Institute of Certified Public Accountants will be principal speaker at a banquet in the Union. His topic will be "The Challenge of a Professional Career."
A single oyster can produce as many as 100 million eggs a season.
Bewildered?
If all you hear are claims, come in and see proof of quality service.
Wednesday, April 16. 1958 University Daily Kansan
LEONARD'S Standard Service 9th & Ind.—VI 3-9830
THE NEW YORK HARBOUR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
GO, MAN, GO—These four members of the KU Jazz Club, Ron Allerton, Hiawatha senior, Gary Foster, Lawrence senior, Jay Fisher, Marion senior and Don Conard, Garden City senior, make final plans for the SUA Big 8 jazz concert to be held at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Color Film Will Trace Circulatory System
Hemo, the magnincent, a minute color film to be shown Wednesday in Bailey projection room will trace the origin of the blood and the development of the circulatory system. The vivid description uses animation, microscope photography and other medical photography techniques which will show a beating human heart.
The TV film, made by the Bell System, is narrated by Dr. Frank Baxter of Southern California University. He will be assisted by Frank Carlson, TV and movie actor.
Five KU faculty members are taking part in the Wichita Art Assn. Craft Workshop and Conference Monday through Saturday.
Five Participate In Craft Workshop
J. Sheldon Carey, professor of ceramics, and Maryln Austin, assistant instructor of design, will be
on the sculpture and ceramics program Wednesday and Thursday. Friday and Saturday Robert K. Montgomery, assistant instructor of design, will show techniques of soldering, welding, mounting stones and other problems in silversmithing.
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KU JAZZ CLUB and SUA Present
BIG 8 JAZZ FESTIVAL FOR1958
Featuring groups from KU, MU, Kansas State, and Oklahoma State
SUNDAY, APRIL 20
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
EXTRA FEATURE Larry Cummings Trio With Pattie Tucker
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 16, 1958
Spartans Have Fine One-Two Punch
No team in the 33rd Kansas Relays this weekend will have a better one-two punch on the end of a 2-mile relays team than Michigan State's Willie Atterberry and Dave Lean.
This is one of only two events the Spartans have entered which means they'll load the gun for this Saturday afternoon derby. With Atterberry, 23-year-old service returnee sophomore, anchoring, State set a new Marine Corps Relays record Saturday in 7:34.2. Only California's Texas Relays kings have run faster this year.
Little wonder. Atterberry and Lean both are fast. The former clocked two of the best freshman 440 and 880 times in the land last year, 47.1 and 150.1. In addition he set a world outdoor record in the 600 with a 1:08.5 in the Ohio Relays. At Compton in 1956 he ran fourth in the final trials 400-meter hurdles, losing a U. S. Olympic spot by six-tenths to veteran Josh Culbreathe.
Lean can present equally glittering credentials. He ran the swiftest Indoor 600 in history on dirt footing to win the Big Ten in 1:10.2 He also is defending Outdoor 880 champion and won the A957 Indoor quarter.
Still, the Spartans will not have the field to themselves. Three Big Eight teams, Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska are capable of defeating them.
With their great sophomore miler, Gail Hodgson, anchoring, the Sooners won the Southwestern Relays Saturday in 7:36.8. This is an improvement of six full seconds over their third-place finish at Texas. Hodgson is believed capable of 1:50. He'll carry good help from another sophomore, Bobby Ringo, who is expected to run under 1:54, in the third leg.
Both the Cornhuskers and Jayhawkers have added power since the outset of the season. Returning
to the Scarlet after a foot operation is Joe Mullins, second only to Atterberry among the nation's fresh half-milers last year on 1:50.6. Knolly Barnes, the secondary hand, has done 1:53.
Kansas is welcoming back sophomore Clif Cushman from a winter-long siege of mononucleosis. He trailed only Atterberry and Mullins on the national yearling rolls last year in 1:51.1. Furthermore, he dipped to 1:50.4 over 800 meters on foreign tour last summer.
Running only his second meet Saturday, he clocked 1:55.4 for third against Oklahoma State, then came back with a 48.8 leg in the mile relay.
The Jayhawkers probably can present better balance than any rival with Dale Lubs, 1:52.5 at Texas, Miler Tom Skutka, capable of the same, and Bobby Tague,
Major League Standings By UNITED PRESS American League
W L Pct.
New York 1 0 1.000
Detroit 1 0 1.000
Baltimore 1 0 1.000
Kansas City 1 0 1.000
Washington 1 1 .500
Chicago 0 1 .000
Cleveland 0 1 .000
Boston 0 2 .000
Tuesday's Results
New York 3. Boston 0
Baltimore 6. Washington 1
Denver 5. Cleveland 1
Kansas City 5. Cleveland 0
W L Pct
Philadelphia 1 0 1.000
Pittsburgh 1 0 1.000
San Francisco 1 0 1.000
Chicago 1 0 1.000
St. Louis 0 1 .000
Cincinnati 0 1 .000
Los Angeles 0 1 .000
Milwaukee 0 1 .000
Tuesday's Results
Philadelphia Cincinnati
Pittsburgh 4, M. Washington 3 (14 innings)
San Francisco 8, Los Angeles 0
Chicago 3, St. Louis 0 (night)
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
1:50.5 at Texas, joining Cushman. Tague has been the sensation of the early Relays season in this camp, clocking 1:51.5 at Austin in addition to his 1:50.5 and winning his first open Outdoor start against OSU in 1:52.5. He matched that clocking in anchoring a Sprint Medley championship in the Arkansas Relays.
Without Cushman at Austin, Kansas ran 7:48.3 for fourth. Running in the 20-mile gusts at Arkansas it clocked only 7:50.8.
Skutka is the only returning
Detroit Wants 1964 Olympic Games
DETROIT —(UP)— Mayor Louis Miriani is putting his weight behind a move to get the 1964 Olympic games for Detroit. The mayor has asked city attorneys to investigate the possibility of drafting an ordinance creating a 7-member Olympic Stadium authority which would have the power to sell bonds for a $15,000,000 stadium.
Dennison Flameproof Crepe Paper
Georgetown beat them at Drake. The collision of these four clubs here certainly will imperil KU's 1-year-old record.
KEELER'S BOOK STORE 939 Mass.
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Wednesday, April 16. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Heavy Bowling Slate In Next Two Weeks
A heavy schedule of bowling is coming up in the next week, with the results of the Men's National Intercollegiate Tournament due and the beginning of the Men's Campus Tournament.
"I don't think we'll win anything, but we are improving," Bascomb Fearing, bowling manager, said concerning the Jayhawker chances in the Men's National Tournament.
Last year KU finished eighteenth with a score of 3,589 for a 5-man team with each man bowling a 4-game series. This year the team rolled a high total of 3,711.
Johnny Woody led the Jayhawkers with a high total of 773 for the 4-game series. Other scores were: David Stein 756, Wayne Hayman 737, Wade Lambel 731 and Ron Clark 714. Woody also had the highest single game with a 225. Ron Clark and Wayne Hayman followed him with scores of 215 and 205 respectively.
The events in the tournament include: regular intramural teams, singles, doubles and all events entries. Those entering in the tournament must pay the trophy fee. Wilt Chamberlain won the all events title last year.
In intramural bowling, the Annual Men's Campus Tournament begins next week. It is a handicap tourney with the handicaps based on intramural averages.
Fearing said that he expected entries to start pouring in later this week for the tourney. There are about 300 bowlers participating in intramurals this year, so a good turn-out is expected.
Underdogs In, Yankees Win
By UNITED PRESS
The "new look" 1958 season is only 48 hours old but the situation is normal in both leagues: the underdogs are kicking up a fuss in the National and the Yankees are off and running in the American.
That's the sum-up of big league baseball's first day of coast-to-coast activity—a day on which:
—Ruben Gomez stole the big show in San Francisco by pitching the Giants to an 8-0 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
—Two rookie pitchers scored victories on splendid relief efforts and seven other rookies figured in the headlines.
The world champion Milwaukee Braves lost the longest opener the National League had seen in 35 years.
And Stan Musial tied Mel Ott's National League record of 5,041 total bases for his career.
But most of all it was a day on which upstart National League teams upset "contenders" and the mighty Yankees got off to a typical start by winning while two of their chief rivals lost.
In the National, four second-division teams of 1957 beat four firstdivision teams of last season.
In the American, the Yankees "did it themselves," 3-0, over the Red Sox and the Tigers helped out the New Yorkers by beating the White Sox. 4-3.
Softball Umpires Report To Mikols
Any man who is familiar with softball rules and who is available to officiate intramural softball games has been asked by intramural director Walter Mikols to report to the intramural office as soon as possible.
Mikols announced at a managers meeting Tuesday that the biggest problem in the softball intramurals program now was the lack of officials. Officials are paid $1 per game.
Golfers Win, Netmen Still Losing
KU's golf team won its first victory of the season Tuesday by defeating Kansas State in a meet here but the netmen lost to the Wildcats.
The golf team's record is now one victory and three losses. Coach Jerry Waugh blames the weather and a corresponding lack of practice for this lopsided record.
"We have yet to play as well as we can," he said Tuesday. "Our returning lettermen are not yet up to form."
The three lettermen are Robert Davies, Dodge City senior; Bob Wood, Liberal junior, and Bill Toalson, Dodge City junior. Toalson, with a below par 66, owns the Lawrence Country Club record.
The teams Waugh's squad has ost to this year are Wichita University, The University of Houston, and Texas Christian University.
The team has two matches scheduled for this weekend. Friday afternoon it will meet Oklahoma and Saturday will play Nebraska. Both meets are here.
"We'll have to play real well to beat Oklahoma." Waugh said. "Oklahoma is defending league champion.
"We know very little about Nebraska so far. But we think we have a pretty good chance of winning. We're probably about equal in strength."
The tennis team, a wet weather
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The next match is scheduled for Monday at Nebraska.
versity and lost the next three to Oklahoma State, Wichita and Kansas State.
IVY LEAGUE CAPS
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$2.50 to $3.50 values----$1.00 off
Wichita Wins From E-State
Coach Denzell Gibbons' netmen dropped their matches with Kansas State here Tuesday. The Jayhawkers won two of five singles matches and split the doubles matches by losing one and winning one.
Ober's
"Our men are showing up pretty good," Gibbons said Tuesday. "We just need the right weather to give them a chance to practice."
VI 3-1951
The team's record this season is one win and three losses. KU picked up its lone victory in its first outing against Washburn Uni-
821 Mass.
EMPORIA, Kan. — (UP) — Wichita University took a doubleheader baseball win from Emporia State Tuesday, 3-2 and 6-2.
Wichita's first sacker, Dick Casidy, hit a homer, double and a single in four trips to the plate in the nightcap.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 16. 1958
Campus Club News
Professional Groups Meet, Elect Officers
Theta Tau
Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, has elected George Dodd, Oceanlake, Ore. junior, regent for the coming semester.
Other officers elected were Robert Rehagen, Kansas City, Kan., vice-regent and Inter-Fraternity Council representative; William Fisher, Topeka, scribe. Both are sophomores.
Tom Domville, Kansas City, Kan
junior, treasurer,
- * *
Phi Mu Alpha
Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb. senior has been elected president of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity for men, for the 1958-59 academic year.
Other officers elected were James Avery, Burlington, vice-president; John Van Kirk, Louisburg, treasurer; Dave Laney, Lawrence, program
chairman; Mike Conner, Dodge City,
historian. All are juniors.
James Haines, Topeka, recording secretary; Bruce Gardner, Lawrence, executive alumni secretary Gary Elting, Kansas City, Mo., social chairman; John Meeks, Kansas City, Kan., warden. All are sophomores.
Jonny Woody, Springfield, Mo
freshman, corresponding secretary.
Sigma Delta Chi
***
Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity for men, held a joint meeting with Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternity for women, in Flint Hall Tuesday.
Jerry Renner, instructor of journalism at Lawrence High School, showed slides on his trip around the world which he financed by feature writing.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity has announced the pledging of Bryan Travis, Des Moines, Iowa sophomore.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Phi Gamma Delta
On The Hill . . .
The parents of 40 members of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity were guests at the chapter house for a noon luncheon and an open house Sunday.
When possible, save time and fuel by cooking vegetables in the bottom of a double boiler while you make the cream sauce for them in the upper pan.
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Phi Kappa Sigma
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity has announced the pledging of six men.
They are LeRoy Hirsch, Powhattan, Sanny Delano, Kansas City,
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Wednesday, April 16. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
**85 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00.** Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dalkan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
SLIDE RULE, 12 inch Pickett, on campus
Thursday. Call W. H. Holmes, VI 5-8333
EIGHT STANDARD pooled puppies, black or brown. AKC registered, top giillee. Affectionate with children, accustomed to cat. Sturdy, gay, intelligent, every one perfect. Sternfeld VI 3-0763. 4-16
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call 71-30124. 5-21
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Between KU and downtown, very reason-
able price, quick possession. Phones VI 3-
7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-18
NOTICE - effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124.
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
1947 FORD CONVERTIBLE, radio, heater,
new engine, good tires, good transportation.
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ELLIS HIGH class ring with blue set. Year 1957 and initials E.C. on sides. Lost in Malott. Reward. Please contact Emma Cochran. V 3-8505. 4-21
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WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn. tf
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 16, 1958
SANDERSON
WATCH YOUR STEP—Ted Morris, Wichita freshman and stage manager for the University Theatre's production, "Robin Hood," scales the framework of a set as part of his work in the expanding program of the theater. (Daily Kansan photo)
Students Invited To AF Speech
The KU student chapter of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences has received a special invitation to hear a speech entitled "The Air Force Missile Program" at 8 p.m., April 24, in the Paseo War Memorial Building, Kansas City, Mo.
Sciences and the Society of Automotive Engineers.
The speech will be given by Gen Marvin C. Demler, deputy commander for research and development, Air Research and Development Command, Andrews Air Force Base, Md. The meeting is sponsored jointly by the Kansas City section of the Institute of Aeronautical
Ammon S. Andes, professor of aeronautical engineering, said the speech would be of particular interest to aeronautical engineering students. A general invitation to the meeting was sent to other engineering departments at KU.
A social hour at 6 p.m. and a dinner at 7 p.m. will be held prior to the meeting. Those interested in attending the dinner are to contact Prof. Andes before April 18. The charge for the dinner is $3.25 per person.
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Theatre To Improve Facilities
STUDENT UNION BOOKSTORE
A bigger and better University Theatre is in the making. With the completion of the new Music and Dramatic Arts Building on Naismith Drive, the KU theater jumped upward to its present status as one of the leading educational theater groups in the country.
The University is not stopping with what is has, however. Dr. Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, in a recent Daily Kansan interview, outlined some plans which the department intends to complete in the near future.
The biggest project, according to Dr. Goff, is to improve the facilities of the Experimental Theatre. First, the theater will be soundproofed. This will aid in carrying on work in the adjoining two theaters and workshop at the same time.
The department is also completing next year's season of plays, Dr. Goff said. So far, he said, the Summer Theatre will present four productions, the last one being the initial Fall program.
Other building improvements slated are a storage dock for scenery in the workshop, and storage space for draperies in the costume depart-department.
The University Theatre is going to have five major shows, Dr. Goff said. A comedy, a drama by the playwright Berthold Brecht, a musical-comedy, an opera, and a Shake-spearian production, are tentatively on the docket.
Seven shows will be produced in the Experimental Theatre next year, Dr. Goff continued. "We are thinking of following each major production with a related experimental show. This would be done by producing the shows in the same period, by the same playwright, or some other connection," he said.
an honorary student dramatic organization, "As far as I am concerned, we just couldn't get along without them. Their cooperation, warmth, and the way they assume responsibility deem them the leaders in our enterprises. They are the nucleus of our group." he said.
Effecting a closer affiliation with community theaters is also in the plans, said Dr. Goff. "Once we build up our department we will be able to send graduate students into the field as directors in various community theaters. This would be part of the work toward their degrees." he explained.
Dr. Goff gave a great deal of praise to the University Players.
"Many people have the idea that you must be a drama major to get a part in our plays. This is absolutely wrong," Dr. Goff said, "We are an all University activity and we would like to have everybody come over and join us. If anyone gets the urge to saw a board, drive a nail, paint a flat, or even act a bit, there is no reason why he should not drop around."
Americans drink an average of more than 16 cups of coffee weekly compared to 5 cups of tea and 2 cups of soft drinks.
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A Campus-to-Career Case History
M
John Reiter (right) discusses the route of signals from the wave guide through the IF stages of a microwave receiver.
"This was the kind of challenge I was looking for"
Here's what John A. Reiter, Jr., B.S. in Electronics, Arizona State College, '54, says about the biggest project so far in his Bell System career.
"This was the kind of challenge I was looking for—a chance to assist in planning a microwave radio relay system between Phoenix and Flagstaff, Arizona. Five intermediate relay stations would be needed, and I began by planning the tower locations on 'line of sight' paths after a study of topographical maps. Then I made field studies using altimeter measurements, and conducted path-loss tests to determine how high each tower should be. This was the trickiest part of the job. It called for detecting the presence of reflecting surfaces along the
transmission route, and determining measures necessary to avoid their effects.
"Not the least part of the job was estimating the cost of each of the five relay stations. All told, the system will cost more than $500,000. When construction is finished in December of this year, I'll be responsible for technical considerations in connecting the radio relay and telephone carrier equipment.
"This assignment is an example of the challenges a technical man can find in the telephone company. You take the job from start to finish-from basic field studies to the final adjustments-with full responsibility. To technical men who want to get ahead, that's the ultimate in responsibility."
John Reiter is building his career with Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company. Find out about the career opportunities for you. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus. And read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office, or write for a copy of "Challenge and Opportunity" to: College Employment Supervisor, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY
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Cervantes Day Set For April 26
The 35th annual Cervantes Day in honor of the Spanish author of "Don Quixote," will be held Saturday, April 26. It is sponsored by the department of Romance languages. Plays, speeches, and a luncheon have been scheduled.
The morning session will begin with a coffee hour on the first floor of Fraser Hall. At 10 a.m., Dr. Walter Starkie, the Irish hispanist author and visiting professor of English at the University of Texas, will speak in Fraser Theater about Cervantes.
"La Farce du Cuvier," a French play, will be given by students from Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia in the morning. Dr. Eugene Saviano, chairman of the Spanish department at Wichita University, will speak on "A Three-Dimensional Glimpse of Spain."
At noon there will be a luncheon in the Kansas Union ballroom. Nearly 250 persons from Kansas and Kansas City, Mo, high schools and colleges are expected to attend. It will be followed by a brief program of Latin American and French music.
A variety program will be presented in Fraser Theater in the afternoon. Schools participating will be K-State, KU, Shawnee-Mission and Lawrence high schools, and Lawrence Junior High School. Students from KU will present "Esgrima y Amor," a one-act farce in Spanish by the Quintero brothers. Prizes will be awarded to the Kansas winners of the National Spanish Contest for Secondary Schools, sponsored by the Kansas chapter of the AATSP.
Edouard Morot-Sir, cultural counseler and representative in the United States of French universities, will speak at 3 p.m. in the recital hall in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. His subject will be "Prix Nobel, 1957—Albert Camus."
The new sound laboratories will be open from 9 to 10 a.m. and from 1:45 to 2:30 p.m. Visitors will be able to observe them in operation. A movie in Spanish has been tentatively scheduled.
A special exhibit of Puerto Rican art, collected by Seymour Menton, assistant professor of Romance languages, during a vacation there last summer, will be on display in the Museum of Art.
Cervantes Day will be held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Kansas chapter of the American Assn. of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. This year, a combined meeting of the AATSP and the west central chapter of the American Assn. of Teachers of French.
Cervantes Day is open to the public. Luncheon reservations must be made in advance by contacting Prof. Menton, 103 Fraser Hall.
Schedule Events For Business Day
The schedule of activities for Business Day, Wednesday, May 7. have been completed. James Surface, Dean of the School of Business said.
Business School classes will be dismissed at 10 a.m., that day, he said. All people in the business school, pre-business majors, and persons interested are invited to attend the events.
The schedule of events includes:
The schedule of events includes:
10 a.m. - Convocation in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
11 a.m. — Coffee will be served in the Jayhawk Room following the convocation.
11:15 a.m. — Professors in the School of Business will have a question and answer period on "Why things are done as they are in the Business School."
2:30 p.m. — Softball game between the Business School faculty and students at the intramural fields.
6:30 p.m. — Banquet in the Union Ballroom. Balfour Jeffrey, president of the Kansas Power and Light Co. will speak on "Business Opportunities in Kansas."
Business Day was planned by the Business School Council, composed of representatives from the various business clubs and professional fraternities. John Meschke, Hutchinson senior, is president of the council.
Weather
Cloudy to partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Scattered showers southwest tonight. Occasional rain or showers in the east and north portions Friday. Little change in temperature tonight. Warmer in the west Friday. Low tonight 45 northwest to 50s elsewhere. High Friday 80 southwest, 70-75 elsewhere.
Wednesday's high was 75, low was 47. The low this morning was 52.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 127
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 17, 1958
Downing, Plumb Win; Vox Sweeps 17 Seats
By DOUG PARKER and AL JONES
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Write-in candidate John Downing. Kansas City, Mo. junior, was elected student body president by a 408-vote margin in Wednesday's All Student Council general elections.
junior, who had a total of 1.031 votes. Ed Prelock, Cleveland, Ohio senior, running on a nonpartisan ticket, collected 403 votes.
Downing collected a total of 1.439 votes to beat the Allied Greek - Independent candidate Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo.
The total vote for student body president and vice-president was 2,935, including 62 other write-in candidates.
Vox Populi overpowered the incumbent AGI party by taking 17 voting seats on the ASC and three other seats with no voting privileges.
Election Results
Student body president and vice-president—John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., and Carol Plumb, Overland Park, both juniors.
Social fraternities—Howie Ellfeldt, Kansas City, Mo. (Vox), Karl Wernett, Independence (Vox), Bill Fricke, Jefferson City, Mo. (Vox), John Husar, Chicago, Ill. (Vox), all juniors; Dick Peterson, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore (AGI).
Peterson, Kansas City. Mo. Metropolitan Social sororities-Jan Rodgers, Paradise (AGI), Sharon Dey, Ulysses (Vox), Judi Neil, Abilene (Vox), all sophomores.
Men's dormitories—Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan. junior (AGI). Ervell Staab, Hays senior (Vox).
Women's dormitories—Miss Plumb (to be replaced by the ASC), Jan Cameron, Topeka sophomore (AGI), Mary Taylor, Kansas City, Kan. junior (AGI).
Unmarried unorganized—Terry Davis, Frontenac junior, Rosann Libermann, Caney sophomore (both Vox).
Married unorganized—Bob Macy, Hutchinson junior (Vox).
School districts:
College men—Pat Little, Wichita junior (Vox). College women—Mary Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo. junior (Vox).
Engineering—C. L. Foster, Kingsville, Tex. junior (Vox).
Graduate school—Brooks Becker, Emporia (AGI).
Education—Ed Dittmore, Robinson senior (Vox).
Fine Arts—Glenn Smiley, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore (Vox).
Business—Chet Vanatta, Bartlesville, Okla. junior (Vox).
Pharmacy—Jim Disque, Lawrence junior (AGI).
Class officers:
Junior class—Larry Schooley, Kiowa, president; Jim Henderson. Wichita, vice-president; Judy Woods, El Dorado, secretary, and Sandy Scroggin, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer.
Senior class—Bill Witt, Garden City, president; Larry Dunlap, Salina, vice-president; Judy Chambers, Leavenworth, secretary, and Ann Underwood, Emporia, treasurer.
Sophomore class—Frank Naylor, Kansas City, Kan., president; Deana Grimm, Omaha, Neb., vice-president; Nancy Varney, Kansas City, Mo., secretary, and Sally Brown, Wichita, treasurer.
AGI gained seven seats on the Council, dropping from its powerful victory in last year's elections in which it captured 18 of the 24 seats on the Council.
Plumb Wins Twice
Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior. Downing's running mate for vice-president, was also elected an ASC representative from the independent women's dormitory district.
The new Council will elect another student to take Miss Plumb's position as representative while she serves as vice-president.
Over a third of the student body turned out to vote in 9 Vox candidates from a possible 11 in the school districts.
Two of the Vox candidates, elected from the School of Journalism and the School of Law, did not get enough votes to gain a vote on the Council, but they probably will have speaking privileges.
Vox swept four of five seats in the fraternity district and two of three seats in the sorority district.
Unorganized Take Two
For the first time in several years the unmarried-unorganized students succeeded in placing two representatives on the Council. However, the cooperative and professional fraternity district placed a representative with no vote.
Jack Davis, Topeka senior, elections committee chairman, said the election was carried out with very few irregularities. Only a few discrepancies were found between the ballots and the poll workers' tally sheets.
Fraser Hall polls were closed for a short time to check out ballots that were being marked in different colored pencils due to the change of poll workers. The ballots were accepted.
Downing was apparently pleased after his victory, receiving congratulations from members of both parties.
Patterson and Joel Sterrett, Topeka senior. AGI president, offered congratulations to Downing, and said it appeared to have been a clean election.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore, president of Vox, said the clean election was more important than his party winning the majority of the seats on the Council.
1983
A poll worker counts ballots in Wednesday's elections. (Daily Kansan photos)
THE GUY AND THE HERMAN
CAROL PLUMB and JOHN DOWNING in a policy discussion.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 17, 1958
Political Motivation
What's a government for?
According to everything we have learned in Western Civilization, it's supposed to represent the people and perform functions for the public good. At least, that's a rough approximation.
Now student government at KU seems to be a little different matter.
Many students (about 80 per cent) don't vote, and don't follow the actions of the All Student Council or committees. Their view is "The ASC doesn't do anything, so why should I bother about it?"
That is a valid criticism. The ASC doesn't do much. The big decisions, the political maneuvering and the frenzied ballot stuffing are not conducted with the student in mind.
Rather, they are conducted to keep one party in power, or to get another party into power.
The question is, if ASC does nothing, why all this trouble to get in the driver's seat?
Just this: ASC positions, committee positions, all the spots in student government, look good on the record of a Greek (and by that we mean social fraternity or sorority) house during rush week.
You don't believe it? Then why and how is it that Greek houses, with about 2,200 members, or 28 per cent of the student body, effectively control student government year after year?
How does it happen that three Greek houses, with a total population of less than 250, hold 33 per cent of all student committee appointments? It may be coincidence that all three houses are powers in the ruling party, but it seems doubtful.
A rushee, properly impressed by the imposing list of titles the house boasts, wants to join up. The house gets a better choice of prospects for membership, and so holds its position as a leading house—it's a circular sort of thing.
This editorial is not going to weigh the pros and cons of the Greek system, though it should be fairly obvious that the writer is not a "Greek."
It does seem, however, that student government must have a more important function than to get good pledges for Sigma Phi Nothing.
As long as rushing remains one of the prime forces behind campus government, it will go on as it has—accomplishing nothing.
—Al Jones
Take A Foreign Language?
Why study a foreign language?
I'll never use it, you say. But are you sure you aren't being a little behind your times, a little old-fashioned, maybe?
When people first came to Kansas, towns were established between 12 and 14 miles apart because that was as far as you could travel in a day's journey. In those days, when a person spoke he used the words readily understood by the people in his town and perhaps the town nearest him. There was little difficulty in getting others to understand what he had to say.
After Henry Ford began building autos and most of us were able to afford one, we started traveling to Kansas City frequently and even to Denver. At first some of our expressions weren't understood by the shopkeepers and streetcar conductors in these strange foreign-looking places. But soon we learned some of their pet phrases and they learned some of ours. Our English had changed. It was now the dialect called Midwestern.
Today most of us dream about traveling abroad.
Some of us will get there. All of us have and will continue to meet foreigners. Our friends will show us slides they took when they were abroad. So far our speech hasn't seemed to change much. Actually it has. We all know what a Sputnik is even if we don't pronounce it correctly. If we've never been to a kaffeeklatsch, we at least know it involves coffee.
We are going to need these vocabulary changes sooner than we realize. Already the airlines are offering comparatively inexpensive trips to Europe.
However our speech hasn't changed enough to keep up with our wandering feet. Sputnik won't buy you a dinner in Moscow or help you to tell a Russian visitor to this country where the bus station is. Kaffeeklatsch would hardly be sufficient for a whole evening's chat with a German student.
So let's stop procrastinating. Let's just dig in and learn those cotton-picking verbs.
Quotes From The News
—Carol Stilwell
NEW YORK — Samuel Cardinal Stitch of Chicago, on leaving for Rome to become head of Roman Catholic missionary activities;
"In Africa, India, colonialism has been thrown off and the people have sought freedom. They have sought this freedom. I think, largely because the Christian missions brought to them the word of God."
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — Gen, Thomas D. White, Air Force chief of staff, giving heartfelt support to the President's plan for reorganization of the Pentagon:
"I have studied the President's plan and as I understand his proposals I consider their implementation will be of great benefit to the security of our country."
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
By Dick Bibler
TEST TODAY
BLEW
R-15
"—AN' JUST WHO WAS LOOKING AROUND FOR HELP ON THAT WESTERN CIV, TEST?"
.. Letters ..
Editor:
Gubernatorial Sketch
We would appreciate your support and suggestions for the All Student Council in the coming year. We feel that, with the support of the student body, we can make this an outstanding year for student government at Kansas University.
We wish to express our sincere appreciation for the support we received from the student body. We feel a deep sense of responsibility and will do our best to perform our duties to benefit every student in the University.
—John Downing, Carol Plumb
Dailu Hansan
With Fred Hall in the Kansas gubernatorial race, what appeared to be a routine political scramble has taken on new proportions.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904
trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 18, 1912
For one thing, he is the third candidate to announce for the Republican primary. His entrance may set the stage for another split in Republican ranks, which would just about wrap up a second term in the governor's chair for George Docking.
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There had been earlier rumors that Hall might seek another term as governor. However, an announcement from Docking that he thought Hall would stand a good chance to win the Republican nomination, because of his opposition to the right-to-work bill, really touched things off.
Hall justified the threat in 1954, defeating the administration-backed candidate, George Templar, in a primary in which he called for a thorough cleaning out of administration personnel from the state house. He went on to a landslide victory of 43,650 votes over Democrat George Docking, who was getting his baptism in Kansas politics.
His veto of the right-to-work bill stood up against all efforts of the legislature to override it. This won him the support of organized labor and he has depended on labor for much of his support in campaigns since.
Hall's term in office was filled with controversy as he made wholesale removals of administration personnel. He put through a program of state aid for high schools, increased workmen's compensation payments, equalized tax assessments, and vetoed a right-to-work bill prohibiting union-shon contracts.
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth
Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant
Managing Editors; Douglas Charrison,
Elisabeth Clark Harrison,
Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden,
Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick,
Assistant Telegraph Editor; George
Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Mary Dole,
Mary Smith, Society Editor;
Editors; Pat Swanson, Society Editor;
Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Clyde Reed Jr., Parsons publisher, and apparently Hall's toughest competition for the Republican bid, has come out for the bill. Docking said that Hall might be able to carry enough labor votes to win. Walter Cherry, Galena businessman and farmer, is the other candidate in the Republican primary.
Hall had served 15 months on the court and his term would have expired after the November election. Gov. Docking appointed Schuyler Jackson, dean of the Washburn Law School, to the vacancy.
Hall was defeated in the 1956 Republican primary by Warren W. Shaw of Topeka. The bitterness of the primary campaign was reflected in the general election, where a divided Republican party watched Docking win by about 115,000 votes over Shaw.
Hall was appointed a justice in 1956 in the well publicized triple switch which saw him winding up on the court. At that time, Hall, completing his only term as governor, resigned shortly after Chief Justice William A. Smith stepped down from the court, and Lt. Gov. John McCuish, promoted to governor, named Hall to the court position.
Hall then worked his triple play and sat on the supreme court in relative obscurity until his April 7 announcement that he would seek the state's highest office for the second time.
Ted Winkler ... Business Manager
John Clarke, Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston, National Advertis-
tion Manager;
Advertising Manager; Tom McGrath,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager.
Guard Republicans, who saw in the fast rising Hall a threat to the administration's tight hold on Kansas politics.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Hall first burst into state politics when he became lieutenant governor in 1950. After winning his second term in 1952, he came under the scowling eye of the Old
-Dick Brown
The first automobile, a Benz, was exhibited in 1889.
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Around The World
Page 3
Ike To Present NewPentagonPlan
President Eisenhower carries to the people today his fight for his bitterly-assailed defense reorganization plan.
Even as he prepared to do battle for his plan, shadows were cast or its prospects with a stinging assault by Rep. Carl Vinson (D-Ga.), chairman of the armed services committee.
Rep. Vinson called the committee into a closed-door meeting today to plan hearings for next week on the plan.
The President was scheduled to appear in a broadcast and televised speech before a meeting of the National Society of Newspaper Editors.
In Washington, Sen. Styles Bridges (R- N. H.) warned Congressional Democrats today that another of their anti-recession bills faces possible veto unless it is watered down before it reaches the House.
Works Projects Loans The bill would provide one billion
Speech Contest Winners Named
First-round winners in the 11th annual intramural speech contest for organized houses were named at the conclusion of the demonstrative speeches Wednesday.
Jacl. Kollman, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, Beta Theta Pi, won first place trophy for his "In Defense of (Elvis) Presleyism."
Second and third place winners were George (Buzz) Hunt, Chicago, Ill., sophomore, Sigma Chi, and Larry Ehrlich, Russell freshman, Battenfeld.
The second round of informative speeches will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 102 Strong. Argumentative presentations will be given the following Wednesday, April 30.
The KU Forensic League and the speech department, co-sponsors of the contest, will present trophies to the houses with the greatest accumulated points in the men's and women's divisions.
Underwriters Will Be Topic
A panel discussion of "The Professional Concepts of Life Underwriters" will be sponsored by the Finance and Insurance Club at 7:30 p.m., April 29, in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union, said Harold C. Krogh, associate professor of business administration and club adviser.
The discussion will be open to the public and will be moderated by William R. Lyons, Lawrence, a member of the Lawrence Assn. of Life Underwriters.
Mr. Lyons said the discussion would be "to help sell economics and business students on the idea of coming into the insurance business and to show that it is a professional occupation."
$185 To Be Given To Poetry.Winner
A total of $185 will be given in cash prizes to the top three winners in the William Herbert Carruth poetry contest which ended Tuesday.
The 68 poems entered by 31 students will be judged next week. The first place winner will receive $100, second place $50 and third place $35. The contest is sponsored by the English department with cash prizes given to the KU Endowment Assn. by former students of Mr. Carruth.
Judges will be poet Donald Hall of the University of Michigan, Miss Geraldine Hammond, professor of English at Wichita University and John A. Meixner, instructor of English. The entries are being sent to Miss Hammond and Mr. Hall.
Each student was allowed to enter three poems.
dollars in $ 3^{1}2 $ per cent loans to communities for public works projects.
Thursday, April 17, 1958 University Daily Kansan
President Eisenhower was warned against going too far with massive public works projects as anti-recession measures.
In Brussels. Belgium opened its 650 million dollar World's Fair today, its cherished ideal of world cooperation apparently a casualty of the cold war.
Blandly disclaiming any spirit of rivalry, Russia wrapped its mighty glass and aluminum pavilion in a last minute phalanx of heavy farm equipment and bulldozers in an obvious effort to overwhelm the neighboring, graceful American exhibit.
U.S. Budget Less
But in the round American buildin there was every confidence that the United States would make as much impact with its expenditure of 13 million dollars as Russia did with a budget of over 50 million.
In Paris, Gen. Charles DeGaule arrived today in the French city from his country retreat to survey the political situation and cabinet crisis which is so deep that a new government does not appear anywhere in sight.
Gen. DeGaulle is mentioned each time France suffers a new government crisis but he is opposed to political leaders of the extreme left and feared by many of the moderate right who feel that he would set up a dictatorship.
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 include name, place, date, and time of function.
Women's Residence Halls Counselors:
All applicants for counselor positions in the freshman halls will meet in Parlor A, Kansas Union, Wednesday, April 23, at 7 p.m. Upperclass women students are interested in learning more about the freshman hall program are invited to attend this meeting.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Der Deutsche Verein trifft, sich um 5.000 bis 6.000 Jahre an derder Schwestz, der jetzt eine Konditorei in Kansas besitzt, wird von seiner Nursezeit erzahlen. Allen sind willkommen.
Museum of Art films, 7.30 p.m. and 9 p.m. Vincent Van Gogh, Thomas Hart Benton Making a Mural, and The World of Utrillo.
Poetry hour, 4 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Union. Ambrose Saricks, associate professor of history with read poetry Hall, 815 West College Road Robin Hood, 4:15 p.m. Experimental Theatre Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Episcopal Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House,
Breakfast follows
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Ravel-Dannhils et Chloe.
FRIDAY
Robin Hood, 4:15 p.m.. Experimental Theatre, Music and Dramatic Buildings
Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew," 4 p.m. Rehearsal room, University Theatre, Music & Dramatic Arts Building
Robin Head. 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Exposition, Music and Dramatic
Arts Building
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Mozart-Sonata No. 8 in C, K296. Beethoven-
Spring Sonata; Sonatas No. 21,
No. 22, and No. 30.
Gamma Delta, cost supper. 5:30 p.m.
Immanuel Lutheran Church. Discussion,
fellowship, and vespers. All students
invited.
Rose Named To Committee
Prof. Kenneth E. Rose, chairman of the mining and metallurgical engineering department, has been named chairman of the Advisory Committee on Metallurgical Education for the American Society for Metals.
Damson plums get their name from the city of Damascus.
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'Spring Sing' Wednesday
The Inter-Residence Assn. Spring Sing will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swanhort Recital Hall in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Men's halls participating are Battenfeld, Stephenson, Jolliffe, and Pearson
Women's halls are Miller, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Douthart, Watkins, and Sellards.
The sing will have two divisions, large ensembles, with no limit on the number of persons, and small ensembles, with as many as 10 persons. Miss Mary Peg Hardman, assistant dean of women, will award trophies to the top men's and women's groups in each division.
Judges will be Mrs. Robert Zillio, former vocal instructor at Lawrence Jr. High School, Wayne Nelson, supervisor of music in the Lawrence schools, and Edwin L. Foot, Jr., Washington, D. C. graduate student and choir director of the First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence.
Marilyn Bell, McPherson sophomore, is chairman of the sing.
Prof. Ricart In Indiana
Find It In The Kansan Classiffeds
Domingo Ricart, associate professor of Romance languages, will give a lecture Friday at a humanities and social service seminar at Earlham College, Richmond, Ind. The title of his talk will be "Juan de Valdes, Spanish mystic of the 16th Century, forerunner of George Fox."
For long driving-
or just driving along
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 17. 1958
Top Track Stars Gather For Relays
A list of entrants reading something like "Who's Who in Track' are assembling to start the 33rd annual KU Relays. Entered in the meet will be top track men of the nation and home entrants who are famous throughout the world.
Ninety high schools, 21 universities, 26 colleges and seven junior colleges will be represented in this classic which has become one of the top track events in the nation. Assembled for the meet will be what meet director Bill Easton calls "the finest field in a number of years."
"There's no question about it we've certainly gotten the cream of the crop for the meet," Easton said.
Easton said the KU track squad would enter every event on the program except the 880-yard relay. He said he was very pleased with the way the weatherman had cooperated with the KU squad the past week. He said the boys have had a lot of outside work and all seem to be in top shape for the meet.
Relay records which may easily fall include the two mile relay, the broad jump, the discus, the mile relay, the two mile and four mile runs and the sprint and distance medley relays.
Included in the Relays will be three Olympic contenders. The Olympians will be KU's Al Oerter, Dave Lean and Eddie Southern.
Shelby Good Prospect
Jayhawker Eraie Shelby has a good chance of surpassing the broad jump record set by Ed Gordon of Iowa in 1931. The record is 25 feet $^{4^4}$-inches and Shelby has already gone over this mark twice this spring. Gordon's mark is the second oldest of all Relays records. If Shelby should beat it, it will mean he has done something three Olympians have failed to do.
It is thought that Olympic champion Al Oerter will have little
Denver Wins In Tenth, 8-6
By UNITED PRESS
Two homers in the top of the ninth sparked a Denver rally last night to give the Bears a tenth inning, 8-6, victory over Indianapolis in American Association competition.
In other league games, Omaha trounced Wichita, 13-7; Minneapolis defeated Louisville, 4-1; and Charleston downed St. Paul, 8-1.
At Wichita, Omaha's Chris Canizaro broke a 5-5 deadlock with a lead-off home run off pitcher Dave Jolly in the fifth inning. Omaha followed through with four more runs in the sixth and three in the eighth to defeat Wichita.
At Louisville, Minneapolis scored three runs in the sixth to overcome a one run, third inning, Louisville lead.
Today, the visiting teams, Omaha, Denver, Minneapolis and St. Paul close out their series at Wichita, Indianapolis, Louisville and Charleston respectively.
Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 2 | 0 | 1.000 | — |
| Kansas City | 2 | 0 | 1.000 | — |
| Baltimore | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | ½ |
| New York | 1 | 1 | .500 | 1 |
| Washington | 1 | 1 | .500 | 1 |
| Boston | 1 | 2 | .333 | 1² |
| Chicago | 0 | 2 | .000 | 2 |
| Cleveland | 0 | 2 | .000 | 2 |
Yesterday's Results
Boston 3. New York 1
Kansas City 9. Cleveland 4
Detroit 5. Chicago 4
NATIONAL LEAGUE
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Philadelphia | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | — |
| Pittsburgh | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | — |
| Chicago | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | — |
| Los Angeles | 1 | 1 | .500 | L₂ |
| San Francisco | 1 | 1 | .500 | L₂ |
| St. Louis | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
| Cincinnati | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
| Milwaukee | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
Yesterday's Results:
Los Angeles 13. San Francisco 1 (night)
trouble surpassing the discus mark he set last year at 178-feet 1-inch. Oerter has gone over this mark several times this year.
Ten men will be back to defend their titles from last year. They are Oerter, discus; Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State, 100; Don Steward, Southern Methodist University NCAA co-champion, high jump; Phil Delavan, Iowa State, shot put; Buster Quist, New Mexico, javelin; Gail Hodgson, Oklahoma, Glenn Cunningham Mile; Cliff Cushman, Kansas, 400-meter hurdles; John Macy, unattached of Houston, steeplechase; Jack Smyth, Houston, hop-step-jump and Ken Kelly, Brooke Medical Center, decathlon.
A scientist has recorded the sound made by a moth larva chewing a sock.
Minor Sports At Kansas For The Non-Specialized
Don't forget the minor sports at KU. You may find one which is made for you.
John H. Giele, instructor in sociology and coach of KU's developing fencing team, offers this advice to students.
"Sports, like everything else, are highly specialized." he said in an interview Wednesday. "Only a certain number of individuals can fill these specialized positions in the major sports."
Students who do not qualify for football, basketball or track may find their niche in fencing, volleyball, wrestling or gymnastics, he said.
"With increasing urbanization we are moving away from the cow pasture sports toward the indoor activity."
The "cow pasture" sports are the space consuming games such as baseball and football.
The indoor sports of wrestling and gymnastics are the fastest increasing high school activities. "It is possible that wrestling and
gymnastics will be the next major sports at KU," he said.
"It is possible that wrestling and
"In our building program we will have to include a physical education building which will have adequate facilities and space to take care of those participating in indoor sports," he said.
Chilean Looms As Threat To Two Marks
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP)—A smooth-striding Chilean schooling in Texas looms as a serious threat to at least two National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics track records, NAIA spokesmen said today.
Ramon Sandoval, a freshman at Lamar Tech State at Beaumont, Tex., already owns the fastest mile recorded in the Lone State state this spring and his most recent performance was only three-tenths of a second off the NAIA mile record of 4:09.4.
The United States was divided into four time zones — Eastern, Central, Mountain and Pacific — in 1883.
Injury May Keep FlahertyFromRace
TULSA, Okla. — (UP) — An arm injury suffered in August 1956 may prevent Fat Flaherty from racing his Zink Special in the Memorial Day 500-mile auto speed classic at Indianapolis.
Flaherty drove a Zink Special to victory in the 1956 classic but later mangled his arm in a race at Springfield, Ill.
The first successful pre-fab brick house has been built at Geneva, Ill. by Structural Clay Products Research Foundation.
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Thursday, April 17, 1958 University Daily Kansan
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Page 5
Miller Has Grudge Ready To Meet MU
Larry Miller, KU's ace left-handed baseball pitcher, will be looking forward to facing the Missouri Tigers this weekend in Columbia. He will start the second game of the 3-game series.
"I have a grudge against MU," Miller said. "I pitched my worst game last year against them. I'll give it all I've got to win."
Miller, a junior from Topeka, was called the "hard-luck" pitcher for a while last season, but that changed when he pitched a no-hit, no-run game against Colorado May 4. The score was 7-0. He faced only 26 batters and struck out eight. He later was named an All Big Seven pitcher.
When he isn't pitching, he plays in the outfield. He said he doesn't mind the double-duty because it gives him a chance to play more ball, although he thinks it is hard on pitches to play the outfield.
Miller would like to play professional baseball after graduating from KU. He is majoring in architectural engineering, and he said he would have this to fall back upon after pro ball.
Strangely enough, he doesn't call this feat his biggest thrill in baseball. Instead he mentioned beating the Boeing Bombers, defending world semi-pro champions, in the national semi-pro tournament at Wichita as one of two "biggest thrills." He pitched for the D-X Oilers, who finished fifth in the tournament. The team finished second in the state tournament and Miller was named the Most Valuable Player.
This year Miller is KU's leading pitcher, record-wise, with three wins and no losses. Against Iowa State, defending Big Eight champs, he won one game and relieved in the second, which KU also won.
Miller's other big thrill came in the summer of 1957 when he set a record for strikeouts in the Canadian League when he blanked 18 batters. He played for the Moosejaw Mallards and won eight games while losing only two.
He pitched three years for Topeka High School and had a 6-1 record in his senior year when Topeka won the Border League.
The seal of Chicago contains a shield, an Indian, a ship, a sheaf of wheat and a babe in a shell.
The African aardvark has never been domesticated as a beast of burden.
before every date
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Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results.
KU JAZZ CLUB AND SUA
BIG 8 JAZZ FESTIVAL FOR '58
Featuring Groups From K.U., M. U., Kansas St., & Oklahoma St.
Sunday April 20
8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium
EXTRA FEATURE:
Larry Cummings Trio With Pattie Tucker
Save Dollars - Shop at Carl's!
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VI 3-5353
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 17, 1958
1940
CAROLYN BAILEY
A. R.
PATRICIA WHITLEY
2 Couples Announce Summer Wedding Plans
The engagement of Carolyn Lee Bailey to Leo G. LeSage has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Bailey, Scranton.
Miss Bailey is a senior in the College and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. LeSage, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo S. LeSage, is a 1857 graduate of the School of Engineering and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. He is now in the Navy and stationed in Washington, D.C. where he works for the Atomic Energy Commission.
The wedding date has been set for June 22.
--the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
The engagement of Patricia Ann Whitley to Kenneth J. Sells has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund John Whitley, Abilene.
Miss Whitley is a sophomore in the College and a resident of Douthart Hall. Mr. Sells, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Sells, Kansas City, Kan., is a sophomore in the College.
A June wedding is planned.
... On The Hill
Gertrude Sellards Pearson
Jane Crow, Topeka sophomore has been elected president of the upperclass women of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall for the 1958-59 academic year.
Other officers elected were Lois Tolbert, Topeka, treasurer; Betty Bumcarner, Tula, Okla., social chairman. Both are sophomores.
Both freshman and upperclass sides of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall will hold an open house from 4:30-6 p.m. Saturday.
Refreshments will be served in the living room and visitors will have the opportunity to see the rooms.
Alpha Chi Omega
The pledge class of Alpha Chi Omega sorority will entertain the pledge class of Chi Omega sorority with a bridge party at the chapter house Monday.
Triangle
. . .
Triangle fraternity held their annual Founders' Day dinner Sunday at the chapter house.
Oral Swanders, charter member of the Kansas chapter, presented a speech on the history of the chapter. Donald Dean, faculty adviser of the fraternity, gave an after dinner speech on "Originality in Engineering."
--the town shop Downtown the university shop On The Hill
Acacia
John Shiedler, Mission sophomore, has been elected president of Acacia fraternity.
Don Elmore, Harper junior, treasurer; Kirk Prather, Wellington freshman, rush chairman.
Appointed officers are Craig Robertson, Joliet, Ill. freshman, sergeant at arms and scholarship chairman; David Rush, Kansas City, Kan. junior, publications; Tim Hamil, Mission senior, decorations; Jim Lindstrom, Hyattville, Md. freshman, athletic chairman; Steve Dodge, Salina sophomore, song leader.
Other officers elected were Ralph Holland, Fredonia, vice-president and pledge trainer; Keith Ott, King-fisher, OKla, school chairman; Dave Pellet, Topeka, secretary; Gary Wiley, Russell, housemanager, Craig Chapman, Bellflower, Calif., junior steward. All are sophomores.
Thorough cooking is a must for fresh pork. A meat thermometer is most reliable, but this method also works: make small incisions next to the bone. If the meat has changed from pink to grayish-white, the pork is done.
Watkins Hall
Residents of Watkins Hall presented a program at the Winter Veterans' Hospital in Topeka Friday,
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KU-Y
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Jan Garrison, La Grange, Ill. sophomore, was elected district representative. Bob Nebrig, Leavenworth sophomore, was elected district co-chairman.
Chuck Johnson, YMCA adviser at KU, was elected district adviser.
Rho Chi
RC, was elected district adviser.
Other KU-Y delegates attending the conference were Marilyn McIntire, Oregon, Mo. senior; David Ontjes, Hutchinson junior; Joyce Cutting, Ottawa, Lehman, Abilenge, Alora Gaines, Kansas City, Kan, Bill Smith, Great Bend, all sophomores; Bob Hartley, Baxter Springs, Delwin Weightman, Overland Park, Chuck Coolidge, Emporia, all freshmen.
* *
Rho Chi, honorary fraternity for students in pharmacy, has announced the initiation of Dean R. Carman, Quinter junior; Jon Holman, Larned, Vernon R. Gleissner, Olmitz seniors.
Max Starns, Cherryvale senior and president of the organization, presided at the ceremony. Dean Allen J. Reese of the School of Pharmacy gave a short talk.
After Six BY RUDOFKER
Colorful Helanca stretch tights now come in patterns. The one-piece stockings and panties are shown in cheeks and stripes. Colors include red or black with white.
A small cork tacked low on backs of picture frames will prevent dark lines on walls.
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Thursday, April 17, 1958 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. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
FOR RENT
ROOM FOR MEN, well furnished, quiet.
Room service, linens furnished, large closet. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri.
4-21
DESIRABLE three room unfurnished ground floor apartment Convenient to show refrigerator, air conditioner, and parking space included. VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1277.
AVAILABLE JUNE 1, three room apartment, private entrance, bath, air conditioned, first floor, $8.50 per person, private entrance, bath, basement first floor, large and roomy, reasonable. Two room apartment, $30 per month. Sleeping room, private entrance, bath, phone, $25 per person, sleeping room, private Lilies furnished, rooms kept. All the above are clean, well furnished. Near KU, utilities paid. VI S-7830 after 4-23
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent sealed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Ice bath, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI .0350
USED CAR BUYS
1951 Chevrolet
Fleetline two door, looks and runs
like new $295
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-6697
1955 Pontiac Catalina
Hardtop with V8, hydraulic, radio,
heater, whitewall tires. Like new!
Cys's Used Cars
19th & Mass. VI 3-9293
1953 Plymouth
Spotless, good tires. 6 cyl. with over-
drive. Perfect all over.
Jim Clark
625 Mass. VI 3-3055
FREE two kittens, male and female. One. Or. or. Mr. Marcus at KU 4521 VI-3-421 or. or. Mr. Marcus at KU 4521
DELUXE FLOOR POLISHERS for rent at Kroger's. Super house cleaning job Gets next to baseboards for eight hours. Kroger's, 9th and 4-23 Hampshire.
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for receptions and parties. For Sale: Mother's glass crystal and china. House Glass and China, 906 New Hampshire. IV-3 3980 5-6
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith
9411%; Phi. Phi. Mt. 3-5263.
EXPERIENCE TYPIST: Prompt and ac-
curate service. Call VI 3-6933, 1621 W
20th St. tt
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast, accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Ph. VI 3-1240. 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 dog gators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hamsters etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant! Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut Phone VI 3-2921
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
Studio, 908 Missouri, phone VI 3-6838.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf
Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter of Phone Ms. Donna Virt, VI 3-8600.
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-1044
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on leses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
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FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
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TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers
VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson, tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
1971-1971 Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singer tt
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson. Mgr. tf
TYPIST. Experienced in all fields including scientific papers. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 2-0628. 5.23
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over house mouse sentative or call VI 3-7553 VI 2-0736 VI 2-0395 for free delivery. tf
FOR SALE
1947 FORD CONVERTIBLE, radio, heater,
new engine, good tires, good transportation.
$100 or best offer. Call VI 3-3494
day, VI 3-5131 night, ask for John. 4-21
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Between KU and downtown, very reasonable price, quick possession. Phone VI 3-7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-18
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to
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Faculty and part-time students also eli-
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LEAVE FILM TONIGHT UNTIL 8:30
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SOLITAIRE interlocking engagement and wedding rings. White gold, 14 carat wedding rings. Silver. Call VI 3-3494 day, VI 3-5131 ask, for John K. 4-21
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124.
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn. tf
CASH LOANS ON YOUR
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WANTED
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
83312 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8074
Driscoll Beauty Shop 908 Mass. VI 3-4070
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
VI 3-1075
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn. VI 3-7738
Pine's Radio & TV
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
1407 Mass.
Rogers Launder-it
VI 3-3503
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Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 913 N. H. VI 3-6844
WATCH REPAIRS
725 Mass. Parsons Jewelry 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
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$47.50 $76.50
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East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
Dennison
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KEELER'S BOOK STORE 939 Mass.
Trophies Money Ribbons
Attention All Students, Administration, Faculty!
RO
3rd Annual Daily Kansan PHOTO CONTEST
PHOTOGRAPHY
Last Big Contest Closes April 25th!
3 Divisions
Black & White (seven fields)
Color (slides or photos)
Jayhawker Publication (special subject for each contest)
四五六七八九十
Prizes
Trophy for best of each show & best of year. Ribbon & certificate for 1st, 2nd, & 3rd in each field. Certificate for Honorable Mention in each field. $10 cash for Jayhawker Publication Award.
Entry Blanks and Rules at Kansan Office, Flint
Get Yours NOW!!
Office, Flint Hall
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 17, 1958
PIONEER MAYER
Teletype Is Quick
MRS. ALTA H. LONNECKER and the KU teletype
It takes KU only a minute to get in touch with the University of California. This can be done by KU's only teletype machine, located in 318 Watson Library.
It is used for several KU departments as well as for library business, Mrs. Alta H. Lonnecker, secretary to the director of the library, said. Watson uses the teletype mainly for inter-library loans. It is also used to take and send messages for 10 departments at KU.
The library got the teletype machine in 1953 as a service for membership in the Midwest Inter-Library Center, a book depository in Chicago. About 25 other libraries associated with the center use the teletype service.
"Many companies use the teletype to request department members for job recommendations," Mrs. Lonnecker said.
Takes Only An Hour
Using the teletype, she can "speak" to any place in the United States which has a teletype machine. In less than an hour she can receive the information she wants.
"You, feel as if you're talking to the other person," she said. "You can get more on teletype messages than on telegrams and can get the answer immediately. Also, using teletype is cheaper than using the telephone." she said.
Letters on a teletype keyboard are not the same as those on a standard typewriter keyboard, she said.
"On a teletype machine, there are no capital letters, question marks or quotes," Mrs. Lonnecker said.
She said that it is often confusing to type a teletype message after typing on an ordinary typewriter most of the day.
A code is followed when calling other teletype stations, she related.
Message Is Relayed
"To call the University of California at Berkeley, I type the code number OA 503. The message from Lawrence goes out over telephone wires to Kansas City, then to a stop station farther west, and then to Berkeley." she stated.
"The operator at Berkeley will type back 'go ahead, please' in telexype code, and I start the message." Mrs. Lonnecker said.
She said that there is no charge for getting a location but that codes are used for speed until the connection is made. KU's number is lawr 8641.
New teletype directories as large as the telephone directory for the borough of Manhattan in New York City are published every three montns, she said.
"We pay rent for a teletype exactly as we do for a telephone." Mrs. Lonnecker added, "we get to keep it as long as we pay the bill."
'Robin Hood' Enjoyed By Both Young, Old
The imagination of a child is a vivid thing, but the youngsters who are lucky enough to see the Children's Theatre performance of "Robin Hood" in the Experimental Theatre will need no abstract forces to be able to feel part of the band of merry men in KU's Sherwood Forest.
Director Sally Six has adequately recreated some of the well-known scenes from the famous novel on the illustrious character. Her staging of Robin's fight with Little John and his fording the stream with Friar Tuck made the characters life-like rather than mere legend.
Robin Hood's quick laugh and dancelike movement, his manliness in conquest and defeat, and his constant good humor were perfected by Terry Kiser.
Both Entertaining
Sneegas was the tumbling fat man who registered some wild and hilarious stylized expressions. Moberly was a cowardly, but excitable sheriff with excellent quick movement and vocal polish.
Larry Sneegas' Friar Tuck and Bob Moberly's Sheriff of Nottingham were the big laugh providers of the evening, both in different ways.
Maid Marion was anything but a withering flower as protrayed by Nancy O'Brien. Her energetic, pert character added a new gaiety
to the show.
Bruce Lewellyn was convincing as Alan-a-Dale. His wife, Ellen, played by Nadine Harrison, was alive and charmingly fresh, yet she maintained a housewifely character which gave her an edge over many of the other players.
Taylor Contest Winner Chosen
Adram Eley was an effective Little John; Sidney Buffington a strong Guy of Gisborne; and Earl Bevan a kindly King Richard. Curtis Zahnd seemed to lack confidence in his role of Will Scarlet, and poor makeup hurt Leela Allen's effectiveness as the sheriff's wife.
Carios M. Campuzano, Kansas City, Mo. senior, won first prize of $85 in the second annual Taylor student book collection contest Wednesday. His winning collection was 25 books on travels in Spain. Campuzano is in the School of Engineering.
Good Supporting Cast
Roger Brown, as a minstrel, set the mood of the show at the beginning and end of each scene with his stirring singing of folk ballads.
"Robin Hood," the play, is guaged for children between the ages of 7 and 14. These children should be enthralled at the performance. Yet, "Robin Hood," the dramatic achievement, should not have any problems delighting adults in the audience. It's a fine little play.
Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth junior, won the second prize of $40 for his collection on the Civil War. He was a finalist with his collection on the same subject in last year's contest.
The judges were Jerome Cushman of Salina Public Library, Dr. C. Frederick Kittle of the KU Medical Center, and John Edward Hicks of the Kansas City Star.
Honorable mention went to Robert L. Packard, Lawrence graduate student, with his collection on North America mammals.
The winning books will be displayed either in Watson Library or the Kansas Union in May.
- John Husar
The contest is sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, Kansas City, Mo. book collector.
Faculty Papers Delivered Saturday
Paid faculty subscriptions to The Daily Kansan will be delivered Saturday morning, because The Daily Kansan delivery boy will be unable to deliver the paper on Friday.
Chicago's motto is "Urbs in Horto," which means "City in a Garden."
Res Ipsa Loquitur Lawyers Alter Law
Take away the lawyers from Green Hall's steps and what do you have? Empty steps.
That is the way they were for several yeu. Deviant this period it was against the law to s
That law, passed by the Law School faculty, said. "Loafing and loitering on the Law School steps and in front of the Law School during class hours is forbidden."
To make sure there was no time to loiter, the faculty passed another ruling which limited the time between classes to five minutes since "there is no necessity for a 10-minute intermission."
These rules were made in an effort to hold down the "horseplay" and "raising-of-hob" by the budding barristers.
The lawyers put up with this administration for several years and then petitioned for the return of their grandstand permits.
They promised faithfully to sit
Exposition Queen To Open Exhibition
Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman, queen of the 1958 Engineering Exposition, will cut the ribbon in front of Marvin Hall and officially open the exposition at 9 a.m. Friday.
Dean John S. McNown of the School of Engineering and Architecture, and Mrs. McNown and Chancellor and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy will be officials at the opening.
Also present at the opening will be Kay Winegarner, Arkansas City junior, the Relays queen, and Emily Mohri, Kansas State sophomore, Big Eight Queen.
with arms folded, to look at the towers of Fraser Hall, and to whistle only an occasional symphonic refrain.
Step-sitting privileges were restored and the law was eventually forgotten.
All that remains is a living monument to the unsuccessful legislation—the lawyers on Green Hall's steps.
The television production of Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew," starring Maurice Evans and Lili Palmer, will be shown at 4 p.m. Friday in the rehearsal room of the University Theatre in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The kinescope, presented on the Hall mark Hall of Fame, will also star Jerome Kilty, Broadway actor, who played Falstaff in the KU production of Sheakespeare's "Henry IV."
Shakespeare Play To Be Seen On TV
The film is sponsored by the University Players and will be open to the public with no admission charge.
There have been two other films in this series at KU. They were "The Lark" and "Hamlet." "Alice in Wonderland," will complete this year's series. It will be shown at 4 p.m. April 25 in the rehearsal room of the University Theatre.
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25,000 Expected For Exposition
Twenty-five thousand visitors are expected to view the 38th annual Engineering Exposition which opened at 9 this morning.
Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman and queen of the exposition, cut the ribbon which officially opened the exhibit. The theme is "Frontiers in Engineering."
Miss Waterson's attendants are Suzanne Kastner, Salina sophomore, and Marilyn Erickson. Mission junior.
The queen and her attendants and Engineering School Dean John S. McNown and Mrs. McNown and Chancellor and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy were the first to view the displays.
Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, is maintaining an information booth for visitors in Marvin.
A 20-foot model of a beam balance scale forms the archway over the entrance to Marvin Hall. Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, constructed the arch.
At the conclusion of the exposition at 12 noon Saturday, Sigma Tau honorary engineering fraternity will award a trophy to the most outstanding of the 21 displays.
The displays are judged on the basis of originality, presentation, individuality, application to industry and student initiative.
Last year the petroleum engineering department won the trophy for the third consecutive year.
'Robin Hood' Play To Be Held Today
Youngsters and parents visiting KU today will have the opportunity to see the Children's Theatre production of "Robin Hood" at 4:15 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Robin Hood will be played by Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb. freshman, and Maid Marian will be Nancy O Brien, Great Lakes, Ill. sophomore. Tickets are available at the Union ticket office. Saturday performances will be at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
This gave them permanent possession of the trophy.
The new trophy, a large silver bowl, is on display in the library in Marvin Hall.
Students in charge of the over-all planning and operation of the exposition are Duane DeWerff, Ellinwood junior, general chairman; Jerry Nelson, McPherson sophomore, publicity chairman; Gary Pack, Wichita sophomore, program chairman, and Arnold Henderson, Topeka senior, route chairman.
Exam To Be Given Orally
Students in Western Civilization honors groups may elect to take an oral examination in place of the written examination scheduled for May 17, James Schellenberg, assistant director of the Western Civilization department announced Wednesday.
A 2,000 to 3,000 word paper on a subject within the scope of the reading program also will be required of those students taking the oral examination. The paper is to be turned in to the student's instructor no later than May 1.
Students choosing this option will meet during the week of May 12-16 with a faculty committee of three for a 30-40 minute oral examination. The examination may cover anything in the readings and may include questions concerning the student's paper.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness today; partly cloudy tonight and Saturday; continued mild; low today between 50 and 55; high between 75 and 80.
AUTHORIZED FOR EDITING BY THE NEW YORK TIMES. (AP)
1.
BIG WEEKEND BEGINS — Engineering Exposition queen, Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman, cuts the ribbon to officially signify the opening of the Exposition at 9 a.m. today. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy watches as Miss Waterson performs one
of her many duties as queen. (Daily Kansan photo)
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, April 18, 1958
Relays, Exposition Underway Today
THE MILITARY CINEMAS
THE ROYALTY—Emily Mohri, Fort Meade, Md. student from Kansas State College at left, and Kay Winegarner, Arkansas City junior, will be the royalty at the KU Relays. Miss Mohri is the Big Eight Conference queen and Miss Winegarner is the KU queen. (Daily Kansan photo)
Co-Queens of Relays In Whirl of Excitement
Kay Winegarner and Emily Mohri—the two beauties who are reigning over the 33rd annual Kansas Relays—are two excited gals.
Miss Mohri, who arrived in Lawrence Wednesday as Miss Winegarner's guest at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house, said in a Daily Kansan interview Thursday night, "I'm just so excited. Everyone here is so friendly, and KU's campus is lovely. I was so surprised at being chosen queen—the whole thing seems like a dream!"
Miss Mohri, whose hobbies include olaying the piano, loves to travel. She has had quite an opportunity for it since her father is a colonel in the U.S. Army.
"I never had any idea I'd get to be Relays queen. My sorority sisters have been about as excited as I have, and everything has been wonderful. Emily and I couldn't have had four more lovely attendants."
Miss Winegarner's feelings on the matter are just about the same.
Pert, vivacious Miss Winegarner was runner-up in the Miss Kansas contest in 1356, a military ball finalist earlier this year and is currently a finalist in the Miss Kansas Press Photographer contest.
Miss Mohri, a hazel-eyed charmer from Fort Meade, Md., is a sophomore at Kansas State College in Manhattan and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. She was recently chosen by Stan Kenton as Miss Royal Purple—queen of K-State's yearbook. And she has been homecoming queen at her school in Fort Meade.
The Relays co-queens are well qualified for their honor.
"We may move to California this summer-I'd like to very much Traveling is fascinating to me," she said.
Miss Winegarner loves sports—tennis, and swimming in particular. Last summer she was a tennis instructor and waterfront director at a summer camp in Maine, and hopes to get a job as swimming instructor at a Colorado camp this summer. At KU she is active in Quack Club.
Jazz Festival To Be Here Sunday
Jazz groups from Big Eight schools will give a jazz concert at KU at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. The Larry Cummings Trio and jazz vocalist Pattie Tucker, both from the Embers Club in Kansas City, will be featured guest artists.
The event is the beginning of the Big Eight Jazz Festival and is sponsored by the KU Jazz Club and Student Union Activities. Admission is one dollar a person. Tickets are on sale at the information booth of the Kansas Union.
Three Queens In Spotlight
The 33rd annual KU Relays, the 38th annual Engineering Exposition, and three queens share the spotlight today and Saturday in KU's biggest spring weekend,
Kay Winegarner, Arkansas City junior, and Emily Mohri, Kansas State College student from Fort Meade. Md., will rule the Relays, and Sharon Waterson, Wichita freshman, will reign at the Exposition's "Frontiers in Engineering."
Given good weather, a record crowd of 20,000 is hoped for at the Relays Saturday afternoon. About 25,000 are expected to see the exhibits at the Exposition.
Skip Williams, Lawrence Relays parade chairman, said he expected about 15,000 to watch the Relays parade in downtown Lawrence at 10 a.m. Saturday.
Relays events started Thursday night when Miss Mohri, Miss Winegarner and four attendants were presented at the athletic banquet after attending the queens' dinner earlier.
About 400 people heard Paul W. Brechler, director of athletics at Iowa State College speak at the athletic banquet. More than 160 high school athletes, KU athletes, and their coaches were guests. After Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy addressed the audience, the queens and attendants were presented by Sam Molen, Kansas City radio and TV personality. The co-queens and attendants were given a miniature gold and silver track shoe charm bracelet.
The parade theme, "Sports in a Scientific World," will be carried out by 23 floats. KU organized houses have entered 21 floats. The other two are entered by Moore Associates of Lawrence and by Hassell Institute. The Haskell float will carry a group of Indian dancers who will perform tribal dances along the parade route.
Queen Crowned Saturday
The queens appeared on a WIBW-TV show at noon today in Topeka. They will be crowned at 2:35 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
The queens will award $2,500 worth of trophies, clocks, watches, and medals to winners of the Relays events.
The queens, attendants, and the other candidates for KU Relays queen will appear in the Saturday morning parade, driven in ten convertibles by members of the KU basketball team.
Marching units entered include the KU marshing band, six high school bands, KU's Pershing Rifles, and color guards from the National Guard and the Disabled American Veterans.
Forty members of the Kansas City Saddle and Sirloin Club will ride show horses and the club will also have three carloads of cowgirls in the parade.
KUOK To Interview
Campus radio station KUOK will have two sports cars in the parade, equipped with a movie camera and a portable recorder, to interview spectators along the route and take a "float's eye view" of the parade. The film and the interviews may be used later for campus TV and radio broadcasts.
Joe Skillman, chief of campus police, is parade marshal. Neither Governor Docking nor Governor Blair of Missouri will be able to attend the events.
(Continued on Page 12.)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18, 1958
AUGUSTA
CROWD PLEASER—A Kansas Relays crowd a good throw. This event is typical of the thrills watches Kansas' shot put ace, Bill Nieder, get off the Relays will provide visitors this weekend.
