Maintenance Men Face Pay Cuts About 164 KU maintenance employees will receive substantial reductions in their 1959 paychecks unless the state Legislature takes other action later this month. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said the wage reduction put into effect Jan. 1 is in keeping with a ruling handed down by Attorney General John Anderson. Anderson said the method of paying KU maintenance employees under the Lawrence "prevailing rate" system is illegal. Maintenance jobs come under civil service and not under the State Finance Council governing the "prevailing rate" system, Anderson said. The KU employees have been paid under that plan since 1947. Every janitor on the University fiscal staff and most tradesmen employed by the University will take cuts, Jan. 13. Mr. Nichols declined to announce the actual amounts of the reductions until after employees have been notified of the amounts. Mr. Nichols said the University is still hopeful that the legislature will act favorably and promptly to the University's recommendation concerning maintenance wages. Its recommendation is essentially the same as the present wage scale operated until January, he said. "We feel that the rates paid the employees are reasonable compared to the wages paid Lawrence construction employees," he said. Fiscal plant, dormitory and service personnel in teaching departments are affected by the new ruling. Very few in those categories will receive increases under the new scale, Mr. Nichols said. The increases were budgeted last July but have not gone into effect. Mr. Nichols said. Because they will coincide with the civil service scale, they will become effective with the cuts, he said. The wage reduction came after an examination of state records showed some employees were claiming up to 300 hours of work a month where the average is 180 hours. Consequently, the salaries of (Continued on Page 5) State Board of Regents Vacancy Still Open TOPEKA —(UPI)—Gov. George Docking said today he has "several good men in mind" but has not made a decision yet on an appointment to the State Board of Regents. The governor appointed Charles V. Kincaid, Independence Republican, to replace McDill Boyd, but has one more vacancy to fill. The term of Larry Morgan, Goodland Democrat, expired Dec. 31. The governor also re-appointed Ray Evans, Kansas City, Kan., Republican. Docking said he had not made up his mind on faculty salaries at the state university and colleges. He said the school budgets are "still being put together." The regents are asking for about $42 million to operate the schools during the next fiscal year, a 12 per cent increase over last year's request. The legislature meets Jan. 13 and will consider the governor's budget recommendations on the schools, probably at a time late in the four-month session. An opinion by Atty. Gen, John Anderson confirmed the governor's suspicions that maintenance workers at Kansas University and Kansas State College were operating under illegal wage scales. The estimated 350 hourly maintenance workers came under state civil service pay scales, as of Jan. 1. These are considerably lower than the "prevailing wage" scales paid since 1947 at the two schools. Other state-supported colleges pay their janitors, campus patrolmen, electricians, plumbers and other maintenance workers under strict state civil service control. Only KU and K-State were exempt. Daily hansan Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 56th Year, No. 68 "That was the first I had heard of it," he said. KU Educator Chief Of Science Education "I think it will be fun spending a year and a half in Washington," Prof. Smith commented. "But I don't want to become a bureaucrat." "The success of the National Defense program will pave the way to future improvement in education," he said. "Its failure would severely jeopardize education." "It is rather terrifying to think of the tremendous responsibility of the position," Prof. Smith said. Herbert A. Smith, professor of education, assumed his duties today as chief of the science, mathematics and modern foreign language section of the National Defense Education Program in Washington. Moderate temperatures this afternoon. Fair this afternoon and evening. Low tonight near 10 above. High tomorrow in lower 40s. The National Defense Education program in Washington today approved the appointment of Herbert A. Smith, professor of education, as chief of the science, mathematics and modern foreign language section of the program. Prof. Smith, president of the National Science Teachers Assn., was attending a conference of that organization. The National Defense Education Act passed Sept. 2 authorizes over $1 billion in Federal aid to education for the next four years. The Board of Regents granted Of that amount, $300 million has been authorized for the division to be headed by Prof. Smith. Weather Arthur A. Fleming, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Office of Education, discussed the position with Prof. Smith lsat month in Washington. Prof. Smith an 18-month leave of absence. He left Lawrence on Christmas Day to meet with officials of the educational program in Washington. Mrs. Smith's family will join PETER M. Herbert P. Smith The purposes of his department will be to. Prof. Smith after school is out in May. 1. Provide advice, consultation and technical assistance to state education agencies and private non-profit schools in the strengthening of science, mathematics and modern foreign language instruction. 2. Provide assistance in the effective use of laboratory equipment, teaching devices and instructional materials. 3. Review, prepare analyses of and recommend action on budgets, plans and reports submitted by state educational agencies. 4. Make available to state educational agencies upon request specialized personnel in the review of state and local programs or to provide other technical assistance. 5. Make studies and prepare reports with recommendations for improving instruction and supervision in mathematics, science and foreign languages in state and local schools. 6. Inform and interpret the provisions of the Act, regulations and procedures to state educational agencies. 7. Cooperate with the division of higher education in carrying out the federal responsibilities concerning language institutes. Prof. Smith said he will name 50 or 60 competent persons to his staff. "It may take as long as six months to get the program underway," he said. Prof. Smith has completed five and a half years at KU. He was formerly an associate professor at the University of Nebraska, and supervised the NU Training School. He is a former mathematics and science instructor and a public school administrator. Andrews Shows No Emotion at Hearing KANSAS CITY, Kan.—(UP) — The preliminary hearing for Lowell Lee Andrews, 18-year-old former KU sophomore, resumed at 2 p.m. today after a noon recess. Two witnesses had testified in the morning session. One of them, Dr. ter pathologist, at KU Medical Center pathologist, said it was his opinion that any one who would shoot his loved ones 15 to 30 times was irrational. Andrews, who earlier had admitted slaying his father, mother and sister on Nov. 28, 1858, sat unmoved and unemotional. Sloughed Off Books Return as Ugly Nemesis It is almost like starting the school year all over again—coming back after Christmas vacation. A woman sits in the snow on a bench. She is wearing a dark coat and gloves. The background features trees and buildings. Instead of summer experiences, roommates are telling each other about how much studying they should have gotten done but did not . . . or about how much holiday food they ate but should not have eaten. Waistlines are not as slim as they were two weeks ago. As one student thumbs through the calorie book she forgot to take home, she munches on another left-over Christmas cookie. Half a dozen lucky females compare the sparklers they have acquired for the third fingers of their left hands. A few more show off newly-acquired fraternity pins. Up in the room, plants neglected the past two weeks stand dead in the windowsill. And until packing is unfinished, the whole room is pretty bare. The telephone is ringing again. And the living room in the women's dormitory or sorority is filling up with men. Roommates are a little harder to recognize, too, with their new hair styles. And lots of new clothes "walking" down the hall indicate Santa Claus was a pretty good fellow this year. Someone down the hall shouts "quiet hours" and everyone else stands puzzled. It is going to be hard to get used to studying again. BACK TO CLASSES—Jac Campbell, Abilene freshman, clears the snow off her car after coming back from the two-week Christmas vacation. Despite obstacles imposed by the weather on students returning from vacation, most are agreed that the greatest obstacle is yet to come-finals. The grand week will be Jan. 19-24. Sixteen days away from classes is a long time—when final examinations are now two weeks away. Students who had vacations littered with term papers may have been unhappy, but they probably emerged better prepared for finals. At least they didn't get out of the study habit. Students who carried armloads of books from dormitories two weeks ago joked: "We're just going to impress our parents." As it turned out it was not a joke. One student who had experienced Child abuse came before, carried only her luggage when she returned to her dormitory. "I knew it wouldn't do any good to take books home. They'd just be in the way," she said. There were probably a few students who really did spent part of their vacations with books catching up on old assignments. But that still leaves the final spurt of studying for examinations. The weather will be no study aid for sledding enthusiasts or Potter Lake ice skaters. But students who have been here a few years are learning to avoid the temptation offered by winter sports on Mt. Oread, They know it always snows just before final week. However there is one consolation for all students. There will be another vacation in three weeks and then the semester will be ended and it will be too late to worry. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 High Pay or Politics? Now, after all the threats that the maintenance employees at KU and K-State will leave if they don't get their requested pay raises, Atty. Gen. John Anderson has announced that the prevailing wage scales paid to them are illegal. This means that all the complaints over no pay raise may rather result in a pay cut. This is because Mr. Anderson said all the jobs come under Civil Service and the wage scales are already above that. The rates paid have been competitive with those paid for comparable jobs in Lawrence and Manhattan. If the KU and K-State staff are overpaid then all workers holding the same type of job are overpaid. The difference actually is that the others are paid by private concerns willing to pay good wages to get good workers. The University employees are paid by the state out of tax funds. The men in Topika are worried more about saving taxes and getting votes than getting good employees for the state schools. —Martha Crosier Fatal Finals It never fails. Every semester, the schedule of finals comes out just in time to be a source of surprise and dismay for the reckless undergraduate. In fall semester, the schedule is diabolically published just before vacation, so the student has a couple of weeks to brood over it. No student in good standing ever has an afternoon final. They're always at 8 or 10 a.m. No matter how cleverly the class schedule is worked out, John Student winds up with three finals on Monday and one on Saturday, as many as possible in the early pre-dawn hours. Take this semester. A shrewd student who works out a late-rising class schedule, freeing his nights for carousel, looks at his finals schedule. He finds he has an 8 o'clock for his French class, an 8 o'clock on Saturday for his 3 p.m. nap period, an 8 o'clock for his 2 o'clock Tuesday-Thursday class, and faints before he can read the rest of the schedule. So next semester, he works things out differently. He takes mid-morning classes to avoid rising at an un-Christian hour, but avoids the afternoon sessions of last time. And he finds, at semester's end, that he has an 8 o'clock for his 9 a.m. MWF, an 8 o'clock for his 9 a.m. TT, followed by 10 o'clocks for the 10 a.m. classes. By the time the student has a year or two in the mill, he has found that there are certain hours which naturally lead to late finals. He pursues these hours assiduously, but by now he declared a major and must take 10 hours of required courses each semester. These courses are so arranged that they all have 8 o'clock finals. But an answer has been devised, a solution found, and the liberation is at hand. If you don't like finals, and particularly detest finals schedules (this includes 90 per cent of the campus) don't take it lying down—graduate. -A.J. From the Bookshelf Publish or Perish "For most members of the profession the real strain in the academic role arises from the fact that they are, in essence, paid to do one job, whereas the worth of their services is evaluated on the basis of how well they do another. "The work assignment, for which the vast majority of professors are paid, is that of teaching. There are a few—a very few—who are supported by full or part-time regular research appointments, but their number is insignificant compared to the vast majority who are hired to teach and in whose contracts no specification of research duties is made. "Most professors contract to perform teaching services for their universities and are hired to perform those services. When they are evaluated, however, either as candidates for a vacant position or as candidates for promotion the evaluation is made principally in terms of their research contributions to their disciplines." —The Academic Marketplace, by theodore Caplow and Reece J. McGee It Looks This Way... One can't even work on research papers at By Alan Jones Some of us are already having second thoughts about returning to the academic cloister as we view with alarm (1) the weeks ahead—weather and schedules seem to be conspired against us. But there is always the carrot on a stick (2), in this case a diploma, dangling before us, and likely all but a few renegades will return to resume their scholarly and other pursuits. From British Information Services: "A new development in underfloor heating which uses aluminum foil and sheeting has been introduced by a British company." This less than earthshaking news (3) (who wants his underfloor heated?) is overshadowed (4) by the obvious influence of American thought on the English. Notice they did not say "aluminium," but "aluminum," the American spelling. This may herald a new area (5) of understanding in the Western world. We always thought that TV sponsor who insists on calling it "aluminium" was rather putting it on, and it rankled. For the students who really enjoyed their vacation and left their school work far behind this may mean two weeks of mad cramming, which, added to trying to recuperate from vacationing, could prove to be an ordeal. Dead Town Revived The vacation is over and only two weeks are left to get ready for the ominous week of finals. But having the students back in town has its good points. Those few who spent their vacation in Lawrence know how dead this town can be. The numbers? We're just counting this week's clichés When KU takes a vacation so do the restaurant owners. The movies in town go from bad to worse. night because the library and most of the buildings on campus are locked tight every night. Of course one can spend his evenings in the Union but it getserie sitting in that big building all alone. The only night lights are on the Christmas trees at Strong Hall. Of course there is no parking problem, and most of the parking restrictions are off. but school is in session and things are opening up again. The town merchants welcome the students back and so do the students who spent their vacation here. School beginning may mean it's time to study again but anything is better than the complete nothingness this town becomes over vacation. —M.C. LUCKY STRIKE LUCKY STRIKE "It's Molly's" LUCKY STRIKE BRINGS YOU TOP COLLEGE BASKETBALL ON TELEVISION! EVERY SATURDAY AT 2:00 C.S.T. "SAY, PHYLLIG, IS THAT YOUR BASKETBALL PLAYER YOU'VE BEEN TELLING ME ABOUT?" Jan. 10...Cincinnati at Houston Jan. 17...Kansas at Oklahoma Jan. 31 ... Texas A&M at Texas Tech Jan. 24...Oklahoma at Oklahoma State Feb. 7...Arkansas at Texas Feb. 28...Wichita at St. Louis Mar. 7...Missouri at Kansas Stato See your local paper for channel Feb. 14...SMU at Rice Feb. 21...Kansas State at Oklahoma State LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER CLIP AND SAVE THIS SCHEDULE M. H. PLEER CHRISTIAN BECKETT MADAME DUFFY F. BLER 5-32 Dailu Transan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIKing 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor John Husar, Associate Editorial Editor. Member Inland Daily Press Association Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY. Resumes to: John A. Campbell International. Mull 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 holiday days, and exam days. Inlined in second edition Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. Malcool Applelegate — Managing Editor Leroy Lord, Pat Swantha, Martha Crosier, Doug Parker, Assistant Managing Editors; Jack Harrison, City Editor; Jeanne Arnold, Society Editor; Saounda Hayn, Assistant Society Editor; Bob Macy, Telegraph Editor; Jack Morton, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Jim Cable, Sports Editor; Don Culp, Assistant Sports Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine ... Business Manager William Feitz, Advertising Manager; Robert Lida, Classified Advertising Manager; William Kane, Circulation Manager; Clydeene Bags, Promotion Manager; Maurice Nicklin, National Advertising Manager. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT January Clearance Sale Terrill's SPORTSWEAR Blouses Jackets Sweaters Skirts Slacks 1/3 Off Sportswear by such famous names as "Jane Irwill," "Koret of California," "Lampl," "Ship & Shore," "MacShore,"& others. terri's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. St. VI 3-2241 Mondav. Jan. 5. 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 3 A program of supreme importance to anybody who ever buys classical records The RCA Victor Society of Great Music UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE Book-of-the-Month Club ... its common-sense purpose is to help serious lovers of music build a fine record library systematically instead of haphazardly ... under reliable guidance ... and at an IMMENSE SAVING over what they would otherwise pay for the very same RCA VICTOR Red Seal Records MOST MUSIC-LOVERS, in the back of their minds, certainly intend to build up for themselves a representative record library of the World's Great Music. Unfortunately, almost always they are haphaazard in carrying out this aspiration. The new Society is designed to meet this common situation, sensibly, by making collection more systematic than it now is in most cases. Because of more systematic collection, operating costs can be greatly reduced. The remarkable Introductory Offer at the right is a dramatic demonstration. It can represent a saving of up to more than $40\%$ the first year. $\star$ Thereafter, continuing members can build their record libraries at almost a ONE-THIRD SAVING. For every two records purchased (from a group of at least fifty made available annually by the Society) members will receive a third RCA VICTOR Red Seal Record free. ★ A cardinal feature of the plan is GUIDANCE. The Society has a Selection Panel whose sole function is to recommend "must-have" works for members. Members of the panel are: DEEMTS TYLOR, composer and commentator, Chairman; SAMUEL CHOTZINOFF, General Music Director, NBC; JACQUES BARZUN, author and music critic; JOHN M. CONLY, editor of High Fidelity; AARON COPLAND, composer; ALFRED FRANKENSTEIN, music critic of San Francisco Chronicle; DOUGLAIS MOORE, composer and Professor of Music, Columbia University; WILLIAM SCHUMAN, composer and president of Juilliard School of Music; CARLETON SPRAGUE SMITH, chief of Music Division, N. Y. Public Library; G. WALLACE WOODWORTH, Professor of Music, Harvard University. HOW THE SOCIETY OPERATES EACH month, three or more 12-inch $31\frac{1}{2}$ R.P.M. RCA VICTOR Red Seal Records are announced to members. One is singled out as the record-of-the-month, and unless the Society is otherwise instructed (on a simple form always provided), this record is sent to the member. If the member does not want the work he may specify an alternate, or instruct the Society to send him nothing at all in that month. For every record purchased, members pay only $4.98, the nationally advertised price. (For every shipment a small charge for postage and handling is added.) RCA VICTOR Society of Great Music, c/o Book-of-the-Month Club, Inc. 345 Hudson Street, New York 14, N. Y. UV 27-1 Please register me as a member of The RCA Victor Society of Great Music and send me immediately the RCA Victor album checked below, billing my $9.99 plus a small charge for postage and handling. I agree to buy six additional records within twelve months from those made available by the Society, for each of which I will be billed $4.98, the price nationally advertised (plus a small charge for postage and handling). Thereafter, I need buy only four such records in a twelve-month period to maintain membership. I may cancel my membership any time after buying six records from the Society. After my sixth purchase, if I continue, for every two records I buy from the Society I will receive a third RCA Victor Red Seal Record, free. □ THE WELL-TEMPERED CLAVIER (6 records) □ THE NINE BEETHOVEN SYMPHONIES (7 records) --- SS } (Please print plainly) Check here if you wish to begin with TCHAIMOVSKY'S FIRST PIANO CONCERTO played by VAN CLIBBURN. (This, of course, counts toward fulliment of the sixsexta agreement.) CITY... ZONE... STATE... NOTE: If you wish to enroll through an authorized RCA VICTOR dealer, please fill in his name and address here. ... DEALER'S NAME... ADDRESS DEALER'S NAME. CITY ... STATE PLEASE NOTE: Records can be shipped only to residents of the U.S. and its territories, and cannot be sent to individuals outside the United States. BEGINNING MEMBERS WILL RECEIVE ... IF THEY AGREE TO BUY SIX ADDITIONAL RECORDS FROM THE SOCIETY IN THE NEXT YEAR The Nine Symphonies of Beethoven ORCHESTRA CONDUCTOR The orchestra conductor is guiding the musicians with a baton. CONDUCTED BY Arturo Toscanini WITH THE NBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SEVEN 12-INCH 33% R.P.M. RECORDS FOR ni $ 3^{98} $ [Nationally advertised price: $34.98] OR W. A. S. M. "The Mighty Forty-Eight" JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH'S The Well- Tempered Clavier PLAYED ON THE HARPSICHORD Wanda Landowska SIX 12-INCH 33% R.P.M. RECORDS FOR $398 [Nationally advertised price: $29.98] P YOU MAY BEGIN WITH THIS RECENT SELECTION, IF YOU WISH Van Cliburn PLAYING TCHAIKOVSKY'S FIRST PIANO CONCERTO Page 4 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 5,1959 League Play Opens Tonight With KU-OS Game in Allen It is back to the wars tonight for Coach Dick Harp and his Jayhawker basketball team. A crowd of 6,000 is expected to see the team meet Oklahoma State at 7:35 in Allen Field House. The Cowboys have met and defeated Kansas once this season. They scored a 59-48 victory in a loser's bracket game in the Big Eight Tournament during the holidays. Oklahoma State, entering Big Eight basketball title competition for the first time this season, used a 50 per cent shooting average to hand Kansas its seventh straight loss. The Jayhawkers then snapped back in the tournament's bottom game to knock off Missouri 84-73 for a seventh place finish. They hit their best shooting average of the season in the Missouri game—40 per cent. Coach Harp will probably start Monte Johnson and Ron Loneski at forwards, Bill Bridges at center, and Bob Hickman and Dee Ketchum or Bob Billings at guards. Loneski and Bridges paced the team throughout the tournament. Loneski totaled 69 points and Bridges hit 40. Bridges hit his career high in the Missouri game with 25 points. He was also named the meet's top rebounder. Johnson opened at center this year but was shifted to forward as Harp searched for a balanced team. Coach Hank Iba, now in his 25th season as basketball coach at Oklahoma State, will probably start Dennis Walker and Dick Soergel at forwards; Arlen Clark at center, and Don Heffington and Jack Hollingsworth at guards. Clark, 6-foot 8-inch senior, hit 21 points when the Cowboys defeated Kansas. He was the team's leading scorer last season with 502 points. Big Eight teams open conference play with a full schedule of games tonight and another round scheduled Saturday. All but two of the games are rematches from the pre-season tournament. the schedule tonight shows Missouri at Oklahoma, Kansas State at Iowa State, Oklahoma State at Kansas and Nebraska at Colorado. The entire Saturday slate is a rematch, highlighted by a duel between Colorado and Kansas State at Manhattan. The Buffaloes had K-State all but beaten for the tournament championship before Don Walker fouled out and K-State's Bob Boozer came through with three clutch baskets for a 67-66 victory. Also scheduled Saturday are Oklahoma State at Nebraska (Nebraska) Big 8 Standings All Games W L Pct. Kansas State ...9 1 .900 Colorado ...9 4 .600 Nebraska ...6 4 .600 Oklahoma ...5 5 .500 Iowa State ...5 5 .500 Oklahoma State ...5 5 .500 **Kansas** ...3 7 .300 Missouri ...3 8 .273 Football Writers Pick Iowa No.1 NEW YORK — (UPI) — Iowa, which climaxed its season with a 38-12 victory over California in the Rose Bowl, was chosen the nation's leading college football team of 1958 $ \gamma $ the Football Writers Association of America. The Big Ten champions received four first-place votes and one second for a total of 14 of a possible 15 points from the five-man committee which handled the voting. Louisiana State, the nation's only major unbeaten and untied team and a 7-0 winner over Clemson in the Sugar Bowl, was second with eight points and Army and Oklahoma each had four points. won 55-48 in the tournament); Oklahoma at Iowa State (the Sooners won 68-65), and Kansas at Missouri (Kansas won 84-73). The tournament was provocative, if only entertaining enough to draw 7,500 fans—the lowest in history—for the Saturday night first round games. Missouri, which finished in the cellar, came within three points of champion Kansas State in the opening game. After the tournament was over Coach Tex Winter said he felt his Wildcats were pressed hard for the championship because other teams in the league were stronger, not that the better teams were weaker. However, a check of records of pre-tournament intersectional play a year ago and this season shows The clubs posted a 42-14 record in 56 games going into the tournament a year ago (counting Oklahoma State's 6-1) but had only 29 victories and 27 losses in the same number of games this season. The two teams are tied for second place in the all games standings going into tonight's opening round of conference play. While the Buffs will have a chance to whittle at K-State's 9-1 mark this Saturday, Nebraska and Kansas State won't tangle until Feb. 2. teams fell off from a .750 winning clip to only .518 this season. Christian Athletes to Honor Top Three Football Coaches Colorado and Nebraska were the only teams with better records going into tournament play, the Buffs showing a 4-3 this season compared to a 2-4 in 1957. Nebraska had a 4-3 compared to a 4-4. "We feel it appropriate at this time," Munn said, "to pay tribute to some of our members for their outstanding contributions to advancing the Christian character of American youth." KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — The Fellowship of Christian Athletes will honor three of the nation's outstanding football coaches, Paul Dietzel of LSU, Pete Elliott of California and Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma. The announcement was made at the organization's headquarters here today by its president, Clarence (Biggie) Munn, head football coach at Michigan State. Munn will make a presentation to the three coaches at a special breakfast meeting Friday in Cincinnati during the annual convention of the American Football Coaches Association. Dietzel will receive the "Coach of the Year" award Friday night. His team was the only major college team to finish the 1958 season unbeaten. It defeated Clemson, 7-0, in the Sugar Bowl. tion, coached Oklahoma to a 9-1 record and a 21-6 victory over Syracuse in the Orange Bowl. Elliott's California Bears won the Pacific Coach title but were defeated 38-12 by Iowa in the Rose Bowl. Wilkinson, a member of the FCA's advisory board and president of the American Football Coaches Associa- G. WASHINGTON, famous father, says; "Makes you hair look real George!" For Bradley, the game against Oscar Robertson and friends will be a grudge fight all the way. Bradley was riding high toward the conference championship last year when Cincinnati won the title by one game. In other Missouri Valley games tonight, St. Louis is at Pittsburg; Wichita is at North Texas state and Tulsa is at Houston. Twice-beaten Cincinnati was ranked first in the United Press International standings last week, while undefeated Bradley was eighth. After tonight, the entire conference is idle until Saturday when another four-game schedule is highlighted by a televised match between Cincinnati and Houston. By United Press International LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. The basketball Titans of the Missouri Valley Conference—Bradley and Cincinnati—collide tonight, and the reverberations are sure to be felt in the national Standings. Just a little bit of Wildroot and... WOW! Homer Floyd, star Jayhawker halfback during the 1958 football season, has signed for the 1959 season with the Edmonton Eskimos of the Western Interprovincial Football league in Canada. Floyd Signs With Edmonton Eskimos Floyd, who came here from Massillon, Ohio, ended his three-year college career as the team's leader in rushing, pass receiving and scoring. He was the top conference pass receiver. National Standings Due for Shake-up 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Cincinnati still has the same weapon that proved so successful last year—the dependable "Big O." Robertson is the Nation's leading scorer with 281 points in eight games—a 35.1 per game average. Get WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Charlie! As seen most on the campus Independent LAUNDRY & GIRL CLEANERS 1903 Mass. Independent LAUNDRY & BODY CLEANERS Rowlands Book Store 1241 Oread to serve you Conveniently located Independent LAUNDRY & BOT CLEANERS 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1903 Mass. 740 Vt. VI 3-4011 Also at Rowlands, 1241 Oread K Page 5 Edible Hat Moves Play; Cast for Next Month The complications that arise when a horse eats an expensive straw hat will be the subject of the next University Theatre show Feb. 10-13 in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. The play, a 19th century French farce titled "An Italian Straw Hat," is popped with philandering brides, outraged husbands and the furious owner of the consumed hat. Gordon Beck, instructor of speech, will direct. LD. cards may be used by students to pick up reserved seats at the theater box office in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building and the Kansas Union concessions stand. Cast members include Lou Lyda, Lawrence, and Marvin Carlson, Wichita, both graduate students; Karl Garrett, Lawrence junior; Bob Moberly, Excelsior Springs, Mo., sophomore; Douglas Halsted, West Medway, Mass., graduate student; Michael Jackson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Terry Kiser, Omaha, Nebr., sophomore; James Gohl, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Janice Beaty, Parsons, sophomore; Molly Hoover, Manhattan freshman. Other cast members are Elizabeth Jarbose, Parsons, and Clenice Roberts, Lawrence, both juniors; Edith Valentine, Lawrence special student; Sandra Powell, Wichita, Julie Harris, Prairie Village, and Ann Runge, Higginsville, Mo., all sophomores. Paul McKee, Ferguson, Mo. grad uate student; Paul Decker, Lawrence junior; Gerald Snell, Topeka senior; Larry Sneegas, Lawrence, and Bruce Ritter, Higginsville, Mo., both sophomores. Suzanne Calvin, Lawrence freshman; Sandra Rogers, Independence, Mo. junior; Lorain Clark, Lawrence sophomore; Karen Lipe, Kansas City, Kan. junior; Barbara Foley, Lawrence, Henry Asbell, Kansas City, Mo., and Ardith Webber, Bartlesville, Okla., all sophomores. Professors Get Leaves University Daily Kansan Two professors in the School of Business have been granted leave of absences to continue study. Wiley Mitchell, professor of business administration and assistant dean of the School of Business, will have a one-year leave beginning in the summer to take part in a management development institute in Lausanne, Switzerland. W. Keith Weltmer, professor of business administration and director of executive development, who is a lieutenant colonel, will spend the spring semester attending the officers' associate course at the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth. Maintenance Faces Pay Cut some janitors of the University will run as high as $5,578.86. (Continued from Page 1) Mr. Nichols said today the abnormal number of hours claimed by the workers is caused by a shortage of employees with many special projects to be completed. Every crew but power and watchmen crews are shrot-handed, Mr. Nichols said. The University has eight janitor vacancies and two electrician vacancies. Common laborers formerly paid $1.05 to $1.62 an hour will receive $1 to $1.34 under civil service and janitors, $83 to $1.10. They formerly received $1 to $1.34. KU pays its electricians, plumbers and steamfitters a starting wage of $1.79 an hour, with that figure climbing to a maximum of $2.63 after 20 years of service. Under civil service, the rates would be $1.47 minimum and $1.98 maximum. Mr. Nichols said the University has had no resignations from maintenance employees so far. But he said most had not been notified of the exact amount of their wage cuts. Gov. George Docking also made an attack on Mr. Nichols' salary The governor said Mr. Nichols' salary was increased from $8,000 in 1953 to $13,500 last year, while an economics professor got only a three per cent raise in the same period. Over $70,000 Received for Grants, Scholarships in Science Research KU received more than $70,000 in grants and scholarships in the past week. The National Science Foundation granted $60,800 for an 8-week summer institute for elementary school teachers and supervisors in biological and physical sciences. The Foundation also granted $7,800 to the University for botanical research. The Shell Companies Foundation, Inc., will renew the Shell Fellowship in geology for the academic year 1959-60. The Garvey Drilling Company, Wichita, has again made $500 available for an undergraduate scholarship in petroleum engineering. KU is one of 12 schools in the nation selected for the first elementary school institutes ever sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Fifty teachers will receive stipends while other qualified persons may be accepted as members of the institute. "Applications for the KU institute are due March 1," said Dr Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day materialization. Do not bring Bulletin material. The only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Ph.D. reading examination, French. Saturday, Jan. 10. 9-11 a.m. In Fraser, Room 11. Turn books in to Miss Craig, Fraser, room 120, by noon Jan. 8th. Official Bulletin TOMORROW WEDNESDAY Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. and Holy Communion, 7:00 a.m. with breakfast following, Canterbury House, Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky, KU Faculty Club, 8 p.m. square dance. Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. L. Worth Seagondollar. WEDNESDAY Graduates and seniors looking toward teaching in church college invited to attend a conference at Center with personnel representative of Methodist Board of Education. Call Rev. Dennis McNamara, 519-428-3011, lunch $.50 at noon or for appointment. Jay Jones, 5:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kan- Quill Club, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Literary magazines from other schools will be examined and discussed. Jay Janes. 5:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Attendance required. KU Faculty Club, 7:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge. Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. James E. Seaver, VI3-4902. Call for reservations by Tuesday. Morse Code, visual signaling variety, was first used by the Army during the Navajo campaign in 1860. Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Holy communion, 9:00 a.m. with breaks after the service. Robert W. Ridgway, associate professor of education and director of the institute. "Applicants must be eligible for admission to the KU graduate School, "Dr. Ridgway said." Stipends for 50 persons with at least two years experience will be available up to $75 a week, plus up to $80 for travel and $15 for dependents with a maximum of four." Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 Research for the second N.S.F. grant, that of $7,800 for research entitled "Biosystematic Investigation in Haplopappus," will be director by Raymond C. Jackson, assistant professor of botany. The genus Haplopappus is in the sunflower family. The N.S.F. will provide for field work for three summers, in Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, southern Colorado and California. Dr. Jackson's assistant will be Ning Ii, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student. The Shell Fellowship in geology, to be renewed by the Shell Companies Foundation, Inc., is open to graduate geology students. It bears a stipend of $1,600 annually, with an 【笑】 ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) additional sum for fees, books and supplies. 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) A man using a camera. Father de Bertier's newest book is "France and the European Alliance, 1816-21: The Private Correspondence Between Metternich and Richelieu." Another work, "Metternich and His Times," will be released later this year. Save at . . . HIXON'S Father de Bertier has taught at the College of Saint Jean, Versailles, and the Catholic University of Lyon. He has been visiting professor at the University of Ottawa and the University of Notre Dame. He studied at the College of Saint Jean, the University of Caen, and the Sorbonne, where he received the doctor of letters in 1949. Father de Bertier was ordained to the priesthood in 1936. 721 Mass. The Garvey Drilling Company scholarship allows the graduate recipient to participate in a major research project of the petroleum engineering department. The award will be made during the spring semester. VI 3-0330 French Politics Theme For 3rd Humanities Talk Among his academic honors are the Thiers Prize and the Gobert Prize from the French Academy. A French historian, the Rev. Dr. Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny, a Catholic priest, will deliver the season's third Humanities Lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in Fraser Theater. A professor of history at the Catholic University of Paris, France, Father de Bertier will speak on "The Handicap of Tradition in French Politics." At 4 p.m. Friday, Father de Bertier will discuss "The New French Constitution" at a Student Union Activities-sponsored Current Events Forum in the Kansas Union Browsing Room. Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, will moderate the discussion. Refreshments will be served. Also on Father de Bertier's schedule are engagements to speak to four classes in history, political science and education, and to lecture in French on "How Frenchmen See the Foreigners." The lecture will be open to students and faculty of the department of French at 4 p.m. Thursday in Fraser Theater. Hoch auditorium was built in 1926. WELCOME BACK SPECIAL! One Group Reg. $16.95 Men's B-9 Parkas $11.88 Sizes 38 to 50, Charcoal or O.D. LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Mass. VI3-3933 End of Year Clearance Delmanette Heels For Women Selected Colors and Patterns Formerly Priced at $18.95 13 $ ^{90} $ Penobscot Loafers For Women Formerly Priced to $8.95 Suedes 590 Leathers 690 Foot Flair Heels For Women Formerly Priced at $12.95 Suedes $ 9^{9 0} $ Leathers $ 1 0^{9 0} $ Town & Country- Deb Dress Flats Leathers and Suedes Formerly Priced to $10.95 690 790 Viner Loafers For Women Leathers and Suedes Formerly Priced to $6.95 490 Evening Slippers For Women Broken Lots Formerly Priced to $14.95 890 Please, no phone calls, returns, or approvals! Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 Summerfield Grants Awarded 2 Scholars Two KU professors have been awarded Solon E. Summerfield and Elizabeth M. Watkins distinguished professorships. They are E. Raymond Hall, professor of zoology, chairman of the zoology department and director of the Museum of Natural History, and Charles D. Michener, professor of entomology and chairman of the entomology department. The appointments were made by the Board of Regents following nominations by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, who described both men as "scholars with genuinely great international stature." Dr. Hall and Dr. Michener will receive their regular salaries from the state, plus the equivalent of income from $100,000 endowments. The annual stipends will total about $16,000 a year to each man, if the salaries are figured on the same basis as the first distinguished professorship awarded to Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology Dr. Moore was named a Solon E Summerfield distinguished professor in September. Two more distinguished professorships will be awarded later to persons outside the present faculty. They will be maintained by a $200,000 endowment created last June by Roy A. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star. Dr. Hall, 56, who received the Summerfield scholarship is a KU alumnus. He taught at the University of California for 20 years before returning here in 1944. He is a specialist on mammals throughout the North American continent. Dr. Michener, 40, is currently on a year's leave as a Fulbright research fellow and lecturer at Queensland University in Australia. He is considered an authority on chigger mites and is among the few international experts on bees. Busy Rest for Faculty KU professors spent a bury Christmas vacation while the students were gayly enjoying themselves. Four professors presented scientific papers at the 125th meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Washington, D. C. Dr. Theodore Eaton Jr., visiting associate professor of zoology; Dr. Nicholas Hotton, assistant professor of anatomy; Dr. Charles Phoenix, resident fellow in anatomy, and Dr. Herbert A. Smith, professor of education, all presented papers at the meeting. Robert W. Johannsen, associate professor of history, presented a paper on "Stephen A. Douglas and the Territories" at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association in Washington, D.C. W. Stitt Robinson Jr., associate professor of history and chairman of the program committee of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, will meet with the executive committee of that organization, also in Washington, to arrange the annual meeting in April in Denver. James E. Gunn, assistant public relations director and instructor of English, has had his science fiction novel, "Wherever You May Be," published by Doubleday and Co. A textbook by Dr. Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics, sociology and anthropology, has been published by Harper and Brothers. Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, was the subject of a feature article in the Dec. 17 issue of the Denver Post. Dr. William Conboy, chairman of the department of speech and drama, attended the annual convention of the Speech Association of America, in Chicago. Prof. Beth to Speak on Privacy Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, will speak at the annual dinner meeting of the chamber of commerce at Burlingame Thursday night. He will discuss "The Right of Privacy: Your Right to be Let Alone," a topic on which he has lectured to many professional and business groups. The University has received a renewed grant for $4,115 for a training and learning study in psychology from the United States Public Health Service. U.S. Health Service Renews $4,115 Grant Principal investigator in the project is Dr. Edward L. Wike, associate professor of psychology. The "Kansas Engineer," Engineering Student Council publication, was recently awarded honorable mention by Engineering College Magazines Associated for the best technical article of the year. Award to 'Kansas Engineer' The article, a review of progress in the electronic computer field entitled "Electronic Mastermind," was written by Ronald D. Groening of Kansas City, Mo., a 1958 graduate. It appeared in the January, 1958 issue. Wakarusa means "hip deep." Downtown 835 Mass. THE Jay SHOPPE On the Campus 12th & Indiana JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE! Skirts Reduced 40% One Group Blouses $2.00 Fall & Winter Dresses One Half Price (Campus Shoppe Only) Cocktail Dresses One Half Price Sweaters Reduced 40% Don’t Forget . . . You’ll want a Subscription to next semester’s UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER $3.00 FULL YEAR $4.50 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building + Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 7 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. FOR RENT NICE APARTMENT for 1 or 2 boys. Ideal quiet study conditions. 1 block from Union, available soon. Call VI 3-8534. EXTRA NICE new apartment. New frigid- dairie kitchen with new automatic washer. 1% blocks from Union, available Jan. 1 Call VI 3-8534. 1-5 MISCELLANEOUS FOR 2 BOYS, 2 room basement apartment, private entrance and bath, kitchen privileges shared, available second semester. Call after 6 at VI 3-8673. 1-5 BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplies ice plant, 6th and Vernon. Phone VI. tt 0350 BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Ola Smith 941v1 Mason, Ph. Ph. 3-5263. Mass. Ph. Ph. 3-5263. NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop, Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Broad. Open weekdays 8 a.m., to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for fish, reptiles, amphibians, Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal., stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, pet toys, baths, food, blankets, etc., Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 227 Mass. TYPIST: Experientenced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service, Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in course material, shotgun study notes. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your call copy VI 3-7553. 805-1-8 CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS In a quandary? Can't decide what business would suit you best? 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 head of our campus unit will be glad to fill you in on the details. PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia BILL LYONS Supervisor 1722 West Ninth VI 3-5692 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers antheses. Fast, accurate service at regulate rates. Call VI 3-8568. WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. Formerly 829 Conn., now 421 Ohio. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dance studio, Dance Studio, Missouri, ph. 3-63838. TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Doe on standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021½ Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. for men and women, professional massage induction rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-1893. 7360 Tenn. tt WILL TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. J. Cosester, phone VI 3-8679. tf TYFING. Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type them. term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr. VI 3-8600. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. free, improve. service on term, papers, theses, dissertations, etc . . . General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428. tf THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed Fast accurate service. Mrs. Lungren, 1632 W. 20th St., VI 3-7184. tf EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. tf FOR SALE Grease Job $1 Brake Adi. 98c PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil feed with oil & filter change CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 8', like new, but too small for owner. Acadia Applique during the day in the K-9 or call or VT if 6063 between 6-7 p.m. BONGOS, used very little, all metal, made by WFL Drum Cr. heads quickly adjustable to desired pitch. Original cost. adjusted price, $60. John Mallory VI 3-0651 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? Give the gift that is repeated 52 weeks of the year. Special gifts include a gift on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazine. Special gift announcements are available using time for Christmas. Available for students, faculty, and staff. Call VI 3-0124. tf HI-FI-DELITY components, systems and kits. Over 40 nationally advertised brands at nine nurseries, no postal charges. Discounts larger than statement of 1409 evenings, ten-18 AAA MEASURED THE BEST 1280 HOTELS COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming T H THiN N KLI English: TOUGH INTELLECTUAL READ S Thinklish : YEGGHEAD JUNE CASTLEBERRY, LONG BEACH STATE COLL HENRY KLAPHOLZ, CCNY English: INDIAN BAR Thinklish : SWIGWAM H FIREWATER ON THE ROCKS 5¢ English: WEIRDLY SHAPED ASH TRAY Thinklish: SLENDERLOIN RICHARD COLLINS, WILLIAM & MARY English: THIN STEAK A man is looking at a plate of food with a magnifying glass. A woman is standing behind him, watching him. Engn. deceptacle! To the discriminating smoker (anyone who enjoys the honest taste of a Lucky Strike), we offer this fashion note: 25-lb. ash trays are very big this year. Thinklish translation: In modern circles, the plain round ash tray is considered square—no butts about it. Today's ash trays resemble anything from a Ming vase to a coach and four—the only word for them is MAKE $25 Start talking our language—we've got hundreds of checks just itching to go! We're paying $25 each for the Thinklish words judged best! Thinklish is easy. it's a new word from two words—like those on this page. Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Enclose name, address, college and class. DEVELOPMENT LUCKY STRIPE Get the genuine article LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES Get the honest taste of a LUCKY STRIKE English: SUAVE PORTER GATE 7 METRO ThinkLish: GRIDLISH Thinklish : GRIPLOMAT PAUL LE VASSEUR. BROWN English: PAPER FOR BOXING FANS $ \textcircled{c} $ A. T. Co. Thinklish: JABLOID DAVI6 TUBBS, ITHACA COLLEGE Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" --- University Daily Kansan Page 8 Monday, Jan. 5, 1959 Ex-Law Dean Helps U.S.-Iran Amiability The former dean of the School of Law helped further relations between the United States and Iran last year by teaching law to Iranian graduate students. Frederick J. Moreau, professor of law, and his wife and two children spent nearly a year in Iran, arriving in August, 1957. "The strategic location of Iran between the Persian Gulf and the oil of the Mid-East is the real reason we need amicable relations with Iran, Prof. Moreau said. "In connection with Anglo-American law which I taught, it is always a problem to get a reception on this issue. Forty years ago, Iran decided to modernize its law and adopted the code of law of France," he said. He added the Iranians look to France for guidance and many of the law professors are educated in France and Switzerland. This is the reason he lectured in French. "The Iranians' approach to law is fundamentally different from ours," Prof. Moreau said. "Their law is handed down from the law-givers but ours is constantly developing." Prof. Moreau's work in various sections of Iran was to explain how the United States governs itself. Prof. Moreau was a Smith-Mundt grantee sent by the U.S. State Department to the University of Tehran. He lectured on Anglo-American law to graduate students working toward doctorates. The Moreaus went by ship to Naples, Italy and traveled through Greece and Eygpt to Beirut, Lebanon. From Beirut, they flew to Tehran, where they lived in an apartment within sight of the American Embassy. Prof. Moreau lectured at all the larger cities in Iran. One city in which he spoke, Meshed, is located just 25 miles from the Soviet border. The Moreauis found that travel in Iran is mainly by donkey or camel. The country is mountainous and semi-arid, except the Caspian Sea area, which Mrs. Moreau describes as being "like the tropes." Life outside the urban areas is much as it was in Biblical times. Clans of tribesmen migrate from the plains to the mountains. Even in Tehran, there is only one large market to care for shopping needs, Prof Moreau said. Hundreds of booths for the various merchants are built into one large old building. Prof. Moreau said Iranians are not to be confused with Arabs. DUCK'S For SEA FOOD 824 Vt. Get WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Charlie! HELEN OF TROY, N.Y. says; “There’s no greece, just natural grooming!” WILDROOF CREAM OIL Just a little bit of Wildroot and...WOW! 鱼 "The only category in which they are the same is in religion. Both are Moslem, but the Iranians are Aryans, not Arabs," he said. (1) Frederick J. Moreau The Morcaul's found that the Persian culture in Iran is deep-seated. Iranians are noted for their rugweaving and other artistic work. Semi-Annual SALE Drastic Reductions Women's Shoes $1.00 - $5.99 Men's Shoes $5.99 - $7.99 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI3-9871 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds 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 3 boys, extra large clean quietLINNES furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2061 or see 1622 A bond. BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per month. Board $35.00 per month. Recharge Co-op 15375 Tennessee. Ph. VI 2-705. Ask for Tom, Allan, or Jack. 2-12 ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the stairs. Have two rooms half block from the entrance. Immediate possession. Vin per room. Double rooms. Inroom. Places taking reservation. TOI Chicago. VI 3-18 Furnished. Large single room privileges for male students to campus. Reasonable VI 3-496 EXHIBITS home. Two bedrooms furnished with attached and reasonable Phone for app. VI 2 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 MENT for students. Private bath and Louisiana or rail. VI 2-8 MENTS 2 and 4 on the Closet to campground middle aged on apartment house. VI 2-8 RD for one student. Call VI 3-4295. 2-8 MENT Furnished town and bus line. VI 3-2-6 GRILLE Phone VI 3-2-6 EXPERIENCED TEXT. Former secretary will type text intern papers and these. Fast and accurate service at regular rate. VI 3-858. FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS Nightingale Carriage Pier. Parked all edges. Free compite stock of Pine foods and tea for dogs—be prepared! University Daily Kansan Want Ads Want Ads Kansan Business Office,111 Flint or Call KU 376 Daily hansan 56th Year, No. 69 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, Jan. 6, 1959 Academic Teacher Training Stressed by Education Dean Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education said today that KU's School of Education is one of the few in the country that has increased academic requirements for students engaging in teacher training. Dean Anderson gave his views on the relation between academic and professional training for education students following complaints voiced by some college presidents at the Assn. of American Colleges' teacher education meeting in Kansas City, Mo., yesterday. Many of the college presidents at the meeting felt that American elementary and high school teachers would teach better with less education courses and more training in their subjects. P. G. BARTHOLOMEW "We think that it is not a question of academic preparation versus professional education training, but that a fusion and strengthening of method and content is in order in all academic areas." Dean Anderson said. Dean Kenneth Anderson Dean Anderson said he was strongly in favor of extensive academic training so that teachers would know what they are teaching. However, he said the 20 semester hours of education courses required for secondary teachers in Kansas were necessary. He said: "At KU, we feel the academic work our students take in the School of Education is most important. Evidence of this is the deep penetration we emphasize in academic work in our new math major and the language arts and social studies programs in the school." Pantomimist Will Perform Friday Cilli Wang, the 4-foot, $9 \frac{1}{2} -$ inch pantomimist from Vienna, will perform at 8:20 p.m. Friday in the University Theatre of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Miss Wang's performance is an extra attraction of the Concert Course. Student ID cards will not admit. Tickets are on sale at the Fine Arts Office, the Kansas Union and Bell Music Co. Prices are $2.05. $1.54 and $1.03. Miss Wang's first name is pronounced "silly." Her one-woman show was introduced to the American public in the fall of 1957. She filled a Broadway engagement and was seen on the television shows of George Gobel and Ed Sullivan of George Gobel and Ed Sullivan. On tour, she carries more than 500 pounds of equipment and disguises which she has designed and made herself. Included are a 7-foot giraffe, a huge flowering plant, a bird, a fish, and many double figures which make her a visibly split personality. Miss Wang's clowning includes impressions of a little boy who refuses to eat his soup and slowly dies of starvation. She gives a parody of inanimate dancing and mockeries of the deficiencies of mankind. The concept of quality or excellence in American education at all levels is the kind that enables each individual to attain the maximum degree of competence that his abilities permit, he said. "But as I see it, the American people have paid lip service to this concept without putting it into operation," Dean Anderson said. "We must modernize the training of teachers in our colleges and universities in order to equip them academically and professionally to present what they teach in an effective and challenging way," he continued. "The American public will have to agree on a central belief to which all schooling can be tied. And we should staff and administer our schools so as to provide all able youths a sound foundation in the natural sciences, social sciences and the humanities," he said. Dean Anderson said the School of Education stresses complete preparation for its students. In line with this, he said, the school has the highest minimum requirements for graduation of any school in the University. To graduate, an education student must have a 1.1 over-all grade point average, and a 1.5 average in his major subject. Only 1 Mishap Caused by Ice Only one traffic accident on campus has been reported since school resumed despite hazardous driving conditions caused by the recent snowfall, campus police said today. A two-car collision occurred at 8:10 a.m. yesterday on Sunnyside Drive at the turn-off for Malott Hall. A car driven by Joseph Glenn, Sharon Springs junior, was traveling east on Sunnyside and began a left turn. Glenn told officers he was blinded by the sun and failed to see a car approaching from the west. The other car, driven by Robert Billings, Russell senior, was unable to stop due to ice on the street. Officers estimated damages to the Glenn vehicle at $500 and $150 damage to Billings' car. Faculty Views GOP Battle The fight between conservative and liberal Republicans to retain leadership of the House and Senate drew comments from KU faculty members today. Mr. Johnson said the party' should keep Joseph W. Martin Jr., (Mass.) as leader of the House. He said Everett M. Dirksen (Ill.) was the logical choice for Senate leader. Thomas L. W. Johnson, assistant instructor of political science, said the Republican party has a better chance to retain its unity if it keeps conservatives as leaders in the House and Senate. A leadership fight has developed between the liberals and conservatives for the key leadership positions in Congress. Some Republicans feared the struggle was opening wounds that might take years to heal. Bulletin WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. (Mass.) predicted failure today for a drive by insurgent Republicans to unseat him as GOP house leader, a post he has held for 20 years. The contest between Martin and his 58-year-old challenger—Rep. Charles Al Halleck, of Indiana—will be decided behind closed doors at a Republican caucus later today. The Senate battle is between Sen. Martin claimed he would win the fight—to be decided at a Republican caucus late today—by at least nine votes. Andrews Will Stand Trial KANSAS CITY, Kan.—(UPI)— Lowell Lee Andrews, 18-year-old former KU student, today was bound over for trial in Wyandotte County district court on three charges of murder in the shooting of his mother, father and sister. City Judge William Burns ordered the youth held without bond pending trial. No trial date was set and Robert Foster, assistant county attorney, said a sanity hearing would be held before Andrews stands trial. The judge said there was "reasonable cause" to believe Andrews had committed the killings, and that he should stand trial in district court. Dirksen and the liberal candidate, Sen. John S. Cooper of Kentucky. Prof. McCoy said; Donald McCoy, assistant professor of history, who is a liberal Republican, said he expected no split in the party. "As long as the fight is fought squarely and fairly out in the open it is likely there will be no split. And an attempt at a compromise between the liberals and conservatives will give greater strength and unity to the party." Supporters of Halleck claimed victory in the battle for the leadership post which Martin has held for 20 years. Martin said the intra-party struggle "can not help but result in bitterness." In the Senate, 11 Republican liberals decided today to limit their fight for the GOP leadership to two positions—floor leader and whip. They had once indicated they might fight for all five leadership jobs. But today they endorsed three of the incumbent officers. The liberal bloc endorsed Senators Styles Bridges (N.H.), GOP policy committee chairman; Leverett Saltonstall (Mass.), GOP conference chairman and Milton R. Young (N, D.), conference secretary. Dirksen now holds both positions of floor leader and whip. Cooper was nominated by the liberaals a week ago to challenge Dirksen for floor leader. Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel (Calif.) was nominated for the position of whip. Of the fight for these two Senate positions, Sen. George Aiken (Vt.), who presided at today's liberal meeting, said: "We make no claim to victory. We concede no defeat. We believe the vote will be so close as to depend on what the uncommitted senators do." Weather Clear to partly cloudy this afternoon. Increasing cloudiness tonight. Tomorrow mostly cloudy. Drizzle and fog extreme southeast tonight and tomorrow. Warmer this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight 20 northwest to 30s southeast. High tomorrow 35 to 45. FAMILY THAT'S 600 CALORIES—Marcia Moran, Prairie Village junior, yields to temptation and breaks a New Year's resolution as she takes a bite of cream pie. Resolutions Are Failing Fast By George DeBord To most of the returned scholars on the Hill New Year's Eve probably seems a long time ago. For many, it probably seemed quite distant the morning after. For those who like to conform to tradition, the coming of the New Year was a time for resolutions. But now, with the machinery of the University grinding away again and 1959 a few days old, resolution-breaking is in full swing. Those who gave up smoking at the end of 1958 tore up their vows this morning and returned to the daily coffee and smoke break in the basement of Strong Hall. The many who lifted a few on New Year's Eve gladly gave up all beverages but cold water Jan. 1. But the strain of studying, listening and sitting is beginning to tell. The local taverns are enjoying increased prosperity as resolution-breakers unbend. However, the best placed to find the promises broken is Watson Library. Here dozens of once-conscientious students doze away happy hours while forgetting firm resolutions to really produce for old KU. Every new year a great number of students at colleges and universities across the land resolve to study harder and make better grades. I had some trouble making my list of resolutions, but am right in step at breaking them. Last night I slipped out with the neighbor across the hall for a little refreshment. This morning I had two cigarettes with my coffee and smoked a cigar on the way to Lawrence. Most professors find bright eyed, businesslike students awaiting them on the first morning after vacation. But by Tuesday or Wednesday things return to normal and the only students working and studying hard are the ones who were before the New Year and did not need to make resolutions. At the library I read up on Sunday's comics and slept over a dry chapter on the geography of Idaho. So I'm right back in the midst of college life with no ball and chain dragging me back to Jan. 1. Sitting here, I see that I am not alone. At the next desk, the girl who resolved to lose 15 pounds by Feb. 1 sits munching a candy bar and drinking a coke. Across the aisle, the guy who resolved to be punctual is hurrying to finish a story which was due yesterday. And the professor who resolved to go easy on his student charges is yelling at me to finish this. So things are back to normal and will probably stay this way until New Year's Day 1960. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 6. 1959 Profs Need Pay When Russia sent up Sputnik I the American population panicked. Everyone was crying for more and better education for the students. Everyone felt the necessity to catch up. But, as in all things time mellows the public into a peaceful state of "things-will-take-care-of-themselves — all-I-have-to-do-is-look-out-for-my-pocketbook." While the latest Russian rocket is flying sunward the governor's recommended budget has done away with any pay raises for faculty at the state schools. New buildings are being constructed on campus—the new business school, proposed engineering building and library addition. These are definitely needed but all the fine buildings can only serve as places for students to learn. All the fine equipment won't do any good without professors to teach the students. Perhaps people are watching their pocketbooks and politics too much. They gripe about having to live on less money. But do they expect the faculty to remain if it can get better wages at other schools or in industry? Martha Crosier Blinking Buttons The Bell telephone system is introducing a new pushbutton telephone. They say it's for business people who make a lot of calls. However, it could prove very useful in some of KU's organized houses. Unlike any other telephones in looks or performance, they are low, compact and button-studded. A hand receiver is attached on the side. The buttons are really fascinating. One model has up to 18 buttons, the other holds 30. Wouldn't this drive a phoneboy or girl nuts? It is confusing enough with only three lines. A button lights up when each line is in use. But have you ever tried keeping up with a mass of blinking buttons? The new phones can be used for inter-office communication, arrange for conference calls or add other extensions to incoming calls. This would be handy if they were inter-fraternity. The sororities could get the large model and have direct lines to each fraternity. Since there are fewer women's houses, the men could easily get by with a smaller model. This direct line would save extended line-jousting. The option of conference calls would be useful when all the Union rooms are full and a committee meeting is necessary. And it would happily save trudging to the Union in sub-zero temperatures for a half-hour discussion about nothing. For the popular coed, the extension on incoming calls would become essential. She could talk to all her admirers at the same time, thus saving study time. Or, if two boys wanted to ask her out she could talk to them both at the same time and let them decide. Even the person who never gets any telephone calls would be happier listening to the jingle of the 16 to 30 lines ring. This is definitely one item no truly organized house should be without. —M. C. For Adults Only Monique Van Vooren, a luscious Belgian nonconformist, has an idea for a special late-night TV program for adults only. It would be, in a word, sexy. Monique claims there has been so much sex censorship on TV that the programs' contents have been reduced to a child's level. She feels the puritanical approach to TV programming has been a failure since it has mainly succeeded in bringing murder to the forefront. "I think it is hypocritical to allow that and for-bid sex," she says. Her proposed show would include attractive women in glamorous clothing. (Actually from the sound of things they would be more out than in.) Sex is real, she claims. She wants a program where the actors will act like adults. Of course it all depends on whose version of adults you are talking about—and how old an adult. Her qualifications appear to be a well developed figure and a low sultry voice. The show, if Monique can ever work it past the censors, would probably have a large viewing audience. The very tag, "For Adults Only," would bring the younger generation before the tube in throngs. And from the sound of things this would be the type of show that would allow one to turn off the sound and watch the picture without missing anything important. Sounds interesting, but personally we prefer Westerns. -M.C. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler 7-26 C. PILEZ OH , MISS FERRIS - HERE'S A SEAT UP HERE NO ONE WANTED Castro won his revolution in Cuba on New Year's Day. A lot of us felt like abdicating that day, but Batista was the only one who did. Trujillo now has enough house guests in the Dominican Republic for a good poker game, and the guests brought lots of chips. Short Ones In Rochester, N. Y. a woman locked the combination to a safe inside it. At least if she can't get at it no one else can either. University of Kansas student newspaper truesteway 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 1912 twelve years ago UNI UNIT REIT Dailu Hansan Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Repres- nted by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, U.S.; national service office; re- ternational 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. En- 1910, to second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Law College; most office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT D. MCCARTHY W. WILSON Mcolm Ewan Marketing Editor R.LUSNESS, DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine ... Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Edito It Looks This Way... By John Husar Many interesting things have transpired in Topeka and other state points the past few weeks. The good governor has no'd proposed KU pay raises, his friend the budget maker has cut existing salaries, and the attorney general has nodded his blessing. The treasurer says there is no money for state schools, the tax man claims he can't get any, and a Kansas publisher writes it isn't worth it anyway. The Board of Regents moans, a University administrator gets insulted, and the taxpayers feel sorry for their poor schools. Meanwhile, the civil service workers squirm, the chancellor assures a bright future, and the professors secretly begin analyzing job situations at other colleges. Considerable pressures have been put upon venerable state politicians since the finance council's ruling against proposed KU-K-State raises. Of course there is a pro and con to every issue. We must look at the state's side. Maybe there really isn't enough money for these salaries. Maybe a pay increase would break the treasury and kill all the other state programs. Very unlikely, though. Governor George never did advocate excessive spending anyway—especially for schools. Maybe George has a shrouded plan to restore the salaries in a little while, and thus look good to the electorate. Then again, maybe he remembers a little escapade in Leavenworth a few months ago when some KU students saluted him with insults. Like we said, there is a pro and con to every story. Dear Diary: Jeepers! What a slovenly meatball this character was that I had to double date with last night! He dresses like a big untidy crumb. Holy Cow! I call him... P Harry the Hoodlum ... For 1959-model-men who have no desire to be like Harry, we've got some new winter styles in suits and stuff like you've never seen before. We'd like for you to come in . . . feel the goods . . . take a squint at the harmoniously-new colors . . . and see if you don't agree that what we have is right down Harry's (or anybody's) alley. Oh! Yes! . . . If you happen to bump into Harry invite him, too. We'll dress that old boy up and make such a dashing figure of him that his gal friend will think of him as a cool (or maybe we should say warm) cat—instead of a big clunk. *Dress Right Man . . . You Can't Afford Not To*! Special Prices on All Winter Clothing Campus Shop 1342 Ohio Page 3 Around the Campus K.U. Skiers Plan Colorado Junket Fifty-five KU students who have never been on skis before will be among the 88 members of Skiers Limited spending their betweensemesters vacation in Winter Park, Colo. Skiers Limited is a University-recognized club sponsored by Larry Marshall, Salina junior, and Alan Morris, Caney senior. The skiers will leave by bus from the Kappa Alpha Theta house at 3 p.m. Jan.24 and will return Jan. 28. One evening of the trip will be spent sleighing, Marshall said. The $78 fee for the trip includes room, meals, transportation, skis, tow tickets, insurance and instruction. The group will stay at Idle Wild Inn and Lodge, 68 miles west of Denver. Instructors for the tour will be Franz Ettlin, Kerns, Switzerland and Hubert Neiss, Vienna, Austria Both are graduate students. Western Civ Review In Bailey Tomorrow Two review sessions for the Western Civilization course will be held at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. The final examination will be given from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. Testing places were assigned to the students when they registered. Students are asked to bring only I.D. cards and pen and ink to the examination rooms. Murrow Interviews Oppenheimer in Film A film will be shown at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Bailey featuring Edward R. Murrow in an interview with Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, nuclear physicist and director of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. N. J. Dr. Oppenheimer gives his views on nuclear warfare and the future of scientific inquiry. He also describes the function of the Institute and the work of its scholars. University Daily Kansan Student Payroll Out Tomorrow Student payroll checks for December should be available tomorrow at the cashier windows, Charles Harkness, director of the personnel office, said today. W-2 tax withholding forms for hourly student employees will be distributed with the January checks about Feb. 2, he added. Supervisors of student hourly employees are asked to have time cards turned in to the personnel office by tomorrow noon. The International Club will close its program for the semester with a dinner at 6 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. International Club To Give Dinner At 5 p.m. club members will meet in the Pine Room of the Union to elect officers for the spring semester. After the dinner the Arab students will present a program. A group picture will be taken and a surprise award for the best "night of nations" this semester will be presented. Tickets for the dinner can be purchased at the Union for $1.50. Woman Wills $35,000 For Scholarship Fund The proceeds from an El Dorado woman's $25,000 estate will be used to establish the Sarah D. Knox Scholarship Fund at KU. Mrs. Knox, who died Dec. 26, bequeathed her entire estate to the KU Endowment Assn. for the scholarship fund. The grant will provide scholarships each year for at least two students, possibly more. The will stipulates that preference be given students from Butler County. Discouraged? Look Ahead Students discouraged with what is left of this semester can begin looking forward to classes they will take in the spring. A schedule of classes is available now in the registrar's office, 122 Strong. Students wishing to transfer to another school of the University next semester should also report to that office as soon as possible so that transfer papers can be prepared before enrollment. James K. Hitt, registrar, said that the enrollment procedure will be similar to that followed last semester. There will be no early enrollment permits "except in severe hardship cases," he said. Students with particular working hours should submit letters from their employers and an application to the Committee on Special Enrollment Privileges. Mr. Hitt is chairman of that committee. Students will be authorized to schedule classes around their work schedule but they will not be given permits to enroll early, Mr. Hitt said. All students will be required to schedule a substantial number of their classes in the afternoon or Saturday morning. Therefore, there is no direct relationship between the time a student enrolls and the class schedule he obtains, he added. Students who cannot enroll at their scheduled time should make special application with the enrollment committee. Enrollment will be completed about noon, Saturday Jan. 31. The last group to enroll will enter the Union at 10:30 a.m. Statewide Activities Forms Texans Club Statewide Activities is organizing a club for Texans attending KU. The group will be an informal club for Lone Star Staters who want to get together with their fellow Texans. Anyone interested should call Dee Morsbach, VI 3-4610. Tuesday. Jan. 6, 1959 The First Shall Be Last On Income Tax Returns Students may be subordinate to faculty members in the classroom but during vacation the rank and status system doesn't necessarily hold. Just ask Kenneth Gray, Lawrence junior, who pulled family rank on a faculty member in the Lawrence Memorial Hospital waiting room between Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. Both Gray and Capt. Donald L. Hunter, instructor of air science, became fathers of daughters for the first time. But a 2-year-old son, plus 29 hours and 23 minutes, gave the junior seniority over the instructor. Shari Lee Hunter, her parent's first child, was the last child born at the Lawrence hospital in 1958. Catherine Marie Gray was the first Lawrence baby of 1959. Capt. Hunter is ready to pull his rank when he files his income tax return. He can claim his new daughter as a deduction for 1958, while Gray will have to wait until next year to get his deduction. PAT READ INDIAN TRADER 445 Tenn. St. Ph.VI 3-1306 Gifts That Are Different - Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs - Hand Loomed Ties The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment --- You'll Enjoy Reading the Daily Kansan- for the "Latest" from the "Most" on the Campus! P. S. - Your Parents and Friends will enjoy reading the DAILY KANSAN, too . . . $3.00 per Semester - $4.50 Full Year Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 6. 