Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No. 116
Wednesday, April 1, 1959
APRIL FOOL
THE GAMES OF WAR
HE'S NO FOOL—Apparently Arlen T. Mueller, Hoisington junior, fooled around on April Fools' Day once too often. The uninhibited woman seen here shows Mueller she's no fool, and it was
learned later that Mueller exclaimed, "What a fool I am." What tomoolery caused this altercation? None, sorry. April Fool. See feature story on the 1st of April on page 3.
Candidates Named For Class Offices
Candidates for class offices were released today by Dave Wilson. Kansas City, Mo., senior and chairman of the All Student Council Elections committee.
Only candidates for senior class president and secretary, and sophomore class treasurer will appear on the primary ballot. No more than three candidates filed for other offices.
Candidates are:
Senior Class
President—Richard Barnes, Seneca; Robert Lueck, Ottawa; Frank A Coombs, Arlington, Va., and Janet Baker, Leawood.
vice president — Roger Stanton Marysville, and John Jeffrey, Bartlesville, Okla.
Secretary—Nancy Scott, Emporia; Karen Johnson, Topeka; Gwendolyn Gray, Coffeyville; Jann Cameron Topeka, and Kathy Hupp, Wichita.
Treasurer--Sharon Hoover, Wichita; Melinda Williams, Kansas City, Mo., and Sandra Owens, Kansas City, Kan.
Junior Class
President — Lynn Anderson, Atwood, and Thomas Coe, Salina.
Vice president — Paul Hensleigh, Winchester, and Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb.
Secretary—Beverly Bagley, Brentwood, Mo.; Monta Kay Epps, Fort Scott, and Virginia Lee Smith, Washington, D.C.
Treasurer—Deana Grimm, Omaha,
Neb.; Lora K. Reiter, Simpson, and
Weather
Clearing southeast and central tonight, otherwise mostly fair through tomorrow. Cooler east and south central tonight. Warmer northwest tonight and over state tomorrow. Low tonight 35 to 40.
Dorothy D. Bickley, Kansas City, Kan.
Sophomore Class
President — Fred King, Kansas City, Mo.; Warren H. Sapp, Neodesha, and Gary Vail, Wellington.
Vice president—Paul Stone, Ottawa, and Thomas N. Turner, Kansas City, Mo.
Secretary — Connie Kay Bovd, Plains; Sally Colladay, Hutchinson, and Sharon Tillman. Clay Center.
Treasurer — Charlotte Dohrmann, Kansas City, Mo.; Rovanna Thomas, Louisburg; Susan Wendt, Kirksswood, Mo., and Roger Wiley, Harisburg, Ill.
Harvard Political Scientist to Visit
V. O. Key, chairman of the political science department at Harvard; will visit the University tomorrow and Friday.
Dr. Key, immediate past president of the American Political Science Assn. will arrive tonight.
He will meet with classes in political science 55 and 65 and consult with members of the Governmental Research Center on research projects.
He is the author of "Politics Parties and Pressure Groups" which is used as a text in several political science courses here.
Dr. Key will speak on "Party Realignment" at an open meeting of the Political Science Club at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. The room for the meeting has not been set.
College OK's B.A. Program
Faculty Voices Tentative Yes for Broader Education
By Dick Crocker and Nancy Whalen
The faculty of the College on Liberal Arts and Sciences yesterday tentatively approved the new requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree from the College.
The B. A. requirements were approved by a "decisive" voice vote after an hour and a half of discussion at a meeting in Bailey Auditorium. The faculty had begun discussion on the proposals at a meeting March 17.
Most of the discussion at yesterday's meeting was concerned with the proposed language requirement for the B.A. degree. The proposed requirement would require the student to pass a language proficiency examination or offer 16 hours of credit in one foreign language in lieu of the examination.
The faculty discussed whether the proposed requirement was too stringent. It also discussed whether
Student Dies After Surgery
A 47-year-old graduate woman student collapsed shortly after undergoing surgery recently for a cerebral condition and died two days later, The Daily Kansan learned today.
Mrs. Carolyn Elizabeth Griffin, Franklin, Neb., student studying English, died in Watkins Hospital March 22 of cerebral embolism (clotting of a blood vessel) due to unknown causes.
A Lawrence physician attending Mrs. Griffin said the operation was a relatively simple one, but due to what he described as a "cerebral accident" she could not recover after collapsing.
The doctor said Mrs. Griffin had suffered a temporary paralysis earlier due to the cerebral condition.
Mrs. Griffin had been living in a rooming house in Lawrence, while her husband, Harry Griffin, had been working in Nebraska. The only other survivors are her parents.
Funeral services were held last week in Franklin.
Seniors Must Order Announcements Now
Today is the last opportunity for seniors to order their graduation announcements. About 500 seniors have ordered them from the Kansas Union Bookstore.
The announcements are expected to be back from the printer by May 15.
the language requirement should go into effect when the rest of the program does or four years later as the mathematics requirement would.
It was pointed out that about two-thirds of Kansas high schools offer no foreign language and that about 45 per cent of the entering freshmen have had no high school foreign language.
No amendments concerning the language requirement were passed. However, it is possible that the requirement could be amended when the faculty considers the whole package.
B. A. Requirements
The requirements for the B. A. degree would require the student to have a major of at least 20 hours, a minor of at least 15 hours in a department other than the major, to have completed college level algebra, and to pass a proficiency examination in a foreign language or offer 16 hours of one language in lieu of the examination.
The student would also have to pass the English proficiency examination, unless exempt, and the western civilization examination.
The College administration emphasized that the requirements for the B.A. will go into effect only if the entire curriculum revision program is approved by the faculty.
The faculty will meet at 4 p.m., April 14, in Bailey Auditorium to begin discussion of the entire program.
First Phase in May
The first phase of the curriculum revision program was tentatively approved in May 1957. It involved the adoption of a series of common underclass requirements.
The second phase was tentatively approved in May 1958. This phase involved the adoption of an initial list of 55 "principal" courses.
The third phase, tentatively approved yesterday, involved the adoption of a series of common requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree.
Henkle Says Sine Die To '59 Legislature
TOPEKA—(UPI)—The 1959 Kansas Legislature officially came to a close today—April Fools' Day—at 11:17 a.m. when Lt. Gov. Joseph Henkle ranged the Senate gavel and said "I now declare the 1959 session adjourned sine die."
A small, faithful group of state- house officials and a few newsmen were present to witness the death of the session.
Gov. George Docking signed the final bill passed by the Legislature, a $1.8 million omnibus appropriation bill, permitting a skeleton force of lawmakers to receive the final governor's message and bring the work of the Legislature to an official end.
Don't Knock Spring; It's a Cure, Dad
Bv Al Jones
You don't dig Spring? Man,
there's news for you. Let me lay
one on you. Like, what happened
to me would have everyone
makin' the Greensville bit.
I was hung over, and making it down to Hawksville for some juice, like, footsie through the Marvin woods, when this long-eared cat gives me the halt bit.
"Hawk's Nest, man," I gave him. "^ah—like what' there, Charlie?"
"Skin me, daddy, where to?" he says.
"I got the whips and jingles, dad. so I'm doin' the caffeine routine."
"So you're hung?" Dad, I got the cure-follow me."
And with that, he cuts out for
the top of the hill. So I follow him, figuring there's lots of bread in a talking rabbit if I can get the contract. Well, he hops over the hill, me hot behind, and makes it to the lake. And there he stops.
What's the scene, Jack? I ask.
"Daddy, Jack's my big cousin,
but I dig you. Just part it, right here until I pull the MacArthur hit."
So I sit down and wait, with my head oversize and a tongue like you see in a delicatessen. And after a while, when the short-tail don't make it back, I whip off the shades and start eyeballin' the scenery.
And all over, like I hadn't noticed before, there's all this grass, and some yellow leaf buds, and nice warm air breeze' in me. Well, to make it short, I
"I got whips and jingles."
pad out right there, in the middle of the day.
And when I come out of it, there's the rabbit, eatin' grass like it was barbecued ribs.
"Where's your cure dad?" I ask.
"Where's your cure, dad?" I ask. "Where's your hangover?" he answered. And by Dizzy, it was long gone. The only noise in my ears was some bird carvin' Bud Shank, and it was almost sun-down. And there I was, no hang-over.
So man, like I said, don't knock the Spring bit.
But you know, when I started talking contract with that rabbit, he clammed up. He said:
"Man, you know rabbits can't talk. You been taken' dope, like?" And he went back to his grass and never said another word.
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1959
Statues or Scholars?
It is near the time for the Class of '59 to select its class gift.
The campus is already adorned with gifts from past years and we must not be outdone. Class gifts have included a sundial, fountain, a statue of a Jayhawk. All sorts of items essential to an institute of higher learning.
The main prerequisite for a class gift is that it must be something physical. Something that class members can point to and say "My class gave that."
These objects must be unusual and stand out from their surroundings such as the canopy in front of the Union. A class gift must be distinctive.
A class gift must be the only one of its kind on the campus. (Let us at least hope we will not have more than one Jayhawk statue.)
Whether the gift is functional seems to be of little concern to the gift committee. (Of course
the sundial may have been functional in its day; however, I was under the impression that most people have watches.)
Of course there are always a few deadbeats in every class who would prefer to give some unimpressive gift like establishing a scholarship fund for students or to create another distinguished professorship. These people obviously don't have any imagination. They are opposed to any gift that is materialistic. They want something that will serve a purpose. They are therefore unartistic.
What is more, these people are selfish. A scholarship would only benefit a few people. Rather than single people out to enjoy a class gift why not give a statue or a sundial which will benefit everyone equally?
After all, the best gift should be one which reflects the purpose of this institution. Which would benefit a place of higher learning more, a statue or a scholarship? —Martha Crosier
letters to the editor
Grades . . .
Editor:
On the front page of your March 24 issue under the by-line of Tom Hough, you carried an article which suggests that the undergraduate scholarship report for the fall of 1958 indicates that sororities and fraternities are "conducive to better grade point averages."
In the interests of responsible journalism and the use of careful thought in inferring meaning from data, I would like to point out that a simple comparison of over-all grade point averages for various groups of students does not indicate the conclusion reached by the journalist.
Before one can draw such conclusions he would need to use some matching or other device for establishing comparable groups of Greek and non-Greek students.
If I am not mistaken an Ed.D. dissertation in the School of Education several years ago demonstrated that, for the most students with comparable entrance examination scores, there was no difference in grade point averages for Greeks vs. non-Greeks.
Grades . . .
Furthermore, it was found that in some fraternities students did less well scholastically than would be expected on the basis of their entrance examination scores.
Howard Baumgartel associate professor of human relations
Editor:
Your article about the better better grade average of fraternities and sororites is misleading. One of the main reasons for the higher grade average of sororites and fraternities is the fact that no freshmen are accepted in sororities, and in fraternities only freshmen with at least a 1.0 average.
This means that in the over-all women and men average all those who drop out of the university after their first semester are included while sororites and fraternities have a proportionally higher amount of upperclassmen.
Harald Meyer
Reinach, Basel, Switzerland
And More Grades
Your story of March 24 concerning the "sure" lead of Greeks over independents in the scholarship field seems a bit too smug and pat. I suggest that there are a few factors the story failed to consider.
Consider first the men's averages—you fail to mention anything of the relative ranking of the houses. For instance, the highest average among Greek men was a 1.8. Three men's scholarship halls were above that mark, and the other two men's scholarship halls were ahead of the second fraternity.
Of the top seven men's organized houses, scholarship halls
A women's scholarship hall was highest on the hill with a 21. The closest sorority had a 2.04. All four women's scholarship halls were at least 0.1 above the sorority average. Of the seven highest women's houses, four were scholarship halls.
hold the top three and the fifth and sixth positions. The all fraternity average was 1.31; the men's scholarship hall average was 1.8.
By this we can see that of the top 14 houses all nine scholarship halls are included.
Sororities should have higher averages than the all-women average. A girl cannot pledge until she is a sophomore and has survived the first year with a reasonable average. The all-women's average includes many girls who are forced to drop out.
Fraternities can be somewhat selective scholastically in picking their pledges, while independent students have no control over their membership. Also, Greek file systems and compulsory study halls are undeniably helpful.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER
But the independent student is as intelligent, important, and able as is the Greek student. His only weakness is that he is what the name implies—independent. He cannot be organized and still be independent in the way he likes, so he is naturally weak in campus politics and activities, but the fact that many independents hold important posts even without organized backing is an indication of their ability.
TOMORROW, U.S. SUPREME CO.
TABLE 185 - 2.90
ORAL EXAM
TO DAY
Billee
5-36
-] REFUSE YOUR QUESTION ON THE GROUPS MY
ANSWER MAY TEND TO INCRIMATE ME. "
Elkhart sophomore L. Deane Rollmann, Pratt sophomore
Let us not brand the independents as a different race or lower caste—and let us have some recognition of the scholarship halls, the real campus intellectual leaders and the contributors of their share of activity leaders.
Jack Salmon.
Dailu Hansan
UNI PRITT
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
trifweekly 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. Represented by National Advertising Service,
420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.
Associated national. 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 lawrence. Sep. 17, 1908 at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker ... Managing Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill Feitz Business Manager Robert Lida, Advertising Manager; Howard Young, Classified Advertising Manager; William F. Kane, Promotion Manager; Paul Nielsen, Circulation Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier, Co-
spiratee of Harwell Harrel,
Associate Editorial Editor.
Student Government-
AGI Is Older Party
(Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles on campus politics and student government. This one deals with the Allied Greek-Independent political party.)
Campus politics is dominated by two political parties. Allied Greek-Independent and Vox Populi. Both parties include Greeks and independents in their membership, the difference being mostly organizational.
One of the main differences between the two parties is the method used to select candidates for the All Student Council. AGI uses the closed primary system while Vox uses the convention method. Both require a party card to vote in the primary.
- * *
Here is how the AGI system operates:
Any member of the party who wishes may run in the ASC primary elections on the AGI ticket. However, the party encourages the members not to run too many candidates for the same office. This can be seen in this year's slate of candidates in which only the School of Business has more than one candidate in the primary.
During the general election campaign the party organizes a speaking committee which visits organized houses and explains the party platform and answers questions concerning the elections.
Once the candidates are elected to the ASC the party does not try to tell them how to vote. However, they are encouraged to attend the meetings of the party's forum.
The governing body of the party itself is called the forum and is composed of one representative of each organized house in the party and one representative for each 50 unorganized independents in the party. This latter representation is determined by having the person who wishes to be seated as an unorganized independent representative present a petition signed by 50 students in that living district.
Last fall the forum included four unorganized independent representatives. However, only two of them are still active.
$$
***
$$
The forum meets once a week prior to elections and twice a month during the rest of the school year.
The party's executive council is usually elected from the members of the forum. The purpose of the executive council is to keep an eye on what is going on in the party and to set up the agenda of the forum's meetings. It also does most of the work of drawing up the party platform although this must be approved by the forum.
The executive council includes the party's president, four vice presidents, secretary and treasurer. The four vice presidents include one man and woman representing the Greeks and one man and woman representing the independents.
Any organized house which wishes to become a member of the party may do so unless there is some objection made in the forum. Unorganized independents may receive party cards by contacting a member of the executive council or the forum.
Party elections are held following the ASC general elections.
均 必 得
This year AGI supported the establishment of a racial desegregation investigation committee by the ASC. The ASC voted this down on the grounds that the Group for the Improvement of Human Relations was already doing an efficient job.
AGI is the older of the two present parties, having been formed after the 1953 spring elections. It was the result of the split in Pachacamac, the political party which had been the first and most dominant party since KU campus politics originated in 1912.
The party surveyed University departments which hire students to determine how much the departments pay and how many they employ. The findings of this survey are to be turned over to the ASC labor committee.
The party encouraged the letter writing campaign in support of the University's proposed budget.
AGI also is supporting the proposed amendment to the ASC constitution which will be on the general election ballot. The amendment will lower the required number of votes which must be cast in a school district in order for that school to have a vote in the ASC.
Worth Repeating
"When we were boys, we had to do a little work in school. Boys were not coaxed, they were not hammered. Spelling, writing and arithmetic were not electives, and you had to learn. In these more fortunate times, elementary education has become in places a sort of vaudeville show. The child must be kept amused and learns what he pleases. Many teachers scorn the old fashioned rudiments and it seems to be regarded as between misfortunate and crime to learn to read..."
"The above item was taken from a New York Sun editorial dated 1902.
"As Will Rogers said, 'Things ain't what they used to be and probably never was.' " Sleepy Eye (Minn.) Herald-Dispatch
The true wealth of a country lies in its men and women. If they're mean, unhappy and ill, the country is poor.—Richard Aldington
---
Morality without religion is only a kind of dead reckoning an endeavor to find our place on a cloudy sea.—Longfellow
检查
A lamentable tune is the sweetest music to a woeful mind.—Sir Philip Sidney
疏 杂 浓
Think not thy own shadow longer than that of others, nor delight to take the altitude of thyself.—Sir Thomas Browne
Page 3
and catch
n. If Ald-
ng一
—Sir
de-
The building is a single-story wooden structure with a pitched roof and a front porch. It features large windows on the front and side, as well as a set of steps leading up to the entrance. The exterior is composed of horizontal wooden slats, while the roof is covered with shingles. The building appears to be situated in a wooded area, surrounded by trees.
EVERYONE COMFORTABLE?—The official University guest house is used by visiting lecturers and speakers. It is located northeast of the chancellor's residence.
Stone Retreat Used As Guests' Quarters
'I Fix Them Coffee'—
A mystery spot on campus is the little stone house northeast of the chancellor's home. It's not a student's retreat or the chancellor's hide-a-way, but it is the official guest house of the University.
Helju Aulik, Holdrege. Neb.
graduate student, is the hostess of
the four room house. It is her job
to see that the guests are made com-
fortable.
"In the morning, I fix them coffee and toast, but the guests eat their meals in the Union," she said.
She added that she is also responsible for seeing that the laundry is sent out and the house cleaned.
The cottage is occupied about 40 per cent of the time.
The house was originally built as a garage and servants' quarters by Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins. Following her death in 1939, the University rented it to two faculty members.
The chancellor's residence is the former Watkins home.
In 1552, the house was remodeled, landscaped and declared the official guest residence.
Reservations for guest residence are made with the chancellor's secretary well in advance of occupation. So far, no problems in having more than one guest at a time have been encountered.
Mrs. Franklin Murphy, wife of the chancellor, said all of the guests seem to be satisfied with the ar-agement. The air-conditioned house provides a sitting room, kitchen, two bedrooms and hostess apartment.
"I wish there were more such places at the University," Mrs. Murphy said.
Snow Addition Plans Formed
A laboratory addition adding 25,000 square feet to Snow Hall is in the final planning stages. Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations and administrative assistant to the chancellor, has announced.
The 6-story addition will be on the northeast end of Snow and will run diagonally between Memorial Drive and Poplar Lane.
The new laboratory will provide additional space for all five life sciences housed in Snow. Another addition, now under construction on the north of Snow, will house the mammalian genetics laboratory.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Foreign Students: If you are returning home after the current academic semester, book a week in Colorado (June 13-20) at the annual Summer Crossroads Seminar. come by the office of the Foreign Student, 228 Strong Hall, for more information.
Foreign Students; If any KU foreign students would like to attend a UNESCO dinner and program at Chanute, Kansas on the evening of April 24, please see the Foreign Student Adviser by Friday noon of this week.
Jay James, Oread Room, 5 to 5:30 p.m.
Attendance required.
Fetes Françaises populaires, Mercredi a
4 h. la salle 11 Fraser.
Ping Pong Practice: SUA, 6:30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Newman Club Executive Meeting,
n.p.m. Catholic Student Center.
Quilt Club, 7:30 p.m., 305-A of Kansas
University. Inquiries should be sent
manuscripts for possible publication
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.
TOMORROW
Episopic Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
breakfast following, Centertown, Houston
Book Contest Winners to Be Named April 23
KU Dames Bridge Group. 7:30 p.m.
Card Room of Kansas Union.
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
The Taylor Student Book Contest, sponsored by Watson Library, closed March 21 with 17 entries. Winners of the contest will be announced April 23.
University Women's Club. Morning Coffee and Gourmet Cooking, John Steuart Curry Room, Union, 9:30 to 11 a.m. Chairman, Mrs. Gilbert Ulmer.
Wednesday, April 1, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong
Copplin, Copplin, Copplin,
Life Ins Co., Sales M. Elsworth,
Hallmark Cards, Men and Women for
Office Writing and Business Administration
"The quality of the collecting is much better this year than it has been the past two years," said Robert L. Quinsey, chief of the reader service.
The subjects which have been entered include English literature, natural history, sociology, biochemistry, Oriental culture, Russian literature, paleobotany, butterflies, mammals, birds, evolution, drama, anthropology, James Joyce, and Thomas Wolfe.
He said that more people had entered collections in the field of biological sciences than in any other field.
Christian Science Campus Organization, 7.30 p.m., Danfort Chapel.
Baptist Student Union, 12:30 p.m.丹. Dancer Rev. Bill Crews will speak on witnessing
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Taylor, Kansas City, Mo., donates the money for the prizes to the library. She will present the prizes April 23 in the Kansas Union Browsing Room, after a talk by William B. Ready.
Mr. Ready, collector, author, lecturer, and librarian of Marquette University, will present his talk at 4 p.m. It will accompany an exhibition of the "Lord of the Rings" by J. R. R. Tolkien.
The exhibition will be on display in the foyer of the Kansas Union through April.
Schlesinger Book Received
The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has received three autographed copies of "The Crisis of the Old Order" by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. The books were donated by Martin Fruhman, president of Associated Retail Millinery, Inc.
1932
E. A. Bayne, American Universities Field Staff representative arriving today for a 10 day visit, will speak to the following organizations and classes Tuesday through Friday:
Tuesday — 11 a.m., Economic Growth and Development; 7:30 p.m., Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi Journalism Fraternities. Wednesday — 9 a.m., International Politics; 11 a.m., Current American Foreign Policy; 2 p.m. The Editorial; 3 p.m., Political Geography of Nation States. Thursday — 11 a.m., Economic Growth and Development. Friday — 8 a.m., World Geography; 9 a.m., Elements of Political Geography; 11 a.m., International Trade; 2 p.m., The Editorial.
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Today's Pranks Puds—
April Fool Jests Lost in Aged Fog
By Al Jones
Despite a few premature excursions and alarums, the silly season wasn't officially open until today. April Fools' Day, with its tired jests, is more a symbol of vernal madness than a day worthy of commemoration in itself.
This augurs well.
The early spring weather this year led to college sport on three or more continents, with telephone box squash, snowballing, and good natured riots.
With a new world record in telephone booths and, a possible record for student probation (4,000 Yale undergraduates), it looks like a banner year for foolery, medical bills, clothing stores (a tux is nearly useless after a trip to the fraternity fountain), and bail bondsmen.
The origin of spring madness is lost in the mists of time, but there are recorded instances of it as far back as the Chaldean civilization.
Ripla Lofo First
Ripla Lofo (the phonetic spelling), a young Mesopotamian, was the pioneer jester. On the first day of spring, by the ancient calendar, Lofo felt the primal urge and pranked the king. He hid the royal ceremonial wig and replaced it with one made of cotton candy, which he had just invented.
Unfortunately for science, the results of this primitive prank were suppressed by the government, and news of the incident was only discovered last week by archeologists or revolutionaries (the message was garbled) working in the ruins.
Lofo was a sacrifice to the gods of jesting. The king, fitting the punishment to the crime, gave him the choice of being suffocated or of eating himself to death—in either case, with cotton candy. Lofo chose suffocation.
Pyramid Doors Closed
The next recorded spring jest came from an Egyptian, Thutmosisir. That was a slave of the Pharaoh, in charge of building one of the minor Pyramids. When madness came upon him, he decided to spring a surprise on the boss, and redesigned the pyramid so no entrance was visible. The Pharaoh, whose name is lost to us, was plenty mad.
In fact, he was so burned he instituted the practice of burying a slave or two in each pyramid—starting with Thut.
And so it went, through the ages—Aristophanes, Nero, the court jesters, the Bourbon kings, and Edward R. Murrow. And today we have the telephone boothers and the Yale student body, devoted pranksters all.
And instead of the rack or the headman's axe, they only suffer probation. Truly, this must be the best of all possible worlds.
KU, TU Tie in MVFL Debate
University of Kansas debaters tied with the University of Texas for third place in the Missouri Valley Forensic League tournament in Austin, Tex., last week.
The University of Oklahoma won first place in the tournament and Louisiana State University placed second.
The KU affirmative team, Larry Ehrlich, Russell sophomore, and Gary Dilley, Emporia freshman, won four rounds of debate and lost two.
The negative team, Robert Nebri
Leavenworth junior, and Robert Walker, Frankfort junior, had a 3-1 win-loss record.
Ehrlich also reached the finals in the extemporaneous speaking contest.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 1, 1959
1
We're on a SWAPPING Spree!
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58 FORD CONVERTIBLE. Blue and white with white top. Low mileage, full power, white sidewalls. Priced at $2,195.00, over $1,500 off new price. Several more convertibles to choose from.
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See it at Dinty Moore's
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See it at Combs Motors
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Loaded with extras, $1,995.
See it at Crystal Motors 632 New Hampshire
Pontiac
58 EDSEL PACER. Rust brown and white. Many accessories and extra equipment.Has had immaculate care.
See it at Les Morgan Oldsmobile 1314 W.6th
FORD
57 FORD FAIRLANE 500. Loaded with extras including air conditioning and power windows, $1,895.00.
See it at Jim Clark Motors
623 Mass.
CHEVROLET
57 CHEVROLET 210 4-DR.6 cylinder, heater, whitewall tires, ready to go. $1,495.
See it at University Ford Sales, Inc., 714 Vermont
Exams Shouldn't Test Memory, Educator Says
More tests are needed in which a person uses what he knows rather than repeats what he knows, E. E. Bayles, professor of education, said in an interview recently.
"Students need to apply the principles rather than repeat a set of words. We need to get things on the use level and not the memory level," Prof. Bayles stressed.
"It's high time we quit memory level testing and memory level teaching. If you can't remember a fact, go to a source. We can't forget a lot if we get it on the use level," he said.
"Students need to know how to arrive at answers when I'm not around." Prof. Bavles said.
He gives essay tests, although he admits they may be impractical to teachers. But he believes fewer tests could be given.
"We have to teach students how to think. The answer only on a test is not enough. Not just a right answer, but a thoughtful answer is needed." Prof. Bavles continued.
"If you don't know the answer, guess. What do you have to work on except guesses?" asked Prof. Bavles.
"The fault lies in the form of the examination," he said. "Words are not the same for everybody or for the same person in different situations."
Prof. Bayles used true and false tests as an example of different word meanings. Because of the way some are written it would be necessary to explain the answer. The test then would no longer be objective, he said.
Former Chancellor Mallot used to say there was too much objective testing on this campus, Prof. Bayles stated.
Essay tests were given before the 1920's, Prof. Bayles said, but they were still repeating what a student knew because he had to have down the right words.
"If essay tests are to be of this kind, I'd rather give objective tests," he said.
In about the twenties, professors disliked objective tests. Now they are accepted. Prof. Bayles said.
Page 5
KUOK
Tonight
6:00 Sign On
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time — A Night in New Orleans
9:05 Wednesday Dance from Trail Room, music by Jack Keenan
10:05 Dwight Norman Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Dwight Norman
12:00 Sign Off
KUOK News—6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11:55 Weather every 30 minutes
Channel 63 on the dial at Corbin-North, Grace Pearson, Douthart, Carruthroh O'Leary, Joseph R. Pearson halls, and Simon Smeets Ben
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Trio No. 7 in B-flat Major" by Beethoven
7:00 Concerto Concert
7:30 News
7:35 The Atom and You
7:50 Wednesday Evening Opera: "La Sonnambula" by Bellini
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Sextet for Piano, Violin, Two Violas, Cello and Contrabass" by Mendelssohn
[Image of a man with white hair, wearing glasses and a suit with a striped tie. He is smiling and looking directly at the camera.]
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
LANGER, the CBS radio voice of KU.
April 22*
*Kansan Fashion Issue
E. E. Bayles
Flashy Drivers Undersexed?
DR. WM. H. BRAY
AND DR. H. R. WILLIAMS
Optometrists
919 Mass. VI 3-1401
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Don't get angry the next time a speed-happy driver zooms by you in a classy-looking sports car. Chances are he's just feeling sexually inadequate.
At least that's the opinion of Dr. Jerome M. Kummer, a psychiatrist at the UCLA Medical Center.
"We have found that a great many sports car drivers go in for these racy vehicles because they express feelings such as sexual inadequacy." Kummer told delegates recently to the sixth annual Western Safety Congress.
Studies Assn. Elects Grier
"The sports car driver is saying I'm not a sissy," Kummer said.
Edward F. Grier, associate professor of English, was recently elected president of the Central Mississippi Valley American Studies Assn. at the fourth annual meeting of the group at MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Ill.
Baur Announces New Curriculum
The new law enforcement curriculum has been approved by the sociology department. E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology and human relations, said
The new curriculum is a liberal arts program with a major in sociology. There is an internship during the summer with the Kansas City, Mo., police department, he said.
"In addition to law enforcement, the program includes correctional work and preventive programs, especially with juveniles," Prof. Baur said.
"A great deal of credit for the program goes to William Reed. His interest in the project led to its development. He is preparing for professional work in this field," said Prof. Baur.
Reed, Kansas City, Mo., senior, holds the Eldridge Scholarship given to the most promising junior in the sociology department.
Actors to Test for Amateur Award Play
Tryouts for the cast of "The Long Shadow." prize-winning amateur play, will be at 7 tonight and 4 p.m. tomorrow in room 341 of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will direct the play to be presented May 4-9. Twenty-five plays were considered before the choice of this play. Centron Motion Picture Corp., a Lawrence firm, sponsored the contest for amateur playwrights.
The play was written by Miriam Roffman, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin now living in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Her play was selected Feb. 15 by a committee headed by Prof. Crafton. Other members of the committee were Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, Marvin A. Carlson, Wichita graduate student, and Gene Courtney of the Centron Corp.
The Castle Tea Room 1307 Massachusetts VI 3-1151
The World's Most Popular Sports Car
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On The Highway In North Lawrence
Wednesday, April 1, 1959
Rowland to Present Report at OSU Meet
Frank S. Rowland, associate professor of chemistry, will present a report at the fourth Conference on Radioactive Isotopes in Agriculture which will be held on April 2-3 at Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Okla.
Prof. Rowland's report, "Gas Counting of Tritium," is one of several to be given at the conference dealing with new methods of harnessing atomic energy for plant and animal research.
More than two million tons of salt are used in the U.S. each winter to melt snow and ice on the nation's streets and highways.
D
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
HOW TO BE A THUMPING BIG SUCCESS ON CAMPUS
While up in the attic last week hiding from the tax man, I came across a letter, yellow with age, that dear old Dad had sent me when I was a freshman. I reproduce it below in the hope that it may light your way as it did mine.
"Dear Son, (Dad always called me Son. This was short for Sonnenberg, which used to be my first name. I traded it last year with a man named Max. He threw in two outfielders and a left-handed pitcher . . . But I digress.)
"Dear Son. (Dad wrote)
"I suppose you are finding college very big and bewildering, and maybe a little frightening too. Well, it need not be that way if you will follow a few simple rules.
"First of all, if you have any problems, take them to your teachers. They want to help you. That's what they are there for. Perhaps they seem a little aloof, but that is only because they are so busy. You will find your teachers warm as toast and friendly as pups if you will call on them at an hour when they are not overly busy. Four a.m., for instance."
"Second, learn to budget your time. What with classes, activities, studying, and social life all competing for your time, it is easy to fall into sloppy habits. Set up a rigid schedule and stick to it. Remember, there are only 24 hours a day. Three of these hours must be spent in class. For every hour in class you must, of course, spend two hours studying. So there go six more hours. Then, as we all know, for every hour studying, you must spend two hours sleeping. This accounts for twelve more hours. Then there are meals—three hours each for breakfast and lunch, four hours for dinner. Never forget, Sonnenberg, you must chew each mouthful twelve hundred times. You show me a backward student, and I'll show you a man who bolts his food.
I could not dissuade her...
"But college is more than just sleeping, eating, and studying. There are also many interesting activities which you must not miss. You'll want to give at least three hours a day to the campus newspaper, and, of course, another three hours each to the dramatic and music clubs. And let's say a total of eight hours daily to the stamp club, the debating club, and the foreign affairs club. Then, of course, nine or ten hours for fencing and bird-walking, and another ten or twelve for ceramics and three-card monte.
'Finally we come to the most important part of each day—what I call 'The Quiet Time.' This is a period in which you renew yourself—just relax and think great thoughts and smoke Marlboro Cigarettes. Why Marlboro? Because they are the natural complement to the active life. They have better 'makin's'; the filter filters; the flavor is rich and mellow and a treat to the tired, a boon to the spent, a safe harbor to the storm-tossed. That's why.
"Well, Sonnenberg, I guess that's about all. Your kindly old mother sends her love. She has just finished putting up rather a large batch of pickles—in fact, 350,000 jars. I told her that with you away at school, we would not need so many, but kindly old Mother is such a creature of habit that, though I hit her quite hard several times, I could not dissuade her.
Keep'em flying.
"Dad." 1950 Max Shulman
. . .
Here's more advice to freshmen—and upperclassmen too. If non-filter cigarettes are your pleasure, double your pleasure with Philip Morris, made by the makers of Marlboro.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesdav. April 1, 1959
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Spring Intramurals Begin Next Week
Spring intramurals—softball, badminton, handball, golf, horseshoes and tennis—will begin next week, Walter J. Mikols, Intramural Director, has announced.
Both "A" and "B' competition will be held in softball.
Badminton, handball and horseshoes will be conducted on a single elimination basis. The date of the golf tournament will be announced later.
In sports other than softball, a team will be composed of one doubles and two singles players with the match going to the team winning two out of three contests. A minimum of four players is needed for a complete team although more may be entered.
The doubles game must be played first or simultaneously. Doubles members must be declared before each match. Partners of the doubles game in any one match cannot play in either singles game of that match.
The deadline date for all entries is Monday, April 6th. A meeting of all managers will be held Tuesday, April 7, in Robinson gym, room 203 at 4:00 p.m.
Swimming will begin later this month. Preliminaries in all events, except diving, will be held Wednesday, April 22, at 4:15 p.m. The finals and the entire diving event, will be held the next day. Each organized house will be limited to one free-style relay and one medley relay team. There is no limit as to the number of swimmers that may enter each event. However, swimmers are limited to two events.
Mikols, director of the intramural program, has asked swimming managers to organize their teams and start practice sessions immediately.
Swimmers will be required to get a minimum of six hours of water work. A record of the practices of swimmers will be kept in the intramural office. Those failing to get at least the required six hours will not be permitted to compete in the intramural swimming meet.
The pool is available for practice sessions on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. On Saturday, the pool is open from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
The deadline date for all entries is Tuesday, April 21.
Wilt Remains Unsigned
PHILADELPHIA —(UPI)— Eddie Gottlieb, president and owner of the Philadelphia Warriors basketball team insisted today he "hoped and expected" Wilt Chamberlain would play for his club but insisted that the giant court star had not reached any salary agreement with him.
"The answer is no, no and no." Gottlieb said last night when he flew back from Cincinnati to attend a Philadelphia basketball writers dinner where Joe Lapchick of St. John's was honored as the coach of the year.
Gottie drafted Chamberlain at the National Basketball Association meeting in Cincinnati.
"The answer is no, as far as reaching an agreement with Chamberlain is concerned," Gottlieb said.
"The answer is no, as far as that we already have him signed. His contract with the Globetrotter runs until April 15. We wouldn't sign him until after that date."
Gottlieb said that Abe Saperstein, owner of the Trotters, and he were to talk over the Chamberlain matter at Chicago during the past weekend when Gottlieb attended the wedding of Saperstein's daughter.
"We were just too busy to talk about Chamberlain," Gottlieb said. "We never got around to it."
"We hope and we expect to get Chamberlain," Gottie continued.
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EMLYN WILLIAMS as "A Boy Growing Up"
An Entertainment from the stories of DYLAN THOMAS
UNIVERSITY THEATRE
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TICKETS: $2.05, $1.54, $1.03 ON SALE AT FINE ARTS OFFICE,
UNION TICKET CENTER, BELL MUSIC CO.
Each match will consist of the best of seven points, one point going to each of five singles winners and two more going to the winning doubles team.
KU's tennis team and coach Denzell Gibbens begin a 13 match schedule tomorrow with a three-day road trip opening at Wichita. The trip will take the Jayhawkers to Norman and Stillwater for conference matches with Oklahoma and Oklahoma State the following two days.
The trip will feature KU marksmen Lynn Sieverling, Jerry Williams, Pete Block, Dave Coupe, and Salvit Lekagil challenging three of the best net teams in this region. Oklahoma State is defending conference champion and holds a top one-two punch in John Agnos and Ron Anglemeyer. Both are sophomores.
Despite reduced practice sessions due to erratic Kansas weather, the Jayhawkers are out to improve their fifth place conference berth of last year.
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — Wilt Chamberlain said today he would like to barnstorm with the Harlem Globetrotters and play with the National Basketball Association Philadelphia Warriors after his Globetrotters' contract expires April 15.
"We're going into the three toughest matches of the year," observed Gibbens, but then pointed out that the Jayhawkers have 10 remaining matches plus the conference meet.
"Coupe and Williams played some pretty good doubles against Mr. Prosser and Bill Shieldon. Jerry is the type of player that can come out and beat you anytime. At times, he'll come out and beat Lynn."
"I'd like to play with two teams, if it is possible," he said. "But, I doubt if it is because the Trotters make most of their money on the American tour that runs from mid-October to mid-April."
"Lekagul and Block will be facing their first Big Eight competition and it may affect their game, but they'll still be picking up some experience.
Sieverling faces a return match with Jimmy Carter of Wichita in what promises to be an interesting battle.
April 22* *Kansan Fashion Issue
Sieverling, former Kansas state high school champion and top man on the KU team for the second year, also shares Gibbens' views on the coming matches.
toughest we'll meet all season. It's a hard way to start out!"
Wilt Wants To Play With Both Teams
Tennis Team Opens Season
"Lynn's the type that will be far behind, but he still hasn't lost," Gibbens said.
"Lynn (Sieverling) started to look good before he went home for vacation, but then he didn't get a chance to play any since the weather turned bad," Gibbens said.
"These three teams are about the
Sieverling has earned the right to play No. 1 singles with Williams, Block, Coupe, and Lekagul following in that order. Sieverling will pair with Block in the top doubles battle, while Coupe and Williams pair off in the final doubles match.
Turning to individuals, Gibbens relayed his praise for his marksm.
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Wednesday, April 1, 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.
LOST
KHAKI JACKET. warm-up type. "Swiss Air," size 44. Left on tennis courts near stadium March 21. Call VI 2-0210. 4-6
HELP WANTED
AMOUNT of money in or near the Student Union. Call Pier Artama at VI 3-6400.
ENGINEERS: The rapid growth of our company has been largely due to our success in developing automatic dispensing equipment which is extremely reliable. Product innovation has therefore increase the need for more engineers. We invite any mechanical, electrical, or industrial engineering student to visit us. Our positions are permanent, offering competitive compensation and progressive Kansas City industry. Apply Personnel Dept, The Vendo Company 7400 E. 12th St, Kansas City, Missouri. The phone is HU 3-7400.
WANTED—TO RENT
KU FACULTY MEMBER requires a furnished three bedroom house for the fall and spring semester, 1959-1960. Call VI 2-0346.
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious, nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath, heat and gas furnished, linen furnished, accept graduate students. Call VI 7677
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, whole third
twelve rooms, two bedrooms,
from KU. CALL VI 3-9066 -5
-8
FOR RENT
TWO ROOMS well furnished, very close to campus. One classroom, classman reduces 2-4 students. VI 3-6089
VACANCY for young man in contemporary home, now and summer, 20 x40' swimming pool, diving board. Living room and private patio area. Entrance, enclosure, shower-bath refrigerator. Country Club atmosphere. Call IV 3-9635. 4-9
FURNISHED HOUSE, three bedrooms,
two baths, close to campus, for the
months of June, July, and August. Call VI 2-0346. 4-3
FIRST FLOOR SOUTHSIDE DUPLXE.
newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six
rooms, full basement, close to KU. Call
V 3-1764 or V 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-7
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: trip to New York, will share expenses. Arrive April 5 and return to KU. April 13. Call Dean Mohstrom at VI 2-0854. 4-3
FOR SALE
WRITE FORMAL full length, net.
tropical size 10, worn once. s25. C48.
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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 3-6124.
HOUSE, AND LOT. 1518 Meadow Lane,
just west of the field house, lot size is
105x162 in Clarkson Grandview Place.
The property includes two trees, shrubs and perennials. Two level
house, entrance level contains two bedrooms, with built in chests of drawers,
bath kitchen with exhaust fan and wood burning fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking Wakara valleys with lawn and tree cover. Three-quarter ion air conditioner. Balcony, screen porch and flagstone terrace. Lower level has an extra large bedroom which is ground floor and has a log surround by flower garden. Basement area back of this room consists of a family room with gas log fireplace and cyclone protection shed. The home also has three carport showers, three car carport, contemporary architecture, custom design. Three-quarter inch redwood sliding, bed case with raised platform and concrete foundation and footing. Call V 3-1782 for appointment.
CAMERAS for the photographer who wants quality. 35mm Canon V-L, never used. 35mm Voigtlander Vitessa, slightly used. Both just brought from overseas. Buy now for the vacation. Call VI 2-0195 between 6:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
1953 FORD, 4 door, clean, $295. Triumph
1957. Dis Brakes, high port head, low mileage, $1,995. See at British Motors.
1737 North 2nd, Phone VI 3-8367. 4-1
Balfour
DAFFODILS, 22 cents a dozen, no de-
fice. Cardboard lardage, 1742 L-7
dairy; Card VI T-3-2275.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags Picnic, party supplies ant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350
411 W 14th VI 3-1571
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BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can help your advance reservations at special student-faculty rate. Call VI 3-9124.
WASH YOUR CLOTHES at Smithy's Diaper Service and Automatic Laundry, Kidco Dry Cleaning, also laundry, lying, and rug cleaning. Floor 3-8077, Pickup and delivery. Call VI 3-8077
VILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Broadway, Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stools and cages, stands, and accessories for pets. Exotic plants include amazon 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, furniture, toys; bags; blankets, etc.; everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
RENT A SINGER machine by the
3-1971, Singe
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron
TLEMON, call VI 3-5263. tff
LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest
dance studios, Dance Studio, 908
Missouri, ph. 3-6388.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers.
Exports those standard rates. Mrs H.
H. S. Lee is secretary.
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. .. General rates, Mrs. Tom Bridley, VI 3-428.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. 'ff'
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021J's Mass.
Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc.
For men and women, by professional
adjudicator. Tables available to
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. Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. Internships. Occupation, training, accuracy work. Cm VI M 3-1420 Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee, tfr
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood, VI 3-1891. 736 Tenn. ff.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly
Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts;
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tt
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS.
Ola Smith
9411 9415, Mass. Ph. 3-2625.
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqquis, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul Hud
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ONE VACANCY for pre-school age child. Convenient location Call VI 3-2640.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1. 1959
Library Sets Displays
By Nancy Whalen
The new Watson Library display calendar for the next school year will soon appear highlighted by a full scale exhibition on John Brown of Harper's Ferry.
This exhibition, celebrating the Kansas Centennial, will be shown in November and December.
Robert L. Quinsey, chief of the reader service, said that a library committee composed of several staff members and himself meet each year in the spring to set up the calendar.
The committee is happy to accept ideas from anyone, Mr. Quinsey said.
"We will take advantage of something in the news and have one of the biggest displays of the year.
Citizens Out In Kansas City
The Democratic coalition swept the Citizens Association out of city hall in the Kansas City municipal elections yesterday.
Five major council posts went to the coalition candidates with three of the present councilmen retained. These three councilmen were backed by both the Democratic coalition and the Citizens Association.
Incumbent Mayor H. Roe Bartle was elected to a second term over former county judge Ray G. Cowan. Mayor Bartle ran as a Citizens candidate, but was supported by a majority of the factions.
The new councilmen will take office April 10.
Student Chosen For Soviet Tour
Robert A. Nebrig Jr., Leavenworth junior, will be one of 20 American college students to represent the United States in an official student exchange program with Russia this summer.
The National Student Council of YMCA's-YWCA's is sponsoring the exchange.
Nebrig, vice president of the KU YMCA and chairman of the Kansas District of the YMCA-YWCA, will leave with the group in mid-June and return in early September.
He will spend a short time in Western Europe, more than 40 days in the Soviet Union and 10 days in either Poland or Czechoslovakia.
KU to Host Annual College Session
Dr. Edward Olsen, Chicago, educational director for the National Conference of Christians and Jews, will speak at the second annual College Conference on Intergroup Relations here Saturday and Sunday.
Principle topics of the conference will be promotion of acceptance of foreign and Negro students.
The conference is sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews and University Extension, in cooperation with the campus Group for the Improvement of Human Relations.
The conference planning committee is composed of representatives from six Kansas colleges and universities. KU's representative is Laurian Seeber, Irvington-on-the-hudson. N. Y., senior.
J. U. Adams, assistant manager of University Extension advised the committee.
"We are planning to celebrate the opening of the new Summerfield School of Business with an exhibition of some of the Renaissance materials acquired with Summerfield funds," he said.
The library would try to pick some of the books with pertinence to economics, history and business, be added.
"We have one of the most outstanding economics collections in the world," he said.
One of the most successful displays which the library has had in recent years was an exhibition of banned books in 1955, Mr. Quinsey said.
"We printed 2,000 copies of the list of banned books for distribution here and the response all over the world was tremendous.
world were tremendous.
"Demands came from major colleges and universities and from Iron Curtain countries. We printed over 22,000 copies before we were finished." Mr. Quinsey said.
the library won a prize in the national American Library Association meeting that year for the dis-
Senior to Present Recital Tonight
David Dodds, tenor, will be presented in a recital by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Dodds is a graduate of Friends University in Wichita where he received a Bachelor of Music degree in voice and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Music Theory. Tonight's recital is a partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music.
Dodds sang the leading role of Michael in the University production "The Saint of Bleeker Street" last spring. He is a student of Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice.
Burge Is Rotary Head
Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, has been elected president of the Lawrence Rotary Club. He will also be a member of the new board of directors and will take office July 1.
International Banquet Saturday, April 18
francis sporting goods
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Tennis
we're in the racket for restringing
bring yours in! one day service
Attention
play and a check was presented to Robert Vosper, library director.
Petitioning for Jay Sisters will be Thurs., April 2 at 7 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity and Joseph R. Pearson Hall now receive KUOK broadcasts.
KUOK Adds Two To Radio Audience
Two new listening audiences have been added to those receiving KUOK radio programs.
Prof. J. A. Sterritt Wins Sculpture Prize
Some of the books which were on the banned list include Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Scarlet Letter," Samuel Clemens" "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" and the "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." Ernest Hemingway's "Farewell to Arms," Erskine Caldwell's "God's Little Acre," John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath," and "Robin Hood."
"More fraternal groups are expected on the list within the next several weeks," said Gayle Askren, Topeka junior and publicity director of KUOK.
James A. Sterritt, assistant professor of architecture, has awarded first prize in sculpture at the 49th Exhibition for Michigan Artists in Detroit.
His welded sculpture made with jagged textured tubes, "Cosmic Souvenir," won the top prize of $200. The show is being held in Detroit until April 12.
Prof. Sterritt received his B.F.A. and M.A. degrees from Wayne University, Detroit, in 1951 and 1952.
Finland's reindeer are capable of pulling sleds up to 20 miles an hour on short hauls.
Dogs and wolves have retained so many basic similarities through the ages that they still fall prey to the same parasites and diseases.
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AUFS Man Views Russia-Iran Link
E. A. Bayne said today the objectives of the Russians and the determination of the Iranians, to remain independent have remained almost the same for the last 150 years.
The visiting American Universities Field Staff representative discussed the impact of Soviet policy on Iran and the history of Russian interest in Iran before a Soviet Problems and Policies class this morning. ___
The Russian objective is to subvert or conquer Iran, he said.
"The Russian position in Iran has rested on a treaty of friendship signed at the end of 1922.
"This treaty has one clause which gives the Russians the right to determine whether the Iranians are associating with a foreign power to the detriment of the Russians.
"This clause gives the Russians the right to march in and rectify the situation to their own interests." Mr. Bavne said.
He said the Russians have made several threats in citing the clause in the treaty of 1922.
"Khrushchev has said the Iranians cannot expect Russia to stand by if they try to receive help or advice from the United States," Mr. Bayne said.
Russian objectives have been well known for a number of years, he said.
"Iran is in a peculiar position geographically and thus it is a football between the East and the West.
He said constant pressure is kept on the Iranians and they are submitting to the kind of pressure Russia thinks will work.
"Iran has had a rather keen sense of its natural history and the fact that it has been able to remain independent. It has maintained integrity down the line." he said.
Mr. Bayne said that Iran adopted
Sorry
The Daily Kansan made two errors in listing the candidates for class officer posts yesterday.
Jan Banker, Russell junior, is running for senior class president. The Kansan reported Janet Baker, Leawood junior, was the candidate.
Virginia Lee Smith. running for secretary of the junior class, is from Topeka, not Washington, D.C., as reported.
a form of constitutional government in 1907, and with the aid of Great Britain forced the Shah to accept it.
"The Russians were opposed to this because the British favored it. The Czarists had learned that it was easy to buy influence and maintain a position in northern Iran. They were opposed to the constitutional movement in the country until the Bolshevik Revolution," he said.
"In 1907, th. traditional rivalry between Britain and Russia in Iran changed. They decided to come to an agreement and divide the country in half." Mr. Bayne said.
He said that the Russians were given almost complete authority, though the Shah still existed.
"Both the British and the Russians established military forces in Iran for the protection of their interests there." Mr. Bayne said.
He said the Russians established a Cossack regiment in the country and the British also established a military force to protect their oil and trade concessions.
"In the 1930s, Russian interest in Iran began to increase, especially in the development of industries in the country," Mr. Bayne said.
"In 1941, with the attack by Hitler on Russia, the British and the Russians found themselves again in alliance," he said.
He said that Russia undertook to develop a political party and to develop the oil fields in northern Iran.
"Russia undertook a fairly full scale program of looting the country during the occupation," Mr. Bayne said.
He said the Russians were very unwilling to leave Iran after World War II.
(See page 12 for E. A. Bayne's comments on the labor problems of Italy.)
Generally fair tonight. Partly cloudy and not so warm west and north tomorrow. Low tonight 45 to 50. High tomorrow 55 to 60 north to 70 southeast.
Weather
Daily hansan
56th Year, No.117
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 2, 1959
Harkness Will Give Kansan Board Speech
The dinner, sponsored by the govern- ing body of The Daily Kansan, will be at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. A coffee hour will be held later in the South Lounge where displays of prize-winning Daily Kansan stories and advertise- ments will be shown.
At the dinner awards and scholarships will be announced for outstanding journalism students. Newsmen from throughout the area, University faculty members, students and guests will attend the dinner.
The 46th annual Kansan Board Dinner will be held May 9, with Washington radio and television commentator Richard Harkness as the guest speaker.
Mr. Harkness, a 1928 graduate of the University who broadcast the first network television news program from Washington, D.C., in 1948, has not announced his topic
Mr. Harkness, of Artesian, S. D., has been working as a newsman for over 30 years.
In the past, such speakers as Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, and columnists Doris Fleeson and Hal Boyle, have been speakers at the dinner.
Last year, Bill Vaughan, Starbeams editor of the Kansas City Star, was the speaker.
Mr. Harkness joined the United Press in Kansas City after college. He was involved in reporting the Pendergast machine activities.
Before he moved to the Washing-
Bouncer Bounced
Airmen's Squawk Bags Light Colonel on Wing
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. — (UPI) — An airman charged today a "storming" lieutenant colonel ordered him and six other enlisted men off a plane taking them home from Japan on emergency leave.
The colonel and his family then took off in the plane for a Hawaiian vacation.
Airman 2-C Robert J. Kindl said here, today;
The airmen appealed to Lt. Gen. Robert Burns, U. S. military commander in Japan, who ordered the Military Air Transport plane back to Japan a half hour later and personally bounced the colonel from the flight.
"We were all on emergency leave. My son had died, and the funeral was being held up. Another airman's
mother had died. The daughter of another was in a hospital and fear was expressed for her life."
ton U. P. office in 1934, Mr. Harkness was also assigned to bureaus in Oklahoma City, Dallas, and Jefferson City, Mo.
Gen. Burns personally ordered the plane back to Tachikawa Air Force Base after it had left with the colonel, his wife and four children. The general went to the base to make sure the enlisted men got on board.
Airman Kindl said the plane had to dump large quantities of fuel as a safety measure before landing back in Japan.
He joined the National Broadcasting Co. in 1934 and now broadcasts news for a Washington television station.
He is also a member of the NBC-TV "Ask Washington" panel and appears on other network news special events programs.
Mr. Harkness has covered political
A. E. B.
Richard Harkness
conventions, the Roosevelt-Churchill Quebec conference, the 1945 United Nations Charter conference in San Francisco, and has traveled throughout Europe.
Collaborating with his wife, the former Gladys Suiter of Macksville, Kan. Mr. Harkness contributes articles to many national publications.
He is a member of the National Press Club, the Gridiron Club, and was president of the Overseas Writers Club.
Tips for Would-be Phi Betas:Be Active, Study Early
ALEXANDRA ROSS AND TERESA SCHNEIDER
AND BRAINS, TOO—These three have more than coiffures on their minds. They are three of the 36 seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in liberal arts and sciences. Form left: Kala Mays, Lyons; Marcia Hall, Coffeyville; Virginia Stephens, Parsons.
It seems that many Phi Bet Kappas are active individuals who prefer to study early in the evening.
Melisande Magers Jones, Lawrence senior, said that cramming for exams is her pet pieve. "I like to study in the evening and try to finish by about 10:30 p.m. because I get sleepy after that.
Lynn Miller, Dodge City senior, said, "I like to get my homework done as early in the evening as possible. I feel that I am just fooling myself when I stay up late to read, because I just get too sleepy."
"In a sorority house there are so many activities that it is sometime hard to study. I found it much easier to study after I was married."
Miller will be at the University of Geneva, Swietherland, on a Rotary Fellowship next year. Although his major is English, he will be working toward his master's degree in international politics.
"It is surprising how much time you can waste during the day, 15 minutes here and there and it all piles up. I think that a person who plans a little will be surprised at how much time he will have left." Miller commented.
Charles E. Platz, Hutchinson senior, said, "I study best when I get up very early in the morning. I do my best work when I go to bed about 8 p.m. and get up at 3 a.m. I generally do not study that way, though. Usually I study between 8 p.m. and midnight."
Platz, who has a double major in zoology and chemistry, will study at the University of Chicago Medical School next year He said he plans
"I have felt at times that I have been burdened by extra-curricular activities. It is harder for me to study since I have been married because I want to spend more time with my wife. The solution to this problem is that I usually study on the hill." Platz said.
"I find I learn a lot easier when I take courses that I am really interested in. When I can, I take courses in which I can develop some interest. I picked courses in English in which I had a little interest and then tried to develop more interest in the course. This is where true learning begins." Platz said
to complete his Ph.D. after he has his M.D.
Howard Marvin Johnson, Topeka senior, said, "I try to keep my study habits well organized. I keep my course assignments up to date and give a certain amount of time to each course. I never really stav up late, and I have quite a few outside activities. When I study I work hard to get it done. I plan to get a master's degree in mathematics education. I'd like to teach for a while, and get a doctor's degree in secondary school education."
Mrs. Patricia Lee Bell, Atchison senior, said, "I just keep up with my assignments, and read a little. I'll probably go into secretarial work after I graduate."
Linda Lois Farmer, Pratt senior,
said, "I try to study when I have
free time. I hope to take graduate
work in English and then teach. As
far as outside activities are
concerned, I am very busy. But it seems
the more I have to do the more work
I get done. I don't waste as much
time when I'm very busy."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 2.1959
It's Up to Candidates
Campus elections are less than two weeks away. And we are still scanning the skies for signs of the individual candidates and their campaigns.
We urge students to vote, but can we justly expect them to make the wisest use of this right unless the candidates give the voters something on which to base their decision?
We have all heard the advice, "Get to know your candidates." This year we propose, "Candidates, get to know your voters. Then they will know you in return."
Students are uncommonly busy citizens of the University community. They cannot seek out each candidate to determine who will be the best qualified representative on the All Student Council or in a class office. But the candidate should feel the obligation to make himself known to the students through his living district or school. If elected, he will then be in closer contact with those students he represents and be more able and effective in acting in their interest.
So far in election preparations we have seen the list of candidates and the announcement of one
party's platform. Candidates cannot ride into office on the coattails and glory of their campus political party.
This is not the time to deal in political parties. To vote a straight ticket in a campus election is even more absurd than in a national election. No one party can boast all the qualified candidates. It is only the uninformed voter who votes a straight ticket.
Therefore, The Daily Kansan proposes to take no sides in the election. It will support clean, fair campaigning, and it will take a stand on sound basic issues regardless of party.
But we would like to see vigorous campaigning throughout the remaining pre-election days.
An informed student body will elect a responsible Council and class officers. These responsible representatives and officers will produce an efficient, effective student government for the 1959-60 school year.
But it remains the responsibility of each candidate to get to know his voters so these voters can go to the polls informed.
—Pat Swanson
No Excuse for Unemployment
Labor Department figures for March show 4,700,000 workers are jobless. This is approximately 7 per cent of the total U.S.labor force.
Economists consider 3 per cent unemployment normal and unemployment over 6 per cent as a signal of national distress.
The high unemployment exists despite the fact that the business economy is moving into high gear since the 1957-58 recession. Two main reasons advanced for the paradox are automation and the trimming of unnecessary jobs during the depression.
These are reasons, but not justification, for unemployment. There can be no justification, for the federal government has been committed to the control of unemployment since 1946.
Automation should not be permitted to cause unemployment, but rather to increase production. Automation is the means which can free workers from routine and divert them to more creative production.
New production raises the national standard of living.
There is no secret as to the government measures necessary to control unemployment and to divert workers to new production:
1. Make money available to business at low interest rates to encourage new expansion and new jobs.
2. Build new public works—highways, schools, and libraries.
3. Increase social payments-social security, welfare, etc.
4. Experiment in new fields of production in
which the profit motive does not tempt private investment. This would include projects to harness atomic or the sun's energy for peaceful purposes.
Though the measures necessary to increase the nation's standard of living are not secret, their use is argued against chiefly on two grounds:
1. Such measures call for high government expenditures and result in a high national debt.
Neither is a valid argument.
The national debt is relative to the nation's taxable resources. If there is no national production or wealth to be taxed—as during a depression or period of unemployment—the debt is high. Tight-fisted money policies can raise the national debt, for such policies can cause depressions to deepen and, consequently, reduce taxable resources.
It is a lack of production and not a booming economy which causes inflation. The dollar is backed by the federal government's taxing power. It represents the nation's wealth. If the nation has no wealth or production, the dollar is cheap There is inflation.
Automation and technology are the means to increase production and to strengthen the dollar. Automation and technology can increase production so that the supply of dollars will not outrun the supply of goods.
There is no excuse for the loss of national wealth and the spiritual degeneration of labor which result from unemployment.
Larry Miles
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
OFFICE PROFESSOR SNAPY
BITTER TEACHERS FOR A BITTER WORLD
5-30
"WHO SAID HE WONT CHANGE A GRADE? - I GOT HIM TO RAISE THIS PAPER FROM A " ZERO " TO AN ' F. "
Letters to the Editor should be limited to 300 words and be typed double space. The writer should type and sign his name. No unsigned letters will be run. However, names may be withheld on request.
Editorial Policy
Dailu hansan UNIVERSITAT
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10026. Post 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 and school offices. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1810, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas dreams bloom,
triweekly 1908, 16, 1912
Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker... Managing Editor
Al Jones, John Husar, Jack Harrison,
Lynne Dudley, Jack Morton,
lors: Jack Morton and Carol Allen,
Co-City Editors; George Debord and
Dong Yocom, Co-Space Editors;
Donna Nelson, School Editor; Donna
Nelson, Assistant School Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill Feitz Business Manager
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier, Co-
ssponsor of the Harwl, Asphalt
Editorial Editor.
Student Government-
Vox Formed in 1957
(Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles on campus politics and student government. This article deals with Vox Populi political party.)
This is Vox Populi's second year on campus. It was formed in the fall of 1957. At that time the Allied Greek-Independent party was the only party.
Vox is governed by its general assembly which meets once every two weeks except just before the spring elections when it meets weekly. The general assembly is composed of one representative from each member organized house and one representative for each 100 unorganized independents in the party.
The number of unorganized independent representatives is determined by the number of party cards distributed to students in that living district. The party has three representatives in this area.
The general assembly must give final approval to all party matters. All general assembly meetings are open to anyone interested.
Any organized house that wishes to join the party must be passed by the general assembly and the executive council. Unorganized independents may receive party cards by contacting members of the assembly or council.
The party's executive council is elected from among the general assembly's members. This council is composed of 10 members, half of which must be Greeks and half independents. Offices on the council are president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, a women's and men's political representative and four members at large.
Party presidential elections are held two weeks after the spring ASC elections. The rest of the officers are not elected until fall when they know who will be returning and be active in the party. A temporary executive council is selected by the president after his election to serve until the fall.
* *
The executive council also meets every two weeks except close to elections when it meets every week. It draws up party policy and platform and presents them to the general assembly. It also interviews prospective All Student Council candidates who wish to run on the Vox slate.
In selecting the party slate Vox uses the convention method. Each member house puts up two persons who it thinks would make good candidates. The persons are interviewed by the executive council which then selects the candidates. Not more than one candidate is chosen per house.
The candidates are selected on the basis of primary interest, previous experience in student government, and their active interest in campus affairs.
* *
It is now supporting a proposed amendment to the ASC constitution which will be voted on by the student body during the general elections. This amendment will lower the required number of votes which must be cast in a school district in order for that school to have a voting representative on the ASC.
During this year Vox has supported the investigations of the ASC housing and labor committees, the Blue Cross-Blue Shield student health program and the new I.B.M. elections bill.
Vox backed the "write your legislator" campaign which supported the University's proposed budget.
(1) **motif** (mo teef)*—A: spontaneous movement. B: theme. C: reason for action. D: witticism.
(2) siesta (se es'ta)—A: farm. B: carnival. C: East Indian market. D: nap.
By Wilfred Funk
The following words, from five languages, are so commonly used in English that they are included in most of our abridged dictionaries. Check the word or phrase you believe is nearest in meaning to the key word.
(4) dishabille (dis a beel)' — A:
shame. B: nudity. C: negligee.
D: distress.
Increase Your Word Power
(3) alfresco—A: in the open air.
B: over-ornamentation. C:
formal. D: ill-mannered.
(5) fauna (faw'na)—A: servile flattery. B: animal life. C: vegetation. D: leg bone.
(7) **inamorata** (in am or rah' tah)
—A: anger. B: jealousy. C:
opera singer. D: sweetheart.
( 8 ) cortege (kor tezh')-A: car-
riage. B: procession. C: nose-
gay. D: close-fitting under-
garment.
(6) wanderlust—A: longing to travel. B: love. C: bitterness. D: passion.
Answers are on page 12.
(10) welschmerz (velt' shmerts)
—A: happiness. B: physical pain.
C: sentimental pessimism.
D: wisdom.
(9) cabana (ka bah'nya)—A: inn.
B: scarf. C: game. D: bath-
house.
(12) pro rata (pro ra'ta) -A: immediately. B: temporarily. C: in proportion D: ahead of time.
(11) fiesta (fyes'tah)—A: anger.
B: festival. C: wildness. D: joy.
(13) soiree (swah ra')-A: evening party, B: afternoon tea. C: morning party. D: any gay gathering.
(14) **per se** (per se')—A: with your permission. B: by itself. C: because. D: brief.
(15) **menage** (me nahzh') — A:
household. B: zoo. C: theatral
company. D: circus.
(16) via (vii'a) A: aside. B: up.
C: by way of. D: roundabout.
(17) par excellence (par ek' se lahn)s—A: beyond comparison. B: unworthy. C: famous. D: successful.
(18) poltergeist (pol' ter gist) -A:
c scheder. B: pickpocket. C:
fictitious name. D: noisy
ghost.
(19) flora (flo'ra)—A: brilliant color. B: plant life. C: ostentatious display. D: a layer of tiles.
(29) decor (da kor')—A: dignified reserve. B: severity. C: decoration. D: good manners.
(From "It Pays to Increase Your Word Power," Reader's Digest, April 1959)
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
MD Concession Serves Coffee, Drama and Fun
By Saundra Hayn
Potato chips, candy bars, coffee, donuts, cigarettes and soft drinks are all found in the tiny, 8-by-12 concession stand in the Music and Dramatic Arts building.
Sandra Blankenship, Great Bend senior, speaks for most fine arts students when she says, "It is a place where you can take a coffee break—but more important, you get to know everyone. Professors stop for coffee; everyone is informal. I have had more interesting discussions there than anywhere on the campus."
Some fine arts students consider this cubicle even more important than the various stages and recital halls in the building.
The Human Element
The concession stand has a circus air. John Westerman, Merriam junior, a student who works there, sells his coffee like an old time side show barker.
Westerman, although businesslike,
has a heart. Yesterday he gave away
two cups of coffee. That was his first
mistake.
Miss Blankenship and Celia Welch. Herington junior, the girls to whom he had given the coffee, soon dragged him from behind the safety of his counter.
A Poet's World
With Westerman seated on a low bench they gave the premier performance of an act which possibly will win them a position of note in the theater world.
Here's to John behind the counter,
If there were stairs to heaven, he
We wonder if he is partial to all men, or just to us.
He is good—and kind—and sweet
—and generous.
Words cannot express the virtues of John.
So we must admit that he's real gone.
We praise, we laud, we magnify his name,
'Cause he gives us free coffee.
This performance ended to wild applause from the gallery of main-
This episode is only one of many that occur in this culinary cubicle.
When there was snow, two coffee-drinking men decided to build an ice Venus. They did, too-right in front of the veranda that connects the two wings of the sprawling building.
jenceance men and fine arts students who had gathered for the premier.
Fate Retaliates
Even in a new and beautiful building there are those who would force persons to conform to minute and confining patterns of behavior. Is it not unbelievable that in the very department which dotes on creativity there are those who would close forever a part of that achievement? Yes, there are rumors that next year the small cubicle will not house goodies.
Here, for all to see, is a place where the spark of creativity can grow and burn, perhaps not brightly, but at least to the illumination of small spaces.
The atmosphere of the stately and quiet Exhibition Gallery may soon replace the merry air around the brave little niche where students find refuge from the "have to" world.
To close or not to close, to inhibit talent or to exhibit the free spirit, that is the question. ___
Dinner Planned for Foreign Students
An "Around the World Dinner" for foreign students, sponsored by the Neosho County Council for UNESCO, will be held April 24 in Chanute. Transportation arrangements can be made through Clark Coan, foreign student adviser, 221 Strong. Representatives from eight Kansas colleges and universities will attend the dinner.
Fire of the Year
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — "Rescue 8," a television series which features heroic rescue exploits, had to be rescued itself by the fire department last night. One of its rescue trucks caught fire.
Elina Holst, class of 1957, has been appointed group leader to Finland for the 1959 summer program of The Experiment in International Living.
She is presently employed as administrative assistant working with the governing council of the American Psychiatric Association in Washington, D. C. She majored in political science while at the University of Kansas.
She will take part in a program involving 1,200 people, aged 16-35, who are going abroad this summer to gain firsthand knowledge of another country's customs and culture.
Graduate to Lead Group in Finland
Miss Holst studied at the University of Helsinki from 1954 to 1956. During that time she lived with relatives in Helsinki and traveled throughout Finland.
Summer Job Slots Open in Capital
Summer jobs in the nation's capital are open for college students. Positions as typists, file clerks, and stenographers are available.
In order to qualify for these positions it is necessary to pass civil service examinations. After passing the examinations, students should obtain a standard form 57 from the post office.
The standard form 57 must be filled out and sent to the personnel office of the agency for which the student wishes to work.
For information regarding National Park Service jobs, students should write the U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Washington, D. C.
Article by Friauf Published
An article written by Robert Friedau, assistant professor of physics, about the Midwest Solid-State Physics conference last fall, was featured in the March issue of Physics Today, monthly publication of the American Institute of Physics.
Thursday, April 2, 1950
The eight jet engines of the B-52 can develop a "thrust" of nearly 100,000 pounds.
Tibet's Dalai Lama Escapes From Chinese Communists
NEW DELHI, India — (UPI)— The god-king Dalai Lama of Tibet was reported today to have escaped his Chinese Communist pursuers and crossed into India.
The Communists said in a Peiping radio broadcast that the Dalai Lama was accompanied by some of the rebels.
The Communist report came soon after sources in new Delhi reported renewed fighting between rebels and the Communists southeast of Lhasa.
Peiping Radio said the Dalai Lama entered India "under duress by the
rebellious elements." The Communists have charged all along that the young god-king did not really want to leave Lhasa.
In the Indian protectorate of Bhutan, just south of the area where new fighting was reported to have broken out, the small kingdom's entire militia of 5,000 men was mobilized to meet the threat of possible trouble at the Tibetan border
Official Bulletin
Prime Minister Jigme Dorje of Bhutan said Bhutan would give the Dalai Lama temporary asylum, but it was clear the Bhutanese feared Chinese Communist reprisals.
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, of publication number 1785. The Daily Kansan, Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
**Foreign Students:** If you are returning home after the current academic semester, sign up for attending a week in Colorado (june 13-20) at the annual Summer Crossroads Seminar, come by the office of the Foreign Student Center, 228 Strong Hall, for more information.
Foreign Students: If any KU foreign students would like to attend a UNESCO dinner and program at Chanute, Kansas, on the evening of April 24, please see the Foreign Student Adviser by Friday noon of this week.
Christian Science Campus Organization, 7.30 p.m., Danfort Chapel.
Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Ian Loram, German student, will read 19th & 20th c. poetry in Music & Browsing Room of Kansas Union.
Petitioning for Jay Sisters, 7 p.m.
Balley Auditorium.
German Department and German Club, 5 p.m. Film "Watch on the Ruhr," narrated by Edward R. Murrow, 110 Fraser Refreshments will be served. Publ wel-
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episopne Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
breakfast following. Canterbury House
or Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong. Mr. R. G. Carney, J & L Steel Corp. Mr. R. G. Carney, M.Bell Lyons and Mrs. Chester Leedford, Provident Mutual Inc. Co., Sales.
Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 829 Miss. Bible study, discussion, refreshments.
**Mathematics Colloquium**, 4:15 p.m., 203. Strong. Coffee at 3:50 p.m. in 217 Strong. "Irregular Points of Normal Families of Analytic Functions."
Lutheran Student Association, 3-5 p.m.
Coffee Hour, 1314 Louisiana.
Friday Night Services, 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2. 1959
Nineteen Students Awarded Foundation Fellowships
Nineteen KU students have been awarded National Science Foundation fellowships following nationwide competition.
Nine awards were for cooperative graduate fellowships and ten for predoctoral graduate fellowships.
Cooperative graduate fellows will receive payment of fees and a stipend at the annual rate of $2,200. Nine-month fellows will receive $1,650.
Graduate predoctoral fellows get tuition and annual stipends from $1,800 to $2,200.
KU students receiving the predoctoral fellowships, their fields, and terms are: David L. Kohlman, Lamoni, Iowa senior in aeronautical engineering, first year fellowship, will study at KU; Thomas D. Bath, Mission senior in chemical engineering, first-year fellowship, will study at the University of Michigan; James Cederberg, Herndon senior in physics, first-year fellowship, will study at the California Institute of Technology; Frank D. Feiock, Lawrence graduate student in physics, initial award, will study at KU; Hugo F. Franzen, Lawrence graduate student in chemistry, renewal award, will study at KU; Clarence E. Harms, Hillsboro graduate student in zoology, initial award, will study at the University of Minnesota.
Charles F. Hobbs, Lawrence graduate student in chemistry, renewal award, will study at KU; Jerry L. Jones, graduate student in physics, initial award, will study at KU; Isaac J. Levine, New York graduate student in chemistry, renewal award, will study at KU; Harold B. Hanes, Fort Worth, Tex., graduate student in mathematics, initial award, will study at KU.
Three former KU students who received predoctoral fellowships are Dr. Lamont W. Gaston, Lawrence, renewal of post-doctoral fellowship in medical sciences, will study at Harvard University; Paul P. Enos,
Perry, initial award to study geology at Stanford University; Arlan Bruce Ramsay, Dodge City, renewal award to study mathematics at Harvard University.
Ten University of Kansas students were accorded honorable mention in the competition. They are F. James Rohlf, San Diego, Calif., zoology; Norman Dudley, Wichita senior chemistry; Russell E. Hays, lawrence graduate student, engineering; Nancy Dahl, Kansas City, Kan, graduate student, medical science.
John Sommerville, Lawrence junior, chemistry; Charles J. Stuth, Lawrence graduate student, mathematics; Willis Ratzlaff, DeSoto graduate student, zoology; Daniel Marsh, Lawrence graduate student, botany; Richard D. Neff, Elmo, Mo., graduate student, biophysics; Robert P. Rannie, Independence, Mo., graduate student, engineering.
Students receiving cooperative graduate fellowships are: Russell Bilyeu, Krum, Tex., mathematics,
genetics, 9 months; Freddie Wilson, Lenexa, zoology, 9 months; Frederick Horne, Mission, chemistry, 12 months; John Root, Shawnee, chemistry, 12 months, and Wayne Wolsey, Battle Creek, Mich., chemistry, 12 months. All are graduate students.
Also receiving the award were Jerry Simmons Rosemead, Calif., senior in aeronautical engineering, 9 months; James Pool, Lawrence senior in physics, 9 months, and James Martin, now a student at Texas Christian University, mathematics, 12 months.
Marlin Harmony, Kansas City, Mo., who received a chemical engineering degree from KU in 1958, received a 12-month fellowship at the University of California at Berkeley, where he is now studying.
John Dealy, Wichita, who received a B.S. in chemical engineering here in 1958, received a nine-month fellowship at the University of Michigan, where he is now a student. 9 months; Herbert Wolfe, Lawrence,
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Student counselor applications for the 1959-60 academic year in the men's residence hall system will be accepted until April 18 by the Dean of Students Office, 228 Strong.
Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, said student counselor staff will be doubled when the new Olin Templin Hall opens.
Counselors will receive a monthly salary of $45, but they must pay $70
a month for room and board. Counselors must have junior, senior, or graduate standing.
The duties of counselors consist of maintenance needs reports, counseling of residents, and advising student government in the halls.
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
Are You Getting ROBBED
?
When you go to a cafe or a drive-in restaurant, the prices you usually pay for your food include a fat appropriation for the "middlemen," the suppliers of the people with whom you are dealing. There is one place in Lawrence, however, where the "middlemen" have been done away with. That place is Fay's Drive-in Restaurant. You see, the people at Fay's are their own "middlemen." They even own their own Grocery Store (Turner's Grocery, 700 Maine).
This means that you can get high quality food at low,low prices—only at Fay's Drive In. Come on out today. See for yourself. Eat at Fay's where you can enjoy good food without getting robbed.
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Page 5
Rally to the Call, Men— The Booths Stand Idle
The true competitive spirit at KU has made only a fleeting appearance in the midst of the turbulent tightly-packed world contest of today.
The campus phone booths have been strikingly, and perhaps significantly. empty.
Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, has shown the only spunk and spirit in challenging
The Nu Sigma Nu competitors averaged 165 pounds.
of others, we finally packed 16 men (or segments of them) into our phone booth." Sills said.
On the Tuesday before spring vacation, the fraternity placed a want ad in the Daily Kansan challenging any other organization on the campus to rally to the cause and squeeze a few more
Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, has returned from a five-day short course in crime news analysis and reporting held at Northwestern University.
Prof. Studies Crime Analysis
The residents of Benton Hall for girls packed them in, but soon ran out of girls when 19 crammed in. A muffled voice from the back seat velled, "send in a couple dozen more."
Squeeze Game Shifts to Cars
Meanwhile, back at the campus in Long Beach, Calif., a fraternity said it would try today to put 50 of its friendly brothers in a small foreign car.
TOPEKA — (UPI)— Nineteen Washburn University women climbed into a Volkswagen here last night in the latest outbreak of the annual college silly season.
The girls set down two rules before they started piling in the small foreign car. Both front doors must be tightly closed, but the windows could be down for circulation. Both back windows must be closed.
He was awarded a Ford Foundation scholarship to attend the conference at which we registered about 50 newspaper reporters, 10 radio-TV news executives, and 9 professors of journalism.
the rest of the world in a contest to see who can pack the most men into a telephone booth.
The KU record now stands at 16.
The KU record now stands at 16. Ted Sills, Newton first year medical student and a member of the fraternity, said the world record is 34 men, achieved somewhere in South Africa.
Nu Sigma Nu invaded the Kansas Union March 17 with a carefully devised plan for filling the telephone booth on the second floor.
"We had a system. According to our figures, 24.95 men could fit perfectly into one ordinary phone booth; if they were perfect cubes, Unfortunately, or maybe fortunately, KU men are not built this way." Sills said.
But when Kansas men get started, they don't give up easily.
"Our new plan was packing the men into the booth in a fetal position we stopped at six."
"We finally decided that someone had been cheating. All is fair in love and war, so with the head of one man and the arms and legs
The Daily Kansan will publish a special honors supplement the first week in May to honor students who have been elected to honor societies this year.
The supplement is designed to replace the honors convocation which was discontinued last year. The first honors supplement was published last year.
Kansan to Publish Honors Supplement
.50
The supplement will include the fall honor rolls and lists of those elected to honor societies.
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Thursday, April 2. 1959 University Daily Kansan
"The need to change or replace the historic coroner system in homicide cases was emphasized during several sessions." Professor Beth said, after a lecture by Dr. Richard Ford, state medical examiner for Massachusetts and acting head of the department of legal medicine at Harvard.
"Dr. Ford used case histories to show that a trained pathologist should be in charge of investigation at the scene of the crime if miscarriages of justice are to be prevented. If the crime area can be sealed off until a trained examiner makes his analysis, few murder mysteries will remained unsolved."
men a little more tightly into a little larger phone booth.
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"At first it sounded like an interesting experience when two sororites responded to our ideas. But Dean Taylor put a stop to that."
"We have been disappointed in the lack of interest in our challenge," Sills said.
The Kansan would be happy to bear of any future bursts of initiative. But we request notice before the event, please—to see is to believe!
In a conversation with Prof. Beth, Dr. Ford said he believed that the Kansas-Missouri area, served by the KU Medical Center, should seriously consider adopting the medical examiner system.
The lectures and discussions in the short course dealt with important aspects of criminal law, including the identification of weapons, interrogation of suspects, courtroom photography, uses of blood tests, examination of questioned documents, access to police and court records, probation and parole, juvenile delinquency, crime prevention, libel and invasion of privacy, court reform, and ethics of prosecution and defence.
Onward and inward,men!
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Les Brown to Play For Relays Dance
Les Brown's "Band of Renown" will play for the annual KU Relays Dance April 17. The semi-formal dance is sponsored by Student Union Activities. Tickets for the dance will cost $2.50 per couple.
The dance will be held from 9 p.m. until midnight in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
There are still more than 8,000 miles of sled roads in Alaska.
Student Nurses To Present Show
Student nurses at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City will present a musical comedy at 8 p.m. April 10 and 11 in Battenfeld Auditorium in Kansas City.
The production is named "Caduceus Capers." This is the sixth year the student nurses of the Medical Center have written, directed and produced a musical comedy.
Tickets are $1.00 for reserved seats and 75 cents for general admission.
Tickets may be purchased from any student nurse starting today.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 2. 1959
Baseball Team 'Optimistic'
C
Clinkenbeard—"At least we won't forfeit any games."
Senators May Get Miranda
MIAMI, Fla. — (UPI)—The Washington Senators' acquisition of problem pitcher Eilly Loes is believed the forerunner of a deal in which they also would get shortstop Willie Miranda from the Baltimore Orioles.
The Senators sent pitcher Vito Valentinetti to the Orioles yesterday to obtain the 29-year-old Loes—an eccentric right-hander who never has lived up to expectations. A product of the Dodger farm system, Loes has a 67-49 record for eight big league seasons but was 3-9 last season.
The Senators, who think they can
afford to gamble' on Loes' in-and-out performances, are desperate for a shortstop and the light-hitting but fine-fielding Miranda is understood to be available.
Frosh Baseball to Begin
A meeting of all freshman candidates for the KU freshman baseball team will be held Saturday, April 4, at 10 a.m. in Allen Field House. Equipment will be checked out and the practice schedule will be discussed.
Kancon Want Ady Get Resulte
By Gabby Wilson
The two rained-out ball games with Washburn have greatly dis appointed the KU baseball team. But with the rain-outs come evitable predictions on the season's outcome.
At this early stage of the season it is hard to find much ground on which to base an intelligent guess. The team has only played three intra-squad games. The remainder of the two months that the team has been practicing has been spent in the field house due to the poor weather conditions.
Provided the warm weather continues, Kansas will entertain the Forbes Air Base baseball team here Friday. The game will be held on Quigley Field south of Allen Field House.
"I think it's unfortunate that a school this size can't afford to send its team south," Bobby Marshall, center fielder and team captain, said. "Almost all the other conference schools send their teams south for some early season games. Small colleges and even some high schools also send teams south."
Bad weather, no southern trip, and the early season rain-outs have brought mixed emotions of optimism and pessimism from the locker room
The majority of the team seems to think that with a few breaks the team could have quite a favorable season.
Curtis Melton, right fielder, had
Patterson-Ingemar Fight Seats Costly
NEW YORK—(UFI) —Promoter Bill Rosensohn will announce the site and price scale today for the Flovd Patterson-Ingemar Johansson heavyweight title fight June 25.
Although he declined to discuss his plans for the press conference, Rosensohn reportedly has decided to stage the fight at Yankee Stadium at a $100 top for ringside seats. There has been only one fight in history where all ringside seats were priced at $100 each. That was the second Joe Louis-Billy Conn clash at the stadium on June 19, 1946, which grossed $1,925,564. First row seats at the John L. Sullivan-James J. Corbett fight in Iowa cost $100 but all other ringside tickets for that classic brawl were priced at $25.
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this to say: "I've given it some thought and I believe that if the pitching comes along and the hitting holds up we'll make a good showing. As far as next year goes, with the help of this year's freshmen, we'll have a great chance for the championship."
Another optimist, Joe Doolittle, a pitcher, said: "If the hitting comes along like it should we'll have a real good team. I have no doubts about the pitching."
Some of the team members were a little less optimistic.
Harl Hanson, shortstop and returning letterman said, "We'll let our opponents know we're there, one way or the other."
Not wanting to be too committal, Bill Clinkenbeard, number two pitcher, quipped: "At least we won't forfeit any games!"
Celtics Down Nats In NBA Playoffs
BOSTON — (UPI) — Whatever happens in the National Basketball Association championship playoff series between the Boston Celtics and the Minneapolis Lakers is apt to be anti-claicam.
Little could top last night's thriller in which the Celtics staged a late rally to win the Eastern Division playoffs from the stubborn Syrueuse Nats by copping the seventh and deciding game, 130-125. The best-of-seven final series starts here Saturday, with the second game here Sunday, both to be televised.
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Thursday. April 2. 1959 University Daily Kansas
Page 7
Shorthanded Team Leaves for Texas
By Ted Dielman
After an impressive victory last week at the Abilene Christian meet, the Jayhawker track team, headed by Coach Bill Easton, will head south once more this week-end.
This time it will invade Austin to participate once again in the Texas Relays April 3-4.
Last year the swift-footed, strong-armed team dominated the Relays by sweeping the meet with 103 points. The closest competitor was host Texas with 64 points.
Last year Shelby's 26-foot 3-inch leap won first place in the meet and established a new Relays record. Last Thursday at Austin, Shelby bettered this mark by one inch, only to have it disqualified. Shelby still won first, however, with a 24' 6" mark.
Two Relays marks were broker, by the Kansas team last year, one by Al Oerter in the discus and the other by Ernie Shelby in the broad jump.
This year Kansas looks much stronger in the javelin with Short Hills, N.J., junior, Bill Alley, throwing. Alley threw a record-smashing 258" 4" at Austin Thursday.
Although Kansas' prospects looked bright last Thursday with this year's team running away with first place against the already-seasoned Southern teams, things have dimmed a little this week. Coach Easton said he did not think the boys would come out as well this year at the relays.
The damaging factor this year is the shortage of men to participate in the weekend Relays. Easton said only twelve men would go. The only relays the team will participate in are the four-mile and the distance medley.
Bob Tague and Bob Covey will be out because of injuries. Charlie Tidwell and Paul Williams will stay behind to keep abreast of studies.
A's Slip Past Tigers
LAKELAND, Fla. —(UPI)—The Kansas City Athletics will be aiming for a repeat victory over Detroit today after edging the Tigers, 5-4, in dramatic fashion yesterday.
Preston Ward socked a two-run, pinch-hit homer in the ninth inning yesterday to give the A's a come-from-behind victory.
Kansas City trailed 3-1 entering the eighth but Hector Lopez made it 3-2 with a circuit clout.
Lary went the distance and got the loss while reliefer Jack Urban gained the triumph.
With two gone in the ninth, Harry Simpson walked and Ward blasted Frank Lary's first pitch over the fence for the game-winning blow.
Larry Doby and Frank Bolling each clubbed homers for the Tigers. The win was the A's 11th in 21 spring starts. The Tigers stand at 8-11.
Bobby Shantz May Regain Winning Form
NEW YORK — (UPI) — There's new hope in the heart of Bobby Shantz today despite the admission that seven innings don't make a season.
Little Bobby has been through six years in which he ranged from utter desolation to mediocre misery. This has been just another lacklustre spring for the mite who was the American League's Most Valuable Player in 1852.
Until this week.
Oh this week was looking good, or even fair. At one stage the New York Yankees sent him back from an exhibition trip so that he could be given more work at their St. Petersburg, Fla., base. There he threw one good game against minor league opposition but Bobby brushed it off with the discouraged remark that "anybody should beat those kinds of hitters."
Everything looks brighter since Monday, however, when he pitched seven shutout innings against the
power-packed Cincinnati Reds.
"And what's even more encouraging," glows the five-foot, six-inch southpaw, "I could easily have gone nine."
Casey Stengel was happy, too. "He still has that major league arm," Casey said.
Shantz seemed ticketed for greatness right from the start. The 140-pounder from Pottstown, Pa., led the Western League with 18 victories his first season in organized ball and moved right up to the Athletics. It took him a year to get started but then, in 1951, he won 18 games for the A's. The following season he won 24 against a mere seven losses. Then disaster struck.
Bobby was hit on the pitching wrist in a game against Washington and suffered a broken bone. The next season his delivery was so altered in an unconscious attempt to guard his wrist that he developed shoulder trouble. He was 5-9 that year, and it was to get worse.
A pulled shoulder tendon virtually washed him out in 1954, in which he pitched only eight innings. In the spring of 1955 he thought of leaving baseball but stuck and had a poor 5-10 mark. The next year he lost his control, along with everything else, for a 2-7 record.
Then Stengel, who had always been high on the little man, got Shantz in a trade. Bobby repaid that faith with an 11-5 mark in 1957 and the league's lowest earned run average. But last season shoulder trouble struck again and Shantz finished at seven wins and six losses.
This spring appeared to spell the beginning of the end. He was throwing "nothing" balls and his control was off. But those seven innings against the Reds made a big difference. Only time will tell what happens next to the little man who has been fate's football. But at least now he has fresh encouragement to go on fighting.
Basilio Halts Seifer With 3rd Round TKO
AUGUSTA, Ga. — (UPI) — Carmen Bastilio, former welterweight and middleweight king, added another victory to his long string but gained little stature in scoring a third round technical knockout over little-known Arley Seifer of Pittsburgh last night.
The end came at 2:31 of the third round when referee Eddie Coachman halted the bout to keep the outclassed Seifer from absorbing any more punches.
Girls' AAU Teams Advance
The bout was Basilo's fifth this year in a campaign for a return bout with Middleweight Champion Sugar Ray Robinson. The fight was part of a Master's Golf Week celebration that attracted 2,300 fans.
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — (UPI) — The script has lived up to form in the 31st annual Women's National AAU basketball tournament.
The three top-seeded teams rolled into tonight's semifinals by winning quarterfinal games last night. The number 4 seeded team, Gus's Gals of Kansas City, was upset by Omaha Commercial Extension, 36-34. But top-seeded and defending champion Nashville Business College whipped Clarendon, Tex., Junior College, 58-43, in a quarterfinal tussle last night. Second-regarded Iowa Wesleyan of Mount Pleasant, Ia., downed the Atlanta, Ga., Tombows, 52-44. Third-ranked Wavland, Tex., won
over Dowell's Dolls of Amarillo,
Tex. 58-35.
Guy's never led in losing to Omaha. The Kansas City team did tie the score 32-32 late in the fourth period. Rita Houser hit 15 points for Omaha and Darlene Everhart collected 12 for Guy's. Nashville was led by Joan Crawford's 28 points while Gay Ivey bucketed 12 for the losers. Nashville hit a blistering 53 per cent of its shots.
KU Adds Texas Tech
Kansas University has added Texas Tech to its basketball schedule for next season. Tech will play Colorado at Boulder, Colo., Dec. 5 and will be at KU Dec. 7.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2. 1950
'Elves and Shoemaker' Tickets on Sale Monday
Tickets for the Children's Theatre production, "The Elves and the Shoemaker," will go on sale Monday. The play, under the direction of Bernice Harvey, instructor of speech, will be presented at 4:15 p.m., April 13 through 17 and at 2 p.m. April 18 in the Experimental Theatre.
The production staff for the play has been chosen.
Bernice Harvey, instructor of speech and drama, is the director and Sally Hart, Fort Scott junior, is her assistant.
Tickets are 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children and will be sold at the box office in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, the Kansas Union, and at Bell Music Co.
Sites designed by Jim Gold, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, will be built by
Announcement Orders Open
Because of spring vacation, seniors will be able to order announcements with assured delivery for the rest of this week. Jack Newcomb director of the Kansas Union Book Store, said.
Seniors may order announcements for a short period after this week, but delivery before graduation will not be promised.
Name cards must be ordered this week.
Companies Donate
$1,500 to Symposium
The first annual Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music, to be held here Monday through Thursday, will receive a grant of $1,500 from the Music Performance Trust Funds of the Recording Industries.
The symposium, sponsored by the KU Endowment Assn., will receive the grant as a direct result of the assistance and cooperation of Lawrence Local 512 of the American Federation of Musicians.
Sociologist Speaks On Prep Drinkers
E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, was the speaker at the annual Social Relations Day Monday at Park College in Parkville, Mo.
Prof. Baur spoke on "Drinkers and Nondrinkers Among High School Students" to an all-student assembly. He also delivered lectures to advanced students in sociology and to the Sociology Club at Park College.
Traffic Statistics
| | To date 1959 | Same time 1958 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Accident total:** | 76 | 56 |
| Fatalities | 0 | 0 |
| Injuries | 3 | 2 |
| **Parking violations:** | | |
| Campus | 7,988 | 7,758 |
| City | 983 | 858 |
| **Moving traffic violations** | 95 | 8 |
Ex-Psychology Associate
Gets National Award
A former research associate in the KU psychology department is one of three recipients of the 1959 national Research Award of the American Personnel and Guidance Association.
Dr. Beatrice Wright, wife of Dr M. Erik Wright, chairman of clinical psychology, is receiving the award for the most outstanding published report of research for the three-year period of 1956-58.
Janeth Auer, El Dorado sophomore;
Elaine Browne, Kansas City, Kan.
junior; Marva Lou Powell, Topeka
senior.
Big Shout for Big Wedding
TOKYO—(UPI)—A crowd of 2,200 police and volunteers waved flags and shouted "Banzai" most of yesterday on the grounds of the Imperial Palace—to condition the imperial horses for the wedding procession of Prince Akihito April 10.
The Japanese have doubled their use of soap in the past six years or so- 3.98 pounds per person to 8.31 pounds per person.
Barbara Conroy, assistant instructor of speech, will be lighting director. Her crew members are Celia Welch, Herington junior, and Adrin Eley, Marysville freshman.
Phyllis Miller, Elwood graduate student, will design the costumes. Barbara Cook, Independence junior, and Nancy Johnson, Lawrence senior, will supervise costume making
Costume crew members will include Eleanor Wilson, Meade senior; John Crouch, Hoisington senior; Jane Perry, Lawrence sophomore; Susan Eggleston, Macon, Mo.; senior; Annette Voth, Clarinda, Iowa sophomore.
Maralyn Shackelford, assistant instructor of speech, will be property crew supervisor. JoAnn Swenson, Rossville junior, will be a member of the property crew.
Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama, will be in charge of make up. Sharon Stout, Wichita senior, will be stage manager.
David Ress, Wilmette, IL., sophomore, will be poster designer. Ell Henry, Parkville, Mo., senior, will design programs. Kay Shiner, Toosek junior, is publicity director.
James Madison, Alexander Harruton, John Jay and others had a band in preparing Washington's Farewell Address.
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University Extension will celebrate its 50th anniversary with an open house 3-5 p.m., Monday, in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be guest speaker at the staff dinner at 7 that evening in the Kansan Room.
Extension Will Mark 50th Year
WOLFSON'S
University Extension was officially founded in 1909 by Dr. Richard Price. Since that time it has grown to a staff of 65 full-time employees and several hundred part-time members and instructors.
743 Mass. - VI 3-4366
No Money Down. A Year To Pay.
It is composed of five bureaus—correspondence study, extension classes, extension library, photographic bureau, and visual instruction.
"In cooperation with the various schools and departments at the University, the Extension office sponsors over 150 conferences a year and approximately 100 are operated
off campus," said Howard Walker. director.
Representatives from the four offcampus centers, Wichita, Colby, Kansas City, Kan., and Garden City will attend.
Librarian at Microfilm Meet
Miss Joyce McLeod, Watson Library head reference librarian, is attending the annual conference of the National Microfilm Association in Washington, D.C., today through Saturday on a travel grant.
Dean F. Mohlstrom, McPherson senior, will represent the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the ninth annual Inside Advertising Week in New York City next week.
Mohistrom will be one of 65 students representing schools from coast to coast.
Student Is Delegate To New York Ad Meet
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flavor cannot come from the filter. Therefore, it's what's up front that counts: Winston's Filter-Blend. The tobaccos are selected for flavor and mildness, then specially processed for filter smoking. This extra step is the real difference between Winston and all other filter cigarettes. Besides, it's why Winston is America's best-selling filter cigarette.
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University Daily Kansas
ite Meet
Page 9
Pherson William rnalism e ninth Veek in
d Free change
VICE
65 stu m coast
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Marianne
A.
Joy Monsees
a book by the late
David Lloyd
Ward.
Alice Jean Banks
10
Marilyn Mover
Engagements Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Melford E. Monsees, Kansas City, Mo., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Joy, to James N. Hoge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur E. Hoge, Overland Park.
Monsees-Hoge
Miss Monsees is a junior in the School of Education and is affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta sorority Mr. Hoge is a senior in the Schoo of Business and is a member of Ph Gamma Delta fraternity.
The wedding date has been set as August 23.
* *
Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Banks, Leavenworth, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Alice Jean, to John E. Hannan, Selby, South Dakota.
Banks-Hannan
Miss Banks is a senior in Music Education and a resident of Grace Pearson Hall. Mr. Hannan is a
graduate of Dakota Weslyan University and a member of Selby High School faculty, Selby, South Dakota
May 31st has been chosen as the wedding date.
***
Dickerson-Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Dickerson ot Phoenix, Ariz., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Jo Ann, to Martin W. Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Wilcox of Grand Canyon, Ariz.
Miss Dickerson is a junior in the School of Education at Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. She is a member of Chi Omega sorority, of Alpha Phi Epsilon, honorary secretarial sorority, and is secretary of the Associated Women Students on that campus.
Mr. Wilcox is a senior pre-medical student at the University of Kansas, and is majoring in chemistry, zoology, and sociology. He is
living at Pearson Scholarship Hall. No date for the wedding has been set.
Moyer-Cash
Miss Moyer is a senior majoring in commercial art and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Cash is a graduate of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and was affiliated with Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton A. Moyer, Leawood, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn, to Justin Cash JR., son of Mr. and Mrs. Justin C. Cash, of Kansas City, Mo.
With a full-time enrollment of 43,478, the University of California is the nation's largest educational institution.
A June wedding is planned.
***
Thursdav. April 2.195
We Know That Spring Is Here As Couples Announce Pinnings
Woods Shelby
Delta Sigma Theta sorority has announced the pinning of Martha Jo Wood, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, to Ernie Shelby, Los Angeles, Calif., senior.
Mr. Shelby is a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. A pinning party was held recently at the Kappa Alpha Phi fraternity house.
Sorenson-Swander
Mr. Hall is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Delta Chi fraternity has announced the pinning of Warner Sorenson, Kansas City, Kan., to Rebecca Swander, San Antonio, Tex., a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Both are seniors.
Challinor-Hall
Pi Beta Phi sorority has announced the pinning of Jean Challinor, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, to David Hall, Wichita junior. Mr.Hall is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
The pinning was announced by Judy Gray, Lawrence, Betty McClure, Wichita, Kathy Nigh, Independence, Mo., Susie Gaskins, Kansas City, Mo., Sharon Lessig, Little Rock, Ark., all sophomores, and Barbara Blake, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Kinemond-Saylor
Douthart Hall has announced the pinning of Gayle Kinemond, Bushton senior, to Mark Saylor, Topeka senior. Mr. Saylor is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
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Sigma Kappa
. . .
Sigma Kappa sorority has announced the initiation of four members.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Jay Nelson, Oxford freshman, was chosen honor initiate of the pledge class of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Others initiated were Bob Christensen, Topeka; John Hiebert, Topeka; Don Barnett, Tulsa, Okla.; Max Eberhart, Great Bend; Mike
Those initiated were Pat Simpson, Hutchinson; Betty Grist, Independence, Mo.; Sandy Freienmuth, Topeka, juniors, and Karen Fry, Okumgee, Okla., sophomore.
Roberson, Abilene; Jim Hammond,
Larned; Richard Wood, Kansas City,
Mo; Dave Robins, Kansas City, Mo.
and Bud Welch, Harrington. All are
freshmen.
Ernie Shaffer, Ottawa, and Will Owens, Lawrence, both are juniors. Mike McCarthy, Prairie Village sophomore, was also initiated.
***
***
George Dipman, Larned senior,
has been elected pledge trainer of
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Tom Thomas Jr., Kirkwood, Mo,
sophomore, has recently transferred to
the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Thomas last attended Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.
francis sporting goods
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like this G-600, autographed by Marty Marion . . .
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9. 95 team price $ ^{ \circ} $ (12.00 regular price)
- pro-laced U crotch (greater width, thumb room)
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- "floating heel" to break where you want it
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"Everything for the Outdoorsman"
Jantzen
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Tartan play separates to wear for mooring the boat—and mooring that man to your side! Jantzen glad plaids are half the fun of summer. The crisp, white broadcloth overblouse banded in your favorite tartan 3.98.
Underneath, tartan jamaicas with highrise waistband and front belt 6.98 Both in sizes 8-16.
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10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2. 1959
JAMES C. HAYSEN, MUSICIAN, LEOPOLDO GARRASCO, PICTOR, AND STEVE EGAN, PRODUCER
SYMPOSIUM GUESTS—The Fine Arts Quartet, a professional group from Highland Park, Ill., will appear here Wednesday during the Mid-
America Symposium of contemporary music. The quartet will present new works for string quartet at 10 a.m. and 8 p.m.
American Music Symposium Presented Here Next Week
The first annual Mid-America Symposium of contemporary American music will be presented Monday through Thursday by the School of Fine Arts.
"We want to provide an opportunity for composers to hear their music, to stimulate interest in this region for new music, and to provide a means by which any person in the University can experience this important segment of art," said John Pozdro, associate professor of music theory and chairman of the Symposium.
The Symposium project is sponsored by the University of Kansas Endowment Assn, and was recently awarded $1,500. The grant was a gift of the Music Performance Trust Funds of the Recording Industries
Dinners are $2.05 per plate. Reservations must be made by noon Tuesday with Janet Turk, KU extension 593.
Special guests at the Symposium will be Mr. Burrill Phillips, guest composer from the University of Illinois, and the Fine Arts Quartet.
A Symposium committee selected 40 works from the 245 works which were submitted for consideration. The committee is composed of the following; L. E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory; Robert Bautistian, associate professor of orchestra; Raymond Cerf, professor of violin; Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts; Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music, and Prof. Pozdro
Prof. Pozdro said all kinds of contemporary music will be performed. Conservative music, some employing devices such as the 12
6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m.
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The following is the schedule for the Symposium;
tone system, some work which is extremely dissonant, and some that takes folk music as its inspiration are all part of the Symposium.
建设家园
Monday—10 a.m., registration, informal social hour for guests and visitors, Music Lounge in the music and Dramatic Arts Building; 2 p.m., program of chamber works, Swarthout Recital Hall; 8 p.m., program of chamber works, Swarthout Recital Hall.
HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 3-0338
Members of the Kansas City Philharmonic will participate in the Symposium Orchestra.
More than 200 persons are killed each year in this country from smoking in bed.
Tuesday—9 a.m., registration; 10 a.m., orchestra readings, University Theatre, and Symposium Orchestra conducted by Robert Baustian; 2 p.m., same as 10 a.m., 4 p.m., forum; 7 p.m., program of twentieth century carillon music, Ronald Barnes, KU carillonneur; 8 p.m., annual spring concert of the Concert Choir, Clayton Krehbiel conducting, University Theatre.
Wednesday-9 a.m., registration. 10 a.m., program of string quartets, Fine Arts Quartet performing, Swarthout Recital Hall; 2 p.m. address by Burrill Phillips, Swarthout Recital Hall; 6 p.m., banquet, Kansas Union, speech by Cancellor Franklin D. Murphy; 8 p.m., program of string quartets, Fine Arts Quartet performing.
Thursday—9 a.m., registration; 10 a.m., orchestra readings, University Theatre; 2 p.m., rehearsal of selected orchestral works; 4 p.m., forum; 8 pm., program of works for orchestra, Robert Baustian conducting the Symposium Orchestra in the University Theatre.
The Campus
Jay SHOPPE
Top O' Twelfth
Top O' Twelfth
More than 3,400 students from 53 northeast Kansas high schools will arrive here tomorrow for a two-day district music festival.
CLEARANCE SALE Today-Friday-Saturday
The musicians will perform 677 musical numbers including band, orchestra, chorus, ensembles and solos. Performances will be in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, in Hoch Auditorium and Allen Field House.
Judges will be from KU, Iowa State College, Missouri and Wichita Universities.
Spring Weight Wool Skirts Reduced 40%
About 50 KU fine arts students will assist with the Festival.
One Group Cocktail Dresses Half Price
Pastel - Bulky - Orlon
Sweaters
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2 Faculty Members Appear in Magazine
Spring Dresses Reduced 30%
Two KU faculty members are featured in an article in the March 24 issue of Science World, a magazine for high school students.
James E. Gunn, assistant public relations directors and instructor of English, is the author of "Light from the Past." The article deals with a project of Edward Zeller, associate professor of geology.
Around the Campus 3,400 on Campus Danforth Grant to For Music Festival Marlan Carlson
The article explains Prof. Zeller's project of measuring light that has been locked in rocks for millions of years. It is illustrated with pictures taken at KU.
Spring & Summer Jewelry $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price
1/2
SEE WOOL COATS AND SUITS AT DOWNTOWN SHOPPE. REDUCED $ \frac{1}{2} $ PRICE
Recital Sunday by Prof. L. E. Anderson
Prof. Anderson's program will include Franck's "Choral in E major," Byrd's "Pavane," Grigny's "Point d'Orgue sur les Grande Jeux," and Purcell's "Trumpet Voluntary."
Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory, will present a recital at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
The program is one in the current Faculty Recital Series.
Americans eat twice as many canned peaches today as they did 20 years ago.
Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb., senior, has been awarded a Danforth Foundation fellowship for graduate study next year at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y.
Carlson's award is one of about a hundred made by the Danforth Foundation to students who hope for careers in college teaching. The fellowship provides for payment of tuition and $1,400 for living expenses.
Carlson is majoring in violin and music education and is an honor student in Fine Arts.
Anderson to Capital For Research Parley
The creation of a National Council for Research in Education will be discussed by educators Monday at a conference in Washington, D.C.
Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, will serve as the chairman at the meeting.
Dean Anderson is president of the American Educational Research Association, which is interested in forming the new council.
Scabbard and Blade Names New Officers
Midshipman Captain Larry
Schooley, Kiowa junior, has been
named to Scabbard and Blade,
honorary military fraternity.
Other officers elected are Cadets Robert Nebrig Jr., Leavenworth junior, 1st Lieutenant; William Gochis, Arkansas City, 2nd Lieutenant; Gary Gibson, El Dorado, 1st Sergeant. All are juniors.
Petroleum Institute Held Here
L. T. White, vice president of the Cities Service Corp., is presiding at the annual Petroleum Marketers Management Institute being held here through Friday. The conference gives training in management and supervision.
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Thursday, April 2, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, 1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day the ad is printed.
LOST
KHAKI JACKET, warm-up type. "Swiss
n stadium March 21, Call VI 2-0210.
WANTED
AMOUNT of money in or near the Student Union. Call Pier Artana at VI S-6400.
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Call VI 3-5297 after 5 p.m. tf
WANTED—TO RENT
KU FACULTY MEMBER requires a furnished three bedroom house for the fall and spring semester, 1959-1960. Call VI 2-0346. 4-3
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath heat and gas furnished, linen furnished, accept graduate students. Call VI. VT. 762
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, whole third floor, room for two persons, two blacks in a cell WI. 917
TWO ROOMS well furnished, very close
rates. Call VI 3-6695 4-2
4-2
VACANCY for young man in contemporary home, now and summer, 20'x40' swimming pool, diving board. Living room and private patio pavilion. Extra entrance, shower-bath, refrigerator. Country Club atmosphere. Call VI 3-9635. 4-9
TRANSPORTATION
FURNISHED HOUSE, three bedrooms,
two baths, close to campus, for the
months of June, July, and August. Call
VI 2-0346. 4-3
FIRST FLOOR SOUTHSIDE DUPLEX.
newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six
rooms, full basement, close to KU. Call
V 3-1746 or V 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-7
RIDE WITH ME to New York, will share expenses. Arrive April 5 and return to KU. April 13. Call Dean Mohistrom at VI 2-0684. 4-3
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold., Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies plant, eth and Vermont. Virginia VI. fl 0350
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Dohnai Virr. VI 3-8660 tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call VI 754-269-1300.
WILL DO TYPING in my home
Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
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
tools of cages, fish tanks, aquariums, 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, leather, grooming tools, collars, leashes. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
1931-1971 Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singr
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard. call VI 3-5263. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TOMMY
Leonard's Standard 9th & Ind.
By whatever standards you measure, Standard is best. Combine quality with courteous service from
LEARN AT DANCE NOW—All the latest
resources on dance Studio, as well
as Music, phi 3-6588.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211; Mass Swedish massage, steam cabin, etc. For men in inventory, by profession for limited time. VI 3-2123. tt
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Mrs H.
Gopper, phone VI - a-6674
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist typid. Mrs Leatherwood, VI 5-8331, 1736 Teen. tf
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop. 730 Massachusetts
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith
9411; Miles, Ph. VI 3-2564
8411; Miles, Ph. VI 3-2564
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. attention, accurate work. Charge 8-13-14 Mrs John L. Ginkla. 1911 Tennessee. tfr
FYING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and delivery.
Call VI 3-9508. tf
FYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqstu, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune up and overhaul. Hadi
dolors. 218 East 17. Phone VI 3-4850.
ONE VACANCY for pre-school age
child. Convenient location Call VI 3-568-2197
FOR SALE
WHITE FORMAL, full length, net.
Graphics, size 10, worn once, $25. CSA
$75.
STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF
BANDS. THE advantage on ballpark price races on T-Mobile and Sprint Illustrated magazine—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI G-8.
DAFFODILS. 25 cents a dozen, no de-
sign. Dairy Farmers' Hall. 1742 Lyle
nard. Cail VI 3-2278. 4-7
SIAMESE KITTENS. nine weeks old, unusually nice markings, housebroken. See **KITTEN** or **STUBBLE** for more details.
HOUSE AND LOT, 1518 Meadow Lane just west of the field house, lot size is 165x162 in Clarkson Grandview Place. Each room has a fireplace, shrubs and perennials. Two level house, entrance level contains two bedrooms with built in chests of drawers, bath, kitchen with exhaust fan and dishwasher. One bedroom has burning fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking Wakara valuables and drapes and draperies and three-quarter ton air conditioner, screen porch and flagstone terrace. Lower level has an extra large bedroom which is ground level at rear of house. Upper level has a flower garden. Bassamment back of this room consists of a family room with gas log fireplace and cyclone protection screen, shower, three car carport, contemporary architecture, custom design. Three-quarter inch redwood sidling, field cement window and heavy reinforced concrete footing. Call V. 1782 for appointment. 4-5
CAMERAS for the photographer who wants quality. 35mm Canon V-L, never used. 35mm Voltlander Vitesa, slightly used. Both just brought from overseas. Buy now for the vacation. Call VI 2-0195 between 6:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.
COLT FRONTIER 38-40 revolver. 865.
Lugers, $40., 32 and 38 automatics.
Can be found in the back door.
Come in and look them over. Peter Des
Jardins, 1138 Mississippi, VI 21-04. 4-8
RCA STEREO TAPE PLAYER, plays both monaural and stereo tapes, anaghayn finish with one set of built-in speakers. Will sell with two stereo and three monotapes. $100.00. 1958 VM record change, player with all four speeds. $20.00. $20.00 watt amplifier with G.E. pre-amp and tone controls. $20.00. Contact Michael Engle at Stouffer Place, Bldg. 9, Apt. 2 anytime after 6 p.m. No phone. 4-8
1956 BUICK CENTURY four door, power brakes, clutch, air conditioning, 37-88 medium-long. Automatic, 22 piston, holster, extra clip, 1,500 rounds ammunition. Call VI 3-0483.
5 AUSTIN HEALY, radio, heater, elec-
mator must sell. Call VI 3-3200. Overs-
must sell. Call VI 3-3200.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 2,1959
Coming One-man Show Gets Advance Praise
"A marvelous evening" is the way one professor's wife describes a performance by Emlyn Williams.
Mrs. Neale J. Carman, wife of the chairman of the department of Romance languages, saw Mr. Williams in "A Boy Growing Up" while she was in London last fall.
"The Globe Theatre was packed, and while he was performing you could hear a pin drop. That is quite an accomplishment for a one-man show," she said.
ALAN PATEL
Emlyn Williams
Emlyn Williams will perform "A Eoy Growing Up" at 8:20 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre. His program is a dramatic interpretation of various sketches and stories of the late Dylan Thomas.
"Everyone in London liked it very much. We certainly plan to go Friday," Mrs. Carman said.
Mr. Williams is a playwright as well as an actor. He wrote "Night Must Fall," a study of a psychopathic murderer and played the lead on Broadway.
Mr. Williams has also appeared
in several films: "Another Man's Castle," with Bette Davis; "Iyanhoe," with Robert Taylor; "The Deep Blue Sea," with Vivian Leigh, and "I Accuse," with Jose Ferrer.
"A Boy Growing Up" was first presented at the Festival of Bath and later in New York, where critics called it "a smash hit."
Tickets for Friday's performance are available at the Kansas Union, the University Theatre box office, and Bell Music Store. Student LD cards are not good for the performance.
Seminar Set For Visitors
Foreign students who have concluded their study in the United States and who plan to return home before the end of 1959 are eligible to attend the Summer Crossroads Seminar in Colorado, June 13-20.
Clark Coan, assistant dean of men and foreign student adviser, said both graduate and undergraduate foreign students may fill out applications in 228 Strong before April 25.
The seminar, to be held at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, will include social events, such as visiting the Air Force Academy, and evaluation discussions of American problems.
Student housing will be furnished by families in Colorado Springs.
Geologists Spend Vacation Studying Rocks for Credit
Most students left classroom thoughts far behind when they paraded home for vacation last week. But three KU men, instead of taking a break, attended class every day and earned three hours of credit for doing it.
The men, all graduate students in geology, have only to write reports of their work in Field Statigraphy before they get the credit hours to show for vacation time.
Sidney Hochens, Atchison, James Peterson, Lawrence, and Paul Johnston, Hoisington, spent eight days studying Kansas rocks with their teacher, J. M. Jewett, associate professor of geology, and his assistant, Stanton M. Ball of the State Geological Survey.
Each morning before 7 a.m. the class was on its way. The men studied Lansing and Kansas City groups of rocks east of here as well as rocks to the south near Garnett.
The group returned to Lawrence each evening, so there was no
camping in the rainy weather which caught them out three times. The men were forced to take notes in cars at times, but this was not disconcerting to the geologists who are used to "nature's classrooms."
The reports, including graphic representations of 25 sections, will be due before the end of the semester.
Although the class actually started on the 21st, four days before vacation, the men did not miss classes for the field work. Other courses were cancelled because the teachers were attending the American Society of Petroleum Geologists meeting in Texas.
Last semester Prof. Jewett's class was scheduled on four weekends instead of during a vacation.
FT. BENNING, Ga—(UPI)—SFC Gordon M. Voss, star markman of the Ft. Benning rifle team, is allergic to gunpowder.
Handicap for a Marksman
Italian Labor Ties Closer, Bayne Says
Italian employers have more responsibility for their workers than Americans do, E. A. Bayne, lecturer for the American Universities Field Staff, told members of the Industrial Sociology class yesterday.
"In Italy, the factory community is combined with the town community. This 'paternalism' may provide almost every conceivable fringe benefit for the employee and his family," Mr. Bayne said.
Mr. Bayne said the labor situation in Italy is paralleled in politics.
"The General Confederation of Italian Labor (GCIL) is associated with the leftist Communist-Socialist factions. Toward the right, the Union of Italian Labor (UIL) is associated with the Democratic Socialists, and the Confederation of Italian Syndicated Labor (CISL) is associated with the Christian Democrats," Mr. Bayne said.
Mr. Bayne said that a "unity of action" paet between the Communists and Socialists in Italy was undertaken at the end of World War II.
"This pact provides the strongest labor organization, but since there was fear of Communist dominance, the UIL was formed in 1947," Mr. Bayne said.
Mr. Bayne said that each spring the plants, dealing with the three political-labor svndicates, put up a slate of candidates to conduct the workers' relationships with the employer.
Mr. Bayne said that many Italian landlords want to get rid of tenants and industrialize. He said the leftest parties proposed an "agarian pact" to guarantee that peasant farmers could not be thrown off land without legal process.
"Although the CISL was in favor of this pact, the majority of the Christian Democrats opposed it," Mr. Bayne said.
Mr. Bayne said that strikes in Italy are frequently for political, not
economic reasons, as a result of the political orientation of labor.
"However, strikes are fairly rare and are not a serious menace now," Mr. Bayne said.
Selective Service Applications Due
The deadline for applications for the Selective Service college qualification test is midnight next Thursday.
All students who intend to request occupational deferment from the draft must take the examination. Applications are available in the Registrar's office, 122 Strong.
The examination will be given April 30 at centers throughout the country. One of the testing centers will be at KU.
Student Wins $3,000 Optometry Award
Robert Whittaker. Eureka sophomore, has been awarded a three-year optometry scholarship by the Kansas Optometric Assn.
Whittaker will be presented the $3,000 award at the KOA's annual convention in Hutchinson next week. He will enroll at the Illinois College of Optometry in Chicago this fall.
Jesse James Is Back Again
MONTREAL — (UPI) — Jesse James, 23, of Jackson, Miss., held as a burglary suspect, said he was no relation of the late outlaw of the same name.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No.118
Friday, April 3, 1959
AGI Emphasis Put on Student Work, Living
The Allied Greek-Independent party called for a system of "coordinating councils" and more active labor and housing committees in a statement of "principles and objectives" released last night.
Terry Elliott, Fort Scott junior and president of AGI, spoke for the
[Photo of a man in a suit]
a platform. The first section we call principles, the second, objectives," Elliott said.
Dick Lewis
Lewis Reads Statement
party after a three-hour meeting of AGI officials.
In a prepared statement, Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and AGI candidate for president of the student body, said:
"The All Student Council has an obligation to inform the student body of its activities and to inform itself of the opinions of the student body. A system of coordinating councils will accomplish this and will result in a student council representing all students.
The party's plan would create a coordinating council in each living district. One representative from each organized house and the ASC representatives from that district would be members of the body. Married student and unorganized independent representatives to the councils would be determined geographically.
The party also calls for a listing of campus employment opportunities that will show when a job has been filled and when a job has been vacated.
It proposes that the function of the housing committee be expanded to include grading of available housing and classifying living conditions in proportion to the rental.
"Jane Dean (Overland Park junior) and I realize that student employment and student housing are
"These are two recurring issues which we feel must be considered immediately. We feel that we have a method of approaching and solving these problems intelligently."
List Campus Jobs
two problems with which students should be concerned."
In the past, student government has concerned itself with these problems, but the results have not been satisfactory.
Miss Dean is the AGI candidate for vice president. She said:
"We have this divided into two sections, neither of which we call
"The student body has often been branded 'apathetic' or 'indifferent' toward student government and affairs. This, Dick and I believe, is not the case. With a more effective
Wilson said from his home in Jetmore today that two of the publishers are Dolph Simons of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World and Jack Harris of the Hutchinson News
Gov. Docking Called 'Small Time Despot'
Gene Sullivan, Gov. Docking's executive secretary, said this morning that the governor would not comment on Mr. Wilson's article because he had not seen it.
(Continued on Page 8)
The bill, passed by the House and Senate excluded both newspapers and newsprint and ink from sales and use taxes. The bill was vetoed by the governor on March 10.
Howard Wilson, immediate past president of the association, wrote in the April issue of Kansas Publisher that Gov. Docking's action was motivated by "hatred" for five Kansas newspaper publishers.
A legislative representative of the Kansas Press Association charged that Gov. George M. Docking's recent veto of a legislative bill exempting newspapers from certain sales and use taxes was the action of a "small time political despot."
"I have heard the governor casi-gate these two men myself," said Wilson. "I would prefer not to be counted on the other three names
B-G Employes Ask 40-Hour Week
Buildings and grounds employees have petitioned the University for a 40-hour work week. University workers are now on a 44-hour work week.
Keith Lawton, director of the physical plant operation and administrative assistant to the chancellor, said today:
"The men petitioned to be on the monthly payroll and for a 40-hour work week.
"In certain instances, being paid by the month instead of by the hour would mean a small increase in pay," he explained.
Mr. Lawton said he would rather not comment about how the petition was received by the administration.
"It is under consideration," he said.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University said:
"There is a rumor that some members of the building and grounds employees have petitioned for a 40-hour week, but at present the administration has taken no action."
Generally fair tonight and to-
tomorrow. Cooler east tonight.
Warmer tomorrow. Low tonight
35 to 49. High tomorrow in 78
Weather
ASC Votes to Require Charters of KU Groups
The All Student Council last night passed a bill requiring extra-curricular organizations, except religious and departmental organizations, to file charters with the ASC.
in other action, the council denied after long debate a request by the Business School Council for an appropriation of $165.
The bill concerning the chartering of extra-curricular organizations was amended twice. Besides requiring all extra-curricular organizations to file a charter with the ASC, the bill states that all departmental and religious organizations must file a statement of purpose with the Council.
To Deliver Charters
The research committee on student organizations was directed to prepare and complete charters and deliver them to all extra-curricular organizations fulfilling the requirements for a charter.
The denied Business School Council request was for an appropriation of $165 to help defray costs of Business School Day, the publication of the "Business School News," and a Jayhawk picture.
A motion to appropriate the money was defeated by a vote of seven to six. Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City, Mo., junior and representative of the business school, said the request would be made again
Two First Readings
Two amendments to ASC bills were given first reading at the meeting. One would reduce the number of cheerleaders from 10 to eight. The other states that a candidate would not be able to run for more than one office in the same election, such as running for a class office and ASC representative.
Those absent from last night's meeting were;
Susan Anderson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Jan Cameron, Topeka junior; Mary Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Franz Ellin, Kerns, Switzerland, graduate; William Fricke, Jefferson City, Mo., junior; Edward Graham, Belleville, second-year law; Judith Neil, Abilene junior; Janith Rogers, Paradise junior; Ervell Staab, Hays senior, and Miriam Schwartzkopf, Larned somonhore.
because the governor's remarks on them came to me by hearsay only."
Docking Gives View
The article by Wilson said that on the day the controversial bill was introduced by the Printing Committee Gov. Docking "gave a violent discourse on the ethics of publishers and stated that they were fat cats who drove around in their Cadillacs while the man digging the ditch paid their taxes for them."
Wilson said the governor's veto action was taken as a punitive action against publishers he had a personal dislike for.
Wilson said his remarks in the Kansas Publisher were his personal opinions and were not to be taken as official proclamations of the Kansas Press Association.
He said this was the strongest stand anyone connected with the association had taken in regard to this particular matter.
Name Put in Hat
Meanwhile, Gov. Docking's name was brought up as a possible vicepresidential candidate in 1960 by Rep. Newell George of Kansas.
Rep. George proposed in Washington that Kansas Democrats launch a boom at the statewide party rally at Topeka April 10 and 11 for a Kennedy-Docking presidential ticket in 1960.
If Docking decides to run for a senate seat his sweeping victories in one-time Republican Kansas put him in the position of providing a strong voice from the West, Rep. George said.
"Party leaders must bear in mind that if the governor decides to make the race it will be a rough one," he said.
3,000 Prep Students Invade Oread Todav
Over 3,000 high school students from northeastern Kansas invaded the campus today and will stay through tomorrow.
Instructors in the Music and Dramatic Arts building taught their classes in Lindley and Marvin halls today since classrooms were used by the high school students here for the District Music Festival.
Choral groups performed in the University Theatre this morning before judges. The Festival will continue through tomorrow with more vocal and instrumental presentations.
New Jay Sister Program Has Culture Emphasis
The Jay Sisters' orientation program for freshman women will feature a new emphasis on cultural development next year.
More than 100 freshmen petitioned last night for positions as Jay Sisters next year.
Patricia Dawson, Emporia junior and chairman of the freshman-sophomore organization, said the new program will not be a drastic change but will be made "a more honorary organization."
MU to Join KU To Up Standards
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The University of Missouri will join KU next year in a move to increase requirements for graduation, the dean of the college of arts and sciences announced yesterday.
Dr. W. Francis English announced a program of new requirements for entering freshmen, which would follow the KU curriculum changes of placing greater stress upon mathematics, foreign languages, humanities and social sciences.
Dr. English said the college will require a 30 per cent increase in foreign language, humanities and social science requirements and a 50 per cent increase in the science requirements.
As the program exists now, sophomore women write letters to freshman women the summer before they enter the University and are encouraged to develop personal friendships with the women during the school year.
"We will put less emphasis on intimate friendship, partly because of the more strict Panhellenic rules put into effect during spring sorority rush." Miss Dawson said.
More than 100 freshman women have filed application for Jay Sister positions next year. Those selected will be named at the Associated Women Students honors convocation April 28.
Next year sophomore Jay Sisters will attend cultural events with the freshmen and will assist them with academic problems.
To be selected, women must have a 1.3 grade average, be active in campus and civic activities, and be willing to accept responsibility.
"The new group will be smaller than this year's Jay Sister program, which numbered about 90." Miss Dawson said.
FILM
POSSIBLE JAY SISTERS—Sherrie L. Seogin, Prairie Village, and Nancy M. Kauffman, Emporia, freshmen, turn in petitions for Jay Sister positions to Jay Sister chairman, Patricia L. Dawson, Emporia junior. Jay Sisters are sophomore women advisers to incoming freshman women.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 3, 1959
Used Up Vacation
It's taken a few days to get back into the swing of things—like studying and going to classes. Five-day vacations, complete with midnight TV programs, can be pretty tiring—even to the student "conditioned" from all-night cramming for hour examinations.
Yet, something happened while we were home —something they call Easter. It came last Sunday. That's why the vacation was called "Easter vacation."
We looked forward to those five days as just another vacation—the last for the semester. Now, we're sorry they're gone because there won't be anymore.
It makes me wonder. Why did University officials give us five days. Easter services lasted little more than an hour. There are no classes on Sunday, anyway. Did they really feel we
needed, or would take five whole days to rejoice in the Resurrection of Christ?
Maybe we did go to church for an hour Sunday morning. Maybe we even had a new Easter outfit or at least enjoyed the woman's hat in front of us. Maybe we liked the choir music or were amused at the little boy who tripped over the Easter lily while he tried to light the candles.
Or maybe we just stayed home in bed or watched another TV program. Maybe we enjoyed watching our younger brothers and sisters hunt for Easter eggs.
Whatever we did on Easter Sunday and during the other four days, we used them up. Yes, they gave us five days to remember Christ. It could have been a meaningful and lasting experience in our lives. But, I wonder. What difference did it really make? —Carol Allen
Foreign Aid- Positive Peace Step
The United States' foreign aid program to underdeveloped countries, while attempting to bridge this gap, does not seem to be as effective as it could be.
The gap between developed and underdeveloped countries keeps widening.
Prime Minister Nehru of India recently said: "A little foreign aid will only keep us where we are. To be really effective, foreign loans from all sources must be sufficient to get our economy off the ground. Now that we have built a sound base, we must make our economy dynamic and self-generating so that further expansion can come from our own resources."
While the United States has allocated $1.4 billion for what is termed "economic assistance," over half of this goes for defense support.
It seems the United States is forgetting the important benefits that the free world could derive from increased aid to countries near the Communist-controlled countries—specifically, those in Asia.
If the United States would concentrate its financial appropriations, as Nebru suggests, to raise the standard of living of Asiatic nations, we would find these underdeveloped nations becoming allies instead of avowed neutrals.
If the "commune experiment" in Red China proves rigidly-regimented Communism can make China an economic power, India and other overpopulated countries may be tempted to turn completely to Communism.
The free world with the United States in the lead could demonstrate that it can induce reasonably rapid development in nations within the non-communist orbit.
This type of program might be started without any additional burden on the American taxpayer. But it would require a reshuffling of the foreign aid monies already allotted to provide a more favorable economic balance in our program.
I there is also the possibility of increasing our budget. Although Pres. Eisenhower is determined to balance the budget, it would be a comforting feeling to know we have some allies in Asia.
If our President still persists on balancing the budget, the responsibility would fall squarely into the American taxpayers' pockets. Would they pay the price of an increased foreign aid program? It is possible. They responded to the Marshall program.
In a world where war is never far away, a positive attempt at peace, if presented correctly, may be welcome. —Doug Yocom
Editor:
These accounts have been con-
The historian has a tremendous job in deciding what accounts should be considered unbiased. He is not always able to be an eyewitness to the events himself. Many groups have been hurt by the historical accounts of biased people.
... Letters ...
sideder by a few historians as a true representation of history. We as students read these accounts in history courses and generally consider them as the way things really happened.
In several American history courses the topic of "Mormons" always enters. This is part of our historical heritage and should be
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
TEST TODAY
FREC
9-29
"HE'S MOST EVEN TEMPERED MEMBER OF TH' WHOLE FACULTY - HE'S IN A BAD MOOD"
The term "Mormon" usually describes to the reader a person that believes in polygamy and the many other supposedly secret rites of this group. In reality, the term means people who believe in the "Book of Mormon." There are two large groups that carry this title, but have very separate and distinct beliefs.
included. However, the tag that has been given to these people and their founder, Joseph Smith, has generally come from the antagonists and enemies of this movement.
One is the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints with headquarters in Independence, Mo. This group has never practiced or believed in polygamy or any other secret rites of worship.
To give the interested person a first hand account of the beliefs of this church, the Liahona Fellowship at KU, in conjunction with the local church, will present a series of lectures at 7:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursdav and Sunday, April 12. These will be given at the church at 12th and Vermont Streets and will be conducted by a guest minister.
Joe Bayless.
Joe Bayless,
Wichita senior and
president of Liahona
Fellowship
Worth Repeating
Everything that enlarges the sphere of human powers, that shows man he can do what he thought he could not do, is valuable—Samuel Johnson
There is a moment of difficulty and danger at which flattery and falsehood can no longer deceive, and simplicity itself can no longer be misled.-Anonymous
the took world
Allen · LanTx
By Donald S. Pady
The Castle was a huge, five story, rambling ark of a building that was quite out of place amidst the modern architecture of Midwestern University. A small, but powerful group of students felt it was out of place too, but principally because it housed the foreign students attending Midwestern.
CASTLE ON THE CAMPUS, by Don Wilcox, Little Brown and Company, 1959, $3.00.
John London, a graduate student from England, was one of the first to learn that his presence was resented. During his second day at Midwestern he was thrown into the campus lake by some students who felt there was no place for foreigners at the university. "Those exchange students" were considered by some too haughty and contemptible to be a part of university life!
Jet Kaley, the ringleader of the anti-foreigner pressure group called the "Black Eye Party," campaigned vigorously to exterminate the foreign, "black eyes," in order to be elected president of the student council.
John found that not only did some Americans dislike him for trying to be a nice guy; some despised him for just being English—particularly the boy from Cyprus whose country so bitterly resisted British authority.
Even the school's "yellow press" was influenced to print the trumped-up scandals reported against the foreign group that inhabited the Castle.
Soon, however, most of the bitter feelings disappeared; John's tact and pleasing disposition literally transformed the Castle's atmosphere into one of international good will and cooperation.
John's year at Midwestern was a full one, especially after he met pretty Geneva Addison and began to think seriously about her. Geneva was the niece of John's major professor and did much to aid John with the solution of his problems and he helped her with hers. John's prestige soared while she pulled the strings and gradually the foreign students were accepted as real assets to the university community.
Author Don Wilcox presents a delightfully entertaining story that reveals college life in a realistic manner with an international twist.
His characters act and speak with enthusiastic spirit, and somehow depict a freshness of living that should mark everyone's college experience. The plot is developed simply and not so clinically with campus morals, frustration and sex, as so many college-minded writers think it necessary to write.
Wilcox is a graduate of the University of Kansas, and also received a master's degree in sociology here.
By Robert Harwi
Mr. Williams, a noted actor and playwright, will read selections from the works of the late Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas. Rather, it should be said that Mr. Williams will give a personal dramatization of Thomas' stories and poems.
The appearance of Emlyn Williams tonight in the University Theatre will produce a fusing of two multi-talented artists from the worlds of literature and the theater.
Mr. Williams conceived the idea of presenting the works of Thomas when he was asked to read a couple of the poet's works at a memorial service shortly after Thomas' death in 1953.
Artists Fuse in Actor's Reading of Poet's Work
The present program was shaped and developed for a whole year while Mr. Williams was touring through South Africa presenting readings from Charles Dickens, and during the filming of the Vivien Leigh film, "The Deep Blue Sea", in which he had a leading part. He first presented the Thomas readings at the Globe Theatre in London.
The tragic personal life of Dylan Thomas is perhaps as well
known as his works of literature. He is already a legend despite the fact that it has been only five years since his sordid death in New York.
Thomas was born in Swansea, a seaport in Wales, in 1914. He published his-first book of poems in 1934. Today he is regarded as one of the greatest lyric poets of the century and is perhaps the most remarkable literary personality of his generation. His disorganized way of living and his wild alcoholic binges did not prevent him from imbining his work with a moving lyricism and an intense vision.
Mr. Williams, besides his career before the footlights, has done considerable writing for the theater. His plays include "The Corn Is Green" and "Night Must Fall." The former starred Ethel Barrymore on the stage and was later made into a film with Bette Davis in the leading role.
With all the talk today of Britain's "angry young men," it might be said that Thomas was the original in this movement in literature. He has been given credit for blazing the way for the "beat generation" of writers.
Dailu hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extention 711 news room
Extension 412, news office
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 Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Page 3
Senior's 2.9 G.P.A. Causes Problem
Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth senior, is a young man of unusual ability. He has the talent to cram lots of work and lots of play into his schedule and give an excellent performance in both fields.
Cuthbertson's scholastic record after seven semesters of all A's and one B is one that many students reach for but never quite touch.
ss. won ry i- er 9. orer ers
"I really don't have a secret formula or anything like that for making grades. I just try to study what's necessary and to keep up in all of my courses," Cuthbertson said.
"Actually, I have the university standard of two hours of study for
Grades Get Him in Jam Strange as it may sound a 29 grade average has presented Catholic He has been honored with two fellowships for graduate study, but he can accept only one.
Gilbert Cuthbertson
Heads Bridge Club
each credit hour as a goal but I never seem to make it."
Statewide Activities, chairman of the ASC housing committee, a member of Delta Phi Alpha, honorary German fraternity, and Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science fraternity. He is a past member of the KU debate squad.
"I can either take a Rotary Foundation Fellowship at the University of Bonn and go into medicine or I can take a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship to Harvard University and go into political science. I now have to choose my field and that isn't easy to do because I am extremely interested in both subjects."
Receives Many Honors
Heads Bridge Club Last, but certainly not least in Gilbert's book, he is president of the KU Duplicate Bridge Club.
"I play bridge at least twice a week. It's a fascinating game," Cuthbertson said.