Welcome To The Relays
This is a big weekend on the KU campus, the weekend of the 33rd annual Kansas Relays and the 39th annual Kansas University Engineering Exposition. The campus will be overflowing with the many visitors to the festivities and the participants in the Relays.
This is a wonderful opportunity for KU to present itself to the many people unacquainted with the University. By being gracious hosts we can give to these visitors a favorable impression of our school. And it is important that these people receive such an impression.
The two-day relays is one of the better and best known track events in the country. Some of the best track and field performers in the country are brought here to provide the sports-minded visitors with top quality performance. Year after year track fans eagerly await that day in April when they can journey to the KU campus to see this great sporting event.
Many of the weekend visitors will be primarily interested in the engineering exposition. This
exhibit is put together each year, with the visitors in mind, by the students of the various engineering departments. The exhibits this year will be centered around the theme "Frontiers of Engineering." Keeping pace with the present scientific developments, some of the exhibits will feature space travel with displays on missile development, human factors in high speed travel, construction of satellites, and rocket launching.
Going along with the space age theme, the annual Kansas Relays parade will salute "Sports in a Scientific World." This parade provides another point of interest to the weekend visitors.
All in all, this weekend should provide the many visitors with an interesting and entertaining weekend. The University has always tried and we are sure, will continue to try to make this special weekend one worthy of attending.
To the visitors, we would like to give a hearty welcome. We hope they will find their weekend visit to the KU campus interesting, entertaining, and worthwhile.
—Del Halev
Letters To The Editor
Too Far
In The Daily Kansas for April 10, we note a filler item stating that aardvarks are not used as beasts of burden in North America. We have often condemned your paper for the maceuraces which it so frequently contains; but this, gentlemen, is going too far—a slur on aardvarks is a slur on us, and we don't like it. Aardvarks are used as beasts of burden in North America, and we can furnish incontrovertible proof in substitution of this claim.
H. Sutjorborg's "Morphology of North American Aardvarks" states that a group of trolls in Sturbridge, Massachusetts has been using aard-varks in place of donkeys since 1903 and is still using them today.
A runrunning friend of ours is at present using a brace of adult male aardvarks to snuggle pint flasks of whisky into Frankfurt, South Dakota. These two are descendants of the purebred racing aardvarks Theodore Roosevelt purchased during the trip on which he wrote "African Aardvark Trails." Each creature, so I am told, carries two pints per trip, and can make six trips in an evening. (Let's see, that's two times six is twelve, times two is twenty four pints at two pints to the quart is twelve quarts at four quarts to the gallon is three gallons. My! That's a lot of whisky.)
We would also like to point out
Perhaps there are no aardvarks now in use on the KU campus. But this is not the fault of the aardvark—the blame can be placed nowhere but on the shoulders of you and benighted prejudiced ignoramuses like you who would kow-toy to the vested interests of the infamous horse-burro cartel. Let us remember the words of Jean-Paul Sartre, who, in his "The Transcendence of the Aardvark," says "You may revile the aardvark, you may ignore him, but you can't write newspaper filler without him!"
an incident which occurred during the 1936 convention of the Bellows Falls, Vermont, Academy of Arts and Letters. Dr. Crathorne Zetler, internationally famous expert on North American Tubulidentata, was waiting to deliver a lecture on the sex habits of aardvarks. Suddenly, from the sullen mob of undergraduates and long-horemen gathered in a ring at his feet came a snarling voice which snarled "Aardvarks are not used as beasts of burden in North America." Dr. Zetler leaped to a nearby chair and barked "Aardvarks are used as beasts of burden in North America and jolly good beasts of burden they are, too. Unless my memory does me a disservice they were introduced by the Potosi Indians of Central Iowa in the early Seventeenth Century. So there!"
Lack In Languages
Your Honor, the defense rests.
George H. Edwards
Kansas City, Kan. graduate student
Editor:
I should like to take this opportunity to commend The Daily Kansan on its synopsis of Dr. Birkmaier's talk. It is refreshing to see that some public interest is still being given to the study of foreign languages.
It is unfortunate that most of the time the only individuals who lend much of their attention to discussions of the role of modern languages in our ultra-scientific world are instructors or departmental majors. Especially the scientifically and politically minded forget that ultimate scientific and political understanding over the surface of our "shrincing" sphere will be mediated through verbal communication. With the vast amount of publication in all fields of study, it is impossible for interpreters to produce reliable translations of all the current material and we certainly cannot expect other nations to convey their ideas to us solely in our language.
The contemporary university undergraduate avoids the study of any foreign language if possible and devotes relatively little time to these few hours which may be required for graduation. Yet, it is possible to understand the student's point of view when he must suffer through a language course with an inadequately prepared graduate teaching assistant.
Haven C. Krueger Wichita 1st Year Medicine
Reply To Letter
First, we would like to state that the editorial "we" is reserved for use of editors, and not for letter writers.
The source of the information at The Daily Kansan's disposal is, of course, a trade secret, but let us say that our sources are impeccable.
The reader has the choice of believing this writer, an admitted associate of rumrunners, or the students' own true-blue newspaper, The Daily Kansan.
1. H. Sutjorborg's book was originally written as a historical novel, and was published as a text on aardvarks only through a printer's error. Herr Sutjorborg is no more a morphologist than Ernest Hemingway. As a matter of fact, the book only mentions aardvarks as an unsuccessful experiment tried in Sturbridge—not used by "trolls," but used for "trolleys." Due to the opening of a new hydroelectric power plant in Upper Sturbridge and the consequent cheap electric power, the aardvarks were deemed impractical.
2. In respect to the rumrunning aardvarks of South Dakota, Mr. Edwards must have mistaken our meaning. We said beast of burden, not beast of bourbon.
3. The Bellows Falls incident, which we understand will be the subject of a new commemorative stamp issue by the Postal Department, was mass confusion from start to finish.
Dr. Zetler has been discredited as an authority on Tubulidentata ever since James Joyce denounced him in "Ulysses." James Joyce's "Ulysses" was published in the unexpurgated edition.
Joyce made no direct reference to Zetler, but J. Swansong Pilsner, the noted literary critic, has stated that the "single pork kidney," formerly thought of only as a sign of Bloom's infidelity, also may be considered a direct aspersion on the qualifications$ of Dr. Zetler—perhaps since "kidney" is an anagram of the Sanskrit word for Zetler.
The aardvark was not introduced by the Potosi Indians, but simply introduced to them by a wandering Frenchman descended from the journey of Marquette down the Mississippi. That Frenchman later became the famous pirate, Lafitte.
4. On this point, Mr. Edwards has us. We cannot argue with Jean-Paul Sartre, possibly because we don't speak French. And we do have a member of the horse-burro cartel in our printing shop. His health hasn't been good since the introduction of the Model T, and we haven't the heart to tell him about the Forward Look.
Dr. Zetler appeared to have been under the influence of some aardvark-carried whisky, except that we've already proved that they never carried it.
The chap is due to retire next year, and plans to open a buggywhip factory with his lifetime savings. In the meantime, we let him carry on his campaign against aardvarks and the internal combustion engine.
Alan Jones
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
By Dick Bibler
NO PARKING
HIGH RISK
GOALS
R-3
BORRER
"FIRST CAMPUS COR WE'VE HAD TO DO ANYTHING TO ELIMINATE THE PARKING PROBLEM."
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
nrweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
nrweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room
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. Mall subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan. every second week. University year except Sundays 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
Olck Brown Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant Manager, Martha Crowser, Jack Harrison, Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Sports Editor; Marc Jable, Assistant Sports Editors; Pat Swanson, Society Editor; Bon Miller, Picture Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager Fed Winkler; Business Manager John Clarke, Advertising Manager; Carol Ann Huston, National Advertising Manager; Bill Irvine, Classified Advertising Manager; Tom McGrath, Promotion Manager; Norman Beck, Promotion Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley ... Editorial Editor
Page 3
'Space Travel Offers New Frontiers'
Space travel presents a new frontier for the world and could be a means of solving the problem of an expanding population. Ray P. Cuzzort, assistant professor of sociology, said Monday. He added that few people are aware of the seriousness of our expanding population.
1958
RAY PAUL CUZZORT
As an example, he said, if there had been only two people on the earth 2,000 years ago and this population of two people doubled every 25 years, there would now be one person for every square yard of livable space on the earth, on the visible planets, and, if all the visible stars had solar systems, on all the planets of those systems.
"This is just an approximation, of course, but it gives an idea of the potential of population growth."
Population is increasing today as never before, he said, and the earth's resources are fairly well defined. New resources and more space will have to be found to meet the population growth.
"If man doesn't destroy himself before the advent of easy space travel, I believe he could control the solar system," Prof. Cuzzort said. "I don't think there is a limit to the capabilities of man. It is not even impossible that he could create suns."
The problems of space travel are not limited to engineers and physical scientists. Prof. Cuzzort said that since the possibility of space travel is so new, there is a problem of finding a man psychologically equipped to endure the stresses of space travel. The test recently completed by the Air Force, in which a man was enclosed in a capsule for several days, is an example of the research being done on this.
As larger crews are required, he continued, the problem of getting men able to work and live together in an environment of a small space capsule becomes a social one.
Prof. Cuzzort said that the World War II studies of bomber crews showed the relation between social factors and crew efficiency. It was found, he said, that if a crew member did not like the pilot or some other member of the crew, his ability was impaired and thus the efficiency of the whole crew was lessened
When crew members were given a chance to choose the crew in which they would prefer to work, Prof. Cuzzort said, the crew which had the most members requesting a change usually was the one which had been the most inefficient,
400 High Schoolers To Attend Jubilee
KU's sixth annual open house for high school seniors, the Jayhawk Jubilee, will be Saturday.
About 400 seniors are expected to attend, and all University schools and departments will be open to visitors. Displays will include geology, entomology, art, design, and book exhibits.
The high schoolers will also see the Engineering Exposition, the KU Relays, and the Relays parade.
The Bahamas, made up of 3,000 islands, cays, and rocks, depend on the sea for transportation, food, and wealth. From the time of the first settlement the sea has been the chief highway.
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1215 West Sixth
Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Did You Miss The Campanile?
Fifty-three bells and not a note heard,
The Memorial Campanile's carillon stood silent all Thursday afternoon. The power plant whistle was the only audible time announcer during this period.
The bells were stilled to preserve the hearing of a crew of welders who were installing maintenance platforms in the tower.
The bells are ringing on schedule today.
The world's tallest peak, 29.028-foot Mount Everest, would fit into the Philippine Trench, off the eastern flank of Mindanao, with a mile to spare. At its greatest depth, the submarine trench plunges 61.2 miles.
J. C. Penney To Speak To Marketing Club
The second public meeting of the Marketing Club will have J. C. Penney, founder of the J. C. Penney Co. Inc., as guest speaker at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
A number of J. C. Penney employees in the area and Lawrence retailers are expected to attend the lecture, "Opportunity As a Way of Life." There is a seating capacity for 500.
Mr. Penney is honorary chairman of the board of the J. C. Penney Co.,
Arabs Wound Immigrant
which is the largest dry-goods chain in the world with 1,694 stores throughout the United States.
JERUSALEM, ISRAELI SECTOR —(UP)— Authorities said today that two marauders believed to be Arabs shot and seriously wounded an immigrant last night and made off with his horse.
Docking To Entertain KU Young Democrats
KU Young Democrats will be guests at an open house Sunday, from 2 to 5 p.m. in the Governor's mansion, Ed Chapman, Leavenworth second year law student said Thursday. The invitation from Governor and Mrs. George Docking was extended to all Douglas County democrats as well as the KU group.
Chapman said any student wishing to go to the open house would be welcome to attend. He said anyone wishing a ride should call him at VI 3-1300.
On Campus, You've Got To Be Dressed Right
Blazers
New Spring Styles and Colors. SemiCasual, The Latest and Coolest.
I'll just use a simple font and color scheme.
Man wearing a white shirt, a black vest with buttons, and a striped tie.
Cool Cardigans
Just Right for Every Occasion. Assorted Colors and Combinations. Towne & King.
BROADWAY FILM FAIR
Knit Sportshirts
Perfect On or Off the Links. Blue, Tan, White, Red, and Combination Colors. Puritan.
TOMMY CALVIN
Two doors north of the Student Union
Jack Norman
1237 Oread
A step from the campus
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18, 1958
HAPPY HAL'S
EAST 23rd
Phone VI3-9753
Complete Family Restaurant
Open 7 Days - 7 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Breakfast Served 7 a.m.- 11 a.m.
DAILY SPECIAL 80c
Also Featuring
Shrimp Fried Young Chicken Steaks (T-Bone, Sirloin, Rib & others) Bar-B-Cued Ribs Delicious Salads (choice of dressing) Your Favorite Ice Cold Beverage
PARTY ROOM AVAILABLE
CHICKEN
POTATOES
Friday, April 18. 1958 University Daily Kansar
Page 5
Many Records Should Fall
By UNITED PRESS
A classy field of 21 universities and 26 colleges opened firing in the 33rd annual Kansas Relays today with heated competition and record-shattering times expected in several events.
Teams from Texas, Michigan Kansas, and Oklahoma were viewed as likely standouts in the 2-day event. The closest competition may come in the distance medley, an event broken down into 440, the 880, three-quarter-mile and the mile distances.
Hougson, a sophomore, clocked a 4:05 anchor lap at the Texas Relays to bring the Sooners home in 9:54.4, almost 10 seconds under the Kansas Relays record.
Texas and Kansas ruled the medley event a year ago, but Oklahoma, paced by South African miler Gail Hodgson, has already defeated both teams in 1958.
Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Michigan are favored in the 2-mile with any of the four capable of
Orioles Take Senators, 4-0
By UNITED PRESS
Everyone thought Paul Richards had gone crazy when he bargained for a pitcher with a slipped disc. But that same pitcher—southpaw Jack Harshman—enabled the Baltimore Orioles to slip quietly into first place in the American League Thursday.
Harshman, whose back was such a question mark that he didn't sign a formal Baltimore contract until last week, vindicated Richards' judgement last night with a relief performance that earned him the victory in a 4-0 triumph over the Washington Senators.
Wearing a special corset for support, Harsham came to the rescue of rookie Milt Pappas in the fourth inning with two men on and one out. He limited Washington to one single the rest of the way to gain his first win for the Orioles since they got him from the White Sox last Dec. 2.
Home runs by Gus Triendos and Brooks Robinson helped the Orioles to their second straight victory which left them the only unbeaten team in the league.
The Yankees defeated the Red Sox, 3-1; the White Sox edged the Tigers. 4-3, and the Indians nipped the Athletics, 3-2.
The lightly-regarded Cubs bounced to the top of the National League standings with a 1-3 victory over the Cardinals; the Giants beat the Dodgers, 7-4, and the Braves defeated the Pirates. 6-1.
Dolson, Welch Win Trophies
William C. Holt, Holland, Mich.
graduate student and Fred H. Faas,
Mission junior, won the runner-up
trophies. Nineteen teams entered
the tournament, held in the Kansas
Union Ballroom.
Trophies were given Wednesday to four men in the year's last SUA sponsored table tennis tournament. Edward Dolson, Kansas City, Mo and Kenneth R. Welch, Prairie Village won first in the doubles. Both are sophomores.
April 25 the KU table tennis team will play a rematch with Kansas State at Manhattan. K-State beat KU 6-1 when they played here in November.
Ottawa Romps Over Bethel in Track
OTTAWA, Kan. — (UP)— Ottawa University took a 93-38 track victory Thursday from Bethel College.
Nick Ganguish of Gibbons, Neb.
set a new Ottawa record with a
discus throw of 146 feet, $2_{1/2}$ inches.
The old mark, was 144 feet, 10 inches,
set in 1952. Ottawa swept the javelin,
oole vault, 220-yard dash, discus
and oule relay events.
surpassing last year's meet record of 7:23.3 erected by Kansas.
Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State sprint star credited with a 9.6 time in the 100-yard dash, led his Cowboy mates to the year's best time in the 880-yard relay, but Oklahoma State 1:22.9 time could be challenged by Nebraska or Texas. Texas one year-old record of 1:24.2 seem doomed regardless.
Individual competition, which annually ranks second in this relaies event, will be highlighted by the showings of Olympic games discutitist. Al Oerter. The Kansas University giant recently became the first man to sail the discus over 200 feet, but the mark may not stand because of a pronounced ground slope.
Texas and middle-distance ace Eddie Southern dipped within a second of the intercollegiate mile relay record and appears a certainty to erase? Oklahoma State's 3-year-old mark of 3:11.6.
The broad jump mark, oldest on the Kansas Relays' book, is likely to tumble under the assault of Ernie Shelby, also of the host school.
Amazing A's Kick-off At Home
KANSAS CITY. Mo.-(UP) The Kansas City Athletics kickoff what could well be their most successful season in the midlands today after taking two of three games in Cleveland.
Ancient Micky Vernon spoiled the Cleveland finale Thursday by doubling in the ninth inning for a 3-2 Indian victory. Despite the loss, manager Harry Craft's rejuvenated Athletics flew home last night with their high morale apparently unshaken.
Craft plans to use veteran Alex Kellner in today's clash with Chicago. Al Lonez will counter with Jim Wilson, a 15-8 performer a year ago. Kellner, 6-5 in 1957, was brilliant in shocking the St. Louis Cardinals for six innings in an exhibition start last weekend.
Vernon's blow, which scored Carroll Hardy and Preston Ward with
the needed two runs, gave young Jim (Mudset) Grant Cleveland's victory yesterday in Grants' first major league try. It also dimmed the tremendous series enjoyed by Bob Cerv.
The stocky former Nebraska athlete had seven hits in the 3-game Ohio stand, driving in nine runs. He singled in the A's first run Thursday and accounted for the second with his second homer. Cerv drove in five runs in a one-man show Wednesday.
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FORWARD
FROM
FIFTY
P
Pae 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18, 1959
Football Team Quarterback Position Mitchell's Top Problem
Jack Mitchell is a man with problems. He's worrying over his first Kansas spring football practice, opening Monday.
For one thing the No. 1 quarterback, Bob Marshall, has an injured knee and probably won't be available next autumn. He is testing his knee in baseball at the present, but it was twice injured last season and there is doubt that he'll be able to go for 1958. Wally Strauch, nifty passer of the Chuck Mather regime, has graduated, leaving only Duane Morris with any genuine experience at the quarterback post, although Larry McKown played enough to letter.
As if this were not acute enough, the quarterbacks must learn the ball-handling and option duties of the sliding-T which will replace the standard-T used here after four years.
Although the Jayhawkers used the sliding-T during the J. V. Sikes regime, they have been essentially a standard attack team since George Sauer installed the pure Bear-T in 1946. Under Mitchell, the swing will be solid sliding-T.
"Quarterback always is a problem during the first year of any sliding-T offense." Mitchell said. "And you can't have a worse problem. You can't move just anybody in there and expect him to do the job."
Morris and McKown, of course, will top the spring list. Don Wrench, Lawrence, and Joe Spurney, Belleville, are the freshman newcomers.
The new offense also precipitates a second basic problem, getting the line to move out quickly as a unit. "We are going to work hard at this." Mitchell emphasized. "We've got to develop more quickness and speed."
This too will be a radical departure from the old offense, which featured considerable pulling at guard and tackle.
Begins Drills Monday
"Besides quarterback, our other personnel problems are at guard and tackle. We're going to find the best 14 linemen and fit them in at center, guard and tackle."
"We'll have the same problem on defense," Mitchell continued. "We'll try to penetrate a little more and play it a little more recklessly. Moving out together is important here too."
"Then, of course, we've got to work hard on speed, agility and fundamentals for everybody."
Eleven lettermen will graduate in June, including Frank Gibson, a 3-year tackle regular; tackle Jim Hull, a late-season starter; guard Bob Kraus, another 3-year regular; Strauch, and end Jim Letcavits, like Gibson an all-conference selection as a junior.
Also lost are halfback Larry Carrier, best dive-man among last year's backs, who dropped out of school at the semester.
Not counting Marshall, the returning monogram list lines up this way:
Ends—Grant Miller, Elmhurst, Ill; H. C. Palmer, Atchison; John Pepercorn, Mission; Dale Remesberg, Iola.
Tackles—Ron Claiborne, Amarillo, Texas; Don Hermick,
Mentor, Ohio.
**Guards—Bill Blasi, Pratt; DeWitt Lewis, Barnesville, Ohio; Tom Russell, Grove City, Ohio; Dick Rohlf, Kirkwood, Mo.; Ervell Staab, Hays; Chet Vanatta, Bartlesville, Okla.**
Centers—Bill Burnison, Ontario, Calif.; Walt Schmidt, East Greenville, Pa.; John Wertzberger, Lawrence.
Quarterbacks—Larry McKown, Oil City; Duane Morris, Salina.
Halfbacks—Homer Floyd, Massillon, Ohio; Buddy Merritt,
Ellis; Ray Barnes, Tacoma, Wash.
Fullbacks—Don Feller, El Dorado; Dave Harris, Washington, D.C.
Mitchell expects a squad of 75 to turn out
1958 Prep Carnival May Yield Many Records
For the first time in the 33-year history of the Kansas Relays, the state's high school athletes will be competing in one class and running along with the collegians when the big 1958 baton carnival unfolds here today and Saturday.
Never before have the state's best track and field stars been given the opportunity to compete in an "open" field here and this year's 2-day meet should result in some of the state's best alltime performances.
Almost sure to tumble are the relay records since this year's meet puts a premium on the baton events instead of the old 15-event meet. And since no team title is on the line, most schools are expected to "load up" for the five relay events on this year's schedule.
Some Finals This Morning
Today's schedule calls for finals in the high school shot put and javelin in the morning and the pole vault and high jump in the afternoon. Also
on the finals schedule are the 120- yard high hurdles, the 100-yard dash and the mile run—the only three individual running events on the slate All three are set for the afternoon
Saturday morning will find the discus and broad jump finals getting underway at 10 a.m. In the afternoon, the four feature relays—the 440, 880, mile and sprint medley—will take over the prep part of the big meet.
The big schools are expected to dominate the relay races. Shawnee Mission, the early season power in the state, has the best times in all three regularly run relays and will be among the teams to beat here.
The Mission 880-yard baton crew has run 1:31.6 this year which is only four-tenths of a second off the relays record set by Salina in 1955.
High Riding KU Nine To Missouri
Floyd Temple moves his baseball team into Missouri this weekend for its first Big Eight road test of the season.
The Javahawkers got away in the first weekend of the season in a triple-tie for second by clipping Iowa State's defending champions twice in a 3-game series. Like Kansas, Missouri opened with a loss to Nebraska on Friday then swept Saturday's doubleheader. Oklahoma won two of three from Colorado. All trail Oklahoma State by a game since the new members swent their opening set from Kansas State.
Kansas has arrived at a better-than-expected 4-3 over-all record because of Temple's maneuvering. His one-two pitchers, Larry Miller and Ron Wiley, are used in left field and third base, respectively when not on the mound. Barry Donaldson, a 2-year catching regular, moves out to third for Wiley when the latter is pitching. This shifts sophomore Carl Lauterjung behind the bat from the outfield.
Thus, Temple keeps his nine best players in the lineup for each game. "We'd like to have one more big pitcher." Temple points out, "but the boys are hitting pretty well and the defense has been sound."
Wiley, Miller and Gary Russell will throw in the order against the Tigers. The regulars are hitting 287 as a unit. Here is the order for MU—Art Muegel, 2b. 241; Barry Robertson, ss. 267; Jim Trombold, 1b, 344; Larry Miller, p-lf, 315; Carl Lauterjung, c-rf, 363; Bob Marshall, cf. 207; Barry Donaldson, c-3b, 421; Harl Hanson, rf. 111.
137 Schools In Relays
One hundred thirty-seven schools coming from as far east as Michigan and as far west as California will be represented in the relays starting this morning.
There are 17 entered in the university division, 25 in the small college class, five junior colleges and 90 high schools from Kansas and Missouri.
Those competing in the university class are: Oklahoma, Colorado, Marquette, Texas A&M, Missouri, Houston, Wichita, Baylor, Oklahoma State, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas State, Texas, Drake, SMU, Arkansas and Iowa State.
In the small college division are: Westminster College, Ottawa, San Diego State, Washburn, Nebraska State College, McPherson College, Bethel, Howard Payne, Lincoln College, Loyola of Chicago, Fort Hays State, Cornell College, Pittsburg State, Emporia State and Nebraska State.
University of Omaha, Northwestern A&M, Compton College, Southwestern College, Tabor College, Southwest Missouri State College, Southern Illinois, Hardin Simmons, Missouri Valley and Kansas Weslevan.
Coffeyville, Kemper Military Academy, Pratt, McCook, Nebraska and Hutchinson will be participating in the junior college class.
The Indians also hold the state's best time in the sprint medley (3:41.7) and the mile (3:28.7).
Top Time Here
The mile relay record here is also the state's best all-time schoolboy effort in that event. Wichita East did that last year, running 3:23.3 in the old Saturday afternoon special mile relay event for the top teams from Friday's finish.
East will present a formidable relay entry this year along with Topeka, Wyandotte, Washington, Junction City, McPherson, Wichita North and Pittsburg.
Three Stations To Carry Results
The Kansas Relays will be broadcast by at least three radio stations in the Lawrence area today and Saturday. Monte Moore, director of the KU sports network, has assembled an 11-man broadcast crew to keep radio listeners posted on up-to-the-minute results of all of the events and play by play reports on most of the major events.
The broadcasts start this afternoon at 1:15 p.m. on KANU-FM, the originating station and on KLWN, Lawrence. WREN of Topeka will join the network Saturday afternoon.
Microphones will be stationed around the track so the announcers can cover the running action on the curves from close range, and describe the field events.
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Page 7
...
University Daily Kansan
CHECKING THE DESIGNS—Herbert Camburn, instructor of speech, checks the costume designs that will be used in "Man and Superman," a University Theatre production to be staged May 3. (Daily Knasan photo)
Costumes Of 1900's Being Made For Play
Work has already begun on the designs for the University Theatre's presentation of George Bernard Shaw's "Man and Superman" April 30 through May 3.
Under the direction of Herbert Camburn, instructor of speech, the costume department is duplicating 10 complete women's costumes and modifying available men's costumes for the 1900-1902 setting.
The budget of $200 will cover even the production of the corsets," Mr. Camburn said.
For references, costumers use original costumes donated by Lawrence citizens and other friends of the University. However, in many cases, Mr. Camburn must study books on the subject, such as "Corsets and Crinolines" by Nora Waugh, many of which are available at the library.
Patterns are then made on paper. From it are cut muslin reproductions which are checked with the original. The muslin is torn up and enlarged, with changes and adjustments made. Again this is torn up before the final costume is made to fit the performer.
First, there is the measuring and having out pieces of the original costume, judging how much has been gathered in or hidden in the original tailoring of the garment.
A costume taken from the original, as many will be in this production, involves a great deal of changes and adjustments, the result being "one half history and one half imagination," Mr. Camburn explained.
Speaking on the problems faced in the costing of this production, Camburn said that the women today are about 2-4 sizes larger than the original costumes. Also, none of the women have long hair, in keeping with 1900 styles. Wigs and switches and false hair will have to be used.
"We try to duplicate the original fabric as closely as possible." Mr. Camburn said, explaining that this is necessary in many cases for proper draping into the correct silhouette.
The original costumes are in many cases very gaudy according to modern tastes, he said, and must be simplified to fit proper theatre standards.
Per costume, it takes one person about five 8-hour working days to complete from top to bottom, Camburn estimated.
"Costuming has become more of a problem because the people know more about what to expect from certain periods of history due to TV and the movies," he said.
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.
Women's residence halls counselors:
All applicants for counselor positions in the freshman halls will meet in Parlor A, Kansas Union, Wednesday, April 23, 1 p.m., in women student who have not filed an application are interested in learning more about the freshman hall program are invited to attend this meeting.
Official Bulletin
Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew," 4 p.m. Rehearsal room, University Theatre, Music & Dramatic Arts Building.
Robin Hood, 4:15 p.m. Experimental Theatre, Music and Dramatic Arts Building
Kappa Phi picnic, 5:30 p.m. Meet at Methodist Student Center.
Hilbert Friday evening services, 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community, Center.
Applications for men's residence hall counselor position for the 1958-59 academic year. Noon deadline. Triplicate for all students. Req. to the dean of students, office 278, Strong.
Robin Hood, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Exposition theatre, Music and Dramatic
Arts Building
Episcopal student vestry retreat, 8-
noon; Lone Star Lake.
SUNDAY
Museum of Art record concert. 2 p.m.
Mozart—Sonata No. 8 in C, K296. Beethoven—Spring Sonata; Sonatas No. 21,
No. 22; and No. 30.
KU Young Democrats reception and tea, 3-5 p.m., governor's mansion. Topeka. Be sure to attend. For transportation call Doyle Bontrager, V. 3-6988. Gamma Delta, cost supper p.m. Imagination Disc. Disc. Fellowship and yessers. All students in.
Gamma Delta, cost supper, 5:30 p.m.
Immmanuel Eutheran Church. Discussion,
fellowship, and vespers. All students
invited.
KAM Candidate Is Queen Finalist
Ruby J. Sterlin, Scott City, Kappa Alba Mu candidate and Kora K. Winegarner. Arkansas City newspaper candidate, will enter the Miss Kansas News Photographers Assn. queen contest finals April 27 in Wichita.
The two KU juniors are among the 10 finalists chosen from 23 entries, representing Kansas newspapers last week in Wichita.
Friday, April 18, 1958
Buddy Rogers, husband of actress Mary Pickford and a native of Olathe chose the queens. Mr. Rogers is a former KU student and star of western movies.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Exposition Has Varied Exhibits
The basis of all engineering is drafting. The engineering drawing display exhibits drawings of students and various devices used in drafting.
Mineral production methods and uses are the theme of the geological engineers exhibit, "Boron—From Pots and Pans to Rocket Plans."
Exhibits ranging from underground mineral deposits to outer space stations are being demonstrated in the 1958 Engineering Exposition, "Frontiers of Engineering."
"A Glimpse of Mathematics in the Modern World" is given to Exposition visitors by the mathematics department. This is a statistical investigation of extra-sensory perception. Visitors are taking part in this experiment.
"Frontiers in Power," the electrical engineering exhibit, is showing how the production of electricity has evolved from the water wheel to atomic reactors.
A possible business enterprise, "The Jayrocket Fuel Co." is being tried by the chemical engineers. Liquid oxygen, manufacturing processes and a model rocket propulsion system are on display.
Actual Smelting Being Done Actual smelting of tin and the casting of ingots is included in the mining and metallurgical engineers' demonstration titled, "Tin—From Floating Mines to Solid Flowing Metal."
Actual Smelting Being Done
Satellite Souvenirs Given Satellite souvenirs are being handed out to viewers of the engineering manufacturing processes display. Included in this exhibit are methods of welding satellite
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The Navy ROTC unit is presenting a display of combat vessels. A model of the USS Topeka is being shown.
Dean Marvin Attends East-Coast Meetings
The car of the future has been designed by the industrial design, department, and radio signals from the American satellites are being received and decoded by the engineering physicists in "Project Moontalk."
bodies, vacuum forming, heat treatment, and close tolerance measurements up to one-millionth of inch.
Randcraft
SHOTS FOR YOUNG MEN
"The Road Ahead" shows the route the future automobile will travel. The display, completed by the civil engineers, stresses construction methods and safety features of the interstate highway system.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, left this morning for Washington, D.C. to attend the annual convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors this afternoon and Saturday.
"Pioneering in Mechanical Engineering" has displays featuring special treatments to increase the strength of steel and electricity generation experiments.
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Mass. VI 3-9871
Sunday he will attend the annual spring meeting of the American Council on Education for Journalism in New York City.
KU JAZZ CLUB AND SUA
present'
BIG 8 JAZZ FESTIVAL FOR '58
Featuring Groups From K.U., M. U., Kansas St., & Oklahoma St.
Sunday April 20 8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium
EXTRA FEATURE:
Larry Cummings Trio With Pattie Tucker
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18, 1958
...
SPRING HAS SPRUNG — Even with a full schedule. KU students find time to relax in their cool shorts. From left, Bill Tillman, Clay Center junior, Peggy McCormick, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore, Howard Ripka, Bronx, N. Y. freshman, Ann Schneider, Ellinwood and Prudy Schneck, Mission, sophomores. (Daily Kansan photo)
Professor Elected President
M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology and director of the University psychological clinic, has been elected president of the Kansas Psychological Assn. He will take office Saturday (April 19) at the annual meeting at the University of Wichita.
"Frontiers in Engineering" is the title of the Theta Tau archway which will guard the front stairs of Marvin Hall during the annual KU Engineering Exposition Friday and Saturday.
Chairman Robert Rehagen, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, said that he and co-chairman William Fisher, Topeka sophomore, are working with 15 piedges on the construction. Each helper will contribute 55 man-hours to the project, he said.
The entrvway is not considered for a contest award. A number of the builders expressed hope that it will be given award consideration in the future.
Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, has been building the entryway to the Exposition for ten years. As in the past, it will be made out of cardboard and wood.
The entryway will be a huge analytical balance. It will stand 20 feet high with a width of 18 feet. On each side, a scale basket will dangle, one holding an 11-foot slide rule and the other containing a rocket-shaped missile, also 11 feet. The base, complete with pointer, will be 5-feet wide
Archway Title Is 'Engineering Frontiers'
The large structure is to symbolize a balance between engineering and progress.
Make a mixture of cinnamon and sugar and roll each prune in the combination until well covered.
Wells Chosen Industrial Queen
The title Miss Industrial Design and a silver trophy were awarded Colette Wells, Lawrence freshman. Wednesday.
Miss Wells was chosen from three finalists by faculty members of the industrial design department. She was sponsored by Dan Ralston, Topeka freshman.
Truman Uraes Tax Cut
Jobs Open On Directory
Applications for two positions on the 1958-59 Student Directory will be taken now through April 26.
Hugh M. Grant, Hutchinson junior and chairman of the All Student Council publications committee, said applications for editor and business manager should be sent to the ASC office in the Kansas Union.
Her duties as Miss Industrial Design will include appearing in the Relays Parade Saturday morning and appearing later at the industrial design department's display at the Engineering Exposition.
When applying students should list their grade average, telephone number, college activities and previous publication experience.
TRUMAN ORGES TAX CUT WASHINGTON - (UP) - Former President Truman urged Congress today to fight the recession by giving midle and low income families a 5 billion dollar tax cut and approving multi-billion dollar increases in defense, foreign aid and public works spending.
A committee of five students and three faculty or staff members will interview the applicants before May 1. Members of the publication committee are: Mary Alden, Hutchinson junior; seniors Steve Schmidt, Salina and Harry Turner, Topeka; Mary E. Olson, Wichita freshman and Grant.
Faculty members are Tom Yoe, director of public relations, Keith L Nitcher, comptroller in the business office, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English.
The two were students at the time the movie was being filmed in the radio and television sequence of the journalism school. They are now in the service.
The annual "Eskuree" day, which stands for Explorer Scout University of Kansas Relays and Engineering Exposition, will be attended by 600 Scouts Saturday. The boys will visit the Engineering Exposition in the morning and watch the Kansas Relays after lunch in the Ballroom of Kansas Union.
THE AUTOGRAPH IS NOT AUTHORIZED TO BE REFERRED TO FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
The students, Kenneth Plumb,
Sunflower, '57, and Paul Culp, Overland Park, '56, in the movie "The Cool and the Crazy," a film about juvenile delinquency. It was made in Kansas City, Mo.
600 Scouts Visit KU
Two recent graduates of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information have roles in a motion picture now showing in Lawrence.
COLETTE WELLS
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The trophy was designed by Robert Montgomery, assistant instructor of industrial design.
2 Graduates Have Part In Movie
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Welcome to the KU Relays!
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Missiles Dominate 'Space Threshold'
lane propellers have seen their day, judging from the aerod exhibit constructed behind Marvin Hall for the Engineering tion this week.
Airplane propellers have nautical exhibit constructed Exposition this week.
"The Threshold of Space" will be the theme of the display built by about 40 students under the direction of George Michos. Brooklyn, N. Y., senior, who says the exhibit will serve as an orientation to what has been going on in aeronautical engineering in the United States during the past years.
On one wall will hang a model missile in relief, showing the various parts and mechanisms with explanations of what each section is used for.
Hanging from the ceiling of the exhibition hut will be a full size 6-foot long model of the Explorer satellite which will be cut away and have the component parts labeled. The pencil shaped model is only 6 inches in diameter. This will be the center of a whole display of satellite models and U.S. military missiles, Michos said.
Bordering the exhibit will be stepby-step illustrations of the production of a missile. The display will show production steps, beginning with the government contract, the engineering and assembly phases and fuel and test firing platforms.
Larger models include the U.S. Jupiter C and Vanguard, plus the 8-foot-high Russian satellite missile. It is the largest and is a scale model of the 127-foot-high Russian missile.
An arsenal of 15-20 small model missiles will be set up with explanations on them as to size, limitations and purpose.
A model of the rail test track use to project men at extreme speeds will be constructed for the display. The purpose of the track firings is to determine some of the human factors involved in outer space, Michos said.
In addition to the exhibits on student work, there will be a jet engine and a piston engine shown.
These are attached to electric motors so they will be operating slowly, giving the observer some idea of what actually happens when such mechanisms are being used.
For publicity purposes Michos has designed a small paper rocket model advertising the aeronautical display. About 2,200 of these paper models are being made for distribution during the exposition.
A two-day educational conference will be conducted by the Kansas Power and Light Co. for 50 of their executives from eastern and central Kansas Tuesday and Wednesday in the Kansas Union.
The department has been working on the exhibit for about four weeks, Michos said. The budget for the project is $00, but much of the displays will be student donations and work, he added.
KPL Executives In 2-Day Meeting
The conference will be conducted by Frank Pinet, assistant professor of business administration; Keith W. Weltmer and Jack Steele, associate professors of business administration, and Edward G. Nelson, professor of economics.
General topics they will discuss are human relations in business, economic conditions, financial analysis and business policy. There will be two classes in the morning and two in the afternoon.
Scientists at Armour Research Foundation have developed glass ribbons which are expected to provide a better building base than fiber glass.
A ship in full sail on Chicago's seal is emblematic of the approach of the white man's civilization and commerce.
A display showing the equipment used and the problems involved in drilling in desert, Arctic and offshore areas, will be featured by the Petroleum Engineering division at the Engineering Exposition.
Problems Shown In Desert Drilling
Dick Birmingham, St. Joseph, Mo. senior, will be in charge of the display titled Geographical Frontiers of Drilling. The display will feature models of equipment used in these processes, showing the equipment in its particular locale.
The display will actually deal with drilling in four areas. These areas will be the desert, the Arctic, the offshore area that includes the Continental Shelf (with depths to about 300 feet) and proposed methods of drilling with underwater rigs that can drill the land as much as 1000 feet under the sea.
In explaining the display, Birmingham said:
"Drilling in the United States has about reached the saturation point. Heavy drilling has exhausted resources in the United States and continental Europe. Recent discoveries of oil in the desert and off shore areas have opened up an entirely new field of drilling. This is what we will try to depict."
Birmingham pointed out the engineers know there is oil under the ocean but they are not sure just how far out the oil runs. He also noted that some drilling is being done in the Arctic circle. He said there were "overtones" of a possible drilling "frontier" in that area.
"The display will show the different means of exploration, how the area is drilled and the type of equipment used in the various areas," Birmingham said.
Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
The display will be located in Room 238 Lindley during the exposition.
Liverwurst is a sausage containing a large portion of liver.
KU's architecture and architectural engineering students today are testing and demonstrating a quick building technique at the Engineering Exposition which has never before been used anywhere in the world. ___
Architects Display New Construction
The new construction method uses waterproof laminated cardboard with a finishing coat of sprayed-on fiber glass. The fiberglass application is done by a recently developed machine which literally chews up a fiber glass rope and ejects the small particles onto the surface to be finished.
Glen McDermed, Lawrence, and Vic Schimming, Wichita, both juniors, are co-chairmen of the display.
McDermed said the dimensions of the structure are 20 by 18-feet. The cardboard roof is supported by a $ 2 ^{1 4} $ -inch pipe central arch and a $ 1 ^{1 4} $ -inch rear arch. The cardboard is $ 5 ^ {3} $ -inch thick.
The structure, located in the triangular plot of ground between Lindley and Marvin halls, will be tested for a year following the Exposition.
Possibilities of the use of laminated cardboard for building was discovered by Willard Strode, associate professor of architectural engineering.
Prof. Strode was experimenting with the cardboard to use for concrete forms when he discovered the cardboard was strong enough to use alone.
Actual construction and testing of the structure was turned over to students as an Exposition project.
"Because the cardboard is so light, our big problem is wind," McDermed said.
"Possible uses for this technique are unlimited," he said. "It can be used not only for buildings, but for other things, such as boats."
The combination of fiber glass and cardboard makes a material
that insulates and is as water proof as any known roofing.
If the cardboard structure passes the tests successfully, and proves to be a popular construction material, a Lawrence company will go into production of the cardboard.
Astronomer Will Speak
Paul W. Merrill, president of the American Astronomical Society, will speak on "From Atoms to Galaxies" at a meeting of Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 124 Malott.
Dr. Merrill's visit to KU is sponsored by the society through a grant from the National Science Foundation.
He has been an astronomer at Mount Wilson and Palomar observatories in California since 1919. During World War I he was a physicist with National Bureau of Standards.
Four Retire After 145 Years' Service
Four professors who have given a combined 145 years of service to the University will retire to emeritus status June 30.
The four are Dr. Sam E. Roberts, clinical professor of otorhinolaryngology at the Medical Center, who has taught at KU 45 years; Dr. Edward Hashinger, professor of medicine and gerontology at the Medical Center, 37 years; Dr. John W. Twente, professor of education, 33 years, and Dr. Austin H. Turney, professor of education, 30 years.
FROM YOUR FRIENDLY LAWRENCE STANDARD STATIONS
WELCOME
to the
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You'll spend an exciting weekend watching the parades, the crowning of the Relays Queen, and the contests—the dashes, the discus, the decathlon and all. You won't want to miss any of them. So off to the biggest and most exciting K.U. RELAYS yet!
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 18, 1958
---
THE YEARBOOK
RARE ONES—Jean Johnson, Lawrence sophomore and student assistant in the music library, displays some of the records that are available at the library in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. (Daily Kansan photo)
Music Library Has 2,000 Records
Would you care to listen to a few original cuttings of Enrico Caruso records? Or perhaps you prefer the 1920's recording of "Bottle It Up and Go" by the Dallas Jug Band, featuring woodblocks, washboards, and cowbells.
Over 2,000 records and albums both rare and popular are available to students and faculty at the music library in Room 448 of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
"All of the records are on the shelves where students can help themselves," said Mrs. Nan Fulton, librarian. She explained that browsing allows the student to become curious about recordings he would otherwise ignore.
"Most of the early opera recordings do not mention the names of the performers—only the conductor." Mrs. Fulton said, adding that occasionally a famous singer would rate mention.
The library has many early recordings of classical artists such as Alma Gluck, Rosa Poussele, Ezio Pinza, and pianists Serge Rachmaninoff, Olga Samoroff and others.
Before moving from the Strong Annex location to the new building students other than fine arts majors were not encouraged to use the collection because of limited space, she said.
Now, however, everyone is invited to use the records, including the rare ones. There are 16 machines equipped with earphones in the library, and six more are expected to be installed in the near future.
"Three of the new machines will be equipped with a 78 r.p.m. speed, since many of the older records are of that speed." Mrs. Fulton said.
Early Jazz Records Available
Duplicates of many of the 1920—1940 recordings by the jazz artists of the day are available. Among them are early records by Jelly Roll Morton, Paul Whiteman, Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby, Red Nichols and others.
"Many of the early recordings sound funny to the modern listener," she said, giving an example of a record called "Awake, Sweet Love" sung by Cecile Dolmeth with a lute and violin accompaniment.
Mrs. Fulton explained that the
easiest way to find a recording is to know the composer and use the card catalogue; however, there is a librarian on duty to aid students.
Students may use the library recordings and study there at the same time, she said.
"Many times I'll see students using the records and machines while working with a slide rule or reading a medical book at the same time," she commented.
The library is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday. No records are to be taken from the room, but students may make tape recordings if they wish.
Mrs. Fulton says that plans are being made to have 33 r.p.m. speed recordings made of the guest recitals and musical events that are presented on campus.
There is also a room designed for group listening, where discussion of records is permitted. This is being used by many classes, Mrs. Fulton said.
Many of the present recordings which are scratchy or defective will also be duplicated.
Jazz Helped Professor
Band A Good College Job
In the days when dixieland jazz was considered "not quite respectable," a KU professor, then an undergraduate, was earning his way through school by playing saxophone on weekends at dances or at the old Bowersock Theatre (now the Jayhawk Theatre) in Lawrence.
Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, still feels that playing in a band is one of the best jobs for college students
"It interferes with homework less than any other type of outside work would." Clark said. "When I was working, we played jazz Friday and Saturday evenings and rehearsed one hour or so during the day. Today, it is much more respectable employment than it was in my undergraduate days (1919 to 1923), when the mildest thing that could be said about it was that it was frowned upon. Musicians are also much better organized now."
He said that he really learned jazz during World War I when he was in military training in the South.
"I didn't frequent dives," he said. "I would just hang around listening and finally joined a group of servicemen who had a little jazz band."
PETER WILLIAMS
Job Came In Handy
In 1919, after he got back from France and entered KU, his jam sessions during the war came in handy when he had to find a job because "there was no GI Bill in those days."
While at KU, he was a member of Phi Mu Alpha, which at that time was both a social and professional fraternity.
"Some of the faculty members of the fraternity looked askance on jazz," Prof. Clark said. "We members earned our musical status separately by being in the glee club, band, or other musical organizations. But some of us who liked jazz would get together to play."
He played jazz professionally in Wisconsin during the summer of 1922. In 1923, after he was graduated from KU, he took a summer job in a five-man jazz combo at an amusement park in Denver, Colo.
"On July 4, 1923, a jitney marathon dance was held," he said. "I played the saxophone for the longest stretch I ever played in my life. We started playing at 10 in the morning and didn't quit until 2 a.m. When we finished, my lip was like raw beefsteak, and the piano player's fingernails were split. But I earned $28, an astronomical amount for a day's work at that time."
"I didn't have a good lip for the cornet, so my mother bought me a secondhand saxophone in 1910," Dr. Clark said. "I had learned music from a German music teacher in grade school. The saxophone was a new instrument then; people would always ask me what it was. Where I was living there was no one to teach it. I picked it up by myself. I could read music and play by car, which ties in with jazz."
After returning from military service in World War II, he formed a jazz group with some other faculty members.
CARROLL D. CLARK
Still Have Small Combo "We broke up in 1954, when several members of the group moved
away and I went on sabbatical leave," Prof. Clark said. "Now a few teachers and I have a small combo and meet now and then for a jam session."
Dr. Clark has a jazz program on KANU, KU's FM radio station from 7 to 8 p.m every Saturday.
"It is an educational broadcast, not a disc jockey type of show," he explained. "I talk about the jazz scene and sometimes have guest jazz groups in to play, and discuss the character, musicology, and sociology of jazz. Jazz has a great deal of social significance. It is a democratic force bringing together people of different races, religions, and backgrounds."
He said that jazz was never a music in which segregation was prominent.
KU
"There was some segregation in
A timber company in the Pacific Northwest is now seeding timber land by helicopter. In one month 17,000 acres of land were seeded in 75 hours of flying time.
Sports Car Club To Hold Rally
Headquarters for
A display of well-groomed cars and a sports car rally will be a semi-official part of the Engineering Exposition.
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will hold a Concours d'Elegance Friday and Saturday in the Marvin Hall parking lot.
The Concours will be held from 9 a.m. until dark Friday, and 8 a.m. to noon Saturday.
Jayhawk
"Jazz is largely a cultural innovation of the Negroes," he explained. "But it is not Negro music—it is American music. Many minority groups in America have participated."
The rally will be judged on time and distance checks, with many average speed changes and "a few gimmicks," Jim Masson, Bethel freshman said.
After the Concours, the club will hold a rally and a picnic. There is to be a driver's meeting at 2 p.m.
Saturday south of Allen Field House. Starting time will be 2:15 to 2:30 p.m.
At the Concours, rather than the usual set of judges to pick the best car, the winner will be chosen by the votes of the spectators.
Many Europeans believe that jazz is the only true indigenous art form that America has contributed, he said.
NOVELTIES & SOUVENIRS
The cars are judged, not on speed or nearness—they never move during the concours—but on cleanliness, condition of the finish and chrome, additional equipment installed by the owner and over-all beauty. Allowance is made for the age and mileage of the car, but a Concours winner must be a near-perfect machine.
Jack Heimovics, Prairie Village sophomore and Concours chairman, said the club expects 25 to 30 entries from KU, Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City.
ku
the early days, but it was dissolved quite early," he said.
Among the cars entered will be Jaguars, Austin-Healeys, Triumphs, Porsches, MGs, and Ghia-Karmann Volkswagens.
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Friday, April 18. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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NOTICE—effective June 1. student and faculty rates on Lite magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1958
Puerto Rican Art To Be Exhibited Here Saturday
Puerto Rican rural community life and problems will be depicted in an exhibit of 18 woodcuts, 14 posters, and a portrait from Saturday to May 10 in the Museum of Art's lower gallery. The exhibit was a gift to Seymour Menton, assistant professor of Romance languages, from Pedro Juan Soto of the Division of Community Education in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
"By focusing the attention of the continental American public on the aspect of Puerto Rican culture, this exhibit, besides its artistic value, will have the effect of partiy counterbalancing the excessive publicity given to the socio-economic problems of the Puerto Ricans in New York City," he said.
Seven Puerto Rican artists are represented in the exhibit: Felix Bonilla, Jose Melendez Contreras, Juan Diaz, Lorenzo Homar, Tony Maldonado, Carlos Rivera, and Rafael Tufino.
The woodcuts and posters illustrate scenes from educational, historical and folkloric movies and booklets. The exhibit contains a portrait of Pablo Casals, the Spanish edlist, by Lorenzo Homar. Several of the works of art have won prizes in international competition.
"In the Division of Community Education, artists and authors are cooperating to improve conditions of rural Puerto Rico," Dr. Menton told a Daily Kansas reporter.
The opening of the exhibit precedes by one week the 15th annual Cervantes Day, sponsored by the department of Romance languages.
THE CABINET
WE WISH YOU LUCK—Ray Burcham, Bonner Springs freshman, started growing a beard in May of 1955 after returning from a trip prospecting for uranium. He has decided not to shave until he actually hits the jackpot in his prospecting for uranium. Burcham prospects only as a hobby. He is majoring in mechanical engineering at the University. (Daily Kansan photo)
Job Picture Looks Bright
Joe College, class of 1958, may find that a college diploma is no longer an automatic ticket to a job. But the alleged business recession isn't scaring students at the University.
"The job picture looks bright for KU's 1,300 June graduates." said Arno F. Knapper, assistant professor of business administration and director of the Business School Placement Bureau. "Although companies are being more selective in hiring students, the limited number of job offers dispatched have been offset by the increase in the number of companies that have visited the campus this year."
"All of our graduates are finding jobs," said Dean John S. McNown of the Engineering School "and I see no setback on hiring."
Representatives from 87 companies have conducted interviews at the Placement Bureau since September. Many of the companies have visited the campus more than once this year.
The Engineering School feels that its students are in a healthier situation now that companies are being more selective.
"I think that the companies should be more selective because when a boy feels that he has competed for a job, he will be hapier with his job and his employer will be happier with his employe," said Dean McNown.
Journalism Jobs Plentiful
There are more jobs for Journalism School graduates than can be filled, but journalism seniors have decided that the best way to get a job is to go out and look for it.
A car, letters of application and four days of vacation were the only tools employed by one Journalism School senior who secured six job offers from metropolitan newspapers in Kansas, Missouri, Indiana and Ohio during spring vacation.
"Graduating journalism seniors have big ideas about jobs," said Dean Burton Marvin of the Journalism School. "Generally they can get general reporting jobs on small city papers, but they must have several years of experience before they can get into big prestige jobs."
Engineers lead the pack in receiving the most job offers, since the demand for engineers is better than a third higher than a year ago. But the actual number of job offers received by each student is impossible to trace since the students correspond directly with the company.
Personality Top Factor The most important single factor in selecting candidates for jobs, according to Mr. Knapper, is personality—not grades. Even in engineering, such things as poise, ability to work with people, appearance and related characteristics count most.
The order in demand for men graduates, according to the Placement Bureau statistics, are engineers, salesmen, business trainees, accountants, chemists, production management experts, insurance men and financial trainees.
Women graduates most wanted are general business trainees, salesgirls, secretaries, engineers, statisticians, chemists, and merchandising experts.
Although hundreds of recruit officials have been beating the campus looking for male help, they generally wait for the women to come to them.
Monthly pay-average starting pay for men is $410, compared with $383 per month a year ago. Engineers will get the most—$433 a month. Accountants will average about $389 and salesmen $385. A master's degree is to add about another $100 a month to a neophyte engineer's pay and a Ph.D. will add another $150 over that.
Salaries for women, job for job, are somewhat lower than for men. Sure, it's not fair, but industry's answer is that they can't be sure a girl will stay put.
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German Art Studied Best In America'
The best place to study German art and its emotional experiences is right here in America, Klaus Berger, associate professor of art history, said at a Student Union Activities art forum Tuesday.
"The contemporary German expressionalist was driven from the country under political pressure in 1938, Prof. Berger said." Now you can find more German art in America than in Germany."
"German art has always been strikingly different from French and Italian art in that the stress is on individual expression rather than formal relations. You can warm up to and live with German art because it is characterized by invertness. Many of the pictures do not show ideal beauty, but they are true to life. The models look like people you and I have humar relations with," he said.
Prof. Berger, who has seen German art from three different viewpoints, said "I don't say it is the best art, but it definitely has this human quality that is lacking in the Romance people's formal detachment."
During the forum Prof. Berger showed pictures on two screens to point out the differences in Germanic and Romance art.
"One can see the difference in the pictures just because they look different," he said, "but the real difference is in the structure, meaning and intention which the artist gives.
Relays, Exposition Open
(Continued from Page 1.)
The floats entered by organized houses will be judged by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce. Trophies will be given the best three floats in both men's and women's divisions. They will be awarded at the Student Union Activities sponsored Relays Dance by Bill Fricke, Jefferson City, Mo. junior and master of ceremonies. Fricke will also introduce the Relays queen and attendants at intermission and award them silver
Dance At 9 p.m. Saturday Harlan Livingood's band, from Kansas City, Kan., will play from
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. 9 p.m. to midnight. The dance decorations carry out the parade theme with a wire and paper rocket behind the bandstand and stars spread throughout the ballroom. Larry Marshall, Salina sophomore and dance chairman said advance ticket sales indicate there will be a much larger crowd than last year.
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LAWRENCE DRIVE-IN
"Three Faces of Eve"
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KU Track Forces Ready For 33rd Annual Relays
AIRCRAFT DEPOT
Sports
Daily Hansan Sports
55th Year, No.128
SECTION B
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 18, 1958
Relays Underway; Grid Hopes High
Football Fortunes Like Weather-Will Change
By BOB MACY
(Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan)
Kansas football has been something like the Kansas weather. If you don't like it now, just wait awhile and it's bound to change.
The KU football fortunes have been about as stable as the Stock market-you never knew which way they were going to turn next.
However, because of a series of rapid events last fall, KU students, fans and alumni are now convinced they have found a man who can lead Kansas out of the football wilderness.
The man to do the leading is Jack Mitchell, a former Oklahoma University star quarterback who was hired by KU Thanksgiving Day, 1957. When Charles V. (Chuck) Mather resigned the coaching position mid-season last year, Mitchell was the only replacement even mentioned for the job.
The 34-year-old native of Arkansas City has a 30-17-2 college coaching record. Mitchell attributes the record to the fact that he and his assistants have gotten some pretty good football players.
"Ive never seen alumni who are as enthusiastic and ambitious to have a good football team. It's wonderful to be a part of a school where the alumni are as active as they are here," he said in a Daily Kansan interview.
Getting top football prospects isn't just an accident with coach Mitchell and his staff. They are known throughout the area for their ability to recruit top football players. As of the first of April, Mitchell and his staff had already recruited 25 boys who said they planned to accept scholarships at KU.
If you ask Mitchell what the biggest factor is in the success of his recruiting drive at KU you'll get a quick, emphatic answer—the alumni.
"I'd anticipated quite a bit of help from the KU alumni when I came here. But I can truthfully say the alumni here have gone far and beyond what I'd anticipated."
"The throwing will also be weak, I'm afraid. There's not a lot we can do about it before fall because you can't instill the basic fundamentals in a team and also teach them a strong passing attack." Mitchell said.
Mitchell said the Jayhawkers will be lacking in depth and speed next year.
Looking into the future, Mitchell made a prediction that should make every KU fan happy.
"I can see KU contending for the Big Eight title yearly in four or five years."
PETER L. BENNINGTON
BILL EASTON
C. SALVATORE
JACK MITCHELL
Top Men In Sports Have Been Relays Refs
Kansas Relays referees have included Dr. John Outland, the founder, Knute Rocke, former Notre Dame coach, Avery Brundege, AAU president, Jim Kelley (twice), Glenn Cunningham, former Kansas track star, E. A. Thomas, former Kansas high school activities commissioner and, this year, Karl Schlademan, one of the founders.
(5-column photo by Jim Hahn)
KU Track, Field Event One Of Nation's Best
By GEORGE ANTHAN (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
At 9 a.m. this morning the 1958 Kansas Relays, streamlined into a 2-day event and promising to become one of the three top track and field events in the nation, began with the 100-meter dash and decathlon.
Over 2,500 athletes, ranging from the university class through college, junior college and high school, are competing.
The Relays get into full swing this afternoon at 1:15 p.m. with a program featuring high school bands and a flag raising by ROTC units. Saturday afternoon it's the KU band providing music at 1:15 p.m.
Then it's back to track with the finals of the high school 120-yard high hurdles at 1:30 p.m. At the same time the high schools will be holding preliminaries and finals in the high jump.
Once again Kansas, as a team, is expected to dominate the Relays. The Jayhawkers scored 103 points in winning the Texas Relays title against 64 for second place Texas. Although there is no official team title, an unofficial point total is kept and the team with the highest number is awarded an unofficial title by sportswriters.
Kansas' Al Oerter, in winning the shot put and discus in Texas, was the only university class athlete to win two events, something he may do again this weekend and repeat at the Drake Relays April 25-26.
Last year, with showers on Friday and threatening skies on Saturday, 13.500 turned out to see 14 records broken on a track that was far from being in top condition.
In another big upset, a KU freshman, Cliff Cushman, competing unattached, defeated 2-time Relays champion Gene O'Conner of K-State in the 400-meter hurdles.
Eight of the 11 individual winners of last year were underclassmen and will again this year make strong bids against the newcomers for first places. With this array of talent back another mass onslaught on the records is expected.
The 21-jewel wrist watches, electric desk clock, trophies, plaques and medals are all bought. All that is needed now is someone to win them and indications are that there will be no lack of contestants.
There Will Be Queens. Too
The fans will see Olympic winners,world record holders,the ten college athletes in the nation,the best of Kansas' high school athletes and beautiful queens and their attendants.
They will also see, providing the weather remains fair, many records fall by the wayside.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1958
LHS
THIS IS THE WAY IT'S DONE—Ernie Shelby broadjumping.
MILLER
BILL TILLMAN—Improving rapidly in low and high hurdles.
Bad Weather Bothers KU Frosh, Too
Unseasonably bad weather has held down the freshman track squad activity to the point that Bill Easton doesn't know yet what his team can really do.
"The weather is simply too bad." Easton said in a recent interview. "We'll need at least a solid week of good weather before we can let the freshmen run."
No time trials "to speak of" have been held for the full team, Easton said, but a few men have been timed in workouts with the varsity team.
"We've been concentrating on the varsity so far," he said, "The freshmen we have let run look pretty good."
Some of the freshman times posted this year, which can't be taken as an indication of the team's full strength, were given by Easton.
Paul Williams has run : 09.7 seconds in the 100-yard dash.
Martin (Tuck) Mason, Ord, Neb,
and Gordon Davis, Wichita, have
clocked times of 2:00 and 2:00.3, reso-
rectively, in the 880-yard run.
Three quarter-milers who Easton says are doing .51.4 to .52 are Paul Rearick, Wichita; Larry Wood, Wymore, Neb., and Darwin Ashbaugh Ellis.
Easton said no hurdles timing had been done.
A 4:18.2 mile timing was made by Danny Ralston, Topeka. Another miler, Bill M. Mills, Denver, Colo., has pulled a left leg muscle and is probably out for the season. His best high school time was 4:22.8.
In the field events at least one person will make a welcome addition to future KU varsity squads. Pole vaulter John Stevens, Ames, Iowa, has cleared the bar at 12 feet 10 inches. Easton's varsity has no pole vaulter this year.
Discus men who have recorded tosses are Gerald Foos, Scotts Bluff, Neb., 152-feet 10-inches, and Phil Miller, Wathena, 140 feet.
Trackmen were not able to run outdoors until March 25. Even then, rains made the track soggy and generally poor for working a team into shape.
"We still need and are anxious to have boys who have had high school experience and are willing to run," Easton said.
"Maybe they are waiting for the weather to improve," he said.
MATTHEW MILLER
THAT'S PRETTY GOOD—Ernie Shelby (right) measures Kent Floerke's jump. This pair gives KU one of the nation's strongest broadjumping teams.
Competition'Terrific' This Year
Rv HM CARLE
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
"We can expect the same teams who gave us trouble in the indoor season, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado, to do the same outdoors," he said.
Big Eight competition this year will be "terrific" in every event, B!l! Easton said.
Kansas finished the indoor season undefeated and won its seventh straight league indoor title as the KU distance men picked up almost half of the team's total points in three events—the mile, the 2-mile, and the 880-yard run.
"The only thing, he said, is that the weather, and most important, a lack of sunshine, have been the hardest on the squad."
Easton is playing it safe and making no predictions as to the final outcome of the season.
A run-down on Big Eight trackmen shows that Easton is not just being conservative in his dislike to guess at the final standings.
There are five 1957 Kansas Relays champions in the conference. These are Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State, 100-yard dash; Phil Delavan, Iowa State, shot put; Al Oerter, Kansas, discus; Gail Hodgson, Oklahoma, mile, and Clif Cushman, Kansas, 400-meter hurdles.
No one in the league appears to becoming close to Oerter in the discus. The Olympic champion hit a career high of 188-feet 2-inchs in the Texas Relays this year and is reportedly aiming at an eventual 200-foot toss.
Oerter out fired Delavan at the Texas Relays in the shot put with 56-feet 1-inch measurement. In the indoor season, Delavan set a new Cyclone varsity record of 55-feet $3^{1/2}$-inches, but Oerter won the indoor championship with a toss of 57-feet, his career high in that event.
Oklahoma State's Hazley had to settle for fourth behind Dee Givins, Oklahoma and just ahead of Jayhawker Charlie Tidwell.
Hazley had several 09:5 clockings last year as a sophomore and was defeated only by Bobby Morrow at Texas and Ira Murchison at Drake.
Givens, Tidwell, and Hazley,
with lows of: 09.6, 09.7, and 09.5
respectively, will run a hot race
for the conference 100-yard title.
Hodgson ran a torrid 4:05 anchor mile in the distance medley for Oklahoma at the Texas Relays. In this event he put on the steam to catch KU's Tom Skutka, who had an 18-yard lead.
In the same meet, Skutka ran off a 35-yard lead in the first mile of the 4-mile relay.
Kansas has some strong men in competition and some weak spots showing through at the same time.
One of the bright spots in the field events is the broad jumping of Ernie Shelby. He cleared 25-feet six times in the indoor season. His indoor jump of 25-feet 4-inches was the longest in Big Eight history.
3 Lettermen Return To Golf Squad
"Bolstered by the return of three lettermen, the golf team has a good chance of finishing third in the Big Eight meet held May 16 and 17," said Jerry Waugh, golf coach.
Last year the Javahawkers placed second to the Sooners in the league meet at Lincoln, Neb. But the number one and two golfers from that second place team, Bill Salyer and Gene Elstun, were lost by graduation.
"First and second places should go to Oklahoma University and Oklahoma State in that order. Third place will be up for grabs and we should have a good chance of taking it."
Over 30 On Team
The three lettermen returning to this year's squad of over 30 men are Robert Davies, Dodge City, senior; Bob Wood, Liberal, junior; and Bill Toalson, Dodge City, junior. Toalson holds the Lawrence Country Club record with a sub-par 66.
A top prospect for the No. 4 man on the team is Jerry Krause, a sophomore from Kansas City. This last summer Krause reached the semi-finals of the National Amateur Golf Tournament.
"Our returning lettermen all shot constantly in the 70's last year, which is real good golfing. Yet Oklahoma University will have to be the favorite to regain their conference title as they lost only one man from their winning team of last year. Oklahoma State always has placed a strong emphasis on golf and should have a real strong team." Waugh said.
Waugh's First Year
Waugh, who is in his first year as golf coach, pointed out that the weather has held the team back. As a result, the team has not gotten in very much outdoor practice. Two weeks ago the team went to Texas in an effort to get in some outdoor practice before league competition started.
Waugh added that this year's league meet is on Friday and Saturday. The 5-man teams will play 36 holes the first day and will close with 18 on the final day. Scoring is by medal play or the total strokes taken by each team's four best scorers.
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Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
KU Baseball Team Hampered By Bad Weather
Kansas' baseball team left March 29 for a 4-game swing into Texas to open its 1958 season. The Jayhawkers played Rice at Houston April 4-5 and Houston University April 7-8.
This season's practice sessions have been marred by adverse weather conditions. Rain kept the team off the practice field and the players have had only a minimum of outside work. Also, the new baseball field will not be used because of the time lost working on it because of the weather.
Regulars returning to bolster Floyd Temple's squad are All Big Eight pitcher Larry Miller; Bob Marshall, center field; Jim Trombold, first base; Barry Robertson, shortstop; and Barry Donaldson, former catcher who will play third base.
The rest of the line-up is Carl Lauterjung at catcher, Harl Hansen or Art Miller in right field and Art Muegler at second base. John Hanson is another pitcher who saw action on the Texas trip. Trombold was all conference last
year and also made the fifth district all star team.
Temple expects Oklahoma State and Oklahoma to be the rough teams in the Big Eight conference this season.
"Iowa State should be pretty tough and we'll be up there somewhere, we hope," Temple said.
Floyd Temple's unready band met Rice at Houston and Houston U. Temple was fairly certain of his pitching rotation, only because of his available veterans, but had no idea of how to arrange his
batting order.
The rain and snow have broken long enough to allow three sessions of infield drill, but the continued chill kept the pitcher's arms sheathed and most batting has been done before the pitching machine. Temple threw his all-Big Eight pitcher, Larry Miller, at the Owls. John Hanson, Tonganoxie sophomore righty, drew the opening assignment against Houston with Wiley due to return in the second game.
two vets will handle left field. Bob Marshall returns in center with Harl Hansen, Kansas City sophomore or Art Miller, St. Benedict's transfer, in right.
Temple will try his varsity catcher of two years standing. Barry Donaldson, at third with sophomore Carl Lauterjung behind the plate.
When they're not pitching the
Another rookie, Art Muegel,
opened at second. Two-year regu-
lars, Jim Trombold and Barry
Robertson, returned at first base
and shortstop.
KANSAS RELAYS-1958
For Your Convenience we offer you the Relays Schedule
ORDER OF EVENTS AND TIME SCHEDULE
Morning Events, Saturday, April 19 TRACK EVENTS
110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon 9:00
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries (time basis) 9:30
One Mile Relay—Junior College—Preliminaries 10:30
FIELD EVENTS
Discus Throw—Decathlon 9:15
Pole Vault—Decathlon 10:00
Discus Throw—High School—Preliminaries—Finals 10:00
Broad Jump—High School—Preliminaries—Finals 10:00
Javelin—Decathlon 10:45
1500 Meter Run—Decathlon 11:30
Afternoon Program TRACK EVENTS
University of Kansas Band ... 1:15
Flag Raising Ceremony—R.O.T.C. Units ... 1:25
120 Yard High Hurdles—University and College—Final ... 1:30
Distance Medley Relay (440-880-$\frac{3}{4}$ Mile) College—Final ... 1:35
Distance Medley Relay (440-880-$\frac{3}{4}$ Mile)—University—Final ... 1:50
100 Yard Dash—University and College—Final ... 2:05
Sprint Medley Relay (440-220-220-880)—High School—Final ... 2:10
Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen ... 2:25
Cunningham Mile—A.A.U.—Invitational—five to six men—Final ... 2:35
100 Yard Dash—A.A.U.—Special Invitational—six men—Final ... 2:40
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Final ... 2:45
Quarter Mile Relay—College—Final ... 2:50
Quarter Mile Relay—University—Final ... 2:55
Two Mile Relay—College—Final ... 3:00
Jumping over a hurdle.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1958
AUSS
AISY AISY
U.S.A.