1959 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Buffaloes Pose Threat To Stampede Big 8 By United Press International The Colorado Buffaloes, gunned down by the big men the past three years, may have the hump in their backs and the drive in the back-court to make the Big Eight season a long one for the other conference members. The Buffaloos, out of the national limelight since clinching the Big Eight crown and third in the NCAA Tournament in 1955 on the play of Eurdy Haldorson, were picked to finish last in the Big Eight this season. Instead, they have come on with a rush to become a top contender for the Big Eight crown and throw the conference race into a quandary of who will beat whom and where. All this has transpired because Gerry Schroeder, a 6-1 senior guard, came from nowhere to become probably the best little man in the conference; because the "big man," Don Walker at only 6-6, has become a defensive titan, and because the Army released Mick Mansfield, who lettered in 1955 and 56. "They're big and they're strong," said coach Tex Winter of Kansas State after his Wildeats managed to salvage a one-point win on an awkward shot by Bob Boozer in the finals of the pre-season tournament last week. "Colorado may be the best team we've met this season," Winter said, although K-State has met and conquered such teams as North Carolina State, Purdue, Indiana, California, San Francisco and St Joseph's of Philadelphia. Schroeder, skilled at ball handling, quick on the inside and accurate from the outside is the top scorer for Colorado and the key to its hopes of living up an unusually dull conference race. Although Schroeder lettered the past two years, conference coaches apparently did not realize his potential when they picked Colorado to finish last in the conference Also overlooked was Russ Lind, a junior who combines with Schroeder to give Colorado one of the best backcourt pairs in the conference. Walker, at center, is not a prolific scorer but has a good hook shot and moves well on defense. He is considered a strong point of the club by 32-year-old Sox Walsch, now in his third year as Buff coach. Mansfield, at 6-4, is another low scorer but strong ball handler and defensive man. Walseh can insert 6-6 Jerry Olson, 6-7 Matt Baskin, 6-3 jumping Jack Billy Lewis or 6-6 Frank Javernick into the line-up, giving the Buffs the height and depth to contend with almost any club. The Buffaloos' home range in the mile high mountains at Boulder also may work in their favor during the conference campaign. They have a return engagement with Kansas State this Saturday at Manhattan, and then get their big chance against the Wildcats in the rarified air at Boulder on Feb. 7. The "dean's dream team," the American People's Encyclopedia all-scholastic football team, has one Kansas player on its first string. Blasi Joins Dream Team He is Bill Blasi, 189 pound senior, who earned a tackle position on the basis of his scholastic record. Oklahoma players filled four positions, Colorado three and Missouri two. Chet Vanatta, center for the 1958 Jayhawker squad, won an honorable mention. The squad is made up of Big Eight Conference players with a B average or better. Conference players make the final selection of men to be honored. IM Play Resumes Tomorrow at 4:15 No intramural basketball games were played yesterday and none are scheduled for today. The regular schedule will resume tomorrow. Tomorrow's schedule— Fraternity A—Phi Kappa Psi vs. Delta Tau Delta, 4:15; Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Kappa Sigma, 5:15; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda 6:15; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Delta Upsilon, 7:15. Fraternity B—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Pi. 4:15; Triangle vs. Alpha Phi Alpha, 4:15; Phi Kappa vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 5; Kappa Sigma vs. Acacia, 5; Delta Chi vs. Sigma Nu, 5:45; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Delta Sigma Pi, 5:45. Fraternity C-Phi Kappa Psi II vs. Sigma Nu III, 6:30. North Texas Falls To Wichita 85-78 DENTON, Tex. — (UPI)—Wichita took a Missouri Valley Conference thriller from North Texas State 85-78 last night. Al Tate, a sharpshooting forward, netted 22 points with his sure touch to enable the Shockers to cut down an early North Texas lead and move into a 43-39 advantage at halftime. Fans Warm Up As Team Shines It was Allen Field House and there were two basketball teams on the floor warming up. But the small crowd seemed unaware that a Big Eight Conference game was about to start. The band played. Cheerleaders went through motions and the smallest crowd in Allen Field House history talked and played bridge. At 7:25 fans were still straggling in. Finally, the five thousand fans settled back in roomy comfort to watch the toss up. Once the game started, the KU players forgot their tension, and jumped into a 19-13 lead. The fans looked startled and yelled a little. Then Bill Bridges stole the ball, dribbled the length of the floor, and scored on a layin. Then followed a wild outburst of clapping, shouting, and the familiar stomping of feet. Harrassed Hank Iba attempted to find the right combination and shuffled his players in and out of the lineup like a man playing chess. A State player entered the game. A minute later he missed a shot and out of the game he came. On the other side of the court, KU Coach Dick Harp put his arm around the nearest man, as if he were a proud father. But then a KU player made a mistake and Coach Harp slapped the nearest leg angrily. Kansas was building up a lead and Iba continued to yell. The gun sounded with KU a 58-49 winner. The opposing coaches met, smiled, shook hands, and left the floor. The fans filed out. SENIORS... IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the '59 Jayhawker CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 A PURE WHITE MODERN FILTER IS ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A WINSTON It's what's up front that counts IF IT HASN'T GOT IT HERE IT HASN'T GOT IT! Winston puts its FILTER-BLEND up front...fine, flavorful tobaccos, specially processed for filter smoking KING SIZE Winston FILTER: CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVOR Winston FILTER: CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVOR R. J. REYNOLD TOBACCO CO. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD ! Tuesday, Jan. 6, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Jayhawks Unhorse Cowboys 58-49 KANSAS 55 KANSAS 22 KU started off the new year by winning its first conference tilt last night with a second-half spurt that corralled the Oklahoma State Cowboys, 58-49. Led by sophomore Bill Bridges and reserve-forward Al Donaghue, the Jayhawkers outshot O-State 33 per cent to 28 per cent and out-rebounded the team 49 to 30. After a 25-25 halftime deadlock, Bridges blocked an attempted shot by Arlen Clark from the 20-foot mark, sped down the court and dunked a lay-in to put KU ahead 33-28 with 17:57 left in the second period. The play stirred the crowd and the fired-up Jayhawkers went far ahead. Bridges hit three more fielders and Monte Johnson pushed one in from 20 feet as KU leaped forward to stay. A small crowd of victory-hungry fans reached a cheering peak at this time. The old time rumble of feet frantically stomping on the steel floor of the balcony shook Allen Field House. Bridges Fouls Out Bridges fouled out with 9:16 left in the second period. He still led the KU scoring with 15 points. Al Donaghue got 13, Ron Loneski nine, Bob Hickman seven, Bob Billings six and Dee Ketchum and Monte Johnson four each. Individual Scores Six-foot eight-inch Arlen Clark Kansas 58 | | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Loneski | 3 | 3 | 9 | | Johnson | 2 | 0 | 4 | | Bridges | 7 | 1 | 15 | | Billings | 1 | 4 | 6 | | Hickman | 2 | 3 | 7 | | Donaghue | 3 | 7 | 13 | | Ketchum | 0 | 4 | 4 | | Hoffman | 0 | 0 | 0 | Oklahoma State 49 was the Cowboys' entire floor show as he dropped in 27 points. He collected most of his points in the first half. | | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Walker | 3 | 0 | 6 | | Soergel | 2 | 3 | 7 | | Clark | 8 | 11 | 27 | | Hefington | 1 | 3 | 5 | | Hollingsworth | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Clarahan | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Deutchendorf | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Ikard | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Wade | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Miller | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Gordon | 0 | 0 | 0 | With 4:13 left in the second period, Oklahoma came out in a man-to-man press and KU went into a semi-stall for the rest of the game. In the last 45 seconds, KU made it a keep-away affair by moving the ball continuously until a final shot in the last three seconds. Bill Bridges had special praise for O-State's big center, Arlen Clark. He also thought Loneski, while not nearing his 21.8 average, played an outstanding passing and rebounding game. Loneski led both teams with 16 rebounds while Bridges grabbed 12. Wildcats Have Scare 'Good to Win' In the dressing room following the game there was a general feeling that it "was good to win this one." Al Donaghue said this was the game "that made me feel better than any game this year." Cowboys' Arlen Clark Tries for Two. Stubborn Iowa State threw a scare into Big Eight pace setter Kansas State last night before falling on the short end of a 59-56 score. The third-ranked Wildeats held off a strong Iowa State offensive to come from behind in the second half. The Cyclones, tough on their home court, wrapped a tight defense around celebrated Bob Boozer, allowing him only 18 points. Kansas State led 31-21 at half-time, but the Cyclones stormed back after the intermission to move in front 46-45 with seven minutes left in the game. Buffs, Sooners Win In other games, Colorado beat Nebraka 57-50, and Oklahoma over- whelmed Michigan 64-59. Colorado went out of reach with Gerry Schroeder's four straight free throws to take a 53-45 lead over Nebraska with $1\frac{1}{2}$ minutes to go. Oklahoma guard Dennis Price broke his team's scoring mark for the year as he fired 27 points to lead the Sooners to their win over Missouri. WRA Demonstration Tonight AAA MEMBER OF THE BEST COUNTRYSIDE MOTELS The KU volleyball team will give a demonstration on volleyball techniques for all women playing in the Women's Recreation Association tournament at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the upper gymnasium of Robinson Hall. COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels 1703 WEST 6TH On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming Birds on a branch BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. Hi-Fi - Expert Service - Quality Parts - Guaranteed Cincinnati Wins by 1 By United Press International A single-point margin after two overtime periods saved Cincinnati from what would have been a costly upset—but Michigan State and Purdue were not. Cincinnati, which tumbled from the No. 1 national ranking all the way to No. 6 after two straight tournament losses last week, found itself faced with a big challenge last night and just barely defeated Bradley, 85-84, to remain the title choice. But Michigan State, ranked No. 5 nationally, took an 80-68 drubbing from Iowa that could seriously hurt the Spartans' Big Ten hopes. And 15th ranked Purdue was beaten for the second straight game, 77-69, by Indiana. Ninth-ranked Auburn made it 20 straight (nine this season) by trouncing Mississippi, 60-47; third-ranked Kansas State squeezed out a 53-56 victory over Iowa State; and seventh-ranked Northwestern made shooting accuracy make up for rebounding deficiencies to beat Michigan, 83-78. National scoring champion Oscar Robertson tallied 28 points to lead the scoring for Cincinnati as it handed Bradley its first defeat of the year after eight wins. Mike Owens saved Bradley from defeat in regulation time with a basket 38 seconds from the end. Billy Joe McDade saved Bradley in the first overtime with five points in the last 58 seconds. But Ralph Davis' two free throws with eight seconds left in the second session won the game for Cincinnati. - - - - - Kansan Want Ads Get Results 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) Holding Down Save at . . HIXON'S 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 the university shop's AFTER-INVENTORY CLEARANCE One week only Sportshirts Large Group—All Types Reg. Now $ 5.00 $ 3.00 $ 5.00 $3.33 11. 95 Topcoats Entire Stock Reg. $47.50 65. 00 Now. $32.50 39.50 42.50 Winter Jackets Parkas and Finger-tip Coats Reg. $19.95 24.95 29.95 Corduroys Leather-type Trim Reg. Now $6.95 $4.95 Alterations extra if needed Across from Lindley the university shop VI 3-4633 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 6, 1959 Campus Club News Faculty Club A square dance will be held at 3 tonight at the Faculty Club for club members. Members of the club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the club for duplicate bridge. L. Worth Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, and Mrs. Seagondollar will be hosts to the square dance and James E. Seaver, associate professor of history and western civilization, and Mrs. Seaver will be hosts at duplicate bridge. A reception in honor of the Rev Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny will be held Thursday night at the Faculty Club following the Humanities Lecture. J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages, and Mrs. Carman, will be hosts. C. A. Valentine, assistant professor of sociology, will speak at the Faculty Club at 5 p.m. Sunday on "Anthropologist's Experiences in New Guinea." A buffet supper will follow the program. Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, and Mrs. Clark, and E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology and human relations, will be hosts. A dinner bridge is scheduled for Jan. 15 at the Faculty Club. Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. and bridge will be played at 7:30 p.m. O. O. Stoland, professor emeritus of physiology, and Mrs. Stoland, Ruth Stoland, secretary of the School of Education, and Dean Thomas Corton, of the School of Fine Arts, and Mrs. Corton, will be hosts. A Bright New Year Is Fashion Forecast Although the campus of this flourishing cultural institution on the Kaw is blanketed in snow, fashion experts tell us that now is Bright Hair, Too There will be even greater use of hair coloring as a basic cosmetic in the future. This was the consensus of beauty and women's editors representing major magazines and some of the country's leading hair stylists who took part in a recent "Beauty Editors Forum." Stylist John Bernard pointed out that modern hair coloring had opened up a new dimension in hair styling. "In the future," he observed, "we will see greater emphasis on the form and volume of the hair, because it will be made more beautiful by color." Stylist Thomas Colesant agreed: "Once the hair is cut, you have to do something with it. The answer must be color and style. Because of this, almost all women use some form of hair color to heighten the effect of their coiffures." Pi Kappa Alpha Houses Elect Officers Dan Deaver, Topeka junior, has been elected president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for the coming semester. Other newly elected officers are as follows: Dick Rinkle, Pratt junior, vice president; Phil Schmidt, McLouth junior, treasurer; Sidney Platt, Bonner Springs sophmore, house manager. Keith Herrin, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, scholarship chairman; Bob White, Hutchinson sophomore, pledge trainer, and Bob Sears, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, secretary. *** Sellards Hall Sellaris Hall has elected officers for the coming semester. They are as follows: Rochelle Beach, Whiting, Ind. sophomore; vice president; Dixie Widup, Parsons junior; secretary; Carol Allen, Leavenworth junior; social chairman; Patsy Ringo, Parsons junior; assistant social chairman, and Linda Fornelli, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; treasurer. Donna Cullen, Kansas City, Kans, sophomore, has been appointed activi- ties chairman, and Linda McKinney. Independence, Mo., junior, has been appointed intramurals chair- man. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 the time to begin planning our spring and summer wardrobes. AL LAUTER To the freezing coed this may seem a grim prospect. Viewed in the spirit of a Happy New Year the idea need not so appallingly. A bright New Year is in store for the coed when she selects colors for her wardrobe. Bright greens, yellows and pinks will be very popular as summer colors. The flowers in printed cotton dresses will rival those of the artist's palette. Crisp white has never been better fashionwise particularly when coupled with red, bright green, pale blue, or shock pink accessories. Monochromatic white ensembles have become very popular and are even being worn for travel, a thing which has previously been taboo. The KU coed can look with favor upon the fashion industry; it has provided a cheerful escape from the long, grey days before, and perhaps after finals. Kansan Want Ads Get Results K.U. CONCERT COURSE Extra Attraction CILLI WANG The Celebrated Pantomimist in 1925-1984 "THE WORLD OF CILLI WANG" Holiday Engagements Told Friday, Jan. 9 at 8:20 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE "In my happy time I have seen on screen and stage a great number of funny people, some of whom I cherished. Add to the list of those I cherish the name of Cilii Wang. As a pantomimist Miss Wang is superb. "Most extraordinary of all is the late Jeremy P. Hawkins, a native arty in her work as was another Phoenix Theatre discovery, Marceau. John Chapman, 'Y, Daily, Impish' John Chapman, 'Y, Daily, Impish' THE CENTER FOR FASHION AND THE FUTURE "The World of Cliff Wang" will remain one of the more memorable theatre events of the season." Walter Sorrell. Providence Journal Carol Potter Tickets Now on Sale $2.05, $1.54, $1.03 tax included Fine Arts Office, Union Ticket Center Bell Music Co. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Potter, Kansas City, Kan., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Carol, to Ron Hardten. Mr. Hardten is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hardten of Claflin. Miss Potter is a junior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Mr. Hardten is past president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and a senior in the School of Engineering. Snyder-Van Meter Mrs. N. V. Snyder of Kansas City, Mo., has announced the engagement of her daughter, Jeanne, to Bruce Van Meter, son of Mr., Mrs. H. E. Van Meter of Houston, Tex. Miss Snwer is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Van Meter is a junior in the School of Business and a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. June 6 has been set as the wedding date. Correction Margaret Ann Kurt and Edward Dolson, both Kansas City, Mo., juniors, are not pinned as reported in the Dec. 19, 1958, edition of the University Daily Kansan. VARSITY Ends Tonight Kim Stanley, Lloyd Bridges in "The Goddess" Shows 7 & 9 --- Myers-Bruce Mr. and Mrs. W. Keith Myers, Kansas City, Kan., have announced the engagement of their daughter Marilyn, to Frank Bruce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Murrel F. Bruce Sr., Mission. Miss Myers is a junior in the School of Education. Mr. Bruce is a junior in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. The wedding date has been set for Feb. 14. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Ends Tonight Cary Grant, Sophia Loren in "Houseboat" Shows 7 & 9 1 You Get More From I A - Superior dry-cleaning C - Personalized service FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY M - Fast,dependable service E 4·HOUR JE PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE CALL ACME TODAY acme acme BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. V13-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Tuesday, Jan. 6, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 worms or less, one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be changed an additional for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall at 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR RENT HOUSE FOR RENT* Furnished or unfurni- table, suitable for 2 families if desired. Call VI 3-7698 after 1 p.m. or VI 3-7695 3-122 ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabamba VI5-0992. EXTRA NICE ROOMS, 1 single, 1 double with single beds, for boys. Call VI 3-7863. Also would like student for odd jobs around house for room rent. 1-12 VERY LARGE SLEEPING ROOM in new home, private entrance, quiet and lovely. $14.50 per month, linens furnished, room. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 1-12 SINGLE ROOMS, graduate girls, ad- dies 3.106-6733. Oread, call Helena G. VIJ 3-6733. SINGLE ROOMS for boys available now to pass on. 1135 Ohio VI 3-2838. 1-13 FOUR ROOMS and bath, unfurnished except refrigerator. Has fireplace, gas heat stove outlet, microwave kitchen town, CI VI 3-5978 until moon or even 5:30 p.m. 3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment, neat, clean, private entrance, phone, laundry private bath, near KU, $55 per month, bill or couple or couple. Call VI 71-7500- liter 5 p.m. FOR SALE CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLEU tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. In the classroom during the day in the Kansan News Room or call VI 9063 between 6-7 p.m. 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT. share kitchen and bath, private entrance, 1520 W. 22nd Terr., VI 3-8673. 1-12 BONGOS, used very little, all metal made by WFL Drum Co., heads quickly become to desired pitch. Original $55, selling price, $30. John Mallory V 1-36513. 1-9 NEWLY DECORATED large single rooms now ready for men students, new beds, refrigerator privileges, near KU and downtown, call VI 3-7199. 1-12 HI-FIDELITY components, systems and kits. Over 40 nationally advertised brands at net prices, no postal charges. Discount perspices. Basement of 1403 nesses, evenings. 1953 MG Td, green roadster, low mileage, many extras, sharp car for only S1-84. Vesuvius sedan, 1951, green car, second vehicle, British Motors, 737 N 2nd, V13-8367. 737 N 1-8 1855 SMITH-CORONA portable typewriter, good condition, one owner, $55 See after 5 p.m. any evening, 1334 Rhode Island, VI 2-0231 STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sport Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI3 0124. t MISCELLANEOUS BEVENAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. plant, 4th and Vermont. Phone VI. t0350 PATRONIZE YOUR - ADVERTISERS • BRITISH MOTORS Jaguar 1952 Sharpest XK120 in the state Only 30,000 actual miles Spotless red roadster with tan hardtop 737 N 2nd, VI 3-8367 BRITISH MOTORS $1495 WANTED WANTED WASHING AND ironings, also sewing, call VI 2-0691, 813 Ibbo Island. DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Ola Snuff 9411; Mile, Phi. VI 3-5263 Dress MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Ola Snuff 9411; Mile, Phi. VI 3-5263 BUSINESS SERVICES NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stools of coats, stands, and accessories for fish. Learn about Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, grooming kit, litter, sweaters, blankets. Everyday in field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable formerly "829" Benn, now "421" Ohio, if WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. RENT A SINGER sewer machine by the 3-1971 Singe Sewing Center, 927 Mass. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contain complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in previous book, biogram study notes, complete cross-index notes, everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553. Worth 1.80 EXPENIENCECED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fart, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqinst, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service, Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211 Mass Swedish massage, steam cabin, etc. For men and women, by professional therapist, available for limited time. VI 3-2123. tf TY191ST: Make reservations now to have these, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. leatherwood, VI 3-8931, 7360 Tenn. tt FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. J. Cosester, phone VI 3-8679. tf THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed. Fast accurate service: Mrs. Lungren, 1632 W. 20th St., VI 3-7184. tf TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8606. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses dissertations, etc . . . General rates. Mrs Tom Brady, VI 3-3428. tf EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. tt WESTERN CIVILIZATION study guide, new, complete, extensive notes covering all the readings. Over 60 pages. Free alive this all week. $1 per set. call VI- 3-7553. TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-3283. If VIPING. OF REPORTS, term, papers, heres, etc. done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI3-2508. tf Your Want Ads Get full coverage Everytime when you run A Summer Session Kansan Want Ad PARKVILLE HIGH SCHOOL WILLIAM F. BLOOMFIELD, B.S.I.E., LEHIGH, '53, SAYS: "Join me for a day at work?" Bill is Plant Service Supervisor for New Jersey Bell Telephone Company at Dover. He joined the telephone company after graduation, has held many jobs to gain valuable experience. Now he has three foremen and 32 craft people working for him. "It's a challenging job and keeps me hopping," says Bill. "See for yourself." PENNEDY'S BANK "8:30 a.m. With my test bureau foreman, I plan work schedules for the coming week. Maintaining equitable schedules and being ready for emergencies is imperative for good morale and service." 100 "9:10 a.m. The State Police at Andover have reported trouble with a mobile radio telephone. I discuss it with the test deskman. Naturally, we send a repairman out on pronto to take care of it." THE SUMMER SHOW "11:00 a.m. As soon as things are lined up at the office, I drive out to check on the mobile radio repair job. The repairman has found the trouble—and together we run a test on the equipment." MOTEL "1:30 p.m. After lunch, I look in on a PBX and room-phone installation at an out-of-town motel. The installation supervisor, foreman and I discuss plans for running cable in from the highway." D C D C D C "2:45 p.m. Next, I drive over to the central office at Denville, which is cutting over 7000 local telephones to dial service tomorrow night. I go over final arrangements with the supervisor." 1950 "4:00 p.m. When I get back to my office, I find there are several phone messages to answer. As soon as I get them out of the way, I'll check over tomorrow's work schedule — then call it a day." "Well, that's my job. You can see there's nothing monotonous about it. I'm responsible for keeping 50,000 subscriber lines over a 260-square-mile area in A-1 operating order. It's a big responsibilitybut I love it." Bill Bloomfield is moving ahead, like many young engineers in supervisory positions in the Bell Telephone Companies. There may be opportunities for you, too. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus and get the whole story. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES BELL SYSTEM Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 6, 1959 KU Band to Present Winter Concert Sunday The annual winter concert of the University Concert Band will be presented at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre, Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band, will conduct. I. D. cards will admit students General admission tickets are $1. Included on the program will be the Henry E. Geehl composition, "Concertstuck," with Kenneth Bloomquist, instructor of trumpet, as cornet soloist. Featured on the second portion of the program will be "Bolero, Trio for Cornets," Walter M. Smith. Performing in this work will be Robert Isle, Lawrence; Lita Bach, Billings, Mont.; Jon Irish, Leavenworth. All are freshmen. The first part of the program will present "Oberon Overture," C. M. von Weber; "First Suite in E-Flat," Gustav Holst; "Emperor Waltz," Johann Strauss; the Geehl work, and "The Three Men Suites," Eric Coates. After an intermission, there will be performances of "Siegfried's Rhine Journey," Richard Wagner; the Smith composition; "March of the Free Peoples." Thomas F. Darcy Jr.; "Commando March"; Samuel Barber; "Divertimento for Band." Vincent Persicheti; and "Les Preludes." Franz Liszt. Little Danger Seen For Hepatitis Here Dr. Ralph Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, said today there is little danger that KU students will contract hepatitis. Infectious hepatitis over the past week has become a problem to the health authorities in Lawrence due to the outbreak of several cases, especially concerning children in the elementary schools. The disease can be spread by contact, particularly through lapses in personal hygiene, contaminated water, or food. After the early flu-like symptoms, jaundice usually develops, and skin and eyeballs turn yellowish. Dr. Canuteson said the KU students are rarely affected by this disease and the Health Center averages less than one case per year. 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 and not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Ph.D. reading examination, French Saturday, Jan. 10, 9-11 am. In Fraser, Room 11. Turn books in to Miss Craig. Fraser, room 120, by noon J. 8th. TODAY Alpha Phi Omega. 7:30 p.m. Oread Ralph Mauger, president of meet- ing elections, and voting organizer. Society for Advancement of Managemen 1:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union KFU Faculty Club, 8 p.m. square dance HBH Mr. and Mrs. L. Worth Seagondollar TOMORROW Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky. Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Holy Communion, 6:45 a.m., with breakfast followed. Carterton, m. Faculty Forum: "Kansas Tax Problems", Prof. F. H. Guild, Director of Taxation, Kansas Unison 12, English Room, Kansas Union 12, home reservations by Tuesday to Y-office Graduates and seniors looking toward teaching in church college invited to teach at The Student Center with personnel representation Methodist Board of Education. Call Rev. Price. V13-7151 for reservation for lunch. $85.00 per appointment. 5:00 p.m. Please call. Jay James. 5:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Attendance required. Quill Club, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Literary magazines from other schools will be examined and discussed. KU Faculty Club, 7:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge. Hosts; Mr. and Mrs. James E. Seaver. VI 3-4902. Call for reservations by Tuesday. THURSDAY Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. and Holy Communion, 7 a.m. with breakfast following Canterbury House Mass, 6:20 a.m. St John's Church, 11th floor, 9:30 a.m. Christian Science Campus Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel throm. 750 h.m. Janforth Chapel, Fraser Theatre. 1250 h.m. Fraser Theatre. "The Handbook of English French Politics." Father*Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvignon, Catholic University of Paris, France. Reception at Faculty Club follows. Art Museum Shows Works of Gramatte' The water colors, drawings and prints of Walter Gramatte', German expressionist painter, are on display this month in the Museum of Art. The exhibition consists of portraits of Gramatte' and his wife. Gramatte' died in 1929. Gramatte', whose paintings are mostly water colors, was widely known as a graphic artist. He illustrated many "avant-garde" books. The museum is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 1:30 to 5 p.m. Sundays. No admission is charged for the exhibition. Potter Lake was built in 1911. Watson Library has acquired a collection of 1,000 volumes from the library of the French scholar and librarian, Leon Dorez. Library Adds Dorez Collection The larger portion of the library left by Dorez at his death in 1922 consisted of 3,000 modern scholarly works and was disposed of some time ago. Those purchased by the University are the old books collected by Dorez. Joseph Rubinstein, special collections librarian, purchased the collection from a Parisian bookseller during his book-hunting expedition in Europe last year. The books, bought with gift money to the KU Endowment Association, are a notable addition to the growing Solon E. Summerfield Collection of Renaissance and Early Modern Books and are fundamental source materials for study in all aspects of the period. The majority of the books were printed in Europe during the 15th to 17th century. A cow may drink as much as 18 gallons of water a day. Senior pictures are being taken now for the 1959 Jayhawker, Arly Allen, Lawrence junior and business manager for the magazine, said today. Appointments may be made with the Estes Studio, 924 Vermont St. by calling VI3-1171. Senior Pictures Taken Now The second issue of the Jayhawk will be out Jan. 14. Allen said. Bids Open Jan. 13 On Union Addition Bids will be opened Jan. 13 in Topeka on the proposed six-story addition to the Kansas Union. Earlier the Board of Regents approved a $900,000 loan agreement with the Federal Home and Finance Agency and authorized issuing $200,000 in revenue bonds to private investment companies. The addition will be constructed on the north side of the Union Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGES SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. It will contain pictures of all organized houses, other living groups, and party and sports views. "All students, teachers, and January graduates are urged to make appointments for their pictures now," Bill Harper, Topeka junior and Jayhawker editor, said. June or August graduates have until March 16 to make sitting arrangements. The pictures will appear in the May senior issue of the Jayhawker. Publication costs are included in the picture price. Coats and ties for men and street clothes for women are suggested, said Harper. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking and Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 position re She com leges of a Off duty weaker she'll skiing Rivi Of m Meet a Young Executive on the Champs Elysées (SHE COULD BE YOU!) Not long ago this young lady was a college senior. Today, she handles the responsibilities and decisions of an executive in one of the world's largest organizations. Today, she's stationed in Paris . . . an officer in the Women's Army Corps. Her professional and social life is busy . . . exciting . . . happily balanced. On duty, this young executive occupies a position requiring education, initiative and intelligence. She commands the high salary and traditional privileges of an Army officer. But wherever this young lady goes, her uniform will be her passport to a wonderful world of opportunity. Because she began her career as an executive . . . an officer in the Women's Army Corps. Off duty, she enjoys her leisure time. (Free evenings and weekends plus 30-day annual paid vacation.) Perhaps she'll attend evening classes at the Sorbonne. Or make a skiing trip to St. Moritz. Or spend a holiday on the French Riviera. Whatever she does, she'll find a world of fun! Of course, her assignment didn't have to be Paris. It might have been Heidelberg, Honolulu, Tokyo . . even New York or Los Angeles. She could be you...this young executive on the Champs Elysées. Special...1959 Summer Program for Juniors: Want a special preview of Army life? Why not see it for yourself this summer! If you qualify for this limited program, you'll receive 4 weeks of orientation training during the summer of 1959-without any commitment. The sole purpose of this program is to help you decide-with confidence-if you want to apply for a commission after you graduate. If you're interested, today is the day to mail the coupon. There's no obligation. --- THE ADJUTANT GENERAL CP Department of the Army Washington 25, D. C., ATTN: AGSN-L Please tell me more about a world-traveling, executive career in the Women's Army Corps. Name_ Address___ City. College or University City___ Zone___ State___ Major. Graduation Class. --- Big Eight Students Ask for School Aid The Big 8 Student Government Association unanimously approved a resolution calling for an increased budget for state colleges and universities at its annual conference last week. Daily hansan The association met at the University of Kansas City Dec. 29-30 Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 Richard Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., senior and 1958 chairman of the association, said yesterday that the resolution stated that the state legislatures of the Big 8 schools have not placed adequate value on higher education in relation to other state-financed operations. Patterson said the meeting was devoted to discussion groups which considered these main topics: school spirit, student influence on college policy, student government operation and structure, high school visitation programs, college newspapers and student relations, campus political parties and campaigns, and student wages and discounts. Other resolutions approved by the association were: The resolution pointed to the need for better student and faculty wages, increased scholarship programs and improvement of facilities and equipment as the reasons for increasing appropriations. 1. Endorsement of the change of the name of Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science to Kansas State University of Agriculture and Applied Science. 2. A plan to exchange minutes of student government meetings among schools in order to keep all the governing bodies aware of the type of work undertaken in the Big 8. KU's representatives to the conference were president and vice president of the student body, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., and Carol Plumb, Overland Park, both seniors. Other delegates were Terry Davis, Frontenac senior, Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and Ed Dittimore, McLouth senior. In December, adhering to Governor Docking's directive for hold-the-line economy, state budget officials cut $853,073 from the proposed KU budget of $12,648,667. Included in the slash were all faculty salary increases. The state legislature has the final say on the school budgets The 1959 officers for the association were elected at the meeting. Thom Field, University of Missouri, was elected chairman, and George Hazelrigg, University of Oklahoma, vice chairman. The responsibility for handling the group's planning committee was given to KU. Halleck,Dirksen Elected GOP Heads in Congress WASHINGTON, D. C. — (UPI) — Voting which ended this morning showed that congressional Republicans will be led by a conservative member of the party in the Senate and a liberal in the House. Two years ago, insurgent Republicans once more approached Halleck, urging him to attempt to unseat Martin. But at the end the support thinned and Martin was reelected to the leadership. And even this year nearly became another "almost" for Halleck. It took two ballots for him to defeat Martin by only a scant majority. Everett M. Dirksen (Ill.) was elected Senate minority leader to help retain some power for his conservative wing. Late yesterday, Charles A. Halleck (Ind.) unsecured Joseph W. Martin Jr., as leader of the House to turn that position over to the liberal wing of the GOP. Thomas H. Kuchel (Calif.) was named Senate party whip in balloting this morning. He represents the liberal wing. House Republicans elected him to their leadership in 1947. But the role actually meant playing lieutenant to Martin, who reigned over both the Republicans and the House as speaker. The victory by Halleck meant the end of a 20-year reign by Joseph Martin Jr. who had acquired the title of "Mr. Republican" in the House. Halleck in 1953 thought the White House was backing him to unseat Martin, but he received no White House support. Again Martin assumed the top house post as speaker with Halleck as his lieutenant. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 56th Year, No. 70 U.S. Trails in Space Race, Helvey Says Mecha, the new Russian cosmic rocket, has vaulted the USSR into the lead again in its chips-are-down fight for survival with America. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. This is the opinion of T. C. Helvey, visiting professor of radiation biophysics. "The first party to put an operational human group into space will rule the world, and probably for good," said Prof. Helvey. "It would take an unforeseeable and unpredictable breakthrough to overcome such an advantage." The Soviet cosmic rocket was expected to be in orbit today as the solar system's first artificial planet, according to an announcement by Russian scientists last night. Prof. Helvey heads the human factors research program in the Research Division of Radiation, Inc., in Orlando, Fla. He is teaching at the KU radioactive isotopes research laboratory this year. T. C. Helvey "It frightens me and it angers me that we are at the tail end in the space race," said Prof. Helvey. "Within a year we will match the The new Russian achievement—called a tremendous show of capability by Prof. Helvey even though it did not reach its target of the moon—places the USSR closer to such a dominant role. Russian rocket, but why weren't we first? We have the money, talent and equipment. "But America must always react to the frightening stimulus of Russia's moves instead of guessing the moves and being prepared for them." Prof. Helvey predicted a man would be sent into space and returned safely within the next five years. He said we could do it this year except for a dominant trait in the American character. Murphy Says Russia Willing To Pay for Good Education Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, said last night Russia's educational system is strong because of the amount of money it spends on it. He spoke at the 45th annual meeting of the Assn. of American Colleges in Kansas City, Mo. The chancellor toured Russia for three weeks last summer with six other American university presidents. He said it was calculated that SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1969 SNOW CAN BE FUN—These residents of Sellards Hall find time for sledding on bakery trays in front of their hall. They are, from left to right, Janet Dorman, Lucas freshman, Pat Ringo, Parsons junior, Linda Lormei, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Dixie Baker, Burr Oak freshman. That pesky snow, which is a curse to students going up the hill, isn't bad for sledding. Skating on Potter Lake, and sledding on the hills are KU snow-time sports. Russia spent three per cent of its gross national product for higher education last year. The United States, he said, spent one per cent. In addition, Chancellor Murphy said, Soviet professors receive more pay than industrial managers—much more, in many instances. He said Russian professors were paid six times the pay of laborers. In the United States, he said, the pay of a professor is about twice that of a laborer. He observed that the biggest lesson to be learned from the Russian educational effort is not how it is done, but the degree of emphasis Russia puts on learning. Big Congress Opens Today WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The new and bigger 86th Congress convened today with a Democratic leadership pledge of "responsible service" and a Republican minority operating under a changed command in both the House and Senate. An economy challenge from President Eisenhower and a space challenge from the Russians were expected to dominate the first session of the most overwhelmingly Democratic Congress since New Deal days. Shortly before the Senate met, Senate Republicans elected Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois as their leader and Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel of California as whip. The Congress with which Pres. Eisenhower must deal in his last two years in the White House is the largest in history because of the addition of two senators and a House member from Alaska. As the gavels fell in both chambers for the opening, 64 Democrats and 34 Republicans were on hand in the Senate; 283 Democrats and 153 Republicans in the House. Democrats operated under their long-established leadership—Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas in the House and Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas in the Senate. "We have the vehicle, we have the capabilities and we have the volunteers," said Prof. Helvey. "But if we sent a man into space and he was killed, the whole program might be set back ten or fifteen years. A clamor of public disapproval would all but destroy the program." Therefore, said Prof. Helvey, we must approach the problem in an evolutionary rather than a revolutionary way. First a mouse is sent, then a dog, then a monkey. Eventually we will send a man. "It may be too late," said Prof. Helvey. An intelligent human being at the controls of a space vehicle could attempt to cope with unknown problems as they arose, he said. "These problems can't be handled from the earth, no matter how sophisticated the machinery is," said Prof. Helvey. (Continued on Page 3) Skits Selected For Rock Chalk The houses and their skis are: Six Greek houses have been chosen to present skits in the 1959 Rock Chalk Revue to be given March 6 and 7 in Hoch Auditorium. The houses and their skirts are. Women's Division: Alpha Chi Omega, "Meanwhile Back at the Igloo"; Chi Omega, "Sailbad the Sinner"; Delta Gamma, "Pandumonium." Men's Division: Beta Theta Pi, "A-Jousting We Will Go"; Tau Kappa Fpsilon, "Road to Nowhere"; Delta Upson, "Faust Revisited." The alternate skit is "If the Harem Can't Scare 'Em, Aga Khan." by Alpha Tau Omega. The skits were judged by Allen Crafton, professor of speech; Tom Rea, instructor of journalism and coordinator of KU Extension; Gorden Beck, instructor of speech, and Herk Harvey, of the Centron Corporation. Lynn Miller, Dodge City senior and producer of the show, said that a small group of students will be responsible for the entire between-acts entertainment. They will act as masters of ceremonies and perform variety acts. Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, is director of the Reveal. Rehearsals will begin in Hoch Auditorium soon after final week. KU-Y is sponsoring the Revue. French Troops Kill 24 Algerian Rebels ALGERIA — (UPI) — French troops killed 24 Algerian rebels and captured a camel caravan carrying arms for the nationalists today in a stepped up campaign to end the wave of terror spreading over Algeria since the new year. A French patrol intercepted the rebel camel caravan near the French army's missile testing grounds in the Sahara. Military observers said it appeared the rebels may be planning hit-run raids against the missile testing installations. Weather Partly cloudy west, mostly cloudy east, and generally colder tonight. Thursday partly cloudy and colder. Low tonight 15 northwest to 30 southeast. High Thursday 25 to 35. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 Students Unaware South American College students invariably involve themselves in political activities to a degree unknown in this country. In the United States, most students show little interest in politics. In South American and other undeveloped areas,the students are often the rallying force for political action. "The Student Struggle in South America," a report made this fall to the International Student Conference by a delegation of students who visited South American countries last year, shows two points which are generally true for all Latin countries. Students are generally poverty-stricken and so have a deep social consciousness. Schools are poorly equipped, poorly staffed and receive meager financial support. Teachers are grossly underpaid and usually have to take outside work to live. Unless they live at home, few students can afford school as scholarships and lodging are both poor and scarce. The students sit on controlling boards of their schools, have a strong voice in policy and a strong important feeling of their place in the nation. The report notes that students are often missed by political organizations which have no educational interests, and which stir the students to riot and violence. But, contrariwise, they often lead fights for causes to improve their nations. They frequently fight dictatorship. There are many things wanting in South American higher education. But it has vitality, plus opinions and the willingness and courage of students to stand up for them. In the United States, our colleges and universities have much more to offer—but more and more it seems the American student has an attitude of non-concern for virtually everything but that which directly or overly affects him. This attitude is more than slightly distressing to students in other lands, for the United States is the acknowledged free world leader. And tomorrow's leader is today's college student. —Pat Swanson What Use White Stuff? Six inches of snow is a lot of white stuff on the ground. Surely it must be good for something, It gives the student the perfect reason why he should get up 10 minutes early. It will take him that much longer to trudge through it to his eight o'clock class. There can be no better outlet for aggression before final examinations. All the student has to do is build a snowman that looks just like his "favorite" professor and start tossing snowballs. And, the final week just two weeks away, what better temptation to get away from studies than a good sleigh ride or a whirl around Potter Lake on ice skates. Add a little milk, sugar and vanilla and you have ice cream. This is a way to pick up a new disease (and perhaps even a way to end up taking final examinations in Watkins Hospital. Students who complain about too many steps down from Lilac Lane to Alumni Place or Tennessee Street no longer have a problem. The piece of ice on the top step is a never-fail elevator that lands students at the bottom in a hurry. And how else can a coed impress the athlete in her Spanish class than by taking an acrobatic spill in front of Watson Library? But, after all, it is kind of pretty. Carol Allen Serene Sunday It ended, as T. S. Eliot says, "not with a bang, but a whimper." About the same time most students were beginning to thing seriously on this business of winding up the Christmas vacation and returning to classes, an era ended. "Our Gal Sunday," a 21-year-old child of broadcasting, whimpered her final words last Friday, then boarded a plane for a never-ending flight to her husband's castles in Britain. Sunday was politely given the axe by CBS in response to network members' demands for more time for news and music broadcasts. This, of course, left unanswered radio's eternal question "Can a girl from a Colorado mining town find happiness as the wife of England's richest and most handsome lord?" But Sunday's millions of listeners are free to conjure up their own answer. We like to think that Sunday is finally free of crippled children, leering lovers, and Black Swan Hall. Who wouldn't be happy? Jim Cable LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler RESEARCH PAPERS DUE LAST FRIDAY! PLEASE FOLLOW MY SUGGESTED LIST OF TOPICS T.22 "MIGHTY POOR STUDENTS THIS TERM — THESE FAPERS ARE SO BAD I CAN'T ADAPT A SINGLE ONE FOR THI' BOOK I'M WRITING!" A recent official survey says the average Briton smoked eight pounds of tobacco and drank 240 pints of beer, $3\frac{1}{2}$ pints of liquor and nearly two quarts of wine in 1958. "Merry ole England" seems to be in good form. Short Ones Teachers in two states in India have recently received orders not to wear cosmetics in the classroom. Wonder what would happen if they tried that in the United States. University of Kansas student newspaper bounded, became biweekly in 1904, trivial to the day. Dailu Hansan Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Enterprise 514 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Repres- ented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, New York, service by Press International, international subscription; $3 a semester or $4.50 published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. En- trance for specific classes Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. po office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm Applegate ... Managing Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor the took world By Gilbert M. Cuthbertson AMERICAN HERITAGE. James Parton, Publisher, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y., $2.95. The December edition of American Heritage is a typical pastiche of American history; that is, a potpourri of assorted commentaries, descriptions, and biographies. Some of the articles are outstanding, others only interesting. One graphic contribution is Carl Carmer's description of the Hudson and the "myth-haunted valley of this great river of the mountains." Another brilliant essay is Henry Steele Commager's "The Constitution: Was It an Economic Document?" in which he refutes the late Charles A. Beard's economic interpretation of the Constitution. In his separation of the economic and political aspects of this basic American document, Commager resurrects some of the arguments of the past thirty years. Others of the selections in American Heritage develop single "did you know that" themes. Did you know that American troops fought on and retreated from the "darkling plain" of Russian soil during the Bolshevik Revolution of 1918? asks E. M. Halliday in "Where Ignorant Armies Clashed By Night." The Civil War reader will be attracted by George W. Groh's narrative of the Confederate privateer, Shenandoah, which functioned for seven months after Appomattox and was ultimately sold at auction to the Sultan of Zanzibar. For the reader of literary history there is included Malcolm Cowley's story of Nathaniel Hawthorne's romance with Sophia Peabody and their subsequent marriage. "The Tragedy of King Philip" recounts the story of the struggles with the Indians during the colonization of New England from 1675-76. This article is an advance excerpt from George Howe's forthcoming book, Mount Hope. The wide scope and broad range of diversified articles in this edition of American Heritage should have some appeal for almost any type of reader. Here is a cross section of Americana at its best. Our 102nd Year of Service WeaverS by by White Stag 1/3 off original price $1330 reg. $19.95 $1663 reg. $24.95 $1730 reg. $25.95 $2663 reg. $39.95 The Car Coat buy of the year! White Stag Car Coats . . a name that means popular styling, quality fabrics and long-wearing features. In a variety of styles and fabrics. With quilted linings, some with pile trims, in plaids and solid colors. Sizes 10 to 16. Weaver's Sportswear Shop-Second Floor Page 3 Prof. Helvey Says U.S. Losing Race (Continued from Page 1) "The pilot would be risking his life. That is true. But he could compute, adjust, send his machine into orbit, and then attempt to return it safely. This risk must be taken." Prof. Helvye said it would be better to risk a little bloodshed now than to just wait for World War III, which Russia will be ready for by 1964 at the present pace of the arms race. "If we don't catch them by 1964 we may never catch them," he said. Prof. Helvey suggested a concentrated bi-partisan propaganda campaign to show America the danger she is in and to whip up public pressure for a crash program to escape this mortal danger. "It is ridiculous, childish and naive to believe the Russians would not attack us if they felt they could do it successfully," he said. "We are not in the horse and buggy days now. This is no quick draw contest. We cannot say, 'If you hit me first, I'll hit you bigger and better.' We may never have the chance to draw or to hit back." Prof. Helvey said the rivalry among the armed forces, which has been criticized for its waste and duplication of efforts, has been an excellent and typically democratic way of increasing efficiency in the space program. "The competition has caused extra effort," said Prof. Helvey. "The duplication, instead of being complete waste, often has verified the precarious findings of one group after another group has reached the same answers." Missouri Paper Backs Symington INDEPENDENCE, Mo.—(UPI)—The Independence Examiner in a front-page editorial today announced Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) as its presidential choice in 1960. T. Hall Collinson, editor and publisher of the Examiner, said the newspaper wanted to be one of the first, if not the first, to support Symington publicly. The Examiner supported Eisenhower in 1952, but announced no choice in 1956. The editorial today said in part: Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Ph.D. reading examination, French Saturday, Jan. 10, 9-11 a.m. In Fraser, Room 11. Turn books in to Miss Craig. Foster, room 120. by noon, Jauh. 8th. Ph.D. reading examination in German. June 17, Cremona register by patent application no. 30698958. Ernst Ferguson The comoral today said in part: "The Independence Examiner today goes on record in support of Sen. Stuart Symington as the next President of the United States. We feel his record in Congress and his knowledge of national affairs make him the standout candidate." TODAY Jay James. 5:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas, Union. Attendance required. MENC, 6:30 p.m. Bailey lounge. Don Carry, speaker. Election, of officers. Quill Club, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Literary magazines from other schools will be examined and discussed. KU Faculty Club, 7:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge. Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. James E. Seaver. V13-4902. Call for reservations by Tuesday. KU Dames, 7:30 p.m., Card room. Kansas Union. TOMORROW Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 am at breakfast, following Canterbury Hom Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 11th and Kentuckv. Poetry Hour 4 p.m. Muscle room Kathy Houser David Crafton Reading in western poetry KUKU 7 p.m. Fine room, Kansas Union. Take ideal for new card section. Student branch AIEE and IRE, 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow Hall. Elmer Broder from ATT, speaker: "D.C. to Microwaves and the Broom Handle." American Society of Tool Engineers, Talent Powered Technical movie. Also Driver Christian Science Campus Organization 7:30 a.m. Desert View Church Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7-38 p.m., Kansas Union, Films. tion, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Fraser Therapy Handicap of Tradition in Free Enterprise Politics, or Gender Bertier de Sauvigny, Catholic University of Paris, France. Reception at Faculty Club follows. Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 University Daily Kansam University Women's Club, 8 p.m. Kansan Union bathroom. Joint party with New York University. German Club, Vier Uhr Donnerstag lauf der deutschen einem film im Film von Alfonso und Flume. Leben Schillers und das Frankenland geben. Auch uured einen heavens Vor-raum. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Inter-Varsity Mission St. Bible study, discussion, refreshments FRIDAY The KU Graduate School today received a $12,000 grant from the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation's headquarters in Princeton, N. J. The purpose of the grant is to strengthen the graduate program and to assist graduate students who have already completed one year of graduate work as Wilson fellows. The amount of the grant was determined by the number of Wilson fellows enrolled at KU. Graduates Get $12,000 Wilson fellows currently enrolled as graduate students at KU are Charles E. Aiman, Kansas City, Kan; Flora A. Crawford, Kansas City, Mo; Frank D. Feiock, Lawrence; Dwight A. Frame, Wichita; Myrna C. Giles, Omaha, Neb., and Bob L. Woodley, Topeka Until the U. S. Bureau of Standards came along to straighten out the mess in the early 1900's, electric bulbs and sockets came in 175 different thread sizes. Miss Kansas Aids March of Dimes Sharon Whitacre, Mission freshman and Miss Kansas of 1958, has been appointed state teenage chairman for the 1959 March of Dimes campaign. Miss Whitacre has made radio and television appearances throughout the state as a part of the January national campaign. "The new National Foundation program will place emphasis on four fields other than paralytic polio," Miss Whitacre stated. "Since the advent of the Salk vaccine and with it the assurance of a victory over paralytic polio, we are also dealing with birth defects, arthritis, virus diseases, and disorders to the central nervous system," she said. The teenage March of Dimes campaign is a comparatively new phase of the national campaign. It was started five years ago. Miss Whitacre will help launch the KU campaign when she assists in the Mothers March later this month. She said that she thought that Lawrence mothers would try to get better campus participation this year. In order to publicize the campaign there will be over 1,900 fashion shows throughout the nation this 1959 License Tags Must Be Registered Joe Skillman, campus police chief, reminded students and staff today that 1959 license numbers must be reported to the Parking and Traffic office in Hoch Auditorium within 48 hours after the new tags are acquired. "The state law requires that all students and staff members must report their new numbers to this office, or tickets will be given for violations." Chief Skillman said. Failure to report may void registration for the rest of the school year. month. Miss Whitacre will appear in a fashion show at the Wichita Municipal Auditorium Jan. 31. "Blue crutch lapel pins, a part of the Blue Crutch campaign, have been effective methods of starting the March of Dimes campaign," Miss Whitcore said. 1. Sharon Whitacre "The Kansas City-Wichita areas have been very well covered," she added. Miss Whitaere attended the March of Dimes program launching coffee given by Mrs. George Docking at the governor's mansion in December. Grease Job $1 Brake Adi. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. Jayhawkers in the Service One Thing Everyone Enjoys is Alums Graduates Jayhawkers in the Service The Folks Back Home FRENCH SQUARE graduation 1978 A Subscription to the Daily Hansan Subscribe Now For This Semester! One Year . . . $4.50 Available at the Kansan Business Office, Room 111, Flint Hall, Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 376 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 University Daily Kansan SPORTS KANSAS 32 READY FOR MU-Bill Bridges, 6-foot $ _{5/2} $ inch Jayhawker center, goes for a rebound in Monday's game. Bridges hit 25 points, his career high, against Missouri in Big Eight Tournament play. Hapless Tigers Are Next Conference Foes The Kansas Jayhawkers move to Columbia, Mo., Saturday in search of a second conference victory over the inept Missouri tigers. Missouri has lost six straight games, three of them in the Big Eight Tournament at Kansas City. The Tigers lost a close game to Kansas State in the opening round and then dropped another to Iowa State. The total losing margin was five points. The Tigers ended in last place after being defeated by KU. They had 5-point leads twice during the game, but the Jayhawkers took the victory. The latest Missouri loss came Monday when the Oklahoma Sooners won, 64-59, in the first conference game for both teams. MU's starting lineup averages 6 feet, 4 inches with center Charlie Henke the tallest at 6 feet, 7 inches. Joe Scott and Burt Jensen, both 6 feet, 3 inches, have taken starting guard assignments away from Mike Kirksey and Glenn Forristal. Rich Pulliam, 6 feet, 2 inches, and Cliff Talley, 6 feet, 6 inches, are battling for one forward position and Al Abram, 6 feet, 5 inches, plays the other corner spot. Vanderbilt Defeats Kentucky By United Press International By United Press International Unranked Vanderbilt last night handed top-ranked Kentucky its first licking in 12 starts, 75-66, for possibly the biggest upset of the basketball campaign so far. Jim Henry, who barely stretches up to six feet, was the man chiefly responsible for Kentucky's first loss since last Feb. 24. Henry's 29 points were enough to snap a Wildcat winning streak which had extended to 16 games ever two seasons. Kentucky, last year's NCAA champions, fell behind early, stayed ice cold throughout the first hall and never was able to catch up. The inspired Commodores, who had won five games and lost five until last night, walked off the floor with a 41-27 lead at half-time and then came back to run up a 17-point lead in the second half. Held in check by a man-to-man defense, the Wildcats rallied late in the second half and with three minutes to go cut Vandy's margin to six points, 70-64. But the Commodores never let them get any closer. ment and have yet to lose a game on their home court this years. Iowa State, which gave K-State a real scare Monday night, will be at Oklahoma. The Cyclones have played some tight games this year in building up a 5-6 record. The Wolfpack blew a 10-point lead in the first half and underdog Virginia rallied again to go in front in the second half. But Bob MacGillivray put North Carolina State ahead to stay, 55-53, with 7:58 remaining and Virginia never again came closer than two points. Kentucky looked sluggish all night, connecting on only 23 of 81 shots for a sub-par average of 28.5 per cent. Billy Lickert was the Wildcats' high scorer with 14 points Second-ranked North Carolina State also suffered a scare before downing Virginia 73-68 for its 10th victory in 11 games. By winning, the Wolfpack took over sole possession of first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference, pushing idle North Carolina into second place. Buff-Wildcat Tilt Heads Saturday's League Slate Big Eight basketball teams move into the second round of the annual scramble for the conference title Saturday night. All eight teams are matched against each other for a full schedule. By George DeBord The favorites got off to a shaky start Monday night in the opening round but managed to come through with winning performances. The Kansas State Wildcats, everybody's favorites for the crown, will meet the Colorado Buffaloes at Manhattan in Saturday's feature. The Buffs, picked for the conference cellar at the beginning of the year, have come on strong and now boast a 10-4 seasonal record. Their latest victory was a 57-50 conquest of Nebraska in a conference opener. Colorado lost to the Wildcats by one point in the finals of the Big Eight pre-season tournament in December. The other game finds the Jayhawkers at Missouri. The KU five will be hoping to keep their short, 2-game winning string intact against the hapless Tigers who have now lost six straight, including a 65-68 loss to the Jayhawkers in the tournament. In other league games, Oklahoma State, loser in its conference opener with the Jayhawkers, travels to Nebraska. The Cornhuskers defeated the Cowboys 55-48 in the tourna- 3-O Swimmers To Nebraska The KU swimming team, boasting a 3-0 record, faces rugged Nebraska this Saturday at Lincoln in a dual meet. Three members of the KU team may miss the meet. Jack Uhlir, diver, and Brad Keeler may miss the meet because of class examinations. But the loss to be felt most by the squad, said Coach Jay Markley, will be Jim Laidlaw, a breast-stroker. He is quitting the squad because of financial reasons. "Jim is one of the three best breaststrokers in the Big Eight," Markley said. But even with these men out of action, the team still has a chance to win six of the 10 events, Markley said. Coach Markley pointed out that in Nebraska's only meet of the season, the Cornhuskers' times were slower than those recorded by KU swimmers this year. The absence of Laidlaw in the conference meet will also hurt the Jayhawkers' relay team. With Laidlaw in the lineup, KU has the league's second-best medley relay team. Without him, KU would be fighting for fourth or fifth, Markley said. Kansas' next meet will be with Oklahoma University Jan. 17. UPI Places Ky. At Top of List Kentucky replaced Cincinnati as the No. 1 team in the United Press International ratings Tuesday while Kansas State remained in third place behind once-beaten North Carolina State. Other members of the top ten are: North Carolina, Michigan State, Cincinnati, northwestern, Bradley, Auburn and St. John's of New York. Previously top-ranked Cincinnati dropped to sixth place after suffering consecutive losses to North Carolina State and North Carolina. Kentucky, in first place as of Tuesday, had a cold night from the field and was dumped by Virginia last night. AAA Kansan Want Ads Get Results COLLEGE MOTEL JAMES BETT MOTELS Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming NCAA Debates Rule CINCINNATI, Ohio — (UPI) Delegates to the NCAA convention began business sessions today with tightening of eligibility rules for athletes as the hottest topic on the agenda. The proposed legislation would give the National Collegiate Athletic Association the power to rule over the eligibility of any athlete attending member schools. This and other top agenda matters, including an increase in the NCAA policy making group's powers, will be voted on Friday at the conclusion of the session attended by about 2,200 of the nation's top college sports figures. Recommendations by the American College Football Coaches Assn., one of several allied groups meeting concurrently, drew top attention as preliminaries wound up. A's Chosen for Cooperstown Tilt KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) The Kansas City Athletics will represent the American League this year in the annual major league hall of fame game at Cooperstown, N. Y., July 20, the A's revealed today. The National League representative is yet to be announced for the game played on the site where Abner Doubleday and the Schoolboys of Cooperstown are alleged to have started the game over a century ago. The A's will play in Washington July 19, go to Cooperstown for the exhibition the following day, and then return to Kansas City to resume the regular league schedule against Baltimore July 21. T 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) A man is holding a camera. Save at... 721 Mass. HIXON'S VI 3-0330 Those were the two major recommendations the coaches will pass to the NCAA football rules committee, which will meet next week in Los Angeles. The football coaches went on record as favoring a return of goal posts to the goal line and a liberalization of the limited substitution rules. Floyd Temple, head baseball coach, is KU's delegate to the convention. Walla Walla, the name of a city in Washington State, means "many waters" in Indian. Penneas, Minn., is the northernmost town in the U.S. Hawk Talk Friends, are you run-down, nervous, out-of-sorts? Do people stare at you when you go to sleep even before class begins? In a word, do you have—TIRED BODY? Pull those weary, gritty eyelids back from those big bloodshot eyes and try this simple test. Do you: (1) Remember where you were New Year's Eve? (2) Remember your date's name? (3) Remember your name? Did you (1) Study any over the vacation? (2) Get up before noon every day? (3) Stay home to watch TV on New Year's Eve? If you answered YES to most of these questions, or even a few, or just one--you're working too hard! You, my friend, probably have Fun Deficiency Anemia or in common terms,-TIRED BODY! What you need is some .well...some rest would probably be just as good. And, folks, for rest and relaxation you can't beat the cheerful, peaceful Student Union. Try two lovely, enchanting weeks of fun and excitement in the Union. Spend your days watching TV, playing cards, ping pong, or pool, or engaged in pleasant conversation with some of the interesting people you can meet in the Hawk's Nest. In the evening there are bowling, bridge, dancing, meetings galore, and some of the cutest little oil' dark, secluded corners you ever saw! And, friends, there's no better way to prepare for a final than by relaxing your mind for a day or two in the carefree atmosphere of the Student Union. Don't wait-start now! See your instructors right away about a leave of absence from class. They'll understand. And so, as our grades sink slowly in the west, we look forward to many happy days in the Student Union, making the most of the opportunities which a liberal, free-spending state government gives us. "Smiley" Joe Student Union Activities Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Alaska Senators Draw for Terms WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The two Democrats from the nation's newest state settled the length of their terms in a rare drawing before the full Senate shortly after they were sworn in. Gruening drew first and bulled a slip from a small, mandolin-shaped box which bore the number 3, which means he will be a "class III" senior with a four-year term. Bartlett picked out a slip which bore the number 2, which means he will be a "class II" senator with a two-year term. A third slip in the box bore number 1, which means "class I" senator. This could have meant a six-year term had it been drawn by either of the new senators. The drawing means that Alaska will have a senatorial election in 1960 and again in 1962. The results of the drawing meant that although Gruening lost a flip of the coin yesterday and was designated the new state's "junior" senator, his first term in the Senate will be longer than Bartlett's. Under Senate rules, approximately one-third of the Senate's membership must stand for re-election every two years. More than 80 engineers attended the ninth annual Sanitary Engineering conference held here today. The all-day session, divided into two parts, covered topics concerning sanitation and problems of specifying and purchasing equipment for municipal construction work. Conference Attracts 80 Four speakers were featured in the afternoon session. They were: afternoon session. They were: L. M. Van Doren, of Servis, Van Doren, and Hazard, Topeka; Max Foote, Carrothers Construction Co, Paola; Edward C. Cardwell of Dorr-Oliver, Inc., Chicago, and Myron K. Nelson, Mission Township Sewer Districts, Mission. The conference also included two general sessions and a noon luncheon. G. A. Dunwoody of Brink and Dunwoody, Iola, and O. O. Ediger of Ediger and Co., Wichita, presided at the two general sessions. R. T. Page, associate professor of civil engineering at KU presided over the luncheon. London Professor To Speak Friday D. H.R. Barton, professor of organic chemistry at the Imperial College of Science and Technology in London, will speak here Friday at the annual Dains Memorial Lecture. He will speak on "Some Photochemical Rearrangements" at 4 p.m. in 124 Malott. Alpha Chi Sigma, professional science fraternity, sponsors the event. Prof. Barton is a fellow of the Royal Society of London. He received the Fritsche Award from the Americal Chemical Society and has been a visiting professor of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has held the chair of organic chemistry at Birkbeck College in London and at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. The lecture series was established 11 years ago by Frank Burnett Dains, former chemistry professor at KU. Traffic Statistics
To date this yearSame time last year
Accident total3630
Fatalities00
Accident with personal injuries11
Parking violations:
Campus43306754
City599438
Moving violations875