He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa last fall and is a co-holder of the Paul B. Lawson Award, a recognition of the highest scholastic record of senior men in the College. He currently holds a Carnegie Research Assistantship in political science, has received the Taylor Memorial Book Collection Prize, and served as KU's representative at the Student Conference on National Affairs which was held at Texas A&M College last fall. He is also a four-year Summerfield Scholar.
How do these activities affect Gilbert's studying? This is how he describes it:
He is president of the Circle K Club, on the editorial board of the Quill Club, regional chairman in
Ten United Presbyterian students from KU will travel to Tulsa, Okla., today to attend the regional meeting of Presbyterian students, which will last through Sunday. Students from Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kansas will attend.
Those representing KU are Paul Hensleigh, Winchester; David Rockhold, Winfield; Joy Fowler, Fort Scott; Carol Edwards, Lawrence, and Mary Elda Scarth, Bartlesville Okla., all sophomores.
Beacon Articles Are Available Copies of the three articles written by Mark Clutter, editorial editor of the Wichita Beacon, concerning his visit to KU and his impressions of the campus can be obtained at the Public Relations Office.
Ten Presbyterians To Visit Oklahoma
The theme of the meeting will be "The Life and Mission of the Church in the Whole World."
But Cuthbertson is no bookworm. He can cite a list of extra-curricular activities as long as his list of scholastic honors.
"The only trouble comes when my studies interfere with my activities!"
Alan Latta, Wichita freshman ivan Eastwood, Summerfield junior J. P. Feighner, Welshville senior Mary Thornton, Clay Center senior and Carol Weidensaul, Shoshoni Wwo. junior.
Javhawker Queen Named
Barbara Mabry, Sedalia, Mo. sophomore, has been named queen of the 1959 Jayhawk yearbook. The final selection, from a field of 20 candidates, was made by Governor George Docking.
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES
What kind of person is this who can cram so many activities into so little time? He is not the nervous, hectic person you might imagine, but he has a quiet and relaxed air about him, punctuated with a quick smile. His secret to success, brains plus efficiency.
New or Used
Dr. John H. Patton and the Rev Alan Pickering, pastors of the KU United Presbyterian students, will accompany the students.
Auto Wrecking
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AT THE PIT
University Daily Kansan
"Best Music in Town" Jerry Taylor's
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
Stock Room
REMODELING SALE
Boxed Stationery Watercolor Blocks
Fountain Pens Artists Pads
Billfolds Illustration Board
Large rolls tracing paper
Most Items 20% Discount other items at greater savings Our entire stock is not included
Carter's Stationery
1025 Mass. — VI 3-6133
Friday, April 3.1959
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 cards. Daily Kansai Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function.
TODAY
Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
pamela. Bible study, discussion,
memoirs
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:15 p.m. 203 Strong. Coffee at 2:30 p.m. in 217 Strong. "Irregular Points of Normal Families of Analytic Functions."
Lutheran Student Association, 3-5 p.m.
Coffee Hour, 13:14 Louisiana.
Friday Night Services, 7.20 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee.
TOMORROW
Lutheran Student Assn., 2 p.m. Clee Club, First meeting, anyone interested is cordially invited. Eastern entrance of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
SUNDAY
Newman Club Mass. Fraser Theater, 8 and 10 a.m. Social Hour after 10 o'clock service in the Hawk's Nest of the Kansas Union.
Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tenn.
Cost supper 5 p.m. Folk song recital at
7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas
Pine Tree Drive. Earle R. Davis of
Kansas State.
Jazz Club, 8 p.m., Curry Room of Kansas Union. Jazz album line notes.
Sorry He Missed That Sale
Grease Job $1
Brake Adj. 98c
RIPLEY, Tenn. — (UPI)— N. C. Utley, a court clerk, was ticketed by police yesterday for failure to buy a license plate for his car. Utley's job is selling them.
Muffiers and Tallipipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change
PAGES SINCLAIR SERVICE
6th & Vt.
We require a B.S. or an advanced degree in mathematics or the physical sciences. Experience in your university's computing facility is highly desirable.
SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Offers work of the future ..today!
$f \approx \sum$
Computer programmers & applied mathematicians
High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming.
Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709,704,and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies.
Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer.
Space Technology Laboratories, Inc.
P.O. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California
STL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Fridav. April 3, 1959
Conforming Smoke Rings? started last Christmas vacation, and I've smoked them ever since. I wanted something to do to keep me awake when I was studying late at night."
Frosh Women Reveal When Smoking Habit Acquired
Statisticians might be interested in knowing that the art of blowing smoke rings is not necessarily a product of college life.
A recent survey taken of ten freshman women reveals that the smoking habit was acquired by six of them before being subjected to the enticing lure of "college conformity."
Here are the comments of some freshman women who have succumbed to the use of nicotine:
Nadine Pedlar, Parsons, "I started smoking when I was a senior in high school just to see what it was like. My friends had Salems then, so they were the ones I started on. Now I've got the menthol habit."
Jorene Ross, Kansas City,
Mo., "Kent was the brand I
picked out at random when I
Linda Gump, Wichita, "I was nervous and wanted something to do, so I started smoking just before I got out of high school. I smoked several brands because they happened to be handy, but soon chose du Maurier."
Judith Kirby, El Dorado, "I began smoking Kents last July because the guy I went with then smoked them. I like them because they're the mildest."
Noreen Mitchell, Prairie Village. "I smoked before I came to college. I started smoking to kill a nervous habit. I smoke Marlboro because I get more out of them than any other cigarette."
Sharlie Warmsley, Leavenworth. "I smoked before I came to college because the group I ran around with smoked. I smoke Pall Mall because I don't like filters and I get flavor out of them."
Sondra Anderson, Osage City,
"I started smoking before I
came to college, probably
because everyone else did. I
started smoking Winston and
just kept the same brand."
Sherry Maule, Wichita, "I started smoking in college because everybody else was. I smoke Kents because they are mild and you hardly know you're smoking."
Judy Smith, Kansas City, Kan., "I didn't smoke until I came to college. I started smoking because I'm a conformist and everyone else did. I smoke Kents because everything else makes me dizzy."
Text of AGI Principles, Objectives
Principles
Campus government seems unable to cope with the major problem which controffits it today. This problem is the lack of student interest in student government. This is evident in organized living groups and even more so among the unorganized independents.
Directly contributing to this problem are two factors:
2. The lack of action by the ASC in matters in which the student body has a genuine concern.
1. The lack of responsible communication between student government and the students.
To solve this problem and to provide for a student government which will be responsive to the genuine concerns of the students, we propose;
I. That the ASC take the initiative in establishing coordinating councils in each living district to facilitate communication between the student body and the ASC.
II. That a response to this genuine concern should be responsible action by the All Student Council in dealing with its annual problem, i.e.
Each organized house within a living district would have one representative on the council. Representation on the councils for the married students and the unorganized independent districts would be on a geographical basis.
1. Intelligent budget action.
2. Responsible committee work and reports.
3. Careful consideration of appointments.
Before student government can
expect to accomplish major changes it must first communicate with the student body. Secondly, it must act responsibly with respect to its annual consideration and then work toward major goals.
We of AGI feel that the present campus government has fallen down in its obligation to consider the attitudes and reflect the opinions of the student body, and in so doing, has failed to stimulate student interest in its actions. We therefore offer the foregoing methods as a means of accomplishing this.
Objectives
I. Coordinating Council — We propose to develop a coordinating council to create a communicating link between the students and their government.
Each living district would have a coordinating council of:
1. One member of each organized house in the district.
2. The All Student Council representatives in that area. The married district and the unorganized independent councils would be based on a geographical basis.
The purpose of these councils would be to communicate with the people of the area, informing them of the action of the ASC, and reflecting their ideas to the ASC.
II. Employment — We propose to make available to all students a list of campus employment opportunities through a student committee working in conjunction with the office of aids and awards.
This list will show when a job has been filled and when the job has been vacated. The duty of this
III. Housing — We propose that the housing committee be expanded to function in the following manner:
committee will be to prepare the list and to strive for better social and economic conditions between the employee and the employer.
1. Grade the available housing, classifying living conditions according to the rental charge.
2. To receive and act upon all student complaints on housing.
图示
HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
by photography
- Portraits
- Weddings
- Application Photos
S. HUROK presents
S. HURON presents
THE SHOW WHICH WON SOLID RAVES ON BROADWAY!
"FABULOUS!" — Akinson, Times — "TRIUM-
PHANT!" — Kerr, Her, Trib. — "IRRESISTIBLE!"
— Chapman, News — "BRILLIANT!" — Gilbert,
Mirror — "GOOD SHOW!" — Aston, W. Tele.
— "SUPERB!" — Watts, Post — "A HARVEST OF
LAUGHS!" — Time — "UPROARIOUSLY
FUNNY!" — Newsweek.
EMLYN WILLIAMS as
"A Boy Growing Up"
An Entertainment
from the stories of DYLAN THOMAS
UNIVERSITY THEATRE
TONIGHT AT 8:20 P.M.
TICKETS: $2.05, $1.54, $1.03
BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 7 P.M.
Trophies will be presented for first and second place in the large and small ensemble divisions.
Spring Sing Set For April 29
- Engagements
FAST
1
HOUR
DRY CLEANING
842 MASS. VI.3-9594
NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR 1 HOUR SERVICE
Malecolm Applegate, Topeka, 1959 graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, is the author of an article in the April issue of Kansas Publisher. The article reviews libel laws as affecting Kansas newspapers.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass., VI 3-2966
Judges are now being selected. Their names will be announced as soon as the selections are completed.
The annual Spring Sing for all independent organized houses will be April 29 at Swarthout Recital Hall. House registrations must be made before Thursday, April 9, with Charlotte Stryker, Topeka junior, at VI 3-9123.
Graduate Writes on Libel
Is it my fault if Blue Hills bake better pies than you?
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Missouri
Safely aloft with a three-game winning streak during the Easter recess, Missouri's baseball team will christen its new diamond here Friday and Saturday against the University of Arkansas.
Around the BIG 8
The teams will play a single game each day on MU's new field just west of Memorial Stadium.
Bengal victims on the southern swing were Memphis State, 4-2 and 10-2, and Arkansas State, 12-1. No MU pitcher worked more than three innings. The Tiger staff gave up 16 hits and just two earned runs in three games.
As a team, Missouri hit .288 against the State entries. Shortstop Gary Starr and rookie Gene Orf, right fielder, each banged out five hits.
Kansas State
With a squad of 66 men, 14 of them returning lettermen from last season and 30 of them sophomores, Kansas State opens spring football workouts today.
Four other Wildcat lettermen are not in gear, Joe Vader, junior end, is out for baseball; Max Falk, junior halfback, is out for track; Don Martin, junior guard, is sideline with a wrist fracture, and Ralph Lambing, junior tackle, is recuperating from a knee operation. Cedric Price, grider-cage-track man, currently is out for track, but will report part-time for spring drills, Coach Bus Mertes said.
The Wildcats show six lettermen at halfback and two at quarterback, but they have no "K" winners at fullback. At line posts they have four letterman ends, four letterman tackles, and two letterman guards. None is listed at center.
Iowa State
Coach Burl Berry has named five runners to take part in three events at the 1959 Texas Relays this weekend.
The Cyclones will compete in the two-mile relay, the four-mile relay and the open two-mile run. Berry has listed Leo Techtmeyer for the two mile run. He will also compete as a member of the four-mile relay team. Other milers in that unit will be Ron Sanson, Gary Haltmeyer and Marlan Millikin.
The two-mile team will include Rick Devereaux, Sanson, Haltmeyer and Millikin.
Collegians Down Oilers In Pan-Am Warmups
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — (UPI) — The College All-Stars, based on their initial showing, should breeze through the Pan-American games basketball trials without taking a deep breath.
With Oscar Robertson and jumping Johnny Green showing the way, the collegians turned back the Phillips Oilers, 89-83, last night after the Wichita Vickers rolled to an 89-73 triumph over the Armed Forces All-Stars in the opening games of the round-robin tournament.
In tonight's games, the College All-Stars play the Armed Forces representatives and the Oilers meet the Vickers. The winner of the
A. E. F. S.
Peggy McCormack Alpha Chi Omega There is something cute for you, too-at the
C
COACH HOUSE
BOSTON & ACCOUNTING
Friday, April 3, 1959 University Daily Kansan
C
three-night tournament will place from five to seven men on the U. S. team that will compete in this year's Pan-Am games at Chicago.
Plaza Brookside
K. C. K. C.
Blue Ridge KU Campus
K. C. Lawrence
The Collegians, although they have been playing together less than a week, displayed remarkable teamwork. Their accuracy was outstanding as they converted 53.7 per cent of their shots from the field.
Consequently Easton's team is landing in Austin this weekend short-handed and will enter only in the four-mile and distance medley relay events besides the individual entries.
Eligible and Able Dozen To Test Southern Hospitality
The "eligible and able dozen" members of KU's track team left for the South yesterday. Eight more prominent stars on Coach Easton's team stayed home.
the trip who is down in over three hours.
Easton's only comment was that this shortage of men will probably damage the Jayhawker's chances to come through with the same type of victory that Kansas captured last year. Then, KU rolled up 103 points. The host Texas team was a distant second with 64 points.
Bob Tague, record holder in the Big Eight 800-yard run, and
quartermiler Bob Covey will remain in Lawrence because of injuries sustained at the sixteam meet at Abilene last week. Bob Cannon will miss the meet because of illness in the family.
Grades will hold five other Jayhawkers on the campus. Sprinters Charlie Tidwell and Paul Williams, pole-vauler Jack Stevens, broad-jumper Darwin Ashbaugh and javelin throwers are the unlucky quintet upon whom the axe fell.
Easton stressed that these boys are not ineligible but he is not allowing anyone to go on
KU Nine Plays Today
Bill Mills, Dan Ralston, Tom Skutka and Clif Cushman will run the four-mile and Bob Lida, Cushman, Skutka, Ralston and Mills will run the medley.
KU opens its baseball season this afternoon at 3:15 against the Forbes Air Force Base team.
Following two rain-outs, the Jayhawkers are more than ready to get the season started. The games which were rained out were scheduled with the University of Washburn and have been rescheduled for Tuesday.
Yesterday, for the first time in a week, the varsity was able to practice outside. The practice was limited to batting practice which had to be held in the right field corner because of the soogy condition of the diamond. There have been no infield drills for more than a week.
mism. Carl Lauterjung, catcher, exemplified the team spirit by saying, "I don't know much by asking the Forbes team, but I have no doubts that we'll win."
The pitching duties today will probably be shared by righthanders Tom Hollar and Bill Clinkenbeard, both rookies. Hollar will probably get the starting call and Clinkenbeard will come on to finish. This will place right-hander Norm Mailen and left-hander Wayne Woodruff in the bullpen.
The limited practice didn't seem to deaden the team's air of opti-
Today's game will be the first one played on the newly constructed Quigley Field, which is located just south of the field house.
For Expert
Watch Repair And All Your Jewelry Needs
WOLFSON'S CREDIT JEWELERS 743 Mass. V13-4366
Individual entries will be Bill Alley and Jim Londerholm, javelin; Bill Dryer and Jerry Foos, discus and shot; Bill Tillman and Bob Okerstrom. 120 high hurdles; Ernie Shelby, broad jump, and Clif Cushman, 400-meter hurdles.
Step out for a...
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Good News for "Wheel-less" Students
AVIS RENT-A-CAR Now in Lawrence
Now you can rent a car right here in Lawrence. A full weekend with a late model Avis car costs you only $15, plus 9c per mile - WE PAY THE OIL AND GAS BILL. And since there's no extra charge for passengers, the cost can be even less.
Due to the shortage of and the demand for Avis cars, we must limit eligibility to only those students with best references.
Students under 22 can take advantage of this offer by calling VI 3-3055 or filling out this form and mailing it to us.
Apply now, even if your don't foresee any immediate need. An Avis permit insures you a car when you need it.
Student's Name ___
Lawrence Address ... Phone ...
Local Credit Reference ...
Drivers License No. ...
Parent's Name ___
Address (st.) ___
(town & state) ___ Phone ___
JIM CLARK MOTORS 623 Mass.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 3, 1959
Couples Reveal Betrothals
AUTHORITY ORDERED BY THE N.Y. STATE BOARD OF MEMBERS
Nancy Schwarz
Schwarz-Winslow
Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Schwarz,
Abilene, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Nancy Fave, to Mr. Elvin H. Winslow, son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Winslow,
Talmage.
Miss Schwarz is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Winslow attended Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia and graduated from Brown Mackie School of Business in Salina. He is employed at the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. in Toneka.
A summer wedding is planned.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hermon, Ness City, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Marie Ann, to Mr. Raymond Carl Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Long, Arnold. Miss Hermon is a junior majoring in English. Mr. Long is a sophomore majoring in technical agronomy at Kansas State College.
Hermon-Long
The wedding will be in June.
Campus Club News
Seven new members have been initiated into Pi Delta Phi, honorary French society.
They are Mary Ann Caws, Lawrence; Helen Goedde, Lawrence; and Mary Lou Morris, Richmond, Va. All are graduate students.
An honorary membership was given to Reinhard Kuhn, visiting assistant professor of Romance Languages.
Mary Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Nancy Fligg, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Karlan Ison, Overland Park junior.
Wedding Bells
DUCK'S For SEA FOOD 824 Vt.
AAA
Oregon
CUSTOMS
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
100
Davis-Kelley
The engagement of Sandra Jean Davis, to Keith Kolley, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Davis of Sedgwick.
Sandra Jean Davis
Miss Davis and Mr. Kelley are both sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Commander and Mrs. John L. Burge, Villanova, Pa., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Sharon Gay, to Ronald H. Womack, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Womack, Lenexa.
Burge-Womack
Miss Burge is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Mt. Wonack is a senior in the School of Business and a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Pollock-Castle
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clay Pollock, Shaker Heights, Ohio, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Nora O'Brien, to William Edward Castle, son of Dr. E. B. Castle, Hillbrook Estates, Ohagrin Falls, Ohio.
Miss Pollock is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Castle is a student at Western Reserve University School of Medicine.
A summer wedding is planned.
George-Elting
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. George, Merriam, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Constance Louise, to Mr. Gary Miller Elting, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss George, a junior, is a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Alpha Iota professional music sorority.
Mr. Elling is a member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional music fraternity. A summer wedding is olaned.
Hartline-Mikolasek
Mr. and Mrs, William Hartline, Milwaukee, Wis., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Audrey, to Douglas G. Mikolaeck, Meninence, Mich., graduate student. Miss Hartline is a graduate of Michigan University and is currently residing in Waukegan, Ill., where she teaches school.
Mr. Mikolasek is doing graduate work in the School of Pharmacy and is a member of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Wedding Bells
Billie Caldwell, De Soto souphomore, to Bruce Wells, Winfield souphomore, Jan. 28.
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ROBERT HELPMANN
"KHYBER PATROL" "CARELESS YEARS"
EXTRA! Saturday Night Only!
Double Owl Show! 4 Features In All!
SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
More Tights Seen for Summer
Tights are stretching into spring and it looks as if they will continue to be popular during the summer months.
Their best application seems to be with bermuda shorts. In new even
brighter colors for spring, peony, azalea, blue bell, fern, and turquise, they provide a cheerful note when added to lighter colors in the shorts themselves.
STARTING SATURDAY
HELD OVER! AND MOVED-OVER
TO THE VARSITY
The Biggest Crowds In Years Are Raving About "Rio Bravo"
JOHN WAYNE
the big guy with
the battered hat
JOHN WAYNE
...the big guy with the battered hat
DEAN MARTIN
Dude-the wreckage piled up by a fast woman
RICKY NELSON
...the rockin' baby-faced kid
HOWARD HAWKS
RIO BRAVO
DEAN MARTIN
Dude-the wreckage piled up by a fast woman
RICKY
NELSON
---
HOWARD
HAWKS'
RIO
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PARKER
and the girl they all call 'Feathers'
and Dean and Ricky sing, too!
"Rio Bravo""My Rifle, My Pony
and Me""Cindy"
TECHNICOLOR®from WARNER BROS
WB
ANGIE DICKINSON·WALTER BRENNAN WARD BOND·JOHN 'Lawman' RUSSELL
PEDRO GONZALEZ GONZALEZ · ESTELITA RODRIGUEZ · Screenplay by JULES FURTHMAN
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
VARSITY
THEATRE - - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-1065
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
ENDS TONITE! SANDRA DEE "GIDGET"
Friday, April 3, 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 Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
KHAKI JACKET, warm-up type "Swiss"
stadium March 21. Call V1 0-2102. 4-6
AMOUNT of money in or near the Student Union. Cell Pier Artama at I 3-4600.
POST VERSALOG SLIDERULE in Maitlott, D. M. Lovell stamped on side, reward offered. Call EN 2-2328, Kansas City. 4-7
FOUND
COIN PURSE, on Memorial Drive. Call KU extension 534 or call at 7 Strong. Anux exE. 4-7
WANTED
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Call
3-1 5297 after 5 p.m.
WANTED: to lease a home with three bedrooms and bath near KU. If possible, would prefer bedroom and extra rooms. Furnished or partly furnished. CALL VI 3-1448. 4-9
WANTED: Car, $250 cash for best deal.
Call Vi 3-0186 between 5 and 7:33 p.m.
WANTED—TO RENT
KU FACULTY MEMBER requires a furnished three bedroom house for the fall and spring semester, 1959-1960. Call VI 2-0346.
FOR RENT
FURNISHED HOUSE, three bedrooms,
two baths, close to campus, for the
months of June, July, and August. Call
II 2-0346. 4-3
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, whole third
room. 3-4 bdw from KU. Call VI 3-9065
from KU. Call VI 3-9065
FIRST FLOOR SOUTHSIDE DUPLXE
newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six
rooms, full basement, close to KU: Call
V 3-1764 or V 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-
TWO BEDROOM HOME. unfurnished
room. Call VI. 4297 during the daytime.
VACANCY for young man in contemporary home, now and summer, 20×40×4 swimming pool, private board, Living room, Private entrance, if desired. Private entrance, shower-bath, refrigerator. Country Club atmosphere. Call VI 3-9625. 4-9
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT. spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
heat and gas furnished. linen furnished.
accept graduate students. Call VI-3-
7671
TRANSPORTATION
HIDE WITH MEE to New York, will share expenses. Arrive April 5 and return to KU. April 13. Call Dean Mohlstrom at VI 2-0684. 4-3
FOR SALE
WHITE FORMAL, full length, net.
size 10, worn once, $25. CHOO
V-1-1977.
SIAMESE KITTENT, nine weeks old, unmarried at 91. Loussain, first floor, anytime.
HOUSE AND LOT, 1518 Meadow Lane,
just west of the field house, lot size is
105x162 in Clarkson Grandview Place,
bath kitchen & exhustion room, six trees,
shrubs and perennials. Two level
house, entrance level contains two bedrooms with built in chests of drawers,
bath kitchen & exhaustion room with wood burning fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking Wakara valuallity center, living
4-8
57 AUSTRIN HEALEY, radio, heater, elec-
must sell. Call V 3-3060
DAFFODILS. 25 cents a dozen, no de-
eign. Call VI 3-2278.
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.
COLT FRONTIER 38-40 revolver, $65.
Lugers, $45,-$42 and 32,automatics.
Mortgages. Come in and look them over. Peter Des
Jardins. 1138 Mississippi I V-2 0045. 4-8
RCA STEREO TAPE PLAYER, plays both monaural and stereo tapes, machogny finish with one set of built-in speakers. Will sell with two stereo and three monotapes. $100.00. 1958 VM record changer, plays all four speeds G.E carrie with 6 watt controls, G.E pre-amp and tone controls. $20.00. Contact Michael Engle at Stouffer Place, Bldg. 9. Apt. 2 anytime after 6 p.m. No phone. 4-8
1756 BUICK CENTURY, four door, power brakes and steering. Naval officer in green goggles. American Army 22 pistol, holster, extra claim, 1,800 rounds ammunition. Call VI 3-0483
RCA STEREOPHONIC M O N A U R L A
TAPE PLAYER, 1958 model. like new,
includes $20, now only $160.
includes $89 worth of stereo tape free.
Call VI 3-1647.
4-9
PFAFF SEWING MACHINE, almost new,
beautiful cabinet model. Purchase price,
$368. $100. $100. Makes button
sizes, them stitches, embroidery.
V-3-7830 after 5 p.m.
4-9
ARGUS 300 SLIDE PROJECTOR, 35mm,
set holders, 48mm set holders,
pet holders, 54mm. Call VI 3-9466. 4-7
POST SLIDE RULE with leather case
18" x 24" x 3.5"
most new $17.50 Coll. VI 3-4365 4-9
FOUR BURNER ELECTRIC STOVE AND
SYSTEMS, also platform rocker. Cail W
and Y are included.
TRIUMP TR3. 11,500 mile, one owner,
$2,395. Call VI 3-8917.
4-9
MISCELLANEOUS
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
BEVERACES - All kinds of slips-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags Plicnic, party supplies tent, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYFING: Fast, accurate, dependable, a regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, V 3,-8660. t
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a senior student-faculty rate. Call VI 0124.
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secure
trial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. t
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 stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for pets. Complete lines of 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, toys; pet supplies; blankets, etc... Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-292. Welcome. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc.General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, III 3-4328
VTING: Theses and themes, Byron
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
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FINEST FLAT-TOPS, barbers, and fascinating Ernie's Barber Shop, 730
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DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS.
Titano, Nicola. Ola Smith.
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Term papers, reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs. H. J. Cosester, phone VI 3-8679. tf
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taxes. Resumes submitted. Tentation, accurate work. CA. VI 3-1240.
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TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
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4.24
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4-24
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
A VERY BEWITCHING COMEDY ABOUT AN ENCHANTING SUBJECT- SEX
JAMES STEWART as The Vanishing American—a bachelor
CANADIAN
KIM NOVAK
TAYLOR JOHNSON
as a well-stacked girl who can't blush — no matter what or how often he tries
---
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents
BELL BOOK AND CANDLE
TECHNICOLOR
popular Cover Girl (Weird Tales, etc.)
co-starring JACK LEMMON
He's a bongo buff with a Congo beat!
ERNIE KOVACS
as a character's character, a lush's lush, a riot's riot
JIM COTZMAN
HERMIONE GINGOLD
LAST TIME IN A WORLD OF MULTIPLICATION
ELSA LANCHESTER another popular Cover Girl (Harper's Bizarre, etc.)
ELSA LANCHESTER
PLEASE REFER TO THE OWNER FOR A LISTING.
JANICE RULE
Tonite and Then It Moves to the Varsity "Rio Bravo"
EXTRA! CARTOON NEWS
—ex-deb who keeps coming out in all the right places
Shows on Sat. 2:00, 7:00, 9:00
Shows Sun. 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30
GRANADA
THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788
Starts Saturday For 1 Week!
---
University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Friday. April 3, 1959
KU Disaster Plan
The University has developed a disaster plan to be followed in the event a tornado or other disaster should threaten or strike the campus. Here is the plan:
Warning
Warning Signal—Four short blasts on whistles
University buildings—Classes will be dismissed; walk (don't run) to sheltered areas on lower floors of permanent buildings.
Living Units-Be sure roommate and neighboring roomers are awake and on their feet; move at once to previously determined safe areas to be named by units.
Instructions
1. Keep calm.
2. Keep cars off the streets and highways.
3. Avoid electrical wiring and appliances in dampened areas.
4. Do not move to disaster areas unless directed to do so by authorized persons.
5. Do not use telephone except for extreme emergency.
6. Do not use open flame (matches, candles, lighters) in disaster area until you have checked for escaping gas and other inflammables.
The all clear signal will be sounded with one long blast on whistles.
AGI Emphasizes Work, Housing
(Continued from Page 1.)
system of communication between the individual and the student council. full 'representation' will cease to be just and ideal.
"A student council can and should have a great influence in the policy making of the University as a
10
Jane Dean
whole. Within the realm of the numerous functions of the council, lie many duties and obligations which are either unfinished or untouched.
"Our responsibility is here and only by taking first things first can student action be visible and concrete," she concluded.
Radio Programs KANU
7:00 Music from Mt. Oread: "Symphony No. 1 for Orchestra" by John Pozdro, Associate Professor of Music Theory
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Sonata in A Major for Violin and Piano" by Franck
7:30 Keyboard Concert, Organ:
"Organ Sonata No. 6 in D Minor,
Op. 65" by Mendelssohn
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air: Our American Music
9:00 Opera Is My Hobby: "Al-cese" by Gluck
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
91.5 MC
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Spring Tune-Up Time
Now is the time to have your car checked at
Harrell Texaco 9th & Miss.
SPECIAL Until April 15
with lady assistant and operator 1022 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-2132
(Above Vicker's China & Gift Shop)
with lady assistant and operator
Regular $4.00 massage ---- now $2.50
Regular $2.00 steam bath -- now 1.00
Here's a healthful and relaxing way to ease off some of those extra pounds you may have gained this winter. Great for muscle tone and weight control.
LEW ORIGER, Professional Masseur
Radio Programs KUOK
6:15 "Mainstreet Melodies," Cliff Tatham.
Dancing
Tonight
6:00 Sign On
8:05 The Dave Holman Show
9:05 "The Big Beat," Harold Hollis
10:05 Moonglow, Bob Smith
12:19 Sign Off
KUOK News—6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11:55 Weather every 30 minutes
Channel 63 on the dial at Corbin-North,
Grace Pearson, Douthart, Carruth-O'Leary, Joseph R. Pearson halls, and
Delta Sigma Phi
Cold drinks and music at old prices
12:00 Sign Off
SHAMROCK INN (Old Silver Wheel) Highway No.10 Bypass-DeSoto, Kansas—1/2 Mile West off Highway 10
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Jerry Marcus
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 tobacco has never been equalled for rich flavor and easygoing mildness. The best tobacco makes the best smoke.
"I'd walk a mile for a Camel!"
Cast off the fads and fancy stuff ..
Have a real cigarette have a CAMEL
CAMEL
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BLEND
CIGARETTES
CHOICE QUALITY
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B. $ ^{7} $ Reynolds Tob, Co., Winton-Salem, N.C
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
"JUST MINUTES AWAY FROM THE CAMPUS"
9th & Iowa
150-Car Free Parking
THE LAUNDROMAT- THE ANSWER TO THE LAUNDRY PROBLEM
- Completely "Do-it-yourself" (coin metered)
25c
- Fast (30 minutes)
- Open 24 hours a day (7 days a week)
- Washing and Drying (full treatment)
25c
HILLCREST BARBER SHOP for haircuts with that "Professional Touch" RANEY HILLCREST DRUG ● Luncheonette ● Cosmetics ● Fountain JAYHAWK CLEANERS & LAUNDRY We Pick Up & Deliver 10% Off Cash & Carry
ku
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
56th Year, No.119
Monday, April 6, 1959
OH, FOR A HELICOPTER—Card games make a good pastime, especially when they enhance the local scenery. Here three suitably-clad women beautify the Alpha Delta Pi sorority sun-
deck. They are from left: Sue Carol Brown, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; DeeAnn Foley, Overland Park sophomore; and Judith E. Neil, Abilene junior.
Chamber Music Program Is Premier for Original Works
The premier performance of two works for piano and brasses and a commissioned work by composer Alan Hovhaness will be featured at a program of chamber music at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
This program is in conjunction with the First Annual Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music which opened this morning and will continue through Thursday.
The concert of previously unperformed compositions tonight will be played by members of the Fine Arts faculty and students.
The program will conclude with the "Octet to the University of Kansas, Opus 159, No 1" by Alan Hovhaness. The famous composer was commissioned by the University to write this number. Its premier was given at the music teacher's national convention in Kansas City in February. The work re
Chairmen Named for All Women's Day
Martha Crowley, Pittsburg senior, has been named chairman of the steering committee for All Women's Day, April 28.
Other members of the committee are Dana States, Dodge City sophemore, honors chairman; Joan French, Topeka freshman, and Marietta Meigs, Mission junior, program chairmen; Barbara Wilson, Wilmington, Del, senior, elections chairman; Marilyn Row, Larned junior, tea chairman; Beverly Baird, Topeka junior, fashion chairman, and Carolyn Ontjes, Hutchinson freshman, publicity chairman.
ceived excellent reviews by Kansas City critics.
"Sonata For Piano," a new composition by Robert E. Middleton of Vassar College, will be played by Marian Jarsild, assistant professor of piano. "Three Pieces for Brasses" by Arthur R. Custer, State University of Iowa, will be performed by University musicians under the direction of John Hill, instructor in music education.
Symposium orchestra in a group of orchestral readings tomorrow afternoon. Tomorrow night the University Concert Choir, under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music, will give its annual spring concert.
Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, will conduct the
The program Wednesday will be devoted to works for string quartets. Thursday evening the Symposium orchestra will present a concert of works for orchestra at 8 o'clock in the University Theatre
Campus Cops Busy With Milk, Bells,and Autos
Ronald Barnes, instructor of music history and carillonneur, reported to the campus police that he heard the Campanile bells ringing Saturday night. Police investigation disclosed no apparent illegal entry.
Ringing bells, runaway cars and chocolate milk cause campus police headaches.
The police department also received a report of an attempted entry into a milk dispenser in the basement of Marvin Hall.
Mr. Barnes called back Sunday night and reported that he had received a call from a fraternity member who said that two other members had broken into the Campanile and had taken magazines for souvenirs. The names of the men and their fraternity were not disclosed.
The break-in was reported by two buildings and grounds workers.
On Sunday night James L. Rotz, Florence sophomore, reported another bit of spring madness. He said that he had parked his car on 14th street hill, parallel to the curb west of the Wagon Wheel restaurant.
who found the machine's door held apart by a coke bottle. It was not disclosed whether any money had been taken.
While walking to the cafe he heard a crash. Looking back, he saw that his car had broken loose, rolled down the hill, side-swiped a car and hit a tree.
Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms developing west portion this evening and spreading over most of state by morning. Tomorrow partly cloudy northwest, scattered showers and thunderstorms east portion.
Weather
New System Set Primary Vote Is Tomorrow
Polls for the primary election tomorrow and Wednesday and for the general election next Tuesday and Wednesday will be in Strong Hall.
Under the new IBM elections bill there will be three polls—one in the rotunda of Strong Hall, one east of the Business Office and one west of the Registrar's Office.
There will not be a primary for all offices. There will be primaries for senior class president and secretary and sophomore class treasurer. AGI will have a primary in the College, men's dormitory, women's dormitory, sorority, and fraternity districts. Vox will have a primary in the College, unmarried-unorganized independent, men's dormitory, women's
Nurses Needle 100 at Strong
More than 100 students were 'shot' today in the rotunda of Strong Hall by a firing squad of Watkins Hospital nurses. Many more students are scheduled to go before the squad before the week is out.
The nurses are not using the customary riffles but have substituted needles to give influenza shots to volunteer students.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, who set up the firing squad, said the shots would protect students from both A and B strains of influenza.
The shots were scheduled because of a "slight increase" in respiratory infections beginning a week ago, Dr. Canuteson said.
Shots are free to students and non-students are charged $1.
Tomorrow — Marvin Hall, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.
Wednesday — Malott Hall, 9 to
11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.
The schedule for the remainder of the week:
Thursday — Military Science Building. 8 to 11 a.m.
Friday — Kansas Union, 9 to 11 am. and 1 to 3 p.m.
dormitory, sorority and fraternity districts.
The voter must first go to the basement of Strong Hall where there will be five tables arranged alphabetically. The voter must present his LD, card and pick up a dean's card. The dean's card gives the voter's name, living district, class, and school. The card will show the pollworkers which ballots to give the voter.
The voter then goes to one of the polling places and presents his dean's card and I.D. card to the first pollworker. In the primary election the voter must also present his party card.
The first pollworker will check the cards, give the voter the class officer ballot and pass the cards to the second pollworker.
The second pollworker will have a roster which the voter must sign. The pollworker will determine the voter's school district and hand the voter his school district ballot and the presidential ballot. There will be no presidential ballot for the primary.
The third pollworker will determine the voter's living district and hand the voter his living district ballot and any referendum ballots. There will be no referendum ballots for the primary election but there will be one referendum in the general election.
The third pollworker will punch the voter's I.D. card and pass the I.D. card and the dean's card to the fourth pollworker.
The fourth pollworker will check the ballots the voter has against the information on the dean's card. He will give the voter an electrographic pencil and pass the voter's I.D. card and dean's card to the election police.
Two election policemen will stand behind the ballot box. They will check the voter against the I.D. card picture and return the card to the voter.
Marko Nikezic, Yugoslavian ambassador to the United States, will visit KU Thursday and Friday. He is coming to the University as a result of an invitation extended to
Yugoslav Ambassador To Be Here This Week
Marko Nikezic
him by Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science.
Mr. Nikezic was appointed ambassador last year and has served in
Cairo and Prague. He was formerly the Deputy Mayor of Belgrade.
His schedule is as follows:
Friday — 9 a.m. Elements of Political Geography, 403 Lindley; 11 a.m. International Politics 1 St-E-Yugoslavia in World Affairs'; 4 p.m. Informative discussion with Political Science graduate students.
Mr. Nikezic will speak on "The Pole of Yugoslavia in World Politics" at 8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Skillman Improving After Hospital Care
Joe G. Skillman, campus police chief, is resting well today at Lawrence Memorial Hospital during treatment for a cardiac condition.
Chief Skillman's condition was stated as "good and improving" by the office of Dr. James W. Campbell, the attending physician. Chief Skillman entered the hospital Saturday.
It will depend upon the progress Chief Skillman makes as to how long he will remain in the hospital, Dr. Campbell's nurse said.
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 6. 1959
Practice for Disaster
A warning, four short blasts on the whistle, will be sounded, classes dismissed and students, faculty and staff will scurry to designated shelter areas.
The disaster plan developed by the University sounds good on paper, but how will it work in the event of a disaster?
We agree to the necessity of a plan to provide shelter if a disaster should strike. But should a tornado or other disaster threaten, the plan on paper will go up in the smoke of fear and confusion.
A person can be told to walk, not run, to keep calm. But when he sees a destructive tornado cloud looming towards him, instinct will cause
him to do the opposite unless he is fully aware of the exact steps he should take.
Yes, the disaster plan looks good on paper. How will it look in action? If the University is to prepare adequately for a disaster, a drill or practice should be part of the preparation.
This would mean that all of the University, including all living units, would follow out the plan at the warning whistle. The practice should not be forewarned, but performed just as in a real disaster.
Such practical preparation would reveal the flaws in the plan so they could be remedied.
Strategy of Study
Only 1 per cent of Harvard freshmen read with anything more than speed and "obedient purposelessness," was the charge made by the university's study counsel bureau director William G. Perry recently.
He said the major problem lies "in their strategy of study—a problem—which has nothing to do with the purely mechanical travel of eyes across the page." He feels very few use judgment in skipping backward and forward, using synopses and studying marginal outlines.
His statements followed a recent sample problem in which 1,500 freshmen were given 20 minutes to read a 30-page chapter from a text. The chapter had marginal notes pointing out key ideas and themes as well as a concluding half page summary in bold face type. Only 15 students either turned to the summary to preview their work or used the marginal notes as a guide.
This is a problem on practically every campus in our country including KU. And it goes beyond the freshman year.
Students do not know how to get the most out
of what they are reading or what they are studying. There has never been emphasis of any kind on such things. They are told to read an assignment. Usually they do.
Each student finds his own method of study. His habits are formed while he is still in high school. No one ever tells him how to read so usually he does not learn.
There is a reading clinic on campus but few students take advantage of it. This is not entirely their fault; few of them are actually aware that their reading habits are not what they should and could be.
The clinic attempts to teach a student to read faster and to concentrate on what he is reading. Many students feel that this would be a waste of time and that they can teach themselves anything they could learn in the clinic. Possibly some students could but it would be easier and faster or the most students to learn under the guidance of the clinic.
Students would find that the few hours spent at the reading clinic would pay off in faster reading and better grades.
— Martha Crosier
Jolly
theater
theater Allen Lehote
ALICE LANGE
By John Husar
The warm, free lines of a poet remembering boyhood were delivered in a voice reminiscent of the author last Friday in the University Theatre.
The program, "A Boy Growing Up," was taken from the writings of the late Welsh poet and story-teller, Dylan Thomas. His "voice," or reader, belonged to a fellow-countryman, playwright and actor Emlyn Williams.
Mr. Williams, who is touring the country with his successful experiment of adapting Thomas' writings to the theater, appeared here on the University Concert Course. Unfortunately, only a few hundred patrons attended his majestic performance.
Mr. Williams' method is simple. He walks on stage, introduces the poet, and beings speaking. Soon one becomes aware that he is the poet, that the lines do not belong to the actor, but are those lines which countless people have learned to love in the name of Dylan Thomas.
Most of the sketches are put into absorbing running stories. In the program's first part, Mr. Williams easily blends Thomas' "Memories of Childhood" with a hilarious item about his long-winded "Cousin Gwilym," and a dreamy account of an idyllic day on the sea-shore between the young artist-to-be and an older companion.
The second part begins with a reading of a poem, "The Hand," amid some clever light and shadow effects. Mr. Williams then delivers a vividly funny episode taken from three stories concerning Thomas' school-days, a fight and a friendship.
The final segment relates Thomas' "Self-Portrait" and a long story about his London dream, "Adventures in the Skin Trade."
Thomas, who died in 1953, is already renowned for the products of his short. 39-year life. His prose and poetry dwell on many bits of living. Humor, love, pity, sarcasm are reflected in most writers. Thomas' exception is his delightfully original and thought-provoking style. His powerful expressions tug at the mind and force it to remember and to see. His lines are felt and absorbed, never merely heard.
But it is the acting powers of Mr. Williams which brings Thomas' words to life. Through art the artist's creations are given the urgency of reality. Mr. Williams' use of technicalities and physical and vocal nuances exactingly fit the moods of each piece. Yet, at the curtain call, he humbly gave homage to Thomas, symbolically saluting his books.
This was the second work of Dylan Thomas given here this season. The first was an Experimental Theatre version of his radio play "Under Milkwood" last fall. Both have confirmed the need for more frequent public display of this master's beautiful gifts.
Colleges Hide 'Iron Curtain' Behind Grey Flannel
By Barbara Asbury
Perhaps there was a short time when we could stretch our necks, wave our arms and scream "unjust!" "unfair!" at the activities of the people behind the Iron Curtain and then retreat safely behind our own Gray Flannel one, secure in the knowledge that we had diverted the eyes of the world for a while.
This is no longer so, and we have found that we cannot call attention to others for very long before we start calling attention to ourselves.
The realization that a problem exists and is a result of ignorance is one thing, however. Doing something about it is quite another, for it soon becomes apparent that pledging Negro students within the sorority or fraternity is not answering the problem, but magnifying it.
Our campuses have their own "Iron Curtains." Perhaps the most glaring example is the confusion over whether or not to pledge Negroes to sororities and fraternities. We may hide our "Iron Curtain" attitudes toward racial prejudice behind the gray flannel of respectability and ignorance, but they are there.
The world is now looking to our country for an example of justice and tolerance. What are we showing them? What do we as a campus community show them?
Let us take this problem of segregation against Negroes in sororities and fraternities. That it is a product of ignorance (meaning lack of understanding or lack of awareness) is being recognized by more and more college and university students.
We need, therefore, to do some re-thinking of our values. This is not, however, an excuse for sitting back and waiting for the next guy to start.
As an undergraduate on an eastern campus, I was a member of
the first sorority there to begin pledging Negroes. It was a difficult move, and needless to say we began with much fear and trembling as would any organization that realizes that it is the first to break "tradition."
Our fear was not of what we would get in terms of the Negro students, because we knew that we could pledge some really top girls. No, our fear was "what will the others think?"; "what will happen
to our date rating?" "how will we fare in the competitions?" and all of the other petty things we let stand between ourselves and what we feel is right and real.
After we had made our decision, however, we sallied forth with all of the vim, vigor, and ambiguity of youth. Our first problem became evident immediately. Were we doing this just because we thought we should, or because we really wanted to?
1
BARBABA ASBURY, Philipburgh, Pa., graduate student and counselor to Lutheran students.
If the first was our reason, both our Negro pledges and our white activities were going to have trouble. Self-inflicted martyrdom is neither pretty nor practical, and we did not want the girls to feel as though we were doing them a special favor.
How were we looked upon by the other sororites? Like we had cut our throats and were standing out in the middle of Main Street for a public bleeding. When the furor died down and we were still stand-ing, however, they began to re-consider. Our Negro pledges had to take some decision from the other sororites, but they came through like the troopers we knew they were.
It took a lot of flexibility and a lot of compassion on the part of both the actives and the pledge class.
What criteria should we use to judge our Negro pledges? This was fairly simple: personality, appearance, the same as we used for everyone else. Who cares whether they bought it at Saks Fifth Ave.? Do they keep it clean?
Did we lose some of the pledges we wanted because we were pledging Negroes? Not to the extent we had feared, and yet one must always leave the foolish behind in the search for wisdom.
Dating presented additional problems, but we took our cues from our Negro girls. Here they put their foot down and said that they would not date white students.
Many were dating Negro students and did not have any intention of damaging this relationship. We did not encourage inter-racial dating or discourage it. When we had four dances with the fraternities on campus our Negro girls were permitted to bring their own dates.
Our position in the competitions did sufficer. Perhaps, this was because 905 would not let it suffer. We hurried our efforts on everything. We placed first in the Greek
Sing, and second in the Homecoming Queen contest.
Many other problems arose among our girls and with other organizations, but we found that they could be solved by clear thinking and a willingness to talk openly about them.
To say that such integration is easy is to misunderstand the whole situation. It is not easy. It takes a lot of thought, strength and praver on the part of all concerned.
If we, the intelligentsia, of this, a declared Christian nation, cannot apply the principles upon which it is based, who will? And if we will, we cannot begin next year, or even next door, but where we are, as we are, and as much as we humanly can.
Dailu hansan UNIVERSITY OF PEKTS
University of Kansas student newspaper
briveweek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
trieweek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Extension 711, news room Business 376, business office
EXTERNAL
Maryland Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Rep-
resented by National Advertising Service,
420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.
News service: www.advertising-newyork.com.
International subscription rates: $3 a
week or $4.50 a year. Published in
Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during
the University year except Saturdays
and Sundays. University, Examination
and examination. Entered as second
college letter Sept. 17, 1910, at
March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker ... Managing Editor
Al Jones, John Husar, Jack Harrison,
Jim Grey, Jack Mausten and Carol Allen.
Gecko-City Editors; George DeBord and
Daude Yecom, Co-Sports Editors;
Samantha Grey, Connie O'Connor,
An Assistant Society Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill F. Kane Business Manager
Robert Hads Accounting Manager;
Howard Young Classical Advertiser;
William W. Kane William F. Kane, Promotion
Manager; Paul Nielsen, Circula-
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swainson and Martha Crosser, Co-
Editorial Editors; Robert Harwl, Asso-
cate Editorial Editor.
Monday. April 6. 1959
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Hard Work Pays Off for 1200 Scholars
Bv Jim Trotter
(Editor's Note: This is the first of a series of four articles on scholarships at KU. The other articles will deal with departmental awards, scholarship halls and athletic scholarships.)
Almost 1,200 scholarships are available to students attending the University. Most of these awards are presented by Schools and departments.
The office of Aids and Awards coordinates 98 per cent of the scholarships awarded yearly by the various departments. Spencer E. Martin is director of aids and awards.
Scholarships are awarded on the basis of need, scholastic merit or scholastic achievement. Faculty committees award the scholarships that are open.
Scholarships average about $250 per year. There are, however, many token scholarships and some which are over $1,200 per year.
Scholarship hall awards represent the largest number given out each year through the office of aids and awards. There are a total of 450 of these grants awarded annually.
Next in line are the athletic scholarships, with a total of 147 students receiving such assistance. Only 27 of these are on scholastic scholarships while the remaining 120 students receive grants because of their athletic abilities.
Civic organizations contribute about 150 awards each year. Such scholarships go to recipients selected by the organization. Stipends vary from $25 to $800, according to Mr. Martin.
General scholarships are awarded by the University. A stipend of $200 goes with a general scholarship, which is open to students in all fields of study. A 2.0 grade point average is normally required for these scholarships.
The School of Engineering leads in departmental scholarships with about 70.
Upperclassmen are considered first in the awarding of general scholarships, Mr. Martin said. He said that 125 of these scholarships are awarded each year.
Following are the School of Fine Arts with 60, School of Business with 15, School of Journalism with 12. School of Education with
5. and the School of Pharmacy with 4.
Scholarships listed in the University catalog are usually awarded each year. Only one has not been given out this year. It is an El Dorado high school student planning to major in either medicine or engineering.
awards. There are 67 Summerfield scholars and 43 Watkins scholars now on campus.
Another major group of scholarships are the Elizabeth M. Watkins and Solon Summerfield
High school students are recommended for these awards by their principals. The applicants are tested and the scholarships awarded to the top scorers. Stipends range from a token to a full scholarship of $1,250 a year, depending upon the need of the student.
Jack Stephens Wins Zoology Honor Award
T. Charles Helvey, visiting professor of radiation biophysics, will speak on "Operations on Single Cells." The meeting is open to the public.
Jack D. Stephens, Oklahoma City senior, will be presented a Zoology Academic Honor award at the Zoology Club meeting tomorrow night at 7:30 in 101 Snow.
The award is given to the student with the highest grade in general zoology each semester. Charles Leone, associate professor of zoology, will make the presentation.
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---
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 6, 1959
Alley's 270 Peg Best Ever in U.S.
After heaving the javelin 270-feet $ _{1/2} $ -inches in the Texas Relays to smash the existing American and Intercollegiate records, Bill Alley said he thinks he can throw farther.
The 217-pound KU junior, who was voted the outstanding athlete in the Relays, says his goal is to win the Olympics. The world's record is held by Norway's Egil Danielsen at 281 feet, 2 inches.
Last month Alley threw a standard hand-grenade 298-6 in a demonstration for KU ROTC officers.
"A grenade weighs three pounds. A javelin weighs almost half as much. This leads me to believe it can be thrown 300 feet." Alley said.
His toss bettered the previous American record set by Franklin Held of the San Francisco Olympic Club by $1_{1/2}$ inches. It also topped the collegiate record of 257-feet 1-inch set by John Fromm of Pacific Lutheran in 1958.
The Jayhawker team was named the best team in the Texas Relays as the 'eligible and able dozen' tied their Texas hosts for the most points of the University Class with 58 points.
Kansas won the four-mile relay and the 400-meter hurdles Saturday and was also victorious in the broad jump and sprint medley titles on Friday.
Three Kansas runners broke 4:20 in the mile; Tom Skutkta 4:16.0, Billy Mills 4:19.2 and Cliff Cushman 4:19.3. Cushman, also a half-miler, was close to Alley in the voting for the out-tending athlete.
Cushman won the 400-meter hurdles in 52.2, with Ken Sweeney of Iowa State second at 53.8.
Other University class records included a pole vault mark of 14 feet
Tennis Team Loses 3
STILLWATER, Okla. - Oklahoma State easily defeated the Kansas tennis team here Saturday, taking a 7-0 victory without losing a set. It was the fifth victory for the Cowboys this season and their 15th straight over a two-year period.
For the Jayhawkers, it was their third straight loss on the southern trip. KU lost Thursday to Wichita 7-0, and lost to Oklahoma, 6-1, Friday.
$ 8^{1 / 2} $ -inches by Jim Graham of Okla-
homa State and a mile relay of 3.10.3
set by Texas.
Eddie Southern of Texas chipped in with a 45.7 anchor quarter-mile in the University Division mile relay to equal the world's record for the distance although it cannot be considered since it was from a running start and not in a flat race.
Two records and a tie were established in the college division. Texas A. and I. set a 3:13.5 mark in the mile relay. East Texas State hit 41.0 in the 440-yard relay in the preliminaries only to lose in the finals to a 42.0 by Texas A. and I. when the first runner, John West pulled a muscle.
Alley Hurls Grenade Past World Record
Cadet Sgt. F. W. Alley, KU trackman, has made a strong bid for a new world record for throwing the U. S. Army hand grenade
Alley, a javelin specialist with Olympic game aspirations, used his javelin technique to hurl a grenade 298 ft. $47^{\frac{1}{2}}$ in. He heaved the handtype missile from one goal line of Memorial Stadium football field toward the other. Me missed the opposite goal line by $19^{\frac{1}{2}}$ in.
When asked if he had thrown as hard as he could, Alley replied, "I have not thrown my best. I warmed up with the grenade out of curiosity and conviction that I could better the record at Ft. Benning, Ga., infantry school." The record throw is 280 feet.
Trojans Capture AAU Swim Title
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — (UPI) — It's Southern California by an eyelash over Michigan in their strictly unofficial battle for the national swimming championship.
Led by triple winner Murray Rose of Australia, the Southern Cal Trojans ran away with the Men's National AAU swimming crown in the tournament that concluded here Saturday night, accounting for five of the 15 records set and scoring 62 points to 29 for the runner-up New Haven Swim Club. Michigan won the NCAA championship last week. Southern California, under suspension, wasn't eligible to compete in that tourney.
That situation evened up here because Michigan was barred by Big Ten conference rules from competing in the AAU tourney as a team. Swimming as individuals, the Wolverines scored 60 points—two less than Southern Cal.
Rose was the big gun for the Trojans, winning three individual championships. He also took the individual scoring trophy with a 21-point total. Rose captured the 1500-meter, 440-yard, and 220-yard freestyle events. He set a new American and meet record in the 440 Saturday with a brilliant 4:18.8 clocking.
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KU Nine Opens With 24-8 Rout of Forbes
Kansas struck early in opening its 1959 baseball season here Friday with a 24-8 rout of Forbes Air Base.
The Forbes pitchers were all too eager to help the Jayhawkers to their first victory as the Topeka moundsmen walked 16 and threw eight wild pitches.
Forbes also booted the ball 10 times. The Jayhawkers were on hand almost every time to take advantage of the breaks.
Centerfielder Bob Marshall swung the big bat for KU as he rapped out a single, a double, and a triple, to drive home six runs.
The first inning spelled the downfall for Forbes, as KU pushed across 12 runs before the side was retired. After that the game was as good as over but the Jayhawkers wouldn't let up and they brought in six more tallies in the second inning.
Tom Holler started on the hill for KU and struck out 10 men and allowed only six hits in the five and two-thirds innings he pitched. Holler weakened in the sixth and was bailed out by Bill Clinkenbeard. Clinkenbeard struck out three and
gave up no hits in his one and a third inning stint.
The game was called at the end of seven innings by agreement.
Clinkenbeard summed up his feelings of the game by saying, "There'll be a lot rougher games."
The ball team plays Forbes again today, this time in Topeka. Joe Dooolittle is the likely starting choice for the Jayhawkers.
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. — (UPI) There are only four more days until the Athletics arrive in Kansas City for the start of the 1959 season.
The A's open with three games against Cleveland at Municipal Stadium in Kansas City, beginning Friday afternoon. The Saturday and Sunday games following are also afternooners.
A's Open Friday Against Cleveland
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KU Students Get Bouquets For Good Driving, Conduct
The proof is in the eating when it comes to judging the behavior of KU students.
Waitress Jean Young said, "About two years ago the students weren't so good. This year it's a lot different. They used to ruin a lot of things, but now they act very nice."
Two Deluxe Cafe waitresses said that this year's group of students is better disciplined than in the past.
A fellow worker at the same cafe, Dottie Fettery, echoed her remarks:
"If you meet the kids half way, they treat you all right. This year is unusual. They are all acting good. Every year is a little bit different."
Poll Conduct and Driving Of the 10 people interviewed in a Daily Kansan poll none had a poor opinion of the students as a group concerning student conduct and driving habits.
Poll Conduct and Driving
Kenneth Walker, a life insurance underwriter, said:
"I think KU students act little differently from other citizens. They do all right. If you go a little
John C. Emick, vice president of Anchor Savings and Loan, said:
younger—into the high school set— you get some hotrodding."
"I have a generally good opinion of college students. They act all right in public. Out of as many students as you have at the University, a few are bound to need a little kicking around, but they are OK as a class."
Monday, April 6, 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 5
Asked his opinion of University students, Harvey Owens, a retired Lawrence resident, had a short, terse comment.
"I don't see anything out of the way about them."
Students Better Drivers
Students Better Drivers Billy Hunsinger, owner-operator of the Billy Hunsinger Music Co., said:
"I think they act about average. They drive more carefully and observe the safety regulations more carefully than the average person.
"I think the big problem in driving is age, so college students have the advantage."
A Lawrence secretary, Miss Mary
Cameron, agreed with Mr. Hunsinger. She said:
"I think they're quicker (in reaction time) than grown people so they do a better job of driving. There are some instances where they are careless, but generally they know where they are going."
Nurse Likes Students
Mrs. Louise Brown, a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said:
"All of the students I know have been very good. I think they're a nice bunch of people."
A representative of the Kansas Public Service Co., O. P. Barber, said he thinks college students are all right as a class.
"At times they don't pay attention to signs, but I think it is because they are new here. They are not any worse than anyone else, as a class," he said.
F. C. Buchholtz, an engineer for the buildings and grounds department of the University, said he thinks students must be classed individually.
MEXICO CITY COLLEGE
Summer Quarter June 22-Aug.28
"It depends on the individual. You can't class college students as a group. Some are good, others bad."
"Silent Night, Holy Night" was written on Christmas Eve in 1818 by an Austrian priest named Joseph Mohr in the village of Oberdorf.
Summer Quarter June 22-Aug. 28
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Latin American Workshop . . June 22 - July 31
Fall Quarter . . . Oct. 6 - Dec. 18
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Page-6
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 6, 195
02.52
DELEGATES CONFER—Looking over a committee report are three delegates to the Conference on Inter-Group Relations held in the Kansas Union this weekend. Left to right are Veronica Fleming, Mount St. Scholastica, Atchinson; Bana Kartasasmita, Wichita University, and Laurian Seeber, Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y., senior and general chairman of the conference.
Human Relations Is Top World Problem
Human relations is the number one problem of our world today.
This was the opinion expressed Saturday at the College Conference on Intergroup Relations by Edward Olsen, associate director of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Mr. Olsen said that the greatest challenge that has ever confronted mankind lies upon the present generation.
"Human relations is your new frontier." Mr. Olsen told delegates at the conference in the Kansas Union.
"The most important problem in America today is that of learning to live together with different backgrounds, races, and religions," Olsen said.
"We have to learn to live with differences willingly and enthusiastically. We should look to the biases on our own campuses and in our own communities," he said.
"Social explosions have come out of the times in which we live," Mr. Olsen said.
He added that there are dominating trends in our lifetime which focus on the number one problem of today, human relations.
"These are the nuclear space age, the Little Rock crisis, and the fact that democracy is on trial as a way of life," said Mr. Olsen.
"The Little Rock crisis was a modern tragedy, a horrible symbol of the kind of inhuman relations which exist all over the country
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when dominating people seek to control the weaker ones," Mr. Olsen said.
He said that any act of discrimination without regard to the merit of the individual in the light of these three factors is a blow to the foundations of democracy.
"Everyone has this disease of prejudice because everyone is born into a set of ideas." Mr. Olsen said.
"In our human relations we are so often like barbarians in white dinner jackets," he said.
Mr. Olsen said that we must recognize prejudice as a disease.
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He said that we should appraise ourselves and see what our attitudes are toward people of other races and religions.
"You should deal with people as individuals and cultivate friends in various groups," he said.
Radio Programs KUOK
Tonight
Tonight
4:00 Music for the Afternoon (Uninterrupted)
6:00 News
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 The Mike Fitzwater Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Mike Fitzwater
12:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Quintet in E-Flat Major for Piano"
7:00 Ballet Music: "Capital of the World," by Antheil.
7:30 Keyboard Concert, Harpsichord; "Five Canzoni Per Sonar," by Frescobaldi
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air: Midwest Composers' Symposium Concert
5. 00 Starlight Symphony: "Symphony No. 9 in D Minor," by Brueckner
10:00 News
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Quartet in D Major, K. 499," by Mozart
11:00
11:00 Sign Off
Dr. Murphy in Washington
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy spoke to members of the Air War College on Russian education over the weekend at Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala.
He then flew to Washington, D. C. for a meeting of the U. S. Advisory Committee on Educational Exchange.
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Official Bulletin
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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 paper to Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Baptist Student University 5:00 p.m. Dan from Florida. Bob Wyatt will speak or "Witnessing."
International Folk Dance Club. 7-8 p.m.
Jiahawk Room. Everyone invited. Girls
music.
TODAY
TOMORROW
Teachers Appointment Bureau. 117
Bailley, I.V. Payne, Carlshad, New Mexico; James C. Porterfield, Gallup, New Mexico.
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong Hall. F. M. Nolting, Lever Brothers Co. Marketing; A. W. Hebrank, Price Waterhouse & Co., Public Accounting.
Newman Club Mass. 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
breakfast following Canterbury House
Baptist Student Union, 12:30 p.m.
Differences in Long will speak on
Christian influence
Zoology Club. 7:30 p.m. 101 Snow Hall.
Dr. T. C. Helvey, "Operations on Single Cells." Illustrated with slides. Public invited.
WEDNESDAY
Business Placement Bureau. 214 Strong Hall. J. R. Porn, Continental Can Co.
Sales; Murray Davis, Northwestern Natl. Life Ins., Life Underwriters.
Episcopal Morning Prayer and Communion, same as Tues.
Newman Club, same as Tuesday.
El Aleno, 4 p. 11. Fraser, Robert
- Portraits
Weddings
- Application Photos
- Engagements
HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Squier, Sociology instructor, "A Mysterious Ancient Mexican Civilization." Illustrated with slides. All are welcome.
Attendance required 11am - 5:53pm p.m.
WITH FRATERNITY CRESTS Navy, Blue, Gray, Maroon $25.95 all wool imported, all stock sizes
Humanities Forum. 305 Union. Professor Peter J. Caws, assistant professor of philosophy, will read a paper entitled, "The Case for Metaphysics."
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Student to National Meet
Julian Massoth, Piqua sophomore, will attend the 1959 National Convention of Waddell and Reed, Inc., today and tomorrow in Kansas City, Mo. He will be the Kansas representative of the firm, which is the distributor of United Funds, Inc.
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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 billoring. all ads must be called or brought to the Daily University Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
KHAKI JACKET, warm-up type "Swiss"
stadium March 21, Call VI 2-0216.
stadium March 21, Call VI 2-0216.
POST VERSALOG SLIDERULE in Mauolt, D. M. Lovell stamped on side, reward offered. Call EN 2-2528, Kansas City. 4-7
PALE GREEN CARDIGAN, lady's, lost Thursday noon. Call extension 324 or turn it into lost and found in the Kansan Business Office. 4-8
FOUND
COIN PURSE, on Memorial Drive. Call Extension 534 or call at 7 Strong. Anx BX
MISCELLANEOUS
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations to special student-faculty rate. Call VI 3-7t
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic. Ice locker. Ivant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-3030.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secret-
trial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
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 stools of cages, stands, and accessories for all pets. Complete lists of Exotic and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal, stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. erything for dogs and cats; baskets, toys, leather, grooming tools, sweaters, blankets. Everything in the pet district. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone I-3 9229. Welcome. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10213½ Mass
Swedish massage, steam cabin,
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TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers
theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast.
error free service, free pick up and
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tt
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood. VI 3-1893. 716t. Teen
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. ti
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers reports, theses. Standard rates. Mrs.H. J. Cossetter, phone VI 3-8679. tf
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. ph. VI 3-6838. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable attest eight years of academic work. Carry out academic work. Carry VI 3-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Formals, wedging gowns, etc. Ola Smith
941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263. t
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadi Motors, 318 East 17. Phone VI 3-4850 4-24
EXPERIENCED white woman wants kitchen work or house work, also sewing and alterations. Call VI 3-5978 or VI 2-4445.
UPHOLSTERING. REFINISHING. TREE
estimates, pickup and delivery. Lane's
Furniture Repair. 311 Earl 7th. VI 3-2776.
5-10
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing, thesis term notes etc. Have electric typewriter. Call VI 3-6249. 4-17
WANTED
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Call
MI 3-5297 after 5 p.m. tt
WANTED: to lease a home with three bedrooms and bath near KU. If possible, would prefer basement and extra rooms. Not matched or partly furnished. Call VI 3-1448. 4-9
FOR SALE
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7 AUSTIN HEALEY, radio, heater, elec-
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DAFFOLDS, 25 cents, a dozen, no de-
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POST SLIDE RULE with leather case and belt attachment, in original box. Almost new, $17.50. Call VI 3-4368. 4-9
RCA STEREO TAPE PLAYER, plays both monaural and stereo tapes, macragyn finish with one set of built-in speakers. Will sell with two stereo and three monatapes. $100.00. 1958 VM record changer, plays all four speeds. 200 watt amplifier with G.E. pre-amp and tone controls. $20.00. Contact Michael Engle at Stouffe Place. Bldg. 9. Apt. 2 anytime after 6 p.m. No phone. 4-8
COLT FRONTIER 38-40 revolver, $65
Lugers, $40,-$45 and 328 automatics,
tumors and wounds.
Come in and look at Peter Duer-
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1956 BUICK CENTURY, four door, power brakes and steering. Naval officer's blues, greens, gabs, size 37-28 medium-long, black uniform, 1,500 rounds ammunition. Call Vi I 3-0435.
HOUSE AND LOT, 1518 Meadow Lane. just west of the field house, lot size is 10x5162 in Clarkson Grimview Place. both entrances have a double storeys, shrubs and perennials. Two level house, entrance level contains two bedrooms with built in chests of drawers, both having exhaust and fireplaces. Large living area with good burning fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking Wakara villa surroundings. Three-quarter ton air conditioner. Balcony, screen porch and flagstone terrace. Lower level has an extra large bedroom with big fireplace. Wall protection feature opens onto big patio surrounded by flower garden. Basement area back of this room consists of a family room with big fireplace and baby proof protection feature opens onto big patio surrounded by flower garden. Three-quarter inch redwood slab wall case with three fireplaces. Baby safety interior crete foundation and footing. Call V 3-1782 for appointment.
RCA STEREOPHONIC M O N A U R A L
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Original price: $200, now only $160. Price:
Originally sold on stereo tapes of stereo
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Monday, April 6, 1959
Exposition Theme To Be 'Pioneering'
"Pioneering in Engineering" will be the theme of the 39th annual engineering exposition April 17-18 commemorating the 100th anniversary of the oil industry.
Two oil derricks will be built in front of Marvin Hall, showing the earliest and latest type structures. In charge of this project is Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity.
"Two trophies will be given by the engineering council—one for the best academic display and one for the best original display. Theta Tau will present a trophy for the best over-all display. In the past, this was the only trophy awarded," he said.
Myron Bernitz, Eudora senior and publicity chairman for the Exposition, said that three trophies will be awarded for top exhibits this year instead of one.
Jack Fry, Augusta Junior and general chairman of the exposition, said that 14 organizations and departments will build displays, with each operating on a budget of $60.
The more than 25,000 visitors expected to attend the exposition will see a preview of the new nuclear reactor to be built next fall.
"The chemical engineering department is going to build a scale model of the nuclear reactor that will be built here next fall," Fry said. "Also, laboratory equipment will be set up that will display the unit operation of materials being used in the reactor," he said.
AFROTC Cadets Sport New Insignias
New insignias worn by KU AFROTC cadets today will mark the first noticeable decorative change in military dress in several years.
The new insignias distinguish the commissioned and non-commissioned officers of the AFROTC detachment. The commissioned officers' badge is small with a blue background. The non-commissioned officers' insignia depicts a burning torch of knowledge and the chevrons.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
The 14 different departments that will build displays and their chairmen are:
Aeronautical engineering, Edward L. Martin, Kansas City, Mo; senior; architecture, William H. Kuhns, Enid, Okla., junior; chemical engineering, Robert D. Filbert, Lawrence senior; civil engineering, Jack Ling, Lawrence senior; electrical engineering, Bernard Halliwell, Lawrence senior; engineering manufacturing processes, Joseph A. Bockenstette, Hiawata sophomore.
Engineering physics, Ernest R. Carlson, Ellinwood senior; geological engineering, Elwin Miller, Topeka senior and Leaman Harris, Cunningham senior; mechanical engineering, John Heimovics, Prairie Village junior; mining and metal engineering, Charlie Fatno, Overland Park senior; petroleum engineering, Dick Davis, Lawrence senior; mathematics club, Spencer Dickson, Topeka junior; and the industrial design department.
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Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts, will receive a citation for his achievement at the 109th commencement of the University of Rochester on June 7.
Gorton to Receive Rochester U. Citation
Dean Gorton has been the head of the KU School of Fine Arts since 1950. He holds bachelor's.
master's and doctor's degrees from the Eastman School of Music.
Before coming to KU, Dean Gorton was director of the Ohio University School of Music and chairman of the piano departments at the University of Texas and Memphis College of Music.
Dean Gorton is a past president of the Kansas Music Teachers Association and currently is serving as president of the National Association of Schools of Music and as a member of the executive committee of the Music Teachers National Association.
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Only 27 KU Athletes Hold Academic Awards
(Editors' Note: This is the second in a series of four articles on scholarship at KU. The other articles will deal with departmental awards and scholarship halls.)
By Jim Trotter
A study of scholarships at the University reveals that of the 157 athletes holding athletic scholarships, only 17 per cent have scholastic awards.
Recently two famous educators spoke out against athletic scholarships. The remarks of A. Whitney Griswold, president of Yale University, have been quoted a number of times.
"The athletic scholarship program of American colleges and universities is one of the greatest educational swindles ever perpetrated on American youth." Dr. Griswold said.
Just last week, Robert Hutchins, president of the Fund for the Republic and former chancellor of the University of Chicago labeled athletic scholarships "ridiculous phenomena" during a speech in Denver.
"There are even some people who say that if we destroyed athletics in our schools, we would destroy the country's entire educational system," Dr. Hutchins stated.
Of the 157 KU athletics holding scholarships, only 27 have a scholastic award. These 27 have Stansbury scholarships. The amount given to each scholar is determined by the Big Eight conference.
The Stansbury scholarship includes money for all fees, books, room and board, and incidentals. The scholars must maintain a 1.76 grade point average to keep their scholarships.
The remaining 130 students on athletic scholarships at the University are supported by grants from the John Q. Outland Fund.
Stansbury scholars and the Outland award-holders receive the same stipends.
Out-of-state athletes receive $396 for tuition and Kansas athletes receive $206. All receive $55 for books. $450 for board, $180 for room and $135 for incidentals per year.
This amounts to a yearly total of $1.216 for out-of-state athletes and
$1,026 for Kansas athletes on full scholarship.
Athletes on partial scholarships receive either a combination of two divisions or get only one. For example, one athlete may receive an allowance for books only while another may get only his fees paid.
A breakdown of the number of scholarships awarded in each sport shows that the football department controls over half the total varsity scholarships.
Sport-by-sport, the scholarship lineup looks like this;
Football 81
Track 32
Basketball 23
Swimming 9
Baseball 7
Golf 3
Tennis 2
Total ... 157
Athletic scholarships are awarded by the Committee on Aids and Awards. The coaches only recommend certain athletes, listing the amount of money they would like to see the boy have.
The committee checks all recommendations for Big Eight eligibility and then makes its decision.
"We have lost very few people on athletic scholarships the past few years because of bad grades. The percentage of flunk-outs is very low," Spencer Martin, director of Aids and Awards, said.
Every penny spent on athletic scholarships is on file in the office of Aids and Awards, he said.
The U. S. Coast Guard cutter Storis is standing off Ider Point at Unalaska Island today, awaiting rendezvous with a Russian vessel to aid a Soviet fisherman with "broken arms and legs."
Noon Primary Daily hansan Vote Is 253 56th Year, No.120 LAWRENCE, KANSAS
At noon today 253 students had voted in the primary election. Of these, 165 voted in the Vox ticket and 80 voted the AGI ballots. Eight students did not vote in a party primary.
Dave Wilson, Kansas City Mo., senior and chairman of the ASC elections committee, predicted a very light vote in the primary.
"I'd be well pleased if we'd get anywhere near 1,000 voters" he said.
"I expect the primary vote to be very light since the voting is all in one area and some people are not aware of this yet. Also, both parties are running nearly a closed primary and there are primaries for only three class offices," he said.
The decision to run by the 83-year-old West German leader means he will have to give up the powerful post of Chancellor he has held for the past 10 years for one with little more than symbolic worth.
Science Makes Atomic Energy Into Electricity
Rv United Press International
By United Press International The first conversion of atomic energy to electric power was announced today by Los Alamos N. M., scientists.
The experiment may mean a "revolution in the design of future fission reactors and the ultimate use of atomic energy," a spokesman said. The project was carried out by the University of California for the Atomic Energy Commission
Also in the science field is a report of a successful 5,000 mile test flight by the first combat-type intercontinental Snark.
The swept-wing Snark, launched at Cape Canaveral, Fla., followed the prescribed flight plan on an eight hour hop to Asscension Island, halfway between Brazil and Africa
The president of the lower house of Parliament said Adenauer was nominated unanimously by a 60-member party committee this morning.
In Bonn, Germany, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has accepted the nomination of his Christian Democratic Union for the presidency of West Germany.
The weapon could strike deep into Russia from the Presque Isle site, a spokesman said.
Wilson said the voting under the new IBM system is going smoothly.
"When we get some heavy voting we can find where the kinks are and work them out," he said.
Wilson said the elections committee wrote the National Student Assn. for information about schools that use an IBM voting system.
"The only other school they know of that uses this system is Southern California. As far as we know we are the first school in the midwest and the second school in the country to adopt this system," he said.
"I also think it will go a little slower because all polls are in the same building. When everyone gets used to the system it will be a lot better," he said.
A pollworker, Charles Burin, Imperial, Pa., freshman, said he thinks voting is going a little slower because of the newness of the system.
The polls will close today at 5 p.m. and open tomorrow at 8 a.m.
"We were encouraged to keep our groups smaller and to revise our pledge training programs into what he termed 'twentieth century' programs. He said he thought all fraternities should do away with any form of hazing and give the pledges more time for study." Jones said.
Murphy Cites Greek Policy
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told members of the Inter-Fraternity Council last night that the University is trying to strengthen sororities and fraternities.
Dick Jones, McPherson senior and president of the IFC, said that Chancellor Murphy called a news story which appeared in the Daily Kansan March 16 headlined "Murphy Slams Greeks' Bias," misleading.
Jones said the chancellor emphasized the right of fraternities to select the people with whom they wished to live but added that since they were selective groups they should strive to be especially outstanding.
Considerable cloudiness through Wednesday, scattered showers and thunderstorms southeast portion. Occasional light rain elsewhere east and south portions this afternoon and most of state tonight. Rain occasionally mixed with snow extreme west tonight and southwest Wednesday.
"Chancellor Murphy stressed that the University is not trying to force fraternities and sororities off the campus.
Weather
VOTE HERE
the students handling the IBM cards are ASC election officials, Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo., Mary Sue Taylor, Kansas City, Kan., and Jim Disque, Lawrence, all seniors.
THE VOTERS—Two students, John Stoskoph, Great Bend freshman, and Harold Archer, Ola the junior, pick up their IBM ballots at one of the polls in Strong Hall. Overseeing the work of
Concerts, Speakers Head Symposium
The second part of the four day Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary Music will continue today with concerts, a forum, and guest speakers.
The first day of the symposium was very successful, John W. Pozdro, symposium chairman said.
"We have really launched something here and we are all very excited about it. The works performed Monday were of highest quality, and the faculty and students did a remarkable job of interpreting the music," he commented.
Ronald Barnes, instructor of music history and KU carillonneur, will give a recital of 20th century carillon music at 7 p.m. today. A premiere piece, "Sonata, The Duke of Argyle," by Roy Hamlin Johnson, assistant professor of piano, will be played, "Landscape," by Prof. Pozdzro, will be included.
A forum on "Dissonance, Slave or Master," will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building.
The University concert choir will present its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. today under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel.
Four premiere pieces, "Autumn"
and "Balleto" (Henry Campbell)
"The Wonder of the Starry Night"
(Maurice Weed); and "The Eagle
That is Forgotten" (Joseph Luke-
witz) will be sung. "Hymn to St Cecilia" (Nermian Dello Joio), which was commissioned by KU and first presented Feb. 26 at the Music Teacher's National Convention in Kansas City, will also be sung.
Tomorrow's program includes a performance at 10 a.m. by the Fine Arts String Quartet. Burrell Phillips, guest composer, will address the Symposium at 2 p.m. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will address the group at a banquet later that night.
Boys Raiding Roof; Pig Patrolling Lawn
Boys on the roof and pigs in the yard were cause for complaints from two sororities early this morning.
Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough, Kappa Alpha Theta housemother, called the campus police at 4:40 a.m. to report "six or seven" boys on the sorority roof. Police were unable to locate the prowlers.
About two hours later the Douglas County Humane Society was summoned by the Gamma Phi Beta sorority to pick up a pig deposited on the lawn.
The committee reported that discrimination in the state was principally directed against Negroes and Mexican-Americans, but that Jews, Catholics and some Protestant groups also ran into prejudice situations because of their beliefs.
Kansas Bias Reported
TOPEKA —(UPI)— Kansas was pictured today as a state whose lawmakers draw legislation against discrimination while its citizens block progress of minority groups through passive resistance and "understandings."
The picture was painted by the Kansas Advisory Committee of the Commission on Civil Rights.
The sharpest discrimination is practiced in the area of housing, the committee said, but it also exists in public accommodations, employment, education, and against migratory workers.
There is no prejudice in the area of justice, the committee said.
KU to Tournament
The KU debate team of Ray Nichols, Lawrence junior, and Don Bowen, Salina senior, won the right to compete in the national West Point Debate Tournament April 22-25. The team won the honor by placing second in the district tournament in Lincoln, Neb., last weekend, said Kim Giffen, debate coach, after the team returned today.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 7. 1959
Nervous Coeds Conform
A recent and limited survey of 10 University women reveals that six of them started smoking before entering college.
I think this is a good indication of the worth of our high schools. Although there is some argument whether or not this same generation of girls is prepared academically for college, this survey seems to indicate that they are pre-trained at least in the social vices.
And what difference does it make if a young freshman knows nothing of algebra or Spanish, as long as she is trained in conformity?
Conformity was a much-quoted word in the text of the article. Half of the women started smoking because "everyone else did." This reason smacks of that old American tradition, individualism.
I suppose that following the will of the majority is all right. If the thing to do is to drink beer on the lawn of Strong Hall, everyone should join in. If "everyone else" decides to burn down the Kansas Union, the thing to do is to gather kindling. If the group smokes, everyone should smoke.
Each girl told how she came to choose the brand she smokes. Here,pure scientific reasoning entered the picture:
One girl began smoking her brand last year. She's still smoking it. "I like them because they're mildest," she relates.
She smokes them because they're mildest, and she's never tried another brand. It's a good idea really, because it prevents conflict.
Another girl smokes the same brand because it is so mild she hardly knows she is smoking.
This put smoking in a new light for me. Apparently, the idea is to get the least possible taste and pleasure out of every drag. The perfect cigarette would probably be one that allowed the smoker to inhale nothing but filtered air.
Another girl chose her brand because everything else made her dizzy. This is more pure reasoning using elimination. Try them all. Then, when you find a brand that lets you stand and inhale at the same time, stick with it.
Several of the girls started smoking because they were nervous and wanted something to do. This is sharp thinking. Whenever I get nervous, nothing fixes me up like a good smoke. In fact, I kill off four or five every time I visit my doctor. He's trying to cure me of the shakes.
— George DeBord
Farm Program Fails
The farm subsidy program is a failure.
For 26 years, the program has wrecked United States foreign policy, encouraged over-production, and enriched the large wealthy farmer, while the small farmer scarcely has broken even.
The bill to the taxpayer for 26 years of the political legerdemain has been $18 billion. The government now owns over $9 billion of farm surpluses which costs $1 billion a year just for storage.
Two defenses of the program are usually advanced:
1. Agricultural potential which may be necessary in the future must be preserved.
2. The yeoman is the backbone of the nation's democratic way of life and must be saved.
Neither is a valid defense, because:
1. The world is filled with starving millions. The need for agricultural potential is not in the future, but now. The problem is not overproduction, but distribution.
The distribution problem has become worse because the farm program artificially inflates farm prices.
2. The yeoman is no longer the backbone of the nation's democratic way of life. He lost his independence 26 years ago, and is growing fewer in number.
The farm program has been inspired by fear of a so-called farm vote and a desire to preserve the small farmer's place in society just as it was 100 years ago.
Such a program is unrealistic.
There have been technological and agricultural improvements in the last 100 years which have enabled the farmer to multiply production with less effort.
These changes inevitably must alter the agricultural picture.
If farm prices were permitted to seek their natural level, the farmer would find it necessary to increase his acreage in order to make enough revenue to justify his large machinery investment.
If farm prices were permitted to fall, land prices would fall too. This would make the price of a 1,000 acre farm within the reach of one or two men. With today's farm machinery, one or two men is all that is necessary to farm 1,000 acres of wheat.
Technological improvements have caused like revolutions in many industries, but only in agriculture has the government attempted to halt the natural effects of those improvements.
The farm program is untenable, unrealistic, and unworkable. The government must allow the inevitable agricultural revolution to transpire as it has in industry.
The government must think in terms of alleviating the hardships of falling product and land prices which will follow the end of the program. But the program must be abandoned, for it has been a source of expense and trouble too long.
—Larry Miles
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
5-28
"THAT'S TH' SCIENCE BUILDING — WE HAVE THE MUSIC CONSERVATORY OVER THERE—'AN' I THINK THIS IS THE GIRLS GAM!"
Poetry Corner
Signs of Spring By Geneva Mendenhall
Can Spring be far behind when her advance agents have posted such sure signs?
You have seen the balding knees on slacks and jeans as small boys crawl about a ring and call, "Vent cha taws."
You thought you heard a child moaning in the night until you knew it for that wall which spirals into the harsh scream of feline eestasy and pain.
You heard the muted accent of wild geese, and looking up, you saw the long V trailing north, the leader honking on his scattered scouts.
With the growing undercurrent of excitement in earth and air and sky, can you longer doubt that Spring is on her way?
Student Government
Worth Repeating
Ignorance is preferable to error; and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing, than he who believes what is wrong. Thomas Jefferson
Jobs of President
(Editor's note: This is the fourth in a series of articles on campus politics and student government. This article deals with the executive branch.)
The president and vice president of the student body will be chosen in the general election next week. They will be in charge of the executive branch of student government for the coming year.
Any person who has served on the All Student Council for one year or has notified the ASC of his intention to run by December before the spring general election is eligible for this office.
The president appoints members of all the faculty advisory and University committees. These include committees for Homecoming, commencement, convocations, the film series, freshmen orientation and the University calendar committee which schedules and compiles the year's activities, final examinations and vacations.
He appoints two student members of the athletic board.
He also appoints the members of the Student Court and student members on the University disciplinary committee, the two bodies which compose the judicial branch of student government.
All of his appointments must be ratified by a two-thirds vote of the ASC. He is responsible for carrying out any instructions given by the ASC and must present a written report to them three times a year.
He appoints the secretary of the Department of Student Welfare which includes the housing and labor committees, the chairman of the Campus Chest Drive, the co-chairmen of the campus leadership training council, the National Student Assn. campus coordinator and the members of the ASC health committee.
The president has speaking privileges in the ASC and may introduce legislation but he has no vote.
He is an ex-officio member of the Kansas Union operating board.
The student body president acts as a spokesman for KU students at various conferences. In this capacity he usually attends the Big Eight Conference, the National Student Assn.national and regional meetings.
the took world
Allen - lentz
By Barbara Solomon
ROMAN TALES, by Alberto Moravia, New American Library, (Paperback) 35c.
Most of the tales in this collection are vignettes depicting vividly an exciting moment in the lives of the central characters. Each story is related by a Roman laborer, but the situations vary greatly: a poverty-stricken workman and his wife attempt to abandon their baby in one of the churches in Rome; a taxi driver is told to drive to a desolate spot, where his passengers attempt to murder him and steal his cab; a young man informs his pitifully disfigured sister that her husband has just gone up on the roof to help the porter's seductive daughter "hang out her washing."
Moravia is very talented in describing the external appearance of his characters: "I have a narrow, yellow face, eyes of an indefinite, dirty colour, and a nose that seems to have been made for a face twice as broad as mine; it is big and long, and looks as if it was going straight down, and then, at the tip, it turns up like a lizard raising its snout."
Unfortunately, the emotional depths of his characters are never explored—in fact, barely touched upon. The characters describe the events and lamely add a few words concerning their reactions about which they have little insight. The result of this absence of insight is that a number of the characters seem to be annoyingly simple-minded.
Toned-down emotional responses are coupled with trite themes in several tales. In "Poor Fish" an extraordinarily ugly dish-washer is worshipped by an equally ugly scullery-maid, proving that love is indeed, blind.
In another story, one of the members of a group of young men who eat dinner together with great zest (and few manners) introduces his girlfriend into the group. The group quickly disintegrates, proving that a woman will soon bring disharmony to a group of bachelors.
Moravia is a skillful writer of entertaining stories, but his use of shallow characters and banal themes greatly limits the significance of "Roman Tales."
Dailu hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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.
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
Business Department
Editorial Department
Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Have Bride; She Will Work
Page 3
In the spring a newly-married student's fancy turns to finding employment for his wife.
It seems the college man has added two more items to his curriculum—getting a wife, and finding work for her.
The personnel office. 131 Strong handles the requests for work. C. A Harkness is personnel director.
"We get a number of inquiries during the spring from girls who are newly married or who are planning to be married soon," Mr. Harkners said. "Young men also come it to ask about positions for their wives.
"If a student's wife must find a job, she should apply early, because we operate on a first-come, first-served basis," he said.
"All the positions are generally filled by September 15, but occasionally we get later requests from Lawrence businessmen who want student wives to work as secretaries." Mr. Harkness said.
He said that women who want to work for the University next fall should make application for a job this spring.
All KU staff positions are civil service jobs, he said. Application blanks are available at the personnel office, 131 Strong.
24 Named to New Business Board
Twenty-four people have been appointed to a new advisory committee to the School of Business Dean James R. Surface has announced.
The advisers include an attorney, a Harvard business professor, and business executives from a wide range of fields.
"The committee will be a bridge between the research and teaching activities of the School of Business and the business world of which they are a part," Dean Surface said.
The membership has been made representative of the range of business activity so the committee can effectively function in appraising and planning programs for the School of Business.
The advisory committee will meet twice a year.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
University Daily Kansan
The other men's scholarship halls and their grade point averages were: Pearson, 1.88; Stephenson, 1.73; Battenfield, upperclassmen,
Jolliffe and Douthart Have Top Fall Grades
Jollife and Douthart scholarship halls had the highest grade point averages for men's and women's organized houses during the fall semester.
Schedule Set for AUFS Lecturer
The Jolliffe upperclassmen had a 2.15 and Douthart had a 2.11.
E. A. Bayne, of the American University Field Staff, will continue his lectures this week. The schedule for this week is as follows:
Today - 7:30 o.m., Reading Room,
Flint, "American Policy in Iraq."
Film, American Politics in Iran.
Tomorrow — 9 a.m., 1 Strong
Annex E. "Soviet-American Competition
in Iran"; 11 a.m., Strong Annex
A. "The Development of Southern
Italy"; 2 p.m., 210 Flint. "Factors
in Iranian Politics"; 3 p.m., 402
Lindley (tonic to be arranged).
Thursday 11 a.m. Strong Anxex A, "The Development of Southern Italy."
Friday — 8 a.m. 405 Lindley (topic to be arranged); 9 a.m. 405 Lindley, (topic to be arranged); 11 a.m. 33 Strong, "Problems of Economic Progress in Italy"; 2 p.m. 210 Flint, "Italy Today."
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1. 91, new men, 1.44; Foster, upper-classmen, 1.70, new men, 1.80; Jollif new men, 1.54.
710 Mass.
rter
Pizza . . . . Large 40c Off
Small 20c off
Lasagne and Spaghetti 20c Off Hero Sandwiches . . 20c Off
PRESENT THIS COUPON FOR DISCOUNT Good from Mon., April 6 to Thur., April 9, 1959.
OPEN
Mon. thru Sat. 5 p.m. - 1 a.m. Sun. noon - 1 a.m.
The other women's scholarship halls and their grade point averages were: Miller, 2.61; Watkins, 1.90; and Sellards, 1.83.
Carryouts VI 3-1086
Delivery
The all-women's average was 1.58, the all-sorority average 1.71, the all-men's average 1.28, the all-fraternity average 1.31, and the all-University average 1.37.
Grade point averages for men's dormitories ranged from the 1.51 of Varsity House to 1.10. Women's dormitories averaged from Grace Pearson's 1.55 to .98.
The sorority averages ranged from 2.04 to 1.09, and the fraternity averages ranged from 1.80 to 74.
The electronic bombing-navigation system of a jet bomber weighs 1457 pounds. The Wright Brothers airplane weighed 750 pounds.
Tuesday. April 7. 1959
SAM to Sponsor Panel on Research
The Society for the Advancement of Management will sponsor a panel discussion, "On the Research Frontier," at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Three faculty members in the behavioral science field will speak. They are:
Jay Jackson, professor of psychology, "Effectiveness of Middle Management Committees"; Howard Baumgartel, assistant professor of human relations, "Human Relations Research", and William Gore, assistant professor of political science, "Patterns of Administrative Decision Making."
The discussion moderator will be E. G. Nelson, professor of economics and director of business research. The meeting is open to the public.
FAST
The world's largest collection of cigar store Indians brought $100,000 when auctioned off in New York in 1957.
FAST
1
HOUR
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842 MASS. VI.3-9594
NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR 1 HOUR SERVICE
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Mrs. J.R.P. to Attend Dedication of Hall
Special guests will include donor Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, the Pearson family, and Clement H. Hall, chairman of the Board of Regents. Open house will be held 1-4 p.m. Sunday.
Get WILDROOT
CREAM-OIL Charlie!
A dedicatory dinner for Joseph R Pearson Hall, 1122 West Campus Road, will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
J. GUTENBERG, bookmaker, says: "If you want hair that's neat, not greasy, you're just the type for Wildroot!"
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They are shoes for individualists.
Drop in . . . let us fit you perfectly. $19.95
Other Burnt Square-Toe Loafer $15.95
Ivory Styles: Two-Eyelet Tie . . . $16.95
the university shop
Across from Lindley
Al Hack
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 7. 1959
University Daily Kansan
SPORTS
13
A hit for Forbes.
KU Whips Forbes Again
The KU baseball team edged out Forbes Air Base 16-12 at Topeka yesterday for the Jayhawkers' second straight victory over the Airmen.
A high scoring game like yester- day's normally indicates a lot of hitting, but KU managed only eight hits. Poor fielding and the wild pitching accounted for the high score. Forbes committed nine errors to KU's four, while KU walked ten in return for eight free passes from Forbes.
Rightfielder Curtis Melton, third baseman Roger Hill and leftfielder Gene Dunigan led the Jayhawkers as they each collected two hits. The big men in the RBI department were Hill with three, Melton with two and Art Muegler, second baseman, with two.
Tennis Team Meets K-State at Manhattan
The tennis team, stung by three straight losses on last week's southern trip, goes against Kansas State today at Manhattan.
Lynn Sieverling will play number one singles for the Jayhawkers, and then pair up with Pete Block in the top doubles match. Dave Coupe, Jerry Williams and Salvit Lekagui will also play singles. Coupe and Williams will team up for the number two doubles match. Sieverling defeated the top K-State player. Win Tilzey last year in a long three-set match. Tilzey has shown much improvement this year, and should give the KU southpaw stiff competition.
SAC was activated March 21, 1946, at Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D.C., with Gen. George C. Kenney as commander.
Alpha Phi Omega Meeting Tonight
Joe Doolittle was the starting pitcher and only allowed one hit in the first three innings. Wayne Woodruff, the winner, went the middle three innings giving up four hits and three runs. Norm Maillon and Bill Clinkenbeard finished up the last three innings.
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
The varsity plays Washburn here this afternoon at 3 o'clock. Tom Holler will probably pitch for KU.
D'Amato, NBC Clash On Title Fight Site
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Custer (Cus) D'Amato, who hopes a lot of tickets will be sold for Floyd Patterson's May 1 heavyweight title defense against Brian London, first has to "sell" television officials on the idea of holding the bout in Indianapolis.
Officials at the National Broadcasting Company weren't exactly beaming with joy today over D'Amato's announcement that the fight will be held in the 14,000 seat Indianapolis Coliseum instead of Las Vegas, Nev.
They pointed out that $225,000 contracts for TV on the bout already have been signed and also that "We sold the match to the sponsor on the basis that it would be blacked out only in the Las Vegas area."
Old, Dillard Place In National Fencing
Dillard, on his first trip to the championship matches, was not as successful as his teammate. Against extremely tough competition he posted three wins. Both men will be eligible for the next NCAA Championships and with an additional year's experience are expected to raise KU's standing higher than this year's 24th place.
Jerry Old, epee ace, and John Dillard, foil man represented KU's fencing team at the NCAA Fencing Championships held at Annapolis, Maryland.
Old won the majority of his matches. He gave a creditable account of himself by posting wins over some of the top ten fencers in collegiate circles. He won a total of 14 bouts but placed 14th in the individual standings.
"The sponsor planned its advertising budget accordingly," said Tom Gallery, sports director of NBC. "Now this changes everything."
Gallery was hoping for a quick huddle here with D'Amato, Patterson's manager, and with Cecil Rhodes, promoter of the bout. Presumably the switch in sites means that new contracts will have to be negotiated but Gallery was hoping that they could "work out a deal."
"I'm not trying to run their business," Gallery said. "But it seems to me they were working backward when they shifted the fight site after signing the television contract.
James Deskin, a member of the Nevada Athletic Commission, said Rhodes gave the commission no hint of an impending switch and commented "The least Rhodes could have done was to notify somebody here."
Deskin said the commission already had made tentative arrangements to get a referee from California, had begun work on legal arrangements, and on conditions for the bout.
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ACROSS
AUCUS
1. They usually use
Head, back,
heart, tooth—
they're related
2. Which was to be
demonstrated (L. abbr.)
3. Retrospective
view of a Kool
Kind, cool
Kind of corn
4. Underground
blind date
5. Single girls
love
6. Sum total of
hot music
7. Symbol of penny
8. Inter Point,
interset
9. Der Kaiser's
der buddies
10. Full of wonder
11. Some of bull
12. Some of cow
13. Mild refreshing
14. Pop's no longer
asked when he
be popped
15. It ruins a
crater a
different handle
16. Cobu, initially
17. Cobu, initially
18. Mazes and
municipalities
19. He had
dead
20. drink and
tea but
no coffee
21. Nelson, he
22. Part of "afras"
No.21
DOWN
1. Mater's first name
2. No smoke is so ___ as a Kool
3. Bridge ante
4. Draw roughy; ___
5. Wild ox found in an ink
6. His stright from ___ to ___
7. Pilgrimage to Mecca
8. German embroidered coat
9. TV doings for the brainy set
10. This is final enchantment
11. Kinect is final enchantment
12. It grew with a cry
13. A boundary
12. Vark's first movie
14. All ___
15. Scent
12. He lives for a window shopper
13. Singles
12. A Yankee
12. Needy of your constant need
13. Even Stephen
13. He's in the nets' rocket舱
13. Even Stephen
13. First name of playwright's daughter, co-owner
13. Even Stephen
14. Opposite of news—yet extremely mobile
14. Opposite of me
14. That French
14. Alaska is a part of it
★ ★ ★
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15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | |
18 | | | | 19 | | | | | | | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | 20 | | "ARE YOU KOOl ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?" | | | 21 | 22 | 23 |
| 24 | 25 | 26 | | | | 27 | | | |
| 28 | | | | | | 29 | | | |
| 30 | | | 31 | 32 | | 33 | | | |
| 34 | | | | | | | | |
| | | 35 | | 36 | 37 | 38 | | 39 | 40 | 41 |
| 42 | 43 | | | | | | 44 | | | |
| 45 | | | | 46 | | | 47 | | | |
| 48 | | | | 49 | | | 50 | | | |
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"You can bet I'll send him a bill for work we've already done," said Deskin.
Rhodes insisted no agreement ever was reached to stage the fight in Las Vegas because no money was put up.
D'Amato said both fighters will go to Indianapolis about two weeks before the bout to complete their training. The bout will be the first title fight ever held in that city.
ACTS A C H E Q E D
L O O K N E A R U N I
M O L E O L D M A I D S
A L L T H A T A Z Z
C U U S M A
B O C H E R H E R A
A D A O R R
B O S O M A W E D
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U S N L LE A L E N D S
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Women to Discuss Problem Issues
Problem questions, which have never been discussed openly before, but questions which concern all KU women, will be discussed at an all-women's meeting at 7:30 p.m. today, tomorrow and Thursday at the United Presbyterian Center.
All KU women are urged to attend and participate in the discussion.
Tonight's meeting will concern problem questions in moral issues. Scholastic problems will be discussed tomorrow, and social problems and relations will be talked about on Thursday.
KUOK
Radio Programs
Tonight
Page 5
6:00 Sign On
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 "Train to Nowhere," Ron Abrams
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Ron Abrams
12:00 Sign Off
She said that any foreign student who would like to display his national dish should contact her at VI 2-0207.
Exotic, rarely tasted foods will be dispensed to all comers at the annual International Club banquet to be held at 6 p.m. Saturday, April 18 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Tickets for the buffet-style dinner will go on sale tomorrow at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd. and the Kansas Union Concessions Counter. The charge of $1.75 covers "all one can eat." Only 300 tickets are available.
Rare Foreign Foods At International Club
So far, representatives of over 20 countries plan to serve their favorite native dishes, said Maria-Regina Griebichler, Karnten, Austria, special student.
Laird Talks in Atchison
Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, will address the Atchison Branch of the American Association of University Women on April 28. Prof. Laird will speak on "Some Strengths and Weaknesses of the Soviet System."
DR. WM. H. BRAY AND DR. H. R. WILLIAMS
Optometrists
919 Mass. VI 3-1401
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Balfour
Tonight
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert
7:00 Symphony Hall
7:30 Choral Concert
8:00 University of the Air: Midwest Composers' Symposium Concert
9:00 F.M. Concert
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
91.5 MC
Hitt to Address Forum
James K. Hitt, registrar, will speak to the Faculty Forum at noon tomorrow on University enrollment trends. Reservations for the luncheon meeting should be phoned into the Y office (KU 227) by this afternoon.
Get WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Charlie!
CLEO PATRA, snake charmer, says: "All the queens admire handsome hair ... so asp for Wildroot!"
MIDDLEBROOM
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Boo
Tuesday. April 7, 1959
University Daily Kansan
Job Hearings
Job interviews to be held in Hoch Auditorium this week: Wednesday, Continental Can Co.; Thursday, Ford Motor Co.; Monday, Schlumberger Well Surveying and Tuesday, Public Service Co. of Colo. Also on Monday there will be a group meeting in the Kansas Union on summer employment.
Extension Courses, Work Are Soviet Diet
He spoke at the 50th anniversary banquet of the University Extension department.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said last night that more than half of the Russians enrolled in colleges last year were taking extension courses and working the remainder of the time.
now you can enjoy formal wear without a care!
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And remember, too...,
our easy-fitting jacket is
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821 Mass.
Phone VI 3-1951
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
Women of Executive Ability:
There is an exciting future for you as an Officer in the U.S. Air Force
If you are a woman who responds to a challenging job...who enjoys stimulating world-wide travel...who finds fun in association with young, imaginative people...you should investigate your opportunities as a WAF officer. Women in the Air Force work side-by-side with male Air Force officers, receive the same pay and privileges, have equal chance for assignment and advancement. Investigate your chances for a direct commission in the U. S. Air Force today.
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Page 6.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 7, 1959
Spring Engagements Revealed
The engagement of Miss Evelyn Pilkington to Mr. Delmar D. Falen has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Pilkington, Parsons. Mr. Falen is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Falen, Herington.
Evelyn Pilkington
Miss Pillington is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts and Mr Falen is a senior in the School of Business.
The wedding is planned for June 28.
P. W. C.
Katharine Heller
An August wedding is planned.
On The Hill
Delta Delta Delta
Sharon Shaffer, Chillicothe, Mo. junior, has been elected president of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Miss Heller is a senior in the School of Education and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, Mr. Keck is a fourth year architecture student and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Heiler, Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Katharine, to Mr. Thomas E. Reck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Reck, Wichita.
Other officers are Gretchen Griswold, Silver City, N.M., vice president; Margie Williamson, Hutchinson, treasurer; Mary Ann Daugherty, Meade, rush chairman; Carolyn Drake, Clayton, Mo., house manager.
Carol Abernathy, Kansas City, Kan., social chairman;Dotty Drake, Webster Groves, Mo., scholarship chairman; Barbara Bastin, Scott City, house and hill activities chairman.
Elizabeth Robinson, Cedar Vale,
sponsors' chairman Dee Morsback
Dallas, Tex., fraternity education
director; Carol Keller, Prairie Village,
alumnae recorder; Sally Hart, Fort
Scott, historian; Judy Regier, Buhler,
chaplain.
Margot Helwick, Ellsworth, recording secretary; Linda Browning, Mendon, Mo., song leader, and Jane Lindell, McPherson, service projects chairman. All are juniors.
Judy Platt, Kansas City, Mo., librarian; Kay Moon, Independence, Kan.; recommendations chairman; Beverly Bagley, Brentwood, Mo. marshall; Carol Simmons, Parsons, corresponding secretary.
Gail Ward, Wichita, publicity chairman, and Liz Wooster, Salt Lake City, Utah, intramurals chairman. All are sophomores.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Freshmen
Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen will hold their annual faculty tea from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday.
AAA
CERTIFIED
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.
MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY
VT 3-0131
1703 WEST 6TH
Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming
Alpha Tau Omega
David Trowbridge, Kansas City,
Mo., freshman, has been named
honor initiate of Alpha Tau Omega
fraternity.
Other initiates are Paul Ingmanson, Topeka; Charles Manney, Arkansas City; Stuart Barger, Harrisville, Mo.; Frederic Jones, Merriam; Bruce Beard, St. Louis, Mo.; Richard Vancil, Abilene; Anthony Martin, Belle Plaine.
SHEWNAN
John Bierlein, Pittsburg; Myron Morris, Augusta; Ward White, Russell; John Beindorff, Wichita; David Rankin, Phillipsburg, all freshmen; and Paul Cacioppo, Overland Park, sophomore.
Mary Helen Clark
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Clark, of Leawood, have made known the engagement of their daughter, Mary Helen, to Mr. Edward B. Becker, son of Mrs. Earl N. Becker, Emporia.
Miss Clark is a senior majoring in French, Latin and Humanities. She is in Mortor Board, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and of Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
Mr. Becker graduated from Emporia State Teachers College and is working for his doctorate degree in chemistry at the University of Kansas
A June wedding is planned.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
AUTO PARTS AND TIRES
New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
A free can of Body Sheen car wax (value $1.49) with each purchase of oil and filter change.
FREE
(Offer Expires Sun., April 12)
1306 W. 6th
Jim's Super Service
Present this Ad at
We handle all brands of oil and honor credit cards.
Official Bulletin
See us for super-powered
APCO GAS
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 release. Do not bring Bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Teachers Appointment Bureau. 117
Balley, I.V. Payne, Carlshad, New Mexico;
James C. Porterfield, Gallup, New
Mexico.
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong Hall. F. M. Nolting, Lever Brothers Co. Marketing; A. W. Hebran, Price Waterhouse & Co., Public Accounting
TOMORROW
Zoology Club. 7:30 p.m. 101 Snow Hall.
Dr. T. C. Helvey, "Operations on Single Cells." Illustrated with slides. Public invited.
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
bread.
or highest following, Canterbury House,
Mines Place Placement Bancroft. 124 Strong Hull.
J. Corn, Goolmichael, Can Co.
Sales, Murray, Western
Natl Life, Ins. Life, Underwriters.
Jay Janes, Oread Room. 5-5:30 p.m.
Attendance required. Union.
Humanities Forum. 205 Union. Professor Peter J. Caws, assistant professor of philosophy, will read a paper entitled, "The Case for Metaphysics."
Mathematics Colloquim, "Nodal Lines on a Vibrating Membrane," Ake Pleijel. 4:15 p.m., 203 Strong, 2:50 p.m., coffee, 217 Strong.
Ei Atenco, 4 p.m. 11 Fraser Robert Squier, Sociology instructor, "A Mysterious Ancient Mexican Civilization" should show you welcome Lutheran Gamma Delta, Delphi
ton, chapel services. 5 to 5:20 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
Newman Club, same as Wed.
Episcopal, same as Wed.
Christian Science Campus organization,
7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
THURSDAY
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
francis
sporting goods
731 Mass.
Tennis Racket and Balls
we're in the racket for restringing
bring yours in! one day service
Jay SHOPPE
On Campus, Top o' Twelfth
SHOPPE
$14.98
TNT
originals Tomorrow New Trend
Chic is the clue to this comment-provoking sheath with a mock jacket look. The frosty white embroidered eyelet top has a scoop neckline and drops softly above the symmetrical lines of the sheath dress. Contrasting color cummerbund and huge bow at midriff makes this washable cotton broadcloth a must for your season's wardrobe. Look for it as advertised in April MADEMOISELLE. In Black, Olive, or Brown. Sizes 7 to 15 and 8 to 16.
25 wo
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PAIR case. on th room
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Tuesday, April 7, 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 Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
POST VERSALOG SLIDERULE in Mastolt, D. M. Lollest stamped on side, reward offered. Call EN 2-2528, Kansas City.
4-7
FOUND
PAIR OF BLACK GLASSES, not in a case. The name, Hanselmann, is marked on the right inside temple. Call VI 3-7415. room 525. 4-9
PALE GREEN CARDIGAN, lady's, lost
Thursday noon. Call extension 324 or turn
it into lost and found in the Kansan
Business Office. 4-8
COIN PURSE, on Memorial Drive. Call KU extension 534 or call at 7 Strong. Annex E. 4-7
WANTED
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Call
M 3-5297 after 5 p.m. t
WANTED: to lease a home with three bedrooms and bath near KU. I possible, would prefer basement and exteriors furnished or partly furnished.
Cali VI 3-1448. 4-9
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS interested in making $150 additional income a month can buy insurance, extra needed for car use, insurance required for cell Carl C F Ade, Jr., Kansas City, Missouri at Harrison 1-6729.
FOR RENT
FIRST FLOOR SOUTHSIDE DUPLEX,
nowly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six
rooms, full basement, close to KU. Call
VL-3,174 or VI L-3,803 after 5 p.m. 4-7
TWO BEDROOM HOME, unfurnished.
42nd during the day. Call VI 30-
42nd during the day.
VACANCY for young man in contemporary home, now and summer, 20x40 swimming pool, pool board, room and private bath. Meals, Private entrance, shower-bath, refrigerator. Country Club atmosphere. Call VI 3-9635. 4-9
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal,
heat and gas furnished, linen furnished,
with accept graduate students. Call VI 3-7871
HOUSE. four rooms, unfurnished, completely modern, full basement. large library. 5-2755 after 3 p.m., weekdays and anytime on Sundays. 4-13
FOR SALE
SIAMESE KITTENS. nine weeks old, unusually nice markings, housebroken. See at 910 Louisiana, first floor, anytime. A.G.
57 AUSTIN HEALEY, radio, heater, electric motor, Cell V1 3-3300 4-8
Cell V2 3-3300 4-8
DAFFODILS. 25 cents a dozen, no de-
sign. Cadillac VI 3-2278. 4-7
Dall'Al. CVI 1 3-2278. 4-7
POST SLIDE RULE with leather case,
box for phone, case for most new,
$17.50 Call VI 3-4368
4-9
COLT FRONTIER 38-40 revolver, $65,
Lugers, $40. $42 and .32 automatic.
$20-$32.50 and the hold them over. Peter Des
Jardins, 1138 Mississippi I 2-9001. 4-8
HOUSE AND LOT, 1518 Mendow Lane,
just west of the field house, lot size is
105x162 in Clarkson Grand Park,
kitchen level with shade, fruit trees,
shrubs and perennials. Two level
house, entrance level contains two bedrooms with built in chests of drawers,
bath, kitchen level with a ceiling fan,
burning living room with wood burning fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking the patio and draperies and three-quarter ton air conditioner. Balcony, screen porch and flagstone terrace. Lower level has an extra large bedroom which is ground floor and cycled into a patio surrounded by flower garden. Basement area back of this room consists of a family room with gas log fireplace and cyclone hot water heater. Half-bath and shower, three car carport, contemporary architecture, custom design. Three-quarter inch red wooden sliding fence mounted foundation and footing. Call V 3-1782 for appointment. 4-9
1956 BUICK CENTURY, four door, power brakes and steering. Navyal officer, blues. Automatic 22 pistol, holster, extra clip. 1,500 rounds ammunition. Call VI 3-0483.
RCA STEREOPHONIC M O N A U R A L
TAPE PLAYER 1958 model, like new.
Original $250, now onlty $150 free.
Give up of stereo tape 1500.
Call VI 3-1647. 4-9
ARGUS 300 SLIDE PROJECTOR. 35mm.
Argus 300 SLIDE PROJECTOR. 35mm.
net holders, 40. Call Vi 9-3496. 4-7
Call Vi 9-3496. 4-7
PFAFF SEWING MACHINE, almost new,
beautiful cabinet model. Purchase price:
$268; will sell for $160. Makes button
papery and embroidery.
VI 3-7830 by 5 p.m.
STUDENTS. FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life, and Sports illustrated magazine—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124.
TRIUMPH TR3, 11.500 mile, one owner,
82.295, Call VI 3-8917, 4-9
VOLVO, 1958, white, 12,000 miles, like new, Triumph, 1955, TR-3, white, disc touring, Ford, 1954, four door Fordomobile, radio, heater, 540, British Motors, 737 North 2nd, 4-8
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 7, 1959
Speech Contest Entries Wanted
An intramural speaking contest for amateur orators will start tomorrow evening in 112 Strong Hall and continue on April 15 and April 21.
The contest is open to all students except those who have been members of Forsenic League for more than one year, varsity debate, or Delta Sigma Rho.
In setting up the competition for which prizes and trophies will be awarded, E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, said:
"We want to give students who are not active in regular university speaking events a chance to use their talents.
The contest offers an equal chance to all participants. This is probably why it has been a popular event at KU."
The contest will be conducted on the point system and will feature three different types of speeches. Students may participate in one or all of the three divisions.
The first speech will be an instructional talk on how to do or make something.
The second speech will be informative and the third speech will be argumentative.
No more than four contestants from one organization may enter in any one event.
Registration for the contest must be mailed, telephoned, or delivered to Prof. Buehler in 116 Strong Hall before 5 p.m. tomorrow.
The Jerez district of Spain, which produces all of the world's true sherry wines, is about the size of New York City's Manhattan Island.
No Easter Eggs for Rock Hunters in Class
Twenty-nine KU citizens, for the most part members of the Historical Geology class, spent Easter vacation studying rock formations and "roughing it" in the Grand Canyon.
Space Men Are Chosen
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Seven candidates have been selected for the honor and the danger of being the first American in space. But the final choice won't be known until 1961.
Names of the seven candidates will be announced later this week by the Federal Space Agency. They soon will go to Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., for training as astronauts.
On that day he will be blasted into an orbit 100 to 150 miles high, whirled around the earth for about 24 hours, and—again, if all goes well—brought safely down at a predetermined place.
Some time in 1961, if all goes well, one of the seven will be told to get into his gear. Not until launching day will he know that he is the chosen one.
The seven were picked from 55 volunteers, all so highly qualified the experts had a hard time choosing the final team for the manned satellite program, dubbed "Project Mercury."
Special recoverable capsules for Project Mercury already are undergoing exhaustive tests in an effort to make the historic flight as safe as possible.
Under the direction of Charles Pitrat, associate professor of geology, the group spent its first night on the canyon rim until the following morning when it walked nearly seven miles down the Bright Angel Trail to the Colorado River and the canyon floor.
"We would have rather ridden a mule, but we weren't going to pay $32 per day for each mule," said Richard Bower, Norton graduate student.
The geologists took the trails in order that they could more easily observe seven different rock formations bared along the canyon walls.
The trip, entirely voluntary, was the first of its kind made by KU students and instructors. It may become an annual event, Prof. Pitrat said.
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H. A. Ireland to visit NU
Dr. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, will speak Monday on "Oil Developments in the Middle East," at the annual meeting for awards to Sigma Xi and Phi Beta Kappa members at the University of Nebraska.
Central City, Colo., now home of the famous summer opera festival, was once called "the richest square mile on earth."
Traffic Statistics
To Date Same Time 1958
Accident total ... 81 ... 56
Fatalities ... 0 ... 0
Injuries ... 2 ... 2
Parking violations:
Campus 8,361 10,777
City 1,051 586
Moving traffic
violations 95 8
(1)
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
THE CARE AND FEEDING OF ROOM-MATES
Room-mates are not only heaps of fun, but they are also very educational, for the proper study of mankind is man, and there is no better way to learn the dreams and drives of another man than to share a room with him.
This being the case, it is wise not to keep the same room-mate too long, because the more room-mates you have, the more you will know about the dreams and drives of your fellow man. So try to change room-mates as often as you can. A recent study made by Sigafoos of Princeton shows that the best interval for changing room-mates is every four hours.
How do you choose a room-mate? Most counselors agree that the most important thing to look for in room-mates is that they be people of regular habits. This, I say, is arrant nonsense. What if one of their regular habits happens to be beating a Chinese gong from midnight to dawn? Or growing cultures in your tooth glass? Or reciting the Articles of War?
...There wasn't a blessed thing
I could use in his wardrobe ...
. BARNARD'S
There wasn't a blessed thine.
Regular habits, my foot! The most important quality in a room-mate is that he should be exactly your size. Otherwise you will have to have his clothes altered to fit you, which can be a considerable nuisance. In fact, it is sometimes flatly impossible. I recollect one time I roomed with a man named Osage Tremblatt who was just under seven feet tall and weighed nearly four hundred pounds. There wasn't a blessed thing I could use in his entire wardrobe—until one night when I was invited to a masquerade party. I cut one leg off a pair of Tremblatt's trousers, jumped into it, sewed up both ends, and went to the party as a bolster. I took second prize. First prize went to a girl named Antenna Radnitz who poured molasses over her head and went as a candied apple.
But I digress. Let us turn back to the qualities that make desirable room-mates. Not the least of these is the cigarettes they smoke. When we wum cigarettes, do we want them to be shoddy and nondescript? Certainly not! We want them to be distinguished, gently reared, zestful and zingy. And what cigarette is distinguished, gently reared, zestful and zingy? Why, Philip Morris, of corris! Any further questions?
To go on. In selecting a room-mate, find someone who will wear well, whom you'd like to keep as a permanent friend. Many of history's great friendships first started in college. Are you aware, for example, of the remarkable fact that Johnson and Boswell were room-mates at Oxford in 1712? What makes this fact so remarkable is that in 1712 Johnson was only three years old and Boswell had not yet been born. But, of course, children matured earlier in those days. Take Mozart, who wrote his first symphony at four. O Titian, who painted his first masterpiece at five. Or Hanso Felbungg, who was in many ways the most remarkable of all; he was appointed chief of the Copenhagen police department at the age of six!
It must be admitted, however, that he did badly. Criminals roamed the city, robbing and looting at will. They knew little Hanso would never pursue them—he was not allowed to cross the street.
If you are allowed to cross the street, hit yourself to a tobaccoinist and stock up on Philip Morris, outstanding among non-filter cigarettes, or Marlboro, the filter cigarette with better "makin's." Pick your pleasure.
40 Plan Sunday Humor Faculty to Use Radio
day of radio programming Sunday to aid underprivileged and day of radio programming Sunday to aid underprivileged and crippled children.
The faculty members are among almost 100 Kiwanis members who will use the services of the local radio station, KLWN, to present advertising the Kiwanians have sold and written by themselves.
"We've had a whale of a time making up humorous ads and it should be a lot of fun presenting them over the air," said Kenneth Deemer, professor of mechanical engineering.
Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice, will present a singing commercial for a local firm. During the Kiwanis Radio Day members will report on Kiwanis work.
"If we didn't have the regulars out there, we might tear up the places." Prof. Deemer said.
The regular radio staff will be present during the day and regular programs will be heard through most of the day.
He said the organization expects to collect nearly $600 from the sale of the advertising, which will go to buying gifts for needy children at Christmas time.
The owner of the station, Arden Booth, allows the Kiwarians to have a day annually for their drive. The club keeps money from the sale of advertising for club projects.
Scholarship Ratio Varies in Schools
(Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of four articles on scholarship at KU. The final article tomorrow will discuss scholarship halls.)
By James Trotter
Scholarship in the various schools at KU vary widely in number and monetary amount.
The School of Engineering has the largest number of departmental scholarships available, but it has only one scholarship for every 24 students enrolled in the school.
There are 70 available scholarships and 1,725 students enrolled in the school. The scholarships run from $50 to $800 per year.
The School of Education, with five departmental scholarships, has the least number of scholarships available according to its enrollment.
There is only one scholarship available for every 154 students enrolled this semester. The school has an enrollment of 771.
The Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers gives four $200 scholarships and the Prairie Village School District Teachers Association grants one $150 award.
Pine Arts are tied in having the most scholarships available per student. Each school has one scholarship for every seven students.
The Schools of Journalism and
The School of Fine Arts has approximately 60 scholarships each year coming from various funds and has an enrollment of 469. The scholarships average $100 per year. They range from $75 to $300.
The two largest funds support the Watkins Scholarship for Women in Music and the Summerfield Scholarships for Men in Music. These scholarships are separate from the Watkins and Summerfield scholarships awarded to gifted students.
The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has 12 scholarships and an enrollment of 85. Journalism scholarships range from $100 to $500 a year and average $250 a year.
The School of Pharmacy, with 92 students enrolled, has only four scholarships that go each year to advanced students. The ratio is one scholarship for every 24 students.
The School of Business has 15 departmental scholarships to offer to its enrollment of 433 or one scholarship for every 28 students.
Dailu hansan
Wednesday, April 8, 1959
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No.121
Each department within the University will have to determine the adjustments of its service, the Chancellor said.
"Some departments may find it necessary to close on Saturday mornings while others may remain open with skeleton staffs by means of adjusting the work weeks of several employees.
"The change comes at an awkward time for the University. To keep up the present rate of efficiency, it will have to employ more people since the present staff will not be working such long hours."
All civil service employees of the University will go on the 40-hour work week beginning May 1.
He said the janitors will not be able to do as much work on a 40-hour week.
KU Cuts Work Week
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced yesterday that the State Department of Administration has directed all classified personnel be paid on a monthly basis.
"In practical terms, the 40-hour week for classified employees is the only alternative," Chancellor Murphy said.
Asked how he feels about the change, Chancellor Murphy said:
The University has been operating in a 44-hour week for civil service employees. Most maintenance employees have been paid on an hourly basis at straight time rate regardless of the number of hours over 44.
Secretaries will most likely have days off staggered and University offices will not be closed on Saturday, he said.
Classified personnel constitute nearly all of the University staff who do not hold teaching positions. Approximately 750 persons are involved.
Buildings and Grounds maintenance workers had petitioned the administration for a 40-hour work week and pay on a monthly basis in February.
Chancellor Murphy said that the shorter work week will mean no Saturday campus mail service and will pose some real problems on evening activities.
Low civil service pay scales make further employment difficult, the Chancellor said.
Snow to Continue
Instead of the recent "Lone Star weather" this morning students were rewarded with a snow storm.
Even though the snow stopped splattering in students' faces at mid morning, the weatherman predicts more snow.
The forecast calls for heavy snow in the eastern part of Kansas, with occasional snow tonight with a narrow band of snow, two to four inches, from south central Kansas through the northeast portion.
Tomorrow it will be partly cloudy in the northeast, with rain or snow in the extreme west and southwest.
The low temperature tonight should be from 25 to 35. High tomorrow is predicted in the 45 to 55 degree range.
Business Council Gets ASC Funds
The All Student Council last night approved an amended request by the Business School Council for an appropriation of $73.50 to help defray costs of Business School Day.
The Business School Council reduced its original request for $165 to the approved sum. The ASC last week voted not to grant the money because part of it would finance the
Vote Count Hits 1.000 Mark Today
A total of 262 students had voted in the second day of primary balleting by noon today. Of these, 193 voted on the Vox ticket and 89 voted Allied-Greek Independent.
About 750 students voted yesterday, Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo., senior and chairman of the elections committee, said today he expe's the vote to exceed his original estimate of 1,000.
The polls will close today at 5:15 p.m. and Wilson said he expects the counting of the ballots to be completed by 8 p.m.
"Business School News," a public relations function.
All appropriations for organizations or functions of a public relations or educational nature are to be granted by the University, the ASC constitution states.
All appropriations for organizations or functions of an administrative, social, or service nature are to be granted by the ASC.
In the appropriation approved last night the Business School Council deleted its request for money for the publication. The motion to appropriate the money passed 12 to 2.
In other action, the council passed an amendment to the traditions bill
See page 2 for an editorial "ASC Too Generous."
reducing the number of cheerleaders from 10 to eight and reducing the members of the pep committee from 12 to seven.
The council also passed an amendment to the ASC elections bill, whereby a student will be allowed to file for only one office in one election. In the case of a write-in vote the student will choose between any offices he is elected to.
Composers Term Music Symposium a Success
THE ORGAN
MANSION OF THE
FIRST BENGALI VILLAGE
CHORUS
A WORD FROM THE WISE — Dr. Gardner Read, resident composer of the University of Boston, gives pointers on the interpretation of a work he composed which was performed at the
Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music. James Christensen, Carbondale junior majoring in organ, listens to instructions.
Burrill Phillips, professor of composition at the University of Illinois said the symposium is superior to others "in that many of the compositions sound like finished performances."
The first annual Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music has been termed a success by composers and guests attending the event.
Prof. Phillips added:
"The orchestra sight reads so wel it is evident that a great deal of practice has gone into the preparation for the symposium."
Prof. Gardner Read, composer in residence at Boston University, said the symposium is "beautifully planned and the scheduling of events does not let one feel at loose ends."
A banquet will be held at 6 to night for 60 composers and guests at the Kansas Union. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will address the group.
The Fine Arts Quartet will perform works for string quartets at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall The quartet is composed of Leonard Sorkin and Abram Loft, violins; Irving Imer, viola and George Sookin, cello.
They will perform works by visiting composers Lexon Stein, De Paul University: Parks Grant, University of Mississippi and Walter Aschaffenburg, Oberlin Conservatory.
Tomorrow at 10 a.m. orchestral readings will be presented by the symposium orchestra. The premiere
The symposium orchestra will present a concert of selected works from the symposium at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, will conduct.
Other featured composers are Fedor Kabalin, San Francisco, Calif.; Markwood Holmes, Kansas State Teachers College, Pittsburg, and Maurice Weed, Northern Illinois University.
performance of "Rota" by Wayne Barlow, Eastman School of Music, and "Elegy for String Orchestra" by Paul A. Pisk, University of Texas, will be given.
The symposium will conclude with refreshments in the Music Lounge following the evening concert.
KUOK, KANU Set For Stereo Sound
KUOK and KANU will combine to broadcast stereophonically a concert of the Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music at 8 p.m. tomorrow.
Bob Lynn, Gainesville, Tex., junior, program director, said one channel will broadcast over KUOK-AM simultaneously with KANU, the high fidelity FM station on campus.
Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, will conduct the "Concert of Works for Orchestra." The orchestra consists of members from the University Symphony, the KU faculty and the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
Page 2
University Daily Kansas Wednesday. April 8, 1959
ASC Too Generous
The All Sfudent Council met last night and approved an appropriation of $73.50 to help the Business School Council defray costs of Business School Day.
This action set no precedent since the Engineering School Council and the School of Law already receive ASC funds. But the precedent does not justify the action.
Although the ASC is empowered by its constitution to grant appropriations for organizations or functions of an administrative, social or service nature, the Business School Council expenses should fall into the hands of the School of Business, just as the School of Law should meet the costs of Law Day. It is the school which sponsors the day. Why should the ASC fall victim to paying for it?
The Council's action in granting appropriations to the various schools for their special days has opened the door to all organizations to demand money for functions that should be financed with other than ASC funds.
Soon the demand could be greater than the supply. It would then be necessary to pick and choose the most necessary functions.
The Council should take action to work out a solution before this problem arises. A constitutional amendment is needed to specify exactly what functions are to be financed by the ASC.
If the ASC were less generous to organizations with other sources of finance, groups which now have economic gray hairs would be able to operate more efficiently with more ASC funds.
—Pat Swanson
If you are a reckless driver you'd better shape up or make an appointment with your local head shrinker.
Drivers, Your ID Is Showing
A Los Angeles psychiatrist says that you reveal your basic personality by the way you steer your wheels. And, he says, this rule of thumb does not apply to teenagers only, but it reflects upon daddy and mommy, too.
The psychiatrist, Dr. Jerome M. Kummer of UCLA, says that any driver who has ever event a fender or collected many traffic tickets is emotionally disturbed and should get a psychiatric examination along with his fine.
Dr. Kummer thinks it is the citizens' responsibility to spot such confused "potential criminals" and prevent them from driving. He thinks the roads would be much safer if people who are emotionally upset were restrained from letting off their anxieties and aggressions from behind the steering wheel.
And, if you are the hot rod type, Dr. Kummer says you well may be trying to cover up feelings of sexual inadequacy. Perhaps this is the basis for the stigma attached to the ferocious female driver.
Dr. Kummer will not let you go, though, even if you are a cautious driver. Sexual inadequacy and emotional disturbance also reveal themselves
if you fail to keep your vehicle in top notch order. If your car does not function properly, it follows that you do not function properly.
From Dr. Kummer's revelations, it is clear and logical that any mishap you might have with your chariot is not the fault of the mechanic or the manufacturer. That is a rationalization. No doubt it is your id, beating your ego to the punch in a battle of instinct versus rational responsibility.
Drivers, not only are the lives of many in your hands, but your own character and reputation are at stake when you surreptitiously sneak behind the steering rod of your Stutz-Bearcat.
Who knows, other than the Shadow, how many eyes peer at you and seek to gain entrance to your precious psychological secrets? You may be branded as an immature, anti-social, sexually inferior, angry bully and potential criminal, when after all you may be one of the meek who shall inherit the earth.
Sinners, if you have been doing naughty things which leave you no outlet for your guilt complexes and aggressions except one behind the wheel, think first of the innocent, puritanical pedestrian. Repent, for heaven's sake! The life you save may lower the grade curve.
—Martha Pearse
Editor:
... Letters ...
When Vox Populi announced its platform for the spring election, the president of Vox stated the party candidates will be campaigning on that platform.
The platform outlines five areas in which Vox has supposedly been working and four new areas in which action must be initiated. 1. Housing Committee: Last year's
Vox platform contained a similar provision. Are we to surmise that nothing has been done to correct the problem of the unorganized independents?
2. Committee Assignments: Vox feels petitioning and approval by the All Student Council is a good method. Yet the ASC constitution requires student council approval of these committee appointments. Also, through Vox's petition system, only 24 of 71 such positions were secured by independents.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
"TIME TO CLEAN UP GIRLS - REMEMBER NOW A PLACE FOR EVERYTHING AN' EVERYTHING IN ITS PLACE!" HARME BLOOM
BUT CATCH THIS
PILLAR OF PERFECTION
IN HER NATURAL
HABITAT.
3. Student government information: Vox pledges itself to continue to inform students through the ASC public relations committee. Yet the Vox ASC voted down a proposal to set up a newsletter to be published by the public relations committee.
4. Curriculum Committees: This idea was formulated last year by an AGI student government.
5. Student Wages: Why didn't the Labor Committee work in this area this year?
Next the platform emphasizes four specific points. The first could be made possible only through the extension of women's closing hours and this is something entirely beyond the scope of ASC. The second is so worded that it only raises a problem, but does not offer any suggestions for solving the problem.
As for the third and fourth points, student government should reflect more than mere concern over such matters as where to get the next cup of coffee or where to park the car. Student government should concern itself with matters more relevant to student government.
It is rather disillusioning when candidates for student body offices and the party they represent are unable to develop ideas of more value than this insignificant chaff.
Larry G. Ehrlich Russell sophomore
Worth Repeating
Life isn't all beer and skittles; but beer and skittles, or something better of the same sort, must form a good part of every Englishman's education.-Thomas Hughes
Student Government
Judiciary Is KU Courts
(Editor's note: This is the fifth in a series of articles on campus politics and student government. This article deals with the judicial branch of student government.)
The judicial branch of student government is composed of the Disciplinary Committee and the Student Court.
The Student Court rules on all All Student Council legislation, campus traffic and parking violations and disputes between student groups. This includes handling irregularities which come up during campus elections.
The chief justice is appointed by the dean of the School of Law, the six associates by the student body president and the faculty advisory committee.
The Disciplinary Committee composed of both men and women, handles scholastic violations and appeals from the Student Court. Last year, for example, they met and ruled on the enrollment violations. Its student members are appointed by the president of the student body.
A check and balance system, like that of the federal government, prevents the possibility of any branch becoming dominant in the student government.
The checks in the system are;
The Student Court rules on the legality of all ASC legislation.
All appointments made by the student body president or vice president must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the ASC.
The student body president appoints members of the Student Court, but they must be approved by a two-thirds ASC majority. The ASC also has the power to remove members of the court.
It Looks This Way...
By Larry Miles
Vice President Nixon is reported to be basking in the Miami Beach sun with a bulging brief case. The vice president should try sun-tan lotion.
The report adds the bulging brief case contains statistical studies about the U.S. economy. This doesn't surprise Democrats. They have long suspected the administration's economic policies were born of sun-stroke.
***
****
Papers also reported that Secretary of State John Foster Dulles continued to rest in the Florida sun. The papers didn't mention when Eisenhower was expected.
- * *
Newsweek reports, however, that there were U.S. Congressmen present during the Easter recess. This may suggest the British had an eye to the future when they burned Washington.
**\*\*\***
Eddie and Liz said they were "jumping for joy" since Debbie agreed to a quick divorce. The happy couple's fans may want to send skipping ropes.
☆ ☆ ☆
***
The movie last weekend may have been produced by Armour Co. It was all ham.
A student I know is spending all his time in the local dives. He wants a 3.2 this semester, but the University is only giving 3.0's.
* *
Lawrence drug stores are peddling grades now. They come in NoDoz boxes.
---
Members of the 1959 senior class are suggesting class gifts for the University. Some have suggested a good present might be the razing of some of the gifts of prior years.
* *
A sports-minded friend of mine reports good hunting Easter Sunday. The bunnies were out.
A sociology professor has researched the divorce problem and claims men are at fault. Men, he says, should cooperate. The little women should be permitted to make all the little decisions. Then the men should decide the big decisions and what are little and big decisions.
****
* *
It takes nine window washers three weeks to polish all 5,400 windows in the United Nations building, then the men start all over again. It isn't know how many psychiatrists it takes to relieve the frustrations.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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. 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... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Alumni Issue Offers Survey
The March issue of the KU Alumni Magazine will contain a special 16-page survey dealing with the college teacher and his importance to society.
The survey, entitled "The College Teacher; 1959," shows the problems and rewards of those who teach in higher education. The report suggests that the college teacher himself underwrites the cost of higher education by receiving an income far out of proportion to current living costs.
Political Scientist To Talk Thursday
The public is invited to sit in on addresses by a Columbia University professor to political science classes Thursday.
The speaker, Dr. David Truman,
professor of public law and government,
will arrive tomorrow. He will
address Prof. John Grummi's 10 a.m.
Politics of Pressure Groups class
and Prof. J. Eldon Fields' 2 p.m.
American Political Ideas class.
Thursday evening he will speak at the annual banquet of Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science fraternity.
Student Improves in Hospital After Swallowing Compound
A University student who last month swallowed Drano, a caustic soda compound, has been transferred to an eastern Kansas hospital, where officials said that his condition is "good with no complications."
The student, who was admitted to Watkins Memorial Hospital on March 23. was transferred Thursday.
Douglas County Sheriff Dale Chappell said he was notified of the incident by officials at Watkins Hospital three days after it occurred.
Part-time jobs for women are available from the office of the dean of women. Most jobs are for clerical work in departmental offices until the end of the year. Women interested should see Donna Younger, assistant to the dean of women.
Jobs Offered to Women
Radio Programs KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "String Quartet No. 13 in B-Flat Major" by Beethoven
7:00 Concerto Concert
7:35 The Atom and You
7:50 Musical Interlude
8:00 University of the Air
9:30 Opera Highlights
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music:
“Quartet No. 3 in C Minor” by Brahms
11:00 Sign Off
11:00 Sign Off
The KU Alumni Magazine will also publish, in the March issue, a report of a conference held recently at KU entitled "The College Teacher at KU: 1959." At the conference a group of KU faculty members and administrators discussed the local aspects of the problems raised by the special survey report.
KUOK Tonight
6:00 Sign On
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Wednesday Night Dance from Kansas Union. Harry Winters Band.
10:05 Dwight Norman Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Dwight Norman
12:00 Sign Off
Gunn to Handle KU Relations
University Daily Kansan
The survey, prepared by 19 alumni magazine editors, was sponsored by the American Alumni Council. Part of the editorial expenses were paid by a grant from the Carnegie Corp. The alumni magazines of 249 colleges, universities, and private secondary schools throughout the United States and Canada are publishing the report.
James E. Gunn, assistant director of public relations and instructor of English, has been appointed to the position of administrative assistant for university relations.
The Castle Tea Room
1307 Massachusetts
VI 3-1151
Caws Is Forum Speaker
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WOLFSON'S
In announcing the appointment, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said that he had merely added to Mr. Gunn's duties and changed his office from Fraser Hall to Strong Hall.