AMSAS
BRIAN TRAVIS—Another Distance Ace. JERRY MCNEAL—Experienced veteran. CLIF CUSHMAN-All-around track man.
New Relays Format Aids Distance Men Kansas High School Semper Greatest 2-Miler In Kansas History The greatest 2-miler in KU and Only Wes Santee's 8:58 for a then try of the 4-mile relay at the 1951
Kansas High School Meet Streamlined Also
The Decathlon, a standard Kansas Relays event since 1928, will be
Back in 1937 Indiana won four Kansas Relays baton championships. The Hoosiers, running under the late Billy Hayes, also won the mile team race, which then was substituted for the 4-mile relay.
No school has ever equalled that harvest, spearheaded by men like Don Lash, Tommy Deckard and Mel Trutt, in the intervening 21 years. Expansion of the Mt. Oread Games into a 2-day meet now will bring such possibility back into focus. The new format, for example, pairs the 4-mile and sprint medley on Friday and the distance medley on 2-mile on Saturday. This means distance aces like Texas' Joe Villarreal, Gail Hodgson of Oklahoma and Kansas' Tom Skutka could go to the post as many as four times as Wes Santee was accustomed to doing.
Indiana's old pinnacle, which' amounted to five relay titles, still will be exceptionally difficult to bring off even with the extra day of action. For the competition, of course, has grown steadily stiffer.
The sprinter's task will be as rugged as ever since preliminaries in the 440, 880, and mile relays have been added. The logical spot to string a quadrangle, then, will be from the Sprint Medley up. Under the old one-day plan, which existed through the first 32 years of the Relays, the custom was to load the gun in one or two relays in an effort to bring home at least one set cf watches.
No distance man could be expected to run more than two separate miles or a mile-880 combination against tough competition in one afternoon.
The new schedule breakdown in the University and college classes aligns this way:
Saturday afternoon—120 HH finals; College distance medley; University distance medley; 100 finals; Glenn Cunningham Mile; College 440 relay final; University 440 relay final; College 2-mile relay; University 2-mile relay; College 880 relay final; University 880 relay final; 2000-meter steeplechase; College Mile relay final; University mile relay final.
Friday morning—College 440 relay preliminaries; college 880 relay preliminaries.
Saturday morning—no University or College events.
Friday afternoon—120 HH preliminaries; 4-mile relay; 100-yard dash preliminaries; University sprint medley; College sprint medley; University 440 relay preliminaries; 440-meter hurdles; 2-mile run; University 880 relay preliminaries; College mile relay preliminaries; University mile relay preliminaries; broad jump preliminaries and finals; discus preliminaries and final.
Dees was never defeated in a conference dual or league meet during his varsity career. H won the old Big Six shot put crown six times in a row, three indoors and three outdoors.
At the 1953 KU Relays Dees set a new Relays record in the shot put when he threw the 16-pound ball 51 ft. 3 1/8 inches.
maintained as usual on Friday and Saturday mornings. The interscholastic meet, which has overflowed Friday afternoon for 53 years, has been streamlined and integrated with the Relays proper as has been done on the other two major Midlands' station. Texas and Drake.
Elwyn Dees, KU's first NCAA shot put champion, can lay claim to a string of conference performances that may never be matched
The major changes here are elimination of team point totals and classes. The schoolboys now will run virtually the same card as their big brothers, which means elimination of the waves of personnel which clogged the 220, 220 LH, 440, and 880 fields. The 880 and mile relays have been retained with the sprint medley, 2-mile and 400 added.
Qualifying rounds are scheduled in the 440, 880, mile and sprint medley. The 2-mile field will be limited to the eight teams showing the best practice or competitive time for the season.
"Our new high school set-up has been received very enthusiastically by all the coaches I have heard from." meet director Bill Easton explains. "We think it will develop into the finest high school meet of its kind."
The 100. high hurdles, and six field events will be retained. All this means the high school boys will be competing in a relay meet instead of a track meet.
Dees Unbeaten In Loop Play
The greatest 2-miler in KU and league history was Herb Semper. The current challenger for this distinction, Jerry McNeal (above, center) who had a 9:06.1, must run even better than he has if he is to topple Semper's 5-year mark of 9:05 set in the NCAA meet in 1951.
Semper, a squat redhead from Forest Park. Ill. left the running scene the holder of both the conference indoor record of 9:07 and the outdoor record of 9:21.
Only Wes Santee's 8:58 for a then college record set in a triangular meet against Arkansas and Drake in 1954 tops Semper's record.
Semper was equally as good at the 4-mile cross country event, winning two successive NCAA crowns in 1950 and 1951. The latter performance was in snow and biting winds at East Lansing, Mich.
His best mile time was a 4:11.7,
a figure he reached in the anchor carry of the 4-mile relay at the 1951 Drake Relays.
Tulane New KU Opponent
Kansas' 1958 football schedule shows one new opponent in Tulane. The Green Wave replaces Miami and will be meeting the Jayhawkers for the first time here October 25.
Al Oerter won the Olympic discus throw with a record 184 feet $10\frac{1}{2}$ inches at Melbourne.
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Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Welcome to the
38th Annual
ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
1943
Marvin Hall, main building of the School of Engineering and Architecture, houses many of the exhibits.
This Year's Theme:
Frontiers in Engineering
April 18-9 a.m.-9 p.m., April 19-9-12 a.m.
Regular Guided Tour
Entrance at Marvin Hall
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1958
KU
WOW!
KU
Let's watch the newer, bigger
1958 KU RELAYS PARADE
10 a.m. Saturday
Congratulations to Champion KU Track Team from
714 Vermont
MORGAN-MACK
YOUR FORD DEALER
VI 3-3500
Welcome Visitors!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT
Extends A Hearty And Cordial Welcome To Every High School,Junior College College And University Competitor Who Will Visit Our Campus This Weekend
KU
To the 33rd KU Relays
[Name]
ARTHUR C. "DUTCH" LONBORG UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Director of Athletics
Friday, April 18, 1958
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
WILLIAMS
TOO LATE NOW—It's too late for Penn's Gene Venkze to catch Kansas' great miler Glenn Cunningham. This was only one of the many fine duels the two had during their college careers.
LANSY
CLYDE COFFMAN—One of the greatest decathlon performers in American history. He also was a top pole vaulter. Performed for Venezuela in the early 1930s.
Kansas in the early 1920s
Dalzell Ran In Shadow
Art Dalzell, one of KU's all time greats, had misfortune of running at the same time as the great Wes Santee.
Although Dalzell had times of 4:13.7 in the mile and 1:52.8 in the half-mile, he went unnoticed. This was due to Santee's record performances and long winded comments capturing the public's attention; if it hadn't been for Santee, Dalzell would have been the conference's No. 1 distance runner.
Also during his career, he ran a 1320 yard leg in the distance in 3:01. It was this medley team that beat the world's record.
Due to the heavy competition of his teammates, he won only one conference title, in his sophomore year. Dalzell ran the 880 in 1.567 in mud and rain. However, he finished fifth in the NCAA mile as a senior and almost went to the Olympics in the 1500 meter run.
Dalzell was perhaps the most unsung and underrated track star in Kansas University history.
Lonborg Lettered In Three Sports
Dutch Lonborg, Jayhawker athletic director is one of only 32 Jayhawker athlete to earn letters in three sports. He also is one of a handful who rated first-string all-conference selection in football and basketball. He demonstrated further versatility by earning his grid letters at end in 1917 and 1919 and at quarter in 1920.
He was an All Missouri Valley guard in basketball, later meriting All America AAU acclaim with the old KCAC in Kansas City. He was a 3-time baseball letterman at third base.
Freshmen Make Swim Future Bright
The return of the entire varsity squad plus some top freshman prospects is making the future for swimming at KU look bright.
Jay Markley, swimming coach said the Jayhawkers should come up with a very good team "if all the boys are back and eligible." Markley said he wasn't worrying very much about his men being eligible—the over-all team grade average for the first semester was 1.84.
Brad Keeler. Bartlesville, Okla., a sprint man that Markley considers the best in KU's history.
Coach Markley said the big thing is that the varsity will have the much needed depth which they lacked this previous season. Markley and his men entered several dual meets the past season where the Jayhawkers had less than half the men the onposing team had.
Pointing to some of the outstanding freshmen KU could depend on, Mark'lev named;
Bill Sitter, Prewitt, N. M., specialties are the 100 and the 220. Times in these events are second only to
those that Keeler has set.
Larry Prather, Wichita, specialty is the backstroke and diving events. Prather is a co-captain and his records are also good enough to topple all previous freshman records.
Mike Cassidy, Salinas, Calif., the other co-captain. He has also set new freshman records in the 440 and the butterfly events.
Markley pointed out that many other freshmen could be relied on to provide depth and over-all strength to next year's team.
Varsity Was 7-5
The freshmen had a 5-3 season. Their biggest victory was a 56-28 decision over the varsity at the close of the season. This avenged an earlier loss to the varsity. Then only other losses were to Oklahoma and Nebaska. They defeated Nebraska once, Colorado twice and Minnesota once. All of the freshman meets were postal meets except the two encounters with the varsity.
The varsity finished the season with a 7-5 record in dual meets. Their biggest surprise was in the Big Eight meet at Ames, Iowa, where they took third place in the conference. This was a jump from
last place where KU finished the previous year.
Mackley said the conference swimming coaches are trying to initiate a plan for 1958-59 season. He said the plan, if conference officials approve it, would mean that when a conference football team played at KU on Saturday, the swimming squads of the two schools would meet the previous Friday night. When the KU football team plays a conference opponent away from home, the swimming team would travel to that school for a Friday night meet.
Markley said that KU does do some recruiting but not to the extent it would like to. He said the main trouble is that there are not enough scholarships to offer prospects.
Carrier Leaves Kansas
Kaasas' expected spring practice letterman turnout was reduced to 23 recently when Larry Carrier, first-team right half of last season, withdrew from school. 'Carrier was a senior and considered one of the best backfield men on the 1957 squad.
Times Most Important
Markley said the first thing he looks for in a prospect is the times the boy has recorded. He said the grades of the boy are then checked. He said the prospect must have at least a "B" average for them to become interested in him. He said the desire the boy has and the boy's personality are also important factors.
Members of the swimming team have pointed out that there are many students present at KU that could be a big help to the swimming team if they would come out.
Bradley Was KU's 1st Olympic Performer
Everett Bradley was KU's first Olympic team member who won second place in the pentathlon at Antwern.
Bradley turned in an odd but sensational performance at the 1922 Drake Relays by bagging both the broad jump and shot put, two completely unrelated events, at 23 feet 3 inches and 42 feet $6^{4}$ inches respectively. His first mark set a new record at the time.
---
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18, 1958
GOOD LUCK KANS ARE WIT
Acacia Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Tau Omega
Jumping over a hurdle.
Beta Theta Pi
Delta Chi
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KU
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Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
SAS - THE GREEKS WITH YOU
JUMPING
U
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18. 1959
mmmms
It Looks Like Another Grand Slam
It Looks Like Only Outdoor Crown Remains To Be Won
If the KU indoor and cross-country squads are any indication of what fans can expect from the Jayhawker outdoor squad, then the fans have a lot in store for them. It looks like another grand slam team (cross country, indoor and outdoor titles.) If so it will be No. 7 in a row.
With the exception of the NCAA cross-country meet at Michigan State, the Jayhawkers have swamped every meet they have entered this year.
The Kansans started their cross-country season with a 15-44 victory over Missouri (in cross-country, the lowest score is the winning score). Next came victories over the Chicago Track Club, 22-39; Oklahoma State, 18-45; Oklahoma, 15-50 and the Big Eight meet in which Tom Skutka won top honors. Kansas was low with 26 points in that meet. Skutka also took top honors in the Missouri Valley AAU meet.
It was the loss of Skutka that hurt KU's chances for a showing in the national cross-country meet in East Lansing, Mich. Skutka became ill during the race and had to drop out. Kansas finished fifth.
The 1958 indoor season was a highly successful one. KU downed Oklahoma in a dual meet, 67-37, then took high point honors in the Michigan State Relays, followed by a 68-36 victory over tough Michigan State in a dual meet. The Jayhawkers swept the final dual meet of the season, downing Missouri 70-33.
KANSAS-OKLAHOMA—Charlie Tidwell, 60-yard dash in
06.2; Tom Skutka, mile run in 4:15.4; Ernie Shelby, 60-yard low
hurdles in 06.9; Ernie Shelby, broad jump, 25-feet 4-inches.
KANSAS-MICHIGAN STATE — Charlie Tidwell, 60-yard dash in :06.0. (ties world record in this event); Ernie Shelby, 60-yard low hurdles in :06.9. Bill Tillman, 60-yard high hurdles in :07.6; Bob Cannon, high jump, 6-feet $ 5^{1/4} $ -inches; Ernie Shelby, broad jump, 25-feet $ 3^{1/4} $ -inches; Al Oerter, shot put, 56-feet, 11-inches.
Dual meets and new meet records set by KU men are as follows:
KANSAS-MISSOURI—Chagelle Tidwell. 60-yard dash in:
:61.1: Ernie Shelly, broad jump, 25-feet $^3$/inch.
In the three dual meets that KU held, only one new meet record was set by a Jayhawker opponent. There were 12 meet records set by KU athletes.
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In the days of the Spanish colonial empire, Cartagena, Colombia, was a major stronghold because of its excellent harbor and the presence of a hill which could be fortified.
Dean Nesmith has been trainer at KU for the past 18 years. He was a three-lettered tackle in the mid thirties at Kansas under Ad Lindsey.
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Headlighting a group of outstanding performers in the college division of the shot put is Al Oerter. Olympic discus champion. Phil Delayan from Iowa State, who won the college competition of the shot put in last years Relays will be back.
Delavan set a Cyclone varsity record of 55 ft. $ \frac{3}{2} $ inches during the indoor season. This is a foot more than the mark he used to win here last year. But Oerter reached a new career high of 57 ft. to win the league indoor crown. This mark is currently the best in the nation for this year.
Since both men will be competing on an exhibition basis their marks will not go down in the Relays records. The Relay record in the shot is 59-feet 7/7 8 inches set by Niedet in 1956. This bettered the old mark of 58-feet 1/3-inch set by Chuck Fonville of Michigan University in 1948.
The shot put event of this year's KU Relays will have some of the top throwers in the country competing for the crown.
Another top performer in the shot put is Beb Mifun of Minnesota University. He won the Big Ten indoor meet with a throw of 56 ft. 5/1 inches.
Since both men have used up their intercollegiate eligibility they will be throwing in an exhibition. Last year Nieder defeated O'Brien at the KU Relays with a toss of 62 feet 2 inches. It was his career high. But O'Brien has thrown even further. He threw the 16-pound ball 63 ft. 2 inches at the Coliseum in Los Angeles in an Olympic trials meet. This is the present day world's record.
There is a good chance that both Bill Nieder, winner of a silver medal for the shot put in the last Olympic games, and Parry O'Brien, the world record holder in the event will be competing on an exhibition basis. Bill Easton, Kansas track coach, said.
After graduation from DePauw in 1811, Schlademann became athletic director at Missouri Wesleyan. He then moved to Baker University where he coached until he moved to Kansas.
Porcupines force their quills into the flesh of an attacker by a slap of their tails and not by Robin Hood archery despite superstitions to the contrary.
After leaving Kansas, he coached 14 years at Washington State before moving to Michigan State in 1940.
Schlademan was track coach at Kansas from 1919 through 1926. In 1923 he worked with Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, then athletic director, and Dr. John Outland, to start the relays.
The Kansas Relays will be homecoming for the referee of the event, Karl Schlademan. Schlademan is one of the originators of the annual track event.
Eighteen conference championships have been harvested under Dutch Lonborg, Jayhawker director since 1950.
Schlademan is retiring this year as track coach at Michigan State after 18 years with the Spartans. During that period his teams have finished high among Big Ten competition and have also done well in NCAA competition.
Homecoming For Karl Schlademan
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Returning Champs All Threatened
This circumstance has not come about because Stewart is inconsistent like many highjumpers. Neither is it because he is off to a slow start. He owns a consecutive string of 6-feet 7-inches, 6-feet $ 7 \frac{1}{4} $ -inches, 6-feet $ 7 \frac{3}{4} $ -inches for the outdoor season. Yet those jumps have been good for nothing better than second place behind the Mustangs' Swedish sophomore, Bertel Holmgren. The latter has posted 6-feet 8-inches, 6-feet $ 8 \frac{1}{4} $ -inches, and 6-feet $ 8 \frac{3}{4} $ -inches in a triangular, the Border Olympics and the Southwest Recreational.
Stewart won here last year at 6-feet 8 inches. He also won the Texas Pelays at 6-feet $ \frac{8}{14} $ inches. Kansas' 7-foot basketball All America kept him from an unsuilled grand slam with a tie at 6-feet $ \frac{6}{4} $ inches at Drake. As a freshman, the Pony junior set a national fresh mark of 6-feet $ 10^{\frac{1}{4}} $ -inches. He topped the national rolls last year at 6-feet $ 10^{\frac{3}{4}} $ -inches, and shared the NCAA title with Illinois' Al Urbankans at 6-feet $ \frac{7}{12} $ -inches.
Seldom is a defending NCAA co-champion in danger of losing his title in a lesser meet. More rare is the fact he could be dethroned by a teammate. But that is the possible fate of SMU's Don Stewart, one of eight returning 1957 individual Kansas Relays kings.
Nothing wrong with these showings. Nothing, that is, save his newly-sequired teammate, who doesn't even know how high the bar is resting since he is accustomed to reading in centimeters. Holmgren reportedly was headed for USC, but was detoured at Dallas thus assuring the Mustangs of the finest one-two punch in collegiate high-jumping.
Texas' Bobby Walters has held the 6-feet $316-inch Kansas Relay record since 1949.
Other 1957 champions expected here for the 33rd running of the Jayhawker games April 18-19 include Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State, 100; Phil Delavan, Iowa State, shot put; Buster Quist, New Mexico, javelin; Al Oerter, Kansas discus; Gail Hodgson, Oklahoma, mile; Cliff Cushman, Kansas 400-meter hurdles, and Jack Smith, Houston, hop-step-jump.
The early form chart indicates all save Oerter can expect almost as much difficulty in repeating as will Stewart. Even though he was able to run only once indoors ahead of the Big Eight, Hazley was expected to finish better than sixth in the conference 60. He clocked several .99:5's last season as a sophomore, one of which he used to win the title from Texas' Bobby Whilden and Hollis Gainey here last year. He was beaten only by Bobby Morrow at Texas and by Morrow and Ira Murchison at Drake.
It is not likely Hodgson and Cushman will defend their titles since they probably will be reserved for relay duty even though the meet has been stretched to two days for the first time in history.
He'll be afforded a chance to see how he compares at 100 yards with his newest threats, Dee Givens, Oklahoma, and Charlie Tidwell, Kansas, at Texas next weekend. Givens fired a .99.6 at Tempe State last Saturday. Tidwell thrice has been caught in .99.7 during his career and tied the American indoor record of .66.0 for 60 yards during the past Indoor season.
Most Will Be Challenged
Delavan set a Cyclone varsity record of 55-feet $ \frac{1}{2} $ -inches during the Indoor season which is a foot more than the mark he used to win here last year. But Oerter reached a new career high of 57-feet 0-inches to win the league Indoor crown and Bob Henry of Minnesota fired 56-feet $ \frac{1}{2} $ -inches to win the Big Ten.
Quist hit 201-feet 3/4-inches in his first start against Oklahoma. Texas'
(Continued on Page 14.)
Recipe For Top Track Teams-Easton
If KU track coach Bill Easton could concoct a recipe out of his track success, then patent it, the sales could probably make him fabulously rich. For Easton, now in his 11th season at Kansas, has come to be known as one of the most successful track coaches in the nation.
A list of accomplishments made by Easton's squads follows:
The Jayhawkers have finished third, second and fourth in the last three NCAA track and field championships. They missed the team title in 1956 by 6/7 10 points. This is the highest finish, both in points and team standings, that a Big Eight club has ever recorded.
Easton's 1953 cross-country squad won the NCAA title and three other teams have been runners-up.
No.7 Coming Up?
If the Jayhawkers can win the outdoor title at Columbia, Mo. in May, they will take their seventh straight grand slam. (A grand slam is when one school wins the cross-country, indoor and outdoor titles in the same school year.) A victory at Columbia would mean the
Easton has tutored 15 All America trackmen since coming to Mt. Oread. This includes a rare double by Kent Floerke, who earned the honor in the broad jump and the hop-step-jump in 1956.
His squads have won 52 baton championships and 36 individual crowns at Texas. Kansas and Drake over the past 10 years.
Easton's performers hold 14 records on the Midwest grand circuit of Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays. They also hold one American record, three national collegiate marks and two NCAA meet titles.
Since coming to KU in 1947, Easton's teams have never finished below fourth in indoor or outdoor competition. They went that low only once.
21st consecutive conference title The string dates back to the 1951- 52 school year.
Easton's men hold four indoor conference records and six outdoor records, plus a tie for a seventh.
Easton is known for his ability to develop distance talent. He has developed six individual national champions in the NCAA cross-country competition.
His teams have won 11 consecutive conference cross-country titles. With each title, Easton has also developed an individual champion.
Easton-coached runners have won 48 out of 63 conference championships in the 880, mile and two-mile runs. This includes 11 indoor seasons and 10 outdoor seasons.
Ask Easton to pinpoint the reason why KU has such outstanding track teams and you're likely to get a short two word answer: "We work."
Easton started his coaching at Hammond, Ind. high school. He then moved to Drake University at Des Moines, Iowa. He came into the national spotlight with his distance teams at Drake.
Easton said they try to get men who will, first; want to get an education and second; boys who want the physical training.
Grades Most Important He said they look for three things in a prospect. First, he said, is to find out the educational standing of the boy. Easton said if the boy was in the upper 50 per cent of
the class, they consider him a good bet scholastically. If he is in the upper 25 per cent of the class, Easton said, then they feel he is a pretty sure thing scholastically. Second, Easton said is how the prospect gets along in his community, his personality, whether he is a church member, leader in school, etc. Third listed was his athletic ability.
Smith's Time Still Unbeaten
Kansas University's greatest quarter-miler, Don Smith, started out as a hurdler. He came to school as the State Class B low hurdles champion from Belle Plain High School.
His time of 47.6 in the 440 is the fastest ever recorded by a Jayhawker performer. He turned in this time in the conference outdoor meet at Ames in 1953 to win his only Big Seven individual title.
Also in 1953 he finished second to Jim Lea in NCAA quarter-mile with a time of 47.7.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18, 1958
Coffee Break
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Page 13
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1959
Jim Bausch One Of Top Athletes
Probably the greatest all-around track athlete in KU history was Jim Bausch, winner of the 1932 decathlon championship.
The 210-pound Wichita performer also was a 2-time All Big Six football player as a fullback. He lettered in basketball as a junior too but never went out for the sport in his senior year.
Track was where Bausch gained his fame. He won the javelin, pole vault and shot put in the 1930 Big Six outdoor campaign and picked up numerous trophies at the major relay meets.
The decathlon came easy for the big guy as his great strength and endurance were ideally suited for the rigorous competition. He broke the world record in winning the Olympic decathon and led a parade of three Lawrence performers, one from Haskell, to the winners stand.
Although he just competed two seasons at KU, Pat Bowers earned the title of the Jayhawkers' greatest half miler of all time.
Bowers KU's Top Half-Miler
The art major from Chicago won the "Most Outstanding Athlete" award at the 1950 Texas Relays, helped the Jayhawkers to an amazing Big Seven Indoor championship in 1950 and broke 16 individual records during his short career.
When he graduated, Bowers had set the Conference indoor mark of 1:54. in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium and missed by only a tenth of a second of tying Glenn Cunningham's ancient outdoor mark.
Champs Threatened
(Continued from Page 11.) Bruce Parker won the $ ^{p} $
Olympics at 212-feet 914-inches. The latter defeated Quist out of fifth in the NCAA last year, 221-feet 10-inches to 221-feet 5-inches. However, the powerful Lobo owns a career high of 222- feet 2-inches. He won here last year at 210-feet 81⁄²-inches, upsetting Colorado's Ken Yob.
Oorter is likely to remain unchallenged in the midlands as has been the case the last two years. He fired a record 178-feet 1-inch here year enroute to his second grand slam, but was consistently over 180 by the time he went into the NCAA and NAAU list.
Smyth set a record of 49-feet 9.78-
inches, but is certain to be
challenged by Jayhawker Kent Floerke.
The latter elevated his varsity record
to 50-feet 21.2-inches in picking
off second in the NAAU last June.
Hodgson, Cushman Below Par
Hodgson, held below par by a varicose vein operation during the indoor season, unwound a 4:08.2 ... matching his national freshman mark ... in his second outdoor start against Tempe State. This means the Sooners will enjoy a terrific anchor for either one of the Medley relays. The South African sophomore won the Glenn Cunningham feature here last year in 4:11.
Nesmith Trains KU Athletes
Dean Nesmith, KU's athletic trainer for 18 years, is one of the most highly regarded men in his profession.
roh has trained the West All Stars against the East in the annual Kansas City Shrine basketball game the past two years.
During the days of the Big Seven-Southwest track dual he twice trained the Big Seven men. In 1950 he headed a course in treatment of athletic injuries at the "Top of the Nation School."
Coffman Called Top U. S. Decathlon Star
Track experts called Clyde Coffman one of the greatest decathlon performers in American history, pound for pound. The slight 163-pounder, who excelled primarily as a pole vaulter, finished seventh in the Olympic decathlon field of 1932, six notches below his teammate, powerful Jim Bausch.
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Softball is the major intramural team sport to be played this spring. Other team sports include badminton, handball, golf, horseshoes and tennis. Badminton, handball and horseshoes will be conducted on the single elimination basis.
Softball Top Spring Sport
Information concerning softball was sent to intramural managers during the spring vacation. The deadline for entering teams is April 15. Walter J. Mikols, Intramural Director, expects about 55 A and B teams to be entered.
Umpires for the softball games come from the physical education officiating class taught by Henry Sheuk, chairman of the Physical Education Department. Any other individuals interested in officiating may contact Mikols. They will receive $1 per game.
All other sports, except golf, require a minimum of four players. These team members will be composed of one doubles and two singles players, with the match going to the team winning two out of three contests. The doubles game must be played first, or simultaneously. Doubles members must be declared before each match. Partners of the doubles game in any one match cannot play in either singles game of that match.
The golf tournament, a 1-day affair, probably will be held at the Lawrence Country Club. The date will be announced later, but it probably will be held during the first week of May.
One member of each team plays in a foursome with other teams' members. The tournament will be medal play over 18 holes. The first place team will receive a trophy.
Tennis matches will be played on the courts near Robinson Annex and Memorial Stadium. A team trophy will be awarded.
Mikols gave the varsity volleyball team credit for helping intramural teams improve their play this year. "When teams have a chance to watch the varsity team's caliber of play, they try new things and improve their own play a lot," he said.
The first two ski areas in New Hampshire to install snow-making equipment are Black Mountain at Jackson and Mittersill in Franconia.
Easton, Hargiss Even
Completion of the 1958 season will allow Bill Easton to draw abreast of Bill Hargiss at 11 years as the longest-serving track coach in Kansas history. Hargiss' tenure embraced 1933 through 1943.
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Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan Page
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18, 1958
'Phog's Folly' One Of Nation's Top Track Shows
The Kansas Relays, a life-long dream of Dr. John Outland are now a reality that draw the nation's best athletes as well as the top high school athletes in Kansas. They have become a 2-day event which draw 15,000 spectators and feature two queens, now a true mark of distinction.
The conception of the Kansas Relays was made by Dr. John Outland, a former KU student who graduated at the University of Pennsylvania, which has its own famous Penn Relays. Dr. Outland got his idea for the Kansas Relays from the Penn Relays.
In 1919 Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen became the manager of athletics at KU and in 1320 he became director of athletics, Dr. Outland had told him of his plans to have the KU Relays, and Dr. Allen realized that the farther south a relays was held, the better the opportunity would be for a good meet.
At that time football was played at McCook Field. This field was situated running east and west with its north edge at the point where Memorial Stadium begins
its bend in the horseshoe. There was no 220-yard straightaway track at McCook Field. The new Memorial Stadium was planned to have the long straightaway and it was the fourth university in the United States to have one, Harvard, Yale and Princeton preceded Kansas.
At first the project was called "Phog's Folly."
"Bill Easton has done a big job in making the Relays what it is today," Allen said.
The first Relays was held in 1923, and was appropriately won by Kansas. Earle McKown, Emporia Teachers' great pole vaulter, won the first of his three titles by vaulting 12 feet 9 inches. Almost every event was run in a steady rain.
In the 1925 Relays, Kansas and Illinois smashed world records in the 440 and 880-yard relays. McKown set an intercollegiate record of 13 feet 27% inches in his event. Kansas' quarter mile tour-some ran in 42 seconds flat and Illinois won the 889 in 1,27.0$.
with Jim Bausch, Kansas' football-track star, leading the parade by setting a new American and Kelavs mark in the decathlon.
Six records were broken in 1931
1935 was a great year as eight records were set. Elwyn Dees, Jayhawker shot-putter, won his event with a record 51 feet 3% inches. Two months later, he became NCAA champion. Glenn Cunningham, KU's great distance star who had made a habit of winning the mile or 1500 meters run, was defeated by Oklahoma's Glenn Dawson in 4:17.4.
Eight more records were broken in 1933 as ten thousand fans watched under sullen skies.
Cunningham ran his last special mile in 1840 in the event that bears his name, Elmer Hackney, Kansas State, won his third straight shot put title with a 49 foot 5-3 inch heave.
The worst rain and cold in Kansas Relays' history held performances down in 1947. No records were broken that year.
Two world records were broken before 10,000 kins in 1948. Dillard ran the 120-yard high hurdles in 13:56 and Michigan's Charles Fon-
ville threw the shot 58 feet %
inch.
Oklahoma's Bill Carroll was voted to have achieved the most outstanding feat when he cleared 14 feet 5 inches in the pole vault in 1950 to break an 11-year old mark held by Beefus Bryan of Texas at 14 feet 2 inches.
Nebraska's Don Cooper set a national collegiate record the next year in the same event when he cleared 15 feet $ ^{18} $ inch. However, the mark lasted only two hours before Don Laz of Illinois sailed 15 feet $ ^{14} $ inches in a triangular meet at Los Angeles after hearing of Cooper's feat.
Wes Santee, KU's sophomore distance star, was named "Most Outstanding Performer" for 1952 by anchoring the winning 4-Mile relay team in 4:11.6 and running a 3:02.0 three-quarters in the Distance Medley, which KU also won.
Darrow Hooper, Texas A&M's great weight-man was "Most Outstanding Performer" in 1953 for winning his third twin-crown in the shot put and discus. This was the first relays performer to accomplish this feat. Thane Baker, Kansas State's Olympic spinner, won his third consecutive 100-yard dash time when he ran :10.0.
Kent Floerke, Kansas freshman, won the Hop-step-jump and set a record at 49-feet $ \frac{1}{2} $ - inch in the 1955 Relays.
In 1956 Kansas' Bill Nieder, who a week earlier became the first collegian to reach 60 feet in the shot put, set a Relays mark of 50 feet 77.8-inches. Parry O'Brien threw 60-feet $2\frac{1}{2}$-inches on an exhibition basis.
The world 440 relay record was broken in 1957 when the Texas team—Wally Wilson, Eddie Southern, Hollis Gainey and Bobby Whilden—ran the event in 39.. This lowered the team's listed world mark of 40.2 and its pending 40.1 record set in the Relays in 1956. Kansas became the first college team in history to dip below 17:00 in the 4-mile relay, clocking an intercollegiate mark of 16:57.8. Missouri's Charles Batch ran the fastest 120-high hurdles flight in conference history, 14:1, to upset Southern in that race.
Bill Nieder Top Kansas Shot Putter
Whether or not Bill Nieder, former Jayhawker star, would compete in the 1958 Kansas Relays was still unknown when KU track coach Bill Easton left with his team for the Texas Relays March 27.
Nieder threw the shot 62 feet 2 inches in the 1957 Relays to defeat Olympic champion Parry O'Brien, who could do no better than 59 feet 1 inch. This was a special event.
In the 1936 Relays Nieder broke the Relays record while throwing 59 feet 7/7 8 inches, Charles Fonville of Michigan set the record in 1948
turrowing 58 feet 1/8 inch. O'Brien competed on an exhibition basis and threw 60 feet 2% inches.
"We would like to get both Nieder and O'Brien this year. However, we have just sent out the entry blanks, so we don't know if they can come." Easton said.
Nieder is now in the Armed Forces and has been competing in meets on the West Coast.
He finished second behind O'Brien in the Olympic games of 1956 in Melbourne, Australia. He was also
the first collegian to break the 60-foot mark, doing just that only a week before the 1956 Relays. Twice he won the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays Grand Slam, setting records at each one. All this was done despite a knee injury which ruined his chances for a promising football career, and slowed his start in shotputting.
If Nieder and O'Brien do compete here, the spectators can expect to see a good exhibition by two of the world's best shot putters.
Spring Sports In Full Swing
7 8 15 15 21
BATTER UP—Members of the baseball team await their turn in the batting cage during practice.
ITS IN THERE—A Kansas pitcher slips a fast one by the batter during practice.
25
P
LYNN SIEVERLING returns to Gene Kane in tennis practice.
Top Team Despite Weak Net Program
KU's tennis team this year is in "pretty fair" shape in spite of a generally weak tennis program which doesn't seek to bring in top players.
The team is expected to finish possibly as high as third in the Big Eight and no lower than fifth. Teams shaping up better than Kansas are Oklahoma, last year's league champion, Oklahoma State and Colorado.
The team, which plays a 12-match dual schedule this year, took third place last year behind Oklahoma and Colorado.
Lost from last year's team is Bob Riley, the 1955 conference champion, and Ron Bevers, a semifinalist in the No.4 singles, who did not return to KU for the second semester.
Four lettermen did return from last year's team to give a new coach, Denzel Gibbons, something to work with.
The four are Bob Peterson, Emporia senior. who was No. 2 last year behind Riley; Lynn Sieverling, Burdett junior; Bob Mettlen, Hutchinson senior, and Gene Kane, Kansas City, Kan. junior.
Peterson and Sieverling finished second in conference doubles last year, and Mettlen was a semifinalist in the No. 5 singles. Kane lettered two years ago and did not compete last year.
No players are on scholarships this year. Riley was on a part time scholarship last year. Gibbons, said a few players would probably have scholarships next year.
The tennis program at KU does not include recruiting players. The quality of the team depends entirely on who happens to come to the University and decides to go out for tennis.
Gibbons has ranked his traveling team in this order: 1. Peterson, 2. Sieverling, 3. Mettlen, 4. Kane, 5. Jerry Williams, Olathe sophomore.
"Tennis interest at KU is pretty high." Gibbons said. "Sixteen boys turned out for tryouts. I haven't cut anybody yet and I don't think I will."
Three sophomores Gibbons said showing promise are Phil Trotter, Kansas City, Kan.; William Sheldon, Salina, and David Lee Coupe, Arkansas City.
Prospects for next year's team can't be determined yet, he said. Peterson, Nettlen and Kane will not return to play next year. Sieverling and Williams will be back.
Several freshmen have been working out, Gibbons said, but they are not concentrated on until later in the year or until they are sophomores.
Big 8 Ranks High In Nation In 1958 Spring Sports
Sweeping triumphs in the NCAA wrestling meet at Laramie and in the Texas relays at Austin for athletes of the Big Eight conference projected the league even more firmly into the national sports picture.
Oklahoma State, Iowa State and Oklahoma university came 1-2-3 in the national championship wrestling meet with Kansas voted the outstanding team in the Texas Relays. The Javahawkers were backed sensationally at Austin by the Sooners and Cowboys from Oklahoma, and Nebraska.
So emphatically did the Big Eight wrestling giants control the NCAA mat meet that it was the midland
conference all the way. Team scoring: Oklahoma State 77, Iowa State 62, Oklahoma 50, Michigan State 35, Iowa 26, Illinois 22, Cornell and Wyoming 16 each and Pittsburgh 15. OSU set a new all-time high total. Big Eight stars won six of the 10 individual weights.
Track men from the Big Eight won four of seven relays at Texas and four of 11 individual events. They accounted for three of eight records.
The first mile Wes Santee ran was a 4.06.7 in the anchor carry of the 4-mile relay at Drake in 1952 as a sophomore.
was if the as a
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GOING UP—A workman at the site of the new building which will house the School of Business climbs a pile driver. The building will allow the school to move out of its quarters in Strong Hall and also make available classrooms in other buildings currently being used for business courses. Twenty classrooms and offices are planned. (Daily Kansan photo)
rooms and offices are planned. (Daily Kansan photo)
AUSTIN
TIME FOR A BREAK—Two construction workers "take 10" for a drink of cold water as they work to finish Pearson Hall in time for the second semester of next year. The warm weather has been a big asset to the workers who are trying to make up for a delay caused by muddy ground early in April. When completed, the dormitory will house 400 men. (Daily Kansan photo)
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 128 SECTION C LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 18, 1958
1
LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE—Dean James Surface of the School of Business looks on at the construction site of the one million dollar
modern business and economics building due to be completed in time for the first semester of next year. (Daily Kansan photo)
7 Buildings Underway
Seven major construction programs are now being carried out or planned to meet the expected increase of students at KU in the near future.
Joseph R. Pearson Hall, a dormitory housing 400 men, is now about 30 per cent completed and is expected to be finished by the second semester of next year, though present construction is being delayed by the recent mud, said Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations.
This 7-story building is on West Campus road, north of Carruth O'Leary Hall. It will cost $1,380,000 and will be financed partly by a gift from Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, KU alumna.
A modern business and economics building now under construction east of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, will be completed by September 1959. The building will have 68,000 square feet which includes 20 classrooms and offices. The building will cost about $1,132,700
Bids have been accepted for the construction of two dormitories for men, Lewis and Templin halls, and will house more than 400 students. The buildings will be at Daisy Field, between Allen Field House and Iowa Street.
Ten buildings, housing 120 apartments for married students, are expected to be ready by midterm next year. This building, added to the recently constructed Stouffar Place, will provide campus housing for 240 married students and their families. Bids Accepted On Two Men's Halls
The unusual aspect of the building will be three special case study classrooms. Seats will be arranged in horseshoe shape and the rows will be on different levels for a clearer view.
Enlargement of the Kansas Union is hoped to be started by next fall. The proposed construction will include the expansion of the present facilities primarily, Mr. Lawton explained, with more meeting rooms, enlarged cafeteria, dining rooms, book store, and expanded
recreation facilities.
Mr. Lawton said plans are being made for construction of the Sprague Apartments to be built on the old Templin Hall property on 14th Street. The nine apartments will vary in size and are to house retired faculty members and their families, he said.
Engineering Building Planned
Engineering building is being planned for construction in the area west of Lindley Hall, beyond Naismith Drive, Mr. Lawton said.
Remodeling of much of Strong and Green halls since the moving of the department of fine arts into its new building will enable the expansion of many administrative offices and additions in classroom space. Mr. Lawton said.
To aid visitors and students to find their way through this growing number of buildings, the latest development has been to install signs on the buildings giving its name.
To add to the beauty of the campus, there will be construction of a formal garden on the south side of the Museum of Art.
Bad Weather Never Causes Postponement Of KU Relays
Weather has never caused postponement of the KU Relays, but it has at times been responsible for records not being broken and for the discomfort of contestants and spectators.
"We never have even considered postponing the Relays because of weather." E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education and manager of the Relays, told a Daily Kansan reporter.
He said that it would be difficult to postpone the Relays with so many teams here. They have been run even in downpours that were "terribly bad," he added.
In 1947 the Relays had the appearance of a swimming meet rather than a track meet. Runners sloshed through the events in the worst rain and cold in the history of the Relays. No records were broken. Six pole vaulters tied for first place in the rain at $11^{\prime}6^{\prime}$, the lowest recorded for that event in the Relays since they have begun.
Rain Hampers Relays Bad rain was also present a
Relaws time in 1923, 1929, 1932, 1951 and 1953.
Almost every event was run in the rain at the first KU Relays in 1923. There was a heavy rain at the 1926 Relays. No records were broken in 1932 when Pittsburgh State Teachers College won all four college class relay events in the rain
Wind has also been a factor in Re-lavis events. In the 1926 and 1941 100-yard dash records were established but were not counted because of a stiff tailwind.
Relays Insured
Rain didn't stop a pole vault record from being broken in 1951. Hail and wind combined with rain in 1955; however five new records were established.
In 1925, when the late Knute Rocke, Notre Dame football coach was referee, the Relays was insured for $5,000 against rain. Not only did
it not rain, but three world records were broken.
Last year intermittent rain fell the first day of the Relays. The second day was cloudy. However, fourteen new meet records were set.
So, although the Relays parade might possibly be called off in case of a severe downpour, the Relays themselves, like the post office, comes through in spite of any kind of weather.
Topeka Graduate Gets $4,500 Grant
Clifford W. Fawl, Topeka graduate student, has been awarded a $4,500 fellowship by the Social Science Research Council.
Fawl has been doing research the past two years at the KU psychological field station at Oskaloosa. The fellowship will enable him to complete his doctoral thesis in psychology.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18. 1958
Financial Funds Put To Good Use
The current rumor about financial assistance funds going unused is "...a lot of baloney"—at least at KU, said Spencer Martin, director of the aids and awards office, 222 Strong Hall.
There are about 800 to 1000 scholarships or renewals of scholarships totaling about $280,000 given out to KU students during the year, he said. "About 400 of these are new awards.
"The purpose of the office of aids and awards is to 'carry the ball' between the students and the 8 or 10 scholarship committees which grant the awards." Mr. Martin explained.
Alumai Furnishes Scholarships
"The trend in new scholarships is coming from the alumni club. The county clubs will set aside a certain amount of money to be awarded a student from that particular county. At least 8 of these awards have been begun recently.
"Most of the awards come from the Greater University Fund. Approximately 90 per cent of the scholarship money comes from the KU alumni," he said.
The largest scholarships are the Summerfield-Watkins awards which sometimes cover the full support of the student, or about $1,200.
"For a scholarship to be of any great value to the student it should at least cover the fees," Mr. Martin said. "This adds up to $206 for the two semesters, but we still have a few awards for about $70-$80."
Must Cover Fees
For a typical application to the general scholarship committee, for instance, the office and the committee cooperate in determining the student's need of financial aid, and his scholastic standing.
Married Students Are Problem
The problem of married students has grown to the point that some 400 married students are applying for about 80 different awards.
Feuding Parties Call Truce
"It is pretty hard for us to help foreign students until they have gotten to KU on their own. Most of
BY JIM CABLE (Of The Daily Kansas Staff)
A truce has been established it the time honored feud between the lawyers and the engineers The traditional tug of war ha been called, off by mutual agreement.
The war between the occupants of Green and Marvin halls has raged for many years. The field of battle has ranged from mud covered football fields to the debating platform in Fraser Chapel
Casualties of the feud, besides lawers and engineers, include 11 engineering dance queen candidates who were kidnapped by lawyers in 1946. 15 prints of the Lord Chief
Justices of England stolen from the School of Law, the bronze bust of Frank Olin Marvin, first dean of the School of Engineering, and the statue of Uncle Jimmy Green.
Uncertain of Victor
The tug of war, always a confusing event, usually ended up with nobody quite certain as to who had won.
In this battle the lawyers and the engineers would gather on opposite sides of Potter lake and throw threats at each other. A referee would bring a rope supposedly strong enough to stand the pull and the tug of war would begin. Energetic spectators would climb trees, while others would fall into the water.
Eventually, if the rope didn't break, one team would be pulled into the lake.
This year the lawyers decided they were too old for this sort of thing and the engineers didn't try to force a challenge.
In the early days of the war encounters were primarily fist fights and snow battles. Strict legislation by University officials outlawed physical strife and the feud went on to more subtle expressions of ill will.
Queen Candidates Kidnapped
Eleven queen candidates for the "Hobnail Hop" were kidnapped by the lawyers in a stunt which was reported by newspapers throughout the country.
Engineers retaliated with the Engineer's Protective Society designed to "protect virtuous young American womanhood" from the whistles emitted from Green Hall steps. The
lawyers, not at all bothered, continued to whistle.
In 1947 the lawyers took a philanthropic turn of mind and decided to give the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. a gift "in memory of James Green, father of the KU Law School."
The most appropriate gift they could find was the bust of Frank Olin Maryin which stayed in the gallery until the University Daily Kansan restored it to the engineers.
The statue of Uncle Jimmy Green has received the most attention through the years. It has been painted, usually on Saint Patrick's Day, every color from pastel green to brilliant red.
How long the feud will last nobody knows.
the foreign students are here on scholarships or assistance from their government." Mr. Martin said.
"We always try to get about two foreign students into each of the scholarship halls. However, there are only five or six of them that have received cash awards this year," he said.
"Our biggest need at present is more support of the Endowment Association's loan fund," Mr. Martin said.
This assistance program loans about $200,000 a year to some 3,500 students, the money to be used for school purposes only. The student must pay back the money, plus $1^{2½ per cent yearly interest.
Most Loans Repaid
"The repayment record of these loans has been outstanding," he said.
"The last check, about a year ago, showed only about 1 per cent of the money had not been returned.
Scholarship loans made through the business office give aid to some 150 students. These loans are made to students of high standing, usually a "B" average, but this is no set rule.
These students can borrow up to $300 at one time, with a $500 maximum for the remaining school years with no co-signers or interest charges. They are usually limited to juniors and seniors and must be paid back by one year after graduation.
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Friday. April 18, 1958 Universitr Daily Kansan
Page 3
N
Political Parties Flourish Since 1912
The April 16th elections were a renewal of the political struggle that has been waged at KU ever since 1912.
A history of KU politics is mainly a history of Pachacamac, which lasted 42 years as a campus party. The present parties bear a faint heritage from Pach, but are too new to be compared with it.
The president of Vox Populi, Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore, defined the purpose of campus politics as to make "an All Student Council that operates efficiently within its budget and is of some benefit to all the students."
The Allied Greek-Independent president, Joel Sterrett, Tokea senior, said. "The ideal purpose is to have an opportunity to control things primarily student in nature -extracurricular rather than scholastic."
Pachacamac retired from the political scene in 1954, when a split in the party gave birth to two new groups, AGI and the Party of Greek Organizations (POGO).
Political Parties Flourish
Political Parties Flourish From 1912 to 1954, campus political parties flourished like weeds, with strange initials and stranger names, but clouding them all was the shadow cast by Pachacamac.
Among the parties that challenged Pach's power in those years were Black Mask, Oread, Kayhawk, PSGL, WSGA and coalitions between groups to break the stranglehold Pach had on student government.
Some of the less serious parties that contended were Dollars and Cents and the Smiling Bill Milander club. Dollars and Cents campaigned in 1922 with a three-piece jazz band
and free peanuts and Eskimo pies
Pach won anyway.
Pach nearly always won, in fact. In one stretch, from 1926 to 1942, Pach won 20 of 25 elections. The five it lost were to newly organized parties, but Pach never lost twice to the same group.
Black Mask opposed Pach from 1917 to 1928, then dissolved into the "Independent coalition." The coalition won its first election, then lost four straight and disappeared in 1931.
Two Grants Again Given
The Phillips Petroleum Company of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, has awarded the University two graduate fellowships, each worth $2500.
One grant will support a fellowship in geological engineering, and the other a fellowship in chemical engineering.
The geological engineering grant will go to a graduate student who received his undergraduate degree in geological engineering, and will cover tuition, necessary equipment, and a stipend to the student.
George W. Swift, Lawrence graduate student, present holder of a Phillips fellowship, will continue to be the recipient in chemical engineering.
Churchill A Soccer Star
WEST HARTLEPOOL, England —(UP)—Winston Churchill will be one of the stars of a forthcoming soccer game between a British and a West German team.
Winston, no relation to Sir Winston, is a 17-year-old plumber.
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The coalition was replaced by three new parties: Oread, Kayhawks, and the KU Progressives. Oread and Kayhawk united to swing the 1931 election, and Pach re-formed its lines to sweep the next three.
Vandals Throw Eggs, Paint
Vandals Till Owens Faint In 1934, The Daily Kansan reported "vandals using eggs and brown paint to spread 'terrorism' turned the MSC (Men's Student Council) election Kansas Citivit today as they attacked the strongholds of the Oread-Kayhawk party." In spite of the indignation Oread-Kayhawk tried to arouse, they followed Black Mask and the Independent
coalition into oblivion after losing the 1934 campaign.
In 1935 a new challenger appeared, the Progressive Student Government League. It won the election, but lost six of the next seven, sharing power with Pach on the seventh.
Another device Pach used in this period was sending pledges to the polls during class breaks and noon hour, with the pledges only breaking ranks for a party voter.
more important, and the MSC became the All Student Council.
The opposition often protested Pach tactics and brought up cases of ballot stuffing, but the MSC always ruled "insufficient evidence." During World War II the position of women in campus politics became
Pach Meets Final Defeat
After the war, Pach took up where it left off, winning five in a row before the "First Actually Constructive Ticket Society" (FACTS) won in 1951. Pach never really recovered from this defeat although they won a slim majority in 1952.
AGI and POGO, besides FACTS, split Fach and it went out of existence in 1954. POGO disbanded in 1957 after some ballot stuffing was discovered.
Vox Populi was formed last fall to take over the role of opposition party.
MAIL THE RELAYS
Now, for the first time. The Daily Kansan will mail a souvenir copy of the 1958 Kansas Relays edition anywhere in the United Statesfor only 25c.The Kansan gives the most thorough pre-relays coverage of any newspaper, so
PETE LUCKER
MAIL THE RELAYS
15
America's greatest track and field stars will be here today and tomorrow. Your friends in the service, parents, or anyone that likes sports will want a copy of this edition. Fill out the coupon, plus 25c, and mail it or drop it by the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall.
PLEASE MAIL THE RELAYS TO
Name ...
Address ...
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18, 1958
★
★
VISITORS...FOR RELAYS SOUVENIRS AND GIFTS visit the Student Union Book Store
We have a wide selection of novelties, stuffed animals, etc.
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Page 5
All Inge Dramas Echo Of Kansas
University Daily Kansan
At least four Broadway hits in the last few years echo the boyhood days in Kansas of one KU alumnus.
Pulitzer prize winning playwright, Bill Inge, class of '35, has used his Kansas background for his successful Broadway plays such as "Come Back, Little Sheba," "Bus Stop," "Picnic," and his latest, "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs."
Mr. Inge was born in Independence May 3, 1913, and spent his boyhood days there. He received his A. B. degree from KU in 1935. In 1955 he gained the KU Alumni Distinguished Service Citation.
He has said that he always had the ambition to be an actor, but gave up the idea after a moment of stage fright in an amateur production of "Our Town" three years after he was graduated from KU.
Mr. Inge first became interested in writing plays when he was working as a music-drama critic on the St. Louis Star-Times in 1944.
After an interview with Tennessee Williams he started toying with the idea of writing plays, and three years later he wrote his first play, "Farther Off From Heaven."
Mr. Inge said in a recent issue of Time magazine, "I seem to return to the Midwest not only because I know it, but because I find the regional speech more lyrical and familiar."
The first play was produced by a company in Dallas but never got to Broadway. He then started working with an earlier story about a black Scotty dog. The finished play was "Come Back, Little Sheba" produced in 1950.
For his second hit, "Picnic," he won the Pulitzer prize, the Donaldson Award, and the Drama Critics Prize in 1953. He returned
to KU in 1955 to help direct the production of "Picnic" put on by the University Theatre.
Mr. Inge said upon a later visit to KU last September that he was very favorably impressed with the new auditorium in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. He said that the auditorium had one of the newest and finest stages in the country today.
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Welcome to the
33rd K.U. RELAYS
We know you'll enjoy your stay here at Lawrence and the University, and we extend to you our best wishes for the most thrilling weekend you've ever had. And when you come downtown don't forget to drop in and see us. We're only too happy to serve you.
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Religious Interest Rising
The growth of the University and people's deeper interest in religion have brought about the rise of interest in the religious organizations at KU, said Harold G. Barr; Dean of the School of Religion.
Dean Barr, in explaining the growth of the religious organizations on campus, said KU's growth has made expansion possible for groups that were very small 10 years ago. He also stressed the point that people today take more interest in religious activities than they did a few years ago.
Also the organizations have expanded as regular supervisors have taken over the leadership, Dean Barr said.
"Up to 10 years ago only two or three groups on campus had full time religious directors. Today there are 6 or 7 full time directors for these organizations. The groups that don't have full time supervisors have appointed faculty members to work with them and act as leaders." Dean Barr said.
The Episcopal organization was rather small until about eight years ago, Dean Barr said. About three or four years ago the organization called for a chaplain to help with the work. Today the organization has Canterbury House, the Episcopalian center.
He said the Jewish group had become quite active since World War II. as had the Catholic Newman club.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was a small organization a few years ago, he said, but it has grown to serve a great many students now.
Dean Barr said the Lutheran Student Assn. organization was not as large as a lot of the organizations, but it was very active in "keeping track of the Lutheran students."
Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the Plymouth Congregational Church, has done a lot for KU students, Dean Barr said. "Frobably the largest single group of KU students go to church there because of Rev. Turner's work with the students." Dean Barr said.
Dean Barr said the Student Religious Council is the center of the student religious organizations on campus. He said two representatives of every religious organization on campus make up the council. The group also has five counselors appointed to work with them. One is
appointed by the chancellor, one by the Catholics, one by the Protestants, one by the Jews and one by the KU religious advisers.
The main work of the council, Dean Barr said, was to plan the annual Religious Emphasis Week. The group also meets about once a month to gather ideas, talk over problems and see how they can help each other.
Richard E. Byrd and Floyd Bennett were the first men to fly over the Greenland ice cap. They did it in 1925.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18. 1958
KU
RELAYS KANS
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Morning Events, Saturday, April 19
TRACK EVENTS
110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon ... 9:00
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries (time basis) ... 9:30
One Mile Relay—Junior College—Preliminaries ... 10:30
FIELD EVENTS
Discus Throw—Decathlon 9:15
Pole Vault—Decathlon 10:00
Discus Throw—High School—Preliminaries—Finals 10:00
Broad Jump—High School—Preliminaries_Finals 10:00
Javelin—Decathlon 10:45
1500 Meter Run—Decathlon 11:30
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Friday, April 18, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SAS RELAYS
events and schedule
KU
ome to
wyer
hway 10.
Afternoon Program
TRACK EVENTS
NSAS GO!
University of Kansas Band ... 1:15
Flag Raising Ceremony—R.O.T.C. Units ... 1:25
120 Yard High Hurdles—University and College—Final ... 1:30
Distance Medley Relay (440-880-$\frac{3}{4}$ Mile) College—Final ... 1:35
Distance Medley Relay (440-880-$\frac{3}{4}$ Mile) —University—Final ... 1:50
100 Yard Dash—University and College—Final ... 2:05
Sprint Medley Relay (440-220-220-880) —High School—Final ... 2:10
Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen ... 2:25
Cunningham Mile—A.A.U.—Invitational—five to six men—Final ... 2:35
100 Yard Dash—A.A.U.—Special Invitational—six men—Final ... 2:40
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Final ... 2:45
Quarter Mile Relay—College—Final ... 2:50
Quarter Mile Relay—University—Final ... 2:55
Two Mile Relay—College—Final ... 3:00
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 18. 1959
18,000 Expected At KU By 1970
KU is expected to have an enrollment of 15.000 to 18.000 by 1970, according to a study made by George B. Smith, dean of the University.
The enrollment boom will have varying effects on schools in the University.
While all schools are anticipating increases and planning expansion to meet the demand, perhaps the greatest expansion is planned in the School of Engineering and Architecture.
John S. McNown, dean of the school said he expected an enrollment increase of about 100 students a year, which would place engineering enrollment near 4,000, starting with this year's 2,300 students.
Dean McNown listed a 3-step building program for the school which will be carried out over an 8 to 10-year period:
1. The first unit will be constructed in 1959-61. Money for planning this building has been allotted by the Legislature. The building, which is to cost about $1,600,000, will be in the area north of 15th Street and west of Naismith Road. This will eventually be part of a much larger building complex, and will house facilities for the departments of applied mechanics and civil, mechanical, and electrical engineering.
for mechanical, petroleum and metallurgy engineering, and for the geology department and the Geological Survey.
3. In three or four more years, another unit will be added to the area north of 15th Street, to house the department of architecture and graphic arts courses.
Dean McNown said a "very rough estimate" of the total cost would be 4 million dollars. He emphasized that the new facilities would be used by departments outside the engineering school, including the geology department and some fine arts courses.
The most noticeable expansion on the campus now is the new building for the School of Business. Dean James Surface said the building, scheduled for occupancy in the fall of 1959, will permit larger sections for some courses and give more classroom space. The building will cost $1,132,792.
Dean Surface said he expects business school enrollment to be two to four times as great by 1970. The present enrollment is 450.
graduate enrollment has risen from 450 to 700 in the last five years, he said, and may rise to 900-1000 by 1970.
Education Program Expanded
The graduate program in the school has "expanded terrifically" over the last five years, with as many graduate degrees awarded in the past six years as the total in the previous history of the school, he said. Dean Anderson said about 15 students receive doctorate degrees from the school each year.
The school is expanding into several fields, the dean said, including special education and an increase in the number of teachers in science, mathematics, and foreign languages.
M. C. Slough, dean of the School of Law, said the enrollment boom would affect the law school later than the rest of the University, but the school might reach 300 students. Present enrollment is 180, with a peak enrollment of 250 after World War II.
Dean Slough said in five or 10 years Green Hall will have to be expanded, and suggested adding wings to Green Hall would be better than a new building. Additions to the present building would cost about a third as much as a new building, the said.
School of Fine Arts, said no further expansion was planned for the music department.
The most urgent need, Dean Gorton said, is for an art building. With the present enrollment of 525 undergraduates, the school can handle a 50-75 per cent increase in music and dramatic arts, but is already overcrowded in art.
This year, the dean said, the school is offering a combined major in theater and voice.
The School of Pharmacy moved into new quarters in Malott Hall in 1954. Dean J. Allen Reese said most of the facilities are adequate to handle doubled enrollment in the school, but more facilities for experimental animals are needed.
He expects enrollment in the school, to go up more sharply than that of the University, after a lag caused by the 5-year requirement. Present enrollment is about 140 undergraduates and 15 to 20 graduate students. Most of the graduates are working for doctorates.
More Women In Pharmacy
He said he also expected a rise in the proportion of women in the
school during the next 10 years, per haus to 25 per cent. National chemical firms and associations are sponsoring a campaign to increase interest in pharmacy as a career.
John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School, listed five points concerning KU's graduate program:
1. Graduate enrollment is expected to keep growing. It has grown steadily since 1945, and prospects are it will continue.
2. The largest gains in enrollment are expected to be in physics, chemistry, mathematics, the biological sciences, and geology.
3. More support for scholarly projects in the social sciences is becoming available, and this will favorably affect graduate enrollments.
4. The outlook is very bright for more scholarships and fellowships from outside the University, especially from agencies of the federal government. These awards will apparently be available not only to science students, but also to those in other fields, including foreign languages.
(Continued on Page 12.)
TOP PERFORMANCE IS A MUST
KANSAS RELAYS
Good Luck to Coach Easton and the Track Team
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Friday, April 18, 1958
University Daily Kansan Page 9
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Comfort, Ivy League Set Year's Style For Men
Men will be glad to hear that the latest trend in masculine attire will not be radically different this year. Ivy League is still the thing to wear, but 1958 has brought in lighter weight fabrics to give the style a more comfortable aspect.
Drip dry shirts have made it possible for men to have presentable shirts without the help of wives or mothers. Consequently the shirts are very much in demand by both sexes. Collars still have short points or no points at all.
Drip Dry Shirts
Suits will be the traditional pleatless charcoal grays and blacks, with lighter colors appearing later in the summer, but in any weather don't forget those all important stripes.
And get this, men. This is the year to outdo your gal in the blazer line.
A variety of colors and fabrics are
Wash and wear fabrics make up the most popular trend in warm weather clothes for the male. Suits have a subtle iridescent look which is caused by a light reflection. Pants legs are shorter with no break at the cuffs. In fact, cuffs themselves are almost disappearing. Men will have to search for some other kind of portable ash tray.
Anything except a tri-button coat with narrow lapels is strictly nil. Of course it must be accompanied by a narrow tie with red stripes.
His And Hers Chairs For Gifts
CHICAGO —(UP)— One way to solve your gift-giving problems this year—whether for birthdays, anniversaries, or Fathers' and Mothers' Day—is to give a chair. Matching father and mother chairs are ideal additions to room arrangements and prove to be special gifts, just for them.
Either casual or frilly is the word for chemise beach suits by Livix of Naples. The suits have low placed draw strings and ruffles. The tighter the draw string is pulled, the frillier the suit.
Also in the sports wear line, bermuda shorts with knee length socks are the recent rage. To complete this outfit, Italian knit shirts are becoming more popular. This bermuda length has given a "Gay 90's" touch to the beachgoer's style. Men's water wear is now a modest knee or thigh length.
designed to give you a jacket which will be the big thing all year round, both for casual and dress occasions.
Weight-Watching Time
Whatever the fabric or style, whatever the occasion, the American male is facing an embarrassing problem of weight watching. Why? Because the word today is slim. The skinny guy is the one who is the best dressed, so cut out that midnight snack. It's time to diet.
Rush Parties
...On The Hill..
fraternities will be entertaining rushees during the relays weekend. Phi Gamma Delta and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternities will hold informal parties at their respective chapter houses Saturday. Delta Chi fraternity has planned a party at Happy Hal's and Kappa Sigma and Sigma Phil Epsilon fraternities will hold parties at Lone Star Lake.
Delta Gamma
Members of Delta Gamma sorority will entertain their fathers at the chapter house this weekend. A party will be held for the fathers Saturday night following the KU Relays.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority is holding its Sisters' Weekend this weekend.
Alpha Omicron Pi
The sorority members and their sisters will attend the KU Relays and attend the Relays Dance Saturday night.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 18, 1958
BUTTERFLY'S
DONNA MATZEK
JUDY K. KEITH
ROSEMARY JONES
Summer Wedding Plans Announced
Mr. George Matzek, Andale, has announced the engagement of his daughter, Donna, to Eddie Elpers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Elpers, Garden Plain.
Miss Matzek is a freshman in the College and a resident of Corbin Hall. Mr. Elpers attended Wichita University.
A late summer wedding is planned.
Table Decorations Have No Limit
LINCOLN, Neb. — (UP — Your imagination is the only limit when it comes to making table decorations, according to Mrs. Clara Leopold, University of Nebraska home management specialist.
Everyday objects can be picked up in fields or gardens, or foods that can be eaten later can be used for colorful centerpieces.
She suggested using cattails, gourds, calico corn, bittersweet, sour dock, plume grass, pampas grass, pine cones, evergreens and leaves of all kinds.
She also recommended grapes, grapefruit, bananas, squash, pumpkins and other fresh fruits and vegetables.
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Jones, Timken, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Rosemary, to Perry L. Rashleigh, son of Mr. Perry T. Rashleigh, Little River.
Miss Jones is a junior in the College and a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Rashleigh is a second-year student in the School of Medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. He is a member of Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity.
A late August wedding is planned.
Don't Lose Health With Extra Pounds
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — (UP) Don't lose your health along with excess pounds, a nutrition expert warns.
Many "fad" or "homemade" diets will help you lose weight, but they do it by cutting down on the wrong foods and by robbing the body of nutrients it must have to stay healthy, says Harriet Barto, University of Illinois nutrition specialist.
A good reducing diet includes foods rich in minerals, vitamins and high-quality proteins but are low in carbohydrates and fats, she said.
Schneck-Crawford
FILM FILM FILM
Five Couples Announce Pinnings Have Parties To Celebrate
FOR THE KU RELAYS-PARADE
Alpha Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Prudi Schneck, Mission sophomore, to Jim Crawford, Winfield junior and member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
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A party was held at the Dine-a-Mite.
The pinning was announced by Judy Chambers, Leavenworth sophomore.
ALSO
Shirley Andrish, Topeka senior, announced the pinning.
Gerlach-Vermillion
The pinning of Lynn Gerlach, Topeka, to Dale Vermillion, Goodland, and member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, has been announced by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Both are seniors.
***
A party was held at the Flamingo
Lundteigen-Cox
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority has announced the pinning of Judy Anderson, Lawrence, to Dick Adam, Emporia, member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Both are juniors.
Anderson-Adam
The pinning of Alice Lundteigen, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, to Larry Cox, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, has been announced by Delta Upsilon fraternity.
A pinning party was held at the Stables.
Magers-Jones
Hey Girls, Roll Your Own
Delta Gamma sorority has announced the pinning of Melisande Magers, Mission, to Michael Jones, Lawrence, and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Both are juniors.
CHICAGO — (UP) — A new type of permanent wave has been developed for women who want to touch up curls and bangs.
Waves are made with paper instead of lotion. Each kit contains fabric end papers and neutralizer for making about 25 curls.
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Welcome Relays Fans
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Me major the t the l
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Woman's World Invaded
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
1967
graduates work in tuberculosis, mental children's and general hospitals." Mrs. Congello said. However, some are employed in the public school system working with handicapped children or in specific rehabilitation institutions."
Male occupational therapists tense to seek employment in specialized types of work, she said. Most of the men enter the field of physical disability or psychiatry.
Affiliations In States, Hawaii
The first affiliation, in a psychiatric hospital, is for a three month period at the end of the sophomore year. The second, a two month affiliation in a tuberculosis hospital, is taken after completing the junior year.
Animations In States, Hawaii The one year clinical training is divided into five affiliations. These affiliations are taken at established training centers located in all parts of the United States and Hawaii.
The third, in pediatrics, the fourth in physical disability and the fifth in general medicine and surgery are taken for seven months after completion of training at the Medical Center.
Just as the nurse receives her RN degree, the OT, after graduation and completion of training, will receive an OTR, occupational therapist registered, by passing a national registration examination.
The Magna Charta was signed in 1215 by King John.
So says Arnold S, Berke, executive vice-president of Parfums Schiaparelli, who recently conducted a nation-wide survey on the subject.
NEW YORK — (UP) — Women often go without hats, stockings or gloves, but never without lipstick.
Berkel also found that orange lipstick went over best in California. Southern women chose pink, golden
Lipstick Shades Vary By Regions
rose, and lilac tones. In the Midwest, ladies were most conservative, generally using clear red. Northern and Eastern women preferred deeper tones, with vivid blue-red the most popular.
Paris houses offered this suggestion for wearing a flower on a suit; just slip a rosebud or tiny spray of lilies of the valley in a pocket.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
The woman's world of occupational therapy has been invaded—but pleasantly. Three male students are enrolled as occupational therapy majors at KU.
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In the picture above, Miss Evelyn DeGraw, assistant professor of design, is helping Tim Reyburn, Leavenworth junior, work the loom in Weaving II class. Reyburn is one of the three KU men majoring in occupational therapy.
Men were first admitted to the OT major at the University in 1955, but the three enrolled this semester is the largest number to date.
"The larger per cent of OT
WELCOME TO THE K.U. RELAYS... "Get More Out of Life-Go Out To A Movie Tonight"
Mrs. Frieda Congello, instructor of design and director of occupational therapy, says she believes there will be a gradual but steady increase of men entering the field.
For his training a student spends three years on campus, the first semester of his senior year at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City and one year in clinical training.
"Just as physical therapists use heat and massage, the OT must use a knowledge of arts and crafts." Mrs. Congelle said.
Required courses also include many hours of biological and social sciences. Nine hours of psychology is required.
The required courses such as design, ceramics, jewelry, minor crafts, weaving, photography and woodwork are treatment tools of the occupational therapist.
Not only must the occupational therapist be able to teach a patient the crafts, he must be able to understand the patient's problem and know how the craft can help rehabilitate him.
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 18, 1950
Exposition Born Of Pranks, Riots In Early Days
Publicity for KU's engineers has not always come from the constructive and informative displays which now characterize the annual Engineering Exposition.
In 1909, the date of the first annual engineering day, a parade was held in which some loud and spectacular displays were mounted on departmental floats.
One of the floats, constructed by the chemical engineers, sprayed the foul odor of phenyl-isocyanide over the somewhat unhappy crowd.
The engineering day celebrator went uninhabited for many years until 1922 when the lawyers made an attempt to decorate the floats with eggs—the rotten variety.
The engineers retaliated with their own rotten eggs and things threatened to get out of hand until former Chancellor Ernest H. Lindley settled the matter by abolishing engineering day.
THREE DINKS—Freshman caps may come and go but students will always exist. Illustrating this axiom are Clyde Hartter, Topeka junior and Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students. Hartter displays an Oklahoma State beanie while Dean Woodruff holds in his hands (not in his teeth) a 1905 relic.
In 1923, P. R. Walker, dean of the School of Engineering, decided the burning energy of the slide rule set could be applied to something practical and the Engineering Exposition was born.
Exposition Born
It was decided that the engineers would compete for awards by making displays showing the work being done in each department and the first exposition was held in 1924.