U.S. Says Russians Rewriting History WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States today charged Russia with trying to "rewrite history" to hide the fate that the Soviet encouraged Hitler's military ambitions and cleared the way for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It also renewed charges that Russia is responsible for the continued division of Germany, the crisis in Berlin and the trouble and insecurity which has plagued Europe ever since the end of World War II. The U. S. charges were contained in a 33-page booklet released by the State Department to refute allegations by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Nov. 27 to the western Big Three demanding they evacuate West Berlin. Today's publication, described as "an analysis" of the Soviet note, took up the Russian charges one-by-one and knocked them down by citing history and the statements of Russian leaders. The United States said that the Soviet Union, during the time that Hitler was in power, "not only maintained normal diplomatic and economic relations with Germany but also assisted in building up a new German war machine." The document also blamed Russia for playing a major role in starting the Pacific war. It said that "in April, 1941, the USSR signed a neutrality pact with the Japanese ally of Hitler, thereby clearing the way for the Pearl Harbor attack on the United States." The booklet states "in March, 1941, the United States on two occasions warned the USSR that it had received authentic information that Nazi Germany planned to attack the Soviet Union and Prime Minister Churchill warned Stalin to the same effect in late April' but the Kremlin continued to show its solidarity with Hitler and the Japanese. Graduate Award Renewed A $2,000 fellowship for graduate study in geology at KU will be renewed by the Phillips Petroleum Co. The fellowship is to be awarded to an outstanding geological engineer for the 1959-60 school year. Shop Tomorrow at Carl's — 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Where You're Just a few Steps Away From the Big, Free Parking Lot in the 900 Block of Vermont Street Annual January Clearance Entire Stock Suits Discounted 15 — 25 — 40% We must charge for alterations on all suits that are discounted 40% Entire Stock Topcoats Discounted 25 — 33 1/3% Tremendous savings on these suits and topcoats Entire Stock Flannel Pajamas Discounted 25% Were $4.00, $5.00 Now $3.00, $3.75 Entire Stock Mac Dee 'Mid-Length' Knit Shorts Were $1.25 79c each — 2 for $1.50 One Group White Shirts 3 Collar Styles Tremendous Value Were $4.00, $5.00 Now $3.00 or $3.75 Shirts One Group Colored, Most Sizes Discounted 33 1/3% Were $4.50, $5.00, $5.95 Now $3.00, $3.35, $3.95 Sweaters One Group Discounted 40% Balance of Entire Stock Discounted 15% One Group Slacks Discounted 40% Balance of Entire Stock Discounted 15% Entire Stock Sport Shirts Discounted 25% Were $5.00 to $15.95 Now $3.75 to $11.95 Entire Stock Robes Discounted 25% Were $7.95, $10.00 Now $5.95, $7.50 Entire Stock Jackets and Car Coats Discounted 25% Lots of winter ahead!—Buy for now and next season at these big savings. White T-Shirt Lightweight, with Pocket, Was $1.00 Now 79c each — 2 for $1.50 Wool and Nylon Stretch Socks Were $2.00 Now $1.39 each — 2 for $2.50 Entire Stocks Not Included Unless Indicated 905 Mass. St. Carl's GOOD CLOTHES Dial VI 3-5353 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 7.1959 The image shows two men in a snowy outdoor setting, pushing a vehicle. One man is wearing a dark jacket and appears to be steering the vehicle, while the other man, who is slightly behind, looks more relaxed. The environment is covered in snow, indicating a cold winter day. STUCK!-Lending a hand to free a car stuck on the 14th Street hill are, left to right, Herb Rapp, Wichita senior, and Dale Moore, Coffeyville senior. The car skidded over the curb as the driver attempted to drive down the snowpacked street. Students and staff members have been experiencing similar trouble this week. Trip to Mexico Taken By Foreign Students KU students from 13 countries visited Mexico during the holiday vacation. The 15-day tour was taken by 26 members of the International Club. The students, and Sam F. Anderson, instructor of German and Russian, who acted as chaperone, left Lawrence Dec. 20 and returned last Saturday. The first stop made was in Monterrey, where the group toured the city. It then moved to San Miguel for a Christmas celebration. A party was held on Christmas Eve and the group attended midnight church services. A dinner party with dancing was held Christmas night after the group returned from a trip to Guanajuato and Salaya, where it watched a bull fight. The next stop was Mexico City. From there the group split and one section went to Acapulco and the other to Oaxaca sightseeing. "The temperature in Acapulco was a little different than here," said Manoucheir Pedram, Tehran, Iran, graduate student and club president. "The temperature there was 85 degrees." he continued. "Mr. Anderson was helpful to us since this was his sixth trip to Mexico and he knows the interesting out-of-the-way things to see," Pedram said. The two groups rejoined in Mexico City Dec. 28, and took a tour of Mexico City University. The students also saw Aztec remains and other interesting features. KU Receives $7,400 For Science Study A $7,400 grant for research in science has been awarded the University in the Du Pont Company's annual program of aid to education. The University is one of 14 universities to receive the $5,000 grant for research in chemistry. An additional $2,400 is provided for the renewal of a postgraduate teaching assistantship. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER The students enjoyed a social gathering at the home of Robert Cuba Jones, the agent who arranged the details of the trip. Mexican families showed colorful costumes and provided other entertainment. The students had a chance to talk with Mexican students. Pedram said most of the Mexicans could speak some English and three of the International Club members could speak Spanish, so language was no barrier. Students on the trip were from Germany, Great Britain, Austria, Italy, Finland, Luxembourg, Denmark, Nigeria, Japan, Ireland, Iran and the United States. Theatre Workshop Presents Scenes The Theatre Workshop presented demonstration scenes "in the round" at 4 p.m. today on the major series stage in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. A 4 p.m. Friday, the same group will demonstrate "proscienium style" scenes on the stage of the Experimental Theatre. The faculty recital by Angelica Morales von Sauer, professor of piano, has been postponed to tonight to Sunday afternoon, Feb. 15. Students are invited to attend both sessions and observe the differences between the two methods of drama presentation. Faculty Recital Postponed Apportionment Has Problems Kansan Want Ads Get Results Reappointment proposals would give a Kansas constitutional convention more headaches than any other single issue, according to a conclusion stated in the Jan. 2 Governmental Research Center Bulletin. The Center, located at the University, has been studying reapportionment solutions and the possibilities of a unicameral legislature for the state. When the present Kansas Constitution was adopted in 1859, its makers did not anticipate the great farm-to-city-to-suburb population movement. As a result, a county with a population of 2008 has equal representation with a county of 102,113. Before this can be changed to a more equitable situation, a constitutional change must be inaugurated. The Center's bulletin also discussed the pros and cons of a singlehouse legislature. Every other state but Nebraska now uses a bicameral system. Proponents say the single-house would consolidate all authority and responsibility in one body, giving more prestige to legislative positions and encouraging capable men to seek them. Supporters of the present system say that the government regulating system of checks and balances would be destroyed in a unicameral house. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 WELL... WHAT WOULD YOU DO? COLUMBIA PICTURES presents KENNETH MORE DIANE CILENTO CECIL PARKER PARADISE LAGOON and SALLY ANN HOWES (Star of MY FAIR LADY) TECHNICOLOR® Application forms for fellowships in Latin American countries are available at the office of the Fulbright Program in Fraser Hall. S.A. Scholarships Open --- The U.S. government scholarship cover round trip travel, tuition and subsistence for one academic year The countries are Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay and Venezuela. EXTRA! CARTOON-NOVELTY — SHOWS 7:00, 9:00 VARSITY NOW! THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1065 AND THURSDAY! Eligibility requirements include American citizenship, a bachelor's degree or its equivalent in work experience, sufficient knowledge of Spanish for use in both daily life and study, and good health. A capacity for independent study is also required. Ski Spree to Be An Indoor Affair Freshman women and their sophi- more Jay Sisters will hold a Ski Spree party Thursday evening in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. The basic part of the application must be received by the International Educational Exchange Program of the Department of State by Jan. 15, 1959. The party will be held in three groups, each 45 minutes long, at 7.8,and 9 p.m. Jay Sisters should wear slacks, bermuda shorts or any other type of ski or winter sport clothing. There will be group singing and refreshments. 10 OUT OF THE AGE OF WONDERS ONE OF THE MOST WONDERFUL MOTION PICTURES OF OUR TIME! SEE Sinbad clutched by the two-headed Roc! SEE Princess Parisa in the palm of her lover! MARCUS GRAFIA SKELETON BATTLES MAN IN SHIELD SEE the murderous Skeleton stalking Sinbad! SEE the chained Dragon unleashed! THE 7th VOYAGE OF SINBAD IS THE 8TH WONDER OF THE SCREEN! Fantastically filmed in TECHNICOLOR and DYNAMATION! brilliant new moviemaking process! starring T starring RICHARD EYER the GENIE with TORIN THATCHER KERWIN MATHEWS · KATHRYN GRANT 25 w EXTRA! CARTOON NEWS PICK before 0963 POS$ namo Unio rew$ SHOWS 7:00,9:00—ADULTS 75c,KIDS 35c NOW! THRU SATURDAY! ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ GRANADA THEATRE - - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-5788 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1959 University Daily Kansan n Page 7 Pro- State sophi Skiing inansas SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS three g, at acks. type t. and 8 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 LOST PICKFIT SLIDE RULE in brown eyes before Christmas vacation, reward. VIII POST VERSALOG sliderer, block case, name on inside front, zone D or Student Union. Call Bud Shoemaker. VI 2-0541, reward. 1-13 WANTED FOR RENT WANTED: WASHING and ironing; also sewing, call VI1-2-0681, 813 Rhode Island HOUSE FOR RENT- Furnished or unfur- nished, suitable for 2 families if desired. Call VI 3-7698 after 1 p.m. or VI 3-5763. 1-12 ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, 1 a.p. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama. VI 3-0902. tf 3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment, neat, clean, private entrance, phone, laundry beds, near KU, $53 per month, paid. Baidu, or couple. Call VI: 7-8501- 1-27 at 5 p.m. EXTRA NICE ROOMS, 1 single, 1 double with single beds, for boys. Call VI 3-7863. Also would like student for odd jobs around house for room rent. 1-12 VERY LARGE SLEEPING ROOM in new home, private entrance, quiet and lovely. $14.50 per month, rooms furnished, room kept. Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 1-12 2 BOOM BASEMENT APARTMENT. share kitchen and bath, private entrance. 1520 W. 22nd Terr., VI 3-8673. 1-12 NEWLY DECORATED large single rooms now ready for men students, new beds, refrigerator privileges, near KU and downtown, call VI 3-7199. 1-12 SINGLE ROOMS, graduate girls, ad- dresses, and 250 Oread call Helene Goode. VI 3-6733. SINGLE ROOMS for boys available now 1-13 Illinois, VI3 - 2838, - 1-13 i135 Ohio, VI3 - 2838, - 1-13 CLEAN, FURNISHED small house, built-ins, good wood, electric. Frigidaire, 2 large closets, married couple, no children, no pets, available Jan. 20, 520 Ohio 1-13 VERY NICE 3 room apartment, $75 a month, new house. Two bedroom, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Two bedroom, furnished apartment, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-0457 or VI 3-3902. WANTED: 1 student to share room, 1 meal served family style, kitchen privileges for other 2 meals, available after Jan. 26, 940 Miss., VI 3-1585, 1-13 FOUR ROOMS and bath, unfurnished except refrigerator. Has fireplace, gas heat, electric store outlet, nice kitchen near V1 5-3578 until room or 3:30 p.m. | 1-12 FOUR ROOMS of furniture, 2 bedrooms living room and kitchen, 12 D Sunnydale FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT. four large rooms, furnished for 4 bays or men simple beds, private entrance and bath. 520 Lac., VI 3-9184. 1-13 GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-2019. tt ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus. $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available at Munich Henry Co-op, 1420 Ohio, Vienna, 0681 2-4 NICE LARGE, ROOM for 1 or 2 boys. See Mrs, Maxwell in Hawks Nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana, VI 3-418 1.13 FOR SALE CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. See Malcolm Applegate during the day or call VI on or call VI 9061 between 6-7 p.m. BONGOS, used very little, all metal, made by WFL Drum Co., heads quickly adjusted to desired pitch. Original cost telling price, $20. John Mali, 1-0 VIII-3 0651 HI-FIDELITY components, systems and kits. Over 40 nationally advertised brands with no postal charges. Discount to large order. Basement of 1409 Tennesse, evenings. 1-8 1953 MG Td, green roadster, low mileage, many extras, sharp car for only $1,-95. Chevrolet sedan, 1951, green, clean exterior, 2005 British Motors, 73-1 N2, 2ND, V1-8367 1955 SMITH-CORONA portable type- writer, good condition, one owner, $55. See after p. 5 m.p. any evening, 1334 Rhode Island, VI 2-0231. 1-8 STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call V13-0124. tt POST VERSALOG slide rule, Handbook of Chemistry, Physics Handbook of chemistry, Other study aids for science majors. Call VI 3-5381 or 3-6012 Ohio after 5:00 p.m. 1-9 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags Plecan, party supplies 350 paper, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 430 657-2722 BIRD TV-RADIO 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 - Quality Parts Hi-Fi - Expert Service Birds on a tree branch - Guaranteed PAT READ Gifts That Are Different 445 Tenn. St. Ph.VI 3-1306 INDIAN TRADER - Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs - Hand Loomed Ties The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 94Uy, Mass, Ph. VI 3-5863. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1215 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Birds and animals, complete packages, animals and accessories for all purpose plants. Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, cushions, pillows, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tt RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the Singer company, a month's worth of 3-1971. Singer Sewing Company 927 Mass. WANTED. Student Laundry Reasonable WANTED. Ironing or Ironing Both. Formerly 8256 or 8258 both. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in course material, shotgun study notes, everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your call copy VI 3-7553, 801-8. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and themes. Fact, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf WILL DO TYPING in my home. See retailer experience. Phone VI 3-7894 TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vernet, 1955 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 90 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6833. TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates prompt service. Mrs. Mohlinger. VI 3- 4409. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention: fost accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. ff EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. In my home, Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106 if THISEES AND TERM PAPERS typed THISES AND TERM PAPERS, Mus.Luneng, id W. 20th St. VT 3-7184 FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. WESTERFEN CIVILIZATION study guide, new, complete, extensive notes covering readings. Over 60 pages. Free delivery on this week, $3 per set, card. 3-75351 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. J. Cosseier, phone VI 3-8679. tf TYPIST: Make reservations now to have these, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-1893, 7165 Tenn LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021₁₂ Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabin, etc. or nurse by professionals for limited time. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. TYFING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI J-3-8600 tf TYPING OF REPORTS. term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers. Cheses, dissertations, etc.. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428. EXPERIENCED TYPEP1, will type themes, reports, etc. Neat, accurate work, Mrs. Davis, $1016_{12}$ Conn. VI 2-0267. 1-13 Ober's JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE Suits $50 to $79.50 values Now $36.85 to $59.85 Topcoats $45 to $69.50 values Now $34.85 to $54.85 Sport Coats $30.00 to $49.50 values Now $19.85 to $28.85 Slacks $10.95 to $19.95 values Now $7.95 to $10.95 Sport Shirts $5.00 to $8.95 values Choice $3.95 Dress Shirts $5.00 and $5.95 values Now $3.95 Bostonian and Mansfield Shoes $11.95 to $18.95 values Now $7.95 to $11.95 821 Mass. Ober's Phone VI 3-1915 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 7. 1959 Rhodes Scholar Tells How To Mix Activities, Study David Ontjes, Hutchinson senior and Rhodes Scholarship winner, believes that a student's grades will suffer if he becomes involved in too many activities. But a look into his own personal COLUMBIA David Onties history seems to prove that it is possible to graduate with top scholastic honors and still belong to a long list of organizations and societies. "Activities should be the flavoring, but not the main course in an education program," he said. "Being in a few organizations and doing a good job is more important than being is so many that you lose yourself." Ontjes is now vice president of his fraternity, Phi Delta Theta. He has previously been scholarship chairman and chaplain. He has been president of KU-Y, a member of Quill Club, A Cappella Choir, Rock Chalk Revue committee, Wesley Foundation and the Chemistry Club. However, a look at the honors he has won proves that he has not neglected the books while busy with outside activities. Ontjes was named to membership in Phi Beta Kappa earlier this semester. He is a Summerfield Scholar and has consistently been on the honor roll of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This year he shared the Paul B. Lawson award for the highest scholastic record by senior men in the College. His major is liberal arts. He received chemistry honors as the top student in his class. He is a member of Sachem and Owl Society, honor societies for senior and junior men, respectively. He received his latest honor, the Rhodes Scholarship, during the Christmas vacation. He was one of four recipients named from a six-state area of Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota and South Dakota Outjes said he had prepared to go to the Harvard Medical School before receiving the Rhodes Scholarship. Rhodes Scholarships are for study at Oxford University in England. "I plan to study animal physiology during the two years I am at Oxford. It should be the equivalent of about two years of medical school," he said. Ontjes was born in Lyons and attended school in Stafford. In high school he participated in football, basketball, track, band, chorus, dramatics, and was president of his junior and senior classes. Late in September of 1959 the 32 Rhodes Scholarship winners will meet in New York City and go to England by ship. "Oxford is not a unified university like KU," Ontjes explained. "Instead it is a group of scattered colleges." "Under the English educational system a student studies on his own. Once a week he meets with his tutor, who suggests reading material. At the end of the year he takes a three-day final examination, consisting of 15 or 20 hours of writing long, broad essays." Science, Math Camp To Have 2 Sessions The fourth annual KU Science and Mathematics Camp will be offered in two sessions of two weeks each next summer. Robert W. Baxter, associate professor of botany and camp director, said he hopes two sessions will allow more deserving students to attend the camp. Campers will live in University dormitories and eat at the Kansas Union. Last summer more than 190 high school students applied for the single three-week camp session. Eighty from 12 states were chosen. This year 80 will be admitted to each of the sessions, June 14-27 and July 5-18. Each camper will attend one or two demonstration lectures given by University faculty members in each of 16 sciences and perform laboratory or field work in each area. The areas are: anatomy, anthropology, astronomy, bacteriology, biochemistry, botany, chemistry, entomology, geography, geology, mathematics, physics, physiology, psychology, radiation biophysics, and zoology. High school students who are sophomores, juniors or seniors may What does Ontjes plan to do after Oxford? Tourists May Visit Russia This Year Educational and economic summer tours of Russia have been approved by the Soviet Government's Intourist office for American students and teachers. Tourists will travel by motorcoach, visiting Helsinki, Leningrad, Novgorod, Kalinin and finally Moscow. Included will be a Black Sea cruise. The tourists will spend 31 days inside Russia. The Maupin Tour, a Lawrence travel organization, can supply details of the tours. "I would like to go to medical school and specialize, but I'm not sure what in. I am interested in teaching, research or surgery." DR. WM. H. BRAY AND DR. H. R. WILLIAMS Optometrists 919 Mass. VI 3-1401 apply for admission to Prof. Baxter. The $90 fee includes room and board, tuition, field trips, recreation, social activities and health fee. Some scholarships are available. "We hope no well qualified student will be denied attendance for financial reasons." Prof. Baxter said. Non-Injury Crash Blamed on Ice KU police blamed ice and snow for a collision involving three cars yesterday on Javahawk Boulevard in front of Marvin Hall. Strong's car hit the rear of a vehicle driven by Danny J. Faulkner, Manhattan, Kan., and knocked it into the rear of a car driven by Leroy Farmer, KU employee. There were no injuries. Police estimated damage to Strong's car at $300 and to Frank Faulkner's car at $75. Farmer's vehicle received minor damage to a bumper guard. Joseph S. Strong, Kansas City, Mo., junior, was driving his car west on the boulevard and failed to notice two cars stopped in the lane of traffic in front of him in time to stop. Real Engraving $12.45 for 100 Extras for less — Free samples sent WEDDING INVITATIONS M. A. LEONARD 8710 Flushing, Queens City, Mo. Plains, New York M. A. LEONARD K. U. CONCERT COURSE Extra Attraction CILLI WANG The Celebrated Pantomimist MARIA MAYORAL in "THE WORLD OF CILLI WANG" UNIVERSITY THEATRE Friday, Jan. 9 at 8:20 p.m. "In my happy time I have seen on screen and stage a great number of friends and acquaintances. Add to the list of those I cherished, name them. Miss Wang is superb." "Most extraordinary of all is the levy, a humber of human beings in her ward, was another Phoenix Theatre discovery. Marcelan John Chapman, N.Y., Daily News John Chapman, N.Y., Daily News "The World of Cilliw Wang" will remain one of the more memorable theatre events of the season." Walter Sorrell. Providence Journal Tickets Now on Sale SENIORS... $2.05, Fine Arts Arena, $1.03 tax included Fine Arts Arena, Union Ticket Center Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR '59 Jayhawker CALL ESTES STUDIOS-VI 3-1171 Reds Hit Quemoy Outposts TAIFEI — (UPI) — Communist shore guns hurled saturation barrages at the Quemoy outpost islands today, reopening the "war on the Formosa Strait," the Chinese Nationalist Defense Ministry announced. children by a Nationalist bombardment, started at 2 p.m. and went on for at least two hours. The ministry said the bombardment, threatened in retaliation for the reported killing of a number of A communique said that by 4 p.m. the Red batteries had hurled more than 12,000 shells at the tiny islands. A card game called All Fours was played by the Pilgrims in 1633. (B) On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.") THE DATING SEASON The simple secret is simply this: A date is successful when the man knows how to treat the girl. I have recently returned from a tour of 950,000 American colleges where I made a survey of undergraduate dating customs and sold Zorro whips. I have tabulated my findings and I am now prepared to tell you the simple secret of successful dating. ...I too was a listener... And how does a girl like to be treated? If you want to know, read and remember these four cardinal rules of dating: 1. A girl likes to be treated with respect. When you call for your girl, do not drive up in front of the sorbity house and yell, "Hey, fat lady!" Get out of your car. Walk respectfully to the door. Knock respectfully. When your girl comes out, tug your forelock and say respectfully, "Good evening, Your Honor." Then offer her a Marlboro, for what greater respect can you show your girl than to offer Marlboro with its "better makin's," fine flavor and new improved filter? It will indicate immediately that you respect her taste, respect her discernment, respect her intelligence. So, good buddies, before going out on a date, always remember to buy some Marlboros, now available in soft pack or flip-top box at your friendly vending machine. 2. A girl likes a good listener. Do not monopolize the conversation. Let her talk while you listen attentively. Make sure, however, that she herself is not a good listener. I recollect a date I had once with a coed named Greensleeves Sigafoos, a lovely girl, but unfortunately a listener, not a talker. I too was a listener so we just sat all night long, each with his hand cupped over his ear, straining to catch a word, not talking hour after hour until finally a policeman came by and arrested us both for vagrancy. I did a year and a day. She got by with a suspended sentence because she was the sole support of her aged housemother. 3. A girl likes to be taken to nice places. By "nice" places I do not mean expensive places. A girl does not demand luxury. All she asks is a place that is pleasant and gracious. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, for example. Or Mount Rushmore. Or the Taj Mahal. Or the Bureau of Weights and Measures. Find places like these to take your girl. In no circumstances must you take her to an oil-cracking plant. Come prepared with a few interesting facts that you can drop casually into the conversation. Like this: "Did you know, Snookiepuss, that when cattle, sheep, camels, goats, antelopes, and other members of the cud-chewing family get up, they always get up up hind legs first?" Or this: "Are you aware, Hotlips, that corn grows faster at night?" Or this: "By the way, Loverhead, Oslo did not become the capital of Norway till July 11, 1924." 4. A girl likes a man to be well-informed. If you can slip enough of these nuggets into the conversation before dinner, your date will grow too torpid to eat. Some men save up to a half-million dollars a year this way. . . . © 1959 Max Shulman To the list of things girls like, add Philip Morris Cigarettes. Girls, men—everybody, in fact, likes mild, natural Philip Morris, co-sponsors with Marlboro of this column. Bikes Okay, Some KU Coeds State It might sound odd, with today's modern transportation, to say bicycles will replace automobiles—but a growing traffic problem at KU could make it come true. Even with the 45-degree hills on campus, a recent survey of University coeds shows that women appear to favor the bicycle idea. Of 59 women surveyed, more than half agreed that the plan would be a good one. Many eastern universities and, closer to home, the University of Colorado, have already banned automobiles on campus during regular school hours. Although no official step has been made in this direction, KU authorities say something must be done to alleviate the safety hazard. Bicycles are a possible remedy. Only 24.7 per cent favored substituting bicycles for automobiles on campus. Riding bikes to and from classes was favored by 42.7 per cent. About half the women interviewed were strongly in favor of riding bicycles. This included many women who would face a steep uphill ride. More than 50 per cent agreed they would ride bicycles if other coeds would also do it. The survey, initiated by the All Student Council Traffic and Safety Committee, grew out of an increasing traffic hazard on Jayhawk Boulevard. The stream of pedestrians between classes combines with automobiles to form a constant jam at intersections. Of course the many replies to the questionnaire brought other suggestions. One coed favored a ski lift as a solution to the problem. Even more modern was the bright young woman who was "strongly in favor of pogo sticks." "I really don't think bikes are the most practical means of transportation," she said. "The pogo stick would have a lower initial cost and could be parked in the corner of the classroom like an umbrella. Books colud be carried in a knapsack right on the student's back," she continued. "It could be carried up and down stairs like a walking stick. It would also be a handy protection against the average KU male, bandits, and other evil beings." William Reed, Kansas City, Mo., senior and chairman of the Traffic and Safety Committee, agreed with this opinion. Another coed, perhaps a bit on the heavy side, suggested that bicycling would be a good means of reducing. Of course not all were in favor of the plan. As one young woman put it, "Hell no, I wouldn't ride a bike." "If everyone else did it," was the most typical comment uncovered in the survey. But the main problem in making bicycle transportation a reality at KU seems to be conformity. "There would be a definite safety factor involved." Reed said. "KU has never had a traffic fatality and had only one injury last year. But as automobiles on campus increase with the rising enrollment, some restrictive measures on autos will have to be made." Reed said that there is a possibility that KU will have a Bicycle Emphasis Week sometime this spring. "To get started we need organization," Reed said. "It would seem on paper that the plan would work. Our problem now is to condition students and get them to start it." And it appears that bicycles might be the solution, at least if the women have anything to say about it. Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 LAUREN Daily hansan 56th Year, No. 71 Mikoyan Has Wrong Idea, Ketzel Says A KU faculty member said today that better relations with Russia are necessary before the United States increases trade with the Communist country. Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, said he felt Soviet deputy premier Anasta I. Mikoyan was putting the cart before the horse in saying that increased trade would improve relations between the two countries. Mikovan, here in an effort to persuade Congress to lift trade barriers between the United States and Russia, said that present trade restrictions pose a serious barrier to any such improved relations. LAWRENCE, KANSAS "Trade is a good area to get better relations, but we need better relations before we start trading." Prof. Ketzel said the President would make the decisions on trade with Russia. Congress will not be a major factor in the issue as it stands now. Prof. Ketzel said: "Up to now, all restrictions with the Russians have been dealt with by the President," he said. "Congress can pass a resolution indicating it wants trade barriers lifted, but I doubt if this will happen." "He may be here to feel out the possibility of a Summit meeting. Prof. Ketzel expressed belief that nothing exciting would happen with this particular visit by Mikovan. "He may be here to find out our stand on the Berlin issue," Prof. Ketzel said. "Or if he can see the President or the Secretary of State, he may use his visit for propaganda purposes, indicating that American-Soviet relations are not as strained as they appear to be." "We'll just have to wait and draw our conclusions afterwards," he said, mentioned that there may be other Mikoyan's visit to the United States. Mikovan is a guest of Cyrus Eaton, millionaire industrialist, while he is visiting the country. A new course in Linguistics. The Nature of Language, will be offered next semester for two hours credit. New Linguistics Course Offered The course is designed to give the student an understanding of language and correct popular misconceptions about language. Examples will be taken primarily from English, but other languages will be used. Hibbs to Give White Lecture Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post and 1923 graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism, will give the tenth annual William Allen White Lecture at the University on Tuesday, Feb. 10. He will speak at 3 p.m. in Fraser Theater after receiving the William PETER P. C. MAYER Ben Hibbs Allen White Foundation's 1959 national citation for journalistic merit The lecture is sponsored each year Live' Shell Found In Topeka Museum TOPEKA — (UPI) — A large mortar shell that had been on display in the state museum since the early 1920s was given a police escort to Forbes Air Force Base yesterday when the director's suspicions that it was "live" proved true. A few days earlier some part-time helpers in the museum had tinkered and pounded on the dangerous explosive out of curiosity. Air Force armament experts told museum director Stanley Sohl it would have blown off a corner of the building if it discharged. Sohl said the 10-inch weapon, possibly German or French from World War I, was placed in a store- room a few years ago. He said he came across it while cleaning up and noticed the firing mechanism was still intact. by the Foundation, which also holds its annual board meeting on Feb. 10, the birthday of the late William Allen White, noted editor and publisher of The Emporia Gazette and a University of Kansas alumnus. Mr. Hibbs, editor in chief of the University Daily Kansas in his senior year at the University, became editor of The Saturday Evening Post in 1942 at the age of 40 and since then has taken the magazine to new heights in circulation and reputation. He was born in Fontana, spent most of his boyhood at Pretty Prairie, and was graduated from Kingman High School. At the University he was outstanding scholastically as well as in journalism and other activities. He made 110 hours of A and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic fraternity. He also was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sachem and the Quill Literary Club. Between 1923 and 1929 Mr. Hibbs did newspaper work and journalism teaching at a number of places. He was an assistant instructor in journalism at the University of Kansas, news editor of the Fort Morgan (Colo.) Times, news editor of the Pratt Tribune, taught journalism and was director of publicity at Kansas State College at Hays. He was editor and manager of the Goodland News-Republic and managing editor of the Arkansas City Traveler. In 1929 he went to Country Gentleman magazine in Philadelphia as an associate editor, and in 1940 he became editor of that publication, two years before his selection as editor of the Post. The annual meeting of the Foundation's board of trustees will be held at 10 a.m. Feb. 10 in Flint Hall. At 12:30 the Foundation will confer the fifth annual citation for journalistic merit upon a Kansas editor at its annual luncheon in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi will hold a dinner at 6:15 p.m. in the Union in honor of Mr. Hibbs. An informal discussion with Mr. Hibbs will follow the dinner. Weather Fair west, partly cloudy east this afternoon and tonight. Tomorrow generally fair. Colder this afternoon and extreme east tomorrow. Warmer west and north tomorrow. Low tonight 15 to 20. High tomorrow generally 40s. Abels Donate Encyclopedia A set of the first American edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, published in 1798, has been given to the Watson Library by Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Abels of Lawrence. Varied Reactions to Approaching Final Week Above, Robert Vosper, director of KU libraries, and Mrs. Edwin Abels, Lawrence, examine one of the volumes in the set of encyclopedia. The books have been in the family of Mrs. Abels since one of her grandfathers in Lancaster, Pa., was a patron for underwriting publication of the 18 volumes in 1798. Several national museums had asked for the rare set, the Abels said. But they preferred to place the books where they could be used rather than locked in a glass case. By Mary Alden The gift is in its original binding of calf and colored paper. The gift, in its original binding of calf and colored paper boards, also includes the rare supplement in three volumes of two parts each. The campus is changed. The gaiety of the pre-Christmas weeks is gone. It has been replaced by a resigned gloom. The cause —final week is rapidly approaching. It is interesting to see how this realization affects different persons. You could hear him a block away while he told his buddy that he had flunked this exam or that, and that his highest possible grade average would be minus something. First, there is the freshman who previously thought it necessary to brag about his assorted hours of F and D. He has changed now. The fact that he really could do this badly and that all his talk might become reality in a few days has silenced him. Frantically he tries to catch up. "Why didn't I realize that there were only two weeks after vacation to do everything," he says to himself. All is far from well with him. Then there is the panicked soul who is "safe" right now, but may lose everything in finals without some concentrated effort. This is usually the person who came through mid-semesters in such good shape he put away the books until now. Included in this group are Greek pledges who want that active pin so badly, freshman women who realize that rush is coming near and last semester seniors who don't want to face another semester to correct the study errors they made in this one. Perhaps the most significant reminder of the finals season is a formerly much-used television set whose screen is now covered by a piece of notebook paper. Written on the paper is the grim reminder that "Final Week Means Everything." The most detested and envied campus personage in these weeks is the self-satisfied person. She spent a productive vacation with the books and the typewriter. Now she paints her nails or reads a novel while her comrades suffer. "I don't want to start studying this early, but I have nothing else to do," she says. Poor girl. Her type is few and far between. They are predominately female, but a few males do slip in. Their main characteristic is organization. They use every spare minute early in the term. They work while their companions complain about what's ahead. They probably deserve a gold medal for efficiency, but right now receive only sneers. A mere two and one-half weeks will restore normalcy to all of these persons. But until Jan. 24, don't expect the usual behavior. This isn't the time of year for it. Final week is bearing down. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 Education's Challenge The challenge before education today is to search out the superior and talented students and offer them specially designed programs. There is a growing awareness among professional educators that the development of special programs for the talented is not only important, but crucial within the framework of our American educational system. Such programs are related to the three primary objectives of American education—the personal, social and intellectual development of the individual student. They are particularly geared to meet immediate and urgent problems of quality and excellence in the face of quantity which confronts our schools and universities today. "A misconception of a primary democratic sympathy for the underdog and distrust of 'aris-toeratic' superiorities has led to the expenditure of nine times as much money on programs for the subnormal as on programs for the superior," says a newsletter of the Inter-University Committee on the Superior Student. Quoting the Rockefeller Brothers Report on Education, "The Pursuit of Excellence," the newsletter says "it has not always been easy for Americans to think clearly about excellence. "At the heart of the matter is a seeming paradox in democracy as we know it. On the one hand, ours is the form of society which says, 'Let the best man win,' and rewards winners regardless of origin. On the other, it is the form of society which gives those who do not come out on top the widest Latitude in rewriting the rules of the contest. "But when the rewriting of the rules is designed to banish excellence, to rule out distinguished attainment, to inhibit spirited individuals, then all who have a stake in the continued vitality of democracy must protect." Every democracy must encourage high individual performance. If it does not, it closes itself off from the mainsprings of its talent and imagination, and the traditional democratic invitation to the individual to realize his full potentialities becomes meaningless. The 18th century philosophers who made equality a central term in our political vocabulary never meant to imply that men are equal in all respects. Men should, as the phrase goes, be equal before the law. But men are unequal in their native capacities and their motivations, and, therefore, in their attainments. In the conspicuously larger classes which have developed in the past few years, the able student is often deprived of intellectual zest. Enrollment in honors courses, in the institutions which have them, is continuing to grow because the intellectually sensitive student wishes to escape from the dated lecture course. The goal of honors study is the development of the student's capacities for research, written and oral expression, and independent thought. It is almost the ideal method for those who "would gladly learn and gladly teach." —Pat Swanson Only Human Most of the time we think of the Russians as cruel; heartless people willing to turn in to the party their own wife or father for misconduct. However, reading the stories on Mikoyan, Soviet deputy premier, now visiting this country, a very different picture is painted. Stories and pictures appearing in Monday's newspapers across our country showed him taking a walk in Washington, D.C. The pictures of Mikoyan watching a squirrel in a tree and his curiosity in the operation of a doughnut machine show his very human qualities. Tuesday Mikoyan went shopping for his own groceries. This does not make him seem so high and mighty. He certainly is not trying to impress the American public as a superior being. This could be part of a propaganda stunt to make him "well loved" by all Americans. However, it is more probably a view of what Mikoyan really is—a person interested in nature and and the smaller things in life such as the squirrels, a person fascinated by the machine age we live in, a person not so much different from many Americans. His education, language, traditional background and political background may be different from that of a citizen of the United States. His dress and mannerisms may be of a different style. But with all this we can not forget that he is a human being. He may be a Russian but he still is a man. He has hates, but he has loves. He may be blase on some matters but he is intensely interested in others. He has a strong feeling of nationalism, but so do we. He will be stubborn and hold out for his country's demands, but so do we. We can not always agree with what he thinks and what he demands but we must remember that he is a man. He is one man but he represents most othe Russian. In many respects he is just like us. Martha Croiser LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler THE BASKETBALL PLAYER AS SEEN BY THE BASKETBALL PLAYER AS SEEN BY HIMSELF ... his Fellow Students HIS GIRL... HIS COACH ... STOMACH HIS FRATERNITY COACH OF THE OPPOSING TEAM his Fellow Students HIS GIRL... HIS COACH... COACH OF THE OPPOSING TEAM F.35 The 86th Congress kicked off its "new era" session yesterday. We hope the report is correct and that it is not a "new error" session. UNI PRITT Dailu transan Short Ones University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekelow, 1904, and closed in 2015. A Wichita man is indignant because he couldn't get treatment for a dog bite New Year's Eve. Well, a lot of us spent New Year's Day looking for a hair of that same dog. Telephone ViKing 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association Associated Collegiate Press Rep- presented by (National Advertising Sery- ce, Inc.) Philadelphia, New York, NY. News staff used: A., New York, international. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Sat- days and Sundays. University holi- day tuition is free. Entered as second-class matter Sept 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm Applegate ... Managing Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor From the Magazine Rack- Keep It Equal By Bruno Bettleheim First there was Little Rock; then came Sputnik. First there was excitement about equal schooling for all children irrespective of race, and then about the need for special schooling for the gifted child The connection between integration in the schools and education for the gifted is indeed intricate. School integration, as adjudged by the Supreme Court, is required because in states where the schools are segregated the educational facilities for Negro children are inadequate. All too often the same people who insist that all men are equal claim just as heatedly that some are more equal—and hence demand a different type of schooling for the gifted. The public demand for better provision for the gifted child is based on exactly the same premise—that educational facilities are inadequate. The more democratic nature of our government and social system came about because, in theory, all children are subject to identical educational experiences during their first twelve years in school, while the radical separation of those who are to benefit from higher education takes place only at about when the personality is nearly fully formed. It is usually only in high school that the young adult can free himself sufficiently from the handicaps his home background may contain and to develop mainly in terms of his own native talents. If differentiation is begun earlier, instead of the school's equalizing differences in home background it only adds to them the agony of intellectual differences. Besides the wish to beat Russia in the cold war race for superior technology, there is a general concern that our curricula do not do justice to the gifted, that they are thwarted in their growth by learning situations designed for the average child. By giving premiums to the gifted child because of his achievement, he may be encouraged to overstrain his abilities in order to remain at the top. Might we not, for survival, need new ideas about how to organize a world-wide society, new ideas to fire the imagination rather than technicians or physicists? And since ideas mature slowly, maybe what we need is not a speeding up but a slowing down of our all-too-rapid pace. We are told we need more scientists or more engineers to "survive" and therefore we must swiftly move ahead those who have talents in such fields. Because it is so difficult to agree on what is the "best" education for the child, the argument is often switched to what is supposedly best for society. —Excerpts from Sputnik and Segregation, Commentary, October, 1958. McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 M'Coy's SHOES JANUARY SALE Suede and Leather Loafers, $5.90 Other Patterns at $4.90 Maine Aires BUS STOP JANUARY SALE Page 3 Frogmen to Invade Robinson (1) A NEW USE FOR ROBINSON POOL—Richard H. Benson, assistant professor of geology, checks the frogman equipment which will be used by him and two graduate students. They will practice in the swimming pool in preparation for a research trip. There will be frogmen in the Robinson gymnasium swimming pool in February. Three KU geologists will start training in the use of frogman equipment — face masks, aqua lungs, flippers, etc. — in preparation for a research trip to the Cape Hattatas-Cape Lookout waters off North Carolina next June. Richard H. Benson, assistant professor of geology, and two unnamed graduate students have received a $9,900 National Science Foundation grant to study recent deposits of the Ostracode. The Ostracode is a kind of "mussel shrimp" about the size of a pin head. "A new item of equipment for the North Carolina study will be rubber suits, for this is the first study of this kind which has been made in cold waters," Prof. Benson said. Prof. Benson, who will train the University graduates, was trained by a Navy frogman at the University of California. The study will help them to map ancient shore lines. These ancient shore lines can be used as sign posts for drilling oil. "We take every possible precaution to have as much experience as possible in the use of equipment," he said. "The first days in North Carolina will be used to train further through actual diving into the sea." Prof. Benson explained the usefulness of the microscopic animals to the University study this way. "The Ostracode is unique in that millions of the animals live in fresh water as well as salt water all over the world. "It is especially sensitive to its various aquatic environments and evolves into many different forms. An animal which lives in quiet, rough, fresh, salty, or brackish water, for instance, will each differ. "We will study the nature of the environment off North Carolina and the Ostracode forms deposited in recent sediments as well as live Ostracodes. "These studies will be tied in with similar studies made in North America and in Europe and compared with Ostracode forms found in ancient deposits. "Through such a comparison we will have some idea of the ancient environments in which the Ostracodes we find in ancient sediments lived. "In finding whether ancient Ostracodes lived in brackish, salty, fresh, rough, or quiet waters, we can determine ancient shorelines. "This is important to oil exploration, for oil forms in marine sediments and not in land deposits." The animal which looks like a shrimp living in a tiny shell is particularly useful for the shell is found as a fossil as far back as the earliest traces of life. The geologist will dive under water and the sediment will be collected by forcing a plastic tube into the sediment and corking the tube. "We will have a better idea of what the water conditions are like by diving than if we just scooped the sediment off the bottoms," Prof. Benson said. Prof. Benson, who has made similar studies off Mexico and Key West, Fla., said that though the same types of animals which live off Florida will be found off North Carolina, there will be some new types. "Some of the types will be like those in Scandinavian waters because the Gulf Stream flows to the North Sea," he said. "The enjoyment of the work we can do during summers is carried over into the work we can do in the laboratories during the winter," he said. "It is an exciting way to spend the summer, but it is just as exciting to study a kind of animal which has lived so long. "There are over 2,000 species of the Ostracode in the sea," he said, "and the intricacy and variation of all of these species provide quite a challenge. University Daily Kansan "The excitement and challenge of studying the animal are increased through the knowledge that the data we uncover will be used to make the finding of oil easier," he concluded. Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 Fire in Oklahoma Takes 14 Lives BOSWELL, OKLA.—(UPI)—Fire swept a four-room frame house here early today, killing 14—a mother, her 10 children, and five nieces and nephews. City Marshal Stanley Shoemake said most of the children died as they huddled about the mother, Mrs. Aire Gardner. The father, Booker Gardner, 45, was away on a coon hunting trip, and was not located until after all the bodies had been recovered. Boswell Constable J B. Richberg, who arrived first on the scene with the town's only fire truck, said the roof had already covered in when he Archaeologists To Hear Wiencke Matthew I. Wieneke, visiting professor of classical languages and archaeology at the University of Missouri, will speak and show colored slides to the Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. There is no admission charge to the event. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals The title of Prof. Wiencke's talk will be "The Parthenon, Past and Present." Prof. Wiencke, who recently returned from Greece, participated in the excavations at Isthmia. He also devoted considerable time to a detailed study of the great frieze of the Parthenon in Athens. Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER got there, and that the "sides were just burning slowly." Helped along by 20-mile per hour winds, the flames leaped to the roof of a neighbor's home, that of Charles Ware, and firemen were forced to play their hoses on it rather than the Gardner home. The house was located about three blocks from the last water main in this little farming village of perhaps 1,000, and when the water in the trunk's tank was used up, the volunteers had to leave the holocaust to return to town for a refill. Authorities waited until daybreak before entering the ruins. Gene Nosbit, a reporter for the Hugo Daily News, said the house had been "completely levelled, except for an old refrigerator standing at the back of the house." The first basic change in the shoe since Julius Caesar invented the hard heel is the "ripple sole" which consists of an extra sole of corrugated rubber. 1-DAY Photo - Finishing FAST Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) HIXON STUDIO 摄影 DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of the announcement not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Ph.D. reading examination, French. Saturday, Jan. 10. 9-11 a.m. In Fraser, Room 11. Turn books in to Miss Craig, Fraser, room 120, by noon Jan. 8th. Ph.D. reading examination in German, Sat, Jan. 17, 9-11 am. 314 Fraser. Books used for the prepared part of the ex- amination must be turned in to 306 Fraser by noon Wednesday, Jan. 14. At noon books can be accepted after this date. Candidates approved by the Graduate School are eligible to take the examination. TODAY Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music room Kayla Campbell Alien Crafton reading, Western poetry Germann Club, Vier. Uhr Donnerstag laden ein Film, an einem film abend ein. Es und Films zu Leben Schillers und das Frankenland Leben Aboi aufeln elnen never Vorstellt sein. Student branch AIEE and IRE. 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow Hall, Elmer Broder from ATT, speaker: "D.C. to Microwaves and the Broom Handle." American Society of Tool Engineers, 1320 S. Michigan St. Technical movie Alex Dryer recording KuKu, 7 p.m. Pine room, Kansas University section. Kappa Phi. Methodist Women's organization, 7 p.m. Methodist Student organization, 7 p.m. Methodist Officers. Attendance required. in undergraduate psychology Club, 7:30 pm. p.m. in college Campus Organizata- Christian Science Campus Organiza- tion Humanities Lecture. 8 p.m. Fraser Museum of History. 8 p.m. French Politics'. Father Gaulgaume de Bertier de Sauvigny, Catholic Univer- sity. Reception at Faculty Club follows. University Women's Club. 8 p.m. Kansai from From John party with Newcomers. British and American Epicopalor Morning Prayer. 6:45 am ammunition hall breakfast. Following Carverbury House. Church Club, 6:20 a.m. at St. John's Church, 11:30 a.m. International Club, 5-10 p.m. Kansas room of Union, Election, dinner, and Arab Student Program. Mariners Meeting, 6 p.m., 1221 Oread, United Presbyterian Student Center. Garry in supper and speaker. Dr. Henry Warnry in psychiatrist at Watkins Memorial Hospital, Central Heard and Your Family." Married couples invited. Babysitters provided. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 829 Mississippi St. Bible study, discussion, refreshments. 3 Attend Archaeology Meet The annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Cincinnati from Dec. 28-30 was attended by James Seaver, associate professor of history, L. R Lind, professor of Latin and Greek, and Arnold H. Weiss, assistant professor of Spanish. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results "A Mature Religion For Modern Man" Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, National Leader in Religious Education A Billings Lecture by 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 11 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Open to the public without charge in the interest of furthering the cause of liberal religion. Sponsored by the Lawrence Unitarian Fellowship and the Billings Fund of the American Unitarian Association. 835 Mass. 12th and Indiana Jay SHOPPE 7th Anniversary CLEARANCE SALE Jay SHOPPE Cocktail Dresses, 40% Off Campus Shop Only Fall and Winter Dresses, 1/2 Price Skirts, Sweaters and Blouses, 40% Off Special $2.00 Bargain Counter Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 Three Brothers Recall City's 'Fighting Farmer' Bv Larry Miles Three brothers, now in their seventies, who buddied with Jess Willard, the Lawrence fighting farmer, added new stories recently to the legend surrounding the former popular heavyweight champ. Jess "smelled rosin" seven times on July 4, 1919, at Toledo, Ohio in the first round of the fight which cost him his championship. In the fight world, however, it is rumored that Jack Dempsey's hand were loaded with plaster of Paris. Roy Lawrence, 1213 Kentucky St., and his brothers, Arthur and Ralph, 809 Louisiana St. report that they never heard the former champion mention the fight after he left the ring. Ralph and Roy accompanied the Lawrence sharee to Tulipa, 1905. Ralph and Roy accompanied the Lawrence champ to Toledo in 1919. "A sorry afternoon," said Roy. "For my part I did not think Jess was in very good condition." "He didn't fight very well for a while," Ralph said. "It was over so soon that I guess nobody will ever know what was wrong. That Dempsey sure was a puncher, wasn't he?" 'I Didn't Lose It' I didn't Lose it On Jess' 74th birthday in 1955, however, he said in an interview: "Dempsey is all right, but I didn't lose the championship. They took it away from me. They loaded Dempsey's hands with plaster of Paris." When confronted with Jess' charge, Dempsey pleaded: "Ask Doc Kearns (Dempsey's manager)." Kearns said: "At Toledo we put the gloves on in the dressing room. It was hot, as you know, and I rubbed powdered alum on the inside of Dempsey's gloves to keep his hands from sweating, but it also would tighten up everything into one solid piece. "After I had the alum on, I told Dempsey to close his fists and keep them closed. We went down to the ring and I'll never forget it. The fight ended in four rounds, and is one long remembered in ring annals. Lasted Four Rounds "While we were standing in the ring waiting for the start, Dempsey turned to me and whispered, 'Doc, something must be wrong, I can't open my hands.'" Jess, who took the title in 1915 from Jack Johnson, lived and trained at the old Willard place on West 7th St. all the time he held the title. He lived in Lawrence for over ten years. He was reared on a farm at Mayetta, Kansas, northwest of Topeka. The brothers who received a letter and picture from the champ three weeks ago report that he is now living in La Crescenta, Calif. Roy visited him a year ago. "He made a lot of money in the fight business, and then retired," Roy said. Ralph, the bigger of the two fighting brothers, Roy and Ralph, used to do road work and spar with the champion. "I did not find any weaknesses. He was too big," Ralph said about his workouts with Jess. Jess was 6 feet, 6 inches tall and weighed 245 pounds. He weighs 295 now. Hard on Chairs Arthur recalls that Jess used to come over "to sit in my chairs and break them all down." "He was a giant," Arthur said. "But I never saw him mad any time he was here. He was extremely good natured." Roy, who owned a meat market at that time. said: "Jess was a good meat customer. He used to buy sirloin steaks half a loin at a time." Roy also used to do road work with the champ, but was too small to spar with him. Ralph, laughing and reflecting on his long association with the champ, said: "After the Toledo fight I went to Topeka with Jess, who wanted to buy a farm. "Yep, it's all here," he said. "What's all there?" I asked. "Sure enough, he had all of his "We went up in an old Cadillac. We parked it out behind the barn and looked over the farm—some 600 acres—which Jess was planning to buy. "When we finished looking at the farm, we walked back to the car. Jess reached down into the back seat and picked up a grip and shook it. Toledo fight money right in that bag! "Why, you damn fool! What are you trying to do—get somebody to take it all!" I said. CAMPAIGNER'S GOLDEN JUBILEE "He just laughed. That was the kind of man he was." Cow in a Fiat On another occasion Ralph and Jess carted a registered Jersey milk cow to Topeka in an old Fiat car. Jess had sold the cow to some man who lived at a hotel in northwest Topeka. The two men and the cow caused quite a stir when they reached the hotel. The association between the Lawrence brothers and the champion was a natural one, for Ralph and Roy used to fight as amateurs at the old "Turner Hall" in Lawrence. "There was no Golden Gloves in those days," Roy said, "but there were a lot of skirmishes for we lived over in the east end of town." Roy also refereed fights at Haskell Indian Institute and at the Federal Penitentiary in Lansing. He later refereed wrestling at the University of Kansas for F. C. (Phog) Allen. THE CHAMP'S BUDDIES—Roy, Ralph and Arthur Lawrence, three local men, recall a friendship with former heavyweight champion Jess Willard. Arthur holds a picture recently sent to him by the "fighting farmer." Jess, who lived and trained in Lawrence for 10 years, is now in California. He is now 77. Roy and Ralph both trained with the fighter. Arthur says he was not a fighter at the time, but an observer. PENNEY'S ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! BRAND NEW TWICE AS BIG ALL MODERN COME SHOP INSIDE AMERICA'S NEWEST J. C. PENNEY DEPARTMENT STORE AT 830 MASSACHUSETTS STREET! Walk down Penney's wide, wide aisles . . . striking and streamlined . . . filled with the most exciting selections since Penney's first came to Lawrence 34 years ago. Discover 17 complete and coordinated departments with everything you want; the newest . . . the best of all time . . . and everything at savings that'll make you look twice! AT NEW PENNEY'S YOU SAVE MORE BECAUSE PENNEY'S 1692 STORES BUY TOGETHER! Penney's buyers explore the nation's top manufacturers, top mills . . . go to the ends of the earth to bring you the world's most beautiful buys. They rush samples to Penney's laboratory for rigorous testing. If they measure up to Penney's specifications, we order! Then we price them to beat everything! The reason? Penney's is thrifty about shop-keeping, careful to keep costs down . . . making sure that savings are passed on to you! Shop Penney's . . you'l live better,you'll save! Page 5 Thursday. Jan. 8, 1959 University Daily Kansas University Daily Kansan SPORTS Phi Kappa Wins In Sudden-Death One basket brought Phi Kappa Psi an exciting 35-33 sudden-death overtime victory over Delta Tau Delta in Fraternity A intramural basketball yesterday. Jim Brownfield, who hit the final goal, scored 15 points for scoring honors. All of his points came in the second half. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Tau Omega and Phi Gamma Delta also won Fraternity A games. Alpha Tau Omega overwhelmed Alpha KappaLambda, 65-18. Tom Holler had 12 points, and Roger Hill and Stuart Luder balanced the attack with 11 points each. Sigma Phi Epsilon defeated Kappa Sigma, 46-40, with Milton Wade scoring 22 points for the winners Phi Gamma Delta ran over Delta Upsilon, 63-34. John Peppercorn led the scorers with 13 points for the winners. Other results: Fraternity B—Delta Chi 21, Sigma Nu 18; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 22, Phi Kappa 20; Phi Gamma Delta 28, Sigma Pi 18; Acacia 22, Kappa Sigma 20; Alpha Pi Alpha 33, Triangle 31; Alpha Tau Omega 36, Delta Sigma Phi 28. Fraternity C—Phi Kappa Psi II 25, Sigma Nu III 24. Games today: Fraternity A—Triangle vs. PIKa. 4:15. Independent A—Concordia vs. Pharmacv. 7:15. Fraternity C—Sigma Nu II vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4:15; Phi Gamma Delta III vs. Phi Delta V, 4:15; Beta Theta Pi IV vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon II, 5. Independent C—Phi Epsilon Kappa vs. Klods, 5; Phi Chi vs. Bloopers, 5:45; Botany vs. Jim Beam II, 5:45. Games tomorrow: Independent A—Chicken Pickers vs. Raiders, 4:15; Medics vs. Radicals, 5:15; Battenfield vs. Pearson, 6:15. **Fraternity B**—Sigma Nu vs. Kappa Sigma, 4:15; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Chi, 4:15; Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Delta Sigma Phi, 5; Phil Kappa vs. Alpha Phi Alpha, 5; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Triangle, 5:45; Delta Chi vs. Acacia, 5:45. USC Is Slapped Second Time; Grid Violations Hurt All Teams CINCINNATI, Ohio — (UPI) — Disappointed University of Southern California officials, slapped with a two-year probation by the NCAA yesterday, were resigned that “there was nothing to do now but comply.” The action by the National Collegiate Athletic Association's committee on infractions came during the weeklong convention being attended by top collegiate sports figures. "I am greatly disappointed and deeply hurt, but there is nothing we can do but stand up and take it." USC athletic director Jess Hill said. The committee ruled that USC violated NCAA bylaws by paying transportation costs to two prospective football players to Los Angeles while already on probation The first probation ended last Nov. 13. Hill said he was "sorriest" for the swimming, basketball and track teams, all defending NCAA champions. USC teams will not be eligible to participate in any television programs subject to NCAA control, nor be allowed to bargain for such appearances, during probation. In the first year, USC may not enter athletes or teams in any national collegiate championship event or invitational. In other action, the NCAA ruled that quarterback Don Fuell, center of a recruiting controversy at Auburn, could play anywhere outside the Southeastern Conference. Brown Pro 'Player of the Year' Tigers Next for KU "The Need For a Liberal Religion in a Crisis Age" The Jayhawkers will be looking for their third straight win when they cross the state line into Missouri for a Saturday night game with Tigers. Invites KU Students to Meet The KU five is showing definite signs of reviving with the New Year after spending some cold nights in December. The Jayhawkers dropped seven straight before disposing of Missouri on the last night of the Big Eight tournament in Kansas City. NEW YORK — (UPI) — Jim Brown of the Cleveland Browns has been named the professional circuit's "Player of the Year" for 1958 in the annual United Press International poll. Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, National Educational Religious Leader, and Discuss The Unitarian Young People's Group Coach Sparky Stalcup has been shifting his starting five around in recent games looking for the right combination. The Missouri coach has been unhappy with his team's lack of ability to hold leads. He said this could be attributed to mistakes Brown, a 230-pounder who runs through the line with a fullback's power and in the open with a half-back's speed, set an all-time NFL rushing record of 1,527 yards in 1958. He led the league in scoring with 108 points. His 18 touchdowns included scoring runs of 65, 60, 59, 58, 52, 41 and 38 yards. 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 11 Tenn. State Leads Poll Oread Room, Kansas Union Monte Johnson will team with Loneski at forward and Bob Hick- This performance against football's smartest and toughest defenses earned him 21 of the 29 votes cast by sports writers who covered the campaign in the 11 league cities. Coach Dick Harp has been shifting the KU lineup looking for someone to share the scoring load with forward Ron Loneski. If Bridges continues his hot streak, Missouri could be in for another rough evening. One reason for the Jayhawkers' improvement is the play of fast-improving center Bill Bridges. Bridges hit 25 points against Missouri in the tournament and turned in another top performance in Monday's win over Oklahoma State. The Tigers have a 3-9 seasonal record and will be out to snap a six-game losing streak which extends back to the middle of December. in fundamental ball handling and inexperience. The losses include four straight to Big Eight teams. NEW YORK — (UPI) — The Tennessee State Tigers, who swept their first 12 games, topped United Press International's small college basketball ratings today for the second straight week. Tennessee State, which crushed seventh-ranked Western Illinois, 114-54, to win the NAIA tournament last week at Quincy, Ill., received 29 first-place votes and a total of 383 points. BRITISH MOTORS Jaguar 1952 Stalcup is expected to go with the same team which fell to Oklahoma 59-64 Monday. This unit is led by 6-foot 3-inch Joe Scott, a sophomore guard who specializes on jump shots from the outside. Sharpest XK120 in the state Only 30,000 actual miles man and Dee Ketchum or Bob Billings will be at guards. Spotless red roadster with tan hardtop $1495 BRITISH MOTORS 737 N 2nd, VI 3-8367 SENIORS... IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR '59 Jayhawker Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) 摄像师 Save at... 721 Mass. HIXON'S VI 3-0330 Boy, have I got Clothes Problems! I Lawrence Laundry can Solve them Don't Worry Little Lady If you've got clothes problems, weep no more. Just take them to the people at Lawrence Laundry. The worst stain, the most stubborn spot is gone SANITONE quick. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 一 University Daily Kansan Page-6 Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 A. A. CELIA WELCH, Herington junior, was chosen "PLAYMATE OF THE YEAR" at the first annual Kappa Sigma fraternity Playboy Party. Mies Welch is a member of Delta Gamma sorority and of Sigma Alpha Iota, professional fraternity for women in music. Policy Change In the future, the society section of the University Daily Kansan will publish pictures of fraternity sweethearts or dreamgirls and party pictures if the organization will bring photographs and copy to the society desk, room 112, Flint Hall. ... On The Hill. Sigma Chi Sigma Chi fraternity entertained the members of Delta Gamma sorority Tuesday with dinner at the chapter house. --- Phi Kappa Psi Neil Perkins, Olathe senior, has been elected president of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Other officers are Larry Dickson, Burdinston junior, vice-president; Chuck Hydeman, Kansas City, Kan., junior, treasurer; Joe Dillingham, Stockton sophomore, recording secretary; Ken Gray, Lyons sophomore, corresponding secretary; Steve Newcomer, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, pledge trainer; Norb Carrett, Olathe junior, social chairman; and John Rust Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, chapplain. --- Lambda Chi Aluha Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity entertained the members of Delta Delta Delta sorority at an exchange dinner Tuesday evening. Dick Jones. McPherson senior, has been elected president of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Other officers are Dick Meldinger, Hiawatha sophomore, vice-president; Charles Wetzler, Marysville sophomore, corresponding secretary; Owen Boland, New Hyde Park, N. Y., sophomore, recording secretary; Dennis Kindswater, Kinsley sophomore, treasurer. Delta Tau Delta Ted Hall, Garden City junior, pledge trainer; Bob Kerlinger, Em- poria junior, social chairman; Gary MacEachen, Fruecie Village junior, scholarship chairman; Jerry Nelson; McFherson junior, intramurals chairman; Wes Witt, Garden City sophomore, guide, and John McFar- land, Hutchinson junior, assistant treasurer. Theta Tau --- A former KU honor student, Robert E. Pope, has been named grand scribe of Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity. Pope received his bachelor of science degree from the University in 1552 and his master of science degree in 1558. Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Booth, Chanute have announced the engagement of their daughter, Rossyldn, to John Lee Montgomery, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Montgomery, Leadville, Colo., formerly of Erie. Miss Booth is a sophomore in th College of Liberal Arts and Science and a member of Alpha Omicron F sorority. Mr. Montgomery is sophomore in the School of Business at Parsons Junior College. A May wedding is planned. Six Couples Tell Winter Pinnings Brenneisan-Fendorf Gamma Phi Beta sorority has announced the pinning of Ann Brennelsan to Midshipman Dale Fendorf of the U.S. Naval Academy. Both are Kansas City, Kan., seniors. --- Mittong-Milliken Gamma Phi Beta sorority has announced the pinning of Carol Mittong, Kansas City, Kan., to Les Milliken, Bonner Springs, Mo., a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Both are seniors. The pinning was announced by Linda Farmer, Pratt senior. 求 积 Moreland-Wolfe Gertrude Sellars. Pearson Hall has announced the pinning of Caroline Moreland to David Wolfe, a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity at the University of Missouri. Both are Kansas City, Mo., seniors. The pinning was announced at the Lambda Chi Alpha Christmas formal at M.U. * * Williams-Jones Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Sherry L. Williams, Kansas City, Mo. junior, to Roger A. Jones of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Jones attended KU and is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. The pinning was announced at a party Jan. 3 at the Kansas City Club. 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? Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Virginia Horton, junior, to Tom King, senior, both of Wichita. Mr. King is a member of Sigma Kia fraternity. Horton-King ROOM for 2 or 3 boys extra busy clean quiet Linen furnished. Call Ml Phone VI 3-201 or xee 1022 Aa bama. 2-8 BREAKFENDENT Live close to the campan Room and board $45.90 per month. Board $25.90 per month. Rochie Stoat top 1547s. Tennessee Ph. VI 3-201. Ask for Tom, Arlan or Jack. 2-15 ROOMS for beds Tired of waltzing on bed, Have two regular bathrooms immediate provision. Near East. For Ohio. VI 3-201. NEW CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 Bathroom. Indiana Phone VI 3-1601. BUSINESS SERVICES YPIST experienced in these terms report required accurate student rates. Mrs Betty Young. Driver Avon Phone VI 3-2601. YPIST experienced in these terms papers report immediate attention fast service. Mrs Glenn Vilson. VI 3-1240. TIMBERING DRESS MAJOR alterations on neat and elaborate garments. Also dresses and slip coats. VI 3-1607. 1306 La. EXPERIENCED TRADERS Potter severed wires will keep these papers out of the house. Fast service of regular rate. VI 3-8588. EXPORING IN ENGLISH Review human sentence structure, outfitting garments and theme structure. VI 3-7401. OR SALE LIVE GIFTS Lightingale Co. are Pawlers all colors of complete stock of fresh foods and tins dishes-bake. --- Rochman-Harris Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Carolyn Rohrman, Liberty, Mo., senior; to Don Harris, Kansas City, Mo., senior and a member of Delta Chi fraternity. University Daily Kansan Want Ads Kansan Business Office,111 Flint or Call KU 376 THE 8TH WONDER OF THE SCREEN! THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD DYNAMATION·technicolor* staring KERWIN MATHEWS·KATHRYN GRANT including RICHARD EVER·CROTE with TOMN TARTISNER A MORNINGIDE PRODUCTION·A COLUMNA PICTURE EXTRA! CARTOON • NEWS SHOWS 7:00.9:00 NOW! THRU SAT.! GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 NOW! THRU SAT. GRANADA THEATRE...Telephone VIKING 3-5788 THAT HEMINGWAY KIND OF EXCITEMENT! The Gun Runners AUDE MURPHY ALBERT OWENS SLOANE Movie in 4 days by ENCIET HEMINGWAY Released thru United Artists UA EXCITING CO-HIT No Body Ever Turned I+ On Like EKBERG as "Valerie" STERLING HAYDEN EKBBERG ANITA ANTHONY STEEL Released thru United Artists FRI. AND SAT.! Varsity THEATRE...Telephone VI3-1065 25 w No Body Ever Turned It On Like EKBERG as Valerie" STERLING ANITA HAYDEN-EKBERG ANTHONY STEEL Released through United Artists Tonite: "PARADISE LAGOON" Thursday, Jan. 8, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 7 nunced junieth of perof CLASSIFIED ADS an-urolynor, to seniorwater- 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. WANTED WANTED: WASHING and ironing, also sweeping, call VI-2-0681, 813 Rhod Island. HELP WANTED PART TIME TIME TYPIST. Hours can be varied, call VI 5-7142 between 16 noon to 1-14 BUSINESS SERVICES NEED MALE REPRESENTATIVE for Philip Morris Inc to work campus on retail and promotions. Prefer Sophomore or Junior taking business, others considered. Contact Mr. C. W. McCabe, Meriden, Ks., HU 4-2930. 1-12 DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Olaa Smith. 941% 941's. Phi. Pv. 3-5263. Olaa Smith. 5-3263. Phi. Pv. 3-5263. NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 comm. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals and accessories for all purposes. Complete lines of Exotic Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, either, grooming and heaters, blankets, etc., Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singr Sewing Center, 927 Mass. WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable. Formerly 829 Conn., now 421 O'Connell, Ohio. If WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts and diagrams not found in materials/materials of the course, complete cross-index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. Price $2.50. Free delivery. For your copy call VI 3-7553. Ohio 18-5 TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequint, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest theater and dance studio. *Jazz* Missouri, ph. 3-6838, jf 4-7982, mf 6-1056, mf 8-1378, mf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular calls. Call VI 3-8568. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service, jurs. mlehninger, VI 3- 4409. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed W. 201st ST., VT 3-7184. W. 201st ST., VT 3-7184. FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and family foray to the Shop 730 Massachusetts. EXPERIENCED TYF1ST. Test. paper reports. report letters. Mrs H. H. phone, phone Vl 3-9874 TYPING: Fast. accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Talippe Installed Free 1 qt oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type paper, tapes, etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1306. tf FYISTP: Make reservations now to move thees, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931 1736 tenn. WESTERN CIVILIZATION study guide, new, complete, extensive notes covering all the readings. Over 60 pages. Free do- vies this week. $3 per set. call 1-895- 735-8553 LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211; Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinette, for men and women, by professional staff, available limited time. VI 3-2132. TYPING OF REFORTS. term, papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. critical rates, Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3248. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, will typemexperiences, reports, etc. Neat, accuratework, Mrs Davis, $1016_{2}$ Conn, VI 2-0267. 1-13 TYFING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9545, Mrs. Earl Wright. I-14-1 FOR SALE CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. We recommend dressing in the Kansan News Room or call VI 5-9663 between 6-7 p.m. BONGOS, BOND used very little, all metal, made by WFL Drum Co. heads quickly to desire pitched. Original cost $5, selling price, $30. John Malahy IV 1- 06-613 HI-FI-DELITY components, systems and kits. Over 40 nationally advertised brands have a postal charges. Discount to large order. Basement of 1409 Tumwater, evenings. 1953 MG Td, green roadster, low mileage, many extras, sharp car for only $1. Lowe's, Cadian, 1951, green, second car, $250. British Motors, 737 N. 2nd, IV 3-8367. 1955 SMITH-CORONA portable typewriter, good condition, one owner. $55. See after 5 p.m. any evening, 1334 Rhode Island, VI 2-0231. 1-8 STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI-3-0124. tf POST VERSALOG slide rule. Handbook of Chemistry, Physics Handbook of Chemistry, and Science of science majors. Call VI 3-5281 or 1332 Ohio after 5:00 p.m. VI 3-5280 or 1321 MISCELLANEOUS BFVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic. phone supply. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 1250. 1350. AAA PICKETT SLIDE RULE in brown case before Christmas vacation, reward VI. COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels LOST THE BEST DATE MOTELS POST VERSALOG sliderue, black case, name on inside front, zone D or Student Union. Call Bud Shoemaker, VI 2-0541. reward. 1-12 On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. WHITE CASE containing glasses with blue upper frame and clear lower frame, with a between 12th andIndulina and Mottl Hall reward. IV 3-635 evenings. 1-12 MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 2. ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT. 3. BATH AND bath parcel contraire-125 4. W200, T200, W300 EXTRA NICE ROOMS. 1 single. 1 double with single beds, for boys. Call VI3-7863 Also would like student for odd jobs around house for room rent. 1-12 HOT SINGLE ROOMS, graduate girls, ad- dults 354 Orred and Call Helene Goode, VI.3-6733. NEWLY DECORATED large single rooms now ready for men students, new beds, refrigerator privileges, near KU and downtown, call VI 3-7199. 1-12 HOUSE FOR RENT. Furnished or unfurni- sated, suitable for 2 families if descrie- Call VI 3-7698 after 1 p.m. or VI 3-3763 FROM CAR on 10th St, between Indiana and Ohio on Friday, Dec. 19 at 9 pm, boys' grey parkas, size 8, red mesh hood, reward. Call VI 3-523 evenings! 1703 WEST 6TH VERY LARGE SLEEPING ROOM in new home, private entrance, quiet and lovely, $14.50 per month, linens furnished, room Call VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 1-12 FOR RENT ROGOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama VI3-0902. tf SINGLE ROOMS for boys available now in Chester, closest to campus. Pusat Obi, VI, Ontario. 3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment, neat, clean, private entrance, phone, laundry privileges, near KU, $58 per month, bills or couple. Call VI17-7850-158 5 p.m. Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV CLEAN, FURNISHED small house, builtins, good stove, electric Fridaread, large closets, married couple, no children, no pets, available Jan. 20, 520 Ohio 1-13 Free Coffee, Free Swimming while you wait VERY NICE 3 room apartment, $75 a month, new house. Two bedroom, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Two bedroom furnished apartment, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-0497 or VI 3-3902. 1-13 francis sporting goods Do Your SKATES Need Sharpening? 731 Massachusetts Street FOUR ROOMS of furniture. 2 bedrooms. living room and kitchen. 12 D Sunnyside. FOUR ROOMS and bath, unfurnished except refrigerator. Has fireplace, gas heat, electro stove outlet and nice kitchen, near V13-5978 until noon or 5:20 p.m. - 1-12 WANTED: 1 student to share room, 1 meal served; family style, kitchen privileges for other 2 meals, available after Jan. 26, 940 Miss. VI 3-1583. 1-13 FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, four large rooms, furnished, for 4 boys or men, single beds, private entrance and bath. 520 Ln., VI 3-9184. 1-13 GARACE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-5019 tt ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus. $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available at Benny Henry Co-op, 4250 Ohio, VI- 0681 NICE LARGE ROOM for 1 or 2 boys. See Mrs. Maxwell in Hawks Nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana, VI 3-4168. 1.73 DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, inner- spread mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 Ohio, VI 3-6709, 1-16 VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off-street kitchen furnished, 1000 Istanbul 1-16 1 FURNISHED and 1 unfurnished apartment, private entrance and bath, 3 room ROOM AND BOARD for spring semester. $50 per month, VI 3-438S. 1-14 CUP CAKES Delicious and Oven fresh from . . . DRAKE'S 907 Mass. — VI 3-0561 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Kansan Want Ads Get Results K. U. CONCERT COURSE Extra Attraction CILLI WANG The Celebrated Pantomimist Irene in "THE WORLD OF CILLI WANG" UNIVERSITY THEATRE Tomorrow Night, 8:20 p.m. "In my happy time I have seen on my desk a great number of funny people, some who are heshed. Add to the list of those I cher- ished. Add to the list of those I cher- ished. Add to the list of those I cher- ished. Miss Wang is a pupil in a pantomime. Miss Wang is a pupil "Most extraordinary of all is the late Judyumi tumor. She not only in her work here, but in Phoenix Theatre discovery, Marceau. John Chapman, Y. D. Daily NPM, John Chapman, Y. D. Daily NPM. "The World of Cilii Wang" will remain one of the more memorable theatre events of the season." Walter Sorrell. *Providence Journal* Tickets Now on Sale $2.05, $1.54, $1.03 tax included Fine Arts Office, Union Ticket Center Bell Music Co. PEAO. Ar. "I don't mind your running out of gas—but Camels!" Many a girl would rather many a girl would rather walk home than do without Camels. For the 10th straight year, this cigarette outsells every other—every filter, every king-size, every regular. The Camel blend of costly tobacco has never been equalled for rich flavor and easygoing mildness. The best tobacco makes the best smoke. Don't give in to fads and fancy stuff . . . Have a real cigarette have a CAMEL CAMEL PERFORMANCE OF PATENTED TECHNOLOGY MARQUES UNIONAUTAS CAMEL CHOICE QUALITY B. J. Reynolds Tob. Co., Winston-Salem, N.C. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 8.1959 JOHN W. HARRIS Humanities Lecture Tonight Father Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny, professor of history at Catholic University, Paris, will present the third Humanities lecture of the school year at 8 tonight in Fraser Theater. Father de Bertier's topic will be "The Handicap of Tradition in French Politics." In the picture above. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism and chairman of the Humanities Committee, is shown greeting Father de Bertier after he arrived yesterday. The visiting lecturer spent this morning viewing the campus, then began a busy schedule this afternoon. He will take part is a discussion of the new French Constitution at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Browsing Room. Band to Give Concert Sunday The annual winter concert of the University of Kansas Concert Band will be presented at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. A trumpet trio, Lita Bach, Billings, Mont, Robert J. Robert, Isa Lawrence, and Jon Irish, Leavenworth, freshmen, will be featured. Kenneth Bloomquist, new trumpet instructor and assistant director of the band, will be soloist with the band. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band, will conduct. The band will present numbers by von Weber, Holst, Johann Strauss, Coates, Richard Wagner, Barber, Persiehetti, Liszt, and several marches. The United States has the world's greatest system of public forests. Guild Says State Can Hold Taxes Kansas can hold the line on taxes this year if state agencies do not ask for new services or pay increases, Dr. Frank Guild told the Faculty Forum yesterday. Dr. Guild, research director for the Kansas Legislative Council, spoke on Kansas tax problems. There could be a money problem, the research director said, if Gov. Docking can get the half-cent sales tax increase repealed. The 1957 legislature increased the sales tax to two and one half per cent. "The law is there, and it is doubtful if the governor can get enough legislators to vote to repeal the increase," Dr. Guild said. The Kansas sales tax is one of the highest in the nation. In many of the states having higher sales tax levies food purchases are exempt. Or part of the tax is sent back to local governments. If consumer food purchases were free of sales tax, Dr. Guild estimated, the loss in sales tax revenue would be 20 per cent. The 1959 budget calls for expenditures of $328 million, the largest budget in state history and an increase of $70 million over 1957. Dr. Guild pointed out that the budget included $93 million the federal government will spend in Kansas, most of it for interstate highways. The state will also collect about $92 million to be turned back to the county and city governments. Dr. Conboy Honored With Two Offices Dr. William A. Conboy, chairman of the department of speech and drama, was elected national vice chairman for general semantics and related methodologies at the annual meeting of the Speech Association of America. Dr. Conboy also has been named to a five-man committee to study department organization in colleges and universities. This group will investigate departmental relationships among the areas of public speaking, theater, radio-television, and speech correction. World production of potatoes centers in Europe and the USSR although this vegetable originated in the Andes. "The World of Cilli Wang," a silent globe of pantomime, will be created at 8:20 tomorrow night in the University Theatre. Cilli Wang to Create PantomimeWorldHere Cilli Wang, a woman pantomimist who has performed in theaters throughout the United States, is the only living character in her world. She is supported by 500 pounds of costuming, life size dummies, and a grand piano. With these effects, her world comes to life. Some of her pantomimes are "His Master's Voice," "The Chambermaid," "Ballet at Midnight," and "Society Dancing." Tickets for the performance are now on sale at the School of Fine Arts office, the Kansas Union ticket center and Bell Music Co. The uses of paper are expanding rapidly, and between 1945 and 1955 United States production increased by 70 per cent. C UPSET OVER COLD WEATHER? YOUR BATTERY has had it these past few days A SLOW FULL CHARGE is what it needs-not a "quickie" LOANERS while we recharge yours A new set of AC Spark Plugs will help too CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE Don't Forget... Don’t Forget . . . You’ll want a Subscription to next semester’s UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER ... $3.00 FULL YEAR ... $4.50 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building D + + BELARUSIA THE VICTIMS—This is part of the crowd of students that gathered at a local pizzeria to get free pizza on a practical joker's call, but found pizza still at regular prices. However, all is not for naught, fellows. To any person who can identify himself in this picture, come to the Daily Kansan office and you will receive a free copy of today's paper. Students Descend On Pizza Parlor The swinging doors of the Campus Hideaway, a local downtown pizza parlor, were kept swinging for a short spell last night by a steady flow of KU students demanding "free pizza." Business boomed at the cafe for nearly 40 minutes as car after car pulled up in front of the establishment and unloaded groups of men students seeking to satisfy stomach pains with free pizza. At the high point of the influx of prospective pizza eaters, the tables were filled with students, and there was standing room only. There were people waiting to get in from outside, and the telephone was ringing off the hook. Some non-believers evidently wished to check about the free offering they were told about. All of the student freeloaders, arriving between about 10 and 10:40 p.m. told the same story of why they were there. Their fraternity or dormitory had received a call saying the pizza was on the house, they claimed. Bill Irvine, Lawrence senior, a cook at the establishment, said several hundred students drove up to the cafe, wandered in, and then drove away. "When they found out the pizza wasn't free most of them left right away," Irvine said. However, after the crowd had thinned down, two cooks were still shoveling out the pizza in a manner that would upturn the eyes of any veteran corporation investor. Apparently, men were not the only ones called to follow the star of pizza downtown. Irvine said he took a call from a woman in a sorority. "She wanted to know the sorority of the week," he said. I guess she thought the winning one would get free pizza." Docking Sees Plan For Retiring Faculty Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy had no comment today on Gov George Docking's proposal for a public employee retirement plan which would include faculty members. "Any comment on the governor's proposal will have to come from the Board of Regents," Chancellor Murphy said. The governor said he favored putting faculty members of state colleges and universities under the same plan as other state employees "Faculty members are not any different from other state employees," said Gov. Docking. "I don't want to create a class system in state government." Under the retirement plan set up by the board of regents in 1941, University faculty members or employers may receive a maximum of $1,480 annual retirement pay. Together with social security, a retired University employee can receive a maximum income of $3,004 a year under present conditions The plan now in operation was never authorized by statute. The regents did it on their own initiative. Gov. Docking said details of a retirement plan were not worked out yet. "I think we can use the one drafted by the league of municipalities as a guide," he said. The league's plan did not include faculty members when it was drafted. This proposed plan is supplemental to social security benefits. An employee contributes four per cent of his salary and the state puts a sum equal to seven per cent of his salary into the retirement fund. If the plan is adopted, retirement benefits would be computed at one per cent of an employee's final average salary times the number of years of service. K-State Hex Dolls Are the Real McCov MANHATTAN — (UPI) — Kansas State College students were warned today that voodoo doll heads sold on the campus last November are poisonous. W. R. Kirk, administrator of the Riley County Hospital, said 24 of the dolls, imported from the Orient, were sold by the Young Women's Christian Association last November. Twelve dolls have been recovered. The voodoo doll heads were on top of swizzle sticks. Gov. Docking said the estimated cost of $2.5 million a year for the state's share "might be a little high." KU Votes for U.S.