CREDIT JEWELERS
743 Mass. VI 3-4366
Peter J. Caws, assistant professor of philosophy, will speak at 7:30 tonight in room 305 of the Kansas Union on "A Case for Metaphysics." The speech is part of the Humanities forum.
Mr. Gunn will work on relationships between the administration and faculty and with problems between the University and other groups. He will officially take over the new position July 1.
Moore Appointed Consultant
Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology, has accepted an appointment as a consultant to work with more than 100 of the nation's leading biologists to create a secondary school biology program which will integrate a series of filmed lecture-demonstrations in classroom teaching.
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Wednesday, April 8, 1959
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 interment. Daily Kansan. Notices include name, place, date, and time of function.
Jay James, Oread Room. 5-5:30 p.m.
Attendance required. Union.
TODAY
Humanities Forum, 7:30 p.m. 305 Union. Professor Peter J. Caws, assistant professor of philosophy, will read a paper entitled. "The Case for Metaphysics."
Mathematics Colloquim, "Nodal Lines on a Vibrating Membrane," Ake Pleijel, 4.15 p.m., 203 Strong, 3:50 p.m., coffee, 217 Strong.
El Ateneo, 4 p.m., 11. Fraser, Robert Squier, Sociology instructor, "A Mysterious Ancient Mexican Civilization" Illustrated with slides. All are welcome. Lutheran Gamma Delta, Pastor Britton chapel services. 5 to 3.20 p.m. Danbury
Newman Club, 7 p.m. Oread Room of Kansas Union Group discussion on. The Conference
TOMORROW
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong,
Mr. H. A. Lee, Equitable Life Assurance
and actuarial training programs; Mr. Guy Cross,
Ginn and Co., college travelers
Episcopic Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. breakfast following. Canterbury House.
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky St.
FRIDAY
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky St.
John's Church, 7th and Kentucky St.
and Holy Communion 7:40 a.m. with breakfast following, Canterbury House,
Canterbury House, Canterbury Fellowship,
7:30 p.m. 829 Mississippi St. Bible study,
discussion, refreshments.
Deutsche Verein trifft sich Donnerstag um 5. Uhr in Raum 402 Fraser, Herri er Johnson Watts wird ueber "Wisconsin Deutsch" spreechen. Er hat einige Tonbauer als Beispiele davon Es wird Tonbauer geben. Alle sind heraldisen eingeladen)
We require a B.S. or an advanced degree in mathematics or the physical sciences.
Experience in your university's computing facility is highly desirable.
SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Offers work of the future ...today!
$f \approx \sum$
Computer programmers & applied mathematicians
High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming.
Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709,704,and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies.
Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer.
Space Technology Laboratories, Inc.
P. O. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California
STL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 8. 1959
LIVE BETTER BY FAR WITH A BRAND NEW CAR
These LAWRENCE AUTO DEALERS
cordially invite you to attend the
C
LIVE BETTER BY FAR
WITH A BRAND NEW CAR
Jim Clark Motors Sanders Motor Co.
Winter Chevrolet
University Ford
Les Morgan Oldsmobile
Car Show & Square Dance Thursday Eve. April 9
Car Show begins 6 p.m. Dance begins 8:30 p.m.The 800 & 900 blocks on Massachusetts will be blocked off for the big shindig! See & inspect all the new cars on display.
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
KU Takes Third Straight On Holler's 5-Hitter
The KU ball team extended its winning streak to three games yesterday by defeating Washburn University 7-0 at Quigley Field.
Righthander Tom Holler won his second victory of the season as he went all the way in a seven-inning contest. Holler gave up no runs on five hits, none of which were for extra bases.
The hitting attack was led by centerfielder Bob Marshall, third baseman Roger Hill and catcher Carl Lauterjung as they all delivered extra base hits in the time of need. The offensive attack netted eight hits.
So far this season the team has out-scored its opponents 47 to 20. The biggest asset of the team to date has been its ability to capitalize on the enemies' mistakes. Up to now the hitting has shown up very well while the fielding has left room for improvement. While pitching has been effective, the hurlers will have to concentrate on giving fewer bases on ball.
the line against Oklahoma State in the first Big Eight Conference game of the season in Stillwater Friday. Then the Jayhawkers will play a double-header on Saturday before returning home. Oklahoma State is rated as one of the top teams in the league.
KU will put its winning streak on
Manager Floyd Temple will probably call on Tom Holler, Bill Clinkenbeard and Joe Doolittle to start the three games.
Coffeyville Juco Wins Easily
PITTSBURG —(UPI)— Capturing nine of 14 events and compiling $110_{\frac{3}{2}}$ points, Coffeyville, Kan., yesterday ran to an easy win in the Junior College Division of the Pittsburgh State Relays.
Independence, Kan., was second among the 12 teams competing from Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri with 25 6/15 points. Third was Arkansas City, Kan., with 24 4/5.
At the same time, a dual meet was held between Pittsburg State and Warrensburg, Mo., State with Pittsburgh winning, $104\frac{1}{2}$ to $32\frac{1}{2}$.
Roberts Draws Starting Role
By United Press International
Robin Roberts, now almost as much a part of opening day tradition as the ceremonial first pitch and the march to the flagpole, topped the list of first game pitching assignments today by drawing the honor for the 10th straight season.
Roberts has been first on the firing line for the Phils since Opening Dav. 1950, when he hurled a nine-hitter to beat the Brooklyn Dodgers, 9-1.
In those nine previous first-day assignments, Roberts has pitched a complete game seven times, including one 12-inning game. He has won four (including a three-hitter over the Giants in 1955), lost four, and last year was the first time he wasn't involved in the final decision.
Roberts this year will be toiling at night as the Phils open at home Friday against the Cincinnati Reds.
The season officially opens Thursday with one game in each league
Track Team Prepares For Kansas Relays
The Jayhawker track team will stay home this weekend to prepare for the Kansas Relays coming up Friday and Saturday, April 17-18.
Coach Easton said barring all mishaps it looks as if the full squad will be able to participate in the Kansas Relavs.
Bob Tague, Big Eight recordholder in the 880 and Bob Covey, champion quarter-miler, were out of the Texas Relays because of injuries.
Only one mishap occurred at the Texas Relays, when Bill Alley injured his arm slightly on his record-breaking javelin throw. However, he should be in good shape it time for the Relays.
team promises to make a good showing and break a few records in doing so in the upcoming Kansas Relays.
For Your
Coach Easton still refuses to make any predictions. "There are going to be some pretty good teams and a lot of stiff competition at these Relays," he said. "Anything could happen."
A's Grapefruit Finale Today
So, if all goes well, the Jayhawker
PARTY PARTY PARTY
DALLAS, Tex—(UPI) —The Kansas City Athletics will play their final spring exhibition game of the season here today against Dallas, then head for Kansas City and their 1959 American League opener with Cleveland on Friday.
our
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A girl runs along the beach. The sea is churning up waves and there are hills in the background.
More people are loyal to Camels than any other cigarette today. It stands to reason: the best tobacco makes the best smoke. The Camel blend of costly tobaccos has never been equalled for rich flavor and easygoing mildness. No wonder Camel is the No.1 cigarette of all brands today!
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Come in today and see these and others you get when you shop at the store that gives you more for LESS.
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1237 Oread
Page.6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 8.1959
Sigma Chi
Sigma Chi fraternity has announced the initiation of 21 new members. Con Poirier, Topeka freshman, was named honor initiate and David Gray, Lawrence freshman, was honor pledge.
Clubs Elect Officers, Gain Honors
Other initiates are Bill Bailey, Topeka; John Benz, Bartlesville, Okla.; Dick Black, Jerry Gardner, Bill Johnson, all of Wichita.
John Ellis, Roger Hall, both of Coffeyville; Bob Hort, Kansas City, Kans.; Steve Reed, Mission; Van Hoisington, Paradise; Charles Johnson, Wymore, Neb.; Fred Kaul, Waimeg; Larry Lady, Abilene; Chris Morgan, Emporia, and Tom Sawyer. All are freshmen.
Steve Charles, Garden City junior; Bill Reeder, Shawnee, and Jack Stevens, Ames, Iowa, both sophomores.
--by photography
Phi Mu Alpha
John Van Kirk, Louisburg junior has been elected president of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity for men.
Other officers are John Woody,
Springfield, Mo., junior; vice president;
Darrrell Nelson, Scandia soophome;
recording secretary; John Meeks, Kansas City, Kan., junior;
corresponding secretary.
Bruce Gardner, Lawrence junior,
alumni secretary; David Crawford.
Prescott sophomore, treasurer;
Charles Rogers, Parker sophomore,
warden.
Garl Elting, Kansas City, Mo.
junior, publicity chairman; Jim
Christenson, Carbondale junior, program chairman; Fred Pendergraft,
Atchison junior, social chairman,
and Myles Criss, Topeka junior;
song leader.
☆ ☆ ☆
Lambda Chi Alpha
The University of Kansas chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity placed seventh in scholarship among the fraternity's 114 chapters for 1957-58.
The KU chapter also had the highest standing in the fraternity among those chapters at state supported colleges and universities, said Robert L. Smith, Salina sophomore and scholarship chairman. Chapter standings were determined by how each unit stood in relation to the all men's average on that campus.
?
An Elring Gift For Every Occasion
Bridal Honors, anniversaries, graduation, birthdays, ... whatever the event, Elring's requests the pleasure of sending your token. It means so very much more!
ELRING'S GIFTS
924 Mass. VI 3-5160
Portraits
- Weddings
- Engagements
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Photos
Watkins
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HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 1-0330
Marilyn Shaw, Galena junior, has been elected president of Watkins Hall for the coming year. Other officers are Linda Guise, Marysville sophomore, vice president; Nadine Blair, Atchison junior, secretary; Marilyn Alpert, Paola junior, treasurer.
Donna Roof, Ness City sophomore,
house manager; Mary Killgore,
Parkville, Mo., freshman, freshman
counselor; Rita Peters, Smith Center
freshman, social chairman, and Pat
Williamson, Troy freshman, Inter-
Residence Council representative.
Phi Kappa Tau
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity held its Founder's Day tea Sunday in its chapter house.
francis
731 Mass.
Theta Chi
sporting goods
Tennis Racket and Tennis Balls
we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service
Gene Triplette, Parsons junior, has been elected president of the Theta Chi fraternity pledge class for the coming year.
GRANADA
HOW SHOWING
Other pledge class officers are Bill Nichols, Wichita freshman, vice president and secretary, and Bud Jones. Girard junior, treasurer.
ENDS FRIDAY
James Stewart
Kim Novak
Jack Lemonn
Ernie Koyaes
"Bell, Book and Candle"
Clyde Kensinger, Sapulpa, Okla.
freshman, Bill Nichols, Wichita freshman, and Triplett, are IFPC representatives.
VARSITY
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THURS.-FRI
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LAWRENCE
---
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Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity held an exchange dinner with the Delta Delta Delta sorority recently.
Chaperones for the exchange were Mrs. H. W. Jenkins and Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow.
Sellards Hall
Stephenson Hall
Dinner guests at Stephenson Hall recently were Francis Heller, associate dean of the College, Mrs. Heller and E. A. Bayne, an American Universities Field Staff representative.
Tau Kappa Epsilon
**
\* \* \*
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity has announced the pledging of Tim Woods, Lawrence junior, and John Jones, Topeka freshman.
Sellards Hall and Battenfeld Hall held a breakfast recently at Sellards Hall.
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Wednesday, April 8, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Hall Sel-
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
PALE GREEN CARDIGAN, lady's, lost Thursday noon. Call extension 324 or turn it into lost and found in the Kansan Business Office. 4-8
WANTED
PAIR OF BLACK GLASSES, not in a case. The name, Hanselmann, is marked on the right inside temple. Call VI 3-7415. room 525. 4-9
WANTED: to lease a home with three bedrooms and bath near KU. If possible, would prefer basement and extra space or furnished or partly furnished. Call VI 3-1448. 4-9
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Call
M 3-5297 after 5 p.m. t
STUDENTS interested in making $150 additional income a month can call the insurance sailing. Call Carl F. Ade, Jr., Kansas City, Missouri at Harrison 1-6725.
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYBING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type them, term papers, theses, Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations for final student-faculty rate. Call VI 3-5014.
NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence-cur-
shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center,
1218 Corn. Open weekdays 8 am to
6:30 p.m. Birds and aquatic animals,
birds' supplies, 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 is included.
Litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone IV 3-2921. Welcome.
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, to General papers. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
Leonard. call VI 3-5263. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tt
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021½ Mass.
Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc.
For men massage by proxies
for women Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. t
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS Formals, welding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 941% Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263. tt
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST: Test papers.
Mates. Mrs. H. H.
Cossetter, phone VI 3-8679.
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
in dance studio. Dance Studio, 940
Missouri, ph. 3-6383.
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have thesis, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typiist. Standard dates. Mrs. Leatherwood VI 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. ttf.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop. 730 Massachusetts. $4.50
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates Fast. error free service, free pick up and delivery. Cail YI 3-9508. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable attribution; attentions; accurate work. Call VI 3-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka 1911 Tennessee t.
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-9568. tf
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veuist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadi
Motors, 318 East 17. Phone VI 3-4350.
4-24
4-24
EXPERIENCED white woman wants kitchen work or house work, also sewing and alterations. Call VI 3-5978 or VI 3-4445. 4-9
UPHOLSTERING. REFINISHING, free estimates, pickup and delivery. Lane's Furniture Repair, 311 East 7th. VI 3-2736. 4-10
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do all kinds
of typing. Call VI 3-6249 4-17
perienced typist. Call VI 3-6249 4-17
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags Plicnic, party supply plant, 6th and Vermon. Phone VI-9350.
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: ride to downtown Kansas
CITY, leaving at 2 p.m., Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday. Call Mrs. Robert Lash
at VI 3-8609.
FOR RENT
TWO BEDROOM HOME furnished
INFORMATION Call VI 4207 during the daytime.
VACANCY for young man in contemporary home, now and summer. 20 x40 swimming pool, living board. Living room and private patio privileges. Needs a private entrance, shows+reception, Country Club club. Call VI 3-9635. 4-19
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath beet and gas furnished, linen furnished to accept graduate students. Call VI 31-7677
HOUSE, four rooms, unfurnished, completely modern, full basement, large backyard and garage. Call 3-5755 at 3 p.m., weekdays and anytime on Sundays.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent or for sale, furnished, includes air conditioner, washer, dryer, and disposal. Near the street level. Year lease at $100 per month, would also sell for $2500 down, second mortgage on balance of equity. Total sale price is $3999. For call or visit agent, available May 18. Call 5-185 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
FOR SALE
SIAMESE KITTENS, nine weeks old, un-
tainted. 910 Louisiana, first floor, anytime.
POST SLIDE RULE with leather case
POST SLIDE RULE with leather case
most new, $17.50. Call VI 3-4388. 4-9
57 AUSTIN HEALEY, heater, heater, elec-
tric wheels and wheels w/wheels
must sell. Call Vi 3-3000 4-8
COLT FRONTIER 38-40 revolver, $65.
Lugers, $40,-$45, 32 and 38 automatics.
Kings, $50,-$50 and three枪. For Duke Jardins, 1138 Mississippi, VI 2-0051, 4-8
HOUSE AND LOT, 1518 Meadow Lane,
just west of the field house, lot size is
105x162 in Clarkson Grandview Place
in Clarkson, NC. Two tiered tree
trees, shrubs and perennials. Two level
house, entrance level contains two bed-
rooms with built in chests of drawers,
bath, kitchen with exhaust fan and din-
board shelves. Two tiered burning
fireplace and two red cedar plank walls. Dining area, two large picture windows overlooking Wakara valu-
able landscaping. Large room with three-quarter ton air conditioner. Balcony, screen porch and flagstone terrace. Lower level has an extra large bedroom
which is ground level rear of house.
Large living room with three-quarter ton flower garden. Basement area back of this room consists of a family room with gas log fireplace and cyclone protection roof. Front yard with two tiered shower, three car carport, contemporary architecture, custom design. Three-quarter inch red wooden siding, field cement wagon and heavy reinforced concrete foundation. Footing. Call 3-4782 for appointment.
1956 BUICK CENTURY, four door, power braking and steering wheel, 30-inch wheel, 47-inch wheel, 72-38 inch long. Automatic 22 pistol, holster, extra clip, 1,500 rounds ammunition. Call VI 3-0445.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 8, 1959
Iranian Aid Seen Essential
A visiting American Universities Field Staff lecturer said last night that if the United States stops aid to Iran a chain reaction would start in the Middle East that would ruin American diplomatic efforts.
Speaking before a combined meeting of Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternities, E. A. Bayne outlined the position of the United States in Iran, stressing the importance of America now, since replacing Great Britain as an influence.
Mr. Bayne said United States aid to Iran consists of military support and the physical strength in that country through the large number
No One Shows Up For Women's Talks
A discussion of religious activities and false moral standards at KU failed to attract any students to a panel discussion at the United Presbyterian Center last night.
A discussion on professor-student relationships and cheating on tests is scheduled for 7 tonight in the Center. The two undiscussed subjects from last night's unattended meeting will be included in the program.
Social problems at KU will be discussed at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Center.
Members of the panel include; Jerrrianne Thornburgh. Syracuse senior and chairman of the panel; Sharon L. Luxford, Kansas City, Mo.; Trudy A. Gier, McPherson; Mary C. Weidensaul, Shoshioni Wyo., all juniors; Nancy F. Schwarz, Solomon, and Margaret Thrasher; Wichita, sophomores.
Sing Registration Closes on Friday
Friday is the deadline for registration in the annual Spring Sing April 29 for all independent, organized houses.
Registration can be made by contacting Charlotte Stryker, Topeka junior, at VI 3-9123.
Eight houses have registered 14 ensembles and 12 songs.
Houses registering small ensembles are Douthart, Pearson, Battenfeld, Gertrude Sellars Pearson third floor, Miller, J. R. Pearson, and Grace Pearson halls.
Large ensembles have been registered by GSP, Douthart, Grace Pearson, Foster, Miller, and Battenfeld halls.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, will award four gold-cup trophies. First and second place trophies will be presented in both the large and small ensemble divisions.
Joseph E. Wilkins, professor of voice, will be one of three judges. The other judges have not been selected. ___
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The United States also participates in the grass roots economic aid supplied by the point-four program, Mr. Bayne said.
Earlier during his stay on the campus Mr. Bayne spoke on the responsibility the United States has in Iran stressing the fact that if the U.S. didn't supply aid to Iran the Russian government would.
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ONE, TWO, THREE — Jan Rodgers, Paradise junior, and Howie Elfeldt, Kansas City, Mo.,
senior, members of the elections committee. double-check ballots in last night's counting.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No.122
Thursday, April 9, 1959
Composers hear Chancellor
Murphy Scores 'Puritanism'
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy called for the "destruction of Puritanism" in a speech last night before a group of faculty members and visiting composers.
Chancellor Murphy spoke at a banquet for members of this week's Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music.
"Puritanism is the kind of tradition which has made it unrespectable for a young man to cry in the presence of beauty. It is one of the difficulties we encounter when young people come to us at the university level," he said.
Introducing Chancellor Murphy
Flu Epidemic Could Hit Here
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, directo of the Student Health Service, sait today it is "not impossible" to have an epidemic of flu here.
Two students are in Watkins Hospital with virus influenza and it is likely that nine more illnesses at the Hospital will be diagnosed as flu he said.
Only two other cases of flu have been reported in the state, Dr. Canuteson said, both in Western Kansas.
"The weather is proof that all students should have the flu vaccine." Dr. Canuteson said.
One of the largest influenza epidemics in history started in September. 1918, he commented.
More than 2,400 students had shots earlier in the year, making the total number 2,700 who have been vaccinated, he said.
"Not as many students are taking advantage of the flu vaccine as we would like." Dr. Canuteson said.
"The vaccine is available for the students to receive. If we give it out, we are doing our part. All we can do is offer it. It is up to the students to take advantage of it," he commented.
"In the 15th century, he would have been Lorenzo the Magnificent; in the 18th century, a Thomas Jefferson; and in the 20th century, he is the Chancellor of the University of Kansas, where he can be a patron of the arts with George Docking's money."
at the symposium banquet last night, Dean Thomas E. Gorton of the School of Fine Arts said this;
Chancellor Murphy said cultural activities like the symposium are essential. He said the symposium is another step forward in the continued development in creating and performing the arts.
Chancellor Murphy replied that he had not found the money yet, but assured his audience "the search goes on eternally."
"Activities like the symposium are not icing on the cake; they are essential to creating a whole human," he said.
The chancellor also spoke about Soviet music and art. In the Soviet Union, he said, creativity is squeezed out of literature, and painting and
sculpture are lacking in creativity. Russian ballet achieves creativity by taking folk tales for themes and building around them, he said.
"An effort is made to teach every child to read music by the time he finishes seven years of formal schooling. There is a continued pre-occupation with music as an important part of life in the Soviet Union," he said.
Chancellor Murphy said amateur music is encouraged in the Soviet Union, especially in factories and in the cities. Small groups meet for music, sports, and chess in the evenings.
"If you could combine the intensive interest in music and the willingness to devote time, money, and materials of the Soviet Union with the freedom we have in the United States, you would have the ideal life," he said.
"If somehow we at the University can convince young people to live richly in their emotional lives, we will have a flowering in our music world." he continued.
Exhibition of Wood's Works Opens Sunday
The exhibition, to be shown through May 30, is the last in the series of the works of the three midwestern regionalist pointers. The other two exhibitions showed the work of John Steuart Curry and Thomas Hart Benton.
In connection with the Wood exhibition a special sales exhibition
The Museum of Art will open an exhibition of the works of Grant Wood with a public reception from 3 to 6 p.m. Sunday.
On display in one of the smaller galleries in the Museum are 19 original signed lithographs by these three artists, loaned by the Associated American Artists Gallery in New York City. These prints are for sale to the public.
The Wood exhibition will include 54 works taken from the East and West coasts as well as from the midwestern collections. Because of their fragile condition a number of Wood's paintings have not been loaned.
of the lithographs of Curry, Benton, and Wood has been arranged by the museum.
The Museum, which receives no commission from the sale, organized it because of the great demand noticed each year among persons wanting to own works by the three regionalists.
Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Saturday and 1:30
p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Vox Outvotes AGI, 951-501
Vox 'Populi outvoted the Allied Greek-Independent party nearly two to one in the campus primaries yesterday and Tuesday.
Party primaries produced 1,452 votes—951 Vox and 501 AGI. About 1,600 students voted, the other votes accounted for the non-party class officer elections,
The primaries serve as a test of comparative strength, since the parties normally nominate only as many candidates as can be elected in the general election. The number of candidates depends on the votes cast in each district.
But six candidates—one Vox and five AGI-were eliminated in the primary.
The five losing AGI candidates are Nancy Knauss, Garnett sophomore, women's dorsitory; Delano Lewis, Kansas City, Kan, junior, fraternity, Russell Marcinek, Chicago, Ill. sophomore, men's dorsitory; Sherron Skaggs, Dodge City sophomore, sosority; Paul Willey, Caldwell junior, business school.
Vox candidate Harold Archer, Olathe junior, was dropped from the ballot after a tie vote was decided in favor of Louis Lawrence, Great Bend sophomore. Archer and Lawrence were running for independent unorganized representative.
Jan Barker, Russell, senior class president; Karen Johnson, Topeka, and Gwendolyn Gray, Coffeyville, senior class secretary; Charlotte
Four class officer candidates were also dropped from the ballot in the primary. They are:
Dohmann, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore class treasurer.
Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. senior and chairman of the ASC elections committee, said the turnout far exceeded his expectations.
One hundred six students voted in the business school primary, 128 in the women's dormitory district, 135 in the unmarried-unorganized independent district, 246 in the men's dormitory district, 492, in the sorority district, and 503 in the fraternity district.
Ballot counting took about two hours last night. Votes were counted on IBM machines in the statistics lab in Bailey.
Forum, Concert, Will Conclude Symposium
Wilson said counting the general election ballots will probably take less time than the primary.
"With the kinks in we'll cut our time about in half," he said.
(Candidates for the general election are listed on Page 3.)
A concert at 8 tonight in the University Theatre will conclude the first annual Mid-American Symposium for Contemporary American Music.
Robert Baustian will conduct the Symposium orchestra in a rehearsal of the scheduled works from 2 to 4 p.m. in the University Theatre.
No Liquor Problem Say Deans, ASC
Three KU deans and the head of the All Student Council Social Committee indicate they believe KU has no liquor problem.
Asked about the procedure for trying a person or group accused of a liquor violation, he said:
Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, said this week that only a few individual liquor violations have been brought up for disciplinary action.
"The judicial setup is somewhat complex because the individual house or hall, judicial branches of the Associated Women Students and All Student Council, and the personnel offices all enter the cases."
University regulations permit no liquor or beer on state property or in any student housing University-owned or private.
Dean Woodruff was asked if he had made a statement earlier this year that students would be better off drinking in the living quarters than in their automobiles. He answered:
"Although I may have made the statement . . . I was only speculating on a situation which is easy to speculate about."
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said her department places emphasis on social conduct rather than drinking alone.
"Actually the evidence doesn't bear me out on this because drunken driving still prevails where there are bars. It's merely speculation," he repeated.
"There is really very little trouble in this respect. There has been a decrease in freshman women's drinking this year."
AWS regulations say minor violations will be dealt with by the individual group, and repeated minor or any major violations will go before the Board of Standards through the Dean of Women's office
The Board of Standards is composed of a member from the AWS Senate, senior women members and representatives of the organized houses.
"Any judgment made by the Board of Standards can be appealed directly to my office," Dean Taylor said.
Dean Taylor said she has received
some complaints from girls that only intoxicating beverages were served at some parties. She said:
"This is not even being courteous. By serving only liquor, you are forcing a person to do something he or she may not want to do. The simple matter of being a good host would not allow this."
"The only things we have had have just been rumors. I don't know just what the procedure would be if we came across a violation."
"This is the first year the social committee has dealt with the student liquor problem.
"Although the subject is frequently discussed among administrators, I do not feel our situation on campus is too troublesome. I believe the vast majority of KU students understand why we have rules and regulations, and, more particularly, how good standards affect them on and off the campus."
Richard Sharp, Kansas City, Kan. senior and chairman of the ASC Social Committee, said no formal complaints have been received by his committee concerning liquor violations. He said:
In a prepared statement, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, said:
Sharp said he thinks the University regulation against drinking in students' private homes and apartments is ridiculous because it is impossible to enforce.
Sharp said two groups have been called in this year by his committee for drinking "and the low standards of their parties," but he said no fines were levied upon them.
He declined to name the organiza- tions.
Weather
Cloudy with occasional snow extreme west this afternoon, spreading over west tonight and diminishing Friday.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 9. 1959
Kansan Presents Campus Issues
Both campus political parties have announced their platforms and are now campaigning for the general elections next week. Both have strong and weak points, but The Daily Kansan feels that the voter should consider a few other issues before he goes to the polls. These issues comprise what we believe is important to the University.
***
1. Cars should be banned from Jayhawk Boulevard during class hours. This has been done on several other campuses and would alleviate the growing traffic problem.
. . .
2. No parking ticket should cost more than $8, regardless of the number of violations. No parking violation is important enough to warrant the present excessive fines.
- * *
3. Library closing hours should be extended to midnight. Many students find it difficult to attend the library early in the evening. In an institution of higher learning every effort should be made to aid the students' educational efforts.
***
4. The curriculum committees in the various schools should investigate the work loads of professors and the amount of space and equipment allotted to them.
--the GIHR should be cut from the ASC budget. A more effective program can be worked out in this field.
5. The All Student Council should investigate the type of library books purchased. We realize that the large collection of rare books presently on hand provides original research material, but the Undergraduate Library is insufficiently stocked with references and books for outside reading assignments.
--the GIHR should be cut from the ASC budget. A more effective program can be worked out in this field.
6. The Student Health Committee should investigate the Student Health Service to determine the staff qualifications, student privileges and other information.
***
7. The ASC should propose an amendment to the constitution calling for the automatic replacement of any ASC member who misses three meetings in one semester without an approved excuse. This amendment would insure a more responsible Council and help assure quorums at all meetings.
8. The ASC should direct the Group for the Improvement of Human Relations toward a program of equal rights in Lawrence and on the campus for all students regardless of race. Otherwise,
***
9. The ASC should establish a system limiting the number of activities and offices in which a student could take part or hold. Although activities can be educational, we feel the groups each student is in should be limited.
--foreign ambassadors representing their countries in Washington, D.C. Several of the nations invited indicated genuine interest in visiting KU. The first visit arranged
10. The ASC should investigate the possibilities of eliminating class attendance requirements for juniors and seniors. By the time a student is an upperclassman he is able to determine how often he needs to attend a class.
***
11. The ASC should investigate all schools and departments in the University and recommend a uniform grading system. This is badly needed. An example of the need is the present situation in the English department.
** **
***
12. The ASC should sponsor a system of student-faculty seminars in all schools and departments to be set up according to the wishes of each department's students and faculty members. Students need to be encouraged to pursue academic interests. Seminars could be developed into an effective method.
13. The ASC should begin a campaign to bring about the elimination of all racial and religious clauses in the national charters of all fraternities and sororites at KU. Although many Greek houses no longer have such clauses, the few which still do are contrary to the principles of American freedom.
***
14. The proposed constitutional amendment to be voted on by the student body Tuesday and Wednesday should be passed. It will give the small schools an opportunity to elect a voting representative to the ASC. This will provide fairer representation on the Council. The present requirements for a voting representative are unrealistic.
These are the issues which we feel, if carried out, would make for a better student government. These points, if made into realities, will aid the campus as a whole. These are the issues against which the candidates should be measured next week. —The Editors
It Depends On You
...Letters ...
Last semester a number of invitations were extended by the department of political science to
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
5-12
11TERM GRADES MUST BE OUT — SOME OF MY STUDENTS AREN'T SPEAKING TO ME TODAY."
As most students probably know, Yugoslavia is a Communist country that split with the Soviet Union in 1948. Since that time it has followed a neutral policy toward both the Soviet Bloc and the "free" countries of the West. As a result of its ideological and geographical position in Western Europe Yugoslavia is a key country whose importance in world politics is far more than its size and population might suggest.
is Friday when the Ambassador from the Federal Peoples Republic of Yugoslavia will visit the University.
However before we in the department of political science make further arrangements for more ambassadorial visits to this campus, we want to make certain that such an interest exists. The best way to indicate this interest is to attend the ambassador's address at 8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. He will speak on "The Role of Yugoslavia in World Politics."
The United States has since 1948 assisted Yugoslavia in a number of ways including both economic and military aid. Thus we believe that the visit of the Yugoslav Ambassador to the University should be of great interest to the student body.
Clifford P. Ketzel Assistant professor of Political Science
Worth Repeating
The first years of man must make provision for the last.— Samuel Johnson
the book world
By Gilbert M. Cuthbertson
THE GREEK VIEW OF LIFE, G. Lowes Dickinson, Ann Arbor Paperbacks, The University of Michigan Press, $1.75.
Dickinson strikes the fundamental chords of Greek Life which reverberate into a "well-destined urn" for the modern world. There is harmony with beauty which is synthesized into the classic keynote of unity.
As the author summarizes his position: "Through and through the Greek ideal is Unity. To make the individual at one with the state, the real with the ideal, the inner with the outer, art with morals, finally to bring all phases of life under the empire of a single idea, which, with Goethe, we may call, as we will, the good, the beautiful, or the whole ..."
"The Greek View of Life" examines four interrelated aspects of Grecian culture and civilization: religion, the state, the individual, and art. Dickinson illustrates each topic with selections from the Greek philosophers, dramatists, and historians.
The view of Greek religion is one of a natural adjustment to natural forces, resulting in an anthropomorphic viewpoint, infused, however, with a certain paradoxical mysticism. Greek religion is considered to be the very foundation of Greek society and a structure resonant with that of the state.
Dickinson's analysis of the Greek view of the state itself presents a miscellany extracted from Aristotle and Plato. The city-state is, of course, the basic governmental unit.
The two divergent forms traditionally represented by Athens and Sparta are contrasted—the capacity for spontaneous individual development with the capacity for discipline and law.
In viewing ethics, the principle of beauty is emphasized which in turn leads to a discussion of friendship from Plato's "Symposium." From this point there is a natural transition to the moral point of view in aesthetics and the theoretical concepts of the plastic and poetic arts.
Tragedy is treated at some length with an emphasis on its interpretative nature, its dramaturgical limitations, and its close relation to religion and to national life. The author finds a parallel in Wagnerian opera.
Although "The Greek View of Life" was originally published some sixty years ago, the book still serves as an admirable preface to a beginning study of ancient Greece.
It Looks This Way...
By Bill Farmer
Why not move the whole thing into Strong Hall and thereby give KU the biggest blasted loafing lounge in these United States?
Before the situation gets out of hand, I think the great white fathers who have decided to enlarge our immensely inadequate Union building should consider another equally sound alternative.
Naturally, Dr. Murphy and many campus administrators would have to set up shop somewhere else, but I'm sure we could squeeze them into one of the Strong annexes or some such hovel.
At any rate, I know that Strong Hall's occupants would be more than willing to sacrifice certain luxuries if it would guarantee bigger and better bowling alleys, larger lounges and a more spacious Hawk's Nest for the war baby boom that'll be hitting our campus soon.
Now do not get me wrong. I realize that the benevolent monopoly is out to help us students, making the old college grind a teeny bit softer for each and every one of us. I'm just suggesting that a little more frugality be exercised in the construction of these non-profit services.
I feel that at a tremendous savings (which could be allotted to scholarship funds and translucent canopies) either the history or philosophy department could be converted easily into the luxurious billiard parlors we all need so desperately.
If somehow we could transfer that bulky old mathematics department over to Fraser Hall, then we could re-establish and enlarge the inadequate Browsing room in its place. Meanwhile, the offices of the various deans would be changed into the college's keenest ballroom ever.
The advantages of this plan are many, as you can plainly see. And not only would the students benefit from it, but visitors would have both of our World War memorials, the Kansas Union and the Campanile, right next to each other for more convenient sightseeing.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
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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... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department ... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department ... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
University Daily Kansan
Dr. Edwin Price Labors for Students
Page 3
He counsels students on marriage and vocation problems, assists with church services downtown, and teaches courses in religion.
Dr. Edwin F. Price, student director of Wesley Foundation, is one of the busiest and most likeable personalities on the "hill."
"KU is my school." Dr. Price said. "I did my undergraduate work at KU and began my job here in 1920 after graduation the summer of 1919
"Student activities centered in the basement of the First Methodist Church in Lawrence until about five years ago. We moved into the new building in 1954," he said.
Dr. Price said his wife has been sharing in the supervision of the center and working with committees since their marriage in 1920.
"We feel pretty close to KU generations because we have seen a good many students whose parents we knew." he said.
Somehow Dr. Price has fit a little "matchmaking" into his career and introduced some of the parents of his present students to each other.
He has a little trouble explaining how he and his wife got together, though'.
"Whenever anyone asks us when we met we say we don't know." Dr.
Price said. Both are natives of Wellington, Kan.
"We went to school together for many years and never had a date until we were freshmen in college," he said.
Mrs. Price is also a KU graduate.
Dr. Edwin F. Price
SAN ANTONIO
but did not study in the ministerial field
The Price's three childre did not follow their father's profession
either. One went into medical entomology, one into social work and the third, into psychiatry.
"My work has its peculiar discouragements but also its many compensations." Dr. Price said.
"You just get to know a group well and you have to tell them goodby. Of course you always are assured of a new group to keep you on your toes.
"Teaching non-credit classes, small class groups, and counseling individuals constitutes the major personal emphasis of his job," Dr Price said.
He said the percentage of students who participated in the religious groups was larger in the 1920's as he remembered.
"Of course the caliber of a number of religious leaders today is very encouraging. These fellows aren't second-raters in any group. We have more creative leadership today," he commented.
Dr. Price said he believes there is more emphasis today on the part of the church in having a student minister and University centers.
"Many churches are realizing religion is a living relationship. It has to be all the time," he said. "No one department can meet all the needs of students." he commented.
Candidates Head for Finale
President and vice president AGI: Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan, senior, and Janie Dean, Overland Park junior, Voxi: James Austin, Topeka junior, and Terence Davis, Frontenac senior.
College — AGI: Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb., junior, and Trudy Gier, McPherson junior. Vox: Frank Naylor, Kansas City, Kan., junior, and Sara Carnash, Topeka junior.
Engineering — AGI: Frank Addis, Wichita junior. Vox: Ted Hall, Garden City junior.
Business — AGI: Harry J. Reitz, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Vox: Larry Dieker, Westphalia junior.
Fine Arts — AGI; Nancy Longwood. Stafford sophomore. Vox: Dorothy Trickett, Topeka sophomore.
**Pharmacy — AGI:** Paul Davis, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore. Vox: Bob Iott. Livingston. Mont. junior.
Education — AGI: Marcia Haines,
Lawrence sophomore. Vox: Marjorie
Williamson, Hutchinson junior.
Law - AGI: no candidate. Vox:
Mike Stout. Bazaar first-year law.
Journalism AGI: Carol Allen,
Leavenworth junior. Vox: Martha
Crosier. Lawrence senior.
Graduate — AGI: Robert Cross, Lawrence senior. Vox: Ken Wainwright. Surprise senior.
Unmarried-unorganized independent — AGI: Larry Blickan, Prairie Village senior. Vox: Sarah Anne Shaffer, Russell junior, and Louis Lawrence, Great Bend sophomore.
Men's dormitories — AGI: Thomas Armstrong, Atchison freshman; Walter Brauer, Bonner Springs sophomore, and Byron G. Stout, Wichita freshman. Vox: Gary Dilley, Emporia freshman; Tom Laws, Burlington junior, and Ed McMullan, Long Beach, N. Y., sophomore.
Women's dormitories — AGI:
Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg sophomore. Vox: Berty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., junior, and Penny Purnell, Topeka freshman.
Co-op and professional fraternity — AGI: Ronald Komatz, Parsons junior. Vox: Al Cohn, Kansas City, Mo. freshman.
Married — AGI: Robert Hickman, Terre Haute, Ind., junior. Vox: Don Schmalzried, Dighton sophomore.
Sorcery — AGI: Sharon Hagman, Pittsburg junior; Marilyn Moyer, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, and
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Fraternity — AGI: Thomas Ash Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Alar Forker, Liberal junior; Barry Ker Gray, Lyons sophomore, and Vincent Meyer, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior. Vox: Bill Barr, Dodge City sophomore; Ron Dalby, Joplin, Mo. sophomore; Jim Henderson, Wichita junior; Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City, Mo., junior, and Rudy Vondraeck, Timkin junior.
Senior Class
Class Officer Candidates:
9th & Ind.
Secretary — Jann Cameron, Topeka; Kathy Hupp, Wichita; and Nancy Scott, Emporia.
There is no substitute for our service and quality
Treasurer Sharon Hoover, Wichita; Sandra Owens, Kansas City, Kan., and Melinda Williams, Kansas City, Mo.
Junior Class
President — Richart Barnes, Seneca;
Frank Alan Coombs, Arlington,
Va., and Robert Luce, Ottawa.
Vice president — Roger Stanton,
Marysville, and John Jeffrey, Bart-
tlesville, Okla.
Secretary — Beverly Bagley, Brentwood, Mo.; Monta Kay Epps, Fort Scott, and Virginia Lee Smith, Topeka.
Vice president — Paul Hensleigh, Winchester, and Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb.
President -- Lynn Anderson, Atwood, and Thomas Coe, Salina.
Treasurer — Dorothy D. Biekley, Kansas City, Kan.; Deana Grimm, Omaha, Neb., and Lora K. Reiter, Simpson.
President - Fred King, Kansas City, Mo., Warren H. Sapp, Neodesha, and Gary Vail, Wellington.
Sophomore Class
Vice president — Paul Stone, Ottawa, and Thomas N. Turner, Kansas City, Mo.
Secretary — Connie Kay Boyd, Plains, Sally Colladay, Hutchinson and Sharon Tillman. Clay Center.
Treasurer — Rosanna Thomas, Louisburg; Roger Wiley, Harrisburg, Ill., and Susan Wendt, Kirkswood, Mo.
The eight campuses and 43,478 students of the University of California make it the largest university in the world.
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Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Employment opportunities available for men. Part-time and a few full-time jobs. Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall.
TODAY
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich Donnerstag um 5. Uhr in Raum 402 Fraser. Herr n. Johnson Watts wird ueber "Wisconsin Deutsch" sprechen. Er hat einige Tonbauer als Beispiele davon Es wird Erfrischungen geben. Alle sind herzlich
KU Faculty Club, dinner, 6:30 and Bridge, 7:30 p.m. Hosts: Dean and Mrs. F. J. Moreau and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Kelly. Call hosts for reservations.
Christian Science campus organization, 7.30 p.m. Danfort Chapel
Tau Beta Pi, 10:30 p.m., 201 Electrical Engineering Labs. Election of members.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 9, 1959
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
President to Miss Baseball Opener
WASHINGTON — (UPI) - Vice President Richard M. Nixon came out of the bullpen today to throw out the first ball of the 1958 big league baseball season.
From the presidential box at Griffith Stadium, Nixon was set to make the ceremonial first pitch five minutes before the Baltimore Orioles and Washington Senators launch the American League on its 59th season at 12:30 Lawrence time. Another righthander, Washington's Pedro Ramos (14-18), and southpaw Jack Harshman (12-15) of Baltimore drew the professional pitching assignments.
Only one other game was scheduled in the big leagues today—at Cincinnati where the Reds open the
National League season as host to the Pittsburgh Pirates. All other teams start tomorrow.
A forecast of "cloudy and colder with rain likely" may ruin the Vice President's big chance as a starter—just as it did in 1953. But, unlike the situation six years ago, if today's game is washed out, Nixon will still get his chance. The game would be rescheduled for tomorrow—before Eisenhower gets back from Augusta.
This was the first time a vice president has had the ceremonial pitching chore since 1944, when Henry A. Wallace substituted for war-busy President Roosevelt.
Protocol notwithstanding, Eisenhower decided to forego the honorary pitching assignment this year in favor of a long-delayed golfing vacation at Augusta.
Weather May Halt A's Opener
KANSAS CITY, Mo — (UP1)—The Kansas City Athletics open their fifth season here Friday with their best, although still slim, hope of finishing in the first division.
Manager Harry Craft has nominated Bob Grim, a rejuvenated Yankee castoff, to pitch the opener against the Cleveland Indians in a game scheduled to start at Municipal Stadium at 1:30 p.m.
Association 6-5 after trailing at one point. 4-0.
But the weatherman doesn't offer much hope. Chief forecaster H. L. Jacobsen said he hated to be a spoil sport, but that he had little other choice than to predict rain or snow and 40-degree weather for the opener.
The Athletics wound up their spring exhibition schedule yesterday by nipping Dallas of the American
The win gave Kansas City a final
12-14 Grapefruit League record.
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Experimental Game Tonight
The KU Volleyball Club will be host to one of the strongest teams in the country when it entertains the Army team from Fort Riley in Robinson Annex tonight.
With the Pan American games in mind, the Army has assembled an outstanding group of players from all over the world to compete in the National Open tournament.
In preparation for the Nationals, which will be held in Des Moines in May, the Army team will scrimmage the Kansas Club in an experimental game starting at 8:00 p.m.
Erdelatz Resigns
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — (UPI) — Navy scuttlebut, without the details, hinted today that Eddie Erdelatz sudden resignation as Navy football coach was due to a long-smouldering dispute with Naval Academy brass about athletic policy.
Erdelatz, who had spent seven years as Navy coach, took the sports world by surprise last night by announcing his resignation.
KU Golf Team Ready
The KU golf team will have its first meet against Nebraska at the Topeka Country Club Friday, Coach Jerry Waugh said yesterday.
Returning lettermen this year are:
Lynn Kindred, Emporia senior; Bill Toalson, Dodge City senior; Bob Wood, Liberal senior; Fred Rowland,
Short Hills, N.J., junior, and Leon Roulier, Colby senior.
Coach Waugh said the team has been working out very little lately because of the weather and the difficulty on reaching a price agreement with the Lawrence Country
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Club. Until they do, the matches will be played at the Topeka Country Club. Waugh said some of the team has paid the student membership fees at the club and have been working out on their own, however.
The team's second meet will be Monday with Washburn University.
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Page 5
Around the Campus Vieth Gets $1000 $900 Scholarship to Poetry Researcher To Complete Book
The grant, which provides for travel and research materials, will enable Prof. Vieth to complete a book devoted chiefly to the works of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.
David M. Vieth, associate professor of English, has received a $1,000 grant from the American Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.
The book will include essays and studies relating to the poetry of Rochester, on whom Dr. Vieth is considered by many to be the world's foremost authority. The book will also be devoted to other important figures in Restoration literature.
Hall Appointed to State Zoologist Job
Dr. E. Raymond Hall, chairman of the zoology department, has been named state zoologist by Chancellor Franklin Murphy.
Dr. Hall is also director of the Museum of Natural History and a Summerfield Distinguished Professor.
Dr. Hall will not officially assume the office until a bill enacted by the 1959 legislature is written into the statute books, probably sometime this summer.
Dr. Hall will be the first state zoologist in the history of Kansas. He will continue to serve as head of the State Biological Survey.
Mansion Hostesses
Carol Allen, Leavenworth, and Norma Hodgson, Parker, both juniors, will assist as hostesses at the annual Kansas Democratic Club reception at 8 p.m. tomorrow evening at the governor's mansion in Topeka.
Two on Charter Council
Two KU professors represent the School of Education on the newly-formed Kansas School Health Advisory Council. They are: Cloy S. Hobson, professor of education, and Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education. The KU School of Education is a charter member of the group.
The largest—though not the longest—vehicular tunnel in the world is part of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.
A $900 Elizabeth M. Watkins faculty summer scholarship has been awarded to Dr. Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English. Dr. Rothwell is doing research on epic poetry in America prior to 1865.
The objective of the scholarships is to make it financially possible for junior members of the faculty to pursue promising lines of research during the inactive portion of the teaching year. Seven similar awards for the 1959 summer were made earlier.
Jerry W. Knudson, instructor of journalism, has been awarded a Thomas Jefferson Foundation fellowship to pursue doctoral study of American history at the University of Virginia during 1959 and 1960.
Knudson Receives Jefferson Fellowship
Robert B. Green, associate professor of drawing and painting, is one of 62 artists invited to show a work in the biennial "Artists West of the Mississippi" exhibition at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. Prof. Green submitted an oil painting, "Images of the Tidal Ponds."
He is one of the first recipients of the new grants for advanced study in history and political science. Mr. Knudson was graduated from KU in 1956 and joined the faculty here in 1958 after receiving the M.A. degree from the University of Minnesota.
Green Shows Painting
Berlin's Tempelhof Airport is one of the few airports in the world located in the center of a large city.
Scholarship Hall Awards Give Opportunity to Many
(Editor's Note: This is the final article in a series on scholarship at KU.)
Students are required to work one hour each day in the hall. This eliminates the need for hired help.
By Thomas J. Trotter
Scholarship hall awards account for the largest single number of scholarships given yearly. Four hundred fifty of these awards are granted annually.
Scholarship hall residents have definite advantages. The halls house small living groups and all the residents are in the same general economic category.
The halls are paid for and owned by the University. Spencer Martin, director of aids and awards, says there is no bonded indebtedness for which students have to pay in house bills.
These scholarships are given to students with 'A' or 'B' averages who need financial help to go to school. The five men's halls include Battenfeld, Foster, Jolliffe, Pearson and Stephenson. Watkins, Miller, Douthart and Sellards are for women.
Scholarship hall students do their own housework and cooking to cut down on bills. Usually, dormitory housebills are about $70 a month. In a scholarship hall, men pay approximately $43 and the women, $35.
Another large group of scholarships are those awarded by the
federal government to NROTC students.
The Navy pays its 120 NROTC students on campus a retainer of $50 a month and foots the bill for tuition, books, uniforms and transportation to the University.
During the summer the students' transportation from the University to the summer cruise ports is also paid. The midshipmen receive $100 a month during the summer cruise.
Commander Francis A. Lewis, associate professor of military science and the executive officer of the NROTC unit here, says that in reality the Navy scholarships are not scholarships.
"I recognize that they serve the same purpose as scholarships but in essence they are not. They are a method of obtaining career officers for the regular navy," Comdr. Lewis said.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 9.1959
AGI Pamphlet to Slam Vox
A four-page pamphlet sponsored by the Allied Greek-Independent party will be issued Sunday or Monday, according to Ron Barta, Salina senior, AGI publicity chairman.
An AGI spokesman said more than 2,000 copies of the publication, "Speaking Frankly," have been printed and are ready for distribution.
The pamphlet says, in part:
"Student government has not been active this year, and the work that has been accomplished has been the result of AGI efforts."
The publication also gives AGI credit for passing the new student health insurance program, mentioning that such a measure was a plank in the 1958 AGI platform. This statement brought immediate denial from Vox man Jack Black, Pratt senior and chairman of the ASC student health committee, who said:
"The AGI delegate to my committee (Jim Disque, Lawrence senior) did not attend a meeting all year. As far as I know, he had no interest in the health insurance program while we were working on it."
In other parts of the pamphlet, the AGI platform is printed, as is an interpretation of parts of the Vox Populi party platform. The pamphlet also contains a review of the past ASC year, a list of the AGI candidates, and an unsigned
letter headlined "Independent For President."
Other statements in the publication:
"The lack of council confidence in the (housing) committee casts a poor reflection on the committee."
"Apathy and disinterest pervade student government. This is the work that Vox pledges to continue."
"In appointments made last fall by a predominantly Vox council, 30 organized living groups were not represented." (A Vox spokesman said last night that all who petitioned received appointments.)
"Concerning the . . . proposal for keeping ASC correspondence and files in the ASC office, the records are not in the office where they would be available to the student
"The only idea that Vox presented from its own basic work was John Downing's (Kansas City, Mo., senior) IBM election system."
body. Instead, the secretary of the council (Sharon Dey, Ulysses junior) has all of these records and is reluctant to release them for the information of the student body."
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Thursday, April 9, 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 25,
for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
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HELP WANTED
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STUDENTS interested in making $150 additional income may call their door number done by part time insurance selling. Call Carl F. Ade, Jr., Kansas City, Missouri at Harrison 1-413-1-413
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PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can help your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call VI 1024. tf
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ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do all kinds of typing; thesis, term papers, etc.; experienced typist. Call VI 3-6248. 4-17
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
One way and local, ready to go anywheresized reservationsbeing accepted
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
MISCELLANEOUS
one mile east of Mass. on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Bags, party supplies. 6th and Vermont; Phone VI-755-0350.
FOR SALE
POST SLIDE RULE with leather case and attached in original box. AXS not included. 20x45 Ca.
RCA STEREOPHONIC M O N A U R L A
TAPE PLAYER, 1958 model, like new,
price, $250, now only $150.
Prints include $80 more of stereo tape
Call VI 2-1647
4-9
PFAFF SEWING MACHINE, almost new,
beautiful cabinet model. Purchase price.
$608. Makes $100. Makes button
ties, bem stitches, embroidery.
V-3780 5 a p.m. 4-9
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
TRIUMPH TR3. 11,500 miles, one owner,
$2.395. CALL VI 3-8917. 4-9
LET'S BOTH SAVE MONEY. Buy car from owner. 2-door, 10-seat, 6-5-cyl, two-tone green Chevy Station Wagon, 20.700 miles. Excellent condition. Leaving for Europe; must sell this "cream-puff" $1750. Call VI 3-259 after 4 p.m. tf
COLLIER ENYCLOPEDIA, complete set. 1852 copyright, yearbooks up to date, will sell reasonably. See Virgil Peters at 501 Tennessee after 5 p.m. $4.9
DAFFODILS, 25 cents a bunch. no de-
ficiency. Call VI 3-2788.
4-14
MAIL
1948 PLYMOUTH, five passenger coupe,
new battery, good running condition.
Call VI 3-5737. 4-13
LARGE DINING TABLE with pads, buffet,
and six chairs all in good condition.
Call VI 2-0049 or see at 721 ill. after 4
p.m.
4-14
1958 CORVETTE. good condition, low mileage. CALL VI 2-0790. 4-14
1947 HUDSON, two door, radio, heater,
new tires and seat covers. Inexpensive,
dependable transportation. Call at VI 5-
210 at 563 Alabama any day 4-14
after 5 p.m.
38 SUPER AUTOMATIC, new, $40. Contact Michael Engle, Stouffer place, Bldg.
9. Apt. 12 anytime to 6 p.m. No phone.
4-10
1950 FORD, new tires, radio and heater,
good condition. Call Jerry at VI 3-1116.
Birds on a branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
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LES BROWN and His No. 1 Band in America
KU
RELAYS DANCE
LES BROWN and His BAND OF RENOWN
Friday, April 17
9-12 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
$2.50 per couple - Semi-formal
Tickets on sale at the Union today and the Information Booth, April 13. Room reservations April 14.
KU
ALEXANDER JOHNSON
BUTCH STONE
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 9, 1959
Hitt Sees Quality Key to KU Future
James K. Hitt, registrar, said yesterday that the quality of KU's teaching and living facilities and not academic requirements will determine the amount of future enrollment.
Mr. Hitt spoke before a faculty forum on "Enrollment Trends and Recruitment."
"Dean Anderson (Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education) has predicted that KU will have an enrollment of 9,600 students by 1960, and 30,000 by 1970." Mr. Hitt said. He continued:
"When you look at this number, no matter what restrictions you put on, you're going to have an awful lot of kids. I don't think quality restrictions are going to influence too much the number of students attending KU." He continued:
"The questions which should be considered are living quarters, classroom buildings, and faculty members. The extent of the faculty attraction could mean the extent of enrollment.
"The change in the College curriculum may make a difference in
Bomb Testing Is Forum Topic
"Nuclear Bomb Testing: A Necessity or a Threat to Survival?" will be the subject of the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Trophy Room.
L. Worth Seagadollar, associate professor of physics, and John Weir, associate professor of zoology, will present their views on the problem.
Prof. Weir said that he will present the biological dangers of radiation, and Prof. Seagondollar will present the physicist's aspect of the danger.
"The audience can use its own judgment on the radiation problem after it has heard the evidence presented by both of us." Prof. Weir said.
future enrollment. We may place restrictions on out-of-state students or admit Kansas students on their rank in their high school graduating class."
About 36 per cent of Colorado's land area is owned by the Federal government.
However, he said, any Kansas restrictions would meet with opposition from the taxpayers.
He said statistics compiled on high school graduating classes showed that four-fifths of entering students were in the upper half of their classes, one-half were in the upper 25 per cent and one-fourth were in the upper ten per cent.
"In a comparison with a school such as Dartmouth, KU ranks fairly high." Mr. Hitt said.
Life insurance offers you a combination of protection and savings, and by starting your program now you will have the advantage of lower premiums.
There needn't be. You can get a head start on your savings program by beginning now, while you're in college.
PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia
See your Provident Mutual campus representative for more information on a variety of plans, which may be tailored to your individual present and future needs.
BLIND ALLEY?
PHOENIX, Ariz.—(UPI)—World-famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, 89, founder of the modern school of building craftsmanship and storm center of artistic controversy most of his life, died today in St. Joseph's Hospital.
The "rebellious old gentleman," as friends referred to him in his later years, succumbed following an emergency operation Monday for treatment of an intestinal tract obstruction. He had responded well to the surgery, his doctor said, but apparently his age made recovery impossible.
Mr. Hitt said that five large Kansas high schools (Topeka, Shawnee Mission, Wyandotte, Wichita East, and Lawrence) consistently furnish a third of the total freshmen.
Critics often disputed whether Wright was the greatest American architect of the 20th century, but all agreed he certainly was the most famous for his individualistic style—a blending of precision machine-age lines with nature's living forms in stone, wood, wood or glass.
"About ten per cent come from the other major Kansas high schools." Mr. Hitt said.
Supervisor
BILL LYONS
Both artistically and personally, Wright's life was a battle with the contemporary schools of thought. And he captured acclaim abroad long before his own country recognized him as a "titanic force" in building design through the American Institute of Architects.
1722 W. Ninth
Frank L. Wright Dies At 89
VI 3-5692
Cheerleaders to Try Out
According to a compilation by the University of Wichita, about 20 per cent of undergraduate students in Kansas and about 50 per cent of the graduate students are at KU.
Practices for cheerleading tryouts will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, April 14 and 16, 21 and 23, 28 and 30 at Robinson gymnasium.
Penney's new sport togs in patch print
"the greatest"
198 to 398
Just arrived! Spring's "hottest" new coordinates! They're really fun in a multi-colored patch print that teams with a solid mate. Tops come in cotton broadcloth, pants in Bedford cord cotton. Look how little it costs for a complete outfit!
Y'S
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MID CALF PANT
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New York City boasts a natural harbor bigger than the world's next six largest harbors combined. The first public power supply system was inaugurated in England in 1901.
Shop Your New Penney's, 830 Mass.
LP SALE CONTINUED
BELL MUSIC CO. 925 MASS.
WINTHROP'S tomahawk
WINTHROP'S tomahawk
the genuine moccasin with the hand-sewn vamp
fashioned for action
Hand crafted to insure smooth snug fit and give rustic good looks. Your wardrobe's most versatile shoe.
WINTHROP SHOES
Arensberg's Shoe Store
819 Mass.
the genuine
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BICICLETA DE VÍA Y CHAQUERO EN EL PADRE DE MAYORAL
DIGGING IN—Beverly Bennett, and Sharon Pine, both Lawrence freshmen, express the uncertainty of current campus weather. Wearing Bermuda shorts in the event the sun shines, the girls dig a trench for protection from threatened cold wind or snow.
Weather-
Cloudy, Cold, Wet—Sad
The topsy-turvy weather picture began to level off today as forecasters revised their snow predictions toward a cloudy compromise in most sections of the state.
KU students scurried around today in their mixture of heavy and light jackets mumbling something about "that blasted sun."
Wagers were being placed on the possibility of snow as the sun plaved leap-frog with the numerous clouds.
Some brave souls ran around in short sleeves proudly displaying their "goose-bumps" to their friends.
In Kansas City, groundskeepers for the Athletics had their snow shovels ready for action after hurriedly getting them out yesterday.
Goodland received four inches of snow yesterday and light rain fell over the central part of the state last night.
The misplaced winter weather will make another attempt to dampen spirits of Kansans tonight and tomorrow, the U. S. Weather Bureau said today.
The forecast:
Cloudy tonight with occasional light snow northwest. Scattered light rain moving across state tonight ending in east early tomorrow. Partly cloudy tomorrow. Low tonight 25 northwest to 35 southeast. High tomorrow 45 to 55.
War Is No Answer Yugoslav Diplomat
By Thomas Hough
Total war will not be the answer to world crisis though there is a possibility the world may choose war, said Marko Nikezic, Yugoslavian ambassador to the United States in an interview today.
Yugoslavia's philosophy is different from that of the USSR, he said.
"There are plenty of possibilities for war, but there is a vital interest in settling the problem by negotiations," he explained.
"Negotiation is the only possible solution. If war comes, it's bound to be total war. There is no victory worth the destruction that would result." Mr. Nikeez said.
"We believe that socialism is the answer to our problems, and the USSR believes communism is the answer to its problems.
America is formally against socialism, but many things you regarded as socialistic a few years ago are in effect now," he said.
"You Americans are more socialist than the Russians because you can afford more," he added.
Mr. Nikezie also said:
"The USSR is still a poor country. It may have made great progress, but it still has a long way to go."
Yugoslavia wants to be completely independent, he said. His people wish to form no block alliances with other nations.
"We intend to make no alliance short of war." Mr. Nikezic said.
Yugoslavia has no desire to extend her borders or conquer other lands because she has enough raw materials within her borders to make her rich, he said.
"We do need help though, because we do not have the industry, technology, and heavy machinery needed to develop our raw materials."
Approximately 50 per cent of Yu-goselia's international trade is with Western Europe. 30 per cent is with North and South America, and 20 per cent is with the communist bloc of nations.
Yugoslavia believes it is possible to maintain complete independence from and friendly relations with the other countries in the world, Mr. Nikeezic said.
He said there could be no comparison between Yugoslavian schools and those of America, such as KU.
"The dormitories and education facilities here at KU are impressive and an excellent example of American higher education.
"However, in Yugoslavia, it will be a long time before we can have anything to compare with the American universities because we have to use our money on the bare necessities of life," he concluded.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 10, 1959
ASC Secretary Believes Council Minutes Stolen
The secretary of the All Student Council said today the reason the ASC minutes are not in the Council office is that they were stolen sometime since April 2.
She was referring to a story in yesterday's Daily Kansan which reprinted a paragraph from the forthcoming Allied Greek-Independent party-sponsored newsletter. The paragraph read:
"Concerning the...proposal for keeping ASC correspondence and files in the ASC office, the records are not in the office where they
Today's UDK Studies Political Campaign
In today's issue of the Daily Kansan see pages 2 and 3 for editorial comment and letters to the editor column concerning the political campaign pointing toward the general elections Tuesday and Wednesday.
Also featured are sketches of all the candidates for the voter's information, plus pictures of candidates from both political parties.
would be available to the student body. Instead, the secretary (Miss Day) has all of these records and is reluctant to release them for the information of the student body.
"Last night, after reading the article in the Daily Kansan. I went to the office and found the file of minutes gone," said Sharon Dey, Ulysses junior.
Always on File
Miss Dey she always kept a copy of all ASC minutes on file in the ASC office together with a check-out sheet.
"The last regular meeting of the ASC was April 2 and following that meeting, when 1 placed the copy of the minutes in the file, the file was intact," she said.
Miss Dey said her copy of the minutes can be seen by anyone who wishes. However, the copy cannot be borrowed, as it is the only copy of the ASC. She said she would hold onto the minutes until a duplicate copy can be made for the files.
Records Always Open
Concerning her reluctance to release information, Miss Dev stated: "I don't think that is exactly right. Only one person asked me all year for minutes of a meeting and I directed him to the ASC office where he could check them out."
She said anyone wanting the records at any time could have gotten the key to the ASC office at the Kansas Union Information Desk.
An ASC spokesman said Patrick Little, Wichita senior, and chairman has a private copy of the minutes.
Vox Denies AGI Charges
The forthcoming political pamphlet "Speaking Frankly" of the Allied Greek-Independent party has brought denials and countercharges by the Vox president, Tom Gee, Leavenworth senior.
The pamphlet is expected to be released by AGI over the weekend. The editor of the pamphlet is Ron Barta, Salina senior and AGI publicity chairman. A copy of the pamphlet was discovered by the Daily Kansan Wednesday night.
Women's Discussion Airs Differences
Greek and independent women discussed little-known differences in a panel discussion at the United Presbyterian Center last night.
Sue Suran, Hays junior and sorority representative, said that an "uncomfortable feeling" between Greeks and Independents could have been brought about by Pan-Hellenic rules.
Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg, sophomore, a scholarship hall representative, said the "awkward and strained situation" between Greeks and independents was based on the fact that the two groups were
"However, I think that any such problem exists only in the minds of people who encourage it," she said.
not able to communicate with or understand each other.
"Scholarship hall girls are self-conscious about the general feeling that they make the highest grades and are expected to keep them up," Miss Stephenson said.
"We rarely have common interests and have no feeling of loyalty. It's more like a hotel. I think girls resent living in the dorms," Miss Spong said.
Virginia R. Spong, Stafford junior, a representative of the dormitories, said dormitory life is difficult because of the many different interests.
The women agreed that a general problem of stereotyping existed because of misconceptions.
"If you don't really know how the other groups live, how can
Over 2,000 of the pamphlets have been printed and are being kept at the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity pending distribution.
you understand them?" questioned Miss Stephenson.
Miss Stephenson said that a certain amount of prestige was given to Greek organizations because of their tradition.
"Scholarship halls are only temporary groups. The girls in the halls lack unity. Sororities have a common interest because of selective membership," she said.
Miss Suran suggested that representatives of scholarship halls could be included on the committee which selects the hall residents.
Emily Taylor, dean of women was contacted today and agreed that a problem of communication exists between women from all kinds of living units.
ever. Greater understanding and consideration should eliminate it." she said.
"I do not feel that this problem is insurmountable, how-
Dean Taylor did not say how the understanding should be brought about.
Dean Taylor continued:
"Many efforts have been made and are being made to bring as much unity into these groups as the girls themselves want," she said.
"I don't agree that there is no sense of unity in the dormitories and scholarship halls. We certainly don't consider them as hotels, but as living groups.
"There are certainly many individuals in the scholarship halls and dormitories who prefer to be individualists and do not wish to live under any kind of organization."
the pamphlet states, in part:
Gee said in reply, "We've had new blood and new ideas and we're going to have more new blood and new ideas. We've done more than five AGI Councils could do and ever have done."
"In its only year in office the new party, with new blood and new ideas has accomplished next to nothing in student government."
The pamphlet continues, "Apathy and disinterest pervade student government."
Gee said, "This is apparently the statement of the party. I believes the party and its vice-presidential candidate should compare notes and not make contradictory statements."
Jane Dean (AGI vice presidential candidate) said in the April 3 edition of the Daily Kansan: "The student body has often been branded apathetic or indifferent toward student government and affairs. This, Dick (Dick Lewis, AGI presidential candidate) and I believe, is not so."
"Dick Lewis evidently agrees with her. However, his action in resigning from the ASC seems to agree with the party's statement that apathy and disinterest exist," Gees said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday April 10, 1959
Vote for Person, Not Party
During the next few days the campaigning for student body president and vice president and for All Student Council seats will become relatively more lively. It is up to the student body to decide who will hold these positions.
What decisions will the students make?
Take a close look at what the candidate and his backers are saying. Are they merely stating that the opposition is incapable? Are they merely reciting their party's platform? If so, this is not enough.
What does one person have to offer? Actually how differently will he act from his opposition should he be elected to the ASC or an executive office? How seriously will he take his office? For
him will it be only another glory to add to the Jayhawker list of activities?
How much does he know about the ASC? How much should he know about the ASC? What specific issues does he want student government to polish off next year?
Will he, if elected, be willing and able to forget his political connections and work toward a united body for the good of the University?
Will he make an honest effort to represent each member of his living district or school whether he is Vox or AGI, independent or Greek?
How deep and sincere are his reasons for wanting to hold office in student government?
Accusations and Actions
Today's "letters to the editor" column contains a letter which makes some of the same claims, in the same language, as the AGI sponsored "Speaking Frankly." newsletter. This newsletter will be distributed shortly among the student body.
The AGI publication relates much of the political happenings over the year. Unfortunately it lacks corroborating reasons to explain the passage and failure of each bill mentioned.
Mr. Salmon's letter and the AGI bulletin slam the All Student Council for failure to communicate ASC happenings to the students. They also state that the Council killed a bill providing for newsletter communication to all students.
The trouble is, neither the letter nor the publication gives the reason for the bill's defeat. After much argument and consideration, the ASC found that the cost of a newsletter would be prohibitive, considering the small amount of readership given such items.
It then decided that a bi-monthly ASC news insert in The Daily Kansan would deliver the
best effect to more students. However, the cost of this measure was estimated at well over $80 per month and thus too expensive for the limited ASC budget.
For lack of a way to reach a large amount of students inexpensively, the bill was killed. The Daily Kansan then complied with the ASC's desire for communication by continuing to include in its news columns almost all items discussed at the Council meetings.
Many other accusations are delivered against The Daily Kansan and the Vox Populi party in the AGI bulletin. These, too, are shrouded with generalities and partial quotations. Never does it contain explanations of the Council's motives for handling issues in any particular way.
AGI does seem to have come up with a new idea of communicating with the houses. This method will be important if it proves workable. If a similar form of communication had been thought of earlier, students would understand why certain measures proved to be impracticable and others important this year.
—The Editors
... Letters ...
Editor:
Vox has pledged in its platform for this election to advance communication between students and the ASC. This plank has appeared before but hasn't materialized. The only publication of ASC proceedings is in the Daily Kansan and in a Vox party publication going to Vox houses only.
The Vox platform of last semester promised to publish complete reports of ASC action. Since then, with Vox controlling the Council, the ASC roll call has been
published three times and the minutes not once.
An AGI representative proposed a bill calling for publication of the above information in newsletter form for distribution to all students. The proposal was killed by a Vox controlled Council.
The AGL platform this semester calls for the formation of a coordinating council to facilitate better communication between Council and students. AGL also plans to publish a newsletter on ASC action, but didn't include this in the
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
STRIKES!
BRICEMENT
SIGNA PHI NOTHING HOUSE
BRER © T-14
platform because it feels it should be done as a duty, not as a vote-getter.
The AGI proposal of a coordinating council holds out the best hope of real communication since ASC was began. Under this system the ASC representative would truly be the spokesman for his district rather than almost a free agent. Under the present system an ASC representative lacks the time to visit each house to poll opinion. The coordinating council would relieve him of that duty.
"NO POINT STAYING IN ALOCKED ROOM FEELING SORRY FOR YOUR-SELF — MAYBE THE 'SIGNALPINTHOLOGY' WILL PLEASE YOU NEXT YEAR."
As a hypothetical case, a resident of Oread Hall would have a representative from his house who would take his opinions to a regular meeting with his living district representative. The district representative would then take them to the Council. Council action would be reported back down the line to the individual with whom the idea originated. Everyone would know what was happening.
Elkhart sophomore
Jack Salmon
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
become bweekly 1904.
bweekly 1908, december 23,
2006.
Member Inland, Daily Press Association Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y. N.Y. service; United Press International 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 August Sep. 17, 1910, at Lawrence Kon., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 111, news room
Extention 226, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker Managing Editor
Bill Feitz Business Manager
Lincoln, L.A., Advertising Manager;
Howard Young, Classical
Manager; William F. Kane, Promotion
Manager; Paul Nielsen, Curation
Manager
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier. Co-
ordinator of the Robber Harwal,
Associate Editorial Editor.
The Candidates Are Before You
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following information for the sketches of political candidates was furnished to The Daily Kansan by leaders of both political parties, Vox Populi and Allied Greek-Independent.
James Austin, Topeka junior, is Vox presidential candidate. Activities: freshman class secretary, sophomore has interned in a national committee, Finance and Insurance Club has president Vox Popul, Jep union and University Veteran Organization.
President
---
Richard D. Lewis, Kansas City, KA; senior, is AGI presidential candidate. Activist Thita, ASC minority leader, big eight Student Governing Assn. delegate. ASC Carnegie Research assistantship, delegate Student Conference on National Affairs.
☆ ☆ ★
Vice president
Jane E. Dean, Overland Park junior, is AGI vice president candidate. Activities: College Intermediary Board secretary, Campus Chest, SUA Carriage steering committee, ASC, High School Leadership Dip program, University Tutoring, Regius College Convention delegates, College curriculum committee. All Women's Day committee.
Terence A. Davis, Frontenac senior, is Vox vice president candidate. Activities: present ASC representation from the unorganized, unmarried district. ASC Committee on Committees and Legislation. Student Athletic Seating Board.
Fraternity
Bill Barr, III, Dodge City sophomore is Vox fraternity district candidate. SUA dance committee. Student Directory, K-Book, Datebook, and "The Fowl."
J. Vincent Meyer, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior, is AGI fraternity district candidate and vice president of the council secretary, Interfraternity Council Executive Council, delegate to Big Eight Conference, council Conclave, Delta Sigma Pi, rush chairman, Greek Week Sing co-chairman.
Ronald K. Dalby, Joplin, Mo., sophomore, is Vox fraternity district candidate. Activities: business staff of Jayhawker and Rock Chalk Revue, IFC, chairman of Greek Week Queen committee, Alpha Kappa Psi, Accounting Society.
Alan D. Forker, Liberal junior, is AGI fraternity district candidate. Activities: Owl Society, A Cappella Choir, KU Chorale.
James H. Henderson, Wichita Junior,
activities: IFPC vice president, Owl Society,
Young Republicans publicity chair-
society of Petroleum Engineer a of AIME
书 条 书
Barry Ken Gray, Lyons sophomore. Active
threads: characterized KU-Y, SU.
Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City, Mo. senior, is Vox fraternity district candidate. Activities: ASC Publications Committee, Owl Society, delegate to SAE Leadership School, SUA Board, KU-Y Cabinet, ASC.
\* \* \*
Thomas G. Ash, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore, is AGI fraternity district candidate.
Activities: Marketing Club secretary, freshman track, Rock Chalk Reuse, sales manager, student directory self, assistant business manager of K-Book
Rudy Vanderchek, Timkin junior. 1. Vox fraternity district candidate. Activities: IFPC, IFC, held Woolworth and L. W. Whitlock scholarships.
**
Sorority
Mary Sue Childers, Merriam sophomore, is Vox sorcity district candidatai Activities: Art Education Club, an Christian Science Organization.
Martha Rowe, Kansas City, Mo., freshman is AGI faculty living district candidate. Activities: SUA, Jayhawker, student directory staff, freshman class co-hosts, High School Leadership Committee, SUA carnival decorations committee.
Sharon L. Hide, Prairie Village sophomore, is Vox sorority district candidate. Activities: Rock Chalk secretary, Red Penners
鸡 枣 麻
白 黑 紫
Marilyn Moyer, Kansas City, Kan.
sophomore, is AGI sorority district
candidate. Activities: AWS, KU-Y, SUA
Rock Chalk Revue ticket sales.
Linda L. Rundie, Bonner Springs junior, is Vox sorority district candidate. Activities: AWS, SUA, KU-Y. Sigma Delta Pi, Tau Sigma.
Sharon Hazman, Pittsburgh junior is AGI sorority district candidate. Acct. member for Women's Organization secretary, Forecate League, Jay Sisters, Jayhawker see-retary, High School Leadership Day discussion.
College
Sara J. Carnahan, Topeka junior, is Vox College candidate. Activities: associate editor Jayhawker, chairman of special events committee in AWS.
Frank W. Naylor, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore is Vox College candidate.
Academic vitae of sophomore class
student, ASC, Department of student
Welfare of the ASC secretary.
Co-ops and professional
Trudy A. Gier, McPerson Junior, is AGI College candidate. Activities: Gambling service president Jay Sisters, AWS, Carnegie Undergraduate Research assistant, presideung residence Asm., Disciplinary Council and the Student Religious Council.
Journalism
Ronald P. Komatz, Parsons junior, is AGI professional schools and co-operative housing candidate. Activités: Eta Kappa Nu, Kansas Engajers, AIEE, and IRE.
Alan S. Cohn, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore is Vox co-ops and professional fraternities candidate. Activities: IFC Executive Board, AFROTC.
---
Martha Crosier, Lawrence senior, is Vox Journalism School candidate. Activities: chairman Journalism School curriculum committee, Kansan Board secretary, treasurer Theta Sigma Phi vice president Gawain McIlroy and professor Campus Chest drive, president Midwest Region Lutheran Student Asss. incumbent journalism ASC representative, Daily Kansan staff, All Women's Day Steering Committee.
Carol Alten, Leavenworth junior, is AGI Journalism School candidate and Foundation Cabinet, Kappa Phi cabinet and first vice president, the Jayhawkier worldwide Activities, Sellards full secretariat, wide chairman, Dally Kansu staff.
* *
Business
Lawrence I. Dicker Westphalia jum-
lity Activities president of Society or Ad-
venturement of Management, IFC, Pershing Riffes supply officer, and Newman
Harry J. Reitz, Kansas City Mo. Junior, is AGI Business School candidate. Activities: assistant business manager of Rock Chalk Revenue, secretary of fraternity Council and committee, chairman of Kappa Phi, sergeant at arms Owl Society, Hawk Watch, Scabbard and Blade, Newman Club and secretary-treasurer of Big Eight IFC.
Engineering
寧 宗 容
☆ ☆ ☆
Theodore E. Hall, Garden City Junior, is Vox Engineering School candidate, Activities; IFPC rush chairman, Rock Chalk sales chairman, ASC Traditions Committee chairman, Owl Society, and KU NSA coordinator.
William Addis, Wichita junior, is AGI School of Engineering Candidate. Activities: Owl Society, Sigma Pi Sigma, Young Republics.
Women's dormitories
---
Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, is Vox women's dormitories candidate from Upperclass GSP. She ran last year on an AGI ticket.
Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg ophthalmics is AGI dormitories candidate. activities: Jay Sister Board, PWO fellowship chairman. AWS Steering Committee for freshman orientation, SUA inter-residence Council.
Penclone Ann Furrell, Topeka freshman, is Von women's dormitories candidate. Activities; Gifted Student Program, SUA.
Education
Marjorie Williamson, Hutchinson junior, is Vox education candidate. Activities: SUA committee chairman; carnival steering committee (Club Club), committee secretary, ASC president's cabinet, Panhelenic clearing committee.
Marcia L. Haines, Lawrence sophomore,
is AGI School of Education candidate.
Activity Special Projects Committee.
Student Union Activities.
审 校
Pharmacy
Bob Lott, Livingston, Mont. junior, is Vox Pharmacy school candidate. Activities: American Pharmaceutical Assn., president Pharmacy school junior class.
** **
Paul W. Davis, St. Joseph, Mo., second-year pharmacy student. is AGI Pharmacy School candidate. Activities: Pharmacy School class officer.
东 东 东
Unmarried-unorganized
Johna A. Lawrence, Great Bend sopho-
Louis A. Lawrence (continued on Pare 3)
Friday, April 10, 1959
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
D.J. MICHAEL SMITH
AGI—Seated from left: Carol Allen, Nancy Longwood, Martha Rowe. Standing from left: Alan Forker, Byron G. Stout, Thomas Armstrong, Larry Blickhan.
CANADA
AGI—Seated from left: Nancy Knauss, Jane Dean, Mary Carol Stephenson, Sharon Hagman. Standing from left: Bill Addis, Lance Johnson, Robert Cross, Dick Lewis Vincent Meyer, Paul Davis. Miss Knauss was dropped from the ballot in the primary election.
More Candidates
(From Page 2)
more, is Vox unorganized-unmarried candidate. Activities: KU-Y, SUA.
Lawrence Blichak, Prairie Village Junior, is AGI unorganized-unmarried candidate Activities: Political Science Veteran's Club and Young Democrats.
肉 食 鱼
Sarah Anne Shaffer, Russell junior, is Vox unmarried-unorganized candidate. Activities: KUOK, ASC, SUA, Rock Chuck secretary.
Men's dormitories
宋 宋 杂
Thomas R. Laws, Burlington junior, in Vox men's dormitories candidate. Activities: Men's Scholarship Hall Council, Wesley Foundation Cabinet, International Club Statewide Activities Chairman, International Club.
Thomas P. Armstrong, Atchison freshman. is AGI men's dormitories candidate. Activities: United Presbyterian Men.
Edward McMullan, Long Beach, N.Y.
sophomore, is Vox men's dormitoriel
candidate. Activities: All Dormitory
Council.
Walter C. Brauer, Bonner Springs sophomore, is AGI men's dormitories co-founder of Kins. Alpha Phi Omega, Young Republicans, Campus Chest Steering Committee.
Gary Dilley, Emporia freshman,
Vos, jen's dormitories, candidate.
Joc Stout, Wichita freshman, is AGI men's dormitories candidate.
Law
Mikel L. Stout, Bazar freshman, is Vox Law School candidate. Activities:
Student Law Association, Phil Delta Phi.
Fine Arts
Dorothy L. Trickett, Topека sophmore, is Vox Fine Arts candidate. Activities: Jayhawker, outstanding freshman in design 1958.
Nancy A. Longwood, Stafford sophomore, is AGI School of Fine Arts candidate. Activities: A Cappella Choir, Student Union Activities.
Graduate
Kenneth E. Wainright, Syracuse graduate, is Vox Graduate School candidate. Activities: Quarterback Club chairman, JSNR Ensign.
Robert L. Cross, Lawrence senior, is AGI Graduate School candidate. Activities: Quilch Club, editor-m-chief of Quill Magazine, History Club, JSCC, vice president Archaeological Institute of America.
Married
Robert L. Hickman, Terre Haute, Ind.. junior, is AGI married students candidate. Activities: Varsity basketball.
Don Schmalzried, Digiton sophomore,
Irieferaternale Council, Shoebush
JONATHAN BROOKS
VOX-Seated from left: Don Schmalzried and Linda Rundle. Standing from left, Terence Davis and Frank Naylor.
Vote Next Week
MISSING--Those not available for pictures were Trudy Gier, Harry J. Reitz, Nancy Longwood, Marcia Haines, Walter Brauer, Robert Hickman, Ronald Komatz, Marilyn Moyer, Barry Ken Gray, Thomas Ash, Sharon Hide, Al Cohn, Mike Stout, Ken Wainwright, and Ed McMullan.
Polls Open Tuesday, Wednesday
Mary K. McConnelly
VOX—Seated from left: Betty Bumgarner, Penny Purnell, Sally Carnahan, Martha Crosier. Standing from left: Ron Dalby, Rudy Vondracek, Bob Lott, Louis Lawrence, Wendell Koerner, Jim Henderson.
CHEMICAL SOCIETY OF CANADA
VOX—Seated from left: Marjorie Williamson, Dorothy Trickett, Mary Sue Childers, Sarah Anne Shaffer. Standing from left: Bill Barr, Larry Dicker, Gary Dilley, Ted Hall, Tom Laws.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday April 10. 1959
Debaters Ready For West Point
The KU debate team will face its toughest competition of the year when it enters the West Point Debate Tournament April 22 to 25.
Ray Nichols, Lawrence junior,
and Don Bowen, Salina senior, won
a place in the West Point finals by
placing second in the West Point
district tournament in Lincoln,
Neb. last weekend.
The debate preliminaries are conducted on a selective basis. The country is divided into several districts and a district committee composed of debate coaches is in each.
"The West Point debate is usually considered to be the one big national tournament. It is hard to get into and even harder to win, since the teams which participate are considered to be the best in the country." Nichols said.
The coaches review the records of all debate teams in their district and select the ten best teams to participate in the West Point District Tournaments.
The national tournament has eight preliminary rounds from which the top 16 teams participate in four final "sudden death" rounds of debate.
The five best teams from the district tournaments then go to the national tournament.
The topic for the debate is "Resolved: That the Further Development of Nuclear Weapons Should Be Prohibited by International Agreement."
Each team will alternate between affirmative and negative positions of the topic from one round to the next.
KU has been represented in the
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national West Point tournament for the last 11 years and was the national winner in 1954. Nichols and Kenneth Irby, a 1958 graduate, were undefeated in the West Point district competition, and placed fifth in the national tournament last year.
"It's naturally pleasing to be going to the tournament, but it's frightening in a way to think of the terrific responsibility. Both Don and I have had the West Point tournament in the back of our minds all year and have been working toward it." Nichols said.
"We not only have the best teams of the country to work against, but the tension is tremendous. There is so much at stake for the debater, and then, too, you never know who your next opponents will be until just before your next debate.
Nichols described the debate as the most difficult the KU teams participate in.
"Fortunately, I always seem to do my best work under pressure," he added.
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Page 5
Speech Festival Brings 200 to KU
More than 200 high school students are on the campus today for the state Speech and Drama Festival.
The students are winners in district contests throughout the state this spring. They will be on campus through tomorrow.
Radio Programs KUOK
Tonight
6:00 Sign On
6:15 "Mainsreet Melodies," Cliff
Tatham
8:05 The Dave Holman Show
9:05 "The Big Beat," Harold Holli
10:05 Moonglow, Bob Smith
12:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "String Quartet No. 2 in A Minor," by Brahms
7:00 Music from Mt. Oread
7:30 Keyboard Concert: "Organ
Sonata No. 6 in D Minor," by
Mendelsohn
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air: Our American Music.
9:00 Opera is my Hobby; Program of operatic oddities
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music
10:00 "Quartet in F," by Haydn
11:00 Sun Off
First place medals and second place certificates will be awarded in these categories: informative speech, original oration, readings, oral interpretation of prose and poetry, exemplarous speech, and one-act plays.
11:00 Sign On
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
MC
Readings will be judged by Maralyn Shackelford, assistant instructor of speech, Bernice Harvey, instructor of speech, and Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and assistant director of the University Theatre. Readings will be humorous and dramatic.
Informative speeches will be judged by Mrs. Cecil Coleman, and original orations by Lynn Osborn, instructor of speech.
Oral interpretations of poetry will be judged by Walter J. Meserve Jr., associate professor of English.
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Farewell, Cruel World
SAN DIEGO — (UPI) — Three-year-old Gregory Askew lost his lucky piece yesterday and went right down the drain after it. Gregory was uninjured despite his 24-foot fall into a storm drain.
Friday, April 10, 1959
The physical education department of the University of Kansas, in cooperation with the American Red Cross, will sponsor a variety
Physical Education Dept. Plans Show
snow for veterans at Winter General Hospital in Topeka at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Positions in the show are still open.
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KOOL KROSSWORD
KOOL
ACROSS
1. Not a longhair
4. In Nasser's league
8. Koods are Fresh
12. Misrepresentation
13. Pudding powder
14. With 10 Down, an order
15. Make a booboo
16. Fly talk
17. Unclosed (poetic)
18. Gets married
19. Bet accepters
22. It's dished or potted
23. You Quaker
24. All ___ sounds sleepy?
25. More playful
29. Miafortunes
30. Texas subsolilo
31. One and ___
32. Good advice during exams
34. Bucks
35. Kind of elf
36. Beat
37. Kind of noxious
38. A type of year
40. Big Greek
42. End of the scene
43. Where to dig
44. Sgt. or Cpl.
45. Wolf look
46. Take five, twice
DOWN
1. Nikname for S.-C. college?
2. He wears a black-and-tan coat
3. This is awful!
4. Dough, for instance
5. Cheers
6. Make ___ of it
7. Western elevation for a tenderfoot?
8. Willie the Penguin's chant
9. Negative arrangement of open
10. See 14 Across
11. Gets hitched
12. Catch on
13. Adalai's initials
13. Double dates minus one
14. Tail half of a bikini
15. Chiropodista' party?
16. You can't blame him
17. Fancy stuff
18. Railways (abbr.)
19. AFL associate
20. Blind-date arranger
21. Cover with lettuce
22. Fountain hunter
23. GI, or any guy
No.22
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
"ARE YOU KOOl ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?" 40 41 42 43 44 45 46
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University Daily Kansan Friday. April 10. 1959
---
1. THE PAINTINGS OF LEONARDO DA VINCI. Over 100 Illustrations, several in color. Text by G. Castelfranco.
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2. Darwin & Huxley: APES, AN-
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GELS, AND VICTORIANS, by W. Irvine. A new approach to the colorful Victorian era and the two revolutionary thinkers it produced—the Originators of the theory of evolution.
3. THE HEAVENS ABOVE by J. B. Sidwick and W. K. Green. Up-to-date guide to the solar system and the Moon, planets, Sun, stars and nebulae. Photos and drawings.
Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.98
4. THE HOME BOOK OF RECOVERY
CURSED MUSIC AND SOUND
REPRODUCTION. edl by J. Kala
REPRODUCTION, ed. by I. Kolodin. Complete guide to hi-fi equipment and recordings. Illus.
Pub. at $4.95 Sale- $1.49
5. A Strange Relationship—WOODD WILSON AND COLO-
NEL HOUSE, by A. L. and J. L. George. The first study showing how Wilson's compulsive hunger for approval was fed by Edward M. House—Presidential advisor—who gained an "unofficial" political influence unparalleled in U.S. history.
Pub. at $6.00 Sale-$1.93
6. The Disaster That Changed History — THE LISBON EARTH-QUAKE, by T. D. Kendrick, Director of the British Museum. Visual account of the catastrophe which took 15,000 lives and forever destroyed the Age of Optimism. Illus. Pub. at $4.00 Sale—S1
7. THE SECRET DIARY OF HAD:
7. THE SECRET DIARY OF HAROLD L. LICKES. The candid, colorful journal of F.D.R.'s incorruptible Secy of the Interior—707 pages packed with revelations of great events and personalities of the first Roosevelt administration.
Pub. at $6.00 Salz—S1
8. THE MEMOIRS OF CORDELL
Pub. at $10.50 Sale—$2.98
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HULL. Two volumes, 1,742 pages crammed with behind-the-scene revelations of 50 years of American and international politics—the turmoil of the Wilson era, the period preceding Pearl Harbor, the winning of WWII, Hull's momentous decisions as Secretary of State, relationships with FDR, Churchill, Stalin, Truman, many others. Two vols.
9. St. Francis to Schweitzer
RATHWAYS OF THE INNER
10. Through The Ages With SOIL
LIFE, ed. by G. A. Barrois. Anthology of spiritual writings by men and women of great faith through the centuries.
AND CIVILIZATION, E. Hyams.
From prehistoric China to modern Europe—a masterly study of the inter-relationships of soil and mankind. Photos and maps.
Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$1.98
11. Stage and Society in Johnson's
Landscape BOX, BIT AND TIT
London—BOX, PIT, AND GAL-
ERY, by J. J. Lynch. A fascinating account of 18th century London theater: the great actors, the society which produced them, etc.
Illustrated with contemporary sketches of theaters, etc.
12. The Philosophy of HENRY
JAMES, SR. The definitive work on the brilliant father of Wm. and Henry James. Illus. by H. Young. Pub. of $4.50 Sale...$1.98
13. THE MIGRATION OF SYMBOLS, by Count G. d'Alviella, 161 unusual illustrations enhance this fascinating work—what symbols are, what specific symbols mean, how they developed, changed, served various cultures.
13. THE MIGRATION OF SYM-
Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$2.98
14. HOW TO RENDER ROMAN
LETTER FORMS, by T. Thompson. Profusely illustrated guide to the elements of individual letter design standard in any style of lettering. Sample alphabets, plus typographic illustrations through-
15. Toscanini, Stokowski, et al—DICTATORS OF THE BATON, by D.Ewen. Behind-the-scene appraisal of America's leading conductors, their lives, training, talents, and famous orchestras. Photos.
Pub. at $3.50 Sale-$1.49
Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.00
16. PAINTED VEILS, by James Huneke. Gusty story of three unusual women in Bohemian New York.
16. PAINTED VEILS, bv
Pub. at $2.98 Sale—$1.49
17. ORIENTAL MAGIC, by S. I.
Shah. The first book to correlate the magical traditions and techniques of the West with those of the East, the context, etc. 57 illus.
Invisibility, fertility, etc. 57 illus.
Pub. at $6.00. Sale $-2.98
18. THE POLITICAL THEORY
OF JOHN C, CALHOUN, by A. O. Spain. An illuminating study of the 19th century political giant and spokesman for the South.
19. RELIGION IN HUMAN EXPERIENCE, by J. R. Everett, Detailed study of Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, and Christianity and cultures they have created. Glossary of religious terms, Illus.
Pub. at $3.50 Sale----$1.49
Pub. at $7.50 Sale- $1.98
D. DICTIONARY OF PSYCHOL-
20. DICTIONARY OF PSYCHOLOGY, BY P. L. Harriman 'Adler' to zoophobia—over 3,500 entries covering all important terms in psychology and the allied fields.. Pub. at $3.50 Safe…$2.98
21. A Marine's War Journal
21. A Marine's War Journal — THE LAST PARALLEL, by M. Russ. A recruit's actual record of hell in Korea in combat with the famous 1st Marine Division. With sketches and diagrams.
Pub. at $3.95 Sale----$1
22. SUCCESS IN PSYCHOTHER-
APY, ed. by Werner Wolff. Ten leading psychologists discuss the reliability of Rorschach tests, the degree of recovery from frustration, self-deception and social maladjustment, other controversial issues
Pub. at $4.75 Sale----$1.49
ZIED POETS, by O. A. Maslenikov.
A searching study of the life and work of Andrey Biely and his leadership of the Russian symbolists.
Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1.49
24. THE BEDSIDE TREASURY OF
INSPIRATION. A rich anthology of selections from the Bible and the inspirational writings of over 100 of the world's most cherished
Pub. at $4.95 Sale—$1.98
25. SCHIZOPHRENIA, by Manfred Sakel, M.D. Authoritative explanation of his epoch-making Inclination to clinical operation and importance to psychotherapy, backed by medical data and case histories.
by M. Carpenter, Engrossing study of the famous 19th century poet: his life, poetry and relation to the other Romantics
"ADD TO YOUR H
26. Samuel Taylor Coloridge
27. INDIFFERENT HORSEGEAN
27. ROCKET! By Air Chief Marshall Sir Philip Joubert. From the first military rocket in the 13th century and the early dreams of space travel to Peenemünde's V1 buzz bams'; and V2 rocket,
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Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$2.98
28. The Future OF SOCIETIES
28. THE FUTURE OF SOCIETIES AND MEN,' by C. P. Haskins. A searching and utterly fascinating study of significant trends in the formation, growth and duration of societies.
Pub. at $6.00 Sale----$2.98
BOOK
Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.98
National Library Week April 12-18
SALE BEGINS APRIL 13 — MANY UNADVERTISED TITLE
29. Complete Handbook of MINERALS FOR ATOMIC ENERGY
by R. D. Nininger of the AEC.
How to -prospect for uranium,
thorium, and beryllium, covering
everything from the known and
probable incidence of these
minerals here and abroad to govern-
mental controls on them. Illus.
color plates
30 INTRODUCING ANIMALS
160 Fine Photo-Illustrations. By F. Vopat & J. Kommerge. All sorts of animals crowd the pages of this bin, handsome book.
Pub. ot $7.50 Sale—$3.98
Pub. at $6.25 Sale—$1.98
31. CALYPSO SONG BOOK, by
31. CALYPSO SONG BOOK, by W. Attaway, Harry Balletonte's arranger. Piano scores and complete lyrics of 25 rollicking Caribbean favorites—Mary Ann, Matilda, Banana Boat Loader's Song, etc., illustrated in color. 7/4 x 10." Pub. $2.95
32. Championship CHESS AND CHECKERS For All, by L. Evans and T. Wiswell. Large, lucid, graphically illustrated book on both games for beginner and the seasoned player alike. 8 x 10 in. $24.95
32 Championship CHESS ANI
Pub. at $3.75
33. Christian Humanism and
THE WARS OF TRUTH, by H. Baker. How the literature, philosophy and theology of the early 17th century contributed to the slow decay of Renaissance optimism and to the rise of scientific materialism
Pub. at $6.00 Sale----$1.98
34. MOZART, by A. Kolb. Intro.
by Jean Giraudoux. First biography to point up the subtle psychological effects of each significant event of Mozart's tragic life and incandescent career. Illus.
Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.98
35. Margaret Fuman's Own Story
COVENIR. The warm child-
hood to-marriage autobiography
of the ex-President's daughter.
Photos.
36. SAMUEL BUTLER, by P. Henderson, Discerning biography of the brilliant English author, based on previously unpublished material about him and his relationships. Ulus.
36. SAMUEL BUTLER, by P. Hen-
nellography
Pub. at $3.95 Sale—$1
Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1.49
27. at $1.00 NOTHING
CAN HEADHUNTING. by G. Fitz
30 years of exciting hunting encounters with grizzly bears, mountain lions, moose, other wild game. Photos.
38. VASTNESS OF THE SEA: Ad-
CENTRE in the Mysterious Depths,
by B. Gorsky, 15,000 miles, from
Tangiers to Tahiti diving in pursu-
suit of huge mantas and leopard
rays, sharks and barracuda. Spect-
tacular photos.
Pub. at $5.00 Sale-$1.49
39. BROOK ADAMS, by Arthur F. Beringeaum. The brilliant biography of the noted American theorist and historian whose political and economic concepts remain vital today.
39. BROOK ADAMS, by Arthu
Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.98
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1
40. THE MAN WHO ELECTED
LINCOLN, By Jay Monaghan,
noted Lincoln scholar. The fantastic shenanigans Charles Ray of the Chicago Tribune employed to clinch Lincoln's nomination in 1860.
Pub. at $4.50 Sale----$1.49
41. AMERICAN BUSINESS DIC-
TIONARY, by H. Lazarus. All the essential terms, definitions, and procedures needed by businessmen, financial writers, students, economists, lawyers and secretaries. 538 pages.
Pub. at $7.50
Sale----$2.93
42. THE AMERICAN FESTIVAL
GUIDE, by H. R. Coates. Unique up-to-date vacationers' calendary and guide to over 200 annual American and Canadian festivals and celebrations
Pub. at $4.00 Sale-$1.98
13. THEATRICAL COMPANION
TO SHAW—With Over 125 Pages of Photographs, By R. Mander and J. Mitchenson, Complete pictorial record of GBS' 53 plays: original casts, etc., plus a wealth of previously unpublished material by Show himself.
Pub. at $9.00 Sale—$3.98
44. H. V. Kaltenborn's IT SEEMS
LIKE YESTERDAY. 210 photos, cartoons and other illustrations. A brilliant picture-text survey of the most momentous events and colorful personalities of the 20th century. $8 \times 10^{14}$.
Pub. at $5.95 Sale—$2.98
45. AMBROSE BIERCE: The Devil's Lexicographer, by P. Fatout.
Features a rich sampling of the famous journalist's historic newsprint vendettas and the Menckenlike wit of his books. Photos.
Pub. at $4.00 Sale----$1.98
46. REALITY AND DREAM —
**OVERVIEW OF A PUBLIC HUMAN**
by G. Dereoure Fascinating human documentation a major contribution to the study of the American Indian cultural pattern. Verbatim account of 30 interviews, tests, etc.
Pub. at $7.50 Sale—$1.98
47. OLYMPIO—The Story of Victor Hugo, by Andrew Maurois. A magnificent biography of the creator of "Les Miserables," "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," other classics. His love affairs, story career and exile. Illus.
48. BASIC PROBLEMS IN PSY-
Pub. at $6.50 Sale—$1.98
CHIATRI, ed. by J. Wortis, M. D. Six specialists delive into such controversial issues as Freud vs. Adler vs. Jung, the validity of intelligence tests, psychosomatic ailments. nc
Pub. at $4.50
49. Big Game Fishing-ALBA-
CORA, by E. Marron. A woman's light-hearted account of a danger-filled voyage to the Pacific's most treacherous waters in search of the fierce, giant 1000-pound broadbill. Photos.
Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1
KAN
50. A Study of GEORGE ORWELL.
by C. Hollis. How the famous author's experiences in Burma, Spain, etc., affected the development of his social and political thought as expressed in 1984, Animal Farm, etc.
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BOOK: "La Cucina," by R. L. Sorge, Antipasto to Spumani—over 800 succulent, authentic, easy-to-follow recipes—14 pages on Spaghetti alone!
Ralph: $3.99 $5.99
51. COMPLETE ITALIAN COOK-
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P3. CHARLES M. RUSSELL — WA-
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The sparkling glass of fruits, the beauty of hour-honored pewter and china—all are captured with nostalgia, superb lighting and color [21 x 11]'.
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66. MOTHER GOOSE NURSERY PICTURES, by Leonard Weissgard, Series Little Bo Peep, Old Mother Hubbard, Little Otter, Peter Pumpkin Eater, Ride a Cock Horse, and Little Boy Witten. $13' x 16'.
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BILES. Brilliant color prints capturing the vibrant, humorous back story of vintage 1900-1913 Roadster, Fard, Touring Car, Olds Rundabout, Nah Rumbard, etc.
Pub. at 3.50 set of 6—now $1
PV. JAPANESE COSTUME PRINTS by Kunisdao. Geographically costumed female figures personifying the seasons of the year '9 $13.44"
set of 4—now $1
P10. Chinese Fruit Arrangements,
Ingrionous fruit in bowl arrange-
ment, pink and white harmonies,
and lovely harmony harmonies, 10x13".
Pub. at 3.50 set of 4—now $1
P11. Eight French Posters: Picasso,
Motisse, Miro, Luger, Chagall. Briti-
annily colorful, strikingly sophisti-
cated—directly reproduced from the
Pittsburgh University Lab.
tbt at 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. 298
AND DEE
52. THE
ern chef's for everydional spe Pub.at S
Hub. at 8.00 set of 8—now 2.98
by O. N.
to-use
actual hi
convenien
to size,
the chara
53. JESS!
Pub. at 5.00
SAS
P12. Six Mbrilliant co Mexico n their birds, $ ^{3 7} $ 'x17"
P13. Modify
pent colors and
that have
orite model
Pub, at 6.00
P14. Japan
P15. REALL
16"x10"
Pub. at 6.04
P16. Early
P15. REALI
charming e
trumpets Ioe
Pub. at S1
P16. Early old maps of Flordia, etc sea travel, 19"x14"
Pub. at 10.0
P17. DECOR
Set of 6 in
orful dom
amidst flore
Pub u 3.50
P18. Utrillo'
Full of sunni
great favori-
tors. L7''x1"
-
Pub. at 12.0
P19. Famous
Prints.
Scen-
drama of th
sport. 11"
Pub. at 5:00
P20. Harbor
Pub. at 4.00
Watercolors ing boats in harbor hom in magnifications, 15th
KANSAS UNION
P21. RATH
INGS. 9 Bi-
graphs of t
passionate o
test since G
P22. Frederi skins." Vis greatest art superb for Pub at 7:50
P23. Horses
thoroughbred
Pub. at 6.00
P24, Van Ccludes "Su Camp," "Pe famous pair Pub at 600
Friday, April 19, 1950 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
HOME LIBRARY"
K SALE
National Library Week April 12-18
TISED TITLES — COME EARLY — QUANTITIES LIMITED
RWELL.
famous Burma, develop- politica n 1984,
-$1.49
COOK
CORK
Y R. L.
umoni—
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52. THE LANGUAGE OF HAND WRITING, and How to Read it
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— $1.98
WRITING and how to 'Read it,
by O'Mearl. My practical, easy-
way to use actual handwriting samples are conveniently arranged according to size, pressure, slant, etc., with the character traits they denote.
53. JESSE'S BOOK OF CREOLE
AND DEEF SOUTH RECIPES. bv
loy Prints At Incredible Savings
URES by closet of a honored captured sitting and
now 1.98
53. JESSE'S BOOK OF CREOLE AND DEEP SOUTH RECIPES, by E. and J. Watts. A famous Southern chef's 175 distinctive recipes for everyday dishes, plus many regional specialties.
Pub. at $3.50 Sale----$1.98
E CAVE
armers and
farmers in
printed with
16"
ready-to-frame, decorative color prints! A
beautiful American and European reproduc-
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WA-
D WEST.
on the us "cow belated of Rem-
5. Exotic coughs in a beige,
now 2.98
now 2.98
now 2.98
still lifes ce-classic x16"
ERY PIC
Series
her Hub-
s, Peter
is a Cock
due 13"x
of 6----$1
ERY PIC colorful room
Jack, and
Bomb, The
Shoe,
My Diddle
captur-
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Chevy
lar, Olds
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PRINTS costumed the sea-
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**agements.**
arrange-
h design
10×13'1
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Picasso gall. Brill-sophisti-from the
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Pub. at 5.00 set of 6—now 2.98
P12. Six Mexican Prints. All the brilliant color and charm of the Mexican market place — vendors, their kids, flowers, pottery, etc.
x17-18
P13. Modiagliati Prints. A magnificent presentation of the vibrant contemporary technique that have made Modiagliati a favorite modern. $16\cdot 20^{\circ}$
Pub. at 6.00 set of 4—now 2.98
P14. Japanese Snow Scenes by Hiru
Pub. at 6.00 set of 6—now 2.98
Japanese Snow Scenes by Hiro-
shide
the great master of form and color.
P16. Early American Maps, Famous
P15. REALISTIC STILL LIFE.
4 charming examples of American trumps (feel paintings, 17"x14"
Pub. at $10.00 Sale--1,98
P16. Early American Maps. Famous old maps of New England, Virginia, Florida, etc., depicting pre-Colonial settlers, Indians and wildlife. $0.14^{a}$
Pub. at 10.00 set of 6—now 1.98
P17. DECORATIVE BIRD PRINTS.
Pub. at 3.50 All 6 prints now—$1
P17. DECORATIVE BIRD PRINTS.
Set of 6, in '10"x12" portfolio. Colorful domestic birds portrayed amidst floral settings.
P18. Utrillo's Montmartre Scenes.
Full of sunlit warmth and beauty—great favorites with interior decorators. $77×14".
Pub. at 12.00 set of 4—now 2.98
P19. Famous Spanish Bullfighter
Prints. Scenes that capture the
drama of the world's most exciting
sport. 11" (30 x 15cm).
Pub. at 5.00 set of 6—now 1.49
P520. Harbor Scenes - 4 Marine
boats in dock, inland coves and
harbor homes, surf, sand and rock
in magnificent colors and compo-
nitions.
INGS. 9 Beautiful, sensitive lithographs of the most powerful and passionate drawings of social protest since Goya. $11\frac{1}{2}\times 14\frac{1}{4}$
Pub. at 4.00 set of 4—now 1.00
Pub. at 7.50 sct of 8—now 2.98
PZ2, Frederic Remington's "Buckskins." Vivid paintings by the greatest artist of the Old West—superb for superfiring, 12"x16".
P22. Frederic Remington's "Buck-
P21 KATHE KOLLWITZ DRAW-
P23. Horses, Stunning portraits of
horses
Paul, at 6.00 set of 8—now 2.98
Bob, at 6.00 set of 8—now 2.98
Pub, at 3.00 Sale—1.00
P24. Van Gogh Masterpieces. Includes "Sunflowers," "Gypsy Camp," "Peach Orchard" and other famous paintings. $11"x14".
Pub. at 6.00 set of 8—now 1.00
54. THE EVEREST-LHOTSE AD-
VENTURE, by A. Eggler. Thrilling,
first-hand report of the Swiss
mountaineering team's recent scaling
of Everest and Lhotse—the world's fourth highest peak. Photos.
55. THE COMPLETE WORKS OF
WILLIAM CHAPTERS I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, X, XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII, XVIII, XIX, XXI, XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV, XXVI, XXV
Pub. at $4.50 Sale----$1.00
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, ed. by A. H. Bullin, noted Elizabethan scholar. The famous Shakespeare Head Press Edition of the Bard's complete works: 37 immortal plays (presented in the order used in the First Folio), the Sonnets, Venus and Adonis and all the other poetry. 1,280 pp.
Special----$4.95
56. AMERICAN FIREARM MAK-
56. AMERICAN FIREARM MAKERS, by A. M. Carey. Over 2,100 entries-dates, special marks and features, calibers and dimensions of Colt, Whitney, Deringer, and all other important guns and firearms—Colonial times to the 20th century. Illus.
Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.98
57. The Pennsylvania Dutch — AMISLAND, by Kiehl G Christian Newswanger, 60 beautiful drawings capture the rare quality of this colorful and unique people, while the text explains their religion, speech, dress and folkways.
Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.98
58. CASE HISTORIES IN PSYCHOACUATIC HOSPICE
Dr. H. W. Miles, et al. 21 cases- ulcers, asthma, narcotic withdrawal, etc. Illus.
Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$1.98
59. GEOGRAPHIC MAP KIT—(1) Wall Map of the WORLD (2) Wall Map of the U.S.A. Printed in 8 soft colors, each large map measures 34 x 51 inches. Reliable, un-to-date essential reference
Pub. at $2.50 Both Maps for $1
60. The Wisdom of the East—BUDHIST TEXTS THROUGH
THE AGES. A treasury of the most important prose and verse of Buddhist thought-trans, into modern English from Sanskrit, Tibetan, Japanese, etc.
Pub. at $10.00 Sale-$2.98
DICTIONARY OF PHORES PHY, ed. by Dagobert D. Runes. Every term, idea and system of thought clearly and authoritatively defined; with full biographical information.
61. DICTIONARY OF PHILOSO-
ARTS. 1100 page compendium of essential information on the men, movements in painting, sculpture, literature, music, drama, the dance, etc., all eras and countries, by 500 leading authorities. $10.00
62. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$2.98
B. Cuttino, Sparkling, immortal verses of the Parision "Vagabond King," Bioar, notes.
63. Ballads of Villon—I LAUGH THROUGH THEM
64. DICTIONARY OF SOCIOL-
Pub. at $2.75 Sale—$1
OGY, ed. by Henry P. Fairchild, 3,600 essential, up-to-date terms used in the social sciences.
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$2.98
65. DICTIONARY OF NEW
WORDS, by M. Reffer; intro. by Partridge. From underworld lingo to technical terms—thousands of important new words clearly explained.
66 CHINA'S GENTRY by Hrion
Pub. ar $6.00 Sale-$2.98
66. CHINA'S GENTRY, by Hsiao-
ung Fue. A unique inside view of
China's life with Chinese and
5 life-histories of Chinese families.
Pub. at $5.75. *Sale*—$1
67. Marco Polo's Life and Times
VENETIAN ADVENTURE!
VENETIAN ADVENTURER, by H. H. Hart. First biography of the 13th century hero to provide a sharply etched image of his vivid personality. Profusely illustrated. Pub. at $5.00 Sale= $2.98
68. YOUNG AMERICA; 1830-1840, by R. J. Riegel. The social,
economic and cultural sources of
American attitudes during the Age of
Jackson, Illus.
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69. GREAT SEA STORIES.
Twenty-nine enthralling tales of high adventure, including "Mutiny on the Bounty," "The Raft," and others by Jack London, Melville, Stevenson, Dana and Poe.
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70 The case That Rested For
Special----$1.98
TER, by G. MacGregor. The true story of the Cockney seaman of 100 years ago who claimed to be the missing heir to one of England's great estates.
Robert B. 62.95
70. The case That Rocked England—THE TICHORNE IMPOS
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71. Concise Dictionary of AMERICAN LITERATURE, ed. by R. Richards. Thousands of fascinating, alphabetically-arranged entries on the lives and works of Melville, Mark Twain, Sandburg, Hemmingway, O'Hara, an Ill. Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$2.98
Color Lithographs by Ariette Davids. Intro. by Henry de Mohrenthal. Handsome, giant-sized prints of flowering cacti and other exotic plants—extremely decorative, ideal for framing. 10 x 13½". Pub. at $5.00 Sale= $2.98
ERATURE, ed. by D. D. Runes. A huge, 1,450-page collection of the world's literary treasures! 300 entries representing every genre from Homer to Joyce, to the "philosophic fiction" of Gide, and the realism of Hemingway and Faulkner.
72. ROCK PLANTS—32 Full-
73. TREASURY OF WORLD LIT-
74. PLAYING CARDS: The History and Secrets of the Pack. Over 250 illustrations, 110 in color. Who was the original "King of Hearts?" Which was called Caesar? And "The Beautiful Thief?" A 600-year survey by W. G. Benham. $7\frac{3}{4}$ x $10^3$. Imported.
Pub. at $15.00 Sale—$5.88
Pub. at $5.00 Sale-$2.98
75. 200,000 MILES SOUTH, by H. and F. Schreider. Real- Life 18-month adventure in a sea-gaing jeep from Alaska to the southern-most tip of South America. Photos. Pub. at $3.95 Sale—S1
ON BOOK STORE
76. History of BOATS AND BOATMEN, by T. C. Lethbridge. Engrossing account of the complex patterns of Western seafaring, filled with fascinating historical lore on the evolution of boats, life and outlook of men who take to the sea for fish, trade or adventure. 45 drawings and photogravure plates.
Pub. at $3.50 Sale—$1.98
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1.98
77. KINGDOM OF THE SAINTS
—The Story of Brigham Young and the Mormons, by Roy B. West, Jr. The epic saga of this unique American religion. Illus.
Pub. at $6.00. Sales: $1.08
78. THE LIFE OF CAESAR, by Gugliemo Ferrero. A vivid recreation of the major events and aspirations of one of history's most decisive figures. 525 pp.
Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$2.98
79. MAN AND HIS MOTIVES, by E. Windle and J. W. Marsh. Clear, simple analysis of the factors underlying both normal and abnormal social behavior.
Pub. at $3.00 Sale—$1
80. HOW TO WIN THE CON-
80. HOW TO WIN THE CONFERENCE, by W. D. Ellis, Practical pointers for the man determined to win promotions and higher earnings. PUBLISHED BY $3.95
Pub. ot $3.95 Sale—$1.49
81. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LITER-
8T. ENCLOPEDIA OF LITERATURE, ed by Joseph T. Shipley. A volume of nearly 1200 pages, containing an essay on all the great works of world literature and their authors. Pub. at $12.00 Sale=$4.98
82. CANCAN AND BARCA-
82. CANCAN AND BARCAROLE, by A. Moss and E. Marvel. Dazzling biography of Paris' 1880 showman par excellence—Jacques Offenbach, "father of light opera." Pub. at $4.00. Sale—S1
83. Thirteen Plays of the LIVING THEATRE, ed. by A. V. Griffin; fwd. by Helen Hayes. An anthology of great European and American drama. Over 500 pages, with a glossary of theatre terms. $7 x 10\frac{1}{4}$.
Pub. at $6.00 Sole—$2.98
84. THE DESIGN OF DEMOC-
8. 4.3 THE DESIGN OF DEMOCRACY by Staplerton A statement of democracy on how they fundamental principles and how they apply to modern society.
Pub. at $4.00 Sale----$1
83. MIDLAND PRESTIGY OF THE
MERICAN WEST—With more
than 1,000 divorces
than 1000 drawings, photos and prints. By Lucius Beebe and C. Clegg. From the near-barbaric Kit Carson days to the fall of Geronimo. Essential Americana. $8'' \times 11''.$
Pub. at $10.00 Sale----$5.95
86. DICTIONARY OF ANTHROPOLOGY
POLOGY, by C. Winic. 10,000 complete, authoritative entries including information on the types and sites, customs, beliefs and achievements of early man, and capsule biographies of the major early anthropologists. 579 pp.
Pub. ot $10.00 Sale—$3.98
87. "Big Bill" Haywood, Clarence
Draper, JF. THE BLOCKY, MOUN
IN
TAIN REVOLUTION, by S. H. Holbrook. The life and trial of Harry Orchard, hired assassin-arsonist of the Western Federation of Miners.
Pub. ot $3.95 Sale—$1
88. World's Best Cartoonist—THE
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF DAVID
89. MANUAL OF MYTHOLOGY.
LOW. The life story of the most famous living political cartoonist, the great and zany men he has known and known. 60 Brown P R 51-98 Sailor 51-98
by A. B. Murray. All the glorious myths and legends of antiquity—Greek, Roman, Norse, Hindu, Egyptian, others—with 200 illustrations of Gods and other fabled figures.
Only $2.49
90. DRINKING IN COLLEGE. bv
90. DRINKING IN COLLEGE, by R. Straus and S. D. Bacon. Facts on the customs and attitudes toward alcohol of 17,000 men and women in 27 colleges throughout the country. Tables and charts.
Pub. at $4.00 Sale—S1
91. WILD TRAIN—The Step
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$2.98
91. WILD TRAIN—The Story of the Andrews Raiders, by C. O'Neill. First-hand accounts of the Civil War capture of a Confederate locomotive by 22 disguised Union soldiers, their subsequent trial and prison breaks. Illus.
Pub. of $6.00 Sale-$2.98
92 TREASURY OF PHILOSOPHY
Pub. at $4.75 Sale—$1.98
94. EDITING THE SMALL CITY
93. The Story of PREHISTORIC
92. TREASURY OF PHILOSOPHY,
by D. D. Runes. Nearly 1,300 page covering the whole span of philosophical thought and writing works of Thomas Aquinas, Descartes, Spinoza, Schopenhauer, Dewey, Schweitzer and nearly 400 others.
Pub. at $15.00 Sale...$5.88
93. The Story of PREHISTORIC MAN, by A. Leroi-Gourhan. The human, day-to-day story of prehistoric man's life, work, religion merit, as revealed by the most recent scientific discoveries. 48 plates.
Pub. at $4.75
94. EDITING THE SMALL CITY DAILY, by R. M. Neal, Clear, complete explanation of modern journalistic techniques and procedures. 38 illus.
95. Dante's THE DIVINE COMEDY, tr. by L. G. White, Luxury gift edition with 69 full-page $81\frac{1}{2} \times 10^{13}$ Dore engravings. A magnificent volume.
Pub. ot $6.50 Special—$3.98
Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$2.98
96. Batsford's History of CHINESE ART, by Roger Fry et al. With 87 magnificent color and black-and-white illustrations. All aspects of 40 centuries of Chinese fine and minor arts, with details on the characteristics and history. Map, marks and dynastic table.
Special----$3.98
98. MODERN GERMAN PAINT-
97. THE IMPRESSIONISTS IN FRANCE—with 50 Plates in Full Color, by G. F. Hartlaub. Brilliant color reproductions of masterpieces by all the leading French Impressionists. With biographies and correspondence. $ 9 \frac{1}{2} \times 13 " $ Imported.
ING, by H. K. Rovethel 80 Illustrations, 60 in Full Color. Lavish collection of the paintings and graphic art of the Expressionists (Brucke, Blaue, Reiter, Bauhaus, etc.) as well as all the individual great artists from 1900 to the present. $91\% \times 122\%$ ".
Pub. at $7.50 Sale-$4.98
99. VESALIUS—THE ANATOMY
ILLUSTRATED. Ed by J. B. Saunders and Charles B. O'Malley A beautiful modern edition of one of the most remarkable works in the whole history of science, art, and literature. A full-page facsimiles of Vesalius powerful and dramatic woodcuts of the human figure and organs. Sub at $10.00. Special---$5.95
Pub. at $10.00 Special----$5
100. FROM ONE CHINA TO THE OTHER — 147 Photographs by
OTHER — 147 Photographs by Henri Cartier-Bresson. A monumental human document capturing the historic drama of the transition from Nationalist to Communist government in China. Text by Han Suyin. $8\frac{1}{2}'' \times 11'',$ produced in France.
Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$2.98
101. Portrait of AUSTRIA. A
107. Portrait of a AUSTRIA.
a complete picture of the land whose
large product is Charmy with 160 large map
plates, informative background
notes and captions, plus double-
page, pull-out map, x 9 x 12"
Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$2.98
102. DANIEL DEFOE, by B. Fitz-Gerald. Sharply etched portrait of the famous English novelist (Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, etc.), unraveling the psychological paradox of Defoe's strongly religious upbringing and his immoral adult life.
Pub. at $4.00
Sale----$1
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 10. 1959
hail, hail
the gang's all there!
on American Express
on American Express 1959 Student Tours of Europe
Wherever, whenever, however you travel, your best assurance of the finest service is American Express! On American Express Student Tours of Europe you'll be escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascinating countries as England . . . Germany . . . Austria . . . Switzerland . . . Italy . . . The Rivieras . . . and France. And you'll have ample free time and lots of individual leisure to really live life abroad!
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Spring Intramurals Begin As First Round Deadline Set
By Dave Butcher
Teams have been formed, schedules set, and the intramural athletic program is ready to swing into spring.
The first round schedules are:
There are eight handball teams. 16 badminton teams, 10 horseshoe teams, and 36 tennis teams. The deadline for the playing of the first round games is Sunday, April 19.
Handbail: Phi Gamma Delta vs.
Jim Beam, Tau Kappa Epsilon vs.
Laptads, Beta Theta Pi vs. Sigma
Chi, Hensons vs. Foul-Ups.
Badminton: Alpha Tau Omega I vs. Delta Upsilon, Foreign Students vs. Phi Gamma Delta II, Beta 3theta Pi II vs. Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. VB Club, Theta Chi vs. Phi Delta Gamma, Delta Tau Delta vs. Alpha Tau Omega II, Beardsvs. Beta Theta Pi I, Alpha Kappa Lambda vs. Phi Gamma Delta I.
Yanks Meet Bosox
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Casey Stengel goes after his 10th pennant in 11 years when the Yankees open their season against the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium today. Bob Turley, who was 21-7 last year, has been tapped to oppose Tom Brewer, 12-12 last season, and a crowd of 25,000 is anticipated.
Cleveland opens at Kansas City where another crowd of 25,000 is expected to watch Gary Bell (12-10) start for the Indians against Bob Grim (7-7) of the Athletics.
Chicago is at Detroit in the only other American League game scheduled. Southpaw Billy Pierce (17-11) will pitch for the White Sox and Jim Bunning (14-12) for the Tigers. Approximately 40,000 are expected to be on hand.
The average American family eats 70 per cent of its meals in the kitchen during the winter and 71 per cent during the summer.
DUCK'S For SEA FOOD 824 Vt.
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
"JUST MINUTES AWAY FROM THE CAMPUS"
9th & Iowa
150-Car Free Parking
Save Time!
When you need a haircut go to
HILLCREST BARBER SHOP
—Located in the basement under Jayhawk Cleaners—
"just minutes away"
JAYHAWK
CLEANERS
&
LAUNDRY
KU
We Pick Up & Deliver 10% Off Cash & Carry
THE LAUNDROMAT
- No Attendant
- Coin-Metered
- Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
RANEY
Grease Job $1
Brake Adj. 98c
Phi Delta Theta II vs. Phi Kappa Psi IV, Delta Upsilon vs. Kappa Sigma I, Phi Gamma Delta II vs. Phi Kappa Psi I, BattferdII vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon, Pearson vs. Delta Tau Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon II vs. Alpha Tau Omega II, Beta Theta Pi II vs. Liahona.
HILLCREST DRUG
- Luncheonette
- Cosmetics
Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free
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PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE
6th & Vt.
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Horseshoes: Tau Kappa Epsilon I vs. Phi Kappa Tau, Delta Chi vs. Phi Kappa Psi. First round byes were drawn by Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, Tau Kappa Epsilon II, and Delta Upsilon.
Tennis: Battenteld I vs. Alpha Tau Omega I, Beta Theta Pi I vs. Jollife, Sigma Alpha Epsilon I vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon I, Nu Sigma Nu vs. Delta Chi, Phi Gamma Delta I vs. Phi Kappa Psi II, Alpha Kappa Lambda vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta I vs. Phi Kappa Psi III, Lambda Chi vs. Jim Beam II, Beta Theta Pi I vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon III, Sigma Chi vs. Kappa Sigma II,
We require a B.S. or an advanced degree in mathematics or the physical sciences. Experience in your university's computing facility is highly desirable.
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High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming.
Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709,704,and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies.
Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer.
Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. P.O.Box 95004,Los Angeles 45,California
SL
Navy May Delay Choice for Month
Page 9
University Daily Kansan
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — (UPI) — It might be "at least a month" before the U. S. Naval Academy picks a new head football coach to succeed Eddie Erdalatz, a source close to academy affairs indicated today.
Although it was understood that present Navy assistant Dick Duden and former Notre Dame coach Terry Brennan were on the inside track, the selection still was wide open.
Supplies for
RELAYS FLOATS
- Spray Paint
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- Staples
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All other items needed to do the job quickly and well
Phone VI 3-2981
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The KU baseball squad will travel to Stillwater this weekend to open Big Eight Conference play with Oklahoma State.
KU Opens Big-8 Season Today
The Cowboys, who are rated as one of the top teams in the league. only have five returning lettermen. Three of the five are pitchers.
Righthander Dick Soergel is the ace of the staff. Last year Soergel posted a 4-0 conference record and an 0.82 earned-rank average. So far this year he has done very little work due to his basketball duties.
The other two veteran pitchers which the Jayhawkers will face are Joe Horlen and Roy Peterson.
Thus far this year the Cowboys have played four games early in March, but since then they have been idle. Oklahoma State played Rice and Houston during their southern trip, winning three of the games.
The Jayhawkers are taking an 18 man squad on the trip to try to protect their three game winning streak.
The starting pitchers for the Jayhawkers in the three game series will probably be Bill Clinkenbeard, Tom Holler and Joe Doolittle. This will leave Norm Mailen and Wayne Woodruff in the bullpen in case an emergency arises.
The rest of the traveling squad will consist of catchers Carl Lauerjung and Don Culp, first baseman Lloyd Nichols, third basemen Roger Hill and Dewitt Lewis, shortstops Harl Hanson and Russ Marcinek, and outfielders Bob Marshall, Curtis Melton, Gene Dunigan and Gabby Wilson.
Take an
ICE CREAM BREAK!
Q
After long hours of hard study there is nothing so refreshing as a delicious dish of Varsity Velvet ice cream
FEATURE ALL STAR FLAVOR FOR APRIL
"Blueberry"
A Creamy Smooth Fruit Flavored Delight
ALL STAR
DAIRY
Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY
Friday, April 10, 1959
202 West 6th St.
Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc.
Phone VI 3-5511
HEY GANG! TGIF
AT THE PIT
"Best Music in Town" Jerry Taylor's
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results.
WHO SAID IT FIRST?
A column of incidental intelligence by Jockey brand $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $
THEATRE
"PRACTICE WHAT YOU PREACH"
"Facias ipse quod faciamus suades."
Sounds like advice right out of "Poor Richard", but Plautus said it many centuries before Ben Franklin. Classical scholars, of course, know this statement in its original Latin:
"EVERYONE TO HIS OWN TASTE"
There has never been any accounting for tastes, and the man who appreciated this truth first was Francois Rabelais. In his "Pontaguel", he coined this now-famous judgment:
Dear John
we are going
through a
difficult time.
may you
be happy.
"Every one to his taste, as the woman said when she kissed her cow."
HAPPY
"LOVED AND LOST"
It's better than not loving at all according to Lord Tennyson's "In Memoriam", XXVII:
"I hold it true, whale'er be-fall! I feel it, when I sorrow most/Tis better to have loved and lost/Than never to have loved at all."
Jockey BRAND SKANTS striped brief
"Purely sensational!" — that's the judgment of college men who have seen the new Jockey Striped SKANTS. Jockey stylists have taken this 100% stretch nylon blinki-style brief .added candy stripes .and produced a garment you'll really enjoy wearing.
SKANTS is cut high on the sides with a low waistband and comes in a choice of red, black, green, rust or blue stripes. Look for SKANTS—in stripes, or solids—in the Jockey department at your campus store.
UUU
fashioned by the house of Coopers
Page 10
University Daily Kansas
Friday. April 10, 1959
Only Top Brains Get Mitchell Prize
Selection of students for KU's top scholarship, the U. G. Mitchell Honor Award, is made from the cream of young scholars at the University.
"Each year about 1,200 high school students are tested for Summerfield and Watkins scholarships," Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards, said, "The Mitchell scholarship awards are made from the top 10 per cent of those tested."
About eight of those tested qualifi for the Mitchell freshman award.
The scholarships in mathematics are given to upperclass students who have achieved high scholastic standing in this curriculum. Only students who maintain "A" averages are eligible for this scholarship.
About 22 students receive these two scholarships each year. The selections are determined by the students' grades and the extent of their needs. The financial contribution is $50 to $500.
The U. G. Mitchell honor scholarship was established at KU in 1941 by Dr. Mitchell, former chairman of the department of mathematics.
Students attending KU on Mitchell scholarships are: John L. Randall Colby; Fred Z. Kaul, Wamego; Neal R. Wagner, Topeka; Ronald E. Boyce, Kansas City, Kan.; Carol F. Ott, Kansas City, Kan.; Arnold E. Catron, Kansas City, Kan., and Emilie L. Hopkins, Kansas City, Mo. All are freshmen.
The Mitchell scholarship in mathematics was added later.
Students on the mathematics scholarship are: Phyllis D. Fahrenbach, Belleville; Lois B. Kuchenbecker, Leawood; and Ann C. Underwood, Emporia. All are seniors.
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Marilyn E. Alpert, Paola; Joanne Halderson, Bartlesville, Oka; Alfred Gray, Dallas, Tex.; William J. Hudson, Wichita; Richard L. Speers, Houston, Tex.; Nancy L. Suellentrop, Great Bend, and Janice A. Wenger, Blue Springs. Mo. All are iuniors.
Balfour
411 W 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
John C. Musgrave, Joplin, Mo.; Damon L. Patton, Wichita, and David Sutherland, Baton Rouge, La.
All are sophomores.
TGIF
TEE-PEE
Friday and Saturday
Afternoons
F. C. S.
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER!
BEST ACTRESS
SUSAN HAYWARD IN TWO OF HER GREATEST PERFORMANCES . . .
SUSAN HAYWARD
DAVID WAYNE
in
"With a Song
in My Heart"
SUSAN HAYWARD
WM. LUNDIGAN
in
"I'd Climb the Highest Mountain"
EXTRA! SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY!
DOUBLE OWL SHOW! 4 FEATURES IN ALL!
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE ---- West on Highway 40
Campus church fellowships have announced this schedule of activities for Sunday.
Church Groups List Sunday Programs
a. m. for Bible study. At 5:30 p.m. the Club will attend the Lutheran Student Assn, dinner meeting.
United Presbyterian students will meet at 5:30 p.m. for evening fellowship. The Rev. Alan Pickering, associate pastor at the United Presbyterian Center will speak on "To This End Was I Born. What?"
Roger Williams Fellowship will meet at 9:45 a.m. and 5:45 p.m. at the First Baptist Church.
Concordia Club will meet at 9:30
Canterbury Assn. will hold a student-faculty dinner at 5 p.m.
Gamma Delta will meet at 5:30
at the Epicenter for meetings at
Emporia Lutheran Church
The Methodist Student Fellowship will meet at 5 p.m. Sunday. Students who attended a work camp at Topeka during Easter vacation will_tell of their camp experiences.
The United Student Fellowship of the Congregational Church will not meet Sunday. Students will attend the state conference of United Student Fellships at Wichita.
Licensed drivers in the U.S. drove about 8,070 miles each last year, covering a total of 643 billion miles.
British Columbia, Canada's westernmost province, is one and a half times the size of Texas.
"OPERATION UPLIFT!" MEET THE "PROXY" LOVER FOR 104 SNOW-BOUND G.I.s!
The Pentagon said "Only one goes"
...so his buddies picked him to spend their furlough in gay Paree...with two delicious dames!
287 CERTIFIED LAUGHS!
*Certified in audience tests by Sindlinger & Co., Inc. Research Division
RIDLEY PARK, PENN.
INCOME TO THE FIELD
Universal International presents
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The Perfect Furlough
CINEMASCOPE in Eastman COLOR
CO-STARRING KEENAN WYNN • ELAINE STRITCH
WITH LES TREMAYNE and LINDA CRISTAL
EXTRA! WALT DISNEY'S FEATURETTE "PAUL BUNYON" — CARTOON
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STARTS
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25 wo f
HURRY! ENDS TONITE! 2 EXCITING HITS! "VILLA" — "GANG WAR"
Friday, April 10, 1950
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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 fee 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
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk, Cah 1
3-5297 after 5 p.m. tt
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS interested in making $150 additional income, month can enjoy a variety of benefits including insurance selling, Call Carl F. Ade, Jr., Kansas City, Missouri at Harrison 1-0735.
WANTED: babysitter, light housekeeping,
1 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, must supply
own transportation. Apply evenings, 11-B
Sunsyide. 4-13
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath heat and gas furnished, linen furnished, accept graduate students. Call VI t: 7677.
HOUSE, four rooms, unfurnished, completely modern, full basement, large-fenced backyard, and garage. Coffee shop, restaurant, weekdays, and anytime, on Sundays. 4-13
TWO BEDROOM HOME, unfurnished,
4297 during the daytime. Call VI.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent or for sale, furnished, includes air conditioner, washer, dryer, and disposal. Near school, laundry room. Offer on lease at $100 per month, would also sell for $2500 down, second mortgage on balance of equity. Total sale price is $4,798. Call or email about the agent, available May 18. Call 5-7185 5-340 to 7:30 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
FIRST FLOOR DUPLEX, newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six rooms, fenced yard, basement. Close to KU. Call VI 3-1764 or VI 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-16
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call VI
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
1941年, Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263
9411质量, Mass. Ph. VI 3-5263
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
One way and local, ready to go anywhere, now being accepted.
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass. on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 am to 6:30 pm. Birds and animals, complete pet supplies 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, bedding, blankets, etc.; Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211's Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. For men the instructor by professional uses. Intrauterine rates available limited time. VI 3-2123. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
RENT A SINGER sewer machine by the Sewing Center, 927 Mass. 5-1971 Singr Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Mrs. H. I.
Coester, phone VI 3-8679.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, V 3-1428
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
dance studios. Dance Studio, 800-
Masonic Phillips, ph. 3-6388, 9f.
MUSIC PHILIPS
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood, VI 3-8831. 176 Tenn. ff.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly
and accommodating staff. Ernie's Barber in 730 Massachusetts.
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Cail VI 3-9508. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, tuition, materials. Certification, accurate work. Can VI M-13-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka 1011 Tennessee. tfr
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vevuist, 1835 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
UNDER THE STARS!
1025 Mass., VI 3-2966
TONITE!
GALA RE-OPENING!
WITH THE BIGGEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR . . .
They're together and nothing can tear'em apart!
JOHN WAYNE • DEAN MARTIN
RICKY NELSON HOWARD" HAWKS' RIO BRAVO
TECHNICOLOR® from WARNER BROS.
TECHNICOLOR® from WARNER BROS. WB
ANGIE DICKINSON·WALTER BRENNAN·WARD BOND
ALWAYS A CARTOON — ADULTS 75c
AN ARMADA PRODUCTION - Directed and Produced by HOWARD HAWKS
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
LAWRENCE
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, paluting body repairs, tune-up and over oil in V-4580.
UPHOLSTERING, REFINISHING, free estimates, pickup and delivery. Lane's Furniture Repair, 311 East 7th, VI 3-2736
DRIVE IN THEATRE - - - - West on 23rd Street
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do all kinds
of types of writing. CV1 VI 6-8249
perfeced types). Call VI 3-8249
4-17
TRANSPORTATION
MISCELLANEOUS
LAUNDRY washed and dried, picked up and delivered, 65 cents a load. Diaper Service; Rugs; Blankets; Floors cleaned, wiped and polished. Call Simity's Warehouse 80771.
WANTED; ride to downtown Kansas
CITY, leaving at 2 p.m. Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday. Call Mrs. Robert Lash
at VI 3-8609. 4-14
BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI: 514-283-1000.
FOR SALE
LARGE DINING TABLE with pads, buffet; and six chairs all in good condition. Call VI 2-0049 or see at 721 Ill. after 4 u.m. 4-14
DAFFODILS, 25 cents a bunch. no de-
sign. Ransdell, 1742 Lennox.