A second exposition was held in 1925 but in 1926 it was decided the event would be held every two years. This plan was followed until 1931, when a three-year lapse occurred
The exposition was revived in 1934 and became an annual affair. It has been held on the same weekend as the Kansas Relays since 1936.
A three million volt atom smasher, model bridges, refrigerator units and designs of new houses are a few of the displays that have acquainted the people of this area with advances in engineering
Prevention For Nanning
One year an invention designed to prevent classroom napping was introduced. The sleepy student would sit with a rope tied around his neck. When he nodded, the rope jerked, opened a trap door, out of which rolled a bowling ball which knocked over some bowling pins.
Rear Guard In Frosh Caps
Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, awards the trophy for the best display. If the same department wins three years straight the trophy belongs to it permanently. This has happened twice in the history of the Exposition, first by the electrical engineers in 1941 and in 1957 by the petroleum engineers.
TOM SCHMIDT
Showmanship has been added to technical skill as the exhibits have grown over the years.
If this didn't arouse the student a tack automatically came through the seat of the chair and punctured the dream and the dreamer.
Dr. Downs, a teacher for 41 years, is internationally recognized for her studies in rackettial diseases and particularly in tularemia. Agencies of the federal government have provided several hundred thousands of dollars for research under her direction since World War II, when she did to-secret work in the bacteriological warfare laboratories at Camp Detrick, Md.
Sirens mounted on the top of Marvin Hall, dynamite explosions and flashing lights have been used to lure the crowds into the Exposition.
Dr. Cora M. Downs, professor of bacteriology, has received a grant of $1,200 from Abbott Laboratories, Inc., of Chicago to be used as she desires. This is the second consecutive year that the Chicago pharmaceutical house has provided this recognition of Dr. Downs' consistent, high quality research in bacteriology and virology.
She Receives Grant For Top Notch Job
By JOAN JEWETT (Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
Back in the days when dad and the boys were college freshmen little billed caps were necessary expenditures—not only for their wardrobe, but also for their general well being.
Those who remember the freshman cap say its particular function was not to protect the head, out rather to prevent bruises to the posterior.
The cap wearing tradition grew out of attempts to protect the freshman in the class scraps of the early 1890's or late 80's. During this time such class scraped with the other three, but somehow the freshmen always got the brunt of the battles.
Such incidents as fire hose drenchings, leaving students hand-cuffed to trees to spend the night in freezing temperatures and making people ill by exploding stink bombs caused much concern.
In the days before the cap, a freshman was captured, stripped of his outer garments and taken to a sorority house. The women refused to let him in and he was then forced to perform before the crowd.
Freshmen Nearly Persecuted
The hazing had reached a degree bordering on persecution by 1905, and then the student council devised rules for cap wearing instead of hazing.
The rules were devised to (1) put an end to the physical violence, (2) foster school spirit, (3) and to unite the freshman rather than to ostracize him. Caps were to be tipped to the school flag, faculty members and seniors, who could be recognized by the arm bands they wore.
Former Chancellor Frank Strong said he was not opposed to the rules in general, but they seemed to "savor of persecution." He said it would have to be understood that no rowdyism would be tolerated on the campus.
The freshmen accepted the verdict and without a murmur donned the little green caps with red buttons.
After a few years the student council empowered the Men's Student Council, the "K" Club and Sachems to enforce the cap wearing rules.
Paddles Prominent Playthings
One of the men who got a new, well-oiled and decorated oak paddle in 1926 to enforce the rules was Raymond C. Nichols, current executive secretary to the chancellor. He was
a member of the Sachem organization.
"The paddlings took place anywhere," Mr. Nichols said, "and sometimes townpeople and high school boys got brought in. Every one tried to get a swat at the men running the gauntlet."
"It was instinctive for freshmen to try to protect themselves as they ran through the lines," he said, "but when hands flew back to cover the target area some finger bones were broken.
"Once I held a watch for a Daily Kansan editor while he got doused in Potter Lake for writing an editorial which accused the upperclassmen of being more juvenile than the freshman."
Mr. Nichols said he agreed with the editor, but as a member of the paddle squad all he could do was offer to hold his watch.
not wearing the cap at football games was to be tossed high into the air from a big canvas blanket.
The customary punishment for
Mr. Nichols said the blanket had handles for 20 or 30 men to heave at the same time. The tossings were stopped when the canvas got thin, he added.
Women Wouldn't Like Caps
Women Wouldn't Like Caps Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant dean of women, said she would not want to wear a freshman cap, in face, she doubted if other women would either.
"I don't think there is any chance that the caps will come back." Miss Patterson said, "because hazing has gone out of the fraternity system to a large extent. I just don't think we could ever return to the flamboyant snake-dancing days."
Finally in 1944 the All Student Council passed a resolution banning the physical enforcement of the tradition, and 1951 was the last year caps were sold.
DELTA GAM
FLOAT PREPARATIONS—Three women from Delta Gamma sorority prepare crepe paper for their float in the KU Relays parade Saturday
morning. The women are, from left, Jean Stone. Kay Morgen, Wichita and Suzanne Beutler, Hutchinson. All are sophomores.
Caps Face Extinction
Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, has a freshman cap, a relic of some 1905 freshman. He keeps it in his files now, except for the times that he wears it in the night shirt-parades held at the beginning of each school year.
Dean Woodruff said the main reasons for the extinction of the caps were the focusing of attention on cars and World War II instead of the caps. Also, he said, men were not wearing any kind of hats very much at the time of war.
Of course KU is not the only school that has had the caps. However, KU is about the only school that didn't give them a nickname. They have been known elsewhere as rat caps, dinks, bonnets, and beanies, but at KU they have simply been known as the freshman cap.
Nuclear Science Study Grows
To stay abreast with the space age, four courses in nuclear sciences are now being offered at KU.
However, the courses do not offer specialized training, but a broad foundation for students wanting to enter the fields for further study, two professors involved in nuclear training told a Daily Kansas reporter.
Russell B. Mesler, associate professor of chemical engineering, said that his department has one course, Introductions to Nuclear Engineering, which has met with high interest among chemical engineering students.
He said the department is planning to offer some new courses in the nuclear field. He said the department was also trying to offer a master's degree in nuclear engineering.
Prof. Mesler said the department was trying to secure funds to build a nuclear reactor at KU. He said the Atomic Energy Commission was interested in helping the University in this project and the main problem at present is finding the money to finance the work.
Ammon S. Andes, professor of aeronautical engineering, said that department was offering one open course, Ballistic Missiles, and two seminar courses dealing with missiles. This is the first semester the Ballistic Missiles course has been offered.
The two seminar courses the department offers are Hypersonics and Rocket Propulsion. Hypersonics is concerned with the aerodynamics of air or gases and their relation to the various missiles.
In connection with the Rocket Propulsion course, some of the students are building a blockhouse to test rocket nozzles. They will experiment with thrust, temperature, velocity and pressures and their effects on rockets.
18,000 Expected At KU By 1970
(Continued from Page 8.)
5. Because of scholarships and research contracts we have, it seems probable we can maintain high standards and perhaps raise them over our present standards.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism, said radio-television is the fastest growing branch of journalism in ratio of students. The radio laboratories now in Flint Hall will be moved to Hoch Auditorium next year, allowing room for expansion in Flint.
Dean Marvin indicated there would be an increased concentration on graduate work. He said, however, "We are primarily in the newspaper field," and that the school would not lose sight of that.
He pointed out that there are 12 to 15 "directions" a journalism graduate may take when he finishes school.
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
55th Year, No. 129
THE ARMED FORCES OF THE UNITED STATES WERE MOVING IN A VEHICLE THROUGH THE GARDEN OF KINGS TOWN, N.Y. AS THE QUEEN ELIZABETH II AND HER SUPPORTERS WELCOME THE NEWLY CALLED FIRST DAYS MEMORIAL FOR THE UNITED STATES WAR FOR PRIDE. THE ORIGINAL PHOTOGRAPHY OF THIS EVENT WAS PROVIDED BY THE BOSTON POST.
Monday, April 21, 1958
JAYNE LEADS THE WAY—KU Relays queen attendant Jayne Allen, Topeka junior, and her escort lead the way on the Memorial Stadium field Saturday down an aisle of ROTC representatives. Miss Allen and the co-queens and other attendants presented gold watches to Relays winners. (Daily Kansan photo by Ron Miller)
Lots Of Relays Excitement Weather Fails Vandals Break Many Exhibits To Slow Relays Utility Pole Will Be Junked
By ALAN JONES and JOAN JEWETT Of The Daily Kansan Staf
(of The Daily Kansan Staff)
In weather alternating between a hot spring sun and threatening thunderclouds, Kansas' spring homecoming—the Kansas Relays and the Engineering Exposition—came off with only minor delays.
Both events started Friday, but the big crowd arrived Saturday. A total crowd of 16,000 watched the 33rd running of the Relays and the exhibits at the Exposition drew about 20,000 to Marvin Hall.
Eleven new Relays records were set, including a world record sprint medley relay time of 3:19.5 by the Oklahoma University team and an intercollegiate mile relay record of 3:09.1 by Texas University.
About 10,000 persons lined Massachusetts Street in Lawrence to see the Relays parade, which started at 10:30 a.m. Saturday after a half hour delay. All four of KU's weekend queens appeared in the parade.
At the Exposition, the department of petroleum engineering won its fourth consecutive first place award for "Geographical Frontiers of Drilling." Second place was won by a display built jointly by the departments of architecture and architectural engineering. Third place was a tie between the departments of civil and chemical engineering.
Triangles Win Division
Tringue
Winner of the float competition between KU organized houses were; men's division; first, Triangle; second, Teu Kappa; Epsilon; third, Lambda Chi Alpha; women's division; first, Delta Delta Delta; second, Alpha Chi Omega; third, DeltaGamma.
At the stadium, Relays co-queens Emily Mohri, Kansas City student from Fort Meade, Md., and Kay Winegarner, Arkansas City junior.
A utility pole was broken off at 1144 W. 11th and a window screen torn at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house in two incidents of vandalism last weekend.
Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said the utility pole was apparently broken off by a large diesel tractor-scraper which was driven from the Engineering Exposition at Marvin Hall to Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall early Saturday morning.
Prowlers at the Alpha Chi Omega house broke a window screen on a basement window early today. Some of the girls in the house heard noises on the south front porch after midnight and called police about 1:45 am, after hearing someone cutting wire in the basement window later.
The clouds stayed around all evening finally cutting loose in time to drench some of the people going to the Relays dance in the Kansas Union. The rain didn't slow things down much, though, as 250 couples attended—the largest crowd ever for the Relays dance.
Dr. Paul W. Merril, noted astronomer, will speak at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 124 Malott Hall, at a public Sigma Xi meeting. His subject will be "From Atoms to Galaxies."
Chief Skillman said the vandals have not been found, but both incidents are being investigated.
awarded medals, trophies, and prizes to the winners from the queens' stand on the west side of the stadium.
Astronomy Lecture Is Tonight
250 Couples Attend Dance
Harlan Livingood's band, from Kansas City, Kan., played before a backdrop of a papier-mache rocket that carried out the parade theme of "Sports in a Scientific World."
By JIM CABLE
BY JIM CABLE
(Of The Daily Kansan Staff)
After the show is over, what do you do with the props?
Apply this question to a show as big and varied as the Engineering Exposition and you get some unusual and odd replies.
The Theta Tau archway which spanned the entrance to Marvin Hall is destined to end up on a junk pile.
Robert Rehagen, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, archway committee chairman, said the missile model would probably be saved—"just in case we think of something to do with it."
The Naval Air Base at Olathe is planning an open house in May and has invited the departments to bring their displays for exhibit. Most departments are hesitant to do this because of the amount of work involved in putting the exhibits together again.
Missile To Be Save $ ^{1} $
The civil engineering model of a section of the inter-state highway system has been junked. The concrete and asphalt roadways have been thrown out while the miniature road building equipment, which was on loan from equipment companies, has been returned.
The half shell cardboard structure built by the department of architecture and the department of architectural engineering will remain up for testing for a full year. It will be sprayed with fiberglass to make it completely waterproof.
Shell Up For Year
Mry displays used laboratory equipment or student work projects. These will be returned to their usual classwork function.
The model car of the future as built by the industrial design department will be taken apart and stored for future exhibits.
Joint Sessions Set For ASC New Council, Officers To Be Sworn In April 29
With Vox Populi, campus party, holding a 17-7 majority in next year's All Student Council, it appears certain Vox members will be elected to the ASC executive positions.
However, Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and Vox president, said he would let the ASC select its officers without recommendations from the party.
Ford Grant For 11-School Study
The Ford Foundation has made a 3-year grant of $39,600 to the University of Kansas and 10 other colleges and universities for an interuniversity social science faculty seminar on "Urbanization in the Missouri River Basin Area."
The Governmental Research Center at KU will serve as secretariat for the program and will provide its administrative headquarters.
Will Be Published
Members of the seminar will try to find solutions to problems arising as a result of the coming of industrialization and urbanization to a once predominantly agricultural area. Results of the study will be published by the University.
"We will have our first meeting as soon as plans can be arranged and members of the seminar can be brought together," Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the Governmental Research Center, said. He said that the project might get underway during the summer, but "certainly by next fall."
The seminar will be composed initially of three representatives each from KU, the University of Colorado, the University of Iowa, the University of Missouri, the University of Nebraska, the University of North Dakota, the University of South Dakota, Kansas State College, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis University, and the University of Wichita. The representatives will meet quarterly for 3-day sessions.
Of the $13,200 annual budget,$5,000 will be allotted for pilot research on one comparative project.
Dr. Allen said that papers will be presented at the seminars by outstanding scholars in the field of social science.
"We want to bring practitioner and academician together to obtain their separate contributions to common problems." Dr. Allen said.
Letup In Rain Is Forecast
A cold front pushed its way across Kansas today setting off small showers and some thunderstorms, but the weather forecast shows a letup during the next 24 hours.
The forecast for the Lawrence area and Kansas tonight and Tuesday calls for showers and thunderstorms in the west and southeast portions tonight, cooler over most of the state tonight. The low temperature tonight should be in the 30s northwest to upper 40s southeast, the high Tuesday in the 60s.
The weather bureau's five-day forecast, from Monday through Friday, calls for warmer temperatures and little or no precipitation.
The new Council will meet for the first time at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Pine Room. It will be a joint meeting with this year's ASC.
The new Council members, together with John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, newly-elected student body president and vicepresident, will hold two joint meetings with the present ASC, Tuesday and on April 29.
At the April 29 meeting, the new Council, Downing, and Miss Plumb will be sworn into office. The Council's first meeting as a governing body will be May 13, when officers will be elected.
Business for Tuesday's meeting includes the Elections Committee's report on last Wednesday's spring elections and the second reading of an amendment which would kill Squat, the official campus humor magazine.
Discussion of the amendment will follow the second reading, and Squat's staff members will attend to present their side of the case. Jerry Blatherwick, Mission senior and managing editor of Squat, said the staff will meet with the Committee on Committees and Legislation before the ASC meeting to discuss the amendment.
(Related editorial Page 2.)
Two KU Students In $1,950 Smash
Charges of driving without a driver's license and failing to reduce speed to avoid an accident were filed against a KU student after a 2-car collision causing an estimated $1,950 damage Friday night.
The charges were made by Lawrence police against John Schick, Kansas City, Kan. junior, driver of an MG sports car, which collided with a 1958 convertible driven by Sharon Lynch, Salina senior. The accident occurred at 7th and Arkansas Streets.
Damage to the MG was estimated at $1,500 and the $450 to the convertible.
British Economic Adviser To Speak
Richard Miles, senior economic officer of the British Information Service, New York, will deliver a lecture on "Monetary Policy and Economic Stability" Tuesday at 8 pm, in Bailey Auditorium.
The lecture, sponsored by the economics department, will deal with the British system and its economic policies.
Miles has been at his present post for four months. Prior to that he was a press officer and spokesman for the British Treasury office in London. A graduate of Exeter College, Oxford. Miles has been with the British government at the Breton Woods Conference and was part of the United Kindom delegation to the United Nations.
Page 2
---
(2) $x = 0$ is a solution to the equation $3x^2 - 4x + 1 = 0$.
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 21, 1958
Go To Work Vox
The election—even the shouting—is all over now, so perhaps it's time to take stock of what has been accomplished.
Thanks to a sweeping victory, Vox party and its candidates are now in the driver's seat in the All Student Council. And the AGI, the "ins" who were tossed out, are picking up the pieces after taking a pretty sound trouncing at the polls.
The biggest victory of the election, however, went to the aroused voter. He carried the day Almost 3.000 students—perhaps a record turnout-voted last Wednesday.
If the election proved anything, it was that campus politicians play with fire when they try to pull shenanigans in the ASC. The election was a dandy object lesson to those who say the student voter doesn't know and therefore doesn't care about what goes on in his Council. The voters punched all sorts of holes in that argument last Wednesday.
1. Eliminate all closed meetings.
2. Amend the ASC constitution to allow students without ASC experience to run for the
Vox party leaders have promised to make the following changes in ASC administration:
offices of student body president and vice-president.
3. Make Council committee appointments according to merit, making sure that appointments are evenly apportioned among organized houses and independents.
With these changes needed, there is work cut out for the new Council. We leave it to Vox now, to perform as promised. The party and its leaders have a good year ahead of them if they will provide sound, efficient student government.
But in parting, we'll leave Vox with some sobering thoughts. Right now AGI partisans are probably mustering their scattered opposition forces. They'll be back strong next year; we hope with a better program than that turned down by the voters this year.
The students will be waiting for constructive Council action.
And finally, The Daily Kansan, bless its cantankerous old soul, will be watching every move the new administration makes.
It takes so very little effort to be honest in government. But one phony move in the Council, one bit of Hanky Panky, and we'll belt the daylights out of 'em. —The Editors
The Student Court
If you've gotten a traffic ticket and you're pretty sure you didn't deserve one, appeal your case to the Student Court. The procedure is simple. Let's say that you have been given a traffic ticket for over-parking in a 30-minute zone, when in actuality your car had been there for only 20 minutes.
Take your ticket to the traffic office in Robinson Gymnasium. There you may fill out an appeal blank. Later you will receive, through the mail, a notice telling you when you are to appear before the court and the name of your defense attorney. It is important that you call your defense attorney a few days before you are to appear so that he will have time to prepare your case.
The Student Court is provided as a service to the students. Its purpose is not to belittle or embarrass the students who appeal their cases. A police officer is only human and as capable of making mistakes as any individual. In case of error the only recourse for the student is to appeal. This is his right.
The Student Court, we feel, is one of the worthwhile institutions on campus since the officials and the attorneys are law students receiving valuable court experience. To increase its service to the students, we would make the following suggestions:
1. Any student who feels that he has unjustly received a traffic ticket should appeal his case.
2. Perhaps there could be several places on campus where a student could fill out an appeal blank. The traffic office is not always convenient for students. The Student Union might be an appropriate place for such an office.
3. The court meets only once a month. It is already over-worked. If there could be two courts which would meet once a month, student convenience would be enhanced.
Evelyn Hall
. Letters To The Editor
Editor:
After reading the editorial pages in Monday and Tuesday's Kansans, I wondered if the Kansan editors who wrote them differentiated between "taking an editorial stand" and cramming their opinions down the throats of their readers.
I think it is important for editorial writers to come to decisions about the issues that confront them and their readers. Decisions have to be made about many issues and the editorial page can often lead readers to a definite pattern of action through the lucid reasoned expression of opinions.
But this calls for a page of reason
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not a vehicle of emotion. To be really valuable, I believe the editors should state the process of thinking that led to the decision expressed in it. The reader should have all the facts that can be printed which led the editors to make their decision. To give them less than this is to imply that the editors are beyond that fallibility inherent in human nature.
The editorial in Monday's Kansan gave just that impression. It presented the qualifications of the candidates of only one party and did not give the reader the materials with which to make up his own mind. The argument that the qualifications of other candidates had already been printed is hardly valid if the true purpose of the editorial page was to aid the reader. A real service would have been to put all the qualifications right before him, because as the editors knew, few readers would take time to dig up old Kansans to search for them.
The whole tone of the paper's Monday and Tuesday editorial page is one of bias and rabid parisianism which serves to discredit in the eyes of many readers who look for calm analysis in seeking to form their opinions.
Tuesday's editorial page carried at least one misstatement of fact. Watkins Hall came into Vox long before the Little Hoover committee report, near the beginning of school. As a resident of Watkins I can state that dissatisfaction with our representation in AGI was a very small consideration if one at all. Apparently the editors conjured these statements from what appeared a probability.
Lighter Side of Congress
As a member of Vox I suppose I should have appreciated those power packed editorial pages of last week. But as a journalism student they turned my stomach.
And already they have run into a distressing problem.
Our lawmakers, fresh from spring junkets to assorted military bases, race tracks, allied nations, southern beaches and other such mundane locations, this week got their much-heralded investigation of space underway, though not to say off the ground.
Where, they are demanding to know, is space? How high and how low does it go? Also, how far?
Chairman John W. McCormack (D-Mass), who does most of his travel to and from Boston, propounded the vexing question immediately after convening his 13-man select house committee on astronautics and space exploration for the first of what promises to be a stellar series of hearings.
Sad to say, he didn't get much of an answer.
McCormack's space explorers already have made one modest ascent. They emerged from their sub-basement offices and climbed four stories to conduct their hearings in the big caucus room on the third floor of the house office building.
Nancev Harmon.
Apparently, they won't get much higher than that immediately, despite their broad authorization. Dr. Wernher Von Braun, the Army rocket expert, told them certain regrettable technical difficulties still stand in the way of manned travel in space.
But this didn't deter the Congressional space men. Where, they kept demanding of Von Braun, is space?
Von Braun, who it was hoped knew all about such things, said disappointingly he couldn't rightly answer the question. He told McCormack space is pretty big. He said it's hard to nail down.
McCormack was willing to settle for this, at least temporarily, but not Rep. Overton Brooks (D-La). Brooks conceded space was sizeable, but said he thought it could be defined.
Brooks said the way he got it,
there is both inner and outer space.
He said the former, according to his
informants, covers everything up to
60,000 feet altitude, and the latter
everything further up, or out.
Von Braun was too polite, apparently, to say this wasn't altogether accurate. True or false, however, Brooks' definition didn't satisfy Rep. James G. Fulton (R-Fa), another of the space men. Fulton pressed Von Braun for something more specific.
Where, he demanded, should the space committee draw its own lines? The taxpayers, he said, demand limits, even on space. Von Braun pondered and said, well, maybe as a starter the committee might confine itself to. sav, just the solar system.
Fulton was dismayed. The people of Pittsburgh, it was plain, did not send Fulton to Congress to write off in such casual fashion all the rest—worse, all but this tiny fraction—of the universe.
Von Braun, smiling, tried once more.
Fulton said sternly this looked like a narrow view for a man like Von Braun, who, moments before, had urged the committee to take a "broad view" of its duties.
"Where does our field end?" he persisted. "What is the limit of our jurisdiction?"
"Just say," he suggested weakly, that the sky's the limit."
United Press
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, rweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 256, 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 school. 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.
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Docking Outlines Program
Monday, April 21. 1958 University Daily Kansas
Page 3
4-Point Tax Plan Presented To State Legislature Session
TOPEKA—(UP)—A 4-point tax plan to solve a "critical" shortage in state revenues was presented to a special session of the legislature today by Governor George Docking. The plan includes higher individual income taxes for all brackets.
He said the present gap between state spending and income was between $17 and $19 million a year
Income-Spending Gap
The first special session in 20 years met at noon today to try to solve the revenue shortage problem.
The 4-point plan includes higher individual state income taxes, reinforcement of a one per cent severance tax on gas and oil, higher state inheritance taxes, and disallowing federal income tax as exemptions on the state corporation income tax.
Bedfast Gov. Docking's message, read by a clerk, said that if his suggestions were made into law, they would bring in revenues of $17.1 million a year.
The tax plan, which is the third budget message he has prepared in 15 months as governor, included only two new suggestions-individual income taxes and severance taxes.
The other points had been sur-
That session ended in a deadlock at midnight Feb. 13. The same 165 members of that Republican controlled group are back to debate the same issues.
gested in the same form to the recently staleated budget session.
Five other revenue sources were mentioned in the message, but were not recommended to be acted on. They were measures the governor would accept if passed by the session.
The tax plan's enactment depends upon the legislature's acceptance of two previous proposals—split the $12.5 million residue and combine the sales and general funds into one fund.
They included higher severance taxes, higher insurance premium taxes and higher corporate income taxes.
Five Other Sources
"There are two proposals to which I am opposed and which I
will veto: an increase in the state sales tax or a return to a statewide ad valorem (property tax)."
Docking has charged that in the past small committees have bottled up his proposals and refused to let them out on the floor for open debate.
Time to Act
"The time has come when further refusal on the part of the legislature to finance the state programs that it has authorized is impossible."
In his message Docking noted his income estimates were conservative and said he took into consideration recession tendencies.
the governor's message concluded with a final request for the legislature to cooperate with his proposals.
"If the economy does not improve, the state government must join with the citizens in tightening its belt and living within its revenues," he said.
"I hope each legislator in this session will act in the best interests of his constituents and not involve them in the petty and expensive pastime of wasting their money in trying to get for himself political advantages."
Clyde Reed, Jr., Republican candidate for the nomination of governor of Kansas, will speak at 7:30 Wednesday to the Clyde Reed-for-Governor Club in the Kansas Union Ballroom. He will speak on Gov. Docking's Administration.
Campaign Brings Reed To Campus
Explosive Is 'Frustration'
M. J. M. S. P.
CLYDE REED JR.
Mr. Reed was born May 14, 1914 in Parsons and is a 1937 KU graduate with a bachelor of arts degree in political science.
He is married and has two children. Clyde Martin Reed III, 15, and Caroiyn, 12.
Since 1942, Mr. Reed has been editor of the Parsons Sun. He was
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, not bringing any other items to the Daily Kaplan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
"I don't want to appear gloomy, but as far as the United States is concerned in Egypt, things couldn't be worse. Egypt is now tied more closely to the USSR than it ever was to the West."
Women's residence halls counselors:
All applicants for counselor positions in the freshman halls will meet in Parlor A, Kansas Union, Wednesday, April 23, at 7 p.m. Upperclass was invited but are interested in learning more about the freshman hall program are invited to attend this meeting.
**HOMETOWN**
Episcopal mortuary, Layer, 7 a.m. St.
Anselm's church, Canterbury House,
House.
TUESDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Mozart—Sonata No. 8 in C,
K 296. Beethoven—Spring Sonata; Sorgutra-
No. 21, 22 and 30.
families, 7.30 pm, Strong Auditorium
Snoo, *Ology* Chub 101, 102
Broadway and Street, Phi'letric,
College faculty meeting, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium.
Delta Sigma Rho oratorical contest
fellas 7:30 p.m., Strong Auditorium.
zoology graduate student
"A Museum of Natural History Field
Trip to the Barranca del Cobre."
hubs,
Nice Zoology Club 7:30 p.m., 101
Snow, Slides and speaker. Philip Ogilvie,
zoology graduate student.
A Memoir of Natural History Field
Department of Economics lectures, 8 am. Bailey Auditorium, Spine Street, London, British Information Service, "Monetary information economics service," British reference to British Experience.
Society for Advancement of Management, 8 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Union Speaker Room E Lane director of safety Kamla Kannam Power & Light Co., "Industrial Safety."
A "frustration gap" between material expectations and reality for Egypt's middle class is the potential explosive troublemaker in Egypt, a visiting expert on the Middle East said last week.
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
The visitor was Richard H. Nolte, who is now making his third lecture tour of colleges as a member of the American Universities Field Staff. He was at KU April 9 to 19.
Armour Research Foundation, Chicago, developed the nation's largest and quietest jet engine test cell to test the Pratt and Whitney J-57, the most powerful engine in the free world.
secretary for two years in Washington, D.C. to his father, Sen. Clyde M. Reed, a former governor of Kansas, and was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1948. He is a member of the Kansas Commission on Constitutional Revision.
Mr. Nolte said the material expectations of the Egyptian middle class are increasing faster than the actual satisfaction of the wants, causing a certain amount of frustration.
The Egyptian government has prevented trouble by keeping these frustrations focused outside of Egypt. The objects they have focused on have been political and emotional issues with the United States, France, Britain and Israel, he said.
"If the outside focal point is lost the frustrations could cause an internal explosion," he said.
Too Many People
The problem of reality lagging far behind expectations is caused by a situation of too many people per unit of productive land, he said.
"Egypt has six million acres of very fertile land. Living on this land are twenty-three million people." he said. The over population of land means a low standard of living.
"Three-fourths of the people don't have what we would call a decent standard of living," he said. "People there are really living on the margin of existence."
Economic Takes 25%
The Egyptian government recognizes the problem, he said. Economic development programs take 25 per cent of the annual income.
"This brings up a moral problem. Taking 25 per cent of the people's income is taking food out of their mouths," he said. "But there is no choice. The present generation must starve to build Egypt so that their children and grandchildren will not starve."
There are two ways to attack the problem of economic development. Mr.Nolte said. These two ways are to expand agriculture and expand industry.
"It would be difficult to increase the production per unit of land agriculturally," he said. "Investment from this angle has reached the point of diminishing returns."
Agriculture can be expanded by changing to crops which bring in more money and by increasing the amount of productive land through irrigation, he said.
"Now that you have the expansion plan and possibilities there is one more problem: Where do you get the money?"
"Egypt will industrialize," he said. There are many industrial possibilities, such as textiles, ceramics, and paper to expand on.
Industrial Opportunities
The most likely source of money is loans from the Soviet Union, he said. Russia has given Egypt $125 million for factories and technical training.
Russia's economic aid puts the United States in an unfavorable position, he said.
Dean To Speak At Wichita Institute
M. C. Slough, dean of the School of Law, will make opening remarks at the Oil and Gas Institute April 27 in Wichita. The event is sponsored by the Barr Association of Wichita and the University of Kansas School of Law and University Extension.
A. B. Hershberger, a former chairman of the Board of Regents, will be presiding officer for the institute.
George B. Collins, Wichita, a new member of the Board of Regents, will speak on "Currently Used Oil and Gas Lease Forms and the Special Provisions Thereof."
The home of John Harvard's mother at Stratford on Avon in England was presented to Harvard University in 1909 as a rendezvous for American visitors, the National Geographic Magazine says. One of the treasures preserved in the house is Jefferson Davis' walking stick.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 21. 1958
11 Relays Records Fall Despite Rain
OU, Texas Men Set Top Marks
Oklahoma and Texas were the top performers in the 33rd KU Relays Friday and Saturday as each registered two record-breaking victories and each set a new intercollegiate record.
Texas wounded up the 2-day track and field carnival with a 3:09.1 in the mile relay. Eddie Southern set an unofficial anchor of :44.6.
The former record of 3:11.6 was set by Oklahoma State in 1955. The intercollegiate record of 3:09.4 set in 1941 by California was also broken.
It looked early Saturday morning as if the Relays were to be swum instead of run but rain, which fell all morning, subsided and all events were run on schedule.
Texas captured the 440 relay in record time of :40.3 Saturday morning.
Oklahoma's records came in the spin, medley—a new intercollegiate time by the Sooners of 3:19.5 Friday. In the distance medley the Sooners' time of 9:50.8 erased the 10:04.3 mark set by Texas last year.
Gail Hodgson. Oklahoma's South African runner, Saturday ran a 4:07 anchor mile to defeat Texas by 70 yards.
The 2-day attendance was 16,000 with 13,000 watching Saturday.
A 21-year-old record which was set by a Texan was broken by another on Saturday.
Bruce Terry of Texas threw the javelin 232 feet, 2 inches. In 1937 Alton Terry of Hardin-Simmons set the old record 232 feet. $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch
Willie Attebury anchored the Michigan State team that set a record in the 2-mile. The Spartans ran 7:24.8 breaking the 7:32.3 record set by Kansas last year.
Former Houston runner John Macy broke the steeplechase record of 9:20.5 with a 9:12.5.
Meanwhile a record-hungry Texas track team looked today to a tentative lineup shuffle as a possible means of acquiring a third world relay record in Saturday's Drake Relays.
The Longhorns, world recordholders in both the quarter and half-mile relays, have ambitious designs on the sprint medley record set last weekend by Oklahoma. Texas coach Clyde Littlefield indicated he may go for the title Saturday by switching brilliant Eddie Southern from a normal 220-veg leg to a 440.
Southern was named the most outstanding performer in the relax.
With three members of last year's team back that set world records of 39.9 in the quarter mile and 12:27 in the half mile relays, Littlefield could follow Southern with proven sprinters Wally Wilson and Hollis Gailey on the 220 legs and bring Joe Villareal on for the final 880.
Gail Hodgson, a South African enrolled at Oklahoma, was second in the most outstanding performer voting following the final Kansas Relays event. He anchored the Sooners to the new sprint medley mark with a 1:48 time for the final half mile and was also instrumental in Oklahoma's meet record time of 9:50.8 in the distance medley.
Eleven records were shattered in the 27-event 1958 running of the Relays. Eight fell in the University division, two in the College, and one in the Decathlon.
Al Oerter, Kansas discus thrower, became the first double winner weight man since Darrow Hooper of Texas A & M in 1933. Oerter, we meet giant Rink Babka of USC in the Drake Relays this weekend, won both the shot and discus.
Phil Mulkey, formerly of Wyoming and now representing the Memphis Olympic Club, took the decathlon in a repeat of his 1956 performance.
A sizzling 1:48.0 anchor carry by
Oklahoma's Gail Hodgson in the sprint medley relay Friday pulled the Sooner team over the line in 3:19.5 to knock off the 3-week-old world record for that event of 3:19.9. A crowd of 3,000 people watched this performance under skies which alternated from bright and sunny to dark and rainy.
In the same race, two other teams timed in under the world mark while three others finished faster than the 1955 Kansas Relays record of 3:22.8
One other University class relays record was set in the 400-meter hurdles by Gene O'Connor of Kansas State who finished in .51.3. Second was Javawhaker Cliff Cushman who held the previous record of .51.6.
Kansas, by running the second fastest four-mile relay in the records, picked up a first place. Don Greenlee clocked 418.7; Dale Lutes, 421.2; Tom Skutka, 416.3 and Jerry McNeal 418 for a total of 1714.2.
Two other KU stars were unable to get their names in the 1958 record book but still finished first.
Broad jumper Ernie Shelby, hampered by a pulled muscle, won his event with one 24-foot 9-inch leap.
Charlie Tidwell put Kansas in the 100-yard dash finals by clocking a .099.5 in the preliminaries. His time was the fastest in the Friday trials.
One of the day's bright moments
Missouri University defeated KU, 25-14. Friday in a Big Eight Conference baseball game that lasted three hours and eight minutes.
Wiley, Hanson Give Tigers 20 Hits
MU battered the Jayhawkers, who now have a 4-3 record, with 20 hits while Kansas got 16 off MU hurriers, for a game total of 36. Fifteen of
was furnished by Concordia High School miler Bill Dotson. He became the fastest Kansas high school runner in history as he finished in 4:20.2.
This clocking was eight seconds faster than the high school division relays record in the 880-yard relay national record.
High schoolers destroyed one other relays record in the 88-yard relay. Shawnee Mission nicked 2 second off the old mark by clocking 1:31.
The only junior college activity of the day resulted in a new record for that division in the sprint medley. Coffeville went the distance in 3:32.4 to erase the 1957 time of 3:34.9
Other Jayhawkers busy in the university class events were Brian Travis, fourth in the 2-mile run and Kent Floerke, second in the broad jump with a 23-foot 11-inch leap.
those went for extra bases and each team got three home runs.
The big inning for the Tigers was the fifth when, with the score 11-8 in their favor, they collected 10 runs. Righthander Ron Wiley started for KU and took the loss after a 4 2/3-inning stint on the mound.
Centerfielder Bob Marshall and catcher Carl Lauerjung led KU with three hits each. Hitting homers for KU were Wiley, Larry Miller and Lauerjung.
The double header scheduled for Saturday was cancelled because of rain.
The box score:
KANASAS ab h rb
Muegler, j 6 0 0
Robertson, ss 6 2 0
Tornado, ss 6 2 2
Wiley, p, 3b 2 1 3
L. Miller, if 4 1 3
A. Miller, if 2 2 0
Donaldson, 3b, c 3 0 2
Lauterjung, c, rf 6 3 1
Mackillah, cf 6 3 1
Hanson, p, rf 2 1 2
Ash, 3b 0 0 0
Yocum, p 0 0 0
a-Nickols 1 0 0
b-Schmidt 1 1 0
Totals 43 16 14
MISSOURI ab h rbl
Uriarie, 3b 3 0 1
Stehr, 2b 4 1 0
Lewis, 2b 2 0 0
Starr, cf 6 4 2
Toff, tf 6 4 5
Slebert, 1b 5 2 0
Hochgrebe, ss 6 4 4
Haas, f 4 0 1
Meyer, if 4 2 1
Kohmhann, c 6 2 5
Lambert, p 4 1 0
Rittman, p 1 0 0
Totals 49 30 21
a—Fanned for Ash in 6th. b—Singled
for Hanson in 7th.
Kansas 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14
New York 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14
a—Fanned for Ash in 6th b—Singled
for Hanson in 7th.
Kansas 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14
Missouri 4 0 4 3 (10) 2 0 5 2-4 5
Tiger-Indian Series Hotter By The Hour
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UF)—The Detroit Tigers move to Cleveland for a 4-game series April 25, and it promises to be a pip.
Flashy dealing Frank Lane said Sunday night he'd have Detroit righthander Jim Bunning ducking if he was field pilot instead of general manager. Bunning hit one Cleveland batter in Sunday's 4-2 Cleveland victory at Detroit and "low-bridged" several others. Lane asserted.
He called it a "rare coincidence that every time one of our boys hit a homer, the next guy had to duck." Manager Bobby Bragan said "It's Bunning's prerogative to throw like he pleases, but he's the guy who takes the consequences."
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Monday, April 21, 1958 University Daily Kansas
Page 5
9—The veland and it
e said
Detroit
iking if
general
Clevé-
Clevé-
"low-
ee as-
evidence boys had to said throw y who
OWLER SHOP
FEHING MANUFACTURING PROCESS
10
A future engineer contemplates the situation . . as Chancellor Murphy starts competition by introducing Karl Schlademan, referee of the 1958 Kansas Relays.
LO
STATE OF
UNIVERSITY
KU
7009
OFFICIAL
Daily Kansan photos by Gaylord Tefft, Ron Miller, Lou Hoell, and Les Milliken.
Beautiful girls on the Delta Tau Delta float help depict the theme, "In Time—Sportsmanship in Science ... meanwhile, another relays traffic jam in Potter's Grove is being unsnarkled by campus cops... and big Al Oster sends another one up, up, and away.
Al Otert sends another one up, up, and away.
KALIS
MALC
LAKERS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 21. 1958
Sneak Preview of Kansas' '58 Football Squad Is Today
This afternoon is sneak preview afternoon for the 1958 edition of the KU football team. Jack Mitchell and his staff will, for the first time, see just what they will have to work with in the coming years at KU.
Mitchell will be in his first season, replacing Charles Mather who resigned last fall.
Mitchell recently said that the KU team, as slow as they are now, could be defeated 40 or 50 points a game when kick-off time comes in September. He said the Jay-hawkers will have to work hard on improving their speed and fundamentals to avoid complete buildupation next fall.
Quarterback is also a position
that brings a sour look to Mitchell's face. It isn't so much what he has, but what he doesn't have that hurts the new coach. Missing from spring practice and probably next fall is quarterback Bobby Marshall. Marshall was expected to add a great deal to the overall football picture at KU and Mitchell isn't hiding the fact that he'll miss him.
Marshall was injured the first of the season last year and has had trouble with his knee since that time. He has been playing some baseball but isn't expected to do any work on the gridiron.
Mitchell will be trying to adapt a quarterback (Duane Morris is the No. 1 prospect at the time) to bis
version of the split-T. Mitchell will also have veteran Larry McKown and rookies Don Wrench and Roger Boeger to work with. Halfback Buddy Merritt will also be trying out at that spot.
Tackle and guard spots will also be weak, according to Mitchell. There has been a wholesale switch of personnel in these departments and Mitchell is hoping the men can make adjustments before next season.
Workouts will be held on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday of each week, providing the weatherman cooperates. There are 20 workouts scheduled before the varsity-alumni game in May.
Musial, Williams In Headlines Again
By UNITED PRESS
Stan Musial and Ted Williams are sharing the headlines again today—Musial because he's off to one of his best starts and Williams because he's off to one of his worst.
The 37-year old Musial finally got the St. Louis Cardinals into the win column Sunday when he knocked in four runs with a pair of 2-run homers in a 9-4 victory over the previously unbeaten Chicago Cubs. He's collected 10 hits, including four homers, in five games for a .435 average.
The 39-year old Williams, meanwhile, went hitless in four trips as the Boston Red Sox suffered their fifth defeat in six games—a 10-inning, 6-5 loss to the Washington
Senators. Williams' average is now an inglorious .000 after seven futile at bats.
In other major developments:
-Bob Turley's 4-hitter enabled the New York Yankees to defeat the Baltimore Orioles, 7-0, for their fifth victory in six games.
—Robin Roberts defeated the Milwaukee Braves, 3-2 and equalled Grover Cleveland Alexander's record of 190 victories by a Philadelphia Phillies' pitcher.
Four more "little league homers" were hit in the controversial Los Angeles Coliseum as the Giants butchered the Dodgers, 12-2.
Musial softened up Jim Brosnan, who shut out the Cardinals on opening day, with a 2-run homer in the first inning and blasted another during the Cardinals' 4-run fifth-inning rally. Don Blasigname had three hits for the Cardinals who had lost four straight games to the Cubs.
Roy Sievers broke up the Boston-Washington game when he hit Murray Wall's first pitch in the 10th inning into the left field bleachers. Sievers also had a triple and a double and Norm Zauchin homered for the Senators, who share second place in the American League with Kansas City.
Turkey walked seven batters but struck out eight as he became the fourth Yankee pitcher to go the distance and the second to pitch a shutout. Yankee pitchers now have yielded a total of eight runs and 37 hits in six games—by far the best pitching record in the majors. Norm Sieburn homered and Mickey Mantile and Gil McDougal had two hits each for the Yankees.
Bill Toalson, Dodge City junior had the best round for the week-end with a par 72. Next in line was Bob
Wood, a junior from Liberal, who had a 73. The team recently elected Jim Davies team captain.
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — (UP) — The Hershey Bears, the runaway kingpins during the regular American Hockey League campaign, reigned today as the new Calder Cup champions.
The squad meets Washburn Wednesday and Missouri Saturday. This schedule will again give the team time to practice before the matches. Waugh said that each team member is qualifying on the week-ends.
GAIL HODGSON ran 4:07 anchor mile
The team now has a record of four losses and two victories. The losses were to Houston, the NCAA champs, TCU, Wichita, and OU. They have defeated K-State and Nebraska.
Golfers Down Nebraska, 16-5, But Lose To Sooners
Jerry Waugh, golf coach said his team played one of its best matches against Oklahoma. As a whole he said that the team performed very well. "The boys had a chance to practice for these matches and this practice probably accounts for their performance."
Hershey Bears Win Title
Over the week-end the KU golf team lost to Oklahoma, the defending Big Eight champions, 162-41s, and defeated Nebraska. 16-5, Saturday.
A's Win, Begin Cleveland Series
Hershey defeated fourth-place Springfield, 2-1 Sunday night, to win the best-of-seven final series.
OU
Chicago pilot Al Lopez filed a game protest after a fourth inning play in which interference was ruled. Billy Goodman was called out when he collected with Urban on the first base line after Urban attempted to field the Chicagoan's slow roller.
Tuttle's homer, his first of the season, snapped a 101 inning skein of homeless innings for Chisox starter, Bill Fischer. Hal Smith had rapped the last one off the balding righthander in Chicago last May 27.
Urban's shutout was spoiled in the top of the ninth by a double to the right field corner by pinchhitter Don Jackson.
Kansas City won its third game in five starts, 8-2, over Chicago yesterday. Jack Urban went the route on a five-hitter while Bill Tuttle and Billy Hunter accounted for six runs with a pair of three-run homers.
KANSAS CITY, Mo—(UP)—The Kansas City Athletics, deadlocked with Washington for second place in the American League, open a two game series with Cleveland tonight with Ralph Terry opposing Jim (Mudcat) Grant.
Both Grant and Terry scored victories in the Cleveland-Kansas City series in Cleveland last week. Grant, a rookie whose name was not carried on the Indians' spring roster, will be making his second major league appearance.
Before marriage, a girl in New Guinea's Wahgi Valley does no work and lives a merry life. Afterward she loses her freedom. She gathers wood, hoes gardens, cooks meals, and tends children and pigs.
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We're Anxious To Serve You
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KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS
W. H. Holmes, KU student, says, "Thanks to the Daily Kansan, I have my slide rule back. With only a 3-day ad, I got results."
If you have anything to buy or sell, use the Kansan classifieds. The price is a bargain-5 times for a dollar. Use the Kansan classifieds and get results!
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Monday, April 21, 1958 University Daily Kansam
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Page 7
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55 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
HELP WANTED—Female
BOOKKEEPER: Experienced in complete accounting cycle from journal to journal ledger. Must be able to adapt to details, some typing, permanent position. Mail reply to Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall, Classified Ad Department.
WANTED
FOR SALE
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn.
HOUSE TRAILER: 1954 Southwestern.
32 ft. Tandem; 2 bedrooms, completely
Dr. H. R. Williams
Optometrist
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-7255
USED CAR BUYS
1951 Chevrolet
Fleetline two door, looks and runs like new. $395
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-697
1955 Pontiac Catalina
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19th & Mass. VI 3-9293
1953 Plymouth
Spotless, good tires, 6 cyl. with overdrive. Perfect all over.
Jim Clark
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modern, very good condition, mahogany
interior, very nice look at 15. Bob's Art
1311 W 6th St. 4-25
SOLIATRE interlocking engagement and wedding rings. White gold, 4 carat wedding rings. White gold, 4 carat $220 for $100. Call VI, 3-3494 day, VI 3-5131 night, ask for John. 4-21
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over house or office telephone numbers, sentative or call VI 3-7553, TI 2-0736, VI 2-0395 for free delivery. tf
1947 FORD CONVERTIBLE, radio, heater,
new engine, new tires, good tire, transportation
$100 or best offer. Call VI 3-3494
davi. VI 3-1513; ask for John. 4-21
SENIORS; Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124.
FOR RENT
EXCEPTIONALLY NICE four room
furnished apartment for rent during summer months. No children or boys. Call VI 2-0095. 4-25
AVAILABLE JUNE 1, three room apartment, private entrance, bath, air conditioned, first floor, $69.50 per month. Four room apartments, private entrance, large room, private entrance, large room, reasonable. Two room apartment, $30 per month. Sleeping room, private entrance, bath, phone, $25 per month. Sleeping room, $16.50 per month. Linens are clean, well furnished. Near KU, utilities paid. VI 3-7830 after five. 4-23
ROOM FOR MEN, well furnished. quiet.
Room service, linens furnished, large
closet. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri.
4-21
PERSONS GOING to summer school in Mexico who would like to drive car to and from Mexico contact Bill Gelbke. I V-3 0540 after seven p.m. 4-24
TRANSPORTATION
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
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
ANYONE WHO WITNESSED the 8 a.m. collision 2 miles southwest of Tonganoxie, April 10, please contact Jack Fenton, Be. 1-4815, K. C., Mo. 4-25
BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicnic, party supplies ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. telef
MISCELLANEOUS
DELUXE FLOOR POLISHERS for rent at Kroger's. Super house cleaning job. Gets into corners, next to baseboards. Works hours. Kroger's. 9th and 4-23 Hampshire.
FREE two kittens, male and female. One
or Mr. Kurtus at KU 422. V-1 42-1
or Mr. Marcu at KU 422.
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for receptions and parties. For Sale: Mother's glass and crystal and china. House Glass and China, 906 New Hampshire VI 3-3980, 5-6
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate
service for theses, reports and term
papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606
Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. 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. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, distributions, and deliver. Mrs. Tom Bradli VI 3-3428
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop
Under the barber's hilt
Clarence Adamson, Mgr.
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
Studio, 908 Missouri, phone VI 3-6838.
5-132
desired. Phone Mrs, Donna Virr, VI 3-
8660. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at
regular power, spec. theme, term
thoseuses, on electric devices
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
LEAVE FILM TONIGHT
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Back Tomorrow At 3
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LAWNS MOWED, one time or seasonal.
New equipment, satisfaction guaranteed.
Reasonable prices. Also yard work. Phone
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LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers.
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock and cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for 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
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by 3-1971. Singer
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LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
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UNDERWOOD'S
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 Mass. VI 3-4070
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
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Pine's Radio & TV
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Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
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Jim Clark Motors
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LAWRENCE ASSOCIATION OF LIFE UNDERWRITERS
The following members are career underwriters and are vitally interested in the continued growth of the University of Kansas.
M. R. Carlson State Farm Life
Frank J. Cassity Woodmen Accident & Life
John Chaney Farmers and Bankers Life
Corlett J. Cotton, CLU Northwestern Mutual Life
John H. Cox Metropolitan Life
Tom Downs Central Life
Harry Crockett Prudential Life
Jerry Doyle Prudential Life
Richard A. Harding Woodmen Accident & Life
Alfred Gallup, CLU Northwestern Mutual Life
Robert E. Einstein Metropolitan Life
Albert H. Fearing Mutual Life of New York
Morris A. Kay American United Life
Lelton A. Hodges American Mutual Life
Robert D. Hazlett Victory Life
Joe Langhofer, Jr.
Prudential Life
Bill Lyons Provident Mutual Life
George W. Mole Massachusetts Mutual Life
Rudolph Neugebauer National Life & Accident
George Noland
Massachusetts Mutual Life
MEMBER OF
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LIFE INSURANCE
A Declaration
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Kenneth C. Pine Metropolitan Life
E. E. Ramsey Business Men's Assurance
Olen E. Reed Western & Southern Life
Richard L. Reinking Prudential Life
William F. Rutherford Woodmen Accident & Life
Wes Santee American United Life
Russel L. Sehon Northwestern Mutual Life
William H. Sheppard American National
Clarence Dale Swenson Provident Mutual Life
Dwight L. Sickles New York Life
George Six Metropolitan Life
C. E. "Bud" Smith, Jr. National Life & Accident
Obed E. Thompson Equitable Life
Leon Turner Midland Empire Life
Kenneth Walker Prudential Life
Vinton Warner Northwestern Mutual Life
Herbert S. Weekly Independent Broker
Ray T. Wright Independent Broker
Dr. Harold Krogh, CLU Professor of Insurance, K.U.
F. B. Denlinger, Retired Prudential Life
Wm. A. "Bill" Moore, Retired Metropolitan Life
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 21, 195
When Tornadoes Are Lurking-
Whistle Is A Warning
If the KU power plant whistle should blow four short blasts, pause, and then blow four more, get indoors and stay away from windows, because the whistle is a warning that a tornado is in the vicinity.
because the whistle is a warning signal. When these conditions are prevalent the ordinary precautions should be taken, according to Howard Lindley, director of Civil Defense in Lawrence.
In a Daily Kansan interview Sunday he explained that a tornado usually travels from southwest to northeast and the southwest corner of a basement affords the best shelter.
"If you are inside a building, get next to an inside wall to have protection in case the building eaves in." he recommended. "Don't stand by a window—you might be sucked through it by the pressure created by the tornado."
by the Toronto Police Tornado warnings to the University are handled by the Lawrence Police Department, he said.
Warning From Topeka
Warning from Topeka "The warning goes by teletype from the Topeka weather bureau to the police station," he explained.
"The police inform Civil Defense, the only agency having the authority to order that the whistle be blown. A secret code is used to tell whoever is in charge in the University power plant at the time to blow the whistle."
Mr. Lindley said that no building at the University is especially safe in case of a tornado, but that residents of Sunnyside, which is "kind of fragile," should go to the Military Science Building if one should strike.
"Tornadoes usually originate from severe thunderstorms," he said.
"When cold air from the north overrides hot air from the south and both combine with a stream of moisture from the Gulf, the hot air goes up and the cold air down. A turbulence results, and the twisting and turning becomes a tornado.
Alert Not a Warning
Alert Not a Warning Many persons are confused about the meanings of "alert" and "warning," he said.
"If the possibilities of a tornado exist, there is an alert," he explained, "If the tornado is on the ground a warning is given. During an alert, the best thing to do, especially if the weather looks bad, is to listen to the local radio station or watch TV for information."
He said there is small chance of getting hit by a tornado, but that "it is always good to know what to do."
Bend No Safeguard
Bend No Safeguard
He described as a "witch doctor's saying" the belief that a town situated in the bend of a river cannot be hit by a tornado.
"There isn't anything a tornado won't do" he said. The hill in Lawrence affords little protection against a tornado, which can strike anywhere, anytime."
Student To Run For Judge Slot
From Law School to judge of a probate court in five months is quite a step.
Robert Pinet. Lawrence thirdyear law student, has filed as a candidate for probate court judge of Franklin County and hopes to make that step. The court is located in Ottawa.
SHELLMAN
ROBERT PINET
If he is successful in the August primary and the November general elections he will officiate over cases involving wills, commitment of insane persons to institutions, and other cases in the jurisdiction of a county court.
Finet, a Republican, has been a probate officer in the Lawrence juvenile court.
Daniel Hosson Jr., assistant dean of the School of Law, says there is nothing particularly unusual about Pinet's candidacy.
"It was a little more unusual the year we had a girl file for the position of probate court judge and win," he said. The girl, a 1953 graduate, is probate judge of Ford County.
"We usually have several graduating students file for the office of county attorney," he said. So far no one has filed.
Beer Could Help Emergency
LONDON—(UP) —Britain's home office has told brewers bottled beer is not affected by radioactivity—as long as radioactive dust is wiped off the bottle.
The Burton-On-Trent brewers intend, in the event of a hydrogen bomb attack, to send bottled beer to areas where water reservoirs have been contaminated.
Since 1955 Argentine map makers have changed the names of almost a thousand places involving the name "Peron."
KU Is One Reason Callery Built Here
One of the main reasons the Callery Chemical Co. chose Lawrence as the site for its $4 million plant was the service and cultural advantages KU could offer.
Plant manager R. G. Schmidt said at a press luncheon Saturday that the company has already made use of and is planning to send more of its personnel to special courses at KU.
Of primary use to the company. Mr. Schmidt said, would be the research facilities of KU's scientific departments. He said the company came here because of the research facilities at KU and at the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said, "It will give faculty members an opportunity to get-up-to-date information on industrial operations at the plant, and there may be consulting opportunities for some
graduate students, too."
"We are glad to help promote industrial development in the state," R. O. Brewster, chairman of the chemistry department, said. The department has made temporary loans of equipment and supplies to industries in the past, he explained.
The plant has already borrowed some material from the chemistry department. Along with research under contract, the libraries at KU could prove invaluable for scientific study, he said.
Mr. Schmidt said plans are being made for management of the plant to attend the summer executive conference held during the summer session at KU.
Also some personnel have attended for two weeks and will continue to attend University Extension courses concerned with labor relations.
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1959 Jayhawker should be filed by 5 p.m. today with Raymond Nichols, chairman of the Jayhawker Advisory board and executive secretary of the University.
File Your Jayhawker Application Today
A professional rug cleaner said last week that it would cost about $100 to clean the rug.
Applicants must furnish three references, but these may come in after the Monday deadline. Any student who is eligible for participation in University activities may apply. ___
Officials at the DU house said all the trophies stolen had been recovered with the exception of one or two small ones Some of the returned trophies were broken and bent. Fraternity members were uncertain about the total damage.
Butter made from the milk of zebus tastes like it.
Sophomore Party Planned
A full scale picnic including boating, refreshments, entertainment and the usual "horsing around" has been planned for the sophomore class for May 3.
Ron Oldham, Kansas City, Kan.
sophomore, class vice-president,
said the picnic, to be held from
1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Lone Star Lake, is the first such activity for any such class.
Dean Woodruff said the students involved in smearing paint and lip-stick on the carpet in the fraternity house would pay the damages, but he declined to name the students responsible. He would not say whether the University would take other action against the vandals.
At one time the crude chemical value of the human body was estimated at $1.00. However, a fair market value for the vitamins manufactured by your body would be
New Mexico has a deer population of over 300,000, and the species include Rocky Mountain Mule Deer, Desert Mule Deer, Texas Whitetails and Coues Whitetail.
. . .
Ancient Romans fed garlic to their laborers to make them strong and to their soldiers to make them courageous.
Kappa Sigma fraternity men who took part in destruction of property at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house April 13 are "being held responsible for their actions." Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, said Sunday night.
Vandals Are Held Responsible
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Daily hansan
55th Year, No.130
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
J. C. Penney Says-
Tuesday, April 22, 1958
For New Business, Use Old Standards
James Cash Penney, 82-year-old founder of the world's largest dry goods company and honorary chairman of the J. C. Penney Co. told 300 persons in a lecture in the Kansas Union Monday afternoon that the best rule for business success was the Golden Rule.
Mr. Penney, whose lecture here was sponsored by the Marketing Club, was welcomed with a standing ovation from the crowd made up of students, faculty members and other guests.
Speaking on the subject "The Education of A Merchant," Mr. Penney said magic formulas and shortouts do not bring business success.
"The basic principles of good business have been proved over and over again so many times that it is hard for me to see how anyone can ignore them."
"The elements of success are simple, but not easy," he stated.
A liking for his fellowmen, creative insight, the courage to sacrifice a temporary gain for the sake of a permanent one, the ability to learn from mistakes. and
integrity and industry are the qualities found in a successful businessman, he said.
Mr. Penney, who founded the J. C. Penney Co. in 1902 and developed it into a chain of over 1700 stores, said the standards of a merchandising business should be as high as any profession.
"The businessman must pride himself on his ability to give the people of his community what they need and want; not on what he may be able to force upon them through his selling ability."
The field of merchandising demands capable persons of high character, he said.
"Instead of stooping to the level of a behind-the-counter job, many people find they are forced to rise to it."
Cardboard Pavilion Goes Down The Drain
The half-shell cardboard pavilion erected for the 1958 Engineering Exposition by the departments of architectural engineering and architecture has become a rainy-weather casualty. It was dismantled Monday afternoon.
Donald Dean, assistant dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, said the cardboard had been weakened by rain over the weekend and had sagged so much that it would not be desirable to continue testing it for the rest of the year.
Original plans for the structure were that it was to be sprayed with fiber glass to make it completely waterproof.
A conflict in planning prevented the application of the fiber glass before the exposition.
Prof. Dean said another cardboard shell would probably be built for testing next fall.
Elections Are Over, But There's Still Work To Do
Although the spring elections are over, the Elections Committee still has work to do. The committee is at work now checking out the listed expenses of the political parties against actual expenses, to determine whether either party went over the All Student Council limit for campaign costs
British Historian To Deliver Humanities Talk
Dr. Maurice Ashley, British historian and journalist, will deliver a Humanities Series lecture on "The Greatness of Cromwell," at 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 29, in Fraser Theater.
Dr. Ashley is the author of five books about the 17th century English conservative dictator, and is chairman of the Cromwell Assn. This year is the 300th anniversary of Oliver Cromwell's death.
Dr. Ashley is on the staff of the British Broadcasting Corp. and is deputy editor of its publication, The Listener. He formerly was an editorial writer on The Manchester Guardian, editor of Britain Today, and an editorial staff member of The London Times.
Dr. Ashley will speak to the History Club on "How and How Not to Write History" at 7 p.m., Monday, April 28, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. That evening, he will be dinner guest of Phi Alpha Theta, history honorary society.
DR. MAURICE ASHLEY
During his visit to the KU campus, he will also talk to classes in history, English, home economics (Engagement and Marriage), journalism, and radio-TV. He will also be interviewed on KANU, the University FM radio station.
A
M. G.
SPRING IN THE WEST—Three KU foreign students enjoy the spring scenery near Potter Lake. Mary Tint, Rangoon, Burma graduate student, snaps a picture of Jong Woo Han, Seoul, Korea graduate student and Yoko Tajima, Osaka, Japan graduate student. (Daily Kansan photo)
Honor Convocation Dropped This Year
KU's traditional honors convocation will not be held this year. In its place, a special section of The Daily Kansan, to be published in early May, will list the names of all students on the fall semester honor rolls, names of students elected to honor societies during the year, and a listing of students awarded scholarships and awards during the school year.
The convocation was discontinued, for this year at least, because of low attendance in the past. In some cases, even the students to be honored didn't appear for the convocation.
The cost of the special section of The Daily Kansan will be about equal to that of the convocation Tom Yoe, director of public relations, said Monday.
Extra copies of the special section will be printed so that each student may have a copy, and copies may be mailed to high schools and home towns of honor students.
Honor societies whose members will be named in the special section are Phi Beta Kappa, liberal arts and sciences; Alpha Omega Alpha medicine; Beta Gamma Sigma, business; Delta Phi Alpha, German; Omicron Nu, home economics; Order of the Coif, law; Phi Alpha Theta history; Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemistry; Rho Chi, pharmacy; Sigma
The committee must submit a report to the ASC within two weeks of the election.
Jack Davis, Topeka senior and chairman of the committee, said members were checking the bills and receipts the parties turned in to the Business Office, and were checking estimated costs of campaign posters against the bills submitted.
Low this morning 37. Low Monday 54, high 68.
At present, there is some confusion as to who is responsible for the poster expenses of the write-in candidates, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, who were elected student body president and vicepresident.
It remains undecided whether expenses should be paid by the candidates or the Vox Populi party.
Weather
Cold rain with winds shifting to northerly west portion tonight and rain becoming mixed with snow extreme northwest tonight. Warmer east tonight. Wednesday windy, cloudy and colder with occasional rain most of state. Low tonight 30s northwest to 40s east. High Wednesday 40s northwest to near 60 southeast.
Should You Pay To Park?
The new coin-operated automatic parking gate in the Kansas Union's east parking lot has developed two lines of campus opinion a Daily Kansan poll showed Monday.
The lot, previously for visitors only, is now open to any student or faculty member who wishes to enjoy an unlimited period of ticket free parking for the price of 50 cents.
Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, said Tuesday that the gate was not installed primarily to produce revenue.
The questions of whether the gate has been paying for itself and whether the lot has received maximum use have been raised.
"The reason we put a 50 cent gate there was to make the lot restrictive enough so there would always be a space available to students and faculty members who had a need to park there," he said.
Use of the parking lot, which was slow at first, is picking up, he said.
"It is impossible to forecast any possible future use. There does seem to be a definite upward trend."
The 50-cent parking privilege is an improvement for campus personnel, Mr. Lawton stated.
"We now are better off than we were," he said. Before, we couldn't park there at all without getting a ticket. Now, emergency needs may be translated into a dollar-and-cent matter of paying to park to solve the problem."
Students interviewed, who thought the toll gate was to exclude students, said there is a principle involved.
Some of their comments were:
Richard Harrington, Niles senior—"I'd walk a long way before I would use the toll gate. The idea of a barrier has an unfavorable psychological impact on me. Meters would be better."
William Nichols, Independence, Mo. senior— "I'm against the principle of a charge for parking. I would be glad to pay an extra dollar in my registration fees to keep the lot running. If money is needed, $8,000 each semester from student fees should help out the University."
One fifth of the students polled indicated that there were emergencies or conditions under which they would be glad to use the lot.
One student, who didn't want his name used, said, "If it was pouring rain, I was late for a class, and I had a load of books, I think the lot world be worthwhile."
Delta Pi, Spanish; Sigma Xi, science;
Tau Beta Pi, engineering; Tau Sigma Delta, architecture; Pi Delta Phi,
French; Pi Kappa Lambda, music;
Pi Lambda Theta, women in education;
Pi Mu Epsilon, mathematics;
Pi Sigma Alpha, political science.
To Select SUA Officers Today
Applicants for Student Union Activities officers will be interviewed, by the Union Operating Committee at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union. During the committee business meeting the SUA president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer for next year will be chosen from ten students who applied earlier this month.
The new officers and graduating seniors on the SUA board will meet Thursday to select eight new board members. Applicants for officers and board members submitted written forms stating reasons for applying, number of hours carried and campus activities.
The committee will base appointments on merit, work and particular talents. All positions will be held for the entire 1958-59 school year.
The Union Operating Committee is composed of seven students appointed by the All Student Council, the student body and SUA presidents, three alumni, five faculty or staff members and the president of the Memorial Corporation. Three Union staff members attend meetings but do not have a vote.
To Hold Part Two Of Speech Contest
Informative speaking, the second part of the Intramural Speaking Contest open to all organized houses, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Strong Auditorium.
The contest is sponsored by the speech and drama department and the Forensic League. Trophies will be awarded.
On Wednesday, April 30, the contest will end with argumentative speeches. For further information, or to apply, go to 116 Strong.
15+x=4
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 22, 1958
To Buy Or Not To Buy?
To buy or not to buy apparently remains pretty much an individual matter despite urging from President Eisenhower to step up purchases as a recession cure.
A United Press check on the man in the street in cities across the nation showed many persons have no intention of increasing their spending. Their answers ranged from a terse "with what?" to "I'm not in need of anything."
A number of persons said they thought the President's advice to "buy, but not indiscriminately" was a sound suggestion for getting the economy rolling into high gear. The President made his remarks at a press conference recently.
Still others said they were willing to buy—when prices drop.
Salesman Jack Leaverton of Des Moines said there's been too much recession talk. "There's been so much publicity the people who've got money are afraid to buy and are saving instead." Leaverton said. He added he does not personally plan to expand his buying.
"It won't influence me to buy anything," said Glenna Evans, a Des Moines housewife. "I think it's a good idea, but not for anyone who had to take a reduction in their income."
A Philadelphia housewife replied rather heatedly. "You can't do much buying when your husband is out of work. I'm buying food, period."
"I'll continue buying what I need and what I can afford," said a Philadelphia typewriter repairman. "I'm certainly not going to go out and buy something just for the sake of buying it."
Marshall May, a Steamboat Springs, Colo. rancher, said he thought "The President is about right" and "Things would pick up if people would start buying again."
"I think he's right about manufacturers too, especially automobile manufacturers," May continued. "They better get to making smaller cars, from the way things look."
A Needham, Mass., man, Robert Evans, said he'd like to buy a car now "but I'm not ready to swing it financially, despite the President's suggestion."
A Kansas City, Mo., man in the street said he bought everything he needed in the boom year of 1955 and wasn't going to buy anything else until prices come down.
"I'm quite a supporter of Ike but I sort of take exception to his attitude toward a spending spree," said J. M. Augustine, 68, Wheaton, Ill., bank employee. Another bank worker, Joseph J. Boos, 19, Crystal Lake, Ill., thinks "Everyone is too scared to buy. I think people will sit on their nest eggs."
E. M. Mitchell, 52, a Dallas, Tex., liquor store operator believes people are “getting the wrong idea. They talk about hard times so much that they want to save instead of spend. He is right about buying. I just bought a suit of clothes.”
"I didn't let the recession scare me into not buying in the first place," a Milwaukee, Wis., man stated, "and I'm not stepping up my buying habits now."
Another Milwaukeean asked, "Who am I going to believe? The Secretary of Treasury said on TV we should cut our buying and invest in government bonds, and Ike says to increase our buying. I'll keep on the way I am."
"No I do not plan to go out and buy things." replied a San Francisco bookkeeper. "When there's no money coming in how can you buy?"
-United Press
... Short Ones ...
Here are some terse little comments on the state of the world.
To wrap up the economy: President Eisenhower has told the public to "go out and buy things you want; this will help end the recession sooner." This is like telling the ex-Brooklyn Dodger fans to journey to Los Angeles to watch the Dodgers play.
In connection with the theme of everybody "buy-buy-buy" we feel the merchants are missing a sure thing by not starting a big campaign right now. This program could have a theme of "Do Your Christmas Shopping Early."
$$
****
$$
Ike gave the American people a one-word anti-recession formula: "Buy!" The unemployed college student has a two-word comment: "With what?"
****
We see now where everybody's trying to get
into the act. The new cigaret ads welcome you to "recessed smoking" and of course "the recessed filter does it." Sounds like a Democratic political movement in these times of "Republican succession."
***
***
Khrushchev says the 1956 Hungarian revolt was caused by "misrule." If only he were a KU student, he might have been a valuable asset to the recent Vox campaign.
The Cuban revolt may have served a useful purpose. It has proved to the world that two sides can fight each other rather than John Foster Dulles.
****
A university, after all, is a place where one can find lots of knowledge. The reason for this is the freshmen bring it in each year, the seniors take none away, and so learning accumulates.
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Excellent
I would here like to thank Mr. Nolte for his honest and skillful reporting and also thank Miss Judith Anne Heller, forum chairman, and the University for bringing to the KU students, the chance to hear such a speaker.
Editor:
Recently, Mr. Richard H. Nolte, American Universities Field Staff expert on the Middle East, presented an excellent analysis of the present situation in the Middle East.