-Russian Exchange Plan The plan was submitted yesterday by the commission of international understanding of the Association of American Colleges at the last day of its 45th annual convention in Kansas City, Mo. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said today the University was one of 349 U.S. colleges and universities to vote in favor of a plan to expand the United States-Soviet Union student exchange program. Yesterday's poll of 750 college and universities attending showed overwhelming support for a Russian exchange program. Only 51 colleges reported they could not participate. "If the program is worked out thoughtfully this university would accept young Russian students just as it accepts those from India and other parts of the world," said Chancellor Murphy. Presently, there are 17 Russian students studying in universities in the United States and 22 Americans attending schools in the Soviet Union. "In the long run the United States has a tremendous amount to gain from the exchange students because they will get an accurate appraisal of this country. At present they are not getting such an appraisal. Some of the schools voting for the proposal were even willing to provide financial aid to visiting students "We have more to gain than lose in such an exchange of students," said Chancellor Murphy. Weather Diminishing fog and low cloudiness east portion this evening, otherwise clear to partly cloudy with slow warming trend through tomorrow. Low tonight 25 to 30 56th Year, No.72 Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Humanities Lecturer Says Mistaken History Is 'Poison' Friday, Jan. 9, 1959 A French historian said last night that historians must interpret history wisely lest it become a "lethal poison to the world." Father Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny, professor of history at the Catholic University of Paris. France, gave examples of mistakes made in French politics. He spoke at the third Humanities Series Lecture. "There are two schools of thought among historians on French history" he said. "One group of Engineering School To Drop Mining Degree The Announcement of Courses Bulletin recently issued shows the degree in mining engineering in Myron Bernitz, Eudora senior, will wear the last orange-tasselled mortar board signifying a bachelor of science degree in mining engineering at KU. BUTCHER Myron Bernitz solid minerals discontinued with no students accepted after June, 1950 The four-year mining engineering program was started in 1898, according to Kenneth Rose, chairman of the department of mining and metallurgical engineering. It was separated from the geology department in 1915. During that period, Kansas had a thriving mining industry. Since 1915, interest in solid minerals mining has declined in favor of petroleum engineering and geology. Dean John McNown, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, said today there are two reasons for discontinuing the degree. There are schools of mines in neighboring states that care adequately for the limited number of students interested in solid mineral engineering, he said, and secondly, metallurgical engineering is the rapidly increasing field now. scholars portrays the people as happy under the government of kings. Father Bertier said two handicaps in the development of France stem from the "let's-do-it-again" attitude and the "let's not make the same mistake" attitude. He described the first as repetition of a political action which had worked in the past in a similar situation. "They accuse Martin Luther of spreading the seeds of revolt and credit rationalists such as Voltaire and Rousseau with starting the Revolution of 1789," he stated The other group pictures France as unhappy under the "yoke of the kings," he said. To it, revolution becomes a "sacred duty." These two attitudes have influenced French political thinking up to modern times, he said. "The superstitious respect for tradition was shattered by the Revolution, but it created a superstition in reverse," he said. He explained the French people decided that all ties with the past must be repudiated in order to be "progressive." "This is the root of the main division in French political life between the left and the right," Bertier Fertier said. Missing Cuban Student Says She's Waiting to Leave Island Sonia Alvarez, Cardenas, Cuba, junior, who had failed to return to school by yesterday, told her roommate over the phone from Cuba that she's ready to come back, but cannot leave. Her roommate, Carolyn Gray, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, called Miss Alvarez last night and was told that due to transportation difficulties she couldn't leave the country yet. She had gone home for vacation. Miss Alvarez said she had received special permission from Cuban officials to leave, but the government is prohibiting travel from Cuba. She told her roommate that rebel leader Fidel Castro had been through her hometown and that she was happy she got to see him. Miss Alvarez's cousin, a student in Salina, is waiting with her at her home so that they can leave together. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Fridav, Jan. 9, 1959 Why Wait? Enthusiasm is not entirely gone from the campus. Right now there are several gung-ho souls who are trying to get everyone excited over the idea of riding bikes to class. Among the projects done in relation to this new movement is a report entitled "University of Kansas Coeds' Attitude Toward Bicycle Transportation on the Campus." It is a 16 page report complete with graphs. If most students received an assignment this long for a class they would loudly complain. We must dispute this point. It is hard enough just walking or driving a car with chains or snow tires on this campus during the winter. The supporters of this "ride your bike" campaign point out that if and when cars are banned on this campus this would be one remedy. The report says the women who favored riding bikes included some of those who lived on Tennessee Street. The survey must have been taken before the snow arrived. It would take much more practice and skill than the average coed has to ride a bike up the hill in weather such as this. Actually bike riding is not a bad idea. But it does seem a little ridiculous that before people can begin to ride them they must take a survey and spend months spreading the word that bikes are really neat. One of the sales pitches used for getting people to accept this idea is that it is something different. If they really want to prove that it is a different, but good, idea then why not just start riding bikes to class? Why do they have to wait for campus approval? The best proof of the worth of an idea, is how well it works out in actual use. Let us see some of this kind of proof. —Martha Crosier Darwinism There has been a debate of 100 years over Darwinism, with 1959 marking the centennial of the publication of Darwin's theory in his "The Origin of Species." Outrageous to some and inspiring to others, Darwin's theory, sometimes called "Natural Selection," says essentially that in any species more offspring are produced than can possibly survive. Because of over-population competition arises among the organisms of a species. Individuals vary in their characteristics and only those most fitted survive. The surviving organisms pass on these favorable characteristics to their offspring. The main objection to the theory has been religion. The non-believers of Darwinism cannot correlate natural selection with the Biblical stories. It does not jibe with the spiritual and picturesque stories with which they are familiar. Still others have found the theory painful to their ego. The theory completely changes the concept of man about himself. something that was created apart, but that he was descended from lower animals. Darwin's theory told man that he was not Evolution, as Darwin describes it, is a thing of the present as well as the past and the evolution of man is nothing unique. He differs from other life on earth in that he has an understanding of the change that is taking place. The vast majority of biologists and other educated persons, although they have found some errors in Darwin's theory, believe the theory of evolution is plausible and marvelous. What will happen to this theory? Some will never abandon their belief of the Biblical story of the creation. This would uproot their entire lives. Still others have, and will follow the majority of biologists and other educated persons along the footsteps of Darwinism, finding the theory does not cancel out their religious beliefs. One thing is certain. Darwin's theory has dominated the intellectual climate of the past century. —Jeanne Arnold Editor: ... Letters ... I read it, blinked, and read it over. It was still just as foolish, naive, and nauseating as on the first reading. Tolerance is a peculiar thing. It is wonderful, it is right, but like all other aspects of life, it can be "... probably. ... Mikoyan really is ... a person interested in nature and the smaller things in life. ... " So states Martha Crosier. carried to ridiculous, dangerous extremes. To observe that the number two man in the Soviet Union is "only human" is a gross oversight. Repeatedly it has been proclaimed that the avowed aim of the Communist machine is to destroy all other forms of government—this from the lips of Mr. Khrushchev, himself. "We will bury you," he recently screamed at an American envoy. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler POST NO BULLS "I SURE AM GLAD I FOUND OUT ABOUT HER! I CAN'T STAND A GIRL THAT'S STRONGER THAN I AM." Is it logical, then, to state that his fellow cohort in crime is "only human?" This writer questions the thinking which preceded that statement of Miss Crosier's. I once saw a picture of Adolph Hitler kissing a baby. Surely, then, he was "only human." Of course, by his order literally millions of people met an untimely death, and misery covered the world. Mikoyan wouldn't be where he is if he was "only human." He is surely just as dedicated to seeing the world ruled by the Communist doctrine as is his boss. If not, Khrushchev has slipped somewhere in his choice of a deputy premier. No, he isn't likely to be representative of most other Russians. If he and Khrushchev were like the ordinary Russian people, this writer seriously doubts that there would be any real tension in this world, and therefore little likelihood of us all being blown into oblivion. UNIVERSITÄT Dailu Hansan Jon Gnagy Hutchinson senior I wish I could agree with you, Miss Crosier. I wish I could. Telephone VIkling 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office University of Kansas student newspaper triweekly 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association Associated Collegiate Press. Repres- ented by National Advertising Service 42 Madison Ave., New York, NY. Mail 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. Entrance required. 17910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm, Applegate, Mc NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm Applegate Managing Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor the took world A|en - lan?z By Gilbert M. Cuthbertson Mosasaurus, the terrible sea lizard, and Hesperornis, the great horned diver, both were animals which inhabited the Cretaceous seas of Kansas some one hundred and twenty million years ago. THE FOSSIL BOOK, Carroll Lane Fenton and Mildred Adams Fenton. Doubleday and Co., $12.50. Their skeletal remains are mounted and reconstructed in the Museum of Natural History. Their fossil remnants are depicted in the Fentons' stimulating account of prehistoric life, "The Fossil Book." From gastropods (snails) to gastroliths (digestive stones of some dinosaurs), the Fentons, using a historical-geological approach, recreate the "animals of the past" in photographs and sketches of fossil specimens. The authors' orientation places especial emphasis on the evolution and development of modern genera. * * The first section of The Fossil Book introduces the fundamental concepts of historical geology and paleontology such as "index fossils" and "stratification." Here also is a precise and well-developed account of the nature of a "fossil" and the means by which fossilization may occur (as carbonization and permineralization). The major portion of the book contains vivid pictures of individual specimens of fossil types, representing the major zoologic and botanic orders and genera with the exception of the primates. There is a proportionate treatment of the invertebrates and the vertebrates. Of particular interest are the brief treatments of the "problematica" in each section as the early algal stromatolites, the graptelites, and sponges in general. Also treated are questions such as those concerning the extinction of the dinosaurs. * * The Fentons study in particular the emergence of land animals from such forms as the Icthyostegalia, early amphibians of Greenland, and the ancestry of common mammals. Although the subject matter of "The Fossil Book" is of a technical nature, the Fentons are careful to define or "popularize" their terms. The fossil material is examined with a concise and logical development with illustrations and diagrams on almost every page. The Fentons conclude with the theme "read, see, and collect." Among the institutions recommended for the reader to visit is the Natural History Museum here, the collections of which provide an excellent supplement to "The Fossil Book." One Year Ago... One year ago this week Gov. Docking had pledged in a letter to the All Student Council "to continue to provide the best education, at all levels, which Kansans can afford to support with their tax dollars." It was announced that bids would soon be let for the construction of Summerfield Hall, the School of Business building, and for Sprague apartments for retired staff members. Although the site for Sprague apartments has not yet been cleared, the business school building is under construction and is expected to be ready for use next fall. The Humanities lecture in the week of Jan. 7 last year was given by Dr. Bruno E. Werner, cultural counselor in the Washington embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany. Damage, not expected to exceed $1,000, was discovered in the Alpha Phi sorority house, resulting from a water pipe that burst during Christmas vacation. Wilt Chamberlain did not play in the game with OU, making KU the underdog—and rightly so. KU lost 64-63. Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. Enjoy a Generous Cut of Choice PRIME RIBS OF BEEF at De Luxe Cafe Also a Fine Selection of STEAKS AND SEA FOOD Open 6 a.m. — Close 2 a.m. Closed Mondays 711 Mass. Ph. VI 3-8292 Friday, Jan. 9, 1959 Uniiversity Daily Kansan Page 3 KU Women Wear Diamond Rings R. J. H. Pat Stitt Mr. Joe Stitt, Montrose, Colo., has announced the engagement of his daughter Patricia, to James Austin. Mr. Austin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey W. Austin of Topeka. Miss Stitt is a senior in the School of Education and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Austin is a junior in the School of Business and a member of Triangle fraternity. Mary Jo McCormack Pat Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Glen Q. Pierce, Lawrence, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Ellen, to Gary Loren Hattfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hatfield of Lawrence. Miss Pierce is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Hattfield attends Pittsburgh State College in Pittsburg where he is a sophomore in the School of Business. Fashion Fellowship Offered All senior women graduating before Aug. 31, 1959 are eligible to apply for a Fashion Fellowship which is awarded by the Tobe-Coburn School of Fashion Careers in New York City. Each fellowship covers the full tuition of $1351 for a one year course for the year 1959-60. Tobe-Coburn offers fellowships yearly to encourage able college graduates to enter a field which holds unusual advancement opportunities for well-trained young women. Graduates hold jobs in buying, advertising, styling, radio and television, and magazine and editorial work. The school maintains an active placement service to help graduates throughout their careers. The one year course at Tobe-Co burn emphasizes actual contact with the fashion industry through lectures by important fashion personalities; visits to manufacturers, department stores, buying offices, fashion shows and museums, and ten full weeks of working experience, with pay, in New York stores and other fashion organizations. Senior women may secure Fashion Fellowship registration blanks by writing the Fashion Fellowship Secretary, Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers, 851 Madison Ave., New York 21, N. Y. Registration closes Jan. 29, 1959. Pi Beta Phi Elects Officers Molly Clark, Hutchinson junior, has been elected president of Pi Beta Phi sorority for the coming semester. Other recently elected officers are as follows: Sue Suran, Hays junior, vice president; Sandy Owens, Topeka junior, treasurer; Jean Garlinghouse, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore, corresponding secretary; Linda Rankin, Littleton, Colo., senior, recording secretary; Judy Allen, Lawrence junior; social chairman; Mary Ann Mize, Salina junior, house manager; Nan O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill. junior, activities chairman, and Nancy Holmes, Hutchinson senior, rush chairman. Just Arrived! The Kingston Trio Volume 2 "from the HUNGRY I" $3.98 Say it with MUSIC BELL Music Company VI 3-2644 925 Mass. THE MUSICIAN WHO SHE PRESENTED THE FILM "ELVIS" AT AUCTIONS IN NEW YORK. BOTH TITLE AND FORMAT ARE COPYRIGHTED BY LIFE MEDIA LLC, 1950. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Clydene Boots Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Boots, Isabel, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Clydene, to Bart Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Forest Brown, Atwood. Miss Boots is a senior in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information majoring in advertising. She is a member of Chi Omega sorority, president of Gamma Alpha Chi, professional fraternity for women in advertising, and a member of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalistic fraternity for women. Mr. Brown is a first-year law student. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Phi Delta Phi professional legal fraternity. March 26 has been set as the wedding date. Spool Heel Will Be News The spool heel is replacing the needle heel in fashion favor. It is the heel that is shaped in slightly after the manner of the Spanish heel although it is higher. Alaska's population has increased almost two-thirds since 1950 and is now about 211,000. I Peggy Logan Peggy Guthrie Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Guthrie, Prairie Village, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Peggy, to Warren Denning, son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Denning, Wichita. PETER A. SCHMIDT Mr. and Mrs. Harold Logan, Wichita, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Peggy, to Randy Duvall, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. U. Duvall, Great Bend. No wedding date has been set. Miss Guthrie is a junior in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Denning is a junior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Miss Logan is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Mr. Duvall is a sophomore at the University of Wichita. The wedding date has been set for Jan. 25. Kansan Want Ads Get Results SENIORS... IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the '59 Jayhawker CALL ESTES STUDIOS—V1 3-1171 End of Year Clearance Dalmanette Heels Selected Colors and Patterns Formerly Priced 18.95 - 13.90 Penobscot Loafers For Women Formerly Priced to $8.95 Alligator Lizards Regular 23.95 - 16.90 Suedes $ 5^{90} $ Leathers $ 6^{90} $ 10^90 Foot Flair Heels Suedes 990 Leathers For Women Formerly Priced at $12.95 Deb Dress Flats Leathers and Suedes Formerly Priced to $10.95 690 790 Town & Country— Viner Loafers For Women Leathers and Suedes Formerly Priced to $6.95 490 Evening Slippers For Women Broken Lots Formerly Priced to $14.95 890 Please, no phone calls, returns, or approvals! Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 9.1959 GRADUATING THIS SEMESTER? XO Keep Up on KU News Next Semester With a Subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clip this coupon and mail it or drop by the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall Only $3.00 per semester ($4.50 for a full year) University Daily Kansan Flint Hall, K.U. Lawrence, Kan. Please mail the University Daily Kansan to Name ... Address ... City ... State ... Enclosed Find Check For $4.50 For One Year $3.00 For A Semester --- University Daily Konson Page 5 Friday Jan 0 1050 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Mitchell Welcomes Fifth Man Plan The decision of Big Eight Conference representatives to add a fifth official for football games brought an enthusiastic response from Coach Jack Mitchell this morning. Mitchell said the step will add to the game. He said such an experiment was tried in the Southwest Conference two years ago with great success. The fifth man will be a back judge. The Big Eight joins other major conferences in the fifth-man plan. The increased pace of the game has brought on sentiment that more officials are necessary. "It will result in fewer flags and fewer penalties," said Mitchell. "More field will be covered and the plays will be watched more closely. It should correct some of the mistaken practices that occurred last year." The adoption of the plan indicates that younger men may be used in officiating games. Some observers feel that the youthful officials will bring more speed and agility in handling the game in an efficient manner. The action came at a meeting yesterday of faculty representatives at the closing session of the 53rd annual N.C.A.A. convention in Cincinnati. It was the only league matter voted on and is effective immediately. Pi Kappa Alpha was hard-pressed to win a 35-33 victory over Triangle in Fraternity A intramural basketball yesterday. PiKA Drops Triangle Gary Pack and Bill Hudson led Triangle with 13 and 12 points respectively, but Pi Kappa's over-all scoring attack was more balanced. Garold Wingate led the winners with 10 points. Two Independent A teams won games by forfeit. Other results: Carruth defeated the Rum Dums, 2-0, and Oread defeated Locksley, 2-0. Fraternity C — Sigma Phi Epsilon II 34, Beta Theta Pi IV 20; Tau Kappa Epsilon 26, Sigma Nu II 23; Phi Gamma Delta III 32, Phi Delta Theta V 15. Games Mondav Independent C — Phi Epsilon Kappa 36, Klods 20; Bloopers 2, Phi Chi 0 (forfeit). **Fraternity A** — Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Delta Upsilon, 4:15; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Pi Kappa Alpha, 5:15; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Triangle, 6:15; Sigma Chi vs. Delta Tau Delta, 7:15. Fraternity B -- Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Pi, 5; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Kappa Sigma, 5:45. A's Schedule Dallas Game KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — The Kansas City Athletics will play one minor league opponent, the Dallas Eagles, on their exhibition circuit this spring. They will play the American Association in Dallas on April 8. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results The Unitarian Young People's Group Invites KU Students to Meet National Educational Religious Leader, and Discuss Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, "The Need For a Liberal Religion in a Crisis Age" 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 11 Oread Room, Kansas Union Fraternity C — Sigma Alpha Epsilon III vs. Phi Delta Theta V, 4:15; Sigma Nu II vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon II, 4:15; Phi Gamma Delta III vs. Beta Theta Pi IV, 5. Independent C — Snake Farm Five vs. Playboys, 7:15; Straps vs. Jim Beam III, 7:15; Maries vs. Bloopers, 5:45; Phi Epsilon Kappa vs. Jim Beam II, 6:30; Botany vs. Phi Chi, 6:30. K. U. CONCERT COURSE Extra Attraction CILLI WANG The Celebrated Pantomimist N. B. R. C. in "THE WORLD OF CILLI WANG" UNIVERSITY THEATRE tonite at 8:20 p.m. Sparky Stalcup, head basketball coach at Missouri University, will attempt to play a hopped-up version of basketball against the Jayhawkers at Columbia tomorrow night. "In my happy time I have seen on screen and stage a great number of funny people, some of whom I cherished. Add to the list of those I cherish the name of Cilii Wang. As a pantomimist Miss Wang is superb. Sparky Juggles Team "Most extraordinary of all is the lady's sense of humor. She is arty in her work as was another Phoenix Theatre discovery, Marceau. She is gay and earthy and impish." John Chapman, N.Y. Daily News The Tigers, limping along on a six-game losing streak, have been shuffled in hopes of producing more speed and rebounding power. One of their losses came in the Big Eight Tournament when KU beat them 84-73. This will be Missouri's first home performance in nine games. Stalcup hopes the home court will help to snap the losing streak. This is the longest losing period of Stalcup's 13-year career at Missouri. "The World of Cillian Wand" will remain one of the more memorable theatre events of the season." Walter Sorrell. Providence Journal Two new men will start for the Volleyball Club to Short Corn Tourney The KU Volleyball Club will be trying to improve on its last year's record when it opens the season Jan. 24 in the Short Corn Tournament in Des Moines. The club finished third last year. Tickets Now on Sale $2.05, $1.54, $1.03 tax included Fine Arts Office, Union Ticket Center Bell Music Co. Later tournaments will be held in Oklahoma City, Omaha, Lawrence, and Denver. Two more tournaments will be held in Des Moines, the Tall Corn, and the National Championships. Kevin Jones, coach of the club, said new players are needed. Volleyball experience is not needed for membership. Interested men should report at 1 p.m. Saturday to Jones in Robinson Annex. Tigers. They are J. C. Leimbach, a 6-foot, 4-inch junior forward, and Richard Pulliam, 6-foot 2-inch sophomore forward. In addition to the new players, Stalcup will switch Cliff Talley, 6-foot 6-inch junior, from forward to center. Talley replaces Charles Henke. Other probable starters for Missouri will be Mike Kirksey, 5-foot 10-inch senior, and Joe Scott, 6-foot 3-inch sophomore, both guards. Kirksey, shortest man on the Tiger roster, carries a 9.4 points-a-game average. The Jayhawkers will rest one day after tomorrow night's encounter with Missouri before again jumping into the middle of the Big Eight conference battle. Iowa State furnishes the opposition Monday night at Ames. The Cyclones are one of the more unpredictable teams in the league. They have been hot enough to press Kansas State to the limit before bowing in the final minutes, and yet have had a tough time earning five victories out of 11 starts. But the record bears out a preseason statement by Cyclone coach Bill Stranigan. He said: "We'll not be too good in December, but the lessons we learn will make us a tougher club in January." The Cyclones were involved in three tight games at Kansas City in the conference tournament. They won two and came out on top of the consolation bracket by beating Oklahoma State the final night. Then came the close game with K-State in the league opener for both teams Monday night and the Cyclones were tough enough to fulfill Stranrigan's prediction. Sophomores Ted Ecker and Henry Whitney have nailed down the forward spots for the Cyclones after the first month's play. Ecker played well in the tournament and was mostly responsible for the victory over Missouri. Whitney has developed into a top defensive man. Center John Krocheski, the leading scorer on the team and guards Larry Fie and Fon Baukol round out the starting five. Jay SHOPPE Top O' Twelfth Fresh - New Dacron and Cotton Pastel Shirts Blue-Pink-Beige White $598 Also Red and Black Have You Been Studying for Finals? THE MISSING TAXES If This Is You, You Win $5.00 If you are the person circled in the above picture, then you win $5.00. Bring this ad to the Lawrence Sanitary office at 6th and Vermont before 3:00 tomorrow, present your ID card, and you will receive a $5.00 bill. Serving KU For Over 38 Years Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. With Top Quality Dairy Products Feature Flavor for January . . RED RASPBERRY Pick up 1/2 Gallon Today TWIRL Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tax Forms Available Now At Strong Hall Post Office Post office officials report that income tax forms are available at the KU post office. The forms, as far as practical, are mailed directly to taxpayers, but additional forms may be obtained from any Internal Revenue Service office, and also at most banks. If a citizen or resident of the United States—whether an adult or minor—you must file an income tax return if your gross income was $600 or more. If you are 65, the gross income figure is $3,200 or more. Even if your income was less than $600, you will want to file for a refund of any taxes which were withheld from your wages. If your income consisted in part of salary or wages, you will need a W-2 form from your employer when you file. Your employer is required by law to provide you with this form. The form shows your gross wages or salary and withholdings during the year. You must file not later than April 15 with the District Director of Internal Revenue in Wichita. Taxes and death are certain, the law says, and tax service experts assure us that tax payment has been made as painless as death. You may use, for instance, the simplified card form (Form 1040A) if: 2. It consisted of wages reported on withholding statements (Forms W-2) and not more than $200 total of other wages, interest, and dividends, and 1. Your gross income was less than $10,000, and 2. You wish to take the standard deduction (about 10 per cent of your income) instead of itemizing deductions. Otherwise, you must use the longer form 1040, but even this is arranged so that pages 3 and 4 can be discarded if not needed. The income tax is a progressive tax. This means that it is levied at a higher rate on higher incomes. Major Poets Do Not Catch Mood of West, Crafton Says The western part of the United States in the last century has inspired no great poetry and very little good poetry from the major poets, Allen Crafton, professor of speech, said yesterday at the poetry hour. "If we want to acquaint ourselves with the mood of the west we must look at the simple, sentimental, lesser poets," he said. To prove his point, Prof. Crafton read some of the "tall tales" such as "Snagtooth Sal" and "Streets of Laredo." He said the poetry which conveyed the mood of the west best is Indian poetry. Fletcher and John Nelheart. He also read some Indian poetry. Prok-Crafton called the poetry written by the Indian, "shorthand notes; the inside song of the west." Indian poetry is in direct contract to that of the white man, he said, because the Indian talks of the beauty found in life and not about death, as does the white man. It was announced that no poetry hour will be held Thursday. Sessions will resume Feb. 12. Lawrence J. McMurtrey, Boeing Airplane Co. engineer, will speak on power plants for present and future aircraft at an American Society of Mechanical Engineers meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in room 303 of the Kansas Union. Mr. McMurtrey, manager of advanced design systems for the Boeing company at Wichita, will discuss the performance and design of power plants to be used in space vehicles. Boeing Engineer to Talk 1950 Lawrence J. McMurtrey He has been with the Boeing company for 11 years. Mr. McMurtrey was an instructor in thermodynamics at the University of Utah for two years following his graduation from the University of Colorado with a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering. At the Boeing company, he is responsible for the over-all design of weapons systems with direct application to Navy requirements. The public is invited to attend the lecture. Official Vallecim TODAY International Club, 5-10 p.m. Kansas room of Union Election, dinner, and cocktails Mariners Meeting, 6 p.m., 1212 Oread United Presbyterian Student Center. Carry in supper and speaker, Dr. Henry Karry as psychiatrist at Watkins Memorial Hospital, Mental Healthi and Your Family." Marti couples invited. Babysitters provided. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Inter-Baccalaureate, 829 (bessapp) St Bible study, Baccalaureate, 829 (bessapp) St Bible study. SUNDAY Newman Club Mass, 8 & 10 a.m. Newman Social hour in Hawk's Passer room, 10 a.m. KU Faculty Club, 5 p.m., "An Anthropologist's Experiences in New Guinea." Mr. C. A. Valentine. Buffet supper following program. Hillel. 5 p.m.; cost supper, AEPI house, 1247 Ohio. Rabbi Solomon from Congregational Kehillah Israel, "Orthodox Judaism." THE 8TH WONDER OF THE SCREEN! THE 7th VOYAGE OF SINBAD DYNAMATION Technicolor* A MORNINGSIDE PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURE starting KERWIN MATHEWS KATHRYN GRANT as starring RICHARD EYER as CENIE with TORIN THATCHER EXTRA! CARTOON • NEWS—SHOWS 7:00, 9:00 THE 7th VOYAGE OF SINBAD DYNAMATION Technicolor* A MORNINGSIDE PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURE THE 8TH WONDER OF THE SCREEN! starring KERWIN MATHEWS KATHRYN GRANT co starring RICHARD EYER as CENIE with TORIN THATCHER EXTRA! CARTOON NEWS—SHOWS 7:00, 9:00 STARTS SUNDAY! 3 DAYS ONLY! The TOWERING adventure that clashes against heaven itself! Produced by DARRYL F. ZANUCK Presented by ROMAIN GARY and PATRICK LEIGH-FERMOR Darryl F. Zanuck's THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN Directed by John Huston starring ERROL FLYNN • JULIETTE GRECO TREVOR HOWARD • EDDIE ALBERT and ORSON WELLES CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE A Darryl F. Zanuck Productions, Inc. Picture Included By 70th Century Fox SHOWS CONT. SUNDAY FROM 1:30 EXTRA! CARTOON NEWS—ADULTS 75c, KIDS 25c GRANADA THEATRE - Telephone VIKING 3-5788 NOW! AND SATURDAY! THE 8TH WONDER OF THE SCREEN! THE 7th VOYAGE OF SINBAD DYNAMATION Technicolor* A MORNINGSIDE PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURE starring KERWIN MATHEWS KATHRYN GRANT co-starring RICHARD EVER as CENE with TORIN THATCHER EXTRA! CARTOON • NEWS—SHOWS 7:00, 9:00 STARTS SUNDAY! 3 DAYS ONLY! The TOWERING adventure that clashes against heaven itself! Darryl F. Zanuck's THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN produced by DARRYL F. ZANUCK ROMAIN GARY and PATRICK LEIGH-FERMOR starring ERROL FLYNN · JULIETTE GRECO TREVOR HOWARD · EDDIE ALBERT and ORSON WELLES CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE SHOWS CONT. SUNDAY FROM 1:30 EXTRA! CARTOON • NEWS—ADULTS 75c, KIDS 25c GRANADA THEATRE • Telephone VIKING 3-5788 2 FEATURE BATTLE OF BEAUTIES! ITALYS'S SOPHIA (38-24-38) FRANCE'S BRIGITTE (37-18-34) What a treat—when Brigitte and Sophia, the feminine bombihells with the magic measurements, unveil their curvaceous charms on our giant screen! It's a spicy Sizzler! SOPHIA LOREN in Scandal in Sorrento she brazenly flaunts her curves at every single man in town! Co-Starring VITTORIO DE SICA a "respectable" rogue...involved in shameless shenanigans! It's wicked and wonderful! It's the world's most famous sex-kittens — in a daring French ramp! Brigitte Bardot MORE PROVOCATIVE THAN EVER Mademoiselle Striptease A glamorous spree with that certain French flavor of sugar and spice! with DANIEL GELIN Varsity STARTS SUNDAY All Tickets 75c NOT FOR CHILDREN NOW & SAT! AUDIE MURPHY "GUN RUNNERS" PLUS "VALERIE" STARTS SUNDAY! 3 DAYS ONLY! The TOWERING adventure that clashes against heaven itself! Darryl F. Zanuck's THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN Directed by John Huston starring ERROL FLYNN • JULIETTE GRECO TREVOR HOWARD • EDDIE ALBERT and ORSON WELLES Produced by DARRYL F. ZANUCK Presented by ROMAIN GARY CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DELUXE 2 FEATURE BATTLE OF BEAUTIES! ITALY'S SOPHIA (38-24-38) ERANCE'S BRIGITTE (37-18-34) What a treat — when Brigitte and Sophia, the feminine bombshells with the magic measurements, unveil their curvaceous charms on our giant screen! 2 FEATURE BATTLE OF BEAUTIES! ITALY'S SOPHIA (38-24-38) FRANCE'S BRIGITTE (37-18-34) What a treat — when Brigitte and Sophia, the feminine bombhells with the magic measurements, unveil their curvaceous charms on our giant screen! in COLOR It's a spicy Sizzler! Sparks fly and scandal rages, as a voluptuous spitfire gets singed by her own flamet she brazenly flaunts her curves at every single man in town! SOPHIA LOREN in Scandal Sorrento Co-Starring VITTORIO DE SICA a "respectable" rogue... involved in shameless shenanigans! It's wicked and wonderful! It's the world's most famous sex-kitten — in a daring French romp! Brigitte Bardot MORE PROVOCATIVE THAN EVER Mademoiselle Striptease A glamorous spree with that certain French flavor of sugar and spice! with DANIEL GELIN Varsity STARTS SUNDAY All Tickets 75c NOT FOR CHILDREN NOW & SAT! AUDIE MURPHY "GUN RUNners" PLUS "VALERIE" in COLOR It's a spicy Sizzler! SOPHIA LOREN in Scandal in Sorrento she brazenly flaunts her curves at every single man in town! Co-Starring VITTORIO DE SICA a "respectable" rague...involved in shameless shenanigans! Brigitte Bardot MORE PROVOCATIVE THAN EVER Mademoiselle Striptease A glamorous spree with that certain French flavor of sugar and spice! with DANIEL GELIN 25 won HOUSE fished. Call VI ROOMS after 6 on Sat VI 3-090 VERY I home, p 914.50 ccept. C B ROOM clean, J privilege paid, B ter 5 p 2 ROO share ki 1520 W. NEWLY now rea refrigera downtow EXTRA with sin Also we around SINGLE and for bus. 113! CLEAN, ns, goo arge clo no pets, VERY N month, condition urnished a month, or VI 3-5 FOUR R living ro VANTED neal serve eges for Jan. 26,9 FOUR RC ept refr electric own. Ca 3:00 p.m FIRST FI rooms, fi single be 520 La., V GARAGE apartment quiet stu rooms. ca ECONOM $50 and Plenty of the Don 0681. NICE LA Mrs. Mas or after DOUBLE spring mator 2nd available 1 block 1 p.m., 1 VERY NI street par 1001 India ROOM A1 $50 per m I FURNIS ment, priv VI 3-4271. SINGLE bath, no bond seame FOUR R close to VI 2-0322 Mo. HALF BI hice hou single, re Come to 5 to 7, or ROOM FG Union, lin legs if d 3-0418, 12 BEVERAGE cold. Crust closed paper ice plant. (0 0350.) Mufflers 1 qt. oil PAGE' Friday, Jan. 9, 1959 alk Page 7 University Daily Kansan e Boeing McMur- in ther university of knowing his university of degree in y, he is - all with di- require- to attend edin m. , Kansas inner, and 221 Oread Center. Dr. Henry at Wattal Health couples in- Fellowship. able study, 10 a.m. in Hawk's Anthro- Guinea," upper fol- EPi house from Con- "Orthodox 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. FOR RENT HOUSE FOR RENT: Furnished or unfurnished, suitable for 2 families if desired. Call VI 3-7698 after 1 p.m. or VI 3-763 1:12 ROOMS FOR BOYS, liners furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama VT 3-0902. tf VERY LARGE SLEEPING ROOM in new home, private entrance, quiet and lovely. $14.50 per month, linen furnished, room舱. Call VI 3-7830 by 5 p.m. 1-12 EXTRA NICE ROOMS, 1 single, 1 double with single beds, for boys. Call VI 3-7863. Also would like student for odd jobs around room for room rent. 1-12 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, share kitchen and bath, private entrance, 1520 W. 22nd Terr., VI 3-8673. 1-12 NEWLY DECORATED large single rooms now ready for men students, new beds, refrigerator privileges, near KU and downtown, call VI 3-7199. 1-12 SINGLE ROOFS for boys available now for second and third class close to campus. For 1st class VT-324 or VT-325. 3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment, neat, clean, private entrance, phone, laundry privileges, near KU, $55 per month, bill or couple. Call V141-7800-11-7 5 p.m. CLEAN, FURNISHED small house, builtnets, good wood, electric Frigidaire, ar cloestes, married couple no children, to pets, available Jan 20, 520 Ohio. 1-13 VERY NICE 3 room apartment, $75 a month, new house. Two bedroom, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Two bedroom furnished apartment, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-0497 or VI I 3-3902. 1-13 FOUR ROOMS of furniture. 2 bedrooms. living room and kitchen. 12 D Sunny- day. OUR ROOMS and bath, unfurnished except refrigerator. Has fireplace, gas heat, electric stove oven, nice kitchen, near VI 3-5978 until noon or 1:12 to 30 p.m. WANTED: 1 student to share room. 1 meal served family style, kitchen privileges for other 2 meals, available after Jan. 26, 940 Miss., VI 3-1585. 1-13 GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-1091. tf FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, four large rooms, furnished, for 4 boys or men, single beds, private entrance and bath, 220 Ln. VI 3-9184. 1-13 NICE LARGE ROOM for 1 or 2 boys. See Mrs. Maxwell in Haven's nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana. VI 3-4168 -1-13 ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, 550 and 16 hours of work per month. plenty of quiet rooms now available. Don Henry Co-op, 1420 Ohio VI, 2- 3681 DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, innermatching mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after p.m., 1332 Ohio, VI 3-6709. 1-16 VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off- kitchen furnished, se-1001 Indiana. 1-16 ROOM AND BOARD for spring semester, $50 per month, VI 3-4385. 1-14 | FURNISHED and 1 unfurnished apart- ment and bath and 3 baths 1-34 M 1-3471, 1222 La SINGLE ROOM, private entrance and path, no other roomers. Available second semester, 1328 Ky., VI 3-4823. 1-15 FOUR ROOM DUPLEX. unturnished. close to campus, available Feb. 1, call VI 2-6222 or see after 5 p.m. at 1833 Mo. 2-5 GALF BLOCK from campus, in very nice house, large double rooms and a library. 1215 Oceane Come to see Lee Weltmer, at 6 to 7, or call VI 3-669. 1-2-15 2 DOUBLE ROOMS with single beds. 12 meals per week, for boys. Beginning second semester. If interested call VI 3-9562. 1-15 ROOM FOR BOYS — ½ block from Union, linens furnished, cooking bri- veges if desired, T.V. showers, call VI -0418, 1222 Miss. 1-15 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supplies plant. 6th and Vermont. Plone VI plant. 0350. Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. LOST PICKETT SLIDE RULE in brown case, before Christmas vacation, reward, VI 3-1 0863 WHITE CASE containing glasses with blue upper frame and clear lower frame. Month Jan. 5 between 12th and Indiana Hall, reward Hall, reward VI 2-0335 evenings. 1-12 FROM CAR on 10th St. between Indiana and Ohio on Friday. Dec. 19 at 9 p.m. boy's grey park, size 8, red lined hood, reward. Call VI 3-4855 evenings. REWARD FOR THE RETURN of History of Science notebook left Tuesday in Science Library stocks, Mary Ann Wad- dell, VI 3-8255. 1-15 EYEGLASSES heavy trous, loose left earpieces in vicinity of Pair-1 VT 3-6018 WANTED WANTED: WASHING AND ironings, also sewing, call VI 2-0681, 813 Rhode Island. HELP WANTED PART TIME TYPEST: Hours can be varied, call VI 3-7114 between 10 and 11 a.m. 1-14 NEED MALE REPRESENTATIVE for Philip Morris Inc. to work campus on retail and promotions. Prefer Sophomore or Junior taking Business, others considered. Contact Mr. C. W. McCabe. Meriden, Ks., HU 4-2350. 1-12 FOR SALE BONGOS, used very little, all metal, made by WFL Drum Co., heads quickly should be desired pitch. Original cost. $5, selling price, $6. John IMAI, 1 V-3-0651 CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLEU tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. Go inside during the day in the Kansan Room or call VI 9063 between 6-7 p.m. STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124. tf POST VERSALOG slide rule, Handbook on Chemistry, Physics Handbook ofochemistry study aids for science majors. Call VI 3-5381 or Ohio after 5:00 p.m. 1-13 REMINGTON PORTABLE typewriter, good condition, come see at 109 East 19th St. Grover's Realty Co. VI 3-2636. J-15 FLAT TOP Spanish guitar, call VI 3-8454, ask for Mr. Morton, 1404 Alumni Pl. 1-13 ThriftiCheck - is America's most popular personal checking account service. - accounts may be opened in just a few minutes, with a few dollars. The cost is only a few cents a check. ThriftiCheck® - requires no minimum balance. Keep as much or as little money in your account as you like. - is the safe, easy way to pay bills and keep track of your dollars. Each check personalized, free. ThriftiCheck® ThriftiCheck® BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 4411> Mass. Ph. VI 32563. tt ThriftiCheck® NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence--our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1215 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Creatures of Exotic Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Elevated dogs and cats; beds, toys, leather, ground carpets, sweaters, blankets, etc., Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. available in this area only at RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf ADVERTISED IN The Tuesday Evening POST WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. formerly 829 Conn., now 421 Ohio. tf DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. 900 Mass. VI 3-7474 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers andheses. Fast, accurate service at regularates. Call VI 3-5868. tt TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequst, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc.Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery.Call VI 3-9508. tf WANTED; TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service. Mrs. Meilinger, VI a- 4409. TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. beatherwood. V 1-3891. 1736 Tenn. ff. THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed Fast accurate service. Mrs. Lungren, 1632 W. 20th St., VI 3-7184. tf LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021½ Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. or more than ten, by professional instructors available for limited time. VI 3-2123. **if** TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tt FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. J. Cosester, phone VI 3-8679. TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tt WESTERN CIVILIZATION study guide, new, complete, extensive notes covering all the readings. Over 60 pages. Free decimal this week. $3 per set, call 1-91-7584 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. ff TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call V1 3-9508. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST. will type themes, reports, etc. Neat, accurate work, Mrs. Davis, $1016^{1/2}$ Conn. VI 2-0267 1-13 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. capital rates. Mrs. Tom Brady. VI. 3428. TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Earl Wright. WANTED: Washings and ironings, rea- sonable rates, VI 3-2906 1-15 the town shop ANNUAL WINTER SALE Topcoats 331/3% off Were NOW $47.50 $31.67 50.00 33.34 57.50 38.34 FINE TWEEDS, COVERTS DEEP FLEECE Sportcoats 25% off Were NOW $35.00 $26.25 37.50 28.12 39.50 29.63 NEW, NATURAL SHOULDER 3 BUTTON Sweaters Lambs Wool - Cashmere V Neck $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price - Bulky Knits 25% off Sportshirts 1/4 off Parkas 1/4 off Wool Socks $ \frac{1}{2} $ price Ties $ \frac{1}{2} $ price Gloves $ \frac{1}{4} $ off the town shop --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 9, 1959 Noted Pianist Set For Mid-week Date The pianist who is considered one of the foremost of his generation as well as the greatest his nation has ever produced will perform Wednesday at 8:20 p.m. in the University Theatre of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Rudolf Firkusny, a Czech-American, will appear on the KU Concert Course. Students may present ID cards at the Fine Arts Office or the Union Center for reserved seats Admission tickets for non-students are $2.56, $2.05 and $1.54 and may be purchased at the Fine Arts Office, the Union Ticket Center and Bell Music Co. Mr. Kirkusyn, who became an American citizen six years ago and now makes his permanent home in New York, was only six years old Unitarian Leader To Speak Here A national leader in liberal religious education will discuss "A Mature Religion for Modern Man" at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union. S. H. DAVIS Rev. Dr, Ernest W, Kuebler The speaker, the Rev. Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, is director of the Division of Education and administrator of the Council of Liberal Churches His lecture will be open to the public without charge and is sponsored by the Lawrence Unitarian Association. Dr. Kuebler also will meet with the Unitarian Young People's group at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Oread room, and will be guest of honor at a dinner at 5:30 p.m. given by the Fellowship's religious education committee in the English room of the Union. A native of Kansas City, Mo., Dr. Kuebler attended Kansas City Junior College, Northwestern College, and Boston University, where he received his bachelor's degree in Religious Education and a master's degree in Character Education and Psychology. He studied for two years at the Yale University Divinity and Graduate schools. 'Elijah' to Be Sung In Monday Concert Mendelssohn's dramatic oratorio, "Elijah" will be performed at 8 p.m. Monday by the University Chorus in its annual winter concert in Hoch Auditorium. There is no admission charge. A chorus of 200 voices will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music. The four soloists for the performance will be Martha O'Dell, Carrollton, Mo., senior, soprano; Beverly R. Benso, Lawrence senior; contralto; Bruce Gardner, Lawrence junior; tenor; and Jack Davison, Lawrence senior, baritone. Jane Carr, Junction City junior will be piano accompanist. when his mother enrolled him at the State Conservatory in Erunn Czechoslovakia. He was ten when he first appeared as soloist with the Philharmonic Orchestra in Prague. Four years later made his first appearance in Vienna. After a concert in Brussels, Queen Mother Elizabeth of Belgium invited him to Lacken Castle and presented him with a watch inscribed with her monogram. He has also performed for the British royal family. Mr. Firkusy came to America for the first time in 1938. He was in his homeland in 1939, when Hitler's troops marched into Prague. With a single suitcase and some music, he fled the capital and eventually made his way into Switzerland and then France. He settled in Paris temporarily and gave the last concert held for the Society for Contemporary Music before the fall of that city. He moved on to Portugal and gave concerts there while awaiting transportation to America. In 1941 he returned to America and his first appearance was at the Ravinia Festival, With Sir Thomas Beecham conducting, Mr. Firkusny reintroduced to this country Dvorak's Piano Concerto in G minor. It was the first performance of the work here in 65 years and the first of a brilliant series of unfamiliar Czech compositions which Mr. Firkusny brought to American audiences. For ten years, Mr. Firkusny has been a soloist with the New York Philharmonic Symphony. He devotes six months a year to concerts here, three months to Europe, two months to South America, and one month to a holiday. He has been called a "global pianist" for his shunting back and forth by plane. 180 to Be Tested In Western Civ About 180 students will take the four-hour Western Civ examination tomorrow at 1 p.m. in 303 Bailey, 203 Bailey and in 9 Strong. James Schellenberg, Western Civilization instructor, said today the examination will be 50 per cent essay. 25 per cent short answer and 25 per cent multiple choice. The multiple choice part of the examination will be machinegraded. At least six instructors will grade each of the other examinations, he added. It is designed to give equal chances to students enrolled in this year's reading program and to students who completed a different set of readings last semester, he said. All of New England and the state of New Jersey could fit inside the borders of Nebraska. The results of the tests will be available in about two weeks, Mr Schellenberg said. 1975 'Carmen' Cast Rehearse Now CILLI WANG, Viennese pantomimist, will perform at 8:20 tonight in the University Theatre of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Miss Wang's appearance is an added attraction in the KU Concert Course. Admission tickets are $2.05, $1.54 and $1.03. The cast is set and rehearsals have begun for the University Theatre production of "Carmen," the opera by George Bizet which will be presented March 9-11. The production will be staged by Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama. The classic story of the fickle Spanish gypsy girl, who was eventually stabbed by her lover Don Jose, will be sung in English. Included in the cast and the character they will portray are Beverly R. Benso, Lawrence senior, Carmen; Celia Welch, Herington junior, Michiela; Robert Lynch, Beloit senior, Escamillo; Martha O'Dell, Carrollton, Mo., senior, Frasquita; Joyce Mickaly, Baldwin sophomore, Mercedes; Dick Wright, Junction City special student, Don Jose; David Dodds, Lawrence graduate student, El Remendato; Bruce Gardner, Lawrence junior, Dancairo; Steve Murhpry, Merriam freshman, Morales; Jack Davison, Lawrence senior, Zuniga. "A Mature Religion For Modern Man" The city of Annapolis was chartered by the Royal Governor of Maryland 250 years ago, in 1708. - Portraits - Weddings - Application Photos - Engagements A Billings Lecture by Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, National Leader in Religious Education by photograph Open to the public without charge in the interest of furthering the cause of liberal religion. 摄影师 Sponsored by the Lawrence Unitarian Fellowship and the Billings Fund of the American Unitarian Association. HIXON STUDIO 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 11 DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union DUCK'S For SEA FOOD Chicken - Steaks OPEN 11:00-11:00 824 Vermont Can't Live on Civil Service, Workers Say Some KU maintenance men believe they should receive a pay raise soon to compensate for their recent payroll cutback to the civil service scale. "A man simply can't make a living on the civil service scale," Elmer E. Cox, a janitor, said today in summing up the attitudes of the many workmen. "Gov. Docking froze wages here last July. I think the reason he didn't do anything then was because he wanted to wait until after the election." Mr. Cox said. The proposed pay cut went into effect Jan. 1, after recommendations by Governor George Docking. Some janitors have received wage cuts of fifty cents an hour. As Mr. Cox described the situation: "They even cut the bottom janitor. "A man can't live on a dollar an hour today. The cost of living has doubled in the last ten years, but pay raises have not kept pace," he said. A night watchman, who would not give his name, said he received Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER a cut but declined to say how much. "But him," he said, pointing to a janitor walking down the hall, "he got cut almost fifty cents. He's now getting less than a dollar an hour and working ten hours a day at that. He couldn't survive without overtime." The night watchman said he knew of no maintenance men who have quit work. Most of them are waiting to see what the legislature will do. He also predicted that the legislature would do something about the cut. "They just about have to," he said. The first regular coal mining operations in North America were begun by the French in 1720 on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia. AAA COLLEGE MOTEL MEMBER THE BEST Western MOTELS Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming W Weaver january shoe clearance loafers and dress flats! - suedes and leathers - hundreds of pairs regularly to $8.95 $4.90 dress shoes! - french heels by Sandler and Citation - pumps and T-straps - black suede regularly to $12.95 $7.90 Weaver's Shoe Shop—Second Floor Cuban Student Returns to Class Sonia Alvarez, Gardenas, Cuba, junior who returned from her home country Friday night, was back in class today. Miss Alvarez left the Cuban mainland about noon. "I was among the first Cuban allowed to leave the country," she said. She was unable to leave sooner because of a four-day strike declared Jan. 1. "Except for electricity and telephones, everything on the island was at a standstill," she said. Miss Alvarez was granted permission to leave the country last Tuesday by a chief of the rebel army. The very first planes leaving the islands carried only Americans, she said. "I received a telephone call early Friday morning from the ticket agent to come to the airport right away," she said. About 30 persons, 15 of them students, left the country about noon. Miss Alvarez said the country had returned to normal when she left it. "There was a little trouble with groups that did not want to accept Fidel Castro's appointments," she said. She said she had talked with her mother by telephone yesterday, however, and that "the groups had surrendered their arms and had completely accepted Castro." She gave this account of the uprising Miss Alvarez left the University Dec. 17 to spend her Christmas vacation at home. She said she had no difficulty entering the country. "When I got home rebels ha conquered most of Las Villas, (the province adjacent to Matazas where Miss Alvarez lives). The government had started bombing the cities which the rebels had liberated. "On Dec. 29, one of the chiefs o, the army went to visit Castro and offered to make a treaty with him so things could get quieted down. "On Jan. 1 we got a telephone call from one of our friends telling us that Batista had left the island. We didn't believe it, though, until it was announced over an American radio station." "He left a military junta in charge, That day Castro declared the strike, to last until he had completely taken over. "As soon as the people knew Batista had gone, flags were displayed in all the windows and on automobiles," she said. "About 89 per cent of the Cubans supported Castro," she said. "Batista had only the army behind him." A student from her hometown was one of the main rebel leaders, she said. When he was killed, other Castro troops entered the city to honor him. She said she got a glimpse of Castro as he was leaving the city by automobile. Many of the rebels were students she said. The country is now holding martial court. Persons who fought to support Batista will be punished, she said. Three or four in her hometown have already been executed. Kathleen R. Fletcher Sonia Alvarez Miss Alvarez said there was no Christmas celebration in Cuba. There were no Christmas trees or other decorations. "The people didn't think it was right to have fun and to enjoy themselves while the revolution was going on." Miss Alvarez said she was glad that things were back to normal: "My family even went to a movie the other night. They hadn't been to a show in more than a year." William L. Walker, Parsons senior, was taken to Watkins Hospital by ambulance at 1:30 this afternoon. He became ill while attending a class in Marvin Hall. The immediate cause of his illness was not known. Bulletin Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 Students Protest Bus Cafe Discrimination Ten members of the International Club protested an incident of segregation in Dallas, Tex., in a letter to the president of the Greyhound Bus Lines. One member of the group, a student from Nigeria, Africa, was refused service in a bus station restaurant while the group was on a trip to Mexico during Christmas vacation. Another Greyhound-operated restaurant in Laredo, Tex., had not refused the student service on an earlier stop. The letter said in part: "We were astonished by the contrast between your desegregated restaurant in Laredo and your segregated restaurant in Dallas. "It would seem to us, therefore, that no legal bar to the advent of French Constitution Seen as Cure for Woes "Matters of great question or importance must be referred to the people through referendum. There is a new Constitutional Council which acts as a Supreme Court," Father de Bertier said. The new French constitution gives France a stronger chief of state and a more stable government. The new Fifth Republic should cure some of the problems of the Fourth Republic" Father Guillaume d Bertier de Sauvigny, professor of history at the Catholic University in Paris, said. He described the new French constitution at the Current Events Forum Friday. He suggested, however, that the constitution's strength depends upon de Gaulle's popularity. Father de Bertier paused and smiled when asked whether he felt the new constitution would last. "There is different parliamentary procedure. This procedure prevents the assembly from acting arbitrarily. Subjects for Assembly discussion are provided for by the constitution through the power granted the Council of Ministers to decide what will be discussed," he said. "A constitution is not an abstract idea imposed upon a nation, but a rejection of a surrounding situation. It answers clearly defined needs of a nation," he said. "There have been 16 French constitutions since 1800," he replied with a shrug. "The mechanism to overthrow the government is more difficult. The Assembly must pass a motion of censure by an absolute majority (over one-half of the deputies)," Father de Bertier said. "This makes the kind of make-shift coalitions of political parties which have voted governments out of office in the past virtually impossible," he said. Faults of the old Republic cited by Father d Bertier are: 1. Too great Assembly power. 2. A downgraded status of the president. He noted that the new constitution provides that political parties must respect democratic principles and French sovereignty. "This means the Communist party in France could be banned," he said. The constitution also re-establishes the Senate as a part of the government. This means that France has a bicameral assembly similar to the House and Senate of the United States. The constitution provides a seven- year term for the French president "This is long—and dangerous—but the seven-year tenure in France is a tradition. This is the reason that it wore out, then cut it out and institution." Father de Bertier said. He added, however, that there is little danger of the president becoming a dictator, for there are too many safeguards written into the constitution. liberalism in your dining facilities can exist even in the state of Texas! "We felt certain that since you enjoy the standing of a public service, your company would have been one of the first to comply with the very unambiguous directives of the Supreme Court on the subject of segregation." Students Were Surprised Margaret Savage, Herts, England, graduate student, made this comment concerning the incident: "We were surprised to confront the segregation issue since the Greyhound Lines are a service to the public. There is no segregation in their bus lines service—only in some of their restaurants." Miss Savage said the letter, written to the head of the Greyhound Lines, was not in criticism of segregation in private concerns. The Greyhound Lines are governed by Interstate Commerce law. Denis Kennedy, Dublin, Ireland, graduate student, said the group had expected the segregation problem in privately owned restaurants. "We didn't expect it in places governed by the law of the land," he said. Kennedy said he did not know whether the club had faced a similar problem in Texas on previous trips. The club makes an annual trip to Mexico during the Christmas holidays. Group Left Restaurant Gretel Mueller, Bonn, Germany, graduate student, said most other members of the group left the restaurant when the Negro student was refused service. "Some didn't realize what had happened so they went ahead and ate at the restaurant," Miss Mueller said. Other members of the club who signed the letter to the Greyhound Lines are Garret Ormiston, Winfield junior; Richard Reitz, Council Groves senior; Carlo Mercant, Vicenza, Italy, graduate student; Shinichi Shigihara, Osala, Japan, graduate student, and Horst Trojan; Flensburg-Murwik, Germany, graduate student. Cold Fear on Icy Roof Fraser Flagman Reveals All Fear strikes the heart of many persons—even those who think themselves courageous. A KU student felt fear on top of Fraser Hall Saturday night as he played "cat man" for the glory of a college stunt. The fear-striken John Doe was able to relate his experience. Here is the letter of the intrepid mountain climber: "The original objective of the stunt was to replace the KU flag with one of our own makings. With our flag in hand, I attempted to climb the west face of Fraser. However, due to someone's burning the midnight oil in a room directly adjacent to the fire escape, I was unable to make my ascent from that side of the building. I and my two accomplices found another fire escape on the east side of Fraser. "The windows were locked, but when I returned to the east side I felt a current of warm air. Investigating this draft, I found that a pane of glass was missing from the east window. Through this it "I climbed the fire escape without incident, walked up the roof to the base of the tower and climbed to the level below the flag. Seeing that there was no way to reach it from the outside, I thought of breaking into the room which was under the flag. was relatively simple to gain admit- tance. "With this done, I made haste to the edge of the building where I would climb down to safety below. However, said safety was not to be had. Once again the burners of the midnight oil had dealt me a cruel blow. "I crossed the room to the door which led to the stairwell, only to find another door securely locked. I resigned myself to placing our flag in front of the window by which I had entered. "I stood there undecided for a moment, and suddenly the campus police appeared on the scene. I dropped to my stomach and crawled to the roof, then to the tower. "I was panic-stricken. One false step on the ice and I would fall. One sound and I would be found. I looked around for a place to hide and found a ledge on the west face of Fraser. It was two stories below the flag, to the right of three small windows one of which showed a light. Weather Mostly fair this evening through tomorrow. Continued mild. Low tonight lower 30's. High tomorrow in the 50's. "I was cold. The wind was biting against my face, and the ice beneath my feet made it hard for me to stand. I began to quiver from the cold, to fire from standing plastered flat against the cold stone. Then the lights went out inside. At last I could sit down. After a few long moments I cautiously arose and crossed to the east face of Fraser, and descended the fire escape. "The police were up now. I was frightened but not yet ready to give in. I saw a beam of light strike to the right of me, then after a few moments to the left. Voices, foot-steps, rays of light; these commonplace things were now so terrifying to me. "There was a man seated beside a window, but I had to get by him. Somehow I slipped by him and reached the bottom. My two friends had gone. I ran, faster than I had ever run before, and probably farther, too." "All in all it was a very interesting evening, an experience which I am sure I will never forget. "Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas." (Happy is he who is able to find the cause of this.) "Why did I do it?" The Triumvirate A LITTLE HELP. Three hands don't seem too many to Tom Taylor, Kansas City, Mo., as Jay Gruver, Prairie Village, helps him button his bulky band uniform, in time for the University Band concert yesterday. Both men are freshmen. A large audience attended the band's annual winter concert in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 12. 1959 Profs Procrastinate A contradiction exists in the relationship between students and faculty at KU—a contradiction in what one has the right to expect from the other. It is apparent that faculty members expect, sometimes demand on threat of failure, that students be prompt in completing assignments. But the student has no means of retaliation against the instructor who allows these assignments to collect dust in his office for several weeks before grading and returning them. Tardiness and procrastination are bad habits. That the faculty is guilty of them is no less worse than the student. Let us look at this problem from the student's viewpoint. He, we shall assume, has spent a great deal of time preparing a paper or studying for an examination. In many courses it will be the only paper he writes all semester. It may be the only test he is given besides the final. When an instructor delays grading these papers, returning them weeks later, the student may only then realize that he is not doing as well in the subject as he had thought. If he discovers this late in the semester, it could prove scholastically fatal. One can argue that faculty members have not only the one paper, but many others to grade. But they should remember also that the student does not have only the one paper to write or the one test for which to study. He has similar obligations in all his other classes Students, as a whole, respect the faculty's demands for promptness in classwork. In return these students have the right to expect the faculty to show respect for their time and effort by promptness in returning the work. Pat Swanson The Humanitarian View With the Russian launching of Lunik I, the United States is again subjected to the cries of her allies to catch the Russians in the race for rocket supremacy. One noted Westerner who seems to feel just the opposite is 86-year-old philosopher Bertrand Russell. In his new book, "Common Sense and Nuclear Warfare," Mr. Russell expresses fear that there may be assaults on heavenly bodies which could possibly cause them to disintegrate. Such acts of aggression would certainly tax the peace of the solar system! Any green-blooded moon man worth his weight in green cheese would rise up in violence at the prospect of having craters blown in his home. It is also possible that such a war between earthlings and moon men could not be held to a local conflict. The Martians, after seeing their canals destroyed by H-bombs (or even worse, flooded by water poured from low flying satellites) could no longer remain neutral. But how could we solve such a momentous problem? Well, Mr. Russell sees salvation, but only when gleams of sanity shine on earthling statesmen. If he is correct, then fame and fortune will no longer belong to the man who builds the perfect moustrap, but to the one who constructs the first sanity lamp. —Jack Fenton Teenage College Snobs Colleges were established in order to give whoever is willing and capable an opportunity to further his education and specialize. The unknowing originators of higher education were unaware of the snobbish clusters of teenagers who were to inhabit the institutions. The teenagers direct their snobbery toward older students on campus who return to college after a lengthy absence. It takes a certain amount of courage to return to college after a one or two year absence, knowing that you will be older than the rest of your class and will probably find it difficult to fit in. The students on this campus who came to college fresh from high school rate themselves the ruling class. They have no consideration for those who have returned after several years' absence. Persons who do return, even though they are mature enough not to pay attention to the rudeness of younger students, probably have a hard time adjusting to college without any discouragement from this younger set. They are here for a definite purpose, for an education and a degree. Let's help them, not hinder them by showing our adolescence. —Jeanne Arnold LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler OFFICE TEST FLIGHT LIST PASSING LIST T-37 "I'M GIVING THEM THEIR FINAL EXAMINATION ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION." Telephone VIkking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office UNIIT FRANCE Dailu fransan Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. University of Kansas student newspaper Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press Representation by National Advertising Ser- lature, Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. New York, New Yor- kia, international. Mail 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 hall expired on May 16. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. Malcolm Applegate ... Managing Editor Leroy Loyer, Pat Lord, Martha Marten, Doug Parker, Assistant Managing Editor, Jonne McNair City Editor; Jeanne Arnold, Society Editor; Sandra Hayn, Assistant Society Editor; Bob Maey, Telegraph Graph Editor; Brian Rushford, Graph Editor; Jim Cable, Sports Edi- tor; Don Culp, Athletic Sports Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine ... Business Manager William Feitz, Advertising Manager; Robert Lida, Classified Advertising Manager; Maurice Kane, Circulation Manager; Clyde Kane, Promotion Manager; Maurice Nicklin, National Advertising Manager. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor John Husar, Associate Editorial Editor the took world Allen - Lanitx MAD By Kay Reiter "FROM THE TERRACE," by John O'Hara. Random House. $8.95. From the terrace, from the chandelier, from the bedroom, the view is much the same—Alfred Eaton trying to assert himself and doing nothing. We see Alfred, the rejected younger son of a steel magnate, the irresponsible Prince Halish member of the Racquet Club, the hard working government-Wall Street man, the cantankerous old busybody. We see Alfred, after he has realized his life's ambition of making more money than his father, and we look away, not with contempt or pity, but because there is nothing in this man to hold our attention, not the ideas of a poet, the principles of a gentleman, or even the vestige of friendliness. Hailed as O'Hara's finest, "From the Terrace" will probably be a very popular book. But it will never be a great book for two reasons. Otherwise, he is merely an integer in our machinated way of life and, as such, what he says or does is only of interest to the reader, not of importance. This is exactly the case with A. Eaton. No matter how interesting the study of his life may be, it is not important. First, it has no hero. I refer you to a paragraph in Arthur Miller's essay "On Social Plays" which says, in effect, that a hero is one of such character and abilities that he is more than theoretically capable of being recognized by the leaders of his society. Secondly, although this is a sad story, smooth and sophisticated, and although O'Hara tells it well, it fails to come to odds with the social problems it hints at. A great novel is, at the least, positive about the situation with which it deals, but "From the Terrace" is much too involved with the affairs of one Alfred Eaton to be even a general criticism of his way of life. (As examples of great novels, I give you "Gulliver's Travels," "Alice in Wonderland," or "Atlas Shrugged.") Summary: An interesting story can be read in less than 897 pages. laughing theater By John Husar ALICAN LUNZ One of the brightest performances to be given on campus this season was "The World of Cilli Wang," offered Friday night in the University Theatre. Sponsored by the KU Concert Course, Miss Wang, a sprightly little pantomimist, entertained the small, but appreciative audience. "The World of Cilli Wang" is a series of impressions, created by Miss Wang, of various people and things. These ideas, 12 in all, have been worked into choreographic pantomimes designed to picture or tell something important about the character being portrayed. Working with ingeniously contrived costumes, Miss Wang shows much talent both as a dancer and an actress. Her lithe movements, whirling, intricate steps and complete bodily control are complemented by the delightful reproduction of looks and traits suitable to her characters. Her wardrobe ranges from dresses and men's wear to animal costumes and dancing ensembles complete with a dummy-partner attached. She uses no scenery and very few properties. Her lighting is simple, but adequate and effective. Her tiny, five-foot-minus person dominates the stage. T 3 Each act is a little vignette of life in which Miss Wang graphically comments upon the particular item under consideration. Her wordless comments, neither caustic nor mean, are rather happy observations on the way life appears to her. In different scenes, she humorously ridicules today's band of radio programs by being a dog listening and tortuously reacting to a set; she depicts the frustration of a man forced to hear the neighbor boy's piano exercise; she reviews the idiosyncrasies of ballet and society dancers, the painter's dramatic temperament, and the ordinary citizen's ordinary day. In her most attractive sequence, she becomes a green plant, her hands flowers, all which develop into a myriad of colors and glory flourishing in sunlight until night brings green shadows and deathlike sleep. The characterizations, exaggerated considerably, are out of reality, but do keep within one's emotional range. Every now and then, the sketches have a tragic, "Poor Pierrot" quality, but generally maintain a highly humorous vein. All but one or two corny, superficial scenes are finely executed. The audience laughed neither uproariously nor loud, but softly, sensitively—as if it were enjoying the performance too much to cause distracting noise. It fastened its attention upon Miss Wang as though the most important thing in the world was happening upon the stage. As she dances or acts through her numbers, Miss Wang gives the feeling of a person who is happy in her work. If so, she has a right to be. Her delightful evenings, spent in the realms of fantasy and fiction, are sources of good entertainment to audiences which appreciate her art. Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 University Daily Kansas Page 3 1980 GLAD ITS OVER-Jean Orr, Kansas City, Mo., senior, breathes a sigh of relief as she hands in her Western Civilization paper to James E. Seaver, director of the program. Civilization Has Its Drawbacks for Some The 180 students who took the Western Civilization examination Saturday came out of the four-hour "ordeal" with varied outlooks. Don E. Johnson, Sharon, Pa, junior, was the last student to finish the examination at one testing spot. "What did I think of it?" he asked. "Huh," he answered, "I have just three words for the test: 'out of it.'" Johnson was enrolled in the discussion course for only one semester. He did the remainder of the reading on his own. Judy Hirsch, Goodland junior thought the test was a "very good exam." "It wasn't too bad but you bet I'm happy to get it out of the way." She expected it to be hard but found: Richard Brandt, Newton senior, said he took the discussion program last semester and was "a little rusty." Clifford Mullen, Kansas City, Kan., junior, was one student who registered for the test but decided to wait another semester to take it. The examination is given three times a year. Ada Sue Cox, Cherryvale sophomore, enrolled in discussion I and audited a second semester class. "It was very general and covered everything we've had. The objective part was tricky and too particular for what one could grasp in a year. "One essay question was too general. The short answers part of the test was too easy. The questions were so general everyone would know something about them," she added. Miss Cox gave this evaluation of the examination: "It was a question of who could dig the deepest" Carol Blackstone, Bridgeport. Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days incl. international from $645 Orient 43-65 Days incl. international from $998 Many tours include college credit. Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tour $549 up and Around the World $1798 up. Ask Your Travel Agent 26th Year SITA 333 WORLD TRAVEL, INC. Neb. senior, thought the objective part was "hard" but that the essay "was not hard at all." "It was necessary to state ideas concisely and to write well," she said. 26th Year Jean Elston, Topeka junior, found the test "not as hard as she expected," but "hard." 26th Year SITA 332 So. Michigan Ave. WORLD TRAVEL, INC. Chicago, IL MA 7-2551 Ask Your Travel Agent Only one graduate student was registered. More than half of the students who registered for the examination were seniors. The results of the examinations will be available in about two weeks. Grade reports will be given on cards left at the Western Civilization office, Strong Annex C. No grades will be posted. When that breathing spell comes, maybe you should take a glance at the future. Have you given much thought to financial planning? Dog tired? Probably not. That's why we suggest a talk with our campus representative. Starting your life insurance program now gives you a head start, and offers the advantage of lower premiums! Who isn't at exam time? But the dog days will soon be over and (so they tell us) a new era awaits. PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia BILL LYONS Supervisor 1722 West Ninth VI 3-5692 Big car bills stealing your room rent? Big car bills stealing your room rent? See the Compact '59 Rambler Save more than ever on first cost, gas, upkeep You've seen the others grow in size and price—now see how much more you can save with Rambler. Hundreds on first cost. New gas economy. Top resale. Easiest parking. Personalized Comfort: sectional sofa front seats glide back and forth individually. Go Rambler 6 or V-8. RAMBLER AMERICAN STATION WAGON Save $300 on First Cost $500 less than other leading low-priced wagons. Based on a comparison of published marketed prices. Full 5 passenger room. SEE YOUR RAMBLER DEALER TODAY AND SAVE ... As seen most on the campus Independent LAUNDRY & DUTY CLEANERS Rowlands Book Store 1241 Oread Independent LAUNDRY & BODY CLEANERS 1903 Mass. to serve you Conveniently located Independent LAVAGET & SHE CLEANERS 740 Vt. Lion Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1903 Mass. 740 Vt. VI 3-4011 Also at Rowlands, 1241 Oread K Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 12, 1958 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Jayhawks Romp Over MU for 3rd in Row The Kansas Jayhawkers rolled to its third straight victory as they downed Missouri 69-62 Saturday night to remain undefeated in Big Eight play. This marked KU's 100th victory in a 150 game series with Missouri and pushed the Tigers to the bottom of the league with their seventh straight defeat. While Bill Bridges led the scoring with 17 points, the Jayhawkers' balanced attack was the key to the contest. Billings left the game with a leg injury, Pulliam left the game escorted by referee Ken Pryor and KU left the floundering Tigers on the low end of the score for the remainder of the game. The Tigers jumped to the front in the first eight minutes of play with a 12-5 lead but within two minutes Dick Harp's crew had bounced back to a 13-13 tie. Then Bob Billings stole a pass and broke for the basket only to be clipped with a rolling block by Tiger sophomore Rich Pulliam. Although Billings left the game without shooting any of his free throws, he was back into the game before the first half was over. Ron Loneski was also forced from the game in the second half with an ankle injury but he was also able to re-enter the game in the last three minutes. KU saw one of its best nights of the year from the field as they hit 19 of 48 fielders for a 39.6 average. Missouri had 32.3 per cent with 20 goals on 62 tries. Both teams took advantage of their charity tosses as sophomore Dee Ketchum and Mizzou's Mike Kirksey sank 11 of 12 free throws. Kirksey topped the Tigers' scoring with 15 points. Kansas also out - rebounded the taller Missouri crew 45 to 25 as Bill Bridges grabbed 16 and Ron Lone- ski 10 for KU. Al Abram was high for Missouri with eight. At the end of the first half the Jayhawkers were in front 36-26. The closest Missouri came after that was the final seven-point margin, KU practically iced the game when it led 62-45 with 6:26 to play. KU went into a stall with four minutes to play only to see its lead cut to seven. But Dee Ketchum's eight straight free throws and Al Donaghue and Monte Johnson's spark under the basket kept KU in front. Kansas State made a hot 49.2 per cent of its field goal attempts as it defeated Colorado, 89-58, Saturday night. The Wildcats were just as effective as in the finals of the Big Eight pre-season tournament when they also defeated Colorado. But Colorado came nowhere near its tournament performance as it made only 18 of 63 field goal shots for a 28.6 average. The cold Buffaloes did not provide a field goal until almost six were gone in the game. Bob Boozer scored 31 points for the Wildeats although he was on the bench as the game ended. Coach Tex Winter played his substitutes much of the last half. Kansas State guard Don Matuszak, who was hospitalized until shortly before the game with a sore throat, scored 10 points during the short time he played. Don Walker scored 11 points to lead the losers. Oklahoma won its second straight Big Eight game of the young season as it defeated Iowa State, 56-43. It was the Cyclones' second conference loss. Del Heidebrecht and Denny Price led Oklahoma to a 25-15 lead at half-time. Heidebrecht had 17 points and Price had 16 for the game. Larry Fie scored 14 for the losers. Chicken Pickers Defeat Raiders in Weekend Play The Chicken Pickers defeated the Raiders 42-40 after leading 23-19 at the half in Independent A intramural basketball Friday. John Hadl scored 13 points for the losers in the victory that was unsure until the final gun. Battenfeld romped past Pearson 35-24 and the Medics swept by the Radicals 42-17 in other Independent A games. Dave May scored 10 points for Battenfeld and Jerry Ubel had eight points for Pearson. Bob Boyer and Blaine Hollinger scored 12 and 11 points respectively for the Medics. Fraternity B — Alpa Phi Alpha 44, Phi Kappa 24; Acacia 25, Delta Chi 18; Phi Gamma Delta 33, Sigma Chi 23; Alpha Tau Omega 38, Triangle 22; Delta Sigma Phi 63, Lambda Chi Alpha 22; Kappa Sigma 33, Sigma Nu 28. Other results: Tuesday's schedule; Fraternity A — Beta Theta Psi vs. Kappa Sigma, 4:15; Phi Kappa Psi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 5:15; Independent A — Physics vs. Raiders, 6:15; Concordia vs. Radicals, 7:15. Fraternity A — Beta Theta Pi vs. Kappa Sigma, 4:15; Kiappa Kappa Psi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 5:15. Fraternity B — Phi Delta Theta vs. Psi Kappa Psi, 7:15. Independent B — Nu Sigma Nu vs. Rochdale, 5:00; Jolliffe vs. Oreadites, 4:15; Burros vs. Foster, 5:00; Newman vs. Empire, 5:45; GDI vs. Air Force, 5:45; Hicks vs. Stephenson, 6:30; Carruth vs. Varsity, 6:30; Phi Beta Pi vs. Battenfeld, 7:15. Independent C — Navy vs. McCook. 4:15. Clemson College at Clemson, S. C., has an undergraduate enrollment of 3,570 men and 65 women. The National Football League's Eastern All-Stars scored 12 points in the final 15 minutes to edge the Western All-Stars 28-21 in the ninth annual Pro Bowl yesterday. A huge Memorial Coliseum crowd in Los Angeles watched as Philadelphia's Norm Van Brocklin led the East 70 yards for the winning touchdown. Van Brocklin passed to teammate Palmer Retzlaff for the final 15 yards. Eastern Pros Defeat West The West led 21-16 going into the final period. But the East added a Lou Groza field goal and a safety to Retzlaff's touchdown to gain the victory. I-State Tonight, Loneski Out The running of Alan Ameche of Baltimore and the passing of Billy Wade of Los Angeles stood out for the West. Ameche scored once on a plunge and Wade passed 20 yards for another. Wade scored once himself on a 10 yard run. KU will be faced with one of its toughest conference tests tonight without senior forward Ron Loneski. Frank Gifford of the New York Giants was named the game's outstanding player. Gifford connected on three of five passes, one for a touchdown. Loneski received an ankle injury in Saturday's game with Missouri. He remained out most of the second half but re-entered the game in the last three minutes when a Tiger rally was threatening. Coach Harold Bradley of Duke University has won 154 games and lost 66 in his nine years at the Durham, North Carolina, school. While the rest of the team traveled to Ames, Iowa, directly from Columbia, Mo., Loneski returned to Lawrence for treatment of the ankle. The Kansas netmen have found things to their liking against conference foes and are currently riding a three game winning streak. They now stand 5-7 for the season in all games. The Cyclones, also 5-7 for the year, have lost their first games to conference teams. After dropping a close game to Kansas State Monday night, the Cyclones fell Saturday to Oklahoma by a 56-43 score. Oklahoma led all the way and piled up a 25-15 half-time lead. The Cyclones had a cold night from the floor and managed on 13 of 28 free throws in falling to the Sooners. Larry Fie was the top scorer for the losers with 14 points. Center John Krocheski, the team's leading scorer was held to only three points by the winners' tight defense. The Jayhawkers continued to get outstanding play from center Bill Bridges, who has come along rapidly since the Kansas City tournament. Bridges was the leading scorer against the Tigers with 17 points. Bridges also led all players in rebounds with 16. Harp will probably start Al Donaghue and Monte Johnson at forewards and Bob Hickman and Bob Billings at guards. Along with Bridges, Coach Dick Coach Bill Stranigan will probably stick with the combination he has been using since early December. Ron Baukol teams with Fle at guard, Krocheski mans the center post, and Ted Ecker and Henry Whitney are the forwards. UPI Crowns Miss. Southern HATTIESBURG, Miss. — (UPI)—The undefeated Mississippi Southern College football team will receive the United Press International trophy tonight for being picked the nation's No. 1 small college team of 1958. The Southernners were first choice throughout the season in the weekly ratings of a nationwide board of coaches. Chiles Coleman of Atlanta, UPI Southern Division News Manager, will present the trophy at a victory banquet given by the Mississippi Southern Alumni Association. Southern is rated a "small college" by the NCAA because its schedule does not include enough major teams. But the Southerners walloped two major teams, Virginia Tech and North Carolina State, in posting the school's first perfect record. Next year's schedule includes Auburn, Texas A&M and North Carolina State. DUCK'S For SEA FOOD 824 Vt. A Campus-to-Career Case History 1967 Dave Karlen discusses the training of new operators with one of his Chief Operators. Still under 30...and he supervises 400 people In the telephone company men with ability move along quickly into important supervisory positions. Take the case of David C. Karlen, for example. Dave was hired by the New York Telephone Company right after graduation in June, 1954. For seven months he received rotational training to familiarize him with the various departments of the company. Then Uncle Sam borrowed him for 25 months. He returned in February, 1957, and completed his training. In June, he was made Traffic Superintendent of some small telephone exchanges outside Utica. He gained valuable experience in handling people, planning work loads, and many other supervisory duties. In June, 1958, Dave moved to Plattsburg also as Traffic Superintendent, but with far greater responsibilities. Here, he is directly responsible for seven telephone offices over 4000 square miles. Fourteen management people and 400 operators are under his supervision. - "A campus interview started me on my telephone career," says Dave. "The opportunities with the telephone company sounded terrific and they have been. What's more, you get excellent training to prepare you for new job assignments." Dave Karlen graduated from St. Lawrence University with a B.S. degree. He is one of many young men who are finding rewarding careers in the Bell Telephone Companies. Find out about opportunities for you. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he next visits your campus. And read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office, MILITARY MUSEUM OF AMERICA NEW YORK COLUMBIA STATE UNIVERSITY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Brigitte and Sophia on Exhibit at Varsity By Bob Harwi A good place to sop up some culture before the withering grind of final week is the Varsity Theatre. Brigitte Bardot and Sophia Loren are on exhibition in two enticingly titled little comedies called "Mademoiselle Striptease" and "Scandal in Sorrento." Brigitte is in "Mademoiselle" and Sophia belongs to "Scandal," if it makes any difference. It may seem strange, but we found these pictures pretty good by just about any standard. In fact, they were a little reminiscent of some of the fast-paced comedies of KU Male Again-He's Oversexed Toad, Cynic By Martha Pearse According to the parents, their daughter is going to leave the old Hill because she cannot bear the agony of association with the KU beasts (male), and obviously she does not intend to spend her weekends sitting home painting her toenails. This one had a new twist. It was a lament by the frustrated parents of an even more frustrated freshman girl. The Daily Kansan does not print anonymous letters—usually. But Friday we received in the mails a scathing expose of the life and loves of that poor mistreated creature, the KU male. The parents want the answer, not only from The Kansan, but from Robert R. Sokal, associate professor of entomology, has been appointed to a scientific advisory panel of the Pan-American Sanitary Bureau, which is the American regional office of the World Health Organization. Entomologist Gets Advisory Position The function of the panel is to institute studies into the genetics of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes in view of the recent development of DDT resistance shown by some important malaria-transmitting species. 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 only. Only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 11 a.m., Sat., 314 Fraser. Books used for the prepared part of the examination must be turned in to 306 Fraser by noon Wednesday at the latest. No books can be accepted after this date. Only candidates approved by the Graduate Council are eligible to take the examination. KU Dames, 8 p.m., Art Museum Lounge. (Spooner-Thayer) TODAY TOMORROW Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. at St. John's Church, l1th and Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:35 a.m. and Holy Communion, a m-ww- baskets for feeding. Carvershoe House, Nurses' Club, 7 p.m., 110 Fraser. Election of officers. Faculty Forum, "The Life of Jesus—Myth or History?" Rev. Ernest Klein, Kansas Union, Phone reservations to the Y-office by Tuesday afternoon. Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America, 7:30 p.m. Trophy Hall, 1020 W. 57th St., Dr. Matthew I. Wiencke, visiting professor of classical languages and archaeology of the University of Missouri; Parthenion, Past and Present." (illustrated with slides). WEDNESDAY AAA THE MOTEL CUSTOMER MOTELS COLLEGE MOTEL On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. Students Should Not Report Tag Numbers Member Best Western Motels 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming the late thirties, when such stars as Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell and Melvyn Douglas were caverting about in what are known as sophisticated comedies. the Dean of Women, and the presidents of Associated Women Students and the student body. They sent letters to everyone. Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, was asked what she plans to do about the letter. These are situation pictures. The characters in each show are set up in conditions which become ensnarled and chaotic and which could lead to disaster, but end up with everybody happy and the customer going home pretty well pleased. "Our regular procedure is to file all anonymous letters in the waste-basket," she calmly announced. Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said today that students should not report their new license plate numbers to the police department. This information will be taken from student enrollment cards. Eleanor Youngberg. Lawrence senior and president of AWS, said, "We'll see if we can incorporate a Sadie Hawkins Day into our program." Brigitte, believe it or not, is cast as a successful young author who has to enter a striptease to earn some money which will replace a valuable book she has mistakenly sold. John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior and president of the student body, said, "Perhaps this is a new problem for student government to investigate." Her sweetheart, played by Daniel Gelin, is confused by her dual role, for he does not know that the stripper and the author are the same person. There is a bombastic father, a fathead of a brother, a nitwit photographer and other assorted French types; male and female. Everything comes out all right in the end, of course. The letter said that KU men-folk are "a bunch of squirrels, toads, squares—and the rich men's sons are the worst." - The girl insists that all KU men are of this breed, for she has made the rounds and found their interests identical. We suggest to the disillusioned young thing that she join a Lonely Hearts club, or else study for her Mrs. degree at some better-equipped institution. It also said the stronger sex on Mt. Oread are alcoholics, oversexed, cynical, and they are all phonies. Sophia plays a fish peddler, a widow who fears being evicted from her house by the owner, Vittorio De Sica, a returning army The Kansan does not run a lovelorn column, but in this critical situation, we will make an exception. veteran and something of an old rake. Staff members,however,must register their new license numbers. IN 3 SIZES Regular, Junior, Super Weaver Our 102nd Year of Service KOTEX 45c Box of 12 45c 2 for 89c Economy Box of 48 $173 KOTEX K KOTEX Kansan Want Ads Get Results 2 for $3.39 Weaver's Notions Shop Street Floor Vittorio moves in with a spinister (a very attractive spinster, we might add) but keeps his eye on Sophia and a Swedish dish who keeps wandering in and out of the show with a ratty little hound. Thus Vittorio is torn between Sophia, the spinster and the Swede. How's that for a problem? The pictures are helped no end by having American actors dub in the voices of all the speaking roles. This causes a certain lack of coordination in the movement of lips and the forming of words, but it did serve one important service. Just think what it would have been like if they had used subtitles and your eyeballs had to flit from Brigitte and Sophia to the writing at the bottom of the screen. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER WHO? ACME, of course for superior dry cleaning and laundry. WHO? ACME, where your clothes get personalized service. Spotst removed and buttons replaced. Owl WHO? ACME, for fast dependable service. Also free pick-up and delivery. WHO? . . . . ACME ACME Be a wise old bird, use ACME. . . . . . 4-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE CALL ACME TODAY acme Acme BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. VI 3-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 Good Complexion Requires Care (THIS IS THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF ARTICLES ON SKIN CARE) NEW YORK — (UP)— Have you ever wondered why you comment on a lovely complexion? Unfortunately, it's because such beauty is the exception, not the rule. And yet this country supports 2,600 dermatologists, an increase of about 25 per cent in the past decade. We're complexion conscious and growing more so. Why then, aren't the results better? A new research report by dermatologists from Lever Bros. cited these reasons; —Our climate with its sharp changes in temperature and humidity is hard on skin, which must constantly "adjust" to the weather. -Modern living, with its industrial smoke and smog, crowded schools, pools, buses and subways encourages the spread of contagious skin disorders. --Americans don't give skin adequate daily care. A part of the trouble is forgetfulness. We forget that skin is a vital, versatile organ. It protects us, warns us, warms us, cools us. It blushes when we get excited. It turns goose-pimply when we're chilled—emotionally or physically. Another part of the trouble is that the naked eye cannot see the film of oil and dust which often clings to the surface of a seemingly clean skin. Many skin ailments are diet-linked and may be modified by diet changes. Basically, nutrients that work for you are liquids, roughage, and green vegetables. Next to food, a key skin aid is circulation. When circulation isn't perking just right, the skin has difficulty throwing off bacteria, germs and poisons. The second includes disorders which call for medical attention—acne, eczema, psoriasis, impetigo and such. To keep normal skin in appleic order, this film should be removed several times a day. Even more cleansings are in order if a problem exists. Pre-Final Pinnings Stimulation helps to overcome this difficulty. Mild exercise and a brisk towel rub after the bath often will turn the trick. Disorders fall into two major categories: Cosmetic and medical. The first includes problems that are not serious - oily skin, dry skin, blackheads, simple pimples, enlarged pores. Weber-Niemackl Alpha Omieron Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Karen Weber, Wichita sophomore, to Todge Niemick, Topeka sophomore, and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. (Next: Problems in the "cosmetic" area.) The pinning was announced by Virginia Weleh, Red Lodge, Mont., Betty Lu Kiddoo, Coffeyville, Joan Hitchcock, Oak Park, Ill., Mary Jane McAleavey, Wichita, all sophomores, Peggy Kallos, Horton, Jo Swenson, Rossville, juniors, and Kathy Heller, Kansas City, Mo., senior. A pinning party will be held Saturday night at the Dine-A-Mite. . . . * * States-Toalson Pi Beta Phi sorority has announced the pinning of Dana States, junior, to Bill Toulson, senior, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Both are from Dodge City. --the town shop Downtown Haren-McMichael Gamma Phi Beta sorority has announced the pinning of Gail Haren, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, to Bob McMichael, Stockton senior. The pinning was announced in a skit given by Sue Wheat, Overland Park, Shirley Hutchinson, Kansas City, Moy, Sylvia Scott, Hutchinson, all juniors, and Gail Kissick, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. Is the KU campus style conscious? If we were to believe what we read, KU coeds are, to put it mildly, up to date. For years coeds across the nation have been wearing plain white bobby sox. This season an innovation has taken place. A pinning party followed in the Flame room of the Dine-A-Mite. Coeds Wear "Crazy Legs" Tights are as functional as a pair of legs . . . they can be worn topped with a bulky hip-length sweather, under bermudas, or as is generally the case, with skirts and sweaters. Instead of red, chapped legs, resultant conditions of cold weather, the KU coed wears "crazy leas." These tights have finally been accepted by the campus males although most of them seemingly prefer the plain black crazy legs to the more brightly colored tights. A vital part of every coed's campus wardrobe, crazy legs come in all colors of the rainbow, stripes, mad plaids, and exuberant prints; Miller-Naylor Pi Beta Phi sorority has announced the pinning of Linda Miller, Dodge City, to Jim Naylor, Liberal, and a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. Both are seniors. Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity has announced the pinning of Doug Webb to Vivian Tice. Both are Iola juniors. Webb-Tice The nation's first underground An average city in the U.S. uses garage is located beneath Union 162 gallons of water per day for Square in San Francisco. each person living there. The distance between the earth and the moon varies from 221,463 miles to 252,710 miles. JUST RECEIVED The newest idea in wash slacks for college men h.i.s SPORTSWEAR Don't envy H·I·S...wear them PIPERS NOW IN THREE COLORS EXTRA SLIM — EXTRA LOW RISE BELTLESS — NO CUFFS HIP POCKETS PLAIN CHARCOAL Corduroy $6.95 ANTELOPE Corduroy $6.95 SUNTAN Polished Cotton $4.95 the university shop On The Hill MEMORIES ARE MADE OF THIS MAKE AN APPOINTMENT FOR YOUR HOUSE TO RECORD YOUR PERSONAL REPERTOIRE OF SONGS. MAY TO N OF SONGS. We can or our studi SPECIAL Audio House HIGH FIDELITY PHONE VI 3-4916 1011 N. H. LAWRENCE, KANSAS We can record at your organized house or our studios. SPECIAL GROUP PRICES Faithful High Fidelity you will like 331/3 L.P. Records or 45's A Lifetime of Memories 25 word for WANTE sewing. HOUSE nished. Call VI ROOMS after 6 on Sat VI 3-090 Show This to Your Music Director 3 ROO clean. privileg pald. B ter 5 2 ROC share k 1520 W EXTRA with sir Also w around NEWLY now re refriger downto SINGLI and for pot, 11; CLEAN ins, go pets no pets VERY month, condi- titute a month or VI 3 Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 S. uses day for University Daily Kansan 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. WANTED WANTED: WASHING and ironings, also sewing, call VI 2-0681, 813 Rhode Island. HELP WANTED NEED MALE REPRESENTATIVE for Philp Morris Inc. to work campus on retail and promotions. Prefer Sophmore or Junior taking Business, others considered. Contact Mr. C. W. McCabe, Meriden, Ks., HU 4-2930. 1-12 PART TIME TYPIST: Hours can be tamed, call VI 51-7114 between 10 am to 11 am FOR RENT HOUSE FOR RENT? Furnished or unfurnished, suitable for 2 families if desired. Call VI1.3-7698 after 1 p.m. or VI 3-3763. 1.12 ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama VI 3-0902. tf VERY LARGE SLEEPING ROOM in new home, private entrance, quiet and lovely, $14.50 per month, linen furnished, room call. Call VI 3-7830 by 5 p.m. 1-12 3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment, neat, clean, private entrance, phone, laundry privilege, near KU, $55 per month, bill- charge or couple. Call V11-7850-1- t2 5 pm. 2 ROOM, BASEMENT APARTMENT. 3 ROOM, BASEMENT priv. apartments. 1520 W, 22nd Wt. VI. 8-6573. 1-12 EXTRA NICE ROOMS. 1 single. 1 double with single beds, for boys. Call VI 3-7863. Also would like student for odd jobs around house for room rent. 1-12 NEWLY DECORATED large single rooms now ready for men students, new beds, refrigerator privileges, near KU and downtown, call VI 3-7199. 1-12 SINGLE ROOMS for baby available now to close to close CLEAN, FURNISHED small house, built-ins, good wood, electric Frigidaire, 2 large closets, married couple, no children, no pets, available Jan. 20, 520 Ohio -1-13 VERY NICE 3 room apartment, $75 a month, new house. Two bedroom, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Two bedroom furnished apartment, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-0497 or VI 3-3902. 1-13 FOUR ROOMS and bath, unfurnished except refrigerator. Has fireplace, gas heat, electric stove to oven, nice kitchen, near vii. VI 3-0773 until noon or 5:30 p.m. WANTED: 1 student to share room, 1 meal served family style, kitchen privileges for other 2 meals, available after Jan. 26, 940 Miss. VI 3-1585. 1-13 FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, four large rooms, furnished, for 4 boys or men, single beds, private entrance and bath, 520 Ln., V1 3-9184. 1-13 GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE, apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-2019. tt ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, 850 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available at Bronen Henry Co-op, 1420 Ohio, VI. 3681. NICE LARGE ROOM for 1 or 2 boys. See Mrs. Maxwell in Hawks Nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana, VI 3-4168. 1-13 DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, inner-sleep mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 Ohio, VI 3-6709. 1-16 VERY NICE ONE bedroom apartment, off kitchen furnished, 1901 India, 1-16 ROOM AND BOARD for spring semester. $50 per month, VI 3-4385. 1-14 1 FURNISHED and 1 unfurnished apart- ment 3, FURNISHED and bath, 3 room V-3-4271, 1232 La SINGLE ROOM, private entrance and second enclosure. Other valuation second. 1328 KV VI 70 HALF BLOCK from campus, in very nice house, large double rooms and single room, reasonable rates, 1215 Oread to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6896 to 1-25 to 5 to FOUR ROOM DUPLEX. unfurnished. close to campus, available Feb. 1, call VI 2-0322 or see after 5 p.m. at 1833 Mo. 2-5 2 DOUBLE ROOMS with single beds, 12 meals per week, for boys. Beginning second semester. If interested call VI 3-9562. 1-15 LARGE, CLEAN, UNFURNISHED apart- ment, condition, available, 1-16 NO. VI 3-3736 2 SINGLE BEDROOMS with bath and separate entrance, for men students, in new air conditioned house west of campus. $35 per month V1 3-8746 1-16 ROOM FOR BOYS — 1/2 block from Union, linens furnished, cooking privileges if desired, T.V. showers, call VI 3-0418, 1222 Miss. 1-15 3 ROOM DUPLEX, $75, 1940 Learned; Furnished 3 room apartment, $80, 121 W. 14th; unfurnished duplex, 2 bedroom, $81; indiana; furnished 2 bedroom, $81; bills room; furnished apartment, $85; bills call. Call T. A. Heilman, VI. 3-3002. NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment, living room, bedroom, kitchen, private available Feb. 1. Moy Abat ments 434 Tenn. Call VI 3-0987 I-3-3375 ROOMS FOR MEN, triple or double, available now. One single available trim 1. Also one pair of matrs's skates, size 10, 40, 146 Tern., VI 3-8-40 after 1-16 STUDIO APARTMENT $1/2 block from stadium, well furnished, for one or two upperclassmen. $35 per month, call VI 3-696. 1-14 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plain, party supplies ice plant. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI thru 727-830-5491. FOR SALE STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF Takes Time to Institute on price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and recalls. Processed prompts. Call VI. 0124 CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38. like new, but too small for owner. Use it during the day in the Kansas Manor or call VI at 2-9063 between 6-7 p.m. POST VERSALOG slide rule, Handbook of Chemistry, Physics Handbook of chemistry for study aid for science majors. Call VI 5-3541 or 134 Ohio after 5:00 p.m. i-13 REMINGTON PORTABLE typewriter, good condition, come see at 109 East 19th St., Grover's Realty Co., VI 3-3636. 1-15 FLAT TOP Spanish guitar, call VI 3-8454, ask for Mr. Morton, 1404 Alumun LOST PICKETT SLIDE RULE in brown case. Prepare Christmas vacation, reward. 1-15 (90%) WHITE CASE containing glasses with blue upper frame and clear lower frame. Loss Monday Jan. 5 between 12th and 13th. Hold, Rall. reward. I V 3-6355 evenings. I 1-12 REWARD FOR THE RETURN of History of Science notebook left Tuesday in Science Library stocks. Mary Ann Waddeh, VI 3-8255. 1-15 FROM CAR on 10th St. between Indiana and Ohio on Friday, Dec. 19 at 9 p.m. boy's grey blue parka, size 8, red lined hood, reward. Call VI 3-0353 evenings. SILVER AND NAVY BLUE ball point pen, between Fraser and Hawk's Nest. Also small German lighter, name Fleibach Malto on bottom: Reward, call V-14 3-7946. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS. Ola Smith 941% Mass. Phi. 3-5263. NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Open weekdays 8 a.m., to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for fish, reptiles, amphibians, Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal, stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, swimwear, bath mats, pet bed in field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 1-3971 Singe Sewing Center, 927 Mass. TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf WANTED, Student Laundry. Reasonable Formerly 829 Cohn, now 441 Ohio, if WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894 tufa EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Cornell, call VI 3-526. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest classes at Dance Studio, Missouri, ph. 3-6383 9f WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service. Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates, Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-1893 7360 Tenn. THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed. W. 20th St., VT 5-7184, Mt. Luengen, 16F W. 20th St., VT 5-7184 FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. **ft** EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, thesis. Standard dates. Mrs. H. H. Fowler. TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist, 1955 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211² Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. Professional massage, professional massure. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. In my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. tf TYPING OF REPORTS. term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, brief rates. Mrs. Tom Bradley, VI 3-3428. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. will type themes, reports, etc. Neat. accurate work. Mrs. Davis, 1016$^2$ Conn. VI 2-0267. 1-13 TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Earl Wright. 1-14 WANTED: Washings and ironings, reasonable rates, VI 3-2906 -1-15 Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free 1 ot. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. One Thing Everyone Enjoys is Alums Graduates Jayhawkers in the Service The Folks Back Home Jayhawkers in the Service A. A. GRADUATION 10 M. B. SMITH A Subscription to the Daily Hansan Subscribe Now For This Semester! One Year . . . $4.50 Available at the Kansan Business Office, Room 111, Flint Hall, Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 376 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 Cilli Wang Calls British Theater 'Most Satisfying' By Robert Harwi Cilli Wang, the diminutive pantomimist who performed on the campus Friday night in the University Theatre, said in an interview, the British theater is the most satisfying and its actors the best trained in the world. Three Battenfeld Hall residents lost $40 to a theft sometime early Saturday morning. The money was missed about 10 p.m. and campus police were called to investigate. Thief Gets Loot, Ignores Cokes Another thief, or perhaps the same one, cleaned out two Coke machines in Strong basement over the weekend. He took the money, but left the drinks. About 5 a.m. Sunday Michael McClusky, Neodesha freshman, and Marvin McDougal, Fontana sophomore, heard someone going down the stairs at Battenfeld and then heard a dining room window open or shut. When they investigated they found no one, but did find two broken windows. Kevin Remick, Kansas Union concession manager, who reported the Strong theft, said the thief might have had a key to the machines. The machines were undamaged. Ki Sung Kwak, Korea senior, reported $5 missing, Edwin Eubank, Pratt sophomore, $15, and Tom Mason, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, $20. Vandals Slash 17 Tires Friday A rash of tire-slashing took place Friday night when 17 tires on nine cars were cut. The vandalism occurred shortly after 8 p.m. during the performance of Cilli Wang, the University Theatre presentation. Campus police had found no leads this morning to the incident. The first slashings took place near Hoch Auditorium on Jayhawk Boulevard and Poplar Lane between Snow and Strong Halls. Mary Jane Carter. Danville, Ill. junior, found her tires cut at 8:30 after leaving her car at 8:10. Wilmot Clarke, Topeka sophmore, lost only one tire. The other eight owners found two tires slashed on their cars. Victor Elliot, 2001 Mass. St., a member of the KU police department, owned one of the cars. Other slashings were in a Lindley Hall parking lot and the Music and Dramatic Arts Building parking lot. International Club Elects Officers Margaret Savage, Welwn, Herts England, graduate student, was elected president of the International Club Friday night. Victims include Don Dishman; Salina senior; Nathan T. Davis, Kansas City, Kan.; junior; William Hunter, Harper freshman; and Ronald Hedberg, Oakmont, Pa., graduate student. Prof. Ketzel talked of the differences between the foreign and American student and the significance of the International Club to campus life. The Arab students modeled costumes from the Arab nations and presented Arab songs and dances. At a dinner meeting the club members heard a speech by Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, and saw a program presented by the Arab students. Other officers elected were; Ernesto M. Vergara, Vigan, Ilocos Sur, Philippines, graduate student, vice president; Augustine G. Kyei, Ashanti, Ghana, junior, treasurer; Carollyn M. Clark, Mission junior, secretary; Aline Marie Roux, Finistere, France, special student, social chairman. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results Miss Wang, now making a cross country tour with her one-woman show, said the English are sometimes too well trained. "Some people come out of Old Vic (theater) training with their own personalities lost, their voices alike, and their reactions the same," she said. Miss Wang said such rigidly controlled training may bury the individual's flair to be creative. She cited Max Reinhardt as being a director who brought out what he could in an actor, but who never forced his own way into the playing of a scene. Miss Wang received her early theatrical training in Vienna. She went from one school to another, trying to learn what she could do best. She joined theater groups and learned parts in many plays. She said she tried never to be typed. "I think it is important for an actor not to be stuck in one spot with one kind of role," she said. "I know some actors who have spent their whole lives in one theater, with one role. It is better to have no job than to be stuck like that." Miss Wang said she began her pantomime work after World War II, "just to be speechless." She started by acting out poems of well known writers. Soon a poet wrote for her an entire show in which she played a number of characters. Her performance evolved into the present combination of dance, pantomime, satire and parody over a period of years. Her present work is not a matter of learning mechanical tricks and then performing them on the stage, she said. She believes she must have such perfect mental and physical control that she actually "is" whatever she is performing. "Every actor must know his own body. It is all in control. The body must react easily like a piece of machinery. Members of the audience should react to a performance with the comment 'That looks so easy I would like to do it myself.' There should be no straining with the actor." Miss Wang said she spends four hours preparing and rehearsing for each two hour performance. She named as one of her favorite artists Charlie Chaplin. She called "The Great Dictator" his last great picture. "Chaplin is more an actor now than a pantomimist," she said. "He has lost his old style. He has allowed his art to be a medium for his personal philosophies." She named Marlon Brando and Danny Kaye as two other favorite talents. Miss Wang now writes all her skits, and makes her own properties and costumes. As part of her training in Vienna, she did handicraft work and therefore is at home with technical problems. She still does a bit of straight acting, but only in Europe, where she is more at ease with the German language. Miss Wang has appeared on television, but feels it is not as artistic a medium as the stage. She finds the rehearsals difficult and the space restricting. And, she says, it is difficult to tailor one's work to fit the requirements of the screen. GET SATISFYING FLAVOR... So friendly to your taste! No flat "filtered-out" flavor! No dry "smoked-out" taste! PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES IN NO TIME SIGNO VINCES WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE CONGREGA You can light either end! See how Pall Mall's famous length of fine tobacco travels and gentles the smoke — makes it mild — but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! HERE'S WHY SMOKE "TRAVELED" THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BEST 1. You get Pall Mall's famous length of the finest tobaccos money can buy. 2. Pall Mall's famous length travels and gentiles the smoke naturally. 3. Travels it over, under, around and through Pall Mall's fine tobaccos! Outstanding...and they are Mild! 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In a telephone conversation with the Daily Kansan this morning, Mr. Freeman said he had not received a letter from the KU International Club protesting segregation in a Dallas, Tex., restaurant. The letter was sent Friday. "The eating facilities are leased to concession operators that have their own iurisdictions," he added. The International Club letter which was sent to the Ft. Worth office was signed by 10 members of the Club in protest of discrimination against a Nigerian member of the group. "The Greyhound Lines operates none of the restaurants in its bus stations." Mr. Freeman said. He was refused service in the Dallas restaurant while the club was on a Greyhound-chartered trip to Mexico during Christmas vacation. Earlier on the trip the student had been served at another Greyhound station in Laredo, Tex. The club members' letter asked for an explanation of the distinction between the segregated and nonsegregated restaurants. Cuban Rebels Halt Reprisals HAVANA — (UPI) — Orders from the rebel army command in Havana called a sudden halt today to "war crimes" trials and executions in Colon, Matanzas Province. There was speculation the rebels might be slowing the pace of their bloody reprisal campaign against followers of ousted President Fulgencio Batista. Reports reaching here said that 84 persons have been sentenced and executed in Santiago de Cuba alone. Capt. Julio Chaviano, rebel army commander in Colon, said he had received the word halting further trials and executions there this morning in an order signed by Maj. Camilo Cienfuego, commandant of the army's Camp Columbia headquarters in Havana. Lockless, Luckless Coeds Find a Way Out By Carol Allen It is said can openers have 101 uses, but four Sellards women stretched it to 102 last night. They used one to pry their way out of a second-floor study room. The women discovered themselves locked in about midnight, when the doorknob failed to unlatch the door, which does not have a lock. They pounded long enough to arouse a dozen other late studiers. Screwdrivers and fingernail files were put to work to remove the doorknob. But once it was off, the door still wouldn't open, so it was put back on. The house president was prepared to call the fire department. But the women inside the room solved the problem themselves. They found the can opener and used it to pry the door hinges loose. Jayhawker Edition Out Tomorrow The second issue of the 1959 Jayhawker, KU's magazine yearbook will be distributed tomorrow through Saturday. It will contain pictures of organized houses, sports and parties. The issue will be available in Strong Hall, the information booth, and several other campus buildings. Covers and tabs will also be sold. House representatives will not distribute this issue. Seniors are reminded to make appointments with Estes Studio. Students, Teachers Enter Art Exhibit Art work by four students and three faculty members has been accepted for the 28th annual American Graphic Arts and Drawing Exhibition at Wichita. Jerry Buchanan, Wichita graduate student, Judith T. Hood, Lawrence senior, Shirley H. Musgrave, and Edward E. Nichols, both Lawrence graduate students, are the students who will show their works. The exhibit will show 112 art works chosen from 700 entries. Hopson to Visit West Germany With Jurists Dan Hopson Jr., assistant professor and assistant dean of the Law School, said today that preparations are about completed for the four-week tour he will make of West Germany. Prof, Hopson said his itinerary would include Bonn, Karlsruhe, Munich, Kassel, Dusseldorf, West Berlin, Frankfurt, then back to New York. Prof. Hopson is one of eight American jurists invited to make a tour as a guest of the German government. "Mr. Fred Six, Lawrence attorney, will teach my Labor Law class and Prof. Oldfather (Charles H. Oldfather Jr., professor of law) will teach my Legislation class for the first two weeks of the second semester," he said. Prof. Hopson, who will miss two days of this semester, gave his finals early. The Law School takes finals a week ahead of other schools anyway, he noted. The group will fly to Bonn Sunday and will confer there with representatives of the Federal Ministries. They will also talk with officials of state and local governments "This is the first time I have been invited as a guest of some government," he commented. "I think it will be o good trip and a good opportunity to learn. The fact that we will be guided by a representative of the German State Department will provide more of an advantage to learn than just going as a tourist," he said. "I hope to talk to lawyers in labor law, union officials and employers to learn more of German labor relations and legal control thereof," he added. Prof. Hopson also hopes to enlarge his understanding of the international operation of the West German constitution. Prof. Hopson is the only professor in the group who has been invited. The other members of the group consist of two judges and five lawvers. "I just hope I do not become an international incident," he said jokinkly in regards to his entry into West Berlin, the current hot spot in the East-West cold war. "I have quite an open mind on the subject, however," he laughed.. Senate Rule Seen Ineffective A KU political science instructor predicts the changed filibuster rules in the U.S. Senate will have little effect on the success of civil rights and other legislation. "The two-thirds vote of members present under the new rules to kill a filibuster will still require practically a two-thirds vote of all senators since almost all the senators will vote on any crucial legislation anyway." The old filibuster rule required a vote of two-thirds of the total Senate membership, instead of two-thirds of the members present. Earl A. Nehring, instructor of political science, said today: "One change in the rules which may have some effect is that the two-thirds vote also applies to notions to change the rules," he added. "Before, they could debate forever on a motion to consider a motion. There was no way to break the filibuster,' he said. The proposal to let a bare majority, 50 of 98 senators, end debate was defeated 67-28. The liberals then sponsored the idea of lowering the majority to three-fifths of those voting. This would never require more than 59 votes, as opposed to the 66 maximum under the new rules. This proposal was defeated 58-36. Mr. Nehring said he had expected the Senate liberals to get more votes on the stronger measures to limit filibustering. Two such measures were voted upon before the new rules were passed 72-22. "I had not expected the liberals to win on either of the two measures, but I had expected them to come closer to the vote they needed," Mr. Nehring said. "Mr. Johnson (Sen. Lyndon Johnson, (D-Tex), majority leader) seems to have very effective leadership in the Senate," he said. Under the new rules, the number of senators who could end a filibuster varies from 34 to 66. The 34 is the two-thirds majority of the 50 senators required to do business. The rule - changing resolution which finally passed bore Sen. Johnson's name. Another provision of Sen. Johnson's resolution requires that the rules of the Senate be carried over from one Congress to the next. This represents another defeat for the liberals. The Northern and Western members of both parties have maintained that each new Congress can adopt new rules for the Senate by majority vote. Student Pleads Not Guilty to Larceny Peter F. Jones, Kansas City, Mo., senior, entered a plea of not guilty in Douglas County Court yesterday to four charges of petty larceny in Battenfeld Hall Friday. Jones is a Battenfield resident. Jones was relased under $1,500 bond set by Judge Charles C. Jones was relased under Eric Rankin. The student is scheduled to appear before the court for preliminary hearing Jan. 22. Jones was arrested by campus police yesterday and questioned about the thefts. Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said Jones signed a confession. He was taken to the sheriff's office and charges were filed by the county attorney Campus police were called to investigate the Battenfeld incident Saturday when three residents reported they were missing $40. Another $20 was missing from a cash drawer in the hall. Those who had reported money missing were Ki Sung Kwak, Korea senior, Edwin Eubank, Pratt sophomore, and Tom Mason, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. Two Battenfeld residents told campus police they had heard someone going down the stairs at the hall. The two boys said they heard a window open or shut. They investigated, but found no one. Hi-Los to Sing Here March 1 The Hi-Los, popular vocal group have been contracted to perform a concert on March 1. "We plan to use the money for something the students want more," he said. Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City, Mo., junior and chairman of the SUA dance program, said that the students' acceptance of the Night Club Party has declined during the past few years and it became a financial loss. They will be a replacement for the Student Union Activities Night Club Party which will not be held this year. SUA also plans to have a name band for the KU Relays dance, April 17 or 18. Previously, bands for Relays dances have been local groups. Residential suburbs are overburdened with tax problems, because they have no industry to carry the tax load as the city does, Prof. Grumm said. Cities and Suburbs Will Merge, Grumm Says He said planned development by the cities can help suburbs which Author of the article is John G. Grumm, assistant professor of political science. Prof. Grumm spent part of last summer in Toronto, Canada, studying the federation plan in effect there. Toronto federated 12 suburbs. A plan for solving the problem of separately incorporated suburbs of large cities by uniting the cities and their suburbs into "metropolitan federations" will be published soon by the Governmental Research Center. "The study is to see how federation worked in Toronto. It has been successful. In 10 years, some U.S. cities are going to have to consider the same thing because they will be snowed under with governmental problems." Prof. Grumm said. can not raise enough taxes to build roads and schools and make other improvements. The plan might be applicable to Kansas City, San Francisco, St. Louis and Chicago areas, he said. New York already has a similar system where there are six federated boroughs at the metropolitan level. London has a similar plan in effect, and Berlin had one before the war, he said. "City-suburban government is uncoordinated in its present state and will take a lot of study. We can't just take a plan from another country and make it work here without some planning." Prof. Grumm said. "Urban population has gone far beyond city limits into the suburbs and is a major problem in the United States. Suburbs incorporate separately with no control by the city. With a federation plan, suburbs retain many of their local governmental functions, but the burden is shifted to the city government," Prof. Grumm said. DALLAS, Tex.—(UPI)—Evangelist Billy Graham said on cancelling a speech scheduled for last night to fly to Minnesota for treatment of an eye aliment; WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-NY) said in introducing a joint resolution to repeal the constitutional amendment which limits presidents to two terms: News Makers Speak Up "After the luncheon speech today, I was greatly tired and felt it probably best to cancel the scheduled speech." "Time has proven how sorry a mistake this amendment is. The country is living with a lame-duck president who—in his second term—has lost much of the political power essential to him for leadership." LAKE FOREST, Ill.—(UPI) Adlai E. Stevenson chiding the United States for its complacency in the face of Soviet progress: "In our fat, dumb, happy complacency, we assume we can't lose. We assume the right won't fail." LOS ANGELES, Calif.—(UPI) —Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan shaking hands with actor Marlon Brando on a movie set: "You're a strong man. When I shake hands with you I feel like a movie star too." Callery Men Released Two Callery Chemical Company engineers who were injured when a homemade rocket exploded and killed three other engineers in Lawrence. Dec. 5 have been released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Richard Wright, 26, and Elmer Boyd have been released. Weather Continued mild this afternoon with partial clearing eastern portion, partly cloudy west. Fog and occasional drizzle extreme southeast tonight, otherwise partly cloudy and cooler tonight and Wednesday. Low tonight 20 to 25 northwest to upper 30s southeast. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1959 False Hospitality This is the greatest country in the world. Its people are good and thoughtful concerning other nations and wish them to resemble America. To prove how really good we are,we refused a student from Nigeria service in a restaurant while he was on a Christmas trin. What sort of an impression do we give foreign visitors who are ejected from our restaurants? How can we expect foreigners to accept our way of life? How can we accept or believe in it ourselves? Segregation is a blight on society. It is not confined to only one area of the country. It is not confined to just restaurants and other places of business. Essentially it boils down to Americana. If our white-skinned citizens were willing to eat and associate with the slightly darker brethren, restaurant owners would not complain about the added business. Fear of business loss would disappear and so would this aspect of the segregation problem. Soon even the bigots would disappear. We can not make other countries respect or idolize us when we continually insult their visiting citizens by refusing them service in our restaurants. —Martha Crosier TV Westerns Warrin' When TV westerns begin to draw their six-guns on each other, a feud in the horse-opera's history looks eminent. Such a feud may have begun in Sunday's episode of "Maverick," a satire on the popular western, "Gunsmoke." Such a battle may turn into a war reminiscent of the cattlemen vs. sheepherder conflicts of 90 years ago, only this time the villains won't be riding black horses nor will the good guys be wearing white hats. This time the villains will be a different kind of killers—TV scriptwriters out to purge their rivals. In doing so they may destroy themselves. The hero of such a modern range war would be the man who pays the bills—the sponsor. Like the old prospector who has finally struck it rich, but must defend his claim against bandits, the sponsor would be in a position to lose his gold mine. Instead of battling a gang of ruthless claim-jumpers, he could find himself fending off irate viewers who dislike seeing their favorite marshal made the object of not-too-subtle satire. The risks could be great. But so could the rewards. It might alienate some western fans; a purge would be good for TV. Jack Fenton The Four-Year Sleep Complacency is a terrible disease! Yet this disease has infected the current American student generation. One of the most important deficiencies in American higher education today is the absence of student motivation toward learning. Not only are most students apathetic toward intellectual life, they flee from it, seeking endless diversion, both in and out of the classroom. They are in a state of intellectual adolescence from which they may never mature. Students are not intellectually tolerant as their complacency might appear, only gullible; not skeptical, only suspicious; not sophisticated, only apathetic; not humble, only confused, and worst of all, not at all enthusiastic or curious. There seem to be two causes for this intellectual apathy. First, the vicious circle of college prestige values. Few people can find incentive to intellectual achievement in a society in which purely intellectual activity is given such scant recognition. Incoming freshmen are made aware that the road to success and status in the college community is social, not intellectual. The second reason for the lack of interest in the world of intellect can be found in the social background from which most of us come—a context in which intellectual achievement has little meaning. College has become four years of polishing which a young man must undergo before he can get down to the real business of bourgeois life—the attainment of material comfort, economic security and social prestige. But a college education is not just this "polishing" process. The student should come to college as a person who has some responsibility for carrying the values and knowledge from his institution into the streams of society. It is for education of the student in these matters that the college exists. It is he who has the talents and the questions. It is in him that the education happens if it happens at all. —Pat Swanson LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler STUDENT IDENTIFICATION CARD PHOTO FRESHMAN LIBERAL ARTS PBER "WE ONLY NEED TO IDENTIFY TH FACE." The Democrats brought a donkey to the inauguration of Gov. George Docking in Topeka yesterday. It got there about an hour before the parade "to give the Democrats a lift." Now we know the Democratic party is the party of the poor, working man. It can't even afford automobiles. Short Ones University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, and became a weekly newspaper. Dailu Hansam UNIVERSITY Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, International service, United Press International, 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. Enquiries to Lawrence, KS, 828-796-1910, at Lawrence, Kan, post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm Amplegate Manage Malecol Applegate ... Managing Editor BUSINESS DEFEATMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor the took world By Calder M. Pickett Assistant Professor of Journalism MEN OF SCIENCE IN AMERICA, by Bernard Jaffe, Simon and Schuster, $6.95 In these confusing days of Lunik and the International Geophysical Year, as science probes the universe and introduces concepts almost as shattering as those of Newton and Copernicus, the layman needs a book like "Men of Science in America," a completely resolved and expanded version of a book published by Jaffe in 1944. A revision obviously was needed. A year after the original publication the nuclear age entered our consciousness with the blinding explosion over Hiroshima. In late 1957 Sputnik I shattered whatever complacency remained in the era of the atom. We can find in a book like "Men of Science in America" the exciting story of the predecessors of Von Braun, the story of men who entered frontiers as wondrous as the polar ice cap entered last summer by the Nautilus. We can also find considerable understanding of the role of these scientific pioneers in the societies of their time, their meaning in history. What Jaffe offers is actually a running story of the development of science in America. Though he presumably restricts his book to 20 notable figures, he spends much time with their contemporaries and with contemporary events. Some of the individuals that Jaffe considers most significant in our scientific past are Thomas Harriot, Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin Thompson, Thomas Cooper, Constantine Rafinesque, Thomas Say, Joseph Henry, Matthew Maury, and others. In view of Jaffe's effort to incorporate the histories of other scientists into the text, it seem to me that he has told very well the story of science. Inventors, for the most part, he treats incidentally. His story of pre-20th century developments is especially intriguing. Here is the giant Franklin, who was a scientist, journalist, philosopher, statesman, inventor, and wit. Here is Constantine Rafinesque, who opened frontiers in botany. Here is Matthew Maury, the South Carolinian who charted the ocean lanes, and constructed a topographic floor of the North Alantic. Later in the 19th century there is Louis Agassiz, the Swiss emigrant-naturalist, and most vehement hold-out against Darwinism. It is in dealing with figures of the 20th century that Jaffe becomes at times too technical, at times too complex. A novice can understand much of his story of Thomas Hunt Morgan and genetics, and Herbert McLean Evans and hormones. But Edwin P. Hubble's adventures in astronomy, and Ernest O. Lawrence's exploration of the atom, can become heavy going. This, however, is actually no criticism. It is an admission of ignorance. But such an admission probably isn't too damaging, for "Men of Science in America" so thoroughly tells its story that of necessity it must include highly technical data. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN READER. Simon and Schuster. $2.25. Here is a comprehensive paperback edition of some of the most significant articles to appear in the Scientific American in the past five years. There are 12 general sections in the book, embracing subject matter in the fields of space, the structure of the earth, the structure of matter, atomic energy, the origin of life, genetics, the virus, stress (including articles on ACTH and cortisone and the pituitary gland), animal behavior, the origin of man, the brain and the machine, and sensation and perception. music In the early 19th Century, Felix Mendelssohn, youthful German composer, created one of the world's greatest single acts of faith in God, his oratorio, "Elijah." This very famous work was presented last night by the University Chorus in Hoch Auditorium. By John Husar All rights reserved Last night's performance of this work can be called conductor Clayton Krehbiel's triumph. His chorus of over 200 voices was more than equal to the huge task of production. He guided the large group through not only lovely melodies, but difficult and deeply contrasting harmonies as well. The composer pieced together a number of quotes from the Bible, plus a few of his own, to make a story—a kind of patch-work story, but one as magnetic and compelling as any chronicle of the power, wisdom and love of God. Mendelssohn's music is extremely beautiful in that it captures the heavenly end earthly passion, longing, suffering and triumphs, and manifestations of nature. In such an oratorio, the chorus takes a number of roles. Mr. Krebbiel's expert interpretations of these roles lend each a certain body or identifying characteristic that one finds in only the best trained groups. If there ever was a question as to baritone Jack Davison's leadership among KU singers, there is none now. While the other soloists sang difficult parts—sang them well—Davidson's smooth, professional voice made his equally difficult part, as Elijah, seem effortless. Conralto Beverly Runkle Benso's strong, but lulling voice was particularly effective in the moving passages of An Angel. Martha Odell, soprano, sang the role of The Widow exceptionally well. Bruce Gardner, tenor, although a bit throaty at times, commendably did his job as both Obadiah and Ahab. Jane Carr competently accompanied. The fiery, alive chorus, the capable soloists and the marvelous conductor combined to form one glorious, harmonic sound. --- Page 3 Latin Is Practical Dr. Lind Has Found "Latin has a practical use in my life," says Dr. L. R. Lind, professor of Latin and Greek. Dr. Lind has received an appointment for the summer of 1959 as research professor in the history of medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles. His research in Renaissance Latin will be done in medical books and manuscripts in both public and private libraries. Dr. Lind does translations for the Humanities 51 course and teaches several Latin courses each semester. He has translated two Greek plays and much Latin poetry into English. His most recent work has been English translations of Renaissance Latin anatomy. In 1950 Dr. Lind completed a translation of Versalius" "Epitome," a dissecting manual. Minister Tells of Mature Religion The characteristics of a mature religion formed the basis of a discussion Sunday night by the Rev Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, president of the International Association of Religious Freedom. Dr. Kuebler spoke before a meeting of the Uitarian Fellowship of Lawrence in the Kansas Union Javhawk Room. "There are three basic elements of all religions,' he said. "Each religion contains a moral code, a metaphysical faith based on a world view of the ultimate nature of things inherent in the way religion develops, and the manner of worship, such as the set of symbols by which people worship." The latter is the most obvious of the three, he said. Among the aspects of the climate in which a religion may become mature are the organizations, or society, considered essential, the education of religious possibilities now widely available, and the protection of youth from mass pressure thus teaching it to be individuals in a world often dominated by mobs. Dr. Kuebler said. He said a mature religion should be honest; one which begs no inspection and encourages no self-deceit and should be capable of dealing with man's emotions "Further," he said, "it should be more and more free. that is, less bound by tradition and geography, and should encourage responsibility." He said a clue to how a religion becomes mature today is in its knowing how to deal with those who dispute the passage and manner in which it is accomplished. Closing, he said the maturity of a religion must be determined not only by its leaders but more so by the people who have faith in that religion. AA Debate Teams To Meet Jan. 30-31 The Kansas AA high school debate championship will be decided Jan. 30-31 when the top eight teams in the state meet at KU. The competing teams will qualify in district competition. The first four rounds of the championships will be held Jan. 20 and the final three rounds on the following day. PIPERS Charcoal Corduroy The translation of the "Epitome" into modern English has been called an important event in the history of medicine and a step toward making all the medical classics available to modern physicians. Dr. Lind is now reading proof on an English translation of Berengario da Carpi, a short introduction to anatomy. The book will be published by the University of Chicago Press in April. See them today at the town shop and the university shop A different kind of request has come to Dr. Lind from a California woman who raises chickens. The woman has asked for a translation of 160 pages on chickens from Aldrovandus' book on "Animals." Both Latin and Greek give a valuable historical perspective to the student of the humanities, Dr. Lind said. The enrollment in the department has increased from 50 students in 1940 to 250 in 1958. "We have four teachers in the department and need another one," Dr. Lind said. Dr. William E. McEwen, professor of chemistry, was a guest lecturer at Fort Hays State College yesterday. Around the Campus Dr. McEwen Speaks At Fort Hays State Two films about Shakespeare will be shown at the weekly film features at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Bailey. He was the second lecturer in the annual visiting chemists program, sponsored by the Fort Hays State Chemistry Club. He gave lectures on "Conformational Analysis," which concerns the relative positions of atoms within a molecule, and on "Development of the Structural Theory of Covalent Compounds," concerning simple molecules. Shakespeare Films In Bailey Tomorrow The first is a 25-minute re-creation of the life and times of the great writer. A 15-minute film entitled "Moor's Pavane" will follow. Both films are in color. About eight billion meteors, ranging in size from tiny grains to enormous chunks of metal and stone, enter the earth's atmosphere every 24 hours. 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. Do only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 11 a.m., SAT., 314 Fraser. Books used for the prepared part of the examination must be turned in to 306 Fraser by noon Wednesday at the latest. No certificate can be accepted after this date. Only candidates approved by the Graduate School are eligible to take the examination. Russkii Klub. V sredu 14-vo Ianvaria s.g., v 12 chasov dina, Driaus stol stol v done “Kansas Union” Prigilhaem hov miyervaheshikh po-russkii TODAY Nurses' Club, 7 p.m., 110 Fraser. Election of officers. Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America, 7:30 p.m. Trophy Room, Dr. Matthew I. Wiencke, visiting professor of classical languages and archaeology of Missouri. The Partition Room, Park and Present" (illustrated with slides). Society for the Advancement of Man- agement 7:20 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Cliff Titus, supervisor of management development at Beech Aircraft. KU International Educators Organizal- ku Foundation, home of Dr. Dr. Oxford Hought, 2043 Mass Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. at St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky. TOMORROW University Daily Kansan and Holy Communion, 7 a.m., with breakfast following, Canterbury House. Faculty Forum." The Life of Jesus—Myth or History?" Rev Ernest Klein. University Room, Kansas Union. Phone reservations to the Y-Office by Tuesday afternoon. Jay Jones, 5 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union. Attendance required. Ulnion: Attendance Required Humanities Forum, 7 p.m., not 7:30 p.m. as originally scheduled, Oread Room, Kansas Union. Newman Club Mass, 6:30 am. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky THURSDAY Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. breakfast following Caterbury House. UF Faculty Club, Dinner, Bridge 6:45 a.m. breakfast following Caterbury Hosts: Dr. & Mrs. O. O. Stoland, VI 3-3322, Miss Ruth Stoland, IV 3-3323, Bea & Mrs. Thomas Gordon, VI 3-5433 Christian Science Campus Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danfort Chapel. Get WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Charlie! WILD ROOF CREAM OIL J. PAUL SHEEDY,* hair scientist, says: "Keepa your hair well-groomed longer!" *n*12 Si. Harriet Hill Rd., Willisville N.J. Just a little bit of Wildroot and... WOW Two smiling fish ITALY SYRACUSE SEMESTERS In A unique foreign study program sponsored by Syracuse University American college students are offered an opportunity to enrich their education with a foreign experience and, at the same time, complete their college course in four years. No language prerequisite. "Home stay" with Italian family arranged. Write For Booklet SS-1 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY 610 E. Fayette St., Syracuse 3, New York Auditions for Dick Harp Show Tonight Auditions for persons interested in introducing the Dick Harp television show will be held at 7.30 tonight in Heoch TV studios. Two announcers will be selected to introduce the program, working alternate weeks. Dev Nelson of WIBW-TV will interview Harp. The program will be broadcast from Hoch Auditorium studios from 10:20 to 10:35 p.m. each Tuesday. Almost one-third of all Federal, state and local government employees in the U.S. are school workers—teachers, administrators, clerks, janitors, etc. V On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!"and. "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.) IS STUDYING NECESSARY? Each night after dinner Walter and Casimir and LeRoy went to their room and studied English lit. For three hours they sat in sombre silence and pored over their books and then, squinty and spent, they toppled onto their pallets and sobbed themselves to sleep. Once there were three roommates and their names were Walter Pellucid, Casimir Fing, and LeRoy Holocaust and they were all taking English lit. They were all happy, friendly, outgoing types and they all smoked Philip Morris Cigarettes as you would expect from such a gregarious trio, for Philip Morris is the very essence of sociability, the very spirit of amity, the very soul of concord, with its tobacco so mild and true, its packs so soft and flip-top, its length so regular or long size. You will find when you smoke Philip Morris that the birds sing for you and no man's hand is raised against you. This joyless situation obtained all through September and October. Then one November night they were all simultaneously struck by a marvelous idea. "We are all studying the same thing," they cried. "Why, then, should each of us study for three hours? Why not each study for one hour? It is true we will only learn one-third as much that way, but it does not matter because there are three of us and next January before the exams, we can get together and pool our knowledge!" Oh, what rapture then fell on Walter and Casimir and LeRoy! They flung their beanies into the air and danced a schottische and lit thirty or forty Philip Morrises and ran out to pursue the pleasure which had so long, so bitterly, been missing from their lives. Alas, they found instead a series of grisly misfortunes. Walter, alas, went searching for love and was soon going steady with a coed named Invicta Breadstuff, a handsome lass, but, alas, hopelessly addicted to bowling. Each night she bowled five hundred lines, some nights a thousand. Poor Walter's thumb was a shambles and his purse was empty, but Invicta just kept on bowling and in the end, alas, she left Walter for a pin-setter, which was a terrible thing to do to Walter, especially in this case, because the pin-setter was automatic. Walter, of course, was far too distraught to study his English lit, but he took some comfort from the fact that his roommates were studying and they would help him before the exams. But Walter, alas, was wrong. His roommates, Casimir and LeRoy, were nature lovers and they used their free time to go for long tramps in the woods. One November night, alas, they were treed by two bears, Casimir by a brown bear and LeRoy by a Kodiak, and they were kept in the trees until mid-January when winter set in and the brown bear and the Kodiak went away to hibernate. ...The effects were, on the whole, beneficial... So when the three roommates met before exams to pool their knowledge, they found they had none to pool! Well sir, they had a good long laugh about that and then rushed to the kitchen and stuck their heads in the oven. It was, however, an electric oven and the effects were, on the whole, beneficial. The wax in their ears got melted and they acquired a healthy tan and today they are married to a lovely young heirs named Ganglia Bran and live in the Canal Zone, where there are many nice boats to wave at. © 1929 Max Shuimaan . . . And here's a wave at you filter smokers. Have you tried Marlboro—same fine flavor, new improved filter and better makin'—made by the makers of Philip Morris, sponsors of this column? Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 13, 1959 GRADUATING THIS SEMESTER? 1950 Keep Up on KU News Next Semester With a Subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clip this coupon and mail it or drop by the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall Only $3.00 per semester ($4.50 for a full year) University Daily Kansan Flint Hall, K.U. Lawrence, Kan. Please mail the University Daily Kansan to Name ... Address ... City ... State ... Enclosed Find Check For $4.50 For One Year $3.00 For A Semester Page 5 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Donaghue Hot as KU Blasts I-State Al Donaghue, a 6-5 junior in a rare starting assignment, was the man in charge last night as the Jayhawkers disposed of Iowa State with surprising ease 69-48 at Ames. Donaghue, who replaced injured Ron Loneski, led all scorers as the Jayhawkers racked up their fourth straight victory. The Jayhawkers, undefeated in Big Eight Conference play, are now tied with Kansas State for the league lead. Both teams have 3-0 conference records. KU is 6-7 for the season. The Cyclones could not penetrate KU's rugged shifting zone defense. Iowa State got off few clean shots in the second half when the Jayhawkers held them to 19 points. KU led 32-29 at the intermission. The Jayhawkers had things their own way in the final 20 minutes. The Kansans tallied 35 points while the Cyclones could score only seven field goals and five free throws. Control of the boards helped send Iowa State to its third loss in league play. Taller Kansas grabbed 67 rebounds to Iowa State's 37. Ted Ecker and John Krocheski led the Cyclones with 12 points each. Donaghue received strong backing from his teammates in the scoring department. Bill Bridges and Bob Hickman had 11 and 12 points -respectively and all nine Jayhawkers who saw action hit from the floor. University Daily Kansan K-State Rambles The Kansas State Wildcats slashed the Sooners from Oklahoma last night in Big Eight conference basketball. 90-45. The Sooners were never in the ball game as the Wildcats swept to a 24-4 lead in the first 10 minutes. Bob Boozer scored 27 points to lead Kansas State in its 12th win in 13 games. The Wildcats, who led by as much as 47 points in the second half, made 30 of 64 field goal attempts to Oklahoma's 13-for-57. It was the first loss for Oklahoma in Big Eight competition. The hapless Missouri Tigers took it on the chin again, this time from the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 81-69. Nebraska Nips Tigers Nebraska went ahead to stay in the second half, but the Tigers threatened with two and one-half minutes left. 66-63. Then five straight free throws and a basket by Wayne Hester gave the lead to the winners, 73-63. Colorado held Oklahoma State's Arlen Clark to only nine points as it defeated the Cowboys. 65-62. Colorado held a 35-29 lead at the half and had to hold off two threats by Oklahoma State in the second half to win. John Musciano, a substitute forward, led all scorers with 19 points for Colorado. Don Heffington got 15 for the losers. KU Game Televised Next on the agenda is a nearfull schedule Saturday with Iowa State at Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma playing a televised game, and Kansas State at Missouri. Colorado and Oklahoma State will be idle this weekend. Kentucky, Cincy Win By United Press International Kentucky and Cincinnati are still riding high today but only after late rallies on foreign courts. First-ranked Kentucky rallied from a six-point deficit at the half to defeat Tulane 85-68 at New Orleans last night while fifth-ranked Cincinnati overcame a five-point margin at halftime to beat North Texas State 64-56 at Denton. Tex. Kentucky's victory enabled the Wildcats to go into a three-way tie for second place in the Southeastern Conference and Cincinnati's win kept the Bearcats in first place in the Missouri Valley Conference. minutes remaining in the game but finally wore out the foul-ridden Green Wave in the late minutes. Center Don Mills' 27 points led the Wildcats, who connected on 51.7 per cent of their field goal tries compared to Tulane's 38 per cent average. Kentucky also out-rebounded the Green Wave. 48-36. Kentucky, now 13-1 for the season, trailed 39-33 at halftime and led by only two points with eight Cincinnati, trailing by as much as 11 points, staged a full-court press that tied North Texas State 49-49 at the end of regulation time and then outscoced the Eagles, 15-7, in the overtime. Oscar Robertson had 28 points on seven field goals and 14 free throws and Ralph Davis added 19 points for Cincinnati. North Texas State led, 27-22, at halftime. Birds on a Branch BIRD TV—RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. TV Tom Holler and John Bierlein each scored 12 points as Alpha Tau Omega swarmed over Pi Kappa Alpha, 68-33. Dick Stroud led all scorers with 16 points for the losers Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Ch Alpha Tau Omega and Phi Gamm Delta won Fraternity A intramura basketball games yesterday. H. C. Palmer led Lambda Chi with 12 points to defeat Delta Upsilon. The winners led at the half, 18-9, but scored only two points in the last quarter as the DU's got back into the game. Sigma Chi got 13 points from Lee Flachsbarth, but Bill Hines took scoring honors with 18 points for Delta Tau Delta. Palmer Leads Lambda Chi; ATOs Win - Expert Service Phi Gamma Delta received the nod over Triangle by a forfeit, 2-0. Other results: Fraternity B — Sigma Chi 47 Sigma Pi 29; Phi Gamma Delta 2. Kappa Sigma 0 (forfeit). - Quality Parts Fraternity C — Sigma Nu II 27, Sigma Phi Epsilon 26; Phi Gamma Delta III 23, Beta Theta P18; Sigma Alpha Epsilon III 20, Phi Delta Theta V 18. Independent C — Jim Beam II 27, Phi Epsilon Kappa 20; Play-boys 32, Snake Farm Five 28; Marines 29, Bloopers 22; Phi Chi 34, Botany 25; Jim Beam III 41, Straps 31. - Guaranteed Games Tomorrow vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 640. independent Basketball: Chicken Pickers- ies; Cases 4:15; Oread vs. Rum Dums, 5:15; Blackhawks vs. Locksley, 6:15. Fraternity A — Phi Delta Theta vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 7.15. Fraternity B — Theta Chi vs. Alpha KappaLambda, 4:15; Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4:15; Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Delta Tau Delta, 5:00; Delta Upsilon vs. Phi Kappa Tau, 5:00; Beta Theta Pi vs. Kappa Alpha Psi, 5:45. Fraternity C — Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Psi II, 5:45; Phi Gamma Delta IV vs. Phi Delta Tha II, 6:30; Sigma Nu III vs. Delta Upsilon X, 6:30; Phi Delta Tha I vs. Delta Sigma Phi, 7:15; Phi Gamma Delta I vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 7:15. Lonborg Elected to NCAA Position A. F. Lonborg, Kansas Athletic Director, has been elected a member of the 10-man NCAA executive committee by the policy directing council of the association. Lonborg is also chairman of the NCAA university basketball tournament committee. Hank Iba is starting his 25th season as head coach at Oklahoma State. He has only one returning regular from last year's NCAA regional conference winner, Arlen Clark. The executive committee is the administrative agency for the 530-member association. Tuesday, Jan 12, 1950 Wilt and Co. In Topeka The Harlem Globetrotters, featuring Wilt Chamberlain, make their first appearance in the area tonight since signing the former KU whiz. The Globetrotters will play the Hawaii 50th Staters at 8 p.m. in Topeka's Municipal Auditorium in the headliner of a gala program of entertainment. The program also includes a performance by the Texas Cowgirls basketball team, a world's championship table tennis match between England's Richard Bergmann and Japan's Norekagu "Cannonball" Fujii, and a pair of trick rope artists. With the pride of Kansas in their lineup, the Trotters are reputed to be more sensational than ever. A talented group of returning "lettermen" add color to the lineup. Meadowlark Lemon is a 6-1 comedy whiz. Three stars who top the 6-foot, 7-inch mark add height, which does not seem too necessary in view of the towering center. They are McCoy Ingram, Ed Burton and Millard Harris. Herman "Honey" Taylor is this year's dribbler, one of the trademarks of the Trotters. This outstanding ball handler rates with the greatest of them all. Don Matsuzak, 6-0 senior guard for Kansas State was named the Wildcats "most inspirational player" last year. The University Press Revised TYPE SPECIMEN BOOK Shows each and every character of all type fonts, in all available sizes. Includes Jayhawks, University Seals, brackets and some ornaments $2.00 Drilled for looseleaf notebook. On Sale only at On Sale only at ROWLANDS BOOK STORE and STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE PAT READ 445 Tenn. St. INDIAN TRADER Ph. VI 3-1306 Gifts That Are Different - Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs - Hand Loomed Ties The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment NOW YOU CAN AFFORD Electric HOME HEAT! Here's Why . . . 