Nardall. Call VI 3-27 4-1
1958 CORVETTE, good condition, low mileage. Call VI 2-0790. 4-14
LET'S BOTH SAVE MONEY. Buy car
seats in the Grey Wagon, wagon or
tune green Chevy Station Wagon, 20,700
miles. Excellent condition. Leaving for
someone else's car. Cream-puff,
tiffin. Call V13-587-4964 after 4.
STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Life, Life, and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0124. tf
38 SUPER AUTOMATIC, new. $40. Contact Michael Engle, Stouffer Place, Bldg.
9. Apt. 12 anytime after 6 p.m. No phone.
1048 PLYMOUTH, five passenger coupe,
new battery, good running condition.
Limited mileage.
1947 HUDSON, two door, radio, heater,
new tires and seat covers. Inexpensive,
dependable transportation. Call at VI 86-
255 at 50 Alabama any day at
fer 5 at p.m.
1950 FORD, new tires, radio and heater-
good condition. Call Jerry at VI 3-1110
57 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE. just
trusted by local professional man. V8,
push button drive, white wall tires, radio,
and heater. Cream and green with spot-
less white top, 12,100 miles. $1,893. See
at Jaybawk Motors, 1040 Vermont. 4-16
"WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN YOU SNEAK OUT and leave your bed in the middle of the night?"
YUL JOANNE MARGARET
BRYNNER·WOODWARD·LEIGHTON
William Faulkner's blistering story of love and transgression in the South that breaks the unwritten commandment!
THE Sound AND THE Fury
A JERRY WALD Production
costing
STUART WHITMAN · ETHEL WATERS · JACK WARDEN · FRANCOISE ROSAY WITH JOHN BEAL
ALBERT DEKKER
EXTRA! COLOR CARTOON — NEWS — ADULTS 75c KIDDIES 25c
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THEATRE - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Continuous Shows Sunday ENDS TONITE! James Stewart, Kim Novak in "BELL, BOOK and CANDLE"
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 10, 1950
Car-Truck Collide; Student Injured
A KU junior received minor injuries in a car-truck accident at Sunset Drive and Stratford Road this morning.
Mary Ann Daugherty. Meade, was taken to Watkins Hospital by ambulance following the collision with a dirt truck at 9:50 a.m.
Miss Daugherty was released following treatment for small cuts on the right elbow and wrist. There were no other injuries.
Lawrence police estimated damages to the car at $450. The truck, driven by Wesley H. Grammer, Route 4, Lawrence, belonged to W.A. Dunbar and Son Trucking and excavating Co.
The truck was hauling dirt from the construction site of the Kansas Union annex. The truck was not damaged. No citations were issued.
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansar. Notices will be placed, name, place, date, and time of function.
Employment opportunities available for men. Part-time and a few full-time jobs. Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strange Hall.
Cheerleader practices, April 14, 16, 21
23. 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Gym, Room 101
and Fryouts, April 28 and 30. 7:30 p.m.
Robinson Gym.
TODAY
Lutheran Student Association, 3 to 5. coffee porter, 1214 a.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30
prior to a research Study, discussion,
and refreshments.
International Club, 8 to 12 p.m. Castle Tea Room, 1307 Mass. German-Austrian students' spring party, semi-formal. For reservations, call VI 3-6455.
TOMORROW
Nursing Club. Meet at 9 a.m.at bus denot. Trin to Medical Center.
Glee Club. Lutheran Student Association. Meet at east entrance of MD build-
dion.
SUNDAY
KU Mennonite Fellowship, picnic, noon.
Cc: UT VI 3-0813 for details.
Newman Club Mass, Fraser Theater, 8
Bnest after 10 service. in the Hawk's
Nest after 10 service.
KU Faculty Club. "Easter Island." Caryle S. Smith. Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. E. Jackson Bauer. Buffet supper following program. 5:00 p.m.
When SAC was organized in 1946 it had only three jet aircraft. Now it has thousands.
Almost two million tubes of beauty preparations are purchased by American women every week.
AAA
AAA
Dentist
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
- Portraits
Weddings
- Engagements
- Application Photos
by photography
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
The Board of Directors of the College of Business Administration is pleased to present a certificate of achievement to Mr. Jorge Guzmán, a distinguished professor and former head of the School of Finance at the University of Mexico. The award recognizes his outstanding contributions to the field of finance and his commitment to advancing knowledge in this important area.
THE WINNAH—Jack D. Stephens, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior, receives a certificate and a handshake from Dr. E. R. Hall, professor of zoology, in recognition of top academic work in zoology.
English Meeting Opens Today
More than 80 members of the Kansas Assn. of College Teachers of English registered here this morning for a 2-day conference.
The group heard Dr. Norman Pounds, Rose Morgan visiting professor of geography, speak at the opening session this afternoon.
Alan Crafton, professor of speech,
will be in charge of entertainment at a banquet for teachers tonight at the Kansas Union. The visitors will see the color movie "Henry V" at Hoch Auditorium at 8 p.m.
W. P. Albrecht, chairman of the
English department, and president of KACTE, will preside at the Saturday morning business session.
A panel discussion led by Sen Don Hults, state senator from Lawrence, George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, The Rev. Brendon Downey, O.S.B., president of St. Benedict's College and Earle Davis, chairman of the department of English at Kansas State University, will discuss the status of the English profession.
Only two families out of 14 in the United States are without a television set. One-third of all U.S. public school children travel to classes in school buses.
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1959
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come in and pick your favorite Chevy!
Brookwood 4-Door Wagon.
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For a "Spring Sales Spectacular" deal see your local authorized Chevrolet dealer!
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No.124
Monday, April 13, 1959
Posters Stolen; Kansans Are Burned
Political Campaign Material Taken and Found on Weekend
Allied Greek-Independent party campaign posters and photo engravings were stolen from the Lawrence Outlook publishing company Friday afternoon. They turned up Saturday evening on the Pi Beta Phi sorority front porch.
The materials, valued at $163, were taken by five men representing themselves as members of the AGI party.
The posters and engravings $ ^{4} $
The posters and engraving were given to the men by Ed Abels, editor and publisher of the Outlook. The incident occurred while AGI publicity chairman Ron Barta, Salina senior, was waiting for a phone call from Abels informing him that the printing was completed.
The theft was discovered Saturday when Barta visited the Outlook to check on the posters. Abels then signed a complaint with county attorney Wesley Norwood.
Abels told The Daily Kansan:
"I couldn't identify them (the five men) if they were standing in front of me."
Detective Jack Laptad said at a meeting Saturday between the sheriff's department and Vox Populi officials that there were two possibilities for the AGI campaign materials being missing;
EXCLUSIVE TO A S.C.
NO. 17 MASTER
FOR 2017
THE LANDMARKS
Larry
Jackhan
LOST AND FOUND—Terry Elliott, Fort Scott junior and AGI president, examines the stolen posters after their return Saturday night.
Either some Vox people did not want the posters to be seen, or some persons in AGI stole the materials to embarrass Vox.
Urges Search
Mr. Laptad urged Vox president Tom Gee, Leavenworth senior, to begin a search in his party's houses for the stolen materials.
Before the materials were returned,Mr. Laptad said:
"Starting Monday morning, we will begin working hard on it, and then somebody will get prosecuted."
A search was also started in AGI houses by Terry Elliott, Fort Scott junior and AGI president.
Gee told the undersheriff:
"I'm not going to accuse anybody from my party, or anybody from the other party, as I don't know who did it. Any thinking person on our side wouldn't do that. Of course, there are non-thinking persons everywhere. But no matter what, the publicity will be against Vox."
Elliott said the posters will be displayed as originally planned.
Barta also dispelled a rumor today that the AGI brochures, "Speaking Frankly," were stolen by saying that he delivered many of them to AGI houses last night. He said Vox houses would receive their share today.
regarding his suspicions, Elliott said;
No Suspects
"I don't have anybody to suspect. I don't think anyone in either party, at least the hierarchy I know, would be foolish enough to do this. I can't help but think that it is something that was done without the major political officers in either party knowing about it."
Dean of Men Donald K. Alderson was contacted shortly after the theft was reported. He said today he has not had time to confer with everyone concerned in the matter.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Eisenhower went to Walter Reed Army Medical Center today for a visit with cancer-streken Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who was rehospitalized unexpectedly yesterday.
Dulles Rehospitalized
Weather
Mostly fair and warmer tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight in 30s. High tomorrow 65 to 70.
Voting Begins at 8 a.m. Tomorrow
Voting in the general election for All Student Council members and class officers will begin tomorrow at 8 a.m. in Strong Hall.
The polls for the election tomorrow and Wednesday are located east of the Business Office, in the rotunda, and west of the Registrar's office. The polls will open both days at 8 a.m. and close at 5:15 p.m.
Before a student votes he must go to the basement of Strong where five tables will be set up alphabetically. The voter must present his I.D. card and pick up a dean's card. The card gives the voter's name, living district, class, and school.
The voter will then go to the polls on the main floor. The pollworkers will determine from the dean's card which ballots the voter should receive. A party card is not required for a student to vote in the general election.
JANE KRAUSKINS
O'Brien Named Relays Queen
Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., junior, was chosen yesterday as KU's Kansas Relays Queen to hold forth over the track marathon Friday and Saturday.
Sharing the throne will be Carol Earls, a University of Missouri sophomore from Ironton, Mo.
Four KU women were selected as attendants to the queens from 19 attendants. The Big Eight choice was selected from pictures submitted from each conference school.
In the above picture are the attendants chosen. From left are Sarah Dillaha, Topeka senior; Annette Martin, Dewey, Okla., sophomore; Miss O'Brien; Cynthia Hunter, Hutchinson senior, and Barbara Everley, Lawrence senior.
Miss O'Brien is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority.
In 1957 she was elected queen of the Student Union Activities Carnival.
The Big Eight co-queen was MU's Homecoming Queen last year.
The royalty will appear in the Saturday morning Relays parade downtown and reign over the Friday night dance.
During the two days of track events in Memorial Stadium the queens will be on hand to give medals to the high school and college winners.
Miss Earls will arrive sometime Thursday and stay at Miss O'Brien's sorority.
Selecting the queens and their attendants were state senators Don Hults (R-Lawrence) and August Lauterbach (R-Colby); Art Wolf, of the Lawrence Centron Movie Corp., and John Kreamer, Kansas City, Mo., lawyer.
Burned Over 1,000 Issues Disappear in Fire
Ashes taken from an incinerator in back of the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity house Saturday evening turned out to be an estimated 1,200 to 1,500 copies of the Friday. April 10, edition of the Daily Kansan.
The newspapers apparently were removed from distribution boxes around the campus.
They and another Vox Populi party member checked the incinerator. They did so, they said, to
Ted Childers, Wamego freshman, and Roger Minneman, Sabetha sophomore, who live in Foster Hall, which is across the street from the Alpha Kappa Lambda house, said they saw a fraternity member "burning large amounts of white paper in the incinerator."
See page 2 for presidential candidates' opinions on campus issues.
dispel rumors that Vox Populi had stolen the AGI brochures, "Speaking Frankly."
The party members thought the brochures were being destroyed by AGI because it had lost its usefulness as a surprise after stories about the brochure had been printed in the Daily Kansan.
Political Stories Involved
The fraternity member who allegedly was seen burning material said he was only disposing of "trash, cardboard backings for shirts, and personal papers from my room."
The issue of the paper which was found in the incinerator contained two stories and an editorial about the brochure.
Minneman, Childers, George Ryan, Kaenas City, Mo., sophomore, all of Vox Populi, and a Kansan reporter, removed all ashes from the incinerator later that evening, and took them to the basement of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. They were joined by six others who began sorting the ashes.
It was apparent that a large number of Daily Kansans had been burned. There was no trace of the AGI brochure.
Asked if he could explain the presence of the Daily Kansans in his fraternity's incinerator, Ron Barta, Salina senior and AGI publicity chairman, said:
Out on Date
"No, I can't. I don't know anything about it. I was out on a date when the Kansans came out and didn't get a paper until I came back.
"The pledges are the only ones who know anything about papers, because they are the ones required to bring back our house's allotment every day.
"But I don't think the pledges in our house would do it. Because they heard me ranting and raving this past week about all this stuff that's been going on—posters missing, and copies of the 'Speaking Frankly' getting out."
Fraternity Comment
Vincent Meyer, Cincinnati, Ohio junior, and vice president of Alpha Kappa Lambda, made the following statement:
"I suppose the fraternity is responsible for every man's actions, but the chapter doesn't vote on every man's actions. We are responsible for every member's actions, although sometimes we would rather not be."
Dick Lewis, Kansas City, Kan. senior, and AGI presidential candidate, was shocked when he heard the accusation. But he said:
"I'd rather not make a statement on this."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 13, 1959
KU Is Undemocratic
Democracy is not practiced in the University's student government. But when the polls open at 8 a.m. tomorrow, conscientious students will have the opportunity to cast their votes for democracy.
In addition to candidates for the All Student Council and class offices, an ASC constitutional amendment will be on the ballot. This amendment will give smaller schools an equal opportunity for representation on the Council, but it needs your support.
As the constitution now reads no school is represented unless a minimum total of 75 ballots is cast by the students of that school in the general election. If the enrollment is less than 75, two-thirds of the enrollment of the school is necessary.
According to the amendment "no school shall be represented unless there is a minimum total of 75 ballots cast by the students of that school in the general elections, or the total ballots cast by the students in that school shall equal or exceed
Our campus government cannot operate in the spirit of a representative, democratic government if two or three of the nine schools do not have voting representatives on the ASC.
50 per cent of the total enrollment of that school in that general election, whichever is least."
That these schools have no representatives does not indicate a lack of interest. Enrollment in these schools is so small that the requisite of a minimum 75 ballots cast is unequal in relation to the larger schools.
The smaller number of students enrolled does not minimize these students' need for a voting representative on the Council. Although these same students are represented on ASC in their living districts, they deserve representation in their professional field where they have specialized interests.
Give your support to the constitutional amendment. Give every University student his voice and vote in campus government. -The Editors
By George DeBord
Jolliffe's upperclassmen cannot be considered as an organized house and therefore their grade
With election time almost at hand. I have a belated nomination. It is for Stupid-Statement-of-the-Year (SSY). It is a direct quote and goes like this:
the fall semester but they do indicate that Pearson did have the highest average.
I feel that your article titled "Jollife and Douthart Have Top Grades" is misleading to your readers and unfair to Pearson Hall. You state, "Jollife and Douthart scholarship halls have the highest grade point averages for men's and women's organized houses during the fall semester."
In fact, if you would look further into the facts, I think that you would find that Pearson Scholarship Hall had not only the highest grade point average among the men's scholarship halls but also among all of the men's organized houses on the campus including all fraternities and dormitories.
It Looks This Way...
These averages indicate that Jollife did not even have the highest grade point average for the men's scholarship halls during
Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
Bob McLean
"Our sorority is an AGI house."
Understand. I'm not knocking the party. Far be it from me. The only political organization I ever belonged to was a party called TGIF at a college south of here.
Pearson ... 1.882
Jolliffe ... 1.826
Battenfeld ... 1.793
Foster ... 1.761
Stephenson ... 1.728
Pearson Really Top
It's this sorority girl's statement that doesn't set right with me. The girl addressed her remark to a member of the opposition who smashed back with an equally ignorant reply:
So here we are at election time, with the voting forces in this great American tradition represented not by clear-thinking individuals, but by a couple of houses. Just what would a house vote for? Better sewage facilities so its plumbing wouldn't rot; a new coat of paint?
"Oh, really?" (A great line in itself.) "Well, I belong to a Vox house."
average must be computed along with that of their new man. When this is done, the grade point averages for the five men's scholarship halls are:
...Letters...
Then it dawned on me that the word "house" also meant social organization. Well, to my way of thinking, this is getting pretty darned social when a person doesn't vote for the best candidate, but for the party his or her house decides to back.
What has happened to the old American idea of playing politics apart from private organizations?
These two group-thinkers attempted to compare the qualifications of the two top candidates in their respective parties. They couldn't remember their candidates names, but the AGI girl said her man was the best dancer. The Vox backer smashed back with the fact that his house was backing the taller candidate.
Well, this political bickering could have gone on all afternoon if it hadn't been for the arrival of a second fraternity man.
The two would-be Carmine De Sapios asked him how his house was going to vote. He threw a damper on things by saying that his house voted to go AGI but some persons still insisted on voting Vox.
But I'm still wondering about these houses voting straight tickets. It just doesn't seem to be the kind of thing of which old Abe Lincoln would approve.
Presidential Candidates Comment on Issues Jim Austin, Vox, Says: Daily Kansan Issues Dick Lewis, AGI, Says:
1. Parking should be eliminated during class hours to help alleviate traffic congestion. But, do we want an "all-visitor" campus? This is a sure answer of such a move. We must keep in mind that student transportation needs should have first consideration.
2. There is no parking violation on the campus serious enough to warrant an $8 fine, as suggested by the Daily Kansan. Charges for traffic violators are presently out of line, and should be reduced.
3. Library hours should be extended to at least midnight during final week. The Kansas Room or the smoking room should be left open at all times to provide adequate study facilities at the library for any student 24 hours per day.
5. The extension of library hours would help solve the problem of an insufficient undergraduate library. If more copies of the required reading materials were made available, students would not suffer the effects of tight circulation.
4. There should be a curriculum committee in each school. Further, an intermediary board, similar to the one in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, should be set up in all the schools.
6. A Vox committee has been working on the student health program all year, and will make a complete report available in May.
7. I agree with the idea that All Student Council members should be dismissed from the Council after missing three meetings without an excuse. A bill of this nature will be introduced very soon.
8. The Group for the Improvement of Human Relations should be given proper consideration as long as it operates effectively. This year, the ASC appropriated funds to the GIHR. Next year, the group should be considered on this year's merits.
9. No student should be limited in the number of activities in which he may participate. Placing limitations on interested students would only tend to make this campus passive.
10. Most students are here to get an education and, thus, to attend class regularly. However, for many students, required attendance is not necessary. Interesting and well-prepared lectures will insure student participation. But the Faculty Senate can be approached on this matter.
11. Anyone can recommend a uniform grading system, but the accomplishments of one would destroy the matter of judgment by individual instructors. The system proposed by the Daily Kansan is
Jim Austin
13. Most national fraternities and sororites have removed, or are in the process of removing, restrictive clauses from their constitutions. A recent report by the National Inter-Fraternity Council indicates that this problem will soon be solved.
12. Seminars are not practical in many cases. This type of activity should be left up to the department heads and their students.
not feasible under the present situation.
14. I agree with the Vox platform and the Daily Kansan on the proposed constitutional amendment. I feel that all schools should have a voting representative on the ASC.
1. Cars should be banned from Jayhawk Boulevard during class hours.
2. No parking ticket should cost more than $8.
4. The schools' curriculum committee should investigate the work loads of professors and the amount of space and equipment allotted to them.
3. Library closing hours should be midnight.
5. The All Student Council should investigate library books purchased.
6. The Student Health Committee should investigate the Student Health Service.
7. The ASC should propose a constitutional amendment for replacement of any member who misses three unexcused meetings in one semester.
8. The ASC should direct the Group for the Improvement of Human Relations toward a program of equal rights regardless of race.
9. The ASC should limit the number of activities and offices in which a student can participate.
10. The ASC should investigate eliminating class attendance requirements for juniors and seniors.
13. The ASC should bring about elimination of racial and religious clauses in the national charters of all KU fraternities and sororites.
11. The ASC should recommend a uniform grading system.
12. The ASC should sponsor a system of student-faculty seminars.
Dailu Hansan
14. The proposed constitutional amendment to be voted on by the student body Tuesday and Wednesday should be passed.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004,
annual 256. Published on Friday
Member Inland Daily Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.
Associated Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $450 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and as second-class unter Sept. 17, 190. Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
1. The problem is not deciding whether traffic should be banned on the campus, but deciding when such action should be taken.
2. Theoretically the purpose of the present parking fine system is to prevent persistent violation. The success of the proposed $8 fine could only be known by trying the idea.
3. A plan for extending library closing hours has been formulated and will go into effect, experimentally, during this semester's final examination period. We must consider not only the study needs
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S NEW CURRENCY LEGISLATURE REFERRED TO A PROGRAM FOR THE RECOVERY OF NATIONAL MONEY.
Dick Lewis
of students, but also the factors of staffing, finances and women's closing hours.
4. The very least that could come of investigations concerning work loads and facilities is a better understanding on the part of the students.
5. Perhaps by working with the curriculum committee, library officials, and faculty advisers, the All Student Council could make suggestions for books to be purchased in the future.
6. The Student Health Committee should definitely publicize information about the Student Health Service, especially the student privileges that do exist.
7. An attendance requirement would be valuable in obtaining quorum and eliminating uninterested council members—but to obtain a "more responsible Council" greater emphasis might be placed on a change in the attitude of parties concerning those whom they nominate. Those who seek glory and do not intend to work have no place on ASC.
8. By working cooperatively the ASC and GHIHR will be able to strive more effectively for equal rights. If the GHIHR is to receive funds from the ASC, it should report periodically.
9. Any scheme limiting a person's activities would be ineffective and might cause the loss of real leadership.
10. Ideally class work and home work should not duplicate each other very much. This is not the case. Since some classes are repetitious, a student should not be penalized for a poor attendance if his missing does not hurt his work in the course.
11. Grading is always relative to the objectivity of the course. For this reason the problems involved in a uniform grading system are tremendous. Before any suggestions can be formulated, the idea should be thoroughly investigated. I propose a joint student-faculty committee for this investigation.
12. The student-faculty seminar seems mutually advantageous. It would encourage thought and participation from students and professors.
13. The elimination of racial and religious clauses from national charters, is in itself only superficial and of little value. Education and a changed attitude are the only feasible solutions to the problem.
14. Representation should be based partially on interest and partially on population. The proposed amendment should be expanded to include living districts as well as school districts.
(Editor's Note: The 14 campus issues proposed by the Daily Kansan were drawn up by the managing editor, four assistant managing editors and the coeditorial editors, and approved by the editorial board. They first appeared in the April 9 issue.)
Cold War Seen as Permanent Fixture
The United States and Russia will continue to live in a state of peaceful co-existence, the Yugoslavian ambassador to this country said Friday.
Marko Nikiezic, who served at European embassies before coming to Washington, told a press conference he does not look for an early end to the cold war.
"Yugoslavia's break with Russia in 1948 was a permanent one.
In speaking of his own country and its relationship to Russia, Ambassador Nikezic said:
"The break has not brought us closer to their philosophy. If better relations between my country and Russia are to come about it will be necessary for them to change their behavior, not us," he said.
When asked about Yugoslavia's friendly attitude toward Egypt, the ambassador said that his country was not in a position to give financial help to Egypt.
"We need to help ourselves instead. The two governments are formed on similar foreign policy and we can help each other most by supporting each other in the field of foreign relations," he said.
At home, Mr. Nikezic said his country was trying to increase its industrial output but the big obstacle to growth was lack of credits abroad.
"Our main problem is providing more jobs for those who are moving from the rural area to the urban centers. This problem will continue because the land will support only one-third of the population. We must find work for the remainder of the population in the cities."
Page 3
Marko Nikezic
P. A. S. P.
Professor 'Injects' Bits of Knowledge
At least one faculty member is looking out for the welfare of his students.
Recently a professor in the School of Education announced to his students that in order to be aware of pupil health problems, a teacher must first take care of his or her own health.
He then promptly led the entire class to the main floor where all the students received fit shots.
Prof. Baumgartner Dies At 87 in New York City
William Jacob Baumgartner, professor emeritus of zoology, died last night in New York City where he lived with his daughter. He was 87.
Prof. Baumgartner, who was born in Versailles, Mo., May 14, 1871, organized the first student hospital at the University, helped establish the School of Religion, and originated the million-dollar campaign which built the first student union building and stadium as a war memorial in 1919.
Prof. Baumgartner retired in 1949, but continued as a volunteer in civic and University affairs until he moved to New York City in 1956.
Prof. Baumgartner helped develop a social service exchange in Lawrence, a canning kitchen for underprivileged people, and helped raise money for many Lawrence social and civic groups.
He served as managing editor of the Science Bulletin of the University from 1914 to 1920 and was on its board for another 30 years.
He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and a number of scientific and academic organizations.
He attended Bethel College in
Tonight
Radio Programs KANU
5:00 Twilight Concert; "Trio in E-Flat Major, Op. 40, for Violin, Horn and Piano" by Brahms
7:00 Ballet Music; "Souveniers"
Ballet Suite" by Barber
7. 30 Keyboard Concert (Harpischord): "Sonata in B Minor" by Bach
Tickets for the production are on sale at the University Theatre box office. Tickets for students cost 50 cents upon presentation of an identification card and for non-students tickets cost $1.
1:30
8:00 University of the Air;
Pacifica Portraits
The elves make shoes and the shoemaker grows prosperous. In return the good and now rich shoemaker gives the elves clothing and shoes. Exit elves and happily ever after live the shoemaker and his wife.
The Children's Theatre production. "The Elves and the Shoemaker," opens today at 4:15 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre.
8:30 University of the Air;
Doorway to the World
9:00 Starlight Symphony.
9:00 Symphony No. 3" by Ives
10:00 Mon
This is one production which has a happy ending. The play is adapted from the original fairy tale. The good but poor shoemaker and his wife are beset by two shoemaking elves.
8:45 University of the Air:
Curtain Going Up
10:05 A Little Night Music: "October
F Major" by Haydn
Newton, then came to KU, where he got his B.A. degree in 1900 and the M.A. degree in 1901. He later studied at the University of Chicago and the University of Munich, Germany, where he received his Ph.D. in 1929.
11:00 Sign On
KANU,the FM radio voice of KU,
814-MC
Bernice Harvey, instructor of speech and director of the Children's Theatre, said absolute realism would be the only thing that would convince the children of the authenticity of the sheeemaker.
He is survived by his daughter, Dr. Leona Baumgartner of New York City, four sisters, and one brother.
In this case all they have to do is to finish a few side lacings and pin a jeweled clip on the toe of the shoes.
Children's Play Opens Today
Mrs. Harvey and her staff have consequently spent many hours cutting out leather shoes and stitching them. On stage some of the actors will be making shoes.
The play will continue through Saturday.
Dr. George H Foxie, organizer of the University of Kansas Medical School, died Friday at his home in Berkeley, Calif. He has suffered for several years from a heart ailment.
Dr. Hoxie joined the KU staff as an associate professor of anatomy after having studied medicine at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, and the Universities of Heidelberg and Munich in Germany. He became dean of clinical medicine and organizer of KU's medical school in 1905. He remained as head of the school until 1911, when he resigned to go into general practice for the first time.
Dr. George Hoxie Dies in California
New York State is the nation's largest producer of cabbage for making sauerkraut.
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Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan. Notices are given at the same, place, date, and time of function.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong, Part-time and some full-time work.
Cheerleader practices, April 14, 16, 21,
23, 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson
Gym, Room 101.
Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the Shoemaker, Experimental Theatre.
TODAY
International Folk Dance Club, 7-9 p.m. North Wind of Rhinoceros Gym, 8-10 p.m. Dances at 7:30 p.m. Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Jones, Jonas Hirschman, and Mickey Warner U. Dances: 8 p.m., Art, 'Museum
KU Dames, 8 p.m. Art Museum Lounge.
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong Hall, Dick Brooks, southwestern Investment Co., Careers in Finance, John R. Hancock, Career Development, Purchasing, Production and Accounting,
TOMORROW
Epicopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
and, Holy Communion, 7:00 a.m. with
worship.
Newman Club Mass, 6:00 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Teachers Appointment Bureau, 137 Bailey, Charles L. Sturrt, Clay Center. Placement Bureau, 214 Sharon Hall, K. C. Johnson, William Volker & Co., Sales.
Zoology Club, 7:30 p.m., home of Dr. J. Weir, 2040 Louisiana. Discussion; Chapters 12 and 13 of Charles Darwin's "The Origin of Species."
WEDNESDAY
The Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 37, Strong Hall Dr. Whittington from Watkins Hospital will speak on electroencephalography.
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Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 13. 1959
WHO'S GOING TO LEAD
AUSTIN
1234567890
Jim Austin
for Student Body President & Vice President
DAVIS
LEAD YOU?
Terry Davis
Make sure
it's someone with a genuine interest in student government
Make sure
it's someone who will keep the students informed
Make sure
it's someone who will insure fair committee appointments
VOTE
DON'T IGNORE STUDENT GOVERNMENT
VOTE at Strong Hall, April 14 & 15
(Paid for by Vox Populi)
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Gridiron Stars Begin Action Today
The sport of the pigskin will re-enter KU's athletic scene today as spring football practice gets underway.
Seventeen lettermen are listed on the squad expected to number 55.
John Peppercorn, All-Big Eight tackle, will exchange his line position for that of halfback. Coach Jack Mitchell has made the move in an effort to inject more speed in the graduation-weakened backfield.
"We have some good young ends coming up and feel we can spare John from that position." Mitchell explained. "If things do not work out at halfback we'll return him to end."
Other shuffling, all of which will move personnel from the backfield to the line, include: Chuck Lukinac, from right half to end; Andy Graham, from fullback to center, and Ken Fitch and Gary Clothier shifting from guard to the tackle spot. Graham is the only freshman in the group.
Returning lettermen from the 1958 team are: Ends—Roger Hill, DeWitt Lewis, Dale Remsberg, Sam Simpson; Tackles—Stan Kirshman, Peppercorn;
Guards—Clothier, Fitch, Dick Rohlf, Joe Spurney; Centers—none; Quarterbacks — Bill Crank; Halfbacks—Dave Harris, Lukinac, Duane Morris; Fullbacks—Fred Bukaty, Norm Mailen, and Doyle Schick.
Bill Burnison, a letterman at center, will miss spring workouts because of a knee operation.
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
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Nebraska Beats KU Golf Team
KU's golf team was defeated $ 9^{1 / 2} $ to $ \frac{1}{2} $ by Nebraska's golfers Friday at the Topeka Country Club.
Outstanding performances were shown by Nebraska's Mike McCusition who shot a par 72 and KU's Bob Wood who shot a one-over-par 73.
Scores were: Kansas, Rowlands. 82; Kirkwood, 88; Cartnell, 85; Tolson, 79, and Wood, 72. Nebraska: Mullins, 81; Romjue, 76; McConahey, 89; McCuistion, 72, and Epstein, 81.
Coach Waugh said today's meet at Washburn has been postponed because of weather conditions. The next meet will be on Thursday at K-State.
Write In
HEY!
CLARA SWANSON
VICE PRESIDENT JUNIOR CLASS
Monday, April 13, 1959
Tennis Team Downs NU
Coach Denzell Gibbens and his five KU tennis marksmen bagged their first big game Saturday when they defeated Nebraska 5-2 on the KU courts. It was the Jayhawkers' first win in five outings.
The Jayhawkers host Wichita in a return match Wednesday.
KU came from behind to claim the victory. Dave Coupe, Arkansas City junior, used his powerful overhead smash to best advantage in turning in the first victory of the afternoon. Nebraska quickly followed up with two singles victories, but Lynn Sieverling rallied from a 2-5 deficit to win his singles match tying things at 2-2. Salvit Lekagal put the Jayhawkers ahead to stay with his singles victory. KU won both doubles matches to clinch it.
Singles
Bruce Russell, Nebraska, defeated Jerry Williams, 6-1, 6-4.
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Lynn Sieverling, Kansas, defeated Bill North, 7-5, 6-4.
Albert Arrigunaga, Nebraska,
defeated Pete Block, 7-5, 6-3.
Dave Coupe, Kansas, defeated Charles Kress, 6-1, 6-3.
Sal Lekagul, Kansas, defeated Bill Kendell. 6-4, 6-3.
Doubles
Block-Sieverling, Kansas, defeated Kress-North, 7-5, 6-4.
Georgia's state tree is the live oak.
Williams-Coupe, Kansas, defeated Russell-Arrigunaga, 9-7, 1-6, 7-5.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 13. 1959
Around the Campus
Evil Calculators 'Borrow' Slip Stick
The engineering drawing department is ready to make a deal for a six-foot Versalog model slide rule that is being held for ransom (the department hopes) by persons unknown.
The demonstration slide rule was taken from Marvin Hall about Feb 10, and is valued at $100. This particular model demonstrates the type used by most engineering students. The school has been unable to obtain another like it.
Charles J. Baer, associate professor of engineering drawing, said that he is willing to make a deal to get it back.
"The persons who took it can't use it, and the department would like to have it back. We might even trade an obsolete model for it."
Prof. Beer assured that no questions would be asked.
Relays Dance Ducats Go on Sale Today
Tickets for the Kansas Relays dance go on sale today at the Kansas Union and the information booth along Jawhawk Boulevard.
Les Brown and his band, which has been voted the number one dance band in America, will play for the dance Friday. Tickets are $2.50 a couple. The semi-formal dance will be from 9 pm until midnight.
Coach Marklev Re-hired
Jav Markley has been re-hired as KU swimming coach for next season. This will mark Markley's third season as the Jawhaker helmsmian
Unlike those people who save bits of string for unknown purposes, KU has a definite reason for stockpiling a huge mound of dirt.
Dirt Mound for Parking Lot Drive
Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, explained today that the mountain of earth opposite the excavation for the Kansas Union addition will eventually save the University money.
"We have delayed opening bids for a permanent drive to Zone X parking lot until we had enough dirt on hand to be able to save the cost of buving earth for a needed land fill." Mr. Lawton said.
The new drive into Zone X will be directly opposite the Baumgartner Drive exit on Mississippi Street. Extensive grading and filling is necessary for the job.
Jayhawker Jobs for '59-'60 Now Open
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1959-60 Jayhawkker, the KU magazine yearbook, should be turned in to Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, in 223 Strong by Tuesday, April 28.
Mr. Nichols is chairman of the Jayhawkier Advisory Board, student-faculty committee. He said that interviews with the applicants will be held May 1.
Each application should include a letter of application and three reference letters, including one from a former employer and one from a KU faculty or staff member.
A law against human slavery was enacted in Rhode Island on May 18, 1652.
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P
y was day 18,
Monday, April 13, 1959 University Daily Kansar
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 25%
for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 m.m. on the day before publication is desired.
WANTED
WANT TO BUY Steamer Trunk. Cali
3-5297 after 5 p.m.
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS interested in making $150 additional income
income earned for dollars by part time
insurance selling. Call Carl F. Ade, Jr.
Kansas City, Missouri at Harrison 1-413-269-7111
WANTED: baby sitter, light housekeeping.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, must supply
own transportation. Apply evenings. 11-B
Sunnyside. 4-13
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT. spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
heat and gas furnished, linen furnished,
accept graduate students. Call VI.
7677
HOUSE, four rooms, unfurnished, completely modern, full basement, large backyard, parking and garage. 3-575s ft² per km., weekdays and anytime on Sundays. 4-13
TWO BEDROOM HOME, unfurnished,
4297 during the daytime. Call VI.
1-800-352-1000.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent or for sale, furnished, includes air conditioner, washer, dryer, and disposal. Near campus location. Monthly lease at $130 per month, would also sell for $2500 down, second mortgage on balance of equity. Total sale price is $4786. Please about to call agent, available May 18. Call 3-7185 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
FIRST FLOOR DUPLEX, newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six rooms. fenced yard, basement. Close to KU. Call VI 31764 or VI 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-16
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED; ride to downtown Kansas
City, leaving at 2 p.m., Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday. Call Mrs. Robert Lash
at VI 3-8609.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. tt 0350.
FOR SALE
LARGE DINING TABLE with pads, buffet,
and six chairs all in good condition.
Call VI 2-0049 or see at 721 Ill. after 4
p.m.
4-14
1958 CORVETTE, good condition, low mileage. CALL VI 2-0790. 4-14
LET'S BOTH SAVE MONEY. Buy car from owner, 2-door, 1957, 6-cyl., two-tone green Chevy Station Wagon, 20,700 miles. Excellent condition. Leaving for Europe; must sell this "cream-puff" $1750. Call VI 3-5297 after a 4.p.m. t
DAFFODILS, 25 cents a bunch, no deal.
DAFFODILS, Runsdell, 1975.
Call VI 31-124, 1-4-14
1948 PLYMOUTH, five passenger coupe,
good running condition.
Cali W1-3757-4-13
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
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
1947 HUDSON, two door, radio, heater,
new tires and seat covers. Inexpensive,
dependable transportation. Call at VI 542-
803 at 803 Alabama any day at
4-11 p.m.
1950 FORD, new tires, radio and heater
good condition. Call Jerry at VI 3-1114
57 PLYMOUTH CONVENTIBLE. Just traded by local professional man. V8. push button drive, white wall tires, radio, and heater. Cream and green with spotless white top, 12,100 miles, $1,895. See at Jayhawk Motors, 1040 Vermont. 4-16
ONE TICKET for "Two For The Seesaw."
Music Hall, Kansas City, Tuesday night;
Tuesday will sell for $30.
Third seat, sixth row orchestra $9.00.
Call VI 3-5464 evenings. 4-17
IS YOUR ORGANIZATION looking for an annex? We have a lovely furnished 18-room home adjacent to campus. Call us to see. Cain Realty 9th st, VI 3-8316 A-17
EUBEKO RECORDS, 55 cents each orch
214 Rowland Book Schoe
241 Oread 4-24
BUSINESS SERVICES
(TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at
regular rates. Will type themes, term pa-
pers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI
-1860. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a student-faculty rate. Call Vi1 8124.
TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tl
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smil 1411; Mgle. Ph. Vt 3-2563
Mphe. Ph. Vt 3-2563
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 animal complete kits for pets. Everything 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, blankets, etc., Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome.
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secret-trial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211's Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. professional profesional masseur. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tt
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
Sewing Center, 927 Mass. 3-1971. Singr
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Mrs. H.
Cosseter, phone VI 3-8679.
TYPIST. Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. V 1-8331. 1736 Tenn. tf
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
dance studios, Dance Studio, 9th
Millionth, ph. V 3-6833.
DUCK'S For SEA FOOD 824 Vt.
VOTE
RICK BARNES SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. general rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, UI 3-5428
SCHOLARSHIP
Efficient Reliable
New Ideas
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers
theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast
error free service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-8508. tf
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do all kinds of typing, thesis, term papers, etc.; experienced typist. Call VI 3-6249. 4-17
LAUNDRY washed and dried, picked up and delivered. 65 cents a load. Diaper Service: Rugs; Blankets. Floors cleaned, and polished. Cairn Smiley VI-3 8077-5 16
FYPIING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, hees, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates eight ears per course. Immune status unknown in course. University II St-134. John L. Glinka 1911 Tennessee t
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veuist. 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadi Motors, 318 East 17, Phone VI 3-4850.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 13. 1950
SANDRA AND SAMUEL BARRELL
HONOR GUEST—Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson is flanked by KU officials at dinner Saturday marking formal dedication of Joseph R. Pearson dormitory. From left, Fred Ellsworth, Alumni Assn., executive secretary; Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy; J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, and L.C. Woodruff, dean of students.
Typhoid Brought Benefactors to KU
Joseph R. Pearson Hall might be called "the house that typhoid built," said Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy Saturday night at the dedicatory dinner in Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
The dinner was the highlight of a weekend open house where Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, a widow and noted contributor to four of KU's residence halls, was honored.
The chancellor said:
"In 1885, Dr. A. B. Sellards and his brother were on their way to Denver when they heard there was a typhoid epidemic near Lawrence. They stayed to help fight the epidemic and later settled in Kansas.
"Dr. Sellards had heard there was a likely-looking college near Lawrence.
"Now many of our students are infected with the KU virus, and they never get rid of it. It's a life-long disease."
"One of Dr. Sellards' girls is our very special guest this evening. It is not given to me the kind of words needed to describe this person. I will only say I give to you a lovely and noble lady whom we honor this evening with the memory of her noble husband." Chancellor Murphy said.
The guests and students stood and applauded Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson
James P. Kirk, president of the dormitory council, said, "Mrs. Pearson, special guests...I would like to thank you very much for giving us a wonderful place to live."
Mrs. Pearson wore a blue shantung silk suit with a white orchid, given by the residents of the dormitory, on her left shoulder. She wore a white flowered hat complemented with a pearl necklace and earrings.
In an interview Sunday afternoon. Mrs.Pearson said:
"Mr. Pearson thought students would be happier in school if they had nice homes. I think a student who comes to KU and makes many friends here will never forget his university."
Mrs. Pearson said that during the dinner Saturday night she noticed one of the boys looking at her, "I know he wanted to sit."
"I knew he wanted to talk to me, she said. "I went over and asked him if he was one of the boys who had given me this corsage. He said he
Ex-Kansan Editors Find Steady Work
Three former members of the University Daily Kansan staff are again working together—but not from choice. They are now staff members of the Fort Wood Sentinel, a weekly, off-set publication at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Daryl Hall and Dick Walt, class of 1957, are serving as editor and managing editor of the newspaper, and Bob Hartlev, a 1958 graduate, is a reporter. All three had been Daily Kansan editors.
was, and he thanked me for helping to give him and his fellow students such a nice place to live."
During the dedicatory dinner, L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, said:
The KC-135 jet tanker carries more than 15.000 gallons of fuel to feed thirsty bombers aloft.
"Today's universities are more concerned with the housing of students while yesterday they were not."
He gave a brief history of yesterday's universities in the Old World, explaining that only the academic part of education was emphasized.
He said England's universities first dealt not only with the academic but the cultural and political sides of education.
"It was quite natural that our universities should follow England's pattern." He then reviewed the rise of concern for educational housing, citing the 1802 food riots in the East.
"They were called 'pantry raids,' he explained.
"Regardless of the cost, I'm sure Joseph R. Pearson Hall will have a greater effect on the students than the football coach or the professor of biology." Dean Woodruff concluded.
TIGHT SCHEDULE?
A few minutes with the head of our college unit will tell you a lot about this absorbing business. And if you're interested in actual sales training you can start now—while you're still in school.
Make every "career planning minute" count! There are plenty of good angles to a life insurance career.
PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia
Two KU faculty members said Friday at the Current Events Forum that fall-out from nuclear testing is not an immediate danger to the American people.
L. Worth Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, and John Weir, associate professor of zoology, spoke on the limits of radioactive fall-out and possible damage to human cells.
Scientists Say Fall-out Peril To Humans Is Not Immediate
BILL LYONS Supervisor
Prof. Seagondollar said that the average amount of radiation fall-out a person would receive from fall-out is one-tenth of a roentgen over a thirty year period (a roentgen is
1722 W. Ninth
VI 3-5692
More than 400 persons attended the opening exhibition of the works of Grant Wood yesterday afternoon at the Museum of Art.
"In the laboratory I receive one tenth a day, so I am not too worried. A quantitative amount like that is not bad," he said.
an international unit of quantity of X-rays).
400 Attend Grant Wood Exhibit Opening Sunday
A public reception launched the exhibit of Wood's works, to be shown here through May 30. Associated Women Students members assisted at the reception.
Prof. Weir said we must be aware of the possible effects of extremely dangerous radiation.
He said he was concerned about the possible damage to germ plasm which would affect future generations.
"I think we had a very fine turn-out for the reception considering the weather," said Mrs. Martha Remick, assistant to the Museum director.
Prof. Seagondollar said the alpha and beta particles, if received externally, would do no damage.
"The opinion seems to be that 'Parson Weeens' Fable' is the favorite picture in the exhibit. People like this story of George Washington chopping down the cherry tree the best," Mrs. Remick said.
The Wood exhibition includes 54 works taken from the East and West coasts and from midwestern collections. It is the last in the series of the works of the three regionalist painters. The other exhibitions showed the work of John Steuart Curry and Thomas Hart Benton.
In connection with the Wood exhibition, a special sales exhibition of lithographs by Curry, Beenton, and Wood has been arranged by the Museum.
A display of 19 original signed lithographs by these three artists, loaned by the Associated American Artists Gallery in New York City is in the small gallery on the second floor of the Museum. These prints are for sale to the public.
The Museum receives no commission from the sale. It organized it because of the great demand noticed each year among persons wanting to own works by the three regionalists.
"It is the gamma rays, both internal and external, we have to worry about. They are the main source of body damage," he said.
He said the solution would be to stop anything that is putting gamma rays into the air.
"But it is not this simple. It is necessary that we have atomic testing. It doesn't appear that any trust between the United States and Russia exists, so we must maintain a retaliatory force," he said.
Prof. Seagondollar, quoting a report from the National Academy of Sciences, said that spontaneous mutations resulting from radioactive fall-out could be the cause of certain diseases.
"But we must discount the harm of atomic testing by presenting the advantages," he said.
Prof. Weir said that spontaneous mutations are almost all harmful.
"The price of accumulated mutations is genetic death. Some good can occur with the bad, but most mutations are dangerous," he said.
Prof. Weir said that the United States could work at discontinuation of atomic testing to prevent dangerous effects of fall-out.
"Bold moves and gambles may be necessary," he said.
The instructors agreed that fallout is not the only source of radiation.
"Until fall-out becomes a much greater problem, we will do nothing." Prof. Seagondollar said.
Prof. Weir suggested that the public be more truthfully informed about atomic testing and the effects.
"Because some think the safest way is to 'classify' information, the press releases are misleading," he said.
Returned by Popular Demand
"Exotic Pizzas"
This Week's Special: PEPPERONI PIZZA
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106 No. Park
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year. No. 125
VOTE 1
KEN
GRAY
FOR ASC
Dave Wilson, elections committee chairman, points to misplaced poster located on unauthorized property.
NAMED
Jim Disque, Mary Sue Taylor, and Dave Wilson form the elections committee. Also seen is pollworker John Bierlein. Wilson said 608 voted this morning.
MADISON
Bill Schmidt, Independence junior, votes at Strong poll. Checking him are pollworkers Art McGowan and Duane Mulkey.
She's a Beauty— But Is She Ours?
"Is she is or is she ain't our baby?"
This is the question in the minds of the officers of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and the personnel in the registrar's office, as they anxiously await tomorrow's arrival of movie star Dolores Michaels from Hollywood.
Miss Michaels' studio, 20th Century Fox, says she attended KU for two years and was a member of the sorority during her stay here.
MARY MAY
Dolores Michaels
The registrar's office, however, reports that no such person is listed in its records for the years (presumably 1950-1951) when Miss Michaels was supposed to have been here.
Miss Michaels, who is one of five stars in the western, "Warlock," will be in Lawrence for a few hours tomorrow to promote her new film.
To further complicate matters, the officers at the KKG house can find no record of her, either.
Her tentative schedule calls for a visit with students in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building, after which she is to attend a coffee at the sorority in question.
However, the women who are to serve as hostesses are still trying, feverishly, to find out if she was or wasn't one of them.
As of last night, the sorority women were undecided on whether or not to have the coffee. First, they want to know if the actress belongs.
An editor of the Daily Kansan called the sorority house to make arrangements to have a picture taken of the actress having coffee with the KKG women.
The whole thing started when the Daily Kansan received a publicity release from the Fox studio announcing Miss Michael's arrival.
Bulletin
When the sorority revealed that it knew nothing of her past membership, it was thought that perhaps
"The publicity manager was reported as saying he thought it would sound better if people thought Miss Michaels was a sorority girl, so he chose one of the houses she had visited and released information that she was a member," said the spokesman.
Starlet Dolores Michael's is ours —by virtue of a three week stay at KU in 1851. But she never did pledge Kappa Kappa Gamma. So says a sorority spokesman.
Her studio was then contacted through Warner Erothers representatives in Kansas City, and the studio said that her name had not been changed. The studio also stuck by its original biography, which states that Miss Michaels had once been a KU coed.
the actress had changed her name after leaving the Midwest.
At this point in the mystery of the celebrity's missing past, the registrar's office was contacted. Again, the results were negative.
So, things are right back where they started, with Miss Michaels' biography on one side and the University and a confused sorority on the other.
The race to solve the mystery is liable to go right down to the wire as the hour set for the coffee draws near.
Bulletin
A student was arrested by election police this afternoon for distributing copies of the AGI pamphlet "Speaking Franklin" within 50 feet of the polls. Jim Disque, Lawrence senior, and AGI representative to the Elections Committee, impounded the ID card belonging to Allan Weis, Freeport, N.Y. freshman, after warning him of the violation once.
In last year's general election 732 students had voted by 10:30. However, last year there was only one day of balloting and eight polls were scattered over the campus. This year there are two days of voting and only three polls, all in Strong Hall. The polls will close tonight and tomorrow at 5:15 p.m. and will open tomorrow at 8 a.m.
At 11:30 a.m. 603 students had voted in the first day of general election ballotting.
603 Vote Before Noon
Today 178 students had voted in the fraternity district, 151 in the sorority district, 81 in the men's dormitory district, 59 in the women's dormitory district, 85 in the unmarried-unorganized independent district, 14 in the co-op and professional fraternity district, and 22 in the married district.
In the school districts, 279 students had voted in the College, 104 in the Engineering school, 74 in the Education school, 49 in the Business school, 29 in the Fine Arts school, 21 in the Graduate school, 20 in the Law school. 17 in the Pharmacy school, and 12 in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Art Work Said Missing
A painting from a student exhibition on the third floor of Strong Hall has been reported missing by Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting.
The print was the work of William Henry, Parkville, Mo., senior, and represented half a semester's work
AGI Campaign Errors Alleged
The All Student Council election committee today reported that alleged violations of the political campaign by Allied Greek-Independent party will be turned over to the Student Court for further action.
Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. senior and committee chairman, said that a preliminary investigation had disclosed violations of the Associated Students Constitution.
Terry Elliott, Fort Scott junior and president of AGI, denied at least two of the charges.
the violations being investigated are:
1. The posting of campaign posters within 50 feet of the polling area.
2. The posting of campaign literature in unauthorized areas.
4. Posters and cards that don't state clearly who paid for them.
4. An apparent over-expenditure of the amount of campaign fund allotted them. The amount allote to each party is $270.
5. An AGI pamphlet, "Speaking Frankly," contains information that is false and misleading.
6. That some place cards contain a drawing of a person making what can be interpreted as an obscene gesture.
Elliott said:
"Distribution of the campaign materials is up to the candidates and it is possible that they could have posted materials in the wrong places.
"As for the campaign funds, I turned in a list of all the costs I knew of and until I can check the books I believe we did not exceed the allotted amount of expenditures."
Party Pamphlet May Get Supplement
Rumors that a supplement to the AGI pamphlet, "Speaking Frankly," might be issued today, were answered by Terry Elliott. Ft. Scott junior and president of AGI He said:
"If the pamphlet is released, it will come out tonight. However, at this time, I doubt if there will be one."
On the charge about the obscenpost. Elliot said:
"I can't accept that at all. I think that the charge is completely false. If he (Wilson) chooses to interpret it that way, that's his business.
"I had no such thought as that in my mind at all, and this is the first time I've heard anything about the poster."
The election committee, in charge of the general supervision of the ASC election, is composed of members from each party. The members are appointed by the chairman of the ASC and approved by the committee on committees.
Wilson said:
T. C. Helvey, visiting professor of radiation biophysics, will discuss "More Than Meets the Eye," (microoperations), on Science Scope at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow on Channel 13, WIBW television, Teopka.
"The reason for the preliminary investigation at this particular time is because of a number of irregularities and discrepancies which we felt warranted investigation."
Helvey TV Show Ready
Tom Rea, instructor of journalism and extension coordinator is director for the series of science programs on which Prof. Helvey has been appearing since March 4. The programs are broadcast directly from television studios in Crew auditorium with student crews.
This series of science programs is designed to enhance knowledge and promote interest in modern science for adults as well as high school students.
Previous programs have included such subjects as what man is looking for in space, testing man for a space trip, man operating on another planet, atomic powered engines, atomic physics, and bacteriology and space flight.
Weather
Mostly fair with a warming trend this afternoon through Wednesday. Low tonight near 40 northwest. Low to 45 to 50 elsewhere.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14. 1959
Same Old Song
"Bills Drag as Time Rolls On" was the headline for the article on the Missouri Legislature story in the April 5 edition of the Kansas City Star. A smaller headline read "With 60 per cent of Time Gone, Little Legislation Has Been Enacted."
The story says that most of the work is done on the "final stretch" but the lawmakers will have to bear down from now on if they want to make any reasonable record this time.
Story sound familiar? It should. This is about the same thing that happens this time of year to KU students, and students all over the country, for that matter.
"Studies Drag as Time Rolls On" could be the title of a story about the University. A smaller caption could also mention that over half the time in the second semester is gone and in a lot of cases little work has been done.
As for the "final stretch," that is something that is taken before one retires for the evening. The "stretch" is getting shorter and shorter and
work is piling up. But then there is reason for delay—the trip to Lone Star, rides in the country and tennis to build the body beautiful.
As for speed? Ah yes, speed in running to class at 8 a.m. after oversleeping. Why, some teachers actually believe that the students planned it this way, but it's just that the night before the morning after was sooo much fun.
No doubt the Missouri Legislature will settle down and get some important bills passed at the last of the session when they realize they must adjourn shortly, but they will leave some important legislation to die on the floor with adjournment.
In like manner KU students will probably get some important studying done before finals roll around in a few weeks, but there will be the class that will be neglected in the hurry of cramming studying and fun into the final week.
But there is one thing about it, we can say that we are typical human beings in "fighting" this thing called spring fever, even if we do flunk out. —Martha Fitch
A Smiley Face
By John Husar
theater
Children's theater is probably one of the more difficult forms of drama to produce. In it the director must satisfy, not only the dotard's censoring eye, but the stringently critical tastes of tykes too worldly for their ages.
Today's kids are inured to blood, sex, murder, hate, as normal courses of entertainment. And so, the director's problem multiplies by having to find a play which will hold a child's interest, and still be suitably moral.
Alicia Lorenzo
Still yesterday's kid-packed audience liked it. The script held together, the players divested proper amounts of melodrama, and the Mother Goose set, eerie light-ing and jaunty elf-music lent a Disneyy mood of fantasy to the proceedings.
Well, director Bee Harvey would probably have to climb aboard a showboot in order to find a more scruppulously pure play than her current Children's Theatre attraction, "The Elves and the Shoemaker." It literally rang with man's honesty and goodness—a rather foreign image of our adored Homo sapiens.
What is more, the attentive kidsturned-autograph-hungry urchins, swarmed backstage after the show, thoughtfully armed with theater-provided scorecards. I guess it was a great success.
Of course the play did have a villain. It seems that a gold-hungry spinster (Jane Paramore) got wind of a secret hide-out full of elves and cached with gold. This wage-earner's dream happened to be under a poor shoemaker's (Karl Garrett) workshop, upon which the spinster held a mortgage.
While the shoemaker was off to the wars, his wife and daughter (Wendy Combes and Judy Satterfield) had no income, could not pay the mortgage, and thus were about to be extracted from the property. Then the spinster could dig for the gold.
This was sad and so three little elves (Don Plantz, Kittie Williams and Laura Mulally) decided to play good deeds and made huge amounts of shoes for the two women, who sold them and pocketed the proceeds to pay off the debt.
Meanwhile, the spinster parlayed a simple-minded, palsied, old ninny (Virginia Kane) into letting her "hold" the mortgage money sent from the shoemaker until the deadline for payment passed. But all worked out well. Just as she was about to claim the shop, one of the elves hexed her shoes, and she went flying off to heaven-knows-where. The kids were happy. I was happy. The show was over.
Although the children were more interested in the elves, all
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER
COLLEGE
AS
DEGREE
NOV 6
DIBLER
5-38
"——YES, ED, I WISH I HAD BEEN ABLE TO GET A COLLEGE EDUCATION. IT GIVES A MAN THAT CERTAIN SOMETHING THAT SETS HIM ABOVE AND APART FROM THE AVERAGE ---"
of the players gave creditable performances. Miss Kane delivered an exciting character role, considering comparative displays of talent. Discounting Miss Paramore's garish makeup, her mighty personality also held the children's attention well.
I guess if you are a dyes-in-the-wool adult, you won't like this show. If you are a student of theater, you may find it interesting. But if you are a kid (at least at heart) . . . oboy! Go to it, man, 'cause it is the coolest ever!
Men
Aren't children what Children's Theatre is for?
Poetry Corner
By Geneva Mendenhall
There are differences in men.
An occasional young man will
check a sleek, powerful car to let
you pass in front of him.
He makes you think of Sir Walter and his cape.
Another will hold the door and even urge you to precede him. Except that you wish not to embarrass him, you would like to say.
"Let me congratulate you for learned the gentle art of courtesy. Courtesy is a rare and beautiful thing."
And then there are the others.
There are great differences in men.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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and examination periods. Entered as
at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act
of March 3, 1879.
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Douglas Parker Managing Editor Al Jones, John Husar, Jack Harrison, Jim Cable, Assistant Managing Editors Jason J. Horton and Carol Allen, City Editor, Matt Levine Doug Yocom, Co-Sports Editors; Saundra Hayn, Society Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill Feitz Business Manager
Jennifer Lowen, Advertiser to Howard Young, Classified Advertising Manager; William F. Kane, Promotion Manager; Paul Nielsen, Circulation
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosler, Co-
sultant to Robert Harwal,
Associate Editorial Editor.
the took world
Allen-Lentz
By Alexandra Mason
THE TRIAL OF DR. ADAMS, by Sybille Bedford. Simon and Schuster. $3.75.
On November 13, 1950, a certain Mrs. Morell, a rich and invalid widow, died at Eastbourne in Kent. Her doctor signed the proper papers and Mrs. Morell's body was cremated.
Six years later, on March 18, 1957, her doctor, John Bodkin Adams, stood in the Old Bailey on trial for her murder. The prosecution attempted to prove, by the testimony of medical experts, that the course of medication pursued by Dr. Adams in treating his patient's cerebral arteriosclerosis was deliberately intended to put a stop to that patient's life, and in fact did so.
Over the course of the trial, the defense attempted to demonstrate to the jury that the prosecution could prove no such thing, and they succeeded in doing so. The verdict was "Not Guilty." On April 18, 1957, Dr. Adams left the Old Bailey, a free man.
$$
***
$$
The trial was extraordinary in many ways. It was the longest murder trial ever held in this venerable court. It was the first trial in nearly one hundred years at which it was alleged that a physician had employed his art to murder his patient.
Death had taken place six years before, and the body had been cremated. Prosecution had to prove, not just that Dr. Adams had done murder, but that murder had been done. But perhaps the most extraordinary thing was that, beyond his initial plea ("I am not guilty, my Lord.") the defendant never spoke, never gave testimony.
Dr. Adams' silence remains mysterious, tantalizing, ambiguous, after all the rest has faded from the mind. His silence, and the fact that he was a doctor. What would he have said? What could he have said?
The question is left in the reader's mind, as it must remain with the jurors: was murder done? The verdict was correct. Under our law a man is presumed innocent unless proved guilty. John Bodkin Adams was most emphatically not proved guilty; therefore he was not guilty.
\* \* \*
At the conclusion of some cases, it is obvious that the verdict is not only true and correct within the great framework of the law, as this one was, but is also true and correct on all levels of reality. This is not obvious here. Enough was not known to leave the doctor white or black. His actual deeds remain as shadowy a speculation as his unuttered testimony.
Beyond this there is the question of the special responsibility of a doctor. Of the three medical experts summoned, one was violently certain that the heavy use of morphine, heroin, and paraldehyde in this case could be explained only by "intention... to terminate life."
The second expert felt that the treatment would "have pretty certain effects... Instructions to keep her under would be almost certain to accelerate death."
The third expert was unperturbed beyond a mild "one might say there was rather a large dose of hypnotics." Knowledge, intention, and responsibility seem so inextricably knotted.
It is ridiculous that a doctor should stand trial for treating the victim of an inoperable condition with a drug which relieves the severe pain but which accelerates the already inevitable death
But where in the unknown rank of unbearable pain and certain death common to all men is this extra-legal point attained? What is the tie between knowledge and intention, and where does responsibility for the decision shift from the doctor's private mind to the court and the 12 jurymen?
$$
***
$$
The trial of Dr. Adams is certainly a most thought-provoking one. Miss Bedford is to be congratulated for placing it before us.
I could wish that she had included the name of the judge, the full name of the victim, and the exact dates of the trial. However, the publisher has taken pity on us to the extent of including the names of counsel and a note on the later life of Dr. Adams in a short appendix.
Worth Repeating
Cutting down, not cutting out, is the secret of proper dieting.— Fredrick J. Stare
***
Books won't stay banned. They won't burn. Ideas won't go to jail. A. Whitney Griswold
If a society conscious of its medical needs cannot afford a decent medical system, what can it afford?—Harry H. Eckstein
I would certainly warn anyone not to enter teaching if he plans to do so because he thinks the people in it are so nice.—David Riesman
* *
What kind of security is found on a seesaw? Is this not precisely the posture of maximum instability?—Barbara Ward Jackson
...
I have never subscribed to the proposition once debated in the Oxford Union that in the opinion of this house Columbus went too far.-Robert M. Hutchins
Everyone is a moon, and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody.—Mark Twain
---
He is a fool and ever shall, who writes his name upon a wall.—John Ray
Page 3
Stiff U.S. Policy Said To Aid World Tension
The Yugoslavian ambassador to the United States said Friday night that a more flexible attitude by the Western nations toward Eastern Europe would help ease world tensions.
Marko Nikezic spoke in Swarthout Recital Hall on "The Role of Yugoslavia in World Politics."
"The economic blockade by the United States in the attempt to keep Russia from building up her military strength actually hurt the Eastern European countries. It did not hurt Russia," he said.
"We in Yugoslavia hope the time has passed when Russia can issue orders from Moscow to her Eastern satellites.
"The internal position of Poland and the Eastern European countries has improved. This has forced Russia to improve her relations with Yugoslavia."
Mr. Nikezic said Yugoslavia's
Damages Slight From Accidents
A rash of accidents on campus over the weekend brought only minor damages to the cars involved.
The latest accident occurred at 9:45 a.m. yesterday when a United States mail truck struck a parked car near the Kansas Union.
Richard F. Tusher, 24, 1345 Rhode Island, driver of the truck, told police that he struck a car belonging to Larry Francis Toney, 22, address unknown, as he was turning in front of the Kansas Union to make deliveries.
There was no damage to the truck. The Toney car received an estimated $5 damage.
Monday a two-car accident in the Union parking lot resulted in minor damages. William A. Crawford, 24. Lawrence senior, was backing his car from a parking stall when he struck a car belonging to Delbert Ray Mann, 22, of Shawnee, Kan.
There was no estimate of the damages.
L. Deane Rollmann, 19. Pratt sophomore, was driving his car south on the service drive behind Pearson Hall at 9:45 a.m. Saturday when he struck a parked car.
The parked automobile belonged to Robert Lee Smith, Salina sophomore, and received a dented left rear fender.
Police made no estimate of the damage.
Peddling Pans Not for KU Males
A Midcontinent Sales Corp. representative found last week that selling pots and pans does not appeal to most KU males.
An advertisement offering full summer employment and a guaranteed 40-hour work week temporarily drew 40 students to a group interview in Bailey Auditorium.
The representative said qualifications for selling cookware included a free summer, ability to be bonded, and ownership of an automobile. No "mama's boys" would be considered, he said.
During a 3-minute break 35 prospective pot peddlers left the auditorium. The representative continued with an audience of five.
basic disagreement with Russia is one of foreign policy support.
"Yugoslavian foreign policy calls for supporting certain Soviet attitudes on the same basis of giving support to movements of other countries," he said.
"The only provision of who gets the support is whether that country's movements serves international peace and understanding."
Mr. Nikezic said the revolts in 1955 and 1956 in Poland and Hungary had a serious effect upon Yugoslavia.
"Russia immediately became cool during this period (1955-56) after Yugoslavia made it clear to her that she would not support Russia."
He said he believes that as a consequence Yugoslavia is stronger now than ten years ago because of her friendly relations with Western and non-committed countries.
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
"Revolution in Yugoslavia was unavoidable," he said, speaking of the revolution which put the present regime in power.
Mr. Nikezic recommended revolution and Socialism for countries attempting to improve their governments.
"Even Yugoslavian Communists believe that Socialism is the future of modern society," he said.
Balfour
He said he believes the countries not committed to either East or West support can best bring about peace.
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
"If war is not a solution, peace has to be organized and the non-committed countries can best do this by remaining as they are."
He said the non-committed countries and their foreign policies of non-intervention in world affairs should be accepted by the Western nations.
"The fact that the United States is giving aid to Poland opens up a whole new world of possibilities for the Eastern European nations," he said.
He credited the United States with helping to preserve Yugoslavia's independence through economic aid.
Radio Programs KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert
7:00 Symphony Hall
7:30 Choral Concert
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air:
Southeast Asia in Modern Times
8:55 News
9:00 FM Concert
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Tric
in E-Flat" by Beethoven
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
KUOK
Tonight
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
(Uninterrupted)
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
6. 15 7:05 Musical Pathwavs
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time — "Dreamland Special," with Vaughn Monroe
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 "Train to Nowhere" — Ron Abrens
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Ron Abrams
12:00 Sign Off
11:15 Ron Abrams
Biological Scientists To N.J. Meeting
Approximately 24 University of Kansas immunologists, physiologists, and biochemists are attending meetings of the Federated Societies for Experimental Biology through Monday in Atlantic City, N.J.
Biological scientists attend the meetings to present papers, attend symposiums, and to report progress in various fields of biological sciences.
The highest point in Berlin is at the peak of a 25-foot hill composed entirely of wartime rubble and now covered by flowers, shrubs and trees.
Tuesday, April 14. 1959 University Daily Kansan
Phone VI 3-2981
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14. 1959
. . . On the Hill ...
Phi Delta Theta
David Ontjes, Hutchinson senior,
has been elected president of Phi
Delta Theta fraternity.
Other officers are James Phil Kirk, Kansas City, Mo., reporter, and John Orr, Kansas City, Mo. senior member. Both are seniors.
Philip James, Kansas City, Mo. pledge trainer; William Sheldon, Salina, scholarship chairman; William Ward, Hays, warden, and Warren Denning, Wichita, social co-chairman. All are juniors.
Robert Stuber, St. Joseph, treasurer; Ben Kuiken, Topeka, assistant rush chairman; John Redick, Kansas City, recording secretary; Douglas Farmer, Pratt, activities chairman; William Tourtillot, Newton chaplain.
James Greenwood, Topeka, social co-chairman; Thomas Triplett, St Joseph, intramural chairman; Mike Allen, Hutchinson, house manager; Donald Detmer, Great Bend, chorister, and Tim his, Dodge City, librarian. All are sophomores.
* *
Gertrude Seltards Pearson Freshmen
Approximately 200 faculty members were guests of the Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen at a tea Thursday.
The second floor of Corbin-North Hall held a dinner at the Holiday Inn recently.
* *
Corbin-North Hall
Guests were Patricia Patterson and Donna Younger, assistant deans of women, and Nancy Durnell, head resident of Corbin-North.
☆ ☆ ★
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Upperclasswomen
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Upper-classwomen and the fourth floor of Joseph R. Pearson dormitory held an exchange dinner recently.
Phi Kappa Psi
A dance at Joseph R. Pearson followed the dinner, Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dummron and Mr. and Mrs. James Middleton.
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity entertained Pi Beta Phi sorority with a roller skating party recently.
Chaperones were Mrs. Mildred Duniver and Mrs. Donald MacLeod.
Delta Tau Delta
Delta Gamma
Delta Gamma sorority entertained their alumni with a Founders Day Celebration.
Tea was served while the chapter presented the pinafore skit.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity held its Pajama Party Saturday at the chapter house.
* *
Pi_Beta_Phi
Chaperones were Mrs. Eleanor Mitchell, Mrs. Wanda Dick-Peddie, Mrs. Thomas Clark and Mrs. Joe Hope.
Pi Beta Phi sorority entertained 50 faculty members at their annual faculty tea Sunday afternoon.
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Pinnings Announced
Larry Swinson, Campus Representative
Home Phone—VI 3-8359
Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Elaine Simons, Pittsburg, Kan., sophomore, to Jim Morton, Hutchinson, January 1959 graduate of University of Kansas, and Ann Fischer, Wichita sophomore, to Alan Fleming, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore. Both men are
Simons-Morton Fischer-Fleming
The pinnings were announced by Deanna Grimm, Omaha, Neb., Bernadine Heller, Beloit, both sophomores, and Sue Coffey, Hinsdale, Ill., junior.
A pinning party was held at the TeePee.
members of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
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HAPPY HAL'S
Do You Think for Yourself? THIS TEST WILL GIV YOU A CLUE!*
!!!
1. If your parents exhibited "baby pictures" of you A□ to a friend, would you be (A) embarrassed? (B) B□ merely interested in your friend's reaction? (C) C□ just plain annoyed?
A □
B □
C □
$
2. You are making a speech—and suddenly find you have a large hole in your clothes. Would you (A) excuse yourself and leave? (B) pretend you didn't know the hole was there and finish the speech?
(c) cover up the hole with a handkerchief?
YOU
$ \mathrm{C H}_{4}^{+} + 2 \mathrm{H C l}=\mathrm{Y} $ $ \mathrm{x}^{3} \mathrm{S U} $
B
400
3. Would you rather have the characteristics of (A) A □
U.S.Grant? (B) Thomas Edison? (c) J.P. Morgan? B
4. You have taken your date to dinner and find you haven't money to tip the waiter as well as take your date home.Would you (A) ignore the waiter?
(B) take him aside and tell him you'll tip him next day? (C) tip him and walk your date home?
A □
B □
C □
A □
B □
C □
CURVES AHEAD
5. Mathematics is your poorest subject, yet you are fascinated by the idea of being an atomic physicist. Would you (A) try to overcome your difficulties with math? (B) pick an easier occupation? (C) ask yourself if it's physics you like or its glamour?
The
6. Your roommate is a nice person, but suddenly takes to asserting an ability to foretell the future. B C
Would you (A) notify the authorities? (B) ignore the whole thing? (C) give him tests to prove to him he's wrong?
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
ujh
7. Do you believe the maxim "It's a long lane that has no turning" is (A) a complete non sequitur?
(B) a well-known fact? (C) an allusion to a common phenomenon?
8. Would you rather have as a birthday present (A) A□
something expensive? (B) something long-lasting? B□
(c) something beautiful? C□
9. In choosing a filter cigarette, would you pick one that (A) claims it filters best?
(B) merely says it tastes good? (C) gives you a thinking man's filter and a smoking man's taste?
If you're the kind of person who thinks for yourself . . . you use judgment in your choice of cigarettes, as in everything else. Men and women who think for themselves usually smoke VICEROY. Their reason? Best in the world. They know that only VICEROY has a thinking man's filter and 'a smoking man's taste.
*If you have checked (B) in three out of the first four questions, and (C) in four out of the last five . . . , you think for yourself!
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Tuesday. Anril 14. 1950 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
KU to Have Full Squad For Relays
KU track coach Bill Easton says the team is in good shape for the grueling weekend ahead. None of the men are out with injuries. The team will have had a two-week rest since their last meet by the time the relavs weekend rolls around.
Seven of 15 individual Kansas Relays champions will be returning to Lawrence this weekend and not one of them is a safe bet to reclaim his title.
Bruce Parker, a Texas javelin thrower who won the title last year by throwing 232-81$\frac{1}{2}$, will be competing with Bill Alley, KU's newly established American champion. Alley has already bettered Parker's mark by almost 40 feet.
Broad jumper Ernie Shelby, who has shown that he can better the 26-foot mark, has had troubles with a leg muscle this year. Any recurrence of this would mean another champion out of the games.
Dee Givens, Oklahoma 100-yard dash man and Jerry Smartt, Houston two-miler, are champions who may be hindered by physical handicaps. Givens was injured in the Big Eight Indoor meet when he lost his 60-yard title to KU's Charlie Tidwell. Smartt has been nursing a virus and has not scored in any major meet this season.
John Macy, also a Houston distance man, won the West Texas Relays two-mile race this season with 9:35.5 but was beaten in the Border Olympics by SMU's Jan Ahlberg, who clocked 9:16.
Jim Green, Missouri high jumper, tied with KU's Dick Taylor last year at 6-6/4, but has lost three times running during the indoor season to Bob Cannon of Kansas.
Jack Smyth, Houston hop, skip and jump man, may have the inside track to this event. Last year he retained his title with a 49.2 mark.
'Satch' Released
MIAMI — (UPI) — Colorful Leroy (Satchell) Paige was free today to join any team in organized baseball. The long-time hurler, who lives at Kansas City, was given his unconditional release yesterday by the Miami Marlins.
At the same time, the Marlins said they signed veteran pitcher Virgil (Fireball) Trucks, formerly of the Kansas City Athletics. The Marlins said Trucks, who had a 2-1 record as a reliefer for New York last year, turned down several big league offers to play for Miami.
Paige, said the Marlins, was a constant problem with his tardiness for airplane flights and accusations that the club owed him money. Paige's latest venture has been as a part-time movie actor in Hollywood.
Major League Play Resumes
Tire Shop
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The San Francisco Giants and Chicago White Sox make their home debuts as unbeaten, front-running contenders today when an estimated 265,000 fans are expected to view major league baseball's seven "secondary" openers.
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Off in front with three straight victories under their belts, the Giants and White Sox will be out to keep the pressure on the defending league champions in the next six days. The Giants have three games each with the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals and the White Sox play six games against the Kansas City Athletics and Detroit Tigers before either hits the road again.
The Giants are sending Jack Sanford, acquired from Philadelphia during the winter, against Dave Hillman while the White Sox have Billy Pierce going against Kansas City's Ralph Terry.
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
54 Softball Teams Swing Into Spring Intramurals Today
KU intramurals swing into action today after standing idle yesterday due to the weekend rains. All five spring sports begin this afternoon.
The big field of participation is softball.
With a large number of men planning to play, 54 teams have been filled in "A" and "B" divisions. The games are scheduled every afternoon at 4:15 on the six diamonds east of Allen Field House.
Of the other sports, tennis drew the second most participants. Enough men signed up to fill 36 teams. Badminton was the next most popular sport with 16 teams signed up. Ten teams are signed up for horseshoes, while only eight teams signed up in handball.
IS Gets New Coach
AMES, Ia. — (UPI) — Freshman coach Glendon Anderson was named last night to head Iowa State basketball coaching chores, succeeding Bill Stranigan.
Strannigan quit last week to become head coach at his alma mater, Wyoming University. He served at Iowa State five years. Anderson is in his fourth year at Iowa State and played basketball for Strannigan at Colorado State.
Juniors!
Let's Elect
JOHN JEFFREY
SENIOR CLASS VICE-PRESIDENT
The
SENTIMENTAL
JOURNEY Man!
IN PERSON
LES
BROWN
RELAYS DANCE
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Friday, April 17 starring
BOB HOPE SHOW
THE NO.1 BAND IN AMERICA - - and Information Booth ROOM RESERVATIONS—TODAY—SUA OFFICE
Les Brown
Jo Ann Greer vocalist
Stumpy Brown bass trombonist
Butch Stone
THIS FRIDAY,9-12 P.M.
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Semi-formal $2.50 PER COUPLE
Tickets on sale at Union
ROOM RESERVATIONS—TODAY—SUA OFFICE
In these four sports there is no special date for the matches to be played, but the games of each round must be played in a week's time.
Today regularly scheduled softball games are:
Fraternity A
PATTERN 92
Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Kappa Sigma
Delta Chi vs. Phi Delta Theta
Delta Chi vs. Phi Delta Theta
Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Sigma Chi
Fraternity B
Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Pi Kappa Alpha
Independent B
Sigma Gamma Epsilon vs. J. R. Pearson
Tomorrow's softball schedule: Footnotes
Fraternity A
Triangle vs. Phi Gamma Delta
Independent A
Hilltoppers vs. Vipers
Joe's Pros vs. Carruth
Independent B
Burro's vs. Chemical Engineering A. Ph. A. vs. Pearson Hall Empire Club vs. K.H.K.
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four-day sale
April 15,16,17,18 (Wednesday thru Saturday)
- 4 days only * cash only * sales final * no exchanges
Below—just a sample of our many bargains in baseball gloves, fishing gear, tennis rackets, golf clubs, badminton sets, bows, guns, radios, and power tools-yours at tremendous discounts. Check tonight's Journal-World for all your money savers.
baseball gloves
close-out 1958 personal models,47 only,quality glove leather,all the Rawlings fine features. reg. 10.45 to 35.00 NOW 6.27 to 21.00
golf clubs
Power-flex woods, Don January autographed, set of 3 (1-2½-3½), men's right hand, Rawlings.
reg. 60.00 NOW 48.00
Power-flex irons, Don January, set of 8 (2 to 9 inclusive), set reg. 100.00 NOW 80.00
Crestwood woods, Rawlings, set of 3 (driver, brassie spoon), men's right hand. reg.34.50 NOW27.60
Crestwood irons, Rawlings, set of 5 (3-5-7-9-putter), ladies' right hand.
reg. 42.00 NOW 33.60
tennis rackets
multi-fil nylon strung . . ply weld bow construction for maximum strength, perfect balance, right feel
4 Rawlings Bantam reg. 4.95 2.97
1 Spalding Doris Hart reg. 11.95 7.17
2 Rawlings Speed Hawk reg. 12.45 7.47
5 Rawlings RC reg. 19.00 11.40
2 Rawlings Finalist reg. 22.50 13.50
1 Rawlings Match Point reg. 24.50 14.70
"Everything for the Outdoorsman"
Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 14, 1959
WHO'S GOING TO LEAD YOU?
Make sure it's someone with a genuine interest in student government
Make sure it's someone who will keep the students informed
Make sure it's someone who will insure fair committee appointments
VOTE
&
AUSTIN
Jim Austin
President
for Student Body
DAVIS
Terry Davis
&
Terry Davis
Vice-President
Don't ignore Student Government
VOTE AT STRONG HALL APRIL 14th and 15th
(Paid for by friends of the candidates)
Tuesday, April 14, 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.
HELP WANTED
WANTED: MARRIED STUDENTS to sell life and personal health insurance. Salary plus quarterly bonus. If interested, send resume to Kansas Insurance Co., 216 Huron Building, Kansas City, Kansas, for further information or appointment. 4-20
WANTED: Babysitter, in our home, three to four days a week. Call VI. 3-8443. 4-20
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
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and gas furnished, linen furnished,
will accept graduate students. Call VI 3-
7677.
FOR RENT
FIRST FLOOR DUPLEX, newly decorated, 1629 Kentucky, six rooms, fenced yard, basement. Close to KU. Call VI 21764 or VI 3-8036 after 5 p.m. 4-16
BUSINESS SERVICES
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent or for sale, furnished, includes air conditioner, washer, dryer, and disposal. One or two year lease at $130 per month, would also sell for $2500 down, second mortgage on balance of equity. Total sale price is $6799. Call agent, available May 18. Call 3-7185 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
TWO BEDROOM HOME, unfurnished,
Cancellation Call VI.
4297 during the daytime.
THREE ROOM DUPLEX, private bath and entrance, large closets, near KU, kitchen or unfurnished room. come, $65 per month, 1947 Kentucky, corner 16th, 1-4-14
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call VI 877-425-1120.
TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. *tf*
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smai M11; Massa Ph. Vt 3-5263
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211's Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. by profession masseur. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132.
RENT A SINGER machine by the
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NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence-out shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m., t 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals compete for these resources and supplies 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, oats, blankets, etc. ... Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-1893 7360 Tenn. ttt
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ry Middlecoff
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K
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14, 1959
KU Engineering Exposition Sounds Gun for Relays
Manufacturing miniature Jayhawks, changing sound into color automatic welding and the Kansas Relays will keep KU students and visitors busy this weekend.
Friday will mark the 34th Annual Kansas Relays and the 39th Annual Engineering Exposition. Both will continue through Saturday.
Opening ceremonies for the relays will be at 1:25 p.m. Friday in Memorial Stadium.
Relays Queen Nancy O'Brien,
Great Lakes, Ill., junior, will reign
over the marathon at the Relays
Friday and Saturday, with Carol
Earls. University of Missouri soph-
omore, who represents the Big
Eight schools.
The Relays dance will begin at 9 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union ballroom where Les Brown and his "Band of Renown" will play. Tickets are $2.50 per couple.
Parade Downtown
The downtown parade of floats will start at 10 a.m. Saturday, an hour after the track and field events begin. The track events will feature five decathlon contests and four high school and junior college preliminaries.
Relays finals will be held Friday and Saturday afternoons for all classes—university, college, junior college and high school.
Two Exposition Themes
The Relays will resume Saturday at 1:25 p.m. with opening ceremonies. The University one mile relay, starting at 4:30 p.m., will climax the events.
The Engineering Exposition will open Friday with two themes, "New Horizons in Manufacturing" and a new concept of "Sound and Color," and a total of 14 displays.
"Rather than concentrate on one special display, all of our laboratories will give demonstrations of various manufacturing processes," Paul G. Hausman, associate professor of engineering manufacturing proceses, said.
The electrical engineering display, under Bernard Halliwell, Lawrence senior, will "feed" sound from a record or tape through an amplifier.
Myron Bernitz, Eudora senior and publicity chairman for the Engineering Exposition, said many engineering novelties will be presented at the exposition.
Correction
The story quoted Black as si
An article in the Thursday, April 9 issue of the Daily Kansan quoting Jack Black, Pratt senior, should have read, "(Jim) Disque (Lawrence, senior) has missed three of the (student health) committee (hospital) staff meetings. He attended all the other dinner meetings. He didn't attend the special committee meetings that were held at the first of the year."
The story quoted Black as saying:
"The AGI delegate to my committee (Disque) did not attend a meeting all year."
KUOK Adds Kappa Sigma
Kappa Sigma fraternity is the second fraternity to subscribe to the program services of KUOK, campus radio station. The first one was Delta Sigma Phi.
- Portraits
- Weddings
- Engagements
- Application Photos
by photography
HIXON STUDIO
HANGING PHOTOGRAPHY
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
filter system, and amplidyne, which will break the sound into frequencies.
The different frequencies will produce various colored lights—thus the display's title, "Sound and Color."
Displays Mentioned
Some of the displays are:
Plastics laboratory, a demonstration of the physical properties and uses of plastics; welding laboratory, a demonstration of an automatic
welding machine; and the machine tool laboratory, which features a demonstration of the use of an automatic tracer contour milling machine.
The milling machine will produce miniature Jayhawks that can be fixed to license plates.
Location and information concerning the displays will be found in guide pamphlets which will be given out at the entrance to Marvin Hall.
VOTE
RICK BARNES SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
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Official Bulletin
9. 95 to 10.95
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 in bag. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Part-time and some full-time work.
Cheerleader practices, April 14, 16, 21,
23. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the Shoemaker, Experimental Theatre.
TODAY
Business Placement Bureau. 214 Strong Hall. Dick Brooks, Southwestern Investment Co. Careers in Finance John R. Kemp, President of Purchasing, Production and Accounting.
Zoology Club, 7:30 p.m., home of Dr J. Weir, 2040 Louisiana. Discussion: Chapters 12 and 13 of Charles Darwin's "The Origin of Species."
TOMORROW
The Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 37. Strong Hall. Dr. Whittington from Watkins Hospital will speak on electroencephalography.
Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117
Bailey. Charles L. Stuart. Clay Center.
Business Placement Bureau. 214 Strong Hall. Johnson, William Voloker & Scalp.
Le circle français, a quatre heures,
dans le musique fraser. Aline Roux,
danse et musique.
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:15 p.m.
203 Strong Hall. The Relation Between
the Area of a Surface and the Integral
of a Curve on a Surface at the surface.
Raymond Rishel, Brown Univ.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, Pastor Brittie
Chapel services in Danfort, 5-2-50
Tuesday
Lutheran Student Association, noon,
West Alcove, Union Cafeteria.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
and Holy Communion, 7:00 a.m. with
the Eucharist.
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m., St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Oread Room, Union
Tau Beta Pi, 11 p.m., 201 Electrical Engineering Labs. Election of members.
Faculty Forum, noon. English Room of Union, Sen. Denale, Huls. *Enactments*
We require a B.S. or an advanced degree in mathematics or the physical sciences. Experience in your university's computing facility is highly desirable.
SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Offers work of the future ...today!
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Computer programmers & applied mathematicians
High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming.
Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709,704,and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies.
Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer.
Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. P.O.Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California
FILM AWARD
CLEBRITY TEA—Dolores Michaels, Hollywood starlet entertains her hostesses, the women of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Pictured here, from left, are Miss Michaels, Betty Thomas, Mission senior, Mrs. Shirley Goldman, who is travel-
ng with Miss Michaels, and three Kappa women; Barbara Callahan, Los Angeles, Calif., sophomore; Barbara Sample, Lawrence senior, and Jan Rodgers, Paradise junior. Miss Michaels was to go to Topeka this afternoon.
Daily hansan
56th Year, No. 126
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Wednesday, April 15, 1959
Vote Count Reaches 1,891; Polling Errors Wait Action
Polls Close at 5:15
At 11:30 today, 1.891 students had voted in the first day and a half of general election balloting.
Of these, 1,331 voted yesterday. and 560 voted this morning. The polls will close today at 5:15 p.m.
By 11:30 a.m. today 552 students had voted for senior class officers, 455 for junior class officers, and 518 for sophomore class officers.
In the school districts, 889 have voted in the College, 373 in the School of Engineering, 51 in the Graduate School, 216 in the School of Education, 105 in the School of Fine Arts, 118 in the School of Business, 56 in the School of Law, 34 in the School of Pharmacy and 37 in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
In the living districts, 565 have voted in the fraternity district, 503 in the sorority district, 251 in the men's dormitory district, 197 in the women's dormitory district, 35 in the co-op and professional fraternity district, 227 in the unmarried-unorganized independent district, and 94 in the married district.
Weather
Cloudy tonight and tomorrow.
Showers and thunderstorms north-
west tonight, warmer east and
south-central.
Correction
The Daily Kansan was in error when it reported yesterday that the identification card of Allan Weis, Freeport, N.Y., freshman, was impounded for electioneering within 50 feet of the polls. Election authorities say that Weis was not arrested but that his name merely was taken for handling out an election pamphlet. Weis told The Daily Kansan he simply passed on the pamphlet to a friend.
AGI Pamphlet Attacks Kansan's Reporting
The Allied Greek-Independent party issued a supplement edition to its "Speaking Frankly" pamphlet today as the last day of campus elections got under way.
"It is because AGI has more to say than the University Daily Kansas wishes to publish that we have deemed it necessary to present to the 'uninformed' issues relevant to the student government elections."
The supplement states:
Jewelry Prize Won
Ronald Hickman, Lawrence graduate student and instructor in silversmithing and design, has won second prize of $50 for a sterling pendant in the jewelry division of the Decorative Arts and Ceramics Exhibition in Wichita.
6 Charges Claimed
No action has yet been taken by Student Court on the six charges made against Allied-Greek Independent yesterday by the All Student Council election committees.
Larry M. Baker, Wichita second year law student and court prosecutor, said today that he had discussed the charges with Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo., senior and committee chairman, but that action on the case is still pending.
"It is likely that action against AGI will be taken. However, at the moment this depends on the kind of evidence available to back up the charges," Baker said.
He did not specify a time when the action would be taken.
The ASC constitution states that any parties found guilty of violating election rules can be tried before Student Court and charged a fine of not more than $150 and not less than $100 if found guilty.
One of the charges was an apparent over-expenditure of the amount of campaign funds allotted them.
A section of the ASC constitution states that no more than $270 can be spent by a political party from from the day of freshman elections through the general elections. This includes both obligations incurred and funds actually expended.
Poster Puller Reports Assault
A rip-roaring 1959 school election campaign comes to a close today with an assault reported.
The victim reporting the incident is John Frederick Stoskopf, Great Bend freshman, a member of Vox Ponuli.
Stoskopf said he was approaching the campus on the 14th Street hill about 9:15 last night when he spotted a campaign poster he thought was illegally posted.
"I took the poster down from the tree and started to fold it to put it in my pocket to take to Dave Wilson, Elections Committee chairman. I got about three or four steps up the hill when a student jumped me from behind.
He said he went to the campus police station where he made a report of the incident. From there he went to Watkins Hospital where he was treated for a black eye and bruises.
"We fought for a little bit before he decided he better get out of there before the cops came," Stoskopf said.
Wilson said he had told some of
"It's against the city ordinances and the city police have been taking down most of them. The administration has been plagued with complaints of illegal posters being displayed during this campaign," he said.
the workers from both parties to take down campaign posters they found posted off the campus.
The administration indicated it is looking into the reported assault. Stoskopf said he has not as yet filed any complaint,
Star's Status Settled; Sorority Tea Follows
Movie starlet Dolores Michaels showed up this morning and had tea with the Kappa Kappa Gammas, the sorority she was supposed to have pledged.
"I'm sorry this mixup happened, but if they had to pick a house, I'm glad they picked this one," she stated.
The tall platinum blonde smiled often at her new friends, who yesterday were perplexed by the Hollywood press agent's story about Miss Michaels' membership in their sorority. The registrar was puzzled, too. The Hollywood drum beater had Miss Michaels attending the University for a year.
Actually, she passed through KU like a breeze. She was at the University for some three weeks in 1951.
"I enjoyed talking with the Kappas. They were wonderful." She invited the sorority women to visit her in California.
With Miss Michaels was her friend, who is a Kappa sorority woman from the University of Utah. She is Mrs. Shirley Goldman, daughter of Chick Evans, publicity director of the midwest section of Twentieth Century Fox.
Mr. Evans said that the confusion about Miss Michaels' stay at KU and her status as a KKG resulted from:
"Embellishment by enthusiastic publicity men."
After the tea, Miss Michael's drove, in the traditional long limousine, to the Campanile where she posed for publicity shots.
"This campus is beautiful, I would like to come back again," she said.
She will leave the Kansas City area Sunday for the West Coast.
New Curriculum Gets Final OK
The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences yesterday approved the entire curriculum revision program that has been under discussion for the past three years.
The faculty approved the program in a short, 45 minute meeting. Only one amendment to the program passed.
The plan is effective September 1959.
Under the amendment the mathematics requirement will go into effect two years after the rest of the plan rather than in 1963.
Yesterday's action marked the first
Faculty Man Comments on Dulles Stepdown
Secretary of State Dulles has resigned. President Eisenhower, with traces of tears in his eyes and a choked-up voice, made the announcement today in the temporary White House news headquarters at the Richmond Hotel, Augusta, Ga.
"Im not surprised. Considering the nature of Dulles' illness and the accounts of his return from Florida made me feel it would just be a question of time," said Ronnie Averyt, assistant instructor of political science.
"Dulles' advice will always be there. He will be available for consultation if he recovers, and that's a big if...". Mr. Averyt added.
The official announcement of his successor will have to be soon because of the scheduled meetings in May, he said.
"I venture the guess the successor will be Christian A. Herter. It will almost have to be Herter because of the May meetings." Mr. Averyt said.
"Of course, Herter is bothered with health problems, too, (arthritis)." he added.
President Eisenhower said today he expected to name a successor to Dulles within a few days. He said there were other government experts on foreign policy who would be considered for this post.
Before he makes a final decision, the President said he would discuss the matter with Dulles.
major change in the College requirements since 1936.
An amendment to have the foreign language requirement go into effect two years after the rest of the program was defeated. The foreign language requirement will affect students entering the University next fall.
The program is divided into three parts. They are:
1. Common Underclass Requirements-The new under class requirements require the student to take more mathematics, and to fill distribution requirements from a list of "principal courses."
2. Principal Courses—The second part of the program is a list of 55 courses.
3. B.A. and B.S. Requirements—The new B.A. requires the student to have a minor of 15 hours, to have completed college level algebra, and to pass a foreign language proficiency examination or offer 16 hours of one foreign language in lieu of the examination.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy made this statement today of the new program:
"I'm delighted with the action of the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in ratifying the revisions of the College curriculum program.
"Basically this action means for the student greater opportunity, greater flexibility and the greater likelihood that he will be prepared to meet his responsibilities in this rapidly changing world.
"The students of the University of Kansas, both actual as well as potential, are deeply indebted to the faculty for this enlightened action."
George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said:
"We hope that a number of good results will follow from the changes—more electives in the freshman and sophomore years, a new opportunity for students to elect art and music appreciation as part of their distribution requirements, greater simplicity in requirements for College degrees, and greater recognition of work done in high school particularly in mathematics and foreign language.
"The changes for B.A. candidates in the minimum requirements in language and mathematics are clearly designed to reflect the new needs of the days we live in.
"The new concept of principal courses—the student will fill all his reduced distribution requirements by a choice among some 55 fundamental courses—should also be beneficial."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1959
Greeks Ignore Challenge
The fraternities at the University seem to hide behind their paddles and the sororites behind their pins without a word in defense against a charge of racial prejudice.
Barbara Asbury, in an editorial page feature April 6, said one of the most glaring examples of "campus Iron Curtains" is the confusion over whether or not to pledge Negroes.
She said she was a member of the first sorority in an eastern college to begin pledging Negroes. She also said one of the first problems her sorority was faced with was the question of whether they were doing this just because they thought they should, or because they really wanted to.
"If we, the intelligentsia, of this, a declared Christian nation, cannot apply the principles upon which it is based, who will?" said Miss Asbury.
Chancellor Murphy said, March 16, that, "racial and religious clauses in national charters are inexcusable. Each sorority or fraternity should be able to decide who can be a member of that living group."
Jim McMullan, in a letter to the editor March
19. did not believe Chancellor Murphy slammed the Greeks hard enough.
"... I am an American who believes in equality, not only in word, but in action!" McMullan said.
He said the answer was always the same:
McMullan talked to a few fraternity friends of his, saying he thought it was a shame "something cannot be done to rid the charters of this kind of garbage."
"We said the airline, "Jim, I do not agree with the racial or religious clauses either, but if we fight it we may lose our national charter."
McMullan then challenged the Greeks:
"When it comes time to send a representative to the national convention, have him go and speak out against this clause( make sure he can dodge rocks), but let them know that you believe in the rights for which your forefathers died."
The Greeks have neither accepted or rejected this challenge. They probably expect and hope that the matter will soon be forgotten. The Greeks apparently can not justify the present situation. Steps should be taken to correct it.
—Tom Hough
Can't Live on Love
Many college professors, caught between inflation and a stationary salary, are giving up their first love, teaching, in favor of higher paying positions in industry.
College professors, like newlyweds, are finding they cannot live on love.
What makes the exodus so distressing is that the need for good teachers is critical. Some of the top teaching talent has already left KU. Other professors are reading the "help wanted" ads because of the indifferent attitude of many people in this state to increasing faculty salaries.
"In a generation," says Scymour E. Hans, Harvard economist, "the college professor has lost 50 per cent in economic status as compared to the average American. His real income has declined substantially, while that of the average American has risen 70-80 per cent."
Can you blame scientists, engineers and other faculty for reading the classifieds for offers in
During the post-war period the emphasis at many schools was on expanding the physical plant. Salaries were almost forgotten. Now this problem must be reckoned with.
industry that will pay them $8,000-$12,000 when the best some schools can pay is half that figure?
For the past 10 years colleges have defied a basic law in economics—"you usually get what you pay for." Colleges have been getting more from dedicated faculty than they have paid for in salary.
If teaching becomes an ill-paid occupation here, the University will become a refuge for ill-trained, lazy and incompetent faculty. No Kansan wants that to happen.
The heyday is over! The competition for brains is keen.
If Kansas wants to go first class it must find the funds now to pay adequate salaries.
-Harry Ritter
Editor:
... Letters ...
I want it understood at the onset that I have no quibble with your April 1 pitch for a senior gift scholarship or distinguished professorship. I would, however, line to clarity a misunderstanding which seems to be the common property of you and several other persons who have signed editorials this year apropos the gift to the university from the Class of '56.
I must admit that I do have a vested interest in our Jayhawk by virtue of having been a member of the class, but I was neither on the committee which recommended it nor among those who voted for or against it. My purpose shall be to defend it.
You have, by inundo if not by word, labeled it unworthy. Others of your colleagues have from time to time described it as unsighably
inappropriate, disgusting, and,
perhaps most irresponsibly, a
worthy candidate for the bottom of
Potter Lake.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
Now Miss Crosier (and conferees), surely such heroes are not to be uttered with impunity! I hope these spoken feelings represent only youthful bravado and class camaraderie—and not your true sentiment; regarding our University symbol.
OFFICE
OF THE
DEAN
PETER
Q-39
"MATH F, PSYC F, ENGLISH F, AN' A C IN PHYS ED. — JU GT SHONG YA WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YA SPEND ALL YER TIME STUDYIN' ONE SUBJECT."
Actually, I cannot think of a single tangible item which more appropriately symbolizes our University than the Jayhawk. His effuge is present at our athletic contests. His spirit pervades our comings and goings in daily University life. His name is legion to thousands of students and many thousands of alumni.
I will admit that the Jayhawk has had some unsavory moments in Kansas history, but considering his present prestige, I view the frequent attaches upon him via Daily Kansan editorials this year as either a vacuum of important issues or a similar state in the editorialists' cranial vaults.
His caricature stimulates immediate recognition of our institution by all persons interested in universities throughout the United States and in many foreign countries as well.
Finally, I admonish you, Miss Crosier, to descend from your high horse; to desist from attacking alumni, the vast majority of whom are not present to defend themselves and their actions; and—if you are truly interested in a worthwhile cause—to suggest to your classmates the possibility of donating a marble pile upon which to raise our Jayhawk majestically and eternally, yes, from the middle of Potter's waters—like Excall-bar—to symbolize the immortality and invincibility of our university.
Sam W. Smith KU Medical Center
music
Allison Hargrove
By Stuart Levine Instructor of English
A young composer, Russell Smith, has an article in the April issue of Harpers which might be helpful to those who were puzzled by last week's ambitious Mid-American Symposium of Contemporary American Music.
Mr. Smith says that the young composer now has an established style in which to write. There has been a kind of synthesis. The musical scene is no longer chaotic. If this is true, then it is not too surprising that a great deal of the music performed here last week sounded alike.
To some listeners, this is reprehensible. Mr. Smith is not the first to notice the change. Winthrop Sargeant, the thoughtful music critic of the New Yorker, has been complaining for several years about the sameness of our new music. I suppose that he misses the wild days of the twenties, the experiments, the manifestoes, the fragmentation which knocked the musical world into a confusion of little camps.
Well, those were good old days and our generation is indebted to them, but the evolution of a common musical language is hardly an event to be regretted. Besides, experimentation as wild as that of the twenties goes on, and there is no dearth of manifesto-writers.
I have a hunch, moreover, that a second or third hearing of last week's presentation might demonstrate that there was, in fact, more diversity than met the ear. That was a lot of music to digest and evaluate.
KANU did an acceptable job of broadcasting the festival, and one may hope that tapes were made, so we may be given another chance to listen to everything. The performances were far better than anyone had a right to expect, and are certainly worth hearing again.
The week's highlights were the two works commissioned by KU, Alan Hovhaness' "Octet to the University of Kansas," and Norman Dello Joio's "Hymn to St. Cecelia." The hymn is a satisfying piece of music for chorus and brass choir, sonorous and spacious, and thoroughly appropriate in subject matter for the occasion.
Hovhaness has his own special sound. The music is oriental in its surface glitter and sensuousness. I'm not sure that what glitters in Hovhaness is always gold. There were passages which sounded like a kind of latter-day Scheherezade (but where are the dancing girls?). The music is very engaging, however, and the composer's admirers say that his work is getting better each year. When the time comes that he has important things to say, he will have an attractive way of saying them.
The Symposium performances included works by several established composers. The choir sang music of Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber. There was a piece for winds by Gardner Reed.
Despite its pompous title, the Mid-American Symposium was a thoroughly enjoyable event, and an important one, too. It was even a little overwhelming. Few people outside the music department were able to attend every concert; I was especially unhappy about not being able to hear Prof. John Pozdro's "Second Symphony."
Mr. Pozdro and his committee must be commended. The entire affair was beautifully planned, and provided us with a splendid cross-section of current work. One wishes that a detailed program had been available a little earlier, but I suspect that the committee was so inundated by the surprising flood of entries that it was unable to complete its selection until the last minute.
It chose well, and if it did on the whole select works which spoke the same musical language, that's good too. Great composers generally appear when there is an established style in which to write. Those who attended the Symposium know what the style will be.
Worth Repeating
Public opinion is a weak tyrant compared with our own private opinion. What a man thinks of himself, that it is which determines, or rather indicates, his fate. —Henry David Thoreau
***
The mutual confidence on which all else depends can be maintained only by an open mind and a brave reliance upon free discussion. —Learned Hand
***
It is preoccupation with possession, more than anything else, that prevents men from living freely and nobly.
—Bertrand Russell
Dailu Hansam UNIVERSIT
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vlking 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, 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... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Page 3
Multi-colored Floats To Shine in Parade
"Sports Provide the Meadow" and the theme for the annual Kansas Relays parade of multi-colored floats, marching units, school bands, pretty girls, and novelty features.
lress.
Newton
every
Uni-
atter
1879.
editor
ager
osier,
lititors
The parade will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at 6th and Massachusetts streets and proceed to the corner of 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Triangle, Tau Kappa Fpsilon, Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Psi, and Joseph R. Pearson have entered floats in the men's division.
Four women's houses, Delta Delta Delta, Corbin-North, Gertrude Sellards Pearson upperclasswomen and Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen have entered floats.
Each float will be decorated to represent a comet title.
the leading color guard and the American Legion color guard will lead the KU Relays Queen, Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, ill., junior, and the Big Eight Queen, Carol Earls, a University of Missouri sophomore from Ironton, Mo.
The University of Kansas band and eight bands from Lawrence Central Junior High School, Haskell Institute, Valley Falls, Lebo, Washington, Blue Rapids, Yates Center, and Tonganoxie high schools will participate in the parade.
The National Guard will provide
Attendants to the Relays Queens will also ride in the parade. The KU Navy, Army and Air Force ROTC units and the Drum and Bugle Corps will all have marching units in the parade.
A unicyclist, Donald E. Priddy,
Stafford freshman, and a barbershop quartet will provide the novelty for the parade.
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.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Part-time and some full-time work.
Cherleader practices, April 16, 21,
23. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101
Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson
Gym, Room 101
Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the
Shoemaker, Experimental Theatre.
Foreign Students: If you need extra Foreign Student's Festival invitations come to the Foreign Student Adviser's office. 228 Strong.
Students and faculty: You may purchase tickets ($1.75 each) to the International Dinner this Saturday evening at the Kansas Union ticket booth, Information booth or from the secretary, Dean of Student's office, 228 Strong.
TODAY
Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117
Bailey, Charles L. Stuart, Clay Center.
Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong
Hall, Johnson, William Volker & Co.
Co. Sales
Le circle français. a quatre heures.
Grease Job $1
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Muffers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt.
dans la saite onze fraser. Aline Roux,
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Mathematics Colloquium, 4:15 p.m.
203 Strong Hall. The Relation Between
Lengths of Contours on the Surface of
Lengths of Contours on the Surface."
Raymond Ritshel, Brown Univ.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, pastor Britten
Chapel services in Danforth, 5-5-20
p.m.
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Oread Room, Un-
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Wednesday. April 15, 1959 University Daily Kansan
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Missing Minutes Still Minus Home
MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS 940 Mass. VI 2-0082
The All Student Council secretary reports that the stolen Council minutes have not been found yet—in fact, the check out list for the Council office key is also missing.
Sharon Dey, Ulysses junior,
said today;
"Anyone can get into the office by obtaining the key at the Union desk. We've been unable to find out who got the key that day because the checkout list was taken also."
200 Foreign Grants Open to Graduates
Two hundred fellowships for graduate study abroad will be offered through the Institute of International Education during the academic year of 1960-61.
General eligibility requirements are United States citizenship, a bachelor's degree, language ability sufficient to carry on the proposed study and good health.
For Expert
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1959
University Daily Kansan SPORTS 1300 Participants To Be in Relays
In two days Mount Oread will be overflowing with over 1,300 Relays participants from 142 different schools and multitudes of enthusiastic fans eager to take part in the 34th annual Kansas Relays.
The rundown of schools and entries goes like this: 16 universities with 292 entries, 28 colleges with 356 entries, 9 junior colleges with 86 entries, 70 Kansas high schools with 509 entries. 9 Kansas City high schools with 64 entries and 10 decathlon entries.
Among these masses that will migrate to KU for the gala track and field spectacle this weekend are such track notables as Eddie Southern, the "Texas Cyclone," who last year led Texas to a new intercollegiate mile relay record, and Jim Baird, East Texas State broad-jumper who has been unbeaten in his two years at East Texas State.
Events which should prove to be promising points of interest with lots of hot competition include the mile and sprint medley races. New records
Kappa Sigs Win In IM Softball
Spring intramurals began yesterday as 10 softball teams started battling toward the hill championship.
In the Fraternity A division, Kappa Sigma nosed out Sigma Phi Epsilon 8-7. Phi Delta Theta, behind the three-hit pitching of Monty Johnson, defeated Delta Chi 4-1, and in the other Fraternity A game, Sigma Chi romped over Tau Kappa Epsilon 11-2.
Pi Kappa Alpha defeated Phi Kappa Sigma 12-6 in the only Fraternity B game. In Independent B play Sigma Gamma Epsilon won by forfeit over J. R. Pearson.
Tomorrow's Schedule
Independent A
Splinters vs. Softies
Stephenson vs. Battenfeld
Jollife vs. Hicks
Fraternity B
Phi Kappa Psi vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 1
Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Alpha
Epsilon
Independent B Empire Club vs. K.H.K.
Light Hitters Pace Braves, White Sox
By United Press International Johnny O'Brien and Luis Aparicio, a pair of little popgun hitters, are the big reasons why the Milwaukee Praves and Chicago White Sox are still in orbit.
were established in both of these events last year with Texas running 3:09.1 in the mile and Oklahoma establishing a 3:19.5 in the medley.
O'Brien, who didn't make a hit all last season, singled across the winning run in the 10th inning to give the Milwaukee Braves a 4-3 decision over the Philadelphia Phillies Tuesday while Aparicio, a slick-field but light-hitting shortstop, drove in both runs with a fifth-inning single as the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Athletics, 2-0.
Involved in these torrid matches will be the host Kansas, Texas, Houston, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Colorado. Kansas has the best time so far this year in the medley event with 3:20.2. Oklahoma has hit a disqualified 3:20.8 this year. After them comes Texas, 3:22.9; Colorado, 3:22.9, and Houston, 3:23.4.
Texas will return this year with three-fourths of its champion mile relay team. They ran 3:10.3 for a new Texas Relays mark this year. Oklahoma has clocked 3:11.3. Houston 3:12.6. and Kansas State will return three members of last year's runnerup team which hit 3:10.4.
Sophomores to Play Big Role on '59 Team
Head football coach Jack Mitchell said that 20 out of the first 35 men on next fall's gridiron squad will probably be sophomores.
Bv Dave Butcher
Thirty freshmen were among the 69 men who reported to Coach Mitchell today for the first day of spring practice. Although the freshmen have not yet proven themselves, Mitchell said many of them will be called upon for extensive duty next fall. "This shows what a green team we have," the KU coach said.
The squad worked two hours yesterday on fundamental drills, passing, and blocking. Workouts will be confined to fundamentals, at the rate of four practices a week, for the first two weeks. Coach Mitchell said the team seems to be in pretty good shape, many having spent the winter running to stay in condition.
Assisting Coach Mitchell in coaching duties are George Bernhardt, Bobby Goad, Bill Pace, Don Fambrough, Tom Triplett, Wayne Replogle, Bill Blasi, and Frank Gibson.
Spring practice had originally been scheduled to begin Monday, but muddy fields caused it to be
KU Men To Coach
A member of last year's football team and two former assistant coaches at KU have accepted posts as head coaches in Kansas high schools.
Bill Blasi, varsity right tackle last fall, will become head football coach at Scott City, Emerson Wilson who was the Jayhawkers' freshman backfield coach, will coach at Washington of Bethel. Jack Wolfe, an assistant basketball coach, will head the Colby staff next season.
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set back a day. Since the squad is allowed only 20 spring practice sessions, Coach Mitchell decided it would be better to wait for dryer conditions.
Three members of last year's squad are unable to take part in spring practice because of operations. Ron Michaels and Gene Dittenber both had shoulder operations, and Bill Burnison is out because of a knee operation.
Pan-Am Games Bill Approved
Pun-Am Games Bill Approved WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Senate passed by voice vote and sent to the White House a bill authorizing the appropriation of $500,000 to help stage the Pan-American games in Chicago this year. A bill actually appropriating the money must follow later.
The salmon catch in the Canadian province of British Columbia brings in about 45 million dollars a year.
Turner High Hires Holwerda
KANSAS CITY, Kan. —(UPI)— Turner high school in suburban Wyandotte County has hired former Kansas State ace Jim Holwerda as its head basketball coach.
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Wednesday, April 15, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Dean Questions Emphasis On Kansan Scholarship Story
Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, has questioned the emphasis put on facts in a recent Daily Kansan story, one of four articles concerning the University's scholarship program.
The article the dean has in mind concerned athletic scholarships. The article, which appeared April 7, stated that only 17 per cent of the KU athletes are on scholastic scholarships.
"When you say that 'only' 17 per cent of the athletes hold scholastic scholarships, you are not looking at the over-all picture," Dean Woodruff told the Lawrence Journal- World.
Radio Programs KUOK
Tonight
Toughed
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time — "The Natural Seven"
9:05 Wednesday Night Dance, Tom Bonar Group
10:05 Dwight Norman Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Dwight Norman
12:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Septet in E-Flat, Op. 20" by Beethoven
7:00 Concerto Concert
7:00 Coffee
7:30 News
7:30 News
7:35 National Library Week—"The
Pleasures of Reading"
Discussed by Robert Vosper
director of libraries and
Edward Howard, Lawrence
city librarian
7.50 Wednesday Evening Opera:
"Modam Butterfly" by
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10:00 News
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: “Trio No. 2 in B-Flat Major, K 502” by Mozart
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the MHz radio voice of KU,
9.15 MC
"Seventeen per cent is quite high and it represents a considerably higher figure than for other undergraduate fields in the University.
"Sometimes the use of the word 'only' can be misused."
He said that in a study he made of the scholarship program at KU, one in eight students carry some type of scholarship, which would be 12.5 per cent, or less than the scholastic percentage for athletes.
Dean Woodruff added that the type of scholastic scholarship athletes carry have to be maintained with a 1.76 grade average, while all other scholarships usually require a minimum 1.5 grade average.
Missing Tickets Invalid for Dance
Approximately 54 tickets for the Relays Dance Friday night have been stolen or lost, Mrs. Katherine Giele, SUA director said yesterday.
Mrs. Giele said all students who have obtained from anyone tickets numbered 47 through 100 should return them for exchange at the Kansas Union or the information booth in front of Flint Hall.
"These tickets will not be honored at the door Saturday night unless exchanged." Mrs. Giele said.
Les Brown and his band will play for the dance.
KU Young GOP Elects New Officers
William F. Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, has been elected president of the Young Republicans for next year.
Other officers elected were Richard H. Hoch, Marion sophomore, vice president; Beverly Stephens, Ft. Worth, Tex., freshman, secretary; Richard M. Harper, Prairie Village freshman, treasurer, and Barbara Elaine Simons, Pittsburg sophomore, delgate-at-large.
Accountant's Day Set for Tomorrow
Discussion groups on "Management Accounting" and a banquet will highlight the annual Accountant's Day tomorrow.
The event is sponsored each year by the KU Accounting Society for Kansas accountants and high school students interested in accounting.
A tour of the KU computation center, Kansas Union and other campus buildings will be conducted at 11 a.m. A film concerning taxes titled "From the Beginning of Time" will also be shown, with comments from a representative of the Internal Revenue Service.
James Surface, dean of the School of Business, will welcome guests at a luncheon.
David Morgan of Peat, Marwick,
Mitchell, and Co.; Homer Jennings,
manager of the Kansas City branch
of International Business Machines
Corp., and Dale E. Bevard, treasurer
of Nelly Don, Inc., will lead the
afternoon discussion groups beginning
at 2.
Donald M. Gamet of Arthur Anderson and Co., a public accounting firm in Kansas City, Mo., will speak
on "Challenges Facing the Accounting Profession" at a 6:30 p.m. banquet.
Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at the west end of Strong basement at $3 a person.
Sociology Award to Hadden
Jeffrey K. Hadden, Lawrence senior, has been awarded a Hilden Gibson honorarium for 1959-60, the department of Sociology and Anthropology announced. The $50 award is given annually.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1959
British Woman Archaeologist To Give Talk
Kathleen Kenyon, noted British archaeologist, will be the speaker at tomorrow's monthly meeting of the Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America.
Dr. Kenvon will speak to the group on "Excavations at Jerichor the Land of Canaan and the Biblical Story" at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union The meeting is open to the public
Dr. Kenyon is the daughter of the late Sir Frederic Kenyon, who was
MARGARET CROSSLEY
Kathleen Kenyon
director of the British Museum, and has recently headed seven years of excavations in Jericho. She has also excavated widely in England and the Middle Fast.
In speaking about her Jericho excavations. Dr. Kevon says:
"Our work has revolutionized ideas about this area and about the beginnings of civilization."
She is also director of the British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem and is noted as an author, teacher, and lecturer.
9 Students to Be In Honor Recital
Nine students in the School of Fine Arts will be presented in an honor recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The students, selected by the music faculty for outstanding performances last semester are:
Jean Converse, Great Bend, bassoon, and Gary Foster, Lawrence, clarinet, both seniors, Loretta Nauman, Alton, piano, and Johnny Woody, Springfield, Mo., both juniors.
Jolene Brink, Ottawa, flute; Mari-anne Marshall, Topeka, cello, and John Walker, Miami, Okla., o'boe sophomores; Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., mezzo-soprano, and Fred Wiemer, Drumright, Okla. piano, both freshmen.
There are now approximately 100,000 private swimming pools in the U. S., compared with only 2,500 a decade ago.
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Dr. Alexander Badaway, visiting professor of architecture, will give the fifth in a series of six lectures on Egyptian art and civilization at the Student Union Activities Forum at 7:20 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Fifth Badaway Talk Set for Tonight
The series is being sponsored in cooperation with the Sculpture Club and Art Service Club, although anyone may attend.
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
The last in the series will be April 29, when Dr. Badawy will speak on the "Dawn of the Western World."
Dr. L. R. C. Agnew, associate professor of medicine, will deliver the first lecture of a series tomorrow night in Bailey Auditorium.
Medicine Lectures to Start
Dr. Agnew will speak on "Murder
Journalists to Cite Columnist
Epsilon chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional fraternity for women in journalism, has named Mrs. Zula Bennington Greene the outstanding Kansas woman journalist, Mrs. Greene is a columnist for the Toneka Daily Capital.
The PMI was originated on the KU campus recently by John Mayer, Kansas City, Mo., junior, who drew up the plan from a similar one at Stanford University.
Mrs. Greene will be cited at the chapter's annual Matrix Table dinner at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union.
and the M.D." in the lecture sponsored by the Pre-Medicine Information Center.
The bi-weekly lectures are being set up to complement pre-medicine courses and faculty advising. Specialists from the medical center in Kansas City and doctors from the Lawrence area have been contacted to lecture on their fields.
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Wednesday, April 15, 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.
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HARRY LAWTON, JR., received his B.S. in Physics at Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., in 1950, joining General Electric that same year. He received an M.S. degree in Management Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1958.
"Long-range programs are important for both men and missiles"
"In a company dedicated to research and development, a young man's opportunities to learn more—to increase his technical skills—are almost unlimited," says 31-year-old Harry Lawton, Jr., a General Electric engineer engaged in the development of inertial guidance and fire-control systems for ballistic missiles. "And to maintain America's scientific leadership, we're going to need all the technical training and skills we can produce.
"An important aspect of my job at General Electric is the continuing opportunity to learn more. I've been able to continue my education in the company's Physics Program for college graduates. And I also have the advantage of association with top technical experts in my work. Opportunities like this have helped me realize that long-range programs are important-for both men and missiles."
Harry Lawton is one of several hundred technical graduates who are devoting their skills to the development of 14 government missile projects to which General Electric is a major contributor. More and more our scientific progress and our national security depend on men like this -men who bring high qualifications to their work and who continue their quest for knowledge, both on and off the job.
General Electric believes that individual initiative and career growth are essential to America's continued technological leadership. To this end, the company encourages all of its employees including more than 30,000 college graduates to develop to their fullest capabilities by providing opportunities for increasing knowledge and working skills.
Progress Is Our Most Important Product
GE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 15, 1959
Kansas Law Makes April a Cruel Month
April is the cruelest month. breeding work out of lazy man.
And to insure that no man neglects spring cleaning, the State of Kansas, mixing desire and law in the dead past, has attempted by statute to stir dull man with a little life. Since 1913, spring cleaning—in April—has been required by law in Kansas.
James K. Logan assistant professor of law, demonstrating that a professor's research occasionally turns up information useful to the public, points out that section 12-1624 of the Kansas Statutes provides:
"That in the month of April in each year, the owners . . . of any real property ... shall cause said premises to be cleaned up of all . . . dirt, filth, sewage, sweepings, dung, excrement, compost, papers, stable manure, boxes, ashes, lumber, coal, wood, kindling, grass, weeds, vegetables, slips or litter of any kind. . ."
The statute also provides for either or both a $100 fine or 30 days in the county jail for violation.
Lithograph Sale Has Few Buyers
A sales exhibition of lithographs by three midwestern artists at the Museum of Art has drawn many inquiries but few sales.
The exhibition of 19 original signed lithographs by John Steuart Curry, Thomas Hart Benton, and Grant Wood is being sponsored by the Museum in connection with the current Wood exhibit.
"I think the sales will go well. There seem to be many people interested in buying lithographs but they have not made many decisions yet," said Mrs. Martha Remick, assistant to the Museum Director.
Mrs. Remick said only a few impressions of each lithograph are available.
The lithographs on sale are "Missed Leaf," $50; "Prize Stallions," $45, and "Stallion and Jack Fighting." $40, all by Curry.
"December Afternoon" and "Fertility," $60; "In the Spring," "Midnight Alarm," and "Honorary Degree," $40; "March" and "Shrine Quartet" $50, and "Sultry Night," $75, all by Wood.
"Aaron," $10; "Departure of the Joads," $50; "Planting," $18; "Man," $15; "Old Man Reading," $35; "Rainy Day," $25; "Sunday Morning," $30, and "White Calf," $10, all by Benton.
Darwin Talk Next Week
The sixth Humanities lecture will be given next Tuesday by Dr. William Irvine of Stanford University on "Darwin and Literature" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. His talk will be in conjunction with the yearlong Darwin-Linnaeus celebration at KU.
During his three-day stay on the campus, Dr. Irvine will speak to classes in political science, humanities, drama, English, and journalism.
Next Monday, he will speak about "George Bernard Shaw and His Women" at an informal coffee in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. On April 22, he will discuss, with proctors and instructors in Western Civilization, Huxley's "Brave New World" compared with Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four."
Dr. Irvine has done intensive research on Darwin, Huxley, and Shaw in libraries in the United States, England, and Italy. He is the author of "Apes, Angels, and Victorians," and of "The Universe of George Bernard Shaw."
He has published about ten articles about Shaw. His research on Darwin and Huxley was done in libraries at Harvard, the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, the British Museum, and the Imperial College of Sciences in London.
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Students Wait Until Last Day to Vote
Perhaps giving the students two days to vote in the campus elections has promoted a "procrastination campaign" on the part of many students who "will do it tomorrow."
In a Daily Kansan interview these students expressed their opinions.
Martha Barnes, Prairie Village freshman, "No, I haven't voted yet, because I haven't been up to Strong yet. I'll probably vote tomorrow. I think there has been too much mickey mouse, and it hasn't been taken seriously enough."
Janet Wagner, Belleville, Ill., freshman. "No, I haven't, mainly because I don't know any of the candidates. I'll probably vote tomorrow. I really haven't thought too much about the elections this year."
Sara-Leone Gaffey, Parsons freshman, "No, I didn't vote today, but I will tomorrow. I think the elections are kind of amusing."
Cynthia Fite, Leavenworth freshman. "No, I haven't been to Strong yet. I don't know if I'll vote tomorrow. Probably will. I think they're a farce because they aren't democratic."
Priscilla Ross, Merriam freshman. "Yes..I voted. I think the elections have been conducted well on the whole."
William D. Horner, Mermaid junior, "No. I haven't got around to it yet, but I intend to vote tomorrow. I didn't know the election was today. I really didn't pay much attention to the campaigns."
Jack A. Wiens, Belle Plaine freshman. "Yes, I voted today. I was impressed by the efforts of the parties."
Richard H. Brandt, Newton senior, "No, I haven't voted yet. I figured I had two days to do it.
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I intend to vote tomorrow. It seems to me there has been a lot of shady dealings on the part of the political parties. There's been a lot of undue accusations and false information."
Kenneth R. Kuhlman, Great Bend freshman, "I haven't got around to voting yet, but I will vote tomorrow when I'm in Strong. I did get a little tired of all the trash mail in my mailbox."
Melvin E. Lowrey, Belle Plaine freshman, "I haven't got around to voting yet."
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25. Kind of Arts (abbr.)
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The Winners
Twenty-six students won seats on the All Student Council in the general election, representing nine schools of the University and seven living districts.
Sophomore, junior, and senior class officers were also selected in the election.
ASC
Following are the winners in each division:
College—Sara Carnahan, Topeka junior, and Frank Naylor, Kansas City, Kan. junior both Voy
sas City, junior, both Vox.
Engineering—theOtheodore Hall, Garden City junior, Vox.
Business—Larry Dieker, Westphalia junior, Vox.
Fine Arts—Dorothy Trickett, Topeka sophomore, Vox.
Education—Marjorie Williamson, Hutchinson junior, Vox.
Pharmacy—Robert Iott, Livingston, Mont., junior, Vox.
Journalism—Martha Crosier, Lawrence senior, Vox.
Law—Mikel Stout, Bazarar first-year law, Vox.
Graduate—Kenneth Wainright, Syracuse senior, Vox.
Unmarried-Unorganized Independents—Sarah Anne Shaffer, Rus-
bition Vote and Louisiana Blichman Preserve Village session, ACI
Men's Dormitories—James McMullan, Long Beach, N. Y., sophomore, Vox, and Walter Brauer, Bonner Springs sophomore, AGI
Women's Dormitories—Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., junior, Vox, and Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg sophomore, AGI.
Married—Don Schmalzied, Dighton sophomore, Vox.
Co-op and Professional Fraternity—Alan Cohn, Kansas City, Mo. freshman. Vox.
Sorority—Linda Rundle, Bonner Springs junior, and Mary Sue Childers, Merriam sophomore, Vox. Sharon Hagman, Pittsburg junior, and Martha Rowe, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, AGI.
Fraternity—Ronald Dalby, Joplin. Mo., sophomore, James Henderson, Wichita junior, Rudy Vondracek, Timkin junior, all Vox. Barry Ken Gray, Lyons sophomore, AGI.
Class Officers
Senior Class—President, Richart Barnes, Ssneca; Vice President, Roger Stanton, Marysville; Secretary, Janet Cameron, Topeka; and Treasurer, Melinda Williams, Kansas City, Mo.
Junior Class—President, Lynn Anderson, Atwood; Vice President, Terry Kiser, Omaha, Neb.; Secretary, Beverly Bagley, Brentwood, Mo.; and Treasurer, Deana Grimm, Omaha, Neb.
Sophomore Class—President, Fred King, Kansas City, Mo.; Vice President, Thomas N. Turner, Kansas City, Mo.; Secretary, Connie Kay Boyd, Plains; and Treasurer, Roger Wiley, Harrisburg.
Referendum Passes 4 to 1
A referendum giving smaller schools a better chance for representation on the All Student Council passed yesterday by a 4 to 1 margin.
Of the 2,912 ballots cast, 2,142 were for and 715 against the referendum. There were 55 void ballots.
Under the new rule a school will be represented if 75 ballots are cast or if 50 per cent of the school's students vote in the general election, whichever is least. Previously, 75 ballots have been required regardless of school enrollment.
Index
Engineering Exposition—Page 8
Election news—Page 4, 9, 12
World roundup—Page 4
KU Relays—Page 7
Sports—Page 6, 7
Income tax socialism?—Editorial,
Page 2
Brucker Backs Ike's Firm Berlin Stand
BERLIN — (UPI) — Secretary on the Army Wilbur H. Brucker warned the Soviets today that President Eisenhower meant every word when he said the United States will not budge an inch on Berim.
Brucker told a plane-side press conference on his arrival here the Russians must be told in advance there will be no appeasement in Berlin.
Considerable cloudiness tonight and Friday with scattered showers and thunderstorms east tonight and Friday. Occasional rain northwest Friday, possibly mixed with snow extreme northwest. Cooler northwest this afternoon and west and north Friday. Low tonight 35 northwest to 50s southeast. High Friday 40s northwest to 60s southeast.
Weather
56th Year, No.127
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
About 75 Vox stalwarts and supporters gathered at the Lakeview Lodge to await the returns.
Austin Leads Vox In; 20 ASC Seats Taken
Thursday, April 16, 1959
The Vox Populi camp was the scene of general celebration last night as the returns from the counting room were announced.
The group was calm until the school district results were announced.
By Douglas Parker
When it became evident that Vox had carried every school district, they began to whoo it up.
Vox Populi, a fledgling political party a little over a year ago, hit pay dirt yesterday by winning 20 of 26 seats on the All Student Council and landing the student body president and vice president positions.
Jim Austin, Topeka junior, and Terence Davis, Frontenac senior, polled 1,683 votes to defeat Allied Greek-Independent candidates for the top positions, Richard Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and Jane Dean, Overland Park junior.
The AGI pair collected 1,191 votes. The total vote in the election was 2,926, including 49 void ballots and three write-in candidates.
There were nine less votes cast this year than last year's all-time high vote of 2.935.
After closing hours, the male contingent moved into the basement of Bailey Hall where the results were being posted.
"In consideration of the candidates elected I'm sure we have an extremely capable council, and I would like to thank everybody for their support.
Vox Celebrates Election Results
In a statement made last night, winning presidential candidate Jim Austin said:
"The turnout this year was just slightly under that of last year. The totals are right on the nose, which indicates no cheating. The new elections bill is the biggest advancement in student government in the last 15 years."
For the first time in party leaders' memory, all nine schools of the University will have a voting seat on the ASC, due to the affirmative vote on the referendum requiring fewer persons to vote in a school district to gain voting privileges.
The 1959 election was all over by 11:30 last night as IBM machines flicked out the last ballots on the presidential race.
Easy Count
Not over a half dozen people were needed to tabulate the votes, in sharp contrast to the smoke-filled counting room of last year when dozens of students counted ballots by hand until 3 and 4 in the morning.
It was in such a session last year that Vox gained its first political victory, capturing 17 seats, plus two more non-voting ones, and pushing write-in candidate John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., senior, into the presidency.
AGI held on to seven seats last year, all of them with voting privileges.
While AGI lost only one seat on the council through this year's polling, Vox gained two more voting seats through the addition of the School of Journalism and the School of Law on the new referendum rule.
Voting Privileges
One representative this year from the Co-ops and Professional district will not have voting privileges, since only 50 votes were cast in that group.
Fifty votes would have been enough in a school district to gain voting rights, but since a living district was involved the right was denied. A 75 per cent majority of students living in the district is needed to gain a voting seat.
There was minor realignment in the number of representatives from
Instructor to Speak On India's Neutrality
Harold A. Gould, instructor of sociology, will speak on "India: Is Neutrality Defensible?" at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Trophy Room. A question and answer session will follow the short talk.
living districts over last year. The fraternity district dropped from five to four; the sorority climbed from three to four, and the women's dormitories dropped from three to two.
Quota System
The quota system decides the number of living district representatives. If 75 to 200 votes are cast, one representative is elected. If 201 to 425 are cast, two can be elected. The ratio continues up to five candidates.
President-elect Austin won over Lewis by approximately the same margin of votes as in last year's presidential race.
For Austin it has been a short but busy climb to the presidency. In the fall of 1857 he began tying together pieces of part of the broken Pogo party, shortly thereafter becoming Vox Populi party president,
(A tabulation of voice totals will be found on Page 12.)
Elliott Calls For AGI Changes
The president of the Allied Greek-Independent Party said last night a "complete reorganization" of the political party is in line for next year.
As the election results were tabulated, Terry Elliott. Ft. Scott junior, told The Daily Kansan:
"This will mean one of two things. Either a new party doing away completely with AGI will come into existence, or a serious reorganization of our present party is necessary.
"This reorganization will mean a distinct effort to get new people into the party." he said.
Elliott attributed Vox's success to superior organization.
He said he thought AGI was hurt by the story in The Kansan of several charges against AGI.
Elliott said that he has heard comment on both sides of the fence concerning the AGI pamphlet "Frankly Speaking."
"I definitely know some houses where it helped us," he said.
Winner...
1945
IBM Vote Counting
IN THE DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
...Loser
A. M. H. K. 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.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 16, 1959
Graduates Owe Debt to KU
In a few weeks more than a thousand students will become alumni.
During the transition period from student to graduate they will hear a baccalaureate sermon and a commencement address, which, if they follow the usual pattern, will remind the graduates of their responsibility to their God, to their society, to their country, to the world, and in this space age, to the universe.
But often, in the hurry to doff caps and gowns for working clothes, the graduate gets away from the campus without being reminded of his responsibility in the future to the University.
Schools such as KU can no longer be dependent solely upon the state for funds and the faculty and administrators for informing the public of the needs here at the University. Especially during the immediate years ahead will this school
need help from alumni, friends and industry if it is to keep the educational pace of the better universities and be ready to educate the increased enrollments of the 1960s.
Not a single student graduated has "paid his way" while he was here at the University in the sense that his tuition covered the costs of his education.
The responsible graduate realizes he owes a debt to his school which he can begin erasing the day he leaves the campus.
He can start off by being active and vocal in combating the anti-education sentiment that Kansas legislators were exposed to during the recent session. Then in future years the graduate can square the debt by loyal support of the University and enlisting others to the cause of higher education in this state and nation. —Harry Ritter
Tax Time
Yesterday was the deadline for filing federal income taxes.
The federal income tax since Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal has been an instrument of social reform as well as a means of financing government. Thus, through high taxes on high income and generous public works and welfare expenditures, the income tax has tended to reduce economic inequalities.
The graduated income tax, based on the politico-social theory of taxation, has been subject to long and bitter criticism. Opponents to the tax argue that:
1. The tax is socialistic and undemocratic.
2. It kills incentive and, consequently, free enterprise.
3. It results in too powerful a central government and in government policies dangerous to both a stable economy and to democracy.
Proponents, on the other hand, point out that:
1. Redistribution of wealth serves to accelerate our economy. This is because money shifted from high-income groups to low-income groups insures that a larger percentage of that money will be spent.
More consumption encourages more production and investment. It makes more jobs. More jobs in turn redoubles the acceleration of the economy.
2. A shift in wealth results in a more democratic society in that economic equality is necessary to political equality. Without economic
equality, those people with the favorable balance of wealth can unduly influence political processes.
Government by powerful vested interests can kill a republic.
Experience since the start of the New Deal has largely invalidated the arguments of the opponents of a sharply graduated income tax. There are still those reactionaries who would return to the policies of an earlier era, but their numbers are fewer and their voice is weaker.
The GNP (gross national product) is higher today than in the nation's history. The real income of the nation's people, as reported in the April 13 Newsweek, continues to rise. That means more suits, food, and refrigerators can be bought for the time worked by the people.
In short, the citizens of the United States enjoy a higher standard of living today than in any other period. This condition has resulted largely because of a government committed to planning the nation's economy.
That kind of government requires a high, graduated income tax.
People will complain about their taxes but their election votes will continue to embrace the governmental policies which make high taxes. The people have seen the results.
They know that the nation has come a long way since the income tax was ruled unconstitutional in 1894—and especially since the New Deal.
Larry Miles
...Letters ...
Editor:
I noticed in the Lawrence Journal-World Dean Woodruff's defense of the KU scholarship program which the Daily Kansan had described in a news article. I
wonder how many students and faculty members will call to the dean's attention that some clumsy writer on the paper has mistaken his position, or that he is guilty of some statistical miscues.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
STUDENT UNION
T-16
"Lotta absences—mus' be some kind of sickness goin' 'round."
Surely, the logic of the reply to the Daily Kansan is equally invalid. As I recall, the story said 17 per cent of the 157 athletes on scholarships have academic scholarships. That's the takeoff point for the dean, too, but from then on he compares apples with oranges, for he goes on to say that this is a swell percentage, for only 12.5 per cent of the student body has scholarships.
I recall the wave of indignant letters that swept over the Daily Kansan's reporter who compared fraternity and independent grade point averages and concluded the Greeks were smarter.
Well, if the college had us all on scholarships because of our ability to tote books around the campus and only 12.5 per cent of us got scholarships for our scholastic achievements, then the dean would have a point.
Since 17 is bigger than 12.5, as any dullard can see, the Daily Kansan was wrong.
But if my seventh grade math teacher is right, the dean has arrived at a false conclusion because he made the mistake of comparing dissimilar groups and considering them the same.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all in favor of bigger and better athletic scholarships. As the Daily Kansan's sports editor said some while back, let's give everyone on the teams a scholarship, not just the football players. But let's not engage in hocus-pocus to cloak what we're doing.
—Name withheld by request
Ninety-one per cent of all American individuals and families with incomes of more than $5,000 a year own cars.
It Looks This Way...
By Alan Jones
The campus elections are over for another year, just in time to prevent nausea.
The ballots are counted, Vox has a majority, and the activities men return to their usual rounds—publicity, parties, and publications.
As the dust settles amid the shards of apathy, a careless look over the shoulder reveals the shimmer of hot air wafting skyward.
And does it make 37 cents worth of difference who won? Not to me, and not to eight thousand other students.