I, as an Arab student, wish only that such true facts would be presented more often to further understanding between the United States and the Middle Eastern countries
Beirut, Lebanon sophomore
Mohammed Y. Shana'a
Daily fransan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trivweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
http://www.universityofkansas.edu
Telephone VIking 5-2709
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. Mall subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after Easter. University weekends at 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.
The Illinois Institute of Technology's psychology department laboratories have disclosed that cats and dogs with transected spinal cords have been taught to walk.
Wash fabrics with crease-resistant finishes in warm water. Very hot water can remove the finish and set wrinkles. Avoid using bleach containing chlorine.
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Tuesday, April 22, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Around The World
Page 3
Deadly Air Crash To Be Investigated
(Compiled from United Press)
Civil aeronautics investigators the burned and twisted evidence and an airliner came together in 49 persons.
The key question appeared to be whether the jet was falling out of control when it crossed the path of the airliner or whether the jet's instructor pilot simply failed to see the airliner during a controlled descent.
In Washington, anti-recession legislation and President Eisenhower's controversial defense reorganization plan dominated Congressional activity today.
Wreckage of the airliner was scattered over a square mile area. It had apparently begun to disintegrate in the air. The jet fell about six miles from the airliner's debris.
Republican legislative leaders are pressing for a more liberal plan for unemployment payments than the
pieceed together in the desert today that may tell why an Air Force jet an aerial collision Monday killing
one favored by the administration which would benefit only persons eligible for state unemployment benefits who have used up their payments.
Across the nation, severe thunderstorms and tornadoes raked the south for the second straight night Monday with at least 10 of the twisters injuring at least 10 persons in Texas.
Stormy weather also invaded the northeast during the night bringing rain to the entire Atlantic coast.
NEW YORK —(UP)— The Columbia Broadcasting System again will telecast and broadcast the Kentucky Derby May 3 over its national networks. The sportscasters will be Fred Caposella, Bryan Field and Phil Sutterfield.
Derby On CBS-TV
More Health Benefits Needed?
A chancellor's committee, established to look into the problems of University students and faculty, is considering as one of the problems the possibility of adding to the benefits of the student health insurance program.
The KU student gets these medical benefits when he pays his $12 fee; a physical examination upon entering KU, the right to consult a physician at Watkins Hospital, laboratory tests, treatment for minor injuries, immunizations, physical
The KU student, at the present time, is covered on most health needs by the $12 fee a semester he pays for the health service.
Student Gets Many Benefits
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, is not a member of the surveying committee, but explained some of the problems involved in starting a new plan.
Health services can be offered to the student for less money now than an insurance company could offer, Dr. Canuteson said, because insurance companies have to pay a board of directors, pay dividends to stock holders and maintain a certain reserve under federal law.
therapy, psychiatric conferences and advice of a trained dietitian.
The hospital doesn't cover expenses of surgery. he said, but pointed out that only 81 operations were performed during the preceding school year.
Partial medical benefits include $3 a day for a room (this also provides for doctor services), medicine for 10 per cent over cost and x-rays at 25 per cent of current cost.
He said since the costly cases are relatively few, most of the students' needs can be taken care of under the present plan.
Dr. Canuteson said last year there were 49,000 calls made to the hospital. He said practically no insurance company in the world would sell a policy offering to cover all benefits and if it did the premiums would be too high priced.
Surgery Is Not Covered
However, Dr. Canuteson said a plan to include surgical benefits, pay the entire bill for drugs and pay all
hospitalization expenses of the student, could possibly be worked out without too much additional cost to the student if the Health Service arranged the plan.
Dr. Canuteson said about 40 percent of the students are insured through insurance policies at home, but warned that most of these policies drop coverage when students become 19 years old.
'Dial M For Murder To Be Shown Friday
He said many students think they have this additional coverage when they do not have, and asked that the students check with their parents to see just how their policy is arranged.
"Dial M for Murder," starring Maurice Evans, will be the last Hallmark Hall of Fame program to be viewed in color in the Union this season. The program will be from 8:30 to 10 p.m., Friday.
four sets will be available in the Union through cooperation of the Hallmark Co. and Student Union Activities.
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 your own documents. The Authority's Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Women's residence halls counselors:
All applicants for counselor positions in the freshman hall will meet in Parlor A, Kansas Union, Wednesday, April 23, at 7 p.m. Upperclass women students are interested in learning more about the freshman hall program are invited to attend this meeting.
TODAY
College faculty meeting, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium.
Delta Sigma Rho oratorical contest finals, 7:30.pm., Strong Auditorium.
Snow Zoology Club, 7.30 p.m., 101
Swies. Slides and speaker. Philip Olgivle,
professor of the student. *A Museum of
Natural History* Gift Trip to the Barranca
del Cobre.
Department of economics lecture, 8 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. Speaker, Richard Miles Sr., economic officer, British Information Service, "Monetary Policy & Economic Stability, with special reference to British Experience."
Society for Advancement of Management. 8 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Union Square, Ethel Line, director of safety and training, Kaiser Power & Light Co., "Industrial Safety."
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
WEDNESDAY
Episcopal morning prayer. St. Angelo
museum. Canterbury House. Breakfast follow
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Mozart—Sonata No. 8 in C.
K 296; Beethoven—Spring Sonata; Sonata
No. 21, 22, and 30.
Faculty Forum, 12-noon, English Room, Keith Lawton, Keith Lawton, The Building Program.
The first he described as the "Big Bang" theory which states that at one time the universe was much smaller and more compact until something happened (presumably some sort of explosion), causing the continuous coasting.
Entomology Club, 4 p.m., 301 Snow Hall. Speaker, Dr. A.W.Kuchier, professor of geography, "Some Aspects of Vegetation Mapping."
El Atenco se reune a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser. El Doctor Colodynh habla en "La Guerra Civil de España" eluro de la Historia." Todos son innuidades.
Sociology Club. 4 p.m. 11 Strong An-
ticipation. See "Judice" and "Judice's"
comments by Dr. Carroll Clark.
The "continuous creation" theory states that the expansion has always taken place, and as various bodies pass out of the universal pattern of expansion, they are being replaced by an unknown production of atoms, possibly hydrogen, somewhere in space. This causes an equilibrium.
Another theory involves an oscillating movement of expansion and retraction again producing a perpetual situation.
Intramural speaking contest, 7:30 p.m.
116. Strong
Expansion Of Universe Theories Told
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Pine Room,
Union. Manuscript reading.
Poetry Hour. 4 p.m., Music and Browsing Room, Kansas Union, Robert Cobb, assistant professor of English, will read the poetry of Henry Vaughn.
Dr. Merril, who has been on the
The constant expansion of the universe from some unknown central force is one of the countless mysteries encountered by the astronomer in his study of the heavens, said Dr. Paul W. Merril, president of the American Astronomical Society.
KU Interfaith Conference, 5:15 p.m.
Meet at Kansas Union to go to 4-H fairgrounds. Dinner paid for by William Allen White Interfaith Fund. Discussion of race issues regarding racial group at KU. Reservation to KU-Y office on or before Wednesday.
Speaking at a public meeting of Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, Monday, Dr. Merril cited three current hypotheses on the phenomena which involves the perpetual separating of all heavenly bodies from each other at a slow, barely noticeable rate.
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dapforth Chapel.
Arden Booth, general manager of KLWN and a member of the advisory committee to KU's radio-TV course, said he hopes other Kansas radio stations will be able to establish similar scholarships.
Radio station KLWN of Lawrence has established a $400 summer internship scholarship for an outstanding junior man or woman enrolled in the radio-TV curriculum.
Mt. Palomar and Mt. Wilson observatory staffs since 1919 until his retirement in 1952, also discussed information with which astronomers are able to obtain from light waves from heavenly bodies with the aid of such instruments as the telescope and the spectroscope.
The announcement was made at the fifth annual KU radio-TV banquet.
Slides were shown depicting individual characteristics of the various types of astronomical bodies and groupings, including satellites, planets and galaxies.
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Leonard Suelter, M. E.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 22, 1958
KU Football Squad In Spirited Drill
THE BOYS IN THE GAME
JACK MITCHELL—Runs team through practice.
THE UNITED STATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE
PITCH-OUT—Quarterback Duane Morris (right) prepares to pitch out while the fullback moves up.
Junior Circuit Buzzing About Cantankerous A's
By UNITED PRESS
Joke all you like about them being a Yankee "farm club," but those cantankerous Kansas City Athletics are giving the "parent club" a better run for their money than anyone else in the American League.
All this talk about a Yankee runaway isn't making much of an impression on the surprisingly strong, second-place Athletics who kept within a game-and-a-half of the league leading New Yorkers
with an uphill 9-4 victory over Cleveland Monday night.
A's Pack Power, Hustle
A's Pack Power, Hustle Kansas City's hustle and take-a-chance tactics on the base paths already is being buzzed about around the circuit. So is their power which they were supposed to have sacrificed in winter deals.
Frank House supplied the big punch when he smashed a grand-slam homer in an eight-run eighth inning against the Indians Monday night. The A's took advantage of
six walks and an error by Chico Carrasquel to push across their runs in the eighth.
Rookie Jim (Mudcat) Grant, Cleveland's starter, had a 4-1 lead until he blew up in the eighth. Roger Maris of the Indians and Woody Held of the A's had homered up to that point. Murry Dickson, the 41-year-old knuckle-baller, was credited with the victory in relief of Ralph Terry.
Don Larsen put in a short day but paced the Yankees to be
fifth straight victory, a 4-1 decision over the Red Sox, while Detroit edged Chicago, 2-1. The Washington-Baltimore game was postponed because of rain.
The Cincinnati Redlegs defeated the Philadelphia Phillies, 4-2, in a 14-inning game that took four hours and 35 minutes. Rain washed out the only other national league scheduled game between Milwaukee and Pittsburgh.
Larsen pitched only five innings in the Yankee victory over Boston
but while he was around he hit a 2-run homer and struck out eight. Bob Grim relieved him in the sixth, ran into trouble himself and needed help from Whitey Ford in the eighth.
Ted Williams connected for his first hit of the season when he singled off Larsen in the fifth and just to show he hasn't lost his touch, he homered off Grim in the seventh. Hank Bauer homered in the first inning off loser Willard Nixon.
10
Susie Smith holds Best of Show trophy for last contest
<
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This trophy, plus ribbons, citations and $10 in cash are the prizes in the first section of the Kansan Photo Contest
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Last Contest Closes April 25
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Entry Blanks and Rules at Kansan Business Office,111 Flint Hall
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Tuesday. April 22,1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By BOB MACY (Assistant Sports Editor Of The Daily Kansan)
Football coach Jack Mitchell and his 6-man staff sent 64 men through workouts Monday as about 100 spectators watched in the intermittent rain. Judging from what this writer saw and comments of some of the observers, spring practice got off to a pretty good start.
Mitchell and his staff seemed determined to do one thing—get the most mileage possible out of the men they were working with. To say that the men were hitting hard and gang tackling like a real football team might easily be an understatement. Granted, there is a lot of work to be done before the KU football players could make a respectable showing. But if today is any evidence of things to come, Mitchell will be giving KU its money's worth.
Acting like a man with a definite split personality, Mitchell would one minute scream at a guard who missed a block or a tackle, the next minute yell praises to someone who carried out his assignment. He was constantly riding the players, screaming for them to get to their feet and get back after the ball carrier after someone had blocked them out.
One thing that was especially pleasing to see was the type of gang-tackling that Mitchell was calling for. The players were demonstrating the type of tackling that was sadly missed Saturday afternoons last fall.
Another remarkable thing to note about Mitchell is his agility on the field. Many times he would follow a speeding back around end yelling "Cut inside! Cut inside!" or "You're out now, run! run!" all the while keeping up with the runner. Mitchell, minus pads, would many times run a play, having the tackles or guards hit him. He rolled with the punches perfectly and the ability that made him a standout quarterback for Oklahoma was plain to see.
Mitchell ran his 44 most experienced players on the first four squads.
"We're awfully green and slow, but the team is making a good effort." Mitchell said. "Right now we're too slow to play anybody."
The first serious injury was evident Monday. Homer Floyd, the Jayhawkers' leading ground gainer was slowed in practice because of a pulled muscle suffered while running last week. Mitchell said Floyd may be slow all spring as a result of the injury.
There are 19 spring practices left in which Mitchell can mold his team into something to start out with next fall. What he can do in those remaining practices remains to be seen. In spite of the weak spots, what he has done in the first practice is impressive.
One thing seems certain from the Monday practice session. The guy who is able to stick it out and make the grade for Jack Mitchell is going to have to eat, sleep and love the game of football. If he doesn't meet these qualifications, he's washed up as far as KU football is concerned.
IM Games Postponed Due To Wet Fields, Drizzle
Wet playing fields and drizzling caused the postponement of all intramural softball games Monday. The games will be played some Sunday to be announced later.
Walter J. Mikols, intramural director, said several softball umpires are still needed. He would be interested in meeting anyone who knows the intramural softball rules and would like to work. An umpire receives $1 for each game.
the schedule for Wednesday and playing fields, are:
Stephenson, F, 10; Battenfeld vs. Hilltoppers, F. 1; Pearson vs. The University Daily Kansan, F. 2.
Fraternity B—Delts vs. Sigma Phi,
F. 3; Sigma Chi vs. Phi Delt, F. 4;
SAE vs Delta Sigma Phi, F. 5.
Independent A — Rochdale vs.
All games will start at 4.15 p.m.
U.S. Cagers In Russia
MOSCOW —(UP) Twenty-four American basketball players arrived Monday night for a 6-game exhibition tour of Russia starting Friday. The players, all chosen after the recent AAU tournaments.
3 Schools Slapped By NCAA
NEW ORLEANS—(UP)—College officials were served notice by the NCAA today that summer jobs offered prospective athletes will be closeiv watched in the future.
NCAA executive director Walter Byers predicted the NCAA scrutiny of jobs in the wake of the announcement of probations against Auburn, Seattle University and Southern Methodist University.
The SMU violation involved a $300 a month job as an oil scout for Glynn Gregory, highly regarded Abilene, Tex., high school football player, which the NCAA said was a "tailor made" job and not legitimate as far as the NCAA was concerned. "You can say the NCAA council is going to pay closer attention to summer athletes," Byers said. "It's okay to get athletes a job, but this one was too special."
The penalty against Auburn was the third-most stringent the NCAA ever imposed. The penalty, placing Auburn on probation until September, 1961, was imposed for "illicit financing" and came 11 days before a 2-year probation against Auburn was slated to be lifted.
The NCAA accused two Auburn coaches of reportedly offering $1,000 to halfback twins Harry and Robert Beaube to enroll at Auburn. The two are now enrolled at Tulsa University.
Auorn will be banned from bowl games, NCAA sporting events of all kinds, including football, basketball and track, and may not make commitments for such events after 1961 without consulting the council.
Seattle's basketball team may not compete in NCAA tournaments until after September, 1960.
1958 KU Relays 'Wonderful,' Says Track Coach Bill Easton
"Wonderful," said track coach Bill Easton when asked how he thought the Relays came off. He said that the 2-day meet lived up to all his expectations.
"We're on the way to bigger and better things." Easton said concerning the future of the Relays. He said that the new Relays offer more more opportunities for athletes than the old type.
to his expectations in all respects.
"The 2-day meet makes a better chance for more interesting Relavs," Easton said.
When asked if the other coaches were pleased with the relays, Easton said, "They were all very much in favor of our meet."
"The turnout was splendid," he said concerning the crowd at the meet. Easton said he was pleased with the student body help and enthusiasm. "The students cheering when the pressure was heavy really helped the boys."
He said that the meet lived up
He said that there would be no major changes made for next year's Relays. Only minor changes, such as stimulating more spectator interest and getting information to the public quicker would be made.
When asked if KU lived up to his expectations, Easton said, "Yes, we won four first places, more than any other team." He said that they would have liked to have won a couple more relays, but what could you expect with world's records being broken.
"Our team is young and we can look forward to more good seasons." Easton said. "They did real good and I'm very proud of them.'
Kansas Pitching Weak—Face OSU
After a 25-14 defeat at the hands of Missouri last Friday the Kansas baseball team is getting ready for a weekend of baseball with Oklahoma State, the conference leader.
As the score of the Missouri game shows, the KU pitching de- partment is weak at times.
"Pitching is our problem, as junior Larry Miller is our only constant winner," said Floyd Temple, Kansas coach.
"Our hitting is real good, as is our fielding, although it slacked off a little last week in the Missouri game." The Jayhawkers made seven errors in their loss. Temple went on to explain that a team's fielding will sometimes fall off when the pitching does.
In the pitching department right-hander Ron Wiley, a big winner on last year's Kansas team has been
a disappointment this spring. Wiley has lost three while winning none. In his last start Wiley allowed 13 earned runs and 12 hits in 4 2/3 innings.
"Wiley has not been throwing hard and his ball has not been moving around as well as it did last year," Temple said. "If he doesn't come around, we are going to be in real trouble."
Not everything is looking bad for this year's baseball team. Miller is holding the pitching staff together. First baseman Jim Trombold, the club's leading hitter last year, is again hitting well. "Catcher-outfielder Carl Lauerjung, although
Baylor Will Stay Despite Probation
DETROIT—(UP)—The Minneapolis Lakers and the New York Knickerbockers took their licks during the National Basketball Assn. season, each finishing last in their divisions. But today they will get top choice in the annual draft of college stars.
Minneapolis, which had the poorest won-lost percentage of the 8-team league, will pick first today while
the Knicks will get the third and fourth choices, the latter because of a trade with the Detroit Pistons.
latter because of a trade with the Detroit Pistons. Baylor Monday told United Press in Seattle that he plans to remain in college regardless of whether he is drafted and notwithstanding the NCAA ban on the Chieftains in playing in any post-season tournaments until after September, 1960.
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not catching as well as we would like, is also hitting very good," said Coach Temple.
Perhaps the biggest surprise of the year is the hitting of Barry Donaldson. Last year Barry hit just over 200 and so far this year is hitting at better than 400. Another good job has been turned in by outfielder Bob Marshall.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 22, 1958
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Tuesday. April 22,1958 University Daily Kansar
Page 7
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 22, 1958
Agriculture
ROCK WALL RISES—John Reynolds, stone mason for Buildings and Grounds, completes laying another stone in the wall under construction at the Art Museum. The Wall-building project for the Museum fountain court should be completed in about a month. (Daily Kansan photo)
New System Aids Return Of Books
Students will have to change their book-returning habits now that the new book-drop at the west end of Watson Library has gone into operation. The modern, outside-hinged door opens from the east window of the undergraduate wing.
The new book slot went into operation Monday night. Formerly, books were dropped into a big gray box in front of the main entrance. Robert L. Quinsey, assistant library director, said the slide will be open only when the library is closed. Books taken from any part of the library may be returned through the slide.
After books are put into the slot, they slide down a chute to a book truck inside a blond plywood box in the undergraduate library. Each morning the truck is unloaded and books returned to the departments they were taken from. The outside opening will accommodate books up to four inches thick and 1 foot, 10 inches wide.
Under the old system, books were sometimes worn and frayed from dropping to the bottom of the box. The new return has a platform on springs which will prevent books from hitting the floor. The old system was sometimes complicated by final examination schedules. The library was closed on the last day of examination last semester. Students filled the box and then started stacking books on top of the box. There was no protection from the weather and a few books were slightly damaged.
Library officials said the new location for night deposits was chosen for the convenience of students, as well as for the protection of books.
Signs were put up in the library Friday to remind students of the change. The slot is plainly marked in black letters on the outside.
When the new system was installed in February, Robert L. Talmadge associate library director, said the undergraduate entrance was getting more student traffic than the mail entrance. John M. Nugent, head of the circulation department, said he preferred that over-sized art books be returned during the library hours. All books will be due at the same time as before.
Five Receive Foreign Study Appointments
Foreign study scholarship appointments for five University students were announced today by Dr. John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School.
Kenneth Dean Stites, Kansas City, Kan a graduate student, has received a Fulbright scholarship to study French at the University of Paris in France.
Noel McKinley Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., senior, will have a direct exchange scholarship to study in the honors section of zoology at University of Exeter in England.
Two students will go to the University of Kiel in Germany. They are Ruwal Freese, Topeka, and Terry Travis, Merriam, seniors.
Robert Skinner, Mission graduate student, has been named the exchange scholar to the University of Birmingham, England.
To Try Out For Cheerleaders
KU's cheerleaders will conduct a school to teach yells and gesture techniques to students interested in joining next year's group.
Sessions will be from 6:45 p.m. to 9 p.m. on April 28, 29 and May 1 in Robinson gymnasium. Dick Jones, McPherson junior and head cheerleader said no applications are being taken. Any student may register by attending the first session.
Tryouts will be held on May 5 for students who attended all sessions. The cheerleaders for the 1958-59 school year, five women and five men, will be chosen by a student-faculty committee after the tryouts. Members of the present squad will compete in the tryouts if they wish to serve again.
The newly appointed squad members will meet to choose a head cheerleader.
Potholders will stay clean longer if they are starched lightly after laundering.
Pizza 'Rings' Plot Exposed
An apparent "ring" of pizza thieves has been detected on campus. A local pizza house that specializes in deliveries reports that large numbers of their pies have been stolen from delivery cars in recent months. All of the thefts have been in two areas—both of them surrounded by fraternity houses and dormitories.
In an attempt to catch the gang in the act, employees of the restaurant accepted two obviously false orders Sunday night. With an employee hidden in the back seat, the delivery boy parked his car in the usual spot, and left a window open.
As suspected, the first order was to a non-existent person in a fraternity house. The delivery boy returned to the car and picked up the other false order, which was to be delivered to a room in the
dormitory. As he entered the lobby, a boy sitting in a chair raised a newspaper, apparently as a signal to an accomplice across the street.
The second boy, who had been hiding behind some bushes, ran over to the delivery car and reached in the window. Just as he was about to grab one of the remaining pizzas, he was surprised by the hidden guard. The would-be thief turned and ran, and disappeared before the employee could get out of the car.
The employee did, however, get a good look at the culprit's face, and could identify him. The owner of the restaurant said that a report to the police will not be necessary if those involved will settle with him for past thefts.
100 Years' Voting Compiled At KU
Extension of the tabulation includes total county vote, Democratic total and percentage of over-all total, Republican total and percentage, other parties total and percentage, percentage by party of Democratic —Republican total and party plurality.
Nearly 100 years of Kansas voting has been tabulated in a publication of the Governmental Research Center.
Titled "Kansas Votes, National Elections, 1859-1956," the work is co-authored by Mrs. June G. Cabe, former research assistant, and Charles A. Sullivan, Morehouse, Mo. graduate student.
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Freshman women who return to school next year will have to "make a choice to live by," Miss Hardman said. Whether they choose to "go Greek" or stay independent, they must "put something into a group" if they expect to benefit from group living," she said.
The KU-Y freshman commission sponsored the panel to "acquaint freshmen with the choices available." Mary L. Brown, Hutchinson freshman and co-chairman of the commission, was in charge of the meeting.
About 45 freshman women, representatives from sororities and independent houses and Miss Mary Peg Hardman, assistant dean of women, discussed the pros and cons of sorority and independent living last night at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall.
Panelists Furnish Information Panel members were: Sorority seniors, Megan Lloyd, Hutchinson and Betty L. Douglas, Kansas City, Kan.; independent juniors, Gretchen Engler, Hutchinson and Joyce Isaacson, Macksville. The women explained and answered questions about expenses, scholarship requirements, social activities, duties and government of their houses.
Panelists Furnish Information
Miss Hardman said it is important to "realize that you do have a choice." "It is not the only choice that you'll make in your life, so you shouldn't worry about it. You should think it through. The choice should be yours alone."
The main differences as explained by the panel are house fees and duties. The similarities are in government and scholarship. Participation in "outside activities" is up to the individual no matter where she lives, they agreed.
Want Cost. Duty Data
The freshman women were mainly concerned with expenses and pledge duties. Miss Engler, who lives at Miller scholarship hall, said the fees are "usually from 20 to 25 dollars a month." The women there share duties to help keep the costs down. If accepted, women must maintain at least a 1.5 grade average the first year and later, a 1.7 average.
Miss Isaacson said the fees are between 40 and 45 dollars a month at residence halls. The women there don't have house duties. There are no specific grade requirements.
Miss Douglas and Miss Lloyd said sorority living is more expensive because of the additional $20 a month chapter dues, initiation fee and cost of a sorority pin. They said the pins range in price from $6 to $50. The requirement
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varies, but most sororities require a 1.5 average.
Miss Hardman reminded the women of another living possibility that of going "truly independent." Women may live in University approved private homes.
"You can find what you're looking for in any group. If you make a choice that's right for you at the time, it will be the right choice." Miss Hardman said.
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GAGGED!
Imagine! Living in a land where free opinion is gagged, your newspaper filled with lies, truth and freedom almost gone from your memory! That's just how it is for 70 million people behind the Iron Curtain in Eastern Europe.
You must help with your dollars or freedom will be completely destroyed in these countries. Your dollars keep Radio Free Europe on the air, keep its 29 truth transmitters at work, overpowering Red "jamming," slashing through Red lies, renewing hope that freedom will some day return behind the Iron Curtain.
Why must you give? Because Radio Free Europe is a private organization, supported by the American people. Your dollars pay for its transmitter tubes, its equipment, announcers, news analysts. Keep your dollars coming or freedom will be gagged behind the Iron Curtain! Send your truth dollars today to Crusade for Freedom, care of your local Postmaster.
CRUSADE for FREEDOM DAILY KANSAS UNIVERSITY
MILITARY COMMAND
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Wednesday, April 23, 1958
55th Year. No. 131
THE FIRST WINNER OF THE DAVIS MEMBERSHIP IS GRANTED THE PRESENTATION CARD. WITH THAT, THE MAN IN SUIT WAS SHOWN BY A COPY OF THE MEMBERSHIP BILL, AND THE WOMAN IN TIE AND SHORT SKIRT WAS DENISED BY THE MAN IN SUIT. THE MAN IN SUIT WAS SHOWN BY A COPY OF THE MEMBERSHIP BILL, AND THE WOMAN IN TIE AND SHORT SKIRT WAS DENISED BY THE MAN IN SUIT.
A GOOD INVESTMENT—Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy presents John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior with a proclamation concerning Invest-in-America Week which will begin Monday. Other student body representatives are,
left to right, Jason Ott, Lawrence second-year law; Chancellor Murphy; Carol Plumb, Overland Park, junior; John Downing; and Grant Napier, Wichita third-year law.
50 Businessmen To Speak Here On Investment Week
Approximately 50 businessmen from Kansas City, Mo., Topeka, Lawrence and Atchison will speak at organized houses at KU next week as part of the Lawrence-KU observance of National Invest-In-America Week Monday through May 3.
For the first time since the beginning of the week on a national scale in 1949, a campus in the United States will observe the week with speakers and a lunchon at 12:15 p.m. Thursday, May 1, in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The week is aimed at increasing public knowledge about the part which savings and investment play in our economy.
"The week's observance comes at a time when our economy needs a boost," said Jason Ott, Wakeeney third-year law student and investment week chairman.
"We are hoping that students and townspeople will see the need our economy has for investment to keep the economy on a sound basis," he said.
Plan Luncheon Speaker
Plan Luncheon Speaker Speakers will appear at organized houses and meetings every night next week and the campus and Lawrence steering committee plan to have a speaker for the Thursday luncheon.
The city-campus observance will be part of the national celebration to be held in over 70 communities throughout the United States. The theme for the week is "Money at Work Means Men at Work." Both Topeka and Kansas City are observing the week at the same time.
Many on Committee On the KU committee are the following:
Grant Napier, Wichita third-year law student, executive chairman;
Bob Billings, Russell junior; Creta Carter. Jennings junior; Carlos Campuzano, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Ron Claiborne, Amerillo, Tex. junior.
Miss Lawrence Title Loses Jaycee Support
Bob Hartley, Winfield senior; Marietta Meigs, Mission sophomore; John Meschkee, Hutchinson senior; Tad Morgan, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Kathy Roberts, Hutchinson sophomore, and Harry Turner, Topeka senior.
Lack of student support has resulted in the loss of one of the many KU queen contests
Bathing suited "Miss Lawrence" will no longer be selected and sponsored by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce.
4 SUA Officers Chosen Tuesday
The winner of the contest was the Lawrence entry in the Miss Kansas pageant.
Mary Ann McGrew was Miss Lawrence two years ago and went on to become one of the five finalists in the Miss America contest.
Harry Starks, Jaycee head, said financial losses and lack of student support were the reasons for discontinuing the contest. The contest
"We gave a higher scholarship than the state contest did as a prize," Mr. Starks said, "But we still couldn't get the support of the feasternities and sororities on the hill.
Contestants for the title first appeared in evening gowns and then in a bathing suit. Finalists were given quick opinion tests by the judges.
lost $500 for the Jaycees in 1956 and
$200 last year.
Four new Student Union Activities officers were selected Tuesday night by the Union Operating Committee, on the basis of interviews, to serve for the 1958-59 school year.
Mr. Starks said the Kansas City, Kan. Jaycees would sponsor a similar contest and would probably use KU women.
They are Howard M. Johnson, Topeka, president; Mary Alden, Hutchinson, vice-president; Marcia Hall, Coffeyville, secretary, and Phil Stuart, Lawrence, treasurer. All are juniors.
The new officers and graduating seniors on the SUA board will meet Thursday to select eight new board members. They are chosen for merit, work, and particular talents.
Weather
Strong northerly winds and rain mixed with snow extreme northwest this evening. Rain and colder tonight with scattered thunderstorms east portion. Thursday cloudy and colder with occasional drizzle west and morning showers east. Low tonight 32 northwest to 40s east. High Thursday 40 northwest to 50s southesat.
Council Starts Flurry Of Bills
Lame Duck ASC Grants Itself A Special Session
The lame duck All Student Council, formerly scheduled for two meetings before next year's Council takes over, granted itself another session and started a flurry of legislation through the mill Tuesday night.
Nine amendments were given a first reading and sent to the Committee on Committees and Legislation, three resolutions were passed, the report of the Elections Committee was approved, and the amendment which would have killed Squat, campus humor magazine, was killed in Tuesday's meeting.
Nichols, Irby Enter West Point Debate Tourney
Ray L. Nichols, Lawrence sophomore, and Kenneth L. Irby, Fort Scott senior, winners of the 9th district debate tournament in Lincoln, Neb., have entered the 12th annual West Point Debate Tournament.
The twosome left KU Monday and will be in New York until Saturday. They are winners of the Northwestern University Tournament, the tournament at St. Thomas College, in St. Paul, Minn., and the Central States tournament Edmond, Okla. They will be accompanied by debate coach Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech.
The West Point Tournament is attended by 36 colleges and universities from all 48 states, said Phillip Tompkins, instructor in speech, who added that many have chosen the KU entries as favorites. KU has participated in the competition for 10 years, he said.
Winners will receive a large traveling trophy plus individual trophies. They also will appear on Dave Garroway's "Today" TV program. Individual winners will be awarded wrist watches, Tompkins said.
KU won the tournament in 1954 when graduates Hubert Bell and William Arnold were entered.
Nienols, a political science major,
and Irbv, who is majoring in history,
will debate the national collegiate question for the year.
ASC chairman Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior, ruled that next Tuesday's meeting would be considered a special meeting, and the new Council will not be sworn in until the next regular meeting, May 6. The ruling was to allow time to discuss and vote on all the legislation which will come back from committee.
The Squat amendment was voted down on the recommendation of the Committee on Committees.
The Council passed a resolution requesting the Publications Committee work with the Squat staff to improve the magazine through "more emphasis on creative writing and literary quality," and "more emphasis on humor, less on obscenity."
An amendment to change the name of Squat was given the first reading. A new name would be selected by the Publications Committee and the Squat staff before publication of the first issue next year.
2 Amendments Concern Kansan
Two amendments concern The Daily Kansan were introduced by Brooks Becker, Emporia graduate student. The first would prohibit the paper from taking a partisan stand in campus elections and require it to give equal opportunity for each party to present its views.
The second amendment would require The Daily Kansan to "print completely and accurately all publicity releases from the All Student Council."
A formal complaint was also lodged against Vox Populi, campus party, on behalf of Thomas Bath, Mission junior. The complaint charged Vox wrongly removed Bath's name from the ASC ballot
(Continued on Page 12.)
Apply For ASC Posts
Petitions are now being accepted for next year's student body cabinet positions.
John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior and student body president-elect, said Tuesday petitions for secretary of student welfare, secretary of student activities, and secretary of the department of public relations will be accepted through Sunday night.
Petitions may be submitted to the All Student Council office in the Kansas Union or the dean of students' office, 228 Strong.
The secretary of student welfare is appointed by the student body president, and the other two posts are appointed by the vice-president.
Downing said a screening committee would be set up with representatives from the political parties, the Associated Women Students, the Inter-fraternity Council, and the All Student Council.
The secretaries will serve under the president and vicepresident, and supervise the work of student committees under them.
The committees under the three departments are:
Student Welfare—Traffic and Parking, Student Labor, Student Housing, and Student Health.
Student Activities—Publications, Social, Traditions.
Public Relations-Statewide Activities, Public Relations.
Petitions should be in letter form, and must include the student's name, living group (fraternity, scholarship hall, etc.), previous experience and activities, grade average, summer home address, and the applicant's reasons for wanting the appointment
Petitions for committee appointments will be accepted next week, Downing said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 23. 1958
Highway Robbery
There are plenty of good reasons why the Union's parking lot shouldn't have a toll gate at its entrance. Most of them boil down to the fact that fifty cents is too much for a student to pay to park in his own Union's parking lot.
For that matter, charging for Union parking may be wrong at any price. The administration could be off the beam in asking students who park at their Union to finance future athletic parking lots to be used, for the most part, by out-of-towners.
To top it all off, there are doubts that my old Ford is worth such expensive lodging. Neither the amount of gasoline in the tank nor the amount of tread on the tires would fetch the half-buck parking price. When the subject of a trade is broached, car dealers only shake their heads at the old heap, but junk men who pass it seem to have that undertaker's gleam in their eyes.
The day may come, of course, when it will be necessary to use the Union parking lot. But the Parking Committee can bet their boots that the entrance my car and I make will be a grand one.
I figure that if the Ford is hitting on all eight and the wind is right, enough speed can be gotten up by starting at the Library. We may shake up prayer services in Danforth Chapel a bit, but we'll round 14th Street corner in grand style. I may wave as we pass the Art Museum.
And then there will be the home stretch. We'll park at the Union, all right. With fenders flapping and doors rattling and the Ford's motor roaring at the top of its aged voice, we'll make that last, final sweep into the parking lot entrance.
That's when I intend to aim the front end straight for the money-taking machine.
A Big Inning For The U.S.
Larry Boston
So far Russia has been hitting some hot grounders that the U.S. has more or less muffed. But the last hard hit ball of the Russians was fielded flawlessly and they were thrown out at first by three strides.
Although the major league baseball season has only been open a couple of weeks, the little game Russia and the United States has been playing is in its umpteenth extra inning.
This latest bit of action was the Russian charge that we were guilty of causing threats to the peace through nuclear bomber flights toward the Soviet Union. Russia was so sure of her play that she brought charges before the UN Security Council.
After six straight hours of debate, Russia "graciously" withdrew her charges so that she wouldn't have to face the humiliation of coming up on the short end of a 10 to 1 vote.
At last the United States has had a big inning. We completely outmaneuvered them in the UN Security Council. Instead of making the U.S. appear as a warlike nation, Russia freely gave further proof that most of the noise she makes is purely for propaganda purposes.
This latest moral victory we have scored should prove two things. First, the U. S. is well prepared in case of an all-out war, and second, despite what Russia would like the world to think, we still have a few friends in the United Nations.
The game isn't over, that's for sure. But the U. S. has proven to anyone that had doubts that she's no pushover. Any future moves that Russia makes could reflect the fact that she had to crawl defeated off the field of a world debate.
—Del Halev
... Letters ...
Open Letter To The Student Body
We feel that much of the apathy shown toward student politics has been a result of so-called corrupted political machinery and selfish individuals in positions of student leadership.
We have been a member of the Vox political party because we felt that with its new organization student government at KU would become a respected and admired structure.
Vox encouraged us to run a candidate and we did so. The party supported Tom Bath from the engineering school and we as a member supported our party. A few days before the election, Tom found that he was not running on the Vox ticket. His name had been withdrawn by one man without hearing the voice of his party or the opinion of the candidate. We believe that this is a misuse of power and our house will not support this type of political manipulation. A qualified candidate has been sacrificed.
Furthermore, our house representative was not informed about the last three Vox political meetings.
We feel that we have lost demo-
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
BENEDET
Q-25
eratic representation in Vox and these abuses are an insult to our intelligence.
In view of these facts we have decided by a house decision to withdraw from this type of party and now declare ourselves a non-partisan organization.
We sincerely believe in good student government and will always strive for this cause.
THAT'S A RIDICULOUS RUMOR, DEAN, I RUN HERE A VERY DEMOCRATIC CLASSROOM.
Harry Stewart, president Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity.
Most of the 100,000 species of sea-shells known and named are less than half an inch in size and range down to microscopic size. However, a giant clam may grow as big as a caldron and weigh 500 pounds.
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Wednesday, April 23, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
BARRINGTON
WOODCARVER—Edbert Miller, Valley Center freshman, does some preliminary cutting with a pneumatic chisel on a walnut log that will eventually be carved into a statue. Fine Arts students have a whole woodpile of potential statuary material
behind Bailey Hall. (Daily Kansan photo)
They Chop Wood For Class Credit
For several weeks, about 60 interested wood workers have been chopping and sawing logs behind Bailey Hall-for class credit.
Walnut logs, sawdust and chips have marked the entrance to the sculpture work shop in Bailey Annex since work began. The logs were brought by truck from Parsons.
Several men in sculpture classes volunteered to take a field trip to an area that was flooded. They brought back 1,500 pounds of logs free for the shopping.
The logs were unloaded on Bernard (Poco) Frazier's property west of Stouffer apartments. Mr Frazier is a sculpture in residence at KU. The logs were then brought to Bailey Annex and piled up until needed.
Eldon C. Teft, assistant professor of design and sculpture, said there has been more interest in working in wood than in stone this semester.
"Some students are still carving stone, but the wood piles have been more common than stone piles since November," he said.
Students in Sculpture I and II classes do their own chiseling and sawing to get the right piece of wood to work on. These students "with an axe to grind" aren't the only persons who get a chance to take a chip off the old block.
James Bass, instructor of sculpture, turned over the wood carving tools to high school students during the art conference in March. Mr. Bass is carving a mask from one of the walnut logs. Many students have worked on the piece to get the feel of wood carving.
The logs range in size from one to five feet in diameter. Most of them are about two feet thick. Some of the larger ones that have started to crack and split are being oilled and waxed to prevent further cracking.
Mr. Teft said walnut is about the only wood being carved this semester, mainly because it was free.
"Walnut lends itself beautifully to carving," he said. "We don't have to do much to care for it. The piles outside don't need covering because the logs have been out in the weather a good long while already."
2 K-State Stars Face Expulsion
MANHATTAN —(UP)— Two starters on Coach Bus Mertes' spring football team today faced possible expulsion from school following an altercation at a women's dormitory.
The Kansas-State student body tribunal has taken under advisement the cases of Gene Meier, Bunker Hill, captain-elect of the Wildcats who was a starting guard last fall, and of Don Miles, sophomore guard from Petersburg, Va.
The two allegedly got into arguments and fist fights at Northwest Hall Friday evening during the coeds' carnival. The scuffle was with two houseboats at the dormitory.
The tribunal heard testimony for five hours in the case Monday night and was scheduled to discuss the case further next Monday. The tribunal has the power to recommend the two football players be expelled from school.
Living Costs At New High In March. Government Savs
Around The World
Living costs hit another alltime high in March, the government reported today.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that record food prices pushed living costs ahead by seven-tenths of one per cent during March.
The Bureau said that it was the largest monthly increase in the consumer price index since July, 1956.
Ewan Clague, commissioner of labor statistics, said food prices should begin leveling off in May and June.
The Democratic plan calls for the federal government to give idle workers 16 weeks of unemployment compensation, whether or not the idled workers are eligible under state unemployment insurance programs.
In Washington, President Eisenhower branded as dole today a Democratic-sponsored plan for benefits to unemployed workers.
The President also threw cold water on any thought of a summit meeting limited to himself and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
He declined to tell a news conference if he would veto the measure if Congress approved. He did say, however, that it has grave defects and would tend to be destructive to the whole system of unemployment insurance benefits as it now exists.
How About The Monkey?
CHICAGO —(UP)— Even organ grinders have agents nowadays. The University of Chicago could not book Guisseppe Renaldo for its festival of arts until it contacted his agent.
The index hit a new record in the very month that the business recession got worse, with unemployment reaching the highest level since World War II.
Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results
More than a million workers whose wages are tied by contract to the government index will receive pay boosts of up to four cents an hour.
lion bill which distributes sales tax money to schools, counties and welfare programs.
The measure was the first to be passed by either house in the 3-day-old special session of the legislature.
He said that it would be hard to justify such a conference.
In Topcka, the Kansas Senate yesterday pushed through a $57.5 mil-
Passane came after three amendment attempts were blocked. The distribution bill would provide a full-formula $8 million for high schools as well as for money for elementary schools.
Those attending are Roy D. Laird, assistant professor; Rhoten A. Smith, associate professor; Robert D. Tomasek, assistant professor; Clarence J. Hein, assistant professor and Chester Newland, assistant instructor.
During a speech by the Yugoslav vice-president in which he criticized the Soviet policy and echoed Marshall Tito's defiance of the Kremlin, the satellite representatives walked out and did not return.
He also said that he is frankly puzzled about what Russia's recent diplomatic maneuvering is intended to accomplish with respect to the summit conference.
While the special session continues, it was announced that Gov. George Docking will remain on the sick list for the rest of the week.
5 Political Scientists Attend Conference
In Lijubljana, Yugoslavia, representatives of Russia and its satellites, angered by Yugoslav criticism of Soviet meddling, walked out of today's session of a Communist Congress here.
The governor is suffering from an attack of acute bronchitis. He will remain under physician's care at the executive mansion.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
Five members of the University political science department will leave today to attend the annual conference of the Midwest Political Science Assn. at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Three of the five will present papers as a part of panel discussions at the meeting which will run Thursday through Saturday.
According to Sen. Paul Wunsch (R-Kingman), the sales tax increase was discussed "fully."
GOP Senators Give Demos Another Day
"The Senate would prefer to consider the governor's proposals first." Wunsch said. "But since the minority members do not see fit to introduce them, we are stymied. We are giving them another day to get something in. If they don't, we'll proceed with something of our own."
Speaker Jess Taylor (R-Tribune) said Docking's bills would be brought up for a floor test "so we can move this thing along as fast as possible. We still hope to get it over within two weeks." In Senate action, two bills were introduced yesterday.
The GOP members met in closed caucus this morning to discus the tax program and took no final action. They will make a decision at a caucus Thursday, they decided.
tion bill earmarking funds for education and welfare purposes which survived three floor amendment attempts and it was given final 34-1 passage. It now goes to the House.
One was a $57.5 million distribu-
A total of nine bills were introduced in the House as the 165member Legislature wound up its second day of the first special session in 20 years.
TOPEKA—(UP)Republicans of the Kansas Senate decided today to give Senate Democrats one more day to introduce bills implementing Gov. George Docking's tax program, then move toward introducing a sales tax bill.
The other Senate bill called for a withholding tax on state income tax payments, similar, but in addition to the Federal income withholding provision.
Docking has stated flatly that he will veto a sales tax hike, as he did during the recent budget session. If another try is made, Wpnsch said, its success will depend on whether "the Governor still has the 42 Democratic members of the House under control."
House Democrats already passed one Republican-sponsored bill. It went through in speedy action yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 23. 1958
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
CMSC Loses, 5-0 To Miller, Kansas
Southpaw Larry Miller, the ace of the Kansas pitching staff, allowed only two scratch singles while pitching Kansas to a 5-0 baseball victory over Central Missouri State College here yesterday afternoon.
Miller pitched near perfect baseball as he faced only 29 batters in the nine inning contest.
Striking out 11, Miller didn't allow a hit until the third inning when Haseltine, the CMS third baseman, led off with a weak hit over first base for a single.
In the eighth, Kubli, the second CMSC pitcher, lined a single through the middle for their only other hit.
The Jayhawkers jumped to a one run lead in the first inning. In the eighth inning Miller hit a solo home run that started a four run rally.
besides his home run. Miller had two singles in five times at bat to lead the Kansas hitting attack.
Center fielder Bob Marshall added
two hits and shortstop Barry Robertson batted in two runs.
The box score:
CMSC ab r h
Oblate, lf 2 0 0
Little, cf 2 0 0
Toler, 2b 4 0 0
Hogan, lf 2 0 0
Minew, c 4 0 0
Dey, f 4 0 0
Haseltine, 3b 4 0 1
Wilson, ss 4 0 1
Hurts, 1b 2 0 0
Fmk, p 2 0 0
Kubli, p 1 0 1
Totals ... 29 0
TOTALS KANSAS ab r
Robertson, ss 4 0
Lauterjung, ss 4 0
Trombold, 1b 5 1
Wiley, rf 5 0
L. Miller, p 3 1
Donnison, e 3 1
Marshall, cf 3 2
A. Miller, if 1 0
Hanson, if 1 0
Wickols, if 1 0
Nickels, if 1 0
Mugler, 2b 2 1
44 5 1
Totals
Sports World Sad At O'Connor's Death
IOWA CITY, Iowa—(UP)—The sports world joined this college community today in mourning the death of Frank (Bucky) O'Connor, warmhearted and personable head basketball coach at the University of Iowa, who was killed yesterday in a car accident.
Ten Conference titles in a relatively short coaching span of seven years, died instantly when his car skidded into the path of a semi-trailer truck near Waterloo and was demolished.
© Connor, 44, who brought Iowa national prominence and two Big
Trade in Virginia's "sweet-scented" tobacco grew so profitable by 1617 that settlers were planting it in streets and market places.
KU Trying For 4-Mile Triple
About the only sweep Kansas didn't score during the Wes Santee era was a triple grand slam in its favoriate relay, the 4-Mile. on the Texas - Kansas - Drake swing.
Going into the 49th Drake games this weekend at Des Moines, the Jayhawkers are just one length removed from such a feat. Earlier they won at Texas in 17:12.4. These completed triples at the first two stations.
One name has been on every entry, Jerry McNeal, now senior statesman of the distance corps. Thrice he has anchored as he is scheduled to do at Drake. Not even Santee ran on more victorious 4-mile clubs. Georgetown kept the Jayhawkers from consecutive victories during 1952-'53-'54 by nicking them at Drake in the middle year. A foot injury to Dale Lubs, well-regarded sophomore, will force Easton to change his regular combine for this late Friday afternoon trail. He'll be replaced by Verlyn Schmidt, dependable Hays senior.
Schmidt spun his best career mile, 4:16.6, two weeks ago, even though failing to score in a dual against Oklahoma State. He likely will handle Lubs' vacated No. 2 spot, behind sophomore Don Greenlee and ahead of junior Tom Skutka.
Greenlee's career low is 4:14.9.
Skutka has hit 4:12; McNeal 4:11.9.
Oddly, these three marks, plus that of Schmidt, all were clocked against Oklahoma State. These figures add to 16:55.4 which would rip 20 seconds off that hallooled Drake record. It is held by a 1952 Kansas combine of Lloyd Kboy, Art Dalzell, Herb Semper and Santee and it broke a long-standing American mark of 17:16.1 which Indiana had held many years. That was the famous race in which Santee telescoped a 40-yard deficit in the final quarter against
Georgetown's Joe LaPierre with the first of his great miles, a 4:06.7.
The Jayhawkers may be obliged to run under the record win. For in addition to those pressing stand-bys from Arkansas and Houston, will be Notre Dame and Illinois
Lubs' absence also will weaken Jayhawker distribution in the 2-mile Saturday. They ran fourth at Texas in 7:48.3, but were down to 7:34.4 behind Michigan State's record-breakers at Kansas. However, Schmidt ran his all-time best half in the Distance Medley last week-end. 1:54.6.
Cliff Cushman also took a second off his best seasonal time, down to 1:54.4 last week, while Bobby Tague again was spinning tremendous efforts in both the sprint medley and 2-mile at 1:48.9 and 1:49.9.
Michigan State won't be at Drake, but Oklahoma, which ran third here, will be, along with Nebraska, Arkansas and Illinois. Kansas also will run in the Sprint Medley Friday and the Distance Medley Saturday.
Podres Again The Toast Of Brooklyn
By UNITED PRESS
It's taken Johnny Podres, once the toast of Brooklyn, just a week to become the Dodgers' No. 1 hero 3,000 miles away in their new Los Angeles home.
The world series hero of 1955 pitched the Dodgers to their first victory of the season, April 16, and Tuesday night was the winning hurler as they downed the Chicago Cubs, 4-2, in the first major league are-lighter ever played in Los Angeles. Podres retired with a sore elbow after $6_{13}$ innings but gained credit for his second straight win.
In the bargain, he also demonstrated that a good pitcher—even a left-hander — can overcome the
hazard of the Coliseum's trick 250-foot left field fence. The Cubs loaded their lineup with six right-handed hitters but Podres pitched no-hit ball for five innings before Ernie Banks hit a 2-run homer in the sixth.
Gino Cimoli, a native of San Francisco, sent the Dodgers off in front with a 2-run homer in the first inning and they added single runs in the second and sixth.
At San Francisco, meanwhile, the St. Louis Cardinals prevented San Francisco from taking over first place in the National League when they defeated the Giants, 7-5. Del Ennis knocked in three runs, two with a homer, and Stan Musial lashed out three hits to lift his average to .464. Lindy McDaniel got credit for the victory while Johnny
Antonelli was charged with the defeat.
A 3-run homer by Hank Aaron enabled the world champion Milwaukee Braves to defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 5-2, in the other National League game.
In the American League, the runaway New York Yankees swept to their sixth straight victory when they defeated the Boston Red Sox, 12-7, the Detroit Tigers dealt the Chicago White Sox their third straight loss, 8-2, and the Baltimore Orioles defeated the Washington Senators, 4-2.
Aaron, who hit 44 homers last season, banged his second of this year in the fourth innning after Ron Kline walked Bob Hazle and Ed Mathews singled. Bob Buhl, coming back nicely after his 1957 world series failures, was tapped for 10 hits but gained his second victory.
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Page 5
Sig Ep,ATO Win'A'Games
Sig Ep, ATO and Sigma Chi won Fraternity A intramural softball games Tuesday. Sig Ep defeated Phi Gam, 17-5, ATO defeated Phi Psi, 6-4 and Sigma defeated Delta Chi, 1-0 (forfeit)
Sig Ep started the scoring early with a five run first inning. It added one in the second and clinched matters with 11 in the third. Bob Price hit two home runs in the big third inning. He was the winning pitcher.
Phi Gam scored three runs in the first inning and then went scoreless until the fifth inning when it got two more runs. Lee Mever was the losing pitcher.
In the ATO-Phi Psi game each team scored once in the second, fourth, fifth and sixth innings to make the score 4-4. In the seventh ATO scored two runs after two men were out. A third run would have scored, but Bill Hoffman, who had tripled, was thrown out at the plate. He was the winning pitcher.
Fraternity B—Kappa Sig 17, DU II 6; Beta I 12, Acacia 2; ATO 10. Phi Psi 10 (game was called at end of seven innings).
Games Thursday
Independent A—Carruth vs. Pharmacy, F. 10; Jolliffe vs. Fossils, F. 1; Hicks vs. Jim Beam, F. 2.
Independent B—VIP vs. Varsity, F. 5.
Fraternity B—Triangle vs. Delta Chi, F. 3; Sig Ep vs. Phi Gam, F. 4.
Auburn Woes On Increase
AUBURN, Ala. —(UP)— More trouble may descend on Auburn in addition to the NCAA bowl ban extension over the Don Fuell recruiting case.
While Auburn officials bitterly complained that the NCAA "conviction" went contrary to all evidence, the Southeastern Conference executive committee prepared to look at the case.
Auburn President Ralph Draughon and Athletic Director Jeff Beard charged that the conviction was based on repudiated assertions and undercover work of a masquerading Pinkerton detective.
But all the Auburn officials got for their trouble were protests by
other SEC colleges that they were being indirectly dragged into the affair, and an NCAA protest about being blamed for the detective work.
Auburn will not appeal because that can be done only with new evidence, they said.
"We are deeply hurt and deeply concerned," Draughon said. "It is inconceivable that the NCAA convicted us on the evidence we presented. If there is any other evidence, neither Coach Beard nor I know about it."
More than 10 per cent of all electricity sold in the U. S. was sold in the Tennessee Valley Area last year. TVA's capacity is 9,889,485 kilowatts.
Jubilant A's Name Hass To Face Tigers
Wednesday. April 23,1958 University Daily Kansan
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UP) Right-hander Duane Haas will start on the mound tonight for the jubilant Kansas City Athletics against Detroit.
Veteran Paul Foytack. (1-0), a 180-pound righthander, drew the assignment for the Tigers.
Kansas City, now 5-2, defeated Cleveland and 9-6 Tuesday with Bob Cerv hammering two home runs. good for four runs. Billy Hunter also slugged a 3-run homer as the A's bombed five Indian pitchers for 11 hits.
Ned Garver, who pitched the first 6 13 innings, got the victory. He was nicked for four earned runs, but Bud Daley and Tom Gorman came on after his departure to salvage the victory. Bob Lemon was the loser.
Rockey Colavito's homer in the seventh drove in three runs for Cleveland and Chico Carrasquel hit one in the eighth with Russ Nixon on base.
Cerv who drove in 44 runs all last season, claimed 14 RBI's today with the 1958 campaign hardly more than one week old. Cerv now has four homers for the season and a 407 batting average.
Major League Standings
By UNITED PRESS
National League
W L Pet
Chicago 4 2 667
Milwaukee 4 2 667
Cincinnati 4 2 600
Francisco 4 3 571
Los Angeles 3 4 429
Philadelphia 3 3 400
Pittsburgh 2 4 333
St. Louis 2 4 333
American League
| | W | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 7 | 1 | .875 |
| Kansas City | 5 | 2 | .714 |
| Detroit | 5 | 3 | .625 |
| Washington | 3 | 3 | .500 |
| Baltimore | 3 | 3 | .500 |
| Cleveland | 3 | 3 | .375 |
| Chicago | 2 | 5 | .286 |
| Boston | 1 | 7 | .125 |
NCAA Didn't Use Detectives, Byers Says
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP) — A denial was issued Tuesday by Walter Byers, executive secretary of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, that a Pinkerton detective was "in any sense" connected with the NCAA investigation that resulted in Auburn's new 3-year suspension for illegal recruiting.
Byers said in his prepared statement that "we strongly object to the inference that the Pinkerton detective referred to by Auburn officials was in any sense connected with the NCAA."
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Refreshments
Pres. Pat Little
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 23, 1958
Six Receive Science Awards
The National Science Foundation has awarded supplementary predoctoral graduate fellowships and two postdoctoral awards to six persons connected with KU.
Postdoctoral awards went to Dr Lamont W. Gaston, '53, now living in Ann Arbor, Mich., and to Dale M Brethower, Neis, Minn. senior.
KU student receiving predoctoral awards are Hugo F. Franzen and Charles F. Hobbs, both Lawrence graduate students; Arlan Bruce Ramsay, Dodge City senior, and Isaac J. Levine, New York, N. Y. graduate student.
To Decide Senior Class Gift May 1
The senior class gift will be decided at a senior coffee at 10 a.m. May 1 in the Kansas Union.
George Blackburn, Joplin, Mo. senior, class publicity chairman, said seniors would be dismissed from their classes that morning to attend the coffee.
At the meeting the class will receive commencement instructions and vote on the class gift.
Tentative suggestions for the class gift include a fountain for the court-ward of the Music and Dramatic Arts building, landscaping around Allen Field House, a trophy case for the field house, and furnishings for the expansion of the Kansas Union.
Art Slides Given ToKU Department
The National Gallery in Washington, D.C., has given the department of art history one of its few sets of original slides made from about 500 works of art in the museum.
Dr. Klaus Berger, associate professor of art history, said the National Gallery has launched a program to promote the teaching of art history and is making available a few sets' of the valuable slides to schools that already have art history departments.
"We are delighted to receive the slides and are equally pleased that the National Gallery officials have a high regard for our teaching program at KU." Dr. Berger said.
While he made no estimate of the worth of the gift, Dr. Berger said it is considerable. Slides can be duplicated from originals at no great expense but to make 500 originals is a large project.
Graduate Named Music Supervisor
Dale K. Moore, fine arts '54, has been promoted to director of the Conservatory of Music at Denison University, Granville, Ohio. He was appointed for a 3-year term.
Mr. Moore, who majored in voice, received a Bachelor of Music degree in 1954 and a Master of Music degree in 1956. In 1954-55 he studied at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria, on a Fulbright scholarship. He has been on the Denison faculty since September, and was formerly an instructor of music at the College of Wooster in Ohio.
Mr. Moore is married to the former Rosanne Greenwood, who attended KU from 1953 to 1956.
Edwards Named Workshop Consultant
Karl J. Edwards, director of student teaching and advising, has been invited to be a consultant at the summer workshop for the National Assn. for Student Teaching Aug. 6-13 at the University of Puerto Rico.
He will give an address on "The Role of Public School Personnel in the Student Teaching Programs" and serve as chairman of a group studying "Utilizing Theory and Practice." tice."
Both sea and lake sturgeon live in the fresh waters of the St. Lawrence River the year round. In spring dense schools drive into tributary streams to spawn.
Home Economics Day Set For May 3
Plans are nearly completed for the Home Economics High School Day May 3, according to Frieda Sloop, assistant professor of home economics. The event is sponsored by the department of home economics.
During the morning, home economics students from Kansas high schools, accompanied by their parents and teachers, will tour the home economics department in Fraser Hall and will visit the child development laboratory and the Home Managemenr House.
Exhibits will be on display and demonstrations will be given. Refreshments will be served.
The afternoon program, which will begin at 1:15, will be in the University Theatre and Dramatic Arts Building and is open to the public. After a period of questions about home economics which will be answered by a roving reporter, high school and college students, wearing clothes they have made in
class, will present a fashion
show.
Joyce Klemp, Leavenworth, is commentator and coordinator for the fashion show. Cornelia Barnes, St. Joseph, Mo., and Connie Deal, Wichita, are the stage committee. All are seniors. Miss Deal also is modeling director.
Pat Gallant, Wichita senior, is in charge of publicity. Adele Schmidt, Arlington, and Gavle Kinemond, Bushton, are in charge of the script. Both are juniors.
Faculty advisers for the fashion show committee are Muriel Johnson, Ruth Franzen, and Miss Sloop. All are assistant professors of home economics.
Registration blanks for the day's activities and further information about the program may be obtained from Viola Anderson, associate professor of home economics, in 118 Fraser.
It has been calculated that the human body contains 26,500,000,000,- 000 cells.
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The Campus Jay Shoppe invites you to stop in soon, see these smart new fashions, and meet Mrs. Irby Hughes (Ruth Roney) who is the new Campus Shoppe manager. We are extremely happy to have Ruth back as a member of the Jay Shoppe staff. She has been associated with Woolf Brothers of Kansas City as an assistant to the sportswear buyer for the past 10 months. Previous to this she was with us during her college career at K.U., where she received her degree in apparel merchandising.
Thanks a million for your patronage of our downtown shoppe, which has made this growth into our new shoppe possible.
Wednesday. April 23. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Business Day At One Time Wasn't Much Of A Holiday
At one time there was only an election of officers and the publication of the paper of the School of Business to celebrate Business Day. That was in 1942 when the annual baseball game between faculty and students and the banquet were cancelled. Students were not excused from classes either.
"Straw hat" day, when juniors and seniors in the School of Business wore straw hats and bow ties was also cancelled because of a shortage of straw hats. That was an observance of business day. Other events were cancelled because of the speed-up program in the school that year.
The next five years the whole program was discontinued because of the war and was not resumed until 1947.
When the day started again in 1947 there were only three straw hats and only a sprinkling of bow
ties to be seen. A dance and picnic was held at the pavilion west of Potter Lake that year and things were back in full swing.
With this exception, Business Day has been observed every year since 1925 when the celebration was first begun.
The purpose of that first observance was to "put forward the newest school of the University, to let other students know that the School of Business exists, and to encourage a spirit of better relations between the students and the faculty."
Since then there has been an annual student-faculty baseball game, a banquet and election of officers.
An election in 1938 turned out to be the biggest event of the day and conflicted with some other activities of the day.
It started out when members of the Commerce party protested the election and wanted it to be ruled invalid because the opposition, the Coalition party, had paid a membership fee for some indifferent
members to boost its vote total. At this time a poll tax of 25c was a prerequisite for voting.
All interest was focused on what Dean F. T. Stockton would say about the election at the banquet that night and immediately there was a run on banquet tickets.
The dean announced at the banquet that the election was invalidated and that the election would be held the following week. The students voted the poll tax out after that.
This year on Business Day, May 7, there will be the annual baseball game and banquet along with a convocation and faculty question and answer session.
Snakes and bugs, what most people try to avoid on an outing, were sought out in two states during the weekend by five University students.
Bugs, Snakes Sought On Ozark Outing
The University will begin an 8-week Summer Theatre this season that will provide a summer stock atmosphere for 20 students and produce six plays.
The five, undergraduate enthusiasts in entomology and zoology, left campus Friday for an unofficial field trip to the Ozark area of Missouri and Arkansas. They collected insect and reptile specimens.
To Produce 6 Plays In Summer Theater
Led by William L. Peters, entomology freshman, the group includes Edward F. Wettig, Leavenworth junior; Stanley W. McKean, Jr., Leavenworth freshman; Dale L Hoyt, Mission freshman, and Gary M. Elting, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore.
The director will be Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre.
BRING YOUR DATE OUT FOR A COOL-REFRESHING
Winners of the contest were Joe Sheldon, Lawrence senior, and his wife, Peggy. They completed the prescribed 1 hour, 50 minute course in 1 hour, $48 \frac{1}{2}$ minutes. They drove a 1956 Porsche.
Second place was won by Kenneth Gates, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, and Ron Higgins, Dallas, Tex. senior, in a 1951 Chevrolet.
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The session will be held June 8-Aug.2 with classes and productions using the new facilities of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
James Masson, Bethel freshman and rallymaster, said participants in the event had to pick up various information along the route, cruise at several average speeds, besides following written directions to the letter.
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The rally covered a 56-mile course, beginning north of Allen Field House, running north through McLouth and Springdale, and ending at Lake Tonganoxie, where a picnic was held.
Malts, Burgers, Coneys, Orange Tenderloins, French Fries
The group camped out during the field trip and returned to the campus Sunday.
Eighteen automobiles took part in a rally held by the KU Sports Car Club Saturday afternoon.
"We have applicants for auditions from as far away as Louisiana and Massachusetts." Prof. Goff said, "and we would like to have more."
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So bring it in after the rain for a wash job
The first audition will be Saturday in University Theatre. Two other sessions will be held May 3 and May 10. The group will be limited to 20 persons.
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Four major and two experimental productions are planned with performances on 12 nights. The major productions will be plays such as "The Petrified Forest" and "The Diary of Anne Frank."
Up to eight hours graduate or undergraduate credit may be earned in acting, make-up, stagecraft, play production, direction or other courses.
All classes and production will be directed by regular KU staff personnel. They will be Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech, managing director of the summer camp; Gordon Beek, instructor of speech, assistant director; Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech, scene designer; and Herbert Camburn, instructor of speech, costume designer.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 23, 1958
Balanced Economy Needed In Britain'
The main economic problem facing Britain is the need for balancing the domestic and external economies, Richard Miles, senior economic officer of the British Information Service, New York, said Tuesday night.
In a lecture sponsored by the economics department, he said, "Britain can't separate the domestic economy from the external one because she is on an island economy with limited resources and is dependent upon the importing and exporting of goods."
PETER H. SMITH
RICHARD MILES
Prices and wages in Britian have gone up more than output, he said, causing an excess demand in relation to the immediately available production. Production has increased one third, he added, but consumer demands have limited the increase in exports to but 10 per cent since World War II.
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.
Women's residence halls counselors:
All applicants for counselor positions in the freshman halls will meet in Parlor A, Kansas Union, 7 p.m. Wednesday.
Upperclass women students who have not filed an application but are interested in learning more about the freshman hall program are invited to attend this meeting.
Candidates planning to take the Ph.D.
German reading exam must register
www.caspers.com 2006 Fraser
TODAY
Entomology Club, 4 p.m., 301 Snow Hall. Speaker, Dr. A.W. Kuchler, professor of geography, "Some Aspects of Vegetation Mapping."
El Atenco se reune a las cuatro de la tarde en 11 Fraser. El Doctor Colodyny hablare en "La Guerra Civil de España" el centro de la Historia." Todos son invitados.
Sociology Club, 4 p.m., 11 Strong Annex R. Kinescope, "Nature of Prejudice" Comments by Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology.
Intramural speaking contest, 7:30 p.m.
116 Strong.
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Pine Room, Union
Manuscript reading.
jon. Mandisppt teaching
meeting, 5 p.m., Pine Room
Kansas Umm
International Club meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Bailey Auditorium. Speaker, Carlyle H. Smith, professor of anthropology, "With Thor Herverdahl on Easter Island."
Newman Cub executive meeting, 8:30 p.m., Castle. Note change in time.
THURSDAY
Poetry Hour. cancelled this week
KU Interfaith Conference, 5:15 p.m. Meet at Kansas Union to go to 4-H fairgrounds. Dinner paid for by William Allen White. Interfaith Fund. Discussion of issues in building religious groups at KU Reservation to KU-Y office on or before Wednesday
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
School of Business pilot group section.
4 p.m., Strong Auditorium.
Christian Science Organization, 7.30 p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Church, Casting,
Oaf's: Everyone welcome
FRIDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Mozart, Sonata No. 8 in C K 296. Beethoven, Spring Sonata, sonatas No. 21, 22, and 30.
The only cure for this problem, he continued, is to make money itself more scarce. The government has increased the bank loan rate and has requested that the banks slow their advances in an attempt to cut consumer spending.
Mathematics Colloquium, 4. p.m., 203 Strong, Speaker, Professor E. Stiefel, Date of Technology Zwick, Switzerland. "Uniformal Mapping by Integral Equations."
Kinescope of Alice in Wonderland, 1 p.m., Rehearsal Room of the University Theatre. Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Public welcome.
Hallmark Theatre Color Television.
Hallmark Television Union Maurice
Evans. 8:30 p.m. Kansas University
This policy has been successful so far, Mr. Miles said. There has been a check to public spending and exports have risen 6 per cent while imports have remained the same. He said that consumer buying was up only 2 per cent in 1957, prices up just 3 per cent and wages only 5 per cent. For the first six months of this year, there has been no increase in prices.
"The main goal for Britain now, 'is to build up a reserve so we can stand to import more than we export in case of a recession," he concluded.
The Beauties And The Beast
GRIMSBY, England — (UP) — A beauty lecture attended by 600 women oroke up in chaos Monday when a mouse ran across the floor in the Grimsby town hall. The mouse got away.
A temple at El Karnak, Egypt, is the largest columnar structure ever erected by man. It took 2,000 years to complete.
Reitz Heads Big Eight IFC
Harry J. Reitz, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore, has been elected secretary-treasurer of the first Big Eight Inter-fraternity Council, established last weekend at Oklahoma State University.
Reitz was elected to the office at the organization meeting which prepared a constitution and by-laws for the group.
The constitution will be voted on for ratification at the separate IFC meetings of the member schools. KU's IFC meets Monday night.
The group will hold an official convention every year and several business meetings during the year. Representatives from the Big Eight IFC will attend the annual national IFC meeting.
KU students attending the Oklahoma State meeting were Reitz; Robert Oiffl, Kansas City, Kan. junior; Donald West, Salina, and Michael Johnston, Independence, Mo. sophomores.
The Sunapee, or golden, trout has been found in only four places: Lake Sunapee and Big Dan Hole Pond in New Hampshire, Averill Lake in Vermont and Floods Pond in Maine.
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Clyde Reed Jr. Will Speak In Union Ballroom Tonight
Governor Docking's administration will be subject to a talk at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom by Clyde Reed Jr., Republican candidate for the nomination of governor.
Mr. Reed has been editor of The Parsons Sun since 1942. He was secretary for two years in Washington, D. C. to his father, Sen. Clyde M. Reed, a former Kansas governor.
He was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1948
and is a member of the Kansas Commission on Constitutional Revision.
Mr. Reed spoke to a luncheon gathering of party leaders in Lawrence today and attacked Governor Docking's "negative attitude" toward education.
"The entire record of the democratic administration toward schools is such as to raise serious question as to its ultimate intent about the future of our educational structure," he said.
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Wednesday, April 23, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Summer Cruises, Camps Ahead For ROTC Students
Summer cruises end camps for Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC students are in the final planning stages. KU men will travel to many parts of the United States and the world for practical training.
Sixty-two AROTC cadets will spend from June 21 to Aug. 1 at Ft. Riley They will attend classes and get experience in firing individual and crew-served weapons.