1 ELECTRIC HEATING COSTS LESS TO BUY! Electric resistance-type heating is the lowest cost heating system on the market. Heat pumps, offering year round air conditioning, compare favorably with the cost of conventional heating and cooling systems. 2 ELECTRICITY'S COST IS GOING DOWN! 3 Prices of flame-type fuels are skyrocketing along with the cost of living, while more efficient electricity has actually decreased in cost 26% since 1940! NEW LOW RATE FOR ELECTRIC HEATING I Save $37 \frac{1}{2} \%$ by getting your electricity for only $1 \frac{1}{4} \%$ per kilowatt-hour during the heating season. Just notify KPL when you install electric space heating to qualify. 4 NEW INSULATION TECHNIQUES SAVE ON OPERATING COSTS! Flameless electric heating does not require combustion air; thus low cost insulation techniques can be fully utilized. (Saves up to 30% in cost of operating air conditioning, too.) 5 ELECTRIC HEATING COSTS LESS TO INSTALL! Electric resistance-type heating is the cheapest to install. No costly fuel storage tank, chimneys, ductwork or furnace room. See your nearest KPL office for our free electric heating layout service The KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY ١ : ٢ Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 13. 1959 Couples Tell Engagements 104 Sandra Daugherty Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Daugherty, Hutchinson, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Sandra, to Robert Sweet, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sweet of Baxter Springs. Miss Daugherty attended KU from 1956 to 1958 and was affiliated with Delta Gamma sorority and Delta Phi Delta. Mr. Sweet, a senior in the School of Fine Arts, is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity and Delta Phi Delta. Susan Diane Junge Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Junge, Joplin, Mo., have announced the engagement of their daughter Diane, to Dennis Payne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Payne, Kansas City, Mo. Miss Junge is a junior in the School of Education and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Payne is a sophomore in the School of Engineering and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. No wedding date has been set. 1938 Mary Claire Purcell Mr. and Mrs. Forest V. Purcell, Kansas City have announced the engagement of their daughter, Mary Claire, to John Edward Pepercorn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Pepercorn, Overland Park, Kansas Miss Purecell is a senior in the School of Education and is affiliated with Pi Beta Phi social sorority. Mr. Peppercorn is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and is a senior in the School of Business. A summer wedding is planned. Absolute Cleanliness and Correct Cosmetics Keep Skin Looking Young (THIS IS THE SECOND IN A SERIES OF ARTICLES ON SKIN CARE.) NEW YORK—(UP)—If skin could talk, it would say "how dry I am" as it gets older. Around the third decade of life, and sometimes sooner, chemical factories in the skin curtail their output of natural oil and moisture. It's part of the aging process. It starts to happen the instant you stop growing. To combat erosion caused by such dryness, dermatologists normally recommend cleansing routines that help the body make the most of its declining natural oily output. The condition is aggravated by steam-heated rooms. Hot, dry air "steals" moisture from the skin. Cosmetics, used indiscriminately, may contribute to the drying. Lanolin creams or soaps containing large doses of lanolin are helpful. Moisturizer creams may be applied under powder or foundation bases to overcome dryness. Oily skin is primarily a problem affecting adolescents. Many adults, however, have a somewhat oily complexion throughout life. Such a skin has one advantage: It does not wrinkle quickly. Oiliness—besides contributing to an eternally shining nose—encourages major and minor blemishes. To combat oiliness, wash three or four times daily with a mild toilet soap. 1-DAY Photo - Finishing FAST Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) This may be followed by an astringent to close facial pores. It also is helpful to remove and redo makeup at least twice a day. An epsom salts solution also may be of temporary help. Stir the salts into boiling water until crystals form. Cool the solution, then pat it on the face with sterile cotton. As it dries, a white film will form. It's natural for most "older" skins to have oversized pores. An astringent that shocks the pores into puckering is of temporary help. A "permanent" cure? None exists. Wash this away after a few minutes, or leave it on overnite—if your skin is the oily type. Simple pimples are, of course, a warning signal. In large numbers they may be the precursors of acne, or storm warnings about other serious skin disorders. In such cases, see a doctor for correction. The occasional pimple may be only a sign of incomplete skin cleaning or too much rich food. (Next: Skin Problems Needing Medical Attention.) Like pimples in quantity, black-heads by the dozen may be a sign of acne. The best therapy: cleanliness. Most dermatologists advise against squeezing. Summing up on cosmetic skin problems: Super-cleanliness. Match creams, lotions and astringents to your general skin condition. There have been significant changes recently in the timing of marriages. Ten years ago the preference was for the first half of the year. Now the pattern is just the opposite. More people choose to be married during the second half of the year than during the first half. squeezing of pimples is not the thing to do. Such a "remedy" may lead to serious infection or an enlarged pore. Nature ordinarily dries up simple pimples. Notice to all bird watchers: Hummingbirds can fly backwards as well as forwards. Leading dermatologists agree that 摄影 HIXON STUDIO DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 HELD OVER! THRU SATURDAY! BEAUTY BRIGITTE BATTLE VS. SOPHIA BEAUTY BRIGITTE 2 SPICY FEATURES BATTLE VS. SOPHIA Brigitte Bardot France's cute little bundle of sex, in her raciest unveiling! Mademoiselle Striptease Voluptuous SOPHIA LOREN Italy's bombshell of female charm! Scandal in Color Sorrento VITTORIO DE SICA RECOMMENDED FOR ADULTS ONLY! GLOBAL INTERNET VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Sigma Phi Epsilon Gordon Sieker, Claflin senior has been elected president of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity for the coming year. Other recently elected officers are Bob Kerr, Lincoln sophomore, recording secretary, and Terry Craven, Neodesha junior, comptroller; ... On The Hill . . . --- Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity has announced the pledging of five men. They are Steve Chard, Lincoln, Bill Crabaugh, Kansas City, Kam., Dick Morris, Lyndon, and Byron Sears, Eureka, all freshmen; Jerry Macomber, Kalamazoo, Mich., sophomore. Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual scholarship and leadership awards banquet recently at the chapter house. Donald K. Alderson, Dean of Men, presented awards to David Mills, Arkansas City senior, and Larry Schooley, Kiowa junior. received a $100 check an Mills received a $100 check and Schooloy received a $50 check. Phi Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Delta, honorary legal fraternity, held a special initiation in Green Hall courtroom for George Jungk, Salina third-year law student. ★ ★ ★ Alpha Epsilon Pi Ron Abrams, Brooklyn, N.Y., senior, has been elected president of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity for the coming semester. Other newly elected officers are as follows: Peter Frey, Vineland, N.J., vice president; Steve Hurst, New York City, N.Y., secretary. Richard Bell, Kansas City, Mo, treasurer, and Avrom Rosen, Kansas City, Mo., member-at-large. All are sophomores. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Alpha Delta Sigma Alpha Delta Sigma Members of the L. N. Flint chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity for men, held an initiation dinner at the Stables recently. Pinnings Announced Shideler-Boss Allen-Porter Acacia fraternity has announced he pinning of John L. Shiderle, mission junior, and Priscilla Ann Ross, Merrill freshman. The pinning was announced at the fraternity's annual Christmas formal. Gibson-Duke The pinning of Jayne Allen, Topeka senior, to Kent Porter, a 1958 graduate of KU and member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, has been announced by Chi Omega sorority. Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Mickey Gibson, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, to Harold Duke, St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Duke is a junior at Washington University in St. Louis and a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Jones-Deeter Delta Gamma sorority has announced the pinning of Marge Jones, Kansas City, Mo., junior, to Kelly Deeter, Topeka senior. The pinning was announced in a skit given by Elaine Gill, Cincinnati, Ohio, senior, Carol Fuller, Ellis, and Linda Compton, Topeka, both juniors. AAA MEMBER THE BEST SUCCESS MOTELS COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming IT'S TRUE! “Tonka” is the Indian name for the horse “Comanche” which was the only survivor of Custer's Last Stand! This is the true story of that horse and that battle! By the way, “Comanche” is on display in the Kansas University Natural History Museum! In One Great Blaze Of Action... ...A boy became a warrior! A horse became a hero! And Custer became a legend! WALT DISNEY'S TONKA The Untold Story Behind the West's Strongest Adventure! SAL MINEO WALT DISNEY'S TONKA The Untold Story Behind the West's Strangest Adventure TECHNICOLOR* JEROME COURTLAND • PHILIP CAREY • RAFAEL GAMPOS ... WYE PAGE · SMITT LOMMOND · H. M. YWYNNT STARTS WEDNESDAY — 4 DAYS ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ GRANADA THEATRE - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-5788 ENDS TONITE—"ROOTS OF HEAVEN" Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1959 University Daily Kansan . CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00 Termi: cash All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash are charged an additional 25 for billing All ads must be called or brought to the Daily University Kansan Business Office in Fint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired PICKETT SLIDE RULE in brown case, before Christmas vacation, reward V-11 - 12 LOST REWARD FOR THE RETURN OF History of Science notebook left Tuesday in Science Library stocks, Mary Ann Waddev, DI 3-8255. 1-15 SILVER AND NAVY BLUE ball point pen, between Fraser and Hawk's Nest. small German lighter, name Fleible Momp on bottom, Reward, call 1-14 3-7546 POST VERSALOG. slide rule, reward offered, call VI 3-7025. 1-15 HELP WANTED PART TIME TYPIST: Hours can be varied, call VI T5-7114 between 10 and 1-14 FOR RENT ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama, VI 3-0902. tf SINGLE ROOMS for boys available now to preschool. 1-13 pulses. i135, Ohio. VI, 2-288. i-13 i-135 VERY NICE 3 room apartment, $75 a month, new house. Two bedroom, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Two bedroom furnished apartment, A-1 condition, $90 a month. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-6497 or VI 3-3902. -1-13 CLEAN, FURNISHED small house, built-ins, good wood, electric Frigidaire, 2 large closets, married couple, no children, no pets, available Jan. 20, 520 Ohio 1-13 WANTED: 1 student to share room. 1 meal served family style, kitchen privileges for other 2 meals, available after Jan. 26, 940 Miss. VI 3-1585. 1-13 FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, four large rooms, furnished, for 4 boys or men, single beds, private entrance and bath, 520 La. VI 3-9184. 1-13 GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-3019. tt SINGLE ROOM, private entrance and admission. 128th floor, end semester, 1328 Bloor, VI 3-4823, 1329 Dufferin Street. NICE LARGE ROOM for 1 or 2 boys. See Mrs. Maxwell in Hawks Nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana, VI 3-4168. 1-13 VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off street parking, kitchen furnished, see at 1001 Indiana. 1-16 ROOM AND BOARD for spring semester $50 per month, VI 3-4385. 1-14 1 FURNISHED and 1 unfurnished spare- ance and bath, 3 rooms V 3-4271, 1221 La DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, in-merse mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 II, VI. 3-6790. 1-16 ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available. Pon Henry Co-op, 1420 Ohio, VI. 0681 2-4 FOUR ROOM DUPLEX, unfurnished; close to campus, available Feb. 1, call VI 2-0322 or see after 5 p.m. at 1833 Mo. 2-5 HALF BLOCK from campus, in very nice house, large double rooms and secure room, 1215 Orca Clove to take Leah Weltner, 12 to 5 or 7, to call VI 3-6696. 1 to 2-15 2 DOUBLE ROOMS with single beds, 12 meals per week, for boys. Beginning second semester. If interested call VI 3-9562. 1-15 LARGE. CLEAN. UNFURNISHED apart- ment, ceiling conditions, avail- ing no. VI 3-3736 ROOM FOR BOYS — 1/2 block from Union, linens furnished, cooking privileges if desired, T.V., showers, call VI 3-0418, 1222 Miss. 1-15 2 SINGLE BEDROOMS with bath and separate entrance, for men students, in new air conditioned house west of campus, $35 per month. VI 3-8746. 1-16 3 ROOM DUPLEX, $75, 1940 Learnard; Furnished 3 room apartment, $80, 121 W. 14th; unfurnished duplex, 2 bedroom, n 12; Indiana; furnished 2 bedroom duplex, n 13; room furnished apartment, $55; bills paid. Call T. A. Hearl- hill, VI 3-3902. I - 141 NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment, living room, bedroom, kitchen, private table. Available Feb. 1. Moody Apartment. 1343 Tenn. Call VI 3-0987-1-018 IV 3-3375-6 ROOMS FOR MEN, triple or double, available now. One single available March 1. Also one pair of men's skates. 1416 Tenn., VI 3-9340 p.m. 14:16 a.m. 1-16 STUDIO APARTMENT. $1/2 block from stadium, well furnished, for one or two upperclassmen. $35 per month, call VI 3-6969. 1-14 2 ROOM BASEMENT apartment, share kitchen and bath, private entrance, telephone, utilities paid, water softener 1520 Terns and Torr., call V 3-8675, see 1-16 time. APPROVED ROOMS for girls. with kitchen privileges and bath, 1232 La., VI 3-4271. 1-16 FURNISHED APARTMENT. 1 block from campus, 2 bedrooms, sun room, living room, fireplace, bath and kitchen, 1st floor, call VI 3-7995. 1-16 1 LARGE DOUBLE, 2 single rooms for men. 1005 Indiana, VI 3-4584, 2-2 NICE LARGE duplex apartments, 3 rooms, bath, stone and refrigerator furnished, $75 and $80 per month. Small unfurnished cottage, 3 rooms and bath, utilities paid, $60 per month, call VI 3-7367. 2-2 2 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. $55, utilities paid, clean, private entrance, garage available, 728 Ohio, VI 3-62-28. 5 ROOM APARTMENT, private entrance and bath, for men, availabe 2nd semester, call VI 3-6723. 2-2 AVAILABLE AFTER JAN. 27, unfurnished 6 room duplex, $80 plus utilities, call VI 3-8063 after 5 p.m. 2-2 NICE CLEAN COMFORTABLE room tor boys near campus and bus line, linens furnished. Also garage for rent, VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 2-2 WANT A BETTER ROOM in a nice residential area? Come see this extra nice panel room with twin beds, excellent desk, plenty of storage space, private entrance and bath. $25 for single or $45 for two, 921 W. 22nd St. 2-2 CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. He sat up during the day in the Kansan Room or call VI 3-9063 between 6-7 p.m. FOR SALE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFI MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-hal price rates on Time, Life, and Sport Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124. POST VERSALOG slide rule. Handbook of Chemistry, Physics Handbook of chemistry studies aids for science majors. Call VI 3-5818 or 1332 Ohio after 5:00 p.m. 1-17 REMINGTON PORTABLE typewriter, good condition, come see at 109 East 19th St. Grover's Realty Co., VI 3-3836. 1-15 FLAT TOP Spanish guitar, call VI 4854, ask for Mr. Morton, 1404 Alum 117-3 1954 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, 4 door, radio, heater, white side wall tires, top condition, call Jim Henley at VI 3-724 at noon or after 5 p.m., 740 La. 1-16 HAVE CAR — WILL SELL, 1956 Chevrolet, 2 door, black, clean, V-8, kick shift, overdrive, well-kept, John Neustaedt, VI 3-1520. 1-15 TELEPHOTO LENS and case, made by Argus, used once, $40, which is approx- imately $15 off retail, call VI 2-0351 evenings. 1-16 '54 OLDS, SUPER 88, radio, henter, power brakes, power steering, very good condition. 14,000 offer miles no reg. invoice. Offer refused. 1708 Mist 3-0796. POST VERSALOG slide rule, almost new, call VI 3-6047. 1-15 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 5-210. TRANSPORTATION WANTED: TO JOIN a car pool from Topeka to Lawrence, daily, arrive 8 am, leave 3 p.m, call KU 548, ask for Larry Lane. 2-2 BUSINESS SERVICES NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to p.m. Birds and animals, complete stock shelves for all purposes. Complete lines of Exotic Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal., stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, pillows, shampoos, socks, washcloths, blankets, etc...Everything in the field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: Ola Smith 101% Mass, Ph. Ff. 3-5263. RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 3-1971 Singe Sewing Center, 927 Mass. WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf WANTED. Student Laundry, Reasonable Formerly 829 Comm., now 421 Ohio, iff TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest instructor's Studio, Dance Studio, 94th Missouri, ph. 3-6838. 9f TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood. VI S 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. ff. Mufflers and Taltipples Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed. Fast accurate service. Mrs. Lungten, 1632 W. 20th St.. VI 3-7184. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service. Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. TYPING; Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term pa- pers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr. VI 3-8600 tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, report sheets. Standard rates: Mrs. H. Klansen. TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. ff LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021½ Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. For me, it provides professional comfort. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. tf TYPING OF REPORTS. term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST, will type hems, reports, etc. . Neat, accurate work, Mrs. Davis, 10161₂ Conn, VI 2- 267. 1-13 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, critical rates Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428 TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9545. Mrs. Earl Wright. I-14 WANTED: Washings and ironings, reasonable rates, VI 3-2906 1-15 INTERESTED IN LOW COST flying time? Due to graduation we have several openings, for information call VI 3-865. 1-16 TYPING: Former medical secretary will provide input for internal standard, rat- ing Mrs. O'Dell; VI 3-3550 EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS --- Don't Forget ... You'll want a Subscription to next semester's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER $3.00 FULL YEAR $4.50 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building + XU3 二 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 13. 1959 --- Indian Watches KU Weather Shyam Bhatia checks weather station. 1960 The combined pep clubs will sponsor a semi-formal Valentine's Day dance from 8 p.m. to midnight Feb. 14, in the Kansas Union ballroom. Valentine Dance Set The Cell Block Seven, a Columbia Recording Co. ensemble, will provide the music. The dance is for all KU students. Tickets will be $1.75 a couple. One thousand bank presidencies become vacant every year in the U. S. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 The KU station makes a weekly weather chart, and has instruments for recording rainfall, pressure, humidity and temperature. When you got up this morning what was one of your first thoughts? It probably concerned the weather, and here on the campus, the weather is one of the main concerns of Shyam Bhatia, New Delhi, India, graduate student. Each morning, rain or shine, Bhatia has to check the weather instruments located between Lindley and Marvin halls. This reading, along with another he takes daily at 5 p.m., goes to the Topeka weather bureau where weather maps are prepared. Bhatia said a new anemograph to measure wind speed and direction soon will be added to the instruments used for charting the weather over a 24 hour period. For 37 years, this job was handled by the late Chesley Posey, professor emeritus of geography, until his death in 1957. Bhatia took up where Prof. Posey left off. Since then, the weather department has been moved from the department of geography to the department of aeronautical engineering. Ammon S. Andes, professor of aeronautical engineering, is now in charge of the weather station. Course Changes In New Schedule Wednesday morning, Jan. 28, may be a good or bad day for students, depending on how they fared on semester examinations. That morning the fall semester grade reports will be available for students who obtain their enrollment materials for the Spring semester. Mrs. Agnes Barnhill, registrar's enrollment assistant, said the new revised official schedule of classes will be available shortly before enrollment begins. "Many minor changes have been made in several classes," Mrs. Barnhill said. "One of the changes will be in the Department of Libraries where Library 110, History of Books, will be scheduled instead of Library 100, Analytical Bibliography." In the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, William Harmon will replace Victor Hyden as an instructor in the radio-television sequence of the school. Mr. Harmon graduated from the School of Journalism at the University as a midterm graduate in 1958. He has been employed with radio station KMBC in Kansas City since his graduation and was promotion manager of KBKC, Mission, Kan. All other changes will be announced in the official schedule of classes. Kansan Want Ads Get Results SENIORS... DEADLINE DATE IS FEB. 21 Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the '59 Jayhawker CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 Goldwater Seeks Campaign Post WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) said today he has been endorsed for the Senate GOP campaign chairmanship by President Eisenhower and Vice-president Richard M. Nixon. He predicted he would win despite liberal Republican opposition. Key GOP liberals, who challenged Senate conservatives on election of this year's leader, warned that Goldwater's selection to head the 1960 campaign could cost the Republicans some Senate seats. Goldwater said he decided to fight for the post when he learned he was being opposed because of his labor stand. The Arizona senator won reelection last fall on a campaign of support for right-to-work legislation, bitterly opposed by organized labor. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results Get WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Charlie! C. COLUMBUS, world traveler, says: "My hair looks great since I discovered Wildroot." WILLOW ROOT CRAM OIL Just a little bit of Wildroot and...WOW Two happy smiling faces. 1959 JAYHAWKER Winter Issue Out Wednesday DISTRIBUTION ON HILL ONLY Hawk's Nest Information Booth Strong Rotunda Fraternity, Sorority and Organized House Group Pictures Party Pictures,Sport Pictures All Seniors Who Purchased Books Through the Mail May Pick Up Their Receipts In the Jayhawk Office, 114 B, Union BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER NOW! Daily Hansan 56th Year, No. 75 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1951 SCHEDULE IT LOOKS STURDY ENOUGH—Inspecting new furniture in Joseph R. Pearson Dormitory are, left to right, J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, and Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant dean of women. The new dormitory, just north of CarruthO'Leary Dormitory, is scheduled to open Jan. 26. It will house 416 men. Pearson Dormitory Ready For Students Next Semester About 250 students will move into KU's newest and largest dormitory between semesters. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, said the Joseph R. Pearson dormitory for men will be ready for occupancy about Jan. 26. Meals will be served after Jan. 29. Plumbers, electricians and other workmen are still busy inside the building. Furniture was moved into the dormitory earlier this week but has not been moved into rooms. The dormitory, located next to Carruth O'Leary Hall, will house 416 students. So far, however, only a little over half that many students have applied for housing. Applicants are mostly residents of Templin, Varsity House, Locksley, McCook and Oread halls. All of these dormitories except Oread will be closed, Mr. Wilson said. The new $1,500,000 Pearson structure was built mostly from funds donated by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, who have granted large sums to the University. The front entrance of the new six-story dormitory opens into an 83 by 49 foot lounge. Similar lounging areas are set aside on each of the upper stories for television and study areas. Also on the first floor of the building are two three-room apartments for the house residents and the house manager. Mr. and Mrs. James Middleton, houseparents at Oread Hall, will be head residents at the new dormitory. Mrs. Madge McElinney, housemother of Varsity House, will be house manager. Mrs. Jean Tice, Templin house- Coach Harp's Strategy Aired Live on Hoch TV Four male student announcers were selected last night and one of them had his debut in the first KU television show on Coach Dick Harp's basketball strategy. The student production was aired live from Hoch Auditorium from 10:20 to 10:35 p.m. over WIBW-TV, a Topeka station. Bill Schmidt Is First Dr. Bruce Linton, chairman of the radio and television committee said; "The snow went wet. we got on and we got off." Bill Schmidt, Independence, Kan. junior, was the first of the student announcers to introduce the show, which will continue through the basketball season in the same time spot. All productions will be live from Hoch Auditorium. Other announcers to participate in the show are Merlin Askren, Topeka junior; Kent Morgan, Hope senior, and Lew Boles, Eudora graduate student. Eight students in a television production class handle the technical aspects of the show. Nelson Interviews Harp The The TV-WTV announcer, Dev. Nelson interviewing Nelson Interviews Harp Conference Room Available A conference room for committee meetings is off to one side of the main entrance of Pearson. To the other side is a cleaning room for temporary storage of incoming laundry. Dr. Linton directed the production last night. He said while the basketball program will only run through the season, there has been discussion of continuing the show as a general sports program. mother, will replace the Middletons at Oread Hall. Harp. Also featured are various blackboard diagrams being drawn by Harp and occasional movies shown. "We also have several other plans, still up in the air, for putting on more shows from the KU studios in Hoch," Dr. Linton added. Starting in one month will be a 12-program half-hour show on science, featuring T. C. Helvey, visiting professor of radiation biophysics. Last night's production crew consisted of Judy Anderson, Lawrence senior, assistant director; Fred Huff, Lawrence graduate student, and Robert Duggan, Lawrence senior, cameraman; Kala Mays, Lyons senior, floor manager; Nancy Stutzman, Kansas City, Kan., senior, switcher; Tom Galloway, Wichita junior, audio, and Boles, shader. Other Shows Planned A switchboard, mailboxes, telephone booths and elevators are also located in the first-floor lobby area. The two wings on each floor have 18 combination study-sleeping rooms. The rooms are 13 by 15 feet and decorated in yellow, rose beige, blue, green and gray. A tack board with shelf above lines one side of the room. Built-in closets with sliding doors and a small chest takes up another wall. Each room is furnished with two single beds, two desks and one lounge chair. Inter-communication systems are installed in each room Dining facilities are in the subbasement area of the dormitory. Two mahogany lined dining rooms are separated by cafeteria and dishwashing equipment. Also on the sub-basement level are laundry rooms, vending machines, trunk and food storage space WASHINGTON' (UPI) President Eisenhower expressed confidence today that if inflation can be controlled, the way will be paved for a possible tax cut. Inflation Can Be Halted, Ike Says He said a balanced budget and a strong America both can be achieved "if we keep under control the problem of rising costs." Eisenhower, at a question-and-answer session with National Press Club members, again sounded the economy theme he voiced in his State of the Union message last Wednesday. A designer of aircraft power systems told a Kanson reporter last night that Russia may be ahead of America in propaganda techniques but not in the race for space supremacy. He was asked if the nation could meet the needs of an expanding defense and growing population and balance the budget at the same time. Boeing Man Says US Ahead in Space He declared it could be done "If we can keep prices from rising." Lawrence J. McMurtrey, of Boeing Airplane Co., said he is not too concerned about the talk of Russia's advances. Swedish Film Is Replaced The celebrated Swedish film, "Smiles of a Summer Night," scheduled to be shown Friday night at 7:30 in Hoch Auditorium, will be replaced by the British film, "Tale Of Two Cities." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said a change in distribution made the move necessary for the KU film series. "The film is not available now, nor will it be made available in the future." Mr. Nichols said: The new film is a recent production of the Charles Dickens story by the Rank studios in England. It stars Dorothy Tutin and Dirk Bogarde as the tragic Sidney Carton. There is no admission charge for the showing. Sigma Xi to Hear Moore Dr. Raymond Moore, professor of geology and former director of the Kansas Geological Survey, will lecture on "The Earth's Crust" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Bailey Auditorium. In the lecture for Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, Prof. Moore plans to discuss certain geological evidences from the formation of earth that indicate a prevailing stability or uniformity of the crust, or outer layer of our planet. Once a professor at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, Prof. Moore is now a KU exchange speaker for Sigma Xi. He is also the principal geologist for the Kansas Geological Survey and spends much of his time studying rock formations in the earth's outer layer. Prof. Moore spent part of 1949 on a three-month assignment in Japan reviewing geological resources for Gen. Douglas MacArthur. He also spent some time that year in Europe representing various national and international geologic groups at different congresses. Mr. McMurtrey spoke on power plants for present and future aircraft before an American Society of Mechanical Engineers group in the Kansas Union. "The Russians have done a very spectacular thing with their cosmic rocket," said Mr. McMurtrey. "But we could have done it three years ago if we had concentrated our efforts as they have. And we don't know how many times they failed." A. C. H. B. Lawrence J. McMurtrey Mr. McMurtrey said he felt no crash program was necessary in America's space program. He said our leaders were maintaining a balance between the armaments race and economy. "The missile programs are very expensive," he said. "We could use our entire military budget for missiles, but it is just not practical. We can move fast when we want to on these projects." Mr. McMurtrey indicated that statements on the missile program are made at times in order to achieve certain effects. "Announcements are often made to satisfy political desires," he said. "The letting of contracts should not be determined by such devices." Mr. McMurtrey, when asked about projects which Boeing is working on, said only that the company is experimenting in many areas and that "the future looks very interesting." Weather Partly cloudy to cloudy and colder over state with light snow northwest portion this afternoon and tonight. Thursday considerable cloudiness and much colder over state with snow west portion. Low tonight lower 20's north to 32 southeast. High tomorrow 25 north to 32 southeast. Rudolf Firkusny to Present Five Piano Numbers Tonight Rudolf Firkusny, noted pianist will present the following numbers in the University Theatre of the I Rudolf Firkusny Music and Dramatic Arts Building at 8:20 tonight. "Variation on a Theme by Salae-ri," by Beethoven; "Intermezzi and Rhapsody" from Opus 119 by Brahms; "Sonata in B Minor" from Opus 58 by Chopin; "Estamps" by DeBussy; and "Pictures at an Exhibition" by Moussorgsky. --- Mr. Firkusny has been hailed by the New York Times as a "major pianist, one of the best in the profession." Students may be admitted to the concert course performance by presenting their ID cards at the box office in exchange for reserved seats. General admission tickets are $2.56,$2.05 and $1.54, and are available at the Fine Arts Office, Union Ticket Center, Bell Music Co. and at the box office. Last summer and in the early fall Mr. Firkusny made a European tour of six countries. He is now on a North American tour which will include 17 appearances as soloist with 11 major orchestras. He will tour Australia next spring. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 14. 1959 Ego Seeks Fame I'm a wheel! I'm important! These thoughts are probably running through the mind of a poor dissatisfied soul now as he gloats over the fact that his week-end venture made the front page of the Daily Kansan. The ego is a funny thing. For most persons, it is satisfied by a reasonable amount of success in life's daily undertakings. But occasionally one of these characters pops up who must risk life and limb to satisfy the self. What a disappointment it must have been when he was thwarted in his attempt to place some kind of a flag on the Fraser tower. Someone had succeeded this fall in taking a flag. What frustration that he could not enjoy the same notoriety, Telling a few about his experience wouldn't satisfy the need in this case. After all, had he not almost been captured, almost hurtled from that high roof, forced to run a great distance to be entirely safe. A public letter would be more satisfying, so our hero took pen in hand and inscribed a note to the editors, describing each spine-tingling minute of his adventure. We hope he is satisfied. If we have boosted his spirit so that his final week will be more successful than before possible, we are happy. Far be it from us to deny public acclaim for such brave individuals. But in answer to the question of the intelligence of anyone who climbs around on icy roofs at night . . . Res ipsa loquitur. (The Thing speaks for itself.) —Mary Alden Jailed for Her Rights Today, Marie Torre gets out of jail. But within a week or so, she may go back. Marie Torre is not a criminal in the usual interpretation of the word. She is a columnist for the New York Herald Tribune. She was in jail serving a 10-day sentence for contempt of court. She was convicted for her refusal to identify a source of information in one of her columns. At the time she refused she was a witness in a libel and breach of contract trial. The federal judge who sentenced her to jail warned Miss Torre that after her sentence is served, she will continue to be subject to additional sentences if she continued defiance of the court's order to reveal her source. This means this case could have a long and strange history. Miss Torre insists there should be a right of confidence between the newspaper writer and the informant. Each time she reaffirms her stand, she may go back to jail. The case may end in several ways. The person Miss Torre is protecting may step forward and announce his identity. This is unlikely since he would be placed in a bad position in the libel-breach-of-contract suit. Miss Torre may break down and tell the judge the name of her informant herself. This is also unlikely. Miss Torre believes in what she is doing—to help establish the right of confidence for the press. This right is already extended to ministers, doctors, and lawyers. Newspaper reporters have it in a few states. The most satisfactory conclusion and result of the case would be for the judge to set a precedent in common law by deciding that Miss Torre did, in fact, have a right of confidence, or for a wave of public opinion to force Congress to pass a law to that effect. —Jim Cable Trying to Save World Over 10,000 students should be given credit for at least putting forth an effort to save the world. Students, enrolled in colleges from coast to coast, signed a petition calling upon the United States, Russia and Great Britain to sign an "immediate agreement for the permanent cessation of nuclear weapons testing" with provision for control and inspection. These names, along with 100,000 more signatures on a similar adult petition sponsored by the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy were presented to the delegates to the Summit talks at Geneva. It is a good feeling to know that at least 110,000 Americans are conscious of what is going on in the world today. The spirit of consciousness we support. However, the 110,000 should have saved their energy. It will take more than signatures to stop the mad havoc of our modern nuclear world. First the United States bulges with smugness as she has something "up" bigger and better than cold Russia. Then we must shudder as here come the Russians with something still bigger and better. Both countries are so busy concentrating on how to scare each other that they have no time for the people. Russia has never given its people a chance to register complaints. But our country has and in the past our government has listened. Jeanne Arnold LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler OFFICE PROF SNARF SIGN UP FOR OFFICE APPOINTMENT T-4 "WELL, I SEE YOU DIDN'T GET HIM TO RAISE YERGRADE." The Boy Scouts will do almost anything to prove their love of God and their country. One troop is now searching the mud in the harbor at Portsmouth, England, for 400 cannon balls. They will be used to make a Bermuda fort look realistic. Short Ones The president of a carpet sweeping company has reported that some women don't approve of the push-button age of housekeeping. They find creative satisfaction in using non-push button methods. Personally, I get the greatest satisfaction out of getting the work done as quickly as possible so I can have time to party. Two men are in jail for burglary because of a sign they painted which read: "King and Morris, burglaries incorporated. All kinds of work considered; breaking and entering a specialty." It does not always pay to advertise. Thirty members of the Flying Saucer Study Society in Tokyo scanned the sky for six hours in sub-freezing temperatures without seeing a single flying saucer. Their patience may soon be rewarded. If Earthlings can send rockets into space why could not the Martians? It Looks This Way... By Donna Nelson Aren't you all glad that you kept up from day to day on your readings and assignments. Now you won't have to exert yourselves and cram for final week. You can just look over your notes for awhile and go to bed early, confident that you will age them all. It doesn't take push to get ahead these days. It takes pull. Statements that prevent meetings from going faster: 1. I'm not questioning. I'm just asking. 2. On page 43, chapter 2, paragraph 7, article 8 of the constitution it states that we cannot do this without the unanimous vote of the whole organization and so I would suggest we start all over from scratch and ... 3. I ask that I'm not for it. It's just that I'm against it because . . . 4. Wait a minute, please. I got all that down except... well, could you repeat everything from the fourth line on. Overheard in the powder room: "These nylons I have on ought to be in a race the way they're running tonight." Many coeds over the campus came back from Christmas vacation wearing new fraternity pins and diamond rings, but the majority of the senior girls simply came back. It seems pretty stupid to us that one western TV program should do an imitation of another. After all, they're always exactly alike anyhow. A fan of children's literature reports that all of the latest fairy tales will begin: "Once upon a time when there were only nine planets." He said he wasn't sure yet, so she suggested they get pinned while he was trying to make up his mind. It seems American scientists don't want to send a rocket to the moon. They are afraid the first thing they will find is a TNE sign. Said the sophomore party girl: "I shall consider myself a failure if I ever become a senior." As the professor who keeps up with student jive talk quipped; "Well, that's the way the cookie bounces." the book world Alen Lentz By Alexandra Mason, Watson Library THE STOIC PHILOSOPHY OF SENECA, trans. by Moses Hadas. Doubleday Anchor Originals, 1958, 95 cents. On the first of these Anchor Originals Doubleday is to be congratulated. Seneca is a writer much too little read today, despite his remarkable influence as philosopher and dramatist upon Christian thought and morality, and such diverse matters as French Revolutionary politics and Elizabethan drama. THE SCOPE AND NATURE OF UNIVERSITY EDUCATION, by John Henry Cardinal Newman. A Dutton Everyman Paperback, 1958, $1.25. THE CLASSIC THEATRE, ed by Eric Bentley: Vol. 1, Six Italian Plays. Doubleday Anchor Originals, 1958. $125. This compact little book presents him in his most congenial form, as a quiet, thoughtful essayist and correspondent. By virtue of Prof. Hadas' translation and helpful introduction, many readers should find these five essays and eighteen letters an intriguing sample of Seneca's thought and Roman Stoicism which he tried so unsuccessfully to instill into his infamous pupil, the emperor Nero. The Second Anchor Original is of less certain value. "Six Italian Plays" seems to be the first volume of a series to be called "The Classic Theatre." No statement of the extent or purpose of the series is made in the book, and the contents and method of presentation give no clue. Five of the six plays of the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries included in volume one are English versions (the word 'translation' is not used) of comedies by Machiavelli, Angelo Beolco, Carlo Goldoni (two plays) and Carlo Gozzi. The sixth is a remarkable expansion by Leon Katz of a brief, anonymous, Harlequin 'scenario' entitled The Three Cuckolds. (A translation of the 'scenario' is printed in Appendix A.) The notes are meager, uninformative and even misleading. What might have been usful literary documents remain incompletely conceived acting versions. Cardinal Newman's deservedly famous reconciliation of religious duty and academic integrity, with its remarkable plea for intellectual freedom, was first published in 1852, shortly before Newman became rector of the Catholic University of Dublin. In 1859 Newman issued a revised edition which later was printed as an 'Everyman.' The present edition adds an index to the original Everyman text. Dailu Hansan University of Kansas Student Newspaper University of Kansas Student Newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trivieway 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extensions 2706, 7100 Extension 376, 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 International. Mail 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 as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. News Department Malcolm Applegate, Managing Editor Business Department Bill Irvine, Business Manager Editorial Department Al Jones, Editorial Editor Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Around the Campus Murphy,2 Others Zeller to Tell In TV Film Sunday Of Antarctic Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education, and Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, will appear in a special film, "The New Battleground," on television. The program will be from noon to 12:30 p.m. Sunday on WDAF (Channel 4), Kansas City. The program was filmed in the Hoch Auditorium television studios by the cinematography class. Dr Bruce A. Linton, chairman of the radio-TV curriculum, wrote and directed the production. Chancellor Murphy, who made a study tour last summer of Russian colleges and universities and his colleagues will emphasize the current Russian total dedication to education as the key to progress and will analyze the dangers in American attempts to copy Russian methodology. Phi Delta Kappa To Hear Replogle Wayne Replogle, assistant football coach, will speak at a dinner meeting of Kappa chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, professional education fraternity, at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Curry Room. Mr. Replogle will show cooired slides of Yellowstone National Park, and tell of his experiences as a senior park naturalist there for the last 29 summers. $150 Awarded Three Engineering Students The General Electric Company has awarded $150 to three architecture students for their outstanding designs of kitchens. First prize of $75 was awarded to Herald Holding, Lawrence junior; second prize of $50 to Richard D. Marquette, Lawrence senior, and third prize of $25 to Ronald B. Clark, Kansas City, Mo., senior. In addition the General Electric Company presented a check to the KU Endowment Association for $150 for use in the architecture department. About 35 students entered designs in the two-week competition. The drawings are on display in Room 311, Marvin Hall. Traffic Statistics | | To date this year | Same time last year | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Accident' total | 36 | 32 | | Fatalities | 0 | 0 | | Accidents with personal injuries | 1 | 2 | | Parking violations: | | | | Campus | 4596 | 6992 | | City | 600 | 451 | | Moving violations | 87 | 6 | McNown to NSF Meeting Dean John S. McNown, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will be in Washington, D.C., Saturday for a meeting of the advisory panel of the engineering sciences program of the National Science Foundation. An ultraviolet-sensitive tube has been developed which will sense the presence of smoke, fire or combustible vapor and relay the information to an alarm system. Suntan Polished Cotton Suntan Polished Cotton PIPERS See them today at the town shop and the university shop Dr. E. J. Zeller, associate professor of geology, will speak on his recent trip to Antarctica at an open meeting of the KU Geology Club at 7 o'clock tonight in 426 Lindley. He will show more than 100 color slides. Prof. Zeller and William Pearn, Sinclair graduate student, were two KU adventurers who spent a month on the frozen land while on a geology field trip. The two usually stayed at American bases between their ventures inland. Their Antarctic travelling was done by plane. Prof. Zeller and Pearn went to Antarctica Nov. 6 in search of rock specimens which might be clues to the age of the continent. Vosper to Speak Jan. 22 Robert Vosper, director of libraries, will speak at 3 p.m. Jan. 22 at the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. His topic will be "Collecting Rare Books and Manuscripts." Waiters Serve Food, Play Psychoanalyst, Get Pinned A sorority-house wafter plays many roles, including those of big brother, marriage counselor, psychoanalyst, errand boy and Santa Claus of the house Christmas party. This is the job as described by Michael A. (Tony) Morrow, Kansas City, Mo., junior. He works in the Delta Delta Delta sorority house. "Actually, most of the waiters in organized houses on the hill set up tables, serve meals, clear the dishes and dry them," he said. "But along with the work they make a lot of good friends." As almost any waiter will tell you, the entertaining side of the work usually outweighs the labor. Several agreed that the most interesting part of the job is listening "It's one of the best jobs available for a boy who needs money, especially a fraternity man, because he can still live in the house and participate in its activities," he said. "The standard pay is $5 per week and meals." to the conservations in the dining room during a meal. "We hear the choice comments on all subjects," Morrow said. "Most of them aren't printable, but they sure give us a laugh in the kitchen." Some women's houses have provisions about dating waiters. One house will not allow the women to date the waiters and another will not let any man who is pinned to a member work in the kitchen. If this happens, the man automatically loses his job. Social advantages in women's houses seem to go along with the waiters' positions. The waiters have a tendency to find the girl of their choice in the house in which they work. One said he has dated 26 women in a house in the two years he has worked there. At the end of school last year all four waiters in one sorority house were pinned to women in the house. Waiters don't take all the glory in the house kitchens. Forbids the most indispensable of the staff is the dishwasher. Besides producing gleaning glassware, he usually helps in setting tables and dishing up food on plates. "We have only one real complaint in this job," said Dan Boswell, Kansas City senior. "It wouldn't be bad if there were no peanut butter." William Faulkner To Virginia University CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — (UPI) — William Faulkner, winner of the Nobel and Pulitzer prizes for his novels and short stories, has accepted a position as consultant in contemporary literature at the University of Virginia. University Librarian John Cook Wylie said the writer and his family will make their permanent home here and that Faulkner has been provided with a study where he can "work, smoke his pipe or just sit." THI THINKLISH N KLI SH PUT IN A GOOD WORD AND MAKE $25 We're paying $25 each for the hundreds of Thinklish words judged best! Thinklish is easy: it's new words from two words—like those on this page. English: INSECT-COUNTER Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, New York. Enclose your name, address, college or university, and class. Thinklish : PESTIMATOR 1 JACK BONANNO, U. OF SAN FRANCISCO English: FAKE FROG Thinklish: SHAMPHIBIAN English: VALISE FOR A TRUMPET PEGGY ARROWSMITH, U. OF S. CAROLINA Thinklish: TOOTCASE JOYCE BASCH, PENN. STATE English: MAN WHO STEALS FROM THE RICH AND GIVES TO THE POOR LUCKY STRIKE English: DIVORCE PROCEEDINGS LUCKY STRIKE LUCKY STRIKE JES TOASTED CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE TOASTED CIGARETTES Thinklish translation: To smuggle loot, this fellow dons his plunderwear. For street fighting, he wears a rumblesuit. He totes his burglar tools in thuggage. The only honest thing about him is the Luckies in his pocket. (Like law-abiding folk, he enjoys the honest taste of fine tobacco!) In the old days, he'd be called a robbin' hood. Today, this churlish but altruistic chap is a (good + hoodlum) goodlum! $ \textcircled{c} $ A. T. Cq. Get the genuine article Thinklish : SPLITIGATION RAPH DANNHEISER, U. OF MISSOURI English : REFORM SCHOOL CLASS DETACHED FROM THE CITY BAND Thinklish; BRATTALION PHYLLIS DOBBINS, U. OF WASHINGTON Get the honest taste of a LUCKY STRIKE Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1950 THE NATIONAL DEFENSE STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM PURPOSE "To stimulate and assist in the establishment at institutions of higher education of funds for low-interest loans to students in need thereof to pursue their courses of study in such institutions." AMOUNT AVAILABLE Of the $6,000,000 appropriated by Congress to date, $97,508 is available to Kansas colleges and universities. The initial allotment to the University of Kansas is not expected to exceed $35,000—$40,000. However, additional appropriations are anticipated at subsequent dates. The University has applied for $100,000 for the spring semester, $10,000 for 1959 summer school, and $250,000 for 1959-60. The amounts which may be received through the application are not known. ELIGIBILITY Full-time students, married or single, graduate or undergraduate, in good standing are eligible for loans from the Program. PREFERENCE Preference is to be given to students with "a superior academic background who express a desire to teach in elementary and secondary schools," and to students whose academic background indicates a superior capacity or preparation in science, mathematics, engineering, or a foreign language." "Superior students" are defined as those in the upper $25\%$ of their high school graduating classes, or those who have a minimum grade point average of 2.0 in University work. While such students are to be given preference, all full-time students in good standing are eligible to borrow. MAXIMUM LOAN The maximum loan to one borrower is $1,000 in one academic year, or $5,000 in total. In practice, loans are expected to be substantially less than the maxima permitted by the law. Existing obligations to other loan funds at the University cannot be transferred to the Program. Loans will be granted only for normal and current educational expenses. TERMS Loans will be without interest until one year after graduation after which time the rate will be three per cent per annum on unpaid balances. Repayment of principal is to be 10 per cent per year, beginning one year after completion of training and military service. Earlier repayment is permissible and encouraged. Co-signers will be required of all borrowers under 21 years of age. BASIS OF LOANS All loans will be based on financial need. All resources available to borrowers will be taken into account by the Loan Committee, which will review and approve applications, to determine the amounts for which applicants are eligible. APPLICATIONS Application forms may be obtained at the Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall. Normally, applications will be processed as far in advance of the beginning of a new semester as is possible, or, if made during a semester, within two weeks after filing. Only those application forms on which all requested information is given will be considered by the Committee. CANCELLATION PROVISIONS The loan, and the interest thereon, of any borrower who serves as a full-time teacher in a public elementary or secondary school will be cancelled to a maximum of 50 per cent, at the rate of 10 per cent of the amount of the loan plus interest, for each academic year of service. LOYALTY OATH AND AFFIDAVIT Each borrower must sign an affidavit that he does not believe in, and is not a member of an organization that believes in or teaches the overthrow of the United States Government by force or violence; and subscribe to an oath of allegiance to the United States of America. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, INQUIRE OF THE OFFICE OF AIDS AND AWARDS, 222 STRONG HALL (This Advertisement Is Sponsored by the Kansas University Endowment Association as a Service to KU Students) Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1970 University Daily Kansan Page 5 A LOVE FOR BASKETBALL BASKET FOR BUTCH — Three-year-old John (Butch) Eskridge, son of assistant basketball coach Jack Eskridge, finds a little help from 6-foot 8-inch Wayne Hightower makes scoring easy. Hightower is a member of the Jayhawker freshman team. The freshmen play Kansas City, Kan., Junior College here Feb.4. Hawks,KS on Top Of Big Eight Race An early look at the Big Eight conference race shows the unpredictable KU Jayhawks riding the crest of the league along with the pre-season favorites, Kansas State. The Jayhawkers' televised meet with Oklahoma Saturday night will be their first game with a team in the top half of the conference standings. KU has knocked off Oklahoma State, Missouri and Iowa State in the past two weeks after finishing December with a disappointing 3-7 record. All-powerful Kansas State goes again luckless Missouri at Columbia with the Cats looking for their 13th victory of the year. Big Eight conference basketball teams continue their scramble for positions in the standings Saturday with two other games on tap. Iowa State plays Nebraska at Lincoln where the Huskers are undefeated this year. Oklahoma State and Colorado are idle. Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado are within striking distance with 2-1 records. The Sooner and Buff losses both came by lopsided Baker Slips by C. of E. EMFORIA, Kah. (UPI) Baked led at the half by four points had to go into overtime last night to defeat College of Emporia. 68-66 Jim Kean hit a 30-foot field goal to give Baker the win. Baker tied the score at 61-all with one second of regulation time left when Terry Herman scored a tip-in. The halftime score was 37-33. Rich Freeman led Emporia scoring with 20 points and Herman got 19 for Emporia. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 scores to the Wildcats. Nebraska lost to the Buffers by six points at Boulder in the conference opener The Oklahoma game should give some indication of how far the Jayhawkers have come since the New Year. KU will be shooting for the 500 per cent mark in this one. The Jayhawkers have improved steadily of late and have been getting some outstanding performances from Bill Bridges and Al Donaghue. Bridges has led the team in rebounding in all recent games. Donaghue filled in for Ron Loneski against Iowa State and came through with 19 points to lead all scorers. K-State is third-ranked nationally. The Wildcats take a long winning streak against the Tigers who have now dropped eight straight. The Cats' latest triumph was a 90-45 pounding of Oklahoma. Missouri has yet to win from a conference team. Iowa State has suffered two disappointing losses after pushing K-State to the limit in the conference opener last week. The Cornhuskers, paced by a pair of Indiana sharp shooters, Herschell Turner and Al Maxey, are on the upgrade and now post an 8-5 seasonal mark. Trackmen Drill for OU The KU track team, although anchored by two national champions and 14 returning lettermen, may have its hands full when it takes on Oklahoma University in the opening meet of the indoor track season Feb. 2. The dual meet at Allen Field Hotte will mark a number of firsts in KU track history. OTTAWA, Kan. — (UPI) — Oitawa overcame a two-point half-time setback last night to defeat Friends, 78-67 in a Kansas Conference game. The meet will be the first afternoon indoor match ever run at KU. Starting time for the first running event is 4 o'clock. The match will also mark the running of two new events. They are the 600 and 1,000 yard runs. Ernie Shelby and Charlie Tidwell are the national champions on the KU team. Shelby, the team captain, competes in the broad jump and sprints. Tidwell, a sprinter and hurdler, set a national record in the 60-yard dash last year with a time of six seconds flat. Vince Driski scored 22 points for Ottawa and Virgil Puetz got 15 for Friends. All-American Norm Stewart is starting his second season as freshman basketball coach at MU. Ottawa Defeats Friends In addition the Jayhawkers have three Big Eight indoor champions. They are high jumper Bob Cannon, miller Tom Skutka and half-miller Bob Tague. "We will need all the support we PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & VL. Mufflers and Talipegs Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c In the distances running for Kansas will be Berry Crawford, Brian Travis, Skutka, Bill Mills and Dan Ralston. "OU is loaded. It has the largest squad in the Big Eight, with more boys returning than any other school," he added. can get," Bill Easton, track coach, said. "At any rate, the meet will be one of the closest and most interesting of the season. It could be decided by the outcome of the mile relay. In that race, five points is awarded to the winning team and none to the losing team," said Coach Easton. Bob Covey, Bob Lida, verne Gauby, Willie Jones, Paul Rearick and Art Henry will represent KU in the 440 and 600-vard runs. Paul Williams will team with Shelby and Tidwell in the sprints. Bill Tillman, Bob Okerstrom and Darwin Ashbaugh will be in the hurdles. Mike Lindsley, one of the greatest weight men ever to come from England, is also on the OU squad. Leading the Sooners in the meet will be three men from foreign countries, Gail Hodgson and Ernst Kleynhans, both from South Africa, will compete in the distance events. KU also has its share of outstanding stars. In addition, OU has three good runners from this country. They are sprinters Dee Givens and John Pellow, and half-miler Bob Ringo. Pellow is the OU back who scored two long touchdowns against Kansas in the fourth quarter of the OU-KU football game. In the broad jump Shelby will get help from Williams and Tom J. Kelly, Jack Stevens is the lone pole valuet. "Our team looks good, but we have had some minor injuries that have hurt us. The squad's manpower is thin and we need every man." Easton said. Bill Dryer and Jerry Foos will fill the hole left by the graduating Al Oerter in the shot put. Dick Keith will add strength in the high jump, teaming with Cannon. "There should be several close duals in the meet." Faston said. Kansan Is No.1 Choice for Army Coaching Post By United Press International Dale Hall, a native of Parsons, and a member of the famed Davis and Blanchard Backfield, is the leading candidate to succeed Earl Blaik as Army's head football coach. Blaik, one of the most successful football tutors of the current generation, surprised plebes and generals alike last night by retiring as the cadets' head coach and director of athletics at the military academy. Blaik has repeatedly endorsed Hall as his logical successor when he turned in his resignation. After Hall's playing days at West Point on Blaik's greatest squad—the 1944 national champions—the Kansas native served as an assistant coach at Purdue, New Hampshire and Florida before returning to the Point as a choice in 1956. He will surrender both positions Feb. 15—on his 62nd birthday—to accept "one of several opportunities either in television or business." "If they are looking for a successor on the present staff, Hall is the man," one Army spokesman admitted. "However, Vince Lombardi also must be considered a strong candidate." Lombardi, a guard on Fordham's celebrated "Seven Blocks of Granite" during his undergraduate days, helped Blaik install the T-formation at West Point after World War II. Although Blaik's retirement shook the Army brass, it was almost common knowledge that he had been dissatisfied with certain policies at the Point, especially the long-standing ban against participation in Bowl games. Navy has engaged in two postseason contests in recent years and even the fledgling Air Force Academy sent a team to the Cotton Bowl New Year's Day. However, Army officials have steadfastly refused to accept bowl bids—and this undoubtedly irked Blaik and may have prompted his resignation. PIPERS Antelope Corduroy See them today at the town shop and the university shop Phi Kappa Psi and Beta Theta Pi won Fraternity A intramural basketball games yesterday. Phi Psis,Betas Win Bob McMichael Hits 19 Phi Kappa Psi defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon, 57-44, with Bob Mc-Michael leading the way with 19 points. Stan Kirshman added 11 points to the Phi Psi cause. Jim Westhoff scored 14 points for Sigma Phi Epsilon. Beta Theta Pi defeated Kappa Sigma, 51-44. Jack Spotts scored 12 points for the Beta's, but Fred Hageman earned game high with 15 points for Kappa Sirma. Harlan Graban led the Physics to a 38-33 victory over the Raiders with 16 points in the only Independent A game played. Other results; Independent B — Phi Beta Pi 27 Battenfield 16; Hicks 48, Stephenson 13; Newman 32, Empire 25; Varsity 38, Carruth 18; Nu Sigma Nu 35, Rochdale 18; Oedatures 33, Jolliffe 27; GDI 47, Air Force 22; Burros 51, Foster 10. Independent C — Navy 43, McCook 23. Fraternity B — Phi Delta Theta 26. Phi Kappa Psi 22. Tomorrow's Schedule Fraternity A — Sigma Nu vs. Chavez Ravine Oked For Dodger Stadium LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrated their biggest victory since coming to Los Angeles today as the California Supreme Court upheld their contract with the city for construction of a baseball stadium in Chavez Ravine. While attorney Phil Silver already has announced his plan to appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, Walter O'Malley, Dodger owner, said he hopes to break ground on the stadium within 30 days and have it ready for the opening of the 1960 season. 1-Day O'Malley said that 32,000 seats will be ready next Spring, although permanent capacity will be 52,000. 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) 721 Mass. Save at . . . HIXON'S VI 3-0330 Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4:15; Phi Kappa vs. Delta Chi, 5:15. Independent A — Jolliffe vs. Foster, 6:15; Stephenson vs. Pearson, 7:15. Fraternity C — Sigma Alpha Epsilon II vs. Beta Theta Pi I, 4:15; Phi Delta Theta IV vs. Phi Kappa Psi I, 4:15; Alpha Tau Omega IV vs. Sigma Chi IV, 5:00; Sigma Alpha Epsilon I vs. Beta Theta Pi III, 5:00; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Phi Delta Theta III, 5:45; Alpha Tau Omega III vs. Sigma Chi III, 5:45; Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Delta Tau Delta, 6:30; Delta Upsilon I vs. Alpha Tau Omega II, 6:30; Phi Gamma Delta VI vs. Sigma Nu, 7:15; Alpha Epsilon Pi vs. Sigma Chi I, 7:15. E-State Stops Washburn TOPEKA, Kan. — (UPI) — Emporia State gained its first Central Intercollegiate conference victory night, stopping Washburn 74-68. Emporia led at the half, 37-31. Jim Fraley led Emporia scoring with 22 points and Larry Elliott and Gaylen Mote got 17 each for washburn. Both schools now have 1-1 conference records. Fraternity Jewelry, Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER AAA THE DEPT. 12 Copperfield HOTELS COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 14. 1958 U.S. Student Loan Deadline Jan.21 The deadline for filing applications for second semester loans under the National Defense Student Loan program is next Wednesday. Spencer A. Martin, director of aids and awards, said about 100 inquiries concerning the program have been made so far. Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Assn. and KU's representative to the loan program, said today it is hoped recipients of the loans can be notified about Feb. 1. "Until that time the University will not be certain of its initial allotment under the program," he said. The amount is not expected to exceed $35,000. Students wishing to file applications for the loans should pick up application blanks at the office of aids and awards, 222 Strong. All full-time students, either married or single, with a minimum grade point average of 2 in University work are eligible for the loans. The main consideration in granting loans will be financial need. Students may borrow up to $1,000 for one academic year or a total of $5,000 while in the University. The loans are interest free until one year after graduation. After that time the interest rate will be three per cent. Loans are repayable in annual payments over a period of 10 years. Co-signers are required only of borrowers under 21 years of age. The loan and the interest on the note will be cancelled to a maximum of 50 per cent for borrowers who serve as full-time teachers in public elementary or secondary schools. Borrowers must also sign a loyalty oath to the United States government. Mr. Youngberg said. The University has filed applications for $100,000 for the spring semester, $10,000 for 1959 summer school and $250,000 for 1959-69. Of the $5 million appropriated by Congress to Kansas colleges and Universities, only $97,508 has been allocated, Mr. Youngberg said. Congress has authorized $47,500,00 for the program for the fiscal year ending June 30 and larger sums for the three following years. The Summerfield Foundation has provided the $3,500 needed to match the federal grant for KU. Take 'Don't Walk,' but Walk BATON ROUGE, La. — (UPI) — Desk sergeant M. K. Gunby tried to help a telephone caller who asked directions to the state capitol building. When asked where he was calling from, the voice on the telephone replied: "On the corner of 'Walk' and 'Don't Walk.'" Only nine per cent of the land in the world is cultivated. Official Bulletin Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 11 a.m., Sat., 314 Fraser. Books used for the prepared part of the examination must be turned in to 306 Fraser by noon Wednesday at the latest. No permission will be accepted after this date. Only candidates approved by the Graduate School are eligible to take the examination. 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 return to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Faculty Forum, "The Life of Jesus—Myth or History?" Rev. Ernest Klein. Noon in the English Room, Kansas Union in home reservations to the Y- Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union, Attendance required... Humanities Forum, 7 p.m., not 7:30 m. as originally scheduled. Oread Room Kim, 10 a.m. TOMORROW Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m., St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. and Holy Communion 7 a.m., with breakfast following, Canterbury House, KU Faculty Club, Dinner, Bridge, 6:30 p.m., dinner; 7:30 p.m., bridge, 8:00 p.m., Mrs. O Stoland, 3-3323; Miss Ruth Stoland, VI 3-3323 and Dean & Mrs. Thomas Gorton, VI 3-5433 Christian Science Campus Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danfort Chanel. Sigma Nl. 7:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Dr. Ray C Moore, Summersfield Professor of geology, "The Earth's Crust." initiation of new members. FRIDAY Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. at St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky and Holy Communion, 7 a.m. with breakfast following, Canterbury House. After-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30-9:00 Mission St. Bible study, discussion, refreshments. Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey Hall. If you wish to have an interview, please come in and arrange for an appointment Today: Mr. Mose Blythe (Elem.) of Topeka; Mr. Charles Romine, of Jefferson County, Colorado. HELD OVER! BEAUTY BRIGITTE SPICY FEATURES BATTLE VS. SOPHIA Brigitte Bardot France's cute lit tle bundle of sex, in her raciest unvelling! Mademoiselle Striptease Voluptuous SOPHIA LOREN Italy's bombshell of female charm! Scandal Sorrento in Color VITTORIO DE SICA THRU SATURDAY! RECOMMENDED FOR ADULTS ONLY! VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Teacher Interviews Will Begin Tomorrow Interviews with superintendents and personnel directors of schools in Kansas and out of state will begin tomorrow for persons seeking positions in the teaching profession. The interviews, which will continue through March, will be handled by the Teacher Appointment Bureau in 117 Bailey. Persons interested in obtaining interviews must register with the bureau so credentials can be made. The scheduled interviews will be listed in the Dally Kansan Official Bulletin. C. Fred Colvin, assistant superintendent of Wichita public schools, will be on the campus tomorrow for interviews. Friday, representatives of Topeka and Jefferson County, Colo., schools will interview. A recent survey showed that only 53 per cent of all the American pupils who ranked in the upper fifth of their high school classes went on to college. IT'S TRUE "Tonka" is the Indian name for the horse "Comanche" which was the only survivor of Custer's Last Stand! This is the true story of that horse and that battle! By the way, "Comanche" is on display in the Kansas University Natural History Museum. A STORY OF COURAGE AND ADVENTURE... AND THAT VIOLENT DAY ...WHEN A BOY BECAME A WARRIOR! A HORSE BECAME A HERO! AND CUSTER BECAME A LEGEND! A STORY OF COURAGE AND ADVENTURE... AND THAT VIOLENT DAY ...WHEN A BOY BECAME A WARRIOR! A HORSE BECAME A HERO! AND CUSTER BECAME A LEGEND! WALT DISNEY'S TONKA STARRING SAL MINEO IN A DIFFERENT KIND OF ROLE! JEROME PHILIP RAFAEL JOY BRITT H.M. COURTLAND CAREY CAMPOS with PAGE LOMOND WYNANT Directed by LEWIS R. FOSTER • Screenplay by LEWIS R. FOSTER & LILLIE HAYWARD Based on the book "COMANCHE" by DAVID APPEL • Produced by JAMES PRATT TECHNICOLOR® WALT DISNEY'S TONKA NOW! thru Saturday! ADULTS 75c KIDS 35c GRANADA GRANADA THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788 WEEK DAY SHOWS 7:00 9:00 SHOWS CONTINUOUS SATURDAY FROM 1:30 Wednesday, Jan. 14. 1959 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 on additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall. If a n.p.m. on the day before publication is denied. LOST REWARD FOR THE RETURN of History of Science notebook left Tuesday in Science Library stocks, Mary Ann Waddehdi, VI 3-8255. 1-15 SILVER AND NAVY BLUE ball point pen, between Fraser and Hawk's Nest. Also small German lighter, name Fleibbler on bottom. Reward, call 1-7946. POST VERSALOG slide rule, reward offered, call VI 3-7025. 1-15 BROWN rimmed glasses in brown pocket case, lost on campus sometime Saturday. Call Karlos Sieg. Ph VI 2-0471. 1-15 FOUND CAMERA TRIPOD owner may claim it for payment of this ad Phone 91-3466 WANTED WANTED one boy to share lovely apartment two blocks from KU, steam heat, quiet. $27.50 per month, bills paid. Call VI 3-0103 after p. 2-3. HELP WANTED PART TIME TYPIST. Hours can be tamed, call VI 3-7114 between 10 and 1-14 FOR RENT ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama VI 3-0992. tf GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-3019. tf SINGLE ROOM, private entrance and end semester. 1328 KY, VI 3-4823) 1-15 VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off parking, kitchen furnished, see at 1001 Temple Blvd. ROOM AND BOARD for spring semester. $50 per month. VI 3-4385. 1-14 1 FURNISHED and 1 unfurnished apart- ment and bath, and 3 room, 3-4271, 1232 La DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, innermess spring mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 Ohio, VI 3-6709. 1-16 ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available at Ben Henry Co-op, 4240 Ohio V, 2-4 0681 FOUR ROOM DUPLEX. unfurnished, close to campus, available Feb. 1, call VI 2-0322 or see after 5 p.m. at 1833 2-5 HALF BLOCK from campus, in very nice house, large double rooms and single reasonable rates. 125. Orcad. to be to be 2 DOUBLE ROOMS with single beds. 12 meals per week, for boys. Beginning second semester. If interested call VI 3-9562. 1-15 LARGE, CLEAN, UNFURNISED apart- ment, clean, conditions, avail- ance, VI 3-3756, 1-16 ROOM FOR BOYS — 12 block from Union, linens furnished, cooking privileges if desired, T.V., showers, call VI 3-0418, 1222 Miss. I-15 2 SINGLE BEDROOMS with bath and separate entrance, for men students, in new air conditioned house west of campus, $35 per month. VI 3-8746. 1-16 3 ROOM DUPLEX, $75, 1940 Learnard: Furnished 3 room apartment, $50, 121 W. 14th; unfurnished duplex, 2 bedroom, $86; 122 Indiana; furnished 3 bedroom furnished 3 room furnished ment, $55; bills paid. Call T. A. Hemphil, VI, 3-3902. 1-14 NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment; living room, bedroom, kitchen, private available Feb. 1. Moody IV partments. 3 I-3375. Call VI 3-0978. I-16 STUDIO APARTMENT. $1/2 block from stadium, well furnished, for one or two upperclassmen. $35 per month, call VI 3-6969. 1-14 TRANSPORTATION DR. WM. H. BRAY AND DR. H. R. WILLIAMS ROOMS FOR MEN, triple or double, available now. One single available. March 1. Also one pair of men's skates. p. 146. Tenn. V-3-9400 at 1:16 p. 148. 2 ROOM BASEMENT apartment, share kitchen and bath, private entrance, telephone, utilities paid, water softener 1520 Derrison Till,柜 call V 3-8673, see time 1-18 Optometrists VI 3-1401 919 Mass. NICE LARGE duplex apartments 3 rooms, 2 bathrooms, furnished, $75 and $80 per room. Small infurnished cottage 3 rooms and bath, less paid, $60 per month, call: 2-1736 APPROVED ROOMS for girls, with kitchen privileges and bath. 1232 La.. VI 3-4271. FURNISHED APARTMENT, 1 block from campus, 2 bedrooms, sun room, living room, fireplace, bath and kitchen, 1st floor, call VI 3-7995, 1-16 1 LARGE DOUBLE, 2 single rooms for 1 man, 1005 Indiana, VI 3-4594, 2-2 1. ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. 355, utilities paid, clean, private entrance, garage available, 728 Ohio, VI-16328, 2-2 $ ROOM APARTMENT, private entrance bath. or men, availabie 2nd cente- rion, for boys only WAILABLE AFTER JAN 27, unfur- nished vi TI 3-8663 5 p.m. 2-2 NICE CLEAN COMFORTABLE room for boys near campus and bus line, lines furnished. Also garage for rent. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 2-2 WANT A BETTER ROOM in a nice residential area? Come see this extra nice panel room with twin beds, excellent desk, plenty of storage space, private entrance and bath. $25 for single or $45 for two, 921 W. 22nd St. 2-2 LARGE SINGLE room, to young man, linens furnished, no drinking or smoking allowed. First house south of campus. 1616 Indiana, after 7 p.m. 1-14 SMALL HOUSE furnished, builtins, good stove and electric refrigerator, two large closets, for married couples only. TWO ROOM furnished basement apartment, outside windows, private entrance and bath, utilities paid, married couple only. 520 Ohio. 2-3 TWO LARGE single rooms with nice interior. For more information, call 1508 Kentucky. Phi VI 3-7199 THREE ROOM furnished apartment, for two or three boys. 019 Indiana. Call VI 3-8316 during the day or in the evening. phone VI 3-6558. 2-3 FURNISHED BASEMENT apartment, two or three boys, utilities bald, private entrance, private bath. Phone VI 3-4237. APARTMENT and rooms 'or girls, improved for W. 3-427 2-3 FURNISHED BASEMENT apartments, utilities paid, $45, 3 big unfurnished rooms, first floor, utilities paid, $45, room $17.50, 1230 Oread, NV - 3-239 FOR SALE STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI-30124. If CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 87, like new, but too small for owner. It looks like a door during the day in the Karan昆新 News or call VI 9063 between 6-7 p.m. REMINGTON PORTABLE typewriter, good condition. come see at 109 East 19th St., Grover's Realty Co., VI 3-8363 1-15 1954 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, 4 door, radio, heat器, white side wall tires, top condition. call Jim Henley at VI 3-3724 at noon or after 5 p.m., 740 Lau 1-16 HAVE CAR — WILL SELL, 1956 Chevr- tolet, 2 door, black, clean, V-8, slick shift, overdrive, well-hept, John Neu- staedt, VI 3-1520. 1-15 TELEPHOTO LENS and case, made by Argus, used once, $40, which is approximately $15 off retail, call VI 2-0351 evenings. 1-16 '54 OLDs, SUPER 88, radio, heater, power brakes, power steering, very good cam, 14,000 actual miles, no reasonable offer refused, 1708 Miss. 3-0796 POST VERSALOG slide rule, almost new, call VI 3-6047. 1-15 CHEVROLET 1954, 2-10 Model, 4 door Sedan, power glide, radio, heat器, back-up lights, two tone, oil filter, tubeless tires, rear brakes, vinyl sell by January 20, H. C Brown Lay's National Bank, Ph VI 3-9996 after 6 p.m. or come to 1539 Mass. 1-16 DACSHUND PUPPIES only one male, one female left. Call VI 3-3827. 2-3 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice bearred. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. ant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI touchscreen. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS MASSE MAKING AND ALTERATIONS Ola Smil (1) 411 Mass. Phi. VI 3-5263 NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Penn. Open weekdays 8 a.m., to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete cages, stands, and accessories for all pumpkin patches. Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, groomer tools, sweaters, blankets. Everywhere in the field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. WANTED: Washings and ironings, reasonable rates. VI 2-2006. 1-15 WILL DTPYING in my home Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894 TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263 tt WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable rates. Washing or ironing or both. Formerly 829 Conn., now 421 Ohio. tt EXPERIENCIED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dance studio, Dance Studio, Mphil. phi 3-918-8878 ¢¢ SENIORS... DEADLINE DATE IS FEB. 21 Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the '59 Jayhawker GIVE YOUR PORTRAIT TO YOUR VALENTINE CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 5-5508. tf And for the Individualized Approach For Portrait Photography of Distinction Plan Now to TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. ff. VI 3-1137 — 1908 Alabama Street THESES AND TERM PAPERS typep THESES AND TERM PAPERS, MursLungen, 16f W. 20th St., VT 3-7184 CONSTANCE SCHEERER STUDIO EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs.H.J.Coseter, phone VI 3-8679. tf WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service, Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. Call RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 3-1971, Singe Sewing Center, 927 Mass. TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8600. tf FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. tf TYPIST; Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequst, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. ff EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses. etc. in my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. ff LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211 Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabin, etc. massage professionals, professional Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. commercial rates Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428 TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9554. Mrs. Earl Wright. 