The All Student Council, class officers, and the other churls and charlatans who have just shut up have done nothing for me, and nothing for eight thousand other students.
Vox and AGI boosted the Lawrence economy a bit by printing up campaign material, and the Daily Kansan got some front-page stories.
But what does politics have to do with a student and the education he gets? It has no more connection with learning than do the thirty-odd beefy men who ravish footballs on autumn Saturdays for the edification of alumni and drunks.
These are the positive accomplishments of the campaign:
1. Four or five students made criminals of themselves by stealing AGI posters from the printer.
2. Another crew played National Socialist and burned a few hundred Daily Kansans.
3. Both parties lied, labeled, and slandered to win control of the next year of nitwit student government.
What does—what can—the ASC do? Let's look at some committees.
The labor committee is bounded by law and regulations, and can't accomplish its goals, worthwhile or not.
The social committee? A farce. If students can't work up their own blasts, sans committee, we'd better board up the windows and use the buildings to store surplus wheat.
Housing? It's a problem. And the committee meets with solemn face, decides we have a problem, and let's check the number of Johns and carpets in organized houses. The unorganized students continue to pay exorbitant rent, commute, or live in rundown hovels they can afford.
Traffic and parking has done so well you can get socked with a $16 bite for overparking.
Publications, in theory, controls the Daily Kansan, Fowl, the Jayhawker, etc. The Jayhawker votes itself bonuses every year. Fowl is run according to administration wishes (when it comes out), and the Daily Kansan does as it pleases.
The parent organization is the ASC—enough to make you believe in heredity. It meets every two weeks, if it can get a quorum, and passes rules for the students.
What, then, is the purpose of this petty chicanery? Glory. Self-glorification and the greater glory of the house. For rush books, for impressing alumi, and for keeping the house in the spotlight.
And that, children, is the reason for student government—an intrenched, inept, expensive adjunct to sorority and fraternity life. A $7,000 toy for a score of people who don't even know what they're supposed to do.
With $7,000, you could buy about 450 kegs of beer, a dozen scholarships, or enough bubble gum to cover the entire campus.
Any of the above would be worth more than student government as it exists at KU.
Worth Repeating
It is always easier to believe than to deny. Our minds are naturally affirmative. —John Burroughs
\* \* \*
So far, about morals. I know only that what is moral is what you feel good after and what is immoral is what you feel bad after.
—Ernest Hemingway
Woman is woman's natural ally.—Euripides
A man says what he knows, a woman says what will please.— Jean Jacques Rousseau
- * *
People who know little are usually great talkers, while men who know much say little.—Jean Jacques Rousseau
Fate makes our relatives, choice makes our friends.—Jacques Delille.
---
He who rebukes the world is rebuked by the world.—Rudyard Kipling
Dailu fransan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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.
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 Douglas Parker, Managing Editor Business Department Bill Feitz, Business Manager Editorial Department Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier, Co-Editorial Editors
Thursday, April 16, 1950 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Work of Big 8 Artists On Six-week Display
The University is host again this year to the Second Annual Big Eight Conference Student Art Competition. The submitted works may be seen in the art gallery of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building until May 22.
The judge for this year's competition was Rola Ginzel, professor of art and acting chairman of the department of art at the University of Illinois Chicago branch.
Entries in the competition are in the fields of painting, prints and sculpture. Each institution was permitted to send three entries in at least two of the three fields.
Winners announced last week were Judith Hood, Lawrence senior, who won first place for her
K. U. ENTRY—Example of work by Robert Edmiston, winner last year.
ART FANS — Charles Burger, Shawnee sophomore, talks sculpture with Duane Steinshouer, Hoxie junior.
ALEXANDER HOPKINS
self-portrait woodcut. In second place was Jerry Buchanan, Wichita graduate student, for a collage entitled "Out of Colors and Out of Glued Scraps." In third place was Hiroko Miyaki, University of Colorado junior, for sculpture in walnut entitled "Figure."
Honorable mention went to James J. Hennessy for a painting entitled "The Madness of Aias No. 1," and Eugene C. Wicks for an etching entitled "Quarry No. 2." Both are graduate students at the University of Colorado. Also given honorable mention was Jerry Lee Jacoby for an untitled oil painting. He is a University of Nebraska junior.
First prize is $125, second
prize $75 and third prize $50.
EE
GUEST ARTIST—Prof. Roland Ginzel is shown talking to Miriam Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, before his lecture April 6 in Swarthout Recital Hall. John J. Talleur, instructor of drawing and painting is in the background.
Mr. Buchanan was a double winner in that his entry was selected for the University purchase award of $250. The award was made by a committee composed of Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy; Edward Maser, director of the University Museum of Art, Eldon C. Tefft, associate professor of design, John J. Talleur, instructor of drawing and painting; A. Dwight Burnham, associate professor of drawing and painting; James E. Gunn, assistant director of public relations, and John Downing, president of the student body.
The Buchanan work will be bung in the Kansas Union and will eventually be displayed in the new addition to the Union now under construction.
The member institutions of the Big Eight Conference participating in the show are the Universities of Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas State University and Oklahoma State University, as well as K.U.
The first prize winner last year was Robert Edmiston, then of the University of Oklahoma, who entered a piece of sculpture.
Photographs by JACK CLIFFORD
MARVELS
LA STUDIO
MARVELS
LA STUDIO
EXHIBITION AREA-Early crowds view sculpture and painting.
GOOD PERSPECTIVE—Elaine Gill, Cincinnati, Ohio, senior, views cameraman.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 16, 1959
Around the World—
Delhi, Taipei Report Tibetan Revolt Flaming
By United Press International
The Chinese Communists have launched a heavy surprise attack against Tibetan positions 150 miles southwest of Lhasa in their first penetration of this strong anti-Communist area, reports from the India border said today.
Fighting was reported raging near Mangar-Tse-Dzong north of the highway running from Gyangtse to Shigatse, home of the Communist-sponsored Panchen Lama. The reports said the Tibetans still held the fortress village.
From Formosa, Nationalist-Chinese intelligence reported the anti-Communist revolution has spread to the border of Szechuan province in inland China.
The sources said in Taipei that fresh intelligence reports from mainland China disclosed that "thousands of people" in Szechuan have taken out hidden arms and joined in guerrilla warfare against the Communists along the Kingsha (Gold Sand) river.
Previous Nationalist Chinese reports said Tibetans residing in Sikang, Chinghai and Sinkiang on Tibet's border had joined the revolt. This was the first report that the fighting had spread inland.
Other world news in brief;
At Vanderberg AFB, Calif. British newsmen openly questioned the "operational" label the United States has placed on its Thor intermediate range missile.
The visiting journalists have been here all week waiting to see the first Thor launching by a Royal Air Force crew, but so far they have waited in vain.
The Thor was slated to be blasted over the Pacific range both Tuesday and Wednesday but firings were
postponed, once because of weather and then for unspecified "technical" reasons.
In Perlin, American sources reported that Soviet jet fighters used "dangerous harassing tactics" against the turboprop C-130 which flew here at 25,000 feet yesterday in defiance of Russian altitude limitations.
Contradicting earlier reports that two Red planes merely "shadowed" the C-130, the sources said they "harassed it in flagrant violation of flight safety."
And news from Washington finds Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro greeted by wildly cheering fans and picketing opponents as he started a round of appearances to win new friends for his regime.
The only scheduled appointment on the first day of his 11-day U. S. visit was lunch with acting secretary of state Christian A. Herter.
But associates said Castro might give his worried security guards more headache by getting a whim to go shopping or sightseeing.
An American official said precautions taken to protect the 32-year-old Cuban leader were tighter than those applied when Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan visited here in January. The Cuban embassy and U.S. State Department have received anonymous threats against Castro's life.
The average salary of full-time professors in the United States is $8,875 a year.
The state motto of California is Eureka, a Greek word meaning "I have found it."
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Red Tape Rampant
Senior Finds Voting Tough
A letter-of-the-law poll worker wound a few yards of red tape about a senior woman in yesterday's elections.
By Martha Pearse
She was stopped from voting four times within 20 minutes by the zealous poll worker.
At first she was refused a ballot because she was a senior. After an argument with the poll worker, she summoned election police, who allowed that seniors were authorized to vote.
The next problem arose when it was found the woman carried a double major and was entitled to vote for representatives in both schools. Again the poll worker argued and again election police confirmed the woman's right to vote—in both schools.
By this time the voting booths were full, so the distraught young lady marked her ballot while sitting on a nearby window sill.
The poll worker now tried to take away her ballots for "campaigning within 50 feet of the voting area." She was allowed to move further away where she would not be "campaigning."
Harvard Professor To Lecture Tonight
Dr. Alfred S. Romer, Harvard University, will present the fifth and final lecture of the Darwin-Linnaeus Year lecture series at 7:30 tonight in Bailey Auditorium.
"Darwin and the Fossil Record" will be his topic. Dr. Romer is the Alexander Agassiz professor of zoology at Harvard and is the director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology there.
The woman was accompanied by a sorority sister also looking for a place to vote. The charge this time was that she was "influencing another's vote by standing too close to another person."
Again she was given a reprise by election police and finally was able to vote without committing another "error."
She left the polls proclaiming she was "terribly glad she was a senior and would not have to go through another election."
Docking Like Gary Cooper?
Movie starlet Dolores Michaels finds publicity agents are "abom- inable," but Kansas' Governor George Docking is "lovely."
After an interview with the governor yesterday in Topeka she likened him to "an articulate Gary Cooper."
"What a lovely man to talk to," she said. "I would have stayed the rest of the day if he would've let me."
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"I know actors and actresses who can't do any work because they cann't get an agent. Agents are an abominable lot. Having one you like and one who likes you is almost second best to having a happy marriage."
Her opinion of that special breed that thrives in show business, the agent, was not as high as that of the governor.
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Thursday, April 16, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
EXPLORATION
READY THIS FALL—A lone workman is pictured in the new mammalian genetics laboratory connecting to Snow Hall. The $220,000 building will be ready for occupancy in early fall.
Play Contest Winner Says She's the Happiest Person
Mrs. Miriam Roffman, who lives in Honolulu, Hawaii, has won first prize in the playwriting contest sponsored by the department of speech and drama and the Centron Motion Picture Corp., Lawrence.
Extensive plans laid last fall have made a citizen of our newest state "the happiest person in the country."
Geologists Break Precedent Here
The annual meeting of the Association of American State Geologists is being held in Kansas for the first time in the 51-year history of the organization.
The meeting, being conducted this week on campus, is sponsored by the Kansas Geological Survey. More than 30 states are represented.
The geologists are discussing their administrative and research problems centered on efficient methods of investigating the rocks and mineral resources of the various states. They will spend two days in the field studying rock formations between Lawrence and Hutchinson this week.
ROTC Unit to Shine At K-Relays Events
A tri-service support program of the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC detachments has been organized and will participate tomorrow and Saturday in events of the Kansas Relays.
The three ROTC units will take part in the parade Saturday morning.
Saturday afternoon, 40 members of each unit will gather at Memorial Stadium to form a cordon for the Relays Queens. A color guard from each branch will be present.
- Portraits
Weddings
- Engagements
- Application Photos
by photography
摄影师
HIXON STUDIO
Mrs. Roffman's prize winning play will be produced in the Experimental Theatre May 4-9. For each performance the author will receive $25.
The play, "The Long Shadow," is a story of an aging man paroled from prison and the difficulties which society puts in the way of his return to being a normal citizen.
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 1-0330
In the play the blame for his situation is not placed on individuals but on society. Each character is portrayed as "blameless."
She did undergraduate work at the University of Wisconsin and took a course in creative writing last year at the University of Hawaii.
Mrs. Roffman is still a figure of mystery to the department of speech and drama. She sent a letter to the department in which she told only a few details about herself.
"The Long Shadow" is the first full-length play that she has attempted although she won first prize in a one-act play contest.
The new mammalian genetics laboratory, constructed to connect on the west side of Snow Hall, will be ready for occupancy "sometime in the early fall," said John Weir, associate professor of zoology.
Fall Finish Set for Lab
The building, being constructed at a total cost of $220,099, of which
Official Bulletin
Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong, Part-time and some full-time work.
Cheerleader practices, April 16, 21,
23 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m.,
Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the
Shoemaker, Experimental Theatre.
International Club, Banquet 6 p.m.
Saturday. Exotic cuisine from 30 different countries of the world $175. Tickets at the Union Center of the Union; Information Booth
**Foreign Students:** A representation of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service will be on campus tomorrow from 1 to 2:30 p.m. for a meeting with students about questions concerning viss, return home, employment, etc. Room 305A of Union.
Men's residence hall counselor applicants for next year must have application in to the Dean of Students by noon Saturday.
Ticket sellers needed for Kansas Relays, Friday and Saturday.
Poetry Hour, Mr. David Vieth, associate professor of English, will read the poetry of Rochester in the Music and Browsing Room of the Union at 4 p.m.
German Club, 5 p.m.; 110 Fraser, Dr. Norman Pounds, visiting Rose Morgan Professor of Geography "The Eastern Western Ruhr Areas." Talk given in English.
Phi Delta Kappa 5 p.m. coffee in Room 201, on the second floor at 6 in the Curry Room. Program, Dr. Edward Zeller, Associate Professor of Geology, who recently worked in Ant-
Dr. Norman Pounds, visiting Rose Morgan Prof. of Geography," The Eastern and Western Ruhr Areas," 5 p.m., 110 Fraser, Public invited.
Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America: Miss Kathleen Kenyon of the University of London. "Excavations at Jericho." The Land of Abraham and the Bible Plus illustrated lecture. Open to the public 7:30 p.m., Orden Room of Union.
Kuku Club, 7 p.m. Pine Room, Union.
The University system will vote on
bring prospective pledges. Election
Sigma Xi, 7:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Dr. Alfred S. Romer of Harvard University, "Darwin and the Fossil record." Election of new members.
Christian Science campus organization.
7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
Pre-Med. Information Club, 7:30 p.m.
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"During a recent meeting of cancer specialists in Houston, Tex., Dr. Howard Andervont, who is chief of biology laboratories for the National Cancer Institute, emphasized that the most significant work on cancer made use of inbred mice," Prof. Weir said.
The mice are being raised and maintained for the Cancer Chemo Therapy Screening Program at the universities of Michigan and Florida and KU.
Besides research in cancer, the mammalian laboratory will provide facilities for research in mammalian genetics to train graduate students.
The new building will be staffed by Prof. Weir, who will direct the genetics project, four graduate zoology students, two laboratory technicians, an animal husbandry expert, and other members of the department of zoology concerned with mammalian genetics.
"We are hoping to obtain one more full-time genetics faculty member, also," Prof. Weir said.
Summer Term Starts June 4
The 1959 KU Summer Session will begin June 4, with orientation for all new undergraduate students and end Aug. 1.
Classes in all schools of the University will be offered during the session.
Miller and Watkins halls will be open for women. Information regarding accommodations are available from the office of the Dean of Women.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Information about housing for men may be obtained from the housing office. University residence halls will be available for the eight-week term.
Summer Session bulletins are now in the registrar's office in Strong Hall.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday April 16, 1959
Undefeated MU Squad Here Friday, Saturday
By Jim Trotter
The Kansas baseball team will play host to defending champion Missouri here Friday and Saturday with three conference games scheduled.
Missouri missed picking off its second national title in five years Last June in Omaha, when Southern California nudged the Eengals 8-7 in a 12-inning championship finale. The Tigers ended the season with a 22-7 record.
Missouri is currently riding at the crest of a 9-game winning streak including three easy victories last weekend over Kansas State at Manhattan. All of the nine games played
by MU this season have been won by decisive margins.
Kansas has a 3-2 record to date. All three losses were in conference play against Oklahoma State last weekend. The Cowboys downed the Jayhawkers by scores of 9-0, 13-2 and 6-5 last weekend at Stillwater.
Roger Hill spoiled a perfect game for Oklahoma State in the last game of the series with a base hit in the ninth inning.
Frior to the three game trip to Stillwater, the Jayhawkers won a pair over a Forbes Air Force Base nine and had scored a victory over Washburn University of Topeka.
Missouri lost two front-line pitchers and five other regulars off its
1958 NCAA baseball finalist team but Coach John Simmons is none- the-less optimistic, especially after nine straight smashing wins.
Three starters dominate the MU roster along with five other lettermen. Ralph Hochgrebe, shortstop; Gary Starr, second bicee; and Bob Haas, left field are the returning regulars. Other lettermen who will probably see some action here are infield Steve Lewis and pitchers John O'Donoghue, Bud Harbin, Ben Cooner and Don Miller.
The first contest is slated to be played Friday afternoon starting at 3:15 p.m. A doubleheader is scheduled Saturday with the first game getting underway at 1:00 p.m.
Wichita Downs Tennis Team
By Tom Clark
A much-improved KU teni team made a determined bid to defeat a strong Wichita squad yesterday on the home courts before bowing 5-2.
The Jayhawkers trailed by only 3-2 after losing the top three singles matches, but dropped both doubles matches to the same Wheatshockers who pinned a 7-6 opening defeat to the Jayhawkers three weeks ago.
Couch Denzell Gibbens' pennin posted two points against the Wheatshockers on outstanding performance by Dave Coupe and Solvin Lekagul Coupe won an uphill battle from Fate Piper for his second straight singles victory. Smash-stroking Lekagul posted his third straight win the hard way.
Holding two match points, Leka-
gut relaxed, and allowed his Wichita
foe to win four straight points for a vital service break. But the patient backcourt artist from Thailand quickly recovered and broke through Bob Blackwell's service in five points for the match. Blackwell had previously defeated Lekagul at Wichita.
Despite losing, Lynn Steverling again made one of his trademark "belated valleys" in the first set, Trinling 4-1 in the opening set, the KU senior reeled off five straight games for the set, but Jim Carter regained his stride and won the next two sets.
Gibbons leads his team against Washburn next Tuesday afternoon on the home courts.
The results:
Singles:
Jim Carter, Wichita, de'ceived
Lynn Sieverling, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1.
$\frac{7}{y} + \frac{8}{5} +$
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Norris Barker, WU, defeated Jerry Williams. 6-1. 6-3.
Bill Potter, WU, defeated Pete Block, 6-4, 3-6, 8-6.
Q.E.D.
Dave Coupe, KU, defeated Pete Piper, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Sal Lekagul, KU, defecated Bob Blackwell, 6-3, 6-4.
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Carter-Barker, WU, defeated Sieverinz-Block, f-0, f-2.
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Phi Gams Whip Triangle,21-1
Phi Gamma Delta whipped Triangle 21-1 in the only fraternity A scheduled for yesterday. The 21 runs were scored on good hitting as all but one Phi Gam collected at least one hit. Triangle hit well but could only manage one run.
In the independent A division the Vipers, scoring four runs in the last three innings, defeated the Hilltopppers 4-3. Joe's Pro's tropped Carruth 13-8 in the other independent A game.
In the independent B class Pearson downed A. Ph. A. 3-1 and the Chemistry Engineers won over Burro's 7-4. No games have been scheduled for tomorrow in any of the softball leagues.
W. B. Taylor rowed on the Harvard crew in an intercollegiate regatta in 1875 and next day won both the seven-mile walk and the three-mile walk.
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Relays Schedule Set
The tentative schedule for the Kansas Relays is:
Page 7
Friday, April 17, a.m.
Track events: 9:00—100 meter dash, decathlon; 9:15—100 yard dash, high school preliminaries (West Side); 9:15—120 yard high hurdles, high school preliminaries (East Side); 9:45—sprint medley relay, junior college (440-220-220-880) preliminaries.
10:00—sprint medley relay, high school (220-110-440-880) preliminaries time basis; 10:30—quarter mile relay—college preliminaries; 10:45—half mile relay, high school preliminaries; 11:00—half mile relay, college preliminaries; 11:15—100 yard dash, high school semi-finals (West Side); 11:15—120 yard hard hurdles, high school semi-finals (East Side); 11:30—400 meter run, decathlon.
Field Events; 9:30—shot put, high school preliminaries, finals; 9:30—broad jump, decathlon; 16:50—javelin throw, high school preliminaries, finals; 10:15—16-pound shot, docathlon; 10:45—high jump, decathlon.
Track events: 1:15-high school bands; 1:25-flag raising ceremony, R.O.T.C. Units; 1:30-120 yard high hurdles, high school preliminaries.
Friday, April 17, p.m.
1:35—120 yard high hurdles, university and college preliminaries; 1:50—four mile relay, university and college finals; 2:10—100 yard dash, university and college preliminaries; 2:25—100 yard dash, high school finals; 2:30—sprint medley relay, university (440-220-220-880) invitational final.
2:40—print medley relay, college
(440-220-220-800) invitational, final;
2:50—print medley relay, junior
college (440-220-220-880) invitational, final: 3:05—one mile run, high school invitation, final.
3:15-quarter mile relay, university, preliminaries; 3:30-400 meter hurdles, A.A.U., (two sections—time basis) final; 3:45-two mile run, university and college finals; 3:50-shuttle relay, Lawrence grade schools, on infield.
4:00-half mile relay, university preliminaries; 4:15-mile relay, high school preliminaries; 4:30-mile relay, college preliminaries; 4:45-one mile relay, university preliminaries.
Field events: 1:00—pole vault,
high school, preliminaries, finals;
1:30—high jump, high school preliminaries, finals; 2:00—broad jump
university and college preliminaries,
finals; 2:30—discus, university and
college preliminaries, finals.
Saturday, April 18, a.m.
Track events: 9:00—110 meter hurdles, decathlon; 9:30—quarter mile relay, high school preliminaries (time basis); 10:30—one mile relay, junior college preliminaries; 11:30—1500 meter run, decathlon.
Field events: 9:15—discus throw, decathlon; 10:00—pole vault, decathlon; 10:00—discus throw, high school preliminaries, finals; 10:00—broad jump, high school preliminaries, finals; 10:45—javelin, decathlon.
Saturday, April 18, p.m.
Track events: 1:15- University of
Kansas band; 1:25 - flag raising
ceremony, R.O.T.C. Units; 1:30-120 vard
high burgles, university and college
finals; 1:35-distance medley relay
(440-880-³-mile) college finals.
1:50—distance medley relay (440-
880-320-mile) university finals; 2:05—
100-yard dash, university and college
finals; 2:10 sprint medley relay.
Flu Hits Bill Alley
KU javelin ace, Bill Alley, spen last night in Watkins hospital, attempting to overcome a siege of flu. Alley was released for a few hours yesterday, but had to return to the hospital overnight.
The record-breaking weightman is expected to be released in time for competition in the Kansas Relays, but it is not known how much his weakened condition will affect his performance.
Buffs Meet K-State
They will be taking a second shot at opening their Big Eight conference season against a Wildcat nine which understandably would have preferred the snow treatment rather than a trio of losses to a fence-rattling Missouri team. The 'Cats were clubbed to 3-0, 25-3 and 2-0 counts while the Buffs and Nebraska remained idle.
New York City played best to 776 conventions in 1957, attended by nearly four million delegates.
BOULDER, Colo.—Undaunted by a base-burying "unseasonal" 26-inch snowfall last week, Colorado's baseballers will lay down their snow shovels, pick up their bats and gloves and mush to Kansas State this weekend.
Morris Moves To Quarterback
Duane Morris, letterman halfback, was switched to quarterback yesterday in an attempt by Coach Jack Mitchell to strengthen the signal-caller's position.
high school finals; 2:20—presentation of Kansas Relays Queen.
Morris spent some time last fall as a quarterback but was later switched to halfback. Bill Crank is the only experienced quarterback on the team this spring. Mitchell said he thinks that KU is strong enough at halfback to be able to move Morris to the shallow quarterback corps.
Bia Eight Baseball
2:30 — Glenn Cunningham Mile, A.A.U.-invitational five to six men,
finals; 2:40—quarter mile relay, high school finals; 2:45—quarter mile relay,
college finals; 2:55—quarter mile relay, university finals; 3:00—two mile relay, high school invitational,
finals.
Team W L Pct.
Missouri 3 0 1.000
Oklahoma State 3 0 1.000
Oklahoma 2 1 .667
Iowa State 1 2 .000
Nebraska 0 0 .000
Colorado 0 0 .000
Kansas State 0 3 .000
Kansas 0 3 .000
Grease Job $1
Brake Adj. 98c
Muffiers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change
PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt.
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- Indian Jewelry - Navajo Rugs
- Hand Loomed Ties
3:15—two mile relay, college finals; 3:30—two mile relay, university finals; 3:45—half mile relay, Kansas City, Mo. schools, finals; 3:50—half mile relay, high school finals; 4:00—half mile relay, college finals; 4:10—half mile relay, university finals.
4:20—3000 meter steeplechase,
A.A.U. finals; 4:30—one mile relay,
high school finals; 4:40—one mile
relay, junior college finals; 4:45—
one mile relay, college finals; 4:50—
one mile relay, university finals.
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University Daily Kansan
Open
9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M.
Open Evenings By Appointment
Field events: 1:00—pole vault, university and college preliminaries, finals; 1:30—shot put, university and college preliminaries, finals; 1:30—high jump, university and college preliminaries, finals; 1:30—hop, step and jump, A.A.U., university and college preliminaries, finals; 2:30—javelin throw, university and college preliminaries, finals.
The luxury liners United States and America could be placed side by side on the flight deck of the Navy's aircraft carrier Forrestal.
Thursday, April 16, 1950
CHICAGO — (UPI) — The Kansas City Athletics, with their first win of the season under their belts, today will be out to cop the odd game of the three-game series with the Chicago White Sox. Ned Garver is slated to work for the A's and Early Wynn for the Sox.
A's Look for 2nd Win Today
The A's rolled up an 8-1 lead after three innings here yesterday, then staved off a late Chicago threat, to beat the Sox, 10-8. It was Kansas City's first win in four starts and the loss was Chicago's first in five outings.
Bob Grim, Kansas City pitcher picked up the win and aided his own cause with a bases-loaded homer in the third inning. The A's scored five runs in that frame, but
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lost for the remainder of the game the services of shortstop, Joe Demaestri. After Grim socked his four bagger, pitcher Barry Latman's first pitch struck Demaestri over the left ear, sending him to the hospital. However, Demaestri is expected to be in uniform today.
The combined state police forces in this country today total only about 22,000 men.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 16, 1959
NAGAR
WATER MUSEUM
GEOLOGY STUDENTS CHECK DISPLAY — William Ward, Hays junior, and Ellis Miller, Langdon senior, look over the geology department exhibit, "Exploration by Land, Sea, and Air."
Mrs. McNown to Open Engineering Exposition
Mrs. John S. McNown, wife of the dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will cut the official ribbon to open the "Pioneering in Engineering" exposition at noon tomorrow.
Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill. junior and KU relays queen, and Carol Earls, University of Missouri sophomore, the Big Eight relays queen, will witness the opening ceremony.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, Dean and Mrs. McNown, Associate Dean and Mrs. Donald E. Metzler, School of Engineering, and Edwin R. Phelps, vice president of the Pittsburg and Midway Coal and Mining Co., Pittsburgh, Kan., will go on the first tour of the exposition.
They will view 16 displays constructed by engineering, industrial design, mathematics, and ROTC students. The exhibits will show new advances, processes, and concepts in engineering and its associated fields.
Engineers of 3 States Hold Soil Meet Here
About 150 engineers from Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska attended the 9th annual Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering Conference here today.
The conference is sponsored by the department of civil engineering, the School of Engineering and Architecture, and University Extension. Dr. James Peoples, associate professor of geology, will be one of the speakers.
Valentine Will Speak To Lawrence Group
Charles A. Valentine, assistant professor of sociology, will speak on "The People of New Britain" at a Lawrence Rock and Mineral Club meeting at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Community Building.
New Britain is an island off New Guinea in Melanesia inhabited by a people known as the Lakalai
Friendliness is everywhere in our bank...
Step In-Get Acquainted!
The exposition will be open from noon to 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to noon Saturday.
First National Bank 8th & Mass.
Myron Bernitz, Fudora senior and exposition publicity chairman, said he expects 25.000 people to view the exhibits.
Class Break Set For Engineers
Junior-senior classes in the School of Engineering and Architecture will be canceled tomorrow and Saturday during the Engineering Exposition.
Freshman and sophomore classes will meet as usual except in classrooms needed for exhibits.
Classes to be held are: engineering manufacturing processes 1, engineering mechanics la and 48, and architecture 2,6,10,11,14,15, 16,21 and 47.
Freshmen and sophomores will be excused from classes if they are needed to work on exhibits. Students helping with the Exposition can get class excuses from the student chairman of each departmental exhibit.
KU Photogs Ride with Law
Six members of Kappa Alpha Mu, photo-journalism honor fraternity, got plenty of action Saturday as guests of the Kansas City, Mo., police department.
The photographers rode from 3 to 11 p.m. with patrol cars assigned to the Accident Investigation Unit. One member rode in each car and patrolled the Kansas City streets with the officers.
During the evening the students covered wrecks, shootings, fights, injuries and intoxication cases with their cameras. Most of the members also experienced a "siren run" in which they went screaming through the streets at 60 m.p.h.
Arrangements for the photographic expedition were made through Major Don Bishop. Chief of the Detective Division of the Kansas City Police Department.
3 KU Men Write for Texts
Three engineering drawing professors at KU have added expression in literary form to their list of accomplishments.
Albert S. Palmerlee, professor of engineering drawing, George J. Hood, professor emeritus of engineering drawing, and Charles J. Bacr, associate profes or of engineering drawing, have recently collaborated to write several sections for the new 10-volume McGraw-Hill "Fncyclopedia of Science and Technology."
Prof. Baer is also the author of a chapter on electrical drawing which appears in the second edition
of the text "Engineering Drawing," and of a book entitled "Electrical and Electronic Graphics," which went into production on March 6.
Business Group Gets 4
Four students have been elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary business society.
They are:
Gary L. Carrico, Beloit, Janet Inez Douthitt, Augusta, Robert Crawford, Salina, all juniors, and Arun Joshi, Chaudigarib, India.
Mr. Joshi graduated from the School of Business in February.
THIS
April 17 and 18
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
Dance to the Music of
9:30 - 12:30 p.m.
COMBO
The
NATHAN
DAVIS
Radio Programs
KUOK
In North Lawrence
TEE-PEE
Tonight
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time — "Dean Martin Sings"
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 Rich Wood Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Rich Wood
12:00 Sign Off
SAC bases have automotive hobby shops where airmen may spend their off-duty hours.
Fire losses in the U.S. averaged $3 million per day last year.
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: 'String Quartet in B-Flat Major, Op. 76, No. 4' by Haydn
7:00 Concert Hall
7.30 Contemporary Concert:
"Second Chamber Symphony"
by Schoenberg
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air:
Asian Institute Lectures — "Divided Korea"
9:00 Everybody's Classics
9:55 News
10:00 A Little Night Music;
"Quintet Op. 143 for Guitar and String Quartet" by Castelnuovo-Tedesco
11:00
11:0f Sigh Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
B1.5 MC
New Angel Re-Issue
Tristan and Isolde with Kirsten Flagstad
on LP Records
Bell Music Co.
925 Massachusetts
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
DANCE TO LES BROWN
and his "BAND OF RENOWN"
Relays Dance
Tomorrow Night
Friday, April 17
9-12 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
$2.50 - Semi-formal
Tickets on Sale at Union and Information Booth
Thursdav. April 16. 1959 University Daily Kansan
j
Page 9
(1)
BOMB SEARCH—Campus police were called to Flint Hall last night to investigate an anonymous phone tip that a bomb was hidden in the basement. The "bomber" called at 11:45 last night, and a Kansan staffer reported the call to campus police. Officers Earl Steck (pictured above) and Victor Elliot investigated, but found no bomb.
KU was one of eight schools recently represented at Kansas State University in the Annual Regimental Assembly of the Pershing Rifle 7th regiment.
Kansas State captured first honor for the annual meeting by receiving the most first place positions. Events included individual and group competition in drill, machine gun drill and field stripping of the M-1 rifle.
George L. Cartlich, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, topped KU honors as he placed second in individual drill competition.
Four KU cadets also received third place for machine gun drill. They were Robert L. Aufdemberge and Julius F. Johnson, both Leavenworth freshmen; Dale E. Coy, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Cartlich.
A phonograph has been developed in Britain which is small enough to fit into a coat pocket but large enough to play 12-inch records.
Nan Newton, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, was KU's candidate for honorary cadet colonel at the Annual Regimental Assembly. She is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and honorary commander of the Pershing Rifles company.
While at Kansas State, Miss Newton and Thomas J. Kennedy, cadet commanding officer, toured the Ft. Riley military installations. Among other events was a speech by Maj. Gen. Derrill M. Daniel, commander of the 16th Corps, headquarters in Omaha, Neb.
The Pershing Rifles unit is a separate company of the Army ROTC detachment. It is primarily a special drill unit and is attached to the 4th Pershing Rifles regiment. Lt. Hoderick R. Howe and SFC Collie Mattfield were advisers on
Lt. Roderick R. Howe and SFC Collie Mattfeld were advisers on the trip.
Senator Asks Faculty Help In Selling KU to Taxpayers
KU faculty members are salesmen and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy is the shopkeeper, Sen. Don Hults (R-Lawrence) said yesterday.
Speaking at a Faculty Forum, Sen. Huits asked faculty members to help sell the University to the taxpayers and legislators.
"I am asking you to put forward a little extra effort to help Chancellor Murphy. You are in contact
AGI Apologizes For Supplement Ire
An apology has been made for the AGI attack on the University Daily Kansan made in the pamphlet. "Speaking Frankly."
"AGI meant no reflection on the Kansan. We realized the Kansan wouldn't have the space, and we wouldn't have the money to publish everything we had to say." Terry Elliott, Fort Scott junior and AGI president, said last night.
The supplement states:
"It is because AGI has more to say than the University Daily Kansan wishes to publish that we ...(printed this pamphlet)."
with students who have friends and parents. When they are proud of the quality of education at KU, they will vote for increased appropriations," he said.
The senator said the legislature had appropriated almost three million dollars to education which was not in the governor's budget.
"Chancellor Murphy spent hours pleading your cause in Topeka. He spent time with various committees and before the House and Senate." Sen. Hults said.
Sen. Hults said the increase over Governor Docking's budget was all in the field of education.
"Education was the only field where people benefited. KU received a total of almost $350,000.
Badawy Speaks on Hittite Architecture
"Gov. Docking's budget was the tightest one since I've been there. We must remember that every time we cut the budget, we cut a service." Sen. Hults said.
Total increase in the budget for KU ran almost one million dollars
The first steam locomotive to operate commercially in the U.S. was the Stoutridge Lion, which was imported from England in 1829.
A visiting professor of architecture described the building techniques of the Hittite civilization in the 13th millennium last night in the Kansas Union.
Dr. Alexander Badawy delivered the fifth in a series of six lectures on Egyptian art and civilization at the Student Union Activities Forum.
We are not happy with it, but it was the best we could do considering the psychology of the men in the House who were trying in good faith to hold the line, he said.
KUOK Raises Air Time to 55 Hours
Wall Hall, a proposed building at the Kansas City Medical Center, will take $900,000 of the money appropriated to KU. Sen. Hults said he thought the building would be of great value since the entire medical program would then be in one place instead of taking the first year at the University.
KUOK, campus radio station, has expanded its program time to include Saturdays and Sundays. The station's air time is now 55 hours.
The last lecture of the series will be on April 29. Dr. Badawy will speak on the "Dawn of the Western World."
The station will broadcast popular, classical and jazz music, news and sportscasts from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday and 1 to 9 p.m. Sunday
The station recently began uninterrupted music broadcasts from 4-6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The World is but a Stage
LONDON — (UPI) — Second prize in a play competition run by Commercial Television was won by Casey Daniels, who turned out to be not only a woman; Sheila Hodgson, but a full-time employee of the competing British Broadcasting Corp.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 16, 1959
Groups Busy Despite Election Rush
"This is an Adult Western... all the horses are over 2!!"
ALIAS JESSE JAMES
With BOB HOPE
Starts Sunday!
VARSITY
THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-106
Douthart Hall
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Miss Donna Younger, assistant dean of women, was a dinner guest of Douthart Hall Monday evening.
Delta Chi
Delta Chi fraternity and Alpha Omicron Pi sorority will hold an hour dance at the Alpha Omicron Pi house today.
Chaperones will be Mrs. W. R Bunker and Mrs. Ethel Harmon.
. . .
Marko Nikizek, Yugoslavian ambassador to the United States, was a dinner guest of Delta Chi fraternity Friday.
***
The University of Kansas City chapter of Delta Chi fraternity entertained the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and the University of Missouri chapters of the fraternity at a four-chapter party recently.
William Schmidt, Independence junior, has been elected president of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity for the coming year.
Delta Sigma Phi
Other officers are James Gardiner, Mission freshman, vice-president; James Rambo, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, secretary; Douglas Reed, Cassoday sophomore, treasurer, and Keith Sickafoose, Phoenix, Ariz. freshman, sergeant at arms.
***
Stephenson Hall
Dean and Mrs. Donald K. Alderson and their three children were dinner guests of Stephenson Hall recently.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity held an exchange dinner with Delta Gamma sorority at the chapter house Tuesday.
Chaperones were Mrs. H. W Jenkins and Mrs. Mary Wigton.
**
Sigma Kappa sorority has announced the pledging of Linda Gump, Wichita; Jane Ann Middleton, Liberty, Mo., and Sally Nixon, Macksville. All are freshmen.
Sigma Kappa
Baptist Student Union
* *
John Musgrave, Joplin, Mo., sophomore, has been elected president of the Baptist Student Union for the coming year.
Other officers are Barbara Gallegly, Lawrence freshman, vice president; Janet Clark, North Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, devotions chairman; Norman Greer, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, enlistment chairman.
John Long, Lawrence sophomore missions chairman; Charles Tommy, Independence, Mo., junior publicity; Dorothy Dehn, Lansing junior, social chairman, and Mary Ann Casebolt, Kansas City, Mo., junior, music.
Dharma Bums Dig Sahl et al
"Do your friends say you're subliminal behind your back? Do you dig Mort Sahl for President?"
If you answered "yes" to both these questions—MAN, YOU'RE BEAT! I. If you're not beat then you're suffering from a disease called "background radiation."
Today's angry young man wears black clothes and dark glasses and tennis shoes. At times he just wears old clothes—the older and more bent the better.
If this description fits you—then shove into your trench coat, man, and be on the road. Don't take a toothbrush or cabbage.
He digs jazz like Ahmad and is "fall-out wise." He reads Kerouac, W. F. Brown, and Sahl. He likes art and paints one wall orange and leaves the paint can on the floor for 6 months. He likes to walk alone and stand under railroad bridges late at night.
LAWRENCE DRIVE IN THEATRE - - - West on 23rd Street
Go to the village and join the group of kindred souls. Contemplate Zen and have yab-yum sessions. The bongos will play and you'll listen. No one speaks. You'll forget about social conscience and go to the pod parties with your fellow Dharma bums.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
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OUTDOOR MOVIE TIME!
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REX REASON-PATRICE WYMORE
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Storyboard by CHELLE HUTCHMAN
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pseudo intellectuals. You'll be in your own world of doing what you alone desire and obeying any impulse that pleases you.
If you, by accident, come in contact with the "out-group", you'll talk to them with your tongue in your cheek.
Just keep walking—like I mean never settling down. Wander from village to group and LIVE LIVE LIVE.
Pretty soon you'll be on the "in" and you'll have the habit. You and the way out truth wanderers will sit for hours looking at a work of modern art. Both sculpture and oils—they'll be protests against togetherness. You'll let your hair grow long like nature meant it to be.
You won't be aware of the "outgroup"—the socialites, the white collar man, the factory worker, the
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AT
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"The hilarious Adventures of Sadie"
NOW
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VARSITY THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1065
Miller Hall
Miller Hall held its spring formal Friday. "South Pacific" was the theme.
Chaperones were Mrs. H. P.
Ramage, Miss Julia 'Willard, M.
Althea Galloway and Mrs. R. G.
Roche.
***
Sellards Hall
Sellars Hall held its formal dance, "April Showers," Saturday.
Chaperones were Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Miss Julia Willard and Mrs. Ethel Kerr.
Watkins Hall
Watkins Hall will hold a barbecue and dance Saturday.
Chaperones will be Mrs. Edna Ramage, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Mrs. W. S. Shaw and Miss Julia Willard.
Delta Chi fraternity will hold a Relays picnic Saturday at Lone Star Lake.
Fill cake pans only half full for best baking results.
CCC
Use a marble as a darning egg for the fingers of torn gloves.
Come sundown.. comes sudden death...in a town called
Come sundown...
comes sudden
death...in a
town called
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Thursday, April 16, 1959 University Daily Kansap
Page 11
CLASSIFIED ADS
YTRYK
RTHUR
25 words 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 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
A
3-5788
POST VERSALOG SLIDE RULE.
Wednesday, April 8. Call Larry Thorne
at VI 3-7415. 4-16
HELP WANTED
WANTED: MARRIED STUDENTS to sell life and personal health insurance. Salary plus quarterly bonus will be provided to Mutual Life Insurance Co., 216 Huron Building, Kansas City, Kansas, for further information or appointment. 4-20
WANTED. Babysitter, in our home, three
to four days a week. Call I3-8443 4-20
WANTED: NAVY UNIFORM, service dress khaki (tropical worsted), size 40-42 in reasonably good condition. Call VI 3-3016. 4-20
TYPING: Tneses and themes, Byron
Leopard, call VI 3-5263. tt
BEVERAGES-All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 31-0350.
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith
p41l%; Mass. Ph. 3-5263.
Phyllis
BUSINESS SERVICES
TELEPHONE CALLERS to work in your home or our office. Call VI 3-6170. 4-21
WANTED: young woman, not over thirty,
for interesting work contacting puerta
pueblo, Mexico. Two years.
Some typing required, also sales
ability. Good working conditions, pay,
and employee benefits. Contact Manager,
western Bell Telephone Co., 734
Vermont.
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPIST: Experientenced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
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 animal companion stocks of cages, pet toys and containers for fish. 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; beetle leather, grouted floors, woolens, etc.). Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
TYINGF: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, phones. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadl
Motors, 318 East 17, Phone VI 3-4850.
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 968 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast. accurate service at regular calls. Rate VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood, V I 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. ttt
FINEST FLAT-TOPS. and friendly
Ernie's Barber Shop, 720 Massachusetts.
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do all kinds of typing, thesis, term papers, etc.; experienced typist. Call VI 3-6249. 4-17
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
More people by far. use HERTZ Truck rental
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
SEWING AND ALTERATIONS, men's clothing a speciality. Will replace pocket or half pockets on men's trousers. 1220 Louisiana, call VI 3-4890. 4-22
Cut moving costs! Rent a modern Chevrolet. Drive it yourself.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10212½ Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. Massage by professionals by professional maeasure. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers,
reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates
receive approval for professional
tention, accurate work. Call MI 3-1240
Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee. tf
HERTZ TRUCK RENTAL
LICENSED
400 Van Buren, Topeka
Ph. FL 7-4444
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can offer your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call VI tt 0124.
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
3-1971, Singe
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, 3 I-3428
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
AUNDRY washed and dried, picked up ind delivered, 65 cents a load. Diaper Rags: Blankets. Floors cleaned, waxed, and polished. Call Smiffy I.3-80779 4-16
ROOBS FOR UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN.
Complete. Kitchen and laundry
inroom. 12' x 18'. 1½ blocks from Union. Make arrangements for summer and fall. Ph. VI 3-6723
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
neat and gas furnished, linen furnished,
and accept graduate students. Call VI
- 7677.
FOR RENT
APT, FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Alarge single rooms for boys. No drinking on campus. First floor south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 4-17
JUKEBOK RECORDS, 35 cents each or three for $1.00. Howlins Book Store, 216 W. 8th St., Chicago. (800) 744-4942
FOR SALE
CALIFORNIA BOUND mimeograph, English airmail paper, U.S. platebacks, automobile overhaul tools, Jensen high fidelity speaker, Karlson enclosure, case, flash bulbs, firm double bed, couch, camera, toaster. CVI 3-1-896, evenings
ONE TICKET for "Two For The Seesaw":
Music Hall, Kansas City, Tuesday night,
Third seat, sixth orchestra sell for $20.
Third seat, sixth orchestra $ 100.
CVI 51-3464 evenings. 4-17
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone
green. Original owner. 20,700 miles,
excellent condition. VI 3-5297 after 4 p.m.
IS YOUR ORGANIZATION looking for an annex? We have a lovely furnished office to attend to campus. Cal for appointment to see. Cain Realty 9th, 91.3-8316
57 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE. jus traded by local professional man. V8, push button drive, white wall tires, radio, and heater. Cream and green with spotless white top, 12,100 miles. $1,895. See at Jayhawk Motors, 1040 Vermont. 4-16
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NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
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CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
DAFFODILS. 25 cents a bunch, no de-
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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
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts, Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
MODERN TRAILER HOME, fenced yard, nice size storage house, all equipped, ready to move into, $850.00 Ideal for medical student, within walking distance of KU Medical Center. Call VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m. 4-22
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. Includes index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio.
READ CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS
THINKLISH
S
GOOD FOOD
English: SCRATCHING DOG
English: CAMPUS TOUGH GUY
Thinklish - FLEAGLE
ROBERT O BRIEN, WISCONSIN STATE COLL.
English: ILL TYRANT
Thinklish translation: This character belongs to the beat generation, as any black-and-blue freshman can testify. When he cracks a book, it ends up in two pieces.His favorite subject: fistory.Favorite sport: throwing his weight around.Favorite cigarette? Luckies, what else? Puffing on the honest taste of fine tobacco, he's pleased as Punch. If you call this muscle bounder a schooligan, bully for you!
Thinkfish: SICKTATOR
Thinklish: SPATRIMONY
English: UNHAPPY MARRIAGE
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
IN NEW YORK CITY
JANE SLEMMONS, TARLETON STATE COLL.
ALAN MACDONALD, TRINITY COLLEGE
UUCKY STRIKE
Get the genuine article
LUCKY
STRIKE
IT'S TOASTED
CIGARETTES
Get the honest taste of a LUCKY STRIKE
一个女人拿着扫帚,一个人在沙发上看书。
English: SPRING CLEANING
Thinklish: MOPERATION
ALAN KOLOSEIKE, CORNELL
HOW TO MAKE $25
Take a word—celebration, for example. With it, you can have a football rally (yellebration), a gossip bridge party (tellebration), or a clambake (shellebration). That's Thinklish—and it's that easy! We're paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best—your check is itching to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose your name, address, university and class.
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Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name"
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 16. 1959
Tabulation of Vote
President and Vice President
Lewis and Dean (AGI) 1,191
Austin and Davis (Vox) 1,683
College
Engineering
Johnson (AGI) 274
Gier (AGI) 335
Carnahan (Vox) 345
Navlor (Vox) 390
Addis (AGI) 2a
Hall (Vox) 3r
Business
Reitz (AGI)
Dieker (Vox)
Fine Arts
Longwood (AGI)
Trickett (Vox) 1
Education
Haines (AGI)
Williamson (Vox)
Pharmacy
Davis (AGI)
Iott (Vox)
Journalism
Allen (AGI)
Crosier (Vox)
Harrison (write-in)
Lawn
No candidate (AGI)
Stout (Vox)
Graduate
Cross (AGI)
Wainwright (Vox)
Unmarried-Unorganized
Stout (AGI) ... 25
Dilley (Vox) ... 60
Laws (Vox) ... 64
McMullan (Vox) ... 117
Women's Dormitories*
Independent
(2 elected)
Elickhan (AGI) ... 129
Lawrence (Vox) ... 84
Shaffer (Vox) ... 100
Men's Dormitories*
(2 elected)
Armstrong (AGI) ... 44
Brauer (AGI) ... 117
Stephenson (AGI) 148
Bumgarner (Vox) 96
Purnell (Vox) 78
**Married**
Hickman (AGI)
Schmalzried (Vox)
Co-cep and Professional
Fraternities
Komatz (AGI) ... Cohn (Vox) ...
Sorority* (4 elected)
Hagman (AGI) ... 177
Moyer (AGI) ... 88
Rowe (AGI) ... 177
Childers (Vox) ... 177
Hide (Vox) ... 112
Rundle (Vox) ... 177
Fraternity* (4 elected)
2 Ash (AGI) 57
41 Forker (AGI) 30
13 Gray (AGI) 184
Meyer (AGI) 79
Barr (Vox) 41
Dalby (Vox) 184
86 Henderson (Vox) 184
Koerner (Vox) 139
20 Vondracek (Vox) 184
59 * Voting districts carrying an asterisk show figures tabulated under a preferential distribution system.
As such, the total number of votes cast for each candidate is not indicated due to the distribution.
Class Officer Candidates
Senior Class
President
Barnes 380
Coombs ... 1
Luce ... 24
**Vice President**
Stanton ... 474
Jeffery ... 286
**Secretary**
Cameron ... 423
Hupp ... 323
Scott ... 218
**Treasurer**
Hoover ... 342
Owens ... 223
Williams ... 386
**Junior Class**
**President**
Anderson ... 427
Coe ... 247
**Vice President**
Hensleigh ... 213
Kaser ... 362
Clawson (write-in) ... 121
**Secretary**
Bagley ... 357
Epps ... 121
Smith ... 209
**Treasurer**
Bickley ... 192
Grimm ... 347
Reiter ... 148
**Sophomore Class**
**President**
King ... 444
Sapp ... 114
Vail ... 219
**Vice President**
Stone ... 350
Turner ... 427
**Secretary**
Boyd ... 395
Colladay ... 363
Tillman ... 166
**Treasurer**
Thomas ... 118
Wiley ... 481
Wendt ... 163
Returned by Popular Demand
"Exotic Pizzas"
This Week's Special: PEPPERONI PIZZA
Price: Small .. 98c Large $1.68
Each week the Hideaway will feature a Special "Exotic Pizza." The specials will change each week but the prices stick. Watch for our rare & exotic Pizza Special each week.
AUSTRIAN
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY
106 No. Park
14 Independent Dorms Pushing Song Practice
"Sing into Spring" is the by-word of the independent organized houses as practice continues for the annual "Spring Sing."
The sing, sponsored by the Inter-Residence Council for upperclassmen, finds Battenfeld, Douthart, Pearson, Gertrude Sellars Pearson third floor, Miller, Grace Pearson, and Foster Halls stepping up their practice sessions as the April 29 competition nears.
Most of the houses have scheduled rehearsals three times a week during the evenings and around meal times. Practices so far have averaged about 30 minutes in length. As April 29 gets nearer, however, practices will probably be held more frequently and last longer.
Battenfeld has taken a traveling trophy home from the past two Spring Sings, and will be able to keep it if it wins this year.
Houses may register with Charlotte Stryker, Topeka junior, at VI 3-9123, until tomorrow.
"Fourteen ensembles have already registered, and we expect at least five more to enter," said Miss Stryker.
The Inter-Residence Council set up and sponsored the annual Spring Sing three years ago. There was little support the first year, but last year 14 ensembles were entered, and this year more than 19 will probably enter, she said.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
60th Year, No. 128, SECTION A
Friday, April 17, 1959
Irene
RUSHED ROYALTY—Carol Earls, left, and Nancy O'Brien, co-queens of the 1959 Kansas
Relays, pause on a stairway during their busy schedule of Relays events.
No Rest for Royalty
Two hurried queens got together last night, compared notes, and decided that the role of royalty left no room for rest and leisure.
Carol Earls, a University of Missouri sophomore from Ironton, Mo., and Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., junior at the University of Kansas, were beginning the busy schedule involved in their dual reign over the Kansas Relays.
The two had just arrived at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house from Kansas City, Mo., where Miss O'Brien had met Miss Earl's plane at 8 p.m.
They paused only long enough to freshen up before rushing off to Topeka to appear on a television program shortly after 10 p.m.
While smoothing wind-blown hair and touching up with light makeup, both girls expressed excitement over the coming events.
"I was thrilled when I learned I was to come here for the Relays." Miss Earls said. "This is my first visit to KU, and I've looked forward to seeing the campus."
"This is one of the most exciting times of my life," said Miss O'Brien. "I'm so proud to share this honor with such a beautiful girl as Carol."
The women paused to adjust white orchids given to them at the airport by officials of the Relays.
A full schedule is planned for the queens for today and tomorrow. The visiting queen attended classes with the KU representative this morning. Then both hurried to the opening ceremonies of the Relays.
Tonight they will dance to the music of Les Brown and tomorrow they will parade to the music of marching bands. And when the last race is run, their reigns will be ended.
Soggy Weather Greets Visitors
A bad spell of weather, featuring chilling rain from a cloudy sky, created a soggy beginning for the 1959 Kansas Relays.
A sparse, and enthusiastic crow gathered earlier this morning with raineouts and umbrellas to watch the preliminary and decathlon events which opened the 34th annual track circus.
Many of the spectators were contestants who were waiting in multi-colored warmup suits for later events. But several students and visitors were also scattered through the huge Memorial Stadium.
The track, already muddy after rains during the night, became even more muddy and caused serious difficulty for runners attempting sprints and exercises.
The forecast is for continued howers today, thunderstorms tonight, and cloudy skies tomorrow. Temperatures are not expected to climb into more than the lower 10s this afternoon.
The weatherman, evidently unconcerned over whether the track is fast or slow, predicted things could only get worse.
For students who do not care to risk being soaked at the stadium,
campus radio station KUOK will broadcast events between 1:15 and 5 p.m. tomorrow. The station will fill in between race reports with recorded musical intervals.
The Schedule
Today
Noon—Engineering Exposition opens.
1:25 p.m.—Opening Relays ceremonies.
1:30 p.m.—Relays events start.
3:15 p.m.—Baseball, Kansas vs. Mississippi.
9:00 p.m. Exposition exhibits close.
9:00 p.m. Kansas Relsvance Dance.
3:00 a.m.-Relays events start.
4:00 a.m.-Exposition exhibits open.
10:00 a.m.-Downtown Parade starts,
Noon-Engineering Exposition clos-
Tomorrow
1:90 p.m.—Baseball, Kansas vs. Missouri.
1:25 p.m.—Opening Relays ceremonies
Snip of Scissors Opens Exposition
1.30 p.m—Relays events start,
1.30
2:20 p.m. Presentation of Relays Queens.
4:50 p.m. Last Relays event
With a smile and a snap of the scissors, Mrs. John McNown, wife of the dean of the School of Engineering, officially opened the 35th Annual Engineering Exposition at noon today.
The KU School of Engineering was the scene of roaring jets, sawing, hammering, and generally feverish activity last night as engineers began assembling and testing their displays in preparation for today's opening of the exposition.
"These guys will have to Indian wrestle me to get out of here," he said. The cause of his ice was a missing 64 square feet of plywood which was an essential part of his department's display.
Last minute hitches began plaguing the department chairmen as they attempted to organize their work forces.
Jack Ling, Lawrence senior and chairman of the civil engineering exhibit, was threatening the use of physical violence last night in order to keep his men working.
"We ordered the plywood from a lumber company. We checked at 5 p.m. and they told us it was on the way. It has never showed up yet."
Ling said the missing lumber would cause some delay, but he expected to have the display finished in time for today's opening.
The display consists of a model water treatment plant, complete with a water tower, reservoirs, run-
Johnson Proposes Learning Centers
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Senate Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson has proposed that the United States help establish international centers of learning to foster mutual understanding in the world.
The Texas Democrat said the "world's best and most mature minds" could meet at such centers and exchange ideas. One center, he said, could be an international university in Hawaii.
Johnson made his suggestion in a speech last night at a banquet given by the Women's National Press Club for the American Society of Newspaper Editors.
His address highlighted the first day of activities connected with the ASNE annual meeting, attended by 400 leading editors from throughout the United States.
Earlier, the editors questioned the national chairmen and senators of the two major political parties at an afternoon session billed as a "smoke-filled room" meeting.
Couples Told to Cut Apron Strings
The wife of a Presbyterian student adviser says newlymarried couples often make mistakes by attempting to pattern a home after the one they lived in before marriage.
Mrs. Celeste Patton, moderator of a series of marriage seminars at the United Presbyterian Center this week and wife of John H. Patton, professor of religion, made these observations on marriage:
"Marriage is a commitment,
Mulkey Takes Lead
Memphis Olympic Club's Phil Mulkey, winner of the decathlon in the last two Relays, took a commanding lead this morning and headed for a third victory.
a blending together of two different families and cultures. Therefore, marriage cannot possibly be like either of the families of the individuals before marriage.
Students agreed the two ingredients included in a successful Christian marriage are understanding and sensitivity of mate.
"Now too many forget that it is not what a person gets out of marriage but what he brings to marriage," she said.
Mrs. Patton said;
"If a couple is not more in love five years after marriage than they were at the time of the wedding, that marriage would be unsuccessful."
"Not everyone realizes it, but going into marriages means entering something new with a calculated risk. Study reports say in normal marriages one partner demands about as much as the other.
Students agreed individuals should decide before the wedding on an attitude to be taken toward their respective parents. Some parents remain too close to the couple and smother their children's marriage, they commented.
Today's Kansan
Three sections are included in today's special 40-page Relays edition of the Daily Kansan. Section A is devoted to news events. Section B contains features and society news. Section C is the sports section.
ning water, and a water purification demonstrator which shows different purification steps.
One of the exhibits in the Exposition is furnished by the Society of Military Engineers and the aero-automated engineering department.
The Nike Ajax guided missile on display is furnished by the fourth anti-aircraft region located at Richard-Gebauer Air Force Base.
The missile was set up by military science cadets early this morning under the supervision of a sergeant from the air force base.
Also, the aeronautical engineering department is exhibiting a miniature pulse jet similar to the type used by Germans during WW II in buzz bombs.
"We are demonstrating basic physical principles underlying all engineering. We are showing some interesting effects of electricity and magnetism, including a continuously operating cloud chamber that shows traces made by atomic particles."
They also have a flight simulator set up which demonstrates problems a pilot might encounter while in flight, a smoke tunnel which shows the aerodynamic principles of a wing in flight, and a tunnel that creates a shock wave which can be photographed as it passes over the object under test.
Another example of the engineering exhibits is the engineering physics department's display of a model of an atomic reactor which is to be built here this fall. Ernest R. Carlson, Ellinwood senior and display chairman, said:
This year there will be three awards presented for the best displays, instead of only one as last year.
Myron Bernitz, Eudora senior and publicity chairman of the Exposition, said:
"Two trophies will be presented by the Engineering Council—one for the best original display, and one for the best academic display. Theta Tau (engineering fraternity) will present a trophy for the best overall display."
Last year's winner of the Theta Tau trophy was the petroleum engineering department.
The awards will be announced and presented at an engineering banquet next Wednesday. Donald E. Wall, Kansas City senior and chairman of the banquet, said this is the first time this has been done.
Dr. Roderick D. Clark, analyst in the missile engineering department of McDonnell Aircraft Corp., will be the guest speaker.
Honors and awards will also be presented at the banquet.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1959
Challenge Faces Victors
The contest of elections is over. Campaign posters are finding their way into wastebaskets. The ballots are counted, winners named and the newly elected representatives and officers are preparing to assume their duties.
The true test of their ability lies ahead. It can only be measured by the way in which they fulfill their responsibilities of the position to which they have been elected.
Vox Populi evidently received a vote of confidence from the student body by winning 20 of the 26 seats on the All Student Council plus the president and vice president of the student body. This responsibility thus entrusted to them puts these representatives and officers in even greater
debt to the student body. They cannot afford to rest upon their promises.
With the glory and excitement of campaigning over, only work remains, not only the obligation to attend meetings, but the conscious effort to contribute useful and thoughtful ideas, not to do the usual, but to do the extra work which an effective student government requires.
Whenever these representatives meet with a committee, vote or speak for or against a proposal this next year in the ASC, their electorate will be watching them.
The victory has been won. The greatest challenge still must be met. How it is met will determine the caliber of student government at the University next year. —Pat Swanson
Youth's Mass March for Justice
Tomorrow will probably be a rather noisy day in Washington, D.C. Thousands of American young people are marching on the nation's capital that day to present a petition to the President and Congress.
This petition is simple and direct. It states:
"We, the undersigned, petition the President and Congress of the United States to put into effect an executive and legislative program which will insure the orderly and speedy integration of schools throughout the United States."
I wish them luck.
It has been almost five years since the Supreme Court made its decision calling for integration of the schools. Since that time, we have made progress. However, to this day, complete and unobstructed integration is no more a reality than it was in 1954.
Schools remain closed to Negroes while state and local governments employ diversionary methods which permit segregation to continue under the guise of private schools. Men like Orval Faubus keep one step ahead of our slow federal court decrees, while our leaders in Washington wait for the miracle of understanding to solve the problem.
These people who will march down Constitution Avenue tomorrow will only ask that which is law be made effective without further
delay. With the law of the land and right on their side, it is my hope that they will be heard.
Conservatives may cringe at this method of promoting legislation. They might rightly say that it represents emotionalism and mass strength, and is contrary to individual expression. A few radicals may go so far as to say it is un-American.
There is one thing a mass demonstration is not, and that is un-American. The one theme in this nation today that is un-American is our continual state of apathy concerning the problems of our times.
This apathy extends to the very heart of government; and if this mass march by young Americans can jolt our lawmakers into enforcing laws that have been passed and disregarded, then the tramping feet will benefit us all.
I condone the petition because it only asks for what is right. I approve of the petitioners' method of presentation because it is no more than the people going to their own government to ask that the will of the people be effected.
I do not ask that anyone sign the petition, for this is a matter of personal choice. I do not say that we should join the march.
I only say that we should not condemn them, fear them or laugh at them. Indeed, we should watch them with interest, and thank them for what they do: They challenge our complacency and ask for justice. —George DeBord
Regionalist's Show Diverse
Bv Jack Schrader
Thirty years ago the movement called "Regionalism" meant a good deal on the American artistic scene. The mere mention of the term was a good starting point for an argument about contemporary American art.
But today the word itself has lost much of its earlier significance. What seems important to us now are the individual talents of the three artists who led the movement of Regionalism—John Steuart Curry of Kansas, Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri, and Grant Wood of Iowa.
The Museum of Art has helped us make up our own minds about the significance of the Regionalists by showing retrospective exhibitions on Curry, 1957, Benton, 1958, and Wood, currently showing.
The Wood exhibition shows the greatest diversity in style one could imagine. This is due largely to a showing of much of Wood's
early work, which consists of a variety of early 20th Century styles. His Regionalist work during the thirties also shows a fairly wide range of interpretation, although it is always bound together by his loyalty to truly American subject matter.
Perhaps the biggest shock to one's predetermined ideas about Grant Wood is "The Spotted Man," which bears a likeness to the Pointillism of Seurat. Wood's "Corner in Montmartre" is stylistically close to a Utrillo Montmartre scene, and "Old Shoes" is strikingly Post-Impressionistic.
However, the Regionalist works in the Grant Wood exhibition are certainly the most important in the evolution of the artist's style. It is in works like the rather humorous "Parson Weem's Fable," the landscape "Stone City," and Wood's 1932 "Self-Portrait" that one sees the artist's meticulous execution, his distinctive technique of building up a surface in many paint layers, his natural colors, and his emphasis on space and design.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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.
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 376, business office
News Department ...
Business Department ...
Editorial Department ...
Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Pat Swanson and Martha Crossier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Prizely Freedom
The Grant Wood retrospective exhibition is an extremely successful attempt to bring to the campus a representative cross-section of the work of a farm boy of Iowa who holds a high rank among American painters. The only thing lacking is "American Gothic" itself, which like several other famous Wood paintings could not be lent but fortunately is represented by the original sketch.
Poetry Corner
By Augustine G. Kyei
I envy the freedom of the tree
That reaches out in freedom spree.
I envy the freedom of the grass
That grows wild and unseen
In the forest glade,
In the mountain range;
And the freedom of the air
Whose passage nature's green stirs
In sprightly dance;
And the freedom of humans;
Bestowed at birth,
Forsaken at death.
Such freedom,
Priceless and yet prizely
Passes muster where freedom rules.
Hanker'd after where tyranny
Papers report that 56 Hawaiians packed themselves into one canoe on Waikiki Beach. The canoe sank in shallow water. Let's hope that this craze doesn't hit Potter Lake. The results could be disastrous.
Wood Gains Fame With 'American Gothic'
By Calder M. Pickett
Assistant Professor of Journalism
Grant Wood, the Regionalist painter whose work will be on exhibit at the Museum of Art through May 30, swept to fame in 1930 with the appearance of "American Gothic."
His emergence as the chief apostle of Regionalism was not unrelated to other currents of the early 1930s. Regionalism was a form of cultural isolationism that characterized the period. Nationalism was a dominant world force. Mussolini was in power in Italy. The Japanese soon would invade Manchuria. Hitler was on the rise. The London Naval Conference was limiting capital ships.
Writers were turning to regional themes. The Southern Agrarians were voicing their creed in "I'll Take My Stand."
Wood, the Iowa painter who had been unable to make a splash in Paris, would soon set down himself, in "Revolt Against the City," the creed of Regionalism: When regions develop characteristics of their own, and throw off the influence of Europe, they will be able to develop an American culture of their own.
In a book called "Modern Art," Thomas Craven was beating the tom-toms for the Regional painters, and flaying the French. C. J. Bulliet, later the art critic of the Chicago Daily News, was giving wide recognition to "American Gothic" in the old Chicago Evening Post. Peyton Boswell of the Art Digest was calling for recognition of the Regional painters.
Wood, like John Steuart Curry and Thomas Hart Benton, was a Midwesterner. He was graduated from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, High School, attended the Minneapolis School of Design and Handicraft and Normal Art, taught for a time in a one-room country school.
He did not go to Paris until the early 1920s, and there he experimented with surrealism and attained notoriety among his friends with the painting of a male nude that came to be known as "Spotted Man." He soon found himself back in America, at work in Cedar Rapids.
In 1927 Wood received a commission to make a stained-glass window in Cedar Rapids. He had it made in Europe, and he encountered the wrath of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Their attack upon him bore fruit: Many years later he painted a savage caricature, "Daughters of Revolution."
savage caricature. Daughters in Wood's early Regional painting came in the late 1920s: "John B. Turner, Pioneer," and "Woman with Plants," a portrait of his mother. In 1930, along with "Gothic," for which Wood's dentist and his sister posed, he painted "Stone City." which contained his landscape trademark—bulbous trees, inspired by those on his mother's Haviland china.
Fame came with "American Gothic," perhaps his best-known work (which Meredith Willson has utilized in "The Music Man," a play about Iowa that Grant Wood surely would have appreciated). Other paintings soon appeared: "Midnight Ride of Paul Revere," which looks like a tabletop landscape; "Birth-Place of Herbert Hoover," which was as popular for a time as Hoover himself. His "Daughters of Revolution" came in 1932, three tea-sipping ladies posed in front of Leutze's "Washington Crossing the Delaware."
The late 1930s and early 1940s brought fame to Wood that was comparable to that of a film star. He developed mannerisms, became somewhat of a character, helped to establish the cult of Regionalism (which probably was more of an afterthought than a conscious school of painting). He did the mural, "Dinner for Threshers," once again painting the rough farm people he knew so well in Iowa.
Wood died in 1942. He and Regionalism remain famous, though neither now receives serious recognition from art critics. The artistic retreat that came to be known as Regionalism likely will be regarded by history as one more movement that characterized the worried and alarmed United States of the terrible thirties.
A. E. M.
SPRING IN TOWN—Carol Abernathy, Kansas City, Kan., junior, examines one of the paintings in the Grant Wood exhibition on display in the Museum of Art through May 30.
W 350 mm D 200 mm E
E
5 10 9
Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
the book world
By Stanley Solomon
Page 3
THE MOST OF S. J. PERELMAN, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1958, 650 pages. Price $5.95.
This book is a large collection of representative articles by S. J. Perelman. It will probably appeal to a wide variety of readers, especially college students who find little satisfaction in campus humor magazines.
The 96 articles, mainly taken from the New Yorker magazine, cover a span of thirty years' writing. Perelman is more hilarious (and often sillier) in his earlier writings than in his later ones; on the other hand, he has become more subtle and more tasteful in recent years.
Perelman is very good in his special field, which is lively—though light—satire of superficial patterns of conformity, or rather, uniformity: of movie plots, of advertisements, of books, of magazines, of numerous commonplace phenomena of American society.
If you are looking for profound social criticism, you will have to read Shaw or Swift, for Perelman's comments are aimed more at noncontroversial foibles than at serious failings. He picks some pretty safe subjects to satirize, such as Louella Parsons, Rudolph Valentino, "Harper's Bazaar," Schraffts and his wife.
Here, in a 300-page book, are short stories by the masters of Russian literature—a collection published in hardback two decades ago by the Modern Library.
Nevertheless, Perelman is no mere dart-thrower at American culture. Urbane and sophisticated, his style elevates his articles to a literary plane of their own. His cynicism never succumbs to morbidity, and this is rather refreshing in a time of "beat" cynics.
This book will probably be of considerable value to the student under pressure of exam and term papers. It will also serve as a welcome change from "heavy" reading. I mean, after all, one doesn't always feel like reading Conrad...
\* \* \*
Several new paper backs should prove of interest to University students. They include a non-fictional bit of Americana, a volume on historical philosophy, an anthology of short stories, four pioneering plays, and a celebrated novel:
Fifteen stories are represented, by 10 writers, including Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Gogol, Pushkin, Chekhov, and Turgenev. Some of these are standards: Pushkin's tale of gambling, "The Queen of Spades," Gogol's "The Cloak." Trends from romanticism to psychological realism are here for the enthusiast of short stories.
GREAT RUSSIAN STORIES. Modern Library, $1.25.
BUFFALO BILL AND THE WILD WEST, by Henry Blackman Sell and Victor Weybright. New American Library, 50 cents.
* *
Here with dozens of sketches and photographs incorporated into the text, is a loving treatment of the great Buffalo Bill, who went from his Kansas home to become frontier scout and pony express rider, a buffalo hunter and finally showman, whose Wild West show was celebrated on two continents.
Though the writers appear to scorn the mythology of the Old West, their book is full of it. as it should be, for Buffalo Bill belongs to legend as much as to reality. It is a reprint that should be valued in these days when the lore of plains and mountains attracts so many Americans.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY IN OUR TIME, selected and edited by Hans Meyerhoff. Anchor Books, $1.25.
***
History to Henry Ford was "bunk." To some it is subjective enough to be classed as a social science. To others it is one of the humanities. In this volume are writings that review the many debates surrounding history.
Among the historians and philosophers represented are R. G. Collingwood, to whom the concept of the imagination in historical writing is so important; Croce, who believed that every history is contemporary history; Toynbee, proponent of a "universal history"; Beard and Becker, who believed that no history could be completely objective, and Sir Isaiah Berlin, who contends that moral evaluations cannot be excluded from history.
FOUR GREAT PLAYS, by Henrik Ibsen. Bantam, 50 cents.
\* \* \*
John Gassner provides for this collection, an anthology that sets Ibsen in his historical context and demonstrates the significance of the great Norwegian in both realistic and symbolic writing.
The plays are those usually recognized as Ibsen's most significant (with the possible exception of "Hedda Gabler"): "A Doll's House," "Ghosts," "An Enemy of the People," and "The Wild Duck." Though the causes for which Ibsen fought—woman's rights, an enlightened public, an awareness of venereal disease and heredity—seem old-fashioned today, they were shocking in the 1880s. And the electricity of his drama is as evident on the printed page as it must have been to those startled Victorians of the late 19th century.
* *
THE MOON AND SIXPENCE, by W. Somerset Maugham. Bantam, 35 cents.
There has been little decline in the popularity of Maugham novels, and this famous book, which first was published 40 years ago, remains one of the most popular.
It is the story of "Charles Strickland," who forsook polite society and conventionality to become a great, though not entirely appreciated, painter, and ended his days on an inle in the Pacific. Gauguin provided the inspiration for Maugham, as is well known. It is difficult to escape the fact that publication of the paperback reprint coincides with an already widely heralded television version of the novel, to star Laurence Olivier this fall.—C.M.P.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
10
SPRING TRAINING—Coeds tune up for next fall's cheerleading tasks. From left are Linda Gillam, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Blair, Lawrence, and Peggy Shank, Hiawatha. All are freshmen.
Activities Board Selects Van Dyke
Tom Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo.
junior is the new president of the
Student Union Activities Board for
the 1959-60 school year.
Other officers are, Mary Ann Mize, Salina, vice president; Gwendolyn Gray, Coffeyville, secretary, and David Hall, Wichita, treasurer. All are juniors.
The officers make up the executive committee of the board next year. They were selected by the present board on the basis of experience and talent.
Applicants for eight other board positions will be interviewed Tuesday in the Kansas Union.
Waggoner, Leonard To Visit Southwest
George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology, are attending the Conference on International Exchange Opportunities at Albuquerque, N.M. today and tomorrow.
Dean Waggoner and Prof. Leonard, the Fulbright adviser, will participate in panel discussions during the conference. Prof. Leonard will discuss "The Benefits of the Exchange Program to American Institutions" in a panel today. Tomorrow, Dean Waggoner will discuss "University Planning for Education Exchange."
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
Campus church groups have announced this schedule of activities for Sunday and Monday.
Church Groups Announce Schedules
Sunday
Roger Williams Fellowship will have Dr. Robert Torbet, dean of Central Baptist Seminary in Kansas City, Kan., as speaker for its meeting at 5:45 p.m. at the First Baptist Church. His topic will be "The Church in an Alien Culture."
Methodist Student Fellowship at 5 p.m. will include a panel discussion on "Branches of Christianity" at the Methodist Student Center.
The Rev. Paul Davis, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, will start a series of talks on "What Are Our Beliefs?" at the United Student Fellowship at 5:30 p.m. The meeting will be held at the Plymouth Congregational Church.
Faith and Life Seminar will meet at 8:45 a.m. at the United Presbyterian Center to continue study in the book of Acts. Sunday Evening Fellowship at 5 p.m. will include a discussion on discrimination. Three members from the KU committee on human relations will make up the panel leading the discussion.
Concordia Club Bible study will be held at 9:30 a.m. with coffee and rolls being served at 10:30 a.m. At 5:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association will have their dinner meeting.
Students from the Baptist Student Union will have meetings in local churches at 9:45 a.m. and 6:45 p.m. Fellowship meeting will be held at 9 p.m. at the home of their director, Charles Beck.
Pastor William J. Britton will speak on engagement and marriage at a dinner meeting of Gamma Delta at 5:30 p.m. He will put special emphasis on a comparison between the
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Morning meditations will be held 7:30-7:45 a.m. in the chapel at the Methodist Student Center.
Prayer meeting will be held at 6:45
a. m. at Canterbury House with Holy Communion at 7 a.m. Episcopal praver will be at 9:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
Chapel services for Baptist students will be at 5 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
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Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Union Expansion Moves Forward More Rooms Needed 1960 Completion Date Now Predicted
The new addition to the Kansas Union will include at least 10 new rooms for meetings as well as additions to the Hawk's Nest, cafeteria, music room, ballroom, and book store.
"Our great need is for space, especially for meetings. We have had as many as 25 to 35 meetings a day scheduled recently." Frank R. Burge, union director, said.
The addition to the cafeteria will include at least three separate wood-paneled rooms for meetings or private dinners. Three folding doors will divide the rest of the cafeteria addition into other meeting and dinner rooms. These doors can be opened to connect the addition to the present area when there are large crowds.
Larger Weekly Forums
There will be a 62-seat addition to the music and browsing room. With this addition, the room will hold over 200 people for the weekly forums.
A new forum room with permanent seating and color television will also be added onto the first floor. The room will be available for poetry hours, lectures, discussions, and displays.
The forum room will be mahogany wood-paneled with wall-to-wall carpeting. The seats will be placed at angles so that they will all be facing the speaker's stand.
Junior Ballroom
The new junior ballroom, which will be built onto the second floor, will have a folding wood-paneled wall which will enable the room to be used as a banquet hall. When the wall is folded, the junior ballroom can be opened onto the Jayhawk room and main ballroom.
"We hope this will eliminate the excessively crowded conditions at all-school dances," Mr. Burge said.
A smaller wood-paneled room
with a fireplace, similar to the present English room, will also be added to the second floor for an additional meeting room.
A meeting room for university married women will be added to to top floor of the union as a gift from the Watkins Fund. The room will also double as a lounge for the women's groups.
The present terrace on the top floor will be glassed in and a much larger terrace will be added.
The addition to the Hawk's Nest will have natural brick interior walls and slate floors. It will feature a grill with a copper hood in one corner of the room.
Nest Features Grill
The bottom floor addition to the building will be one large recreation room. Among other recreation facilities, it will include 12 bowling alleys, pingpong tables, and billiard equipment.
The Hawk's Nest addition will be more elaborate and sophisticated than the present facilities. It will be particularly nice for snack and coffee dates," Mr. Burge said.
A patio will be built off the Hawk's Nest and will be connected to the new room by sliding aluminum and glass doors.
The present bowling alleys will be torn out and a stairway will be built connecting the room with the book store. The new store facilities are designed to eliminate over-crowded conditions in the present rooms and to make it easier for students to find needed materials.
The new million dollar addition to the Kansas Union to expand existing facilities is set for completion in June 1960.
Frank R. Burge, union director, said:
"We feel that we have the type of facilities in the Union that the students want and need now. We just don't have enough room." Mr. Burge said.
The new addition will include 43,552 square feet of space. The construction of the addition was begun early in March.
The last addition to the union was started in 1950 and finished in 1952. Plans for the new addition were started in 1955.
"Students from the SUA and the Union Operating Committee spent two years discussing areas which should be included in the new addition." Mr. Burge said.
"The students, particularly, were most vocal in defining what the student body needed most. More bowling alleys, and more room in the Hawks' Nest, bookstore, and ballroom were the features mentioned most." he said.
Provides Easy Access
The new addition was also planned to provide a more convenient entrance from Mississippi Street and easier access to the University parking lot near the football stadium.
The one-way street between Oread Drive and Mississippi Street which has run behind the Union will be rebuilt over the Mississippi Street entrance.
"The parking and traffic problem has become a real concern to the
University. We feel that this will help to eliminate some of the problems involved," Mr. Burge said.
Construction on the addition will be speeded by the use of precast, pre-stressed flooring.
Floor Slabs from K.C.
"The floor slabs will all be made in Kansas City, shipped to Lawrence, and then lowered by crane into the framework of the building. This prevents the cost of additional labor in pouring the concrete and time hazards which fluctuate with the weather."
The addition will be completely
air conditioned and contain two new elevators.
The Kansas Union is an independent organization and receives no funds from the University. It is run primarily from the $10 union fee which is included in the University enrollment fee.
Each $10 fee is sub-divided into $5 for existing debt, $2.50 for maintenance and equipment, and $2.50 for the union annexation debt.
The new addition is being financed by borrowed money (revenue bonds) and funds which have been laid aside for this purpose.
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Fencing Classes Learn Three-way Swordplay
By Gary Settle
When two duelists meet at sunrise and say to each other: "Choose your weapon" they have a choice of three different types of swords. Each type of sword has its accompanying set of rules for proper fencing conduct.
The three swords are called epee, foil, and saber. The techniques for using each one properly are taught in fencing classes by Richard Laptad, assistant instructor of physical education.
Naturally, disputes could frequently arise over whether or not an actual touch was made. To avoid this in match play, epes are used with special electrical tips.
The epee is a sturdy sword with a wedge-shaped blade. The object of epee play is for a fencer to touch any part of his opponent's body with the tip of his sword.
A spring contact on the tip of the epee causes an electric impulse when ever it touches anything. A wire runs the length of the blade to the player's glove, up through his sleeve and out the back of his jacket to a scoring device. The electric impulse causes a buzzer to buzz, and a light to flash for the fencer who scores a touch.
The foil is a lightweight,flexible
sword with a rectangular cross section.
The target area in foil play is limited to the torso. Touches made on the arms, legs or head do not count.
In foil play, before scoring a touch the attacker should extend his sword arm toward his opponent as a signal of attack; then he is granted "right of way." This means that both players cannot begin an attack lunge at the same time. An attacked person must first parry the attacker's lunge before he may gain right of way for his own counterattack.
Five touches constitute a match.
The saber is used for slashing as well as penetrating. The cross section of a saber is T-shaped, and it is a little heavier sword than a foil.
The target area in saber play includes all of the body above the waist. It is not necessary to determine right of way before scoring a touch.
Five touches also determine a winner in saber play.
Mr. Lantad said tall fencers usually are better at epee, and short, quick men are usually better at foil.
"But there are exceptions," he said. "It really depends upon the individual player."
Coach Bill Easton's track men will be going into the 1959 Kansas Relays with record holders in four events.
Track Men Start Relays With Four Record Holders
Charles Tidwell, Independence sophomore, shares the Big Eight record for the 60-yard dash at :60.1 and the 60-yard low hurdles at :66.7. These are also national records.
Cliff Cushman, Grand Forks, N.D. sophomore, holds the record for the 1,000- yard run with a time of 2:11.6.
The foursome of Tidwell, Bob Covey, Cushman and Bob Lida hold the record in the mile relay with 3:18.7. Both Cushman's record and the mile relay mark were set in the Big Eight Indoor at Kansas City.
The Javhawker team lost a number of Relay record-holders last year, including Don Greenlee, Dale Lubs and Jerry McNeal in the four-mile relay and Al Oerter in the discus and shot put.
In spite of this, however, Coach Easton says the team this year has more depth than it has for some time.
More Denth Seen
The impressive list of past records which have been set by Kansas men and the possibility of some upcoming stars have put Easton in an optimistic frame of mind.
Other returning aces include Ernie Shelby, Los Angeles senior, who missed the world's broad-jump record by less than a foot at the Texas Relays last year.
Bill Alley, a transfer student from Syracuse, N.Y., with a past recore of 246 feet-plus, will be throwing the javelin along with John Book, Kansas City, Kan., junior, the defending Big Eight champion with a record of 215-feet $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch, and Jim Londerholm, Mission senior.
Tillman 120 Ace
Bill Tillman, Clay Center senior, will be the returning ace in the 120-yard high hurdles. Tillman has been a hurdle place winner in the Big Eight for the last three seasons.
Joining these aces will be a sophomore trio of Paul Williams, Cleveland, Ohio; Bob Okerstrom, Mason City, Iowa, and Darwin Ashbaugh, Ellis.
Williams ran the 100-yard dash in :09.4 in military service and set a new conference freshman record of :09.5 last year.
Last May he set a new national freshman record of :20.5 in the 220 and shared first place in the freshman 60 at :60.3. Williams will also participate in the broad jump.
Okerstrom, a 6-5, 200-pounder.
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won the freshman indoor high hurdles last winter with a time of .07.6. This past season he won the same event indoors at .07.0.
Promising quartermilers are Bob Lida and Bob Covey. Lida, Prairie Village senior, holds the school record of 49.5 which he established at the Big Eight Indoor meet.
Covey Freshman Star
Covey, Ames, Ia., sophomore, won both league freshman titles last year at :50.4 and :48.4, then ran ninth in the NAAU field in :47.8.
Other probable placers are: Bill Drer, shot; Jack Stevens, pault vault; jerry Foos, discus; Paul Williams, sprints, and Bob Cannon, outdoor high jump monarch.
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KU's Indoor Title May Be Clue to Team's Meet Finish
By Larry Hazelrigg
The KU outdoor track squad should place high in the Kansas Relays and the NCAA meet if the record of the indoor squad is any indication of things to come.
The Jayhawkers climaxed the indoor season by winning the Big Eight Indoor Meet in Kansas City Feb.27. It was the 23rd consecutive title in cross country, indoor and outdoor track or KU.
The squad began the season by defeating Oklahoma, 60-52. Ernie Shelby won the bread jump with $25' 34''$ in his only indoor meet of the year. An injury forced him to lay out of all but one of the remaining meets.
Bill Tillman tied the meet record for the 60- yard high hurdles with a .075 clocking.
Michigan Was Surprise
Dan Ralsten won the two-mile run in 9:13.5, the second fastest time ever recorded by a sophomore in the Big Eight conference. Wes Santee ran the event in 9:07.2 in a dual meet with Oklahoma in 1951.
The Michigan State Relays. Feb. 7, produced some pleasant surprises as the Jayhawkers finished high in the unofficial team standings.
The KU mile relay team of Bob Lida, Clif Cushman, Paul Rearick and Bob Tague also won in a record time of 3:18.8.
First Triangular Was Easy
The Jayhawkers overpowered Oklahoma State and Kansas State Feb. 14 in the first triangular meet ever held in Allen Field House. The scoring was $73^{\frac{1}{2}}$ for KU, $40^{\frac{1}{2}}$ for Oklahoma State and $37^{\frac{1}{2}}$ for Kansas State.
Charlie Tidwell provided the big thrills as he equaled two American records, in the 60-yard dash and the 60-yard low hurdles.
Tidwell ran the dash in :06.0 to equal his own record and tie the field house mark, and clocked :06.7 in the hurdles to tie the national record set by Nebraska's Keith Gardner, who graduated last year.
Bob Okerstrom won the 60-yard high hurdles
in : 07.4 and Lida won the 440-yard dash with
50.0 to set other field house records.
The Jayhawkers invaded Tigerland at Columbia, Mo., Feb. 20 and won 77-42.
Tigers Were Tamed
Bob Cannon set a meet record of 6' $ 6 \frac {1}{2} $ in the high jump. Tidwell defeated his old rival Henry Wiebe in both the 60-yard low hurdles and the 60-yard dash.
Shelby got back into competition, but placed only second in the broad jump behind sophomore Darwin Ashbaugh.
The Javhawkers entered the Big Eight Indoor Meet with a team Coach Bill Easton described as being in "only fair shape." But the squad captured nine of the 14 events, set two meet records and equaled two others.
Tidwell Was in Usual Form
Clif Cushman won the 1.000-yard run in 2:11.6 to break the meet record he had set the previous night in the preliminaries.
Tidwell equaled records with a :60.1 in the 60-yard dash and :60.7 in the 60-yard low hurdles. The latter time also equaled the American record.
The fourth meet record was set by the mile relay team of Tidwell, Bob Covey, Cushman and Lida, who won in 3:18.7.
Page 7
Tillman surprised the crowd with a :07.4 victory in the 60-vard high hurdles.
Bob Tague was the only defending champion to repeat, as he won the 880-yard run in 1:53.1.
Other Big Eight champions from KU were Ashbaugh in the broad jump. Lida in the 440-yard dash, and Cannon in the high jump.
Tom Skutka finished second in both the 880-yard run and the mile.
Other consistent performers for the squad were Billy Mills and Brian Travis, distances; Bill Dryer, shot, and Paul Williams, sprints and broad jump.
University Daily Kansan
Covey missed all but two meets of the season and distance man Barry Crawford was out for all the indoor season. Verne Gauby was out with a groin injury.
Friday. April 17, 1959
Sluggers Pace IM Softball
The intramural softball sluggers turned out yesterday and three teams scored in the double figures.
In the independent A division the Splinters, with the help of a nine-run-inning, defeated the Solttes 14-6. The Hicks took the lead from Jollife with six runs in the first inning and then coasted to a 10-3 victory. The other independent A game Stephenson came from behind with three runs in the last inning to down Battenfield 3-2.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon of the fraternity B division came from behind and scored four runs in the third inning and went on to beat Kappa Sigma 5-3. Beta Theta Pi pieded Phi Kappa Psi 8-7 in the only other fraternity B game, K.H.K. clobbered the Empire Club 16-7 in the only independent B game of the day.
MONDAY'S SOFTBALL
SCHEDULE
Fraternity A
Sigma Alpha Fpsilon vs. Sigma
Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu.
Delta Tau Delta vs. Delta Upsilon, Delta Sigma Pi vs. Pi Kappa Alpha, Theta Chi vs. Phi Kappa Sigma, Alpha Tau Omega vs. Beta Theta Pi II, Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Nu.
Fraternity B
Ernie Shelby holds the NAAU broad jump mark of 25' 10½". His best jump was 26' 6" against the Russians last summer at Moscow.
Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
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AL LAUTER
Cushman All-Around Star But Best in Mid-Distance
Possibly the most versatile runner in Kansas history. Cushman has handled every event from the 220 low hurdles to the mile.
Clif ran second in the 440 in last year's KU Relays behind Kansas State's Gene O'Connor, Cushman reversed the defeat, taking first in front of O'Connor in the Drake Relays a short time later.
He seems to be best in the intermediate hurdles as he has a record from the Kansas Relays and from the Drake Relays in the event plus 3rd in the 1958 NAAU and 2nd and 6th in the 1959 NAAU.
The lanky senior holds the Big Eight record for the 1,000-yard run with a 2:11.6 time.
Bermuda welcomed a record number of 68,374 visitors during the first half of 1958. a 7.7 per cent increase over the first six months.
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Welcome Visitors!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT
Extends A Hearty And Cordial Welcome To Every High School, Junior College. College And University Competitor Who Will Visit Our Campus This Weekend
KU
To the 34th Kansas Relays
THE HIGHWAYS
ARTHUR C. "DUTCH" LONBORG UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Director of Athletics
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1959
Radio Programs KUOK
Tonight
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Mainstreet Melodies—Cliff
Tatham
8:05 Dave Holman Show
9:05 The Big Beat—Harold Hollis
10:05 Moonglow—Bob Smith
12:00 Sign Off
Tomorrow
9:00 Sign On and News
9:15 The Saturday Hilltop Show with Gayle Askren
12:00 News
12:05 The Mike Fitzwater Show
1:00 Classics Time with J. E. B. Sharp
3:45 News
4:00 Sign Off
Sunday
1:00 Sign On and Mainstreet Melodies with Cliff Tatham
3:00 The Flip-side Story with Bob Lynn
5:00 The John Patton Show
7:00 The Jim Brooks Show
9:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Violin Sonata No. 1 in G Major" by Brahms
7:00 Music From Mount Oread—University A Cappella Choir
7:30 Keyboard Concert (Organ): "La Nativite du Seigneur" by Messiaen
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air—Our American Music
9:00 Opera to My Hero—Excelses from Leoncavallo's "I Pagliacci"
10:05 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "String Quartet No. 2 in D-dflat major" by Dohnanyi
11:00 Sign Off
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU,
MC
Faculty Members Attend Convention
Six faculty members in the department of sociology and anthropology are in Lincoln, Neb., this weekend attending a convention of the Midwest Sociological Society.
Attending the conference are Carroll D. Clark and Marston M. McCluggage, professors; E. Jackson Baur and E. Gordon Erickson, associate professors; Ray P. Cuzzort, assistant professor, and John Giele, instructor.
Prof. Ericksen will be chairman of the section on Urban Problems and Ecology. Prof. Cuzzort will present a critique of two research papers.
James Schellenberg, graduate student in the department, will present a paper, "Homogamy in Personal Values and the 'Field of Elibibles'" before the section on Family and Marriage.
You Can't Go Home Again
CARLISLE, England — (UPI) Mrs. Ellen Burrows, 78, boarded a train to say good-bye to her brother and traveled 600 miles before she got home again.
"I couldn't get off because of people jamming the corridors," she said. ___
The word "Christian" was first applied to the followers of Jesus Christ in Antioch, Turkey, site of St. Paul's first ministry.
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Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Jeep Logs Miles in Studying Easter Island Statues
During the course of five months, the Thor Heyerdahl expedition put 9,000 miles on the speedometer of a brand-new jeep, helping study the famous Easter Island statues, Carlyle S. Smith, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, said at a SUA forum Thursday.
This record is unusual when it
Rare Dishes For Dinner
Tickets are on sale at the concession stand in the Kansas Union and at the information booth in front of Flint Hall. Tickets will not be sold at the door.
National dishes from 30 countries will be served buffet style at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Tickts for the dinner, which is sponsored by the University of Kansas International Club, are $1.75.
Some of the dishes on the menu include, Austrian Wiener schnitzel, English trifle, Finnish whipping porridge, Guatemalan lengua a la vina-greta, Indian kheara ka raita, Iranian shole-zard, and Greek monsaka.
Sociology Scholarship Given Pratt Student
The $50 Hilden Gibson honorarium for 1959-60 has been awarded to Jeffrey Hadden, Pratt graduate student in sociology.
Hadden, now working on an M.A. degree, will be research assistant to Dr. E. Gordon Ericksen, associate professor of sociology, on a West Indies population study next fall.
The Name's The Same
BATON ROUGE, La. — (UPI) — What's in a name? Well, police arrested James Swindle of Greenwood, Miss., on charges of stealing $70 from a service station. Now they are looking for John J. Crook of Bunkie, La., accused of passing a bad $68 check.
is remembered that Easter Island is 14 miles long and 10 miles wide.
"Constant and proper diplomatic relations with the people, priests, and government kept the four expedition archeologists pretty busy." Prof. Smith explained.
The expedition was the first "modern" archeological expedition to go to Easter Island, he said.
"We made it our goal to dispel the mysteries that had surrounded the island's statues and to study the civilizations on other islands in the Pacific," he said.
"For instance, the pictures of the statues before we came were only of the heads sticking out of the ground. The bodies of the statues were buried in the ground," he explained.
The statues were hammered and chipped in a prone position from
Charity Begins at Home
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI)— R. G. Alexander paid up without argument when his wife's unlicensed dog was picked up by the dog catcher. Alexander is the master of the city pound.
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to knock over another tribe's statues" he said.
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"It looks like a piece of Western Kansas grassland abandoned in the Pacific." Prof. Smith said.
of ancestor worship and were to be placed on stone foundations beside the sea, Prof. Smith sgid.
a quarry with stone chisels. The expedition put a crew of wood-carvers to work hacking out a statue. After a week of chipping stone, the expedition concluded it must have taken a year to hammer the smaller statues out of the hard stone.
After the statues had been freed from the quarry, they were dragged down the hill and placed upright in holes to finish shaping their backs. It took 180 men on ropes to move a 9-foot statue.
"The work was stopped for some reason, and the holes around the statues were filled with dirt by erosion until only the heads remained above the ground," he explained.
The statues were representative
Prof. Smith said many of the toppled statues on the island were pushed over during inter-tribal warfare.
"It was considered great short
The expedition spent from eight hours to a month on some of the other islands in the area. They also spent a week-long vacation in Tabiti, Prof. Smith said.
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---
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 17, 1959
A
NEW TYPE HOUSE—The above replica of a primitive hut is a model designed by Dwight
Teter, Shawnee junior, for a design class. The model is on display in the Kansas Union cafeteria.
Relays visitors who eat in the Kansas Union cafeteria this weekend will probably see the ancestral images of the homes they live in today.
Primitive Housing on Display in Cafeteria
On display will be models of dwellings used by primitive peoples in all parts of the world Featured are huts, cliff dwellings, tents and grass shacks.
The work is a class project of design students in the department of architecture. C. Ross Anderson, visiting assistant professor of architecture, and John See, instructor of architecture, were in charge.
"The purpose of the problem was to investigate a variety of these dwellings types and to present the results of the study with a model, drawings, and a brief explanatory text."
"These structures differed according to environment, customs and technology.
"At various periods in the development of civilization, man has been sheltered in one sort or another of primitive structure." Mr. Anderson explained.
allowed one and one-half weeks to do the research and complete the projects.
Students used library references for a guide in their work. They were
The display in the cafeteria is not an official part of the Engineering Exposition, but is related to the work of the engineers.
Rochester, N. Y., claims to be the The weather bureau recorded world's leading producer of mail 1.056 tornadoes in Texas from 1916 chutes. through the first half of 1957.
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Stanford Darwin Researcher To Give Series of Talks
Dr William Irvine of Stanford University, the coming week's humanities lecturer, will arrive Sunday for three days of speeches, lectures, and dinners.
Dr. Irvine will speak at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater on "Darwin and Literature." His talk will be in conjunction with the year-long Darwin-Linnaeus celebration at the University.
Dr. Irvine has done research on Darwin, Thomas Huxley, and Shaw He is the author of "Apes Angels and Victorians," and "The Universe of George Bernard Shaw."
During his three-day visit Dr. Irvine will speak to classes in political science, humanities, drama, English, and journalism. He will stay in the University guest house during his visit.
The Tuesday night lecture and two other meetings will be open to the public. At 4 p.m. Monday, Dr. Irvine will speak on "G. B. Shaw's Women" at a coffee hour in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union.
At 1 p.m. Wednesday, he will speak on 'The Writing of Biography' at the Feature Writting class in 216 Flint.
Dr. Irvine's lecture topic, "Darwin and Literature," was selected to
Police to Work Both Shifts
Both day and night shifts of the campus police will be on duty during the Relays weekend, Willard Anderson, acting chief of police, said today.
Chief Anderson said there will be no extra guards on the Exposition displays, but the area will be patrolled periodically.
"There will be no special guards because there are not enough men," he said.
Chief Anderson said the two shifts will direct traffic on campus and at the stadium and parade.
"The Lawrence police will be on duty for the parade, but no other arrangements have been made with them," he said.
Chief Anderson advised drivers to be particularly cautious over the weekend because of the additional traffic on campus.
103
Louise Tomlinson Kappa Kappa Gamma Having a look at the many clever new accessories-sunglasses, Italian flats, straw purses, etc. at the
Truck
ROBERT MINNESOTA COACH HOUSE
Page 11
Plaza K. C.
Brookside K. C.
Blue Ridge KU Campus K.C. Lawrence
His schedule:
Monday—8 a.m., Political Science 161, Strong E, room I. "G. B. Shaw's Political Ideas"; 10 a.m., Humanities 52, Fraser 206, "Dostoyevski"; 11 a.m., Speech 150, Music and Drama 341, "Shaw's Works and His Influence"; and 4 p.m., SUA Coffee, Tro-
correspond to the Darwin-Linnaeus celebration this year.
Tuesday—9 a.m., English 189, Fraser 213, "Nineteenth Century Criticism"; and 8 p.m., Humanities Lecture.
phy Room, Kansas Union, "G. B Shaw's Women."
William Irvine
Wednesday - 10 a.m. English 195 and 191, Fraser 213, "Shaw's Plays and Politics"; 1 p.m. Journalism 160, Flint 216, "The Writing of Biography"; 4 p.m. discussion with Western Civilization proctors and instructors, Parlor A, Kansas Union, "Brave New World" Compared with 1984" and 7.15 p.m. English 308, Watson 415, "Browning."
David Vieth, associate professor of English, at yesterday's Poetry Hour read the poetry of a man he called "one of the most colorful rakes that flourished at the court of Charles II."
Prof. Vieth, who is considered an authority on the poet, John Wilmont, Earl of Rochester, said;
Reading Features 'Colorful Rake'
"I think you can like Rochester's poetry. Good as his songs are, his real achievement is in satire.
"Rochester is considered second only to Dryden in the Restoration period He also has the reputation of being the most obscene poet in English history." Prof. Vieth remarked.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
Foley Elected Statistician
Frank C. Foley, professor of geology and director of the State Geological Survey, has been elected statistician of the Assn. of American State Geologists.
Young mountain lions shed their spotted coats when they are about six months old.
2 Engineering Awards Given
Two engineering students have been awarded scholarships for the current school year. Robert Blakely, Kansas City, Mo., senior, received the Bendix Aviation Corp. honors scholarship, worth $206. David Kohlman, Lamoni, Iowa, senior, received the Danny Taylor Memorial award.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
Humanities Gain Strength on Campus
While rockets whiz through the air, submarines set new records for under-ice stays, and the entire field of science grows larger and more complex daily, a group of University of Kansas professors is making sure interest in the humanities does not die—at least in the midwest.
The Humanities Forum, a year old last month, was created specifically for the exchange of information and views concerning research and developments in the fields of the humanities.
George Kreye, associate professor of German and chairman of the forum, said the group was one of a very few interested exclusively in the humanities.
Humanities develop an understanding, appreciation and enjoyment of man's nature and accomplishments in the past and present.
Membership in the forum is limited to full time faculty members, instructors and their friends. One paper is read at each meeting.
Prof. Kreye said that although the papers were of high quality the average reader would be able to easily understand them.
"We try to send these papers to some of the members before the meetings so they will be especially prepared to criticize them," Prof. Kreve said.
The forum got its start when the Humanities Committee, under the
direction of Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, appointed a subcommittee to determine if faculty members would be interested.
William Gilbert, associate professor of history, Milton Steinhardt, associate professor of music history and literature, and Prof. Kreye were on the subcommittee.
Cards were circulated among the faculty asking if they would be interested in such a forum.
"Response to the inquiry was wonderful. It was amazing to see how interested the University was in the forum," Prof. Kreye said.
"The Humanities Forum fills two roles," he continued. "It provides a place for professors to read research papers to a critical public, and it helps to further research in the humanities."
Some of the papers which have been presented are:
"Is Shakespeare Baroque?" presented by Darnell Roaten, assistant professor of romance languages; "The Character—types of Myth" presented by Arvid Schulenberger, associate professor of English; "The New York World, The Culmination of the Mass Press," presented by Calder M. Pickett, assistant professor of journalism; "The Case of Metaphysics," presented by Peter J. Caws, assistant professor of philosophy.
OUTDOOR MOVIE TIME!
PERFECT FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT!
the keeper of the entomology department storeroom gave up the position of college dean to do the work he liked better.
Charles L. Shepard, known as "Shep" by his associates, relinquished his job as instructor and Dean at Miles College, Birmingham, Ala., for a job which he enjoys doing.
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DAVID LADD·CHILL WILLS REX REASON
He hopes to do research work when the new wing of Snow Hall is completed.
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co-starring CHRISTIANE MARTEL
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In the storeroom at Snow Hall, Mr. Shepard is in charge of the insect specimens for laboratory work. He is also in charge of chemicals and glassware, and prepares the equipment for laboratory quizzes.
"Ive liked entomology all my life—all the way through. When I took biology, I knew this was my field," he said.
Mr. Shepard was graduated in 1933 from KU with a bachelor of arts degree in zoology. He completed work for his master's degree in entomology in 1939.
"Now that I'm in this work, I don't think I'll ever go back to teaching," he said.
He enjoys anything out-of-doors and "anything to do with nature."
Novel by James Gunn Published in German
James E. Gunn, administrative assistant for University relations, has received a German paper-back edition of his science fiction novel, "This Fortress World."
At the beginning of World War II after he was graduated, he was classified as "too valuable for service" and was sent into teaching as a part of civilian defense.
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Heat-flames or sparks from other than electrical equipment account for 11 per cent of all the fires in the U. S.
The book, "Von Mauern umgeben," is the first foreign language translation of a novel by Gunn. His science fiction short stories have been published in Australia, Latin America, Italy, Germany, and England.
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Friday. April 17. 1959
University Daily Kansan
---
Page 13
Footwear Has Many Styles
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Season Fit for Raincoats
Open-heel, closed-toe shoes are
Closed-toe and heel pumps are expected to be spring favorites because of the "lady-like look" resulting from this year's feminine fashions with defined waistlines, Empire-accented bosoms, curvy coats and provocative suits with short jackets and hippy skirts.
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Nearly all come in one of those ubiquitous tans which are associated with raincoats; shade and sheen, however, vary considerably.
These raincoats are water repellent, but not water proof. Popular fabrics include Dacron, Orlon and Dynel, which do not absorb water Nylon and acetate are also good.
Weaves of the poplin, oxford, and sateen types help to repel water. The tailoring also affects the rain penetration resistance.
A new feature in the raincoat field are wool jersey raincoats for women which are supposed to be good year round.
Plastic coated fabrics and plastic film coatse are waterproof, but may
Of course, the umbrella is a rain item that should not be overlooked. They come in all styles, colors, patterns, and are relatively easy to carry.
make the wearer uncomfortable because they do not allow water vapor to pass through. Their chief advantage is that they pack easily into a brief case or glove compartment and cost less than a good umbrella.
also expected to be popular this season. Strap shoes will be in the limelight, with new and graceful leather straps that curve around insteps and ankles.
The Long Island Railroad has started an umbrella loan program with umbrellas available at transfer stations. The system is to work on the honor basis—borrow and return.
Whatever your choice of rainwear, don't let it get too far back in the closet as you'll probably be needing it before April showers are over.
Footwear for late-day and dinner clothes, are closed but festive. Silk ribbon ties and bows for that important touch of femininity are also in on the wave of lady-like fashion.
LOOK THEY GAVE
Imagination in colors this year offers unlimited choices. A favorite color is pink geranium along with lighter and brighter blues, and beiges which range from a pale palomino to bright, rich brown. Black patent leather is as popular as ever. The country colors offer a wide choice of greens—from leaf-green to foliage-green.
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Smooth fashion surfaces will appear again in leather such as kid-skin, bright luster leather and shadow-calf.
Shoe texture will vary as much as the colors. The season's dark horse is bone-white, often in combination with shiny black. Dyable silk and linen will be back, and silky suede will join in.
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
Red Rose Has Popularity
The red rose is the most popular flower in Lawrence, with the carnation running a close second on the best-seller list.
Dwight Regnier. Regnier's Flower Box, says, "Lawrence is known as a 'rose town' because of KU."
Homer D. Allison, Allison-Thomas Flower Shop, said, "Boys are our biggest buyers and red roses are probably our best sellers."
Jim Owens, Owens Flower Shop,
said, "Red roses are popular, but
roses don't last too well. Most
florists don't grow roses around
here. They are grown mostly by
people who specialize in them and
have two or three acres of plants."
Cut flowers and plants are the best-sellers and are usually sold by seasons and occasions. Some of the favorites include Easter lilies, poinsettias, chrysanthemums, azaleas, cyclamen and hydrangeas.
"Flowers are usually sold by the dozen and range in price from $1.25-$5.00." said Mr. Owens.
Spring favorites include jonquils, tulips, snapdragons, stock, sweet peas, iris, and daisies.
Spring shrubs and flowering trees grown in this area are redbud, magnolia, lilacs, forsythia, privet and honey suckle bush. Evergreens
Pinnings
Whitacre-Oberg
Pi Beta Phi sorority announces the pinning of Karen Whitacre, Elmhurst, Ill., junior, to Bruce Oberg, Villa Fack, Ill., soonmore.
Mr. Oberg is a member of Ph Gamma Delta fraternity.
Dempsey-Dewey
Corbin-North Hall announces the pinning of Donna Dempsey, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, to Dwain Dewey, Prairie Village sophomore. Mr. Dewey is secretary of Ph Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Olson-Allison
Gamma Phi Beta sorority has announced the pinning of Ruth Olson, Wichita, to Bob Allison, Lawrence, a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Both are seniors.
Cutting-Currv
Chi Omega sorority has announced the pinning of Joyce Cutting, Ottawa junior, to Jim Curry, Ottawa.
Mr. Curry is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and a 1957 KU graduate.
Wilson Victor Kramers Imperial's RACKET RESTRINGING
Headquarters for University teams for over 20 years. Check our prices before you buy new or restring your old racket.
Ober's
Ober's
821 Mass.
VI 3-1951
which sell best are pine, juniper and vew.
Summer best sellers are gladioli. peonies and green tropical plants.
Florists sell many bedding plants which are used in flower boxes—petunias, ageratum, lantana, marigold, geranium, periwinkle and verbena.
Popular corsage flowers include orchids, sweetheart roses (yellow, red, pink, white), and gardenias.
Mr. Allison said, "Florists are the second largest users of air transport. Most flowers are flown from the coast at night and we get them the next day."
... On The Hill ...
Corbin-North Hall
Corbin-North Hall has elected house manager and treasury committees for the spring semester.
Members of the house manager committee are Sara Ayres, Pratt, chairman; Patricia Flynn and Janice Pilley, both of Prairie Village; Judith Beymer, Iakin; Sally Latinis, Wichita.
Sue Church, Atchinson; Delores Dummermuth, Waterville; Rita Harris, Wellington; Brenda Morris Caney; Nancy Copeland, St. John and Norma Kelly, Kansas City, Kar
Members of the treasury committee are Sharon Gale, Grand Junction, Colo., chairman; Virginia Kane, Stafford; Juliana Ragland, Kansas City, Mo.; Martha Beacqua, Merriam; Ann Morgenstern, Salina; Mary Harris, Independence, Mo.
Martha Abel, Clay Center; Barbarabara Wilmeth, Mission; BarbaraWade, Mayfield; JoAnn Adams, FtLeavenworth; Brenda Nordruff, Wayne, N. J., and Kay Johnson, Mitchell, S. D. All are freshmen.
Pastor T. A. Weinhold, Kansas City, Mo., will be the guest speaker at the regular Gamma Delta, Missouri Synod Lutheran Student Organization, meeting Sunday.
Gamma Delta to Hear Weinhold Sunday
Pastor Weinhold will show slides and speak about his recent trip to the Holy Land. The talk will be at 6:30 p.m. at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont.
Alpha Chi Omega
Virginia Baker, Wichita junior, has been elected president of Alpha Chi Omega sorority for next year. Other new officers are Contsance Andrews, Phillipsburg sophomore, vice-president; Judyth Burnside, Garden City junior, second vice-president; Nancy Swartz, Fredonia junior, assistant vice-president.
Alice Forssberg, Logan junior, treasurer; Jane Goodnow, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, assistant treasurer; Jackie Johnson, Hutchinson junior, rush chairman; Mary Beth Hornback, Parsons sophomore, assistant rush chairman; Sharon Moriarty, Kansas City, Mo., junior, scholarship chairman.
Sara Carnahan, Topeka junior, recording secretary; Shirley Miller, Garden City junior, corresponding secretary; Jaqueline White, Ottawa sophomore, social chairman; Melissa Gerber, Leavenworth sophomore, assistant social chairman.
Sally Shultz, Kansas City, Kan.
junior, warden; Marcia Moran.
Prairie Village junior, assistant
warden; Barbara Lesher, Wichita
sophomore, house manager; Patricia
Easton, Kansas Ctiy, Mo., sophomore,
assistant house manager;
Cecily Johns, Wichita sophomore,
activities chairman.
Dorothy Cox, Kansas City, Mo.
juniar, song leader; Carol Duncan.
Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, historian; Judy Rieder, Kansas City,
Mo., sophomore, chaplain; Rosa Lind, Lawrence sophomore, Lyre and publicity editor, and Susan Sandifer, Wichita sophomore, intramural chairman.
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
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Layaway Now for Graduation
Gustafson
809 Mass.
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
VI3-5432
April 17 and 18
TONIGHT AND SATURDAY
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TEE-PEE
In North Lawrence
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Friday. April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansar
Page 15
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.
FOR SALE
JUKEBOX RECORDS, 55 cents each or three for $1.00. Rowlands Book Store, 1241 Oread. 4-24
CALIFORNIA BOUND minneograph. English airmail paper, U.S. plateblocks automobile overhaul tools. Jensen high fidelity speaker. Karlson enclosure, case flash bulbs, firm double bed, couch camera, toaster. Call VI 3-9869, evenings
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift. 2-tone
green. Original owner. 20,700 miles, excellent
condition. VI 3-5287 after 4 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
DAFFFILDS. 25 cents a bunch, no de-
cisions. Seller name: Sallazel 1742
nard; Card VI 3-2378. 4-22
1950 FORD CUSTOM V-8. excellent interior, tubeless tires with less than 500 miles, good, clean engine Best offer taken. Call Jerry at VI 3-116. 4-23
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, and diagrams not found in the material; not good study notes; complete index; no references. Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio
MODERN TRAILER HOME, fenced yard,
nice size storage house, all equipped,
ready to move into, $350.00. Ideal for
medical student, within walking distance
of KU Medical Center. Call VI 3-
3626 after 5 p.m.
4-22
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-2
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
1955 CHEVROLET Six. standard transmission, beater. $750-$850. 1949 Chevrolet Six with '52 motor, standard transmissio-
n, beater. $300, tires, and battery.
$250-$300. Available by Hudson Super Six. $75. Call Woody at VI 3)-$802. 4-21
IS YOUR ORGANIZATION looking for an annex? We have a lovely furnished room at home to camp to campus. Can you陪伴我到见. Cain Realty 4-18 e9th, 9T 3-8316.
1955 OLDSMOBILE, holiday hardtop,
two-tone blue. Call VI 3-3823 after 5:30
p.m.
HELP WANTED
WANTED: MARRIED STUDENTS to sell life and personal health insurance. Salary plus quarterly bonus. If interested, please complete application to insurance Co., 216 Huron Building, Kansas City, Kansas, for further information or appointment. 4-20
WANTED: Babysitter, in our home, three to four days a week. Call IY 3-8443 4-20
TELEPHONE CALLERS to work in your home or our office. Call VI 3-6170. 4-21
WANTED: young woman, not over thirty,
for interesting work contacting public.
Job duties include working for 5-10
years. Some typing required, also sales
ability. Good working conditions, pay,
employee benefits. Contact Manager
of Southwestern Bell Telephone Corp.
344
Vermont C-4-22
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious nicely furnished. garbage disposal, bath heat and gas furnished. linen furnished to accept graduate students. Call VI tt 7677
ROOMS FOR UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN:
Complete kitchen and laundry facility. Girls' gymnasium. 1½ block from Junior Make arrangements for summer and fall. Phi. VI 3-6723
APT. FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Also large single rooms for boys. No drinkings allowed. West side south of campus, 1616 Indiana 4-17
APARTMENT FOR RENT, three room,
turned, for men or couple. See at 919
Indiana before 10 am or after 5 a.m.
and all day Saturday. Sundays.
4-23
GOOD LUCK! KU
RELAYS FANS: While you're downtown for the RELAYS PARADE stop in THE BOOK NOOK for the latest fiction and non-fiction, best sellers, many more!
8EVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies plant. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI. 0350
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: NAVY UNIFORM, service dress knikh (tropical worsed), size 40-42 in reasonably good condition. Call VI 3-
1016. 4-20
THE BOOK NOOK
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt
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
images, stages, and accessories
for all purposes. Complete lists of 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,
baskets, toys, toys, toys, toys, toys,
blankets, etc., Everything in the pet
field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone
VI 3-2921. Welcome.
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
conard, call VI 3-5263. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith
9411 Myles. Phi Vt 3-5263
"Best Music in Town"
AT THE PIT
VI 3-1044
TGIF
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadl Motors, 318 East 17. Phone VI 3-4850.
4-24
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Massachusetts
Jerry Taylor's
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
HEY GANG!
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood, VI 3-1893 7160 Tenn. ff.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers. Barber Shop 720 Massachusetts Barber Shop 720 Massachusetts
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
One way and local, ready to go anywhere. We can keep the observations now being accepted.
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to all kinds of typing; thesis, term papers, etc.; experienced typist. Call VI 3-6249. 4-17
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
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
SEWING AND ALTERATIONS, men's clothing a speciality. Will replace pockets or half pockets on men's trousers. 1220 Louisiana, call VI 3-4800. 4-22
TYPING_OF_TERM_PAPERS, reports theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. ff
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10211's Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc For men and women, by professional or店 for customers available for limited time. VI 3-2132. **tf**
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term panners reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates years experience. Announcement, course work. Chi. VI 3-1240 Mrs John L. Glinka 1911 Tennessee ff
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1711, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. ff
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretary experience. Phone VI 3-7894. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a your student-faculty rate. Call VI 0124.
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST, electric type-writer, error free, immediate service on term papers, these, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs Tom Brady, VI 3-3428.
Grease Job $1
Brake Adj. 98c
821 Mass.
Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt oil free with oil & filter change
PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt.
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34th KANSAS RELAYS
Capture the spirit of this weekend
- the 1959 RELAYS PARADE
* the K.U. TRACK WINS
* the RELAYS DANCE
ON FILM
Ober's
VI 3-1951
with hand-sewn seams for foot-hugging fit and strong long wear
ALL TYPES and SIZES B/W and COLOR FLASHBULBS
Before the parade starts, stock up on film at the CAMERA CENTER
Fast Film Service
IT costs so little to remember this weekend when you stop at the
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass. VI 3-9471 Next to the Varsity Theatre
Page 16
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
Lack of Work Forces Exposition Queen Out
The president of the Engineering Council said last night that the Council decided not to elect an Exposition Queen this year because of a lack of work for her.
Ronald W. Bonjour, Lenexa senior, stated that earlier the Council had decided to discontinue an annual dance held during the Exposition weekend.
"Without a dance to show the Engineering Queen off, the Council members also voted to do without a queen." Ponjour said.
One member of the Engineering Council, Duane DeWetff, Ellinwood senior, voiced his loyalty to tradition.
"I really don't know why we didn't choose a queen this year but now I wish we had. The Engineering Council chose not to elect a queen for no reason." DeWerif said.
spent in past years for planning and making arrangements for the queen saved us a great deal of time this year.
"We also felt that the campus could easily do without one more beauty contest since there are already so many in existence. We wouldn't hurt anyone's feelings by not having a contest," Bonjour concluded.
The Engineering Council asked the co-Relays queens to assist at its opening ceremonies.
Oily, Dried Worms Fed to Students
Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., junior and Kansas Relays royalty Carol Earls, University of Missouri sophomore, were to be at the ribbon cutting ceremony at noon today to open the Exposition.
A professor fed worms to his class yesterday.
Earl A. Cross, instructor in entomology, heated a can of agave worms while his Insects and Man class watched a movie. The class had "refreshments" after the movie.
The agave worms, which look something like caterpillars, were dried and cooked. They are oily and something like Fetos.
The worms are nigh in protein and low in calories, Mr. Cross said.
Pep President Elected
Gordon Hofstra, Bonner Springs junior, has been elected president of Pi Epsilon Pi, men's honorary pep fraternity. He will serve until the end of the football season next semester.
FAST FAST FAST FAST FAST
FAST 1 HOUR DRY CLEANING
842 MASS. VI.3-9594
NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR 1 HOUR SERVICE
FASHION
FASHION WEEKLY
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
Inter-Varsity Bibles Bible study, discussion
referections
**rants** for next year must have application in to the Dean of Students by noon
Kenny Kansan
is jumping for joy
at the New Fashions.
Whee!
Watch for the
April 22 Fashion Issue
of the
Daily Kansan
TOMORROW
Kenny Kansan
is jumping for joy
at the New Fashions!
Whee!
Watch for the
April 22 Fashion Issue
of the
Daily Kansan
Go Kansas, Go!
Flower Box
20 East 9th
VI 3-1701
LET'S Play Ball!
Get Equipment
Now
Team Prices
Special on all
Tennis Racquets
Professional Restringing
The Sportsman's Shop
715 Mass.
VI 3-6106
American Chemical Society, 7:30 p.m.
Room 122, Malott Hall, Mr. W. Merie Allen, address: 4907 North Dearborn Street speak on "Initial Measurements of Cosmic Debris of Inter-planetary space."
Official Bulletin
LEONEER
TODAY
Foreign Students: If you need extra Foreign Students' Festival invitations come to the Foreign Student Adviser's office, 228 Strong.
International Club, 6 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom. International Banquet. Exhibits include: $175 a ticket. Purchase at the gate, con-
firmation of payment on the information booth on the campus.
Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the Shoemaker, Experimental Theatret
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. Daily Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Part-time and some full-time work.
Men's residence hall counselor appli-
Cheerleader practices, April 21, 23,
7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson
Gym, Room 101.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Flowers ALWAYS APPROPRIATE
Flowers
... ALWAYS APPROPRIATE
ALWAYS APPRECIATED!
Go Kansas, Go!
Flower Box
20 East 9th VI 3-1701
LET'S Play Ball!
Get Equipment Now
Team Prices
Special on all Tennis Racquets
Professional Restringing
The Sportsman's Shop
715 Mass. VI 3-6106
2.
LET'S Play Ball!
Get Equipment Now
Team Prices
LET'S
LET'S Play Ball!
Get Equipment Now
Team Prices
Special on all
Tennis Racquets
Professional Restringing
The Sportsman's Shop
715 Mass. V13-6106
Tennis Racket
Features
Daily hansan
Society
Friday, April 17, 1959
56th Year, No. 128, SECTION B
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
BETHELAND
RARE VIEW OF JIMMY—Dean Green and paint. Our Russian-racing engineers apparently protege without the customary spring coat of lack some of the rowdy habits of their forebears.
Fine Arts Dean Now Sure KU Is 'Friendly' Campus
By Saundra Hayn
New courses, new majors, new techniques of performance, and a new building are all innovations to the School of Fine Arts.
Perhaps the greatest change was the time when Thomas Gorton became the school's dean.
Nine years ago, Dean Gorton described KU as being "friendly." Today he is more convinced of his first impression than before.
"I think that this campus is friendly to the arts. This makes it possible for them to survive and to thrive," he stated.
Dean Gorton, who is a composer and pianist as well as head of the department of piano, gives one the impression of a sober Santa Claus as he sits smoking a pipe in his office overlooking the new Summerfield Hall.
"This new plant has given us facilities to develop new programs and to increase the effectiveness of the existing ones," Dean Gorton explained.
Changes Made
Dean Gorton listed some changes:
"Students seemed to feel that they
would rather not be segregated but would rather sing in mixed groups, so we discontinued the men's and women's glee clubs."
Now the University Chorus performs bigger works such as Handel's "Messiah" or Mendelssohn's "Eliiah," each year, he said.
"We try to include more liberal arts content in our professional program. I think that a musician should first receive an education. He should get some basic training and, by the time he gets his university degree, be ready for specialized training." Dean Gorton emphasized.
"One of our two new music programs is the high school string clinic which occurs each spring. Also, this year we held our first 'Symposium' for modern American composers." Dean Gorton continued.
The Arts Seek Breadth
Some of the majors offered by the School of Fine Arts since Dean Gorton became head are art history, music history, wind and percussion instruments, viola, trombone, and bassoon.
Plays and Composers When he is not at work, Dean Gorton says that he enjoys playing
The School of Fine Arts is changing to meet the challenge of the times. Perhaps the most general difference in the school is the larger amount of liberal arts courses required for graduation.
Most of the school's professors agree that there is an ever-increasing need for breadth, even in a professional diet.
In addition to the liberal arts program, several workshops have been added to the school's curriculum. There is now an opera workshop, an oratorio workshop, and a workshop in advanced conducting.
Music majors have an ever-widening choice of fields. History of art, music history, viola, trombone, bassoon, carillon, and harpsichord, are all fields of major study.
the piano and composing. As he mentioned that he has more time for these delights in the summer, he glanced somewhat ruefully toward the baby-grand piano in the corner.
The dean takes Mrs. Gorton and their daughter Judy, a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, on an east coast trip each summer.
"I enjoy deep sea fishing. Besides, our families live there," he explained.
"I think that there is definitely a potential for growth here that is greater than where the arts have been established longer." he mused.
Dean Gorton said he thought that the attitude of the midwestern university toward the arts is very different from that of more traditional eastern schools.
Because he is so busy, it may be burrising to note that Dean Gorton is one of the few deans who signs such degree personally. He is also reputed to be quite an understanding fellow.
"He takes a personal interest in each one of the students and has effected a close relationship among members of the faculty." Charlotte Simon, one of the dean's secretaries said.
An Understanding Fellow
Dean Gorton, who is a past president of the Kansas Music Teachers Asn..has recently been elected president of the National Assn. of Schools of Music.
As an artist, his compositions include, "Piano Concerto," "Symphonny." incidental music to Eugene O'Neill's play, "Marco Millions," "Variations in Fugue for Symphonic Band," and a suite for orchestra, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow."
Before coming to KU, Dean Gorton taught at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester. N.Y., where he received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees in music.
Alumni to See KU Panorama
By Saundra Havn
As a former student or alumus returns to the University there are several items which flood into his mind.
First may come the visual image of KU. A sprawling array of architecture is a good way to describe it. From the northeast, one sees stone buildings with varying shades of red roofing. On warm spring days this panorama seems invitingly fresh with curving sidewalks interrupting large patches of green grass.
The twin towers of Fraser Hall herald the building which was once a proud landmark saluting the surrounding countryside. Now the structure holds sentimental value, but presents problems to students clinging precariously to the winding bannisters during school hours.
Strong Hall looms before most persons as a great sun-drenched desert cathedral. Constructed of yellow stone, the building stretches nearly a city block to provide space enough for classrooms, and business and administration offices.
Campanile Guards Lake
Classes in Strong should be among the more punctual with the World War II Memorial Campanile standing directly behind it, serenading the Kaw valley with the music of time passing. The campanile itself guards heart-shaped Potter Lake and the shrouded grove nearby.
Across a wooded dell is the Kansas Union. This houses the Hawk's Nest and gathering grounds for student organizations. The seniors of 1937 bequeathed, an aluminum awning to doll up the front, and disarrayed the English architecture until it now resembles an army camp wearing a horizontal snorkel.
On the opposite end of the green is Lindley Hall, famous for its blooming trees, and geology majors who claim to be obsessed with the idea that their predecessors created the famous "Rock Chalk" chant.
To the east of Lindley is generally found some project which the architecture students have settling in the ground.
Sprawling southward down the hill from Lindley is the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Inside this rambling tomb of variegated design is the latest equipment for drama productions and musical performances. Here are located the University Theatre and Swarthout Recital Hall.
Wilt Built It
Perhaps the most memorable object on campus is the statue of "Uncle Jimmy" Green. Some citizens actually believe that the kindly-visaged, often multi-colored gentleman whispers stories about the shapely pretties who daily suffer the scrutiny of lawyers seated on the Law School stairs.
Across Naismith Drive is the "house that Wilt built," or Allen Field House. Smudged with ghoul-green lights at night, this largest building on campus often seats as many as 17,000 patrons.
These same students say that "Uncle Jimmy" tells his friends the same thing that the campanile bells proclaim. Others say he has grown philosophical, blessing his metal neighbor's ear with:
"I am not so intent upon getting away from our Kansas roots as I am in realizing that I have grown from them."
Campus Culture Agenda Full of Many Events
The cultural events scheduled each month at KU form staggering loads for those involved.
For example, last month's agenda included:
"Li'l Abner" on the KU Concert Course; the annual Rock Chalk Revue; a faculty recital; the opera, "Carmen"; the St. Louis Symphony; the LaSalle string quartet, and "The Great God Brown."
How does it happen that this midwestern University has become such a cultural plum spot? Many faculty members think it is because KU has an administration that favors and appreciates the arts.
Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre, said he thought that people had always been amazed to find that KU had so many fine cultural events to attend.
"The greatest advantage that we have is a young, active administration which is determined that KU will not get behind. The administration is moving ahead and setting the pace for the rest of the University," he said.
Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama and assistant director of the University Theatre, said he sometimes becomes discouraged because he feels students do not take advantage of the cultural opportunities afforded them.
"I think the administration is vitally interested and I think this is rare," he said.
For the past few years, the music and dramatic arts departments have worked together on technically professional productions such as "The King and I" and "Carmen."
Although it is a common belief that these productions are just "fun to be in," it is recognized by the faculty that they are hard on students.
To be in such productions, a student must sacrifice many of his normal habits and activities to a strict rehearsal schedule.
With the continued help of the administration, the productions will continue to reflect theatrical credit upon the University.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17. 1959
Book Nooks Abound
The large gray stone building on Jayhawk Boulevard known as Watson Library is a central point for the entire KU campus population. There is probably no student who has not entered its doors at least once during his college career.
But little known to the majority of students are the several branch libraries found on campus.
These eight branch libraries house material pertinent to a special field, for example, the law library.
This is the largest of KU's branch libraries, with 07,000 volumes on its shelves. It is located behind the "law barn." Green Hall. The many law students taking advantage of its long hours keep Hazel Anderson, librarian, quite busy.
One of the oldest branches is the engineering library, in 119 Marvin. Reference books and periodicals found in this room provide the latest information in the engineering field. Although the room is large, "it is crowded from morning to evening closing hours, and some people even have to be turned away," says Eva Morrison, librarian.
Malott Hall is the new science library. Its spacious rooms and modern decor offer the student a pleasant place for studying.
High up on the sixth floor of
At first, chemistry, physics, and pharmacy were the only subjects housed in this library, but it has since been expanded to include materials for first-year medical students also. Approximately 40,000 volumes are contained here.
If ever in doubt about the location of a certain point, the library in 318 Lindiev is the place to go.
In 207 Strong, a small, crowded room is the mathematics center for the University. Here are filed the important mathematics journals and reference books. Although the room's small size does not permit a large crowd, mathematics majors make good use of its facilities.
This interesting room contains all types of information pertinent to geology, geography, and engineering, plus innumerable maps of many kinds.
One of the newer branch libraries, the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room and Historical Center in Flint, is a primary source of
information for journalism students. Every Kansas newspaper is filed here, as well as many periodicals.
The books on its shelves are private collections donated by persons interested in journalistic work. Adding to its bright atmosphere are colorful displays placed round the room by librarian Jean McKnight.
A library with recordings instead of books is the music library in 448
Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Scores and recordings are kept in this library to be used by music majors.
Although not on the Lawrence campus, the medical library at the KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., is another branch library of the University.
Here future doctors and nurses do the research necessary to qualify themselves for degrees.
These eight branch libraries are primarily for the use of students majoring in the particular fields represented, but are open to anyone who wishes to take advantage of their specialized information.
P
RIGHT THERE, I THINK—Smiling James Cable, Independence, Mo., senior, the happy librarian, gives little assistance to a bewildered coed—Nancy Stutzman, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Counselors Aid 1st Year Women With Problems
Ever wondered who has the responsibility of "looking after" 700 freshman women away from home for the first time?
This big job is handled by 19 young women who serve as residence hall counselors. At least one undergraduate or graduate assistant is found on every floor of the two freshman dormitories, Certrude Selards Pearson and Corbin-North Hall.
The duties of a student counselor are many and varied. Specifically, they involve assisting individual students with their personal, academic, and social problems and serving as adviser to the corridor group. Each counselor is in charge of approximately 40 girls. She further assists with administrative duties in the residence hall as assigned by the resident director.
"The job entails a lot of responsibilities," agreed Dee Phillips, Abilene senior, who serves as counselor at Gertrude Seilards Pearson. "Actually, as far as assisting the girls with problems, we're trained only to be aware of the problem and send the girl to a trained counselor if the problem is serious. But of course there are many little day-by-day situations that we can help with," she said.
Includes Responsibilities
Women are selected as freshman counselors by applying to the Dean of Women and then going through interviews and personality tests.
Qualifications for counselors include interest in the work, grade average, and leadership ability. The girl must also meet the minimum requirements for junior standing.
Girls from all living groups scholarship halls, sororities, and independents—are chosen.
Job Has Renewals
Although many counselors feel that the job is time-consuming, all agree that it is a wonderful and rewarding experience.
Barbara Boley, Kansas City, Mo.
minor counseling at Corbin-North,
feels that one of the values of her job is "seeing my girls develop and mature, and having a successful and happy college life. I enjoy the work, and wouldn't have missed the experience for anything," she said.
"Getting to know and work with so many fine girls and perhaps be of some assistance in helping them adjust to their first year of college is one of the rewarding features of the work," said Mary Ann Stites, Prairie Village senior, at G.S.P.
"I've learned as much from this experience as I have in my entire college career," said Miss Phillips.
The freshman women, too, enjoy having the counselors in their living group.
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Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
DAVID CROSSON
PLANNING AHEAD—Bernice Harvey, director of the Children's Theatre, considers a Davy Crockett script for possible future production.
Mark Golden Anniversary For School of Education
It was a big year for KU-1909. Marvin Hall was dedicated, Haworth Hall was completed.
In the opening year, 1876, Dean P. J. Williams said:
"The pupils are enthusiastic, earnest, and devoted to their work, and we believe as they go out into
Fraternities and football were almost abolished. The Lawrence streetcar line was reaching toward the campus.
And 1909 was the year the Board of Regents established the School of Education. Education training at KU had begun 33 years earlier, however, with the opening of a normal department in 1876. By 1879, the number of students in education had reached 27, and was up to 52 the following year.
Education School Begum
That was the year the campus got a modern sewer system and the student government came into being. The journalism department was founded and University enrollment reached 1,917.
the schoolrooms in the different portions of the state, they will demonstrate, by their superior ability to impart instruction, the value of the Normal School to the state."
Johnston Was 1st Dean
Charles Hughes Johnston, a graduate of the University of North Carolina and Harvard, became the dean of the new school of Education when it was established in 1910.
Following Dean Johnston, Alvin S. Olin, a member of the faculty, became dean of the school.
In 1915, Frederick J. Kelly took over the job until he became the Dean of Administration of the University in 1921. By this time, the School of Education had 355 undergraduate students.
A former superintendent of schools in Lawrence and in Duluth, Minn., Raymond A. Kent, succeeded Dean Kelly. When Dean Kent left in 1932 to accept a position at Northwestern University, the next dean served the longest term in the school's history.
Raymond A. Schwegler held the office for 18 years, until his retirement in 1941.
Dean Schweegler came to the University in 1907 from the presidency of Ottawa University. He continued to teach, after his retirement as dean, until 1946. He died in 1952.
Another big year in the school's history was 1956. On October 5, the school moved into the newly remodeled Bailey Hall.
Had Been in Fraser
Previously the school's quarters had been the basement and first floor of Fraser Hall. That area had proved too small even before the 50 per cent enrollment increase between 1952 and 1956. Bailey had been used by the School of Pharmacy and the chemistry department.
In 1953, a member of the education faculty, Kenneth E. Anderson, took the reins as dean of the School of Education. Dean Anderson has seen the school's undergraduate enrollment rise from 426 in the fall of 1952 to its present 788.
Director Kills 2 Birds With One Thought
A bird eagle, a parrot, and a night cap have once again proved the great American dream of success.
In the theater, the young star who makes good is the personification of the American dream. Likewise, the harassed director must make good.
Bernice Harvey, instructor of speech and drama and director of the Children's Theatre, has provided KU with a success story.
Miss Harvey needed an associated idea to carry over from the Children's Theatre production, "Treasure Island," to the latest production, "The Elves and the Shoemaker."
She certainly couldn't use the pirates who had introduced the acts in "Treasure Island" so, with help, she found another concept.
Joan Eckles, instructor of speech, has a bird cage which was left from the production of "Naked." In the case sits the parrot which Long John Silver carried on his shoulder in "Treasure Island."