The cadets must have completed their third year of AROTC training before they can attend the camp.
camp at the marine base at Quantico. Va.
Navy midshipmen will cruise to places such as Japan, Northern Europe, the Middle East, and South America. The 104 men making the cruises will be spread out on several different ships and fleets.
Twenty-five Air science cadets will learn base orientation, attend instruction courses, and watch fire power demonstrations at Air Force bases in six states.
The first cruise begins June 11 and the last cruise will end Aug. 20. During this time the midshipmen will practice what they have learned during the school on engineering navigation, gunnery, and other naval science techniques.
First-class regulars and contract Marine cadets will attend a summer
The states visited by the men will be California, Arizona, Washington. Ohio, Texas, and Georgia.
Transportation allowances to and from the assigned stations will be made by the services and students will receive some financial compensation for spending time in the camps and cruises.
"Ronan women had no status in early times and all their possessions belonged to their husbands after they were married," Miss Winnie D. Lowrance, assistant professor of Latin at William Jewell College said in an interview Tuesday.
'Roman Women Had No Status'
"They couldn't own property or inherit anything and hold it themselves," she explained. "If they were not married and inherited property, a male guardian was chosen to administer it. Women stayed home and kent house."
Miss Lowrance will talk on "The Economic Position of Roman Women" at the 51st annual meeting of the Classical Assn. of Kansas and Western Missouri on the KU campus Saturday.
"I will trace the economic status of women from 500 B. C. to the beginning of the early Christian era" (around 31 B. C.) Miss Lowrance said.
Despite her handicaps, a Roman matron of the property class had the highest social position of all the women in the ancient world, Miss Lowrance said.
"She did not dine with her husband's guests, but she could receive them in the drawing room of her home," she explained.
The change in the economic status of Roman women came about as the result of legislation and changes sometimes campaigned for by the women themselves, she said.
"In 109 B. C., the Oppian Law, which said that women could not own more than half an ounce of gold, wear colored garments, or ride in a horse-drawn carriage within a mile of Rome, was repealed." Miss Lowrance said. "To get it repealed, women gathered in groups on the streets of Rome and stopped senators to ask them to do away with it. Romans believed in law and did things in an orderly fashion."
Complete freedom also came about with the increase in wealth and number of slaves and as a result of new ideas coming from contacts with other Mediterranean peoples, she said.
"By the beginning of the early Christian era, Roman women were free." Miss Lowrance said.
Two Seniors Guests At Advertising Meet
The top senior woman and man studying advertising at KU represented the University at "College Awards Days" Monday and Tuesday in St. Louis, Mo. They are Jere Glover, Salina, and Harry Turner Jr., Topcka.
They were guests of the Advertising Club of St. Louis for the two days and studied agency, media, and graphic arts as well as case histories.
James Dykes, associate professor of journalism, accompanied them on the trip.
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Dancers, vocalists, a band, and a basketball exhibition will be taken to the Winter Veterans Hospital in Topeka Tuesday by the Army ROTC as its third ROTC Show for the veterans.
AROTC Will Sponsor Show For Veterans
The show, enceed by Claude E. Kean, Olathe senior, will feature music of the ROTC band, directed by Jasper Rever, Lexington, Mo.
junior.
Robert Nebrig. Leavenworth sophomore, will lead a 12-man Pershing Rifles drill team exhibition.
Vocalists and tap dancers for the show will be Jo Ann Swenson, Rossville sophomore; Laura Ann Baker, Olathe freshman and Delano Lewis, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore. Acecompanist for the acts will be Reginald Buckner, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore.
A basketball exhibition will be given by Ron Loneski, Calumet City, Ill., junior and Bob Billings, Russell junior.
Three Make First Solo Plane Flights
Three KU Army ROTC students made their first solo airplane flights last week, M. Sgt. H. E. Armstrong said today.
They are Claude E. Kean, Olathe; Colby Rehmert, Jetmore, and John Reinert, Park Ridge, Ill. All are seniors.
Flight instruction is given to the cadets at no expense to them. The three began their training April 1.
10 NROTC Riflemen Receive Decorations
The Naval ROTC unit has been notified that 10 members of the NROTC rifle team have received decorations from the National Rifle Assn.
Marine T. Sgt. Thomas A. Jones said the firing was done on the Military Science Building range. Students who received awards are
James D. Schrivner, Winfield junior; Larry C. Schooley, Kiowa sophomore; David G. Blaker, Bartlesville, Okla; Robert Nolop, Leavenworth; David E. Epp, Tribune, and Russel A. Chanbers, Kansas City, Kan.Le Roy D. Hirsch, Powhattan; Gordon J. Kauffman, Overland Park; Roger B. Whitaker, Wichita and Merle G. Wilcoen, Bloom. All are freshmen.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 23, 1958
Clubs Meet, Elect Officers
Student Religious Council
Gerald Simmons, Parsons junior, has been elected president of the Student Religious Council (SRC).
Other officers elected were Phil Knouse, Garnett, vice-president; Jane Flagler, Geneva, Ill. secretary; Barbara Abegg and Mary Miller, both of Lawrence, public relations co-chairmen. All are juniors, Gary Zarybnicky, Oketo sophomore, is treasurer.
Simmons, Knouse, and Miss Abegg flew to Minneapolis, Minn. with the Rev. Dr. Alan Pickering, an SRC adviser, to attend the National Student Religious Council Convention Friday and Saturday.
The SRC is sponsoring an interfaith conference and supper meeting at the 4-H Fairground Thursday. The group will meet in front of the Kansas Union at 5 p.m. and will leave from there. Problems of relationships among the student religious groups on the campus and the relationships of the groups to their advisers will be discussed.
The dinner wil be paid for by the William Allen White interfaith fund. Reservations can be made by contacting the KU-Y office, KU extension 227.
German Club
Der Deutsche Verein, German Club, will have an hour of operatic and program music at 5 p.m. Thursday in Room 305A of the Kansas Union.
Mrs. Gisela Goetting, a professional singer who recently came to Lawrence from Germany, will sing, Raymond Roberts, Kingman graduate student, will accompany her on the piano.
The public is invited to attend the meeting and to join Mr. and Mrs. Goettling afterwards at a dinner in the Kansas Union Cafeteria.
--co-hit Bing Crosby in "MAN ON FIRE"
Zoology Club
Philip Ogilvie, Bellflower, Calif.
graduate student, showed slides and spoke on the Museum of Natural History's field trip to Barranca Del Cobre in Mexico last summer at a meeting of the Zoology Club Tuesday in Snow Hall.
SNEA
Virginia Gerboth, Lawrence junior has been elected president of the KU chapter of Student National Education Assn.
Other officers are Karen Miller
... On The Hill ...
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Chi Omega sorority will hold a Mothers' Luncheon Saturday at the chapter house.
Triangle
Triangle fraternity entertained members of Alpha Chi Omega sorority Tuesday with a picnic.
A national prize winner TV panel discussion. "The Nature of Prejudice," will be presented at a Sociology Club meeting at 4 p.m. today in 11 Strong Annex E.
Panel members on the kinescoped program are Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, Howard Baumgartel, assistant professor of business administration, human relations and psychology, J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, and William Comboy, associate professor of speech and drama. Dr. Clark will comment on the telecast.
Sociology Club
El Ateneo
Theta Chi
The show was one of a series produced last fall by University Extension and KARD-TV in Wichita.
Theta Chi fraternity entertained Alpha Chi Omega sorority at a dessert party Tuesday.
Alpha Tau Omega
Horton, vice president; Mary Antennen, Bazine, recording secretary; Joy Benjes, Kansas City, Mo., corresponding secretary; Janet Chun, Honolulu, Hawaii, treasurer. All are juniors.
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held its Province Convention April 11 with chapters from the University of Nebraska, Missouri, and Kansas State College.
Dean W. Clarke Wescoe of the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., was the guest speaker.
The KU chapter was given an award for highest scholarship in the province. Individual scholarship awards were given to Bill Addis, Wichita sophomore, and Don Logan, Prairie Village freshman.
Miller Hall
Robert Colodny, visiting professor of history, will speak to El Ateneo, Spanish club. on "The Spanish Civil War in the Perspective of History" at 4 p.m. today in 11 Fraser Hall. Dr. Colodny, who fought in the Spanish Civil War, has recently had his book, "The Struggle for Madrid," published.
Jim Trombold, Wichita senior, was chosen province representative for the Alpha Tau Omega national honorary award.
North College-Corbin Hall held its spring formal Friday in the North College living room.
* *
The new pledges are Jim Schartz, Sam Neff, both of Ellinwood, Larry Martin, Wakefield, Bill Sitter, Prewitt, N. M. Joe Spreckelmeier, Ruddy Mauser, both of Fort Worth, Tex. Phil Vogler, Kansas City, Kan., all freshmen; Fred Bulaty, Kansas City, Mo., Fred Hageman, Lawrence, Tom Dorney, Kansas City, Kan., all sophomores.
The theme of the dance was "Moonglow."
North College-Corbin
Kappa Sigma fraternity has announced the pledging of 10 men.
--co-hit Bing Crosby in "MAN ON FIRE"
Candlesticks should not be immersed or soaked in water or scraped with a knife or sharp instrument to remove wax. Instead, sponge off the base with carbon tetrachloride or other cleaning fluid, and pour warm water into the socket. Let it stand until the wax softens, then wipe it out with a paper towel.
Kappa Sigma
Triangle fraternity held its annual Founders' Day dinner at the chapter house Sunday, April 13.
Orval Swanders, one of the founders of the Kansas chapter, gave a speech on the history of the chapter. Donald Dean, faculty adviser, gave an after dinner speech on "Originality in Engineering."
Miller Hall held its annual spring formal Friday. The theme was Japanese and Dean Fleming's Band played for the dance.
Delta Chi
Chaperones were Mrs. Donald MacLeod, Mrs. Sebonia Hancock and Mrs. Mildred Wogan, motherhouses.
Delta Chi fraternity will hold a party at Happy Hall's from 8 to 12 p.m. Saturday
The new president and vice-president of the student body, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., Carol Plumb, Overland Park, both juniors all newly elected ASC representatives and class officers will be honored at a reception at the Delta Chi fraternity chapter house Sunday.
Triangle
FIRST LOVE FOR EMPEROR JOSEPH III.
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JOAN SWANSON
[Image of a woman with dark hair styled in a bun, wearing a light-colored dress. She is smiling and looking directly at the camera.]
Wedding Plans Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Swanson have announced the engagement of their daughter, Joan Fern, to Edward Leroy Farquhar, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Farquhar. All are of Hopkins, Mo.
Miss Swanson is a senior in the School of Education and a resident of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Mr. Farquhar is a senior at Northwest Missouri State College, Maryville, Mo., and is a mebner of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
The wedding date is set for June.
Pinning Announced
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority has announced the pinning of Jean Rogers, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, to Jack Bolin, Mission sophomore and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Rogers-Bolin
A pinning party was held at Happy Hal's.
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Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
has Jean bho- bho- Delta
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sults
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WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn. tf
FOR SALE
EQUITY in three income property. Located between KU and downtown. May compete with hotel use. Must be reliable married couple, may submit VI 3-7628 or IV 3-4445. 4-28
ELECTRIC STOVE, four burners, oven and broiler $90, no more. no less. Call Phil Emery, VI 3-7867, after five p.m.
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MISCELLANEOUS
ANYONE WHO WITNESSED the 8 a.m.
collision 2 miles southwest of Tonganoxie,
April 10. please contact Jack Fenton, Be-
1-4815, K. C., Mo.
4-25
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350
DELUXE FLOOR POLISHERS for rent at Kroger's. Super house cleaning job. Gets into corners, next to baseboards $1,000 hours. Kroger's, 9th, 8th, 4-23 Hampshire.
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for recep-
tions and parties. For Sale: Mother's
crystal and china. House: Glass
and China, 906 New Hampshire.
VI 3-3980. 5-6
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates will deliver. Mrs. Tom Bradley VI 3-3428
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
Studio, 908 Missouri, phone VI 3-6838.
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson. Mgr. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter phone. Phone Mrs. Donna Viri, VI 3-8600.
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
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 alliances with the animals etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tf
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 23. 1958
American Egghead' Talk Wins In Oratory Contest
"The Hey Day of the American Egghead" was the subject of the winning speech given by Ralph Seger, Topeka senior, in the 11th Annual Delta Sigma Rho oratorical contest.
A tie for second place went to Lizzie Dawson, India freshman, and William Summers, Wichita senior.
Seger was awarded a $300 encyclopedia set and Miss Dawson and Summers received cash prizes of $12.50 each.
"The American mass mind has bent its knee to the egghead," Seger stated. "This is because of a bugaboo on the American conscience—the Russian sputniks."
This reaction of emphasizing our intellect to "beat the Russians" is an unhealthy one, he said.
"This is not only unhealthy, but a danger to the existence of a free society."
It is up to the American individual to turn the present emphasis on "eggheads" into a constructive, healthy aid, Seger said.
Miss. Dawson, speaking on "Christianity," said that the Christians in India look to the United States for spiritual as well as political aid.
It is important to Indians whether Americans are "preaching Christians or practicing Christians," she said. "We say so much and do so little in America."
"An enemy just as large and terrible as any foreign enemy lurks within the country," he said.
Summers warned against the dangerous, ever present threat of "The Enemy Within."
Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty from a power-hungry individual who may attempt to establish himself as the first American despot. Summers said.
(Continued from Page 1.)
Other students in the finals of the contest were Claude Kean, Olathe senior; Pat Beers, Hoisington junior; and John E. Brown, Lawrence freshman.
Council Starts Flurry Of Bills
after the Vox primary March 30.
Under the ASC constitution, political parties may submit any names they wish for the general election ballots, regardless of primary results. The complaint is on the ground that Bath was not notified of his withdrawal from the ballot.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and Vox president, withdrew Bath's name when Ed Prelock. Cleveland, Ohio senior, filed to run for student body president.
The Elections Committee will continue to investigate Bath's complaint.
Prelock introduced an amendment in which ASC members who change schools or living districts after they are elected would be removed from office and replaced by another student from the election district.
Amendments Concern Elections Bill
One elections amendment would require all parties and writ-in candidates to submit summaries of all campaign expenses and reports on the sort of campaign material used, within two weeks after the election.
Several amendments submitted Tuesday were concerned with the Elections Bill. The Elections Committee reported there were no voting frauds, but that there were "multiple campaign violations" which will be brought before the proper authorities.
Another amendment would clarify appointment of the Elections Committee, and provides the committee would be appointed by the ASC chairman with the approval of the Committee on Committees.
WINNING SPEAKERS—Ralph Seger, Toppea senior (center), won first place in the Delta Sigma Rho oratorical contest which ended Tuesday night. Lizzie Dawson, Mukupen, India freshman (left), and William Summers, Wichita senior, tied for second place (Daily Kansan photo)
Business Society Elects Twelve
The election of one junior, eight seniora and two graduate students to membership in the KU chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, national business administration honor society, was announced by Harold C. Krogh associate professor of business and chanfe: president.
Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business, was voted into honorary membership. Dean Surface took his undergraduate degree at KU in political science and was elected to Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science fraternity. The new members are;
Workshop Slated For June 3-14
Kansas Elementary Education Workshop will be held June 3-14 at KU for teachers, supervisors and administrators. It is designed to present an over-all view of current trends in elementary education yet permit intensive work in an area of special interest.
Deaak Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education and Robert W. Ridgway, coordinator of the School of Education, will direct the workshop. KU faculty members will teach courses in nine fields.
The 1958 Foreign Student Festival will be held Saturday, May 3. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. Exhibits will be open from 1:30 to 5 p.m., and will reopen from 6:30 to 10:00 p.m. A program is scheduled for 7:45 p.m.
The workshop classes will cover arithmetic, guidance, science, language arts, music education, social studies, reading, playground activities and home-school relationships. The workshop may be attended for two hours of credit of may be audited.
Foreign Students To Hold Festival
The program will include about 20 selections given by more than 20 different countries, and exhibits of 40 countries.
Douglas Arnold Scott, Ottawa junior; Fred Charles Allvine, Jr. Kansas City, Kan. Paul Richard Carolus, St. Joseph, Mo. John David Cleland, Topeka, Hugh Mansfield Grant, Hutchinson, Robert Eugene Plain, Garnett, Wallace Allen Richardson, Bartlesville, Okla., John William Sanders, Jr., Stockton, Cloyce Evan Wiley, Lyndon, seniors; Virginia R. Huntington, Kansas City, Mo., John David Moxley, Atchison, graduate students.
The world premiere of "Symphony No. 2" by John Pozdró, assistant professor of music theory, will be played May 4 in Rochester, N. Y. as part of the 28th annual Eastman School Festival of American Music. Dr Howard Hanson will direct the Eastman-Rochester Symphony Orchestra in the performance.
Festival Will Hear Pozdro's Music
There Were Only 400
Professor Podroz "Symphony No. 2" was written as a doctoral dissertation while he was a teaching fellow and student at the Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, in 1956-57.
Professor Pozdro has taught at KU since 1950, except for the year in Rochester for work on his doctor of music degree.
The Parthenon, a Greek temple built 447 B. C., had optical refine-ments which made the building look correct in perspective, though its parts were not exactly perpendicular and horizontal.
A musical contest was held in which each group played its version of "A Foggy Day." The groups were judged upon their interpretation of the song and originality of improvisation.
The first concert of the Big Eight Jazz Festival was attended by a small but enthusiastic crowd here Sunday night. Jazz combos from four Big Eight schools participated, and they played as if Hoch Auditorium contained 4,000 persons instead of 400.
Musicians Play To Appreciative Crowd
Judges from four Big Eight schools were unable to choose between the rendition of the Don Conard Quartet from KU and that of the Dale Narris Sextet from Kansas State. Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, presented one trophy to both schools to be shared until next year's contest.
Aardvark milk is very rare in Western Europe.
The Esquires from Oklahoma State began the concert. The audience enjoyed their rendition of Horace Silver's composition, "The Preacher."
The Esquires were followed by the Don Conard Quartet, featuring Gary Foster, Lawrence senior, and Jay Fisher, Marion senior, on tenor saxophone and piano. The Conard group opened with "Hersey Bar," and followed it with "Spring Is Here." On both numbers solos by Foster and Fisher were applauded by the audience.
The Kollege Kats Kombo from Missouri performed next, and Sam Hargadine's baritone saxophone solo on "Broadway" brought applause, as did Frank Sullivan's piano solo.
The Dale Norris Sextet opened with an up-tempo composition, "Count Me Out," and followed it
with the ballad "You Are Too Beautiful."
The Larry Cummings Trio and jazz vocalist Fattie Tucker, both from the Embers club in Kansas City, were the featured guest artists. They performed while the judges were deciding the winner. Cummings sang "Caravan" and "Dancing on the Ceiling" in addition to playing the piano. Miss Tucker's rendition of "Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe," was the best received number of the whole evening.
Jack Morton
But He Was Already There
PASADENA, Calif. — (UP)—Motorcycle officer Walt Kilgore stood by helplessly as he listened to the police radio repeatedly order him to go to a fire at Lincoln Avenue and Idaho Street. The reason he couldn't go—it was his motorcycle burning.
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Docking Forgets Schools, Says Reed
Clyde Reed Jr., candidate for the Republican nomination for governor, told a group of KU students Wednesday night that "we are going nowhere fast under a Democratic administration."
Mr. Reed charged that the Docking administration's attitude toward schools is "full of tragic libels against the dedicated men and women devoting their lives to your education and to the education of all young people."
Intent Question
"It is a minority of one in holding such an attitude toward teachers," he added.
He said the Docking administration is on record as saying that "teachers are underworked and overpaid."
"The entire record of the Docking administration toward schools is such as to raise serious questions as to its ultimate intent about the future of our educational structure," he said.
Mr. Reed then pledged his "ful and untiring support" to the educational system of Kansas.
The solution to the educational problems of Kansas will not be easy, Mr. Reed emphasized. He warned that citizens could "look forward to nothing but increased outlays for schools."
He commented that the Docking Administration's record on school "leaves everything to be desired."
'Party Of Reaction'
"Instead of support for education there has been only sniping at schools and teachers. Instead of encouragement for educational goals there has been only ill-concealed contempt for the whole important business of education," Mr. Reech charged.
He asserted that the Democratic party in Kansas is "the party of reaction."
"It seldom has been for anything but rather against everything," Mr Reed said.
The people of Kansas cannot, he said, afford a 1910 government in the atomic age. He added that great opportunity lies ahead for Kansas.
"It is not opportunity which will come knocking on our door. We must go out ourselves and tell and sell the story of Kansas to the nation." Reed added.
In closing, Mr. Reed said, "Kansas cannot long afford the lack of leadership and vision which is now so apparent in a Democratic administration."
Mr. Reed's talk was sponsored by the University of Kansas Reed for Governor Club. ___
John Burns Still Missing
Campus police chief Joe Skillman reported today there has been nothing new in the case of John P. Burns, Olathe freshman, who was reported missing April 1 after he failed to keep an appointment with his father.
Chief Skillman said the FBI has distributed circulars to law enforcement agencies in all the larger cities throughout the nation but this has not brought any results.
"This case is a lot different from one in which a crime has been committed," Chief Skillman said. "In a criminal case you can go after the person—you have something to work on. In a case like this the only thing we can do is hope someone recognizes him from the posters and turns him in or else that he decides to come home."
Mrs. George Burns, the student's mother, said in a telephone conversation that their only hope now was that he would "get in touch with some of the family."
Chief Skillman said he thought there was a good chance the boy had a job before he left or at least found one soon after leaving KU. He said there had been no other checks cashed after the three he cashed for $58 just before his disappearance.
Small Car Not So Easy To 'Unpark'
A modern Sir Gallahad came to the rescue of a lady in distress to save her from being imprisoned by a coin-eating mechanical dragon.
The lady, a KU student, drove her small foreign car into the toll-gate parking lot east of the Kansas Union.
When she was ready to leave she found that the car was too light to operate the treadle mechanism which opens the gate for exits.
An unidentified male student got into the car to try to add the necessary weight to lift the gate. The gate didn't budge.
Finally, the hero, Kevin Remick, concessions manager at the Union, was called to the scene and solved the problem by inserting his pass card in the proper slot to raise the gate.
Moral: If the car doesn't fit, don't drive it.
Cervantes Day Book Acquisition Is Announced
The University will announce the acquisition of a number of rare books valued between 10 and 15 thousand dollars at the Cervantes Day lecture at 10 a.m. Saturday in Fraser Theater.
Robert Vosper, director of libraries, said they were written in a foreign language.
Cyrus DeCoster, professor of Romance languages, quoted the value of the books and said they were of the Spanish Renaissance period. He said some of the material is by Cervantes, author of "Don Quixote."
The announcement will be made formally at the lecture by Irish hispanist, Walter Starkie, visiting professor at the University of Texas. Prof. Starkie is the author of a number of books on Spain, including a recent translation of "Don Quixote." Cervantes will be the main subject of his talk.
KU students participating in the Cervantes Day program are Susan Aldrich, Great Bend, James Rambo, Kansas City, Mo., William Gelbke, Mexico City, Mex., Albert Palmcrlee, Lawrence, freshmen; Linda Rundle, Bonner Springs sophomore, and Dolores Villarreal, Pratt junior.
Saturday afternoon a Spanish group will put on its annual variety program at 2:30 in Fraser Theater. KU, K-State, Lawrence high and junior high schools, and Shawnee-Mission High School will present acts.
French University representatives in the United States, Monsieur Edouard Morot-Sir, cultural counselor, will address the French group on the subject, "Prix Nobel, 1957—Albert Camus," at 3 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Staging for the show will be by James Bennett, De Soto special student, and Therese Davis, Pocatello, Idaho freshman.
Honors English Examination
Candidates for June graduation with the Honors in English citation, will take the honors examination at 9 a.m. Saturday in 309 Fraser. Miss Natalie Calderwood, chairman of the Honors in English Committee, said the examination will be a written one, lasting approximately three hours.
Daily hansan
55th Year, No. 132
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 24, 1958
ROBERTS
DOUTHART HALL group in Inter-Residence sing. (Daily Kansan photo)
Pearson, Battenfeld Win Sing
Women in spring dresses and white gloves and men in dark suits against the simple background of Swarthout Recital Hall in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, lent a fresh atmosphere to the InterResidence Assn's second annual Spring Sing Wednesday night. It was heard by an audience of approximately 300.
Ten groups took part in the contest itself, and two groups provided special entertainment during the judging.
Trophies were awarded for the top men's and women's groups in each of two divisions. In the division of small ensembles, which could have as many as 10 persons, ensembles from Pearson Hall and Miller Hall won first place trophies. The Pearson Hall group sang "Two Guitars" by Palmer Clark and the Miller Hall group "Softly as in a Morning Sunrise," by Sigmund Romberg.
The large ensembles division was won by Battenfeld Hall, which sang "Now Let Every Tongue Adore Thee" by J. S. Bach, and Watkins Hall, which sang "Inchworm" by Frank Loesser. Watkins also won first place last year.
Women's halls which participated were Douthart, Gertrude Sellards Pearson three and four, Miller, Sellands, and Watkins.
Men's halls which participated
were Battenfeld, Jolliffe, Pearson and Stephenson.
As special entertainment during judging, GSP freshmen sang "Zing Zing-Zoom Zoom" by Sigmund Romberg, and a Jolifte and Miller halls combined ensemble sang "Jada" by Bob Carlton and "I Love to Whistle" by Adamson and McHugh. Marilyn Bell, McPherson sopho-
Marilyn Bell, McPherson sophomore was chairman of the sing.
Judges for the Spring Sing were Elizabeth Townsley, assistant professor of voice; Wayne Nelson, supervisor of music in the Lawrence schools, and Edwin L. Foot Jr., Washington, D. C. graduate student and choir director of the First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence.
1911 Car Will Be Theatre Prop
The antique, a dark blue touring car with white spoked wheels, will be transported to Lawrence from the Kansas City, Mo. regional chapter of the Horseless Carriage Club. It is the property of the club president. E. A. Sloan.
The auto will be trucked from downtown to the theatre loading dock by buildings and grounds, Mr. Godfrey said.
A 1911,4-cylinder Buick will be used as a prop in the University players' presentation of "Man and Superman" next week.
"The entire second set is built around the car," said Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, who explained that the main action of the scene is based on a proposed auto trip in the car. It will appear with the top down.
It will be returned to Kansas City on May 4.
Since cars that old have to be cranked and tend to be "temperamental," he said, it has not been decided whether John Schick, Kansas City, Kan. junior, who plays the chauffeur, will actually drive the car.
Mortar Board Holds Parties
Freshman women who made the fall honor roll will be honored by Mortar Board in a series of three parties tonight. The parties, starting at 7:30, are to be held in Douthart Hall.
Man And Superman Runs April 30-May 3
The University Theatre will present George B. Shaw's "Man and Superman" at 8 p.m. April 30 through May 3 in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The play, considered to be one of Shaw's greatest, will be in three acts. It will depict the "universal chase" where man remains merely man, but woman is superman, said Gordon Beck, instructor in speech.
"It was written by Shaw on his honeymoon," Mr. Beck said, explaining the unusual circumstances of Shaw's marriage in 1903.
The playwright, a confirmed bachelor of 47 at the time, had a foot infection. The lady who came to nurse Shaw decided he needed better care than he had been receiving, so they were married the same afternoon. Shaw, still recuperating from the infection, spent his honeymoon writing.
The male lead in "Man and Superman" is John Tanner, who will be played by Louis Lyda, Lawrence senior. Ann Whitefield, the "superman," will be played by Joyce Malicky, Baldwin freshman. There are 12 supporting actors.
Originally a long, four act play, it has been divided into two separate presentations. The second part, a dream scene called "Don Juan in Hell," will be presented here, beginning May 5.
ID cards will admit students, but they must be exchanged for reserved seat tickets at the Kansas Union ticket office.
KU Beauties On TV Show
Seven KU finalists for Jayhawker queen will appear on KCMO-TV's program, "Magic in Music," at 1:15 p.m. Friday.
The queen will be named the second week in May, just before the final issue of the Jayhawker yearbook. Her picture will appear in that issue.
Appearing on the TV show are Kathiene O'Neil, Kansas City, Mosephomore, Sandra Aldrich, Clinton, Iowa freshman, Cynthia Hunter, Hutchinson junior, Ann Underwood, Emporia junior, Caryl Dillon, Hutchinson senior, Barbara Everley, Eudora junior, and Julie Casterman, Pittsburg sophomore.
Weather
Colder east tonight with local frost. Warmer west portion Friday with occasional rain southwest by afternoon or evening. Low tonight 25 northwest to upper 30s southeast. High Friday 55 to 60,
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 24, 1958
No Vandalism, Please!
Spring is here, and with the new climate, stifled wintry emotions are let free. Some students let their emotions go astray and quite a few pranks are pulled. This is natural and there is nothing wrong in it.
But often pranks turn into downright vandalism, which sometimes injures personal property and other students. This is wrong.
To clear matters up and impress upon students the seriousness of going too far astray, the administration has said that the policies of the KU-Kansas State Peace Pact will be enforced.
That policy is that no vandalism will be tolerated from students of either campus. This spring
it will apply to KU students on their own campus.
In the past few weeks, the Delta Upsilon fraternity was damaged by vandals. Last weekend a window screen was damaged at the Chi Omega sorority.
All these events have led the administration to a reiteration of the statement that automatic dismissal from school can be the result of such vandalism.
Last fall Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said, "For the past two years there has been no trouble because we would not stand for juvenile delinquency."
Remember, ignorance of the law is no excuse.
—Doug Parker
Do Spectators Approve?
Coaches and Kansas Relays officials seemed to be in agreement that the new set-up for the Relays is much better than the 32 Relays run previously.
Under the new plan, the Relays is a 2-day event with college and university events being run on both days. Before, high school events had dominated the first day's activities.
No doubt this is a decidedly better set-up for the athletes. It gives them much more time to rest between events and certainly some of the outstanding performers who run in several events can use this extra time to rest.
The new plan was also designed partly to attract a crowd for both days of the Relays. It was thought that having college and university events on both days might accomplish this end.
The 1958 Kansas Relays had a comparably good turnout of 3,000 and 13,000 persons on Friday and Saturday respectively. But as is shown by these figures, Friday's events still lacked the interest of those run on Saturday.
Although high school athletes turned in several fine times in their races, many people lacked interest in watching the high school athletes perform. They would much rather see the top stars of college and university track perform
Certainly there are good arguments for the new set-up. But for future Relays it seems that the average spectator must also be considered. Since he undoubtedly comes to see the top men perform, on Saturday, it seems logical that the majority of the outstanding events should be run on Saturday.
Mal Applegate
'Why My Paper Lied'
The other day I was reading an article in an issue of the Saturday Review written by Thomas Braden. It was titled "Why My Paper Lied."
I think there is no better opportunity than now to tell you why this paper too lied.
This paper has done as so many other papers have done by printing the bare outside face of the news. It is like getting a press release and looking upon it as a godsend, never tracing the story to its full extent.
Our paper has been gullible and has taken you, the readers, along with us to being simpletons. For instance, if a man in the U. S. administration tells the Washington reporters that we have perfected a fuel that can put a rocket ship on the Moon anyday, the reporters report in the newspaper that this is a great thing.
But should the reporter pursue the questioning of the administration official or the official stop trying to put a hoax over on the people, we would find that there has not been and there cannot be for 10 years a rocket that would withstand the pressures of space.
Thus, our paper has lied because we have led you to expect a rocket to the moon sooner than is humanly possible.
If the papers report that our foreign aid is an enormous sum, but the officials or the reporters forget to say that the amount of the money in proportion to the work it does greatly exceeds this country's expectations, then again our paper has told you a lie.
This kind of reporting of the news is continued into state, city and township government and slowly, through the evasiveness of our governmental officials, the American people are becoming apathetic fools living off the propaganda of governmental machines.
What must be done? The reporter must seek behind the official statements for proof. The officials must be brought to realize they are harming the country through their over-zealous protective measures.
—Doug Parker
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
Q-15
FO BROAD, ELABAUT TONIE
"TYPICAL NEW TEACHER PROBLEM—SHEES WORKED ABOUT HER ABILITY TO HOLD THEIR ATTENTION FOR A WHOLE HOUR!"
Employment in South Carolina textile plants has increased more than 33 per cent during the past 20 years.
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904 trieworks 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
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 year except summer. Subscription periods, 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
Extension 251, news room
Extension 276, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth Noyes, Maleelm Applegate, Assistant Manager, Eddie Bauer, Editor; Martha Croster, Jack Harrison, Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden, Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick, Assistant Telegraph Editor; George Anthan, Snorts Editor; Bob Macy, Dale Horsch, Jim Sable, Assistant Snorts Editor, Ronn Miller, Picture Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler Business Manager
John Clarke, Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston National Advertising-
Manager; Bill Irvine, Classified
Advertising Manager; Tom McGratch,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Hall, Morslen Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate
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Air Force Missile Short Of Target
Page 3
(Compiled from United Press)
The Air Force blasted the forerunner of its moon rocket spectacularly into the sky at Cape Canaveral, Fla. Wednesday night, but there were indications that it fell short of its target area in the ocean 6,300 miles away.
Scientists were still trying to determine from electronic data received during the flight of the missile—a combination of the Air Force Thor and a modified second stage Navy Vanguard—just where it landed. It appeared that the answer might not be known for several days.
In New York, Gen. Curtis LeMay, Air Force vice chief of staff, said today that the threat of global atomic war is increasing "with every passing day."
Meanwhile, the Navy is readying a complete Vanguard rocket for a try at putting a fourth U.S. satellite into space to measure X-ray activity in space around the globe.
Army and Navy chiefs contended, however, that the nuclear "stalemate" between the United States and Russia makes limited wars more likely than an all-out conflict.
President Wants Curve
The military leaders gave the American Newspaper Publishers Assn. many strong opinions that underlie so-called service bickering in Washington. President Eisenhower hopes to cure the feuding with his defense reorganization plan which calls for truly unified combat forces and strategic planning.
In Fort Campbell, Ky., freak guts of wind were blamed today for the deaths of five paratroopers, fatally dragged by their billowing parachutes in a mass jump of 1,300 men
President Wants Cure
More than 100 others were hospitalized after the jump yesterday. Some of the dragged paratroopers were traveling at such speeds that spectators were unable to overtake their chutes and cut them loose.
In Washington, the House Foreign Affairs Committee was expected to wind up action on President Eisenhower's foreign aid request today after lopping off 339 million dollars to head off deeper cuts on the House floor.
The committee took that total from the President's original 3.9 billion dollar request.
Expect Postage Approval
Expect Postage Approval Congress appeared likely today to put its seal of approval on a 4-cent postage rate for both local and out-of-town letters.
The Senate-House conference committee rebuffed President Eisenhower yesterday by rejecting
BATON'S
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LETTER PAPERS
in Eaton's Open Stock LETTER PAPERS
We'll always match the Eaton papers you choose here from Open Stock. Paper and envelopes are packaged separately—you buy what you want, when you want it.
CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass.
Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield issued a statement saying that a penny cut in the administration proposal "would scuttle President Eisenhower's proposed two billion dollar postal modernization program" that would provide jobs for thousands of workers.
Birds vary in size from 300-pound ostriches to tiny hummingbirds that weigh less than one tenth of an ounce.
the administration's proposal for a 5-cent rate for out-of-town letters.
The second round of the Intramural Speech Contest was won by Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence freshman, representing Sigma Chi fraternity. The general subject was informative speeches.
Driscoll Wins Second Round
Thursday, April 24, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Second-place winner was Raymond Dean, Kansas City, Mo. senior, representing Beta Theta Pi fraternity, and third-place went to Lizzie Dawson, Mukupen, India freshman, representing Watkins Hall.
There is a tie between the Beta Theta Pi and the Sigma Chi fraternities in the men's division, and a tie between Corbin-North College and Watkins halls in the women's division.
The final round, involving arguments on the subject "Contemporary Problems in American Education," will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 102 Strong.
The Pentagon, the world's largest office building, also has the world's largest private exchange switchboard. Staffed by approximately 200 persons, its 44,000 telephones are connected by 160,000 miles of cables, handling 280,000 calls a day.
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Sticklers!
WHAT ARE THE PANGS OF LOVE?
BOB ARCHIBALD,
U. OF OREGON
Heart Smart
WHAT IS A POOR LOSER?
MARGOT BANNISTER.
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THE MENTAL MARVEL mentioned above is so studious he made Phi Bete in his junior year—of high school! When he walks into classrooms, professors stand. The last time he got less than 100%, the proctor was cheating. When it comes to smoking, he gets straight A's for taste. He smokes (All together, class!) Lucky Strike! Naturally, our student is fully versed on the subject of Lucky's fine, light, good-tasting tobacco. He's well aware that it's toasted to taste even better. So when someone asks him for a cigarette, he's happy to spread the good taste. And that makes him a Kind Grind! Assignment: try Luckies yourself!
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ROBERT MAC CALLUM, Slack Track
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WHAT IS A TERM EXAM IN PLASTICS?
DOUGLAS OUSTERHOUT. Vinyl Final
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 24,1958
German Leaders Campus Visitors
Two members of the German Bundestag, equal to the U. S. House of Representatives were KU visitors Tuesday and Wednesday.
The Germans, Bernard Bauknecht, and Hermann Hoechler, were brought to the campus by former state department employee, Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, who said Thursday, "They just wanted to see some of the real America."
They also visited Baker College and Haskell Indian Institute. The group is touring the United States for three months.
While in the area, the visitors dined with Floyd Black, executive secretary of the AFL-CIO in Topeka, and attended a debate on the "Right to Work" legislation in Wamego.
While on the campus, the visitors talked with faculty members on subjects such as teaching German, political science, and the problems of grammar schools.
Law Queen Contest Candidates Total 19
Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur (meaning "the thing speaks for itself") will be selected from a field of 19 candidates as queen of the Law School Fun Day May 2.
Richard Foster, Halstead third year law student, chairman of Law Day, said the candidates would be judged at 11 a.m. by three Law School faculty members.
A picnic and softball game will be held that afternoon at the farm of Charles Oldfather Jr., associate professor of law.
Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur will be crowned at a lawyer's dance beginning at 9 p.m. in the Hotel Eldridge.
Pilot Group Meeting Today
A meeting to discuss the new pilot group section to be offered in the Business School next fall will be held at 4 p.m. today in Strong Auditorium. All students interested in the program are invited to attend.
The Indian on Chicago's seal represents the discoverer of the city's site and is indicative of his contributions to the city's history.
SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIAL
TAXI
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Wheel Pack 2.00
Oil Change 2.50
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BRIDGE
Standard Service
601 Mass.
Phone VI 3-9849
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 only by Mail. Noticees should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Official Bulletin
Candidates planning to take the Ph.D.
must register by Saturday in 306 Fras
TODAY
Poetry Hour, 4. p.m., Music and Browsing Room, Union, Robert Cobb, assistant professor of English, will read the poetry of Henry Vaughn.
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich um 5:00 Donnerstag, 205A Union. Frau Gisela Poelung, an der Gesellschaft kurzer Zizea der Deutschland gekommen ist, wird singen. Alle sind eingeladen.
School of Business pilot group section,
4 p.m. Strong Auditorium
KU Interfaith conference, 5.15 p.m.
Meet at Kansas University to go to 4-H fairgrounds. Dinner paid for by William Allen White Interfaith Fund. Discussion of among religious groups at KU Reservation to KU-Y office on or before Wednesday.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel, "Casting Out
the Badness"
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
FRIDAY
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Mozart, Sonata No. 8 in C.
K 296 Beethoven, Spring Sonata; sor-
tatas. No. 21, 22, and 30.
Collegiate Young Republican Club. 2 p.m., Holcumb's Grove, Picnic Refresh-
ment
Mathematics colloquium, 4 p.m., 203
Strong Speaker, Professor E, Stiefel.
Lawyers Will Try 4 Practice Problems
Trial practice problems for lawyers will be held Monday through Thursday of next week in the new court room in Green Hall.
Four cases, two criminal and two civil, will be tried by 25 students with faculty members as judges.
The juries for the cases will be made up of first-year law students and witnesses and principals will be portrayed by other University students and faculty members.
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,
conformal Mapping by Integral Equations.
Kinescope of Alice in Wonderland, 4 p.m., Rehearsal Room of the University Theatre, Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Public welcome.
Hallmark Theatre color television.
Maurice Eyans 8:30 p.m. Kansas Union
Liabon Fellowship, Kansas regional conference today and Sunday, starting 9:30 a.m.
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Liahona Fellowship, Kansas regional conference, 12th & Vermont.
Foreign Student festival program rehearsal, 1:45 p.m. Kansas University Ball-
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Mendelssohn—Symphony No. 3 in A
Minor Dvorak—Concerto for Violin in
A Minor.
Wesley Foundation, 3:30 p.m. meal and recreation 6:30 program. Greek Ortho-
thetics 8:30 a.m.
United Student Fellowship, 5-7 p.m.
Congregational Church, Speaker, Dr.
Sever. "The Dead Sea Scrolls." Election
of officers. Everyone welcome.
SEE
The Lawrence Outlook
for
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ALL KINDS
10th & Mass. VI 3-3666
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The U.S. Indian School in Phoenix, Ariz. has students from almost 20 tribes.
Wooden or padded hangers which extend the full width of the shoulders help coats hold their shape.
Go KU
TGIF at the Pit
"Best Music in Town"
Jerry Taylor's
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
Pit
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Snider Suspended For 'Horseplay'
LOS ANGELES—(UP)—Duke Snider, veteran hitting star of the Dodgers, was on suspension today as punishment for straining a tendon in his elbow while engaging in a bit of horseplay Wednesday night prior to his team's game with the cubs.
Manager Walt Alston, irked be-cause the injury forced him to remove Snider from the lineup and change his batting order after he had announced it, ordered Snider taken off the payroll "until he is in condition to play again."
"I'll admit Don Zimmer and I were horsing around," Snider said after learning of his suspension. "but I hardly expected this sort of punishment."
Dr. Hsl Wendler, team trainer, said the injury was a minor one that should not keep Snider out of the lineup for more than a day or two.
Snider and Zimmer were in the outfield of Memorial Coliseum during the pre-game warmup and engaged in a contest to see which one could throw a ball higher in the air. It was during this contest that Snider suffered the injury to his throwing arm.
As a result, Alston had to substitute Jim Gilliam in left field for Snider as the Dodgers went down to a 7-6 defeat by the Cubs. Gilliam failed to get a hit while subbing for Snider.
A's Lose,8-2 On Road Friday
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UP)—The Kansas City Athletics end the year's first home stand today as Jack Urban (1-0) was named to oppose the rampaging Detroit Tigers.
Former Tiger Duke Maas was the victim last night as Detroit took an 8-2 victory in the opener of a two-game set. Billy Martin blasted three straight hits against his former mates as Detroit moved to within a game of the first place New York Yankees.
Kansas City dropped to third on the setback, a half game behind Detroit. Paul Foytack went the distance for the Tigers, spreading six hits, one a solo ninth inning homerun by Hector Lopez.
Detroit scored four runs in the third inning to hand Maas the loss in a three inning starting assignment. Charley Maxwell scored two runners in the third with a long single.
Following today's game, the Athletics head east for a long road trip. They return May 13 against the Chicago White Sox.
R H E
Detroit ... 004-010-102 ... 8—13—0
K.C. ... 000-001-001—2 ... 6—1
Foytack 2-0 Andhegan. Maas.
Cox 4, Craddock 5, Duser 7, Trucks
9 and Chiti. Loser—Maas 0-2.
HR—Lopez 1.
Major League Standings BY UNITED PRESS American League
W L Pct.
New York 7 2 .778
Detroit 6 3 .667
Kansas City 5 3 .625
Washington 3 5 .571
Cleveland 4 5 .444
Baltimore 3 4 .429
Chicago 2 6 .250
Boston 2 7 .222
National League
W L Pt.
Chicago 5 2 .714
Cincinnati 4 2 .667
San Francisco 5 3 .625
Milwaukee 5 3 .571
Philadelphia 4 3 .500
Los Angeles 3 5 .375
Pittsburgh 2 5 .286
Lake 2 5 .286
Barteldes On Fund Staff
Ben Barteldes, '36, 1745 Indiana, has been named Douglas County chairman of Greater University Fund activities Robert H. Royer, Abilene, chairman of the advisory board for the Fund program, has announced.
A Mississippi River steamboat once navigated the Kaw River as far west as Topeka.
Yankees Take Rap For Move
UNITED PRESS
NEW YORK—(UP)—It may be true that everybody loves a winner, but you can't sell that to the New York Yankees.
When the Dodgers and Giants moved west, there was some speculation that the Yankees might pick up some of the National League Patronage. It was the old theory of it being the only wheel in town and therefore would get the play.
But the Yankees are drawing less than last season—at least in their first five games—and there is a feeling now that they may be taking the rap for an anti-baseball feeling engendered by the newest California gold rush.
Dartmouth College's indoor track in Alumni Gymnasium is a 260-yard cinder track (6¾ laps to a mile) with a 60-yard straight-away.
Head football coach Jack Mitchell sent his 64 charges through their second day of extensive practices, trying to mold a team he could work with in his first season next fall. Mitchell and his six man squad worked the players for $2^{1/2}$ hours in extensive contact drills and basic fundamentals.
Players' Efforts Please Mitchell
Mitchell will be trying again tonight to find the right combination as he prepares for the Saturday scrimmage between squads. The scrimmage will be in Memorial Stadium at 2 p.m.
Still concerned about the lack of speed, Mitchell said he was surprised at the effort the players are putting out.
"The guys are making much more effort than we'd hoped for. They've got a lot of fire and that will help." Mitchell said.
"However, I'm afraid speed is always going to be a problem for us. It's a problem now and I think it will be a problem next fall. I don't know how we're going to get away from it." he added.
Mitchell seemed especially pleased with the work of his fullbacks, mostly players coming in from last season's freshman squad. He also complimented the work of Buddy Merritt in his new spot at quarterback.
RELAYS PARADE PHOTOS May Be Seen In Window LAWRENCE OUTLOOK
1005 Mass.
Orders For These May Be Left At
1015 Mass. Ph.VI 3-9471 Next To Varsity Theatre
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Thursday, April 24, 1958 University Daily Kansan Page 5
CITIES
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Sir Ruler Favorite
Phone VI 3-4321
8th and New Hampshire
SERVICE
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LEXINGTON, Ky. — (UP)—Clairborne farm's Sir Ruler was a shaky favorite over eight other Kentucky Derby candidates and one non-eligible for today's 34th running of the Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland.
Athletes should not drink milk from zebus before an athletic contest.
Dairy products made from Zebu milk are rare in America.
Hildegarde
Emporia Wins Track Meet
EMPORIA, Kan.—(UP)—Emporia State won 11 events Wednesday to take a three-way track victory from Ottawa and Washburn Universities. Emporia scored 198 points to Ottawa's 28 and Washburn's 27.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 24, 1958
Campus Club News
Religious Groups Plan Meeting
Liahona
Ninety students from four area colleges and universities are expected to attend a regional Lahoma conference at the University Saturday and Sunday. The delegates will represent KU, Kansas State College, Kansas State Teachers' College in Emporia and Graceland College in Des Moines, Iowa.
Liahona is the college youth organization sponsored by the Re-organized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Three ministers from Independence, Mo., the headquarters of the church, will speak at the conference. They are Harley Morris, a psychologist, Byron Constance, a lawyer, and Donald Landon, who returned recently from a mission trip to Norway.
Registration begins at 9:30 a.m. Saturday and the conference will adjourn at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Conference delegates will attend a banquet Saturday evening at the church. 1201 Vermont St.
- * *
B'nai B'rith Hillel
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship of KU and Kansas State College are sponsoring a celebration in honor of the tenth anniversary of the independence of Israel Friday. The program will be held in the McAlvar Chapel at Washburn University in Topeka.
Consul Unna of the Israeli Consulate in Chicago will speak on the significance of the celebration. The Oz group, an Israeli professional folk dance troupe which is touring the United States this year, will perform.
Those wishing to attend should meet at the Jewish Community Center at 7 p.m. Transportation will be provided.
***
Phi Delta Phi
Phi Delta Phi, professional law fraternity, has announced the election of Dick Croker, Kansas City, Kan. first-year law student, as magister for the 1958-59 academic year.
Other officers elected were Jack Reed, Coolidge, exchequer; Jack Brand, Lawrence, clerk. Both are first-year law students. Dick Loyd. El Dorado second-year law student historian.
Senior Women Asked To AAUW Tea
A tea for senior women, sponsored by the American Association of University Women, will be held between 2 and 5 p.m. Sunday in the home of Mrs. Harold L. Kipp, 1647 University Drive.
A free membership in AAUW will be awarded to one Kansas girl.
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Chi Omega sorority celebrated its Founders' Day at a dinner in the chapter house Monday.
Chi Omega
... On The Hill ...
Mrs. George O. Foster, Lawrence spoke to the members on how the local chapter was founded in her home in 1902.
Watkins Hall
Miss Julia Willard, house director of Watkins Hall, gave a dessert in honor of graduating seniors Sunday.
The senior girls honored were Doris Czinczoll, Detroit, Beverly Doig, Independence, Mo., Barbara Emison, Muncie, Nancy Harmon, Wichita, Judy Hulse, Topeka, Joyce Klemp, Leavenworth, Betty Lowell, Kansas City, Mo., Ruth Pyle, Armstrong City, Mo., Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg, Mary Beth Spena, Lecompton, Joy Yeo, Manhattan.
Delta Delta Delta sorority will hold its Mothers' Weekend Saturday and Sunday.
Delta Delta Delta
Delta Upsilon
\* \* \*
Delta Upsilon fraternity and Chi Omega sorority will hold a breakfast at the chapter houses Saturday.
Miller Hall
Chaperones were Mrs. Donald MacLeod, Mrs. Sebonia Hancock, Mrs. Mildred Wogan, housemothers.
Miller Hall held its annual spring formal Friday.
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will hold an informal dance at the chapter house for Chi Omega sorority Tuesday.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
***
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold an exchange dinner at the chapter houses Thursday.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold a barn party Saturday.
Sigma Nu fraternity will hold a jacks tournament for members of Alpha Chi Omega sorority Sunday at the chapter house.
Sigma Nu
* *
Reflectors on light fixtures can create as much as 35 per cent more light in the area served by the fixure. Reflectors reduce glare and concentrate the light.
Cooked and chopped prunes add flavor to spice cake and help keep the cake from drying.
VARSITY
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co-hit Bing Crosby in "MAN ON FIRE"
LAWRENCE
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Two Thrill-packed Action-Filled Hits!
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Thursday, April 24.1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR
**55 words or less:** one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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 RENT
APARTMENT, available for sublet June 1 thru Aug. 31. Two bedrooms and common furnished Sunnyside, rent $25/month including all utilities. Phone VI 3-1505.
COOL basement apartment to boys.
Available June 1. Also a single room
available now. No drinking or smoking.
In house south of campus. 1618
Indiana. 4-25
DESIIRABLE three room unfurnished ground floor apartment. Convenient to a frigoriet, air conditioner, and parking space included. VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1277.
EXCEPTIONALLY NICE four room furnished apartment for rent during summer months. No children or boys. Call VI 2-0095. 4-25
MISCELLANEOUS
ANYONE WHO WITNESSED the 8 a.m.
collision 2 miles southwest of Tonganoxie,
April 10. please contact Jack Fenton, Be.
1-4815, K.C., Mo.
4-25
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for reception and parties. For Sale: Mother's gifts crystal and china. House Glass gift China, 906 New Hampton, VI 3-1890.
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicc. party supplies. nth. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. tf 0350
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to
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Faculty and part-time students also
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Dr. H. R. Williams
Optometrist
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., VI 3-7255
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. 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. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations etc. General rates, up to 100 dollars for. Mrs. Tom Brady, TI 3-3428, tf
LEARN TO DANCE, all the Rarest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
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FLAT TOPS a speciality. KU Barbershop
Clarence Adamson, Mgr.
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type terms, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter, Phone Mrs. Donna Viri, VI 3-1860.
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers
Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629. iff
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WOULD LIKE to get some lawns to mow in the afternoon. Call VI 3-4893.
WANTED
WANTED student Iaundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn. tf
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
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THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-1044
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
LOST
REWARD for return of my Modern Art
piral notebook, believed lost in Strong
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FOR SALE
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Located between KU and downtown
centre. Must be married or not
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may sublet. VI 3-7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-28
ELECTRIC STOVE, four burners, oven and broiler. $90, no more, no less. Call Phil Emery, VI 3-7867, after five p.m.
FOR SALE or lease, Crystal Cafe. 609 Vermont St. Call VI 3-4767, after six p.m.
HI-FI CONSOLE, beautiful cherrywood.
Motorola masterpiece floor model. Price cut to $150, easy terms. B. F. Goodrich Store, 929 Mass. 4-30
BEAUTY SHOPS
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Dritscho Beauty Shop 908 Mass. VI 3-4070
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
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Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
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Parsons Jewelry 725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
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Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
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TRANSPORTATION
PERSONS GOING to summer school in Mexico who would like to drive car to and from Mexico contact Bill Gebke, VI 3-0540 after seven p.m. 4-24
TUXEDO RENTALS AND SALES
"Everything in Format Wear"
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio, VI 3-8763 One door south of Jayhawk Cafe
USED CAR BUYS
1951 Chevrolet
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 24,1958
Counsels,Teaches In Legal Career
Paul E. Wilson, first assistant to the Kansas attorney general, came to the University in September 1957 as an associate professor of law following an interesting career as a practicing attorney.
Coming to KU was not a new experience for Prof. Wilson. He received both his BA and MA degrees in political science here. He attained his LLB from Washburn University in 1940.
Prof. Wilson teaches criminal law, public law and procedure courses. He finds teaching a very gratifying experience and one which affords him an opportunity to study.
BENNY BERGER
As an assistant to attorney general's Harold R. Fatzer and John Anderson from December 1951 to September 1957, Prof. Wilson had experience in the litigation of many important lawsuits. One that had considerable publicity was the case of Brown vs. Topeka School Board in which he was counsel for the defendant.
PAUL E. WILSON
"In cases of this kind, where the law of a state is claimed to be unconstitutional, the federal law requires that notice of the suit be given to the governor and attorney general in order that they may defend the state law under attack," said Prof. Wilson.
Went To Washington
When the Brown case was appealed to the Supreme Court, Prof. Wilson went to Washington at the same time four other states' representatives met to argue for the legality of the state law.
In commenting on losing the case. Prof. Wilson said, "Personally, I know of no moral or ethical justification for segregation, but I was interested in the legal question of whether the state of Kansas had power to determine its own policies in the fields of public education."
Bid Research Work After completing his degrees in political science, Prof. Wilson worked in the Research Department
of Kansas Legislative Council until September of 1941 when he went to Ashland to practice law. In July of 1942 he was summoned to military service where he became a troop officer in the corps of engineers with the Far Pacific as his field of duty. He has continued in the army reserves and has the rank of major.
Prof. Wilson practiced law and was county attorney at Lyndon in Osage County from 1946 to 1950 when he accepted the position of attorney in the Department of Social Welfare in the state.
In 1940 he married Harriet Stephens, a KU graduate and a former instructor on the University faculty. The couple has three daughters and a son.
Monday Deadline For Applications
The deadline for submitting applications for engineering scholarships is Monday. Spencer Martin, director of aids and awards, said the applications should be turned in at his office in 222 Strong.
Friday is the final day for persons to enter the last Daily Kansan Photo Contest of the year. Entries are due at 1 p.m. that day in the William Allen White Reading Room, 104 Flint Hall.
Photo Contest Closes Friday
The contest has three divisions — five fields of black and white prints, colored slides or photos, and Jayhawker publication photos. "This I Remember About KU" is the subject for the Jayhawker photos.
All students, faculty members, and administrators may enter the contest. A best-of-show trophy will be awarded and certificates and ribbons will be given to first, second, and third place winners.
The winner of the Jayhawker award will receive $10. Awards will be made April 28, and the winning photos and slides will be on display in the Reading Room from April 29 to May 9.
Entry blanks and rules are available in The Daily Kansan business office, 111 Flint. Any questions about entries should be directed to Norman Beck, Daily Kansan promotion manager, or to Miss Jean McKnight, librarian of the Reading Room.
The Roman Coliseum was used on many occasions for naval displays. Aqueducts filled the structure with water.
YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass. VI 3-2966
Pitchers at the Huddle
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Brand New Shipment of
Shirts, Shorts, Skirts, Slacks
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---
On The Campus Lawrence
Sportswear $\Leftrightarrow$ Accessories
On The Plaza Kansas City
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Italian Club Meets Tonight At 8 P.M.
A. Byron Leonard, professor of zoology, will report in Italian on new paleontological findings he made during his Fulbright year at the University of Bologna, Italy, at the meeting will be held at 8 p.m.to night at Prof. Leonard's home at 1916 Louisiana.
Jazz Band
The Don Conard Quartet
New Sounds for Dancing And Listening
Playing At The DINE-A-MITE
Saturday
April 26
2 to 4
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Daily hansan
55th Year, No.133
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 25, 1958
I'll just provide the text as it appears.
1. A man in a suit with a tie.
2. Another man in a suit with a tie.
3. A man in a suit holding a document.
MOOT COURT PANEL—The Law School's moot court panel poses with Dean M. C. Slough. From left: Dean Slough; presiding judge Walter A. Huxman, a retired judge of the Circuit Court
of Appeals, 10th Circuit; William C. Kandt, district court judge, Division I, Sedgwick County; Justice Robert T. Price of the Supreme Court of Kansas. (Daily Kansan photo)
Petitioners Win In Moot Court
In the Law School Appellate Court practice held Thursday at 4 p.m. in Green Hall, John Eland, Topeka second-year law, and Robert Howard, Emporia third-year law, counsels for the petitioner in the practice case, won the decision of the judges on presentation and on point of law.
Don Cordes, Manhattan, and Ed Chapman, Leavenworth, second-year law students, represented the respondent. Don Burnett, Larned, a member of the moot court team last fall at St. Louis in national competition, served as clerk. Paul Wilson, associate professor of law, welcomed the visitors in the chamber of the Supreme Court.
Presiding judge was Walter A. Huxman, a retired judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. Other members of the panel were Justice Robert T. Price of the Supreme Court of Kansas and William C. Kandt, district court judge, division I. Sedgwick County.
A moot court is held for the purpose of giving student lawyers an opportunity to plead a supposed case. In this competition the "supposed case" involved Antonnelli who had been convicted in the Green district court on a violation of the federal narcotics law.
Proposed Postal Increases May Increase Department Expenditures
Some departments at KU are going to find their expenditures soaring if the new postal increases being studied by Senate-House conferees goes into effect. They can have some consolation, however, in the fact that the new hike would be just half of what was requested.
The rate was cut from the proposed five cents to four cents for out-of-town letters. The decisions of the conferees are subject to the approval of the Senate and the House. The conferees were appointed to adjust differences between the two branches of Congress on this legislation.
The Administration warned that only an increase to five cents would do the job, but the conferences decided differently. The post office has operated in the red for years and this increase
Senior Recital Monday
Assisting with the recital, which is open to the public, will be Jane Carr. Junction City sophomore, pianist: Cynthia Sellers, Drumright, Okla., freshman, flutist, and Alan Harris. Lawrence junior, cellist.
Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg senior, contralto, will be presented in a senior recital by the School of Fine Arts at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Weather
Partly cloudy east, considerable cloudiness west this afternoon through Saturday. Occasional light rain or drizzle northwest this afternoon. Slowly rising temperatures. Low tonight 30 northwest to near 50 southeast. High Saturday 50 to 60 west to 60's east.
The Public Relations department sends out about 70,000 letters a year. This would mean an additional cost of as much as $700, possibly more, for the one department.
was sought as a solution. The three cent charge for out-of-town mail has been in effect since 1932.
NAA Banquet Is Monday
The School of Business will host the Kansas City chapter of the National Assn. of Accountants Monday
A panel discussion on the Use of Standard Costs for Management Control will be held in the Jayhawk Room in the Union at 3:30 p.m. John G. Blocker, professor of business administration, is chairman of the panel.
"It will be people who advertise
A banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. Howard Stettler, professor of business administration, will speak on Sampling Techniques—The Dietary Approach to Figure Control, and Jack Mitchell, head football coach, will speak on Football Prospects for 1958.
The KU Chorale will present the entertainment at the banquet.
Tickets can be bought in 2 Strong before Monday noon. The public is invited to attend the banquet.
Mr. Smith said they didn't keep track of the daily mail load, so he wasn't sure just how much revenue would be increased by the hike.
by mail that are hurt most." Andrew Smith, superintendent of the campus post office, pointed out.
He points out that new stamps probably wouldn't be printed up since there are already 4 cent stamps in circulation.
Office Shake-Up Nearing End
Since the beginning of the year, the reorganization committee made up of carpenters, painters and tile layers have been telling the office staffs to watch their steps and when and where to move.
The big shake-up in the administrative offices in Strong Hall is nearing the end.
Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for operations, said yesterday the shifting of offices in the building is almost completed.
Office changes you won't find in housing office, from 222 to 226, and the Student Directory are:
Alumni Assn., from 226 to 127, the payroll and personnel division of the business office from 121 to 131.
One room, 226, has been partitioned and two offices have expanded into it. They are the Endowment Association and the Dean of Students.
Mr. Lawton said that before the moves could be made each office was painted, new tile laid, and remodeling or partitioning was done.
Awards Highlight Law Day Activities
Awards, speeches, judges, moot court and a banquet were on the docket for Law Day Thursday at the University Law School.
Modern life challenges the young professional, banquet Harry F. Corbin of Wichita University told the law
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy of the University gave a short speech on the growth and development of the Law School, Dean M. C. Slough of the Law School discussed the curriculum changes and developments within the faculty.
Mr. Corbin, a professional in both law and education, said, "From medieval ages to modern days professionals have made their contribution in molding history. The lawyer, informed as a professional, has an important role in community life and he is trained to assume that role."
"Lawyers, todav you have a great opportunity to be influential in this challenging age. If you don't take this opportunity, too few will," Mr. Corbin said.
Law School awards were announced at the banquet. The Order of the Coif, the highest honor conferred, was awarded to Heywood Davis, Kansas City, Mo.; Phillip Rother, St. Louis, Mo.; William Nulton, Pittsburgh third-year law and Alvin Herrington, Wichita, a graduate of the Law School last summer.
Philip Rother was granted both
SUA Selects Board Members
Student Union Activities board members for next year were selected Thursday by new SUA officers, representatives from the Union Operating Committee, and three senior members of this year's board.
The students were selected on the basis of scholarship merit, previous accomplishments and talent.
The new board members are Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, hospitality; Mary Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo., junior, arts and crafts; Mary Nell Newsm, Topeka junior, music and forums.
Thomas Van Dyke, Kansas City
Mo., sophomore, special events;
Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City,
Mo., sophomore, dance; Floyd (Van)
Palmer, Independence junior, recreation;
Martha Pearse, Nevada, Mo.
junior, personnel, and Mark Saylor,
Topeka junior, public relations.
the C. C. Stewart Award and the Lawyers Title Award for outstanding scholastic performance and for honors in the Property Course.
The William L. Burdick Prize, split three wavs, was given to Robert Howard, Emporia; Donald Cordes, Manhattan; Thomas Hampton, Salina, members of the first-year-class, for outstanding scholastic achievement for the 1956-57 school year.
To those students who had maintained good standing in contributing to the Law Review, awards were given.
Collector Gives Items To KU
Two items for the Walt Whitman collection at Watson Library were presented to the University Thursday afternoon by a Whitman collector, Charles Feinberg of Detroit.
The two items were a proof of a work Mr. Whitman had prepared for publication and several photographs of the author and poet.
"A Whitman Collector Destroys a Whitman Myth" was the theme of Mr. Feinberg's talk before 175 persons in Bailey Auditorium.
There is a myth perpetrated by Whitman biographers which describes Mr. Whitman as being an idler and a drifter in his formative year less from 1844 to 1855, Mr. Feinberg said.
"He was a vary practical young man, devoted to his family, and moderately successful in business," the collector stated.
"These documents reveal Whitman as a person who had a constant family interest in his brothers and his mother," he said.
Using receipts, bills, checks, and letters, Mr. Feimberg reconstructed the poet's life up to 1855, the year he had published "Leaves of Grass."
The bills and receipts also showed that Whitman was busy during this period building and selling houses, working for newspapers, running a printshop and later a book and stationer's shop.
"Wittnan was a man who delibertly turned his back on money and his business success to do what he wanted to do—write."
Whitman, he said, was "the archi- tect of the American dream."
Phi Beta Kappa Elects 38 Seniors
The election of 38 graduating seniors to Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honor society, was announced today by Prof. L. R. Lind president of the KU chapter.
The 38, who are seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or who have in another school of the University filled graduation requirements of the College, join the eight seniors chosen last fall. Additional members may be chosen in June.
The new members will be initiated May 5.
No Phi Beta Kappa chapter may elect more than the upper 10 percent of the senior class. The KU chapter, which is the oldest west of the Mississippi, further restricts membership to those earning approximately a 24 grade point average of a possible 3.0.
The new Phi Beta Kappas are:
Frederick B. Misse, Jr., Highland; Diane Phyllis Hays, Kansas City, Kan; Dale Marvin Bretherow, Nevis, Minn.; Jack A. Wortman, Chanute; Megan Starr Lloyd, Hutchinson.
Ruth Ann Anderson, Hutchinson; Ruwal Henry Freese, Topeka; Marcia Sue Fullner, Mission; Peggy June Brown, Topeka; Joy Arlita Yea, Manhattan.
Freddie Wilson, Lenexa; Carolyn Huntley, Washington; David Gaumer, Oberlin; Richard Ohmart, Scott City; Anne Miller, Dodge City; Vera Stough, Lawrence; Dale Vermillion, Goodland; Virginia Miller, Wichita; Shirley Ward, Salina; Wayne Mason, Prairie Village.
Carroll Simpson, Holden, Missouri; Donald Hopkins, Kansas City, Kansas; Polly Peppercorn, Lawrence; Diane Sandberg, Wichita; Julie Miller, Kansas City, Kansas.
Martilyn Coffelt, Lawrence; Jerry Kirkland, Herington; Warren McNabney, Coffeyville; Calvin Siebert, Marion; Jerrad Hertzler, Newton.
Edwin Rathbun, Great Bend; Lois Scott, Leawood; Mary Ann Evans, Lawrence; Kent Lee Floerke, Kansas City, Kansas; Robert T. Cook, Leavenworth; Jere Glover, Salina; Margaret Louise Armstrong, Westfield, N. J.; Mary Joanne Pugh, Ferguson, Mo.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 25, 1958
KU's Unsilent Ones
Why live?
Why do I live, why am I alive? To what purpose was I destined? Was I born to die for a Cause, or was I born to die because of a Cause? Where shall I find reason in living—to whom, to what can I turn for relief? Must I create a Purpose or shall I wait and hope that one will be given to me?
These are questions burning within this member of the "Silent Generation." It may be the question of many University students. If you believe the answers to these questions are insignificant, then you are a fool. If you have the answers, then you are blessed—you need read no farther.
Many men find relief from these questions through external means. They either escape into the race for wealth and power, plunge their souls into cozy brown bottles, or play a stacked game of Russian roulette.
Neither prostitution, embalmment, nor death of the questions plaguing a man's very soul seem to be likely question-quenching techniques. To search soberly is noble. To search on with a hint of failure is magnificent. This generation needs to be more noble and magnificent.
It seems to me that our society forces its inhabitants to be subtle. It prevents man from being spontaneous, from being an individual. Here on the campus the greatest virtue of a student is to be "well-rounded." The sharp edges of one's personality that give a person an individual character are desirably disposed of and disguised.
To be complete, one must assume a prone position and allow himself to become smooth and cylindrical. One must be relatively bright, pleasing to the eye, and have a fair share of the social graces.
To be a success, one must subtly proclaim his "well-roundedness," present a few cautious ideas, and then allow himself to ascend. The competition in this ascending process is most intense on this campus and in our society.
We enter the competition and seek a successful position in society. Why, I am not sure. But it seems that hollow success has become holy. Drums are hollow, but most are successfully loud. The answer to the question of when will my life, rather than when will I, be a success and have meaning will come silently and be filling.
We need silence.
Time To Invest In U.S.
—Marilyn Mermis.
The way out of the present recession is to invest. To aid students on the campus in realizing the importance of investments for a strong economy, a campus campaign has been organized for Invest-in-America Week starting April 27.
The investment week is a national affair, and is of special importance in this present low ebb of the economy. When the citizen invests he makes his stake in society that much more secure.
What does the week mean to the student? Only through the American free enterprise system, built on investments, does the student get a free public education with the opportunity for unlimited study.
Behind the free public education is the money
Money that is put into savings and investments, insurance policies, homes and bonds creates new jobs, new plants and new businesses.
An average of seventeen thousand dollars must be invested in the plant and tools that make that job possible. The students savings and investments can do that job.
"Money at Work Means Men at Work" is the slogan of Invest-in-America Week. To the students who will be trying to get jobs in the future this might be very important.