1-14 TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf INTERESTED IN LOW COST flying time? Due to graduation we have several openings, for information call VI 3-8865. 1-16 TYPING: Former medical secretary will serve as senior staff, standard rank, Mrs. O'Dell, VI 3-3530 813 Mass. Roblee and Pedwin Shoes for Men VI3-2091 M.Coy's SHOES FASHION SHOE Styles Shown 8.90 others from 7.90 to 10.90 SALE! 10 Leather or Bucks- Many Styles Still Available— Most Sizes Too! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1959 UN Comes to Life in Sound Rooms PETE PLEASANT AN OLD HAND-Helen Adler, Fredonia senior, dons earphones in the language sound rooms. Miss Adler has taken 23 hours of German and French. She plans to take still more next semester, as well as audit Latin. She recalled, however, that she has not always been proficient in the use of the equipment. "I just watched the fellow next to me and did as he was doing the first time I used the equipment," she confided. "I had a little trouble, though. The reels did not turn the right way. I just pounded on the recorder a little and fixed it," she said. She paused, laughed, and continued: "You know, I'm not sure the reels were supposed to go that way." There is a suggestion box at the entrance of the Blake Hall Annex foreign language sound room. A sign above the box reads: "Suggestions—The Sound Lab is here for your convenience. Please offer any suggestions, constructive criticism, etc., you may have on schedule operation, or otherwise." Atmosphere Is Friendly This is representative of the friendly, courteous policies of Mary L. Morris, sound room operator, and Howard C. Adams Jr., coordinator. Such attitudes make the use of the language sound rooms enjoyable for the students. The sound rooms, dedicated November 23. 1957, were the University's answer to Russia's lead in foreign language instruction. Since then, enrollment in language courses has risen sharply. Figures released by the department of Germanic languages show that 84 students are taking Russian as compared with 35 in the fall of 1987. The enrollment for all German courses is 506. There were 434 enrolled last fall. 530 Take Spanish The department of Romance languages continues to have the heaviest enrollment of all foreign languages. Enrollment in all French courses is up 40 over last fall. Enrollment in Spanish totals 530. There are 27 students of Italian and 5 of Portuguese. There are 75 taking languages in the department of Latin and Greek. Seven students are enrolled in Swedish. The sound rooms, a labyrinth of booths, doors and glass-enclosed closets, are filled with electronic controls and recorders. There are 75 tape recorders, 20 control-room recorders, 15 wire recorders, and a large recorder used only for professional recordings by departments and instructors. From the control booth the sound rooms coordinator or a faculty member can operate 20 master recorders to play 20 separate tapes, and relay the sound to any of the 97 individual student recorders. The student latens to the voice on the tape and repeats the phrases and sentences on his own recorder. He then plays back the tape and hears the expert's voice alternating with his own. The former sound room was located in Fraser Hall, and had accommodations for 30 students, with 12 channels for record turntables, wire recorders, a voice circuit and a short wave radio. Rooms are National The illusion of a nation is given by each room. There is a French room, a Spanish room—and a room which doubles as a German and a Russian room. The senses are stimulated to accept the illusion. Colorful pictures and travel posters decorate the walls. There are signs—and there are more signs. Come and read the signs: Peru via Panagra. Spain—land of dancing girls, castles, and bull fighting. Germany — Deutschland — Allemagne—land of Gothic steeples and the Volkswagen. Wiesbaden — festive Spa and convention city. Charts Aid Students A chart shows Spanish vowel chanting patterns. Discover a nation, the signs command. The door to the German and Russian room is locked. The East Germans and Russians have lowered the Iron Curtain. There is ingress through another door—a West Germany. The control room—the United Nations—is filled with the controls which coordinate language activities of the students who use the sound rooms. P A WOMAN ALONE — Mary L. Morris, assistant instructor of Romance languages and a sound room operator, is the only woman who works in the prism-shaped, glassed-in control room. "I play the tape, the student listens and responds," she said. "He then plays the tapes back and hears both his own voice and that on the master tape. "Tapes break, machines fly, and if you punch the wrong button, you erase half a tape. Then, nerves fly," she said. "But I enjoy the work," she added. "Since students started preparing for examinations, our business has picked up considerably over here," she said. 1959 JAYHAWKER Winter Issue Out Now DISTRIBUTION ON HILL ONLY Hawk's Nest Information Booth Strong Rotunda Fraternity, Sorority and Organized House Group Pictures. Party Pictures, Sport Pictures All Seniors Who Purchased Books Through the Mail May Pick Up Their Receipts In the Jayhawk Office, 114 B, Union BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER NOW! Swedish Film Was Stopped by Censors By Robert C. Harwi The long hand of censorship reached out to the University campus and snatched a movie from the University Film Series program. The Swedish film, "Smiles of a Summer Night," was scheduled for showing here tomorrow night. But it was suddenly, and somewhat mysteriously, canceled yesterday, and replaced by "A Tale of Two Cities." Today The Daily Kansan learned that the Kansas Board of Review had ruled the Swedish film unfit for showing in Kansas. Mrs. Hazel Runyan, director of the board, said from her home in Kansas City, Kan., that the board :'did not see fit to turn loose" the film. Mrs. Runyan did say, however that the board may review the film again soon. "We will give the film more consideration later on," said Mrs. Run- yan. "We will call in broadminded citizens to help us decide. Clergymen and educators will be asked to review the picture. There is no bias in these matters." Yesterday The Kansan was told the film was removed because of "distribution problems." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University and chairman of the Film Series Committee, said yesterday that a change in distribution made the substitution of films necessary. "The film is not available now, nor will it be available in the future." he said. According to Kansas statutes, the board must review all films entering the state, and shall disapprove those which are "obscene, indecent, or immoral." However, the board may order a re-examination, and may grant a special showing permit for educational purposes. $40 Stolen From Six Freshmen A total of $40 was stolen from bill-folds at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house this week. The theft was reported by David Ontjes, Hutchinson senior, to Lawrence police at 12:40 p.m. Tuesday. Campus police received the complaint yesterday. Police said there was an earlier theft Jan. 5, when two freshmen lost $30. This week's haul of $40 was taken from the billfolds of six freshman pledges. Ontjes reported that the money was left in billfolds kept in dressers in the study rooms. Police said Ontjes has a suspect but refuses to identify him until consulting with the officers of the fraternity. Richard Wilcox, Kansas City, Mo. junior, reported two dollars taker from his room in Templin Hall sometime late Friday night or early Saturday morning. Residents of Templin have lost more than $200 in the last two semesters. Tax Problems Are Solved WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Rep Paul A. Fino (R-NY) announced that he would reintroduce a bill to set up a national lottery. Fino describes himself as the "No. 1 advocate of a national lottery in America today." He has introduced a national lottery bill for the last four years, during each of the years he has been in Congress. He said his new lottery bill would "provide the only answer to every taxpayer's dream for tax relief." "This painless form of taxation will bring into the coffers of our government over 10 billion dollars a year in added revenue which can be used for tax cuts and part payments towards our tremendous, ever-increasing national debt," he said. Car Comes Calling At Delta Gamma Someone came calling at the Delta Gamma sorority house yesterday—then evidently decided to walk home. A car was found on the sorority's front lawn and was reported to police at 1:18 this morning. The car belonged to John Burlingame, Independence sophomore, who had reported it stolen yesterday, not knowing it was in the company of the females over in West Hills. Weather Cold arctic air that brought up to two inches of snow to northwest Kansas spread across the state during the night, dropping temperatures 15 to 25 degrees lower today than yesterday. High today in the 20's. Low tonight, 5 to 10 above. Wilt Tells Kansan He Has No Regrets See page 5 of today's Daily Kansan for an exclusive interview with Wilt Chamberlain, Harlem Globetrotters' basketball star who was the mainstay of the KU team the last two years. Wilt told a Kansan reporter last night that he has no regrets about giving up his last year of eligibility at KU for a $65,000 salary with the Globetrotters. Accident Causes $100 Damages A two-car accident in back of the Kappa Sigma fraternity on High Drive yesterday afternoon resulted in $100 damages to the vehicles involved. The accident occurred as the Smith vehicle was approaching from a private drive. Sundbye told officers he was unable to stop because of loose sand and gravel on the street. A car driven by Aaron Eldridge Smith, El Dorado senior, was struck by a vehicle driven by Earl Sundbye, Gardner sophomore. Daily hansan Thursday, Jan. 15, 1959 56th Year, No. 76 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Worst in History 192 Students Flunk English Proficiency Out of 602 students who took the English Proficiency Examination on Dec. 6, 192 or 31.9 per cent - failed. This represents the worst showing in the history of the examination. The high number of failures, nearly one-third of the examinées, cannot be blamed on more rigid grading. There was no effort to make it more difficult than normal themes, said W. P. Albrecht, professor of English and department chairman, and David Dykstra, instructor of English and supervisor of the examination. Questions on the examination ranged from discussions of the Far East situation to campus parking. It was assumed that each student would have found some topics in the several available for discussion on which to write effectively. "We have data on all those who took the examination," said Prof. Albrecht. Prof. Albrecht and Mr. Dykstra said that students who failed can receive help in several ways for the next examination, which will be given March 21. The next worst percentage was in the spring of last year, when only 69 per cent passed. Passing the examination is a requirement for graduation in most of the schools of the University. A list of those passing appears on page 6. The list will be posted outside the Office of the Registrar tomorrow. "Each student filled out a questionnaire. Questions were asked on what English courses were taken before, what instructors gave them, and what grades were given for each course. We can use these data and the test papers themselves as aids in counseling." Prof. Albrecht and Mr. Dykstra emphasized that the Writing Clinic, which is run by the department of English and is located in 214 Strong Hall, is available to all those who failed the examination. The Clinic is open from 3 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. "Tutorial help in the Clinic will be given to those who want it," said Mr. Dykstura. "But if the student is really interested, there is much he can do on his own. Plenty of occasions can be found to practice writing. Long letters can be written. Practice essays can be attempted. Writing courses in the department may be taken." Prof. Albrecht said the purpose of the English Proficiency Examination is to help maintain and improve the student's writing. The student must prove that he can write clear, accurate, well-organized English. "The standards for grading these examinations are fairly absolute," said Prof. Albrecht. "The grammatical standards are relatively constant and easy to establish. The thought content standards are more difficult, but obviously the student must have something to say and be able to organize his ideas." Mr. Dykstra said he could not emphasize too much the fact that the examination is not merely an exercise in mechanical aptitudes. Mature thought is just as important, he said. "Generally speaking, there was no indication that the thought content was any worse than infractions of the grammatical rules." Mr. Dykstra said. "Frequently, if one was slovenly, the other was too. Some students have a lot of trouble passing this examination. And between attempts to pass it, many of them don't try to correct what they did poorly before." In June 1958 a total of 153 took the examination, and 26 per cent failed. Last spring, 320 took it, and 31 per cent failed. Last December, of 558 who took it, 20 per cent failed. Criminology Makes Prerequisite Switch Introductory sociology will be the only prerequisite for criminology in the second semester. In the past students taking the course were required a second course in sociology, said Marston M. McCluagge, professor of sociology and human relations. Factors producing crime and the methods of crime treatment and prevention will be included in the course. The three-hour course, taught by Prof. McCluggage, will meet at 2 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Plenty of Summer Jobs For Female Idlers By Martha Pearse Now that women have a solid standing in the business and professional world, many are looking for jobs. But, alas, most never know quite where to begin. The Associated Women Students House of Representatives has organized a file for female students desiring summer work. The only qualification for using this file is that the job-seeker must journey to the Dean of Women's office and ask to see it. Many of the jobs available for women are office jobs—clerical work, bookkeeping, secretarial jobs, etc. For those who like work of a more physically active nature, the file contains data on breaking eggs, manufacturing ice cream, exercising horses, playing the organ, teaching square dancing, working in summer stock, appearing on television, and many others. Two of the larger files give information on resort work and camp counseling. These seem to be in greatest demand. Not only are different types of work given, but there are opportunities to go to some far, exotic areas. Whatever kind of work the coed wants, she would find it advisable to look now. Many of the jobs are filled early in the spring. The file gives much information about specific jobs, rather than just the occupation's name. Salary, location, education and age requirements, and advantages and disadvantages of each job are given. At least 200 KU women have used the file to get summer jobs during the past year. Over 500 positions are included in the file. In case the coed is looking for mental rather than physical work, the Dean of Women's office also supplies information on American summer schools. Should a question arise as to what the female thumb twiddler can do between June and September, the summer school and job files can help relieve the twitch of ennui. After all, who can stand to sunbathe, party or sleep for three months? 14 MODERNISTIC—This is probably the best word to describe the new Theta Chi fraternity house. Shown in the picture is an outside staircase—one of the more modern features of the house. Chapter officials expect to move into the new structure between semesters. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 15, 1359 Can't Cram Culture This is a culture-minded campus. Students and faculty both enjoy the many cultural activities sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and the University Theatre. The majority of these musical and dramatic presentations are really worthwhile events. Either works of great renown and beauty are being offered, a performer or artist of high quality is here, or the blossoms of student creative efforts are on hand. We can be proud of the extensive number of these events. KU receives great prestige from its high-quality program and everyone in the campus community can benefit from it. The next, and satisfying, step will be the logical programming of these events. We have no quarrel with the quality or number of artists and productions. But we do defy the Fine Arts schedule-makers to choose more inopportune times to present their embellishments. Take the past week for example. In eight days, Jan 7-14, the campus was blessed with five attractions. A week ago Wednesday pianist Jan Chiapusso gave his Faculty Recital. On Friday, Cilli Wang made her appearance in the University Theatre, Sunday, the KU Band gave its semester concert. Monday the University Chorus sang Mendelssohn's "Elijah," and last night Rudolf Fir- kusny joined the KU Concert Course in a piano recital. This is a little too much before final week. Either students must ignore these attractive programs, or they must run themselves ragged studying in between events. At other times the Fine Arts calendar announces programs in swaths of two or three at a time. One attending all of them can certainly foul up a weekend or muddle the mid-week study habit. Of course, it is often hard to make other plans. The most advantageous time for large student groups to present their wares is at the conclusion of a semester, after the maximum hours of rehearsal have been utilized. Then we must consider that the University has almost no choice of dates when it contracts a professional to appear here. The schedule, being extensive, is pretty tight. But since the current system hinders those who would like to attend all or most of the functions, a change is necessary. The students' schedules should be considered before the Fine Arts events are arranged. Some area must give to support the change. It probably will have to be that of the student productions. —John Husar Democratic Executions? Castro now is inviting American tourists to the beautiful island country of Cuba proclaiming that it is now a happy and free democracy. But is is not entirely happy. So far at least 150 Batista supporters have been executed under Castro's rebel regime. Castro defends this by saying that they at least were given a humanitarian death instead of being tortured as his followers were while Batista was in power. During a radio interview last week a man from South America said that Latin American revolutions are merely a means of changing governments just as we hold elections. This seemed to be pushing the whole thing aside rather lightly. Enough men die during a revolution. Why must 150 more be executed? When was there time to hold trials for these men? And if there were no real trials how can it be called a democracy? Until a government learns to live with its opposition it is not truly a free government. Certainly it has quite a ways to go before it becomes a democracy. Editor: In referring to Anonymous who wrote the letter which Martha Pearse quoted in Monday's Daily Kansan, I admit the KU male, as elsewhere, is a damned jewel. ...Letters ... But perhaps it isn't all short-comings of the all-American boy. I use myself as an example, (Editor's note; Miss Pearse's story concerned an anonymous letter supposedly from parents of a KU freshman woman who had complained about KU men.) "I like wimmin," but I have to be well-beered before I would trade a cold bottle of Budweiser for a hot smooch or warm feminine companionship. This is because the American female is still living in the preWorld War I days when the woman was a house pet and not the woman-of-the-world she is today. Being a poor, struggling student, I'll not squander my borrowed funds on an animal that will be making as much, or probably LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler M. H. MILLER more, money than I will in the future. It seems that social obligations should go hand in hand with the financial benefits the rosy-faced modern beauty now enjoys. Why shouldn't the female species call the male animal for a date to take in the town, a movie, some coffee, or even the local pub? The situation can be handled for a change is long past due. If little Jane wants a date, why doesn't she call someone for one? "YES, I KNOW I'M GIVING TH' SAME FINAL THAT I GAVE LAST TERM — BUT THIS TIME I CHANGED TH' ANSWERS." There is nothing degrading about being refused. I am every time I get beered up and I'm not discouraged vet. If this is taken as merely another statement by the cynical KU male, it must be remembered that many a true word has been said in jest or through satirical comment. Now that parents are complaining about the KU male, the next voices expected may come from grandparents, or better yet, the males complaining about themselves. Abilene graduate student Dick Moore UNIVERSITÉ DAILUHANSAN Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, December 28, 1904, 31 trieweley 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Brownstein 1917, daily Feb. 1, 1915 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY. Assigned to international Mail 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 holloway Extered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcolm Applegate ... Managing Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones ... Editorial Editor music Alicia Ward By Stuart Levine, Instructor of English From listening to a few of his recordings, I had the impression that Rudolf Firkusny was guilty of that most basic of expressive faults, swallowing the ends of passages. After last night's concert in the University Theatre, I find myself confirmed in that opinion. Mr. Firkueny is a superbly equipped pianist, but the effect of his performances is repeatedly ruined by this lack of care with the tail ends of phrases, especially technical phrases. The effect reminds me of a comedian who would begin his sentences in a loud voice and then gradually trail off into a kind of double-talk which sounded almost like the real thing, although the listener could never quite make out what he was saying. The program was taxing enough. It opened with Beethoven's "Variations on a Theme by Salieri," an odd work, not methodical and symmetrical in the usual manner of the theme and variation, but rather crab-like and grotesque, almost as though it were a parody of the variation form. The effect it produces is one of going through the usual graceful procedures, which somehow come out, to steal Behrman's phrase, a "perpetual scherzo." Next came the three "Intermezzi" and "Rhapsody" of Brahms' Opus 119, which the soloist handled very well. An enormous range of expression is called for, from the delicate B minor Intermezzo, or the sentimental slow section of the E minor, to the orchestral Rhapsody. Mr. Firkusny had a splendid variety of touch, and the work seemed to fit him nicely. For all its well-worn cliches, the first movement of Chopin's "B Minor Sonata," Opus 58 was a magical thing in Firkusny's hands. The performance was graceful, elegant and convincing, with just the right amount of rubato and an effortlessness which quite concealed the considerable technical difficulty. Mr. Firkusny played the second movement tastefully, if a trifle slowly, but it is too hammy and rhetorical a section to be saved even by superb musicianship. The finale, Presto, a show piece, was brilliant in this performance. Debussy's "Estampes" is pretty exotic stuff, and once again the pianist's good control of touch was in evidence. You probably remember the old comment that, since Ravel's masterful orchestration, Moussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition" doesn't sound right on the piano. Well, it does sound right, although to tell the truth I have never heard a pianist play it quite this way before. Perhaps because he didn't want to sound like the familiar orchestral performances, our soloist did some unfamiliar things to the tempi. This made his reading fresh, if a little less convincing. He had his troubles in the last section—as though the ghosts of Hartmann and Moussorgsky were punishing him for his eccentricities in the first few "pictures," and as a result, the usual thunderous and soul-satisfying uproar at the close never came off. It's unplayable anyway. As if to retrieve his dignity, Mr. Firkusny returned to play three encores impeccably, two by Chopin, and a third unidentified but dazzling. I can listen to the man play turns and trills and "inside" runs all night long. I just wish he would round out phrases. Increase Your Word Power By Wilfred Funk Check the word or phrase you believe to the nearest in meaning to the key word. Answers are on page 8. (1) authenticity—A: signature, B: announcement, C: genuineness. D: creative work. ( 2 ) cuisine (kwe zeen')—A: cookery. B: household. C: dining-table equipment. D: fashion design. ( 3 ) composite (kom poz' it) — A solidity, B: compromise. C: strength. D: something made up of several parts. (4) **intonation**—A: solemnity. B: inflection. C: modulation in music. D: emotion. ( 5 ) serenity—A: seriousness. B: calmness. C: shyness. D: gaiety. ( 6 ) *impact* (im' pakt)—A: forceful impression. B: solid mass: C: agreement. D: bruise. (7) interception—A: encouragement. B: trickery. C: interruption. D: mediation. ( 8 ) **interjection**—A: exclamation. B: argument. C: annoyance. D: anger. (9) **predecessor**—A: one who follows another. B: overseer. C: preconceived liking. D: one who precedes another. (10) device—A: division. B: plan or scheme. C: imperfection. D: turning aside. (11) disposition—A: pleasantness. B: ousting or eviction. C: inclination. D: sworn statement. (12) revelry—A; merrymaking. B: awakening. C: making known. D: wickedness. (13) guiltyility—A: mockery. B: clumsiness. C: greed. D: quality of being easily fooled. (14) felicity—A: ease. B: happiness, C: good nature. D: faithfulness. (15) straits—A: need. B: rigidity. C: harsh laws. D: sharp points. (16) conciseness—A: extreme accuracy. B: fussiness. C: impertinence. D: brevity. (17) ovation—A: flood. B: enthusiastic reception. C: confusion. D: banquet. (18) adaptation—A: act of taking for one's own. B: imitation. C: act of fitting into an environment. D: surrender. (19) detractor—A: instrument for plotting angles and lines. B: defamer. C: machine used for hauling. D: thief. (20) reappraisal—A: act of complimenting, B: notification, C: re-estimation of values, D: taking away. (From "It Pays to Increase Your Word Power," Reader's Digest, January 1959.) Page 3 Templinites Face Big Move With Hopes, Misgivings Moving day is close for the 38 Templein Hall men. At the end of the semester, these students will move from the men's residence hall, 1407 Alumni Pl., to the new Joseph R. Pearson dormitory. Men who call Templin home have mixed emotions about moving. Max M. Griffin, Salina senior and Templin counselor, said; "I've enjoyed living here, but I am looking forward to moving to the new dormitory." Griffin will be a floor counselor at the new hall where a system of proctors chosen from students will be tried. Charles Clutz, Rochester, N. Y senior, said he would like to stay in the old place. "There is a home-like atmosphere here that I'm afraid the new hall won't have." Allen Finch, Parsons sophomore said the move would put him closer to classes. But he added that the new hall would probably seem "like a hotel." Bill Yarnell, St. Joseph, Mo. senior, said he does not want to move—he hones to graduate this semester All the men said they would "miss" the walk up 14th St, hill and the sport of sliding home on icy sidewalks in the winter. Mrs. Jean Tice, housemother at Templein, will become housemother at Oread Hall. In her six years at Templin she had "looked after" men of "all sizes, shapes and personality types." "I imagine it will be quite a task to learn the names and personalities of three times as many men at Oread," she said. Tire-Slashing Probe Stymied, Chief Says No new cases of tire-slashing have been reported, and campus police are at a standstill in their investigation of previous incidents, Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said today. Friday night vandals cut 17 tires on nine vehicles during the Cilli Wang performance in the University Theatre. The slashings took place near Hoch Auditorium on Jayhawk Boulevard and on Poplar Lane. A survey is being made in northwestern Alaska to determine the feasibility of creating an artificial harbor by an atomic explosion. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY "We're all sorry to see the end of a landmark such as Templin, but moving offers a new challenge to us," she added. KU Faculty Club, Dinner, Bridge Hosts. p.m., dinner; %0 p.m., bridge Hosp. hosts, dinner; %0 p.m., bridge 3-3332; Miss Ruth Stoland, VI 3-3333; Miss Ann & Mrs. Thomas Gorton, VI 3-5433 Templin Hall was a private home before the University acquired it for housing. Formerly it was the home of the Acacia fraternity and also was used during World War II to house Navy men. Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 11 a.m., Sat., 314 Fraser. Christian Science Campus Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danfort Chapel. Sigma XI, 7:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium Dr. Raymond C. Moore, Summer- drum Dr. Michael B. Sumner, North- Crust "Initiation of new members." TOMORROW Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. at St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. and Holy Communion, 7 a.m., with messenger. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 Inter-Varsity炎症 St. Bible study, discussion, refreshment Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey Hall. If you wish to have an interview, please come in and arrange for an appointment (including Mose Dahlstrom and others) (Elen Topeka; Mr. Charles Romine, of Jefferson County, Colorado). Lawrence L. Dicker, Westphalia junior, was elected president of the Society for the Advancement of Management, a club run as a business for students interested in developing their ability in management. Dieker Made SAM Leader Other new officers are: University Daily Kansan Lawrence L. Dieker, Westphalia, Marvin D. Brummett, Concordia, vice president; Charles L. Curtis, Great Bend, treasurer; James G. Duff, Pittsburgh, secretary; John S. Mullally, Mission, publicity director; Robert Kerlinger, Emporia, communications director, and Paul D. Keynolds, Dallas, Tex., arrangement director. All are juniors. Michael L. Gleason, Lawrence special student, is membership director. The society is the largest student organization in the School of Business. Insurance Expert To Speak Friday Solomon S. Huebner, noted insurance expert, will speak on "Human Life Values" at 3 p.m. Friday. Feb. 27, in the Music and Dramatic Arts building. Prof. Huebner, professor emeritus of insurance and commerce, author of many books on insurance, chairman president of the American College of Life Underwriters, will be sponsored in his talk here by the KU School of Business and the Insurance Club. Members of the Lawrence Life Underwriters Association will act as hosts for a reception following the speech. There will be no charge for admission to the speech. Mardi Gras Without Confetti? MOBILE, Ala. — (UPI) — Confetti will fly for the last time at Mobile's Mardi Gras celebration this year. The City Commission said the streamers and chopped-up paper will be outlawed in the future as a nuisance and a health hazard. Thursday. Jan. 15. 1959 Oscar Board Repeals Anti-Communist Ruling HOLLYWOOD—(UPI)—The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has repealed a controversial amendment barring Communists and "fifth amendment" witnesses from the annual competition for Oscars. The action, revealed yesterday, would allow Communists and witnesses who pleaded the fifth amendment before government investigating committees to be eligible for Oscar nominations. Repeal of the amendment brought a blast from actor Ward Bond, president of the Motion Picture Alliance and a crusader against Communists in Hollywood. The amendment came under renewed fire this year over the eligibility of Ned Young, a screenwriter of "The Defiant Ones." Young took the fifth amendment in 1953 while appearing before the House Un-American Activities Committee. The Academy board of governors found itself in somewhat of a quandary when it was pointed out that Young had collaborated on the script with Harold Smith, who was eligible for an award. The Academy finally labelled the amendment "unworkable." "The proper function of the Academy is only to honor achievements as presented," a statement released by the board of governors said. "Experience has proven the amendment to be unworkable and impractical to administer and enforce in view of the fact that control over engaging of talent does not rest with the Academy, but is the sole responsibility of the producers, both major and independent." LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 The University Press Revised TYPE SPECIMEN BOOK Shows each and every character of all type fonts, in all available sizes. Includes Jayhawks, University Seals, brackets and some orna- Drilled for looseleaf notebook. $2.00 On Sale only at ROWLANDS BOOK STORE and STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE 1959 JAYHAWKER Winter Issue Out Now DISTRIBUTION ON HILL ONLY Hawk's Nest Information Booth Strong Rotunda Fraternity, Sorority and Organized House Group Pictures Party Pictures, Sport Pictures All Seniors Who Purchased Books Through the Mail May Pick Up Their Receipts In the Jayhawk Office, 114 B. Union BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER NOW! Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 15, 1950 An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS? We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming, but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books. Used Books—What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get? At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester. With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used. You paid We buy back Patron refund Total you get back For New Book $5.00 $2.50 or 50% .50 or 10% $3.00 or 60% For Used Book $3.75 $2.50 or 66.2/3% 37 or 10% $2.87 or 76.2/3% $3.75 $2.50 or 66 2/3% .37 or 10% $2.87 or 76 2/3% What About Books No Longer Used at KU? During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at K.U. The best offer he can make on good current books is about 25% of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at 45% of the current list price. The extra 5% allowed the stores is for freight costs which actually means the store pays him the same price, 50% list, that it pays the students for used books. What Do Other Book Stores Do? The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books. What Are Old Books Worth? We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future. An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber. Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library. New Books We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20. With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks. We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books. Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so. The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report. From Each Dollar Income: Paid to Manufacturers ... 72.8c Operating Expenses ... 16.7c Patronage Refund to Customers ... 9.2c Book Store Share (Net Income) ... 1.3c Book Store Share of 1.3 cents is reserved for emergency, expansion and inventory purchase. KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Thursday, Jan. 15, 1950 University Daily Kanean Page 5 OKLAHOMY 44 SOONER STAR—High scoring Denny Price will be one of the chief threats to the Jayhawks' undefeated conference record when KU meets the Sooners on their home court Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. Price has average 17 points in Big Eight games so far this year. Tigers' Kirksey to Miss K-State Game COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) — Mike Kirksey, 5-10 Missouri guard and acting captain, won't play in the Kansas State game here Saturday because of a bruised cartilage between two ribs. Saturday's game against Kansas and played briefly against Nebraska Monday night. Kirksey yesterday watched practice in street clothes and is expected to be out about 10 days, on physicians' orders. He was injured in last Coach Sparky Stalcup said Don Sarver, 6-3 sophomore, probably won't play Saturday either. Sarver has a nearly healed fractured wrist, but so far has not got a doctor's approval for more action. He has been out since the Texas Tech game Dec. 20. 'The Stilt' Has No Regrets, Satisfied With Pro Game By George DeBord Wilt Chamberlain told the Daily Kansan last night that he has no regrets about leaving KU for professional basketball. "I'm perfectly satisfied. Of course I miss KU. I miss the school a great deal. But I knew I would when I left." Chamberlain said. Wilt was in Kansas City with the Harlem Globetrotters helping defeat the Hawaii 50th Staters 85-75. He scored 30 points as he replayed the role Kansas City fans recalled easily—the role of the top point producer. "In college ball the coach is much more important and plays a larger part in the game. In this game, the coach leaves it up to you," Chamberlain said. Chamberlain said the difference between pro ball and the college variety is that the emphasis is on the individual when you are playing for money. Wilt pointed out that the professional game itself was played differently. "The emphasis is on offense. You do not spend nearly as much time trying to figure out how to stop the other team. You try to outscore them." Wilt said he has been following the Jayhawkers in "every game this year." He said he thought the team was beginning to catch on in the last few games. "They had to adapt to a new style of play this year," he said. "It Busy IM Schedule Tomorrow Wichita Holds 1st in NIBL WICHITA—(UPI)—The Wichita Vickers last night took a firmer grip on first place in the National Industrial Basketball League with a 116-107 win over Denver-Chicago Truckers. Halftime was Wichita 55-45. George Bonsale netted 36 points for the Truckers. Dick Boushka tallied 34 for Wichita. takes a team a month or so to do that. "Now that they are rolling, they should finish high up in the Big Eight standings. I think they might even wind up in first or second place." ___ da 17; Kappa Alpha Psi 28, Beta Theta Pi 24; Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, Phi Kappa Sigma 0 (fortef); Delta Upsilon 26, Phi Kappa Tau 20. Fraternity N — Delta Tau Delta vs. Kappa Sigma, 5:15; Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 6:15; Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Kappa Psi, 7:15. Independent A — Old Timers vs. Battenfeld, 4:15. Suntan Polished Cotton Fraternity C — Phi Gamma Delta I 36, Sigma Phi Epsilon 21; Phi Delta Theta II 22, Phi Gamma Delta IV 16; Phi Delta Theta I 42, Delta Sigma Phi 7; Beta Theta Pi 51, Phi Kappa Psi II 15; Sigma Nu III 1, Delta Upsilun X 0 (forfeit). Wednesday's Results Fraternity C — Phi Gamma Delta V vs. Alpha Tau Omega I, 4:15; Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Chi II, 4:15; Triangle vs. Sigma Chi II, 5:00. PIPERS See them today at the town shop and the university shop Fraternity B — Delta Tau Delta 1, Sigma Phi Epsilon (forfeit); Theta Chi 43, Alpha Kappa Lamb- George Inks A's Contract KANSAS CITY — (UFI) — Shortstop Alex George today became the fifth Kansas City Athletic to sign a 1959 contract. George, currently attending Rockhurst College here and playing on its basketball team, first signed with the A's in 1955 at the age of 16. U. S. scientists are studying a proposal for disposing of radioactive wastes by firing them to the moon in rockets. SENIORS... DEADLINE DATE IS FEB. 21 Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the '59 Jayhawker CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 ALL SCHOOL DANCE! Sponsored by the Combined Pep Clubs February 14th-8.12 Midnight In the Kansas Union Ballroom Come One, Come All - Dance and Listen to the Wonderful Jazz Music of the Cell Block 7 Tickets Can Be Purchased at the Information Booth $1.75 Per Couple Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 15, 1959 SAE Holds Buffet A One solution to the problem of where to have dinner on Sunday night is to hold a buffet supper. While other students were madly roaming the streets in search of a restaurant with even standing room, the members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and their dates enjoyed a buffet supper at the chapter house. Leading the line Sunday night were Pat Dawson, Emporia, and Bill Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo., both juniors. Following the buffet, the SAE's accompanied their dates to a party held in the Flame room of the Dine-A-Mite. Mrs. H. W. Jenkins was hostess for the buffet. Bright Blazers Aid Wardrobe For a mid-winter fashion pick-up for her wardrobe, the coed may want to add a collection of colorful light wool blazers to her wardrobe. Although blazers have been a campus favorite for years, they have never been better than they are this season. The coed may want to wear a jacket in a strong stripe of royal blue and black, cut along classical lines of tailored simplicity. A red velvet jacket, trimmed in black will brighten the simple dark costume. Blazers are particularly helpful for the college wardrobe because they can be matched to several skirts. They will help keep the freezing coed warm on winter days and will wear smoothly into spring when a light jacket is still necessary. Jolliffe Hall .. On The Hill.. Kenneth Megill, Vassar sophomore, has been elected president of Jollife Hall for the spring semester. Other officers are: Darrell Owen, Great Bend sophomore, vice president; John Hodge, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, secretary and publicity chairman; Dan Fischer, Osborne freshman, treasurer; Harold Eads, Topeka senior, social chairman. Terry Schoeni, Athol sophomore, intramurals chairman; Jerome Niebaum, Coldwell sophomore, song leader; Don Close, Bonner Springs junior, Ray Spitznogle, Augusta freshman, and Bill Daeschner, Topeka sophomore, forum's board members. Tom O'Brien, Great Bend sophomore, representative to Men's Scholarship Hall Council, and Don Homrighausen, Paola sophomore, chairman of the small appropriations committee. Stephenson Hall .. .. David Leitch, Leavenworth senior, has been elected president of Stephenson Hall for the coming year. Other officers are: Bert Chronister, Wellsville junior, vice president; Albert Maduska, Leavenworth sophomore, secretary; Larry Jones, St. John sophomore, treasurer; Dean Rollman, Pratt sophomore, social chairman. Paul Stone, Ottawa freshman, assistant social chairman; Paul Zaman, Olathe sophomore, song leader; Warren Leitch, Leavenworth freshman, intramural chairman, and Richard Umstattd, Kansas City, Mo. junior, Men's Scholarship Hall Council representative. Phi Delta Theta The pledge class of Phi Delta Theta fraternity has elected John Mitchell, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, as its president for the spring semester. Other recently elected pledge class officers are: Jack Stuber, St Joseph, Mo., vice president and Bob Frederick, Glendale, Mo., treasurer. John Kost, St. Joseph, Mo., and Kent Staab, Dodge City, social cochairmen. All are freshmen. Hill Activities In Full Swing Phi Chi Theta Phi Chi Theta, women's professional business fraternity, has announced the pledging of Marilyn Miller, Lawrence junior. Pi Tau Sigma Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, has elected officers for the spring semester. They are: Kenneth M. Timmerman, Lawrence, president Ronald J. Wilson, Kansas City, Kan, vice president. Lowell H. Linderman, John City, N. Y., recording secretary; Lee E. Bray, Overland Park, treasurer, Burson D. Carpenter, Kansas City, Mo., historian, all seniors. Norman F. Luther, Kansas City, Mo., junior, corresponding secretary. * * Gamma Alpha Chi Alpha Delta Sigma An executive of Look magazine was the guest speaker at a combined meeting of Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternities, yesterday. Ed Bartlett, the subscription manager for Look magazine, graduated from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information in 1954. He will speak on, "How We Use Direct Mail to Sell Subscriptions." Concordia Club Gary Lentz, Cheney junior, has been re-elected president of Concordia Club, a Lutheran organization, for the spring semester. Other newly elected officers are Ken Staley, Kingman junior, first vice president; Charles Swank, Nortonville senior, second vice president; Merlin Stigge, Washington sophomore, treasurer. Jim Wedemeyer, Atlantic, Iowa senior, secretary; Herb Hauffer; Vassar, junior, rush chairman; Glen DeWerff, Ellinwood freshman, social chairman, and Bob Onek. Hiawatha senior, commissary. Delta Sigma Pi Ten business students were initiated into Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, Sunday afternoon. They are: Robert M. Foyle and Harl T. Hanson, Lawrence seniors; Charles L. Brown, Quenemo, Joseph L. Campbell, Independence, Mo., Gary A. Gibson, El Dorado, William J. Godfrey, Valley Stream, N. Y., Arthur A. Powell, Coffeyville, and Richard D. Reinhold, Chicago, Ill., juniors, Lynn L. Anderson, Atwood and William R. Charles, Oak Park, Ill., sophomores. --- Alpha Delta Sigma Five pledges were initiated, and officers elected at a recent meeting of Alpha Delta Sigma, honorary advertising fraternity. Bill Sleight, Sunflower senior, was elected president. Others elected are Paul Nielsen, Riverside, III., senor, vice president; Howard Young, Leavenworth junior, secretary; Bill Feitz, Olathe senior, treasurer; Bob Lida, Prairie Village senior, rush chairman. Ted Tidwell, Mission senior, social chairman; Larry Jones, St. John sophomore, assistant social chairman; Bill Kane, Stafford junior, editor; Dan Welchons, Hutchinson senior, publicity; Dean Mohlstrom, McPherson senior, activities chairman. New members are Mark Dull, Kansas City, Kan., Rudy Hoffmann, Hutchinson, John Massa, Kansas City, Mo., all juniors, and Bob Lida, Prairie Village senior, and Larry Jones, St. John sophomore. Mining Society Mr. Dave Goldberg, chief metallurgist for the Westinghouse jet engine plant in Kansas City, Mo., will speak at a meeting of the student chapter of the Mining and Metallurgical Society today. "Refractory Metals" will be Goldberg's topic. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at 101 Lindley. Coffee and donuts will be served. Complete List of Those Passing Proficiency Exam The following students passed the English proficiency examination. English proficiency examination. Carol E. Abernathy, Ronald Abrams, Helen C. Adler, Philip P. Aherne, Marjorie E. Akers, Bill G. Albright, John M. Allen, Kenneth M. Allum, Barbara J. Anderson, Judith Anderson, Peter Addison, James Addison, Donna J. Arnold, Donna J. Ashley, Lyndon L. Bailie, Marvin C. Baker, Nicholas W. Bankson, Carol Marie Barber, Patricia Den Barnes, Joe Bret Bayless, Patricia D'Arcy, Paul Harris A. Bentz, Suzanne Beutler, Jackie G. Beverly, Mariae R. Bierlue. Margot A. Black, Carol J. Blackstone, Geraldine S. Blair, Nadine A. Blair, Sandra K. Blankenship, Billy James Boaz, Barbara Elena Bolley, Clydene Shanu Boots, Don Ramsey Bowen, Boots L. Woodman, James F. Branden, Ann Breinenstein, Paula D. Brinkman, Charles L. Broadwell, James A. Brownfield, Helen R Bruch, Morris R. Buell, Ralph E. Buglewicz, Robert E. Burke, Bryan E. Burgare, Mary W. Carter, Mary Ann Casewicz, Mary Farres Caven, Clifford E Chamney. J Nancy L. Chapman, Mary Lou Childers, Gilbert J. Pan Po Judith B. Clark, Carbyn C. Clark, Harylen Helen Clark, Pattie Carolina Coe, Mae Beth Coeh, Thomas Lee Coen, Miles W. Coiner, Linda Jane Compton, Bernard J. Connelly, Barbara Kay Cook. Frank O. Cox Jr., Marilyn Sue Cox, Lee Allen Crawford, Barbara A Criswell. Kay Crumley, Fabio R. Cuadrado, Joyce Crowd, Mary A Daugherty, Cheryl E. Davis. DAVIS TO JAQUISS Howard S. Davis I. Patricia L. Dawson E. Kate Deal, Sherryl Ann Bees Kintney, Deusen V. Devall B. Devall Grace D. Amon Diana Dlacks Spencer E. Dickson, Sarah Dillaha Agnes E. Diller, John Norman Dickrs Ann Doddie, Patricia A. Don- neley, John Cohen Dubach, Norman D. Dudev, Patricia L. Luckerks, Benton S. Duffet Jr, Robert A. Duggan, Betty Dunaway, Rosemary Charbon Edgar, Alene N Egger, Barber Ekfung Howard James Ellifeld, Judy L. Elliott Margaret Elliott, Mary J. Elliott, Sam L. Elliott, Gary Hush Ellis, Gary Miller Gary Hush Ellis, Gary Miller Marie H. Fairchild, Robert D. Fall Jack D. Fenton, Johanna D. Flichten, Loren D. Fleckenstein, Margaret E. Foote Betty Lynn Forrw, Margette Forrest, Robert Lynn Forrw, Margette Forrest, Doris E. Gaedett, Chark E. Garner, Earl N. Garrett, John Thomas Gee, Robert B. Giarranau, Frank L. Gibson Rosalie A. Gibson, Helen Louise Gill, Carol D. Glancy, Helen R. Laze, Bar- rion C. Clement, Robert S. Barr, Lanelle C. Gordon, Gwendolyn S. Gray, Dana Jean Greiner, Max M. Griffin, Gretchen Griswold, Kelsey A. Goell, Louis E. Gulick, Mary E. Habiger, J- oelis H. Inderma, Mary E. Habiger, David G. Inderma, Joseph Ford Hanna, Audrey I. Hansen, Horbart R. Hansen, Sandra J. Harding, Richard H. Har- rison, Julie P. Janice Lee Har- rison, James P. Harris Nyra R. Harris, Sally Ann Hart, Frances A. Hawkins, Mary Loun Haworth, Henderson R. Haworth, Hzuziguer Margo, A. Helwick, Con Henderson, Diane Henry, John Stanley Hibbard, Stephen Higdon Hill, Barbara K. Hodgson, Norma K. Hodgson, Virginia K. Hodgson, Norma K. Hodgson, Howell, Dudley R. Hudgins, Marien E. Hunt, Sonja K. Hushaw, Ann Louise Hyde, Dana Lee Jackson, Philip J. James, Sherri R. James, George W. Jones JARBOE TO MORTON Elizabeth E. Jarbee, Carolyn Jeter, Barbara Ann Jezek, Clara A. Johnson, Nancy D. Johnson, Alice P. Jones, Janet Jones, John M. Jones, Peter F. Jones, Jennifer K. Jones, Peter F. Jones, lami L. Jungmann, Peggy James Kallos, Mary Susanna Kastner, Billie F. Kay, Zoe Ann Kelley, H. Kelso, Nancy M. Knauz, Larry L. Kompus, Kenneth K. Krueger, M. Kimberly, M. Kruzelock, Lois B. Kuchenbecker, Gloria J. Landon, Linda Larson Martha F. Lawrence, Gail B. Leatherwood, Roland Bruce Leiser, Donna S. Knapp, Jake D. Lewis, Lilie Nella, Linda Lindell, Ann Karen Lindhack, Barbara B. Lane, Lerry A. Lineback, Loren A. Lockwood, Richard H. oeb, Robyn Lott, Elizabeth Lundborg,莉安 Rott, Elizabeth Lundborg, Sally Ursula Mack, Janet Sue Mangan, Mary A. Markham, Marianne L. Marrath, Robert F. McComb Roederck J. McDonald, Martha F. McKinney MOYER TO SCHULTZ Sallie O. McLeroy, Jane Mede, Marielle Meigs, Carol J. Mellinger, James L. Mckinney, Lyla C. Cerriman, Harald Betts, Beth A. Emmons, Miller, Hilda C. Miller, Jacquelyn K. Miller, John James Linda Lou Ronne, Ronnie L. Shirley Miller, Desen Milliken, Mary M. Mitchell, Mary Ann Mize, Karen Moekey, Dean F. Molhist, Judith Joyce Mobri, Carroll Montgomery, Sharon K. Donald, Donald A. Morris, James R. Morton Marilyn An Mover, Marvin R. Mursell, Barbara Murphy, Joan B. Murray, Reean Myers, Marilyn Me Myers, Lee Larsen, Marilyn Me Myers, Karen Nelson, Carol A. Newhard, Ann Debhine Nichols, Lloyd Nichols, Robert T. Nichols, Catherine C. Nieder, Max Nieder, Harriet Nige, Sara Thornton, Helen Nige, Kathleen Nell, Kathleen D. O'Neill, Keith M. Ott, Eileen D. Overbey, Gorrv David Owen, Fre Aaron Owen, Sandra S. Owens. Keith E. Parker, Earleta L. Pasean, Glenn T. Peake, Marilyn Pennier, Barbara Arnall Anmessel, Alan B. Phares Jr. Mary Getteppe, M. E. Phillips, Nancy Getteppe, Pine, Elaine Ruth Amm Pippert, Marion Louise Placke, James C. Pool, Carol J. Potter, Suzanne C. Pretz, Patricia A. Pruett, Pauleston Pyattee, Donna Luise Pyr tee, Caroline Caroline M. Ransopher, Kay A. Rathbone, Robert L. Reed, Charles S. Reeves. Harold C. Palmer, Jane Mae Paramore. Judith H. Regier, Carolyn Hart Renshaw, Karen K. Resner, Darrell L. Rhinebeck, Peter M. Bates, Mary Larry Lee Rice, Barbara B. Richards, Jacklyn A. Rickner, Gloria Roach, Nancy S. Robb, Kathleen A. Roberts, Elizabeth A. Vlron A. Rosen, Mary L. Ruskudhel, Afford A. Mark, Saylor, Marlan L, Schalker, Georgine F. Scheel, John P. Schick, Chris S. Schmidt, Mary L. Schmidt, Homer H. Schutz, Prudence M. Schneck, Mary E. Shultz SCHWARTZ TO ZUBER Joanne M. Schwartz, Evelyn D. Scott, Laurian Seeber, Oliver J. Selfridge, Kenneth J. Seils, Kay E. Shackleton, Sharon V. Shaffer, Sylvia J. Shaffer, Patricia M. Shannon, Kenneth Sheffer, M. Y. Mields, Hard F. Shipley, Stanton N. Snakerholder, Bill son, Jay B. Simpson, Bill Dovle Smith, Nancy Ellen Smith, Sally B. Smith, Suzann E. Smith, Warner H. Sorensen, Mary J. Staggus, Nancy A. Stankiewicz, Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mutters and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. VARSITY D W SHOWING I Now thru Sat. BRIGITTE BARDOT in "Mademoiselle Striptease" co-hit SOPHIA LOREN in "Scandal In Sorrento" Curtis J. Steele, Virginia G. Stephens, Carol J. Stephenson. John W. Stewart, Charles M. Stiles, Emily C. Stiles, Darlene F. Stone, Sharon Sue Stout, Mary E. Strong, Char- tina M. White, William A. Summers, Susan Furk, W. Swartz, A. Carlton Syler, James Knord, Richard B. Thatch, Molly Ann Tayler, Thomas R. Warren, Harlene Thomas, Suzanne Thompson, Thomas L. Thompson, Mary Evelyn Thornton Vince, Tice, William Ted Margo C. Tice, William R. Townsend, Shelton N Townsend, Brian D. Travis, Paul J. Troustol, Muffet Truitt, Constance C. Tucker, Sally Turner, Joan Underwood, Thomas W. Vandyke, Rilla M. Vickrey, Karl E. Charcoal Corduroy PIPERS See them today at the town shop and the university shop Voldeng, John B. Vosburgh, Gaill Dean Wade, John Oliver Walker, Neil Wall-Waters, Mary C Weidensau, Herbert S. Weldon, Janice Ann Wenger, Lennis L. Arthur R. White, Donna L. White, Marilyn J. Wiles, John K. Wiley Lance L. Willdermood Peggy A. Williams, Marjorie Williamson, William M. Willson, Michael Wright, Brynond Yocom, Alan Dale Yowen, G. Young, Mike E. Zakoura, Victoria Zuber, 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) 25 wc HIXON'S VI 3-0330 Save at . . . An illustration of a person holding a camera. 721 Mass. BROV et ca urday In One Great Blaze of Action a Legend was Born! Walt Disney's TONKA TECHNICOLOR WAN Tope a.m. Larry SOM aft o CAM for p WAN apart heat, paid. SAL MINEO DRAWN BY LEMUS R FOSTER • PRODUCED BY JAMES PRATT PLUS • CARTOON • NEWS ROO after on S VI 3- GRANADA NOW! THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788 THRU SATURDAY Thursday, Jan. 15, 1959 University Daily Kansar Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS initirofesunday Hanes L. Campy A. God arthur richard niors, and s., Ill. and meeting y adr, was selected ; sen- oung, ; Bill ; Bob rush r, so- John hairi- r, eda sena- Mcer- rman. Dull, mann, kansas Lida, Larry metal jet Mo. stu and Gold will be endley. lived. n Dean Wal- Robert pert S. Anis L. Wheat. Mari- Wil- m M. od D. ord G. Zuber. *ES words or less: one day, 50; three days, 75; 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 University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.* LOST FOUND BROWN rimmed glasses in brown pocket case, lost on campus sometime Saturday. Call Karlos Sieg, Ph VI 2-6471. WANTED CAMER TRIPOD owner may claim it for payment of this ad. Phone 91-4454 WANTED one boy to share lovely apartment two blocks from KU, steam heat, quiet. $27.50 per month, bills paid. Call VI 3-0103 after p. 2. WASHINGS and ironings, also sewing, call VI 2-0681, 813 Rhode Island. 2-45 HELP WANTED WANTED; TO JOIN a car pool from Topeka to Lawrence, daily, arrive 8 am, leave 3 p.m., call KU 548, ask for Larry Lane. 2-2 SOMEONE to care for baby, weekdays and long-term time for study S-C Sunsidey, VT 3-7044 FOR RENT ROOMS FOR BOYS, linens furnished, see after 6 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama VI 3-0902. tl GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-3019. tf SINGLE ROOM, private entrance and shelter. Attendance by the second semester. 1528 K., VI 3-4832, 1-15 FURNISHED APARTMENT, 1 block from campus, 2 bedrooms, sun room, living room, fireplace, bath and kitchen, 1st floor, call VI 3-7995. 1-16 DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, in-ner spring mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 Ohio, VI 3-6709. 1-16 ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available. John Henry Co-op, 4420 Ohio, VI 5-24 0681. HALF BLOCK from campus, in very nice house, large double rooms and single, a reasonable rates. 125 One Room Apartment, to 12 to 2 or 5 to 7, or call VI 3-6696. - 1-15 2 DOUBLE ROOMS with single beds. 12 meals per week, for boys. Beginning second semester. If interested call VI 3-9562. 1-15 2 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, 855, utilities paid, clean, private entrance, garage available, 728 Ohio, VI 3-6328 2-2 ROOM FOR BOYS — ½ block from Union. linens furnished, cooking privi- leges if desired, T.V., showers, call VI 3-0418, 1222 Miss. 1-15 2 SINGLE BEDROOMS with bath and separate entrance, for men students, in new air conditioned house west of campus, $35 per month. VI 3-8746. 1-16 NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment, living room, bedroom, kitchen, pantry, bathroom and play Feb. Teen. Armatures 1843 Tenn. Court VI 3-0978 or VI 3-3375. . . . . 2 ROOM BASEMENT apartment, share kitchen and bath, private entrance, telephone, utilities paid, water softener. Large sleeping room suitable for two boys, 1520 W. 22nd Terr., call VI 3-8673, see any time. ROOMS FOR MEN, triple or double, available now. One single, available table 1. Also one pair, one unit, size 10, 1416 Tenn., VI 3-3340 after 3 p.m. 1-16 PIE! APPROVED ROOMS for girls, with kitchen privileges and bath, 1232 La., VI 3-4271. 1-16 AVAILABLE AFTER JAN. 27, unfurnished 6 room duplex, 880 plus utilities, call VI 3-8936 after 5 p.m. 2-2 1 LARGE DOUBLE, 2 single rooms for men. 1005 VIANI, VI 3-4349, 2-2 Delicious and Oven fresh from . . . NICE LARGE duplex apartments, 3 rooms, bath, stone and refrigerator furnished, $75 and $80 per month. Small unfurnished cottage, 5 rooms and bath, utilities paid, $60 per month, call VI 3-7367 2-2 ARGE, CLEAN, UNFURNISHED apart- ment, conditions, VI 2-3736, 1-416 VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off street parking, kitchen furnished, see at 1001 Indiana. 1-16 DRAKE'S NICE CLEAN COMFORTABLE room for boys near campus and bus line, linens furnished. Also garage for rent. VI 1-3429. 827 Miss. 2-2 SMALL HOUSE furnished, builtins, good towe and electric refrigerator, two large closets, for married couples only. 320 Obio. 2-4 TWO ROOM furnished basement apartment, outside windows, private entrance and bath, utilities paid, married couple only, 520 Ohio. 2-3 TWO LARGE single rooms with nice losets, 4 blocks from campus, for men 1308 Kentucky, Ph VI 3-7199. 2-3 THREE ROOM furnished apartment, for two or three boys, 319 Indiana, Call VI 3-8316 during the day or in the evening, phone VI 3-6558. 2-3 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 APARTMENT and rooms for girls and boys girls girls, Louisiana, PH VI 5-421, 2-3 WANT A BETTER ROOM in a nice residential area? Come see this extra nice panel room with twin beds, excellent desk, plenty of storage space, private entrance and bath, $25 for single or $45 for two, 921 W. 22nd St. 2-2 1215 OREAD — Well furnished rooms, one large double and one single, avail- able second semester to upper classmen, reasonable rates, see Lee Weltmer, 12 to 2 p.m. or 5 to 7 p.m., or call VI 3-6696. 1-16 NEW 3. bedroom home. 1628 Harper. Thomas PN VI 2-8444 1-16 FURNISHED BASEMENT apartment, two or three boys, utilities paid, private entrance, private bath. Phone VI 3-4537. 2-3 TWO APARTMENTS, modern furnishings, utilities paid, 2nd floor, 2 large rooms, monthly payment, apartment rentable private suite S30 $8.99 entrance, PhI V1 3-4888, 2-4 TWO ROOMS for boys, clean 2 blocks from cousins, must be quiet. 1-16 SINGLE ROOM for male student, linen and bedding furnished. 1037 Tennessee, Saturday or day, week days, anytime semester, VI 3-5137. Available in semester, VI 3-5137. 2-4 VERY ATTRACTIVE single room for girl, approved private home, 536 Ohio. Ph VI 7-1943. 1-16 FOUR LARGE ROOMS, private bath. $120 a month for 4, all utilities paid. $20 for couple, pay electric bill, VI 3-9184 N. P. Matter. 2-4 CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38. like new, but too small for owner. I was sitting during the day in the Kansan News house or call VI. tf 9063 between 6-7, p.m. FOR SALE STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and reviews. Processed promptly. Call VI-3124. tf REMEINGTON PORTABLE typewriter, good condition, come see at 109 East 89th St., Grover's Realty Co., VI 3-3636. 1-15 1954 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, 4 door, radio, heater, white side wall tires, top condition, call Jim Henley at VI 3-724 at noon or after 5 p.m., 740 Ls. 1-16 HAVE CAR — WILL SELL, 1956 Chevro- l, 2 door, black, clean, V-8, stick shift, overdrive, well-kept, John Neu- staedt, VI 3-1520. 1-15 TELEPHOTO LENS and case, made by Argus, used once, $40, which is approximately $15 off retail. call VI 2-0351 evenings. 1-16 CHEVROLET 1954, 2-10 Model. 4 door Sadure, power slide, radio, heatter, back- up lights, two tone, oil filter, tubeless tires, winfield cable must be fitted to Brown Lawrence National Bank, Ph. VI 3-9996 after 6 pm. or come to 1539 Mass. 1-16 '54 OLDS, SUPER 88, radio, heater, power brakes, power steering, very good condition, 44,000 actual miles, no re-tailage offer refused, 1708 Miss. 3-0796, 1-16 POST VERSALOG slide rule, almost new, call VI 3-60471 1-15 BUSINESS SERVICES DACHSHUND PUPPIES only one mate, one female left, Call VI 3-3827. 2-3 DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS: 14111 gm. Phi. VI. 3-5263. Ola Smith 14111 gm. Phi. VI. 3-5263. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf WANTED: Washings and ironings, reasonable rates. VI 3-2906. 1-15 WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term pa- perses, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr. VI) 3-8660. vi FINEST FLAT- TAPERS and friendly barbors, and TACINING magazines. HARVARD 720 WEST MASSACHUSETTS NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center. 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, compute bird food for all purposes. Complete lines of Exotic Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal., stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, cushions, stuffies, blankets, etc., Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. ff WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable Formerly 829 Conn., now 451 Ohio, if TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood. VI 3-1891. 7360 Tenn. fc THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed THIRES, 20 W. ST. VT, 3-718-1. W 20 W. ST. VT, 3-718-1. RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the Sewing Center, 927 Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Mrs. H. Coester, phone VI - 3-8679 AAA MOTEL BEST MOTELS COLLEGE MOTEL Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones. TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming BIRD TV-RADIO 908 Mass. Duck and Owl Quality Parts Guaranteed VI 3-8855 CAR RADIO Expert Service LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10212½ Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. For men and women, by professional and equipment available limited time. VI 3-2132. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. larger rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI - 3233 TYFING OF REPORTS. term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-3508. tt TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Earl Wright. 1-16 MISCELLANEOUS INTERESTED IN LOW COST flying time? Due to graduation we have several openings, for information call VI 3-8865. 1-16 TYPING: Former medical secretary will will M. O'Dell, VT 3-3852 standard rate 149 WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service. Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type term papers, theses, etc. In my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. tf BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags Bags, little party supplies. ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI the. --- VI 3-2644 Ode to your portable Eaton's Corrasable always Erasable Music Company Ecton's Correxable Bond in convenient100-sheetpackets travels handily as your portable typewriter! And you'll bless this miracle paper for its performance. it erases without a trace with an easy up and down flick of a pencil eraser; leaves a fresh, smooth surface for retyping. 100-sheet packets in four weights, extra-lightweight through heavy-weight, ß/2 x 11 inch size. (Also punched for standard 3-ring binders). Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. BELL A New Recording "Front-Row-Center-Sound" Special Price L.P. $2.98 - Stereo $3.98 Gaite Parisienne Say it with MUSIC Boston Pops Orchestra 925 Mass. PAT READ INDIAN TRADER 445 Tenn. St. Ph.VI 3-1306 Gifts That Are Different - Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs - Hand Loomed Ties The Midwest's Largest Dealer In Indian Handicraft Open 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 15. 1959 Mary Ann Kearney Good Cook Makes It a Treat To Ail at Watson Hospital Students who temporarily reside in the hospital agree that Mrs. Cobb fixes goodies "like mother cooks." "Thank you for the gastronomical delights I found on the tray sent up to my hospital room three times a day," said a note from a KU student to Mrs. C. C. Cobb, head cook at Watkins Hospital. TASTES GOOD!—Mrs. Cox Makes Certain. Mrs. Cobb has received much fan mail from patients rooming high above her ovens telling her how much they enjoy the delicacies sent up from the hospital kitchen. Mrs. Cobb's chief delight is baking. She loves to bake birthday cakes for patients (who are miserable enough without the thought of another year slipping away) to give them a special treat. This really convinces students that they are sick, for such a pleasure as a birthday celebration in a hospital room is rarely found. "Dr. Camuteson even receives one of Mrs. Cobb's chocolate fudge cakes, his favorite, on his birthday," said Mrs. Margaret Ball, dietitian at the hospital. "For Thanksgiving or Christmas hospital dinners I prepare an old-fashioned menu consisting of turkey and dressing, mashed potatoes, frozen fruit salad, and lemon chiffon or mince pie." Mrs. Cole said. According to another note from a student, the lemon chiffon pie was so good that the student did not want to eat her own cooking again. Mrs. Cobb enjoys housework, laundry work, caring for flowers, crocheting and taking care of others. Her husband has been in ill health for a number of years and Mrs. Cobb has confined her activities to her home and the hospital kitchen. Mrs. Cobb herself has been ill since September and has been off duty. She has been the chief cook at Watkins for thirty years. State Constitution Is Seminar Theme A senior seminar will be a new course in political science next semester taught by Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science. Dr. Sandelius said the seminar will conduct research on the Kansas Constitution in relation to the experiences of other states. The seminar will be on the junior-senior level. Drilling costs account for 47 per cent of the expense of finding and producing oil. (from page 2) Increase Word Power Answers 1-C; 2-A; 3-D; 4-B; 6-A; 7-C; 8-A; 9-D; 10-B; 11-C; 12-A; 13-D; 14-B; 15-A; 16-D; 17-B; 18-C; 19-B; 20-C. Vocabulary ratings: 20 correct, excellent; 19-17 correct, good; 16-14 correct, fair. She plans to be back on her 5:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. shift in the hospital kitchen at the beginning of the second semester. The Rev. Ernst Klein says that the main question facing contemporary religious philosophy is: Was Jesus primarily a prophet depicting the coming end of the world, or was he simply a teacher of ethics? Minister Talks on Religious Question Jesus - Prophet or Teacher of Ethics The Rev. Mr. Klein, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Lawrence, addressed the Faculty Forum yesterday. He said the answer to this question is determined by each person's faith and philosophy of life. "Of course the traditional view is that the Bible is an infallible record," he said. "But a literary criticism of the Bible has been developing since the beginning of this century. The result of this criticism has been to establish Mark as the earliest gospel and recorder of the life of Jesus." He said it is pointed out by some critics that Matthew repeats about 90 per cent of Mark in the Bible, and Luke about 50 per cent. "The Markian hypothesis is the result of these critics' work," he said. "The hypothesis contends that Mark can be thought of as a reliable historical source. Thus the liberal philosophy presents a picture of Jesus in relation to His teachings and His life. This is why some see Jesus as a great ethical genius or a religious genius rather than as a divine." The other school of thought, by the neo-orthodoxists, maintains that one must consider basic religious problems, such as sin and salvation, when attempting to discover the role of Jesus. Many attempts have been made to deny the historical authenticity of Jesus by denying that ancient historians make reference to Him," he said. "Jesus is mentioned in history, despite what many have said. He is mentioned in the Talmud, the document of Jewish civil and canonical law, and by Roman historians, such as Tacitus." Students Advised to Get Some Sleep Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director or the Student Health Service, today cautioned students about neglecting their health during final week. usually get three or four students who have run themselves down." "There are always a few who leave all their work until the last few days, and then try to live on coffee and go without sleep while cramming for finals," he said. "We He said that student health has been unusually good since Christmas vacation. "I have never seen such healthy students in all my life," he said. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Antelope Corduroy PIPERS See them today at the town shop and the university shop MY! I DIDN'T KNOW ANY LAUNDRY OFFERED SO MANY CONVENIENT SERVICES! - Free Pickup Free Delivery Spots Removed - Sanitone Safety - Clothes Storage - Moth Proofing - Tears Mended - Buttons Sewn On "The Laundry With COMPLETE Service" We Deliver We Deliver LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call VI 3-3711 APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE We Deliver "You'll be glad you did" TIMMY EASTMAN Thomas R. Buckman, lecturer in Swedish, said yesterday that he was planning to make inquiries on whether the banned Swedish film, "Smiles of a Summer Night," could be brought to the campus for showing under "other auspices" than were previously arranged. Film May Make It Yet Mr. Buckman, a librarian in the acquisition department of Watson Library, said he would attempt to contact film distributors in New York to see if the picture could be obtained. If so, he would seek to bring it here an on educational permit. See Mr. Buckman's letter on page 12: "Questions Censor Group." See page 2 for an editorial on censorship: "Censored Sex." "Everyone at the University has a right to see this film," said Mr. Buckman. "This is a question of the invasion of the individual's rights in a free society." The controversial film, which was scheduled for showing tonight at Hoch Auditorium as a feature of the University film series, was blocked from presentation in any Kansas theater by an action of the State Board of Review. Mrs. Hazel Runyan, director of the board, told the Daily Kansan yesterday that the board "did not see fit to turn loose" the film. But she said the board may review the film again soon. Mary Helen McFerson, Wichita sophomore and chairman of the All Student Council film committee, said last night that her committee was planning no action on the step by the state board. "The films for the current years were arranged for by the film committee last spring," Miss McFerson concluded. Mr. Buckman said that the film won top comedy honors at the international film festival in Cannes, France in 1956. Daily hansan 56th Year, No. 77 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Last After-Lunch Class Today; New Classes Now The top picture shows Bob Hayes, Topeka senior, and Janet Douthitt, Augusta junior, perusing the schedule of classes for the spring semester. Below, as seen from the third floor of Bailey Hall, is part of the last after-lunch students to go to 1 p.m. classes this semester. Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 Batista Condemns Rebel Executions See page 8 for more news on Cuban executions and United States reaction. See page 2 for an editorial on the Cuban trials: "Dismal Note Sounded." HAVANA—(UFI)—The revolutionary government has postponed for 24 to 48 hours the start of "war crimes" trials for 631 Havana prisoners. The postponement announcement came as former dictator Fulgencio Batista added his voice to those crying for a halt to the "blood bath" execution of Batista supporters. Custed Batista says Fidel Castro will have to kill, jail or exile more At the same time the Fidel Castro regime launched a campaign to publicize the "horrors' committed by, Batista's army and secret police. than half of Cuba's six million people if he means to carry out his "monstrous" threat to punish all Batista's supporters. In response to questions submitted by this reporter, Batista said his regime was supported by political parties which polled 2,800,000 votes in last election. The deposed strong man said the "It would be interesting if the boastful affirmation that there is freedom of the press in Cuba—a freedom like that in Russia, where anyone who speaks out against the government dies or is jailed—were put to the test," he said. "blood bath" executions now in progress in Cuba are a "symptom of barbarism . . . a state of collective insanity imposed by terror." "You must remember that when he was a student he personally 'liquidated' some of his rivals . . . that he took part in the Bogota Riots (of April, 1948) in which priests and members of religious orders died . . . and recall his executions in the Maestra Mountains." "The river of blood now running in my unfortunate country is caused by a thirst for vengeance and savagery whose origin must be sought in Castro himself," Batista said. Batista scoffed at Castro's claim that Cuba now enjoys freedom of the press. "Let the relatives of the thousands they (the rebels) murdered or injured, or those who disappeared, speak out." Library Hours Set For Semester Split Watson Library will go on a slightly altered schedule during the next two weeks. On Saturday, Jan. 24, the library will be open from 8 to noon. It will be closed on Sunday, Jan. 25, then vacation hours of 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. will prevail from Jan. 26 through Jan. 31. The library will be open tomorrow from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., and the regular schedule will prevail Sunday through Friday next week. A mass of cold air kept the chill on all of Kansas today, but a gradual moderating trend was expected to bring a slow warmup during the weekend. Low temperature here last night was 7 degrees. Temperature to Rise Some This Weekend It will be closed on Feb. 1, then will resume its regular schedule on Feb. 2, the first day of the new semester. Temperatures fell to two above zero at Lovewell Dam in Jewell County last night. Dodge City reported 14 for the highest nighttime mark. Most areas ranged around 10 degrees. Skies were clear in the east and overcast in the west in the forenoon. Enrolling Time Cut to $ 2\frac{1}{2} $ Days The University will attempt to push through enrolling students in two and a half days during the second semester enrollment period. A similar enrollment to that of the fall semester is predicted by James K. Hitt, registrar, and he believes there is no time like the present to see if the enrollment can be shortened. In the past, three days were used for enrollment. "We always wanted to see if we could enroll the students in two and a half days, and with a televised basketball game to be played with Colorado that Saturday afternoon, I don't know what would happen if we continued enrollment." ASC Gets Group Insurance Plan For Students The All Student Council Health Commission has entered into a contract with Blue Cross-Blue Shield for a low cost student group health insurance plan. The new plan is voluntary and supplements the health service now provided through the $12 student health fee. A Blue Cross-Blue Shield card will be given to students when they pick up fee cards in February. Students may at that time indicate whether or not they want the additional health insurance coverage. No physical examination is necessary. If students desire the coverage, the insurance cost is payable when they pay fees. Cost Is $11.70 The cost of the plan will be $11.70 for the single student and $64.75 for a student with dependents. The plan will be effective for eight months—Feb. 1 through Oct. 1. If the student wishes to renew the policy at Oct. 1 of next year, the renewal period will cover the next 12-month period. (Continued on Page 12) Last Issue Today Today's issue of the Daily Kansan is the last to be published this semester. Publication will resume Feb. 2, the first day of classes. "We seem to be on a temporary plateau," Mr. Hitt said. "The big enrollment increases likely will not come until 1960 through 1955." The registrar predicts around 7,700 students to enroll during the period Jan. 29-31. The enrollment would be similar to the fall's 7,743 students admitted on the KU campus and 695 at the KU Medical Center. No Enrollment Changes No changes have been made from the enrollment procedure used this semester. There will be early pick-up of enrolment materials beginning on Wednesday, Jan. 28. "The student should take his grade report with him to the Kansas Union when he enrolls, for his spring enrollment schedule may depend upon his grades. His adviser may want to see the reports," he added. Class schedules are available at the registrar's office. The student is advised to study enrollment procedures on pages 1 and 2 before beginning the enrollment process. "Fall semester grade reports are available for the student at Table I. first stop, when the student picks enrollment materials." Mr. Hitt said. Bring ID Card Mr. Hitt also advised the student to bring his ID card. The enrollment will proceed according to a letter schedule, and every student must follow that schedule unless he has a permit. "We have directions and application forms for those students who need exceptions." Mr. Hitt said. "We do not want to make it difficult for the person who has a valid reason for special enrollment, but we do want to make it difficult for the person who does not have a reason for special treatment. Look for Problems "We look for those students with a problem, but in doing so we have to be tough with those who do not," he said. Ten days after enrollment fees must be paid. The days for fee payment run from Feb. 12 to 16. At that time a card will be distributed upon which the student can indicate whether or not he wishes to be covered by the new, voluntary health insurance plan. (See related story on this page: ASC Get Groups Insurance Plan or Students) "The time for the student to gather information about this plan is between now and the time to pay fees. The students should get a lot of information about the plan and discuss it with their parents over the vacation," Mr. Hitt said. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 Censored Sex Writing editorials in Kansas is a cinch. The wheat-belt prophets should be ashamed to pick up their paychecks. When things get dull, and the piece on Afghanistan is already written, you simply pull out the file on moongazers. Kansas has prohibitionists, fundamentalists, reformers, and faith healers, the healers moving to Southern California in recent years. But no species among the native fauna is more reliable fodder for the editor than the Kansas Board of Review. The board passes on the state of public morality as reflected in the movies entering the state. A dirty movie has more trouble passing the state line than a bottle of Missouri whisky. The board usually finds the public mind a sink of iniquity, and edits public film consumption accordingly. Whenever the board stirs a stump, the editor has tomorrow's editorial page taken care of. He either rears back on his hind legs and annihilates the board for censoring, or he rears back and blasts the film maker who has just suffered the board's depredations. It's a sure winner either way. The film this time is "Smiles of a Summer Night," a Swedish pastry which probably deals with sex. Most Swedish movies do. We haven't seen the picture, and neither has anyone else in Kansas, except the Board of Review. Nobody is likely to see it. The board is going to call in some "broad-minded people" to look at their prize. The implication is that the board members are not broadminded, but that's no shock. The width of the Kansas mind is measured in microns, and has been since before Comstock's palmy days in New York. Some sort of review board is a good idea. There should be some agency to shield us from the flood of pap and papillae that Hollywood normally spews. But the board is oblivious to artistic merit, and passes only on morality. The board passed "I Was a Teen-Age Werewolf" without batting an eye. Even Abbott and Costello have been seen in Kansas. But the Swedish film is immoral, the board says, and the University Film Series is running a good, safe standby film in its place. One thing the board has never recognized, and probably never will. Some of us are natural-born moral lepers, and we like to be titillated. If we can't see dirty movies, we'll buy pornographic books or subscribe to college humor magazines. A few benighted souls even feel they have a right to select their own entertainment. In some places, they do. But Kansas, in the traditions of camp-meeting morality, hallowed by custom and established by the Legislature, will continue its robotomies, hoping against hope that the mob will eventually be weaned of the desire for things unclean, immoral, obscene, and defiled. Sometimes about the millenium, their wish will come true, followed by the Second Coming. We Preach, Don't Practice The recent overthrow of Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista and the subsequent resignation of U. S. Ambasador Earl Smith once again points up one of the big faults in our system of government. America has tried to be the showcase for democracy since that day in 1776 when a group of men gathered to pen their names to the Declaration of Independence. We have talked in glowing terms of the rights of man. While we mouth sweet talk about freedom for all, we continue to shovel arms to dictators in Latin American countries. These dictators, in turn, use American weapons to see that their people do not step out of line in search of such absurdities as freedom. Then, we sit around and try to figure why the people of South America stone our vice president. Unquestionably, much of the agitation in these South American countries is worked up by the Communists. But when you stop to look at the record of this country in dealing with our southern neighbors, you can't help but wonder just how much agitation it takes on the part of the Communists to develop these hate campaigns such as the Nixon episode. The United States could not conceivably send direct aid to the rebels in their fight for freedom. But it certainly did not have to support Batista diplomatically and with arms. What is needed now is emphatic support of the new Cuban government—provided of course that government shows it is willing to put the wants and needs of the people first. Another factor that would greatly aid the cause of democracy south of this nation would be to send Cuba a diplomat well versed in Cuban affairs. This country cannot continue awarding diplomatic posts as "political plums" and expect to win the confidence of the people being served by these ambassadors. America likes to play the role of the good guys in this game—and rightly so. There is no other way it should be. But someone in Washington ought to rewrite the script so that, even if we don't help the other good guys, we won't go around supporting the villain. Bob Macy LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS AN 'EXCUSED' ABSENCE NO NO D. BITLER "JEE ME TOMORROW—I'M BUGY GRADING FINALS NOW." A foxhunt official used a tin bathtub as a lifeboat to rescue a hound that had fallen into a flooded mine shaft. We admire his courage but wonder how he happened to have a bathtub with him on a fox hunt. Short Ones Dailu Hansan UNIVERSITET An author of a recent book on how to live without alcohol found out he couldn't. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press Repres- ented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. 212-694-8200. Press International. Mail subscription a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holliday examination periods. Entered as second candidate Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Malcum Applegate ... Managing Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bill Irvine ... Business Manager NOTEBOOK DEPARTMENT. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Al Jones Editorial Editor It Looks This Way... By Alan Jones I haven't been well lately. I have an intense pain in the sacral area, aggravated by reading guff from every bleeding heart and big-mouthed politician in the country about how terrible things are. First Anastas Mikoyan, a professional Armenian butcher who is currently drumming up trade in this country, has some eggs thrown at him. Washington is afraid Mikoyan won't like us. Frankly, who gives a damn if Mikoyan likes us or not? He's a politician of the teady school, who has held office by being acceptable to the number one man of the moment. He was the animal responsible for the slaughter in Hungary. He directed the capture of Nagy and Maleter, and supervised the Hungarian slaughter. Who wants to be friends with a beast like that? The people chucking things at him were Hungarians—the ones who escaped. They know Mikoyan for what he is, and they get my thanks if nobody else's. And there has been a great protest against the executions in Cuba. Castro is a butcher, a blood-eaxed fanatic, the lament goes. About a week ago, a TV newscast listed some of the torture instruments found in a Batista jail. There were pliers for the tongue, pincers and wires for the fingernails, iron boots for feet The congressmen didn't say anything about these sophisticated little amusements, but are outraged because a few dozen sadists and legalized criminals are erased. Congress is going to investigate the executions in Cuba, to see what we can do "short of sending U.S. troops." We have about as much right in Cuba as a polecat at a lawn party. We stood by, watching and ignoring, while Castro and his grubby army lay sweating in Oriente. And now, the gentlemen of Congress find Castro's program "regrettable." We could do with a little less shocked piety and a little more concern for things that are properly our business. And our business, Cuba ain't. Happy Birthday letters to the editor Cuban Supports Castro Editor: Every hour, as the radios bring the last news, you hear the bitter comments about the executions in Cuba. Newspapers and radios are keeping a close count of the persons executed. The United Nations is thinking about a way to make Castro stop the executions, and it makes me wonder why? The people that are being executed are war criminals, people that during Batista's regime tortured and killed thousands of Cubans. Why protest now because they are given justice, a fair trial and a generous death considering the one they gave others? If the United Nations is so concerned about Cuba, why didn't they say something during Batista's regime when 20,000 Cubans suffered horrid deaths. Why didn't they speak when Batista, in his last attempt to stay in power, ordered the bombing of open cities that were on the rebel side? We had to live through these bombings, we had to see, hopelessly, how Batista's air force bombed cities like Santa Clara during 23 hours in a row and five planes at a time; and now they try to tell us what to do. Didn't the United Nations stop to think how many innocent lives were being lost then? Why complain now that the men guilty of such cruelties are being judged and executed? If the government wouldn't take care of those criminals the people would take justice into their own hands, and then it would be much worse because they would receive what they gave, they would harvest what they planted with seeds of terror and destruction. The Cubans were strong enough to fight a dictatorship and destroy it. The United Nations didn't offer them any help then, why not let them take care of what they acquired in a fight of ideals against corruption, power and money. If we knew how to destroy a dictatorship, why think we don't know how to apply justice to the supporters of it? Sonia Alvarez Cardenas, Cuba, junior * * Congratulations, Jayhawkers Editor: A look at this year's Jayhawker is certainly no waste of time. Last year, I had gone so far as to generalize after seeing the Jayhawker what low standards yearbooks of American schools have. I had to look twice when I opened this year's Jayhawker. Not only its photography, writing and general presentation show imagination, creativity and originality, but also the spirit it disseminates is clear, modern and joyful. Particular attention is deserved for the special effects in photography as well as text and design and the attempt to bring some life even into the normally dullest (and most used) sections like the presentation of the members of different houses. I am glad to have some evidence to change my opinion about American yearbooks. Harald Meyer Reinach, Basel, Switzerland graduate student Page 3 University Daily Kansan The survivor, Comanche, a horse, lives again today in Walt Disney's movie, "Tonka," now playing in a local theater. The only U.S government survivor of the 1876 Custer massacre at Little Big Horn is on display at the KU Natural History Museum—stuffed, of course. Comanche Gallops Again Comanche is shown in the above picture being viewed by visitors to the museum. Comanche's fame dates from the time a detachment of U.S. Cavalry troops arrived at the scene of The horse's owner, an officer in Gen. Custer's 7th Cavalry, had been killed along with the rest of the soldiers by warriors led by Chiefs Rain-in-the-face and Crazy Horse. Custer's last stand two days after the massacre. The only living thing left was Comanche, and even he was seriously wounded. Comanche was nursed back to health by the Army following his discovery and transferred to Ft. Riley, Kan. He died there on Nov. 7, 1891, at the age of 31. Around the Campus Theta Chi to Move Three Professors Into New House Write Indian Book "We will be more or less camping there for a while anyway." De Ros Hogue, Lawrence senior and a member of the fraternity, said. Theta Chi fraternity will be moving into at least part of its new house between semesters. The fraternity will occupy one floor, a study tower and the dormitory part while construction will be continued on the rest of the house. "It should be pretty recognizable as a house around March," Hogue said. "There is a lot of carpenter work that must be done before it is complete." Plant Growth Study Gets $2,200 Grant Research on regulating plant growth has been granted $2,200 from the Frederick Gardner Cottrell Fund administered by Research Corp. The study is directed by Albert W. Burgstahler, assistant professor of chemistry. Graduate students seek information on the inhibition and regulation of plant growth with certain acids. The authors are Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education; E. Gordon Collister, professor of education and director of the Guidance Bureau, and Ralph E. Kron, now at the University of Pittsburgh. Two KU professors and one former instructor have written a book on Indian school children entitled "The Indian Child Goes to School." Mower Gets Bad Time A report is given of the Indian children's achievements and cultural and environmental factors related to their schooling. A total of 23,608 pupils, was reported on after taking the California Achievement Tests in reading, arithmetic and spelling. Use Kansan Want Ads NEW CASTLE, Ind. — (UPI)— Thieves who broke into Cadiz High School last night ignored money in coin-operated machines, but consumed 27 containers of chocolate milk, 10 dozen eggs and 20 pounds of sausage. ST. LOUIS, Mo. —(UP)— Police found a power mower reported stolen Wednesday in suburban Ladue, but left it to find a starter rope. Today they had the starter rope but were looking for three men seen taking the machine while they were gone. Hungry Thieves Raid School Underground steam is used in Italy to generate electric power. Wells are being drilled in California for the same purpose. The Kansas chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society, imitated last night 73 persons to full and associate membership. Thirty-one were elected to full membership, the rest becoming associates. Sigma Xi Initiates 73 to Membership To quality for membership in the society, one must present evidence of ability and productivity in research in the physical or natural sciences. Full membership is granted for research resulting in a doctoral dissertation or for a master's thesis plus publication of research results. The 31 persons newly elected to full membership are either graduates or faculty of KU. They are: Raymond J. Ackermann, chemistry, Argonne National Laboratory: Kenneth Anderson; dean of The School of Edu- tory geological survey; Don H. Byers, physics; geological survey; Don H. Byers, physics; Goldwell Jr., pharmaceutical chemistry, Skine, Smith and French Laboratories Richard C. Carlston, chemistry, Sperry Gyroscope Co.; Ronald J. Clark, chemistry, Linde Air Products Co.; Gordon Collister, Guidance Bureau director; William C. Cottie, education professor; George R. Coonin, chemistry, Texas Instrument Co. SENIORS... DEADLINE DATE IS FEB. 21 Thomas B. Daniel, physics, Midwest Rivers National Laboratory biochemistry assistant prof., Nancy Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 122-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin intended to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include the Name, place, date, and time of function. Get Your Senior Picture Taken for the Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 9-11 a.m., Sat, 314 Fraser. '59 Jayhawker TODAY CALL ESTES STUDIOS—VI 3-1171 Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey Hall. If you wish to have an interview, please come in and arrange for an appointment. Today: Mr. Mose Topeka, Mrs. Riemer, (Elem.) of Topeka; Mr. Charles Romine, of Jefferson County, Colorado Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:45 a.m., m821 St. Joseph's St. Bible study, 7:30 a.m. for the TOMORROW Ph. D. Reading Examination in German, 9-11 a.m., 314 Fraser. Newman Club Mass, 8 and 10 a.m. Newman Club Mass hour in Hawk's Nest after noon, 9 a.m. KU Faculty Club, 5 p.m. Mr. E. J. KU lovers in the lows. Hosts, Mrs. & Mrs. H. A. Ireland. United Student Fellowship of the Congregational Church, 5-7 p.m. at the church for a "fun night." Peggy Epps urge of the program. Everyone welcome. Dahl, physiology graduate student; Dennis R. Dahl, physiology medical student; Dale R. Diff, pharmaceutical chemistry research associate. Jean Ann Foster, anatomy graduate student; Yoshinori Fujimoto, biochemistry graduate student; Kiyoshi Ishiguro, Japan; Donald Fulhage, chemistry; Didewater Oil Corp.; Tneedore Kuwana, chemistry graduate student; N. Garyane, geology; geology department, Japan. James C. Lillo, mathematics assistant prof.; Carl McMillin, chemistry graduate student; Frank Popp, chemistry, post-dectorate fellow, Michigan University; Stephen Reagan, biology graduate student; John L. Riggs, bacteriology graduate student. Audrey N. Roberts, bacteriology graduate student; Harry E. Robson, chemistry, Esso Research Labs; Donald J. Burschner, biomedical engineering Georgia Institute of Technology; Homer Scarborough Jr., pharmaceutical chemistry, Mead Johnson & Co.; Diana Schellenberg, anatomy research assistant; Pharmaceutical chemistry, Abbott Labs. Associate membership is granted to those who are well along on a promising research project, 42 graduate or junior grade student at KU elected as associate members are: Loren Argabright, mathematics, Boeing alrcarft plant; George Axelrad, chemistry; Bea Berger, chemistry; Arthur Blade, chemistry; Donald E. Bubilt, chemistry; Alvin Burt, anatomy; Philp lomontology; geoengineering; tomology; Donald Collins, geology; Arthur Gridland, botany; all are graduate students. Victor Davis, physics, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory; William J. Davis, zoology; David Dume, geology; John Elvig, petroleum engineering; Gwendolyn Freeman, anatomy; Gale I. Harris, physics, the University of Illinois;emami- Heedley chemistry; Paul L. Hillman, geology; Charles Hobbs, chemistry; all graduate students. Ronald E. Hubert, physics, Boeing Airplane Co.; Paul L. Johnston, geology; Walter Kintsch, psychology; Karl Kumli, chemistry; Isaac Levine, chemistry; Richard Holley, physiology; William Longmore, geology; Douglas McDarnie, geology; Robert McDarnie, chemistry; John Morris, botany; all graduate students. Theodore Mueller, chemistry; Dean Neher, physics; Robert Parkhurst, geology; Hans-Otto Paulussen, physics; William Pivonka, chemistry; Eugenerodreubach, chemistry; Dale Othese, geology; Hank Schmidt, Robert Stultz, chemistry; Wesley Unhru, physics; Gary Webster, geology; Murray Zanger, chemistry; all graduate students. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Jerry Marcus "I'd walk a mile for a Camel!" More people want America's real cigarette than any other brand today. For 10 straight years, Camel has been the top-selling cigarette of all. The Camel blend of costly tobaccos has never been equalled for rich flavor and easygoing mildness. The best tobacco makes the best smoke. Cast off the fads and fancy stuff . . . Have a real cigarette have a CAMEL CAMEL RELEASED DEMONSTRATING NEW LIFE PETRUS CHOICE QUALITY CAMEL B. J Reynolds Tob, Col., Winston-Salem, N.C. --- Page 4 University Daily Kansan Land, Sea Won't Move, Moore Says A KU geology professor said last night that the evidence now available to geologists seems to disprove the "floating continent" theory that the form and placement of land bodies has changed in the earth's history. Raymond C. Moore, Summerfield distinguished professor of geology and former director of the Kansas Geological Survey, told Sigma Xi honorary science fraternity members that he is certain continents and oceans are stable as a whole and will not change. "Research indicates that no sediment from chiefly land-based rocks and minerals is found on the ocean floor, and that no deep sea sediments exist on land masses," he said. "Thus the continents have always existed in much the same form as they do now," Prof. Moore said. He said the seas and land masses of the earth's crust differ in that the oceanic part is much heavier. However, the two parts are always in balance, he said, because the rocks from the interior of the earth supporting the water in the oceans are lighter than those supporting land masses. "There are 1,370 million cubic kilometers of water on the earth, excluding the ice at both poles, Prof. Moore said. "If all the ice were melted, the mean sea level would be raised 150 feet and lowlands and coastal plains all over the world would be flooded." To emphasize the quantity of water on the earth, Prof. Moore said that if all the water in the world were walled in within the boundaries of the United States Denver, the mile high city, would be covered with 4,000 feet of it. Prof. Moore said the earth is separated into two kinds of areas what geologists call mobile belts and nuclear areas. The nuclear areas, he explained, are composed of rocks which have existed unchanged for a long time and are stable. Kansas Mineral Production Is Up State Geological Survey figure released this week show that mineral production in Kansas now exceeds a half-billion dollars annually. All but three of Kansas' 105 counties reported commercial production of one or more of 22 minerals during 1957 and each of 54 counties contributed minerals worth $1 million or more during that year. Oil and natural gas, which were produced in 80 counties, led in collar volume. Of the $234,093,093 mineral production in Kansas during 1957, $467,151,147, or 87.5 percent, was derived from mineral fuels. "Contrary to this, mobile belts are composed of chiefly layer-caked rocks which have more than ordinary mobility," he said. These mobile belts are the areas which contain most of the faults (a break or split) in the earth's crust, he explained. One such area JACKSON Raymond C. Moore is located in California and contains the San Andreas fault. Faults are the major cause of earthquakes, and movement along the San Andreas fault caused the San Francisco earthquake in 1906. Buses Ready For K-State The KU pep clubs will charter two buses to transport 76 students to the KU-Kansas State basketball game Feb. 11 at Manhattan. Tickets are $4, which includes bus and game ticket costs. The tickets will be on sale Feb. 6-9 from 2 to 5 p.m., and Feb. 7 from 8 to 11 a.m. in the information booth on Javihawk Boulevard. Docking Says Some Salaries Increased Gov. George Docking said today he would not reveal his recommendations for salary changes for faculty at state supported schools until the budget comes out. But, he added, he did not grant civil service pay increases to any other class of state workers, except those in the lower pay scales. He said his tax recommendations "will be a lot more pleasant than anybody thought." Take an at the EXAM CRAM BREAK DE LUXE CAFE Open till 2 a.m. Closed Mondays Only EXCELLENT MENU SELECTION VI 3-8292 The new increases are effective as of yesterday on all insurance written by stock companies. Sullivan, in approving the rate increases pointed out that Kansas ranks only 44th among state insurance rates Auto Insurance Rates Hiked The rate hike will boost the state-wide average cost on the required liability insurance from $31.07 to $36.60. Collision rates will increase by about the same ratio: Car owners will have to pay more for their auto insurance because of action taken by Frank Sullivan, State Commissioner of Insurance. Sullivan has approved rate increases that will average 17.8 per cent for liability and 7.54 per cent for collision coverage. 711 Mass. The minimum coverage required by the new liability law calls for up to $5,000 for each death or injury; $10,000 for each accident, and $5,000 property damage. The increased rate was first requested in November, 1957, but the request was turned down because the commissioner did not feel the information submitted justified a hike. Kansas was the only state which did not grant such an increase at that time. The latest request was submitted four months ago with additional information on justification of a hike. Reasons submitted were more accidents, more costly repair bills and higher hospital and medical costs. Most of the repair bill increases were attributed to wrap-around windshields, elaborate grilles and tail fin assemblies, and fender sections with built-in multiple light units. Sullivan said that liability insurance for unmarried men under 25 years old would increase even more than the average raise for other age groups. Martin to Iowa Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards at the University has been invited to serve as scholarship consultant at Iowa Wesleyan College, Mount Pleasant, Iowa. The wings of commercial jet airliners are not only flexible but also twist to carry gust shocks out over the wing tips and into space, away from the airframe itself. Student Legislator Sees Tight Budget Tom Van Sickle, Ft. Scott senior who was elected to the Kansas House of Representatives last November, said this morning the University will suffer if the Legislature accepts Gov. George Docking's budget program. "Gov. Docking has said he will balance the budget this year, and Tom Van Sickle do it by refusing the increases requested by the Board of Regents," Rep. Van Sickle said. He added that while most budget cuts have been restored in previous years, it would be difficult to predict whether the same will happen this year. There are more Democrats to back the governor's proposals, and Republicans will have difficulty getting enough votes to override vetoes, Rep. Van Sickle said. Rep. Van Sickle said the budget will not be sent to the Legislature for about a week. Nothing specific Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. was said about it in the governor's inauguration speech. "We have only the general outlines of the budget so far," he said. "In fact, the governor made only basic statements on all matters. He should have tied the whole thing together in one package in his first message." Rep. Van Sickle predicted the governor's proposal to cut the sales tax by one-half cent will now go through. The question of home rule will be one of the most important in the coming session. Rep. Van Sickle said, The plan, which has Gov. Docking's backing, would give more authority to local officials. The Kansas plan is based on the home rule program used in Wisconsin. Rep. Van Sickle said he would have to see the completed plan before committing himself on it. Rep. Van Sickle will finish his senior year at the University next week, and will then devote full time to the Legislature. He is considering enrollment in the law school next summer. Tugboat Named "Women" TOKYO —(UPI)— The Communist Chinese New China News agency proudly disclosed today that 100 women in Shanghai drew up plans for the first tugboat in Chinese history to be entirely designed by females. They also suggested that the vessel be named "Women." Two expert shoemakers from England, Thomas Beard and Isaac Rickerman, began the manufacture of leather shoes in America at Salem, Mass., in 1629. NEXT TIME Try MOTOR IN specializing in Chrysler products and mechanical work of all kinds 827 Vt. VI 3-4955 A MESSAGE OF IMPORTANCE . . . TO YOU! RENT RECEIPTS: current market value $00.00 Are you now renting, or plan to rent an apartment or house? DID YOU KNOW that you can purchase a home with payments actually less than rent? Compare "LESS-THAN-RENT" payments on one of our comfortable homes with what you'll pay over the next 2 or 3 years for a rental property. Perhaps your logical question will be this: What about the resale value of my Lawrence property when I leave K.U.? May we say this: Ask any qualified university official or city official what effect the growth of K.U. and the industrial expansion in Lawrence has had on future real estate values. You alone can determine the tangible and intangible benefits of living in your own home while at K.U. But this we can determine for you . . . THE MARKET VALUE OF RENT RECEIPTS WILL STILL BE $00.00. Call Moore Associates TODAY and let us show you these attractive homes and explain to you our SPECIAL STUDENT HOME BUYING PLAN. You'll be glad that you did . . . MOORE ASSOCIATES REALTORS 704 Mass. - VI 3-2571 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Three AFROTC Cadets Take 600-mph Plane Ride Friday. Jan. 16. 1959 Three KU seniors recently flew from Spokane, Wash., to Elgin, Fla., in four hours. Jerry G. Miller, Lawrence, Robert E. Boehme, Goodland, and John L. Fourrét, Mission, Air Force ROTC cadets, were Air Force guests in a 600-mile-an-hour KC-135 jet transport. N-E PHOTO The men, who are in pilot training in connection with BOTC, are carefully screened through aptitude and physical examinations for the advance training. The three watched the Air Force's firepower demonstration at the Air Proving Grounds at Elgin. Thirty-six and one-half hours of flying instruction is given senior cadets who have been selected for pilot training. The men can qualify for a private pilot's license after completion of the training. First hand observation of Air Force Base operations is part of the training. The KU 213-man Air Force ROTC Cadet Corps is one of 180 such units in universities and colleges over the nation. The KU unit was established in 1949 when the Air Force was made a separate branch of the Defense Department. Since then over 650 cadets have been commissioned second lieutenants from the KU detachment. Enrollment in the program is voluntary. In the junior year each cadet is designated to specialize in one of four areas—pilot training, navigator training, scientific-technical, or administrative. SKY SCANNING—Four Air Force cadets and staff officers from KU observe landings at Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Okla., on a recent tour of the base. From left are Richard L. Branham, Neosho, Mo., freshman; Jerry L. Friedman, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Capt. Donald T. Hawkins, assistant professor of air science, and First Lt. Donald L. Hunter, instructor of air science. (Vance Photo) Civilian Clerk Wins From Navy NEW YORK — (UPI) — A civilian naval clerk found guilty of insubordination for answering her hospital office phone a minute after the official closing hour, has appealed her case to the Secretary of the Navy and won. The triumph of Mrs. Anna Wasylkow, 39, was disclosed today. The Bureau of Medicine, acting for Navy Secretary Thomas Gates, ruled yesterday that the charge be expunged from her record. Two weeks later she received a reprimand from Capt. Cecil L. Andrews, commanding officer of the hospital, which said: "You are hereby officially warned for failure to carry out instruction relating to answering of phones after working hours on July 31, 1958. A repetition of the offense within one year may result in application of higher penalties." Mrs. Wasylkow left her desk promptly at the 4:30 p.m. closing hour last July 31, but was called back immediately by a ringing telephone. She took a message regarding hospital supplies and left it for the appropriate authority. The repreimind would have made it difficult for Mrs. Wasylowk to obtain a future promotion so she appealed through grievance procedure. On Oct. 15 Andrews informed her that the appeal was denied and that she was "guilty of insubordination." Her lawyer then filed a brief will Gates. The latter turned the case over to the Department of Medicine, which ordered the single blotch on Mrs. Wasylkow's record removed. WASHINGTON — (UPI)—Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles talked for two hours and 25 minutes today. The Russian said they had "an exchange of views on questions of interest to both sides." Mikoyan and Dulles Talk U.S. Described Safe From Enemy Air Attack The United States is protected from bomber attack by the SAGE air defense system which automatically alerts jet interceptors and directs them to the enemy plane. Maj. Logan C. Atthebury, electronics specialist assigned to the 4908th Air Defense Group, Richard-Gebau Air Force Base near Kansas City, described the new defense system Wednesday to the Arnold Air Society, honorary Air Force ROTC group. SAGE is a vast electrical system which uses radar to detect, position and identify aircraft over or near the U.S. The information is fed into a computing machine which interprets it and beams it to a special scope. "Eventually we will have defensive weapons capable of destroying an inter-continental ballistic missile," he said. Civil Service Tests Offered This Spring "With SAGE (Semi-Automatic Ground Environment) we can track and destroy objects traveling across our skies at speeds up to 100,000 miles an hour," Maj Attorey said. "SAGE is still very new, and expensive. Because of the impossibility of any Russian aircraft in operation flying from Russia to the Caribbean area and attacking us from the South, most of Florida just hasn't any air defense system. Asked about the Cuban bomber which flew undetected within a few hundred miles of Cape Canaveral missile launch site in Florida, Maj. Attebury replied: Examinations will be given for: mediator, $7,030 a year; digital computer and operator, $4,980 to $8,330 a year, and geologist, $4,450 to $5,450 a year. Maj. Myron Peale, who assisted Maj. Attiebury with the presentation, said the capability is much greater than any aircraft or missile in use. The Civil Service Commission will give examinations for positions in several fields this spring. Exams will also be given to college students and high school seniors for student trainee in the scientific, technical, agricultural, accounting, statistical, and civil engineering fields. Additional information and application forms may be obtained at the Lawrence Post Office. A. M. B. G. Maj. Logan Attebury A map of the United States is superimposed on the scope, so that the aircraft's position, course and speed can be seen at a glance. DUCK'S For SEA FOOD Chicken - Steaks OPEN 11:00-11:00 824 Vermont Air Force Missile Fizzled Last Night WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A powerful Atlas missile which the Air Force had hoped would travel 6,000 miles was reported today to have sputtered out less than 300 miles from its Cape Canaveral, Fla., launching pad. Informed sources in Washington said it was believed that the missile's engine cut off and it was not thought that the Atlas blew up. This would make its performance "partially successful," they said. An official Defense Department announcement was expected later today. Dozens of wild ponies are driven from a nearby island and sold at an annual auction each summer at Chicoteague, Va. The missile was fired last night as a second test of its capability as a potential intercontinental weapon. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Rupe entered the newspaper business in 1928 when he bought the Maryville (Mo.) Daily Forum. He sold it in 1932 and purchased the Creston (Iowa) News-Advertiser, selling the latter in 1835 to buy the Ames Daily Tribune. Iowa Publisher and Native Kansan Dies AMES, Iowa — (UPI) — W. S. Rupe, native Kansas and publisher of the Ames Daily Tribune since 1935, died recently. Rupe, 72, underwent surgery Jan. 7. He was a native of Dickinson County, Kan., and a graduate of the University of Kangas. COLLEGE MOTEL AAA Kansan Want Ads Get Results MIRROR THE BEST Coca-Cola HOTELS Member Best Western Motels 1703 WEST 6TH On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming YOU EXPECT THE BEST From LAWRENCE SANITARY "All Star" Dairy Products And You Have This Assurance Because LAWRENCE SANITARY DAIRY PRODUCTS MUST MEET STRICT CITY, COUNTY AND STATE REGULATIONS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Doug Yocom The Oklahoma basketball game this weekend will mark a decisive point in this year's basketball season. The Sooners, ranked at the first of the season behind Kansas State and on equal ground with Iowa State, will be the highest ranked Big Eight team KU has met since the start of conference play. Oklahoma has dropped only one league game to date, and that was to the high-flying Wildcats. For KU fans, the game should determine the type of team Dick Harp has put together without the aid of that seemingly mythical figure of long ago. "Wilt." "I if we can beat Oklahoma we can still have a good season." Coach Harp has said of the importance of the game. "Unless we play our best we can't win. Oklahoma is strong physically and there is not a loss that would hurt us more," the KU coach said. He added that he did not think Ron Loneski would be able to make the trip. The responsibility of stopping Denny Price, the OU scoring ace, will fall on guard Bob Hickman. Price has averaged 17 points in the Sooners' first three conference games. Hickman glued himself to Iowa State's Larry Fie in Monday night's game to hold the little left-hander to seven points. But Hickman's most notable performance of the season has probably been over quickshooting Lou Pucillo, North Carolina's 5-foot 9-inch playmaker. Pucillo hit only one of 14 tries from the field. This Saturday should prove quite an outing for the sports-minded Sooners. Tip-off time for the basketball game is 2 p.m. The Sooners' sports publicist says it is believed to be the first varsity afternoon game to be played in the OU field house since 1926 when it was built. At 8 p.m. later in the day Coach Jay Markley's swimming team will meet the Sooner tankmen. So far this year the Jayhawk swimmers have been the beam of light in KU's foggy sports picture. Markley's crew owned a 3-0 record until falling to Nebraska last week. 44-42. But the Sooners still hold an edge in the meet as OU has never lost a conference championship or a dual meet since Matt Mann became OU's coach four years ago. It is interesting to note that Oklahoma, which has always been the team to beat in the Big Eight, has only one swimmer on their squad from Kansas. Markley, on the other hand, has four men on his squad listed from swim-conscious Oklahoma. By United Press International Ed Conlin needed just nine minutes last night to give Syracuse its seventh win in eight starts. Syracuse, Conlin Defeat Lakers Conlin scored 15 points in a second period spree to give the Nationals an 111-105 victory over Minneapolis and move Syracuse to within two games of New York in the Eastern Division race. Philadelphia edged the Knickerbockers, 95-91, in the opener of a National Basketball Association doubleheader at Syracuse. EAT in your car, in the Blue Room, or take it with you Genuine Hickory Smoked Barbecue Burgers and Tenderloins Blue Hills 1601 E. 23rd. Blue Hills 1601 E.23rd. Team Confidence Up, Says Ketchum The recent winning streak of the Kansas basketball team can be attributed to a change in the mental attitude of the players, Dee Ketchum, sophomore guard, says. Kansas, after opening the season with two quick wins, dropped the next seven in a row. Fans settled back for a long basketball season. But this was not the case as the Jayhawkers have bounced back to win their last four games. "An attempt to explain the difference in play is hard. We simply have started playing good ball and everyone's confidence is up," said Ketchum. In explaining the win over Iowa State, the Bartlesville playmaker said: "The loss of Ron (Loneski) gave us a real challenge. We wanted to prove to ourselves we could win this one." In the game Ketchum scored nine points on four field goals and one free throw. This gives the reserve guard a total of 77 points in the Jayhawkers' 13 games. Ketchum, the fifth highest scorer on the team, has a 6 point average. Most of these points have come on Ketchum's favorite shot; a running one hand jump shot. But like many backcourt players he likes setting up a score with a good pass as well as scoring himself. When asked about his improved offensive showing he replied as many athletes do. He attributed it to luck. Turning to the nationally televised game with Oklahoma Saturday, Ketchum said that it is a tough job predicting a winner. "Our team is on the upgrade and we are getting better. We are also playing together better as a team than earlier in the year. It's hard to say but we have a good chance of winning." Missouri's Al Abram Benched Because of Scoring Slump COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) Leading scorer Al Abram of the Missouri Tigers will not be a starter tomorrow night against Kansas State. Coach Sparky Stalcup said he hopes the benching will shock Abram out of a slump that has plummeted his 14.9 scoring average. He totaled only 12 points in the last two games against Nebraska and Kansas. Bud Harbin, a 6-5 senior, will replace Abram at forward. Stalcup said he received doctor's approval yesterday to play Don Sarver, 6-3 guard. Sarver, who had been out with a broken wrist, returned to practice yesterday. But the coach said Sarver probably will see only spot action tomorrow. In 1908 the Jayhawkers defeated Kansas State in a conference basketball game, 50-12. Through the years, Kansas has won 91 while K-State has won only 45 in the long series. Plan Now to GIVE YOUR PORTRAIT TO YOUR VALENTINE For Portrait Photography of Distinction And for the Individualized Approach Call CONSTANCE SCHEERER STUDIO VI 3-1137 - 1908 Alabama Street ROOMIER BODY BY FISHER: features wider seats and more luggage space. MAGIC-MIRROR FINISH: keeps its shine without waxing for up to three years. NEW BIGGER BRAKES: better cooled with deeper drums, up to 66% longer life. OVERHEAD CURVED WINDSHIELD and bigger windows--all of Safety Plate Glass. SLIMLINE DESIGN: fresh, fine and fashionable with a why the smart switch is to the '59 Chevrolet practical slant. HI-THRIFT 6: up to 10% more miles per gallon. VIM-PACKED V8's: eight to choose from, with compression ratios ranging up to 11.25 to 1. FULL COIL SUSPENSION: further refined for a smoother, steadier ride on any kind of road. One short drive and you'll know the smart switch is to Chevy. Come in and be our guest for a pleasure test first chance you get. NOW—PROMPT DELIVERY! Stepped-up shipments have assured you a wide choice of models and colors. We can promise prompt delivery—and it's an ideal time to buy! CHEVROLET 1953 1953 The 6-passenger Nomad and the Impala 4-Door Sport Sedan. now—see the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's! University Daily Kansan Page 7 OKLAHOMA 24 BUDDY HUDSON — Oklahoma's 6-foot 2-inch jump shot artist. A former all-stater in high school, Hudson attended Oklahoma Baptist for his first year in college ball. Last year he played with the freshmen while waiting for varsity eligibility. Aaron Dissatisfied With New Contract MILWAUKEE, Wis. — (UPI) — Henry Aaron, Milwaukee Braves' slugging outfielder, today became the first member of the National League champs to publicly express dissatisfaction with his 1959 playing contract. "The offer wasn't what I wanted." Aaron was reported as saying. According to Milwaukee Sentinel Sportswriter Lou Chapman, Aaron refused to disclose the terms of the new deal, but he indicated his concern about the pact by delaying a scheduled trip with his family to Mobile, Ala. Aaron, who clouted 30 homers and had 95 RBI's to go with his .326 batting average last season, told Chapman that "some important personal business is coming up and I can't leave for a while." Connie Mack World Series BATTLE CREEK, Mich.—(UPI) The first "Connie Mack World Series" for baseball players under 19 years of age will be held by the American Amateur Baseball Congress at St. Joseph, Mo., Aug. 21-24. Regional champions were determined in the Connie Mack League last year but financial difficulties prevented a national tournament The Quaker Oats Co. and the St Joseph Chamber of Commerce volunteered to sponsor the 1959 event AABC President C. O. Brown said at Battle Creek today. Football was started at KU in 1890 Oklahoma Host To KU Saturday Big Fight basketball teams swing into action tomorrow with three games on the slate that is featured by the Kansas-Oklahoma regionally televised games at Norman. Saturday's game marks the 83rd meeting of the Jayhawkers and the Sooners with Kansas holding a decisive edge, 53-29. Both teams are in the midst of comeback surges. After losing seven straight games, Coach Dick Harp's Jayhawkers have swept four in a row and currently share the conference leadership with K-State. Missouri goes into the Wildcat game carrying an eight game losing streak. The Tigers have seen no wins in conference games and show a 3-11 season record. The Sooners are in a three way tie for second place with Colorado and Nebraska, all sharing a 2-1 record. In over-all season play OU has won seven while losing six. In other Big Eight action tomorrow fourth ranked Kansas State meets hapless Missouri at Columbia. On the other hand Kansas State Coach Tex Winter takes a red hot team to Missouri. In their last two games the Wildcat cagers have hit 48 per cent from the floor. The Wildcats are the highest scoring team in the conference, averaging over 79 points a game. Under Winter the Wildcats have never lost a game at Missouri since 1953. Kansas State defeated MU earlier in the season, 69-66, in the pre-season Big Eight tourney. In the other conference action, Iowa State plays at Nebraska tomorrow night. Coach Bill Stranigan's cagers have lost three straight conference games at home to Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Kansas. Picked for second place in the conference race in pre-season poll Iowa State has yet to win its first league game and are in the cella with a 0-3 record. Wanted: Volleyball Tourney Player A volleyball opportunity has opened with a chance for immediate advancement for the right man. Kevin Jones, coach of the KU Volleyball Club would like to take two teams to tournaments in Des Moines, Iowa, Jan. 24. His problem is he has enough players for one and three-fourths teams. So, Jones would like any interested men with intramural volleyball experience to call him at VI 3-3097 tonight. Coach Everett N. Case, head basketball coach of the North Carolina State Wolfpack, started coaching at the age of 18 at an Indiana High School and still managed to get his college degree between coaching assignments. HEY GANG! TGIF Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 AT THE PIT "Best Music in Town" Jerry Taylor's The Southern Pit 1834 Mass. 14 JACK MARSH—The 6-foot 7-inch junior center was the Sooner named as showing the greatest improvement last year. The big center is one of the squad's best rebounders. Fencers Meet Falcons The KU fencing team will meet the powerful Air Base Academy for its first meet of the season Saturday at Colorado Springs. "The Air Force take their fencing as seriously as their football." John Giele, fencing coach and an instructor in sociology, said. Nine men will go to Colorado Springs for the match. The fencing队 consists of three squads: the foil squad, the epee squad and the sabre squad. Each squad has an individual captain and Jerry Old, who last year went to the NCAA, is the team captain. Foil squad, John Dillard, captain, Duke Fleckenstein, Floyd Dellinion; epee squad, Old, Franz Ettlin, I-State Has New Athletic Director DES MOINES, Iowa — (UPI) — Gordon Chalmers, swimming coach and assistant athletic director at West Point, today was named Athletic Director at Iowa State College. Chalmers, 43, was believed at first to be out of the running for the job at the Ames school after Red Blaik resigned as Athletic Director and Football Coach at West Point this week. He will succeed Louis Menze, who is retiring. Sooners Take Victory But the athletic directorship at West Point must go to a graduate of the Academy and Chalmers did not graduate from there. MANHATTAN —(UPI)— University of Oklahoma wrestlers slammed out their second lopsided road victory in two nights last night, whipping the Kansas State Wildcats 28-2. The Sooners mauled Nebraska 32-0 Wednesday night. and Stan Patterson; sabre squad, Loyd Wilson, Herb Kasold, and John Mallory. George Washington registered its ninth victory in 13 starts with a 79-63 decision over Virginia Military Institute. The academy last year defeated Illinois University, the Big Ten champs as well as NCAA winner. Utah solved New Mexico's deliberate ball control attack to gain a 76-50 win in a Skyline Conference clash at Salt Lake City. Virginia scored its first Atlantic Coast Conference victory of the season by beating Duke, 83-67, at Charlottesville, Va. Illinois will fence KU Wednesday, Jan. 28, the day before enrollment begins. The meet will be in Robinson Gymnasium and the public is invited to attend. The Utes spurted to a 54-30 lead before coach Jack Gardner called Basketball action was relatively light throughout the nation las night with none of the top 10 teams playing. Virginia Gets First Victory, George Washington, Jack Gardner's Utes Win off his first string and sent in his second unit. Sophomore Rich Ruffell of Utah was individual high man with 18 points while Dean Dorsey led New Mexico with 17. In other games, Denver licked Montana. 66-61; Arkansas Tech defeated Arkansas A&M. 64-60, and Florida beat Miami (Fla.) 85-70. "We will have either two or three men represent us in the NCAA at Annapolis this spring." Giele said. READ CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS BORN IN HAWAII IN 1923. A WEEKLY NEW-YEAR BALCONY STAR. A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL BOWING GROUP. ELLEN JURDEN KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Ellen is wearing a Weskit, Skirt, and a Color Coordinated Blouse in a Spring Color. P. S. We are having a wonderful Special on JACK WINTER PANTS. COACH HOUSE Once a Year Clearance Of OLD MAINE TROTTERS Entire Stock of Suede Loafers 8.90 Leather, Broken Lots . . . . 7.90 Discontinued Patterns Formerly Priced to 10.95 ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 16. 1959 Bendix Corp. Will Build KU Reactor The Bendix Aviation Corporation received today $132,600 from the University for construction of a nuclear "training" reactor to be complete by this fall. "The reactor is scheduled to be in operation by the end of this year," said Russell Mieler, associate professor of chemical engineering and director of the training program. The reactor will be used by engineering students to learn about its design and preparation and to conduct experiments on foods and materials. Set to Go Year End "We could possibly have it by August but our new engineering building will not be completed by then," Prof. Meisler said. The reactor will sit in 16 feet of water, which will serve as a window, a protective shield, to slow down neutrons, and cool the reactor Dr. W. E. Kock, general manager of the Bendix research division said the reactor will use highly enriched Uranium-235. The unit with a top power output of 10,000 watts, is especially designed for use in the engineering laboratories of universities to teach all branches of the nuclear art. It is being built to meet all requirements of the Atomic Energy Commission. Cubans Tell of Batista Crimes Logs Go Into Reactor The reactor will be equipped with graphite "logs" to slow neutrons to about 5,000 miles an hour for study purpose. Students will be able to study the effects of these slow neutrons which are responsible for increasing the radioactivity of material and changing its atomic structure. HAVANA — (UPI) — The newspaper El Mundo said today the government should give fuller publicity to "the crimes of (ex-president Fulengcio) Batista agents" to offset criticism in the United States and elsewhere of "war crimes" executions which total nearly 250. El Mundo's proposal was published as authorities prepared to start the trials of 631 Batista supporters imprisoned in the Cabana fortress here. Fidel Castro reacted sharply to U.S. criticism, saying that "I won't sell out to the Americas, nor will I take orders from them." His statement followed U. S. Congressional demand for a U. N. investigation, a trade embargo and a ban on tourists. The revolutionaries charge that Batista supporters murdered 20,000 persons in the past six years. Dr. Francisco Muller, director of the Havana morgue, said the beaten or bullet-riddled bodies of 603 youths, believed to have been rebels captured by the police, were dumped at his door while Batista was in power. Angry lawmakers called for a United Nations investigation, a trade embargo against Cuba and a ban on tourist travel to the Caribbean vacation spot. A recent survey by the U. S. Census Bureau found that Americans took a total of 107 million trips of 100 miles or more to visit friends and relatives in 1957. Muller estimated that only about a fifth of the rebels killed in the Havana area during that time passed through his hands. He said the others probably were thrown into the sea, burned or buried in unmarked graves. In one instance, he said, police demanded an autopsy report saying that a doctor was killed by a hit-and-run driver when the condition of the body clearly indicated he had been beaten to death. The former ambassador, Earl T. Smith, resigned after the new Casto government accused him of having aided Batista. Chairman Wayne Morse (D-Orc) of the Senate Foreign Relations Sub-committee on Latin American Affairs said he expected the United States to name a new ambassador to Cuba "momentarily" to convey this country's concern over the executions. Congressmen Seek Cuban Investigation WASHINGTON — (UFI) — Indignation mounted in Congress today against Cuban rebel leader Fidel Castro's mass executions of followers of ousted dictator Fulgencio Bataista. But state department and congressional sources said flatly the United States would not intervene directly to halt the killings. For example, under a neutron bombardment, glass and crystal turn black and plastics become hard and brittle. Harvard Man Recommends Cut in Nation's High Schools Materials for study will be placed in tube-called bean poles-about six inches in diameter and seven feet long, which lead through the shield to the reactor. Equipment or material can be placed in these tubes to be near the reactor or to permit the emission of fast or slow neutrons. NEW YORK — (UPI) — James Bryant Conant, president emeritus of Harvard University, will recommend on the basis of a two-year study that the nation's high schools be reduced in number from 21,000 to 9,000, it was learned today. Secretarial Tests Open The State Personnel Division will give examinations in February or March for three classes of secretarial positions. Applications are also being accepted for Statistical Clerk and Psychiatric Aide I. Two of the classes require skill in shorthand, speedwriting or stenotype. In the third class, an employee types from copy, rough draft or recordings. The three classes are Secretary I and II (Stenographic) and Secretary I (Non-Stenographic). Applicants for these classes should return their completed applications to the Personnel Division by Feb. 9. Application forms and information may be secured from the Personnel Division, State Department of Administration, 801 Harrison St. Topeka. The study, which will be published Jan. 28, was based on visits to 55 high schools in 18 states. Conant found only eight of these schools satisfactorily fulfilling the job of providing students with a general education, job training or preparation for college. Conant said a major reason for inadequacy is the smallness of many of the nation's secondary schools. He said the number of high schools should be reduced by about 13,000 in order to provide "comprehensive schools for all the youth living in a town, city or district." "I early became convinced that a high school must have a graduating class of at least 100 to function adequately as a comprehensive school." Conant said. The educator and former ambassador to West Germany, whose study was financed by a $370,000 Carnegie Corporation grant, said only a few of the schools visited provided a wide enough range of academic studies with sufficient challenge to make students want to work hard. "The able boys too often specialize in mathematics and science to the exclusion of foreign languages and to the neglect of English and social studies," he said. "The able girls, on the other hand, too often avoid mathematics and science as well as the foreign languages." These include: While noting that no radical change in the basic pattern of American education is necessary in order to improve the schools, Conant's report will offer 21 specific recommendations for improvement. More intensive study of English, with English composition occupying half the total time in a four-year course. Three of four years of social studies including two years of history and a senior course in American government or American problems. At least one course in mathematics and in science for all pupils. A four-year course of one foreign language should be available no matter how few students want it. A full-time counselor or guidance officer for every 250 to 300 pupils. A tuition-free summer school for bright and ambitious pupils as well as repeaters. Grouping of students by ability subject for subject because the exceptionally able student in English social studies may be slow in math. Special work, special tutors and, if possible, a special twelfth grade class of college level work for the highly gifted students. Kansan Want Ads Get Results SOCIAL CHAIRMAN Plan Your Spring Party Now It's not too early to begin making plans for your big spring party. The Kansas Union Catering Service specializes in serving delicious food to any size group, from eight to eight hundred. If you need advice in planning your dinner-dance, luncheon or banquet, the friendly personnel of the catering service is ready to assist you. A large selection of menus is available. Just call K.U. 509. The Kansas Memorial Union has many private dining areas of all sizes available to you. For reservations or information call the reservation secretary at K.U.277.She will be happy to accommodate your party. Remember, now is the time to make your spring party plans. Call soon and avoid possible last minute disappointments. Kansas Union Catering Service University Daily Kansan Page 9 Historical Review, the Pacific Historical Review, and the Western Political Quarterly. Historian Writes Book Donald R. McCoy, assistant professor of history, has written a book, "Angry Voices," concerning left-of-center politics in the New Deal era. It was published by the University Press last month. The period covered by the book is from the Great Depression of 1929 to the end of domestic New Deal liberalism in 1939. The book deals especially with the attempts of independent left-wing politicians to form a new national party. Friday. Jan. 16, 1959 Prof. McCoy has had articles appear in numerous professional journals such as the Mississippi Valley "Angry Voices" is on sale at the office of the University Press, Flint Hall. The book will be on sale at the Kansas Union book store the third week of February. The Kansas Business Review reports Kansas department store sales were up 11 per cent over those for November 1957. This was the largest gain reported in a five-state area. Department Store Sales Up Police Take Extra Guard for Mikoyan WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Washington police took extraordinary precautions today to safeguard Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan on his final visit here. Uniformed police and plain clothesmen turned out in force both at the state department and the U.S. Capitol where the Russian official was appearing. State department officials and police declined to comment on a report that 10 students from three colleges in New York and Washington had threatened to assassinate Mikovan. FOR MEN ONLY Clearance of Men's Dress and Sport Shoes Entire Stock of Cordovans $14.90 to $15.90 Formerly Priced to $19.95 Entire Stock Hundreds of Pairs of Freemans $8.90 Formerly Priced to $14.95 Nunn Bush $17.90 to $21.90 Formerly Priced to $23.95 Discontinued Patterns $10.90 Formerly Priced to $16.95 ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP Bikes Okay, Some KU Coeds State 837 Mass. (From University Daily Kansan, Jan. 8, 1959) Sure! We Got 'em $39.95 up 2-speed Gear for Hill Climbing also available Pogo Sticks, too-$6.98 Flying Disc (saucer sled) $4.95 goes best down hill) But in the meantime for ease of travel and best performance, fill 'er up with MILEMASTER Gasolene at 'Regular' price CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers HEY SENIORS! H. Keep current with K.U. campus happenings Clip the coupon below and send to The Daily Kansan Business Office → TO: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 111 FLINT HALL UNIVERSITY OF KAN$AS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Please send me the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for: one semester for $3.00 □ □ a full year for $4.50 Enclosed is (a) ___ in payment Name ----------------------------------------------------------- Address ... University Daily Kansan Page 10 Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 1015238607499 Lucy Screechfield S. C. BURKE Karen Miller SAN FRANCISCO Sharon Rogers 1924 5 Couples Announce Engagements JONATHAN WELCH Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Screechfield, Topeka, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Lucy, to Marvin J. Pratt, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Pratt, also of Topeka. Connie Andrews Miss Screechfield is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, Mr. Pratt attended KU for two years and is presently in the Navy where he has obtained an appointment to the Naval Cadet Officer's School. Susan Uhlrich No wedding date has been set. Delta Chi Larry Kevan, Fairway, Kan., junior, has been elected president of Delta Chi fraternity. Other newly elected officers are: George Schlutter, Kansas City, Mo., junior, vice president; Rex Fowler, Kansas City, Mo., junior, secretary. .. On The Hill.. Miss Bloch is a senior in the School of Education. Mr. Dodson is in the School of Medicine and a member of Phi Chi medical fraternity. Phi Kappa fraternity has elected Harley Russell, Topeka junior, president of the chapter for the spring semester. Other recently elected officers are: Robert Beally, Leavenworth senior, vice-president; Gary Carrio, Beloit junior, treasurer, and Jim Smarsh, Great Bend junior, secretary. Dave Winn, Chicago Heights, Ill. sophomore, treasurer; John Harvey, Salina sophomore, corresponding secretary; Stan Washburn, Paola sophomore, sergeant-at-arms; Robert Miller, Great Bend sophomore, rush chairman, and Fred King, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, house historian. Phi Kappa *** . . . Phi Delta Theta David Outjes, Hutchinson senior, has been elected president of Phi Delta Theta fraternity for the spring semester. Other newly elected officers are: Philip Kirk, Kansas City, Mo., reporter. Bob Stuber, St. Joseph, Mo, sophmore, treasurer; Tom Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo., junior rush chairman; Phil James, Kansas City, Mo., junior, pledge trainer; Warren Denning, Wichita junior; and Jim Greenwood, Topeka sophmore, co-social chairmen, and John Redick, Kansas City, Kan., sophmore, recording secretary. 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) Sorority Bids Named Jan. 29 Upperclasswomen who are registered in sorority open rush will be informed of the bidding results Thursday, Jan. 29. Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Bloch of Horton have announced the engagement of their daughter, Karen Miller to Robert Dodson, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dodson of Parsons. *FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) Construction Save at . . . No wedding date has been set. HIXON'S 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Miss Rogers is a junior in the School of Education and a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Heilman, a junior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, is a member of Delta Chi fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eldred Rogers, Lawrence, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Sharon Lee, to Donald Hugh Heilman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Heilman, Williamsburg. Freshman Meeting Jan. 31 All freshman women who are interested in going through sorority Panhellenic Meeting A required Panhellenic Association meeting of all sorority women will be held at 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 31, in Fraser Auditorium. Chapter and alumnae rush advisers must attend with each chapter. rush next semester should attem a meeting at 4 p.m. Saturday, Jan 31 in Fraser Auditorium. Freshmen will be instructed as to the rules and general procedure of the rushing period. They will receive their registration forms at that time. 6. 4 per cent of licensed pharmacists in the United States are women. Y. NOW & SATURDAY THE TRUE STORY BEHIND THE WEST'S STRANGEST LEGEND! WALT DISNEY'S TONKA SAL MINEO TECHNICOLOR TOPS EVERYTHING HE'S EVER DONE! Jerry hits the Orient in a Mirth-Quake of FUN! Starts SUNDAY - 3 DAYS! TOPS EVERYTHING HE'S EVER DONE! Jerry hits the Orient in a Mirth-Quake of FUN! A 福山県 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 福山市 PARAMOUNT PRESENTS JERRY LEWIS PARAMOUNT PRESENTS JERRY LEWIS in The Geisha Boy A TECHNICOLOR TREAT! EXOTIC BEAUTY OF COLORFUL JAPAN VISTAVISION® Starts SUNDAY – 3 DAYS! TOPS EVERYTHING HE'S EVER DONE! Jerry hits the Orient in a Mirth-Quake of FUN! PARAMOUNT PRESENTS JERRY LEWIS in The Geisha BOY Costarring MARIE McDONALD SESSUE HAYAKAWA Produced by JERRY LEWIS Directed by FRANK TASHLIN • Screen Story and Screenplay by FRANK TASHLIN Associate Producer ERNEST D. GLUCKSMAN A TECHNICOLOR TREAT! EXOTIC BEAUTY OF COLORFUL JAPAN VISTAVISION® Plus — Cartoon • News GRANADA THEATRE ··· Telephone VIKING 3-578 Miss Ulrich is a junior in the School of Education and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Loncar, a junior in the School of Business, is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Uhlrich, Kansas City, Mo., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Susan, to Phil Lonacr, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Loncar, Leawood. UNIVERSIDAD DE MONTECATO ESPAÑA GRANADA GRANADA THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Andrews. Phillipsburg, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Connie, to Robert Heinschel, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Heinschel, Smith Center. Miss Andrews, a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Mr. Heinschel is a sophomore in the School of Engineering. A survey of 800 people proves that women can wink as well as men. No date has been set for the wedding. NOW & SATURDAY. NOW & SATURDAY Brigitte Bardot "Mademoiselle Striptease" Sophia Loren "Scandal in Sorrento" Starts SUNDAY - 3 DAYS! 5 ACADEMY AWARDS MARLON BRANDO'S GREATEST HIT! 5 ACADEMY AWARDS "A Streetcar Named Desire" AN ELIA KAZAN PRODUCTION PRODUCED BY CHARLES K. FELDMAN STARRING VIVIEN LEIGH AND MARLON BRANDO with KIM HUNTER·KARL MALDEN RE-RELEASED BY 20TH CENTURY-FOX SHOWS CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 1:30 Varsity Varsity Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS FOUND CAMERA TRIPOD owner may claim it for payment of this ad. Phone VI 3-4455 WANTED WANTED one boy to share lovely apartment two blocks from KU, steam heat, quiet, $27.50 per month, bills paid. Call VI 3-0163 after p. 5: 2. WASHINGS and ironing, also sewing, call VI 2-0681, 813 Rhode Island, 2-4 HELP WANTED WANTED: TO JOIN a car pool from Topeka to Lawrence, daily, arrive 8 a.m., leave 3 p.m., call KU 548, ask for Larry Lane. 2-2 SOMEONE to care for baby, weekday after shower, time for study at Sunnyside, wi. Y1-547-6900 CLASSY MIDNIGHT BLUE tuxedo, size 38, like new, but too small for owner. We were during the day in the Kansas News Room or call VI 5-963 between 6-7 p.m. FOR SALE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI3-0124. tf 1954 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, 4 door, radio, heatter, white side wall tires, top condition, call Jim Henley at VI 3-3724 noon or 5 p.m., 740 La. 1-16 TELEPHOTO LENS and case, made by Argus, used once, $40, which is approx mately $15 off retail, call VI 2-035 evenings. CHEVROLET 1954, 2-10 Model, 4 door Sedan, power glide, radio, heater, back-up lights, two tone, oil filter, tubeless tires, winch system, 18 H. C. Brown, Lawrence National Bank, Ph VI 3-9996 after 6 p.m. or come to 1539 Mast. 1-16 '54 OLDS, SUPER 88, radio, heater power brakes, power steering, very good condition, 44,000 offer miles, no loss, offer refused, 1708 Miss. VT 3-0796. 1-16 DACHSHUND PUPPIES only one male, one female left. Call VI 3-3297. 2-2 Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results TRANSPORTATION INTERESTED IN RIDE to St. Louis, contact Earl Thompson, VI 2-0434. 1-16 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Party supply plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI "718-250-2300." FOR RENT BOOMS FOR BOYS, lines furnished, sea after 8 p.m. on weekdays, after 1 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, 925 Alabama, VI 3-0902. GARAGE, MODERN AND PRIVATE apartment for 2 boys, snack bar and quiet study, also 2 extra nice single rooms, call VI 3-3019. tr DOUBLE ROOMS for men, bright, innermess mattress, private phone, refrigerator, 2nd and 3rd floors, linen service available, 3rd floor air conditioned, only 1 block from campus. See or call after 5 p.m., 1332 OH. VI 3-6709. 1-16 ECONOMICAL LIVING near the campus, $50 and 16 hours of work per month. Plenty of quiet rooms now available at Henry Henry Co-op, 1420 Ohio, Vt. 0261 2 SINGLE BEDROOMS with bath and separate entrance, for men students, in new air conditioned house west of campus, $35 per month VI 3-8746. 1-16 NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment, living room, bedroom, kitchen, private available Feb. 1, Moody Ap- armments 433 Tenn. Call VI 3-0987-1 i 3-3375- ROOMS FOR MEN, triple or double, available now. One single available March 1. Also one pair of men's skates. p.m. 14:16 Tenn., VI - 3:340 a. 1-16 2 ROOM BASEMENT apartment, share kitchen and bath, private entrance, telephone, utilities paid, water softener. Large sleeping room suitable for two boys, 1529 W. 22nd Terr., call VI 3-8673, see any time. 1-16 APPROVED ROOMS for girls, with kitchen privileges and bath, 1232 La., VI 3-4271. 1-16 1 LARGE DOUBLE, 2 single rooms for men, 1005 Indiana, VI 3-4594, 2-2 AVAILABLE AFTER JAN. 27, unfur- furished for use as utilities call VI 3-8096 after 5 p.m. FURNISHED APARTMENT, 1 block from campus, 2 bedrooms, sun room, living room, fireplace, bath and kitchen, 1st floor, call VI 3-7995, 1-16 2 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. $55, utilities paid, clean, private entrance, garage available. 728 Ohio, VI 3-6228 NICE LARGE duplex apartments, 3 rooms, bath, stone and refrigerator furnished, $75 and $80 per month. Small unfurnished cottage, 3 rooms and bath. utilities paid, $60 per month, call VI 3-7367 2-2 LARGE, CLEAN, UNFURNISHED apartment, quiet, study conditions, available VERY NICE one bedroom apartment, off street parking. Kitchen Furnished, see at 423-580-1298. NICE CLEAN-COMFORTABLE room for boys near campus and bus line, lines furnished. Also garage for rent, VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 2-2 SMALL HOUSE furnished, builtins, good stove and electric refrigerator, two large closets, for married couples only. 120 Obio. 2-4 TWO ROOM furnished basement apartment. outside windows, private entrance and bath, utilities paid, married couple only. $20 Ohio. 2-3 TWO LARGE single rooms with nice closets 4 beds from camps for men, women & children 99 - 199 FHIRE ROOM furnished apartment, for two or three boys, 319 Indiana, Call VI 3-8216 during the day or in the evening. phone VI 3-6558. 2-3 APARTMENT and rooms for girls, approved for room 3-423 girls, 1225 Ph. WANT A BETTER ROOM in a nice residential area? Come see this extra nice panel room with twin beds, excellent desk, plenty of storage space, private entrance and bath, $25 for single or $45 for two, 921 W. 22nd St. 2-2 NEW 3 bedroom home. 1628 Harper. Phi VI Phi 3-8443 to 10 p.m. 1-16 TWO APARTMENTS, modern furnishings, utilities paid, 2nd floor, 2 large apartment, more room, investment apartment, private home $50 a month, rate entrance. Phi VI 3-4888. 2-4 1215 OREAD — Well furnished, rooms, one large double and one single, avail- able second semester to upper classman, reasonable rates, see Lee Weltmert, 12 to 2 p.m. or 5 to 7 p.m., or call VI 3-6696. 1-16 FURNISHED BASEMENT apartment, two or three boys, utilities paid, private entrance, private bath. Phone VI 3-4937. FURNISHED BASEMENT apartment, utilities paid, $45. 3 big, unfurnished rooms first floor, utilities paid, $45. room $17.50, 1200 Groads, 2 3-2599. TWO ROOMS for boys, clean, 2 blocks from campus, must be quiet, 12-6 SINGLE ROOM for male student, linen and bedding furnished. 1037 Tennessee. Call after 5 p.m. week days, anytime. Available in semester. VIII; 3-5137. 2-4 JERY ATTRACTIVE single room for IV, IV-17 provided private home. S38 Ola I1, I4-23 provided private home. S26 Ola I2, I4-25 provided private home. S26 Ola I3, I4-26 provided private home. S26 Ola I4, I5-30 provided private home. S26 Ola I5, I6-32 provided private home. S26 Ola I6, I7-34 provided private home. S26 Ola I7, I8-36 provided private home. S26 Ola I8, I9-38 provided private home. S26 Ola I9, I10-40 provided private home. S26 Ola I10, I11-42 provided private home. S26 Ola I11, I12-44 provided private home. S26 Ola I12, I13-46 provided private home. S26 Ola I13, I14-48 provided private home. S26 Ola I14, I15-50 provided private home. S26 Ola I15, I16-52 provided private home. S26 Ola I16, I17-54 provided private home. S26 Ola I17, I18-56 provided private home. S26 Ola I18, I19-58 provided private home. S26 Ola I19, I20-60 provided private home. S26 Ola I20, I21-62 provided private home. S26 Ola I21, I22-64 provided private home. S26 Ola I22, I23-66 provided private home. S26 Ola I23, I24-68 provided private home. S26 Ola I24, I25-70 provided private home. S26 Ola I25, I26-72 provided private home. S26 Ola I26, I27-74 provided private home. S26 Ola I27, I28-76 provided private home. S26 Ola I28, I29-78 provided private home. S26 Ola I29, I30-80 provided private home. S26 Ola I30, I31-82 provided private home. S26 Ola I31, I32-84 provided private home. S26 Ola I32, I33-86 provided private home. S26 Ola I33, I34-88 provided private home. S26 Ola I34, I35-90 provided private home. S26 Ola I35, I36-92 provided private home. S26 Ola I36, I37-94 provided private home. S26 Ola I37, I38-96 provided private home. S26 Ola I38, I39-98 provided private home. S26 Ola I39, I40-100 provided private home. S26 Ola I40, I41-102 provided private home. S26 Ola I41, I42-104 provided private home. S26 Ola I42, I43-106 provided private home. S26 Ola I43, I44-108 provided private home. S26 Ola I44, I45-110 provided private home. S26 Ola I45, I46-112 provided private home. S26 Ola I46, I47-114 provided private home. S26 Ola I47, I48-116 provided private home. S26 Ola I48, I49-118 provided private home. S26 Ola I49, I50-120 provided private home. S26 Ola I50, I51-122 provided private home. S26 Ola I51, I52-124 provided private home. S26 Ola I52, I53-126 provided private home. S26 Ola I53, I54-128 provided private home. S26 Ola I54, I55-130 provided private home. S26 Ola I55, I56-132 provided private home. S26 Ola I56, I57-134 provided private home. S26 Ola I57, I58-136 provided private home. S26 Ola I58, I59-138 provided private home. S26 Ola I59, I60-140 provided private home. S26 Ola I60, I61-142 provided private home. S26 Ola I61, FOUR LARGE ROOMS, private bath. $120 a month for 4, all utilities paid. $90 for couple, pay electric bill, VI 3-9184, N. P. Matter. 2-4 NICE LARGE ROOM for 1, or 2 boys. See Mrs. Maxwell in Hawk's Nest day time or after 4:45 at 821 Indiana, VI -3-4168 2-5 LARGE SINGLE ROOM for boys, linens furnished, clean and quiet, refrigerator available, 801 Missouri, Call VI 3-9556 ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED small apartment, private entrance, shower, nice quiet house, very conveniently much cheaper $58.60 per month, phone 1-3696 APARTMENT. $40 plus electricity, 3 large rooms. 1347 Mass. 1-16 BUSINESS SERVICES DIRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS Mallene, Ph. Ph. 3-5264 Imaa, Mass. Ph. 3-5264 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-526. tf TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-5908. tf WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. tftu TYPING; Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf FINEST FLAT-TOPS. and friendly ernie's Barber Shop 730 Massachusetts NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1215 Comm. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for pet birds. List of EXotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal., stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, mother, grooming, and sweater; bikes, bicycles, everything in the pet篮. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest in dance instruction Studio, 98th Missouri,ph. 3-65384 WANTED. Student Laundry. Reasonable Formerly 829 Comm, nov 41 $2, Ohio if it TYPIST; Make reservations now to have these, term pans, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-1891. 736 Tenn. THESES AND TERM PAPERS typed. W 20th St. VT-7-1748 RENT A SINGER sewer machine by the month, 3-1971, Singer sewering C.C., 292 Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Paper papers, exams, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. Cohen. WANTED: TYPING, theses and term papers, experienced, reasonable rates, prompt service. Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. tt EXPERIENCED SECRETARY will type paper masters, theses, etc. In my home. Standard rate, free pick up and delivery on or near campus. VI 3-1106. ff LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211's Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. massour. introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers, theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc., capital rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3428. TYPING: Experienced in typing term papers, accurate and prompt service, reasonable rates, call VI 3-9544, Mrs. Earl Wright. 1-16 INTERESTED IN LOW COST flying time? Due to graduation we have several openings, for information call VI 3-8865. 1-16 1-16 TYPING: Former medical secretary will train in emergency medicine, standard 1-10 Mrs. O'Dell, VI 3-3532 SELL YOUR USED BOOKS Monday Thru Saturday, Jan.19-24 (We Cannot Purchase Used Books After Jan.24) When you finish your exams, sell us those books you no longer need that will be used again next semester. We will be buying those books the instructors have advised us will be used during the spring semester. An off campus buyer will be here Monday thru Friday - Jan. 19 to 23 to make you an offer on those titles no longer used at K.U. K Note: We will be buying only those titles used in spring semester 1959. Books for summer and fall session will be bought during finals of spring semester. Kansas Union Book Store Union Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 16, 1959 18 WINTER VACATION—These three students are part of a delegation of 37 leaving Saturday after final examinations for skiing at Arapahoe Basin, Colo. They will return Jan. 28. From teit are Bill Perry, Webb City, Mo., freshman; Judy Mackenzie, Prairie Village sophomore, and Peter Block. Mission sophomore. Questions Censor Group To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: "Smiles of a Summer Night," is a Swedish film comedy which has received the highest praise from competent film critics in New York, Kansas City, Mo., and other large American cities for its wit, sophistication, high comic spirit and artistic finesse. Yet this film has been denied a showing at the University of Kansas by a small and relatively unknown group of minor government officials who have been given the questionable moral if not legal power to decide what is fit for you and me to in the motion picture theatre. I think it is fair that we ask and insist on straightforward answers to such questions as: Who are the persons that have made the decision to ban this film? What were their reasons for so doing? Are they competent to judge the artistic merits of a film? Perhaps satisfactory and cogent answers can be given to these questions in which case we shall know that we are in good hands. We can rest in the thought that the Board has served us well and that we no longer need to make troublesome decisions for ourselves in matters of taste and artistic preference. The Board in its infinite wisdom will watch over our moral well being. If we are not content to do this, however, and if acceptable answers to our questions are not forthcoming, then every effort should be made to ensure a re-examination of the film in which the officials would be assisted by people who know the theatre and the cinema and who can employ the recognized standards of Worship in Lawrence excellence in these fields in reaching a decision. I would hope that if the Board gives its approval of a showing here for "educational purposes," university authorities would also agree to its immediate rescheduling. Assembly of God 13th and Mass. J. J. Krimmer, Pastor Sincerely, Thomas R. Buckman Lecturer in Swedish Sunday School ... 9:45 Worship Time ... 11:00 Youth Vespers ... 6:45 Revival Time ... 7:45 ASC Gets Insurance (Continued from Page 1) The 12-month coverage will cost the single student $17.50 and a student with dependents, $96.25. (Continued from Page 1) The plan offers nearly full coverage for a 12-month period, while the Student Health Center plan offers less coverage for the period school is in session. "The plan is a supplement to the present student coverage," said Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, "and I encourage everyone to study the new plan." Lower Than Normal One important advantage of the voluntary insurance is that the student rate is 50 to 60 per cent lower than what the student would pay if he bought similar insurance coverage as an individual rather than as a group. This is possible because the University group is at a low age level. Older people, of course, generally require more medical attention and rates have to be adjusted accordingly. Claim Is Reduced A large part of the student's claims against Blue Cross-Blue Shield, then, can be settled at the reduced Watkins Hospital rates when the student is on campus. The new insurance provides the student with 12-month coverage whether he is on or off the campus. He can receive service at any registered hospital. Here is what the student essentially receives for his present $12 fee; 1. Physical examinations. 2. Medical advice 3. Hospitalization and medicine at moderate costs. Hospitalization and board, for instance—except for obstetrics—costs $3 a day. The only limit on hospitalization is the end of the school year. 4. Immunization shots—flu, polio, etc. 5. Annual tuberculosis tests, 6. General nursing, hospitalization, and the use of the operating room in case of surgery. The student must pay the surgeon and anesthetist. 7. Dependents may use all facilities of the laboratory, X-ray and hospital at special rates. The dependent pays $9 a day for hospitalization as compared with the student rate of $3. The dependent must also pay the physician whereas the student receives the physician's services for his $12 fee. The new plan, on the other hand, provides: 1. All general nursing and hospital expenses in a semi-private room or up to $9 a day in a private room. The payments are good for 365 days, except 120 days a year for pulmonary tuberculosis and 30 days for nervous and mental disorders. 2. Full coverage for drugs, laboratory tests, physical therapy, and operating room. 3. Payment at community rates for X-ravs, and diagnostic and specific therapy. This means that all expenses might not be paid if treatment is received in a community which has higher rates than in Lawrence. 4. Two-thirds of the surgeon's Union to Purchase Books Final Week The Kansas Union book store will buy used textbooks Monday through Saturday during final week. If the textbooks will be used again next semester, the book store will pay 50 per cent of the current price listed. Students who wish to sell books which will not be used next semester may sell to an out-of-town buyer, who will pay 25 per cent of the current price listed. The Union will be open during its regular hours during semester vacation. For Your Studying Pleasure We are now featuring And Now SUBMARINES The Students' Favorite Beverage! Acea Quick Carry Out Service! VI 3-9111 fee according to a schedule attached to the policy. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 No. Park 5. A sum of $5 a day from the second day through the sixth day and $3 a day thereafter for doctor's visits to the hospital. This amount is paid up to 365 for general illness, 30 days for mental disorders or 120 for tuberculosis confinement. 6. A supplemental accident payment of up to $500. This payment is for a physician's service, repair of natural teeth, and an ambulance. The accident payment is over and above the other payments listed. Dependents receive the same hospital coverage as the student, except there is a waiting period of eight months for tonsil and adenoid operation and for maternity cases. Sixty per cent of dependent drug charges are covered. In the case of maternity care, there is full hospital coverage for the mother, nursery care for the infant. $60 for normal delivery, and $125 for a Caesarean delivery. Student Allowed 2 Plans If the student is presently covered by another plan, he can receive payments under both. This depends upon the plan, but most policies will pay. If the student takes out the voluntary plan, he has to continue to pay the present $12 fee. The rates for the voluntary plan are based on student coverage under the student health service. The plan will no, pay for loss of an arm or leg. The plan can only be taken out at fee payment times in September and February. After graduation the plan will continue to the end of the 12-month period—or to Oct.1. At that time the student may continue the plan at another rate. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results FOR SCHOOL KIDS ONLY WIN A FREE AUTOMOBILE Isetta FOR SCHOOL KIDS ONLY WIN A FREE AUTOMOBILE Fsetta AND 30 FREE DECCA: RECORD PLAYERS FOR SCHOOL KIDS ONLY WIN A FREE AUTOMOBILE Fsetta AND 30 FREE DECCA RECORD PLAYERS Watch this paper for exciting BILLY BOY SYRUP CONTEST! BILLY BOY SYRUP AND 30 FREE DECCA : RECORD PLAYERS BILLY BOY SYRUP WM. BARNES, INC.,MINNEAPOLIS,MINN.