Suddenly Mrs. Harvey found a solution to her problem. Why not use the parrot to introduce the acts of "Elves?"
Only one thing was lacking—the bright-plumaged bird still looked like a pirate's parrot. Miss Eckles found a way to save the day. With great care, she made a night cap for the bird and stitched a red beard for it.
The finished product is a bewildered-looking parrot who will remind the children who see "The Elves and the Shoemaker" of the saucy bird who loftily rode the shoulder of Long John Silver in "Treasure Island."
The result? A happy director, and another Children's Theatre production on the way.
Union Hums In Summer
"All conferences desired by anyone except KU students must be approved by University Extension before they can be scheduled," she said.
The heaviest traffic-makers in the Kansas Union are not the ninemonth coffee break students, but the summer conference goers.
"The most conferences and meetings in the Kansas Union come when the students aren't on the Hill. August is the busiest month. We have at least one conference scheduled in the Union every week," said Mrs. Betty Fluker, Kansas Union reservations secretary, who is in charge of scheduling these events.
U.S. MILITARY UNION
Why did 14,436 sophomores enter advanced Army R.O.T.C. during 1958?
Many more applied. Not all were accepted. In more than 200 U. S. colleges, 14,436 college sophomores met the high standards set. These students were selected to continue officer training in the advanced R.O.T.C. course. Why did each of these young men decide that he would benefit by fulfilling his military obligation as an Army officer? Here are two important reasons. Perhaps they'll help you make your decision.
1...TRADITIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES
As an Army officer, you're in command of men. More men than the number supervised by many civilian executives years older than yourself.To meet your command responsibilities,you employ a great many of the LEADERSHIPprinciples acquiredin advancedR.O.T.C.training.And your executive potential develops while
you gather LEADERSHIP experience. The executive ability you gain as an Army officer will be an important advantage in any civilian career. That's why employment directors often prefer men who have served as commissioned officers. These men have already proven their capacity to handle executive responsibility.
2...TRADITIONAL REWARDS
In every organization, greater responsibilities mean greater rewards. The traditional prestige of an Army officer is matched by material advantages. A second lieutenant earns a minimum of $355.88 per month plus substantial fringe benefits. Think you might want to marry soon after graduation? An officer's salary can
make things a great deal easier for a married couple just starting out. What's more, an Army officer is entitled to take his dependents with him, wherever possible. Imagine sharing the fun of travel with your wife in the United States or foreign countries like France, Germany or Japan.
TRADITIONAL Responsibilities Rewards
U.S. ARMY R.O.T.C.
SOPHOMORES: Are you considering whether to apply for advanced Army R.O.T.C.? Why not discuss your decision with the Professor of Military Science and Tactics at your college? He'll be glad to talk it over with you.
---
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
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RULES—PLEASE READ CAREFULLY
1. The College Puzzle Contest is open to college students and college faculty members except employees and their immediate families of Liggett & Myers and its advertising agencies.
2. Fill in all missing letters . . . print clearly. Use of obsolete, archaic, variant or foreign words prohibited. After you have completed the puzzle, send it along with six empty package wrappers of the same brand from L&M, Chesterfield or Oasis cigarettes (or one reasonable hand-drawn facsimile of a complete package wrapper of any one of the three brands) to: Liggett & Myers, P. O, Box 271, New York 46, N. Y. Enter as often as you wish, but be sure to enclose six package wrappers (or a facsimile) with each entry. Illegal entries will not be considered.
3. Entries must be postmarked by midnight, Friday, May 29, 1959 and received by midnight, Friday, June 5, 1959.
4. Entries will be judged by the Bruce-Richards Corporation, an independent judging organization, on the basis of logic and aptness of thought of solutions. In the event of ties, contestants will be required to complete in 25 words or less the following statement: "My favorite cigarette is (Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) because ..." Entries will be judged on originality, aptness of thought and interest by the Bruce-Richards Corporation. Duplicate prizes will not be awarded in event of final ties. Illegible entries will not be considered. By entering all entrants agree that the decision of the judges shall be final and binding.
5. Solutions must be the original work of the contestants submitting them. All entries become the property of Liggett & Myers and none will be returned.
HURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29, 1959
CLUES ACROSS:
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24. Chemical Engineer (Abbr.)
26. Campers will probably be ... by a forest 6m
29. When starting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first ...
31. At home.
32. Literate in Arts (Abbr.)
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35. Associate in Arts (Albr.)
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37. Reverse the first part of "L&M ."
CLUES DOWN:
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1. The beginning and end of pleasure.
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25 What Abner might be called
36. Bachelor of Education degree.
1 $^{2}$ L 3 $^{4}$ N | $^{5}$ S | 6 O 7 8 $^{9}$ S
$^{10}$ A | E | A | A | A | I |
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PRINT CLEARLY! ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH
Mail to Liggett & Myers. P.O Box 711, New York 46, New York. Be sure to attach six empty package wrappers of the same brand (or fascioline) from Chesterfield, L.B.M, or Oasis cigarettes.
Name___
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This entry must be postmarked before midnight, May 29, 1959, and received at P. O. Box 271, New York 46, New York, by midnight, June 5, 1959.
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Completing One . . .
图画
Friday, April 17, 1959
University Daily Kansas
Page 5
建設中
. . . Beginning Another
FINISHING TOUCHES on new dormitories near Stouffier Apartments.
1968-10-14
A group of soldiers is seen loading trucks in a snowy environment. The scene appears to be taking place during the winter season.
TRUCK HAULS dirt from hole dug for new Kansas Union addition.
Mature KU Still Growing
Plans for another laboratory addition to Snow Hall are in the final stages, Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, has announced.
The new addition will provide additional space for all five departments of life science. Six stories high, it will add 25,000 square feet to Snow. The addition will be built on the northeast end of Snow, running diagonally between Memorial Drive and Ponder Lane.
The Kansas Legislature recently appropriated funds for the Snow addition, and it is expected that contracts will be let this summer.
"The new genetics laboratory addition to Snow Hall should also be finished early this summer. It will be occupied immediately after construction is finished." Mr. Lawton
Plans for a new building for the School of Engineering are also in the preliminary stages. The new building will be built in the area north of Allen Field House along Fifteenth Street.
Summerfield Hall, new home of the School of Business, will be completed this summer and opened for classes this fall.
"But people aren't concerned about anything except the present. This is why it is so hard to get 20-year-olds to stop smoking. They can't get too concerned if someone tells them that when they are 40 they may get cancer or coronary trouble because of their smoking," she continued.
With the Facts; Why Smoke?
"When a person knows that cigarette smoking does no good, but that it definitely does harm to some individuals, why would he smoke at all?"
These were the concluding words of Dr. Bentrice Lins, Watkins hospital physician, in a Daily Kansan interview.
"Almost all in the medical profession agree that one type of lung cancer is caused by smoking. I really thought more people would quit smoking on account of the recent cancer reports," she said.
Those who have had coronary attacks or who have lung conditions are the ones who get so scared that they quit, she said.
It was not the cancer report which convinced Dr. Lins of the evil of smoking, however. It was the report from ten years ago that smoking caused skin temperature change, and could cause Bergers disease, a vascular cell decaying disease.
"It is generally accepted that coronary patient) and individuals with lung conditions should not smoke, or at least they should cut down tremendously. And, there is evidence that ulcers are also aggravated by smoking so I always tell my patients who have ulcers to quit smoking." Dr. Lins said.
The project of putting up names on the buildings in aluminum lettering will be completed this month. Mr. Lawton said.
The Kansas Union construction that began in mid-March will not be finished until a year from June. The addition will cost almost a million dollars.
Mr. Lawton also said the University has recently purchased a teaching 10-watt nuclear reactor
and plans for a reactor building are on the drawing board.
Another major action taken by Mr. Lawton's office is the widening of the west approaches to the campus, involving several alterations to streets and sidewalks.
The main job in the alterations will be cutting back the corner at the intersection of West Campus Road and Crescent Drive at the southeast corner of the Chi Omega house.
hail, hail the gang's all there!
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WHO SAID IT FIRST?
A column of incidental intelligence by Jockey brand
MATRIX CROSSMAN
"WHEN IN ROME..."
"When they are in Rome, they do there as they see done."
...do as the Romans do, we say, thus misquoting a line from Burton's "Anatomy of Melancholy". In this monumental book, the celebrated vicar stated it thusly:
"TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT"
The privileged and the underprivileged, the rich and the poor—most of us have a tendency to divide mankind into two classes. The man who showed us how to do it was Cervantes. In "Dan Quixote", he wrote:
"There are only two families in the world, the Haves and the Have Nots."
ALFRED ROWLING
W.M.
"JACK SPRAT"
No, "Anon" not coin the famous quatrain concerning the thin man and his peculiar eating habits. Instead, it was a certain John Clark in something called, "Paraemiologia," written in 1639:
"Jack Sprat will eat no fat, Jill and Dill jade lose no lean, Yet betwixt them both They lick the dishes clean."
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fashioned by the house of Georgie
Page 6
University Daily Kancon Friday April 17 1970
KU
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KU
Order of Ev Time Sch
---
Morning Events, Saturday, April 18
TRACK EVENTS
110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon 9:00
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Prelims (Time Basis) 9:30
One Mile Relay—Junior College—Preliminaries 10:30
1500 Meter Run—Decathlon 11:30
FIELD EVENTS
Discus Throw—Decathlon ... 9:15
Pole Vault—Decathlon ... 10:00
Discus Throw—High School—Prelims and Finals ... 10:00
Broad Jump—High School—Prelims and Finals ... 10:00
Javelin—Decathlon ... 10:45
Afternoon Program
TRACK EVENTS
120 Yard High Hurdles—Univ. and College—Finals ... 1:30
Distance Medley Relay—College ... 1:35
Distance Medley Relay—University ... 1:50
100 Yard Dash—University and College Finals ... 2:05
Sprint Medley Relay—High School—Final ... 2:10
Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen ... 2:15
846 Indiana VI 3-2311
Harwood's Wholesale Meat Market
GO KANS
Logan Moore Compa
R. F.D. 3
Friday, April 17, 1959
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
NSAS RELAYS
KU
of Events and Schedule
--- 9:00
--- 9:30
--- 10:30
--- 11:30
--- 9:15
--- 10:00
--- 10:00
--- 10:00
--- 10:45
--- 1:30
--- 1:35
--- 1:50
--- 2:05
--- 2:10
--- 2:15
Glenn Cunningham Mile ... 2:30
Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Finals ... 2:35
Quarter Mile Relay—College—Finals ... 2:40
Quarter Mile Relay—University—Finals ... 2:45
Two Mile Relay—High School Invitational—Finals ... 2:50
Two Mile Relay—College—Finals ... 3:00
Two Mile Relay—University—Finals ... 3:15
Half Mile Relay—Kansas City, Mo., High Schools—Finals ... 3:30
Half Mile Relay—High School—Finals ... 3:35
Half Mile Relay—College—Finals ... 3:40
Half Mile Relay—University—Finals ... 3:45
3000 Meter Steeplechase ... 3:50
One Mile Relay—High School—Finals ... 4:05
One Mile Relay—Junior College—Finals ... 4:15
One Mile Relay—College—Finals ... 4:20
One Mile Relay—University—Finals ... 4:30
FIELD EVENTS
Pole Vault—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals ... 1:00
Shot Put—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals ... 1:30
High Jump—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals ... 1:30
Hop, Step and Jump—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals ... 1:30
Javelin Throw—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals ... 2:30
ANSAS GO!
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Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
Official ROYAL Representative
Typewriter Service — Office Supplies
School Materials
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Welcome to the Relays
Kay Pharmacy
Prescription Headquarters
We Deliver
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Marks Jeweler
Fine Diamonds, Watches Silverware
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Lawrence's Modern Variety Store
Duckwall's
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KU
1. 21 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17. 1959
Hard Work Goes Into Opening Night
1950
Louis Lyda, Lawrence graduate student, and Joyce Elliott,
Independence, Mo., senior, learn their lines.
A variety of jobs goes into producing a play. On this page are pictures of some of the behind-the-scene work in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building on two plays, one of which, "Elves and the Shoemaker," opened Monday.
The tale of the elves and the shoe-maker, a KU Children's Theatre production, will be performed at 4:15 p.m. today and again at 2 p.m. tomorrow.
At the same time the children's production was underway, the University Theatre was in the first stages of preparing Shakespeare's "Winter's Tale," to be presented April 29 and 30 and May 1 and 2.
Building stage props, designing costumes, taking the first look at the lines, and taking inventory of instruments are being done a month before the opening night of "Winter's Tale."
Two days before the children's play was to be presented the lights were hung, the actors ran through the play amidst the scenery, and the director made last minute changes.
M
Adrin Eley, Marysville sophomore, hangs stage lights in the darkened upper reaches of the stage.
1980
Herbert Camburn, instructor of speech, makes a blonde wig.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Sally Hart. Fort Scott junior, inventories musical instruments on the stage.
The artist is cutting a design from fabric.
Ernest Kasold, Lawrence freshman,
saws out prop material.
A man stands in a room filled with empty chairs, looking down at the floor.
Sally Hart, an assistant director, sits among swivel seats in the Children's Theatre to hear actors rehearse. The theater seats 80 persons.
COBRA
Mary Ann Harris, Independence, Mo., freshman, runs through her part over a shoemaker's repair stand.
Friday. April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Canine Capers Add to Campus Folklore, Fun
By Martha Ormsby
"Didn't go to any classes today, spent the whole day in the basement of Strong—be glad when the weekend gets here, sure happy it's Thursday!" A KU student talking? No, just what Sarge most likely thinks on his way back to the Sigma Nu fraternity house, his official residence.
Sarge is probably the best known of the dogs which belong to organized houses on the hill, since he has been around for the longest time. Like many of the professional students with whom he associates, Sarge seems to have attained the ultimate in status. He is a former Little Man on Campus, and he never quite seems to get enough credit to graduate.
However, as always on the campus, the old established guard is threatened by the younger generation. Recently four other houses have acquired mascots and they too are rapidly becoming campus personalities.
Enter Toby
Sarge
About two years ago several members of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity were in a downtown Lawrence bar and during the course of the evening (time has blurred the details) they purchased a collie, who was named Rummy and has remained the TKE mascot.
Tony Morrow, Kansas City, Mo.
sohomore, said;
"Rummy is annoyed by little children and women, and probably is annoyed by the latter, as are his 'brothers,' because he doesn't understand them."
Last year Phi Delta Theta fraternity bought a basset hound who is, according to the Phi Delts, pedigree.
Bruce Lewellen, Hutchinson junior, said, "Toby will probably never make his grades, but there is assurance that he will never be placed on probation."
Brandy, Too
Not long ago, when Sig wandered into one of the offices on the hill, a professor was heard to express his disillusionment concerning Sig. He said that he was under the impression that Saint Bernards always carry a keg of brandy under their chin—for emergencies, of course.
Toby's best friend is Sig, the Saint Bernard puppy which Sigma Chi fraternity bought at the first of the year. Sig is now about three feet tall and he is still growing. He eats all of the scraps from dinner, and raids all of the garbage cans in the neighborhood.
The only dog who has the distinction of living at a sorority house is a boxer named Mister Caesar, who calls Alpha Delta Pi sorority home. Some of the ADPis found Caesar, cold and forlorn, at the first of the year and the house voted to keep him.
Caesar is not an official pledge yet, but may be soon. The ADPis find a small item under the heading "dog" on their monthly house bill. Caesar eats out of a tin pail and has learned to carry it around when he's hungry.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1959
1952
WELCOME to 34th K.U. RELAYS
Alumni, Visitors, Jayhawkers
The Kansas Union Building will be your Relays Center. Make the Kansas Union Hawk's Nest and Cafeteria your Center for quick economical meals
Hours For Your Convenience
CAFETERIA
Breakfast 7:00-8:30
(Sunday) 8:30-9:15
Lunch 11:00-1:20
(Sunday) 11:00-1:30
Friday 7:30-11:00
Dinner 5:00-6:30
HAWK'S NEST
Saturday 7:30-11:00
Sunday 1:30-10:30
KANSAS UNION
Hawk's Nest & Cafeteria
Your Relays Center
For Quick, Economical, Delicious Meals
Friday. April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
I will do anything to protect you.
Students Give Swimming Lessons
GOIN' SWIMMIN'—Here some members of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity are shown as they give swimming lessons to Lawrence children.
For a few hours on Saturday afternoons, the students devote their time to giving the partially handicapped children swimming lessons.
If you should stop by the Robinson gymnasium swimming pool some Saturday afternoon this spring, you would probably find a small group of students busy teaching handicapped children to swim.
The students, members of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, are helping six crippled children by aiding them in physical rehabilitation.
The lessons, about seven in all have been a project of the fraternity for the past four years. They are in conjunction with the Beaker Cup project, a social service award for which the fraternity is competing.
Each spring approximately six Lawrence children are selected to participate in the program. Doctors have told the student instructors that the lessons are excellent therapy for the children.
All students who help with the lessons are well-qualified to do so since they are members of the swimming team or physical education majors.
Those conducting the lessons this year are Richard Reasom, Topeka; Dwight Pope, St. Joseph, Mo., and Keith Bras, Kansas City, Mo., all freshmen.
Co-chairmen for the project are Thomas Johnston, Prairie Village sophomore, and James Anderson, Lawrence freshman.
The girls on the KU campus are becoming sporty! They want to ride bicycles to class, and now they want to wear bermudas and slacks to class so they can use this form of transportation.
Bermudas Seen as Boon
Most of the girls are already accustomed to wearing slacks to final examinations. The University has no rule which prevents the wearing of sports clothes on the campus. Only the social rule of conformity prevails.
Slacks are also worn for certain classes for their convenience and casualness. Donna Leonard, Fulton, Mo., senior, said, "To some art classes, such as ceramics, you wouldn't want to wear your best clothes."
Wearing slacks and bermudas will not only aid the girls in riding bicycles, but it will also give them a chance for more casual type of dress. Wearing sports clothes enables the girls to wear bulky crew-necks, colorful middy tops and a wide variety of tuck-in blouses. However, as much neatness will have to be considered in outfitting for this type of dress as the girls do now for blouses and skirts.
The fad of wearing bermudas and slacks to class has already been adopted on other campuses. Why have the girls at KU waited until now to start discussing it? Are they all conformists or are they afraid of losing their femininity?
This idea was mentioned by Don Luellen, Kansas City junior. If slacks and bermudas are to be worn, the girls still should appear neat and not sloppy, such as neglecting to tuck in a blouse," he said.
The women's point of view
KANSAS!
GO
Hurdle Jump
Another Win for K.U. in the 34th Annual Kansas Relays
42. The area of a rectangle is 60 square units.
While you're waiting for the Relays parade to start, pick up some crunchy fresh popcorn, a bag of creamy caramels, or a pound of old-fashioned hard candy.
A parade isn't a parade without POPCORN and CANDY.
Get enough to last all afternoon.
The Relays will be even more fun when you stop in
DIXIES CARMEL
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The question of wearing shacks and bermudas to class still seems to be unresolved. Can KU women lose their sense of puritanism and adapt to a more casual type of way?"
Last but not least, a girl must judge for herself how she will look in these casual styles. The girl who looks good in a straight skirt and who is slim and long-legged, will look just as good in a pair of slacks or bermudas. But to the girl whose extra pounds already show in a straight skirt, a pair of slacks will certainly not hide those inches.
study, not to wear particular clothes
to study in"
For the above reasons, I am sure one will agree with Jo Evans, St. Louis, Mo., junior.Jo says, "It certainly would not improve their looks and with certain figures, it would certainly show off their figure defects."
expressed by Marcia Casey, Hutchinson freshman and KU's "Best Dressed Co-eed." "Somehow I don't think they ought to wear slacks on campus. To me, it doesn't seem like our school is the type where campus wear is that informal," she said.
Pat Glen, Ft. Riley sophomore;
"Women have always worn skirts
or feminine type clothes and I don't
think they should stop now."
Although the girls seem a little dubious as to wearing slacks and bermudas to class, the boys think it would be a fine idea, Bob MrGee. Hutchinson senior, said, "I think it would be great. Especially in the spring because it would add so much to the atmosphere of the campus."
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17.1959
KU Men Criticize Campus Cosmetics
A plain face has not been the fashion since before Cleopatra's time. However, the men do have a few complaints. Some of them don't believe the women have learned how to use what has been passed down to them.
According to advertisement and beauty tips by the experts, it should never be a question of what makeup to use, but how much of it you need and where. How do KU men feel about this problem?
Jim Kesling, Timber Lake, S. D., sophomore, said, "Some women don't have any natural coloring and without some cosmetics they look poor."
Cosmetic manufacturers have been producing new shades of gray and lavender eye shadow for a number of years. The newest beauty aid is the white lipstick which is used as a base coat.
Men Note Innovations
Tomorrow You'll Wear:
It should be heartening to the women to know that some of the men are noticing these changes. Kesling noted that he didn't "care much for the coloring under the eyes." The color however, might be attributed to something else, like lack of sleep.
Bright pink: New color for accessories, scarves, gloves, and in little touches of color in the fabric itself.
Mike Herwood. Kansas City, Mo..
The silk costume; Silk suits in solids or prints are simply tailored in day and afternoon styles.
Ruffled skirts; Two and three tiers of ruffles on wide skirts have a new look for silhouette interest.
The shirtwaister: It has a new face this year with soft, slimmer lines and the use of silk preferred for late day versions.
sophomore, said he had seen the advertisements and was quite "fascinated with the white lipstick."
Eye makeup was attacked by Her-wood. He said, "I think a little is all right, but if you over do it, it is false. It seems a little out of place on the campus.
If the women follow the suggestion of *Stu Barger*, Harrisonville, Mo., freshman, there won't be any complaints about eve cosmetics.
Barger, said, "I think rouge and lipstick, used moderately, are enough."
Barger also felt mascara, eyebrow pencils and eye shadow "should be used with a lot of discretion—and rarely."
Jim Schneider, Salina freshman,
doesn't "have any real complaints"
about how the women wear make-up,
but he did say, "I think some
do put on a little too much lip-
stick."
Some men claimed the women were using lipstick too heavily.
Mike Wilcox, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore, said, "I think most of the women here don't know how to use makeup right."
Women Unskilled
without any thought of the colors they were wearing.
A few men admitted they didn't know anything about makeup, but thought they knew when a girl was wearing too much.
Keith Ott, Kingfisher, Okla, junior, said, "I think they certainly know more about it than I do," but he went on to score heavy makeup.
KANSAS RELAYS -1959
Girls, the men are not asking for the naturally beautiful face. They want the ladies to know what they are using and to notice how much they are using.
For Your Convenience We Offer You The Relays Schedule
The men conceded that some mornings the ladies were too hurried to apply their cosmetics with care. They seemed unwilling to accept this excuse. They want the female students to hit a happy medium.
ORDER OF EVENTS AND TIME SCHEDULE
Saturday Morning, April 18, 1959
9:00 110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon
9:30 Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Prelims (Time Basis)
10:30 One Mile Relay—Junior College Preliminaries
FIELD EVENTS
11:30 1500 Meter Run—Decathlon
9:15 Discus Throw—Decathlon
10:00 Pole Vault—Decathlon
10:00 Discus Throw—High School—Prelims and Finals
10:00 Broad Jump—High School—Prelims and Finals
10:45 Javelin—Decathlon
Saturday Afternoon
TRACK EVENTS
1:30 120 Yard High Hurdles—Univ. and College—Finals
1:35 Distance Medley Relay—College
1:50 Distance Medley Relay—University
2:05 100 Yard Dash—University and College—Finals
2:10 Sprint Medley Relay—High School—Final
2:15 Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen
2:30 Glenn Cunningham Mile
2:35 Quarter Mile Relay—High School —Finals
2:40 Quarter Mile Relay—College— Finals
2:45 Quarter Mile Relay—University —Finals
2:50 Two Mile Relay—High School Invitational—Finals
3:00 Two Mile Relay—College— Finals
3:15 Two Mile Relay—University— Finals
3:30 Half Mile Relay—Kansas City, Mo. High Schools—Finals
3:35 Half Mile Relay—High School— Finals
3:40 Half Mile Relay—College— Finals
3:45 Half Mile Relay—University— Finals
3:50 3000 Meter Steeplechase
4:05 One Mile Relay—High School— Finals
4:15 One Mile Relay—Junior College —Finals
4:20 One Mile Relay—College— Finals
4:30 One Mile Relay—University— Finals
FIELD EVENTS
1:00 Pole Vault—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals
1:30 Shot Put—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals
1:30 High Jump—Univ. and College—Prelims and Finals
1:30 Hop, Step and Jump—University and College—Prelims and Finals
2:30 Javelin Throw—University and College—Prelims and Finals
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Sports
Daily hansan
Sports
56th Year, No. 128, SECTION C
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 17, 1959
BILLS
Prospects Bright for KU Track Team
Champions Return From Last Year
By Jim Cable
If winning experience is indicative of a track competitor's winning potential, fans at the 34th Annual Kansas Relays should see some fancy footwork as over 2,500 top-notch athletes race for first-place trophies.
In last year's Relays, 11 records were shattered by men entered in university, college, junior college and high school classes.
Early this year, men who had helped set seven of those records gave indications they would return for another appearance in Memorial Stadium.
The Texas Longhorns, record-breakers for the last five years, again appear to be strong contenders for Relays honors. Texas, led by a blazing anchor run by Eddie Southern, last year set a new intercollegiate record of 3:09.1 in the mile relay.
Members of that team, besides Southern, were Wallace Wilson, Drew Dunlap and Jimmy Holt. Three of those men are back this year.
Southern anchored the Texas mile relay team to a 3:13.2 time for a meet record in the Border Olympics early in March. The Texans took the meet championship with several of their best men absent.
Others from Texas who will be repeat performers today and tomorrow are Bruce Parker, who set a new Relays record in the javelin last year with a toss of 232 feet. $8\frac{1}{4}$ inches, and Alex Palmros, who finished fourth in the discus last year.
Oklahoma University returns an entire squad of record breakers. In the 1958 Relays, Oklahoma set new times in the distance medley relay and in the sprint medley. The sprint medley mark of 3:19.5 shaded the Intercollegiate record of 3:20.2 set by Kansas in 1954.
Hi Gernert, Bob Ringo, Ernst Kleyhans and Gail Hodgson, members of the Sooner distance medley team, all return in that event. Dee Givens and Hodgson, who helped set the sprint medley record, will run today and tomorrow.
Hodgson, the Sooners' South African runner, ran a 4:07 anchor mile in the distance medley to defeat the runner-up Texans by 70 yards.
In addition to the relays performers, some bright stars will (Continued on Page 12.)
Track Roster
The roster of this year's KU track team is as follows:
Bill Alley. Short Hills, N.J., junior javelin throw; Darwin Ashbaugh Ellis sophomore, hurdles and broad jump; Terry Beucher, Kansas City, Mo., senior, javelin throw; John Book, Kansas City, Mo., junior, javelin throw.
Bruce Brient, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, 440-vard dash; Bob Cannon, Pawhuska, Okla., senior, high jump; Bob Covey, Ames, Iowa, sophomore, 440-yard dash; Berry Crawford, Boise, Idaho, senior, two-mile run; Clif Cushman, Grand Forks, N.D., junior, 880-yard run, mile run, relays.
Gordon Davis, Wichita sophomore.
440-yard dash, 880-yard run; Bill Dryer, Great Bend junior, shot put, discus throw; Jerry Foos, Scotts Bluff, Neb, sophomore, shot put, discus throw: Verne Gauby, Marysville senior, 440-yard dash
Jack Henry, Kansas City, Kan., junior, two-mile run; Dick Keith, Blue Springs, Mo., junior, high jump; T. J. Kelly, Atlanta, Ga., junior, broad jump; Bob Lida, Prairie Village senior, 220-yard dash, 440-yard dash.
Jim Londerholm, Mission senior,
javelin throw; Ron Miller, Kansas
City, Mo., junior; hurdles; Bill Mills,
Denver, Colo., sophomore, mile run,
two-mile run; Bob Okerstrom,
Mason City, Iowa, sophomore,
hurdles; Dan Ralston, Topeka sophomore,
mile run, two-mile run
Paul Rearick, Boise, Idaho, sophomore, sprints; Ernie Shelby, Los Angeles, Calif., senior, broad jump, 220-vard dash, low hurdles; Tom Skutka, Hibernia, N.J., senior, mile run; Bob Tague, Kansas City, Kan. junior 440-vard dash, 880-vard run; Charlie Tidwell, Independence junior, sprints.
Bill Tillman, Clay Center senior, hurdles; Brian Travis, Des Moines, Iowa, junior, distance events; Paul Williams, Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore, sprints and broad jump.
Depth May Provide National Crown
By Ted Dielman
"We hope to finish in the first three," KU track coach Bill Easton said, summing up the aspirations of his team for the NCAA meet this season.
"There are a lot of fine teams that will be at the NCAA." Easton said. "To name just a few, Oregon, San Jose State, Arizona State and Villanova will be there."
The Jayhawker team is well balanced this year, according to Easton. He said it is probably the best balanced team KU has had in some time.
Easton's team has depth, especially in the javelin throw and the dashes. The trio of Bill Alley, John Book and Jim Londerholm promises to be one of the finest groups of javelin throwers in KU history.
With sophomores Paul Williams and Charlie Tidwell in the dashes, it appears as if the Jayhawker team has speed as well as strength. Williams set a national freshman record of :20.5 last year in the 220 and finished with a time of :60.1 in the indoor 60-vard dash.
Tidwell ran :06.0 in the 60-yard dash and :06.7 in the 60-year low hurdles to equal two existing intercollegiate records during the indoor season. His record-setting time in the 220-yard low hurdles came last June when he ran the course in :22.7 in the NCAA meet.
Ernie Shelby, star Jayhawker broad-jumper also runs the sprints and hurdles. He made a good showing in the Big Eight low hurdles last year, winning the event in 224.4.
In the shot put and discuss the team boasts the pair of Bill Dryer and Jerry Foos. Dryer put the shot a distance of 52' 1" during the indoor season and expects to add another foot or two this spring. Foos threw the discus over 168 feet as a freshman and has consistently been over 160 feet in the early workouts.
KU will have Dana Ralston, Bill Mills, Clif Cushman and Tom Skutka as top contenders in the distances.
Cushman holds the Big Eight record for the 1000-yard run with a 2:11.6 time. He also ran the number three leg in a record-setting performance in the Big Eight Indoor mile relay.
Page 2
University Daily Kansas Friday. April 17. 1959
FAMILY MEALS
DINE OUT AT THESE FINE RESTAURANTS
Have Your Meals at Any of These Fine Restaurants
Hutson's Eldridge Hotel
Coffee Shop
Relays Hospitality Headquarters Serving Party Needs
Crystal Room—Big Eight Room—Pike Room
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Friday, April 17. 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
BEFORE OR AFTER THE RELAYS-OR ANY TIME
Enjoy the Tasty Foods Offered in Lawrence
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Enjoy the College Atmosphere
Home Cooked Meals
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17. 1959
Inexperience Hurts Baseball Team
10
Gene Dunigan signals . . .
Sport Clubs Supplement KU Athletic Program
By Doug Yocom
While fencing, gymnastics and volleyball-called KU sport clubs—do not receive either the financial support or the publicity of KU's varsity sports, the three teams still provide rugged competition for the participants.
Fencing is only in its second year at Kansas, and Coach John Giele's team has jumped right in the middle of some of the most rugged fencing competition in the United States. The first meet of the season was against the Air Force Academy, last year's Western Intercollegiate champion. The Faleons showed the inexperienced Kansans how a champion team performs, as KU came off on the low ends of both a 24-3 "A" team score and a 18-9 "B" team score.
The following week the Jayhawkers challenged another team of chapmions. This time the team was Illinois University and its title was last year's Big Ten and National Intercollegiate champions. The Illinois meet also marked the first formal inter-collegiate fencing contest ever to be held on the KU campus. Mt. Oread's fencers dropped 25 out of 27 matches.
When KU started into the milder half of the schedule it seemed the experience received from the nation's top fencing teams was proving valuable.
The next foe, Nebraska, was conquered. The Kansas City Fencing Club came to Mt. Oread, then left in defeat.
Coach Giele had stated at the start of the season that if he had
Two fencers, Jerry Old and John Dillard did make the grade and represented KU at the NCAA on March 27-28.
any fencers to merit going to the NCAA in March they would go.
The Kansas University volleyball team will be looking for another top position in the National Collegiate Volleyball Tournament this year.
Two years ago the volleyball team won third place in the tournament and last year it pulled down second place.
Volleyball coach Kevin Jones' only prediction of how KU will finish in the tournament this year was:
"We should place."
Another sport club that has not been around the campus long is the gymnastics team.
While gymnastics is only in its second year at KU, Coach Laptad already is building for the future.
"KU will probably be the only team in the conference that will have its entire team back," coach Laptad said.
The Jayhawk team failed to place in the All-College Gymnastic Meet at Boulder last month, although Dan Grover, Bob Lockwood, and Stan Allen advanced to the final rounds.
The Soccer team is trying to form a soccer league in the Big Eight. Colorado, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Missouri and KU already have teams organized.
This year's Jayhawker team, composed of 17 players from nine different countries, compiled a 1-4-2 record.
Spring Moves Intramurals Into Warm Out-of-Doors
By Dave Butcher
With the coming of spring and warm weather, KU's extra-curricular emphasis moves to the out-of-doors. As the snows recede, throngs of students can be seen driving to the country to commune with nature, or just sitting on lawns, enjoying the sun.
Not to be left behind in this mass return to nature, KU's intramural athletic program moves outside after spring vacation.
There is a wide choice of sports for the student who wishes to have fun in the sun. For the "team man,"
softball will be the order of the day.
The "individualist" may choose from golf, horseshoes, handball, badminton, and tennis. Tennis has the largest turnout among individual sports.
For the student who still wishes to remain indoors despite the warm weather, a two-day intramural swimming meet will be held in the middle of April.
Each year, about 2,650 male students participate in the intramural program which also includes football, basketball, bowling, and volleyball.
By Gabby Wilson
Weather has provided KU's baseball team and Coach Floyd Temple with a "headache" that could handicap the Jayhawkers once the regular season starts.
In fact, the Jayhawks were forced to spend over a month and a half indoors this year hoping the sun would soon shine their way.
"The weather has hurt us." Temple said. "It has put us behind from the start. We didn't take a southern trip this year so we had to rely upon getting good weather, which we didn't get. Before we were ever outside, Oklahoma had already played six games.
"Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and Missouri are the teams to beat. We'll be able to hold our own with the rest, but those three are definitely tough." Temple continued.
It is hard to predict where the end of the season will find KU in the Big Eight standings. "It all depends upon how strong the other teams are. If we have a good year and the pitcher come along, maybe we can finish with the top four."
Inexperience is the biggest problem Temple faces. With only five returning lettermen, Bob Marshall, center fielder and team captain; Art Muegel, second baseman; Carl Lauterjung, catcher; Harl Hanson, shortstop, and Lloyd Nichols, at first base, the balance of the team must be filled with untried rookies.
"The bright spot at the present seems to be Tom Holler. He is definitely a Big Eight pitcher, but he has had no previous conference experience." Temple explained.
Rounding out the pitching staff will be Bill Clintonbeard and Joe Doolittle with Wayne Woodruff, Don Culp, and Norman Mailen fighting for the number four spot. The entire pitching staff is composed of rookies.
The other leading candidates for the remaining positions are Roger Hill at third base, Larry McKown in left field, and Curtis Melton in right field.
When asked how the team hitting would be this year, Coach Temple replied, "There's no way of telling this early. Lauterjung is the only one who has proved he can hit Big Eight pitching. There's no way of telling until the team gets more experience."
BENNETT
Tom Holler fires.
Glenn Cunningham Is Among All-Time Greats
Glenn Cunningham was one of the greatest middle distance runners in world track history.
This almost legendary figure was the only performer in the old Big Six and Big Seven conferences ever to win two American Olympic berths. He was a member of the 1932 team at Los Angeles and returned in 1936 for the Berlin games.
He realized his most bitter disappointments in the Olympics. He ran fourth in the '32 games as a college sophomore, and was second to New Zealand's Jack Lovelock at Berlin.
But disappointments were not the usual bill of fare for this great KU star. He once held, simultaneously, world records for both the indoor and outdoor miles. He ran the outdoor mile in 4:06.7 and the indoor in 4:08.4 in 1934. His paced mile of 4:04.4 on Dartmouth's board track in 1938 still is the second fastest indoor performance in history.
In 1933 he came within two inches of winning two events in the NCAA meet, losing to Indiana's Chuck Hornbostel in a 1:50.9 half-mile after winning the mile.
Mike Cassidy's 21:40.4 in the 1500- meter free-style broke the previous record of 22:02.0.
KU's Best Swimming Team Sets 11 New Varsity Records
The varsity team loses two sen-
This year's KU swimming team was the best the University has ever had, and next year's should be as good, Jay Markley, swimming coach, said in reviewing the past season.
In dual telegraphic meets this season the KU freshmen set new freshman records in nine of 13 events, and placed second in the conference postal meet.
The team won nine dual meets, lost four and finished third in the Big Eight conference meet.
"The fact that we finished third doesn't necessarily show the improvement of the team, but the fact that the team set new varsity records in 11 events does show the improvement over past teams." Markley said.
The top four record-breaking performances of the season were in the 60-yard free-style, the 400-yard free-style relay, the 100-yard back-stroke, and the 1500-meter freestyle.
Ed Poort broke the 60-yard freestyle record of 30 seconds flat with a clocking of 29.7 seconds.
The 400-vard free-style relay team of Bill Sitter, Steve Hill, Brad Keller and Ed Poort set a record of 3:40.7, erasing the old mark of 3:44.0.
Tom Herlocker set a new 100-yard back-stroke record with a time of 1:04.8. The record had been 1:06.6.
ors this year. They are Steve Hill, Lawrence, and Jon Poort, Topeka.
"We have built a strong foundation for a good swimming team-one that is at least recognized by the outstanding high school swimmers in the nation." Marklev said.
"Now it is up to the University to decide whether it wants a swimming
He said that the University must offer better swimming facilities and better swimming scholarships if it expects KU to develop an outstanding swimming team.
team that will compete in the Big Eight or one that will merely participate," he said.
Jon Poort and John Jeffrey toe the mark.
A. L. B. S.
Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Welcome to the 39th Annual Engineering Exposition
MARVIN HALL
PIONEERING IN ENGINEERING
100 YEARS OF PIONEERING AND
PROGRESS IN THE OIL INDUSTRY
1869-1959
ENGINEERING
RESEARCH
ARCHITECTURE
TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE
This Year's Theme Is
Pioneering in Engineering
Exhibits of:
- Nuclear Reactor Power Plant - Development of Oil Fields
- High Speed Wind Tunnel
- High Temperature Alloys
- Monkey Saddle
Friday, April 17. . Noon to 9 p.m. Saturday, April 18. . 9 a.m. to Noon
Regular Guided Tours
Entrance at Marvin Hall - West End of Campus
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17. 1959
GOOD LUCK KANS ARE WIT
Acacia
Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Tau Omega Beta Theta Pi
A
GO
Delta Chi
Delta Sigma Phi
Delta Tau Delta
Delta Upsilon
Kappa Alpha Psi
KU
A
Kappa Sigma
Lambda Chi Alpha
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
GO
Friday, April 17, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SAS THE GREEKS WITH YOU
GO
1. Which of the following is NOT a rule in track and field?
KU
Phi Kappa
Phi Kappa Alpha
Phi Kappa Psi
Phi Kappa Sigma
Phi Kappa Tau
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
GO
Sigma Chi
Sigma Nu
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Sigma Pi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Theta Chi
Theta Tau
Triangle
HARRY'S LOVE
---
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17. 1959
[Picture of a group of runners in motion, starting from the left]
THE MEN—Five members of the Kansas track team break from the blocks at the start of the 440-yard dash in a pre-meet warm-up session. After an all-winning indoor season, the team moved outdoors in early March and has been working out daily in Memorial Stadium. Today the men will shed their warm-up suits and don the crimson and blue for the big races.
Today Is Theirs
An event like the Kansas Relays sends a thrill of pride down the spine of any man who has ever been a part of the color, speed and achievement that goes with an outdoor track meet on a warm spring day.
There is an atmosphere of urgency even for the sophomore from the little town in western Kansas who knows he can finish no better than fourth or fifth against the great names gathered from all across the nation.
But he is proud, for he is a part of this great spectacle that has been handed down to our generation from other generations dating back to the time of the Ancient Greeks.
And he is proud too, for the fact, that regardless of the outcome, he has earned the right to compete. He has earned his spot in the blocks on the cinder track with endless hours
of running, aching and trying—always trying, for a better time, a better stride, a better race.
The spectator watches and the sight is inspiring. Dozens of gold and blue and red jersied machines, all perfectly tuned, perform like well-trained players on an outdoor stage. The spectator becomes a part of the marvelous play as it unfolds.
But he is only a superficial part of the production, like a necessary prop that gives the thing continuity. For only those who have given the sweat and blood can be a real part of—the players in—this spectacle.
And no matter where they finish, and they all will finish, they are the ones for whom this day has meaning. They are the descendants of the Olympians.
The men who perform today are the products of back-vafd high jumping pits and country school
races. They began to run in street races and sand lot contests.
At one time or another they began to compete on the cinder track. Most of them ran their first race as sophomores or freshmen in high schools. If they were lucky or talented or fast, they participated in a big meet before coming to college.
For some, this is their first appearance before a large crowd. For the old pros, the crowd is no more than a blur of color in the stands as they flash by the stretch. But for all who compete, it is not the crowd, but the event itself that provides the extra something that inspires outstanding performances.
When they gather on the track or in the field for their particular events, the atmosphere is charged. This is the day for the fast time or the big jump. This is the day of the relays.
They're off.
Trackman
By George DeBord
What makes him run, go chuggin' around that cinder track like a race horse with his head held high? It isn't the glory 'cause he might be last, but God how that kid runs and nothin' catches him but time.
What makes his spikes dig in like life was there and only speed could free it from the dirt? It isn't the glory 'cause he might be last, but look at him swing by the stretch with long sure strides.
What makes him do it, that crazy kid with his legs turned rubber while his arms pump time? It isn't the glory 'cause he might be last, but oh how he bears down and the cinders fly.
God, oh God, where is the air, he's being passed and the strength is gone, his lungs explode in pain. It isn't the glory'cause he might be last, but run sick Greek, the world leaves you behind.
What makes these turns so far apart, and the stretch so long between, the legs are wood, now pain, oh God! It isn't the glory 'cause he might be last, but churn your stomach and bring forth fresh new blood.
The tape is broken and he's not there, but the cinders crunch beneath his lead-soled shoes. It isn't the glory 'cause he might be last, but of the race is life, and next time he will do it.
Running
OU
KU
TRACKMEN — The opposition on the left and the man who carries the hopes of KU on the right.
Ready
Ku
10
Friday, April 17. 1959 University Daily Kansan Page 9
THE SORORITIES
of K.U.
Welcome
Alumni, Visitors, Jayhawkers to the
34th K.U. Relays
We know that you will join with us in wishing Coach Easton and the track team a Successful Day!
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Delta Pi
Alpha Kappa Alpha
RUNNING
Delta Gamma
Gamma Phi Beta
Alpha Omicron Pi
Kappa Alpha Theta
Alpha Phi
Chi Omega
Delta Delta Delta
M
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Pi Beta Phi
Sigma Kappa
Good Luck, K.U.!
411
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1959
KU Freshmen Tops in Big 8
Kansas University's domination of Big Eight track may continue for some time.
Besides building top varsity teams that strike fear into Big Eight Conference foes, Coach Bill Easton is also producing top freshman teams for the future.
This year the varsity track team is stronger in the sprints and the hurdles than the distances. The varsity is also lean in the pole vaulting department. The freshman team
is strong in the distances, although it shows no signs of being weak in the sprints or hurdles. The team has at least one good pole vaulter.
Ken Olson, whose powerful shoulders helped him set a new Big Eight Conference indoor pole vault record of 14 feet $ _{1/2} $ inch, is leading the way for bright prospects in the future for the KU freshman track team.
KU scored 49 19/28 points in the Big Eight Conference freshman postal indoor meet to win first place.
Oklahoma finished second
34 19/28 points.
Bill Dotson captured first place in the mile run. 4:20.5; the two-mile run. 9:28.0; the 880-yard run. 1:56.5, and the 1,000-yard run. 2:15.4.
Curtis McClinton took first in the 60-yard low hurdles; .07; tied for first place with Ron Leitch in the 60-yard high hurdles; .07.5, and placed sixth in the 60-yard dash.
hurdles, is expected_to develop also
Clarence Peterson, who finished with the second best time in the lows and in fourth place in the high
nurdies, is expected to develop also.
In other events, Robert Albright put the 49 feet $11\frac{3}{4}$ inches to place third. Marvin Wilson placed seventh in the broad jump, jumping 21 feet 9 inches.
The KU freshman squad is weakest in the mile relay, where it finished last. The four KU men entered in the 440-yard dash placed 30th, 32nd, 34th, and 35th out of a field of 35 contestants.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Tom Skutka
The senior, middle-distance man is expected to enjoy his best year on the outdoor track.
Skutkra ran 4:09.6 to finish second behind Oklahoma's Gail Hodgson in the 1958 Big Eight Outdoor mile. He was 13th for the last two years in the NCAA mile, clocking 4:12.3 both times.
He has also won the Big Eight Indoor mile at 4:11, the third fastest time ever run on the Kansas City track. He also won the 1957 Big Eight cross-country race.
Kansas University's Bill Nieder was the first collegian ever to throw the shot past 60 feet. April 14, 1956, was the date and 60" 3" was the mark.
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Friday, April 17, 1959
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
Freshman Crop to Bolster Football Team
Football Coach Jack Mitchell said he has about 25 outstanding freshmen lined up for the 1959 KU football team.
"Next fall is going to be a lot different from last year. There is a real promising croon of freshman players who will be eligible," he said.
Coach Mitchell said there were too many good players on the team to single out anyone in particular.
Mitchell will find helpful.
The five named by Fambrough were:
However, freshman Coach Don Fambrough named five of the top frosh of last season he thinks Coach
John Hadi, Lawrence and James Jarrett, Coffeyville, halfbacks; Monte Deer, Augusta, end; Wilfred Bales, Tulsa, Okla., tackle, and Elvin Basham, Kansas City, Mo., guard.
"I'm not limiting the good players to these five, however, as there were many outstanding freshmen on last year's team," he said.
Bob Cannon is the returning Big Eight outdoor high jump champion. He won the title last year with a jump of 3 feet, 5 inches.
"Another thing, these are only prospects for Coach Mitchell's team. They all looked good playing against
Bob Cannon Leads KU High Jumpers
other freshman teams, but it remains to be seen how they will act playing against juniors and seniors. They have had no varsity competition." Fambrough added.
Spring training started officially April 13.
Cannon also jumped 6' 6" in the NCAA championships last year to take fourth place in the big event. Last year, Cannon finished third in the Kansas Relays with a leap of 6 feet, $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Cannon won the indoor title this winter with a 6 foot, $4\frac{1}{2}$ inch jump.
"The boys have been working out themselves for several weeks. They were out doing some running each day getting ready for spring practice to start." Fambrough said.
Coach Mitchell said KU will lose a lot of good players through graduation this year. He listed among that
Coach Mitchell said he plans to move John Peppercorn. Overland Park junior, to left half next fall. Peppercorn played left tackle this year.
But he said he has no one in mind as of vet to replace Homer Fleov.
group Larry McKown, El Dorado;
Homer Floyd, Massillon, Ohio; John
Wertzberger, Lawrence; Walt
Schmidt, East Greenville, Pa.; Bill
Blasi, Pratt; Tom Russell, Grove
City, Ohio; H. C. Palmer, Atchison;
Bob Marshall, Warrenburg, Mo.
and Ron Claiborne, Amarillo, Tex.
Bob Lyda from Oklahoma University ran 47.5 to win the NCAA 410-vard dash in 1941 at Palo Alto, Calif.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 17. 1950
Better Record Is Tennis Team Goal
Top-ranked Lynn Sieverling
R
Pete Block, top somnomore
Bill Easton Builds RichTrackTradition
With the 1958 Big Eight indoor championship tucked away in his records for the eighth straight time, Coach Bill Easton is now busy with the outdoor season.
Easton, in his 12th season at Kansas, is the most successful track coach in the conference.
If his team can win the outdoor championship at Norman, Okla., in May, it can complete an eighth straight triple crown in the combined indoor—cross-country—outdoor track events in the conference. (A triple crown is won when one team wins the cross-country, indoor and outdoor titles in the same school year.)
In national competition, Easton-coached teams have finished third, second, fourth and second in the last four NCAA track and field championships, missing the team title in 1956 by only 6 7 10 points behind UCLA. This is the highest finish both in points and team standing ever recorded by a Big Eight team.
Last year, Easton's Jayhawkers finished second to Southern California in the NCAA meet at Berkeley. Calif. Kansas scored 4034 points, only eight behind the winning Trojans. Kansas edged out defending champion Villanova by 7 points. Charlie Tidwell set a new record in the 220-yard low hurdles and the Jayhawkers won two other first places in the meet.
Easton's success has become as much a part of the Kansas tradition as winning basketball teams were for "Phog" Allen. Easton has coached at least one conference champion in every event on the indoor-outdoor list.
Easton's career here has been marked by his ability to develop top distance runners. His cross-country teams have won seven consecutive cross-country conference championships. On the track, his distance runners have won more than 50 individual championships.
Before coming to Kansas, Easton was building a reputation as a distance coach. At Drake, he coached three consecutive NCAA cross-country champions.
Easton, a former Indiana University quartermiler, started his winning ways at Hammond, Ind., high school before moving up to Drake where he gained national recognition for his team's cross-country performances.
Easton has but two words for his team's success:
"We work."
Easton said he tries to get men who, first, want an education and, second, want the physical training.
He said he looks for three things in a prospect. First is to find out the educational standing of the boy. Second, Easton said, he finds out how a prospect gets along in his community. Then he looks at his athletic ability.
Champions Return
(Continued from Page 1.)
perform in the individual events, Charlie Tidwell, Kansas' 100-yard dash ace, will compete with Dee Givens, the Sooners' top sprinter.
Last year, Tidwell took third in the event behind Givens' :09.5 clocking. The Relays record for the race is :09.4. The mark was set in 1930 by Cy Leland of Texas Christian and equalled in 1956 by Bobby Whilden of Texas.
Tidwell had qualified for the finals with a :09.5 effort—the fastest of the preliminary runs.
Orlando Hazley of Oklahoma State, who finished second in last year's 100-yard finals, is here again this year.
By Tom Clark
Lynn Sieverling, left-handed marksman, has taken the lead role on Coach Denzell Gibbens' tennis squad this spring, and is spearheading a KU drive to improve its fifth place conference berth of last season.
Coach Gibbens has the nucleus of an upcoming squad in junior lettermen, Dave Coupe and Jerry Williams, plus the necessary fourth weapon in sophomore Pete Block. Salvit Lekagul, Bill Sheldon, Jim Brownfield and Charles Studt supply the reinforcements.
The Javhawkers were hampered by foul weather at the onset of the season, but quickly rounded into true form once they 'hit' the courts three weeks ago. Pete Block was the early season sensation fighting his way to a third place berth behind Sieverling and Williams. Block, a sophomore, lacks conference experience but will be a key man in KU's present future.
Williams, Olathe junior, has all the shots, but is in the process of overcoming early season inconsistency. Coupe, Arkansas City junior, is at his best when the pressure is on. He displayed this virtue in the preliminary challenge matches.
Lekagul. Thailand import, is in his first year of varsity tennis after winding up second in the intramural tournament last fall. He lacks the "big punch," but is very consistent and methodical in returning any "blasts" his foes throw at him.
Sieverling, number one for the second season, has a hopping service plus a skillful net game to make him one of the top players in the conference. Lynn comes from the old school of die hards, with a come-from-behind victory as his trademark.
Sheldon and Studt are more aggressive players than is Brownfield, but lack his consistency. Brownfield is an opportunist at the net, capitalizing on all his foes' mistakes, but otherwise, like Lekagul, is best in the retrieving category.
Optimism prevails that, despite inexperience, the Jayhawks will attain their goal of improving last year's record. A preliminary match against Washburn next Tuesday, followed by showdown battles against Nebraska and Iowa State next weekend will provide three more targets for the KU tennis marksmen.
KU's Wes Santee Is Among The All-Time Great Milers
Wes Santee, the great KU miler of 1952-54, registered a total of 48 mile runs under 4:10 before being handed lifetime suspension by the AAU in 1956.
Santee's best mile time was a 4:00.5 in the Jerry Thompson Mile at the 1955 Texas Relays. He had lowered Bill Hulse's old American record of 4:06 three times as a collegian, clocking 4:02.4 at the 1953 Compton Invitational. 4:01.3 at the Missouri Valley AAU, and 4:00.6 at the 1954 Compton meet.
A year after graduation Santee hold title, not only to the five swiftest miles ever run by an American.
but also to 13 of the 15 fastest in American records.
Santee established a world indoor dirt-track mark of 4:04.9 in a 1954 triangular against Michigan State and Illinois at East Lansing.
He was born and raised in Ashland, just 100 miles east of Glenn Cunningham's home of Elkhart. Big Seven opposition was left in the dust of this great KU miler.
He gathered three indoor and three outdoor conference mile championships, two indoor half-mile titles, and one outdoors at that distance. He also collected two cross-country conference titles.
4
Denzell Gibbens, tennis coach
Ashbaugh Improving As a Sophomore
Darwin Ashbaugh is a promising Ellis sophomore who won the Big Eight freshman 60-year low hurdles last year in :07.0 and ran sixth in the highs at :07.8. Ashbaugh carries good strength and may run the 440-yard dash this spring.
Ashbaugh was the surprise Big Eight indoor broad jump champion in the absence of injured Ernie Shelby with a jump of 23 feet, $7^{1 / 2}$ inches.
While the history of Kansas track and field teams goes back to 1903, the history of the Big Eight Conference in track goes back only one year.
KU Track Teams Have Won Eight Straight Indoor Titles
Last year Oklahoma State came into the conference and the league name was changed from the Big Seven to the Big Eight.
In 1958 the Jayhawkers swamped the remainder of the conference competition to win their seventh straight indoor and outdoor conference championships under Coach Bill Easton. The Kansas runners also added the cross-country title.
Kansas received a scare last year in the indoor championships as the Nebraska Cornhuskers placed well in the preliminaries. But the depth of the Jayhawkers prevailed and Kansas ended the meet with a total of 58 5/6 points. Nebraska scored 35 1/6 points.
In the Big Eight outdoor meet last year at Columbia, the Jay-
hawkers compiled 145 $ \frac{1}{2} $ points to take the top honors once again. Nebraska gained second place for the second time but
1960
Ernie Shelby, track captain
the Huskers were far behind with 70 points.
The Jayhawkers stepped into the spotlight again early last month as they swept to their eighth straight indoor championship.
The Jayhawkers scored 70 $ _{1/2} $ points. They were followed by Oklahoma with 30, Kansas State with 26, Colorado with 25, Missouri with 18 $ _{1/2} $ , Nebraska with 16. Oklahoma State with 13 7/12 and Iowa State with 8 7/12.
The indoor victory in Kansas City was the 23rd consecutive victory for Kansas in the combined indoor, outdoor and cross - country championships for the Jayhawkers.
Things look even brighter for Kansas on the outdoor scene with indoor stars Charlie Tidwell, Bob Covey, Clif Cushman, Bob Lida, Darwin Ashbaugh, Bill Tillman, Bob Tague, Bob Cannon, Billy Mills and Dan Ralston returning.
Daily hansan
56th Year, No.129
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Engineers to Award Trophies
Monday, April 20, 1959
Award winners for the Engineering exposition will be announced at the Engineering Banquet Wednesday evening.
Two trophies will be presented by the engineering council—one for the best academic display and one for the best original display. Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will present an award for the best overall display. In past years the Sigma Tau award has been the only trophy presented.
The banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom, Dr. Roderick D. Clark, analyst in the missile engineering department of McDonnell Aircraft Corp., will speak on "Pioneering in Space Engineering. Tickets are on sale at the Union.
Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will present the award for the best display of the Engineering Exposition. The Daily Kansan erred in reporting the award would be presented by Theta Tau, engineering fraternity.
Two Guggenheims To Faculty Men
Two faculty members are the only Kansans awarded Guggenheim fellowships for 1959-60.
Dr. Robert E. Schofield, associate professor of history, will use the assistance to study the life and work of Joseph Priestley, 18th century English clergyman and scientist. Dr Schofield hopes to do research in England this summer and will make his headquarters at Cambridge Mass., during the coming school year.
Robert G. Vosper, director of University libraries, will study the historical trends in the growth and development of book collections in libraries at British universities.
Not Quite a World Record
LONDON —(UPI) —Mrs. Alice Holloway, 96, was crestfallen to learn she wasn't the oldest person to undergo an appendectomy.
She perked up, however, when she was told she held the British record.
Weather
Partial clearing tonight and tomorrow except possible very light snow extreme west tonight. Continued cold tonight and tomorrow with below freezing temperatures west and north portions tomorrow morning. Low tonight 20s northwest to 35 southeast. High tomorrow 45 to 55.
I am a soldier in the Army. I love my job and want to make a difference. I will be proud of my service and continue to serve my country.
ESCORTING ROYALTY—Weldon Fate, Kansas City, Mo., junior, escorts Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., junior, onto the queen's stand at the KU Relays Saturday. Miss O'Brien and Carol Earls, University of Missouri sophomore, reigned over the event.
Seniors to Decide On Gift Next Week
Another explosive senior gift controversy could be set off soon.
Members of the class of 1959 will vote on their gift at the spring coffee at 10 a.m. Thursday, April 30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom, Larry Dunlap, Salina, class vice president, announced today.
Recent senior class gifts such as the Kansas Union canopy and the Bronze Jayhawk have been severely criticized in some quarters. This year's senior class officers are hoping the meeting next week will produce decisions that are less subject to cirticism.
Seniors will be excused from 10 and 11 o'clock classes to attend the coffee. The seniors will also vote on class dues and hear reports on the planned activities of Commencement weekend, the Senior Picnic and other class activities. Refreshments will be served.
Dunlap expressed hope that the turnout for the spring coffee would be as good as that for the fall coffee in October, attended by 1.200 seniors.
"Up until now the seniors have shown a great deal of interest and enthusiasm for the class activities," he said. "We certainly hope this continues. All the committees are working hard to make the spring events well worth attending."
Craig Haselwood, Wichita, chairman of the Senior Picnic, said today that seniors will be excused from all afternoon classes on Friday, May 8. to attend the picnic. Details of the event will be announced at the senior coffee, he said.
KU Dominates Meet
KU trackmen won four relay titles and added three individual titles in dominating the Kansas Relays here Friday and Saturday. Details of the Relies appear on pages 4 and 5 in today's Kansan.
Sociologist Says Neutralism Vital to India's Economy
A sociology instructor said Friday the neutrality of India is defensible only when it is understood in it full context.
Harold Gould told the Current Events Forum that people must understand three principal grounds on which India's neutrality makes sense before they pass judgment on it.
"Non-alignment, which the Indians prefer to call their position, is necessary to the country's political and economic status." Mr. Gould said.
"Before World War I, a political party known as the Congress party was formed. Under Gandhi and Nehru, it promised a new way of life to the people of India.
"This promise has become the hope of every citizen of the country and failure to fulfill the promise would mean the end of the party.
"If India supported a military budget it would ruin its economic chances and the promises of the Congress party would be lost. The military budget would be necessary if India should renounce either the Eastern or the Western powers."
Mr. Gould said nonalignment was necessary also for the support of
'Old World Bazaar In Hoch Saturday
Hoch Auditorium will have the air of an exotic Old World bazaar Saturday as KU exchange students hold their annual International Festival.
The exhibits will display photographs, handicrafts, embroidery and other representative items from the 40 countries taking part in the "Foreign Students' Day." Axel Plambeck, Hamburg, Germany, graduate student, is chairman of the festival.
Foreign exchange students studying at high schools in the area have been invited to the festival. The
Festival.
Forty countries will have exhibition booths, eight countries will present short programs of dances, songs and skits and France will present a pantomime.
"The western charges are that India has more sympathy for Communism than it has for the West and that it has fought a war with Pakistan over Kashmir regardless of its stated neutral position.
certain principles the Indians acquired under Gandhi.
"India has a long border with China. Whenever Red China is on the upgrade, it becomes bligerent toward its surrounding countries. Red China is on the upgrade now and antagonism would mean war for India," he said.
"Gandhi's philosophy was the avoidance of killing or harming living things. He taught his people that they must make enemies love them by returning whatever cruelty they might hand them with love and kindness."
"India's perception of the West has been strongly conditioned through its experience as a British colony. India does not admire Communism itself, but rather the rapid economic rise of the Communist countries," he said.
The third ground for non-alignment is India's geographic position.
Mr. Gould said many people in the Western world have decried India's neutrality as hypocritical.
Committee chairmen for the festival are Manouchehr Fedram, Tehran, Iran, graduate student, exhibits; Ernesto Vergara, Quezon City, Philippines, graduate student program; Sonia Alvarez, Cardenas, Cuba, junior, publicity and invitations; Ali Moushine, Moroco, North Africa, freshman, clean-up, and Jarl Bafving, Gothenburg, Sweden, graduate student, music.
George B. Smith, dean of the University, will give the welcoming speech to start the program at 7:45 p.m.
public is invited to attend the program and view the exhibits. There is no charge.
The exhibition will be open from 1:30-5 p.m. and from 6:30-10 p.m.
Mr. Gould said India's stand on Kashmir did not violate its position of neutrality.
"Both India and Pakistan need
Campanile, Auto Hit by Vandals
One visitor to the KU campus didn't find the relays weekend as thrilling as he had anticipated.
John Schrack, 516 Kearney, Hutchinson, reported to the KU police that the top of his convertible car had been slit by vandals sometime after 3 a.m. Saturday, while he was staying with a friend on the campus.
Ronald M. Parnes, instructor of music and carillonneur, reported to the campus police that vandals had struck again at the campanile. He found one of the stone benches turned over shortly after noon Sunday. This is the second time within two weeks that the campanile has been victimized.
"There is also a tremendous hos-
Kashmir for economic progress. Kashmir is a mountainous, undeveloped country and it is believed that it contains the coal and iron which both India and Pakistan need.
Mr. Gould said the Western powers should allow India to maintain its neutrality and still aid the country economically.
"India has democracy at the present time. No strong democracy has fallen to Communism yet. However, India is having to curtail its economic program because it cannot raise the funds to support it. If the economy of the country falls anymore, there might be chaos from which only the Communists can benefit," he said.
Owl Society Selects 19 Men
Owl Society, junior men's honorary organization, has elected 19 new members for the 1959-60 school year.
Members are selected on the basis of outstanding scholarship, leadership, service and student activities. An initiation banquet will be held April 30 at the Dine-A-Mite.
The new members are: Ronald D. Andreae, Abilene; Thomas G. Ash, Kansas City, Mo.; Bruce R. Barrett, Kansas City, Kan.; Ronald R. Broun, Phillipsburg; John E. Brown, Lawrence.
Robert L. Covey, Ames, Iowa; David E. Crawford, Prescott; Ronald K. Dalby, Joplin, Mo.; Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence; Clay D. Edmands, Minneapolis; Paul A. Hensleigh, Winchester.
Ben C. Kuiken, Topeka; Don E. Logan, Prairie Village; John J. McCabe, Topeka; Lee R. McGimsey, Salina; Edward Mullman, Long Beach, N. Y.; Kenneth A. Megil, Vassar; Frank W. Naylor Jr., Kansas City, Kan., and Michael E. Ryan, Emporia. All are sophomores.
TOM PELLETT
NOSELESS NIKE—Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science, stands beside the Nike missile which was on display at the Engineering Exposition. Later, the nose cone of the missile was taken and found on Jayhawk Boulevard. The missile was guarded at all times.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 20, 1950
Good for the Engineers!
We would like to congratulate the Engineering Council for its decision not to elect a queen for this year's Engineering Exposition.
This act shows individuality in an age when every organization on a university campus feels it must select a queen if it is to maintain its self respect.
To be chosen as queen of something is supposedly an honor, but with so many queens roaming through these vine covered buildings,
most of them get lost in the shuffle. A queen has only a few short hours of glory before a new one steals the spotlight.
One of the reasons given for not choosing a queen is the lack of work for her to do. We wonder if any queen has any really essential duty to perform or if it is not really more work trying to find work for her.
The men of Marvin proved themselves by putting on another excellent esposition—without the aid of a queen. —Martha Crosier
Forgotten Men
This weekend several thousand persons watched the KU Relays and parade, attended the Engineering Exposition and danced to the music of Les Brown. And despite the rain the weekend was a success.
Many persons worked hard to get things ready. Yet let us not forget that the main persons who should have been honored were the members of the track team. The relays dance should be considered as a celebration—a celebration for the track team.
Yet this year, due to the fact that many fraternities were having parties on Saturday, it was decided to have the all school dance on Friday. This may have met with the favorable approval of the fraternities but the change in days made it impossible for the trackmen to attend since they had to perform the next day.
Next year's Relays committee should consider just how many couples would really attend if the dance were on Saturday when the track team could attend. —M. C.
letters to the editor E.D. ALLEN-JANEZ
THE PEOPLE
Tin Eagle
Editor:
When Sam Smith wrote in the April 15 issue of the Daily Kansas that student editorials have been abusing the bird symbol, whose "caricature stimulates immediate recognition of our institution," he has, in my opinion, tripped on his own words.
This is the fate of our symbol, the Jayhawk, whose spirit lies hidden somewhere in midst that tinnagle.
When an idea, whose manifestation is a symbol, is forged into the concreteness of words or bronze, it can either be enhanced and immortalized by human power or maimed and immortalized by human limitations, or both.
Con Henderson Stanberry, Mo., junior
Editor:
Greek Bias
Editor:
I am a citizen of Leavenworth and I have followed your student discussions concerning the lack of democracy in the Greek housing at KU. Might I, not as a former KU
student but as a present resident of the Jayhawker state, make a comment concerning this.
To me the significance of the national fraternity and sorority organizations deleting the racial and religious clauses from their constitutions has little meaning. The problem is that the local chapters still include such restrictions in their initiation rituals and oaths!
This Greek group will not pledge someone because he is a Negro; another because he is Jewish; another because he is white; another because he is protestant; another because he is Roman Catholic, and so it goes, on and on.
I think that a Greek group would do three things to show good democratic faith:
1. Remove restrictive clauses from their national charters, as many, many groups have already done.
2. Remove restrictive clauses from initiation rituals.
3. Invite members of other religious and racial groups to participate in rush week and if one or more of the "special" groups are satisfactory in every way, but in
their race or religion, ask them to pledge.
This old idea of individual selection and living with whom you wish is fine as far as it goes but it does not go far enough. I hope we realize that the last bastion of Greek strength is in the Middle West and if we don't make the Greek organizations totally democratic we will be censored right out of existence.
The question is, is my Greek fraternity or sorority worth keeping?
Harold C. Applegate
Students Unaware
Many reasons are given at various times for the lack of student interest in school politics. I think that one important reason was found in yesterday's paper.
Quoting your article on page eight of the April 15 Daily Kansas, I find these phrases referring to the elections; "too much mickey mouse," "elections are amusing," "I think they're a farce because they aren't democratic," "shady dealings," "undue accusations and false information," and "trash mail."
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER
DEAN BELLOWS
BITTER TEACHERS
FOR A
BITTER
WORLD
NOTICE TO FACULTY
PLEASE GO
MAKING TO
SHARING MY
SHEDES
THAT'S MY
WIFE'S JOB—
NOT MAKING
ENOUGH!
TEACHING?
BEE MY
GEBERKY
ADOPT EXTRA
JOBS FOR
TEACHERS
Peter
"WELL WE CAN'T PROMOTE TH' WHOLE FACULTY-GET ME A LIT OF THE TEACHERS WHO OWN A HOME, HAVE A LARGE FAMILY AND CAN'T AFFORD TO MOVE AWAY."
John L. Herring Muncie Senior
If this year's elections are going to be perpetrated in a like manner in the future, the student governing body had just as well be abandoned.
It is obvious that many of the students are aware of the true nature of KU elections. They are a lot of sound and fury by a few people seeking to add to their prestige and school activities list.
Poetry Corner It's Hail and Farewell
Poetry Corner
By Geneva Mendenhall
It takes time to know a man, time To get acquainted, time to think. Right now.
I'm fascinated with Mark Twain,
Intrigued with Eddie Robinson, and
Enamored of Bob Frost. But here
Comes my professor with C.
Sandburg! What's a poor girl to do?
About the time I begin to get
Emotionally involved, someone
Else comes along!
Talk about a split personality— Man, I'm fairly splintered!
New Hampshire's state legislature is the largest in the United States with 400 representatives and 24 senators.
书架
the took world
By Alexandra Mason
THE YOUNG CAESAR, by Rex Warner. New American Library, 1959. 50c.
Any fictional autobiography of a Roman must invite comparison with Robert Graves' superb "I, Claudius," and come out the worse for the comparison. The Young Caesar stands up to the test remarkably well, much better than, for instance, Hadrian's Memoirs.
Warner's task was made both easier and harder by the large body of Caesar's writings which are extant. The problem of presenting a convincing and interesting character who is consistent with the man who wrote the Gallic and Civil Wars, and at the same time explains that man, is not inconsiderable.
The attempt has been remarkably successful. If Julius Caesar had, disturbed by vague prescience of his death, composed his autobiography on the night of March 14, 44 B.C., he might well have written the book that Warner has given us.
This Caesar may perhaps lack some ordinary human dimension, but not a dimension which such a man could be expected to concern himself with in his autobiography.
He is a clear-sighted man, a man of logical and practical mind. He looks at himself as he looks at other men, with cold consideration of his own advantages and disadvantages. He does not deny either, but makes good use of the one set of qualities and keeps a careful eye on the other.
He does not make the mistake of assuming that he always acted as dispassionately, or turned his passions to such good use, as he can at 58, but neither does he make the companion error of considering all his youthful acts either charming folly or juvenile madness. He evaluates each act of his political life and judges it for efficacy and fitness in its immediate place as well as in the larger universe of the changing Roman political and social pattern.
He reveals himself, intentionally, as an ambitious and ruthless man with a strong desire for personal advancement, but also as a far-sighted man with a great concern for the survival of his country and people. These characteristics, acting in concert, produce his deliberate construction of that dictatorship which, in the hands of following Caesars, became the Empire.
Whether we consider this admirable or dastardly is of little import. It is drawn clearly and undeniably here, with its genesis in the bloody riots of Marius-Sulla feud, in the hideously corrupt government and taxation of the provinces, and in the great egoism and undeniable genius for power of Caesar himself.
Stylistically the book is certainly admirable. Warner has given us a quiet, sardonic narrative with no wasted words, though a trifle more expanded than Caesar's highly compressed war notebooks. It is extremely readable, quite Caesarian, and lends itself easily to ruthless character sketches as well as to the exposition of political events.
The descriptions of Cicero ("He has always seen himself as a character intruded into a history book.") and Cato ("Though still under thirty years of age, Cata had already acquired an important and indeed unique reputation. He had done this by his extreme pig-headedness, and by his affectionation of what he imagined to have been the ancient virtues—an affection so consistent and intense as almost to deserve the name of sincerity.") demonstrate its aptness for a dry and delightful humor.
The Young Caesar ends with Caesar's forty-third year. Since he lived to be fifty-eight we are left with the possibility that Mr. Warner may intend to publish a similar account of Caesar's last fifteen years. I sincerely hope so; it should be worth waiting for.
Worth Repeating
In the United States there is more space where nobody is than where anybody is. This is what makes America what it is.
—Geetrude Stein in "The Geographical History of America"
***
It is sometimes the man who opens the door who is the last to enter the room.
—Elizabeth Asquith Bibesco in "The Fir and the Palm"
***
Every succeeding scientific discovery makes greater nonsense of old-time conceptions of sovereignty. —Sir Anthony Eden
Dailu Hansan
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. 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 ... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department ... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department ... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Monday, April 20, 1959
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Religious Groups Schedule Meetinas
The following meetings and activities have been scheduled by campus religious organizations for the remainder of the week:
Tomorrow
The Roger Williams Fellowship will have a coffee hour at 8 p.m. at 1124 Miss.
Sam Elliott, Dodge City sophomore and president of Wesley Foundation, will lead the worship at the coffee and vesper hour at 9 p.m. at the Methodist Student Center.
The Canterbury Assn. will meet at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. to study Christian life.
Chapel services for Baptist students will be held at 12:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
Morning meditations will be held 7:30-7:45 a.m. at the Methodist Student Center.
Wednesday
Congregational students will meet at 9 p.m. in the Kansas Union to discuss and study the book "The Church, the Bible, and
ROTC Inspection Starts Tomorrow
The annual federal inspection of the Army ROTC detachment to determine the proficiency of unit training will start tomorrow and continue through Wednesday.
Cadets will be observed by the inspection team both in class and in the field. Tuesday afternoon the entire detachment will be reviewed by the visiting officers.
The inspection team will be Col Carl F. Lyons, Kansas State University, Manhattan; Col Paul H. Jacobs, Hq XVI U. S. Army Corps (reserve), Omaha, Neb.; Capt Walter R. Patterson, Lawrence Sub-center; and Capt. Johnny Hood, Hq. XVI U. S. Army Corps (reserve), Omaha, Neb. Capt. Hood, will inspect air cadets.
KU administrators who will be present are Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy; John H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school; George R. Wagoner, dean of the college of liberal arts; James Surface, dean of the school of business; John S. McNown, dean of the school of engineering and architecture; Donald K. Alderson, dean of men; L. C. Woodruff, dean of students; James B. Smith, professor of law; James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, and James E. Gunn, director of University relations.
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the United Student Movement." The room number will be posted on the bulletin board in the Union.
Morning meditations will be held 7:30-7:45 a.m. in the chapel of the Methodist Student Center.
United Presbyterian Women will receive Christmas gifts for mission stations at the annual Christmas in April meeting at 7:15 p.m. at the United Presbyterian Center.
The Canterbury Assn. will meet at 8 p.m. to study Christian life.
Chapel services for Lutheran students will be held 5-5:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
A prayer meeting will be held at 6:45 a.m. at Canterbury House with Holy Communion at 7 a.m. Episcopal prayer will be at 9:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
Morning meditations will be held 7:30-7:45 a.m. in the chapel at the Methodist Student Center.
At Canterbury House there will be a prayer meeting at 6:45 a.m. with Holy Communion at 7 a.m. Prayer will be at 9:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
Thursday
The Christian Science Student
Assn. will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will hold a Bible study and discussion at 7:30 p.m. at 829 Miss.
Chapel services for Baptist students will be held at 12:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
Fridav
Morning meditations will be held in the chapel at the Methodist Student Center 7:30-7:45 a.m.
The Canterbury Assn. will have prayer meeting at 6:45 a.m. with Holy Communion at 7 a.m.
The final date for students to take the Federal Service Entrance Examination is May 9.
Thursday Deadline For Civil Service
Applications for the examination will be accepted until Thursday. Application cards (Form 5000AB) may be obtained from most post offices. Starting salaries for college level applicants range from $4,040 to $4,980 a year for trainee-type administrative, technical and professional positions.
The Concordia Club coffee hour will be at 3-5 p.m. at 1314 La. Members from the Baptist Student Union will attend a state retreat in Wichita.
Saturday
The Spring Retreat for officers at the United Presbyterian Center will be held from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the center.
Baptist students will be in Wichita at a state retreat.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 20, 1959
1
UP AND OVER—High hurdlers clear the barriers in the university class of the Kansas Relays Saturday.
University Class Results
4-mile relay-1. Kansas; 2. Colorado;
3. Arkansas; 4. Nebraska; 17:30.5.
**Sprint medley-1.** Kansas; 2. Oklahoma;
3. Kansas State; 4. Houston;
2-mile run—1. John Macy, Houston;
2. Leonard Edenen, Minnesota; 3. Miles
Emmons, Oklahoma State;
4. Brianna Olsen, New Meer
ord. Old record 9.07.9 by Simpson, 1588.
120-yard high hurdles — 1, Charles Bode
East Texas State; 2, Fay Bradley, Pittsburg (Kan.) State; 3, Calvin Groff, Missl.
4, Richard Murphy, Tech Tech
149.
Distance medley relay—1 Oklahoma
2 Colorado; 3 Houston; 4 Iowa State;
5 Idaho.
100-yard dash 1-Charlie Tidwell, Kansas; 2. Henry Wiley, Missouri; 3. Orlando Hazley, Oklahoma State; 4. Ron Altenburn, Cornell College; 69.9.
Glenn Cunningham Mile -1. Barry Almond, Houston; 2. Joe American Horse Nebraska, 3. Pat Clothesy, Houston; 4. Jack Nelson, Arkansas: 4:14.1
**Shot put**-1. Dan Erwin, Oklahoma;
2. Mike Lindsay, Oklahoma; 3 Jim Cain,
Kansas State; 4 John McCarrier, Wichita;
55-73).
Hop, step and jump-1. Jack Smyth,
Houston; 2. Kent Floerke, unattached;
3. Walt Brown, Lincoln University; 50-1
4. Record. Old record, 157 by Smyth,
49-9.7a).
440-yard relay—1. Kansas; 2. Texas
3. Oklahoma State; 4. Houston; 41.0
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High Jump—I. Dub Thornton, Texas Tech, 6-6(1). Bill Weller, Texas; Dee French, Kansas State; Monroe Fordham, Kentucky; Cannon, Kansas; (4-way for second).
2-mile relay-1, Kansas; 2. Nebraska;
3. Texas; 4. Drake; 7.37.6.
880-yard relay—1. Texas; 2. Oklahoma State; 3. Missouri; 4. Baylor; 1:23.6.
3000-meter steeplechase—1. Bill Coleman, Chicago Track Club; 2. Al Lawrence, Houston; 3. Tom Oakley, Arkansas; 4. Dare Holman, Kansas State; 9. 16:9.
Javelin-1 Bill Alley, Kansas; 2. Buster
Otterus; 4. Bob Berenson, Walburn; 254-9
Tuxes; 4. Bob Berenson, Walburn; 254-9
Pole vault —1. Iim Graham, Oklahoma State; 2. Aubrey Dooley, Oklahoma State; 3. Monte Doyl, New Mexico; 4. Jack Stevens, Kansas; Bob Oden, Emporia; 5. Roberto Cochrane, Pohard, Nebraska; J. D. Martin, Oklahoma, Marvin Howard, Wichtia; 14-8. $^3$
Mile relay—1. Texas; 2. Kansas State;
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Phil Mulkey of the Memphis (Tenn.) Olympic club won his third Kansas Relays decathlon crown Saturday.
The former Wyoming University and Memphis State College athlete compiled 6,302 points compared to the record-breaking 6,544 points he scored last year.
Mulkey Wins Decathlon Crown
Second place Terry Arenz of Arkansas, who led at the end of Friday's competition, scored 5,914 points. He was followed by Jim Klein of Whitworth College, 5,641; Jim Pettit, Texas Tech, 5,170; Ronnie Carter, Coffeyville Junior College, 5,097; Harty Greer, Cleveland City University, 4,558; Dale Falter, Kearney (Neb.) State, 4,162; and Charles Carpenter, Oklahoma Baptist, 4,008.
The 56 million cars owned by Americans make up about 70 per cent of all the autos in the world.
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Rain Cancels Missouri Games
The same weekend rain that put a damper on the KU Relays completely drowned out the activities of the KU baseball team. Friday and Saturday's games with Missouri were canceled because of the inclement weather.
FAY'S DRIVE-IN
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The next series on the Jayhawkers' schedule will be with Iowa State on April 24 and 25 at Ames.
KU Sports Schedule
Golf—Missouri there today.
IOWA—Missouri there 'today.
Iowa State — tomorrow.
IOWA State-Friday, and Saturday.
Tennis—Wichita there tomorrow, Nebraska there Friday, Iowa State there Saturday.
Track-Drake Relays Friday and Saturday.
Fraternity Jewelry,
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Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
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Monday April 20, 1950 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Tidwell Is 'Most Outstanding'
ALEXANDER BAYARD
Bill Alley—A wet field, football shoes and a new relays record.
Darwin Ashbaugh, Kansas' new Big Eight Indoor Broad Jump champion from Ellis was one of only two sophomore champions crowned in Kansas City. He jumped $23-71_{2}$ a career high, for his surprise blue ribbon.
Charlie Tidwell was voted the most outstanding athlete of the Kansas Relays in a poll of sportswriters covering the event.
The Kansas junior won the 100- yard dash and carried the baton on two legs of KU's winning relay teams.
Two runners, a jumper, and a javelineer overcame a muddy track Saturday to set records in four events in the Kansas Relays.
KU junior Bill Alley, although suffering from a 101 degree temperature Saturday morning, pulled on a pair of football shoes and heaved the javelin 254-9. Although this was 22 feet over the record set last year by Bruce Parker of Texas, it was well under his $270^{-1/2}$ herculean throw two weeks ago at the Texas Relays. Alley said that, under the prevailing conditions, the 254-plus toss was still 20 feet farther than he thought he would throw.
Other university class recordbreaking performances were by Dick Howard of New Mexico in the 400-meter hurdles (50.4); John Maey of Houston in the two-mile run (8:59.2); and Houston's Jack Smyth in the hop, step and jump (50 feet one inch). Smyth has now won this event for the past three years. Last year he set a relays record of 49-97/8.
Bill Easton's Kansas team dominated the meet by winning four of seven relay events and three individual titles.
Ernie Shelby, Paul Williams, Bob Lida and Charlie Tidwell won the 440-yard relay by outrunning a Texas team who had been victorious in the race for the last five years. KU's time was 41:10.
The Jayhawkers also added the four-mile, two-mile and sprint medlev relays.
Cliff Cushman clocked a 4:13.2 in the mile to anchor KU's four-mile relay team (Dan Ralston, Bill Mills, Tom Skutka and Cushman) to its 11th victory in 12 years.
Davis began with a 1:56. Bob Tague followed with a 1:53.7, Skutka ran a 1:53, and Cushman finished with 1:53.9.
The versatile Cushman also anchored the two-mile relay team that saw all the Kansas runners well under the two minute mark. Gordon
Anchorman Bob Tague had less than a yard to spare as he snapped the tape in front of Oklahoma's Gail Hodgson to lead KU to victory in the sprint medley. Bob Lida ran the first leg of the race, a 440, and was followed by Williams and Tidwell, each running a 220.
Tidwell seemed to virtually explode from the starting blocks in the 100-yard dash. Within ten yards he was leading the pack, which was by no means a sluggish group, by a good two yards. He kept the lead all the way to the wire to win with a : 99.9.
Ernie Shelby leaped 25-31$\frac{1}{4}$ Friday to win the broad jump. This was a scant $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches behind the Relays record of 25-43$\frac{4}{4}$ set in 1931.
Central Michigan set a 3:14.7 relays in the college class mile relay.
days in the college class nine relay.
The only other record was set
Friday when Wichita East's Archie
San Romano sped to the fastest mile
ever clocked by a Kansas high
schooler. He hit 4:17.4 to break the
4:18.2 he set last year as a junior.
any chance KU had for duplicating Indiana's 1937 performance of capturing five relay events. Paul Williams accepted a handoff from Ernie Shelby past the end of Shelby's designated 220 handoff mark, and 20 yards later, Williams hit Lida's foot while passing him the baton to send the latter tumbling. Lida was on his feet after a perfect roll but withdrew from the race after limping for a few strides.
A's Stop Indians, Start Home Stand
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI)
The Kansas City Athletics, riding high after they stopped a Cieweanu Indians' win streak at six games, return to the home park tomorrow night for a 14-game stand.
Pinchhitter Zeke Bella delivered the big brow yesterday as the Athletics rallied for all their runs in the ninth inning off Herb Score to beat the Indians 4-3 before 11,264 fans.
A Zebu has never been known to win, or compete in, the Kentucky Derby.
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Shenk Given Sports Award
Henry Shenk, head of the department of physical education and recreation, received the Pop Warner Distinguished Service Award from Gov. George Docking today.
The award is made annually to the person in each state who has contributed the most to the physical fitness of youth for the year.
Gov. Docking nominated Prof. Shenk for the award, which is promoted by the President's Conference on Physical Fitness.
Kansas Half-Miler Bob Tague was the lone survivor among eight defending Big Eight Indoor track champions in Kansas City.
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WHO SAID IT FIRST?
A column of incidental intelligence by Jockey brand
loving
"LOVE IS BLIND"
"THIRTY DAYS HATH SEPTEMBER." ETC.
"But love is blind, and lovers cannot see
The petty filies that themselves commit."
Next to the Bible, Shakespeare is the richest source of common quotes. He's responsible for this one, too. See his "Merchant of Venice," Act 11, Scene 6:
No need to recite further from this bit of daggerel which has served us all as a pony ever since grade school. For this universal handy reference we are indebted to a man named Richard Grafton who was nice enough to compose the rhyme way back in 1570.
@
SEPT.
1
AUG.
31
"PUT IT IN YOUR PIPE"
No, Sir Walter Raleigh didn't originate this smoker's challenge. It was R. H. Barham, in "The Lay of St. Odlille";
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 20, 1959
ING-NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
THE WINNER—Triangle fraternity's first place float in the Relays Parade Saturday morning advanced the theme "KU National Champions."
KU Group to Excavate S. Dakota Indian Site
An Indian village in South Dakota will be excavated this summer by a field party from KU.
Carlyle S. Smith, associate curator of anthropology at the Museum of Natural History and associate professor of anthropology, will direct the project, which will take place in the Big Bend Reservoir on the Missouri River during June and July.
Water to Cover Site
The KU group will cooperate with the National Park Service, which is granting $3,000 for the project, and the Smithsonian Institution.
Big Bend Dam is one of a series of multi-purpose dams being constructed by the U. S. Government in the Missouri Basin, which will flood or destroy large numbers of archaeological sites.
The field work is part of the Inter Agency Archaeological Salvage Program aimed at saving the information which would be lost forever under the water of the reservoirs.
"This work is part of the effort of anthropologists to contribute toward the reconstruction of the cultural history of the American Indian. The occupation by man of the Missouri Valley in South Dakota has been pushed back to at least 10,000 years ago by expeditions similar to this one." Prof. Smith said.
"In addition to those in field work, other students gain experience in the laboratory with the specimens obtained."
Village Had Earth Lodges
Village Had Earth Lodges Prof. Smith and his assistants will be working on the site of an earth lodge village which probably was occupied by the Arikara tribe.
The field party will excavate houses, refuse mounds, and storage pits. They will also search for other features, such as fortification ditches. They expect to find between 20 and 30 thousand specimens in the excavation.
The group will live in a base camp composed of an abandoned building and tents near the excavation site.
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The results of the work will be compiled in a report for publication.
Smith's 6th Expedition
This will be Prof. Smith's sixth expedition to South Dakota. Bert Salwen, graduate student from Columbia University will be field assistant, and Mrs. Maria Wille, KU graduate student from Costa Rica, will be laboratory assistant.
Other KU students on the trip will be Elizabeth Gray, Topeka freshman; Marvin E. MeDougal, Fontana sophomore; James Chism, Anthony, and Marvin Mussell, Kansas City, Kan., juniors, and David Hutchison, Maryville, Mo., Barbara Richards, Hays, and Mary Villarreal,颅, seniors.
AUGUSTA. Ga. — (UPI) — President Eisenhower today formally nominated Christian A. Herter as Secretary of State to replace the seriously ailing John Foster Dulles.
John H. Rick of the University of Toronto, Robert Frazier of Lawrence High School, and Lawrence Espenshade of Arlington, Va., also will join the expedition.
Albrecht Heads Language Group
Ike Officially Names Herter
Eisenhower announced the appointment last Saturday and today went through the formality of seeking Senate consent. Public hearings on Herter, 64-year-old former governor of Massachusetts and currently the acting secretary, will begin tomorrow before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The new organization was formed to advance criticism and research in modern language and literature.
W. P. Albrecht, professor of English, was elected president of the Midwest Modern Language Association of America at a meeting in Wichita Saturday.
Prof. Albrecht is chairman of the English department.
COLLEGE MOTEL
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The administration was confident of confirmation before Herter leaves late this week for the Western foreign ministers conference in Paris. On the last full day of a golfing
Member Best Western Motels
On U.S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district.
The $100,000 L. V. Burns Memorial Medical Research Fund has been established for research in cancer and heart disease.
On the last full day of a golfing holiday that began here April 7 at
$100,000 Fund for Medical Research
1703 WEST 6TH
The fund is to be invested by the KU Endowment Association and the income expended with the approval of Dean W. Clarke Wescoe of the School of Medicine.
MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131
The money was the gift of Miss Ethel E. McDougall of Kansas City, Kan., through the estate.
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the Augusta National Golf Club, the President devoted his morning to consideration of official documents, including some routine nominations and a supplemental appropriation previously authorized by Congress for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
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Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
KHAKI WIND BREAKER in Strong Wednesday, April 15. Call Dean Henrichs at VI 3-4711. 4-22
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT. spacious, nicely furnished. garbage disposal, bath and gas furniture. linen furniture to accept graduate students. Cal V 13-7677.
ROOMS FOR UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN:
Complete kitchen and laundry room.
1½ blocks from Union. Make arrangements for summer and fall. Ph. VI 3-8-2015
APARTMENT FOR RENT, three room,
furnished, for men or couple. See at 9
Indiana, before 10 a.m. or after 10
sundays and all day Saturdays and
Sundays.
4-23
FOR SALE
JUKEBOX RECORDS, 35 cents each or three for $1.00. Rowlands Book Store, 1241 Oread. 4-24
CALIFORNIA BOUND mimeograph. English airmail paper, U.S. plateblocks, automobile overhaul tools, Jensen high fidelity speaker, Karlson enclosure, case, flash bulbs, firm double bed, couch, camera, toaster. Call VI 3-9869, event# 2017.
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., two-door, standard shift, 2-tone green. Original owner, 20,700 miles, excellent condition. VI 3-5297 after 4 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.
DAFFODILS, 25 cents a bunch, no need.
Davall, CV 11 - 3-278. 4-29
1950 FORD CUSTOM V-8, excellent interior, tubeless tires with less than 500 miles, good, clean engine. Best offer taken. Call Jerry at VI 3-1116. 4-23
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, and diagrams, in course in course, in study notes, in cross index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7533, 805 Ohf
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts. Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
MODERN TRAILER HOME, fenced yard; nice size storage house, all equipped, ready to move into, $850.00. Ideal for medical student, within walking distance of KU Medical Center. Call VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m.
4-22
1955 CHEVROLET Six, standard transmission, heater. SX$75-$850. 1949 Chevrolet Six with '52 motor, standard transmission, rafter motor. SX$300-$330. Available in May, 1946 Hudson Super Six. $75. Cal Woody at VI 3-8202.
1955 OLDSMOBILE, holiday hardpos.
1955 OLDSMOBILE, call VI 3-3823 4-23
4-23
K U.M.C. AREA. 4418 Cambridge. Low equity, low payment G.I. Loan. Income position. Mail to KU.M.C. by appointment. Call YE 2-9094. Kansas City, Kansas. 4-24
GERMAN TYPEWRITER, solid portable with box, almost new, $100. Call Peter Haefner at VI 3-6244 4-22
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, stockets of cages, furniture, and accessories 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. Weather, grooming, litter, sweaters, etc.. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome.
TYING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660.
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadi
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DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Formals, wedging gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
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TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron
Leopard, call VI 3-5283.
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly
Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqst, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. 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
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-ALWAYS the latest
dance studio, Dance Studio, 908
Milpacuille, ph. V3 - 6838.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-1891 7360 Tenn. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. Attention to content and presentation. Work on Chi V3-1240. Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can provide your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call Vi 10124. tf
SEWING AND ALTERATIONS. men's clothing a specialty. Will replace pockets or half pockets on men's trousers. 1220 Louisiana, call VI 3-4890. 4-22
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singh
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WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc.
General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-3428
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicc. party supplies. ant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350.
WANTED; NAVY UNIFORM, service dress khaki (tropical worsed), size 40-42 in reasonably good condition. Call V1 3-3016. 4-20
WANTED: MARRIED STUDENTS to sell life and personal health insurance. Salary plus quarterly bonus. If interested, write to John Hancock Building, Kansas City, Kansas, for further information or appointment. 4-20
WANTED: Babysitter, in our home, three to four days a week. Call VI 3-8443 4-20
TELEPHONE CALLERS to work in your home or our office. Call VI 3-6170. 4-21
WANTED: young woman, not over thirty,
for interesting work contacting public.
workplace. Please provide your years. Some typing required, also sales
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 20. 1959
Most Phi Beta Kappas Did Not Aim for Award
Only three of 36 Phi Beta Kappa awarded this year said they worked specifically for the award. To the others it came as a surprise.
Patricia Bell, Atchison, said, "I transferred to KU from Washburn my junior year. I didn't think of Phi Beta Kappa until I had been in school awhile, but then I worked extra hard to get it."
Richard A. Kraus, Lawrence, explained he did not know the award existed until he came to KU. "After I found out about it, it was certainly the end I had in mind."
Robert W. Woodruff, Cedar Vale,
said "That was my prime objective,
but I was more interested in making
Official Bulletin
Cheerleader practices, April 21, 23, 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101. Tryouts, April 28 and 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
TODAY
Aids and Awards Employment opportuni-
tive available for men. 222 Strong
Banks, Postal Services, Fire & Safety
Mathematics Colloquium, Prof. Wacław Sierumnik, University of Warsaw. "On Some Unsolved Problems of Arithmetic." 4 p.m. 9 Strong Hall. (Given in French and translated into English by Prof. Jacek Szarski.)
Humanities Lecture Series, 4 p.m.
Troptery Room, Kansas Union, Discussion,
"G. B. Shaw's Women." Dr. William Irvine,
Stanford University.
TOMORROW
International Folk Dance Club, 7-9 p.m.
Jaynavik Room of Kansas Union. Every-
day.
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 break-
down for lunch.
Mathematics Colloquium Prof. Wacław Sierpinski, "Projective and Analytic Sets," 4:15 p.m., 203 Strong Hall. Given in French and translated into English.
SUA Doubles Ping Pong Tournament,
6:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. Register your team now at the information desk in the Kansas Union.
Society for the Advancement of Management 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union. Frank R Burge, director of Kansas Union will speak.
Humanities Lecture. Dr. William Irvine, Stanford University. "Darwin and Literature" 8 p.m., Fraser Theater Informal reception afterward at the Faculty
Chemistry Club. 7:30 p.m., Room 231.
Malott, "The KU Tradition in Chemistry," by Dr. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry.
WEDNESDAY
Faculty Forum, Dean W. Clark Wescoe of KU Medical Center, "Evident Defects in the Training and Selection of KU graduates Who Are Recommended for Admission to the School of Medicine" Noon, English Room of the Kansas Union
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
Dance Teacher, speaker, prayer
200-450 lb.
El Alenzo se reune el miercoles dia 22 de abril a lasta 4 de la tarde en 11 Fraser. Dauckles, Secretario Ejecutivo del American Friends Service Committee on Mex.-e la habilar sobre el tema: "El Mexico de las Hablas" hablara en espanol. Se serviran refrescos.
good grades than getting an award."
good grades than getting an award." Virgil Sandford, Wichita, was one of those who said top grades were not his prime objective.
"Grades as a rule are not important, but I did not study hard just for such an honor. I was more interested in learning, and my eligibility came as a coincidence."
Sandford, who has a scholarship to study law at Columbia University, New York, is one of the 18 men who plan to do graduate work.
Robert Yaple, St. Joseph, Mo., also thought grades were not important as such:
"I was very appreciative of the honor. However, grades are not indicative of a good student nor do they prove how much he knows," he said.
Yaple also mentioned that during his college career he formed study habits parallel to the University's suggestions. He sleeps about four hours in a 24-hour cycle. He plans to do graduate work at Chicago University.
Most of the Fhi Beta Kappa women plan to continue their education but not Barbara Fugate, Kansas City, Kan. She is taking on a lifetime job - marriage.
Two of the winners want to study in a foreign country. Stephen Hill, Lawrence, is trying to get a scholarship for a year's study at an English university. John Callahan, Independence, plans to study in France.
A student must have a 2.4 grade point average to be considered for membership to Phi Beta Kappa. The KU chapter, the oldest west of the Mississippi, annually elects 10 per cent of the senior class for membership.
Seniors in Recital Tonight, Wednesday
A pianist and a soprano will present this week in Swarath, Regal Hall.
At 8 p.m. tonight Mary Warren, Muskogee, Okla., will present a piano recital. Wednesday night at 8 p.m. Martha O'Dell, Carrollton, Mo., soprano, will present a recital. Miss Warren is a pupil of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, and Miss O'Dell is a student of Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice.
The Castle Tea Room 1307 Massachusetts VI3-1151
Ober's
VI 3-1951
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with hand-sewn seams for foot-hugging fit and strong long wear
Bostonian Authentic Moccasins
From 13.95
Radio Programs
KANU
5:00 Twilight Concert: "String Quartet in A Flat Major" by Dvorak
Tonight
7:00 Ballet Music; "Ballet Suite No. 2 and 3" by Shostakovitch
7:30 Keyboard Concert (Harpsichord): Treasury of Harpsichord Music
8:00 University of the Air:
"And the World Listened"
7:55 News
8:30 University of the Air:
"Dearness to the World!"
8:45 University of the Air:
"Curtain Going Up."
8:45 University of the Air "Curtain Going Up"
KUOK
9:00 Starlight Symphony;
"Symphony No. 7 in A Major,
Opus 92" by Beethoven
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Little Symphony in B Minor for Wind Instruments" by Gounod
Tonight
11:00 Sign Off
KANU, the FM radio voice of KU, 91.5 MC
Ad Groups Visit KC For Field Trip
About 30 members of KU chapters of Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, national men's and women's advertising fraternities, recently made a field trip to Kansas City, Mo.
The group toured the Hallmark greeting card plant, Bruce B. Brewer Advertising Agency, Nelly Don Dress Company, and KMBC-TV. In the evening they were guests at a banquet held at the Sales and Advertising Executives Club, at which Charles E. Garvin, Direct Mail Group Head for J. Walter Thompson, spoke
Two-thirds of all the manufacturing jobs in South Carolina are in the textile industry.
4:00 Music for the Afternoon (uninterrupted)
6:00 News
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 Mike Fitzwater Show
10:15 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Mike Fitzwater Show
12:00 Sign Off
The Breaks of The Game
NEW ORLEANS — (UFI) — Mrs.
Lydia W. Davis, 84, has filed a
$26,000 suit against a dance studio
Mrs. Davis said she'd learned the mambo, cha-cha, tango, samba, fox trot, swing, merengue and the waltz. But she broke her leg during her 400th lesson.
With one refueling, the Strategic Air Command's new B-52G bomber can fly more than half-way around the world.
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Gallagher Predicts Algerian Freedom
Algeria will gain independence from France within a few years, an American Universities Field Staff speaker told a Daily Kansan press conference yesterday.
Charles F. Gallagher, visitingAUFS expert on North Africa and the mid-East, stated yesterday afternoon in a Daily Kansan press conference that Algerian rebels will accept nothing short of independence from France.
"The question is not if Algeria can gain independence but how long it will take," Mr. Gallagher said.
"Algerian independence is not progressing at the pace the nationalists would like, nor is the French movement to keep the colony under its thumb moving along well under the strong Fifth Republic.
"There is no definite French political program for Algeria and there is no move to fit in any presumable political program at the present time."
Algerians Dynamite
Mr. Gallagher outlined the Algerian rebel leaders as self-made
men who take action instead of theorizing. He stated that when independence was won, a left of center type of government would probably be set up.
"Algeria is very important today in that it will control the major oil interests in North Africa and will also have the best fighting force in the Arab world," he said.
Shifting to the mid-East, Mr. Gallagher blasted our misconceptions about Nasser and the Arab world.
"These misconceptions are largely due to Zionistic propaganda on the Arab world which is distorted to present only the bad side of the picture."
Attacking the press, he said:
"The New York Times is the worst paper in the world on the subject of the mid-East. The editorial pages are a scandal and read like reports from the Israeli foreign office. The editors don't even believe their correspondent stationed in the mid-East!"
2 Paners Best
The Christian Science Monitor and The Manchester Guardian were cited
[Image of a man smiling]
Charles F. Gallagher
as two leading papers giving the best coverage of the explosive midmid-East area.
Continuing on the subject of Aral
nationalism, Mr. Gallagher stated that there is very strong public opinion in favor of a united Arabia and mentioned that Nasser is moving into a dead center position between the Eastern and Western worlds.
"There has been strong talk of an Arab federation in North Africa and I can see this as a probability in the near future," Mr. Gallagher said.
He also tabbed Jordan as a likely candidate for membership in the United Arab Republic composed of Egypt and Syria and forecast its entrance into the UAR within two years.
"Saudi Arabia will probably also come around to joining the UAR," Mr. Gallagher said. "The present dynasty is living right now on borrowed time."
The remainder of Mr. Gallagher's schedule is:
Tomorrow: 9:00 a.m.—Recent World History, 110 Strong, "Arab Nationalism and Power Politics." 11:00 a.m.—International Trade, 33 Strong, "Economic Geography of North Africa." 2:00 p.m.—Civil Unrest, 400 short, "North Africa in the Arab World."
Thursday; 11:00 a.m.—International Organization, 13 Strong Annex B, "The
U. N. in North Africa." 3:00 p.m.—Comparative Party Systems, 13 Strong Annex B. "Political Institutions in the North African States."
Friday; 8:00 a.m.—Elements of Sociology, 11 Strong Annex E. "Changing Social Factors in North Africa." 9:00 a.m.
—Recent World History, 110 Strong. "The Algerian Question." 11:00 a.m.—International Trade, 33 Strong. Economic Development, 293 Press once. 2:00 p.m.—The Editorial, 210 Flint. "The Algerian Question." 4:00 p.m.—Current Events Forum. Union Browsing Room.
Monday: 9:00 a.m.—Current American Foreign Policy, 1 Strong Annex E,
American Foreign Policy, North艾伦,
1 Strong Annex F, Sociology of the Berbers," 11:00 a.m.—International Politics,
1 Strong Annex E, The Algerian Factors,
Practices, 303 Bailey, "Changing Social Factors in North Africa."
April 28: 7:30 p.m.—Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, William Allen White Reading Room, Flint Hall, "North Africa in Transition."
April 29: 8:00 a.m.—World Geography, 426 Lindley. "North Africa in Transition" 9:00 a.m.—Political Geography, 403 Lindley. "Arab Nationalism and Power Politics in the Middle East" 1:00 a.m.—Strong Annex E. "Emerging North Africa." 1:00 p.m.—Problems in the Social Sciences, 208 Strong. "Economic Geography of North Africa."
Daily hansan
56th Year, No. 130
Polish Visitor Speaks On Arithmetic Problems
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, April 21, 1959
Waclaw Sierpinski, professor of mathematics in Poland, still vigorous after more than half a century of teaching, delivered a lecture, "On Some Unsolved Problems of Arithmetic," to a KU graduate class yesterday.
Prof. Sierpinski read his lecture in French from a script, illustrating his remarks on a blackboard. Jacek Szarski, a dean at the University of Krakow, Poland, who is at KU this semester to work on a mathematical research project, translated for students whose mathematical French was below par.
Several of the KU mathematics faculty would have been able to follow Prof. Sierpinski in his native
Polish, but it was decided the remainder of the faculty and graduate students could better understand the lecture in French. Prof. Sierpinski speaks no English.
Born in 1882, Prof. Sierpinski is the oldest of Polish mathematicians now working actively. He has published over 600 papers and nearly 20 monographs and books.
Among his many honors, he is a member of the Council of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the Academia dei Lincei of Rome, and the Academy of Sciences, Peru.
He will give a lecture on projective and analytic sets at 4:15 pm today in 203 Strong.
Around the Nation
Approval for Herter; Death for Starkweather
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—The Senate Foreign Relations Committee today unanimously approved the nomination of Christian A. Herter to be Secretary of State.
Chairman J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) said he would ask the Senate leadership to bring the nomination up in the Senate today if possible.
"There has been some confusion in the circumstances surrounding this appointment," Fulbright said. "I think that fast action by Congress will correct any impression that may exist that there is a difference of opinion about the appointment."
LINCOLN, Neb.—The Nebraska Pardon Board today refused to commute the death sentence of mass slayer Charles Starkweather and set his new execution date for May 22
The two men with whom the decision rested made their decision after hearing 20 minutes of testimony by the redhaired mass slayer who had admitted 11 killings.
The board members, Attorney General C. S. Beck and Secretary of State Frank Marsh, made their ruling immediately upon closing the hearing at the state penitentiary here. Starkweather, who once terrorized the entire Lincoln area, was
WASHINGTON—Roy W. Johnson, the Defense Department's space projects chief, said today the next discoverer satellite, Discoverer III would have a "biomedical space traveler" aboard.
meek and quiet-voiced as he made his plea for clemency.
Johnson left the impression last night that an effort would be made to eject the capsule containing mice and return them safely to earth. He said the biomedical information to be obtained from Discoverer III would be "very useful" to Project Mercury, the program to put a man into orbit around the earth in 1961.
TALLAHASSEE — The Florida House of Representatives yesterday unanimously passed a bill calling for a maximum penalty of death for terrorist bombings.
The proposal also makes it a felony to make false reports of bomb threats.
Professor Says Shaw's Love Is Economy Symbol
George Bernard Shaw was not really interested in writing of love. He did so only as a way of illustrating his economic ideas, said the current Humanities lecturer.
Dr. William Irvine, of Stanford University, spoke yesterday at the Student Union Activities Coffee in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. He spoke on "G. B. Shaw's Women." He said:
"Shaw was really interested in socialism and revolution. The public would not listen to such drastic economic ideas. Shaw solved the problem by writing his kind of love story so it said very shocking things about economies and revolution without seeming to say them."
Dr. Irvine said Shaw's ideas about women came from his relationship with his mother and women who pursued him during his early career in London.
"Mrs. Shaw was a very rational, capable, and well informed woman. Her example caused Shaw to think of women as rational creatures," he said.
Dr. Irvine said while most women who pursued Shaw were fairly reasonable about it, one was not. Shaw's experience with this woman taught him that females do have aggressive tendencies.
Shaw's condemnation of the Victorian status quo committed him to utilize two types of female characters—the "womanly" woman and the "new" woman, he said.
Further experience showed him that woman also was ferocious in achieving her desires, he said.
"The 'womanly' woman is the Victorian woman. She is the sort of thing which Shaw does not approve. The 'new' woman is a rationalist; a realist," he said.
Dr. Irvine said Shaw was against the conventional romance, such as melodrama, presented on the stage in his time. He said:
"He was, on principle, against ordinary love scenes. He couldn't write that kind of love affair. To Shaw, love was a battle of will, wilt, and even physical force. These combat Shaw could do wonderfully well."
Will Gift Be a Painting Sofas, Trophy Case?
A championship trophy case to be placed in Allen Field House will be recommended as the senior class gift at the senior coffee April 30.
Robert Billings, Russell senior and chairman of the senior gift committee, said that this recommendation and two other gift possibilities would be presented to the seniors on a ballot.
The class members will have the final decision on the gift.
The other two suggestions are furnishings for the new addition to the Kansas Union, or a painting of a Kansas scene to be placed in a display panel at Dyche Museum.
"Many people feel that the fine athletic tradition that we have had here at the University through the years deserves an appropriate place to display trophies received as a result of outstanding work on the part of KU coaches and players," Billings said.
The recommendation includes six cases which would cost $1,750 and could be delivered in a short time.
"The cases would be located in a place where a great many people would be able to view them and their contents through the years. A fitting plaque would be attached to credit the class of 1959 for their gift." Billings said.
The championship trophies are now located in the Trephy Room of the Kansas Union, the chancellor's office, the coaches' offices, and other places around the campus.
Considerable cloudiness this afternoon. Clearing east tonight Wednesday partly cloudy and warmer over state. Frost east portion with freezing temperatures tonight. Low tonight 25 to 35. High Wednesday 50s.
Weather
E
SPORTING NEW STRIPES—Three members of the Air Force ROTC unit show the birdie their new-type stripes, a change this semester over the previous regulation stripes. They are, from left: Edward Bailey, Atchison junior, Kim Wiley, Wichita senior, and John Durrett, Prairie Village sophomore.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 21. 1959
A Year to Answer
The strength of any platform depends upon the quality of material from which it is built. And Vox Populi political party will either stand upon a strong foundation or fall through the weak and rotten boards, depending on its performance.
The test of durability begins tonight when newly elected representatives meet with the All Student Council. The new Council, composed of 20 Vox Populi members, has only a month of the school year left, but this is sufficient time to act upon some of the planks in the party's platform.
The proposals of the platform were:
1. The housing committee should continue to work on the problem of housing for independent students living in unorganized housing. This should be investigated before the end of the 1958-59 school year so provisions can be improved before the fall semester begins.
2. Committee appointments should be made on the basis of petition and with the approval of the ASC. But openings in committee should get campus-wide publication so all interested students are aware of the positions.
3. Vox will...inform students about student government through the ASC public relations committee. Perhaps this is a positive step toward reducing, and eventually eliminating, student apathy.
4. Vox will work toward the formation of curriculum committee in each of the schools of the
University. Not only should these committees be formed, but the ASC should give them guidance which would in turn make them more influential in effecting changes and improvements.
5. The problem of student wages should be taken to the ASC labor committee. But Vox should not stop there. It is a matter that must go beyond committee meetings where everyone agrees that it is a problem and lets it go at that. A solution may never be found unless the problem is thoroughly investigated, documented and presented to the Board of Regents or the state legislature.
The Vox platform also proposed to bring four points to the attention of the ASC. The four points were:
1. Extended library closing hours.
2. Improved new student orientation program.
3. Expansion of the Kansas Union coffee service.
4. Lifting zone parking restrictions during final week.
These proposals need consideration to determine their advisability. But as part of the platform they must be given due attention.
The party built its platform upon which it stood during elections. Now with the majority of representatives on the Council it must continue to stand and to work on it throughout the remainder of this school year and the 1959-60 year.
The work begins at the meeting tonight.
THE PEOPLE
letters to the editor
Dear Mr. Jones
(Editor's note: The following letter refers to a column by Alan Jones, "It Looks This Way," in Thursday's Daily Kansan.)
Editor:
I quote—because of necessity:
You (Alan Jones) painted a very discouraging but evident verbal picture in your article. Even though you were merely trying to emphasize the uselessness of student government, you aptly (though unconciously, I am sure) pointed out the cause of "nitwit student government."
"And does it make 37 cents worth of difference who won? Not to me, and not to eight thousand other students."
Mr. Jones, you proved nothing in your emphatic article except that it is the eight thousand and other apathetic students that reduce student government to "petty chi-
canery." Your article was a supreme example of apathetic rationalization.
Be realistic, Mr. Journalist! You cannot condemn the few interested individuals (I believed you termed them activities men) for what the All Student Council does not do—or cannot do!
Limitations exist, Mr. Jones, but I believe that my positive dream, for more effective student government, is more desirable and more beneficial than your remarkable, but extremely negative, observations.
You wrote that campus elections are over "just in time to prevent nausea." But your article informed me of nothing and served merely to increase my nausea.
We have the power of our intellects and our physical fitness within in our reach—but it is up to you and your comrades to realize our
potential, grasp it and use it for constructive gains.
You asked: "What does—what can—the ASC do?" Well, suppose you and your uninterested eight thousand think about it while "the shimmer of hot air is wafting skyward."
Ed McMullan
Long Beach, N. Y. sophomore ASC representative-elect
- * *
Editor:
Class Gift Suggestion
Editor:
Recent editorial letters about senior class gifts remind me to suggest a gift that would benefit a great many people but which may never have been considered.
I gather that there are no regular funds available with which to buy books and magazines for students hospitalized in Watkins. We have occasion to help out a bit on occasion by turning over some of our duplicates, but this isn't a very satisfactory way to keep lively and interesting material on hand all the time.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER
5-12
A car driving down a street with two women standing beside it.
S-12
Only a small gift or endowment fund would be necessary in order to assure that Watkins regularly could have an attractive selection of magazines and new books available at all times for those hospitalized students who don't quite have the energy for intensive studying.
"REMEMBER — AFTER TH' MOVIE DON'T LET HIM TALK YOU IN GOING TO HIS APARTMENT TO SEE HIS EITCHINGS."
A small plaque on the book truck, or something similar, could appropriately remind readers of the class making the gift.
I have heard this problem mentioned so frequently that I am sure a move of this sort would be received with gratitude by a great many people.
Robert Vosper
UNIVERSITY BRITT Dailu hansan
Director of Libraries
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
banned in 1950.
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, N.Y.
service desk. Press International,
subscription fee semester or $450 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays,
and examination periods. Entered as
Lawrence on Sept. 17, 1810 at
Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
the took world
By David L. Webber
CROME YELLOW, Aldous Huxley. Bantam Books. 35 cents.
"Crome Yellow," first published in 1922, was Huxley's first use of the novel form for the exploration of the problems which he has so eloquently put before us over the years. Many of the ideas which were later to form the basis for his better-known novels "Antic Hay," "Point Counter Point," and "Brave New World," appear here for the first time and undergo a sort of preliminary discussion.
11 Huxley fails to delve as deeply as he might into the possibilities of some of the problems he presents, it is partly because so many of them appear. One gets the impression that "Crome Yellow" was intended to be a survey of ideas later to be studied individually and in greater detail.
The action takes place in England, just after World War I, and the setting is Crome, a country estate to which a number of guests have come for a summer outing. The plot is a rather tenuous thread used only to hold the book together. Mr. Huxley's style, however, is effective and very readable.
A large part of the book is social satire, quite penetrating although rarely bitter. The remainder is devoted to a study of certain aspects of love and sex. None of the attitudes exhibited are strongly praised, and none are condemned except by being made to appear ludicrous and shallow.
The group assembled at Crome does not comprise all classes, but each character is representative of his type. They have views still common today, and are concerned with problems which are still alive and real today. For that reason the years which have elapsed since the writing of "Crome Yellow" have not affected its timeliness.
Increase Your Word Power
By Wilfred Funk
Check the word or phrase you believe to be nearest in meaning to the key word. Correct answers are on page 4.
(1) immeasurable—A: stingy. B:
without limit. C: powerful. D:
generous.
(2) monograph—A: treatise on a single subject. B: long speech by one person. C: picture. D: study of many subjects.
( 5 ) *recision* [re sizh' un]—A: act of canceling. B: reconsideration. C: surrender. D: surgical technique.
(3) *deranged*—A: assorted. B: degraded. C: defeated. D: disordered.
(4) adulatory (ad' u la to ri)—A:
boastful. B: immoral. C: extravagantly c o m p l i m e n tary.
D:高手踌ed.
( 6 ) severance—A: indignation. B: separation. C: deep respect. D: harshness.
(7) footless—A: clumsy. B: hope-
less. C: free to go anywhere.
D: useless.
( 8 ) imperturbable—A: extremely upset. B: ignorant. C: unexcitable. D: stubborn.
(9) **dismandle**—A: to upset. B: disillusion. C: shatter. D: strip or take apart.
(10) aria (ah'r i a)—A: extent. B: melody for a single voice. C: applause. D: prima donna.
(11) destined—A: made famous. B: postponed. C: fated. D: announced.
(12) virtuously—A: completely. B; righteously. C: hopefully. D; essentially.
(13) uncoouth—A: dull. B: awkward. C: insipid. D: untrustworthy.
(14) holocaut (hol' o kost) — A:
complete destruction. B: fun-
eral pyre. C: feast. D: tumult.
(15) bizarre (bi zahr')—A: of great beauty. B: gay. C: grotesque. D: noisy.
(16) canard (ka nard')—A: game bird. B: false story. C: explosion. D: vase.
(17) **roundly**—A: loudly. B: indirectly. C: unfairly. D: vigorously.
(18) abashed—A: embarrassed. B: insulted. C: smashed. D: self-possessed.
(19) tumultuous (tu mul'tu us)—
A: heavy. B: revolution.
C: full of commotion. D: terrifying.
(20) denumelatory (de nun' se a to ri) A: resigned. B: vile. C: relating to a formal announcement. D: threatening.
(From "It Pays to Increase Your Word Power," Reader's Digest, May 1959.)
Worth Repeating
"Whenever someone speaks with prejudice against a group—Catholics, Jews, Italians, Negroes—someone usually comes up with the classic line of defense: 'Look at Einstein!' 'Look at Carver!' 'Look at Toscaniini!' So, of course, Catholics (or Jews, or Italians, or Negroes) must be all right.
"They mean well, these defenders, but their approach is wrong. It is even bad. What a minority group wants is not the right to have geniuses among them but the right to have fools and scoundrels without being condemned as a group."
Agnes Elizabeth Benedict.
quoted from "Jewish Digest"
***
A truth that's told with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent—William Blake
The only reward of virtue is virtue; the only way to have a friend is to be one.—Ralph Waldo Emerson
***
There is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors, and no slave who has not had a king among his.—Thomas Jefferson
Tuesday, April 21. 1959 University Daily Kansen
Page 3
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7. This contest is subject to all Federal, State and local laws and regulations.
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5. Solutions must be the original work of the contestants submitting them. All entries become the property of Liggett & Myers and none will be returned.
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RULES—PLEASE READ CAREFULLY
1. The College Puzzle Contest is open to college students and college faculty members except employees and their immediate families of Liggett & Myers and its advertising agencies.
2. Fill in all missing letters . . . print clearly. Use of obsolete, archaic, variant or foreign words prohibited. After you have completed the puzzle, send it along with six empty package wrappers of the same brand from L&M, Chesterfield or Oasis cigarettes (or one reasonable hand-drawn facsimile of a complete package wrapper of any one of the three brands) to: Liggett & Myers, P. O. Box 271, New York 46, N. Y. Enter as often as you wish, but be sure to enclose six package wrappers (or a facsimile) with each entry. Illegible entries will not be considered.
3. Entries must be postmarked by midnight, Friday, May 29, 1959 and received by midnight, Friday, June 5, 1959.
4. Entries will be judged by the Bruce-Richards Corporation, an independent judging organization, on the basis of logic and aptness of thought of solutions. In the event of ties, contestants will be required to complete in 25 words or less the following statement: "My favorite cigarette is (Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) because . . . ."
Entries will be judged on originality, aptness of thought and interest by the Bruce-Richards Corporation. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in event of final ties. Illegible entries will not be considered. By entering all entrants agree that the decision of the judges shall be final and binding.
HURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29, 1959
CLUES ACROSS:
1. These may indicate that a nation is prepared to wage war in the air.
6. Some college students.
10. When at ..., Light up an Oasis.
11. Sinking ship deserter.
12. Plural pronoun.
13. Fatal problem
14. One expects ... discussions in a sociology class.
16. A student's careless ... might annoy a short-story instructor.
17. Initials of Uruguay and Denmark.
19. Nova Scotia (Abbr.)
19. Nova Scotia (Abb).
21. It probably would count when you pick a horse to bet
22. Sometimes a girl on a date must ... into her pocketbo pay the tab.
23. The muscle-builder's may fascinate a poorly developed man.
24. Chaperon (Abbar.)
24. Chemical Engineer (HOBERT)
26. Campers will probably be ... by a forest fire.
when starting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first . . . . . . . . . At home.
32. Literate in Arts (Abbr.)
36. One could appear quite harmless at times.
33. Familiar for faculty member
25. Associate in Arts (Abbr.)
37. Reverse the first part of "L&M".
38. What will soon appear in a bombed-out city.
1. The beginning and end of pleasure.
2. A rural ... can be inviting to a vacationist.
3. Second and third letters of OASIS.
4. When one is ... packed, it could be exasperating to remember
a few articles that should be included.
5. It would pay to be careful when glass is
6. Grounds to relax on with a mild CHESTERFIELD.
7. Author ... Ambler.
8. District Attorney (Abb.)
9. from Paris should please the average woman.
10. An inverteate traveler will ... about distant lands.
14. are hard to study.
15. Stone, Bronze and Iron ...
M. Markman ... (Not)
20. row Mexicans say, 'Yes.'
23. All L&M cigarettes are " . . . high" in smoking pleasure.
25. May be a decisive factor in winning a historic
26. Initials of Olthorstein, Iona, Rutgers and Emerson
28. United Nations Organization (Abbr.)
89. Cell phone
32. Colloquial for place where the finest tobacco are tested for L&M.
32. (Abbt)
95. Filler words.
96. What Abner might be called.
35. What Abner might be called.
36. Bachelor of Education degree.
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| $^{19}$ | $^{20}$ | | Y | | E | | $^{21}$S | I | | E | |
| $^{22}$D | | | $^{23}$A | R | | | O | | S | |
| E | | | | $^{24}$ | | | | | | | $^{25}$S |
| $^{26}$R | $^{27}$ | $^{28}$ | | | D | | | $^{29}$S | $^{30}$T | | P |
| | $^{31}$ | | | S | | $^{32}$ | | | | | U |
| $^{33}$ | | | $^{34}$ | | $^{35}$ | | | $^{36}$E | | R |
| $^{37}$ | | | $^{38}$ | | | B | L | | | | |
PRINT CLEARLY! ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH
Mail to Liggett & Myers, P. O. Box 271, New York 46, New York. Be sure to attach six empty package wrappers of the same brand (or fascilem) from Chesterfield, L&M, or Oasis cigarettes.
Name___
Address___.
College___
This entry must be postmarked before midnight, May 29, 1959, and received at P. O. Box 271, New York 46, New York, by midnight, June 5, 1959:
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 21. 1959
Military Descended on KU For Training During WWII
Campuses all over the nation became centers for wartime training during the period from 1941 to 1945, and KU was no exception.
The Army ROTC program had been in operation here since 1919, but during World War II a new concept called the Army Specialized Training Program took shape.
The ASTP was a system whereby military trainees who met certain requirements were sent to universities for a specialized training program.
The Army program opened at KU on August 10, 1943, 18 months after the United States entered the war. The first class finished in March, 1944.
Early November of 1943 found the Army headquarters here being moved from Fowler Shops to the new military science building. Only the garage and offices had been completed, but during the national emergency there was no time to waste.
New Changes
KU made many more physical changes to allow for the large number of military trainees. Lindley Hall was turned into a barracks until 1945, and Hoch Auditorium was used for physical education and special examinations.
Fraternity houses also were used as barracks. One Army medical student dance was held at Barracks A—the Sigma Chi house.
In March 1944, a directive from the War Department sent the University into a flurry of excitement. Chancellor Deane Malott received notice that the ASTP would be cut to 35,000 men—primarily in medicine and engineering.
Drastic Cut
This War Department directive would mean a drastic cut in enrollment in Kansas colleges. KU would be affected least, but Kansas State College, Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia, and Fort Hays State College would lose half their enrollment.
Educators got busy and scheduled a meeting in Kansas City. College presidents from all over the nation gathered, among them the presidents of Cornell and Harvard Universities and the chancellor of Vanderbilt University.
The college heads requested the War Department to enroll 100,000 volunteer 17-year-olds in the Army training program.
The issue was never quite resolved, but the schools went on functioning as usual.
The gravity of the war effort was exemplified in an article in the Lawrence Journal-World in March 1944.
"The decision of the War Department to proceed to the quick liquidation of the greater part of the Army Specialized Training Program is based on the need of more young men of fighting age in the Army training camps. Sectors of violent action are increasing in number on the fighting fronts, and the end is not yet," the article said.
"The war is approaching its crucial phase, when all considerations unconnected with serving the immediate needs of the fighting fronts are waived."
The wholesale reduction of attendance for Kansas colleges was a new problem to be met.
The Daily Kansan gave a grim picture of the period. It said the pep and enthusiasm of the entire student body was lacking. The semester was then cut from an 18 week period to 26 weeks.
"The University has become warminded, although plans and schedules have remained much the same. The old 'college spirit' of goldfish swallowing and steak fries has passed. Instead, students are concentrating on the serious side, with fewer extra-curricular activities and less nonsense," the Daily Kansan reported.
As the end of March approached, the time drew near for the ASTP
tranees to leave and the University went through a series of parties, smokers, and speeches for the departing students.
March 30, 1944, the ASTP students shipped out and the registrar, Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, announced that the enrollment had decreased to 3,168 students. Of that number, only 1,715 were civilians, the rest being Army, Navy and special aeronautical trainees.
Theatre to Present 'The Winter's Tale'
William Shakespeare's "The Winter's Tale" will be produced in the University Theatre April 29 through May 2.
The production will be staged by Virgil Godfrey, instructor of speech. Settings are being designed by Bill Henry, Parkville, Mo., senior. Costume designer is Herbert L. Camburn, instructor of speech. Lighting will be under the direction of E. Arthur Kean, instructor of speech and drama and journalism.
The cast includes Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, N. Y., graduate student as Leontes, King of Sicilia; Topher Godfrey, son of director Godfrey, as Mamillius, young prince of Sicilia; Al Rossi, Chicago, Ill., graduate student, as Camillo.
Marvin Carlson, Wichita graduate student, as Antigonus; Steve Callahan, Independence senior as Polozenes, King of Bohemia; Bruce Lewelyn, Hutchinson junior as Florizel, Prince of Bohemia; John Welz, Goodland senior as the Old Shepherd; Harper Barnes, Kansas City, Kan., junior as Clown.
Robert Moberly, Excelsior Springs, Mo., sophomore as Autoleycus; Louis Lyda, Lawrence graduate student as Major Domo; Douglas Brown, Lawrence sophomore as a Lord; David Rockhold, Winfield sophomore as a Lord; Rex Buell, Sterling junior as a Judge, and Bob Thomas, Marysville freshman as a Shepherd.
Linda K. Plake, Prairie Village freshman as Hermione, Queen to Mo., senior as Perdita, daughter to
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Historical Speakers Include KU Faculty
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Two KU professors will speak at the 52nd annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley Historical Assn. in Denver, Colo., Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Donald R. McCoy, assistant professor of history and director of correspondence study, will present a paper entitled "Alfred M. Landon and the Election of 1936." Elmo R. Richardson, instructor of history, will report on "The West and the Secretary of the Interior, 1909-1913: A Problem in the Politics of Conservation."
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Dean of Med. School To Discuss Students
W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine, will speak at the luncheon meeting of the Faculty Forum tomorrow in the English Room of the Kansas Union. He will talk on the freshman medical student.
Reservations should be phoned in by this afternoon to the KU-Y office (Ext. 227).
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Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Drysdale Leads Dodger Comeback
Those long-suffering Los Angeles fans are finally convinced that it's true what the experts said about Don Drysdale.
By United Press International
Drysdale, who beat Sam Jones in a brilliant mound duel, yielded only three hits and struck out 11 to score his second victory of the season. He has struck out 25 batters in 24 innings to lead the league in that department and seems well on his way toward the brilliant season predicted for him a year ago.
One of the biggest flops of the 1958 season, the 22-year-old sidearmer pitched the best game of his career Monday night and beat the San Francisco Giants, 2-1, on Charlie Neal's ninth-inning homer. The victory moved the Dodgers past the Giants into second place in the National League.
Then, Drysdale started the season as the overwhelming choice of the experts to be the league's pitcher of the year. But he dropped his first five decisions, didn't win his second game of the season until May 21 and wound up with a thoroughly disappointing 12-13 record for the year.
The 6-foot, 6-inch, 210-pound
Finn Wins Boston Marathon
BOSTON—(UPI)—Finnish detective Eino Oksanen had a coveted laurel wreath and diamond-studded gold medal today for winning the 63rd annual Boston A.A. marathon. The well-muscled Oksanen brought Finland its third marathon victory yesterday by forging past favored Johnny Kelley of Groton, Conn., with less than a mile left in the 26-mile, 385-yard course and winning by some 300 yards. However, temperatures in the low 40s were too much to overcome for a course record.
right-hander flashed brilliant form during spring training but suffered a 6-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs in his first start. He bounced back four days later, however, with an eight-hit shutout against the St. Louis Cardinals so now has yielded 10 hits and one run in his last 18 innings.
The Dodgers' fine start this season is exactly the opposite of their 1958 getaway when they lost six of their first nine games.
The game was the only one played in either league Monday. New York at Boston in the American League was rained out and the Pittsburgh-philadelphia National League night game was called at the end of the first inning because of rain and wet grounds.
Scholarship Halls To Hold Track Meet Saturday
The first annual men's scholarship hall track meet will be held at 2:00 p.m. Saturday, April 25th, in the Memorial Stadium.
The meet is being sponsored by the Men's Scholarship Hall Council. There will be approximately 75 contestants from the five men's halls participating.
Roger Minneman, president of the Men's Scholarship Hall Council, said the idea of having an inter-scholarship hall track meet was discussed last year but no action was taken on it. This year the council acted on the idea and is planning to make an annual event out of it.
The five men's halls participating in the meet are Battenfeld, Foster, Jollife, Pearson and Stephenson.
The list of events in the order of running are:
440-yard relay, 60-yard dash, 880-
vard run, 880-yard relay, 220-yard
dash, medley relay, 440-yard dash.
100-yard dash and mile relay;
High jump, broad jump, discus and shot put.
Winners were Gertrude Sellars Pearson (freshmen), Gamma Phi Beta, Corbin-North, Delta Gamma, Gertrude Sellars Pearson (upperclass), Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Pi Beta Phi.
Girls' Softball Teams Complete First Round
GSP freshmen slipped by Alpha Phi 11 to 9. Judy Bird was the winning pitcher.
Seven girls' softball intramural teams emerged as winners in first round games played last week.
Gamma Phi Beta had little trouble in whipping Watkins 19 to 2. Donna Bowman and Ann Brenneisen were the battery for the Gamma Phis. Mary Wade, Gamma Phi Beta, homered.
Corbin-North trounced Sigma
Kappa 16 to 2. Pitching for the freshmen was Judy Anderson. Catcher Marilyn Simpson homered for the winners.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson (upperclass) defeated Sellards Halls 15 to 4. Pat Sheley and Susanne Shaw did the pitching for GSP.
Delta Gamma defeated Alpha Omieron Pi 16 to 5. Battery for the DG's was Karen Kukuk and Susie Beutler.
Kappa Kappa Gamma defeated Douthart easily 21 to 2. Barbara Callahan was the winning pitcher. Hitting home runs for the Kappas were Judy Morgan, Barbara Callahan, and Martha Hammig.
Radio Programs
KANU
Tonight
Tuesday, April 21. $ ^{105} \mathrm{~F} $ University Daily Kansan
5:00 Twilight concert: "Sinfonia Concertante" for 2 violins and string orchestra, by Bach
7:00 Symphony Hall
7:30 Choral Concert
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air; Southeast Asia in Modern Times
8:55 News: Between the Lines
9:00 FM Concert
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Trio No. 4 in C Major, K 548" by Mozart
11:00 Sign Off
KUOK
Tonight
4:00 Music for the Afternoon (uninterrupted)
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 "Train to Nowhere," Ron Abrams
12:00 Sign Off
Official Bulletin
Cheerleader practices, April 21. 23. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym. Room 101. Tryouts, April 28 and 30. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Aids and Awards. Employment opportunities strong. Fair-time and some full-time work.
Mathematics Colloquium. Prof. Waclaw Sierpinski, "Projective and Analytic Sets". 4:15 p.m. 203 Strong Hall. Given in French, and translated into English.
TOMORROW
Humanities Lecture. Dr. William Irvine, Stanford University. "Darwin and Literature." 8 p.m., Fraser Theater. Informal reception afterward at the Faculty
Society for the Advancement of Managemenl. 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union. Frank R Burge, director of Kansas Union will speak.
SUA Doubles Ping Pong Tournament.
6:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom. Register your team now at the information desk in the Kansas Union.
Chemistry Club. 7:30 p.m., Room 231, Malott. "The KU Tradition in Chemistry," by Dr. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry.
TORONTO
Business Planning Bureau, 214 Strong. John Brannan and Mrs. Tom Prechel, Insurance Co. of North America, Special Agents and Underwriters; Wm. B. Sharp Jr., Western Tablet and Stationery Co., Management Training.
Pi Beta Phi defeated the Courageous Counselors 15 to 11.
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Undergraduate Psychology Club. 7-30
Drugs in Psychology. E. J. Walaszek.
"Drums in Psychology."
Episopel Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
breakfast Following, Centerbury House.
El Alenzo se reune el microleres dia 22 de abril a las 4 de la tarde en 11 Fraser. Duckies, Secretario Electivo del American Friends Service Committee en Mexico. Va ha habido sobre el tema: "El valle de la vida" fablara en espanol. Sg servir refrescos.
Faculty Forum. Dean W. Clark Wescoe or one of the instructors in the Training and Selection of KU graduates Who Are Recommended for graduate studies. Noon, Room of the Kansas Union. Nood, Room of the Kansas Union.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, 5 p.m. Darnfah Chapel, services led by Pastor Britt-
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
Intern-Volunteer, speaker and prayer.
12:54:16 - 8:00 BP
THURSDAY
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer. $4.35 am
breakfast following. Canterbury House.
Faculty Club. 7:30 p.m. dessert and 8 p.m. bridge. Hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friauf. VI 3-2422 and Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Buchholtz. VI 3-5831.
The schedule for this week is:
the schedule for this week is:
Tuesday: GSP upperclass) vs.
Kappa Alpha Theta; Delta Delta
Delta vs. Corbin-North; and Chi
Omega vs. Alpha Delta Pi.
Wednesday: Alpha Phi vs. Sellards; Watkins vs. Courageous Counselors, and Alpha Omicron Pi vs. Sigma Kappa.
Thursday: Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. winner of Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi game; Pi Beta vs. Gamma Pi Beta; and Delta Gamma vs. winner of Delta Delta Delta, Corbin-North game. All games will be played at 5 o'clock.