When representatives for the investment week speak in the coming week at the organized houses on the campus, think about the proposal; it will make your future more secure.
—Doug Parker
... Letters To The Editor
Edito::
Through your columns I take
. . .
It has been noticed by many students this semester that somebody makes a pencil or ink mark around certain news items appearing in the newspapers kept in undergraduate library. All such marked news I have come across are those which abuse India in one way or another over so called "Kashmir Question". Apparently this is done to draw special attention of the readers towards such publicity.
this opportunity to point out to my my friends who resorted to this method, that this practice is not only against the rules and regulations of the library but fall short of any decency expected from the University students. The newspapers are purchased from the funds contributed by all students and are not to be misused like this by any particular group.
In case this practice continues in future I might call upon the good offices of the director of libraries
and dean of students to do the needful since such practice creates in discipline among the student community and creates bad blood in various groups of foreign students.
Harbans Lal
India graduate student
Before the first dose of mass-produced penicillin was marketed, according to the Health News Institute, private firms spent $25 million and the government $3 million in development.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
THE COLLEGE STUDENT
AS SEEN BY:
HIMOELF ... HIG FATHER ... HIG GIRL ...
JOKER
RANDOM
THE GUIDANCE OFFICE ... HIG CLASSMATES ... HIG MAJOR PROFESSION
THE COLLEGE STUDENT
WOLF
JOKER
JACKPOL
THE GUIDANCE OFFICE --- HIS CLASSMATES --- HIS MAJOR PROF.
South Carolinians employed in the textile industry share an annual payroll of approximately $440 million.
UNIVERSITY DAILY TRANSAN
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded in 1904.
trademarked 1908. daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 276, business office
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented National Advertising Service 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $50 a year. Published during awards. Kan., every afternoon at Sundays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 19, 170, at inland post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dick Brown ___ Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth
Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant
Managing Editors, Douglas Parker, City
Editor, Barbara Duffield, Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden,
Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick.
Assistant Telegraph Editor; George
Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Dale
Morseh, Jim Cable, Assistant Snorts
Editor, Richard Taylor, City Editor;
Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winker Business Manager
John Clarke, Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston National Advertising
Manager; Bill Irvine, Classified
Admin Marion Macon Tom McGrath,
Circulation Manager; Norman Beck,
Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Evelyn Hall, Marilyn Mermis, Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Editors.
3rd Issue
1958
Jayhawker
will be on sale and distributed
at the
Information Booth
and
Strong Rotunda
Today and Monday
$6
limited supply
(No House Distribution)
Burr Cited As Top Trial Lawyer
Page 3
Aaron Burr was the most competent and effective trial lawyer at the American Bar, William E. Treadway, Topeka, told the Phi Delta Phi professional law fraternity Thursday at their monthly meeting.
Mr. Treadway, general counsel for the Santa Fe, teaches "Legal History" at Washburn University Law School. He prefaced his topic "Aaron Burr, Advocate" with a brief outline of opportunities for the law graduate in the field of large corporate practice.
"The most malinged and misunderstood patron of American history was Aaron Burr, a Princeton College graduate at the age of 16 and first United States Senator from the state of New York after service on General Washington's staff, Mr. Treadway said. He was a vice-president of the United States, yet he was tried and acquitted for treason."
Honored guests included Province President Wayne B. Wright, St. Louis and new Supreme Court Justice of Kansas and Schuyler Jackson, formerly dean of Washburn University.
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager on the 1958-59 Student Directory will be taken now through Saturday.
Student Directory Positions Open
Two KU Men Sell Paintings To KSTC
Hugh M. Grant, Hutchinson senior and chairman of the ASC publications committee, said applications for the two positions should be sent to the ASC office in the Kansas Union.
Robert B. Green, associate professor of drawing and painting, and Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, have received purchase prizes at the Annual Kansas Painters Exhibition at Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburgh.
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
KSTC purchased "Profiles of Maple Grove," a water color by Prof. Green, and "Race Light Light," an oil painting by Prof. Eastwood.
New York City covers 359.4 square miles, including 43.9 square miles of inland water.
Birds on a branch
BIRD TV - RADIO
908 Mass.
VI 3-8855
Eveready Portable Batteries
- Expert Service
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
YES, IT'S TRUE !!
University Daily Kansan
H
I'm Popping My Buttons. I'm Proud Because We Have The Best Burgers And The Friskiest French Fries. The Biggest Buys In Town.
CHATEAU
Friday, April 25, 1958
1802 Mass.
DRIVE IN
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.
A crowd of about 900 persons is expected to see the last of the season's color TV movies, "Dial M for Murder" at 8:30 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Maurice Evans stars in the hour and a half show sponsored by Student Union Activities and Hallmark Cards. Folding chairs will be set up on most of the available floor space in the middle and south
Final Color TV Movie Tonight
lounges and in the Kansas Room. The sponsors have loaned four color TV sets to the SUA. The show is open to the public.
CAR TALK
I AM
REALLY
A WRECK!
I'LL GIVE YOU
THE NAME OF
MY BODY AND
MECHANICAL
SPECIALIST
MORGAN
FOKO
FURO MACK
Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence
714 Vermont VI 3-3500
"DIAL
"DIAL M FOR MURDER"
Starring Maurice Evans
THE MAGICIAN
IN COLOR on the Hallmark Hall of Fame
FRIDAY,APRIL 25 AT 8:30 P.M.
5 Different Locations in the Student Union
PERFECT EVENING ENTERTAINMENT
A quick hamburger, a delicious salad or something from the dairy bar to top off the evening.
And before and after the show, enjoy a cup of coffee,a glass of tea,or a quick malt.
KU
THE
HAWK'S
NEST
Ku
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 25.1958
Pharmacy, Fossils, Hicks Win Intramural 'A' Games
Pharmacy, the Fossils and the Hicks won Independent A intramural softball games Thursday.
Pharmacy defeated Carruth 24-15 in a high-scoring battle. Pharmacy sent 18 men to the plate in the first inning and hit five home runs before the side was retired.
The Fossils defeated Jolliffe 18-0 in a game called at the end of the fourth inning. Anytime one team is leading its opponent by 10 runs after the fourth inning, the game is called
at the end of the inning being played.
The Hicks defeated Jim Beam by 5-2. Several strikeouts were recorded in this game.
Other results.
**Independent B** — VIP 4, Varsity 3.
**Fraternity B**—Triangle 18, Delta Chi 4; Phi Gam 22, Sig Ep 0.
Other results:
Intramural tennis and handball results:
Monday's schedule:
Fraternity B—Du I vs. Phi Kap Sig, F. 3; AEPi vs. Beta II, F. 4; PKA vs. Sig Nuf, F. 5.
Monday's Fraternity A—AKL vs. Phi Psi, F.
10; Du vs. Sig Chi, F. 1; Phi Gam vs.
Delta Chi, F. 2.
A's Face Faltering White Sox Today
Phi Psi II 2, Jolliffe 1 in a tennis match.
Sig Ep defeated AEPi by forfeit in intramural handball.
The Kansas City Athletics pushed off for Chicago and a 3-game set with the faltering White Sox Thursday night after concluding a season-opening 4-2 home record against three American League opponents.
Butter made from the milk of zebus is not popular in Wisconsin.
Dr. H. R. Williams
Optometrist
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., VI 3-7255
Ian estimated $275—one day's pay.
LOS ANGELES—(UP)—All was peaches and cream — well maybe skim milk—with Duke Snider and Los Angeles Manager Walt Alston today after the Dodger slugger returned to the lineup following a one-day suspension.
wear
Schaefer
MADE-TO-MEASURE
CLOTHES
$47.50 to $76.50
Campus Shop
1342 Ohio VI 3-8763
Snider Back In Play, Fined
That fine, for injuring his arm while indulging in a bit of horse play prior to Wednesday night's game with the Cubs, cost the Duke
an estimated $275—one day's pay.
Snider and teammate Don Zimmer were skylarking a bit Wednesday night, trying to toss a few bails out of the Memorial Coliseum. No mean trick, considering the top of the Coliseum is 106 feet from the field.
"At $275 a day, I can't afford not to play." Snider said, and played as the Dodgers lost to the Cubs again 15-2.
Fascination...
Fascination...
Town & Country's
winning pump
$12.95. White only
A veiled beauty, pointed to perfection. New mesh fashion, dark or light. Done on that illusion mid-heel that looks high but isn't.
Matching handbag
AMERICA'S BEST FASHION SHOE VALUE
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
Town & Country's winning pump
Town & Country's
winning
pump
$12.95. White only
A veiled beauty, pointed to perfection. New mesh
fashion, dark or light. Done on that illusion mid-heel,
that looks high but isn't.
Matching handbag
AMERICA'S BEST FASHION SHOE VALUE
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
Royal College Shop
ALEXANDER
Another Satisfied User of Dairy Products from Lawrence Sanitary
You never outgrow your need for milk. Drink nourishing "All Star" Milk.
PHI KAPPA "Fraternity of the Week"
Presented by
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO.
202 W. 6th VI 3-5511
MORGANIZED MILK
ALL STAR
MONOPENIZED
MILK
Pure Fok
SIT POURS LIKE A BITCHER?
"IT POURS LIKE A PITCHER"
SOPHOMORES
Let's have a
PICNIC
Saturday, May 3 1-5 p.m.
Lone Star - Elks Point
FUN
REFRESHMENTS
of ze-
---
21. ( )
Friday, April 25, 1958 University Dailv Kansan
Page 5
3
League-Leading Oklahoma State Arrives At KU
The league leading Oklahoma State Cowpokes come here this weekend to meet the fourth place Kansas Jayhawkers in a Big Eight Conference baseball game.
This will be the first time that KU has played the Cowpokes in a league game. This is the first season that Oklahoma State has participated in the conference.
The Jayhawkers need to win this series to stay within striking distance of the Cowpokes.
KU is now two games behind the league leaders.
Pitchers likely to see action for Floyd Temple in the series are Larry Miller, ace southpaw of the staff. Ron Wiley and Gary Russell.
So far this year, Miller has a perfect record of 4-0. Wiley and Russell have both failed to win a game. They have records 0-3 and 0-1, respectively.
THE GLAMOUR OF HOLLYWOOD... THE EXCITEMENT OF SAN
FRANCISCO... THE WHITE BEACHES OF SANTA BARBARA...
THE SERENITY OF THE SACRAMENTO VALLEY
For Summer Session education in California, you have a unique choice of four campuses where you can participate in graduate and undergraduate courses, education workshops and seminars conducted by a distinguished faculty.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Berkeley / Los Angeles / Santa Barbara / Davis write for free catalogue and complete information to Director, Statewide Summer Sessions, University of California
Dept. Kon. Los Angeles 24, California
SELF-SERVICE
this summer it's CALIFORNIA!
TENNIS
Spring Sale
On Selected MacGregor Tennis Rackets
Reg. Sale
MacGregor Tourney $25 $20.45
MacGregor Service Ace $22 $18.45
MacGregor Intercollegiate $19 $15.95 Others $3.95 up
MacGregor Tennis Balls, 3 for $1.98
Others $3.95 up
We Do Professional Restringing
(Discounts for organized teams on softball and baseball equipment)
The Sportsman's Shop
VI 3-6106
715 Mass.
The Kansas tennis and golf teams travel to Missouri University to meet the Tigers in matches this Saturday.
The Jayhawker golf team, owning a 3-4 record, will then go to Washburn University next Wednesday for a match. Leading the team will be Jim Davies, the only senior letterman on the squad, who was recently elected captain of the team.
the KU tennis team will go to Kansas State for a match next Monday. The tennis team has won one and lost four.
Following its match with Missouri
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
Invest in America
WORK-SAVE-INVEST FOR PROSPERITY FOR ALL!
Regardless how small the amount . . . save a little money every month! When your money has accumulated, invest it how and where you choose . . . in a savings account, in a business, in a home, in life insurance, in a local store, in stocks or bonds. Only with the collective savings and investments of the American people, can our nation continue to build the bright future envisioned for tomorrow!
Every American should be proud of our country, for no other economic and political system has produced the blessings we enjoy!
Anchor Savings and Loan Association 737 Mass. VI 3-0621
Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association 1046 Vermont VI 3-5850
Lawrence Building and Loan Association 800 Mass. VI 3-0460
University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Friday, April 25, 1958
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 school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Candidates planning to take the Ph.D German reading exam. May 31 must register.
Mathematics colloquium, 4 p.m., 203 Strong, Speaker, Professor E. Stiefel, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland, Conformal Mapping Equations
Liahona Fellowship, Kansas regional conference, today, Sunday, starting at 10 a.m., Vermont.
Kinescope of Alice in Wonderland, 1 p.m., Rehearsal Room of the University Theatre, Music and Dramatic Arts Building, Public welcome
Hallmark Theatre _color televison,
"Dial M to Murder" starring Maurice
Eastwood.
SUNDAY
Foreign Student festival program re-bearings, 1:45 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom
Liahona Fellowship, Kansas regional conference, 12th & Vermont
Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m.
Mendelsohn-Symphony No. 3 in A
Minor. Dvorek-Concerto for Violin in
A Minor.
Hillel cost supper, 5 p.m. Jewish Community Center. "The Significance of Israel to the Jewish Student." A party will follow the program.
Wesley Foundation, 5:30 p.m. meal and
rabbit. 6:30 program, Greek Orthod-
chy, Religion.
United Student Fellowship, 5-7 p.m.
Congregational Church, Speaker, Dr. Sever,
"The Dead Sea Scrolls." Election of
offers. Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
Episcopal morning prayer. 7 a.m.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House
House of Christ.
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Mendelssohn -Symphony No. 3 in A Minor. Dvorak -Concerto for Violin in A Minor.
Student vestry meeting, noon, Canterbury House.
Episcopal evening prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
UNDERWOOD'S
Flocking—Balsa Models—Trains 1215 West Sixth
LOREN EISELEY
introduces new Post series "Adventures of the Mind"
Famed scholar, anthropologist, and ex-University of Kansas teacher Loron Elseley, appears in this week's Saturday Evening Post to lead off one of the most unusual and provocative series of articles ever published by a major weekly magazine.
Intellectual leaders like Oppenheimer, Zworykin and Gropius, each writing on his own field, will follow Mr. Eiseley's "An Evolutionist Looks at Modern Man." Unaltered and unified, these articles present the major thoughts of our modern world —directly from the men who conceived them!
IN ALL, 7 articles, 3 stories,
2 serials, many cartoons.
Begin now, with this week's Post.
Get your copy today—wherever magazines are sold.
The Saturday Evening
POST
April 26,1958-15r
A CURTIS MAGAZINE
KU-Y Freshman Commission To Meet
Members of the newly formed KU-Y freshman commission will hold an all day planning session Saturday at Lone Star Lake. KU-Y secretaries and cabinet members will assist the eight member commission and its chairmen by explaining the organization and its activities.
During the morning the officials will talk about the national and campus organizations and explain the budget and purpose of the campus chapter.
Ruins of Indian cities in New Mexico span more than a thousand years and many were abandoned before the Spanish explored the region in the 16th Century.
Shutter Queen CONTEST
Win Argus C-3 Camera
call
John Smith
Ph. VI 3-0147
The Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, London, England, notified a KU student Thursday that he is one of 10 American students who will be permitted to enroll in the
Academy. The student, William Teichgraeber, Emporia senior, was chosen after auditioning with 1,600 other students in New York.
Dramatic Arts Academy Selects KU Student To Enroll
Teichgraeber is the second KU student in two years to receive the honor. Tom Sawyer, 1957 graduate, was also selected by the academy.
WOW!
That's How Everybody Describes Our Jumbo - Burger 1/4 LB. STEAK-A MEAL IN ITSELF
Now Served Quickly With Our New Radio Order Service
VI 3-2098
BLUE HILLS DRIVE-IN
East 23rd
AND BLUE ROOM
GRANADA NOW SHOWING!
ALL THE DAYS AND NIGHTS OF "THE YOUNG LIONS"
Marlon Brando Montgomery Clift Dean Martin in "The Young Lions"
✩
Shows 7 and 9:55
VARSITY NOW SHOWING!
NOW & SATURDAY
Johnny Saxon, Molly Bee in
"Summer Love"
CO-HIT
Wm. Reynolds in
"The Big Beat"
STARTS SUNDAY—4 DAYS
Danny Kaye in "Merry Andrew" with Pier Angeli
LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING!
NOW & SATURDAY
2 Thrill-Packed Hits!
"Motorcycle Gang"
and
"Sorority Girl"
STARTS SUNDAY Leo Genn, Kieron Moore in "Steel Bayonet" CO-HIT Rory Calhoun, Gloria Grahame in "Ride Out for Revenge"
SUNSET NOW SHOWING!
NOW & SATURDAY
Tony Curtis in
"Houdini"
CO-HIT
Clayton Moore in
"The Lone Ranger"
SUNDAY & MONDAY
Bing Crosby, Bob Hope in
"Road To Bali"
PLUS
Doris Day, Frank Sinatra in
"The Young At Heart"
25 w
WANrates Conr
Friday, April 25, 1958
University Daily Kansan
KU e the educate, deny.
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
**25 words or less:** one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional $25 for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the Daily Kilman Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED student laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. 829 Conn. tf
ANYONE WHO WITNESSED the 8 a.m. collision 2 miles southwest of Tonganoxie, April 10. please contact Jack Fenton, Be-1-4815; K.C., Mo. 4-25
BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic bag. Ice pack. 4th, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-0359 tt
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for reception and parties. For Sale: Mother Day gifts crystal and china. Home of China, 906 New Hampshire, VI 3-1980. 5-6
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Life magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks; Buy now, pay later. Call VT 3-0124. 5-21
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to
Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at
special one-half price student rates.
Faculty and part-time students also
eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI
3-0124) 5-21
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine: Phone VI 3-7654. tf
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast, accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tt
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
94% Alum, Phi. MgT 3-5263.
94% Alum, Phi. MgT 3-5263.
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. 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, gators, fathers, sure, hamsters, everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. tf
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
Studio, 98 Missouri, phone VI 3-6838.
5-12
SERVICE DIRECTORY
BEAUTY SHOPS
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 Mass. VI 3-4070
RADIO REPAIRS
RADIO REPAIRS
Beaman's Radio & TV
1200 N. Y.
Pine's Radio & TV
1100 Conn.
VI 3-7738
SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
Rogers 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 8434
Chadwick Studios
Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass VI 3-305
USED CAR BUYS
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-6697
1951 Chevrolet
Fleetline two door, looks and runs
like new,$395
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
1955 Pontiac Catalina
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
td
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter Phone. Phone Mrs. Donna ViRI, V1 3-8600.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
1955 Pontiac Catalina
Hardtop with V8, hydramatic, radio,
heater, whitewall tires. Like new!
Cy's Used Cars
19th & Mass.
VI 3-9293
1953 Plymouth
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations. General rates, up and delivery. Mrs. Tom Brady TI 3-3428 tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and ac-
cue service. Call VI 3-6333, 16212,
20th St.
Spotless, good tires, 6 cyl. with overdrive, Perfest all over.
TYPIST, experienced and fast. Reason-
bler. Phone VI 3-2001. 19f
Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001.
625 Mass VI 3-3055
Jim Clark
TYPIST. Experienced in all fields including scientific papers. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 2-0628.
1953 MG TD MK I
Good condition—loaded with extras
British Motors
737 N. 2nd VI 3-8367
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
WOULD LIKE to get some lawns to
mow in the afternoon. Call VI 3-4893.
TYPIST: Experienced; theses, term papers, reports, etc. Fast accurate service.
Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
FOR SALE
FOR SALE or lease, Crystal Cafe, 609 Vermont St. Call VI 3-4767, after six p.m.
HI-FI CONSOLE, beautiful cherrywood,
Motorola masterpiece floor model. Price cut to $150, easy terms. B. F. Goodrich Store, 929 Mass. 4-30
21 INCH Hallcaster TV set, and an RCA
rpm record changer. Inquiry
3-14-6458.
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833 1/2 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-8074
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Located between KU and downtown.
Owns one apartment or two units
nished. Must be reliable married couple.
may sublet VI 3-7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-28
ELECTRIC STOVE, four burners, oven and broiler. $90, no more, no less. Call Phil Emery, VI 3-7867, after five p.m.
4-28
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over house representative or call VI 3-7553 VI 2-0753 VI 2-6395 for free delivery.
HOUSE TRAILER: 1954 Southwestern,
32 ft. Tandem; 2 bedrooms, completely
interior, with condition, mahogany
interior. See it let 15, Bob's Court,
Court, 1311 W. 60th H. 4-25
MG A, 1957, red, wire wheels, radio,
heater, tonneau, luggage rack $2,300
Jerry Straf, VI 2-0291, 1633 Vermont.
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.-Ph. VI 3-1044
FOR RENT
COOL basement apartment to boys.
Available June 1. Also a single room
available now. No drinking or smoking.
House south of campus, Indiana.
4-25
FRATERNITY RING, gold with black stone and shield in center. Lost Wednesday evening in Union restroom. Call V1 3-7810, reward. Tad Hoff. 4-29
REWARD for return of my Modern Art spiral notebook, believed lost in Strong Hall!失 Wednesday or Thursday. Bill Wolfe, phone VI 3-5544. 4-25
DESIRABLE three room infurnished ground floor apartment. Convenient to refrigerator, air conditioner, and parking space included. VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1277.
LOST
APARTMENT, available for sublet June 1 thru Aug. 31. Two bedrooms and completely furnished. Sumyside. rent $64 home, including all utilities. Phone W: 1-1055.
EXCEPTIONALLY NICE four room, furnished apartment for rent during summer months. No children or boys. Call VI 2-0095. 4-25
LEAVE FILM TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30
Back Tomorrow At 3
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass.—VI 3-9471
Where there's a Man... there 's a Marlboro
MILLER
The cigarette designed for men that women like
---
A long white ash means good tobacco and a mild smoke.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Friday, April 25, 1958
Job Opportunities Available In Aids And Awards Office
For the student who's at loose ends and has no plans for the summer, the Aids and Awards office may have the answer.
The office acts as a clearing house for summer student jobs with about 500 employer requests a year. Only about 275 of these requests are filled each year, so there are jobs waiting.
Jobs in Kansas and in the Lawrence vicinity will be scarcere this summer, but there is a large number of summer camp and resort jobs, selling jobs, and temporary odd jobs still open. Spencer Martin, director of aids and awards, said.
The deadline for resort job applications is May 1, but there are still some positions open, Mr. Martin said.
For a student who has the ability, a selling job could be the most lucrative one available for the summer, he said, but most students don't like to try a summer job on commission instead of salary.
A perpetual problem at the office is the large number of calls for odd jobs—yard work or temporary labor—which often go unfilled for lack of a student to take the job.
A typical summer job would be one at Yellowstone National Park, where a student may earn about $125 to $175 a month with board and room furnished.
A student looking for a summer job may fill in an application form at the Aids and Awards office in 222 Strong, and the office will try to match the student's experience with a job request.
A student registered with the office may go through the request
To Attend Business Meeting
Dean James Surface of the Business School will attend the annual meeting of the American Assn. of Collegiate Schools of Business in Gatlinburg, Tenn. He and Mrs. Surface will leave Monday and will return the following Friday.
files himself to find a job he thinks he can handle. If the office agrees, he is given an introduction card to the employer and sent out to the job.
Eventually Aids and Awards will be expanded to include placement service, Mr. Martin said.
In addition to summer jobs, the office handles year-round requests for part-time student workers. The Aids and Awards office has been in
To Ask Seniors To Join Alumni Assn.
The 16-member alumni relations committee of the class of 1958 will meet this week and next with seniors in organized houses in a concentrated drive for membership in the Alumni Assn. Committee members also will answer questions about coming senior class events.
In previous years, letters for membership in the association were sent to graduating seniors.
American Commercial Barge line is the world's largest inland bargel line. System extends from the Great Lakes to Mexico and has a fleet of 51 towboats and 570 barges with more than 3,000 workers. Annual volume of business in excess of $50,000,000.
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THE HISTORY OF TOM MURRAY
Collection Valued At $75,000
ONE OF THE COLLECTION—Joseph Rubinstein, special collections librarian, thumbs through one of the books received Saturday by KU. (Daily Kansan photo)
KU Gets Rare Books
The 25th annual Cervantes Day celebration Saturday was highlighted by the announcement of the acquisition of more than 2,000 original volumes of 16th and 17th century books valued at approximately $75,000.
The collection, which is to be added to KU's rare book collection, is "the most significant addition to the KU collection in the field of humanities." Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said in announcing the acquisition.
Chancellor Murphy told The Daily Kansan Sunday night that $50,000 of the $75,000 paid for the books came from a fund set up by the Summerfield Foundation three years ago as part of a 10-year plan to bring rare book collections to the University. The remainder of the money came from individual contributions.
Chancellor Murphy termed the books a "major collection of scholarly works both for learning and teaching."
"There have been other additions in the fields of science," Chancellor Murphy said. "However, this is certainly the most significant of all addition in the
field of Humanities."
Students Can See Books
Robert Vosper, library director, said the collection was "probably the most important purchase acquisition the library at KU has ever made."
Mr. Vosper said students could now see the books in the rare book room at the library. Because of the value of the books, students wouldn't be allowed to take them from the library, he said. A selection of the books is now on display in the lobby of the Kansas Union.
The decision was made to purchase the books in February, Mr. Vosper said. He added that once the purchase was made, it was decided to hold the announcement of the acquisition until Cervantes Day since many of the books are Cervantes' works.
The books were once part of the famous Sir William Stirling-Maxwell collection and had been stored in Keir Castle in Scotland from
1878 until last year when they were acquired by a New York book distributor.
Subject Matter Differs
The collection consists of two main parts—the Cervantes section and a group of 16th and 17th century writings.
The books vary in size as well as subject matter. The smallest books are only 2 or 3 inches in length and $1^{1 / 2}$ inches wide. The largest is about 3 feet long and weighs about 15 pounds.
The collection contains such books as a travel guidebook to Italy, a book on monsters and their characteristics, one of the first law books of the Holy Roman Empire, books with genealogies of famous families and important early German books.
Joseph Rubinstein, special collector for the library, learned of the purchase of the Stirling-Maxwell collection by the New York firm while touring Europe last summer.
Books Sell As High As $700
Derby Day Is A Dashing Success
It was then that preliminary negotiations began. Mr.Rubenstein returned to KU and notified officials of the books and began work to raise the money needed.
About 450 spectators watched Saturday as 60 women from 14 organized houses chased greased pigs, threw eggs at each other, and engaged in similar horseplay. The occasion was the fifth annual Sigma Chi Derby Day track meet for women in organized houses.
Several women cheerfully received bangs, cuts and bruises as "battle scars." Those who won events received certificates and trophies.
Daily hansan
KU Woman Named Contest Winner
Organized houses taking part were Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, North-Corbin halls, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Kanpa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Beta Phi, and Sigma Kappa.
Events in the meet were an egg throw, and sack, fishpole, balloon, leap frog, grapefruit, and pony express races; musical buckets, and the pig chase. The pig, incidentally, came out second best, for several girls pounced on him about 30 seconds after the race started.
An Olympic flavor was seen at the meet in the lighting of the "eternal smudge pot" before things got under way. The Derby Day Symphonettes, a marching band led by a conductor whose "baton" was a plunger, added to the festivities.
"We were all happy to see the turnout that the houses gave us and we enjoyed every bloody minute of it." George (Buz) Hunt, Chicago, Ill. sophomore and member of the Derby Day committee, told a Daily Kansan reporter.
Arden Janice Weston, Blue Springs. Mo. junior has been named winner of a college beauty queen contest, part of a national beauty contest sponsored by an advertising firm.
Miss Weston will represent KU among a group of 78 schools in one of three regional college beauty contests.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Increasing northerly winds this afternoon and evening. Tuesday mostly fair and cool. Low tonight middle 20s northwest, upper 30s southeast. High Tuesday 48 to 58.
55th Year, No. 134
ETA
SOME DERBY DAMAGE—John Jeffrey, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore, treats Anne Miller, Dodge City senior, Kappa Alpha Theta, for minor injuries suffered while participating in the Sigma Chi Derby Day. (Daily Kansan photo)
KU-Y Names New Members At Banquet
the producer and business manager for the 1959 Rock Chalk Review received their appointments Friday while this year's review staff was being honored at a recognition dinner in the Kansas Union.
Lynn H. Miller, Dodge City, was named producer and Richard I. Barr, Ottawa was named business manager. Both are juniors.
About 40 persons including the
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
KU-Y president and treasurer, the review staff, organized house directors, and committee advisers were present.
Seniors Shirley Andrish, Topeka and James Tierney, Wichita, were this year's producer and business manager. David C. Skaggs, Pratt junior, is Rock Chalk co-ordinator for next year.
Monday, April 28, 1958
Public Will Want Educational TV'
"As American and English standards of education continue to rise in the next 20 or 30 years the public will demand more cultural and educational television and radio programs and fewer of the entertainment type."
These are the words of Dr. Maurice Ashley, noted English historian and journalist, who will present a Humanities Lecture, "Cromwell's Place in History," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater.
In a Daily Kansan interview this morning Dr. Ashley said that the British Broadcasting Corp. is able to give more cultural and educational programs because it is a public service corporation and does not have the commercial compulsion to reach the widest audience possible.
Dr. Ashley is deputy editor of the BBC publication, The Listener, and was recently notified that he will become editor of the magazine in August.
"Your facilities are excellent, especially your libraries, and you have absolutely first-class professors," he said. "Any student should be able to get an education of the highest quality."
He said that Americans justify having a lower average level of instruction in the universities because more people are able to become educated. In order to raise the level, enrollment would have to be selective and limited to only the better qualified students, he said.
Listener Performs 2 Jobs
Dr. Ashley said that the BBC magazine, The Listener, of which he is now deputy editor, performs the two-fold job of publishing texts of programs which have been presented on the network and at the same time making an interesting weekly cultural journal.
Slipping Sod:Ch.2
Chapter two in the "Case of the Slipping Sod" was written recently when Geology I students investigated the cracked and bulging soil on the hillside northeast of Malott Hall.
The students of Wakefield Dort Jr., associate professor of geology, were asked to study the area and tell what had happened, and why, what would remedy the slide, and what damage would result if no action is taken.
The students agreed that the hill, known as the Wakarusa Valley Overlook, may be destroyed by landsliding unless proper methods of surface and subsurface drainage are used at once.
Prof. Dort said that the downward movement of soil and fill material is very common during wet seasons.
"The processes active in this small slide near Malott are analogous to those causing the recent large slides in California which caused so much damage," he said.
Stabilization of the mass could be best obtained through proper drainage, they concluded from their examination.
( 520 )
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 28,1958
Senior Gift Time Again
Time is rapidly approaching for the senior class to decide what their gift to the University will be.
It is natural, we think, that each class wish to give the University something which will be seen by students, faculty and alumni for years to come. The idea to "give something that everyone can see" is a natural one, but not necessarily a good one.
Something should be said for spending the money for a worthwhile cause rather than investing in just another structure to be placed somewhere on campus. A more functional gift might be decided upon by the class of '58.
Perhaps the class could establish some sort of a fund to help students financially when emergencies arise. This calls to mind the case of a foreign student who attended the University last
year. His parents were killed in an earthquake and he wanted to return home, but he had no money. If such a fund had been in existence, the student could have borrowed the money to return to his country immediately.
Perhaps with the money, some worthy faculty member's salary could be increased as a bonus for outstanding merit in the field of teaching.
Perhaps the seniors could donate the money toward a parking lot for the students, the use of which would not cost 50 cents.
There are many practical ways to spend money. Good cannot always be measured by the amount of recognition received. It would be better for one person to derive good from the money than for it to be wasted on something impractical.
-Evelyn Hall
We Also Made A Study
We took a poll the other day and found that KU women who are short are much better adjusted than the tall girls. To arrive at this conclusion, we looked around the University Daily Kansan newsroom and found that the girls who were tapping most vigorously on their typewriters were the girls who were 5-feet 6-inches and shorter. We decided that the reason for this might be that when someone taller than they spoke to them, they were in a habit of tilting their heads backward, thus relaxing their neck muscles.
The taller girls, when spoken to, had only to look straight ahead into the speaker's eyes to appear attentive. (This whole theorem depends on a premise that the girl's interlocutor is about 6-feet, and probably male.)
We are a little concerned by the outcome of our study, for it is in direct conflict with a report
of a similar study which appeared in a recent issue of the Lawrence Daily Journal World. The study made at Pomona College, Claremont, Calif., by a psychology professor and a student indicated that those "coeds who consider themselves tall are also more ascendant—that is, they stand up better for their rights and tend to be leaders. They are also better adjusted, more even in mood, more socially oriented, more tolerant of others and more homogenous."
The study was made by Carole McCoy, North Hollywood, Calif., a Pomona senior who stands 5-feet 10-inches in her bare feet, and Dr. Graham B. Bell, 6-foot 4-inch psychology professor.
The Daily Kansan study was made by a girl just 5-feet 5-inches in her bare feet, and not more than 5-feet 6-inches when she wears shoes. No professor had anything whatever to do with this study.
—Evelyn L. Hall
American Way' Show At Fair
A Russian electronics engineer, notebook in hand, carefully examined the display of voting machines set up in the American pavilion of the Brussels World's Fair.
The next day he returned with two other Russians.
"We have decided," he told the manager of the exhibit, Arthur Darby of Hallandale, Fla., "that there is a device in the machine that enables an official to tell who voted and how he voted.
"It is not a secret ballot at all."
So Darby, a lean, slow-talking ex-naval officer, hauled the Russians around to the back of the triple-locked machines and showed them how impossible it was to break the integrity of an American ballot.
"I guess they were convinced," he said, "because they left shaking their heads and jabber-
President Eisenhower, who suggested the voting machine exhibit, is herewith assured that showing how America votes has turned out to be almost the happiest inspiration of the fair.
ing away in Russian."
To everybody's surprise it is one of the three top attractions of the display intended to dramatize the American way of life.
The President couldn't have known about it at the time, but the Russians also decided to boast about "equal, universal and secret" suffrage in their adjoining pavilion. Unfortunately, however, they lettered this on a wall just under a painting of the late Josef Stalin.
"Visitors over there are thus able to read the claim, look at Stalin's picture and draw their own conclusions," Darby said.
—United Press
Former KU Professor Writes For Saturday Evening Post
Dr. Eiseley's article, "An Evolutionist Looks at Modern Man," is the first in a series written for the magazine by seven widely known scholars.
Dr. Loren C. Eiseley, KU professor of sociology from 1937 to 1944 and one of last fall's Humanities Series lecturers, is the first author to write for the Saturday Evening Post's current series, "Adventures of the Mind."
human rewards on the moon, but rather in communication with his own mind and fellow man. The moon trip is merely an "escape out of the human problems on earth," he says.
Dr. Eiseley said in his article that he believes man will not find his
Dr. Eiseley is chairman of the department of anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania.
He spoke here last fall on "Modern Man: The Crisis in His Evolution."
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Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trivisector 1908, daily jan. 16, 1912
Telephone VIkring 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented
National Avenue, New York advertising Service
420 Madison Ave., New York, NY;
service: United Press. Mail publication
rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Pub-
nish w/ Lawrence,ville, every afternoon
during daytime and on Saturday and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-course matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
Madison Kan, post office unier act of March 3, 1879.
Dick Brown ___ Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth
Noyes, Malcolm Applegate, Assistant
Mary Bishop, Keenan City
Editor; Marian Cross, Dick Kerrich,
Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden,
Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick,
Assistant Telegraph Editor; George
Anuth, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Dale
Mason, Sporting Events
Editors; Pat Swanson, Society Editor;
Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Ted Winkler...Business Manager
John Clarke...Advertising Manager;
Carol Ann Huston.National Advertising
Manager. Bill Irvine. Classified
Advisor Manager. Tom McGrain.
Circulation Manager. Norman Beck.
Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Haley Editorial Editor
Evelyn Hall, Marilyn Mermis, Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Editors.
100
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After Six
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Monday. April 28,1958 University Daily Kansan
Page
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INVEST-IN-AMERICA WEEK
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INVEST IN AMERICA FOR MORE AND BUTTER JOBS
Pi Beta Phi
Sigma Kappa
The City-Campus observance of INVEST-INAMERICA WEEK is part of a national celebration. Approximately fifty businessmen from Kansas City, Topeka, Lawrence and Atchison will be at KU this week to speak at various organized houses.
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Plan to attend the
Alpha Tau Omega
INVEST-IN-AMERICA WEEK LUNCHEON
Beta Theta Pi
Thursday, May 1
Delta Sigma Phi
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 28. 1959
Murphy, Deans To Wichita Banquet
If you look around Tuesday,you may notice that there isn't a dean in sight.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, the deans of all University schools, and other administrative personnel will leave at 8 a.m. Tuesday to attend an alumni reception and banquet in Wichita. Wives of most of the University leaders will also make the trip.
01.25.2014 WEDNESDAY morning National alumni president Paul J.
Adam, of Kansas City, Mo., and his wife will also make the trip.
The group will go in the University:
bus, and return. Wednesday morning
Chancellor Murphy will be the speaker at the banquet, which is given by the Sedgwick County KU Alumni Association.
The party will arrive in Wichita about noon, and the wives will be luncheon guests of Mrs. Lloyd Kagey and Mrs. Floyd Amsden at the Wichita country club, Mr. AmSDen, a 1935 KU graduate, is a former mayor of Wichita, and Mrs. Kagey, a former KU student, is an attorney.
The deans and administration have been encouraged to make luncheon and afternoon appointments with Wichita alumni and friends of the University.
Reception At 6 m.m.
The reception will be given at 6 p.m., by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Coleman, Mr. Coleman, is president of the Union National Bank in Wiechita
The KU Chorale, under the direction of Clayton Krebiel, associate professor of music education, will entertain at the banquet. The Chorale will leave Lawrence Tuesday, and return Tuesday night.
Those going to Wichita are:
Chancellor and Mrs. Murphy; Mr. and Mrs. Adam; George B. Smith, dean of the University, and Mrs. Smith; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, and Mrs. Nichols; John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School, and Mrs. Nelson; George R. Waggoner, dean of the College, and Mrs. Waggoner; Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, and Mrs. Anderson.
John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, and Mrs. McNown; Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism; M. C. Slough, dean of the School of Law; W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine; J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, and Mrs. Reese; Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, and Mrs. Gorton; Robert Vosper, director of University libraries, and Mrs. Vosper.
Arthur C. (Dutch) Lonborg, director of athletics, and Mrs. Lonborg; Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association;
Maurice Barker, secretary of the Greater University Fund, and Mrs. Barker; Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the Alumni Association, and Mrs. Ellsworth; Dick Wintermote, field secretary of the Alumni Association, and Mrs. Wintermote.
House OK's 1% Tax Bill
The Kansas House passed a twice- amended one per cent gas and oil severance tax today and sent it on to the Senate after a 65-45 vote.
The amendment to the bill provided exemptions for stripper wells with an average daily production of three barrels or less and wells 1500 feet or deeper with average daily production of six barrels.
The House also approved and sent to the Senate a bill to close the holes in the state's intangible tax law which would bring out an estimated $50 to $60 billion in intangibles for taxation.
A bill giving the legislative council $5,000 to work with the governor's constitutional revision commission was also given final passage by the House.
Debate Team Ties For Fifth Place
The KU debate team of Ray L. Nichols, Lawrence sophomore, and Kenneth L. Irby, Fort Scott senior, reached the quarter finals in the 12th annual West Point Debate Tournament in New York before being eliminated by the University of Southern California (USC). KU tied for fifth place with three other teams.
First place went to Northwestern University, second place to Harvard, and third place to USC and Princeton.
Nichols was judged ninth and Irby 18th in a field of 72 debaters.
Nichols and Irby were accompanied by Kim Griffin, associate professor of speech.
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
To Honor Three Retiring Faculty
Three retiring faculty members will receive service citations from the KU faculty at a banquet at 6:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. A fourth, who left the University April 1, will receive his citation by mail.
The three who will be honored at the banquet:
Sam E. Roberts, clinical professor of otorhinolaryngology at the KU medical center in Kansas City, who became a faculty member as an in-
Austin H. Turney, professor of education, who came here in 1927 as an assistant professor.
John W. Twente, professor of education, who is chairman of the board of directors of the Kansas State Teachers Assn. He came to KU as a professor in 1925.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will present the three with certificates of the faculty's appreciation for the services the professors have given the University.
Some 200 faculty members are expected to attend the banquet which is sponsored by the Endowment Association.
Steals Cars To Save Gas
DENVER —(UP) — Police today held a youth who admitted stealing cars in the morning to get to school across town, then stealing others to get back home at night because he never had enough money to buy gas for his own car.
Monkey Mind Malfunctions
CHICAGO —(UP)— Brookfield zoo officials thought the arrival of a male monkey from Africa would be just the spring tonic for two sadd-faced female monkeys. The new arrival's thoughts did not lightly turn, so the zoo now has three sadd-faced monkeys.
Dr. H. R. Williams Optometrist
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Monday. April 28, 1958 University Daily Kansam
Page 5
Softball Victories By Three Frats
Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta and Phi Delta Theta had little trouble in defeating their opponents by fairly wide margins to win their Fraternity A intramural softball games Friday.
ATO beat Sigma Nu 14-3 in a game called at the beginning of the fourth inning. Intramural rules provide that a game may be called if a team is leading by 10 runs during or after the fourth inning.
Ridder, the ATO pitcher, gave up only two hits in the three innings of the game.
innings of the game.
Delta Tau Delta collected 10 runs in the first three innings of their game and went on to defeat Tau Kappa Epsilon 14-7. Thornburgh was the winning pitcher.
Phi Delts piled up a four run lead to beat Beta Theta Pi 6-2. Johnson, the winning pitcher, held the losers to a total of five hits for the seven innings.
Other results:
Other Results.
Independent B—Foster 14, Whipits 9; Newman 27, KHK 17;
Nu Sigma Nu 15, Sigma Gamma Epsilon 5.
Handball—Carruth O'Leary 2, Phi Gamma Delta 0.
Tennis—Sigma Nu 1, No-Nothings 0 (forfeit); Beta Theta Pi 2, Sigma Chi 1; Battenfeld I 2, Beta Theta Pi II 0; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 2, Phi Gamma Delta 1; Varsity House 2, Sigma Phi Epsilon 1.
Tuesday's schedule:
*Independent A—Cats vs. Hilltoppers; Rochdale vs. Battenfeld; Oread vs. Pharmacy.*
Fraternity B—Beta Theta Pi I vs. Phi Kappa Psi; Acacia vs. Delta Upsilon II; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Kappa Sigma.
Volleyballers Prep For National Tournament
The University of Kansas Volleyball Club held its final practice match of the season Sunday, playing Washburn University to a stand-off, three games to three. Without the services of setman Dick Laptad, who has an infected toe, the KU team played well but was forced to come from behind to square the match.
The result was left as no decision because this was a warm up match for both teams in preparation for the national Championship to be held in Scranton, Pennsylvania, May 7-10. The Jayhawkers hope to improve on their third place finish of last year.
The KU club has a tournament record of 35 games won and 30 lost against all competition for the season. Commenting on this record, Coach Kevin Jones said, "We have played YMCA teams for the most part. Although we have barely broken even, when we get to the Nationals we should be one of the favorites in the collegiate tournament."
If Washburn, made up primarily of players from the Topeka YMCA, can maintain the quality of play shown Sunday, they are a threat to finish on top. An all Kansas finals
By UNITED PRESS American League
in the double elimination tournament is an outside possibility.
W L Pct. GB
New York 8 3 .727 ...
Kansas City 7 4 .636 1
Washington 7 4 600 1
Cleveland 7 6 528 2
Detroit 7 6 538 2
Baltimore 4 6 400 2
Boston 4 9 368 5
Chicago 3 8 273 5
Results Sunday
The 546,329 figure exceeds by 127,-060 the total of 419,269 drawn by the six other National League teams on 25 dates
Boston 7 Washington 3
Detroit at Cleveland 3 (st)
Detroit at Cleveland, 2nd game, postponed rain
Cleveland City at Chicago, postponed, rain
New York City at Baltimore, two games,
rising rain
Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results
A United Press survey revealed today that the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Francisco Giants drew a total of 546,329 fans on 18 playing dates. This compares with the total of 1,557,483 paid admissions for all 16 teams.
National League
W L Pct. GB
San Francisco 8 4 667
Milwaukee 8 4 636 $_{1/2}$
Chicago 7 4 636
Pittsburgh 5 5 500 2
Cincinnati 5 5 444 $_{1/2}$
Los Angeles 5 7 417 3
Philadelphia 4 6 400 3
St. Louis 4 6 273 $_{1/2}$
Results Sunday
Philadelphia 6. Milwaukee 2
Los Angeles 10. St. Louis 3
Chicago 5. San Francisco 4
Rochester 6. Cincinnati, two games,
postponed, rain
Drilling for 21/2 hours, Jack Mitchell and his staff ended the first week of spring football practice with a controlled scrimmage Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
Scrimmage Shows Progress
The 64 men were divided up into squads, running the first three teams against the fourth, fifth, and sixth units.
The Saturday scrimmage was the first in a series that Mitchell plans this spring. League rules allow the Jayhawkers 20 practices during the spring.
Dodgers, Giants Pull Most Fans
The new fans in Los Angeles and San Francisco accounted for 35 per cent of the total attendance at Major League baseball games during the first two weeks of the season.
Mitchell seemed satisfied with Saturday's practice.
"We haven't had time yet to get much done, but I think we're showing progress," he said.
Mitchell said Homer Floyd, star right halfback, is out with an injury and would probably see limited action this spring.
KU Beats Tigers In Golf, Tennis
Jayhawker golf and tennis teams matched the fair weekend weather with equally fine playing as they defeated the Missouri Tigers at Columbia on both the courts and links.
The netmen won all but two sets as they trounced the Tigers 7-0. KU winners were Lynn Sieverling, Bob Peterson, Gene Kane, Bob Mettlen, and Malcolm Applegate.
The Jayhawkers barely slipped by MU 8-7 on the golf course as medalist honors went to two Tigers who were only four over the 72 par course.
Bill Toalson and Jim Davies dropped their rounds to Missourians. Bob Wood, Don Wilson and Leon Roulier were winners.
15
ITS CLOSE—Gene Ellis, SMU (center) nips Oregon's Dave Edstrom (right) at the Drake
Relays. KU's Bill Tillman is at the left. (United Press Telephoto)
KU Top Winner At Drake; Big Eight Dominates Meet
Kansas University athletes raced to two relay titles and three individual championships at the Drake Relays this weekend. No other school entered in the huge track carnival could match this collection of first places.
Despite chilly weather and a slow track four records tumbled on Friday and Saturday running the 2-day total to eight.
Kansas was also represented in the college division as tough Pittsburgh State won the mile relay championship in 3:19.7 on a 49.3 anchor by Bob Wooten.
Ohio University pulled up seven yards behind the winning Gorillas with Emporia State third. Emporia State also won a second place in the sprint medley, finishing four yards behind Western Michigan.
KU's Al Oerter failed in his bid to take three straight double titles (Texas, Kansas and Drake Relays) when he was knocked to third in the shot put by Henry of Minnesota who hit 55 feet 9 inches and Dan
Erwin of Oklahoma with 54 feet 7 inches. Oerter hit 54 feet 3 inches.
Oerter did defeat California's Ring Babka to win the discus, though. He fired over 185 feet.
Keit Floerke won the hop-step-jump with a 48 foot 9 $ \frac{3}{4} $ inch effort, four inches better than the record. Floerke also placed second in the broad jump, behind teammate Ernie Shelby.
A new 440-yard hurdle record Friday and a fine 1.544 half Saturday in the 2-mile relay was the work of Clif Cushman.
In the 2-mile relay Cushman's fine half gave Kansas a 3-yard edge but Dale Lubs, running a 1:56.8, finished four yards behind on the second carry and that four yards still separated KU from leading Iowa State after Tom Skutka ran a 1:54.8.
Bob Tague, former Rosedale high star, eliminated the 4-yard deficit in the first quarter and beat off a late challenge by Houston's Don Loadman to win with ease.
The Relays, regarded as one of the nation's four best, was dominated by Big Eight teams which won six of eight university division relays.
Oklahoma State, sparked by Orlando Hazely, won the 440- yard relay in 41.4 and the 880 in 12:47.
Nebraska swept the shuttle hurdle relay after winning the sprint medley Friday.
Two of the record breaking performances Saturday came in the college division as Tennessee A&I ran the 880-yard relay in 1:25.6 and Howard Payne set the 2-mile mark of 7:39.3.
Jim Grelle of Oregon ran the mile in 4:07.9. Kansas State's quartermiler Delosse Dodds again was defeated by Texas' Eddie Southern as the Wildcats finished a good second in the mile relay.
Dodds touched off only two yards behind Southern on the final carry. He ran a 47.6 but still finished 15 yards behind the Olympian.
Jayhawkers Win Two, Move Up
The Kansas Jayhawkers won two out of three games from the league-leading Oklahoma State Cowboys last week-end to remain in contention for the conference baseball championship.
KU won Friday, 7-6, and split Saturday's double-header, winning the first game 1-0 behind the 2-hit pitching of Larry Miller and losing the nightcap, 4-2.
In Friday's game, a two out single in the ninth inning by Barry Donaldson, drove in the winning run and gave Ron Wiley his first victory of the season. Donaldson also homered in the second inning.
Wiley struck out eight and walked six in picking up the victory. He also collected three hits including a homer to drive in three runs and aid his own cause.
In Saturday's first game, KU picked up its lone run in the second inning as Wiley singled, Miller doubled and Donaldson drove in Wiley. These were also the Javahawks only two hits.
One run was all Miller needed however, as he spun a 2-hitter, struck out eight and walked only one in pitching one of the best games in his brilliant pitching career at Kansas.
This was his fifth victory of the season against no defeats, and his third victory in conference play.
Miller also started the second game, but was relieved in the fourth inning by Gary Russell with the score tied 2-2. In the sixth inning, the Cowboys tagged Russell for two more runs, and went on to win 4-2. This was Russell's second loss against no victories.
Oklahoma State now has a conference record of 5-3, while KU is a half game behind them with a 4-3 standing.
Other games this week-end saw Missouri win two out of three from Kansas State. MU won by scores of 24-2 and 5-0, and K-State won 6-3. Oklahoma defeated Iowa State at Norman by the scores of 11-8, 4-2 d. 9-1, Nebraska defeated Colo-
Oklahoma defeated Iowa State at Norman by the scores of 11-8, 4-2 and 9-1. Nebraska defeated Colorado 9-7 and 4-3, while Colorado won 4-3.
Friday's box score:
| KANSA$ | AB | H | RE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Marshall, cf | 5 | 0 | 0 |
| Robertson, ss | 5 | 2 | 0 |
| Trombold, 1b | 5 | 2 | 0 |
| Wiley, p | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| L. Miller, lf | 5 | 2 | 1 |
| Donaldson, c | 5 | 3 | 2 |
| Lauterjung, 3b | 4 | 2 | 1 |
| A. Miller, rf | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Muegler, 2b | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Totals 41 14 7
OKLAHOMA ST. AB H BB
Webster, 1b 5 1 0
Sloan, cf 5 0 0
Warner, 1b 4 3 1
Townsend, rf 4 0 2
Adkins, i 5 2 4
D. Soerel, gf 3 1 1
Holdermann, c 3 0 0
DeHart, 2b 2 0 0
Peterson, p 3 0 0
Bensinger, p 1 0 0
First Game
Saturday First Game
banks
Oklahoma State 3 1 0 0 0 2 0 0-6
Kansas 0 1 0 2 0 0 2-7
KANSAS AB H RB
Marshall, cf 3 0 0
Robertson, ss 3 0 0
Trombold, lb 3 0 0
Wiley, rf 2 1 0
L. Miller, p 2 1 0
Donaldson, c 2 0 1
Lauterjung, 3b 1 0 0
A. Miller, lf 2 0 0
Muegler, 2b 2 0 0
Totals 20 2 1
OKLAHOMA ST. AB H RBI
Webster, 3b 3 0 0
Shan, ef 2 0 0
aGreen 1 0 0
Warner, 1b 2 0 0
Adair, ss 3 1 0
Jech, c 3 0 0
Townsend, rf 2 0 0
D. Soerger, lf 2 1 0
DeHart, 2b 2 0 0
Horlen, p 2 0 0
Totals ... 22 2 0
a-flied out for Sloan in 7th
Oklahoma State 0 0 0 0 00 0-0
Kansas 0 1 0 00 x-1
Second Game
Second Game KANASS AB H RBI Mueley, 2b 3 1 0 Robertson, ss 4 2 0 Trombold, ib 4 1 1 Bray, cf 2 0 1 L. Miller, p-I 2 0 0 Donaldson, c 2 0 0 Lauterjung, 3b 3 0 0 Marshall, cf 3 1 0 Nichols, lf 3 1 0 Russell, p 1 0 0 A. Miller, rf 1 0 0
Totals 25 5 2
Totals 25 S 2 RBI OKLAHOMA ST. AB H RBI Webster, 3b 4 1 0 Sloan, cf 4 0 0 Warner, 1b-p 4 1 0 Adair, ss 3 2 0 Holderman, c 3 1 0 Townsend, rf-1b 1 0 0 D. Soergel, lf 2 0 1 Green, lf 0 0 0 DeHart, 2b 2 2 0 R. Soergel, p 0 0 0 Horlen, rf 3 0 0
Totals 26 7 4
Oklahoma State 0 0 0 2 0 2 0-4
Kansas 1 1 0 0 0 0 0-2
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 28,1958
Campus Club News
Clubs Have Busy Schedule
Language Clubs
El Ateneo, Le Cercle Francais, Der Deutsche Verein, and the Russian Club, language clubs of the University, will jointly sponsor a program, party, and dance at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
Each club is preparing a contribution of songs and skits for the program which will be presented in the respective language of the clubs. Following the program, the groups will move to the Kansas Room for refreshments and dancing to American music and the music of the countries and cultures they study.
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional music fraternity for men presented a concert on the history of sacred music Sunday at the Immanuel Lutheran Church.
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia
The program included the Gregorian Chant, sung from plain-song notation, and featured both choral and instrumental music of composers Palestrina, Bach, Mozart and Brahms. It concluded with a charole and fugue for brass choir composed by Claude Smith, Lawrence senior
* *
Marlan, Carlson, Wayne, Nebr
senior, was program director.
Alpha Kappa Psi
...
Larry G. McCully, Wichita junior, has been elected president of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity.
The other new officers are Michael Tad Hayes, Zenith, vice-president; Thomas Odell Rost, Topeka, treasurer; Douglas Arnold Scott, Ottawa, master of ritual. All are juniors.
Harry Joseph Reitz, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, secretary; Thomas M. Conner, Prairie Village freshman, Business School representative.
**
Marketing Club
Earl Jones, division director of sales development for Phillips Petroleum Co., will speak on "What to Look for and What to Expect in a Training Program" at a meeting of the Marketing Club at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
**
Following the program, there will be discussion of election of officers
Undergraduate Psychology Club
M. Erik Wright, clinical professor of psychology will speak to the Undergraduate Psychology Club on "Hypnosis: Facts and Fiction" at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
\* \* \*
Diana Gayle Kenoyer, Hugoton senior has been elected president of Phi Sigma Chi, national women's pep organization.
Phi Sigma Chi
Carolyn Merrill, Marion junior was elected corresponding secretary
NEW YORK—(UP)-U. S. fashions will fill a new role at the Brussels Fair—they'll on exhibit to help win the friendship of foreign visitors.
Fashions To Help Win Friends
The clothes were gathered under the direction of Vogue magazine at the request of the U. S. State Department. The collections will be changed each six weeks, until the fair closes Oct. 19. Vogue called the presentations a "slice of life" because the clothes are in all price ranges.
American styles from blue denims and bathing suits to ball gowns and furs will be on continuous display at the U.S. Pavilion.
Don't throw away the wax paper in which bread is wrapped. It will do a slick job of polishing a tea-kettle or nickel on a stove.
Finance & Insurance Club
Club
The Finance & Insurance Club will have a panel discussion at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union.
The panel of four local insurance agents, moderated by William Lyons of Provident Mutual Life, will discuss "The Professional Concepts of Life Underwriters."
2 Couples Tell Of Pinnings
Morawitz-Akers
Delta Gamma sorority has announced the pinning of Janice Morawitz, New London, Mo., to Ronald Akers, Dighton, both seniors. Mr. Akers is a member of Theta Chi fraternity.
Delta Gamma sorority has announced the pinning of Judith Buck, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore to Arthur Vogel, Leavenworth junior.
\* \* \*
Buck-Vogel
Miss Buck's attendants were Carolyn Bailey, Scranton senior; Marjorie Jones, Kansas City, Kan., Margot Black, Prairie Village, and Diane Joplin, Joplin, Mo., all sophomores.
Alpha Rho Gamma
About 15 members of Alpha Rho Gamma, professional jewelry and silversmithing fraternity, took a field trip Saturday to Wichita to visit the silversmithing studio of Rudolph Brom, a Wichita silversmith.
They also toured the Wichita Art Assn. Galleries, where several members of the group have work displayed in the Decorative Arts and Ceramics Exhibition.
Carlyle Smith, associate professor of design, accompanied the students.
1958
Weslev Foundation
***
The officers and committee co-chairman of Wesley Foundation held a retreat Sunday at the Wesley Student Center.
A lunch was served and plans for next year's program were discussed. Harold Eads, Topeka junior and president of the foundation, led the discussion.
The entry date for the annual Delta Phi Delta Art Show to be held May 2 and 3 has been extended to Wednesday. Entry blanks are available in the design office, Room 324 Strong Hall.
\* \* \*
Delta Phi Delta
MARTHA LAWTON
Engagement Announced
The engagement of Martha Lawton to William Walker has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Lawton, Bushong.
Miss Lawton is a senior in the School of Education and a resident of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Mr. Walker, the son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Walker, Parsons, is a senior in the School of Engineering.
The wedding date has not been announced.
Collars Can Be Asset
Here are a few rules of thum on the selection of collar styles:
Men who pay as much attentive to the style that women do mer a high rating, not only from tl fairer sex but also a prospective enployer. A man's general appearant can be a great asset and stylish co lars play an important part in givin that well-groomed look.
The most important things about a collar is the fit. The correct size is essential for comfort, appearance and even health.
The general collar categories are regular, wide-spread, long-poin short-point and low-slope. One ma select any of these basic types in choice of regular or button-dow collars.
The regular collar is becoming { almost all men and is the mov versatile of the styles. The wide spread collar is flattering to lon lean faces and usually has stay to keep the point neat.
The button-down collar is a fav orite of young men and is being worn more frequently by older me for less dressy occasions. Tall, this men look best in a short-poin medium spread, button-down colla Both styles have a box pleat i front and back of the shirt and button in the back of the collar.
Men with long necks can camot flage the giraffe-look with a shop point, higher band collar. A ma with a thick neck requires a lov band collar for comfort.
CHESTERFIELD
SUMMER JOB ON THE RANCH
Driving cattle!
Desert sun ablaze!
Pounding leather,
Rounding up the strays!
On the range,
You'll find a man
Stops to take big pleasure
When and where he can...
CHESTERFIELD
Live-action shot—
Saddle Mountains, Wash.
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Nothing satisfies like the BIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
LINGETT & MAYER TOBACCO CO.
5 wo
REGULAR
EQUI Locat May mishe may! ELEC and Phil
KING
an
Monday, April 28. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
attentio
dober mer
from ther
active ente
pearanoar
lylish co
in givin
of thum styles:
gbs about correct size appearance
gories are long-poin
One ma
types in
eton-dow
**words or less:** one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 2c for billing. 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.
coming to the moe the wide to lon has stay
is a fay
is bein
older mel Tall,
nort-point-
wnolla colla
pleat i
irt and
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an camov
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FOR SALE
HI-FI CONSOLE, beautiful cherrywood.
Motorola masterpiece floor model. Price cut to $150, easy terms. B. F. Goodridh Store, 929 Mass. 4-30
KING
EQUITY in three unit income property.
Located between KU and downtown.
May contain firearms. Must be furnished.
Must be reliable married couple.
may subtay. VI 3-7628 or VI 3-4445. 4-28
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for receptions and parties. For Sale: Mother's Day gifts, crystal and china. House: gift China, 906 New Hampshire, VI: 3-1980. 5-6
NOTICE—effective June 1, student and faculty rates on Live magazine will be raised. Extend your present subscription now! New subscribers allow 3-4 weeks. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic box support Ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone III 3t-0350
ELECTRIC STOVE, four burners, oven and broiler. $90, no more, no less. Call Phil Emery, VI 3-7867, after five p.m.
4-28
FOR RENT
DESIRABLE three room unfurnished ground floor apartment. Convenient to refrigerator, al dripping coffee, and parking space included. VI 2-0179 or VI 3-1217
MG A, 1957, red, wire wheels radio,
Jerry Stry, VI 2-029, 133 Vermont.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES. All new, organized by weeks, indexed, over 50 pages, $3.95 each, house mouse traps, call VI 3-7553, vi 2-0796, VI 2-0995 for free delivery.
SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
APARTMENT, available for sublet June 1 thru Aug. 31. Two bedrooms and completely furnished. Sunsyside, rent $750 including all utilities. Phone VI vt 3-1505.
1955 33 foot housetrailer. Two bedrooms, bath, all accessories included. Perimeter heating, excellent condition. Call VI 3-
0453. 5-2
FOR SALE or lease. Crystal Cafe. 609
Vermont St. Call VI 3-4767, after six p.m.
21 INCH Hallicrafter TV set, and an RCA Victor 45 rpm record changer. Inquire VI 3-6455. 5-1
BUSINESS SERVICES
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
9411% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263. tf
FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson, Mgr. tf
We Stock The COMPLETE MODERN LIBRARY
296 Titles at $1.65 ea.
80 Giants at $2.95 ea.
Come in and see us soon
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass—Ph. VI 3-1044
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 for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Malne. Phone VI 3-7654. 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. Supplies include:
hamsters, hamsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's
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Phone VI 3-2921. tf
LEARN TO DANCE, all the latest dances,
private lessons. Marion Rice Dance
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TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable at regular rates. Will type terms, term papers, theses, on electric typewriter if Phone Mrs. Donna Virt, VI if 8600.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates, with pick up and deliver. Mrs Tom Brady. tt 3-3428
FORMER SECRETARY, experienced in typing theses, term papers, etc. Accurate and prompt. Phone Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. 4-30
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Prompt and sc-
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971. Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service on theses, term papers, reports, etc. Phone Mrs. Phyllis Holden, VI 3-7629.
tf
LEAVE FILM TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30
Back Tomorrow At 3
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass.-VI 3-9471
1015 Mass — VI 2-9471
USED CAR BUYS
1951 Chevrolet
Fleetline two door, looks and runs like new. $295
Sanders Motor Co.
622 Mass. VI 3-6697
FRATERNITY RING, gold with black stone and shield in center. Lost Wednesday evening in Union restroom. Call 3-7810, reward. Tad Hoff. 4-29
1955 Pontiac Catalina
Hardtop with V8, hydramatic, radio,
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Cy's Used Cars
19th & Mass. VI 3-9293
1953 Plvmouth
Spotless, good tires. 6 cyl. with over-
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625 Mass. VI 3-3055
Jim Clark
1953 MG TD MK II
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TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf
SERVICE DIRECTORY
TYSTIP, experienced and fast. Reason-
Barker Ave, Phone VI 3-2001; 19
TYPIST. Experienced in all fields including scientific papers. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 2-0628 5-21
BEAUTY SHOPS
737 N. 2nd VI 3-8367
Driscoll Beauty Shop
908 Mass. VI 3-4070
British Motors
RADIO REPAIRS
LAWNS MOWED. one time or seasonal.
New equipment, satisfaction guaranteed.
Reasonable prices. Also yard work. Phone
VI 3-5837. 5-2
High Fidelity High Fidelity
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VI 3-1075
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VI 3-7738
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WATCH REPAIRS
Audio House HIGH FIDELITY
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Call VI 3-0177. Mrs. Jack Larson. tf
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS
Anderson-Shaw Auto Service
612 N. 2nd VI 3-8943
Parsons Jewelry
725 Mass. VI 3-4731
Wolfson's Credit Jewelry
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
Jim Clark Motors 623 Mass VI 3-3055
WOULD LIKE to get some lawns to
mow in the afternoon. Call VI 3-4893
PRINCE CIGARETTE LIGHTER. south
PRINCE CIGARETTE Hall VI 3-4-
ask for the Wizard.
WANTED
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Washing or ironing or both. $54.
Conn.
CASH LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
call Paul R. Gantz at BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.
833% Mass—Ph. VI 3-8074
for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students call Paul R. Gantz at
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SUMMER SPECIAL!
Dorothy Gray
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6 1/2 oz. Bottle-$1
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We will MOTHPROOF FREE all woolen garments sent to us in regular dry cleaning service and will furnish bag for home storage. 0r
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---
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 28. 1958
Vox Contests One Council Position
The election for one All Student Council living district has been contested, but the Elections Committee's decision on the case won't make a bit of difference in the line-up of parties in the ASC.
Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox Populi, told the committee it had made a mechanical error in counting the votes for representatives from women's dormitories. The district elected three representatives, Jan Camron, Topeka sophomore, and Mary Taylor, Kansas City, Kan. junior, from the Allied Greek-Independent party, and Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, from Vox.
Miss Plumb drew the highest number of votes, followed by Misses Cameron and Taylor, and Miriam Schwartzkopf. Larned freshman, who was defeated.
In ASC balloting, the voters select as many choices as they wish, numbering the candidates in the order of preference. The number of persons elected to the Council depends on the number of votes cast in the district.
Say Committee Erred
Austin said the committee ered in its manner of redistributing the votes. Since enough votes were cast to elect three representatives, one vote more than a third of the total was sufficient to elect. Austin said the proper procedure would have been to redistribute Miss Plumb's votes in excess of the number required to elect her. The committee instead eliminated Miss Schwartzkoef with the candidate with
the least number of votes, and redistributed her votes according to the second-place votes.
Austin's contention is that had Miss Plumb's excess votes been redistributed, Miss-Schwartzkopf might have won enough of the second-place ballots to win a Council seat.
Makes No Difference
The committee was scheduled to meet at 4 p.m. today to decide whether a recount is required.
Austin pointed out Sunday, however, that a recount would make no difference. Miss Plumb was elected as student body vice-president on a write-in campaign, and her position on the ASC will be filled by a vote of the Council at its first meeting. With a 16-7 Vox majority, Miss Schwartzkopf would have no trouble being elected to the post.
If, on the other hand, there is a recount and Miss Schwartzkopf defeats one of the other candidates, Austin said he would ask Vox Council members to elect the defeated AGI candidate to the position.
Austin explained this by saying only two women's dormitories are in the Vox party. If Miss Plumb and Miss Schwartzkopf are both in office, both houses would be represented, and Austin's declared policy is that each of the Vox houses shall have no more than one ASC representative. This would leave a candidate from an AGI house as the only alternative.
Honor Group To Initiate
Twenty-five KU students and two assistant professors were to be initiated into Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science honor society, this afternoon. Initiatives are: James E. Titus and Robert Tomasek, assistant professors of political science; Thomas L. W. Johnson, assistant instructor of political science and graduate student.
Ivor Shelley, Sholing Southampton, England; Ronald D. Showalter, Manhattan; James E. Springfield, Ottawa; Ruth Sturtevant, Mount Airy, N.C.; Charles Sullivant, Morehouse, Mo.; Hans Binder, Linz, Austria; Chis E. Cherches, Columbia, Mo.; William T. Cozort, Lawrence; Duane F. Guy, Hays; Hendrix A. Hearn, Columbia, Mo; Theodore L. Heim, Lansing; Roger D. Hoffmaster, Topeka; Raja Mohammed Naib, PO Jagta District Jhelum, Pakistan; Ruth Y. Nettleton, York, Nebraska All are graduate students.
Ruth Ann Anderson, Hutchinson;
James E. Circle, Osakaloa; Jerry
Gill Elliott, Hutchinson; Anne Miller,
Dodge City; Sandra S. Simpson.
Lawrence; Bruce E. Smith, Stockton; Saundra Sturtevant, Riverdale N. Y. All are seniors.
Don Ramsey Bowen, Salina; Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth; Richard Donald Lewis, Kansas City, Kan. All the juniors.
The Gamma chapter of the society was organized at KU in 1923. Eligibility for membership is based on scholastic achievement and demonstrated interest in the field.
To Honor New SUA Officers Wednesday
New officers and board members of Student Union Activities will be honored at a recognition dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Kansas Room.
About 100 students and faculty members who have been active it SUA programing and planning this year will be honored along wifl present officers and board members
Hawaii has two active volcanoes, Mauna Loa and Kīlauea.
Articles Stolen From Stadium
Campus police are investigating the theft of watches, billfolds, money and a ring, taken from the baseball dressing room under the west wing of Memorial Stadium sometime Saturday afternoon. Total value of the articles stolen was estimated at $837, according to campus police reports.
The valuables belonged to members of the KU baseball team. The thief gained access to the articles by breaking a window to enter one room and a padlock to enter another room.