AUTO PARTS
AND TIRES
New or Used
Auto Wrecking
And Junk Co.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Softball Slowed by Rain and Mud
Heavy rains over the weekend forced postponement of the regularly scheduled intramural softball games for yesterday. The games will be rescheduled at a later date.
TOMORROW'S GAMES
Fraternity A
Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Delta Chi.
Independent A
Carruth vs. Hilltoppers. Vipers vs.
Softies.
Independent B
Nu Sigma Nu vs. Pearson Hall. Burro's vs. A.Ph.A.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Go Formal
Go Formal
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28. 95
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Cummerbund and Tie Sets, from $5.00
POLYESTER TUXEDO
RENTALS
We also rent "After Six" white dinner jackets and summer formal trousers. All sizes.
the town shop DOWNTOWN
the university shop
ON THE HILL
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 21, 1959
Foreign Students Give Opinions on American Clothing
Bobbysocks and bermuda shorts are the most disliked things about American dress according to several KU foreign students.
The following comments were given by several foreign students when asked the difference between the dress in their country and the United States.
Birthe Madsen, Bramminge, Denmark, special student, said, "I don't like bobbysocks. They are practical but not pretty. Bermuda shorts are worse than bobbysocks.
"We don't wear jeans as much in Denmark, but they are becoming more common. I think your matching sweaters and skirts are beautiful.
Not Much Difference
"Danish clothes are more simple. We can always tell an American tourist by his bright colors, stripes and bows." she continued.
Mads Bjorn Bjerre, Vesthirk,
Denmark, graduate student, said, "I do not think there are many differences between the way business and professional people in Denmark and the people of the U. S. dress."
"American girls dress much better and make themselves more attractive than European girls. I think it pays off. I like it anyway.
"Student dress here is more conformist. In Europe, we tend to more individuality. We are not so concerned with what people think.
"Why do American girls have to wear bobbysocks?" he asked. "And, Bermuda shorts are horrible."
Sophia Ralli, Ahia, Greece, sophomore, said. "We have almost the same fashions in Greece as the United States. I like them very much although I don't like bobby-socks. We have fads but they are moderate.
"We do not wear as many blue jeans—more slacks. Most of our clothes are made by dressmakers.
"Clothes are cheaper in Greece A heavy ski sweater that would cost about $25 here would cost about $9 in Greece," she said.
Greeks have a national costume which is worn for celebrations, according to Miss Ralli.
More Feminine
Lizzie Dawson, Madras, S. India, sophomore, said, "Our clothes are more feminine and easy to walk in. It's all right to wear American clothes if you have pretty legs.
"Skirts look uncomfortable but not slacks. It's all a matter of getting used to it. Skirts look nice on
American girls but I wouldn't want to wear them.
"The majority of the people in Indian wear cotton saris and some silk. Each year in India the style of the sari changes.
"A sari is six yards of straight material and is wrapped starting from the left. No pins are used. It's very easy to travel as saris are very easy to pack," Miss Dawson concluded.
Abdul-Amir Al-Saadi, Baguah, Iraq, graduate student, said, "In general the people in the Iraqi cities wear about the same kind of clothes as they do in the United States. Design in clothes appears in Iraq about a month after it appears in the U. S."
"The people of Iraq differ greatly. The people of N. Iraq have their own clothes and their own language," he said.
Some of the clothes of the country include a longer dress and very wide veils of silk which are worn over the face so that the person can see out but others can't see in, he said.
Some men wear a special cloth over their head which is then covered with a turban, Al-Saadi said.
Cloth is woven by hand from wool or cotton or is imported from England or the United States, he said.
Informality Is the Key
Rab Malik, Karachi, Pakistan senior, commented on the dress habits of his country. He said:
"The dress is quite distinct—in the cities they wear Western dress and in the rural areas they wear native costumes. The men wear a type of long shirt, long trousers and a turban.
"Almost all the cloth is made in Pakistan and not imported. Some is imported from England and the United States.
Bette Chiang, Taipei, Taiwan, junior, said, "Girls here wear too many petticoats and it makes it too hot, But, it looks nice.
"One thing is the same here. The people are very informal in dress and actions. It makes me feel at home." Malik said.
"I changed to American clothes right away and I found them very comfortable. Our clothes are harder to walk in, but we don't do so much walking.
"We don't wear bermuda shorts or jeans at all. We wear more plain colors, too. The boys here wear much brighter colors," Miss Chiang said.
United Student Fellowship
Campus Club News
Linda Guise, Marysville sophomore, was elected first vice-chairman at the conference.
Sibyl Riekenberg, Topeka sophmore, was elected chairman at the State Conference of Congregational Students held at the Fairmount Congretational Church, Wichita, Saturday and Sunday.
KU students attending the conference were Miss Riekenberg, Miss Guise, Phillip Friedeman, Great Bend senior; Arthur Neis, Eudora freshman, and Thomas Clark, Center, Neb., senior.
ASC
Dave Wilson, Kansas City, Mo.
senior and chairman of the ASC
elections committee, requests all
students with a free hour to vote
during the class period rather than
during the class break.
At least two write-in campaigns are being conducted for the election. Sara Clawson, Hartford sophomore, is conducting a write-in campaign for junior class vice president. Jack Harrison, Hays junior, is conducting a write-in campaign for ASC representative from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Pi Tau Sigma
Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, held a banquet recently in honor of its newly initiated members.
Those initiated were Robert L. Evans, Lawrence; Vernon C. Hattrup, Offerle; Troy G. Kniffin Jr. Kansas City, Mo.; Myron B. Margolis, Kansas City, Mo.; Joseph W. McKinley, Kansas City, Mo.; Farrohk Ostovar, Iran, and Phillip C.
Gary W. Kibbee, Kansas City, Kan; Roy C. Hughes, Lawrence; Robert L. Klamn, Kansas City, Kan; David L. Reid, Muncie, and Charles L. Sanford, Meriden, juniors.
Quo, Kansas City, Mo. All are seniors.
Jim Merkinger, Claflin junior, has been elected chairman of the Kansas Region of Newman Clubs at the province convention in Pittsburgh. Newman Club is for students of the Roman Catholic faith
James Peoples, associate professor of geology, was guest speaker at the dinner.
Richard A. McFarren, Lawrence soohomore.
Other University of Kansas students attending the convention included Paul Grelinger, Beloit junior; Carol Walther, Lawrence freshman; Bob Channel, Chicago, Ill.; senior, and Mary Ann Waddell, Kansas City, Kans., sophomore.
Newman Club
Alpha Rho chapter of Rho Chi honorary pharmaceutical society, has announced the election of the following persons to membership in Rho Chi.
Rho Chi
Louis D. Bruno, Lawrence senior; Robert M. Dickson, Riverdale, Ill.; Charles L. Harrelson, Galena, and Robert O. Iott, Livingston, Mont., all juniors.
Members of Concordia Club for Lutheran men entertained their dates at an informal picnic-party at Lone Star Lake Saturday.
* *
Concordia Club
Chaperones were Mrs. Hazel Carter and Mrs. Mildred Durned.
SIRIANA BARRUZA
Svlvia Mahon
A. M. S.
Myra Lewis
Juanita Harrison
Spring Engagements Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Mahon Oberlin, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sylvia Louise, to Edward Raymond Wheeler, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Raymond Wheeler, Casper, Wyo.
Miss Mahon is a graduate of the University of Kansas and is a member of Alpha Phi sorority and P.E.O. She is now teaching at Westwood View School in Johnson County.
Mr. Wheeler, a senior, is affiliated with Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and
Sigma Pi Sigma, honorary physics society.
An August wedding is planned.
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Lewis, Prairie Village, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Myra Gail, to James Lawson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Lawson, Topeka.
Miss Lewis is a member of Chi Omega sorority and a junior in the school of education.
Mr. Lawson, a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, is a senior majoring in architecture.
The wedding is planned for early September.
***
The engagement of Juanita Ruth Harrison, Raymond, to Jack Carl Dysart, Sterling junior, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Harrison, of Raymond.
Mr. Dysart is in the School of Engineering. His parents are Dr. and Mrs. Jack C. Dysart Sr., Sterling
An August wedding is planned
. . . On the Hill
Douthart Hall
Douthart Hall took an hour-long program to the State Mental Hospital in Toneka, Saturday, April 4.
Members of the group were dinner guests at the Turnipke restaurant and were taken to Topeka by the Lawrence Cosmopolitan Club.
The group was composed of Miriam Schwartzkopf, Paola sophomore, program chairman; Mary Ann Markham, Hollywood. Fla., junior; Judith Nininger, Hutchinson freshman; Harriet Kagay, Larned freshman; Kay Reiter, Simpson sophomore; Carolyn Kranzler, Brookings, S. D., freshman; Nancy Chapman, Independence, Mo., junior; Ilene Smith, Goodland sophomore; Ruth Poe, Edgerton freshman; Sue Winkler, Canye freshman; Louann Ruby, Bonner Springs sophomore; Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg sophomore; Phyllis Mace, Leavenworth freshman; Jeanne Nilson, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Patricia Walters, Dallas, Tex., and Loree Alpert, Paola senior.
***
Alpha Phi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Blain Kincaid, staff members.
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity has announced the initiation of Ralph Wilson, Overland Park freshman.
Alpha Phi sorority recently held its annual informal party, the "PhiFi-Fo-Fum." A pre-party for the members and their dates was held at the Tee Pee.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
Bob Hope
Rhonda Fleming
Wendell Corey in
"Alias Jesse
James"
Acacia
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
Delores Michael's
Richard Widmark
Henry Fonda
Anthony Quinn
Dorothy Malone
Keith Ott, Kingfisher, Okla., junior, has been elected president of Acacia fraternity for the coming year.
"Warlock"
Other officers are Kirk Prather, Wellington sophomore, vice president; Bob Rati, Pittsburgh sophomore, secretary; Ron Waddell, Kincaid junior, treasurer; Bill Hunter, Harper freshman, social chairman; Richard Emanuel, Mission sophomore, house manager; Bob Redding, Prairie Village freshman, assistant house manager; Gary Thompson, Glasco junior, rush chairman; Jim Lindstrom, W. Hyattsville, Md., sophomore, pledge trainer, and Lynn Willdermood, Mission freshman, sentinel.
Delta Sigma Phi
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity has announced the pledging of Karlos Sieg, Wellsville sophomore and Wade Purce, Fort Scott freshman.
---
Alpha Chi Omega
Alice Pfortmiller, Russell freshman, was elected president of the Alpha Chi Omega pledge class.
Other officers elected were Bobbie Laughery, Bethel, secretary-treasurer; Jan Coyne, Kansas City, Kan., social chairman; Carol McMillen, Coldwater, song leader; Nancy Reifel, Overland Park, chaplain, and Edie Graves, Wichita, activity chairman.
All are freshmen.
Love lasteth as long as the money endureth.
Grease Job $1
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Spaghetti Special
This Wednesday And Every Wednesday
Enjoy Our
Fine Italian Spaghetti
At Our Special Low Prices!
Spaghetti, Plain 55c
With Meatballs 75c
Robertso ' s
710 Mass.
We Deliver VI 3-1086
Tuesday, April 21, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
KHAKI WIND BREAKER in Strong Wednesday, April 15. Call Dean Henrichs at VI 3-4711. 4-22
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath heat and gas furnished, linen furnished, accept graduate students. Call Vi TI 7677
ROOMS FOR UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN
and MEN in college campuses.
Give living under $80 a month
1½ blocks from Union. Make arrangements for summer and fall. Ph. VI 3-421
APARTMENT FOR RENT, three room,
furnished, for men or couple. See nt 918
Indiana before 10 am or after 10 am,
days and all day Saturdays and
Sundays.
4-2¹
BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic party supplies plant, 6ft and Vermont. Phone VI 0350
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
JUKEBOX RECORDS, 35 cents each or
100. Rowlands Book Store
1241 Oread.
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone
green. Original owner, 20,700 miles, excellent condition. VI 3-5297 4 p.m.
DAFFDILS. 25 cents a bunch, no de-
cisions. Calvi VI 3-22781. 1742 Near-
dall. Calvi VI 3-22781. 1-42
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.
1950 FORD CUSTOM V-8, excellent interior, tubeless tires with less than 500 miles, good, clean engine. Best offer taken. Call Jerry at VI 3-1116. 4-25
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. Index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio
MODERN TRAILER HOME, fenced yards
nice size storage house, all equipped,
ready to move into. $850.00. Ideal for
medical student, within walking distance
of KU Medical Center. Call VI 3-
3626 after 5 p.m. 4-22
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts. Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
1955 OLDSMOBILE, holiday hardpole,
two-tone blue, Call VI 3-3823
4-23
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HERTZ TRUCK RENTAL
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400 Van Buren, Topeka
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1955 CHEVROLET Six, standard trans mission, heater, $750-$850. 1949 Chevrolet Six with '52 motor, standard transmission, battery, $250-$300. Available in May. 1946 Hudson Super Six, $75 Call Woody at VI 3-8202. 4-2
K. U.M.C. AREA. 4418 Cambridge. Low equity, low payment G.I. Loan. Income possibility on holidays or Saturdays, or work by appointment. Call YE 5-424. Kansas City, Kansas. 4-024.
GERMAN TYPEWRITER, solid portable with box, almost new, $100 Call Peter
1937 FORD, exceptionally good, novel and
well-dressed. Brook, Kansas. Phone MO 5-2600 4-21
2-800.
BUSINESS SERVICES
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 stoeks of cages, stands, and accessories for dogs. Learn the Importance of 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, shoes, and toys. In our field, Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, Phone IV 3-2921. Welcome. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660.
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadl
Motors, 318 East 17. Phone VI 3-4850.
A24
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021½ Mass
Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc.
massage, professional
massure. Introductory rates available
limited time. VI 3-2132. tt
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith 941% Vials. Phi. VI 3-5263.
941% Vials. Phi. VI 3-5263.
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequst, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. 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
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tt
LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest
studio, Dance Studio, 985,
Mph.塑材 V 3-6838.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular calls. Call VI 3-8568. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretral experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
- Portraits
Weddings
- Application
Photos
- Engagements
E
by photography
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood. VI 3-1893. 7360. Tenn. tf
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a private student-faculty rate. Call VI 60124. tf
HELP WANTED
DON'T WAIT TO BUY YOUR GAS
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, tuition, education, time, care. Can VI 7-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka, 1911 Tennessee, tfr
TELEPHONE CALLERS to work in your home or our office. Call VI 3-6170. 4-21
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General papers. Mrs. Tom Brady, 13-3428
or this may happen to you!
A man running away from a car.
WANTED: young woman, not over thirty,
or interesting work contacting public.
Public office positions for 25 years. Some typing required, also sales
ability. Good working conditions, pay,
and employee benefits. Contact Manager
in western Bell Telephone Co., Vermont.
4-22
SEWING AND ALTERATIONS. men's clothing a specialty. Will replace pockets or half pockets on men's trousers, 1220 Louisiana, call VI 3-4890. 4-22
Get gas, oil, and other automotive supplies today from
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
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One way and local, ready to go anywhere. Wherever you are, you can serve a few people being accepted.
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CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass. on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
THE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAL THING
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THE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!
2. with a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL . . . which has been definitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette milder and smoother.
Lesson for today: In a few short months, New Dual Filter Tareytons have become a big favorite on U.S. campuses. For further references, see your campus smoke shop.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 21, 1959
'Pioneers' Follow Outdoor Living
A
CHOW'S ON—The Oregon Trail wagon train's cooks, Edna Blair and Jean Marshall prepare
food for the hungry travelers. (Kansan photos by Lee Lord)
Experiences Brighten Trip
By Lee Lord
The first wagon train to pass through Lawrence in years will arrive about noon tomorrow as the Oregon Centennial Wagon Train follows what's left of the old Oregon Trail. Its destination: Independence, Ore.
According to Tex Serpa, wagon master, the seven covered wagons will leave the actual Oregon Trail for awhile when passing through Lawrence in order to avoid traffic congestion on the KU campus.
In front of Lindley Hall there is a plaque with an inscription telling how the wagons on their way to Oregon wound up the southern slope of Mt. Oread and across the present KU campus. This is the portion of the trail which will be avoided.
Only 3 Are Paid
Of the 24 present members of the wagon train, only the wagon master and truck drivers are paid. The rest of the personnel are along for the experience.
Mr. Clark, who owns a leather goods store in Hillsburg, said, "Tm actually losing money by making the trip, even though I left my wife home to tend the store." His special job is to keep the harness in repair.
Weaver Clark of Hillsburg, Ore., said, "We're not getting a nickel for this trip, but the experience itself is pay enough. It will be some time before anything like this is done again and it's an honor to be one of the few who are actually making the trip.
"The harness wasn't new to begin with," he said. "Already we have had some trouble with it. Just yesterday the harness snapped on the lead team of our only four-mule hitch. If there hadn't been somebody there to grab the mules they might have ended up turning the wagon over.
Mule Ignores Truman
Tex Serpa, when asked about their start at Independence, Mo., when former President Harry S. Truman, acting as honorary wagon master, stepped to the head of the train and velled "Forward," chuckled:
"Those mules must have been Republican mules the way they balked. But, Ben got them under control and we were on our way." Tex was referring to Ben Griffith, who besides being postmaster, also drives the lead wagon.
Tex, who was hired by the Independence Chamber of Commerce to head the train, used to be a stunt man in movies a few years ago.
The mock Indian attack yesterday morning really caught him unaware. "I was pretty well scalped by the time I found my gun," he said.
Roy Brabham, Eugene, Ore., who takes care of the wagons, began building them in February.
Last night over 2,000 people stopped to view the wagons and talk to the people who are making the 2,000 mile trip to Independence. Flashbulbs popped all over the place as the sightseers posed their children alongside the Oreogiaias and took their autographs.
The only complaint the Oregonians have so far is the cold weather that is following them across Kansas. But Roy Brabham made things right when he looked out over the Kansas countryside and said, "You sure have some good farm land in this state."
Though they camp out each night
in tents or sleep in the wagons the "pioneers" admit they don't have it quite as hard as granddad did when he made the trek. Besides the wagons there is a water truck, a large van to carry hay for the 23 horses and mules and a pick-up truck to pull the cook wagon. The caravan's publicity agent also travels much of the time with them in a station wagon.
Two-Way Radio
There is also a two-way radio which can be used in case any emergencies develop along the way. The "59-ers" send their laundry to the nearest town two times a week instead of doing it themselves.
Tonight the train plans to make camp outside Gardner, and then tomorrow will camp some six to eight miles outside Lawrence. Thursday night will find it in Topeka where it will spent the night at the Topeka Fair Grounds after a brief welcoming ceremony in the heart of the city.
Woman's Rugged Life Requires Responsibility
PETER BALDWIN AND YOUNG BALDWIN
ENTERTAINING VISITORS—Tex Serpa, wagon master, talks to one of his group's 2,000 curious guests. She is Yvonne Marie Head, Hillsdale, Kan.
By Joan Jewett
In 1959, women beat the scouts to camp sites on the Oregon Trail. Unlike great-great grandmother, her blue-jean wearin' descendants do not follow meekly behind the wagon train as in the good old days. Instead they are up and off at 5 a.m.
A Daily Kansan reporter-photographer team visited the train's camp site near Olathe last night. The wagon train is on a 2,000 mile cross-country trek from Independence, Mo., to Independence, Ore., following the route of the Oregon Trail celebrating the anniversary of that state.
Two of the seven Oregon women with the train take daily turns at cook shack duties. When the evening meal is nigh they whip out of formation, speed to the camp site and have the coffee boiling before the first mule print is in the mud. In the morning they stir out their bearded, booted companions with a whiff of bacon sizzling on a hickory log.
And when it's time to turn in, not the women, but the children are first. For after a day of wide-eyed wonderment, with lessons to log for the teacher back home, the little trail blazers are pretty well burned out.
Children Keep Logs
The three children, ranging in age from 11 to 14 keep daily records to complete essays vital for final grades. Gary Carmine, 12, is the only boy now on the trail. Two other boys, 17 and 13, will join the train when school is out.
Mrs. Edna Blair, on duty Monday night, at the cook shack, said:
"The trip isn't going to set them back in school. In fact," she said as she sliced ham, "it's the best education they could get." The ham joined a mound of sliced bread.
She handed the sandwiches to her partner, Miss Jean Marshall who wrapped as she counted. "54, 55, 56.
These are for tomorrow's lunch. Everyone gets two."
Besides the ham there was a choice of peanut butter or cheese. Jean leaned toward the light of the open fire and with an eyebrow pencil marked "ch" on a brown bag.
"This is the first time I've used this pencil since we started," she said. "But I don't mind foregoing glamor for adventure." She usually works as a secretary for the county juvenile court in Roseburg, Ore. She wanted to be with the train "just to get out and see the world."
"I'll have to stoke up the fire so we can see to get these dishes put up," Jean said. The "dishes" are heavy army trays and were donated, along with the cook shack and everything in it by the Oregon National Guard. There are two gas stoves in the shack, but "the controls are a little complicated so we've cooked out so far."
Entertained by Public
What do the women do for entertainment while men are fixing and caring for the mules and horses? There are four guitar players along, but so far there hasn't been any need for entertainment. Thyraz Pelling said: "Everywhere we go a crowd gathers to entertain us. It's such fun meeting so many people."
While they are between townstops on the trail women wear jeans, warm shirts and jackets, but they wear frilly centennial costumes for inside city limit appearances.
One of the women on cooking duty must know how to drive the pick-up truck that hauls the kitchen. Can the women and children take this trip? Tex Serpa, wagon master said, "Well, they'll have to. It's easier to ride along than it would be to walk to Oregon."
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Cervantes Day To Be Saturday
The air will ring with Spanish Saturday as the activities of the 35th annual Cervantes Day unfold.
Cervantes Day marks the death of Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, author of "Don Quixote," on April 23, 1616.
The traditional "Programa de Variades" will be held in Fraser Theater at 2 p.m. Students from KU and other schools and colleges throughout Kansas and western Missouri will present plays, sketches, songs and dances on Spanish and Latin American themes.
A Spanish dance and the comedy, "La Venta de Don Quixote," will be given by KU students. Victor Baptiste, assistant instructor of Romance languages, is director.
Players in the comedy are William Charles, Oak Park, Ill.; Roberto L. Diaz, Sancti Spiritus, Cuba, and Albert Palmerlee, Lawrence, all sophomores.
Sandra Ackerman, Leavenworth; Faxon House, Mission, and Frank Villarreal. Pratt, all juniors.
Richard Reitz, Council Grove; Dolores Villarreal, Pratt, both seniors.
Robert Scott, Massillon, Ohio; Adolph Snaidas, Brooklyn, N.Y. both graduate students.
At intermission awards will be made to the outstanding Kansas high school students of Spanish. The awards are based on a special examination sponsored by the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. The Kansas winners will be eligible to compete for a national award.
Miss Marietta Daniels, a 1933 graduate of KU and now associate librarian at the Columbus Memorial Library of the Pan American Union in Washington, D.C., will speak on "Quixote Transplanted" to the AATSP at 10:30 a.m. in Fraser.
Displays and demonstrations will be on view all day in the Union and Fraser Hall, and from 9 a.m. to noon in the sound laboratory in Blake Annex.
Dailu hansan
56th Year, No. 131
The appointive council's selections will be subject to ASC approval, as they were when made by the student body president and vice-president.
Reed said his committee will start taking applications immediately so committees can be organized and a plan of work outlined for each committee.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Wednesday, April 22, 1959
Members of the appointive committee are divided between the no-
New Group to Give ASC Committee Jobs
William Irvine, Humanities lecturer, said yesterday nearly all writers of Darwin's time were influenced one way or the other by his theories.
By Douglas Parker
All Student Council committee appointments will not be made by the student body president and vice president this year. They have relinquished their right to make the appointments to a committee composed of non-Council members.
Darwin Influenced Writers Of His Time, Irvine Says
"There will probably be appointments made in excess of 100 students with around 20 to 25 committees to be Silled." Reed said.
William Reed, Kansas City, Mo. senior and chairman of the newly organized Student Committee Appointment Council, said today his committee will start screening applicants for appointments next week.
Dr. Irvine, of Stanford University, spoke on "Darwin and Literature" last night in Fraser Theater in the sixth Humanities Lecture of the year.
"In the strict sense Darwin wrote little prose and less poetry, yet few English prose writers have influenced English literature so much," he said.
The lecture was an event scheduled for the year-long Darwin-Linnaeus celebration at the University.
"Tennyson did not fully accept
Darwin was an inspiration to both Marx and Freud. He undermined orthodox religion by undermining Genesis and was the first and most influential of the Victorian thinkers who flooded minds with unpleasantities until they ceased to be Victorian. Dr. Irvine said.
the 'Origin of the Species.' In a world that grew steadily more Darwinian, Tennyson became more pessimistic. he said.
Thomas Huxley was one of the first to be affected by "Origin of the Species." In the 1860s Huxley saw man as an ape and in the 1870s he saw man as a "remarkable" ape, Dr Irvine, said.
Thomas Hardy refused to be encouraged by Darwinian evolution. He brooded on the methods of evolution rather than examining the end result. He was indignant at the blind nature of evolution, Dr. Irvine said.
"He saw that natural law and moral law were two different things The suggestion that man could make his own environment was courageous and profound," he said.
The journalist always is a part
"Hardy is almost the classic example of the evolutionary pessimist He felt no enthusiasm for the moral and intellectual achievements oman," he said.
The journalist must work for personal integrity and always keep in mind the dignity of man, Miss Turkington said.
"There are so many people you come in contact with who can influence your life by their knowledge." she said.
Magazine Editor Cites Journalism Essentials
Miss Turkington added that buding journalists shoul never underestimate things that can be learned from other people.
Self-confidence and the courage to uphold convictions were cited last night as cornerstones of a foundation for a journalistic career by the editor of The Kansas Transporter, monthly magazine of the Kansas Motor Carriers Assn.
Mary Turkington, speaking in the Kansas Union at the annual Matrix Table dinner of Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism, said:
"Cultivate your self-confidence and never turn down challenges or opportunities."
Generally fair and warmer tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 35 to 45. High tomorrow 65 to 75.
The students parked their cars about a quarter-mie from the train and began their sneak attack. But the hardy pioneers had posted a guard and he invited the students to have coffee.
The coffee soothed the students who were seemingly in a weakened state.
Thirty University of Kansas students were foiled when they attempted to raid the Oregon Trail wagon train at 1 a.m. today.
Weather
of public life. Contribute what you as an individual can do and remember the influence of the pen. Above all, don't be a snob," she said.
Wagon Train Guard Foils 30 KU 'Tribe'
"Both Meredith and Hardy are Darwinian in their willingness to discuss unpleasant subjects," he said.
In the 1890s the emphasis on Darwinism came from novelists. Many novelists turned to Darwinism as a way of achieving easy popularity. The novels of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells were greatly influenced by Darwinian thought, he said.
Hardy, and George Meredith,
while refusing to accept Darwinism,
had a tint of Darwinism in their
writings, Dr. Irvine said.
"Science has long been the stepmother of romance and fantasy," he said.
litalical parties. Vox Populi and Allied Greek-Independent.
Members are: John V. Black, Vox,
Pratt senior; Nancy L. Varney, AGI,
Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Lance
F. Johnson, AGI, Wymore, Neb.
junior, and Dorothy Wohlgemuth,
Vox, Cummings senior.
"We plan to have all the committees fully orientated and familiarized by the end of the school year." Reed said.
Applications for committee appointments will be available in the dean of men's office tomorrow. The committee will go over the applications after they are returned to the office a week later.
Reed said the committee will interview the applicants. Experience, desire and ideas will be the criteria for the appointments. Reed said
"We were going to try some sort of merit system for the committees and also try to exercise the power of removal." Reed said.
The appointive council plan was outlined in the Little Hoover committee report asked for in 1958 by former student body president Bob Billings. Russell senior.
At that time the report pointed up inadequacies in the functioning of committees and the appointment of students to the committees. Reed and Miss Wohlgemuth were members of the Little Hoover committee.
"By the end of this spring the committee will want a report from the students appointed on the plan of action for the committees next year and confirmation from the Kansas Union of meeting dates planned." Poed said.
ASC Appropriates Total of $550
Appropriations totaling $550.64 and the entry of two new bills highlighted last night's meeting of the All Student Council.
Members of both the outgoing and newly-elected Councils were present at the meeting, but the new members were only observers. Patrick Little, Wichita senior and ASC chairman, announced that the swearing in of the new council and the election of officers for next year would take place next Tuesday.
The Council voted $350.64 to finance the trip of the KU entries in the National Debate Tournament being held this week at West Point ASC treasurer Edgar Dittmore, McLouth senior, said such a trip has been ASC-financed.
At the suggestion of the Jayhawker Advisory Board, a resolution was introduced proposing to grant $700 from the Jayhawker fund to be split into bonuses for the yearbook's editor and business manager
of two years ago. The motion was amended to $200 before being passed.
W. J. Argersinger, associate dean of the Graduate School, pleaded for funds to carry the expense of two foreign fellowships or next year. Dittemore expressed doubt that the Council had sufficient funds, so the resolution was tabled until he could give the treasury better study.
Bill No. 19 provides that ASC members may not miss more than three meetings dring the year without excuse, or at the most, seven meetings with or without excuse. According to the bill, all members exceeding the maximum amount of absences are to be removed from the Council and replaced by their political parties.
The other bill is an amendment to Bill No. 5 and provides that the Fowl Magazine be issued only at the discretion of the student body president.
ATTENTION!—Col. Carl F. Lyons, professor of military science and tactics at Kansas State University, inspects a tuba held by James Ferrell, Atchison freshman, during the annual federal
inspection of the Army ROTC unit here yesterday. Standing next to Ferrell is Evert Uldrich, Fairbury, Nebr., sophomore, a baritone player in the band.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 22, 1959
Gift Trophy Cases?
Every year about this time it is the traditional duty of the senior class to bestow upon this community a memento of its four important years.
The memento, a token of remuneration for academic, social and any other services rendered, comes in the form of a senior class gift. The trouble is, only a select few have the privilege of choosing it.
Now, we can see where it would be difficult for some 1,700 seniors to make suggestions for a class gift. Therefore, the procedure followed is for a committee of seven or eight interested comrades, more or less, to sit around throwing out suggestions. After a year of deliberation, they choose three gifts. A class ballot picks one.
Usually the senior gift committee recommends one particular gift, watering down the remaining possibilities by selecting two vague or useless items. This year trophy cases seem to be the going things. The vague or useless items are some furniture for the Kansas Union, and a painting to be hung in Dyche Museum.
Obviously, trophy cases is the most vivid of three poor ideas. Thus, seniors are expected to vote for them and so add another horror to the long list of facetious class gifts.
Even the grotesque canopy (Class of 1957) donning the Kansas Union serves more students
than could trophy cases. For 30 feet it protects people from the rain all of 35 days each year.
The future fountain (Class of 1958) near the Music and Dramatic Arts Building holds some functional status also. It could well become a romancing area for inspired couples.
What are the benefits of trophy cases?
The only recent gift topped by the trophy case idea is the beast-like bronze Jayhawk (Class of 1956) which, it is hoped, will be stored in the corridors of Blake Hall.
Well, a few spectators hovering about the Field House may notice our array of brass, although that is doubtful, since most people go there to watch basketball games.
Dusting the cases would be a good chore for field house personnel or scholarship boys earning their $15 per month.
KU athletes would enjoy seeing their hard-earned trophies safely displayed, even though few may stop to admire them.
And other students could laugh and kiss off $1,750 which might have been used to purchase something useful for the University.
Wonder what happened to the ideas for scholarships, fellowships, a class decorated room, braille library books, a new piano for the Union addition? And so on down the list.
—John Husar
THE PEOPLE
Stricter Closing Hours
Editor:
We are deeply disturbed over a rumor that closing hours might be relaxed. What the women of the University need is stricter closing hours. There is not yet enough "morality" on the campus. Closing hours are a healthy discipline for people for the discouragement of unnecessary activities such as too avoid an interest in culture and not enough in football.
What importance has his love life compared with the will of the fifty per cent of the people plus one?
We think that closing hours should be shortened to 5:30 p.m. on weekdays and to 7 p.m. on weekends. After all, what can be done after 5:30 p.m. that cannot be done perfectly well before 5:32?
letters to the editor
We believe that the benefits of
Also, what is more consistent with the traditions of American democracy and rugged individualism, than that the will of the majority should govern the actions of the individual?
closing hours should be extended to married students and to junior staff members. Why should these husbands be exposed to needless anxiety simply because they married teenagers?
If living in a university has failed to make their wives mature—will marriage have any effect on them?
Obviously any scheme for the loosening of closing hours has a pinkish tinge and is objectively part of a Red-inspired plot to demoralize American womanhood. Surely every American girl has heard of the insidious dangers presented by the existence of men.
Finally, what is the point of a university encouraging adult-living on the part of undergraduates. Would they be here if they were capable of it? Surely this would lead straight to the demoralization of American citizens.
Denis Kennedy
Dublin, Ireland graduate student
Jim McMullan
Long Beach. N. Y. senior
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BY BIBLER
FIRE ONLY
"YOU SHOULDA BEEN HERE YESTERDAY WHEN THIS
GIRL GINPINED TH' DOLL NEXT TO HIM."
Editor:
Misquoted
I am more than a little angry, and for that I do not apologize. You should. I do apologize for the fact that I did not hold the view concerning the Phi Beta Kappa award, which the UDK staff (whoever was responsible) wanted me to hold. I am sorry that they were forced to print the exact opposite of my view (and then put this completely false statement in quotation marks!!) in order to create a trio of Phi Beta Kappas who "worked specifically for the award."
I made no statement using the following word order—“After I found out about it, it was certainly the end I had in mind.” If the reporter, or the editor who 'doctored' the article wished to use this word order, he should have left off the quotation marks and inserted 'not' after 'certainly.'
Furthermore, I was interviewed by a UDK reporter last March. In the article which appeared in the issue of 24 March, there were three statements which were absolutely false and which I did not make, and, in addition, one distortion which in substance amounted to a falsehood. I would list these statements, column, line, and word, but I understand that the UDK does not like long letters, especially if they are critical.
In closing, in my own future interests and in respect for truth, I must state that I will never again 'be at home' to a UDK interviewer.
Richard A. Kraus Lawrence senior
Dailu Hansan
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.
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420 Madison Ave, New York, N.Y.
International Mail subscription rates:
semester or $45.0 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as deadline for Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879.
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the took world
By Calder M. Pickett Assistant Professor of Journalism
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST STORIES 1958. Doubleday,
$3.50.
The world of the Saturday Evening Post is a world that to many readers is an unreal world. It is a brightly colored middle-class world, a world that considers Norman Rockwell the greatest living artist and Taylor Caldwell the greatest living writer.
It is a world of problems that get solved. No New Yorker ending or New Yorker humor in the Post—they're for the snobs who can buy pieces of crystal that cost $1,450.
There are actually two kinds of people in the world of the Post. One is the middle-class family (like the pleasant young couple on the dust jacket, all dressed up for an evening out, the mother warding off the advances of a dirty-faced son who wants to kiss her goodbye). The other is the low class family, not quite low enough to be out of Erskine Caldwell but low enough to be patronized by the middle-class family.
This lower class, in fact, comes up right away in the 1958 collection, in a story by H. E. Bates called "The Darling Buds of May." (This plot sounds suspiciously like a recently reviewed movie called "The Mating Game," but my life hasn't been brightened as yet by a trip to this one.)
There are Pop and Ma Larkin (now I remember—Ma and Pa Kettle) who have a brood of hungry young-uns and a daughter who is just bursting out in late adolescence (Debbie Reynolds in the movie, perhaps). This income-tax feller comes along and wants them to pay their back taxes, but Pa doesn't believe in such things (come to think of it, neither do some of the Post's editorial writers). But the whole thing is resolved out in the orchard, where the income-tax feller, "his limbs melting once more as she lifted his hand to her bare, warm shoulder," hears the nightingales sing.
There are inspirational pieces, too. If they were non-fiction, or novels, the Reader's Digest would condense them for us (and may do so anyway). There's this boy, Simon, in "Journey in the Dark," who is blind and leads his family to safety when a hurricane sweeps away their New England home. There's this family in "The Conformers" all a little larger than life-size, and none of them really knowing the others.
There's Bruno, a kind of village idiot type, who turns out to be better than the proud and scornful Konrad. He saves Konrad's life and then Bruno's wife, who married him to make Konrad miserable, or something like that, finds that Bruno is really a man of great character after all. Well—something like that.
Science fiction, too. There has to be science fiction these days. So Robert Murphy in "The Shock" tells about a kind of fish-boy who makes life quite horrifying (he's a sort of quiz kid, too) until the hero gets up courage and expels the fish-boy to wherever he came from.
Then there's "Night of Horror," by Joel Townsely Rogers, which as near as I could make out (it was a mystery all right) was about a kind of Hollywood-style blob that goes creeping around swallowing up people.
And oh yes, "Fair Young Ghost," Brockden James is stationed in England in World War II and falls in love with a Scot girl named Alison. They are going to get married, and then Alison has a premonition of disaster. Then Brockden is transferred to the Mediterranean and a V-1 kills Alison.
Years later he comes back with his shrewish American wife, Roz. They stay in the same inn where Alison had her premonition, and there's this crying ghost in the hall, and Roz realizes how cruel she been, and she and Brockden become friends again, and the ghost disappears, and it never again cries in the old inn.
What will the Post have in store for us in its 1959 collection?
It Looks This Way...
By Martha Fitch
Women have a new problem to face. And just because they have a longer life expectancy than in 1900.
Women now can expect to live to the ripe old age of 75 years instead of the 64 that they had to look forward to 59 years ago. And this is a problem!
Surveys show that the mother completes her family at the age of 26 and by the time she is 32 her youngest child enters the first grade, leaving her comparatively free to do as she wishes. But is this the time that being a mother stops when all her children are in school?
Evidently so. Anyway, all this adds up to the modern mother's dilemma: How can she use the next four decades of her life so that they will be of the greatest benefit to her family and to herself?
Authorities are not in agreement on the solution, although some suggest that the mothers can then go to work and help their husbands earn a living. However, none suggest the fact that perhaps mothers might be old fashioned and stay home and tend to some mending, or be around when the children come home from school. This "extra" attention to school children might help cut down on the delinquency problem and help cut down on the problems of a woman in her "last four decades."
Her problems might also be lessened if she would devote some time to her husband instead of joining three or four bridge clubs a week. Or perhaps she might join a worthwhile organization that helps the sick or underprivileged.
It seems like that with a little common sense women could use these last four decades to become better mothers and grandmothers.
Wednesday. April 22, 1950 University Daily Kanson
Page 3
Around the Campus
April 30 Deadline For W. Civ. Exam
April 30 is the registration deadline for the Western Civilization examination, which will be given from 1 to 5 p.m. May 9.
Students should register in the enrollment office, 130 Strong Hall. The place of examination will be assigned at that time.
The examination will be held in Malott, Bailey, and possibly Strong halls, if there is a large registration.
The next Western Civilization examination will not be given until July 25.
Seniors to Receive Alumni Assn. Gifts
Graduating seniors will not wait long to receive one of the benefits connected with a degree from the University of Kansas.
Seniors whose names appear on the commencement announcement automatically receive a free year's membership in the KU Alumni Assn.
A gift of a life membership in the Association will be presented at the commencement breakfast. Mr. Ellsworth suggested a life membership as the "ideal graduation gift."
Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the association, said that the memberships are provided by the Association and the University.
The life membership, in memory of Agnes Wright Strickland, class of 1887, will go to an outstanding senior chosen by a University committee, on the basis of character, scholarship, and service to the University.
Five Officers Chosen By Phi Alpha Delta
Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, has elected five officers. They are:
Bernard E. Whalen, Lawrence, justice; Thomas F. Fulkerson, Kirksville, Mo., vice justice; John E. Blake, Kansas City, Kan., marshal. All are second-year law students. Ronald K. Badger, Kansas City, Kan., clerk; Wendell E. Yockey, Lawrence, treasurer. Both are first-year students.
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Prof. Frantz will replace Dr. Leroy A. Calkins, who has held the post for 30 years.
Kermit E. Krantz has been named professor and chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the KU Medical Center effective July 1.
Continental Classroom plans another course next year, probably chemistry, and will develop a mathematics course in the future.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22, 1959
Librarian to Speak On Tolkien Book
William B. Ready, collector, author, and Marquette University librarian, will speak at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Browsing Room.
His talk, sponsored by Watson Library, is about "The Lord of the Rings," a book in three volumes by J. R. R. Tolkien. The talk will be given in connection with an exhibit of Tolkien's original manuscripts in the Kansas Union foyer and main floor of the library.
Following the lecture, winners of the Taylor Book Collection Awards, sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth M. Taylor, Kansas City, will be announced A first prize of $85 and prize of $40 will be awarded to the students whose book collections are judged best for content and quality according to subject interest and stated purpose of the collector.
Radio Programs KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert
7:00 Concerto Concert
7:30 News
7:35 The Atom and You
7:50 Wednesday Evening Opera:
“Faust” by Gounod
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Trio in G Major, Op. 9, No. 1" by Beethoven
11:00 JOHN RYER
KUOK
Tonight
Columbus discovered the island of Trinidad in 1498 on his third voyage to the New World. Three-fifths of the grapes exported by the U.S. in 1957 went to Canada. The first paper mill in the U.S. was built on the Neponset River at Milton, Mass., in 1729.
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Javahawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and
Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
9:05 Wednesday Night Dance
10:05 Dwight Norman Show
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Dwight Norman Show
12:00 Sign Off
Dean Taylor to Tell Seniors of AAUW
Senior women will be guests of the American Association of University Women from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, April 26, at a reception and program at the home of Mrs. M. N. Penny, 629 Tennessee Emily Taylor, dean of women, will talk about AAUW, its obligations and its opportunities
Cheerleader practices, April 21. 23. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101. Tryouts. April 28 and 30. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101.
Official Bulletin
Aids and Awards. Employment opportunity Strong Part-time and some full-time work.
Business Placement Burcan, 214 Strong.
John Branham, Director of North America, Special
Agents and Underwriters; Wm. B. Sharp,
Manager of Stationery Co.
Management Training
TODAY
Lutheran Gamma Delta, 5 p.m.丹佛
forth Chapel, services led by Pastor Britt-
r
Faculty Forum, Dean W. Clark Wescoe is the medical director of the Teaching and Selection of KU graduates Who Are Recommended for College. He is a Member of the Noon, English Room of the Kansas Union.
Undergraduate Psychology Club. 7:30
P.O. Box 1254, E. J. Walzale.
"Drug in Psychology."
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
Inter-Varsity Christian speaker and prayer.
12:15, 9:00 PM.
El Atenco se reune el microlese dia 22 de abril a las 4 de la tarde en 11 Fraser. Dauckles, Secretario Executive del American Friends Service Committee en Mexico, Va a hablara sobre el tema: "El Mexico va declarar la declaración en español. Se serviran refrescos."
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer. 6:45 am
and Holy Communion 7:15 am.
breakfast with the Chapel at
House.
Faculty Club. 7:30 p.m. dessert and 8 p.m. hosts. Hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friauf. VI 3-2422 and Mr. and Mrs. F. C. BueholtzHI. IV 3-8811.
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Daily Kansan Fashion Issue
THE NATIONAL GOLF COURT IN MIDDLE EAST, FLORIDA. THIS BOWLING POINT IS USED TO HELP GOLFERS GET A SHOLL AND PLAY THE GOLF. IT IS FACILLY AVAILABLE FOR ALL AGES.
Marcia Casey, KU's Best Dressed Coed,
Swings Into Spring
In One of the Latest Campus Fashion Creations
Women's fashions for spring seem to have returned to the natural look. Spring colors will rival the pastel pink of cherry trees and the crisp yellow of hill-dotting daffodils.
Perhaps the biggest news in spring fashion is the monochromatic color scheme of milady's ensemble. The KU woman will wear slippers in shades which will match or blend with her costume.
All in all the spring scene stresses the natural. Nature's colors, a normal waistline, and shorter skirts all point to a whimsical springtime.
1957
WINDBREAKER—Rudy Vondracek, Timkin junior, wears a lightweight jacket from the University Shop to combat spring rains and brisk winds.
The rugged, even bearded look has slipped into the picture in men's fashions for spring.
In a land of conformity, designers have placed emphasis on the look of the individualist. Knit shirts in an assortment of colors are available. Each has a different sport symbol, alligator, turtle et al.
Men's clothing will be brighter in color and lighter in fabric than ever before. Manufacturers are doing all they can to keep men air-conditioned for the summer months with synthetic fabrics.
Page 2A
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22,1959
WeaverS
Rose Marie Reid
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Your figure is your fortune... in FORTUNA. The marvel of "magic length" shirring and elasticized bengaline capitalize on every curve. Misses sizes.
Weaver's Swimsuit Shop — Second Floor
gay gibson
so young and pretty...
$15.00
Whirl into summer, with all the lasting neatness and pleatness of wash 'n wear woven cotton. An all day—all occasion dress in exquisite colorings. Blue, gold, apricot. Junior sizes.
Weaver's Dress Shop — Second Floor
ship mates
ship togs
blouse $5.95
shorts $5.95
Matching tartan plaid in wonderful, washable tarp-poon cotton. Let it drip dry and it barely needs the touch of an iron. Roll-up sleeve blouse with Italian collar, combined with jamaica length shorts featuring side pockets, hidden zipper, self belt. Misses sizes. Blue or beige plaid combination.
(not shown) matching plaid contessa pants... ankle length with two side pockets, hidden zipper, snugtex belt lining, self belt... $8.95.
1960S WEDDING DRESS SAMPLE
gay gibson
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Blue, gold, apricot. Junior sizes.
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1
A plaid dress with a fitted bodice and flared skirt.
Weaver's Sportswear Shop — Second Floor
Wednesday, April 22, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 3A
THE LIFE OF WAYNE HARDY
SPRING FRESHNESS-Elizabeth Robinson, Cedar Vale junior models semi-formal wear, courtesy of Ober's Jr. Miss.
Multitudinous Monarchy Leads to Campus Confusion
Everyone has a queen to reign over their festivities, or so it would seem. During the seven months of school there have been eight queen contests on this campus.
Organized houses for women were kept busy electing queen candidates in November—the bargain month for queen contests. The homecoming queen, the law queen and the military ball queen were all elected in that month.
January and February were a relief. Only final exams, Rock Chalk and rush were emphasized.
Beauty Mad?
Marilyn Campbell, Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich., sophomore, says the reason for so many contests stems from the fact that "all America has gone wild over beauty." She said that in magazine advertising "they don't even advertise an automobile without a beautiful woman."
It has been suggested that queens are selected by many groups to add interest or just to add a touch of femininity to an event.
Alpha Chi Omega and the independent women are running neck and neck so far this year with an equal number of representatives who were finalists in queen contests. Each group had five.
Kappa Alpha Theta is running a close third with four finalists. Other sororities and organized houses still may come in in the final stretch.
Fraternities also elect their ideal girl each year. "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" is a familiar song to many people. The Sigma Nus and the Sigma Phi Epsilon also select a "sweetheart." The Delta Upsilon
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one good-looking girls are." The ratio is about 2.5 men to every woman.
Some advice to organized houses which are interested in saving valuable time during house meetings—elect 15 to 20 possible queen candidates at the beginning of each fall semester and let them draw for the chance to enter when the entry blanks are sent out.
Royal College Shops
fraternity honors their "trophy girl" and the Pi Kappa Alpha's their "dream girl."
Fewer Girls, More Queens
Bill Tournissot, Newton sobhomore, said, "I imagine there are so many contests because of the comparatively small number of girls here and the boys like to know who
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Page 4A
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22. 1950
Donna Dempsey
1954
Myra Lewis
Engagements Announced
The engagement of Donna Dempsey to Dwain Dewey has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Dempsey, Roeland Park Jr. Dewey is the son of Mr. and its R. W. Dewey.
Miss Dempsey is a freshman in the College of Liberal Arts. Mr Dewey is a sophomore.
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Lewis, Prairie Village, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Myra Gail, to James Lawson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Lawson, Topeka.
Miss Lewis is a member of Chi Omega sorority and a junior in the school of education.
Mr. Lawson is a senior.
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Men Still Wear Khaki Pants
By Douglas Parker
To put a male through college requires the purchase of some khaki pants...more khaki pants...some more khaki pants...and still more khaki pants.
with variations due to seasonal changes. In the winter the pants go with a parka; in the spring and summer with a sport shirt; in the fall with a sweater.
The college male nowadays opens his closet—big or small—and thinks he is moving into a tent due to the multitude of khaki pants hung before him.
Some collegiates wear the pants dirty or clean, buckled or sans buckle, with belt or minus belt, and some three-quarter length for that pirate look for lounging.
That is the campus look for men
Conformity Is the Key
Just as the coed can be identified by white bobbysocks, so can the college male be identified with the khaki leg cover.
The trend is to complement the pants with similar shoe wear. The sneaker, which through use reaches a darker shade than the pants, and the soft leather suede shoe—high or low toned—have found their uses
top toped have found their uses
Top the khaki pants and paralle
shoe wear with tan, rain-resistant,
wind-breakers and the style is set.
Throw in socks—any size or color—shirts with squares or stripes (preferably brightly colored) and some accessory wear to meet the variety of Kansas weather and you have the college male in everyday wear.
The military service has nothing on the KU male as far as a uniform goes. Both species display a uniform.
It's not particularly inspired, but it's functional. And that's more than you can say for some of the khaki-clad men.
Women Now Wear Pantaloons
Pantaloons, in a modified form. have been introduced into the ladies' fashion world for spring.
Although the day of the hoop skirts and ankle-length pantallets is gone, the well-dressed lady may now wear knee-length pantalons adorned with lace and ribbons. They resemble tight-fitting tooreador pants and are worn as an undergarment.
They may be worn under full skirts in the summer in place of a straight slim.
Dick Rolf, Kirkwood, Mo., junior,
commented, "Personally I'm not in
in favor of them. I don't think they're
very feminine."
When asked what they thought about the new pantaloons, 10 university students gave the following opinions:
Carolyn Grother, Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore said, "I'd never spend my money on them. They might have been okay in the days of hoop skirts, but today they're not practical."
Jim Austin, Topeka junior, said,
"Frankly I would rather see a little bit more leg, but under the circumstances I guess the uniqueness of palantouls will make them of value on the campus."
Susie Beuler, Hutchinson junior,
stated, "I think it would be a good
idea to have pantalones dyed to
match summer dresses. But I think
they would be too warm in summer,
so I wouldn't buy any."
Hal Archer, Olathe junior, remarked. "It sounds like a wonderful boost to the female who wants to
maintain her femininity and still wear the pants in the family."
Jim Londerholm, Mission senior, said, "it would like to see them. They could not be worse than some of the things girls wear."
Diana Fitzgerald, Beloit sophomore — "They'll never go over. They are ridiculous and a waste of money." Paul Motzkus, Russell senior, asked, "What good would they do? They wouldn't show would they?"
Barbara Holm, Prairie Village sophomore, said. "They will probably be just like the leotards and everybody will end up wearing them.
This is the everybody look alike season. Male, female—there is no difference in appearance during the rainy season.
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I
Page 5A
Wednesday, April 22,1959 University Daily Kansan
I am a graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I received my Bachelor's degree in Business Administration from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1967. After graduation, I worked at The American Express Company as a Business Analyst for over five years. In 1982, I joined the company's Vice President and Director of Human Resources position. In 1987, I became the company's Chief Marketing Officer and Vice President of the Consumer Products Division. In 1993, I was appointed as the Chief Operating Officer of the Consumer Products Division. In 1995, I was appointed as the Vice President of the Consumer Products Division. In 1997, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2001, I was appointed as the Vice President of the Consumer Products Division. In 2003, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2004, I was appointed as the Vice President of the Consumer Products Division. 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In 2097, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2098, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2099, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2000, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2001, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2002, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2003, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2004, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2005, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2006, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2007, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2008, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2009, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2010, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2011, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2012, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2013, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2014, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2015, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2016, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2017, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2018, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2019, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2020, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2021, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2022, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2023, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2024, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2025, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2026, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2027, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2028, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2029, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2030, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2031, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2032, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2033, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2034, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2035, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2036, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2037, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2038, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2039, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2040, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2041, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2042, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2043, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2044, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2045, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2046, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2047, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2048, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2049, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2050, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2051, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2052, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2053, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2054, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2055, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2056, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2057, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2058, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2059, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2060, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2061, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2062, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2063, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2064, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2065, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2066, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2067, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2068, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2069, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2070, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2071, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2072, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2073, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2074, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2075, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2076, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2077, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2078, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2079, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2080, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2081, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2082, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2083, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2084, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2085, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2086, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2087, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2088, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2089, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2090, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2091, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2092, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2093, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2094, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2095, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2096, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2097, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2098, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2099, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2000, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2001, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2002, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2003, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2004, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2005, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2006, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2007, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2008, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2009, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2010, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2011, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2012, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2013, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2014, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2015, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2016, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2017, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2018, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2019, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2020, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2021, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2022, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2023, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2024, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2025, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2026, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2027, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2028, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2029, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2030, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2031, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2032, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2033, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2034, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2035, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2036, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2037, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2038, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2039, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2040, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2041, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2042, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2043, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2044, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2045, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2046, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2047, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2048, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2049, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2050, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2051, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2052, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2053, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2054, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2055, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2056, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2057, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2058, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2059, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2060, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2061, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2062, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2063, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2064, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2065, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2066, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2067, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2068, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2069, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2070, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2071, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2072, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2073, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2074, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2075, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2076, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2077, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2078, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2079, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2080, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2081, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2082, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2083, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2084, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2085, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2086, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2087, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2088, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2089, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2090, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2091, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2092, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2093, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2094, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2095, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2096, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2097, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2098, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2099, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2000, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2001, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2002, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2003, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2004, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2005, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2006, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2007, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2008, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2009, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2010, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2011, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2012, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2013, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2014, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2015, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2016, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2017, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2018, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2019, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2020, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2021, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2022, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2023, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2024, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2025, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2026, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2027, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2028, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2029, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2030, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2031, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2032, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2033, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2034, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2035, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2036, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2037, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2038, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2039, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2040, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2041, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2042, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2043, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2044, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2045, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2046, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2047, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2048, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2049, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2050, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2051, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2052, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2053, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2054, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2055, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2056, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2057, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2058, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2059, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2060, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2061, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2062, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2063, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2064, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2065, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2066, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2067, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2068, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2069, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2070, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2071, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2072, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2073, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2074, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2075, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2076, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2077, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2078, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2079, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2080, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2081, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2082, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2083, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2084, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2085, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2086, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2087, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2088, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2089, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2090, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2091, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2092, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2093, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2094, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2095, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2096, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2097, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2098, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2099, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2010, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2011, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2012, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2013, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2014, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2015, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2016, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2017, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2018, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2019, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2020, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2021, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2022, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2023, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2024, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2025, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2026, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2027, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2028, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2029, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2030, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2031, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2032, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2033, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2034, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2035, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2036, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2037, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2038, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2039, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2040, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2041, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2042, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2043, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2044, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2045, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2046, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2047, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2048, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2049, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2050, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2051, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2052, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2053, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2054, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2055, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2056, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2057, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2058, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2059, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2060, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2061, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2062, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2063, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2064, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2065, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2067, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2069, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2070, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2071, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2072, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2073, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2074, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2075, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2076, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2077, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2078, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2079, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2080, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2081, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2082, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2083, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2084, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2085, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2086, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2087, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2089, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2090, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2091, I was named the Company's Director of Marketing and Strategic Planning. In 2092, I was named
IVY LEAGUE — Gerald Williams, Olathe sophomore, wears three-button, thin lapel suit from the Jack Norman Shop.
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'Citrus' Is New Scent for Men
The scents of hair-spray, car polish, and perfumes don't just "happen." There are experts who decide—for psychological, esthetic, and economic reasons—what scent "fits" a given product.
Girls majoring in chemistry or who have training as medical laboratory technicians and food researchers may find jobs helping to decide scents very fascinating. The cosmetic field is a good one for women as it is exciting and full of opportunity.
As members of "perfume evaluation boards" for manufacturers of essential oils and perfumes, one may help decide what scent will help sell what product.
Rhinestones, pearls, gold thread, embroidery, pastel colors, shimmering fabrics. get set for the most "spun-sugar look" in years.
Since the public is attuned to certain special scents, such as baby lotions or men's cologne, they aren't likely to take to a new blend suddenly. Men are beginning to accept scents other than pine and leather or themselves, going into the "citrusy" smells, occasionally even lavender.
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Page 6A
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 22, 1959
Male Mocks Milady's Hat
By Alan Jones
The big noise in women's headgear this spring is hats. Caps, tans and manifolias, while still popular in some places, are definitely playing second flute to the hat.
Glorious chapeaux, of straw, felt or textured fabrics, ranging in a range from the miniature dome daily to the Mexican sambrohi, will adorn the patte of melady fair silk through spring, and summer if the weather holds out.
Perhaps the most exciting news in millinery this year is the rumor that Jackson Pollock will head an all-star cast of women artists who will design, decorate, and manufacture several exclusive lines. The only problem is a technical one—getting the brightly-colored sand patterns to stay on the hat of an active woman.
The artists have experimented with glaze finishes and a rather subdued patina which adds a soft touch to match the wearer's hair spray.
Fastell are out and bright lively colors are in, with chartreuse, shocking pink, electric blue and a rather nasty magenta some of the popular shade.
A Solution For the Money Mad
In some cases, both a cash saving and a first-class effect can be obtained by taking the money intended for hat buying and crimping the roll into a small, ruffled effect, then cutting and trimming to add flair.
A new idea this year is the do-it-yourself hat, which may easily be constructed from your husband's old fora. Here's how:
Carefully trim away the hat brim and remove the band. Now place the
not make sure you're wearing your party cuffie) firmly on the head, pushing it down until the inner, or greasy, side is nestled firmly against the outline of the skull.
Now, with scissors (pinking a 's ear, are nice), trim the edge of the hat to complement the planes of the face, perhaps allowing a peek-aboob ear or a stray wisp of fetching curl to wink naughtily at the spectator.
With the basic shape cut out mark the front to avoid later errors and remove the hat. Now use paint, embroidery, feathers, lace, veils, or whatever pleases you to make the former fedora an expression of your individual personality.
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For example, one movie star used high-gloss paint and a few feathers to cover her individual hat with cleverly-designed Freudian symbols Her psychiatrist was an eager ally in the project.
And one lady Senator used flesh-colored paint and a fine fringe of feathers to simulate the appearance of the male Senatorial dome. She was a sensation at the spring session of the Legislature.
Of course, these are only suggestions. The imaginative woman will work out her own design and decor.
For those who feel they lack the talent needed to make one's own hat, there are always the creation of Mr. John, Hattie Carnegie, and newcomer Pollock.
Happy hatting!
Bermuda Shorts Sport Tassels
Men's fashion designers have really come up with a "swinging" idea—bemuda shorts with a tasseled effect.
Although it has only been in the past two years that a man has felt normal in bermuda shorts, he must now acclimate himself to a new device to make his legs conspicuous.
Brightly colored tassels are attached to the legs of the bermuda shorts. When the gentleman wearing the summer spectacular walks, the tassels swing along with him.
Most men will probably prefer wearing tasseled shorts with knee socks that have tassels too. This way his knees will be covered and he will still find the shorts cooler than khaki pants.
BROTHER OF THE FIELD
FORMAL WEAR—Stanley Washburn, Paola sophomore, is ready for the spring formal, courtesy of Ober's. Shoes are from McCoy's.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
THE JOHNSON BANKING CORPORATION OF CHICAGO, INC. MAKELYA WATSON
AUTHORITY OF THE PHILIPPINES
PHOTO: BERNARD GAYNON
1936
Coeds at Kansas Have Confidence
in the
Casual Clothes and Accessories
They Find at the
Plaza
K.C.
Richard Mindlin's
COACH HOUSE
Sportswear Accessories
Brookside
K.C.
Blue Ridge
K.C.
KU Campus
Lawrence
C
.
Women Can Be Beautiful, But Not in Current Fashions
By John Husar
Tis the middle of spring now, and the run of copy concerning milady's seasonal apparel has spurted through our news columns for better than a month. The effects of this are easily observable.
Fashion, the demi-god and champion of woman's heart, dictates how she is to look, feel and walk more completely than the best attempts of any parent or lover. Some women do have it in them to look like the mythical, but desirable "girl next door." But others persist in dressing as ideas.
The trouble is, the ideas usually emanate from bald-headed, mustachioed, effeminate, little men in Paris, an studios with tastes in beauty perpendicular to those of normal males.
These gentlemen seem to be enjoying a trend toward practicality, issuing raiment designed to cover the busks of well-led womanhood, shoes devised for combative purposes, and cosmetics and strange colors which produce visionary effects similar to those of a battle-bound Arapaho chief.
A common occurrence is the sight of baggy Woman draped in form-less material with an ivy-leagued bow in the back. Shod in long cylinders of leather, spiked at both ends, she lumbers along the boulevard with a smile that is begging to be photographed painted on her grease-based face.
Stimulated by sights of campus dolllies sporting the latest bonanzas in women's tashions, the male mind usually shrinks in horror.
Her smart "rainbow" coiffure lingers in the breeze like a weather vane pointed in all directions. Often souvenir strands of hair can be found glowingly placed on local male objects, the results of religiously-used scalp-drying hairwash.
Fiercely claiming individuality, she is always eager to hop into an intellectual conversation. But first she must remove her loafers to display to the world the fact that she, too, wears bobby-sex.
Ah, yes, our Woman is a sweet
Newest Trend Hi-Fi in Pink
By James Cable
New this year in the world of fashion are tiny little pink hearing aids which are being worn more and more to resort parties by the ladies who really are "in the know," so to speak.
The artificial hearing devices, moderately priced at leading drug stores, feature tiny record players inside. When milady finds a sound she likes, she simply records it, inserts it in her ear phono, turns up the volume, and is completely happy.
The next development will be a jukebox which fits on the bridge of the nose. Then we can say, "Rings on her fingers, bells on her toes, she shall have music, coming out of her nose."
Certain evening clothes—some of the best—are very set in their ways. They demand a special accessory plan.
little thing. Like a little puppy she happily bounds from style to style in a never-ending drive to win applause and solicitude from preferred companions.
She is always one step ahead of Man, who never has had time to adjust to any one style before she bobbed into another. These vicissitudes in habit are disorganizing and frustrating. And some of the products of rapid change are phony and discouraging.
Still when she is with us and her hand is soft and her eyes are frank and deep, we couldn't care what she is wearing, for we know that she has dressed to try and please us. Then, alone, in ginny or silk, she is lovely. And her ludicrous styles are the world's least important cares.
THE SCIENTIST
this is GORDON
a new approach to menswear...
OF PHILADELPHIA
the accent on casual, comfortable neatness in a Dacron and cotton suit that keeps up appearances.
Tailored to wash, hang and wear it has the fine business-like air of a lightweight worsted.
Wednesday, April 22, 1959 University Daily Kausan Pa
See it now in a wide range of colors, including Olive, Charcoal, Black-Brown, Cambridge Grey, Charcoal Blue. $39.95
MERLIN
the town shop
the town shop
DOWNTOWN
the university shop
ON THE HILL
Arrow White Shirts
In step with style:
We've been busy as a dixieland drummer ever since the new Arrow White Shirts came in.
These are dress-up shirts as you like them. Arrow-styled in oxford or broadcloth, in drip-dry cotton or Dacron* and cotton . with the smartest new collar styles and French or regular cuffs. See them soon.
*Du Pont polyester fiber
905 Mass.
VI3-5353
Carl's GOOD CLOTHES
Bermudas Gain Popularity With Masculine Sex
Judging from the plaid pairs already being sported by several daring males, it appears that bermuda shorts are back in full force this season. This daring unveiling of masculine legs just goes to show that men must not be vain creatures after all.
Have Wide Lapels Trimmed Or Wait for Style Change
Men, if your lapels are of the broad variety, take them to the tailor and get them cut down to this season's new narrow look. Of course, you might simply wait a few years and take the coat out of mothballs, because undoubtedly by then the wide look will be back in style.
Gibbs
CLOTHING CO.
811 Mass.
SPRING PREVIEW
Suits
WITH THE NEW LOOK FOR SPRING '59
THE NEW STYLECRAFT
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The newest styles, fabrics, patterns. Choose from hundreds of new shades that will best complement your wardrobe. A great value at these low prices.
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Handsome new slim-line suits, tailored for extra long wear and neat appearance. Make your selection now from this large group of fine quality suits.
FT
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$5950
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100% Wool Flannel Fabric. Newest Styles, Shades, Patterns $2875
NEW STYLES IN SPORT COATS
Three-button models, muted tweeds patterns, stripes and checks
choose from shades that will blend with many of your favorite slacks.
$19^{98}$ to $34^{50}
Randcraft
SHOES FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN
All New Styles and Shades
$7^95 to $10^95
1
ONE GROUP YOUR CHOICE $5.00
Page 8A
Universtiy Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22, 1959
Summer Swimmers to Have More Sun, Less Suit
Summertime is almost upon us, and with the advent of warm weather, thoughts turn to the newest beach wear for the season.
The big news this year in bathing suits is the two-piece suit. Some are almost conservative, with nice substantial tops and straight little-boyish shorts. Others range toward the bikini type, which require a back-yard tan before venturing onto the beach.
One-piece bathing suits, of course will still have their following. This season, these incorporate the new
empire waistline and are flattering to all figures
A new slant on contour draping in the one-piece suits emphasizes the flattering feminine look.
Seaweed print with a Hawaiian motif are seen in all beach apparel this year.
ter's edge, there's the striped cotton beach dress, street-length with deep slips up the sides of the skirt.
Beach wraps can be anything from the shore shirt, plainly tailored and usually made out of the same fabric as the swim suit, to the fancy beach coat, simply cut, elaborately trimmed with black braid. If you've been looking for a little something that will take you beyond the wa-
The beach boot, a new type of summer shoe is a variation of the canvas sneaker, cut high. These boots are found in sandy colors such as beige and yellow. Still around are the fetching sandals with fluffy fake flowers on the toes.
All in all, it promises to be a very pretty—if sometimes daring—summer as far as beach wear is concerned.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
PENNEY'S
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT
Victoria
new! Belfast cottons say goodbye to ironing and drip-drying!
These good looking dresses actually iron themselves in the wash. Wash them as usual. Don't bother to drip dry. Wring out by hand or spin in your washing machine. The bare-armed flower print is in misses' sizes.
$ 8^{9 5} $
PENNEY'S GREATER - THAN - EVER
MAIN FLOOR READY-TO-WEAR
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CARNIVAL
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SMART BLAZER—Mary Ellen Jurden, Kansas City, Mo., junior, is ready for a daytime outing in a matching wool blazer and skirt from the Coach House.
Ivy smartness . . . short sleeve comfort! . .
Manhattan MANSMOOTH SPORT SHIRTS
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Every inch is ivy with all the important ivy details. And they're there to stay because MANHATTAN'S $ Mansmooth shirts are just as carefree as they can be.Tailored of 100% cotton they wash easily and dry to a neat, wrinkle-free appearance... need no ironing. $5.00
diebolt's
S
843 Mass.
Page 9A
Lone Star Lake Called Most Popular Spring Spot
MILLIE MADISON
CAMPUS WEAR—Carolyn Delich, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, wears a crisp, cotton dress, courtesy of Weaver's.
There is an adage that spring turns men's thoughts to the great outdoors and University of Kansas students prove that they are no exception.
By Sara Pfeiffer
With the advent of warm weather, earthy matters—such as grass, flowers, and the birds and bees—take the spotlight. The lure of the native countryside waxes strong.
In accordance with the social customs at KU, this "return to nature" urge requires a Shangri-La-type asylum where the pressing cares of studies may be pushed into sweet oblivion.
Students find just such a retreat in Lone Star Lake, KU's own Walden Pond.
This small oasis, conveniently located a few miles from the campus, is a haven for exhausted students seeking to get away from the mad whirl of school activities.
The green shores of Lone Star are the scene of many a rousing fraternity party, not to mention more private excursions by parties of two.
Wednesday, April 22,1959 University Daily Kansan
In fact, come springtime, the lake area has the appearance of an all-school convocation, as hordes of students armed with food and liquid refreshment descend upon it.
Not only on sunny weekends, but on balmy evenings as well, many various activities may be observed going on around the lake.
On a typical Sunday afternoon in May, for example, one may find every form of recreation from rowing to just "plain relaxin".
A few diligent souls with textbooks may even be spotted. The sun and gentle lapping of the water aren't very conducive to study, however, and only those with extreme concentration power are advised to attempt it.
Whatever the purpose of going to the lake, all agree that Lone Star is without a doubt the most popular spot of the spring season.
Elegance, Brilliance Will Be News in Formal Fashion Wear
The new look in evening shoes is brocade, satin, and faille. These dressy fabrics are shaped into very pretty shoes with fairly pointed toes and high, delicate heels. These are the silhouettes that make great sense for dancing. They're newsiest in splashy colors—you can buy them that way, or have them tinted.
Blue, gray, silver, vibrant orange. This isn't a rainbow description, it's fingertips. Most women know they aren't a total success without strict attention to the fingertips.
Bright Colors in Fingernail Polish Too
No matter what the occasion men behind the chemicals have made sure that there is a color perfect for the fingertips.
W
Exciting Jewelry
Your good taste will be complimented when you select your fashion jewelry from our fine collection. We feature Hobe, Krementz, Imperial Pearl, TruKay and other recognized makers of quality jewelry.
Come in Today! You Will Be Pleased!
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
809 Mass.
Please stop in and have a Coke. Register for free drawing on Lady Manhattan shirt
VI 3-5432
The color groups which will pre-vaill in both flats and high heels are the hot pinks; brilliant reds, bright, bright, blues; salad green and Irish green going into avocado; and hot orange going to a glowing sea coral.
Color Keynotes Spring Slippers Fashion's bright point this spring are shoes in five families of vivid colors.
Happy Birthday
CAMPUS JAY SHOPPE
1144 Ind.
Other colors designed to coordinate with the bright silk prints, paisley prints and madras plaids are the yellows, mauve pinks, lilac, deep purple, and the newest neutrals—intense tones of beige from tan to bone color.
Supple kids, silky suedes, reptiles, brushed leathers, and leathers with sleek, simple lines give the new spring shoes a look of clean-cut elegance.
Patents have a new look which puts them into the brilliant color class too this spring.
Celebrating 1 Year
AMERICAN GIRL SHOE
THE AMERICAN GIRL SHOE
BONE TONE
...the go-with-all neutral color
$9.95
THE AMERICAN GIRL SHOE
BONE TONE
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$8.95
$9.95
Bone is on wonderful terms with every other color, particularly chic with navy, black and the new beige tones.
In exciting American Girl styles ... versatile, livable, affordable!
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Massachusetts
VI 3-987
$9.95
$8.95
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Massachusetts VI 3-9871
Page 10A
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 22,1950
Springtime Comes to the Campus
N.Y. JACKSON CITY HOCKEY 1928-30
COLLEGE GOLF
BROADWAY, NEW YORK
1962
University students are shown on this page taking a break from the razzle-dazzle of scholastic pursuits.
Barbara Bach (upper right), Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, is perched atop an ancient bit of masonry as she enjoys the view from Potter Lake. Miss Bach wears bermudas from the Coach House.
Clarence Trummel (upper left), Wilmore junior, turns his back on KU's Memorial Stadium to ponder the mysterious Campanile. He seems ready for a lazy afternoon in bermuda shorts and shirt from the Campus Shop.
Although psychologists tell us we need time just to do nothing, there are students on the campus who prefer athletic endeavors to relaxing. Bicycling, long-time European favorite, seems to be gaining popularity here.
Glenda Price (lower right), Topeka sophomore, pauses to smile at the camera. Skirts are banned for cycling so she wears pedal pushers and blouse from the Campus Jay Shoppe.
Ted Mueller (lower left), Lawrence graduate student, seems to be contemplating a fast 18 holes. If the Kansas weather does not improve, he may stay inside for months. He wears a sport coat from Carl's Clothing Store.
A. K. A. B.
MARY TAYLOR
S
Wednesday. April 22, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 15
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words 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 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 SALE
JUKEBOX RECORDS. 35 cents each on three for $1.00. Rowlands Book Store. 1241 Oread. 4-24
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON
6 cyl. 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone
green. Original owner. 20,700 miles, ex-
cellent condition. VI 3-5297 after 4 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
DAFFODILS, 25 cents a bunch, no de-
eign. Cald VI 3-2278.
4-22
Nail CV 1-3278.
1950 FORD CUSTOM V-8, excellent interior, tubeless tires with less than 500 miles, good, clean engine. Best offer taken. Call Jerry at VI 3-1116. 4-23
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, and diagrams not found in course materials. The index of over 600 terms Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio
MODERN TRAILER HOME, fenced yard, nice size storage house, all equipped, ready to move into. $850.00 Ideal for medical student, within walking distance of KU Medical Center. Call VI 3-3626 after 5 p.m. 4-22
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts, Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
1855 OLDSMOBILE, holiday hardtop,
p-n-m tone. Call VI 3-3825 4-255
K. U.M.C. AREA. 4418 Cambridge. Low equity, low payment G.I. Loan. Income days by appointment. Call YE 2-4-24 Kansas City, Kansas.
GERMAN TYPEWRITER. solid portable
German typewriter. 100" Call
Haefern at VI 3-6244. 4-22
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
LOST
KHAKI WIND BREAKER in Strong
rished MICRO BREAKER 5. Call Dean Hei-
richus VI 3-471-71
RAINCOAT, medium length, red paisley,
light grey grey, reward offered
VI 3312487
4-24
KU RING, gold with red stone, lost on
opener. CAL VI 3-310 I, inside. 4-24
offered. Call VI 3-310 I, inside. 4-24
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT. spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
well and gas furnished, linen furnished,
will accept graduate students. Call VI.
7677
APARTMENT FOR RENT, three room,
armished, for men or couple. See at 919
before 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
weekdays, and all day Saturdays.
Sundays.
4-23
APARTMENT, exceptionally nice. new.
New Frigidaire kitchen, automatic washer. Three minute walk to Fraser,
private parking, available soon. Also,
new apartment to submit during summer.
Call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APARTMENT for one or two men, one block from Union, ideal study and living conditions, reasonable. Available June 1. call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APT. FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Also large single rooms for boys. No driveway. Attached to campus. South house of campus, 1616 Indiana. 4-28
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, nice. clean,
three rooms and private bath. Kitchen
with built-ins. Refrigerator and towel
furnished, now available. Call VI 3-2760
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent container bags Plecic, party supplie Ice agent, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350.
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
One way and local, ready to go anywhere, now being accepted.
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass. on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
HELP WANTED
WANTED: young woman, not over thirty,
for interesting work contacting public.
Publicity, television and media
years. Some typing required, also sales
ability. Good working conditions, pay,
and employee benefits. Contact Manager,
Western Bell Telephone, 641-
Vermont. Co-4-22
WANTED
WANTED TO BUY: 20 second good, hand good
9 to 14 Call after 5 p.m.
at VI 3-1497
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 stoops of cages, stands, and accessories, fish, lizards, and complete collection of 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, mattresses, gifts in gift shop field. Grant's Pet and礼品 Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. **tf**
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660 tf
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
tuition-up and maintenance
Motors, 312 Broomstick VI 3-4850.
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tt
For Expert
Watch Repair
And All Your Jewelry Needs
CREDIT JEWELERS
WOLFSON'S
743 Mass.
VI 3-4366
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10213 Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. For men and women, by professional staff available for limited time. VI 3-2132. tr
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smith
9411y Milly, Ph. Vi 3-5263
www.dressmakes.com
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts.
"NYPIST": Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regularates. Mrs. Betty Veqist, 1935 Barker v., phone VI 3-2001. 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 OF REPORTS, term papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
Music Studio, Dance Studio,
Missouri, phi 3-6388, 9f
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m.
Photo-Finishing
FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak)
摄影
EAPERIENCIED TYPIST: Form secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular calls. Call VI 3-8568.
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 3-6330
HIXON STUDIO
TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-1893. 736 Tenn.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers,
reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates.
business-related education,
tention, accurate work. Call VI 3-1240.
Mrs. John L. Glinka 1911 Tennessee. tf
SEWING AND ALTERATIONS. men's clothing a specialty. Will replace pockets or half pockets on men's trousers. 1220 Louisiana, call VI 3-4890. 4-22
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a real student-faculty rate. Call VI 0124
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on tenn papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-342
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22, 1950
KU Ices Washburn In Chilly Contest
By Tom Clark
Chilly tennis weather may be just the tonic for KU's Javahawkers.
Yesterday, Coach Denzell Gibbens's shorthanded crew recorded its second victory, a 7-0 whitewash of Washburn University from Toppea. Two weeks ago, the Jayhawkers defeated Nebraska 5-2 in the rain, but then lost last week to Wichita in ideal weather.
Playing without Lynne Sieverling who is in Burdett with his seriouslylvill mother, the Jayhawkers passed their seventh test without the loss of a set. Jerry Williams won the top singles assignment and teamed with Dave Coupe in the doubles. Pete
Block marked up his first singles victory while Sal Lekagul and Dave Coupe walked away with their fourth straight singles triumphs.
Fete Block, KU, defeated Tom Romig, 5-2, 5-2.
Dave Coupe, KU, defeated Gary
Streile, 5-2, 5-0.
Sat Lakouai, KU, defeated David Junge, 6-0, 6-1.
Jerry Williams, KU, defeated John
Wolfbart, 6-3, 5-0.
Eil Sheldon; KU, defeated Jim Mang, 5-1, 8-6.
Coupe-Williams, KU, defeated
Wohlfried-Romig, 6-0, 6-4.
Block-Brownfield, KU, defested
Lunge-Feile, 6-3, 6-0.
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8th and New Hampshire
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Downtown—Near Everything
Public Affairs Speaking Contest Tuesday
A public affairs speaking contest, sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, will be held April 28 in Bailey Auditorium.
All speeches should deal with some vital public issue and should be prepared to stimulate thought rather than stir the emotions. Their
roles should be similar to a strong editorial in which reasoned discourse predominates.
Preliminary speeches will be held April 23 in Bailey.
The speech must represent the speaker's own preparation and creative effort and should be 10 to 11 minutes in length.
A written copy of the speech containing not fewer than 1200 and not more than 1500 words must be
submitted on the night of the final contest.
Speeches will be judged on choice of subject, coverage and supporting materials, organization, clear and appropriate language, and effective delivery.
A complete set of the Encyclopedia Americana will be awarded to the winner.
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Expert Says Man Can Beat Space
A missile expert for McDonnell Aircraft Corp. says man can conquer the problems of space flight.
Speaking to 200 engineers and guests at the first annual Engineering Exposition Awards Banquet last night, Dr. Roderick D. Calrk, analyst in McDonnell's engineering department, explained some of the many problems facing engineers in space rocketry.
"Merely putting a man into a missile is nothing. Keeping him alive introduces every problem encountered by the sanitation engineer the heating and refrigeration engineer, and the electrical engineer, to name just a few." Dr. Clark said.
Dr. Clark, whose company is working on the Project Mercury space capsule, said one of the major problems in manned space flight is a psychological one.
He explained that the Mercury Astronaut faces loneliness, confinement, and difficulties in waste disposal, which will cause psychological problems.
"I am confident that engineers will be able to solve these problems," Dr. Clark said.
He said the largest factor hinder ing the engineers in solving these problems is financial.
"An engineer is someone who must do economically and efficiently what anyone with unlimited resources and unlimited time can do," he said.
Why manned space flight in the first place?
"The scientists who are urging manned space vehicles are sincerely interested in learning about this portion of nature simply because understanding nature fills a need in their mental makeup." Dr. Clark said.
Senior Hookey OK'd
Seniors will be excused from 10 and 11 a.m. classes next Thursday to attend the senior class meeting. They will also be excused from afternoon classes on May 8 to attend the class picnic.
Exused absence from class, but not from the work involved, has been approved by the Chancellor.
He said the engineers assisting with space projects have a num conviction that whatever is added to man's knowledge of nature can be used for man's welfare.
"Remember this," he cautioned, "these capabilities can be used to apply military pressures and we had better be ready."
E. Engineers Get 2 of 3 Trophies
The electrical engineers took top honors at the Engineering Exposition Awards banquet last night, winning two of three awards on their display. Sound and Color."
The electrical engineering department was presented the award for the best original display and the Sigma Tau trophy. annual award for the best overall display.
The award for the best academic display was presented the mining and metal engineering department for its display, "Modern Metallurgical Techniques."
Runners-up for the awards were: best academic display, engineering manufacturing processes department; best original display, petroleum engineering department, and the best over-all display, petroleum engineering department.
Petroleum engineers were the winners of last year's Sigma Tau trophy, only award given. This is the first year for the awards banquet.
56th Year, No.132
Melvin Hawk, Atchison graduate student, and David Blackburn, Parsons junior, said they asked Dean Woodruff to have the student-faculty disciplinary committee review the suspension.
"These boys have been guilty of planning and executing an unwaranted and fantastic attack on private property and, as we have said man" times in the past, we simply will not tolerate acts of vandalism and irresponsibility on the part of our students," Dean Woodruff said.
The students appeared before Dean Alderson and Dean Woodruff Tuesday. Dean Woodruff said he and Dean Alderson then met with the academic deans of the students involved and the decision was made by this group.
"Dean Woodruff doesn't seem to think the disciplinary committee has any power. We will have to take it to the chancellor." Blackburn said.
The action was based on damage to a house at 1316 Ohio St. The second and third floors of the house were damaged, furniture was overturned, and glass was broken during the party.
Dailu hansan
Nine Suspended After Apartment Damaged
Two of the students said they plan to appeal their suspension to Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. They complained they did not get a fair hearing. L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, said he and Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, held a full hearing.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Nine University students were suspended and two put on probation yesterday as a result of a party held March 18 at which the second and third floors of a Lawrence apartment house were damaged.
HORSE AND WAGON
Douglas County deputies stood the watches for the 24 Oregonian "pioneers" who camped with their covered wagons west of Lawrence last night.
After a hot breakfast, the "pioneers" began to prepare for their trip to Topeka, where they will
The deputies were brought in to prevent a rumor from materializing. The word yesterday was that KU students might spring a surprise midnight attack on the train.
The campsite was a hive of activity as horses and mules were watered and fed, harness repaired and horseshoes checked by the train's own harness maker and blacksmith.
attack on the tank However, the night passed without incident and the Oregonians began to stir around their camp sites at about 5:30 this morning.
Yesterday, more than 25,000 people turned out to see the wagons pass through the center of Lawrence, more than watched the Kansas Relays parade Saturday. At least 6,000 people lined their cars bumper to bumper and made the trip to the campsite to get a closer look at the Oregonians.
be welcomed by Governor George Docking and will spend the night at the Topeka Fair Grounds.
Thursday, April 23, 1959
Mrs. Mary Stephenson, the owner, said $115 was paid by one of the suspended students. The student had rented the apartment for a week under an assumed name.
Mrs. Stephenson was out of town when the party took place. She discovered the damage when she returned at 1:30 the next morning and called the campus police.
Six of the involved students had rented the apartment last semester. Hawk and Blackburn said they had had disagreements with the land-lady and moved out.
Blackburn and Hawk said they were at the party for only a few minutes and left when it got noisy. They said the two students put on probation were not in the house that night.
"I was told my suspension was because I went up there and didn't do anything to stop this. We (Blackburn and Hawk) got over there and
about four guys were there sitting around. When they started making a lot of noise, Blackburn and I left," Hawk said.
"We were there two or three minutes at the most. We left when they started making a lot of racket. When we were at the party they weren't tearing anything up.
Hawk said:
"Dean Woodruff said we were expelled because of our thoughts in the matter. He said, 'We don't want anyone around here who wouldn't do anything to stop something like this.' He said if he saw a murder being committed on the street he would try to stop it."
"The two were put on probation because they knew Blackburn and me, and because they lived there last semester."
Dean Woodruff was asked if the group had had an opportunity to (Continued on Page 8)
(Continued on Page 8)
Helvey Minimizes Fall-out Fears
"We must consider every possible chance of danger," he said.
Concern over the effects of increasing quantities of radioactive elements in the Kansas River was minimized today by T. C. Helvey, visiting professor of radiological biophysics.
J. Lee Mayes, director of industrial hygiene for the State Board of Health, has said that radioactivity in Kansas rivers is increasing. He specifically mentioned the Blue River near Manhattan and the Kansas River at Topeka as having the highest levels of radioactivity in the state.
"The permissible dosage of industrial waste as described by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) is so conservative that it may be considered as absolutely safe, with the exception of a possible genetic damage. This, however, cannot be determined until the second or third generation." Prof. Helvey said.
"Theoretically, the only safe radioactivity is no radio activity at all Even the cosmic radiation we receive from outer space could cause
"However, the radiation level in our drinking water is carefully monitored and always is kept below the permissible dose," Prof. Helvey said.
"The danger of certain radioactive materials depends strongly on the type of material it is. The most dangerous are the bone-seeking materials (Strontium 90)" he said.
"In spite of the theoretical chances for damage, there is no justification for concern as long as conditions are kept within their present limits," he said.
Betas Take First Place In Intramural Speeches
Beta Theta Pi fraternity won first place in the 12th annual intramural speech contest last night with 38 points for the three divisions of the contest.
"Fall-out in this area is so small that it is not necessary to consider it with a great deal of seriousness. Industrial wastes are strictly regulated, and natural radioactive materials washed from the soil into Kansas rivers do not come near the level of danger." Prof. Helvey said.
Radioactivity in water may be due to fall-out, industrial wastes, or the natural radioactivity in the soil.
damage, but we are not sure just what damage will or could be caused by a very low level of radioactivity," he explained.
Alpha Tau Omega won second place with 36 points and Sigma Chi placed third with 34 points.
Stephen Hill, Lawrence senior,
was first place winner in the argu-
mentative contest held last night.
Others who placed were Paul Cacioppo,
Overland Park sophomore,
second; Sidney Stoepewelphur, Russell junior, third; Alan Wuthnow,
Hope sophomore, fourth.
Bill K. Flynn, Topeka freshman, was the winner of the informative speech contest held April 15. Others who placed in this contest were Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence freshman, second; Janet Cameron, Topeka junior, third; Charles D. Aldrich, Osborne sophomore, fourth.
Alan Wuthnow was the winner of the demonstration speech, the first division of the contest, held April 8. Other winners, of this contest were Norman Schwartzkopf, Abilene sophomore, second; Michael D. DeBusk, Macksville sophomore, third; Jack E. Kollmann, Kansas City, Mo., junior, fourth.
Other winners of this contest were Norman Schwartzkopf, Abilene sophomore, second; Michael D. DeBusk, Macksville sophomore, third; Jack E. Kollmann, Kansas City, Mo., junior, fourth.
Trophies were presented to the first place winners and to Beta Theta Ph.
In his winning speech last night, Hill said a responsible electorate and interested voters depend on a good educational system.
"The difference between interested and non-interested, responsible government is education," he said.
"For sound education and subsequent citizenship, we must teach responsibility toward government and public affairs."
Weather
Increasing cloudiness north tonight. Friday partly cloudy. Cooler west and north Friday. Low tonight 30s northwest to 40s southeast. High Friday 60 northwest to lower 70s southeast.
一
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 23, 1959
Algeria-French Tinderbox
Algeria is scorched by the flames of rebellion. France's manpower, pride and frances are on fire.
The result is a bubbling caldron of headaches for the Western World and the United States. The United States is squeezed between the conflicting armies of France and Algeria, both vital to Western defense.
This week, while Charles F. Gallagher of the American Universities Field Staff and an expert on North Africa, visits the campus, he will touch on some of the Algerian questions.
Algeria, a nation as large as the United States and four times as large as France, is the gateway to Africa and its storehouse of resources. It has been said that he who controls the North coast of Africa controls the Mediterranean.
Oil—the magic of the Sahara Desert—adds to the volatility of the African tinderbox.
The Algerian nation is essential as a market for France whose drooping economy could wilt with new trade disturbances. But final negation of Algeria's aspirations for independence would be fatal to co-operation between the West and the Arab world and extremely damaging to relations with other Asian-African nations.
And further prolonged identification of the West with the forces of blind colonialism can lead to an Algerian arrangement with the East of the kind taking place in Iraq.
The war in Algeria is four and one-half years old. The bloodletting is close to 125,000 casualties.
The war costs France $1.5 billion a year. The stepped-up draft of young men for service in North Africa has taken more than one per cent of the normal labor force. The stationing of nearly 500,000 men in Algeria has been a serious drawback to NATO plans for the defense of Central Eurone.
And an end to the Algerian War, at least on France's terms, seems as far off as ever. The French army will not recognize that it cannot have a military victory, and this can destroy France.
Liberal, democratic opinion in France is dead. The problem as seen by the dominant right-wing in France is one of honor.
Further, the Algerian Nationalists are turning more and more toward the East for arms. Both Russia and China have promised weapons.
Rebels claim that they are the true representatives of the Algerian people, and through the machinery of the UN (using Syria and Tunisia among others as their spokesmen) they have demanded that Algeria get full independence.
To this France has responded that while it will negotiate a cease-fire at any time, and now plans to hold elections on the basis of a greatly enlarged franchise, it has no intention of granting Algeria full sovereignty. It considers the country an integral part of the French Republic.
The United States has so far tried to carry water on both shoulders. This country has long standing ties with France and could scarcely sustain the NATO alliance without her. At the same time the United States has sought not to offend the Asian-African bloc in the UN.
At the last UN debate on Algerian independence, the United States abstained from voting. But this is running away—not a solution.
Should the United States back France and rely on time and a gradual process of Algerian education to solve most of the issues Algeria presents?
Is Algeria really ready for independence? Or is it another Indonesia? Liquidating colonialism does not guarantee true economic and human progress. Algeria, like all undeveloped countries, needs French capital.
Is the United States possibly taken in by anti-imperialist slogans? France has organized teams of doctors, teachers, and social workers who have ministered to Algerian needs. She has poured millions of dollars of investment into Algeria—more than she has taken out.
And what will be the effect upon the East-West struggle if Algeria achieves independence? The danger of Communist domination is worth considering, for the independence movement consists of the F.L.N. (National Liberation Front), the M.N.A. (Algerian National Movement), and the Algerian Communist party. The three movements are as much at odds with one another as with the French.
Is it time for Americans to consider the need for disassociation from foreign policy which stands in the way of high ethical standards? Should the United States support the Algerian cause?
How these questions are answered could mean the difference between peace and World War III. —Larry Miles
Once Upon a Time
By Martha Fitch
Once upon a time there was a senior class that did not leave a gift for the University to remember them. They didn't even have a fitting plaque to put anywhere in remembrance of their school devotion.
They did not realize that in a
few years some of them would come back and be embarrassed because they couldn't take their children to see the gift they had left. How would they explain the dilemma that had faced their class?
It was really very simple. At the time it had seemed horribly important to think up a gift to give
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
10 MIN
SPEECHES
TODAY
5-43
to the University but some of the more active members had decided that this class should give something that would please absolutely everyone (almost), and this was hard to do.
"NO MATTER HON LOUSY HER SPEECHES - YOU'LL HAVE TO ADMIT SHE ALWAYS HOLDS THEIR ATTENTION."
First they though of putting gold-fish in the Chi O fountain, but who could imagine a fish swimming around with a plaque on it?
Then the idea was brought up that perhaps a new filter for Potter Lake could be installed, but of course they could not do that because the plaque might rust in the water. Not that a plaque was a must, but after all, everyone before them had a plaque and how could they afford to be different?
As numerous suggestions were brought up and thrown out the window just as fast, the seniors got so discouraged that they decided rather than be criticized they would leave nothing at all. Surely no one could talk about that.
Of course in the end they were talked about the most because they had dared to be different. no gift and no plaque and nothing at all.
When a fellow says it hain't the money but the principle o' the thing, it's th' money.—Frank McKinney
Worth Repeating
. . .
Most women are not so young as they are painted.—Sir Max Beerbohm
--a thing for the future. Mathematics becomes a blur, science a song and literature poetry.
A genius is a man who *does* unique things of which nobody would expect him to be capable.—Edward V. Lucus
. . .
They talk of professional women. Personally, I have never met an amateur—Sir Winston Churchill
It Looks This Way . . .
By George DeBord
A spring day like this one brings out not only the best in nature, but the best in man. Blood flows through the veins like warm, red wine until the mind is dizzy with thoughts of beauty in man's sweet drunkenness in harmony with his world.
The hard, cold, logical thinking of winter melts before the rushing spring air. Business becomes a game, study a bore, and work a thing for the future. Mathemat-
April is the month of awakening. It is the month that brings the promise of May, the most beautiful of all months. Man awakens from within himself and his cold and stormy world. He moves outside—outside his factfilled mind and into the heart of nature.
It is a time for happiness, love, singing, thought, watching, dreams, playing, peace, tranquility. It is the time for living.
COKEA
What good is it?
It is no good to the man in search of the dollar. He can't make a profit from the season. Production slacks off because workers become restless at their machines. Office workers tire of papers and typewriters and sit dreamy-eyed waiting for 5 o'clock.
It is no good to the teacher. Students skip assignments, miss class. When they do come, they are not responsive. Those who have pored over the books through the winter, now leave them in search of the pleasures of life.
The man who asks this question presents a perfect defense for the worth of spring. It is the season that brings out the best in man, his hopes, his dreams, his appreciation of the world in which he lives. This is why he does not produce for the material world—he is drifting above it in the beauty of the aesthetic.
But spring needs no defense. A clear blue sky and a warm south breeze are far more beautiful than all that man could produce with centuries of labor. But more important than this is the appreciation of his wonderful world that spring gives to man.
What good is it? Don't ask me. I'm too busy living.
the took world
Alain Lazard
By Calder M. Pickett Assistant Professor of Journalism
SOME LIKE IT HOT, by Billy Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond. Signet 35 cents.
The screenplay of Billy Wilder's new motion picture comedy is available in paperback, with eight pages of photographs. The movie itself still has not arrived in Lawrence (when it does arrive it will have been "treated" a bit by the state board of censorship).
But the screenplay is a delight, diluted or otherwise. Most film fans know by now that "Some Like It Hot" is in the grand old tradition of film comedy, complete with sight gags and wild chases that recall the days of Mack Sennett and Chaplin. It's the story of two Chicago musicians who witness the St. Valentine's Day massacre and are forced to hide out with an all-girls' band to escape the mob.
That's enough. Details should not be given away. Moviegoers old enough to recall the 1930s ("It Happened One Night," "The Thin Man," "My Man Godfrey," and "Nothing Sacred") will be glad to hear that there'll soon be a comedy in town. Younger people should be glad, too. Except for some of the Judy Holliday films there have been fewer movies in recent years as much fun as "Some Like It Hot."
Dailu hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Hampshire
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. 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 ... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department ... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department ... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Cos-Editorial Editors
Page 3
Around The Campus SUA Names Eight Radiation Replaces Board Members Hairpins in Hodder
Student Union Activities announces the appointment of eight new board members.
Named to committees are Margaret Brown, Kansas City, Mo, arts and crafts; Richard Dowell, Bartlesville, Okla., recreation; Judith Duncan, Overland Park, special events; Julia Stanford, Concordia, music and forums.
Marilyn Henning, Ottawa, hospitality; Phyllis McCampbell, Kansas City, Kan., personnel, and Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., public relations. All are juniors.
Jay Richardson, Bartlesville, Okla.
sophomore, dance.
Forum Will Hear Mid-East Expert
Charles F. Gallagher, visiting American Universities Field Staff expert, will speak at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Trophy Room.
"North Africa and the Middle East—The Trend Toward One Arab World" will be Mr. Gallagher's subject.
2 Design Students Honored
Two KU design students received $50 prizes from the Lawrence Women's Club this week for their selection as the "most outstanding" of approximately 400 design students.
Foreign Students, Festival rehearsal will be at 7 p.m. tonight in Hoch Audi-
Official Bulletin
Mary A. Markham, Hollywood Fla., junior, presented a water-color landscape, and Donald C. Craven, Stanberry, Mo., freshman, a ceramic bottle to the club for permanent exhibit.
Cinderleader practices, April 21. 23. 7:30 p.m. Robinson Gym. Room 101. Tryouts. April 28 and 30. 7:30 p.m. Robinson Gym Room 101.
Aids and Awards Employment opportunity Strong Part-time and some full time work.
TODAY
Faculty Club, 7:30 p.m. dessert and 8 p.m. bridge. Hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friau, VI 3-242 and Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Buzholtz, VI 3-8381.
Der Deutsche Teleintrift sich an.
Donnerstag um 5. Uhr in Raum 402
im Kaffeeklasse und auftunde und
einen Kaffeeklutsch. Auch besprechen
wir die Politik Deutschlands.
Christian Science Campus Organization
7.30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
KU Faculty Club. Dessert, 7:30 p.m.
and Bridge. 8 p.m.
Teachers Appointment Bureau, Donald Golden, Phoenix, Ariz. High school and college positions only. MA required for all except women's phys. ed.
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 8:45 a.m.
and 9:30 a.m. Monday through Friday,
fellowing Canterbury House.
Art Education Club, Room 103, Balmy
Speaker, B. J. Everly, Student Teaching
Speaker, B. J. Everly, Student Teaching.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30
p.m., 829 Miss Bible Study, discussion,
refreshments.
Nearly half-47 per cent-of the natural gas produced in Texas is consumed there too.
Hodder Hall, once a dormitory where women searched the floor for hairpins, has today been taken over by men searching for radiation.
Sixteen participants in the Kansas Highway Patrol recruit training program are getting practical experience by running radiation tests with Geiger counters in Hodder's front yard.
A supply of cobalt 60 in the yard furnishes the stuff to make counters tick.
Marvin Elected to Education Council
Dean Burton W. Martin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has been re-elected for a three year term to the accreting committee of the American Council on Education for Journalism.
Dean Marvin was also re-elected chairman of the committee for another year.
Dean Marvin presented the annual report to the council as past chairman of the ACEJ Accrediting Committee. The council met in conjunction with the meeting of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.
Marquette Librarian To Talk at Poetry Hour
William Ready, librarian from Marquette University, will discuss John R. R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Ring" at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. today in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union.
Medical Open House Saturday
The School of Medicine will hold open house from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at the Medical Center, 39th Street and Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, Kan.
An invitation is extended to any pre-medical students.
A recent ordinance provides for a $10 fine for supermarket owners in Kenilworth, N. J., whose shopping carts are found abandoned in the streets.
LEONARD'S STANDARD
The place you want to go to be SURE your car is ready for spring.
9TH & INDIANA
Thursday, April 23, 1959 University Daily Kansan
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VI 3-9111
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Home Ec Day Is Tomorrow
The home economics department will entertain about 200 girls from 12 Kansas high schools tomorrow during its annual high school day.
Carol Barber, Chanute senior, will narrate the fashion show. The script was written by Miss Barber, Nancy Dodge, Salina senior, Theresa Gainey, Prairie Village junior, and Gayle Kinemond, Bushton senior.
George B. Smith, dean of the ternoon program. Mrs. Joyce Smith, home economics instructor, will be master of ceremonies.
Helping to plan and produce the show are:
Nadine Eger, Oregon, Mo., senior; Patricia Binns, Kansas City, Kan., Joan Hohman, University City, Mo., Doris Bamber and Patricia Domnell, Lawrence, Jeanine Tiemeier, Lincolnville, and Katherine Woods, Arkansas City. All are juniors; Brenda Gosney and Melinda Hill both Kansas City, Mo., sophomores
Participating in the skit will be Edna Hill, professor of home economics; Mrs. Luella Foster, assistant professor of home economics; Marcia Hall, Coffeyville, and Geraldine Blair, McPherson, both seniors.
Judy Weatherby, Ft. Scott, Margie Critten, Kansas City, Mo., and Karen Johnson, Topeka. All are sophomores.
Connie Smith, Topeka, Charlotte Roberts, Independence, Kan., Sue Ellen Winkler, Caney, Darla Seltenreich, Quinter, and Ann Kelley, Independence, Mo. All are freshmen.
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Around the World
K.C. Fire Kills 3 In Chemical Plant
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Three men were killed and five injured today as an ear-shattering, rumbling explosion ripped the Thompson-Hayward Chemical Co., and left it a smoking ruin.
Company president R. F. Thompson said the damage would approach $1 million. Ten chemical tanks, one large concrete block building with a metal roof and several smaller buildings were involved in the blast.
One steel tank was blown three-quarters of a block away.
TOKYO—The U.S. Air Force announced today it has reprimanded Lt. Col. Charles H. Platt Jr., and relieved him of his command for his part in bumping seven enlisted men enroute to the United States on emergency leave.
Platt, 49, of Brooklyn, N.Y., was relieved of his post as commander of the Air Terminal Squadron at Tachikawa air base and more to forfeit one-half month's salary, $240.
NEW YORK—Police today received information that seven men had been sent to New York to assassinate Cuban Premier Fidel Castro.
TOKYO—Feiping radio today claimed "tremendous victories" in a Red Chinese Army offensive against anti-Communist Tibetan forces and said the rebellion in Lhasa had been completely quelled.
The Communist New China News Agency said the Red Army swept across hundreds of miles in 10 days of action and wiped out the rebel nests at one stroke. It claimed 2,000 Tibetans wounded or captured in the drive.
JIM McMULLAN, KU SENIOR
JUST ARRIVED YESTERDAY- "I GET SO JEALOUS" "GIVE ME A LITTLE LOVIN' "
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"Excellent (B+)" 3rd on their list.
"WREN"-
Next Week's Pick Hit.
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Mass.
VI 3-2644
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23, 1959
Rookies Push Regulars For First Team Positions
3
Coach Jack Mitchell gives instructions.
By Dave Butcher
The prediction that sophomores will dominate KU's football team next fall seems to be proving itself after the first week of spring practice.
Rookies appear as alternates at every position except right end and fullback. A few injuries would elevate them to starting roles and bring last year's No. 2 fresh unit into the second team.
Coach Jack Mitchell commented: "We have a group of somewhat better athletes physically among our new men, but their inexperience will be obvious. Our staff considers all of them prospects with potential, but they won't be ready for the competition we play."
Sam Simpson and Dale Remsberg, both junior lettermen, are 1-2 at right end. Sophomores Doyle Schick and Fred Bukaty are handling full-back duties this spring. Norm Mailen, the club's best punter, has been excused for pitching duty with the baseball team.
Elsewhere, the squad breaks down this wav:
Left end — Veteran DeWitt Lewis is backed by sophomore Larry Allen.
Left tackle — Letterman Stan Kirshman is followed by Dick Davis, freshman, and Dean Barnes, sophomore.
Center — All are rookies, with Fred Hageman, Mike Bogard, and Kent Staab vying for a starting job. Hageman is a transfer from Arkansas, but played only one game there as a sophomore before being injured. Andy Graham, fullback, may be switched to end.
Right guard — Joe Spurney, sophomore letterman, is backed by Benny Boydston, John Collins, and Bill McKinney, all freshmen.
Right tackle — Ken Fitch returns
with rookies Ed Alberg and Wilfred Bales behind him.
Quarterback — Bill Crank return to the No. 1 spot. Learn Flahnsbarth Ron Leitsch, and Larry McCallister all freshmen, will be crowding veteran Duane Morris for the No. 2 position.
Left half — John Peppercorn, last year's all-Big Eight tackle, is No. 1, with sophomores John Hadl and Byron Sears trailing.
Right half — Dave Harris is marked as No. 1 man. Sophomores
Curtis McClinton and Gib Wilson are close behind. Freshman Jim Jarrett would be in the picture, but he was sidelined with a knee injury the first week of practice and is out indefinitely.
After dominating their last three track meets, the Jayhawker squad will pack up their confidence and head for Des Moines and the Drake Relays this weekend.
By Ted Dielman
Confidence Accompanies Track Team to Drake Relays
And confidence will probably be KU's biggest asset. So far this week the team has not had an opportunity to practice outside.
"The boys are ready to work out.' Easton says, "but there is one catch. We can't."
The downpour received on the eve of the Kansas Relays not only put a cramp in the relay's performances, but also left the Memorial Stadium track and field in unusable condition.
Easton does not believe the field will be fit for practice for the remainder of the week. "However," he suggests, "Markley's swimming team could start working out in it. I hear they need a new pool about as bad as we need a new track."
However Easton says team spirit is high and the Jayhawkers will head for the Drake Relays golden anniversary in hopes of winning grand slams in five events. (A grand
slam would be a victory in the Texas Relays, the Kansas Relays and the Drake Relays.
Those who will be aiming for triple crown victories are: Bill Alley in the javelin throw; Ernie Shelby in the broad jump; the team of Clif Cushman, Bill Mills, Dan Ralston, and Tom Stutka in the four-mile relay, and Bob Lida, Cushman, Charley Tidwell, and Bill Tillman in the sprint medley.
The fifth grand slam the Kansas team will be aiming for is not an event, but the most outstanding athlete award. Alley was awarded this honor at the Texas Relays, and Tidwell won it last week at the Kansas Relays. Cushman was a close second for the honor both times.
Amateur Tourney Tough
PINEHURST, N. C. — (UPI) — A mixture of tournament-wise veterans and talented youngsters tangled today in the quarter-finals of the 59th annual North and South amateur golf tournament.
The players matched in today's round were the survivors of Wednesday's two rounds.
BOXED STATIONERY SALE!
59c Each . . 2 for $1.00
(our entire stock is not included)
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ROCKHILL
Art Theatre
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AND
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ROCKHILL Arts Theatre
Press at 46"...Via.1-7020
"ONE OF FUNNIEST IN YEARS!" — Time
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historic comedy
"Mr Hulot's Holiday"
"The year's funniest film!"
— Life
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TECHNICOLOR
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ALASTAIR SIM
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ENDS TUES.
"HULOT" AT 7 & 10 "GEORDIE" AT 8:25 ONLY
STUDENTS DISCOUNT — 75c WITH I.D.
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Forest at 46"...Vn.1-1028
"ONE OF FUNNIEST IN YEARS!" — Time
AND
JACQUES TATIS
Filarious comedy
"Mr Hulot's Holiday"
"The year's funniest film!" — Life
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TECHNICOLOR
BILL TRAVERS ALASTAIR SIM
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ENDS TUES.
"HULOT" AT 7 & 10 "GEORDIE" AT 8:25 ONLY STUDENTS DISCOUNT — 75c WITH I.D.
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
e
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
819 Massachusetts
FLORSHEIM Slip-Ons
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featuring a new front seam treatment that provides a tailored look for welldressed office, street or leisure wear. They're available in Black Calf or Tobacco Brown Calf. From A to D to 12.
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Journalist-Missionary Finds Satisfaction in Her Work
A talent in journalism, a deep interest in people, and a desire to "do something for them" led Mona Millikan, 1953 KU graduate, to a fascinating job in one of the world's most remote corners.
Miss Millikan is not only a successful journalist but a commissioned, full-time missionary as well. Until her return to the United States in October, she had served for a year in a mission station in the east central section of the Belgian Congo.
She attended the Matrix Table of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary and professional fraternity for women in journalism, here Tuesday evening.
"People often ask me why I left my reporting job to go to Africa," she said. "My father is a Methodist minister, so I inherited the family interest, but I didn't actually consider doing the work until 1956," she said.
"The bishop of Africa spoke in Topeka at that time, and emphasized the need of literature for those natives who have just learned to read." Miss Millikan explained. "I became so interested that I applied and was accepted by the Board of Missions to train for mission work."
She spent a year at Scarrritt College, Nashville, Tenn., and left for the Belgian Congo in August. 1957.
The quiet poised woman smiled. "I soon learned that my first job was to learn the language and customs before I could begin to write. And learning an African tribal language is not the easiest thing in the world to do," she added.
Miss Millikan was stationed at a regional school for children from six to sixteen.
"Ours was a rural area, so most of the children boarded at the school," she said. "Many of the students earned their board by doing
sewing or craft work," she said. "Often the family couldn't pay money, but sent produce instead.
MANHATTAN, Kan. — (UPI) — The Kansas artificial breeding service unit at Kansas State University set a new record last year with 49,234 first services, its annual report said. The number represented an increase of 1,465 from the previous year.
"Working with those children and seeing them grow and develop brought home to me that the hope of any country in the world, whether it be the United States, Russia, or the Congo, lies with its young people.
"My year in the Belgian Congo was one of the most worth-while experiences that I've ever had. I only hope that I can return someday," she said.
That's a Lot of Bull!
When Spain ruled New Mexico from 1598 to 1822, the territory was off-limits to all foreigners.
Thursday, April 23, 1959
Miss Versalog Still Missing
"Miss Versalog," the six-foot demonstrator for a special course offered by the School of Engineering, is still being held by persons unknown.
An attempt to ransom her has met with failure, Charles J. Baer, associate professor of engineering drawing, said today.
Prof. Baer even recently offered to swap an obsolete model slide rule for the missing demonstrator—no questions asked. To date there have been no offers.
The Versalog slide rule is the type used by the majority of engineering students. Prof. Baer said that it is "very inconvenient" to teach the slide rule class, offered at the beginning of each semester, without it.
"We could do a much better job if we had it back," he said. "We know it's around here some place and we are still hoping to have it returned."
Power plants in Now York State produced 40,900,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity in 1956.
Board Ruled Out Of TV Censorship
The Kansas Board of Review has no authority to censor television movies, John Anderson Jr., Kansas attorney general, said Tuesday.
This was a reversal of an earlier decision by Anderson in reply to a query by Robert Duncan, county attorney of Athienison county. Anderson had said in a letter to Duncan that educational films and films sponsored by nonprofit organizations were required to have the Kansas movie seal of approved viewing.
After reconsideration, Anderson ruled that since television stations are under the licensing jurisdiction of the federal communications commission the state censor board does not have the authority.
Revue Applications Due Mon.
Applications for positions of business manager and producer of the Rock Chalk Revue are due at 5 p.m. Monday in the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union.
His Nose for News Glistened Until-
A Daily Kansan reporter at his home, heard fire sirens on the campus, and called the Lawrence Fire Department.
Applicants will be interviewed April 29.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
"This is the Daily Kansan. Where's the fire?" he questioned. "At the journalism building," was the reply.
Rushing to Flint Hall, he found no cinders, no ashes, no smoke, no fire. But he did find broken glass around a switch where a prankster turned in a false alarm.
The city fire department, called only to turn off the siren, came en masse with two hook-and-ladder trucks and the police.
TV Producer To Speak Here
Dorothy Culbertson, executive producer of NBC network's "Continental Classroom," arrived in Lawrence yesterday from New York to deliver two talks.
She will lecture on "Instruction by Television" at 4 p.m. today in Bailey Auditorium, and will speak at the annual meeting of the Mathematics Honorary Society tomorrow.
Dr. James R. Killian Jr., special science adviser to President Eisenhower, has called "Continental Classroom" a "public service of the highest order." Two hundred fifty colleges and universities throughout the United States offer academic credit for the television course.
Mrs. Culbertson is staying at the home of Dr. Baley Price.
M
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Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Kansas City, Missouri
Interested Students, Apathetics, Complainers
If you are among the loyal supporters of the ASC, then this opportunity is extended especially to you.
If you are one of the many apathetical students who have been criticizing student government over the last year, now is your chance to do something about it.
ASC committee appointments are now being accepted in the Dean of Students Office.
Committees:
PUBLIC RELATIONS — HOUSING — PUBLICATIONS LABOR — SOCIAL — MANY OTHERS
Students interested in working in one of these committees during the next year, apply immediately. Applications due Thursday, April 30.
胡氏
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For real, down-to-earth smoking enjoyment, there's nothing else like Camel. No other cigarette brings you the rich flavor and easygoing mildness of Camel's costly blend. More people smoke Camels than any other cigarette of any kind. Today as always, the best tobacco makes the best smoke.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23, 1959
... On the Hill ...
Delta Sigma Phi
William Schmidt, Independence, Kan., junior, has been elected president of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity for next year.
Other officers are James Gardiner,
Mission freshman, vice president;
James Rambo, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore, secretary and athletic
chairman; Douglas Reed, Cassoday
sophomore, treasurer; Keith Sicka-
foose, Phoenix, Ariz., freshman,
sergeant at arms.
John Olson, Kansas City, Mo.
senior, rush chairman; Dwain Jenista,
Caldwell sophomore, pledge master and song leader; Berle Berson,
Winfield sophomore, house manager; Raymond Rader, Kansas City, Mo., senior, editor and historian.
Jerry Payne, Kansas City, Mo.
senior, steward; Clifford Tatham,
Lawrence senior, chaplain; Daniel
Felger, Mishawaka, Ind., sophomore, social chairman; Frank Swenson, Clay Center junior, scholarship chairman.
William McCall, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, corresponding secretary; Charles Converse, Parkville, Mo., sophomore, alumni chairman, and John Carlson, Wichita sophomore, and Douglas Newport, Independence, Mo., freshman, co-activities chairmen.
***
Pi Beta Phi
Pi Beta Phi sorority has announced the election of the pledge class officers for the spring semester. Marcia Casey, Hutchinson, has been elected president.
Other officers are Sally Barhydt, Prairie Village, vice president; Liz Riedell, Salina, secretary; Cynthia Lackie, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer; Ann Morgenstern, Salina, social chairman, and Lynn Magnuson, Western Springs, Ill., song leader.
Delta Delta Delta
Delta Delta Delta sorority entertained their mothers for the weekend recently. A luncheon was given at the chapter house Saturday noon, and in the evening dinner was held at the Castle Tea Room.
***
Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Pi Beta Phi sorority will hold a picnic at Lake Tonganoxie Thursday evening.
Delta Tau Delta
Chaperones will be Mrs. Mildred Dunivent and Mrs. Joe Hope.
The girls and their mothers spent the evening playing bridge, and at closing the mothers were entertained by a serenade.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority held a picnic at Lake Tonganoxie.
Chaperones were Mrs. Joe Hope and Miss Merle Munson.
Six Pinnings Announced
Calkins-Epps
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Helen Calkins, Iola junior, to Ted Epps, Philadelphia, Pa., sophomore, a member of Delta Chi fraternity.
Jean Anderson, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Vicki Bruner, Sedan sophomore; Jo Mohri, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, junior, and Polly Smith, Belton, Mo., junior, announced the pinning.
A pinning party was held at the Alpha Omicron Pi chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. W. R. Banker and Mrs. Ethel Harmon.
Williamson-Coombs
Miss Williamson's attendants were Gretchen Griswold, Silver City, New Mex., Sharon Shaffer, Chillicothe, Mo., Mary Ann Daugherty, Meade, Kathy Deuser, Kansas City, Kan., and Liz Phillips, Kansas City, Kan, all juniors, and Ernestine Williams, Wichita sophomore.
Delta Delta Delta sorority has announced the pinning of Margie Williamson, Hutchinson, to Alan Coombs, Arlington, Va., a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity. Both are juniors.
Castro-Sims
Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Mary-Lucreille Castro, Garden City senior, to Ron Sims, Ottawa. Mr. Sims is a
senior at Kansas State University where he is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
The pinning was announced by Jan Schlittenhardt, Denver sophomore, Barbara Tucker, Leavenworth sophomore, and Joann Hummel, St. Joseph, Mo., junior. Kay Crumly, St. Francis junior was the attendant.
* *
Hesner-Knouse
Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen have announced the pinning of Roberta Hesner, Columbus, Ohio, freshman, to Phillip Knouse, Garnet senior.
Knouse is a member of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.
Luxford-Pearce
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Sharon Luxford, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, to Bob Pearce, Kansas City, Mo., junior, a member of Triangle fraternity.
* *
Rarker-Johnson
Alpha Delta Pi sorority has announced the pinning of Walda Barker, Oak Park, Ill., to Bob Johnson, Overland Park both freshmen. Mr. Johnson is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
The pinning was announced by Sandra Jackson, Scott City junior and Jean Gilmour, Kansas City Kan., freshman.
GRANADA
HOW SHOWING!
Delores Michael's Richard Widmark Henry Fonda Anthony Quinn Dorothy Malone in "Warlock"
VARSITY
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Bob Hope
Rhonda Fleming
Wendell Corey in
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James"
★★★★★
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haircuts with that
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Janet Jackson, Lawrence, and John Nicholson, Wichita, both juniors, were discovered sitting at the south end of the lake.
It is early in the season, but already students are finding Potter Lake a place to linger.
"I came to get away from the pressures of the hill," was Nicholson's reply.
Students Find Fishing Poor Atmosphere Peaceful at Potter
A roving reporter asked several students what drew them to that particular spot.
Miss Jackson said, "This is the first time we have come here this year because it's the first time I've really had spring fever. It's not too conducive to study though. We came after our two o'clock class."
Next we flagged down Daniel K. Ralston, Topeka sophomore, "I run around the lake because I have to practice for track. I run by every morning and evening. I like it here. I was just thinking about going swimming," he said.
Another group was busy playing tennis just up the hill.
lake. I wanted to get away from the outside world."
New Idea for Coffee
Kirk Anderson, Overland Park junior, said, "I came for the view and the cool breeze coming off the
Betty Grist, Independence, Mo. junior, said, "I came to relax and to read the Kansas. I think most people come to relax, not to study."
For a tasteful, wakeful breakfast cup of coffee add a piece of chocolate to the brew. Cut a piece of chocolate bitter or sweet—about the size of a thumbnail and drop into the coffee pot with the coffee grind and percolate together.
K. Orville Mears, Argonia senior, said, "I came here today because I'm waiting for a transcript which won't be ready until 4:15. It beats sitting on a stone bench in Strong Hall. I think it's a good deal that they cleaned up the lake. I come down here once in a while, it is quieter and I suppose it is relaxing."
Bright hats covered with flowers—chrysanthemums, daisies and cornflowers—are the spring favorite this year. Also popular are brilliantly colored cloches, berets, fezzes and pillboxes.
AKA Car Wash
SAT., APRIL 25
At Texco Station On Highway
10—Across From Dine-A-Mite.
(Weather Permitting)
$1.25 Per Car
Birds on a branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
CAR RADIO
- Expert Service
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THE CAMPUS
On Campus Top O' Twelfth
Jay
SHOPPE
On Campus
Top O' Twelfth
It's Dollar Day in Lawrence and We're Bringing It to You On the Campus
One Group
Spring and Summer Jewelry $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price
Clutch Bags
Regular $3.00
Now $2.00
Spring Dresses and Cocktail Dresses
1/2 Price
|||||||||||
Selection of Spring Gloves Regular $2.00 Now $1.00
25 words
för
RAINCO.
lining, 11
VI 3-3310
WANTEI formals. at VI 3-
KU RIN campus, offered.
FOUR nicely f heat and will acc 7677.
Blouses $2.00
APARTI furnishe Indiana weekday Sunday
No Returns or Approvals
APART New washer. private new ap mer. Ca
APART block fi condition call VI
APT. F apartmo so large ing or south o
FIRST
three t
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STUDI MEMB price Illustra newals 0124.
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1
Thursday, April 23, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Mo., Id to peo-
senior,
I'm
don't
getting
all. I
they
own
Peter
wersorn-thisantlyand
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words 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 charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
RAINCOAT, medium length, red palsy
grey light grey, reward offered
VT 3-S310 4-24
WANTED
KU RING, gold with red stone, lost on
stainless steel. Inside, 4-24.
Offered Call VI 3-3310.
WANTED TO BUY: 20 second hand. good
to have 9 to 14. Call after 5 p.m.
at WI 3-1497
FOR RENT
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
can and gas furnished, linen furnished,
will accept graduate students. Call VI.
7677
APARTMENT FOR RENT, three room,
furnished, for men or couple. See at 919
indiana before 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
during all day Saturdays
Sundays. 4-23
APARTMENT, exceptionally nice, new.
New Frigidaire, kitchen, automatic washer. Three minute walk to Fraser,
private parking, available soon. Also,
new apartment to submit during summer.
Call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APARTMENT for one or two men, one block from Union, ideal study and living conditions, reasonable. Available June 1.
call VI 3-8834
4-28
APT. FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Aling of smoking. Can be seen front south of campus. 1616 Indiana. 4-28
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, nice, clean,
three rooms and private bath. Kitchen
with built-ins. Refrigerator and stove
furnished, now available. Call VI 3-2760.
THREE ROOM APARTMENT, ground floor, unfurnished, air conditioned. Off the building, air refrigerator, and air conditioner supplied. GAIRVernon Call VI 3-5561 for 5 p.m. A-429
APARTMENT for the summer or longer.
Unfurnished bedroom, living room,
kitchen and dining area, good location.
Call VI 2-0114 after 5 p.m. 4-29
FOR SALE
JUKEBOE RECORDS. 35 cents each or three for $1.00. Rowlands Book Store, 1241 Oread. 4-24
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
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone green. Original owner, 20,700 miles, excellent condition. VI 3-5297 at 4 p.m.
1950 FORD CUSTOM V-6, excellent interior, tubeless tires with less than 500 miles, good, clean engine. Best offer taken. Call Jerry at VI 3-1161. 4-23
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. Spotgun study notes include everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50. free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts, Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
1955 OLDSMOLE, holiday hardpan,
toned bone. Call VI 3-3823 for
4-25
K. U.M.C. AREA, 4418 Cambridge. Low equity, low payment GI Loan. Income days by appointment or Saturday, other days by appointment. Call YE 2-424 Kansas City, Kansas.
MACGREGOR TENNIS RACKET, new.
MACGREGOR $12.50 4-17
4143 19 p.m. C-4
27
BUSINESS SERVICES
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660.
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smil A1114, Mass. Phi VI 3-5263
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt
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
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
upkeep, up- and down-cleaning.
Motors, 218 Chevy. VOICE VI 3-4850.
Balfour
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 1021'l' Mass. Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. massage by professional mausere. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132.
411 W 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
This Is Just Another One of the numerous facilities we have developed to help you with your financial problems. Ask one of our officers to introduce them all!
WE HAVE A CHECKING SERVICE FOR EVERY NEED
FRANK BANK TALKS...
Writing
Come in and get Acquainted
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates for attention. Contact him. Call VI M-13-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee t
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
Singer. 3-1971, Singer
Sewing Center. 927 Mass.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894. tf
LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest
studios, Dance Studio, University,
Mph. ph. 3-6388.
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast accurate service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-5908. tf
J
One way and local, ready to go anywhere. All sizes. Special reservation needed.
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass. on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
1ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Lawrence 8th and Mass.
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 pet supplies 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, furniture, and more. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady, I 3-5482.
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. 1736 Tenn.
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicie, parties supplies.iant, 6th and Vermont. Vernon VI.0250
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can help your advance reservations a special student-faculty rate. Call VI 3-1012.
SUMMER JOB HUNTING IS HERE
APPLICATION PICTURES
Good Pictures, Fast Service,
Reasonable Prices at the
CAMERA CENTER
1015 Mass. VI 3-9471
FOR Mothers Day
What Mother Has Been Dreaming About!
NEW FAMILY CHINA From the Famous Franciscan Kilns
Guaranteed (for a solid year of normal family use) not to chip, crack, craze or break, even in dishwasher and oven heat. If it does, FRANCISCAN will give you a free replacement. It's a true, new china...versatile, beautiful, dependable...six patterns to choose from. 16-piece starter set, $24.95...or the service for eight, specially priced at $74.95.
ELDRIDGE GIFT SHOP
707 Mass. St... Phone VI 3-0482
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 23, 1959
KU Suspends Nine
(Continued from Page 1.) appear before the deans who made the decision. He said:
"They spoke to Dean Alderson and me, yes. This was the decision of the academic deans of the students involved, in consultation with Dean Alderson and myself," he said.
Asked if the students could appeal the decision, he said:
"Anything I ever do is subject to review by my superior officer, the chancellor."
Asked if the students could appeal to the disciplinary committee, he said:
"I don't think so. I would say this is a decision of an administrative body of equal standing with the disciplinary committee."
He said any decision on what matters go to the disciplinary committee is made by him.
"The ASC bills and the code of the University Senate leave thines entirely to my judgement as to what is handled administratively and what is handled by the disciplinary committee. Sometimes things are handled by this office as a matter of expediency," he said.
Mrs. Stephenson said:
"Mrs. Stephenson 'said:
'She haven't lost my faith in KU boys.'"
The disciplinary committee includes students as well as faculty members.
Union, Fraser Set Display For Cervantes Celebration
Cervantes Day dancers are clicking castanets in preparation for the annual celebration Saturday.
Engineering Council Petitions Due April 30
Petitions for Engineering Council positions for next year must be filed in the Engineering office by April 30.
Openings are for president, vice president, secretary-treasurer, and senior, junior, and sophomore representatives to the council.
Long-Term Learner
LONDON — (UPI) — Reginald Seymour, fined $11.20 for driving with a learner's permit without the company of an authorized driver, disclosed that he'd been doing just that, on the same learner's permit, since 1939.
Radio Programs KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Trio in A Minor for Cello, Clarinet and Piano" by Brahms
7:00 Concert Hall
7:30 Contemporary Concert: "Quartet No. 1" by Thompson News
7:55 University of the Air: Asian Institute Lectures — "A New Pakistan"
9:00 Everybody's Classics
10:00 A Little Night Music: "Quartet No. 4 in C Minor, Op. 18, No. 4" by Beethoven Sign Off
KUOK Tonight
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time — "Dean Martin Melings"
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 Rich Wood Show
11:00 Lucky Strige Melodies
11:15 Rich Wood
12:00 Siern Off
The Union display was prepared by Mrs. Mirylis Moreland of Cuba and Mrs. Roselia de Barrientos of Guatemala, both Watson Library employees. The display features Spanish dolls and fabrics and Pan-American literature.
Spanish and Latin American displays in the south lounge of the Kansas Union and Fraser Hall will also be featured in the celebration.
In a Cervantes Day article yesterday, the Daily Kansan omitted the names of Mrs. Moreland and Jane Murdock, Joplin, Mo., graduate student, in the Cervantes Day comedy cast.
A bi-centennial concert commemorating George Frederick Handel will be given at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Handel Concert To Be Sunday
The School of Fine Arts, in cooperation with Sigma Alpha Iota, Mu Phi Epsilon, and Phi Mu Alpha, musical fraternities, will sponsor the concert.
musical directors are Robert D. Schaaf, Herrington, conductor of orchestra, and Marva Lou Powell, Topeka, choral director, both seniors.
Orchestra and chorus personnel will include members of the fraternities.
Soloists are Marva Lou Powell,
soprano; Bruce Gardner, Lawrence
junior; tenor; Marianne L. Marshall,
Topeka sophomore, cello' Jon R.
Irish, Leavenworth freshman, trumpet;
Michael Conner, Dodge City
senior; flute; Myles J. Criss, Topeka
junior, organ; and James A. Avery,
Burlington senior, harpichord.
The program will include "Anthem for the Coronation of King George II" (The King Shall Rejoice) and "Ode On St. Cecilia's Day."
There will be no admission charge
Actors Workshop To Present Plays
Actors Workshop will present scenes from "I Am a Camera" and "The Vortex" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Experimental Theatre.
Scenes from "Strange Victory" and "Playboy of the Western World" will be performed at 4 p.m. Monday.
KU Sod Trompers Pinch B-G Wallet
Bv Glenn Logan
Hurried and inconsiderate students and faculty members cost the University enormous sums of money for campus shrubbery, sod and blue grass.
C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said $10,000 is spent annually for landscaping materials.
Several thousand dollars are spent yearly to eliminate minor distractions from the campus. Looking from his office window, Mr. Bayles pointed to a footpath west of Watkins library.
"Pedestrians travel up and down these paths in mud and snow instead of walking on the sidewalks," he said. "It's human nature to travel the shortest distance between two points."
Keep Off the Grass
JRP Alarm Inflames Tempers
Landscaping architects have planned KU's hard-surface walks more for beauty than practical use, Mr. Bayles commented.
"KU may have to adopt a policy similar to Cornell University. Cornell notes where students walk and then constructs sidewalks."
He offered this solution:
Temper flared in Joseph R. Pearson Hall for the second time this semester when the fire alarm sounded between one and two o'clock yesterday morning.
A false alarm had been set off in the dormitory just before Easter vacation.
Several JRP residents were reported gathered in one hall intending to throw another student in the showers. That student's door was locked.
"To finish this night off right somebody ought to turn on the fire alarm," one of the group said.
GLASS
9 to 12:30
A few minutes later the alarm sounded through the halls.
Before Joseph R. Pearson Hall was built, small ash trees were twice planted on the site. They were run down both times by automobiles.
Disciplinary action has been left to the dormitory judicial committee.
AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service
- Portraits
- Weddings
- Engagements
- Application Photos
by photography
"Students can be careless and thoughtless," Mr. Bayles said. "One crew member and sometimes two, spend 44 hours a week picking up paper from the campus.
Before a marriage takes place in Lhasa, Tibet, astrologers set a propitious wedding hour. Invitations are sent only to friends born under harmonious zodiacal signs.
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
"Once we tried fencing off a do-not-walk-on portion of grass. A professor would clip the wire and continue his shortest, most convenient distance between two points," he said.
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
Friday, April 24
With the Saints Dale Flory — Chuck Embick Herb Baker — Dave Fisher
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DOG DAYS—"Sig," the St. Bernard mascot of Sigma Chi, begins to feel the heat under his wooly coat. Comforting "Sig" is Bonnie Lou Burdorf, Emporia freshman. The temperature was in the 70s by mid-morning.
Dames Await Derby Day
Sorority women will return to the sports of yesteryear and the picnic games of the 1920s tomorrow at the sixth annual Sigma Chi Derby Day.
Daily hansan
The events include such games as leap frog, flour grubble, three-legged-race, and musical buckets. Participants will also try their talents at sack racing, fishpole racing, grapefruit racing, and ice-cake sitting.
For the more active entrants there are egg throwing contests and pony express.
The events will start at 1:30 p.m. at the tennis court in back of the Sigma Chi house, 1439 Tennessee.
Certificates will be given to individual winners and trophies to team winners. The best athlete will receive an individual trophy.
The fraternity has provided coaches from the house for each of the sororities entering. The rules state that each contestant may enter only three events and each team may enter only one contender in each event.
Co-chairmen of the Derby Day planning committee are Fred A. Rowland, Short Hills, N. J., junior, and Paul F. DeBauge, Emporia junior.
Twelve sororities are expected to enter contestants. Alpha Phi was the 1958 winner and Alpha Delta Pi the 1957 winner.
Mrs. Culbertson pointed to the present course in physics being taught on Continental Classrooms as one of a national need.
Cities Seen as Better For Educational TV
Educational television should come from the desire of the individual communities, rather than be supported by the state, the producer of NBC's television show Continental Classroom, said today.
Mrs. Dorothy Culbertson told a Daily Kansas reporter today that when educational television is university oriented, it does not feel an obligation to the community to fill its needs. "Educational television becomes responsible to only one group fi it is state supported.
"I think the educational station focusing on adult educational programming, that is a non-instructional type of program, should be community oriented and the community should feel a need for it and support it."
Mrs. Culbertson said that NBC expects to continue Continental Classroom next year and take in the fields of chemistry and mathematics in the future.
"At this time, network educational television should be limited to the subject areas in which there is either something of tantamount importance in a national emergency or those subjects which we (the network) could teach better than anybody else.
"An example of the latter is a course in Shakespeare," she said.
"Mostly educational TV should be in response to local needs. Only the individual community can know what its own needs are."
She attributed the success of Continental Classroom to filling a realistic need.
Mrs. Culbertson said that in spite of the broadcast hour of 6:30 each morning, Continental Classroom holds an estimated audience of 400,- 000 persons.
"I think the biggest reasons our program has been a success is that it actually fills a need in American education and it is being taught by a superb teacher."
"Actually, 6:30 is when most of our intended audience can look at the program. Most of our viewers, teachers, students, and engineers, for example, are persons who are otherwise employed." she said.
"They aren't too tired for 'hard thinking' early in the morning, and it doesn't tie up their social life as it would if presented during the evening hours."
Today's Kansan Has Picture Supplement
A picture story on the Grant Wood retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Art is featured in the picture supplement which appears in today's Daily Kansan.
A photographic interpretation of Dylan Thomas' poem, "Fern Hill." also is included. Copyright permission to reprint the poem was granted by New Directions Books, N. Y. The supplement is published by the advanced news photography class of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
56th Year, No.133
Two KU students were awarded prizes yesterday in the third annual Taylor student book collection contest sponsored by Watson library.
Book Collection Contest Honors Go to 2 Students
Friday, April 24, 1959
Ize E. Sedricks, Topeka junior,
was awarded first prize of $85 for
her collection of books on Oriental
poetry, philosophies, and religion.
The two collections will be on display in the foyer of Watson library.
Miss Sedricks, a Latvian student who has been in the United States for seven years, said she began her collection about three and a hall years ago.
Kent H. Wilson, Fort Worth, Tex.
graduate student, won the $40 second prize for a collection of butterfly books.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
"I am majoring in English and first became interested in poetry, and the religions and how they reflect the philosophy and attitudes of life." Miss Sedricks said.
"I plan to buy more books to increase my collection with the prize money, unless I have to pay a lot of it in library fines."
Buv More Books
Wilson, doing graduate work in entomology, said he began his collection of the butterfly books about 1936.
"My collection has slowly built up to be a professional type of collection. I also have books on other types of insects," he said.
Wilson said he entered a collection in the Taylor Contest last year which was based on books about entomology that would help people working in the field. The collection did not place, so he entered one again this year, he said.
Readv Talks
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Taylor, Kansas City, Mo., who donated the prize money, awarded the prizes to the two winners preceding a talk by William B. Ready, Marquette University librarian.
Other collections entered in the contest were on the subjects of natural history, English literature, sociology, biochemistry, Russian literature, paleobotany, mammals, birds, evolution, drama, anthropology, James Joyce and Thomas Wolfe.