Reports said the players changed clothes in the room about noon Saturday, then returned to the room about 1 or 1:30 p.m. Reports said the valuables were thought to have been taken sometime after that and probably before 2 p.m. The theft was reported to campus police at 4:30 p.m.
Articles stolen included a $125 waten from Larry McCully, Wichita junior, a $130 watch from Barry Donaldson, Springfield, Mo., senior, and a $125 watch, $20 in cash and keys to a new Chevrolet from Art Miller, Aitchison junior.
Funeral Tuesday For KU Student
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Kansas City for Henry Kemp Free, 26, an aeronautical engineering senior from Shawnee, who died Saturday in the Missouri Methodist Hospital in St. Joseph, Mo., from injuries suffered in a two-car collision Friday near St. Joseph.
The services will be at the Newcomer Chapel and burial will be in Mount Moriah cemetery.
Free suffered a broken neck and cuts and bruises in the wreck in which a passenger in his car, Ralph William Blessman, 43. Kansas City, Kan., died Friday night.
The accident occurred on U.S. Highway 71 when the two were returning to KU from a flight with the Missouri Air National Guard. Free was a jet pilot in the National Guard.
The accident occurred when a car driven by Steven J. Vache, 34, Kansas City, Mo., attempted to pass a line of cars and skidded out of control into the opposite lane. Free's English sports car collided with the Vache car.
Free had transferred to KU from New Mexico A & M where he had received a degree in business administration.
Thev Were Heavy Bettors
FUCHU, Japan —(UP)— Racing fans reacted violently at what they considered a false start yesterday when the favored horse got off 100 vards belond the others.
The fans surged onto Fuchu track and staged a sitdown strike, preventing further racing. It took 200 policemen to get them off.
END-THE-RECESSION SALE
EATEN INSIDE Monday thru Thursday
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY
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 Do not bring Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
VI 3-9111
office. (Daily Kansan photo)
THE RACE
TODAY
German Ph.D reading examination,
Saturday 9-11 a.m., 314 Fraser. Books
must be turned in to 306 Fraser by
Thursday noon.
Pre Med Tech Club. noon. Nurses
Home. Elections of officers. Everyone be
ready.
Jayhawk Aerial Club. 7:30 p.m. 119
Strong. All interested persons welcome.
106 N. Park
PROPS FROM 1903—Actor Louis C. Lyda, Lawrence senior, beckons to John P. Schick, Kansas City, Kan. senior (in knickers), from the 1903 car which will be seen in the University Theatre's presentation of George B. Shaw's "Man and Superman." The play starts at 8 p.m. Wednesday and runs through May 3 in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. ID cards may be exchanged for reserved seats at the Kansas Union ticket office (Daily Kansan photo)
SUA Forum, 1 p.m. Music Room.
Room 629, 4 p.m. Dance Instructor,
instructor of drawing and painting.
1/3 off on Pizzas
Nursing Club banquet, 6 p.m., English Room, Kansas Union. Pay $1.75 reservation to Miss Patterson. All nursing students invited.
INVEST IN AMERICA FOR MORE AND BETTER JOBS
Episicopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
American Society of Civil Engineers.
officers in the installation of
offices for fall 1958. Refreshment
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Daily Hansan
A. RAVENA
$20,000 WORTH—Gazing at a portrait "A Florentine Lady as the Magdalene" by Agnolo Aelori, is Gaylord Tefft, Lawrence junior. The picture is hanging in the Art Museum and is valued at approximately $20,000. (Daily Kansan photo)
They Smile A Lot As Cheers Begin
Only 10 of the 57 students enrolled in cheerleaders' school will make next year's squad, but all of them will know the Rock Chalk vell and just when to "hit it."
After a brief warm-up, the 42 women and 15 men were divided into six groups during the first session Monday night in Robinson Gymnasium. Dick Jones, McPherson junior and head cheerleader, gave general instructions before the group began to work with words and motions to the Jayhawk Junior yell. Jones is conducting the school with help from six other cheerleaders.
Sessions will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. today and Thursday. Tryouts will be at 6:30 p.m. Monday.
Jones told the prospective cheerleaders to "smile, make distinct and clear motions, smile, be full of vigor and pep—and smile." He said each motion represents a word which the spectators are supposed to say. He added that the students themselves might have a few words to say tomorrow when they "find muscles they didn't know they had."
The first session 'uniforms' consisted of Bermuda shorts, slacks, jeans, T-shirts and tennis shoes. Women were asked to wear full
skirts and blouses tonight so they could "get the fell' of cheering in uniforms."
Other vells and some songs will be practiced before tryouts. Jones said the only qualification for candidates other than agility, pep and smiles is a "C" grade average.
On the final day of school, five men and five women will be chosen by a student-faculty committee. Members of the present squad will compete in the tryouts if they wish to serve again next year. The Ku Ku's and Jay Janes, men's and women's pep clubs, will each choose one cheerleader. The newly appointed cheerleaders will choose a leader.
Committee members include: the athletic director, athletic coaches, the deans of men, women and students, the presidents of pep clubs and the All Student Council traditions committee.
Cheerleader instructors are: Jones, Howard Elfeldt, Kansas City, Mo.; William Fricke, Jefferson City, Mo.; and Barbara Taylor, Prairie Village, all juniors, and Sharon Edgar, Mission, Patience Allen, Kansas City, Mo.; and Glenn Smiley, Kansas City, Kan. all sophomores.
Tuesday, April 29, 1958
Freshman Women To Be On Own Before Finals
Freshman women will be on their own this semester when it's time to study for final examinations, but many of them will "recall to active duty" the study tips and moral support they got from Mortar Board members before their first KU final week.
When the honorary scholastic society talked to freshman women and their counselors during January their first job was to dispel and debunk the rumors and legends concerning examinations.
Instead of black coffee and nodose pills, the honor women prescribed careful planning of time, a certain place to study each subject and a survey of the course to try to determine if the test would be subjective or objective.
Shirley Stout, Lombard, III. senior and Mortar Board president, said the talks wouldn't be "necessary or particularly helpful" now because most freshmen have been through final week and have emerged "older and wiser."
No evaluation of benefit from the talks was made, but dormitory counselors reported that freshmen thought it was "well worth their time."
The honor society, also a leadership and service organization, first met with freshman women last fall. At that time they previewed campus life. The series of talks were devoted to social life, cultural events, scholarship and extra-curricular activities.
Before final week the counselors suggested that Mortar Board members come again—to talk about scholarship only. The women agreed that they could use some expert advice.
The society will probably introduce freshmen to final week again in the fall of 1958, but members said the new chapter will make its own plans. They said the counselors' reports will probably be used as a basis for outlining the new service program.
"The talks were spontaneous and consisted mostly of questions and answers—or suggestions," she said.
55th Year, No.135
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Dr. Maurice Ashley, British historian and journalist, will deliver a Humanities lecture on "The Greatness of Cromwell" at 8 tonight in Fraser Theater.
British Historian To Deliver Humanities Talk
Dr. Ashley is the author of five books about the 17th century English conservative dictator, and is chairman of the Cromwell Assn.
Dr. Ashley is on the staff of the British Broadcasting Corp., and is deputy editor of its publication, The Listener. He is also editor of Britain Today, and is an editorial staff member of The London Times.
MARTIN A. HAWKINS
DR. MAURICE ASHLEY
His work on "The Greatness of Oliver Cromwell" was published this year, and he has a forthcoming volume on "Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan Revolution."
He received his Ph.D. at Oxford University and he has won the Stanhope Essay Prize, the Gladstone Memorial Prize, the Gibbs university scholarship in modern history, and the Bryce research studentship. He was an official British historian of civilian affairs in World War II.
During his visit to the campus he will speak to classes in history, English, home economics, journalism and radio-TV.
An informal reception honoring Dr. Ashley will be given by the Faculty Club at 9:15 tonight.
Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Scattered showers and thunderstorms southwest Wednesday. Near freezing temperatures or local frost most of state tonight. Warmer Wednesday. Low tonight 30s. High Wednesday 60s.
For example, there's the problem the architecture students had in travelling the shortest route from Lindley Annex to the nearest coffee shop.
Weather
Architectural skill and ingenuity can be put to use in many ways.
Architects Pave Way To Coffee
The way led from the Annex, across a parking lot, and up a steep hill to Jayhawk Blyd. This hill, because of recent rains, became slippery under the feet of the hungry, thirsty architects.
Rather than give in to the elements, the students, using stones left over from the architecture display at the Engineering Exposition, constructed a flight of steps so they may now travel up the hill in safety and comfort.
GradsToHave Busy Week
Many Events Planned For Commencement Time
Graduation will include much more than the traditional walk down the hill for seniors during Commencement weekend May 31-June 2.
A baccalaureate address at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Stadium will be the first event for graduating seniors. The Rev. Edward Wells, bishop of the Episcopal Church for western Missouri, will give the address.
A class breakfast will be held at 8 Monday morning in the Kansas Union. Seniors will wind up the weekend at 7 Monday night when they start down the hill for Commencement exercises in the stadium.
Class reunions will be held for the classes of '08, 18, '33, and '48. Bus tours of the campus will be made all three days. On May 31 there will be a welcoming dinner in the Union.
June 1 will be the annual Alumni Assn, meeting and the alumni commencement supper, and reunion luncheons for the four classes.
On June 2, ROTC commissioning ceremonies will be held at 11 a.m. at the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, and a reception for seniors, parents, and alumni will be held in the Union lounge.
And those three groups—seniors, parents, and alumni—will have most of the campus to themselves, as the rest of the student body scatters to the winds until September.
Coming! $100,000 In Aids And Awards
About 325 scholarships, worth more than $100,000, will be awarded at KU within the next few weeks.
Scholarships still to be announced this year include about 200 for men and women's scholarship halls, about 50 from the School of Engineering, and 75 to 100 to be selected by the general scholarship committee. Summerfield and Watkins scholars are among those already selected.
Spencer E. Martin, director of Aids and Awards, said Monday that most of the scholarships would be announced in the next three weeks.
Mr. Martin said about 900 undergraduate students were attending KU on scholarships at the present time. The Aids and Awards office has estimated the total value of KU's 1957-58 scholarships at about $350-$00, Mr. Martin said. About $135,000 of that total goes to students in scholarship halls, Mr. Martin said.
Foreign Student Fete Slated For Saturday
The annual Foreign Student Festival will be held from 1:30 to 10 p.m. Saturday in the Union Ballroom.
Those nations or groups of nations which will display exhibits from 1:30 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 10 p.m. are:
Argentina and Brazil; Austria, Hungary, and Switzerland; Belgium, France, and Netherlands; China; Colombia and Venezuela; Cuba and Mexico.
Denmark, Norway, and Sweden;
Hawaii, the United States; Greece;
Iraq, Jordan, and Lebanon; Iran;
Italy; Japan and Ryukyu Islands;
Philippines; Quebec, Canada; Korea,
Spain; Turkey and Germany.
George B. Smith, dean of the University, will open the evening program. Takis Panayotopoulos, Athens, Greece graduate student, will be the master of ceremonies.
The following nations or groups of nations are giving skits at the evening program which will start at 7:45: Austria, Hungary, and Switzerland; Canada and England; China; Denmark, Norway, and Sweden; Ghana; Iran; Japan and Ryukyu Islands; Latin America; Korea and Germany.
The foreign students will be wearing national costumes or dresses during the festival.
KU Coed Wins 2nd In Contest
Ruby Sterlin, Scott City junior, finished second in the Miss Kansas News Photographer Assn. queen contest held last week in Wichita. She was one of 10 finalists picked from 23 entries.
Carolyn McGirr of Wichita, who was a runner-up in the Miss Universe contest and previously Miss Nebraska, won first place in the contest.
Kav Winegarner, co-queen of the 1958 Kansas Relays, was also one the finalists. She did not place in the final judging.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 29, 1958
Keep Those Doors Open
Universities must keep an open mind and an open door to experimentation in new disciplines and skills. They must constantly expand the educated class.The stability and progress of society demand more and more training at middle as well as at advanced levels.Universities have a responsibility toward selecting men and women who ultimately will enter into the field of higher learning.
The only purpose of the university is NOT the education of Ph. D.'s and therefore only future university professors. Different kinds of training for what we are beginning to call a mass democracy are required; as well as all kinds of terminal degrees, and programs and courses that do not need degrees at all.
If universities are going to be restrictive and selective-as too many privately-supported institutions have announced they plan to be, constantly raising the requirements for admission and refusing to make adequate plans to expand with our suddenly growing population—they will shut their doors to the great majority of young people and adults who are not only educable but whose trained services we so desperately need.
A university must always keep its doors open to all qualified students at all times. The survival of learning and of our society depends upon
the acceptance of this obligation. Freedom of knowledge means freedom for scholars and scientists; but it also means free access to them for every legitimate community need and by every qualified student regardless of age, previous conditions of education, and whether or not he has a degree intention. Whether a student's purpose is formal training (on a full or part-time basis, during the day or during the night, in regular term or during the summer) or the advancement of his self-interest and tastes, or for occupational improvement, the university should receive him.
In order to meet all the complex needs of our world and make possible the education of men and women with all sorts of adult responsibilities, universities should be available day and night and 365 days in the year, at the same time that they continue to explore through every form of communication, including television and correspondence courses—the means for the extension of educational services.
Our world requires more educated persons at all sorts of levels; and knowledge, as well as our society, will remain free as we continue to encourage the development of an increasing number of educated men and women. This is where the true defense of learning really is to be found. This is the nature of an open university.
—The Nation
... Letters ...
Protest
May I request the courtesy of your columns to voice a strong protest against a letter published in Friday's (April 25) Daily Kansan. I was surprised to read that some one would refer to Kashmir as a "so-called Kashmir Question." To term an item of international importance, such as Kashmir, "a so-called question" shows the lack of knowledge expected from a person of average intelligence.
As you are aware, Kashmir's problem is an outstanding dispute between Pakistan and India. More than 10 years have passed since India has aggreased in Kashmir. But she still holds the unfortunate Kashmirians in subjugation, by force and in defiance of the world public opinion, which has so cleverly expressed itself in favor of free plebisite in Kashmir.
Why is Kashmir a "so-called question?" Is it because India has aggressed and occupied it? Is it because the people of that unfortunate land continue to suffer under the worst type of colonialism ever known to the history of civilized nations? Is it because India has backed out of her international commitments and has been defying the U.N Security Council's resolution on Kashmir? Is it because the downtrodden Kashmirians have been refused, by India, their birthright—the right of self determination? Is it because the efforts of freedom loving nations, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, to bring about a peaceful solution of this explosive problem have been fruitless, due to the Indian intransigence? Or is it because an Indian graduate student likes to think that way?
I need not add that Kashmir—that powder keg of Asia—is the most dangerous problem undermining the unity of the free world. The world is interested to know how long the Indians can go on defying the United Nations and world public opinion and keep Kashmir under their iron heel. Undoubtedly they can have no consolation in the pages of history.
R. Malik Karachi, Pakistan graduate student
The streets in Lawrence running north and south are named after the states in the United States and the order in which they joined the Union.
A student body numbering 25,000 on its main campus was envisaged as the Pennsylvania State University sought to outline the measures by which it hoped in the decade ahead to meet the educational challenge of the space age in industrial Pennsylvania.
Looking Ahead
Implicit in the long range plan, which will be subject to continuous study and revision, is conversion of the annual schedule from a two-semester plus summer sessions, to a system which will more effectively use the total resources of the University over a 12-month period, and adjustment of daily and weekly class schedules to insure optimum use of faculty and staff, dormitories, classrooms and laboratories.
Green Hall Blossoms In Spring Colors
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
Green Hall has blossomed out for spring with interiors of pastels and mahogany. Faculty offices in the building have had new paint-jobs and other decorating. The entire basement has had a face-lift.
BEER
BREW K 34
"I UNDERSTAND TH' SIGNA FAI NOTHINGS ARE A BUNCH OF 'PARTY' BOYS."
The pride of the lawyers is the new court room in the basement. Silver-colored light bulbs and fixtures illuminate the bench, witness and jury boxes and the partitions between this area and the seating section all paneled in Philippine mahogany.
Currier and Ives prints, which once sold for six cents each, are now bringing as much as one thousands dollars from art collectors.
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Extension 251, news room
Extension 376, business office
Telephone VIking 3-2700
February 25, 2014
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 Saturday. University. Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence. Kan. post office univer act of March 3, 1879
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Dlek Brown Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth
Noyes Malcolm Applegate, Assistant
Manager Martha Crosser, Jack Harrison,
Editor; Maria Crosser, Jack Harrison,
Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden,
Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick,
Assistant Telegraph Editor; George
Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Dale
Mancuso, Cable Sports
Editors; Pat Swanson, Society Editor;
Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Fed Winkler Business Manager John Clarke, Advertising Manager; Carol Ann Huston National Advertisertial Manager Hill Irvine, Classified Advertising Manager Todd Gehrth, Circulation Manager; Norman Beck, Promotion Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Hakey Editorial Editor
Hall Hall, Marlah Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Editor
Quotes From The News
NEW YORK—Mrs. Robert B. Meyner, wife of New Jersey's governor, explaining quickly to her husband why she gave such a big kiss to the pilot of the airliner taking the Meyners to Europe:
"He is an old beau of mine."
sadors of "peaceful" Communist countries at a Polish embassy reception:
MOSCOW—Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschev, speaking to ambassa-
"Now I know there are other ambassadors here who would love to spit on Communism. But don't let's see who can spit further, like camels in a cage."
Find It In The Kansan Classifieds
C
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
SWEENEY IN THE TREES
Spring is here—the season of tree-sitting contests. This I applaud. Tree-sitting is healthful and jolly and as American as apple pie. Also it keeps you off the streets.
Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards. Take, for example, the dread and chilling case of Manuel Sigfafoos and Ed Sweeney, both sophomores at the Nashville College of Folk Music and Woodworking, and both madly in love with a beautiful alto named Ursula Thing, who won their hearts singing that fine old folk song, I Strangled My True Love with Her Own Yellow Braids, and I'll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More.
Both Manuel and Ed pressed Ursula to go steady, but she could not choose between them, and finally it was decided that the boys would have a tree-sitting contest, and Ursula would belong to the victor. So Manuel and Ed clambered up adjoining aspers, taking with them the following necessaries: food, clothing, bedding, reading matter, and—most essential of all—plenty of Marlboro Cigarettes.
We who live on the ground know how much you get to like with a Marlboro. Think how much more important they must be to the lonely tree-dweller—how much more welcome their fine, mild tobacco; how much more gratifying their free-drawing filters; how much more comforting their sturdy, crushproof flip-top box. Climb a tree and see for yourselves.
A TREE SITTING CONTEST CRAWFORD
Well supplied with Marlboros, our heroes began their treesitting contest—Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning. The shocking fact is that crafty Ed, all unbeknownst to Manuel, was one of three identical triplets. Each night while Manuel dozed on his bough, one of Ed's brothers—Fred or Jed—would sneak up the tree and replace him. "How can I lose?" said Ed with a fiendish giggle to his brother Fred or Jed.
But Ed had a big surprise coming. For Manuel, though he did not know it himself, was a druid! He had been abandoned as an infant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter named Cornelius Whitney Sigafoos III, who had raised the child as his own. So when Manuel got into the tree, he found much to his surprise that he had never in all his life felt so at home and happy. He had absolutely no intention of ever leaving.
After seven or eight years Ed and his brothers wearied of the contest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel's tree and cried, "I am yours! Come down and pin me."
But Manuel declined. Instead he asked Ursula to join him in the tree. This she could not do, being subject to mopery (a morbid allergy to woodpeckers), so she ended up with Ed after all.
Only she made a mistake—a very natural mistake. It was Jed, not Ed, with whom she ended up.
Ed, heartbroken at being tricked by his own brother, took up metallurgy to forget.
Crime does not pay.
---
© 1958 Max Shulman
This column is brought to you by the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes who suggest that if you are ever up a tree when trying to find a gift, give Marlboros. You can't miss!
Tuesday, April 29. 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 29, 1958
'58 ART P.
Color Prints at Big Savings and now
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Tuesday. April 29, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 29, 1958
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Frey Leads DU To 15-3 IM Victory
DU started its scoring with four runs in the first inning and added three more in the second. Warren Henson hit a home run in the fifth inning as the team added five more runs.
Sigma Chi scored one run in the second inning and added two more in the fourth. Larry Markel was the losing pitcher.
Monday was a happy day for the AEPi's—they won their first intramural softball game since being established on campus. They defeated the Betas 12-2. Mike Neufeld hit the first pitch of the ball game for a home run.
Bob Kass, AEPi pitcher hurled a 3-hitter against the Betas.
Other results:
Fraternity B—PiKa 27, Sigma Nu V 7; DU I 14, Phi Kappa Sigma 2; AEPI 12, Beta II 2.
Wednesday's Schedule
Independent A—Carruth vs. Pearson, F. 10; Jolliffe vs. Jim Beam, F. 1; Fossils vs. Hicks, F. 2.
**Fraternity B**—Delts vs. Phi Delt, F. 3; Sigma Pi vs. Delta Sigma Phi. F. 4; SAE vs. Sigma Chi. F. 5.
N.L. Could Transfer Team Back To N.Y. Immediately
CHICAGO — (UP)—The National League could transfer a franchise back to New York immediately upon approval by baseball commissioner Ford Frick under a rules change recommended for action at the next major league joint meeting.
The recommendation was made by the major league's territorial rules committee.
It proposed changing the rule to provide that either major league may include any city of the other major league "after approval of the league desiring to change its circuit and the commissioner."
It also would stipulate that "such approval by the commissioner shall be withheld until after hearings have been held and necessary investigations conducted."
The current rule on territorial rights gives any major league club the power to veto the entrance of any other team into its city.
"The proposal takes away the veto power of the other league." Charles Segar, assistant to Frick, said.
Frick today was to meet with other baseball officials to prepare the language for the 4-year draft
rule approved at the last major minor; league meeting. Segar said the meeting was routine and there would be no change in policy discussed.
KU Baseball Team Busy
Four games are on the schedule for the Jayhawker baseball team this week.
This afternoon Kansas has a single non-conference game with Wichita on the home field.
The schedule of one 9-inning game Friday and a 7-inning doubleheader Saturday will find the Kansas baseball squad at Colorado. According to Fleyd Temple, KU baseball coach, southpaw Larry Miller (5-0) will pitch Friday.
In the doubleheader Ron Wiley and Gary Russell (1-2) will be on the mound for the Jayhawkers.
In a productive year about two-thirds of a bushel of apples is grown for every man, woman and child in the United States.
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DOWNTOWN
ON THE HILL
San Francisco House-Warming Due For Quick Stop Soon
The world champion Milwaukee Braves, knowing all too well how these things can turn out, are bent on putting a quick stop to that surprise party, house-warming or whatever else you want to call it out there in San Francisco.
By UNITED PRESS
Up to now, the Giants have been having a ball at their new home in San Francisco. Almost everyone picked them sixth or seventh, but here they are leading the National League, a half-game ahead of second-place Milwaukee.
It may be a new sensation for the Giants but it's an old familiar one to the Braves.
Only five years ago, after they had shifted their franchise from Boston to Milwaukee, the Braves got off to a flying start, too, winning 15 of their first 20 games.
Like the Giants, no one took them seriously at first. After all, they had finished seventh the year before—a notch lower than the Giants wound up last season—but the Braves confounded the experts by developing into a serious pennant threat and finally finishing second.
"Don't forget, too, that during one stretch last year the Giants played the best ball of anyone in the league," said Milwaukee Manager
Fred Haney. "Maybe others are brushing them off as a flash-in-the-pan, but I'm not."
Haney is leading with his left-handed ace, Warren Spahn, against the Cubs at Chicago today. Spahn will be shooting for his third straight victory while the Cubs, almost as much as a surprise as the Giants, will be aiming to take over sole possession of second place, which they now share with Milwaukee.
The Giants, meanwhile, will be showing the Phillies San Francisco for the first time. They're sending Ray Monzant, fresh off a 4-hit 2-0 conquest over the Cubs, against Philadelphia's top southpaw, Curt Simmons. The Phillies' left-hander has failed to go the distance in two previous efforts and still is after his first victory.
Fred Hutchinson's Cardinals, off to a last-place 3-8 start, have lost four of their last five starts and are hoping that Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell can start them on the way up against Cincinnati in a night
Tim Tam Warms Up For Kentucky Derby
LOUISVILLE, Ky. —(UP)—Calumet Farm's Tim Tam, the Kentucky Derby favorite, warms up today for Saturday's classic in the $15,000 added Derby Trial, with Ismael Valenzuela in the saddle as a replacement for injured Bill Hartack.
Dozens of top jockeys were anxious to ride Tim Tam in the first of the triple crown classics after Hartack broke a small bone in his left leg at Churchill, Downs on Saturday. From them trainer Jimmy Jones of Calumet tagged Valenzuela as rider for Tim Tam in the trial and intimated that the Texas-born rider would also be aboard in the big one Saturday if things go well in the warmup.
Jones said, however, that Valen-
zuela only had been engaged for the trial and not the rose run. Even so, the opportunity to ride in America's premier horse race for the first time—and aboard the favorite at that—was enough to get Valenzuela winging by plane to Churchill Downs from New York, where he currently is the leading rider. He fully expects to ride Tim Tam in the Kentucky Derby as well.
Ten three-year-olds were entered in the trial, a mile race which has produced Kentucky Derby winners Citation, Hill Gail and Dark Star. Tim Tam ruled a 4 to 5 favorite to add this test to his earlier victories this year in the Everglades, the Flamingo, the Fountain of Youth and the Florida Derby.
Wednesday night at 8:40
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Lana Turner in
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Andy Griffith in
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Jose Ferrer
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Pittsburgh gets its first look at Los Angeles, and Bob Friend has been given the honor (?) of being the first Pirate pitcher to work with that left field screen at his back. Friend is 2-0 and he'll face Carl Erskine, who is 1-0.
game. Bob Purkey or Joe Nuxhall will do the Redlegs' pitching.
In the American League, the pace-setting Yankees begin tackling the western clubs after having won eight of their first 11 games from eastern rivals. Casey Stengel, grumbling a bit lately about his team's hitting, has nominated southpaw Bobby Shantz (1-0) to face Paul Foytack, who sports a 2-0 record for Detroit.
Kansas City, the big surprise of the American League, will be trying to strengthen its hold on second place in a game against the so far disappointing Red Sox at Boston. Jack Urban (1-0) is slated to go for the A's and Tom Brewer (1-1) for the seventh-place Red Sox.
The last-place Chicago White Sox, who have shown practically no punch at the plate at all, are at Baltimore for a night game. Southpaw Billy Pierce, a 20-game winner last season who has dropped his first two decisions this year, faces ex-teammate Jack Harshman (2-0).
Fireballer Herb Score will make his fifth appearance of the season for Cleveland against Washington in another night game. Score (2-1) will oppose Camilo Pascual (0-1). After a rocky start, the Indians righted themselves to win four of their last five games. The Senators are in third place with six victories in 10 starts.
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Tuesday, April 29.1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. 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.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 29, 1950
ASC Has Heavy Schedule Tonight
The All Student Council, in its last meeting but one, tonight will be digging out from under a minor mountain of legislation.
The Council, which will meet a 7:30 p.m. in the Union Pine Room, must discuss and vote on nine bills and amendments which were introduced last week.
One new bill, which would make the Curriculum Committee permanent, will be introduced and perhaps voted on tonight. The committee at present is operating on a temporary basis, with no authority under the ASC constitution
Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., junior and ASC chairman, said the bill could be given first and second readings, and be discussed and voted on, by suspension of the rules of order. If suspension were voted down, the old Council could vote on the bill next Tuesday at its last meeting, before swearing in the new Council.
The other nine bills, which will be voted on tonight are:
To change the name of Squat, campus humor magazine.
Prohibit The Daily Kansan from taking a partisan stand in campus
elections.
Require The Daily Kansan to "print completely and accurately publicity releases from the All Student Council."
To replace ASC members who change districts after they are elected.
Require all political parties and write-in candidates to submit summaries of all campaign expenses within two weeks after elections.
To clarify appointment of the Elections Committee.
Prohibit closing of polls because of the absence of a poll worker, and to make every effort to keep the polls open at all times during voting hours.
To require class officer candidates to submit reports of expenses following elections.
To add Law Day to the list of functions classified as public relations functions of the University. This would allow the Student Bar Association to apply to the administration for Law Day banquet funds.
Two Receive Fulbright Grants To Study Abroad
Gary Allen Williams, Paola senior, and William Conrad, instructor in architecture, have been awarded Fulbright exchange grants to study abroad.
Williams will go to Marburg and der Lahn, Germany, where he will study physics at Philips University.
Mr. Conrad will travel to Helsinki, Finland, where he will conduct research in architecture. He is working on his master's degree in architecture.
Recount Taken, But Results Are Unchanged
The Elections Committee took a recount of votes in the women's dormitories living district Monday, but the election results remained unchanged.
Dale Brethower, Nevis, Minn. senior and acting chairman of the committee, said the committee had complied with the request of Jim Austin, Topeka sophomore and president of Vox Populi, campus political party.
The committee redistributed the votes in excess of the quota needed to elect Carol Plumb, Overland Park junior, and Jan Cameron, Topeka sophomore. The votes were redistributed according to the indicated second choices, but the plurality for Mary Taylor, Kansas City, Kan junior, over Miriam Schwartzkopf Larned freshman, still held up.
However, Miss Plumb was elected student body vice-president on a write-in campaign, and her position will be filled by a vote of the new All Student Council.
Conrad's award is one of approximately 400 grants for lecturing and research abroad. Williams' scholarship is among the 900 grants for graduate study abroad. The Fulbright Scholarships are being awarded under the International Educational Exchange program of the Department of State. As provided by the Fulbright Act, all students are selected by the Board of Foreign Scholarships, members cf which are appointed by the President.
Brethower also reported on the committee's post-election check on campaign expenses. He said there were "some individual violations," which would be taken before the Student Court.
Neither party has filed complete campaign expenses with the Business Office yet, Brethower said, but will file them by Wednesday.
Brethower said there were indications that Vox had not made all its expenditures through its Business Office account, as required by the ASC constitution. If that is the case, the violation will be presented to the Student Court along with the other violations, he said.
Apply Now For Committees
Applications for student body committee positions are being accepted this week. John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior and student body president-elect, said Monday that application letters should be submitted to the All Student Council office in the Union or to the dean of students' office.
Petitions should be in letter form and must include the student's name, living group, previous experience and activities, grade average, summer home address, and the applicant's reasons for wanting the position.
Deadline for the applications is 5 p.m. Monday. Committees to be filled are Traffic and Parking, Student Labor, Student Housing, Student Health, Publications, Social Traditions, Statewide Activities, and Public Relations.
Faculty Members' Works Displayed
Paintings by five members of the drawing and painting department faculty are being exhibited at Baker University's Elsie Allen Art Gallery. Baldwin, Kansas.
The thirteen paintings by Prof. Raymond Eastwood, Robert Green, associate professor; A.D. Burnham and Robert Sudlow, assistant professors, John Talleur, instructor, will be returned to KU on Friday, May 2.
Cauliflower is recorded in human history as early as the 6th century B.C. It is the aristocrat of the cabbage family because of its sensitivity to climate, difficulty of culture, and relatively high price.
Cabinet and committee appointments will be made after the new student government is sworn in May 6.
The officers will be installed at the next meeting of the IFC, which will be in two weeks. Officers, with the exception of the president, will serve for one-semester terms. The president will serve for a full year.
Inter-fraternity Council officers for the coming year were elected Monday night.
Officers Selected In IFC Elections
Donald West, Salina; Richard Peterson, and Harry Joseph Reitz, both of Kansas City, Mo., all sophomores.
Dick Jones, McPherson junior,
president; Hulen Jenkins, Kansas
City, Kan. junior, vice-president;
Michael Johnston, Independence, Mo.
sophomore, secretary, and Lance
Johnson, Wymore, Neb. sophomore,
treasurer.
Officers-elect are:
Executive council members will be;
Alan Cohn, Kansas City, Mo., and Lee McGimsey, Salina both freshmen.
UNDERWOOD'S
Summer Session To Have 485 Courses
Flocking—Balsa Models—Trains 1215 West Sixth
Forty-seven departments at KU will offer 485 courses from beginning freshman to doctoral degree levels in its summer session. June 5-August 2, Dr. George B. Smith, dean of the university and summer session director, announced today.
Orientation for new students will be June 5, registration and enrollment June 6-7 and classes will begin June 9.
Around The World
Psychoanalysis has never been too successful with zebus.
Pressure Mounts On Sales Tax Veto
The weight of the issue was an $18-$20 million state deficit which has to be solved.
Pressure mounted slowly and steadily today as the Kansas legislature prepared for a test of convictions on a governor's veto.
"Compromise is no longer a luxurv, it is a necessity," said Rep. Donald Joseph (D-Whitewater).
The issue is whether to pass a one-half cent sales tax increase over the governor's veto or whether to sustain Docking's veto and find other taxes.
Student Gets Fellowship
Dean A. McManus, Dallas, Tex.
graduate student, has been awarded the $1,900 Shell Fellowship in Geology for 1958-59, Frank C. Foley,
professor of geology, announced.
The fellowship is awarded to a Ph. D. candidate in the department, McManus received his B.S. from Southern Methodist University, Dallas, in 1954 and his M.S. from University of Kansas, June, 1956.
The doctoral candidate has received the Erasmus Haworth Award to distinguished graduate students, a University Scholarship, 1954-55, and a University Fellowship, 1955-56.
He has worked in the University geological laboratories for the past two years as a teaching assistant.
Hitt Elected A Vice-President
James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, has been elected vice-president in charge of regional associations and membership promotion for the American Assn. of Collegiate Registrars and Admission Officers.
The test to override the veto may come Wednesday. It takes two-thirds, or 84 votes to override.
In United Nations, N. Y., Russia today renewed its call for the United Nations to end United States H-Bomb alert missions and urged that the projected summit conference take up the question of safeguard against surprise attack.
It was the first Western nuclear explosion since Russia made an announcement that it was conditionally halting its own tests.
In London, an announcement of the nature of Britain's explosion of a nuclear weapon has led experts to believe that it was almost certainly a hydrogen weapon.
Major aircraft and missile manufacturers in seven states were threatened today with a strike of 125,000 members of the International Association of Machinists and United Auto Workers Union.
Spokesmen for the two unions issued a joint statement here Monday reminding Douglas, Lockheed, North American, and Convair that labor contracts with the companies end May 7.
In Little Rock, Ark.. Gov. Orval Faubus was reported prepared today to carry to the U. S. Supreme Court his appeal against the federal injunction forbidding national guardsmen to block integration of Central High School in Little Rock.
Faubus was expected to confer shortly with his attorney to map future plans in the wake of Monday's ruling that the injunction issued last fall would be upheld.
'New Faces' In Play Cast
The cast for "Man and Superman" contains an unusually high number of "new faces" according to Gordon Beck, instructor in speech and University Theatre assistant.
The 3-act comedy by George B. Shaw will be presented in the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Wednesday through May 3. Joyce Malicky, Baldwin freshman and Louis Lyda, Lawrence senior, will both star in their first leading roles.
Making their debuts in University Theatre roles will be Steve Boozer, Kansas City. Mo. freshman, playing Octavius; George Edwards, Kansas City, Kans. graduate student cast as Malone; Ernestine Williams, Wichita freshman, who will play the maid; John Feist, San Francisco, Calif. senior playing Ramsden, and Ardith Webber, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman as Miss Ramsden.
Relatively new in The Theatre's casts will be John Schick, Kansas City, Kan. junior playing Straker and Daryl Warner, Merriam freshman as Hector.
Two members of the cast have had considerable experience in University Theatre productions, Beck said.
Vera Stough, Lawrence senior, cast as Violet, has appeared in such plays as "Henry IV." "Picnic," and "Crock of Gold."
Joyce Elliott, Independence, Mo. junior, playing Mrs. Whitefield, has been in plays such as "Judith," "The Rainmaker," and "Picnic."
"I would like to emphasize that any student enrolled in courses at KU is eligible to try out for any of
the University Theatre roles."Beck said. Many of the casts include students majoring in business, engineering, education, etc.
Those interested in summer auditions, which will be held this Saturday and next, should call the University Theatre office for an appointment.
Beck said 75 to 100 students usually try out for parts in the average play.
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Daily Hansan
Wednesday, April 30, 1958
55th Year. No.136
Business School To Hear Jeffrey
Balfour Jeffrey, president of the Kansas Power and Light Co., will be the main speaker at the Business Day Banquet at 6:30 Wednesday. May 7, in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Mr. Jeffrey will speak on "Business Opportunities in Kansas."
He received his BA from KU in 1928 and graduated as an honor student. This award is given each year to the student whose influence is considered to have been the most beneficial to the student body.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Mr. Jeffrey is currently on the board of trustees for the Endowment Assn. His work in the Alumni Assn. includes serving as vice-president of the association in 1938 and as a member of the board of directors from 1940-45.
While a student at KU he was president of Sachem, on the honor society for senior men; on the dean's honor roll, and a leader in YMCA activities.
(1)
BALFOUR JEFFREY
After graduation from KU, Mr.
Jeffrey attended Harvard Law
School and graduated with an LLE degree in 1932 from there.
He practiced law with the firm of Doran, Kline, Cosgrove, Jeffrey and Russell in Topeka until 1953 when he became assistant president of KP&L in 1956.
Mr. Jeffrev is listed in Who's Who in Labor, Who's Who in the Midwest, and Who's Who in America for 1958.
Tickets for the banquet may be purchased in the basement of Strong Hall or from members of the Business School Council.
Need Squat Editor Business Manager
Applications are now being accepted for editor and business manager of next year's Squat, campus humor magazine. All entries must be sent to Hugh Grant in care of the All Student Council office in the Kansas Union before May 10.
The application letters must contain grade point average, activity record, previous publication experience, an estimate of creative writing ability, and anything else the applicant wants to include, Grant said.
All those who apply will be interviewed by the Squat governing board which consists of the present Squat editorial staff, a faculty committee, and the ASC publications committee.
1960
SPRING TRAINING-Three candidates for cheerleaders test their techniques during the 3-day school to select 10 students for next year's cheerleader squad. A total of 57 students are enrolled in the school which will end tonight. (Daily Kansan photo)
Sign For Western Civ By Thursday
Thursday is the last day students may sign up for the Western Civilization examination to be given Saturday May 17. Students who plan to take the test this semester should register in 130 Strong.
Shaw's Play Opens Tonight
A witty presentation of man's fate being subordinate to woman is depicted in George B. Shaw's "Man and Superman," opening at the University Theatre at 8 tonight.
The play is set in the early part of the 20th century and is filled with Shaw's earlier "words, wit and wisdom," said Gordon Beck, instructor in speech and University Theatre assistant director.
In their first leading roles will be Joyce Malicky, Baldwin freshman and Louis Lyda, Lawrence senior.
Student I.D. cards will admit through reservation at the Kansas Union ticket office.
Originally written as a lengthy, 3-act play the dream scene in "Man and Superman" will be presented separately in the experimental theatre beginning May 7.
Potpourri Set For Thursday
About 100 Speech I students representing all sections of the course are expected to try out for the new Speech I "potpourri," or informative speech competition.
These tryouts will be held at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium to determine the eight finalists. The final round will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Strong Auditorium.
The purpose of the event is to provide qualified students in Speech I with an opportunity to exhibit their speaking talents before a large audience, said Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan. senior who is in charge of the event.
The three top speakers will be awarded records which are connected with speaking, Lashbrook added.
Continued cool tonight. Possible showers and thunderstorms this evening. Thursday continued partly cloudy and cool.
Weather
Low this morning 41. High Tuesday 58. low 34.
ASC Passes 7 Amendments
2 Amendments Fail; One Bill Accepted
The outgoing All Student Council, in its last legislative meeting, continued the hectic pace set in last week's meeting and passed seven amendments and one bill Tuesday night. Two amendments were defeated.
In addition, the Council accepted the spring election in toto, voting down a protest entered for one-time Vox Populi candidate Tom Bath, Mission junior. The Elections Committee ruled that since Bath's name had never appeared on the ballot, withdrawal of his name by Vox was a party matter and not one for the committee to decide. The ASC accepted the committee's report.
In the one new bill passed, the Curriculum Committee was converted to the Students Academic Committee and made a permanent ASC committee. Members will be appointed, with the approval of their scholastic deans, by the student body president. The committee will have one member from each school of the University.
In order to pass the bill in one session, the ASC voted to suspend the rules of order, heard both readings of the bill, and voted to pass the bill.
The meeting, scheduled for 7:30 p.m., was delayed 40 minutes for lack of a quorum. A fourteenth member was rounded up at 8:10, and the meeting got under way.
Two of the amendments concerned The Daily Kansan.
In an amendment to the Publications Bill, the Council voted unanimously that "The University Daily Kansan shall take no partisan stand in any campus election. And further that said University Daily Kansan shall be required to furnish
IM Speech Contest Ends Tonight
Argumentative speaking at 7:30 tonight in 102 Strong will conclude the 11th annual intramural speaking contest open to organized houses.
The subject of the speeches will be "Contemporary Problems in Education" said Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan. senior.
Trophies will be awarded to individual winners and to the house with the largest total of points.
equal opportunity to all political parties for each election."
Supporters of the amendment said it was aimed at the editorial page of The Daily Kansan. No charge was made that the paper had slanted news stories.
The other amendment states that "Futhermore, The University Daily Kansan shall be required to print completely and accurately all written official news releases from the ASC or Public Relations Committee." This amendment also was passed unanimously.
Other amendments accepted require that:
Each political party shall present an itemized list of election expenditures to the Elections Committee within one week after the general elections.
Polls To Remain Opened
No polls shall be closed due to the lack of poll workers from any party. Every effort shall be made to keep every poll open at all times,
The Law Day banquet shall be added to the list of public relations functions of the University. This means the Student Bar Association may apply to the administration for banquet funds.
The Elections Committee shall be appointed by the chairman of the All Student Council.
ASC representatives shall be removed from office if they change living district or school after they are elected.
The Council tabled a request by the Engineering Council for $196.50 to make up the deficit for this year's Engineering Banquet. Chairman Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo. junior said the request would be considered after the ASC had determined whether it had enough money remaining to make up the deficit.
Class Time Assignments At Scribe's Desk Next Fall
Instead of getting the time for classes at the adviser's table during enrollment next fall, several courses will have the class time assigned at the scribe's desk in the pen section.
Pen sectioning, the assigning of class times by scribe, has been tried at the University in Western Civilization reading courses for three semesters.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said Tuesday that the same system would be applied to other courses, such as English, laboratories in biology, chemistry, physics, and foreign languages.
The system was proposed after it was decided that students and their advisers spent more time arguing about when the course would
be taken than what the course actually was, Mr. Hitt said.
Pen sectioning has been selected as the method which would free the adviser to devote more time and energy to assisting in the selection of courses, he said.
Part of student anxiety to enroll early is also expected to be reduced by the method. Mr. Hitt said, since students who enroll on the third day may plan on getting as good a class schedule as the students who enrolled on the first day.
Mr. Hitt expects pen sectioning to enable departments to have their sections balanced more evenly since one of the scribe's duties is to keep the sections equal as enrollment progresses.
"As we gain experience and information other modifications may be introduced to make a more streamlined enrollment system," Mr. Bitt added.
He said class schedule for the fall semester would be out some time in August. Any student who wants to receive one by mail may do so by leaving his name in the registrar's office.
Enrollment for the fall semester will be on Sept. 11, 12, and 13. Early pickup of enrollment supplies will begin Sept. 9.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Anril 30, 1958
The Problem Still Exists
Since we were almost run down while peacefully walking across the campus last week, we feel it is time to once again discuss the campus traffic dilemma.
It has been some time since an attempt has been made to find a solution for this knotty problem. Someone must surely be hard at work attempting to discover an answer, but the effects are not too apparent.
The only attempt at a solution that we have been able to discover is that clever bit of subterfuge at the Union parking lot, the money-eating monster. This seems like a negative means of solving the problem. Its installation has been greeted with jeers, not cheers, and many students are more than a little bit unhappy about its presence.
In a way this move has added insult to injury. At the first of this school year, parking violation fines were made much stiffer. Now the students are charged $ .50 cents to park in their own lot. If the plan is to discourage students from parking on the Hill at all, this latest move should go a long way in that direction.
But it seems that a more positive way of eliminating traffic on the Hill could be worked out. Although the students wouldn't be too happy with the idea, a step in the right direction could be taken by banning any parking at all along Jayhawk Blvd. Of course there would be exceptions to the rule, such as delivery trucks and the campus police.
The advantages of such a move would be the freer flow of students walking to and from classes, less congestion in the movement of automobile traffic, and a better view for visitors driving across the campus.
There would also be disadvantages to this plan, such as even more crowding of the parking zones off the Hill. more student legwork, and less parking fine revenue.
To go a drastic step further, the administration could ban traffic on Jayhawk Blvd. altogether between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. This would give a completely free flow of students going to and from classes. But such a solution might have the effect of creating problems nearly as great as the one to be solved. And to most students the discomforts of such a plan are readily apparent.
With the coming of a greater number of students to the campus, the parking-traffic problem is bound to increase in intensity. To solve this problem, something that we now have will have to be sacrificed. If the students are willing to exchange the ease and comfort of riding for the possibly slight discomfort of walking, a solution should be easier to find.
'Fail Safe' Foolproof
—Del Haley
Since Russia has become so concerned over the flight of U. S. bombers carrying nuclear loads, the chief of the Strategic Air Command has issued an explanation of the plan involved. This was to insure the Russians that such flights cannot possibly be the cause of a new world conflict.
SAC commander Gen. Thomas S. Power told reporters that SAC bombers investigating Dew Line radar alerts would always be turned back by the "fail safe" system.
"Fail safe" is a term used by engineers which means to proceed toward a target for a fixed number of miles and then turn back if orders to continue are not received.
There have been reports that American bombers have been within two hours' flying time of the borders of the USSR. When asked to comment on these reports, Gen. Power said, "This command has never stated, for obvious reasons, the point at which 'fail safe' aircraft would return to their bases. However, we have stated
that our aircraft would always turn back sufficiently far from the radar warning net of other countries to absolutely preclude such nets being triggered."
Russia has charged in the United Nations that U. S. bomber flights toward the Soviet Union were a threat to world peace. Last week, the Russians withdrew their charges after the failure of their resolution became apparent.
Since then, the United States has suggested a plan to establish a military inspection system to prevent surprise attack over the Arctic. President Eisenhower Monday challenged Russia to join the West in such an inspection system.
In all probability, Russia wasn't really too worried about the U. S. being so foolishly careless as to start another world conflict. She just dislikes the idea of the U. S. being so apparently ready to cope with any aggressive action. Her charges, designed to hinder such preparedness, failed to impress anyone.
—Del Haley
Quotes From The News
LONDON—A source close to Sir Winston Churchill denying the 83-year-old statesman has had a recurrence of pneumonia:
"The old man's in fine shape. But you can't wonder at people getting the snuffles here with the weather so changeable."
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
TEST TODAY
TEST
"WHY NOT SPREAD OUT BOYS? NO NEED FOR ALL OF YOU TO FLUNK."
WASHINGTON — White House press secretary James C. Hagerty, on a newly received message from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to President Eisenhower:
LOS ANGELES—Mrs. James Roberts, who is trying to save an 18-year-old former show horse, "Tom Boy," from the death prescribed in his late owner's will:
"A first reading of it does not disclose anything new."
"He's like one of the family. He's not old and has tremendous vitality."
Why the annual spring obstacle course of sprinklers, sponsored by the department of buildings and grounds, has not been put into operation yet? It could be because of the rainy spring we have been having. But if memory serves well, the sprinklers have, at times, competed with nature.
We Wonder
Why the campus cops leave the intersection of Jayhawk Blvd, and Mississippi St. right on the hour? The car and pedestrian traffic flow does not stop when the campanile strikes the hour.
Why the coming of Spring has not produced the usual rash of cute little pranks, such as putting soap in the Chi Omega fountain? Either the season lacks its usual punch, or the students have at last decided that a round of golf or a set of tennis is better recreation than nany raids.
Why no effigies are being hung or no young men are being bound to the Strong Hall flagpole? So much peace and harmony on the campus is rather dull.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904.
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 251, 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. New service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published on weekdays and even noon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, a
Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879.
Dick Brown ... Managing Editor
Larry Boston, Bob Hartley, Mary Beth
Noyes, Mimi Colmie, Applegate, Assistant
Manager Edith; Martha Crosser, Jack Harrison,
Assistant City Editors; Mary Alden,
Telegraph Editor; Martha Frederick,
Assistant Telegraph Editor; George
Anthan, Sports Editor; Bob Macy, Dale
Mankin, Sports Editor; Sam Sears, Sports
Editors; Pat Swanson, Society Editor;
Ron Miller, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Del Heye Editorial Editor
Evelyne Hall, Marilyn Leroy
Zimmerman, Associate Editors,
BUSINESS EDITORS
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Ted Winkler Business Manager
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THE LATEST FROM "AFTER SIX"
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Wednesday, April 30, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Leon T. Swan___Vice-President of Midwest Research Institute
George Lister___President of Peoples National Bank, Ottawa
This advertisement is sponsored by the organized houses and local businesses whose names appear on this page.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 30, 1958
Valenzuela Will Ride In Derby
LOUISVILLE, Ky.—(UP)—Because he did such an expert job of piloting Calumet Farm's Tim Tam through a heavy traffic jam in the Derby trial, Ismael (Milo) Valenzuela will be back aboard the Calumet Farm colt in Saturday's rose run.
Valenzuela, filling in for injured Bill Hartack, twice steered Tim Tam out of trouble when the Colt was forced into "blind switches" and booted the son of Tom Fool to a neck triumph over Maine Chance Farm's Ebony Pearl in Tuesday's 1-mile trial.
That ride "sold" Valenzuela to Calumet trainer Jimmy Jones, who announced the little Mexican from McNary. Tex., would be on Tim Tam's back again when the derby field parades to the post Saturday.
While Jones was pleased with Valenzuela's ride and Tim Tam's performance, he was enraged at jockey Johnny Heckmann, who he claimed caused interference in the trial.
Heckmann placed Nadir outside Tim Tam in the trial and pinned him against the rail, forcing Tim Tam into two pockets. Finally Tim Tam found racing room, moved into contention in the stretch, where he was slightly bothered by another horse, and then bounded into the lead right at the wire.
The trial failed to eliminate many horses from the probable derby field. Between 16 and 19 are expected to start.
Eddie Arcaro will ride Jewel's Reward in the derby while Manny Yceaza, aboard Ebony Pearl in the trial, switches to Jet's Alibi in the rose run. Mrs. Graham hopes to get Dave Erb as jockey for Ebony Pearl.
Pirates Off And Running
By UNITED PRESS
The Pittsburgh Pirates are off and running like contenders—and the word is out that this time it may not be a false alarm.
The Pirates matched the season's longest National League winning streak, when they defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7-1, Tuesday night for their fourth straight victory.
Bob Friend, who slumped to a 14-18 record last season, turned in his third straight victory Tuesday night, with a 4-hitter and Frank Thomas sparked the Pirates' 11-hit assault with a homer and two singles. A crowd of 19,778 raised Los Angeles' home attendance for 10 dates to 397,379.
Pitchers also starred in three of the other four games played Tuesday as rain again marred the big league baseball schedule.
Warren Spahn scattered nine hits and drove in three runs as the Milwaukee Braves took over first place with an 8-4 decision over the Chicago Cubs; Bob Purkey turned in his third straight victory in the Cincinnati Reddies' 5-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals and Bobby Shantz pitched a 6-hitter to give the New York Yankees a 5-1 triumph over the Detroit Tigers. The Philadelphia Phillies beat the San Francisco Giants, 7-4, in the other game.
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Oread scored five runs in the second inning and added seven in the fifth. Charles Winfrey and Dwight Fickbolm hit home runs in the second inning. Fickbolm was the winning pitcher.
Oread, Rochdale Win 'A' Games
Oread and Rochdale won Independent A intramural softball games Tuesday. Oread defeated Pharmacy 13-8, and Rochdale defeated Battenfeld 15-14.
Rochdale scored 10 runs in the fourth inning to get back in its game after trailing by several runs. The winners added three runs in the sixth to insure the victory. John Olander hit a home run in the first inning.
Dave Armentrout hit a home run for Battenfeld in the third inning. Dennis Haves was the losing pitcher. Other results:
Fraternity A—Kappa Sig vs. Phi Delt, F. 10; Delts vs. Beta, F. 1; SAE vs. Phi Psi. F. 2.
Fraternity B—Sigma Nu I vs. Phi Gam F. 3; Triangle vs. Sig Ep, F. 4.
Fraternity B- Beta I 13, Phi Psi 2; ATO 15, Kappa Sig 11; Acacia 1, DU II 0 (forfeit).
Games Thursday
Independent B—VIP vs. Sig Gam Ep, F. 5.
NEW YORK — (UP)— Casey Stengel kept his fingers crossed today and hoped that Mickey Mantle's latest injury was as mild as the Yankee center-fielder said it was.
Keep Fingers Crossed Casey
Mantle suffered a sprained right foot while batting against Paul Foytack in the first inning of Tuesday's game with Detroit. Stengel was ready to take Mantle out of the line-up immediately but Mickey insisted he could play and remained in the game for seven innings.
"They said it wasn't serious." Stengel said after the game, "and I hope that's true. We'll find out today."
Prince Rainier of Monaco enlisted in the French Army in World War II; served as a lieutenant; refused to be promoted to colonel.
Major League Standings
By UNITED PRESS American League
W 9 L Pct. GB
New York 9 3 .750
Kansas City 7 4 .636 $1^{½}$
Washington 6 4 .600 1
Clive Island 7 6 .538 $2^{½}$
Detroit 7 7 .500 3
Baltimore 7 6 .400 4
Boston 4 9 .308 $5^{½}$
Chicago 3 8 .273 $5^{½}$
Results Tuesday
New York 5, Detroit 1
Kansas City at Boston, night, postponed, rain
Cleveland at Washington, night, postpooed, rain
poned, rain Chicago at Baltimore, night, postponed
Detroit at New York—Lary 0-2 vs. Ford
1-1
Games Today
Kansas City at Boston—Urban 1-0 vs. Brewer 1-1.
Cleveland at Washington (night)—Nar-
cleveld 2-1 vs. Rams 2-0
Chicago at Baltimore (night)—Wynn 1-1 vs. Harshman 2-0.
National League
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Milwaukee | 8 | 4 | .667 | |
| San Francisco | 8 | 5 | .615 | $^1$ |
| Chicago | 8 | 5 | .583 | $^1$ |
| Pittsburgh | 7 | 6 | .545 | $^2$ |
| Cincinnati | 5 | 5 | .500 | $^1$ |
| Philadelphia | 5 | 5 | .455 | $^{2}$ |
| Los Angeles | 5 | 8 | .385 | $^{3}$ |
| St. Louis | 3 | 9 | .250 | $^5$ |
Milwaukee 8. Chicago 4
Philadelphia 7. San Francisco 4
Cincinnati 5. St Louis 2
Pittsburgh 7. Los Angeles 1
Bernard (Poco) Frazier, KU sculptor in residence, designed the sculptures on the bronze doors in the memorial Campanile.
Petersburg, Alaska, is a prime center of the fishing and shrimping industry.
Dr. H. R. Williams
Optometrist
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"One thing is sure," Mitchell said.
"The boys are making a tremendous effort. Their spirit and morale are great.
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The 1958 model Jayhawker football team still has a long way to go before it is ready to play ball the way Coach Jack Mitchell likes to see it.
BUILDERS OF NATIONAL HOMES
"The team is tough and playing hard. There have been very few injuries, because when a team is in as good a shape as this one, there are no injuries."
The team spent Tuesday afternoon working on pass offense and defense. Not too bad, Mitchell said. But there is a lot to do.
"Some of the boys throwing the ball looked pretty good," Mitchell said Tuesday. "Morris, McKown and Merritt were standouts."
The team still has the problems of a speed shortage and how to fill several questionable positions, he said.
Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals has won seven National League batting championships, Hans Wagner of the Pittsburgh Pirates won cight.
The typewriter was invented in 1864 by an Austrian named Mitterhoffer.
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Wednesday. April 30,1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
TV Teaching May Be Used Here Soon
Closed-circuit television, already widely used in schools throughout the country, and in medicine and industry, may arrive at KU in the not-too-distant future.
Galen R. Adkins, chairman of the radio-television research committee at KU, said that the radio-TV staff "has the equipment and personnel to accommodate any department that would like to try a pilot experiment with closed-circuit teaching."
"We hope to have additional equipment to equip one or two classrooms with closed-circuit TV next year." he added.
Television is already in use at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Rather than reducing the need for teachers, television would enable teachers, freed from lecturing, to work with smaller student groups. Prof. Adkins said. One teacher using TV could give lectures to several student groups, allowing other teachers to do laboratory or seminar work.
Prof. Adkins explained that TV is already extensively used in a number of colleges and public schools. Television teaching is "past the experimental stage at some places," he said.
Many Uses For TV
Indiana University is about to start using TV to supervise student teachers, Prof. Adkins said, and the University of Texas already uses TV to demonstrate chemistry experiments to laboratory students.
Closed-cireuit TV could also monitor laboratory teaching situations, or could be used to monitor children in nursery schools so student teachers or students of child psychology could observe, he said.
One particular advantage in chemistry work, Prof. Adkins said, is that with TV all the students, instead of only five or six, can get a close-up view of experiments.
Hoch Could Be Center
Members of the radio-TV faculty at KU have had several discussions with various departments of the University to determine possible uses of television here, Prof. Adkins said.
Teaching experiments at present
could be set up in Hoch Auditorium, he added.
Other schools using or experimenting with classroom television include Purdue University, Pennsylvania State University, the University of Iowa, and the public school systems in Hagerstown, Md., and Evanston township, Ill.
61 To Attend Science Academy
Sixty-one students, faculty anc staff members from KU, the State Geological Survey and the Museum of Natural History will attend the 19th annual meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science Thursday. Friday and Saturday at Ottawa University.
Members of the Academy will study work done by members in the fields of botany, microbiology, chemistry, geography, geology, physics and zoology.
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 if publication is only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Official Bulletin
German Ph.D reading examination,
Saturday 9-11 a.m., 314 Fraser. Books
must be turned in to 306 Fraser by
Thursday noon.
TODAY
Sociology Club meeting, 4 p.m. 11 Saturdays
Ericksen, associate professor of sociology,
and John H. Giele, instructor of sociology.
"Are Fraternities and Sororities
Newman Club executive meeting has been canceled.
Jay Janes, 5 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union
El Alteneo se reune el Microlesca a las
y media en el Union, para una
beta
Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union, Speaker. M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, facts and Fieldiq. Everyone welcome.
Joint meeting of El Ateneo, Cercle Francais, Deutsche Verein and Russian Club. 7:30 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Intramural Speaking Contest, 7:30 p.m.
102 Strong.
Man and Superman, 8 p.m. University
Tower Music and Dramatic Arts
Building.
THURSDAY
University Women's Club luncheon, 1
program. Business meeting and
lunch, 2:30 p.m.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m., Music and Browsing Room, Kansas Union. Franklin C. Nellick, associate professor of English, will read 18th century verse.
Section 1 of Speech Potpouri Try-Outs, 4 p.m., Strong Auditorium.
Section 2 of Speech Potpouri Try-Outs., 7:30 p.m., Strong Auditorium
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Sigma Alpha Eta dessert, 7:30 p.m.
Women's Football Club.
Man and Superman, 8 p.m. University Theatre, Music and Dramatic Arts Buildings
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
FRIDAY
Man and Superman, University Theatre Music and Dramatic Arts Building. 8 p.m.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 7 a.m. St. House,
Canterbury, St. House.
Breakfast follows.
Pharmacy School Picnic To Be Sunday
Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Mendelssohn, Symphony No.
3 in A Minor. Dvorak, Concerto for
Violin in A Minor.
A picnic for students and faculty in the School of Pharmacy will be held at 4 p.m. Sunday sponsored by the KU student division of the American Pharmaceutical Association.
The annual event will be held at Potter Lake picnic grounds and will be preceded by a traditional junior-senior softball game at 2 p.m. The losing class will present the winners with a trophy.
The banded anteater is a small Australian marsupial.
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ON THE HILL
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 30, 1958
C. H.
CAROLYN HOGAN
DEANA DALBY
T. S. HARRIS
2 Couples Plan Summer Weddings
Mr. and Mrs. George D. Hogan, Little Rock, Ark., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Carolyn, to Merrill Stiles, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Doyle Stiles, Coldwell.
Miss Hogan is a junior in the College and a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Stiles is a sophomore in the College and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
A summer wedding is planned.
Mr. and Mrs. K. O. Dalby, Joplin Mo., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Deana Kay, to James Lucian Berglund, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Berglund, McPherson.
Miss Dalby is a junior in the School of Education and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Bergland is a junior in the School of Business and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. A late summer wedding is planned.
Campus Club News
University Club
The University Club will have a covered dish supper and bridge party at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the club rooms.
Hosts are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mingos, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cochrane and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Antisdel.
Ku-Ku
The Ku Ku cheerleader will be selected following try-outs.
Graduate English Club
The Ku Ku Pep Club will hold a russo smoker at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union.
A special meeting of the Graduate English Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union, Senior Faculty members are particularly invited to attend.
Stith Thompson, folklore scholar and visiting professor of English will speak on "Adventures in Motif-Indexing"
Tonight at 8:40
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Jose Ferrer
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Alpha Kappa Lambda
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity held its Mississippi River Boat party April 19 at the chapter house.
Pi Beta Phi
Dinner will be held at the chapter house and skits are planned for entertainment.
The members of Pi Beta Phi sorority will entertain their mothers Sunday.
The annual Pi Beta Phi Founder's Day luncheon was held in Kansas City Saturday. The four chapters attending were from KU, Kansas State College, the University of Missouri, and Drury College.
The afternoon was highlighted by skits presented by the individual chapters. Approximately 200 actives and alumni attended.
The newly initiated members of Pi Beta Phi sorority entertained the Kappi Alpha Theta pledge class with a coffee at the chapter house, Sunday.
The newly initiated members of Pi Beta Phi sorority were hosts at a western party given for the chapter and dates Friday.
The theme of the party was accentuated by a western style barbeque served outdoors, western dress and decorations.
The chaperones were Mrs. W. R Banker, Mrs. Glen Seewell, Mrs. J. E Stevens, Mrs. Gordon Yockey, housemothers.
Veils In Style For Hot-Hoters
Women who don't like to wear hats will find new interest in veils for spring. They come trimmed with velvet bows, flowers and chenille filigree. Some veils are so light colored that the trimming appears suspended in air above the head. Sizes range from half-veils to "head cages" which cover face and hair.
To keep a house plant from turning toward the light, place foil paper behind it. The foil serves as a reflector and keeps the plant growing straight.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority held its annual State Day Sunday. Alumnae and collegiate chapters were represented and were guests at the chapter house.
Delta Upsilon fraternity will hold its spring formal Friday in the Student Union Ballroom.
Alpha Omicron Pi
Delta Upsilon
* *
Chaperones will be Mrs. Gordon
Yockey, Mrs. Joe Hope, Mrs. Sebonia
Hancock, Mrs. Edward Dicks, and
Mrs. Helen Spralding, housemothers.
* *
Alpha Phi
Alpha Phi sorority and Alpha KappaLambda fraternity held an exchange picnic April 22 at the chapter houses.
- * *
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will entertain Pi Beta Phi sorority with a barbeque at the fraternity house Tuesday.
Delta Gamma
--and Mrs. Ethel Harmon, housemothers.
Delta Gamma sorority will be entertained with a barbeque at Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity Thursday.
Delta Chi
Delta Chi fraternity held its Three Chapter party at Wyandotte Lake recently with chapters from Kansas, Kansas City and Missouri Universities attending.
The Five Scamps Band played for the dance.
Delta Chi fraternity will hold its spring picnic Friday and its White Carnation spring formal Saturday.
Chaperones for the dance will be Miss Merle Munson, Mrs. Ross Cole
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The fraternity will entertain alumni at the May meeting Sunday at the chapter house.
- * *
Kappa Sigma
The Kappa Sigma fraternity chapters of KU, Kansas State College and the Universities of Nebraska, Washburn and Baker held their biannual district conclave Saturday at the KU chapter house.
James Blythe, Indianapolis, national vice-president of the fraternity, spoke at a banquet which climaxed the business sessions of the conclave.
District President Ed Gund, Kansas City, presented certificates of merit for scholastic achievement to the Baker University and Kansas State College chapters.
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Wednesday. April 30, 1958 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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SENIORS: Last chance to subscribe to Time, Life and Sports Illustrated at special one-half price student rates. Faculty and part-time students also eligible. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. 5-21
BUSINESS SERVICES
FOR RENT: Punch cups, etc for recreations and parties. For Sale: Mother's glass gifts crystal and china. House, gift China, 906 New Hampton VI. 3-3980. 5-6
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DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS:
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
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FLAT TOPS a specialty. KU Barbershop
Claremont Under the hill
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 30, 1958
Sociologist Feeds Dozens Of Mascots At Office
2
Some people think the Jayhawker grew into a mighty Kansas legend by eating sunflower seeds on Mt. Oread. If it's true, don't be surprised if the faithful old mascot is rivaled by other birds who have been feeding on sunflower seeds in a window in Strong Annex E.
2
About a year and a half ago, Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, became the "owner and manager" of KU's only bird feeding station.
As a veteran observer of the habits and actions of people, Prof. Clark turned his attention to birds, "Just because I've always liked them."
Prof. Clark's feeder attracts the very obliging birds the year around.
the very oonging birds the year around.
"I keep sunflower seeds in the feeder all year, and in the winter I add suet and hemp. Red-breasted nut-hatchers and downy wood-peckers show up for the suet."
Prof. Clark keeps a list of the various species that visit the feeder. Although he can't watch all of the time, he has already seen more than 20 kinds of birds.
In the spring and fall the feeder draws migratory birds. Naturally, more birds are fed there in the winter when other food is scarce, but cardinals stop to eat there all summer.
Bluejays, the "robber birds," are welcome at the feeder so long as they don't drive other birds away. Prof. Clark said.
Prof. Clark recognizes most birds, but keeps a bird guide handy on his desk in case a newcomer should drop by.
"I usually put the seed out in small amounts because the bluejays scratch around in it and waste it."
The feeder opens from the inside by a sliding glass panel in the screen. The panel not only allows him to put the seeds in, but it also keeps the birds from flying into his office. Although Prof. Clark's office is "closed for business" on Sunday, he doesn't forget the birds. He feeds them at least twice every day of the week.
CAREFUL THERE!—Jael Saren, Levittown, N. Y. freshman and Daily Kansan photographer, tries for a photo award shot as he overlooks a bird feeder outside the window of the office of Carroll Clark, professor of sociology. It looks like Saren's job is for the birds. (Daily Kansan photo)
Kraus Wins $300 Gustafson Award
Richard Kraus, Arlington junior, has been awarded the $300 Gustafson Scholarship for the outstanding man majoring in political science. Kraus was awarded the scholarship Monday afternoon at the initiation ceremony of Pi Sigma Alpha, political science honor society. He was selected for the award by the political science faculty.
Ruth Palmgren, Kansas City, Mo.
junior, was awarded the fifth annual
Girls State Scholarship The award
is for $250 and is sponsored by the
American Legion Auxiliary.
Ruah Ann Anderson, Hutchinson senior, was chosen for the annual Pi Sigma Alpha award. The $50 award goes to the outstanding student in political science each year.
Four other awards were made to political science students chosen as "outstanding" by faculty members. Those chosen were: Polly Peppercorn, Lawrence senior and president of the local chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha; Donald Hopkins, Kansas City, Kan.; senior; James Circle, Oskaloosa senior, and Gilbert Cuthbertson, Lawrence junior.
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Flying Carpet Part Of Trial Practice Problem
A flying carpet failed to bring riches to a young woman Monday night in the first of four trial practice problems for Law School students of Dean M. C. Slough.
The case concerned a woman who chanced to walk down a New Orleans street in front of a hotel during the Mardi Gras season.
During her walk she was hit on the head by a small oriental rug falling from the hotel window, the counsel for the plaintiff said.
"The fact that the rug was allowed to fall on the head of the plaintiff is evidence that the defendant (the hotel owner) was negligent in his duty to prevent injury," the counsel held. The plaintiff asked $17,500 damages.
"Not so," the defense countered. "There is no evidence that an agent of the hotel owner threw the rug out of the window.
The jury, made up of first-year law students, decided in favor of the defense and the young woman was left to cope with her headaches on her own finances. The trial practice problems, conducted for class credit, are held as a regular trial would be. Witnesses are called from the faculty and student body. Defendants and plaintiffs are students.
Additional cases will be held today and Thursday. The public is invited to attend.
The trial practice problems, con-
Ph.D. Candidate Gets Instructorship
Lila Weissenberg, who is working on a Ph.D. dissertation, has been appointed instructor in psychology at Wells College, Aurora, N. Y., for the academic year 1958-59.
Miss Weissenberg has degrees from University of Pennsylvania and has taught there. She has been a research assistant at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka.
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