The judges for the book contest were George Allen, Lawrence lawyer, Roy L. Kidman, science librarian, and Robert M. Mengel, research assistant, librarian, and zoology instructor.
Tennis Anvone?
Tennis Anyone! KENE
Warm weather sport
All Women's Day Tuesday
"Our Fair Ladies" is the theme for the annual All Women's Day, sponsored by Associated Woman Students to be held Tuesday.
All women students and faculty members are invited to attend a fashion show in the morning and an honors program in the evening.
The fashion show, sponsored by the Ray Beer's Clothing Company, Topeka, will be from 10 a.m. to noon in the Kansas Union ballroom. Models for the show will represent each of the women's organized houses.
Women may register for the cashmere skirt and sweater set and three dresses which are being offered as door prizes by the company.
Drawing for the prizes will be held at the conclusion of the AWS Honor Night from 7 to 8:30 in Hoch Auditorium.
Announcement of new Morton Board members, Jay Sisters, and dormitory counselors for next year will be made. AWS Senate officers for next year will be installed also.
The program will be concluded with the announcement of women chosen by their individual houses as the most outstanding person in house activities.
Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Scattered light showers east tonight. Colder west and north tonight and over state toorrow. Low tonight 30 northwest to 45 southeast. High tomorrow 55s northwest to 60s southeast.
No Prosecution For Disciplined 11 Students
The owner of the apartment house damaged by a group of KU men during a party last Saturday night, said today she did not wish to prosecute the students because payment for damages had been made.
Mrs. Mary Stephenson, owner of the house at 1316 Ohio, said she decided to turn the problem over to the dean of men to get the matter straightened out.
Nine students were suspended from the University and two placed on probation as a result of the incident which occurred last Saturday,
$115 Paid
A total $115 dollars was paid by the student renting the apartment for a week last week. The student said Mrs. Stephenson said she would not prosecute because she was satisfied.
Melvin Hawk, Atchison graduate student, one of students suspended who plans to appeal the disciplinary action, said today he has not taken any action vet.
Hawk asserts that he was wronged because he had nothing to do with the party and was suspended on the grounds of doing nothing to stop the damage.
Still Thinking
"I have done nothing definite now about appealing, but I'm still thinking about it because I sincerely believe I was wronged." Hawk said.
Mrs. Stephenson said the apartment had been damaged last semester by some members of the group who were living there. She said she notified the students Dec. 8 to vacate the dwelling in a month to avoid recurring disturbances. They moved out after Christmas vacation.
Last week one of the students suspended rented the apartment for a week under an assumed name. However, Mrs. Stephenson said she did not feel the student who rented the apartment was a part to the damages.
Talked Into It
"I think he was talked into renting the apartment for the other fellows," she said.
"I understand all the boys chipped in and paid the amount of the damages to me," Mrs. Stephenson said.
At the time the students vacated the apartment last semester Mrs. Stephenson said they forfeited some rent money in order to pay for earlier damages.
Noted KU Zoologist to retire
Edward H. Taylor, 70, professor of zoology and an internationally recognized herpetologist, will be retired to emeritus status in June Prof. Taylor has served on the faculty for 33 years.
He will be honored at the all-University Faculty retirement dinner at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union. He is the only faculty member being retired to emeritus status this year.
Prof. Taylor will be presented a certificate of service marking his long connection with KU, which began in the first decade of the 20th century when he was an undergraduate.
Prof. Taylor earned the A.B. degree from KU in 1912, the M.S. degree in 1920, and the Ph.D. in 1926. He became an assistant professor in 1926, and in 1934 earned the rank of full professor.
"I am very happy about retiring. I am going to spend probably the next year in Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand doing largely study and some collecting," said the quiet, polite scientist.
Prof. Taylor said he would be completing preparation of a scientific paper on the amphibians, reptiles, and crocodiles of Thailand for the government of that country.
Edward H. Taylor
M. A. H. RANDALL
His other scientific publications number thousands of pages. Three years ago he completed a 1,100 page, 4-volume study of the reptiles and amphibians of Costa Rica that required 10 years of study and writing.
Few scientists have spent as much time in the tropical jungles of the world-from India, Ceylon, Southeast Asia, and the Philippines to Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean Islands-as Dr. Taylor has.
He went to the Philippine Islands in 1912 as a supervisor of schools. Later he was chief of the division of fisheries in the Philippines. During the winter of 1918-1919, he engaged in civilian relief work in typhus-affected areas of Western Siberia.
His field work took him over much of the island of Mindanao, at a time when that island was mostly unexplored and when some headhunter tribes still occasionally indulged in their forbidden practice.
Prof. Taylor considers his jungle experiences as just part of the work of accomplishing the scientific task.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1959
The Newest Injustice
Certainly this type of party was contrary to any standards of maturity expected of college students. There is no question that someone must account for it. But the students involved must not be condemned, for after the party wore off they repented and apologized by honestly paying their debt. There the case should have closed. Honor had returned, and the students learned a lesson, regaining their self-respect.
The party was held in a rented apartment during which furnishings were damaged or destroyed. This irrational action could have been serious were it not for the fact that the students involved paid for their misdeeds. According to the landlady, the students paid $115 to cover the costs. In return there was an agreement between the owner and the students that the owner would not prosecute.
Wednesday, nine students left the University. They were suspended on the grounds that they were connected with a boisterous party.
But our active and well-meaning University administration did not think so. As far as it was concerned, the students embarrassed the University, and did not act like good college students. (Just what is a good college student, anyway?) Therefore, it concluded that they should be punished. The administration became properly angered, and ruled on a matter which had been
ended as far as the students and landlady were concerned.
This type of event would receive no critical review had the principles involved related to academic matters, University property or physical harm. But we question administrative authority in reopening problems which, apparently, have been settled. Further, we question the ends the administration expects to achieve by dealing out swaths of punishment in such a slipshod manner.
To show a couple instances: Two students, who left the party before glass and other furnishings were broken, were suspended because they did not bother to halt the festivities. Two other students were placed on probation because, according to their report, they lived in the apartment the previous semester, although they had no connection with the destructive party.
The punishment is inconsistent. A week ago, a senior running for election to the All Student Council beat up a freshman party worker for tearing down one of the candidate's illegally-placed posters. Nothing happened in that case, although the deans were informed.
Exactly where does our administration stand when it punishes students who have paid their debt and then excuses an attack on a human being? We wouldn't dare guess. —John Husar
Editor:
Once again the powers of the University have disciplined a large group of University students by expelling them from the University. One begins to wonder just how far the authority of the University extends in regard to the policing of the student body.
1. for one, have not seen any sort of statement of what are considered grounds for dismissal from school. Perhaps it would be a service to the student body if the Daily Kansan would attempt to tell us just how far we can go before we are expelled from the University.
Obviously the criteria of the law does not apply. It appears that some sort of super-governing body can serve as prosecutor, judge and jury in deciding which actions are acceptable and which are not.
Once that the criteria which the University uses to discipline students is determined, it would be fitting for some sort of examination of what should be the role of the University in disciplining students. I am appalled at the prospect of seeing an administrative official or board of an institution supposedly devoted to education passing judgment on the conduct of University students outside of the class room and away from University property.
...Letters ...
I would like to urge that an investigation into the disciplinary powers of the administration be held and that the students be informed as to what is expected of them both on and off University property so that we can attempt to escape the wrath of University discipline.
Kenneth Megill Vassar junior
Editor:
We would like to share some thoughts with you concerning the senior gift. We feel the senior gift committee has shown little insight into or understanding of measures which would advance the development of our University.
After several years of study if we do not understand what contributes to an educational institution's fulfilment of its aims, we have deliberately avoided our responsibilities as students. It is our opinion that above all things a university needs outstanding teachers to carry on its mission.
We would like to suggest that the senior class of 1959 give yearly, $1,000 to be used for ten distinguished visiting professorship grants. This sounds impossible, but with a graduating class conservatively estimated at 1,750 and a donation of $5 per senior we could establish a fund of $8,750 which invested at four per cent interest would not only cover the cost of the ten grants, but would also provide several hundred dollars for a handsome plaque.
We think that this is the worthest gift a graduating class could give. We would appreciate all the support that you can voice at the forthcoming senior class meeting next Thursday.
Phil Friedeman
Great Bend senior
George Klee
Hickman Mills, Mo., senior
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
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Worth Repeating
"You don't have to be highly educated or world-traveled or wealthy to become important. The most important individual in history lived only 33 years, never traveled more than 100 miles from home, moved in an area smaller than Connecticut, but still transformed civilization."—Oren Arnold, "Presbyterian Life"
. . .
"The poor earnest American spends his day importuned to keep to the right, to curb his dog, move to the rear, watch where he is going, dim his lights, throw trash here, not smoke there, fasten his seat belt, face the front, not stand in this place or park in that; he is asked to remember the blind, the helpless and Pearl Harbor. He is tempted with fattening foods and warned to watch his weight; he is urged to think this and told not to think that; he is solicitously invited to go into debt to pay for a car, a TV set or vacation—and urged to be thrifty. He is asked to consider the Jews, reminded of Arab refugees, and cautioned to be kind to minorities. And he is also asked why he doesn't relax."—Thomas Griffith, "The Waist-High Culture"
--holds a Carnegie Research Assistant ship in political science.
"The clever woman desiring to ensnare a man realizes that the best way to get him is to throw away all the traditional feminine weapons and subterfuges, and frankly and openly, yet charmingly, tell him that she likes him. The man thus handled, all folklore to the contrary, is won—and absolutely."
George Jean Nathan, "The Smart Set Anthology"
Cuthbertson, Horejsi Named Outstanding Seniors
(Editor's note: The following is the first in a series of features on 10 outstanding members of the 1959 senior class. They were chosen for their activities and scholastic honors. The seniors were selected by first sending out cards to over forty campus organizations and departments asking what seniors in their organization they considered to be outstanding. From the replies to this questionnaire a committee composed of four students and three faculty members chose the persons to be honored. Any persons who had been Jayhawker Hilltopters were eliminated because they had already been honored for their work.)
A long list of activities may not be proof that a student has gained much from college but when it is backed up by a high grade average, one can be sure the student received an education during four years.
He has held a Summerfield Scholarship throughout college and is a member of the gifted student program. Last fall he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He currently
Cuthbertson tops the list of grade averages for the senior class with over a 2.9. He received the Paul B. Lawson award, given annually to the senior with the highest grades.
Two seniors who can claim both grades and activities are Stewart Horeisi, Salma, and Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth.
His collection of books on the Civil War won him the Tavler Memorial Book Collection Prize.
the is a member of Delta Phi Alpha, honorary German fraternity, and Phi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science fraternity.
Cuthbertson also collects books on other subjects and Indian relieds and fossils.
Cuthbertson's interests expand in many directions as shown by his other activities. He is interested
1940
in writing and is a member of the Quill Club editorial board and has written book reviews for The Daily Kansan.
He has served as a regional chairman for Statewide Activities for several years. He has been a member of the debate squad and vice president and president of the Circle K. Club, a Kiwanis sponsored service organization.
Gilbert Cuthbertson
He was chosen to be one of two KU representatives to the Fourth Student Conference on National Affairs which was held at Texas A & M College last fall.
An interest in student welfare was shown when Cuthbertson served as secretary and later chairman of the All Student Council Housing Committee.
As a freshman he was treasurer of Westminster Fellowship.
He enjoys playing bridge and won the KU bridge tournament in 1957. He also was president of the Student Union Activities Duplicate Bridge Club.
Cuthbertson plans to do graduate work next year but has not decided whether to accept a Rotary Foundation Fellowship to study medicine at the University or for a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship to Harvard University to study political science. He majored in political science at KU.
He says his main decision is whether to become a political science teacher or go into medicine.
Horejsi has about a 2.8 grade average and is a member of Owl and Sachem societies.
His major is industrial management and his business school background has led him into many activities. Among them are Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity and Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, of which he is vice president.
He has served as vice president of the Business School Council. He is also on the Business School curriculum committee.
He has been business manager for the K-Book, editor of the KU calendar, advertising manager of
Stewart Horejsi
LAURENCE E. HARVEY
the Student Directory, business manager of Squat humor magazine, and on the sales committee for the Rock Chalk Revue.
A member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity. he was president of his pledge class.
now that spring is here he will be heading for Lone Star to participate in one of his favorite sports, water skiing.
Herezis plans eventually to earn a PhD degree. Next year he will begin working on his master's in economics on a Woodrow Wilson scholarship to Indiana University.
For three months he plans to tour Europe by car.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1888, became university newspaper 1904,
published online 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
extention.276.businessoffice
Member Inland Daily Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press. Repres-
ented by National Advertising Service.
420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.
News service; United Press International.
Mall subscription. 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, post office under act
13, 1879.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker Managing Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill Feltt Business Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier, Co-
sident Robert Harwi, Associate
Editorial Editors
Friday, April 24. 1959 University Daily Kansar
Page 3
business magazine, e for
wspaper y 1904. 12.
associa-
sia. Rep.
g Serv.
k. N.Y.
intmana.
n.tua
shaped in
in dur
Satur-
der as
added as
1910, at
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15
Members of Alpha Delta Pi woke up this morning to find that a springtime Santa Claus had visited them during the night.
Santa Makes Spring Visit, Leaves Small Cars
CLICKETY-CLACK—Cervantes Day dancers click castanets in time to lively music. They are, from left in front, Janet Presutti, instructor of physical education, Wellsville, Ohio, and Cecil Torz, New York, N.Y.; in back, Roberto L. Diaz, Cuba sophomore, and Victor N. Baptiste, Kansas City, Kan., assistant instructor of Romance languages. The Cervantes events will be tomorrow.
fingerprints on the cars, only flat tires.
Two small foreign cars were parked at the door. There were no
Owner of one car is Sandra Rickards, Wichita Falls, Tex., sophomore, a member of the sorority. Mary Jane Carter, Danville, Ill., junior, is the owner of the other.
A Welshman told the group gathered at Poetry Hour yesterday that "fantasy is one topsy-turvy way of looking at heaven."
Fantasy Defined by Author
William B. Ready, librarian of Marquette University, thus defined fantasy along with comments on the wrongs in American society as he discussed J. R. R. Tolkien's epic fantasy, "The Lord of the Rings."
"Stories of fantasy are concerned with absolute truth. In fantasy there gleams the true light which shines through the window of home that is waiting for us," he said.
"It is only today that fantasy is coming into its own," he continued. Mr. Ready explained that the theme of the three volume, 1,800 page "The Lord of the Rings," is a shadow of power that hangs over the world today.
"The circle of the mushroom is represented by a ring in the book," he said.
"The greatest proof of the quality of this book is its depth. The characters have dimension and you see them more clearly as you grow in grace and wisdom," he commented. "Today the Christian message comes through for men like Tolkien. Religion is something which makes
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people interested in fantasy," he stated.
"In 'The Lord of the Ring,' the problem of power over good and evil takes on a majesty that is difficult to believe before you read it."
T
On Campus with Max Shulman (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
VIVE LE POPCORN!
The other day as I was walking down the street picking up tinfoil, (Marlboro, incidentally, has the best tinfoil, which is not surprising when you consider that they have the best cigarettes, which is not surprising when you consider that they take the best filters and put them together with the best tobaccoes and rush them to your tobacco counter, fresh and firm and loaded with smoking pleasure). The other day, I say, as I was walking down the street picking up tinfoil, (I have, incidentally, the second largest ball of tinfoil in our family. My brother Eleanor's is bigger—more than four miles in diameter—but, of course, he is taller than I). The other day, as I was saying, while walking down the street picking up tinfoil, I passed a campus and right beside it, a movie theatre which specialized in showing foreign films. Most campuses have foreign movie theatres close by, because foreign movies are full of culture, art, and esoterica, and where is culture more rife, art more rampant, and esoterica more endemic than on a campus?
Nowhere; that's where.
...dias, his flashlight battery is burned out
I hope you have all been taking advantage of your local foreign film theatre. Here you will find no simple-minded Hollywood products, marked by treachy sentimentality and machine-made bravura. Here you will find life itself—in all its grimness, its poverty, its naked, raw passion!
Have you, for instance, seen the recent French import, Le Crayon de Mon Oncle ("The Kneecap"), a savage and uncompromising story of a man named Claude, whose consuming ambition is to get a job as a meter reader with the Paris water department? But he is unable, alas, to afford the flashlight one needs for this position. His wife, Bon-Bon, sells her hair to a wigmaker and buys him a flashlight. Then, alas, Claude discovers that one also requires a leatherette bow tie. This time his two young daughters, Caramel and Nougat, sell their hair to a wigmaker. So now Claude has his leatherette bow tie, but now, alas, his flashlight battery is burned out and the whole family, alas, is bald.
Or have you seen the latest Italian masterpiece, La Donna E Mobile (I Ache All Over), a heart-shattering tale of a boy and his dog? Malvolio, a Venetian lad of nine, loves his little dog with every fibre of his being. He has one great dream: to enter the dog in the annual Venetian dog show. But this, alas, requires an entrance fee, and Malvolio, alas, is penniless. However, he saves and scrimps and steals and finally gets enough together to enter the dog in the show. The dog, alas, comes in twenty-third. Malvolio sells him to a vivisectionist.
Or have you seen the new Japanese triumph, Kibutai-San (The Radish), a pulse-stirring historical romance about Yamoto, a poor farmer, and his daughter Ethel who are accosted by a warlord one morning on their way to market? The warlord cuts Yamoto in half with his samurai sword and runs off with Ethel. When Yamoto recovers, he seeks out Ethel's fiancé, Red Buttons, and together they find the warlord and kill him. But, alas, the warlord was also a sorcerer and he whimsically turned Ethel into a whooping crane. Loyal Red Buttons takes Ethel home where he feeds her fish heads for twenty years and keeps hoping she'll turn back into a woman. She never does. Alas.
© 1959 Max Shulman
. . .
If there's smoking in the balcony of your theatre, we hope you'll be smoking Philip Morris—or, if you prefer filters, Marlboro . . . Marlboro—new improved filter, fine rich flavor from the makers of Philip Morris.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1950
Foreign Exhibits Ready For Tomorrow's Festival
KU exchange students will hold their annual International Festival, "From Our Lands to You," tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium.
High Schoolers Visit Home Ec Department
Exhibition booths representing 40 countries will be open from 1:30-5 p.m. and from 6:30-10 p.m.
family relations, home decoration. housing, home management and child development are on display.
master of ceremonies for the program.
Colorful and informative exhibits are on display today in the home economics department in Fraser Hall. Visitors to the annual High School Day will view the exhibits, the nursery school, infant center and home management house.
Foreign students studying at high schools in this area are invited to attend the festival. The public may also attend the program and view the exhibits free of charge.
Committee chairmen are Manoucheir Pedram, Tehran, Iran, graduate student, exhibits; Ernesto Vergara, Quezon City, Philippines, graduate student, program; Sonia Alvarez, Cardenas, Cuba, junior, publicity and invitations; Ali Moulusine, Morocco, North Africa, freshman, clean-up, and Jarl Bafving, Gothenburg, Sweden, graduate student, music.
Axel Plambeck, Hamburg, Germany, is chairman of the festival.
The exhibits will display photographs, handicrafts, embroidery and other representative items from the 40 countries taking part in the "Foreign Students' Day."
Exhibits on the fields of foods textiles, health, nutrition, clothing.
view, Wellington, Parsons, St. Paul and Vinland high schools.
The program will begin at 7:45 p.m. with a welcoming speech by George B. Smith, dean of the University.
Eight countries will present short programs of dances, songs, and skirts, and France will present a pantomime.
The many displays by students from Lawrence, McLouth, Haskell Institute, Bethel, Overbrook.
Bernard Carpentier, Puy-de-Dome, France, graduate student.
are being seen Williamsburg, Bonner Springs, Washington at Linwood, Fair-
Indigence among Americans over $ \ell5 $ years of age has dropped in the past 10 years from an average of three persons out of 10 to less than one in 10.
The main markets for fresh apples exported by the United States in 1957 were Canada, Cuba and England.
Are You My Servant?
If you are having trouble with your servants, take a break and eat out tonight. ___
Jumbo Shrimp 1.50
Barbequed Ribs 1.50
1/2 Fried Chicken 1.50
Blue Hills
1601 E. 23vd.
Eat in the Blue Room or in your car.
Did You Go to the Humanities Lecture?
O
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 April Pick up $ _{1/2} $ Gallon Today
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hilarious comedy
Mr. Hulof's
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"ONE OF FUNNIEST IN YEARS!" — Time
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Professionally designed by and for top-flight tennis players. Featuring a flexible arch for comfort; an abrasion-resistant sole that stands up to any playing surface; laces to the toe to insure perfect fit, complete support. Fully cushioned, heel to toe. About $8.50.
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Examination Schedule - Spring Semester, 1959 Friday, May 22, 1959, to Thursday, May 28, 1959, inclusive
Classes meeting at: Will be examined at:
8 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 1:30- 3:20 Friday May 22
8 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 8:00- 9:50 Wednesday May 27
9 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 8:00- 9:50 Friday May 22
9 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Tuesday May 26
10 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 3:30- 5:20 Tuesday May 26
10 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Wednesday May 27
11 A.M., MWF sequence* ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday May 23
11 A.M., TTS sequence** ... 8:00- 9:50 Thursday May 28
12 Noon, MWF sequence* ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 22
1 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 8:00- 9:50 Tuesday May 26
1 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Saturday May 23
2 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Monday May 25
2 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Friday May 22
3 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 3:30- 5:20 Saturday May 23
3 P.M., TTS sequence** ... 10:00-11:50 Thursday May 28
4 P.M., MWF sequence* ... 1:30- 3:20 Thursday May 28
4 P.M., TTS sequence* ... 3:30- 5:20 Thursday May 28
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
(All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Monday May 25
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
(All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Tuesday May 26
Chemistry 1, 2, 2a, 3, 28, and 29 (All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Monday May 25
Physics 3, 4, 5, 6, and 116 (All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Saturday May 23
Business Administration 9, 12, 72 and 73 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Monday May 25
Business Administration 25 (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 22
ROTC (Army, Navy, Air Force, All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Wednesday and/or Wednesday May 27
3:30- 5:20 Wednesday May 27
Engineering Mechanics 1, 1a, 61 and 61a (All Sections) ... 3:30- 5:20 Friday May 22
Engineering Mechanics 48, 49, 55 and 57 (All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Monday May 25
Tonight
Radio Programs KUOK
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Mainstreet Melodies—Cliff Tatham
8:05 Dave Holman Show
9:05 The Big Beat—Harold Holli
10:05 Moonglow—Bob Smith
12:00 Sign Off
Tomorrow
9:00 Sign On and News
9:15 The Saturday Hilltop Show with Gayle Askren
12:00 News
12:05 The Mike Fitzwater Show
1:00 Classics Time with J. E. B.
Sharp
3:45 News
4:00 Sign Off
Sunday
1:00 Sign On and Mainstreet Melodies with Cliff Tatham
3:00 The Flip-side Story with Bob Lynn
5:00 The John Patton Show
7:00 The Jim Brooks Show
9:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Sonata No.
6 in A Major, Op. 30, No. 1
for Violin and Piano" by
Borchoven
7:00 Music from Mt. Oread: University Concert Band
7. 30 Keyboard Concert: "Sonata in C Minor for Organ on 9th Psalm" by Reubke
8:00 University of the Air: "Our American Music"
9:00 Opera is My Hobby: The career of the Neopolitan tenor Fernando de Lucia
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Quar-
tet No. 12 in E-Flat Major"
by Beethoven
11:00 Sign Off
Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Official Bulletin
Balfour
411 W 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
Cheerleader tryouts, April 28 and 30
7-30, p.m. 101 Robinson Gym.
30 and 30
7:30 p.m. 101 Robinson Gym
Employment Opportunities available
for men. Contact office of Aids and
Summer Job
Schilling AF Bags at Salloum
TODAY
Teachers Appointment Bureau, Donald Golden, Phoenix, Ariz. High school and college positions only. MA required for all, except women's phys., ed.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7.30
inter-varsity. Bible study, discussion,
refreshment.
Faculty Club. Beginners' Bridge. Desert at 7:30 p.m., Bridge, 8:00 p.m.
CERVANTES DAY:
Coffee Hour, Wilcox Museum of
Fraser Hall. 9:00 a.m.
Annual meeting of Kan. chapter of
TOMORROW
Friday. April 24, 1959 University Daily Kansan
AATSP, 10:30 a.m. Fraser Theater
Guest; speaker: Miss Marietta
Daniels, American Union,
Washington, D.C.
Luncheon: Kenna Room of Kansas
Union, 12:30
Program: Variedades, Fraser The-
师, 2:00 p.m.
Sound Room demonstration, Blake
Annex, all morning.
SUNDAY
Newman Club Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Frase Theater, Social Hour in Hawk's
Tower, 5 p.m.
Faculty Club, Mr. C. F. Gallagher,
AUFS Lecturer, 5 p.m., "Moreco"—Buffet supper following program Hosts; Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Simonett.
Munich, Germany, is celebrating its 800th anniversary this summer;
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Treasured Beyond All Other Gifts
Precious when given, even more precious through the years. The diamond you give will be an enduring symbol of a happy life together.
"A Diamond Is Forever"
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
H
"CODE" IS A REGISTERED TRADE-MARK. COPYRIGHT © 1999 THE CODA-COLA COMPANY.
Prom trotter
She's the queen of the campus, and of course she favors you know what... the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. She knows that anytime, everywhere, Coke is the real refreshment. We don't say that the secret of her success is Coca-Cola ... but it helps!
Drink Coca-Cola MILITARY AIR FORCE
BE REALLY REFRESHED...HAVE A COKE!
Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Kansas City, Missouri
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1959
Netmen Invade Neb., I-State This Weekend
By Tom Clark
It's not often that both winner and loser share in the spoils after a tennis match. But such will be the case for KU junior Jim Brownfield and Bill Sheldon when they accompany the Jayhawker tennis team when they play Nebraska this afternoon and Iowa State tomorrow.
Coach Denzell Gibbens' five-man squad will be playing without the services of No.1 player Lynne Sieverling and Sal Lekagul when they try to repeat an earlier 5-2 victory over the Cornhuskers.
Sieverling is home in Burdett with his mother who is seriously ill, while Lekagul passed up the trip in favor of pressing studies.
Coach Gibbens is counting on the services of juniors, Jim Brownfield and Bill Sheldon, to pick up the slack. Jerry Williams will again play the top singles assignment with Pete Block and Dave Coupe following in that order. Coupe is setting his sights on his fourth and fifth consecutive singles victories.
Brownfield and Sheldon started a playoff challenge match for the team's sixth spot Wednesday night aware that the winner would go if Sieverling remained at Burdett. They split sets, Sheldon winning the first 6-1, and Brownfield coming back for the second 8-6. Both agreed to wait until yesterday to play the final and deciding set.
Word arrived from Sieverling yesterday that he would stay in Burdett over the weekend. This left the fifth traveling spot hanging in the balance. Sheldon fought off four match points before yielding as Brownfield claimed a 6-4 deciding set.
But, Sheldon's face lit up as he left the court when Coach Gibbens shouted: "Both of you be ready to leave it six tomorrow morning."
"Both of us?" Sheldon asked unbelievably.
"Yep, Sal isn't going," Gibbens informed the Salina junior.
A happy Sheldon quipped: "I'll
he ready at four!"
While Brownfield and Sheldon were fighting for Sieverling's spot, Sal Lekagul told the coach he had a showdown match with the textbooks this weekend. A series of deciding exams are pressing the Thailand senior. Both Sieverling and Lekagul won their singles matches in KU's earlier victory over Nebraska, and Sieverling added a doubles win for good measure. The shakeup makes the matches a tossup.
Scholarship Halls Have Talented Stars
The first annual men's scholarship hall track meet, which is to be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Memorial Stadium, holds promise for some close and interesting races.
Of special interest are the dashes with some better than average talent participating. Robert Henderson, Battenfeld, who is an ex-varsity track man, will be competing against the Leich brothers, Warren and Dave, representing Stephenson, in several dash events. Norman Dudey, representing Foster in the half-mile and the medley is also a former varsity man.
Larry Daubert, Jollife, who will be entered in the shot, discus and 220-yard dash, is on the freshman track team this year.
TEMPEST
OVERWHELMING AS THE ELEMENTS
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A DINO DELAURENTIIS PRODUCTION
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Van Heflin as the Pretender Czar!
As a great Empire trembles
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SILVANA MANGANO
VIVECA LINDFORS
GEOFFREY HORNE
Go starring OSCAR HONOLUA - HELMUT DAFTINE - ADNES MOOREHEAD - ROBERT KETTL and VITTORIO GASSMAN - Directed by
ALBERTO LATTUADA - Screenwriting by Louis Peterson and Alberto Lattuada - Based on a novel by Alexander Pugham
PRODUCED BY DINO DELAURENTIIS
EXTRA! CARTOON, NEWS—ADULTS 75¢, KIDDIES 25¢
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VARSITY
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Now & Sat.: Bob Hope in "Alias Jesse James"
Van Heflin as the Pretender Czar!
As a great Empire trembles
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KANSAS CITY. Mo. — (UPI) — Detroit's Tigers were here today for a three-game set as the Kansas City Athletics hoped to make up for Wednesday's humiliating loss.
McClinton, Crank Out Indefinitely
KU's backfield was hit hard this week as Bill Crank, No. 1 quarterback, and Curtis McClinton, highly-regarded right halfback, were sidelined indefinitely with knee injuries.
Topeka-Lawrence Race Set
The second annual canoe race for the KU and Kansas State chapters of Alpha Phi Omega, scouting fraternity, will begin early tomorrow morning at Topeka.
With Crank out, the Jayhawkers have only one experienced quarterback. Duane Morris played left half last season after being switched from quarterback.
The Chicago White Sox topped Kansas City 20-6 Wednesday night and the A's gathered a taste of revenge yesterday by beating the Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Hilltopers 14-2 in an exhibition contest. Ralph Terry (0-2) will take the mound tonight for Kansas City against Billy Hoeft (1-0) of the Tigers.
The squad will rest Friday in preparation for the spring's first game condition scrimmage at 2 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
Three teams from each chapter will be out to break the record for the 43-mile trip down the Kaw river.
A's Meet Tigers Tonight
Yesterday the A's unloaded on the Army All-Star team for six runs in the third, highlighted by a bases-loaded double by Preston Ward and a two-run homer by Roger Maris. Later, Frank House socked a two-run homer for Kansas City. The Army scoring was highlighted by catcher Roy West's home run with one on. It was the first time in history a major league team had played at Ford Wood in Central Missouri. The Army team members are all from minor league clubs.
FAST FAST
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FAST
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FAST FAST FAST FAST FAST FAST
TONITE! and SAT. SUN.!
Two of Academy Award Winner
David Niven's Best!
Otto Preminger's
BONJOUR TRISTESSE
With
DAVID NIVEN - DEBORAH KERR
CO-HIT
YOU'VE NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD AND FUNNY!
20th Century-Fox presents
OH, MEN!
OH, WOMEN!
COLOR by DE LUXE
CINEMA SCOPE
With
DAVID NIVEN - GINGER ROGERS
ALWAYS A CARTOON — FREE PLAYGROUND
GIANT SCREEN — KIDDIES RIDE IN FREE
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40
Otto Preminger's BONJOUR TRISTESSE
DAVID NIVEN - DEBORAH KERR
CO-HIT
YOU'VE NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD AND FUNNY!
20th Century-Fox presents
OH, MEN!
OH, WOMEN!
COLOR by DE LUXE
CINEMA SCOPE
With
DAVID NIVEN - GINGER ROGERS
ALWAYS A CARTOON — FREE PLAYGROUND
GIANT SCREEN — KIDDIES RIDE IN FREE
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40
20th Century-Fox presents
OH, MEN!
OH, WOMEN!
COLOR by DE LUXE
CINEMA SCOPE
SUNSET
Six of the nine football teams that Dartmouth faces this fall were on the Big Green grid schedule prior to 1900.
TONITE!
UNDER THE STARS!
2 GREAT BIG HITS ON OUR GIANT SCREEN!
The Screen's Laughtime of a Lifetime! NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS
ALEXANDER GILLETT AND THEIR MOTORCYCLES
It out-happys
the happiest
best-seller
of our day!
Staring in the stage role that
rocked him hot on lone!
ANBY GRIFFITH
MYRON McCORMICK
NICK ADAMS
MERVYN LEROY
PRODUCTIONS
JOHN LEE MAHIN
MERVYN LeROY
PRESENTATION
WARNER BROS.
THE STAR IS IN THE HAND
EXCITING CO-HIT
The young
rebel who
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try...
a kid who
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DIRECTED BY WILLIAM A WELLMAN
Always A Cartoon
NOW! SAT. & SUN.
LAWRENCE
DRIVE IN THEATRE...West on 23rd Street
Lafayette Escadrille DIRECTED BY WILLIAM A WELLMAN WB
Always A Cartoon
NOW! SAT. & SUN.
LAWRENCE
DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on 23rd Street
LAWRENCE
DRIVE IN THEATRE West on 23rd Street
Friday. April 24. 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
RAINCOAT, medium length. red paisley
lining. lt gwt grey. reward offered. C24-
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WANTED TO BUY: 20 second hand, good
willingness to 9 to 14. Call after
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4-28
1-48
BUSINESS SERVICES
FURNISHED APARTMENT OR HOME by September 1, married graduate students, can furnish references, no children. Call VI 2-0467. 4-30
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Erme's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts.
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type them, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Ola Smil 9411; Mahl. Phi V. 3-5262
Phi V. 3-5262
TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron
Leonard, call VI 3-5263. ff
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqnist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. 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
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE, painting,
body repair, tune-up and overhaul. Hadi
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TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-9568. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood VI 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. tti
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one safe stay awake tablet— available everywhere
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LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10212¹ Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. massage men, bureau, professional masses Introduction materials available for limited time. VI S-2123.
NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our
ship. Grant's Pet Supply Center,
1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m.
to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete
stores, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Complete lines of 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, toys, cleaning supplies, 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, 927 Mass.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates entitution, accurate work. Call VI 3-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka, 1911 Tennessee, tfr
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can your advance reservations at special student-faculty rate. Call VI 30124. if
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
studios in Dance Studio, 9th
Missouri, ph. 3-6858, 9f
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates. Mrs Tom Brady VI 3-3428
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicnic, party supply Ice antant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-857-2900
MISCELLANEOUS
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
and gas furnished, linen furnished,
will accept graduate students. Call VI 3-
7677
FOR RENT
APARTMENT, exceptionally nice, new. New Fridgiaure kitchen, automatic washer. Three minute walk to Fraser. private parking, available soon. Also, new apartment to submit during summer. Call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APARTMENT for one or two men, one block from Union, ideal study and living conditions, reasonable. Available June 1. call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APT, FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Also large single rooms for boys. No driveway. Located near home, house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 4-28
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT. nice, clean,
three rooms and private bath. Kitchen
with built-ins. Refrigerator and stove
furnished, now available. Call VI 3-2760
THREE ROOM APARTMENT, ground floor, unfurnished, air conditioned. Off-street office, refrigerator, air conditioner supplied. I34 Vermont Call VI 3-5561 for 5 p.m. 4-29
APARTMENT for the summer or longer.
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Call VI 2-0114 after 5 p.m.
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JUKEBOX RECORDS, 35 cents each or
40 cents each. Rowland: Book Ski-
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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. tt
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1959
Religious Groups to Meet
Students will discuss "Religion and Science" at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Methodist Student Center. Professor Charles Leone, assistant professor of zoology; Linda Fornelli, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Jack Jewell, Garden City freshman will compose the panel.
Morning meditations will be held 7:30-7:45 Monday through Friday in the chapel at the Methodist Student Center. Orlyn Holloway, Junction City sophomore, will lead the worship at the Tuesday coffee hour and vespers at 9 p.m.
Faith and Life Seminar will meet at 8:45 a.m. Sunday at the United Presbyterian Center.
Sunday evening Fellowship will
begin with supper and singing at 5:15 p.m. at the United Presbyterian Center, followed at 6:45 p.m. by installations of officers and Holy Communion at Danforth Chapel.
United Presbyterian Women will hold their annual Christmas in April meeting at 5:15 p.m. Thursday at the center. After supper the group will receive Christmas gifts for mission stations.
Congregational students will hear the second in a series of talks by the Rev. Paul Davis, of Plymouth Congregational Church, at United Student Fellowship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Rev. Davis will speak on "What Are Our Beliefs?" at the Plymouth Church
KU Faces London Team In International Debate
Two University of London students will be on campus Monday to challenge a KU debate team to an international debate.
Rav Nichols, Lawrence junior, and Don Bowen, Salina senior, will debate against E. C. Dalrymple-Alford and Fredrick Crawn of the University of London on "Resolved: That Democracy is a Perverted Form of Government" at 8 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium.
Nichols and Bowen will take the affirmative side.
An international debate has been held each year since 1924, with the exception of the war years.
In an exchange program with Great Britain, two teams from that country tour the United States. One American team is sent to England and one to Australia.
Crawford and Dalrymple-Alford started their tour of the United States March 3 and will finish it May 1 at the University of Missouri.
Crawford has attended the University of Liverpool, Birkbeck College, and the University of London. He has his Bachelor's and Ph.D. degrees in engineering, his Bachelor's and Master's degrees in mathematics, and an education degree.
He is currently lecturing at the College of Technology in Birmingham on electrical engineering and is working on his Ph.D, in mathematics at Birkbeck College.
Dalrymple-Alford attended the
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The Wednesday study group will meet at 9 p.m. in the Kansas Union to discuss the book "The Bible, the Church, and the United Student Movement."
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will have its regular noon meeting Wednesday in Danforth Chapel. The group will have a Bible study and discussion 7:30 p.m. Friday at 829 Mississippi.
Kappa Beta will meet Tuesday noon in Myers Hall.
Four Students Left In Speaking Contest
Four KU students qualified for the finals of the Delta Sigma Rho public affairs speaking contest in preliminary competition last night.
line nmaists are Stephen Hill, Lawrence, and Georgia Erickson, Kansas City, Kan., seniors; Robert Nebrig, Leavenworth, and Sue Elmore, Stafford, juniors.
The final rounds will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Bailey Auditorium.
A complete set of the Encyclopedia Americana will be awarded the winner.
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Every Woman a President in Good Old Pi Lambda
By Janet Juneau
"With a P., with a P., with a
P.LO. . . . " This rousing cheer
echoes through the halls of North
College dormitory third floor.
The charter members of Pi Lambda Omega, highly selective honorary organization, are conducting their initiation ceremony. Let us uninvited spectators blend into the walls and watch the secretive proceedings.
The P.LO. pledge is standing on a table in the middle of the social room. Active members of the chapter (the only one of its kind) form a circle around the pledge. The right hand is crossed
over the left, the left foot is crossed over the right, and the head is turned to the right.
Lusty voices ring forth in a song dedicated to the society neophyte. This is followed by the PLO. cheer—the text as follows!
With an Li, with an Li, with an L.O.P.
With a P, with a P., with a P.I.O
With an O., with an O., with an O.P.I.
What does it spell?
We really don't give a damn.
While the members are resting from their activity, perhaps we should relate the history of the organization.
It was formed during the fall semester with the charter members being girls who had failed in their campaigns for pep club offices. They were "Poor Left Overs"—thus the name Pi Lambda Omega (P.L.O). The 21 girls on that floor of North College organized the society.
It was suggested that the club be only for officers. Therefore, there are 21 presidents.
Twenty honorary members have since been added to the club roster. These include the head resident of the hall, mothers of some of the girls, and high school girls who have spent a weekend on that floor.
We return to the solemn events before us.
The candidate for membership is being instructed.
The secret word: "Secret."
The handshake: Grasp the elbow of the person you are shaking hands with. Slide your hand down past her wrist, and reaching the hand, quickly shake it off. (The term "handshake" is derived from this latter action.)
The slogan: "Love your enemies . . . it will drive them crazy." (This slogan is explained by the fact that the laundry is on the third floor. Noisy intruders from other floors are requested to observe quiet hours, but this is not always done. Thus, the title "enemies")
the motto: "What the hell do we want a motto for."
After the instructions, the members reverse their stances by crossing the left hand over the right, and the right foot over the left. The neophyte is then officially pronounced a member of Pi Lambda Omega.
A president, who wishes to remain anonymous, commented:
"Our year as a secret organization is coming to a close. We are no longer 'Poor Left Overs.' We are now 'Pretty Lucky Ones.'"
Daily Hansan
56th Year, No.134
Monday, April 27, 1959
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
BETA PHI
ONE-TWO-SKIP—Another women's Derby Day has passed into oblivion and the Sigma Chis will have such moments as these to remember.
In the foreground trio, from left, are Sue Sladek, Kansas City, Mo., Pat Getto, Lawrence, both freshmen, and Kay Rathbone, Wichita junior.
College Has 44 Research Grants
Three sources have granted the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences funds sufficient to grant more than 40 undergraduate research awards.
The National Science Foundation and the College's Carnegie grant will each provide funds for 20 research awards and the Kansas Heart Fund will provide four.
The individual stipend under this program will normally be $400 for the academic year. A few awards may be made for the summer at a stipend of $200.
The student will be expected to devote between eight and 10 hours a week, (15 to 20 in the summer), to his research appointment.
Students interested in obtaining these awards should contact College faculty members before May 1.
Murphy Firm on Discipline Policy
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy today reiterated the University administration's policy that deliberate destruction or defacement of public or private property is grounds for automatic dismissal or suspension from the University. He said at a press conference that his position has not changed.
"The University gets no pleasure whatsoever out of student discipline. This is the most distasteful part of our activity. When this discipline is applied it is out of our regret," he said.
Asked what action the disciplinary committee can take, Chancellor Murphy said:
"The disciplinary committee is frequently active. The issue here is someone doing violence to a firm rule of the University. No one needs to interpret deliberate destruction. The only question is the investigating process."
ority Women Math Students Honored
Selection of students will be by a faculty committee under the chairmanship of Francis Heller, associate dean of the College.
Mrs. Mildred Dunivent, house mother, reported a well-dressed man in a sweater and light pants on the fire escape. He was described as being of medium build and height, with brown hair and a crew-cut.
Sorority Women Report Prowler
A report of a prowler at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house early this morning capped a full weekend for the campus police.
Faculty members wishing to participate in this program should write to Dean Heller not later than May 1. They should indicate the general nature of the project and the manner in which they would expect the student to participate in the project.
Ross Wulfkuhle, visual education technician and instructor, reported Saturday that a microphone had been taken from a cabinet in Bailey Auditorium.
If a particular student is thought to be especially qualified for the appointment, his name and qualifications should be included.
Mrs. Dunivent said she asked him what he was doing and told him she was going to call the police. The man fled.
The purpose of these awards is to stimulate interest in research, not to replace clerical or other routine help or to provide financial assistance. Dean Heller said.
On Sunday afternoon eight students from Battenfeld Hall reported that $19 had been stolen from their rooms between midnight and 4 a.m. No suspects were reported.
James C. Pool, Wellsville senior, received the junior-senior prize for making the highest score in the KU mathematics contest, and Robert Remple, Lawrence freshman, received the freshman-sophomore prize.
These included the selection of 19 U. G. Mitchell honor scholars in mathematics, the initiation of 36 students into Pi Mu Epsilon, national honor society in mathematics, the appointment of University scholars and fellows in mathematics, the appointment of three fellows under the National Defense Education Act and graduate assistant appointments.
James W. Cederberg, Herndon senior, received a prize for making the highest score by a KU student in the national Putnam mathematics competition.
Terrence Brown, Omaha, Neb. graduate student, will hold a KU Fellowship in the Graduate School next year.
G. Baley Price, chairman of the department of mathematics, announced the department's awards at the annual Honors Dinner Friday night.
Barbara Blake, Kansas City, Kan.
senior; Raymond Pippert, Lawrence
juniur; and Martin Lang, North
Central College, Naperville, Ill., received National Defense Education Act fellowships.
Marilyn E. Alpert, Paola junior,
Robert E. Barnhill, Lawrence sophomore;
Donals H. Close, Bonner
Springs junior; William E. Daesch-
Buddy Johns, Wichita, Samir A.Khabbaz, Lawrence; and Fuad Mulla, Basra, Iraq, all graduate students, will hold University Fellowships for study in mathematics.
These 19 students will be U. G. Mitchell honor scholars in mathematics next year:
ner, Topea sophomore; Alice Forsberg, Logan junior.
Alfred Gray, Dallas, Tex., junior; Joanne Halderson, Bartlesville Okla., junior; Emile L. Hopkins Kansas City, Mo., freshman; John C Musgrave, Joplin, Mo., sophomore
Carol Faye Ott, Kansas City freshman; Damon Patton, Wichita sophomore; Louis D. Rollman, Pratt sophomore; Jeanne Sebaugh, Wichita freshman; Richard L. Speers, Houston, Tex., junior; Nancy Lee Suellentron, Great Bend junior; David Earl Sutherland, Baton Rouge La., sophomore; Bert Alan Taylor, Plainville sophomore; Janice Ann Wenger, Blue Springs, Mo., junior.
Search On for Mob Victim
POPLARVILLE, Miss. — (UPI)—FBI agents and state troopers continued a frantic search today for a young Negro who was dragged from his jail cell by a hooded lynch mob Saturday.
jawmen also sought the members o. the kidnapping mob.
No leads were reported in the case. Some officers believed Parker, a truck driver, would never be found, dead or alive.
In addition to the search for the Negro, M. C. Parker, 23, who was to have gone on trial today on charges of raping a young white mother, the
A well-organized Mb broke into the unguarded Pear River county courthouse jail before dawn Saturday.
He said there are some hazy zones in the area of what the disciplinary committee will handle and what the deans will handle.
"In the case of a situation like this there are no hazy zones," he said.
He said he and L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, had discussed these "hazy zones" and that he intended to carry out further discussions into the matter.
Dr. Murphy continued;
"There is not necessarily a relation between University discipline and what the courts downtown do. We are not bound by what the courts do. There will be occasions when the University and the courts follow the same line.
"This is a University and by definition people who belong in a university are fundamentally mature people.
"There is no place in the University of Kansas for a person who does not understand that mature behavior and vandalism are incompatible."
Case for 11 Not Closed
The eleven students reprimanded for their activities during a recent apartment party will get further hearings from the University administration.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told a press conference today that the vandalism case is "definitely not closed" pending further investigation.
Regarding the suspension of the nine students and the probation of two of these, Chancellor Murphy said:
"I don't think the matter is completely finished. As far as I'm concerned I want to continue to examine the matter."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 27, 1959
Worthwhile or Worthless?
Every June another senior class "bites the dust," so to speak. And every year a part of that class that calls itself the senior gift committee invites its classmates to coffee to decide what the class should leave the old alma mater.
This year Robert Billings, Russell senior and backbone of the Jayhawkers' basketball quintet, is chairman of the senior class gift committee. This year that committee is recommending that class members vote to purchase a championship trophy case for Allen Field House.
Is it not wonderful, too, that the University has won so many athletic trophies that they can't possibly be squeezed into one whole Trophy Room in the Kansas Union?
Or, maybe the class of '59 could decide just not to leave the University anything. Maybe they could best be remembered that way—or at least remembered in the best kind of way.
Of course there is no sure indication that the class will donate a trophy case. There will be two other gift suggestions on the ballot Thursday: furnishings for the new addition to the Kansas Union and a painting of a Kansas scene to be placed in a display panel in Dyche Museum.
Four years of university life is supposed to do something for a student—make him somewhat more broadminded, a more mature person. It somehow usually manages to indoctrinate him with the idea that education is a wonderful thing and that it must be something passed on to every member of posterity.
Yet there has been no indication that students have acquired these things when one examines the gifts presented the University in recent years.
No recent class has valued its education so highly that it has provided a scholarship or fellowship that would enable someone else to acquire an education. No class in recent years has made any contribution to further education.
Of course not! These would not be tangible gifts. They would bear no bronze-plated, engraved plaques to boast their contributors.
Instead, walking across the campus we find a variety of fountains, stone benches, and an unsightly canopy that directs water in a steady flow so that you get a whole bucketful of water on your head instead of a few gentle drops.
There is a bronze Jayhawk that is supposed to make the campus a more beautiful place to study someday.
The plaques that ornament these mementos remind students where they came from. But I doubt that they remind students of the academic achievements of those who gave them. I doubt that they bring more than an occasional poke at posterity's folly.
Perhaps six trophy cases costing $1,750 would be different from the gifts in the past. Maybe they are needed.
But I have a better idea. Why does not the class of 59 just donate funds to remove the canopy from the Kansas Union? —Carol Allen
Editor:
KU emphasizes the amount of individual attention a student may receive from professors and other individuals concerned with the "optimum development of each student." However, the suspension of certain students for apartment damage as reported in the April 23 Daily Kansan casts doubts in this area.
The students in this case are Melvin Hawk and David Blackburn, students attempting to appeal their suspension from the University. We have known Mel five years and Dave more than three. Unless the administration can come up with further evidence to "incriminate" them or more fully explain the reasons given for suspension, it seems that their case should be reconsidered.
... Letters ...
The administrators need to clarify the following points:
Dean Woodruff purportedly told the men that they were suspended because they had not stopped what
1) According to Hawk, he and Blackburn went to the apartment in question for only a few minutes. They left when the fellows there began making "a lot of racket."
was going on. What could two guests do to stop their host and his four guests from making noise? Could attempts to stop the noise not have led quickly to a fight? Was not leaving a better solution than fighting?
Or Hawk and Blackburn could have called the police. But people rarely call the police to quiet a noisy host and his friends. How many people, students and professional people allike, have attended parties where they wondered if the neighbors would be disturbed by the noise? You either endure the noise or leave, just as these two men did.
2) Dean Woodruff compared seeing a murder being committed on the street and trying to stop it to the action he believed the two men should have taken. In any case the use of murder in an analogy seems rather strong. This analogy seems equally logical: When you see a car driven at high speed, you do not stop the driver on the assumption that he is reckless and will probably have a wreck.
3) Two other young men who had lived in the apartment with Hawk and Blackburn during the first
semester were not even present during the evening. But they were told they had been placed on probation because they had formerly lived in the apartment and knew Hawk and Blackburn.
We are proud to say that we know them too and if this is a reason for being placed on probation we are eagerly awaiting the distinction! Were there other reasons for this probation about which we are not aware?
4) Considering that the two men took no part in the unfortunate action in question and that they readily told all they knew of the situation to the deans, could not the punishment have been less severe? Take Hawk's case for example: Hawk (with credit for a full course load this semester) would have been able to complete work for a master's degree in January, 1960. The authorities will allow him (if he desires to) to reenroll next fall.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
RESERVE DESK
2 HOUR LIMIT
5-17
It seems that loss of a semester's credit absolves his "crime." If not, then why let him re-enroll at all? 5) There are three possible levels on which the fate of these two students may be decided;
*PROF SNARF IS UP TO HIGI D TRICKS - MAKING AN ASSIGNMENT
AN PUTTING ONLY ONE REFERENCE BOOK ON RESERVE*
A) The deans may make the final decision. If all of the above factors have not been considered, perhaps Dean Woodruff and Dean Alderson would take time to re-examine the facts in the case. We sincerely hope that they will not ignore anything so important as the education of two students in order to "stand their ground."
B) Chancellor Murphy could play an important part in the decision. In many instances a member of the administration feels that he should not contradict the decisions of other administrative members.
If Chancellor Murphy assumes this attitude, the right to appeal is worthless. Is it possible that he and the two deans could reach a compromise agreement?
C) This case seems to be the type which could be handled by the disciplinary committee, composed of both students and faculty. However, all such cases must first be referred to this committee by Dean Woodruff.
Does KU really give any consideration to the individual student or does it just herd the masses? The decision reached in this particular case may eventually put its finger on any one of us as students. Are there any methods of defense for us when we are accused of wrongdoing? Or are we "guilty until proven innocent?"
Mr. and Mrs. Lauren Wilson
Lawrence graduate students
Vincent van Gogh
SELF PORTRAIT—Judith T. Hood's contribution to the Big Eight art show was first prize winner.
Big Eight Art Show A Little Disappointing
By Brett Waller
The annual Big Eight show offers young midwestern artists a chance to exhibit their work and an opportunity to win substantial cash prizes.
One show cannot create renaissance, but it is a step in the right direction. Although the Big Eight show may never foster a single piece of great art, it will play an important part in creating an atmosphere in which great art may someday be created and appreciated.
This year's exhibition, however, is a little disappointing. Several of the pieces are not even good student work. Barbara Cheatham's "Seated Figure with Yellow," Mary Stipp's "Quiet Harbor," and Bill Stevenson's "Study in Form" are all inferior works.
The show also has its quota of mediocre pieces. Nancy Lumpee's "Midday on the Lake," an eviscerated Van Gogh with calendar art sentiments, is a good example. "Saduh, a skillfully executed metal sculpture by Martha Renfro, has about the same aesthetic appeal as an Elffel Tower made of toothpicks. Our interest is more in how long it took the artist to make it than with anything it says.
Robert Edmiston exhibits a handsomely crafted piece of "Forged and Welded Steel" sculpture. However, there seems to have been insufficient concern with formal values so that the expression is a bit melodramatic. The ragged lower edge seems to have been considered mainly as a literary symbol for poverty and despair rather than as a form existing in space which needs to be related to every other form in the work.
What of the prize winners? They are indeed the three best works in the show, Judith T. Hood's first prize winner, "Self Portrait," was highly praised in an earlier review of the Print Workshop show, and that judgment remains unaltered by a second exposure.
The third prize winner, a wood sculpture by Hiroko Miyake, is not an ambitious work, nor is it particularly original. But one is pleasantly surprised to find that it succeeds. It seems to say, if a visual statement can be paraphrased, "See the beauty of this walnut, and of the gentle interplay of simple forms." It is an honest, successful affirmation of a simple thing.
Jerry Buchanan's "Out of Colors and Out of Glued Scraps," which took second place and the purchase prize, is undoubtedly the best painting in the show. It is a large work in typical landscape format. The color and paint surface are subdued, almost ascetic, except for the three or four rich, thick accents which bring it off. The painting's uniqueness is due to the fact that its upper portion, the sky area, is cut out and pasted on as a piece of collage material. This visual double meaning is both interesting and amusing.
All the other paintings in the show have fallen into one or another of the current cliches. We've seen them all before. Buchanan's work avoids these snares, but still seems to fall a little short of real significance.
In considering the works, this reviewer was struck by the appearance of sloppiness and haste. Upon close examination, this apparent sloppiness is seen to have been carefully considered, and in some cases, even contrived.
There have been painters—great painters—whose burning desire to make a statement led them to disregard certain aspects of the craft. Rembrandt, Goya, Van Gogh, Beckmann—this is true to a certain extent of all these artists. What they had to say was too urgent to permit a subtle approach.
A young artist who admires these men is apt to assume that the vigor he senses in their work is due to their lack of concern with "polish." Actually, just the opposite is true. The lack of polish is an effect, not a cause, of the urgency of their statements. That vigor cannot be induced by carelessness is something that the artists in the Big Eight Show have seemingly failed to recognize.
Dailu hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004, triweekly 1208, daily Jan. 16, 1512.
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Telephone VIking 3-2106 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, 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 Saturday 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.
War Is Waged-
Page 3
University Daily Kansan
Sexes Disagree on Senior Gift Idea
The question of a senior class gift may become a battle of the sexes.
Many senior women interviewed prefer furnishings for the new addition to the Kansas Union, while many of the men favor a trophy case for Allen Field House.
The senior class will decide on the gift Thursday morning at the Senior Coffee. The gift committee has made three recommendations, from which the gift will be chosen. The third choice is a diorama for Dyche Museum.
KU students noted with interest that the graduating class at Northwestern University is leaving a fund of $4,000 for faculty salary increases. But the KU class of 1959 did not consider such a gift.
Jane Flagler, Geneva, Ill., senior, echoes the opinions of many senior women. "I would prefer giving furnishings for the Union because this would be a much more
Top News Kudos To Wichita East
Wichita East high school took top honors in the 39th annual high school newspaper contest, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism, it was announced today.
Twenty-four Kansas high schools were recognized for journalistic work of merit during the 1958-59 school year. Thirty-nine schools submitted entries.
The 12 contest divisions were news story, editorial, feature, human interest story, interview, sports story, news and feature pictures, retail advertisement, service-to-school, business management, columns and miscellaneous.
Wichita East, which has won or tied for the service-to-school award for nine consecutive years, this year shared the honor with Norton high school.
Wichita East took nine places, Topeka. Lawrence and Washington of Bethel six each and Norton, Bonner Springs, Arkansas City and Wyandotte of Kansas City, Kan. four each.
practical gift than a trophy case; she said.
Gary Shofner, Ottawa senior, presented the argument for the trophy case. "If we put a trophy case in the field house, thousands of people will look at the trophies and see what KU athletes have done." he said.
A few seniors believe that none of the three proposed gifts is suitable for the class of 1959 to donate to the University.
Richard Brandt, Newton senior,
said, "I think it would be more appropriate to donate a scholarship,
which would be of lasting value."
Donna Nelson, Kansas City, Kan. senior, also was disappointed with the recommendations of the committee. "I think we could do far more constructive things, but of the three suggestions, the furnishings for the Union would be best."
LeRoy Lord, Ridge Manor, Fla. senior, was particularly opposed to the trophy case. "I don't like any of the suggested gifts. I would favor a scholarship or loan fund, but definitely not a trophy case," he said.
Science Paper Gets $300 Award
The United States Air Force Academy was bested last week by a KU student in aerodynamics.
David Kohlman, Lamoni, Iowa senior, won first place in the undergraduate division of the Southwest Regional Paper Competition sponsored by the Institute of Aeronautical Science at Ft. Worth, Tex.
Kohlman's paper, entitled "Theoretical Methods of Determining the Ground Effect on Wings," was given first-place prize of $300. The paper was chosen over entries from 11 other universities, including the Air Force Academy, Notre Dame, Purdue, and Texas A&M.
Kohlman's paper will be submitted in national competition with the first-place winners from six other regions.
Each university selects an outstanding paper written by an aeronautical engineering student each year. The papers are then sent to their region's paper competition where they are judged by scientists and engineers in the aircraft industry.
Federation Best for Arabs, Gallagher Says
The North African expert said the pan-Arabism movement is an intellectual as well as a social and political revolution. He outlined the Arab wants as political justice, social justice, reform and economic stability, in that order.
or anything can be said about the Arab world it is that it is unpredictable. No one can say for certain what will happen concerning an Arab federation," he said.
"Arabism is a civilizing influence
Education in America has changed to the "business of training at the expense of education," Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told a convention of American Assn. of University Women in Hutchinson Saturday.
as reflected in Morocco and other primitive states. It will do more good than bad in the long run."
Ray Nichols, Lawrence junior, and Don Bowen, Salina senior, will represent KU in the debate on "Resolved: That Democracy is a Perverted Form of Government." Nichols and Bowen will take the affirmative side.
Murphy Says Education Lost
KU debaters will match wits and arguments with a debate team from the University of London at 8 p.m. tonight in Bailey Auditorium.
Mr. Gallagher called attention to the United Arab Republic composed of Egypt and Syria and said that many mistakes have been made in trying to govern it.
KU to Debate London U. Tonight
Over 200 high school girls saw exhibits and demonstrations prepared by home economics department students Friday at the department's annual High School Day.
The idea that education might bring a richer personal life has been practically lost, he said.
"Unity today is not being built on a religious or a racial foundation but rather is being built as a community of Arabs." Mr. Gallagher said. He defined the word Arab as a cultural term like American.
Exhibits in the foods department emphasized differences in cost and time of preparation of ready-mixed and home-made pie, calorie count in favorite snacks and vitamin C content in beverages.
"The trend toward unity is not a new trend," Mr. Gallagher said. "The Arabs themselves are the first to point this cut. They think in terms of reconstituting a unity that existed over 1,000 years ago as a religious state.
Charles F. Gallagher told a Current Events Forum audience Friday afternoon that there is a strong trend toward community unity rather than total unity in the Middle East and North Africa.
He suggested three betterment ideas;
"We can now see that a more loose federation may be the best thing for the Middle East and North Africa." Mr. Gallagher concluded.
1. There should never be a year in any school without a rigorous course in the written word.
200 High School Girls Attend Home Ec Day
Speaking on "The Trend Toward One Arab World" the American Universities Field Staff expert said the trend towards unity is greater in North Africa than in the Middle East.
2. The nation should accept this as an age of science and it is inexcusable that anyone should get out of a secondary school without a course in laboratory sciences.
3. More young people should be learning foreign languages.
German Bingo Pays—Almost
MANNHEIM, Germany — (UPI)— Karl Schumann heard on his automobile radio that he had won a prize in the weekly national bingo. He became so excited he skidded into a tree.
Schumann said the prize money is exactly enough for a new car.
Monday, April 27, 1959
Prof. Gaston Awarded Music Club's Citation
E. Thaver Gaston, chairman of the KU music education department, has been awarded the presidential citation of the National Federation of Music Clubs.
chairman of its education committee and committee on research and edited the national association's yearbooks for five years.
The federation's national president, Mrs. Ronald A. Dougan, Beloit, Wis., presented the citation to Prof. Gaston Friday during a banquet meeting of the national session in San Diego, Calif.
Mrs. Dougan mentioned Prof. Gaston's "outstanding, effective and dedicated service in the field of music education." She called him a "world pioneer in music therapy."
Dr. Gaston is an executive committee member of the association and is chairman of the committee on registrations, a professional accrediting body. He has been chairman.
Prof. Gaston taught music in the public schools for 17 years before joining the KU faculty in 1940. In 1946 he set up the first courses in psychology of music and the influence of music on behavior. A short time later he established the first graduate degree program in the nation on functional music.
Prof. Gaston is a founder and past president of the National Association for Music Therapy. He was
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 27, 1959
10
LAOCOON—This interesting statuary, a gift from a friend of the University, was on display last weekend in the Chi Omega fountain. The serpents, which will complete the group, have not arrived due to a shipping error. The figures,
from left, are: Rosemary Nation, Chanute junior; Carol Stover (top), Colby sophomore; Judith Mackenzie, Prairie Village sophomore; Carolyn Kreye, Lawrence sophomore; Nora Pollock, Shaker Heights, Ohio, sophomore.
12 From KU to Construct Chapel on Mountainside
Twelve KU students will spend three weeks this summer building a chapel on a New Mexico mountain-side.
The Westminster Fellowship Workcamp, a Presbyterian students' group, will finish building an outdoor chapel! at the Loma Verde campgrounds at Taos Canyon, New Mexico. The students will work at the camp from June 2 to 6.
Dr. John H, Patton, professor of religion, will be the workcamp director. Mrs. Patton will also make the trip. The group will travel in three cars, camping out, sleeping in church basements or cabins en route to Taos Canyon.
Construction of the chapel, at the Loma Verde camp for Spanish-American youth, was started last year when the roof and supports were completed.
This summer the workers will pour a 30 by 60 foot concrete floor.
put up four walls and build a fireplace.
"Although Loma Verde camp is operated by the United Presbyterian Church, a great many other groups such as scouts and farm youth organizations use the grounds for conferences in addition to the regular sessions throughout the summer," Dr. Patton said.
"Because we planned this project last year, the Rev. Julian Duran, the camp's summer director, will not allow campers there while we work."
The students will do without some of civilization's niceties. They must build their own shower stall and heat snow water from a nearby stream to use in it. The water will be poured from the top of the shower.
Dr. Patton said:
Dr. Patton said:
"Wednesday and Saturday afternoons and all day Sundays will be work breaks. Hard labor like pouring concrete is rough on muscles unaccustomed to it, so two and one half days of work at one clip leaves enough sore muscles."
The students will takes rides and excursions during afternoons off in order to learn as much as they can about the area. They will visit the Taos art center in Santa Fe, Albuquerque and the University of New Mexico, old plaza towns, and cliff dwelling sites.
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KU Danforth Scholar To Study at Cornell
A KU senior is one of the 87 students in the nation to receive a Danforth Fellowship for a year of graduate work.
Marvin Carlson, Wayne, Nebr., will attend Cornell University next year to work for his doctorate in Speech, Drama and Theater history.
Carlson's major field is theater although he has a minor in French.
Light Bulb Causes Apartment Fire
A burning light bulb folded up inside a hideaway bed started a fire that caused extensive damage to the apartment of an assistant to the Dean of Women, 1205 Oread, late Sunday morning.
Lawrence Fire Department officials said that Donna Younger was not in her apartment when the fire started.
The total amount of the damage has not yet been determined but a spokesman for the fire department said that the damage to Miss Younger's apartment would run fairly high. The fire was kept confined to that apartment, with only slight smoke damage to other apartments in the building.
Poverty Stymies Solons
LANSING, Mich. — (UPI) Money-harried Michigan legislators have submitted bills to:
Give Michigan back to the Indians.
Turn over all bank deposits to the people.
Sell Michigan's upper peninsula to Wisconsin for half a billion dollars to bail the rest of the state out of its financial crisis.
Jumpy Cow Bags Booze
AYR, Scotland—(UPI)—A three-year-old champion heifer which charged a crowd here yesterday was given a fine old Scottish remedy to quiet frightened cows—half a bottle of Scotch whisky.
His undergraduate grade average is 2.4.
Carlson has been active in Quill Club, French clubs, and Wesley Foundation. He has been president of the National Collegiate Players Assn.
The fellowship appointments are given for outstanding academic ability and intellectual vigor, personal qualities giving promise of success in the classroom, and serious inquiry within the Christian tradition.
"There is not much around the theater that I haven't done. I have worked on lights, sound, crew positions, but I like acting best," he said.
Carlson said he plans to teach after receiving his doctorate and continued. "I also want to try my hand at playwriting."
Architects Show Artist's Designs
The display, the work of artist Eugene Masselink, who had been associated with Mr. Wright since 1933, features a harmonious relationship between art and architecture.
An exhibit entitled "Integral Ornament" featuring art work designed for the buildings planned by architect Frank Lloyd Wright is on display in the Architectural Library in Marvin Hall.
This is consciously built into the room or building of which it is a part, taking its motifs from the overall character of the building.
The exhibition will remain on display through May 22.
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Speaker Lauds Aid to Latin Am. Libraries
"Very few cities maintain their own public libraries," she said. "The library in Sao Paulo, Brazil, is one of the few maintained by government funds."
Establishing the Benjamin Franklin library in Mexico City was one of the most significant things the United States has ever done in Mexico, the Cervantes Day speaker said Saturday.
The scholarshipships, $250 each, are financed through an endowment established by members of the Ahrens family of Paola: Henry D. Ahrens, Darwin Ahrens, and their late sister, Della Ahrens.
"The U. S. Information Agency has been of great importance in the development of Latin American libraries," said Marietta Daniels, a 1933 graduate of KU and now associate librarian of the Columbus Memorial Library of the Pan American Union in Washington, D.C.
"There has not been a great need for libraries in Latin America until very recently," she said. "Schools have been slow in organizing libraries. Students have not been required to do supplementary reading, and they have not needed libraries.
"There were very few librarians trained before World War II, and those who were trained were sent to the U.S." she said.
She said the most fundamental problem of Latin American libraries is the training of librarians.
The five honor students are Charles Koelsch, Ronald Hinkle and Carl Smith of Paola; Ralph Gage Jr., of Ottawa, and Robert Wilson of Mound City.
She said that many excellent libraries are supported by private institutions, however.
Miss Daniels spoke at the 35th annual Cervantes Day activities Saturday in Fraser Hall. Cervantes Day marks the death of Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, author of "Don Quixote," on April 23, 1616.
"The schools do not offer courses in using the librarian," she said. "Students usually know how to use reference books, but they are really facing a problem when they have to write a research paper."
Prep Honor Students Get Ahrens Awards
Five Kansas high school seniors have been awarded Ahrens Scholarships in Engineering for next year.
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VI 3-6311
Monday, April 27, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Claims Four Titles at Drake
Bill Alley continued his spring assault on javelin records as he threw 253-5 for a new mark at the Drake Relays Saturday.
Kansas also won victories in the shuttle hurdles and two-mile relay while Ernie Shelby won the broad jump title for the second straight year.
The KU team of Gordon Davis, Tom Skutka, Bob Tague and Clif Cushman posted the third fastest two-mile relay time in Big Eight history when they hit 7:33.3.
Bill Tillman sprinted the final leg of the shuttle hurdles in 14.0 to defeat Missouri's Cal Groff by two yards and give Kansas the victory. KU's 880-ryoll relay team was in close competition with Texas until the Jayhawkers were disqualified for passing out of the proper lane.
Texas' 440-yard relay team reversed last week's KU Relays' finish by running ahead of the Jayhawkers in that race.
Eleven records were broken Friday and Saturday before 18.000 fans in the 50th running of the Relays.
Glenn Davis, formerly of Ohio State, won the special AAU quarter-mile race in :46.6. Nineteen-year-old Purdue freshman Dave Mills placed second, Willie Atterberry of East Lansing, Mich., was third while Bobby Morrow, former Abilene Christian star, finished fourth.
Morrow was edged by Ira Murchison of the University of Chicago Track Club in an AAU 100-yard dash.
Jim Graham of Oklahoma State set a Drake Relays record of 15- $ _{1/4} $ in the pole vault.
KU's Jim Londerholm placed fifth in the javelin with a throw of 215-5. Bill Tillman was fourth in the high hurdles.
Netmen Split With Nebraska, I-State
By Tom Clark
Coach Denzell Gibbens' squad now shows a 3-6 record with a heavy schedule on tap for this week.
KU quickly responded from a 4-3 loss to Nebraska's tennis team Friday to earn a split in their northern trip by defeating Iowa State 5-2 the next day.
Tomorrow afternoon, the Jayhawkers host Kansas State, aiming to avenge an earlier 6-1 loss to their cross-state foes. Friday, Missouri invades Lawrence. Saturday, Gibbens takes his netmen to Topeka for a match with Washburn.
Handicapped by the absence of two regulars, Lynne Sieverling and Sal Lekagul, the Jayhawkers were unable to repeat an earlier 5-2 victory over the Cornhuskers. Dave Coupe claimed the only singles victory. However, the Jayhawkers came back to win both doubles matches, closing the gap to 4-3.
closing the gap to 14-6. Saturday was a different day as the Jayhawkers won all the singles matches from Iowa State. Dave Coupe, Arkansas City junior, led the way with his fifth consecutive singles victory over Dick Sahr. The Cyclones rallied to win both doubles
matches to cut the KU margin to 5-2. Nebraska 4 KU3
Bill North, N, defeated Jerry Williams, 6-1, 5-0.
Bruce Russell, N, defeated Pete Block, 8-6, 8-6.
Dave Coupe, KU, defeated Albert
Arrigunaga, 6-0, 4-6, 4-6.
Charles Kress, N, defeated Jim Brownfield, 6-2, 7-5.
Williams-Coupe, KU, defeated Russell-Kress, 6-1, 8-6.
Bill Kendall, N, defeated Bill Sheldon, 6-3, 6-4.
Block, KU, defeated Roger Barney,
6-2. 6-3.
Brownfield-Block, KU, defeated Arriguna-kendall, 6-2, 6-0.
Williams, KU, defeated Mike Hoffman, 6-1, 5-7, 6-3.
Coupe, KU, defeated Dick Sahr,
3-6, 6-4, 6-3.
KU 5. Iowa State 2
Sheldon, KU, defeated Al Brown,
6-3, 3-6, 6-3.
Brownfield, KU, defeated Glen Trapp, 6-3, 7-5.
Orioles Slap Yanks 5-4,3-2
Hoffman-Barney IS, defeated Williams-Coupe, 12-10, 8-6.
Paul Richards says the sky is the limit for his Baltimore Orioles and who's going to argue with him after a weekend sweep that has the New York Yankees off to their worst start in five years.
Sahr-Trapp, IS, defeated Brownfield-Sheldon, 6-3, 4-6, 1-
By United Press International $ ^{1} $
Richards had a right to crow a bit Sunday because his Orioles swept a double-header from the Yankees, 5-4 and 3-2, dumping the world champions into the second division. With seven losses in 13 games, the Yankees have made their poorest start since 1954—when they failed to win the American League pennant.
dians. The White Sox cooled off the Indians Sunday by beating them. 6-5 and 5-2, as Early Wynn and Billy Pierce doubled as pitching and hitting heroes.
The Washington Senators shaded the Boston Red Sox, 2-1, and the Kansas City Athletics edged out the floundering Detroit Tigers, 4-3, in other American League games. The Los Angeles Dedgers took over first place with a 17-11 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals, the Cincinnati Reds outsugged the Milwaukee Braves, 11-10, the San Francisco Giants beat the Chicago Cubs, 3-2, and the Philadelphia Phillies bounced back from a 9-2 loss to down the Pittsburgh Pirates, 10-5, in National League activity.
The Orioles are tied with the Chicago White Sox for second place one game behind the Cleveland In-
Captain, Coach Part; Team Is Swamped
The KU baseball team, playing without captain Bob Marshall, lost a series of three games with the Iowa State Cyclones this weekend.
Marshall and Coach Temple were reported to have parted ways after reaching a disagreement.
Temple's only comment was; "Bob is no longer, with the team."
When contacted, Marshall said: "I have no comment to make."
In other action, Cyclone Bob Harden hit an infield grounder with the score tied and the bases loaded in the last of the eighth inning of Saturday's finale to give Iowa State a 4-3 victory.
Iowa State scored four quick runs in the first game of Saturday's doubleheader to win 11-2.
Saturday's Games:
Kansas ab h rb
Hanson, ss 3 1 0
Muegler, 2b 3 0 1
Dunnigan, rg 3 0 0
Melton, lf 3 1 0
Lauterjung, c 2 0 0
Hill, 3b 3 0 0
Mailen, lf 1 1 0
Nichols, 1b 2 0 0
Holler, p 1 1 0
Clinkenbeard, p 1 0 0
Marcinek 1 0 0
The Jayhawkers are now 0-4 in conference action.
Iowa State ab h rbi
Lewis, ef 2 1 1
Olmstead, ss 3 2 0
Locker, 2b 3 2 1
Hardin, rf 2 1 2
Van D' H'dn,rf 4 1 2
Warfield,lf 3 1 2
Slaudte, 1b 3 1 0
Willard,c 4 2 2
B. Locker,p 3 0 0
- - - - -
27 11 9
Fires take about 12,000 lives in the U.S. each year,2,000 of them children under the age of six.
(Second game)
Kansas ab h rb
Hanson, ss 4 0 0
Muegler, 2b 4 1 1
Dunnigan, rf 3 1 0
Melton, lf 3 0 0
Lauterjung, c 3 1 0
Mailen, lf 3 0 0
Hill, 3b 3 2 0
Nichols, 1b 3 0 0
Doolittle, p 1 5 1
| Iowa State | 27 | 5 | 1 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lewis, cf | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Olmstead, ss | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| R. Locker, 2b | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Hardin, rf | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Van D' H'dn, 3b | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Warfield, c, lf | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| Meyer, lf | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Mate'an, lf | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| B. Locker, c | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Ingram, 1b | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Willard, | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Staudte, 1b | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Bruno, p | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Halse, p | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Green, p | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 27 | 5 | 1 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | 21 | 2 | 2 |
Pairings Ready For Big 8 Tourney
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) -- Defending champion Kansas State will meet Iowa State in the first game of the 1959 Big Eight conference pre-season basketball tournament in Kansas City under pairings announced today by the conference office.
The kickoff game will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 26, followed by Colorado vs. Nebraska at 9:30.
Play resumes Monday with Missouri meeting Oklahoma and Kansas playing Oklahoma State. Second round games will be played Tuesday, with the finals on Wednesday.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
BROOKLYN NEW YORK JUNE 1968
ATHENS TRANSPLANTED—Panayotis Danos, special student from Athens, Greece, tells Phyllis Frick, Great Bend sophomore, of his homeland as they look at the Greek exhibit at the Foreign Students Festival in Hoch Auditorium Saturday.
Hoch Foreign Fete Viewed by 1500
The floor of Hoch Auditorium was transformed into a miniature United Nations Saturday for the opening of the Foreign Students Festival, "From Our Lands to You."
Bright flags from over 20 countries adorned the exhibition booths erected by KU's colony of foreign students. Some 1,500 spectators attended the fete.
The sounds of foreign tongues blended smoothly in the auditorium. Only a few of those present could understand a particular set of instructions shouted across the floor.
The booth of the Scandanivian countries displayed pottery, ski sweaters and silver crafts. Next to it was the booth of Korea, with intricately carved ebony tables and chests.
Joyce H. Kawamoto, Kapaa Kauai, Hawaii, sophomore, said, "I think such an exhibit is a wonderful idea because it helps to promote better relations between other nations and the states of America."
Mrs. Victor Manuel of India said, "We are proud of our country and it has a lot to show people of the world. This is an excellent way to present our culture to people of other lands."
Berlin Depicted
The German exhibit and skit depicted the political turmoil of Berlin. Axel Flambeck, Hamburg, Germany, graduate student and chairman of
ASC Committee Applications Due
Student applications for positions on the orientation committee of students and faculty members are due tomorrow at the dean of students office.
All other student-faculty and All Student Council committee applications will be due Thursday.
Selections for committee membership will be made on the basis of experience, desire, and ideas after written applications and interviews are concluded.
Members will be selected for the following committees:
Student Union operating board, traffic and parking, student court, ASC secretaries, film series committee, calendar, commencement, convocations and lectures, eligibility, athletic board.
Student athletic seating board, public relations, housing, labor, student health, traditions, social, publications, campus chest, homecoming, National Student Association, disciplinary, and orientation.
Application forms are available in the dean of students office.
the festival committee, said, "Since Berlin is currently in the news we decided to tell the visitors something about the four-power city."
Eight countries presented short programs of dances, songs, and skits, in spite of minor mechanical trouble.
"African Rhythms," a musical program by Augustine G. Kyei, Ashanti, Ghana, junior, and Rahim O. Ojikutri, Lagos Nigeria, senior, was presented despite a language handicap. Speaking their native languages on stage, neither was able to understand the other.
Embroidered wearing apparel formed the background for the Greek booth. A poster showed the architecture of Athens.
Arabs Show Lace
Across from the Grecian booth was the display of the Arab countries. Linen handwork and lace were shown at the base of a wrought copper tray.
Pewter utensils were on display at the booth of Great Britain. At the French booth the spectator could glance through a collection of travel leaflets and books.
High school students living in the United States under the American Field Service exchange program came from nearby towns for the festival.
"Connie" is spending her senior year at Central High School in Kansas City, Mo. She is an aspiring journalist and writes her views of the U.S. in the high school news paper.
Maria Consuelo Espana Valdes from Guatemala City, Guatemala, was one of the visiting students who wandered smiling through the exhibition.
When asked about her near-perfect English, the petite girl said that it had become worse since she came to this country.
Science Meeting Starts Thursday
More than 500 persons will participate in the 91st annual meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science Thursday and Friday. About 200 scientists from off-campus will attend the meeting.
"I forgot all the good English I learned, and picked up the slang," she said.
Ten subdivisions of the natural sciences will hold "paper sessions." In these sessions faculty and staff research units, independently-working graduate students, and high school students in association with the Junior Academy will read 174 papers.
Edward J. Zeller, associate professor of geology, will present an illustrated lecture, "Antarctica," at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. The paper is based on his recent work in the Antarctic under auspices of the International Geophysical Year.
The high school papers were judged highly superior at earlier district meetings of the Junior Academy.
Connie was surprised at the attire of KU men. "Our boys would never wear anything like Bermuda shorts—nor would the girls," she said. "But they do look pretty sharp."
Tickets Available
Tickets are still available for "The Winter's Tale" which will be presented Wednesday through Saturday in the University Theatre. Tickets are free to students upon presentation of an LD, card and cost $1.50 for non-students. The theater boxoffice and the ticket booth in the Kansas Union are handling ticket sales.
Registration will be from 5-8 p.m. Thursday and all day Friday in the Kansas Union. An annual banquet will be at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Dr. Ted F. Andrews, Kansas State College at Emporia, will discuss "The Future of the Kansas Academy of Science."
Ernest Griswold, professor of chemistry, is chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements.
KUOK to Cover Home Ball Games
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Home baseball games will be covered the rest of this season by KUOK, campus radio station, beginning with tomorrow's game with Central Missouri. Broadcasting time is 3:10 p.m.
The KUOK sportscasters include Mike Kajoura, Osawatime junior, sports director; Jerry Konop, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Irwin Rein, Chicago, Ill., junior. They will begin broadcasting from Quigley field five minutes before the game begins.
The complete schedule of baseball broadcasts will be;
April 28 ... Central Missouri
May 1 ... Colorado
May 2 ... Colorado
May 8 ... Nebraska
May 9 ... Nebraska
Radio Programs
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Sonata in G Minor for Cello and Piano" by Rachmaninoff
7:00 Ballet Music: "Helen of Troy" by Offenbach
7:30 Keyboard Concert (Harpschord): "Sonata in E-flat for Violin and Harpsichord" by Mozart
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air: "And the World Listened"
8:30 University of the Air: "Doorway to the World"
8:45 University of the Air: "Curtain Going Up"
9:00 Starlight Symphony: "Symphony No. 3 in B Minor, Op. 42" by Gliere
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Sextet for Strings in G Major" by Brahms.
11:00
11:00 Sign Off
5 KU Grads Receive Awards
Five architecture graduates received medals this week recognizing their design achievements in the Kansas City area.
Clarence Kivett, '29; Donald R. Hollice, '45; J. David Miller, '50; John C. Monroe Jr., and Gene Edward Lefebvre, '49, received the awards.
The gold medals were awarded by the Kansas City chapter of the American Institute of Architecture at a dinner meeting Tuesday.
The awards were presented for design of the Hallmark Cards building in Lawrence, designed by Kivett, Myers & McCallum; the Meadowbrook junior high school in Johnson County by Hollis and Miller; Parke, Davis & Co. branch office in Kansas City by Kivett, Myers & McCallum, and the Holy Cross Lutheran Church in Kansas City by Monroe and Lefebvre.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
I would like to thank the student who prevented a major dog fight Friday morning on the campus, if you would call VI 3-7031.
KUOK
Tonight
4:00 Music for the Afternoon (Uninterrupted)
6:00 News
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
8:45 Campus Highlights
9:05 Music From Beyond the Heavens
10:05 Stardust Melodies, with Mike Fitzwater
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Stardust Melodies, with Mike Fitzwater
12:00 Sign Off
Channel 63 on the dial at Corbin-North, Grace Pearson, Douthart, Carruth- O'Leary, Joseph R. Pearson halls, and
Piano Recital Tonight By Janice Morawitz
Miss Morawitz received the Bachelor of Music Education degree from KU in 1958 and is a candidate for the Bachelor of Music degree with a major in piano in June.
The School of Fine Arts will present Janice Morawitz, pianist, New London, Mo., in a Senior Recital at 8 tonight in Swarthwout Recital Hall.
A commercial jet airliner that misses a landing approach and has to try it all over again consumes an extra ton of fuel in the process.
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Monday, April 27, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. all ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office In Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
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University Daily Kansan Monday. April 27, 1959
Largest KU Grant Comes From AEC
The largest research grant ever received by the University was announced Saturday by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
The contract-for $156,800-is a renewal for a year to continue high-temperature chemistry research Paul W. Gilles, professor of chemistry, will direct the research. It is from the Atomic Energy Commission.
The Atomic Energy Commission has been supporting the research since Prof. Gilles began in 1950.
Included in the contract is $85,000 for the purchase of a mass spectrometer, a huge machine which shows the molecular weight of gaseous molecules. There are about 12 of these machines in the world according to Prof. Gilles.
"Man has been using high-temperature processes for millions of years, but only recently in a controlled fashion. It is a young and dynamic field with tremendous interest." Prof. Gilles explained.
In the project Prof. Gilles and his assistants work with high temperatures ranging up to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit. They are interested in kinds of chemical compounds, their structures, melting
Strong Elevator Gets Student OK
Sidewalk superintendents and hallway foremen have been enjoying themselves at Strong Hall the past few weeks.
Students burrying to their classes have found time to stop and watch construction workers who are building a balcony for Strong Auditorium and installing an elevator in the building.
Last week a crane was used to left heavy I-beams to a west window in the third floor of Strong. The beams were pushed in the window, mounted on dolls and rolled into the auditorium. The two main support beams each weigh a ton and a half.
"We didn't have any trouble moving them," Bob (Red) Kile of the Kile Construction Co. of Ottawa, said. "This is just a part of our routine work."
Last week students using the stairway just west of the rotunda dodged two-by-fours being carried upstairs by workmen and "gritted their teeth" as loud pounding noises came from the new elevator shaft
The balcony is expected to be finished in two months. The completion date for the elevator has not been set.
Official Bulletin
Home town Correspondents: Deadline for turning in stranger: 3 PM at Forrump stranger: 222 Strong
Ph.D. French Reading Exams: 9 a.m.
Saturday, Fraser 11. Leave books with
Mr. De Coster in Fraser 5-B by Thursday.
Cheerleader Tryouts, tomorrow and Thursday. 7:30 p.m. in 101 Robinson.
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Summer Job—Schilling AF Base, Salma.
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German.
May 9. Candidates planning to take the exam must register by noon Friday in
306 Fraser.
TODAV
International Folk Dance Club, 7-9 p.m.; Jayhawk Room. Everyone Enjoyed. Faculty Club. Duplicate Bridge. 7:30 p.m. Host: Host and Mrs. R. L. Schielebusch IV, 3-5869
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m., St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Epicopia C Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
breakfast following, Canterbury House.
Le cercle français, marqui a quatre
caractères, le point d'un de l'union
Conference de M. Morot-Sin
Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Communion breakfast,
early October at Silverbury. House
Faculty Forum. Mr. Dolph Simons, Jr. speaks about his recent visit to South Africa. Noon in the English Room of the Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
Inter-Chapel. Speaker, prayer. 12:15-
12:30 p.m.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, Paston Britton,
chapel services. Danforth, 5-5 20 p.m.
University Theatre, 8 p.m. "Winter's
Tale."
and boiling points and reactions at high temperatures.
Assisting Prof. Gilles in the project this year are Phillip G. Wahlbeck and John G. L. Wall, both research associates in chemistry; Ernest Plante, Hinesburg, Vt., Warren Knarw, Parsons, Stanley Killingbeck, Blackburn, England, Hugo Franzen, Lawrence, P. Kent Smith, Penns Grove, N. J., and Kenneth Beck. Lawrence graduate students.
Also aiding are Robert Barnhill, Lawrence sophomore; Gary Burgess, Pomona junior; Patricia Smith, Shawnee sophomore; Roy Hartley, Lawrence senior; and Mrs. Gladys Loofbourrow, research technician.
The KU researchers are concerned only with the basic research but think that it may be important in the nuclear reactor field where there is a demand for material that will withstand high temperatures.
Debaters Lose In Semi-Finals
The KU debate team was defeated by Wisconsin State University at West Point, N. Y., Saturday.
Ray Nichols, Lawrence junior, and Don Bowen, Salina senior, lost in the semi-final round of the national debate tournament.
Summer Music Clinic to Be Unique for Area
Nichols received a gold watch Friday night for being voted runner-up in total speaker points in their preliminary round of the tournament.
Northwestern University won the tournament.
The first Midwestern Music Clinic here July 9-13 will be the only one of its kind in this region—with orchestra, band, chorus, marching band and all instruments.
The heaviest attendance will be from 12 midwest and southwest states, but music teachers from as many as 40 states are expected to attend.
Co-sponsors of this pioneer clinic are the School of Fine Arts and the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Russell L. Wiley, KU professor of band is clinic director.
Evening events, which will be
open to the public, include a concert by the Chicago Symphony Woodwind Quintet, concerts by the Midwestern Music Camp organizations, a recital by several clinicians, and the marching band demonstration in Haskell Stadium.
The orchestra, band, and chorus of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be integrated into the clinic program, both for rehearsals and concerts. There also will be a Supervisors' Clinic band, marching band and chorus.
Lucien Cailliet, formerly of the Philadelphia Symphony, will lead the Clinic band and be guest conductor of the Camp band. Daniel Moe of Denver University will lead the Clinic chorus and be guest conductor of the Camp chorus. Drilling the Clinic marching band will be Jack Lee of the University of Arizona. Guy Fraser Harrison of the Oklahoma City Symphony will be guest conductor of the Camp orchestra.
Instrument makers, music publishers and uniform suppliers will provide a 400-foot display gallery. Other features will include forums on repairs of stringed and wind instruments.
Interested Students, Apathetics, Complainers
If you are among the loyal supporters of the ASC, then this opportunity is extended especially to you.
If you are one of the many apathetical students who have been criticizing student government over the last year, now is your chance to do something about it.
ASC committee appointments are now being accepted in the Dean of Students Office.
Committees:
PUBLIC RELATIONS — HOUSING — PUBLICATIONS LABOR — SOCIAL — MANY OTHERS
Students interested in working in one of these committees during the next year, apply immediately. Applications due Thursday, April 30.
D
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Misnomer Kauses Kansan Konfusion
By Jim Trotter
A talented dramatics student used his ability Sunday night to put one over on a Daily Kansan reporter thus causing one of the season's bigger mixups in the Kansan newsroom.
The story started when it was announced that Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb., senior, was awarded a Danforth Fellowship for a year of graduate work.
But somehow or other the name came out Marvin Carlson and the Wichita graduate student majoring in theater readily claimed the Danforth Fellowship and, upon request, started spinning a yarn about his history.
Yesterday we gave Marvin's history, now we'll deliver Marlan's:
Everything seemed okay until Marlan walked into the newsroom last night and announced that he had been awarded the Danforth Fellowship—not Marvin.
Martan is a senior majoring in music education. He will get his Bachelor of Arts degree in music education in June and expects to add a Bachelor of Music degree in July.
Marlan plans to use his scholarship to do graduate work at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y. His undergraduate grade average stands slightly over 2.8
N. Y. His undergraduate krew average stands slightly 28.8. He is in Phu Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional music fraternity, Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary music fraternity, Music Educators National Congress, Westminster Fellowship, University Symphony and Little Symphony.
He is also the past president of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia and last year served as president and concert master of the University Symphony.
"I don't know Marvin to speak to him but I know him when I see him since our names are so similar. I also know that I was the only KU student awarded a Danforth Fellowship," Marlan said.
Marlan plans to teach in a college after he achieves his doctorate but also stated that he would like to play violin professionally for a while.
Marvin's quote to The Daily Kansas reporter Sunday night still stands.
"There is not much around the theater that I haven't done," he said.
Winter's Tale' to Open Tomorrow for 4 Days
The University Theatre production of Shakespeare's "The Winter's Tale" will open tomorrow at 8 p.m in the theater and will run through Saturday.
Fantasy has been chosen as the style for this romantic story. Costumes and sets are designed to add to the storybook quality.
Bill Henry, Parkville, Mo., senior, is scene designer. He is the first student to design sets for a major theater production at KU.
The plot of "The Winter's Tale" revolves around Leontes, King of Sicilia, played by Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, N. Y., graduate student. He unjustly accuses his wife, played by Linda Plake, Prairie Village freshman, of unfaithfulness and causes his infant daughter to be banished.
The king's life is one of loneliness and regret until those he wronged are returned to their rightful places.
Tickets for non-students are $1.50. Students may get reserved seat tickets free upon presentation of
identification cards, Tickets may be purchased at The Theatre box office and in the Kansas Union.
Quaker Executive Speaks Tomorrow
Edwin Duckles, executive secretary of the American Friends Service Committee will speak about "The Quiet Revolution in the Villages of the Less Privileged Countries." tomorrow at a meeting of the Society of Friends.
The meeting, sponsored by the KU-Y International Commission, will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Fine Room.
Mr. Duukles has served 14 years as field director of the Mexico-El Salvador project work.
Salvador between 1955 and 1959. Mr. Duckles made several trips to Guatemala. El Salvador and Honduras.
The talk by Mr. Duckles will be illustrated by slides and a discussion will follow.
Daily Hansan
56th Year, No.135
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, April 28, 1959
Chancellor Reinstates Two Suspended Men
Asked to confirm the name of the other student reinstated, L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, said:
Two of the nine students suspended for vandalism Wednesday have been reinstated into the University on probation after conferences with Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy today.
Melvin Hawk, Aitchison graduate student, was one of the two students reinstated. Hawk and David Blackburn, Parsons junior, complained in a Daily Kansan story Thursday that they had not had a fair hearing. Blackburn has not been reinstated.
"You know I won't release the names of any student involved."
The nine students were suspended and two others put on probation after a party April 15 during which the second and third floors of a Lawrence apartment house were damaged.
In the Kansan story Thursday, Hawk and Blackburn said they had not had a fair hearing. They said they had been at the party for only a few minutes and had left before any destruction took place.
The students were told by Dean Woodruff that they could appeal to the chancellor. Hawk appealed yesterday afternoon. Later, he was
"Dean Woodruff isn't going to let me back in school. He said I can still appeal to the chancellor. I'd still like to see the chancellor," Blackburn said.
informed by Dean Woodruff that he had been reinstated. Blackburn said this morning he has not yet seen the chancellor. He appealed to Dean Woodruff this morning.
Blackburn said he will probably then appeal to Chancellor Murphy tomorrow.
Dean Woodruff said he didn't know if final action has been taken in the case. One of the other students involved was meeting with him this morning.
Booth Fad Ended?
BOURNEMOUTH, England — (UPI)—A group of students announced the beginning of an open-air variation on telephone booth stuffing yesterday. They balanced 15 of their number on the top of a pillbox—a circular mail box with a diameter about that of a manhole cover.
Debate Starts Business Day
A debate on "Life Insurance Versus Purchasing Power" will start the annual Business School Day at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Leland Pritchard, professor of economics and business administration, and Harold Krough, associate professor of business, will be the debaters. Coffee will be served.
A softball game between faculty and students at 2 p.m. on intramural field No.4 at 2 p.m. will be the second event of the day.
John Latshaw, resident partner of E F. Hutton and Co., investment bankers, will speak at a banquet at 7 p.m. in the Ballroom. Mr. Latshaw is the youngest man ever to be admitted to the New York Stock Exchange.
AWS 'Fair Ladies' Fete All Women's Day
A revised All Women's Day program, "Our Fair Ladies," will be highlighted by an honors convocation for all women students from 7-8:30 p.m. tonight in Hoch auditorium.
The other section of today's program was a fashion show and tea this morning in the Kansas Union ballroom, featuring fashions.
Fashion show door prizes of a cashmere skirt and sweater and three dresses will be awarded tonight at the honors program.
The honors program tonight will feature the installation of 1959-1960 Associated Women Students officers, the announcements of the AWS Memorial Scholarship winner, residence hall counselors, and Jay Sisters for next year.
There will also be a capping ceremony for the new Mortar Board members, recognition of Phi Beta Kappa members, and the American Association of University Women's award to an outstanding senior woman will be presented.
The program will be concluded with a presentation of "Our Fairest Ladies," which is an announcement of women chosen by their individual
houses as the most outstanding person in house activities.
Last year's All Women's Day program, "You Owe It to Yourself to be Fashionable," was held in the fall rather than the spring. The program was changed to spring this year because the AWS felt that the event would be a good way to culminate the year's activities.
Martha Crowley, Pittsburg senior, is chairman of this year's All Women's Day committee and also will be mistress of ceremonies.
Other members of the All Women's Day committee are Dana States, Dodge City sophomore, honors chairman; Joan French, Topeka freshman, and Marietta Meigs. Mission junior, program chairmen; Barbara Wilson, Wilmington, Del., senior elections chairman; Marilyn Row, Larned junior, tea chairman; Beverley Baird, Topeka junior, fashion show chairman, and Carolyn Ontjes, Hutchinson freshman, publicity chairman.
Phi Kappa Forms New Group Here
A new social fraternity will begin life at KU tomorrow as the final step takes place in consolidation procedures between the national fraternities of Phi Kappa and Theta Kappa Phi.
The new group, to be known as Phi Kappa Theta, will be a national Catholic social fraternity like both of its predecessors. The move was enacted when both fraternities voted for the merger last September. The Phi Kappa chapter has been at KU since 1915.
The initiation services will begin tomorrow at 6:30 a.m. Mass in St.
John's Church, with the formal presentation of the new charter taking place in the evening. A banquet will be held at 6 p.m. at the Holiday Inn, after which the chapter will hold an open house.
Car Damages Gas Facilities
Jerome Koehler, Phi Kappa Theta representative and alumnus of the KU Phi Kappa chapter, will then present the new charter to chapter president Harley Russell, Topeka junior.
A runaway car rolled backwards from a parking stall located at 10 Stouffer Place last night, smashing into gas meters and resulting in $150 damage to the car and $50 damage to the gas lines and meters. The car, owned by Alfred J. Mroczkowski, Lawrence sophomore, began moving when the transmission failed while in the "park position."
Alumni of both Phi Kappa and Theta Kappa Phi will receive automatic membership in the new fraternity, Russell said. Dating from the founding of Phi Kappa in 1889, the fraternity has now expanded to include 65 chapters and six colonies.
The two charters at the KU fraternity are marked by the passage of one generation. A charter member of Phi Kappa is August M. Shrepfer, Potwin, whose son, M. Waldo, is presently an active member of the fraternity. The latter will step ahead of his father by becoming a charter member of the new Kansas Epsilon chapter of Phi Kappa Theta.
PHI KAPPA THETA
NEW NAME—Viewing a plaque with the fraternity's new name, three members of Phi Kappa Theta remove the Phi Kappa name plate from
1.
the door. Left to right, Kent Morgan, Hope senior; Gerald Sanderson, Topeka sophomore, and president Harley Russell, Topeka junior.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 28.1959
Partisanship Is Your Fault
Each year a cry goes up-"Partisan representation on the All Student Council committees."
Students complain because their dormitory or fraternity does not have anyone on certain committees. The unorganized independents think there is prejudice because there are so few from their living district represented.
Now is your chance to do something about it. The ASC is taking applications for committee positions. Its main problem is that so few people have applied.
Here again apathy lulls the student body into a "who cares?" state of being. But these same students within a matter of months will begin to wonder why there are two men from Joe Blow's fraternity on key committees and his house has none. The scream will once more go up—"unfair!"
These committees can play an important role in the student's life—for example, the Housing Committee's investigation of Sunnyside and the
Health Committee's getting the new student health program. For these committees to continue their work, competent persons must apply —persons who are genuinely interested in what they can do to aid their fellow students.
Students discussed the various persons running for the All Student Council—they wanted to make sure they were qualified. This same interest should be shown toward the committee appointments. What the committee members do or do not do will affect the whole student body just as the Council's action does.
Talk to your friends who you feel would be able to carry on the work of the various committees. Urge them to apply. This is your responsibility.
Unless you have applied or have talked to your friends about applying, you will have no right to complain or criticize next fall.
The committees are an important part of student government and it is up to you what sort of government we have. —Martha Crosier
letters to the editor
What Are Our Values?
Editor:
J. A.M. Murloo published in 1956 his book, "The Rape of the Mind." It represents his studies dating back to 1933 on the various aspects of mental torture, submission because of fear, brain-washing, in effect, "rape of the mind," with very broad implications.
When I finished reading Wednesday's Daily Kansan, I was quite angry. And as I've done at other occasions when I was angry at the Daily Kansan, I controlled my impulse to "do something about it," discarded the paper, and went about my work. However, lest I fall under the condemnation of Mr. Murloo who has studied the whole matter of "passivity" for more than 20 years and may be right in part, I am now writing to you briefly.
The most concrete statement in Murloo's book which, I confess, I do not know inside out, is this: "Every man has his own psychological Maginot line—a mental fortress that he believes inviolable." My comments fall within the framework of its implications.
I object to a national advertising program which interrupts all radio and TV presentation with cigarette and beer advertisements. Does this actually reflect the standard of this—the United States—society?
I object to the use of four-year-
old children to sell soap, a certain hair-do, and finally, "a happy home," created by other group factors over which the child in no way has any control.
And finally, I object to the Daily Kansan, as the paper representing university level scholarship in this area, succeeding to the lead of society at large. In proportionate emphasis on advertising, we are almost caught up with the Saturday Evening Post; in ladies' fashions, with Seventeen. For fluidity of style, we probably excel Budweiser.
Is it impossible to get an editorial on what goes on inside leaders (they may not be campus leaders) as they stand on that solitary hill, by day, some four miles south of Lawrence, or as they pause on campus, on a quiet, starlit night. Which are the things, the everlasting values, that we want to share with our fellow-man, and transmit to our children?
Let's take 10 minutes to see whether the things we emphasize in this our society and on the KU campus are such as will "sell" in terms of foreign policy, or whether as perhaps Muruo indicates, we are being sold.
This letter constitutes my token of confidence. Please continue my subscription to the Daily Kansan.
Hepburn, Saskatchewan,
Canada graduate student
ALEN-LATZ
E.D.
CAFETERIA
T-8
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
"SAY,THEY'VE SURE SPEEDED-UP THIS 'CHOW LINE' SINCE I WAS HERE LAST."
Champions of Female Editor:
Poor, traitorous Messrs. Kennedy and McMullan that they must champion the American female. It would seem that the problem facing us should not be their protection. To use some of their remarks one could easily see a reversal of their case.
The amount of morality on campus is indeed an open question. But to be bewail a lack of maturity and in the same breath suggest further restrictions is a psychologically incompetent remedy.
Furthermore, if that which is done "after 5:30 p.m." is, in their words, possible "before 5:30 p.m.," there is strong reason to believe that the only change will be in the area of study during the day. I propose abolition of closing hours so that what would have to be done "before 5:30" could be returned to its time-honored place, and studies could be normal.
If one rewords a statement they made it would seem that "...any scheme for the tightening of closing hours has a pinkish tinge and is objectively a Red-inspired plot to demoralize American manhood."
To close I would merely congratulate them on their last issue. They have by their letter successfully convinced us that at least some of those in college are not mature.
Peter M. Gardner
Osawatomie senior
* * *
Proposed Gift Explained Editor
The senior class gift selection seems to be very much in the lime-light now. This is as it should be, I suppose, since the voting is to be at the senior coffee Thursday.
However, as the gift committee member who was assigned to look into a possible gift to Dyche Museum of Natural History, I should like to clarify its nature. It would not be a painting as has been stated in the "Kansan." The suggestion of Dr. Hall, director of the museum, was a diorama featuring the state bird and flower.
The space set aside for such an exhibit is on the second floor of Dyche and would be similar in structure to the three dimensional scenes already there.
Such a gift would not only be a memorial to the class of 1959, but would enlist paid student aid in preparation. Thus the student would be receiving the equivalent of a scholarship while learning techniques of exhibit preparation.
An estimated fifty-thousand or more people visit the museum yearly. These include school children from the surrounding area for whom the diorama would be a visual lesson worth many words of a text book. On the college level it would be a lasting teaching aid in mammalogy, biology, ornithology, botany, entomology, and ecology of the area.
No. John Husar, a diorama is not a "vague and useless item."
Barbara Richards
Hays senior
the took world
Allen-Lentz
By Jerry Knudson Instructor of Journalism
THE HUNGER AND OTHER STORIES by Charles Beaumont, Bantam, 35 cents.
Billed as "a collection of violent entertainments ... for the ghoul in you," this collection of startling short stories reaches a macabre intensity that adds new dimensions to the grotesque.
Readers will find a collection of characters ranging from "Miss Gentibelle," an insane woman who insists her son is a girl, to a spinster in "The Hunger" who seeks out a rapist-murderer for his love.
In "The Dark Music" a Victorian biology teacher is seduced by a Satyr; in "Tears of the Madonna" a Mexican boy discovers his prostitute friend plays the role of the Virgin in a theatrical tableaux.
The unexpected dominates Beaumont's stories. They range from a whimsical humor in "The Vanishing American," in which a nondescript office clerk regains his individuality by fulfilling a lifelong dream of riding the stone lion in front of the library, to stark morality plays such as "Last Night the Rain," wherein a stone-built Tower of Sin topples over and crushes a small girl.
Humor pervades "Free Dirt," story of the catastrophe which befalls the man who gets free dirt from a cemetery to build up his garden. Perhaps the finest story is "Black Country," which captures the pain and release which produced jazz.
* *
FANCIES AND GOODNIGHTS by John Collier. Bantam, 50 cents.
More of the weird and fantastic by a writer picked by some as heir to the mantle of H. H. Munro, better known as "Saki." On the basis of this collection, the praise seems premature, however.
Collier suffers from lack of style. His plots are often engagingly bizarre but he needs polish to give them form, "Evening Primrose" is the strangest, embracing a group of characters too weak to face the world. They go underground in large department stores, emerging only at night to prowl the deserted buildings.
Inevitably, a genie tale shows up in a book such as this, and "Bottle Party" adds a new twist to devilish trickery. "Spring Fever" offers a new variation on the living ventriloquist's dummy theme. Fifty stories, but the chaff outweighs the grain of originality.
\* \* \*
THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH, edited by Louis B. Wright. Pocket Library. 35 cents.
Another paperback edition of "Macbeth" appears, this one distinguished by a thorough-going introduction by editor Wright, who is director of the Folger Shakespeare Library. Carefully explicit notes appear opposite each page.
The introduction discusses the tragedy, which came between "King Lear" and "Antony and Cleopatra," from the standpoints of "A Study in Evil," text and history of the play, the author, the publication of his plays, and the Shakespearean theater. References for further reading are appended.
This edition in the Pocket Library series calls to mind Richard Armour's recent book, "Twisted Tales from Shakespeare" (McGraw-Hill, $2.95) in which he describes "Macbeth" as "full of beautiful passages, such as the hallway in Macbeth's castle, where Lady Macbeth loved to fingerpaint on the wall with other people's blood."
Worth Repeating
To a brave man, good and bad luck are like his right and left hand. He uses both. —St. Catherine of Siena from Rudolf Flesch's "The Book of Unusual Quotations" quoted in the Reader's Digest
***
On the whole, I think we shall survive. The outlook is as bad as it has ever been, but thinking people realize that—and therein lies the hope of its getting better.
— Jawaharl Nehru in "Forbes" quoted in the Reader's Digest
** **
If I were a godfather wishing a gift on a child, it would be that he should always be more interested in other people than in himself. That's a real gift.
Sir Compton Mackenzie in the London Sunday Times quoted in the Reader's Digest
***
An American will tinker with anything he can put his hands on. But how rarely can he be persuaded to tinker with an abstract idea. —Leland Stowe in "They Shall Not Sleep"
Dailu hansan
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.
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 ... Douglas Parker, Managing Editor
Business Department ... Bill Feitz, Business Manager
Editorial Department ... Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier,
Co-Editorial Editors
Tuesday, April 28, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
OYO
SPRING FEVER?—Wheels pack the load for Richard Miller, Campus Postman.
THE GARDEN PICNIC
INSECURE?-Cigarettes are carefully hidden from a Kansan photographer as Mary Easta-
brook, Carol Potter, Judith Newell, and Gertrude Anderson enjoy yesterday's weather.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, will present a trophy to each of the winners in the men's and women's divisions.
Inter-Residence Sing Starts Tomorrow
Judges for the sing are Joseph F. Wilkins, professor of voice, Elim K. Jorgensen, professor of education, and Mrs. Douglas Wallace, a Lawrence voice instructor.
The small ensembles entered are Douthart, Battenfeld, Grace Pearson, Joseph R. Pearson, Miller, Pearson, and Watkins Halls.
Men's and women's voices will ring the air with song in the annual Inter-residence Association Sing at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The large ensembles entered are Douthart, Battenfeld, Gertrude Sellards Pearson upperclass, Grace Pearson, Foster, Sellards, Joseph R Pearson, Watkins, Pearson, and Miller Halls.
Special entertainment will include
a small vocal group of Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen, a combined ensemble of Watkins and Battenfeld Halls, and folk songs sung by Lora K. Reiter, Simpson sophomore.
Architecture Films To Be Shown Wed.
Three movies on architecture will be shown at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Bailey as part of the film features program.
The first, "Miracle Builders," shows examples of ancient architectural engineering.
The interior decorations of two Baroque churches in Germany are featured in the second film.
The third film will show trends n residential, industrial and other types of architecture.
Radio Programs
KUOK
Tonight
3:10 KU-Central Missouri
5:30 Uninterrupted Music
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
9:05 Music from Beyond the Heavens
10:05 "Train to Nowhere" with Ron Abrams
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Ron Abrams
12:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert—“Diverti-
mento in D Major” by Haydn
7:00 Symphony Hall
7:30 Choral Concert
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air:
Southeast Asia in Modern
Times
8:55 News: Between the Lines
9:00 FM Concert
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music—"String
Quartet No. 2 in D Major" by
Borodin
11:00 Sign Off
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
TODAY
11:00 Sign Off
Official Bulletin
Le cercle francais, mardi a quatre heures, ne s'étend pas de l'union de France, de la M. Morot-Sir le Dauphin
Corcogall Morning Prayer,
with breakfast following. Canterbury House.
Ph.D. French Reading Exams: 9 a.m.
Saturday, Fraser 11. Leave books with
Mr. De Coster in Fraser 5-B by Thursday
Hometown Correspondents: Deadline
4 am May 4 at
Public Relations Office 212-756-0780
Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Summer Job—Schilling AF Base. Salina.
Cheerleader Tryouts, tomorrow and Thursday. 7:30 p.m. in 101 Robinson.
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
May 9. Candidates planning to take
the exam must register by noon Friday in
306 Fraser.
Faculty Forum. Mr. Dolph Simons, Jr. speaks about his recent visit to South Africa. Noon in the English Room of the Union.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, Paston Britton,
chapel services. Danforth, 5-5:20 p.m.
University Theatre, 8 p.m. "Winter's
milieu."
Jay Janes, 5.00 p.m., Pine Room, Rush Tea and Meeting.
inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
Dantorf Chapel, speaker, prayer 12:15-
12:30.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
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. Christian Science Campus Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
University Theatre, "Winter's Tale," 8:00 p.m.
ASTE Annual Banquet, 6:30 p.m. Kansan
Fairground, 210 West 49th Street,
by Wednesday at 6:00 p.m. in 200 Fowler.
Maps available at www.fowler.com.
Smallest Library Is Busiest
By Sara Pfeiffer
If you've ever walked the ancient corridors of Fraser Hall, chances are you may have noticed an unofficial sign on the ground floor proclaiming the "Extension Library."
Beyond the sign, and inside a small room is one of the busiest spots of the University, for there is housed one of KU's most-used branch libraries. Stocked with a wealth of reference material, the Extension Library provides invaluable services for hundreds of Kansas residents.
Each year thousands of requests or information are received by the library. These requests usually come from small towns which do not have adequate library facilities.
Bigger Year
"We usually send out over 5,000 loans a year, but this year we expect a bigger total," said Mrs. Virginia Maddox, director. "In March alone, we answered 986 requests," she said.
The majority of requests are answered by a unit called a package library. These "portable libraries" contain a dozen or two magazine clippings, several pamphlets, and possibly a book or two, all dealing with a single subject.
Each request is considered an individual reference problem, and
each package library is assembled with the particular needs and interests of the borrower in mind. The package library may be borrowed for a nominal fee, plus postage, for a period of two weeks.
'Rush Season'
"I think this is because so many small high schools use our service for spring term papers," Mrs. Maddox explained. "If students can't find adequate information in their towns, they turn to us for help," she said.
The KU Extension Library is the only library of its kind in state institutions in Kansas. Similar services are provided by the state library in Topeka, but on a much smaller scale.
The library staff of five full-time members and five part-time assistants has been working particularly hard recently, for March and April is the "rush season" for the library.
"Although students here at the University cannot use this library, I think that they might be interested in knowing how it might be
Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
Medics Attend Insurance Seminar
of use to them after they finish college," Mrs. Maddox said.
John V. Black, Pratt senior, chairman of the All Student Council student health committee, is accompanying Dr. Cauteson. Black is on the committee for the planning of insurance for KU students.
More than 24 Kansas colleges attending the seminar will hear discussions on insurance payment costs for students. Dr. Canuteson will discuss the common health care needs of students.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of student health service, is attending a Blue Cross-Blue Shield seminar on health insurance for college age students in Topeka today.
HIXON STUDIO
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
6-Hour in by 10 a.m.
out by 4 p.m.
Photo-Finishing
FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak)
A
HALLMARK
Presents Eugene O'Neill's
AH, WILDERNESS
With Helen Hayes, Lloyd Nolan Burgess Meredith
TONIGHT AT 8:30 P.M.
Color Television
IN THE UNION
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 28, 1959
.
Bikes Seen as Ulcer Easers
Do you suffer unspeakable frustrations when your car is stalled in the inevitable throng of automobiles along Jayhawk Boulevard? Do you mentally wince as you shell out dollar after dollar for your car's appalling consumption of gasoline and oil? Do you long to be free from the burden of "keeping up with the Joneses" in having the latest model sports car or limousine?
Then disgruntled drivers of the campus, unite!
banish the cumbersome, finance-draining automobile and put in its place the vehicle of the future... the bicycle!
Consider the advantages of this two-wheeled chariot.
Dear to everyone's heart is the state of his pocket-book. What
could be more wonderful than having no staggering fuel bill to pay, or no transmissions, pistons, or mufflers to replace. Merely wheel your Schwinn Deluxe to a convenient air pump, (free, of course) fill up, and you're off!
No Depreciation
The initial costs of bicycling are far below those of automobile driving, too. A meager $5 will buy a good, if slightly used cycle. Invest 25 cents in a scarlet reflector, and a license tag and you're ready for action.
What's more, you don't have to be a master mechanic to keep a bicycle in workable condition. A simple tire-repairing kit plus one small can of oil will take care of squeaks and punctures.
Bicycles are not only economical and easy to maintain, but easy to park as well. No more lost hours as you drive endlessly around looking for a parking place. Simply replace the parking areas with rows of shiny bicycle racks (which take up much less room) and never again will you have to master the intricacies of parallel parking.
The Tandem Is the Answer
Those amorously inclined are undoubtedly wondering just what to do about dating. Simple! Purchase a tandem, strike up a chorus of "Daisy," and your problem is solved.
So, if you want to be free from irksome transportation problems then turn to the true vehicle of the future, the bicycle!
Campus Club News
Pi Lambda Theta
Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education sorority, has announced the initiation of 38 new members.
Initiates are Donna Ashley, Chanute; Ellen Bartley, Kansas City; Kan; Lavena Brown, Colby; Barbara Cook, Independence; Janice Cornwell, Salina; Barbara Crisswell, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorothy Drake, Webster Groves, Mo.; Margaret Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Ellund, Summit, N. J.; Marjorie Hallman, Hudson.
Julia Herrick, Kansas City, Kans.; Hazel Hodge, Hutchinson; Sherri James, Emporia; Janet Jackson, Lawrence; Jackie Johnson, Hutchinson; Marietta Meigs, Mission; Mary Kay Myers, Lawrence; Loretta Nauman, Alton; Sandy Owens, Kansas City, Kan.
Mary Strong, Columbus, Ohio;
Nancy Suellenfort, Great Bend;
Margaret Tolle, El Dorado; Lois
VanLiew, Lawrence; Carol Weidensaul,
Shoshoni, Wyo.; Barbara Werbe,
Kansas City, Mo.; Kay Cronkite,
St. Joseph, Mo.; Lois Hays, Norton;
and Brenda Johnson, Atchison. All are juniors.
Jackie Strickler, Winfield; Paula Bartlow, Silver Lake; Carolyn Cash, Augusta; Alise Parker, Coffeyville; Rosemary Stebbins, Ellis; Sandra Harding, Lawrence, and Gayle Kinemond, Bushton. All are seniors.
Martha Cook, Maryville, Mo., Emma Owen, and Geneva Mendenhall both of Lawrence, graduate students.
Jav Janes
Jay Janes, upperclass pep club for women, has announced the initiation of 20 new members. Sharon Shaffer, Chillicothe, Mo., junior, was honor initiate.
Kay Crumly, St. Francis; Janet Douthitt, Augusta; Jean Elston, Topeka; DeAnna Hensley, Mission; Kathie Hupp, Wichita; Barbara Hutchinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Weidensaul, Shoshoni, Wyo.; Dixie Widup, Parsons; Carol Sparks and Vickie Zuber, Kansas City, Mo. All are juniors.
Other initiates are Sue Corliss, Spring Hill; Candy Harley, Wichita; Judy Mott, Lawrence; Kaye Porter, Sterling, and Carol Stover, Colby, sophomores.
Denise Brown, Lawrence; Frankie Eberly, Seneca; Carole Houck, Syracuse, and Bobbie Young, Everest, all seniors.
Miss Florence Black, associate professor of mathmatics and Miss Maude Elliott, associate professor of romance languages, were made honorary members.
The new sponsors for Jay Janes are Miss Marilyn Stokstad, assistant professor of history of art, and Miss Wilma Morton, instructor of secretarial training.
--secretary; Jan Douthitt, Augusta junior, treasurer; Judy Mott, Lawrence sophomore, social chairman; Carol Weidensaul, Shoshoni, Wyo., junior, historian.
Sharon Shaffer, Chillicothe, Mo. junior, has been elected president of Jay Jones.
Other new officers for the coming year are Victoria Zuber, Kansas City, Mo., junior, vice president; Kaye Porter, Sterling sophomore,
... On The Hill ...
- * *
Phi Kappa
Larry Dieker,
was awarded the
trophy of Phi
Thursday. The
Russell, Topeka
the trophy.
Dieker, Westphalia junior,
carded the annual Honor Man
of Phi Kappa fraternity
day. The president, Harley
Topeka junior, presented
phy.
As a member of Phi Kappa fraternity for two years, Dieker has twice served as president and is presently a member of the executive council.
Linda Michael, Kansas City, Mo; Bilie Lamkin, Kirkwood, Mo; Marilyn Rockwell, Wichita; Marilyn Miner, Merriam; Barbara Lewendusky, Leighton, Pa, and Donna Roberson, Mission. All are freshmen.
***
Chaperones were Mrs. Anna McDorman and Mrs. Mildred Wogan.
Corbin-North Hall
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity held its "Casino Party" at its chapter house last weekend.
Others on the committee are Emilie Hopkins, Kansas City, Mo.; Julia Reed, Clearwater; Judy Bock, Topeka; Darlene Trueblood, Mission; Anne Gile, Delphos.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Barbara Wingard, Independence, Kan., and Sue Morgan, Wichita, were elected co-chairman of the regulations committee for Corbin-North Hall.
. . .
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass., VI 3-2966
Delta Gamma
Other officers are Sally Pringle, Kansas City, Mo., secretary; Joyce Campbell, Abilene, treasurer; Diane Allen, Lawrence, social chairman; Sarah Walker, Leavenworth, and Sue Morgan, Wichita, junior panhellenic representatives.
The fathers were entertained by the Pinafore Skit.
Delta Gamma sorority held its annual fathers' weekend recently. A banquet at the Dine-A-Mite was given in their honor.
Brunch was served Sunday morning and the fathers and daughters attended church and had dinner at the Holiday Inn.
Brenda Morris, Caney freshman, has been elected president of the pledge class of Delta Gamma sorority for the spring semester.
Laurie Riley, Arlington Heights, Ill., song leader; and Diane Devine, Topека, sargeant at arms. All are freshmen.
Jean Elston, Topeka junior, publicity chairman; Mary Elda Searth, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, song leader; Carol Sparks, Kansas City, Mo., junior, assistant song leader; Carol Stover, Colby sophomore and Kathie Hupp, Wichita junior, Red Pepper advisors.
* *
June Carter, Lincoln, Neb., junior and Sue Corliss, Spring Hill sophomore, Phi Sigma Chi delegates; Prue Faulkentbury, Emporia junior, alternate delegate, and Kay Crumly, St. Francis, junior, Phi Sigma Chi corresponding secretary.
Phi Delta Phi
Don Humphreys, Ashland, second year law, has been elected magistrar of Phi Delta Phi, professional legal fraternity, for next year.
Other officers include Dan Young, second year law, exchequer; Larry Fiss, second year law, clerk, and Bob Edmonds, first year law, historian. All are of Lawrence.
Terry Fiske, Lawrence, scholarship chairman; Bill Dye, Wichita, program chairman; Willis Brown. Atwood, social chairman; Mike Grove, Lawrence and Mike Stout, Bazaar, rush chairmen, all first year law.
---
Phi Delta Phi, professional legal fraternity, has announced the initiation of 19 new members.
Initiates include John Logsdon, Coffeyville; Ivan Poe, Peabody; Mike Stout, Bazaar; Chester Arterburn, Jr., Emporia; James Snyder, Jr., Leavenworth; Willis Brown, Atwood; Norman Steanson, Troy.
Tom Smith, Horton; David Buxton and Bill Dye, Wichita; Robert Collins, George Detsios, Bob Edmonds, Terry Fiske and Norman Grove, Lawrence. All are first year law students.
Gene Anderson, Belleville senior; Don Humphreys, Ashland, second year law, and Don Meeker, Leavenworth, second year law.
More people by far...use HERTZ Truck rental
Cut moving costs! Rent a modern Chevrolet. Drive it yourself.
HERTZ TRUCK RENTAL LICENSE
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UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS SHAKESPEARE'S "THE WINTER'S TALE"
April 29-30, May 1-2
8 p.m.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE
UNIVERSITY THEATRE
KU Students Free Admission With I.D. Card
Puffed sleeves, puckered at the shoulder, are best worn by tall women. That graceful flared sleeve will find shorter women its advocates.
Tall or short, puffed or flared,
the new sleeves add another bit of
femininity to the woman and
another trend to the wardrobe.
The temperature sometimes reaches 100 degress in Alaska during the summer.
The state flower of Georgia is the Cherokee Rose. Its state bird is the Brown Thrasher.
Grease Job $1
Brake Adj. 98c
Muffers and Tailpipes Installed Free
1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change
PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt.
DANIEL BROWN
On Campus with Max Shulman
(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and,
"Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
THE MANY LOVES OF THORWALD DOCKSTADER
When Thorwald Dockstader—sophomore, epicure, and sportsman—first took up smoking, he did not simply choose the first brand of cigarettes that came to hand. He did what any sophomore, epicure, and sportsman would do: he sampled several brands and then picked the mildest, tastiest, pleasingest of all —Philip Morris, of corris!
Similarly, when Thorwald took up girls, he did not simply select the first one who came along. He sampled. First he took out an English literature major named Elizabeth Barrett Grisht, a wisp of a girl with luminous eyes and a soul that shimmered with a pale, unearthly beauty. Trippingly, trippingly, she walked with Thorwald upon the beach and sat with him behind a windward dune and listened to a sea shell and sighed sweetly and took out a little gold pencil and a little morocco notebook and wrote a little poem:
I will lie upon the shore.
I will be a dreamer.
I will feel the sea once more
Pounding on my femur.
Thorwald's second date was with a physical education major named Peaches Glendower, a broth of a girl with a ready smile and a size 18 neck. She took Thorwald down to the cinder track where they jogged around 50 times to open the pores. Then they played four games of squash, six sets of tennis, 36 holes of golf, nine innings of one old cat, six chuckkers of lacrosse, and a mile and a quarter of leap frog. Then they went ten rounds with eight-ounce gloves and then they had heaping bowls of bran and whey and exchanged a manly handshake and went home to their respective whirlpool baths.
AUGUST 1940
"I think I'll stick with PHILIP MORRIS." he said
Thorwald's final date was with a golden-haired, creamy-browed, green-eyed, red-lipped, full-calved girl named Totsi Sigafoos. Totsi was not majoring in anything. As she often said, "Gee whillikers, what's college for anyhow—to fill your head full of icky old facts, or to discover the shining essence that is YOU?"
Totsi started the evening with Thorwald at a luxurious restaurant where she consumed her own weight in Cornish rock hen. From there they went to a de luxe movie palace where Totsi had popcorn with butter. Then she had a bag of chocolate covered raisins—also with butter. Then they went to a costly ballroom and cha-cha'd till dawn, tipping the band every eight bars. Then they went to a Chinese restaurant where Totsi, unable to decipher the large and baffling menu, found a simple way out of her dilemma: she ordered one of everything. Then Thorwald took her to the women's dorm, boosted her in the window, and went downtown to wait for the employment office to open.
While waiting, Thorwald thought over all of his girls and came to a sensible decision. "I think," he said to himself, "that I will stick with Philip Morris. I am not rich enough for girls."
. . .
$ \textcircled{c} $ 1959. Max Sbulman
Anybody is rich enough for Philip Morris—and for Philip Morris's brother cigarette, filter-tip Marlboro, the cigarette with better "makin's". The flavor's fine, the filter filters, the price is right.
Tuesday, April 28, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
KANSAS STATE HERE TODAY—Jerry Williams will be in the No. 2 singles spot today when the Jayhawkers play Kansas State on the KU courts. KU, playing without Lynne Sieverling and Sal Lekagul, split with Nebraska and Iowa State on last weekend's road trip. Friday Kansas will be host to Missouri. Saturday will again see the Kansas team on the road, this time to Topeka for a match with Washburn.
Battenfeld Victorious In Hall Track Meet
Battenfeld, with 43 points, was especially strong in the dashes and relays. Foster Hall was runner-up with 39 points. Stephenson had $18\frac{1}{2}$ points, Jolliffe, $17\frac{1}{2}$ and Pearson, 10.
JACK ROGERS
Battenfeld Hall defeated four other dormitories in the first annual men's scholarship hall track meet Saturday.
Battenfeld came out on top in three of the four relay events. Jay Mellies, Glenn Albright, Dennis Hayes, and Dave May won the 440-yard relay with a time of :49.0.
The 880-yard relay was won by Jim Sanders, Dave Armentroff, Hayes, and May in 1:45.5. The mile relay was won by another Battenfeld crew of Elmo Law, Dave Crawford, Mellies, and Bob Henderson in 4:06.4.
The medley relay, the only one not dominated by Battenfeld, was won by Foster Hall with a time of 4:23.0.
Scores in the individual events were:
60-yard dash — 1. Henderson,
Battenfeld; 2. Niebaum, Jollife;
3. D. Leitch, Stephenson, Time: 7:05
880 - 1. Dudey, Foster. Time:
220.3
2:20. 220-yard dash — 1. Henderson,
Battenfeld; 2. W. Leitch, Stephenson:
3. Niebaum, Jollife. Time: 25.0
Villarreal, Stephenson. Distance: 38 feet 2 inches.
man. Postdash. Time 100-yard dash — 1. May, Battenfeld; 2. Niebaum, Jolliffe; 3. Henderson. Battenfeld. Time: 104.
440-yard dash — 1. Dudey, Foster; 2. Homberg, Jolliffe; 3. Minneman, Foster. Time: 58.5.
son, Battenfeld — 1. Niebaum, Jolliffe;
2. Hayes, Battenfeld Distance:
19 feet 4 inches.
High Jump — 1. Johnson, Foster;
Bogart, Battenfield; 3. Sanders,
Battenfeld. Height: 5 feet, 6 inches.
Shot Put — 1. Myers, Foster; 2.
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By United Press International They said it couldn't be done, but they failed to reckon with Don Drysdale or those unpredictable first-place Dodgers.
By United Press International
Dodgers Riding High
Never in the history of the National League has a ball club finished seventh one year—as the Dodgers did last—and then won the pennant the next—as Walt Alston's crew is threatening now.
The odds-makers were convinced it just couldn't happen. They backed up that belief by making the Dodgers 25-1 shots before the season began.
But those odds looked entirely out of line Monday night when the Dodgers stretched their lead to a full game by beating the Pirates, 9-3, behind Drysdale's nifty six-hit pitching.
The victory was Drysdale's first over Pittsburgh since 1957 and his third of the season. Quite a difference from a year ago when Drysdale's record was 0-3 and the Dodgers were floundering in last place.
The Los Angeles-Pittsburgh game was the only one played in the majors Monday. The only two other ones scheduled—Chicago at Milwaukee and San Francisco at Philadelphia—were rained out. All the American League clubs were idle.
In addition to his pitching, Drysdale, a guy who swings a mean bat, also collected two of his team's 11 hits and had a hand in a five-run first inning rally that chased George Witt and sewed up the game for Los Angeles.
Bill Alley, the Jayhawkers' record-breaking javelin thrower will be featured in the lead story of the May 4th issue of Sports Illustrated magazine.
Don Demeter, the league leader
Alley Featured in Sports Magazine
The article tells of Alley's reasons for switching from Syracuse University to Kansas because he wanted to be on a national champion track team. In the story, the KU ace says he thinks the Jayhawkers will take the top national honor this year.
Last weekend, Alley continued his assault on javelin records as he hurled the spear 253 feet, 5 inches at the Drake Relays for a meet record.
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in runs batted in, increased his tota to 20 when he singled to left for two runs. That blow finished Witt, who suffered his third straight loss, and brought in Ron Blackburn. The Pirate reliever issued an intentional pass, then gave up singles to Don Zimmer and Drysdale which produced three more runs.
The KU golf team defeated Washburn $11 \frac{1}{2}$ to $3 \frac{1}{2}$, at the Topeka Country Club yesterday. Brien Bogess of KU was the medalist with a 73.
Golf Team Defeats Washburn at Topeka
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — (UPI) — Whether the Kentucky Derby draws one of the largest fields in its history hinged on the 32nd running of the $15,000 added Derby Trial at Churchill Downs today.
Preliminary Trial to Pick Horses for Kentucky Derby
Other scores for the Jayhawkers were: Bill Toalson, 74; Leon Roulier, 77; Fred Rowland, 81, and John Bowser, 89.
First Landing, who has yet to explode this season with the speed and power which crowned him champion a year ago, was a stronger
Sixteen three-year-olds, a record field were entered for this final "do or die" qualifying test of Derby candidates. And to give each and every one of them a true chance to prove his right to run in America's most spectacular horse race, officials solit the Trial into two sections for the first time.
Nearly half-47 per cent of the natural gas produced in Texas is consumed there too.
Finnegan ruled an 8 to 5 favorite to win the first division of the Trial. He faced Hoist Away, Royal Orbit, Mosby, Troilus, Open View, Rico Tesio and Bernmattar.
Finnegan, winner of the California Derby, headed the first division. First Landing, the 1958 juvenile champion, headed the second.
They are the yardsticks by which rival owners and trainers will determine whether or not to take a shot at the Kentucky Derby, the most coveted prize in thoroughbred racing.
favorite in the second section. He was an even money choice over John Bruce, Quantrell, Dunce, Sundown II, Our Dad, Master Palynch and Steno Bill.
Johnny Longden, who rode in his first Derby 22 years ago and won with Count Fleet in 1943, rides Finnegan. Eddie Cararo, the Derby riding champion with five winners, rides First Landing.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 28, 1959
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1954
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Page 7
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 TO BUY: 20 second hand, good formalms, sizes 9 to 14. Call after 5 p.m.
at VI 3-1497. 4-28
FOR RENT
FURNISHED APARTMENT OR HOME by September 1, married graduate students, can furnish references, no children. Call VI 2-0467. 4-30
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APARTMENT for one or two men, one block from Union, ideal study and living conditions, reasonable. Available June 1. call VI 3-8534. 4-28
APT. FOR BOYS; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outdoor, open for boys. No drinking or smoking. Can be seen first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 4-28
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, nice. clean,
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APARTMENT for the summer or longer. Unfurnished bedroom, living room, kitchen and dining area, good location. Call VI 2-0114 after 5 p.m. 4-29
UNFURNISHED APARTMENT. 5 rooms with basement and private bath, clean and in good condition. Nice neighborhood and within walking distance to KU. $75 per month plus utilities. 1629 Kentucky. Call George Frye, VI 3-7191.
THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished.
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919 Indiana. 5-4
MODERN THREE ROOM APARTMENT,
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BUSINESS SERVICES
FINEST FLAT-TOPS. and friendly
bagging room. Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts.
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type themes, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660.
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequit, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tf
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast, error free service, free pick up and delivery. Call VI 3-3508. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates for training, certification, accurate work. Class VI 3-1240. Mrs. John L. Glinka. 1911 Tennessee t.
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 102115 Mass.
Swedish massage, steam cabin, etc.
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Introduction. Equipment available for limited time. VI 3-2132. t
'53 Ford V-8 Automatic
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BRITISH MOTORS
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'58 Volvo White
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'55 Jaguar Coupe
black, red leather $2,395
MOST SKILLED FOREIGN CAR SERVICE IN LAWRENCE.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type terms, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
NOTHING LIKE IT in *Lawrence*—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete set of equipment for all purposes. Complete lines of Exotic Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal., stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; best for outdoor use. Wear sweaters, blankets, etc. … Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tr
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
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DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS.
Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
941$^1/2$ Milk. Ph. VI 3-5263.
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PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance reservations at a partial student-faculty rate. Call VI. 0124
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest
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TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. 736 Tenn.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. General rates, Mrs. Tom Brady, VI 3-4437.
GUARANTEED ALTERATIONS, trousers,
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ELECTRIC TYPEWRITE to do thesis.
experiment etc. Experienced typwriter IVI 3-6249 5-11
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LAWN MOWING. have new lawn mower.
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Call Vi 3-5573.
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic. party supply ice plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI.
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ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CAR INSURANCE? If you are over 25 and a safe driver, you may qualify for an ATI 3-5454 or at VI 3-9244 after 5 p.m. Representing Charlton Insurance Agency, serving Lawrence since 1861. 5-1
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.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts, Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
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WESTMINSTER HALL at 1221 Oread is being replaced. The building is for sale individuals or organizations should contact Dr. John Patton at 1221 Oread. 4-40
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, and diagrams from the course; complete cross index of over 600 terms. Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7533, 805 Ohio
SPECIAL SALE OF BOOKS at 50 cents
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---
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English: FEATHERED MUSICAL GROUP
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 28, 1959
Frosh Street Dance Saturday Is Precedent
The parking lot of Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin-North Halls will be the scene of a street dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday.
This is the first time a cooperative street dance has been held on the campus.
Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla. junior, and originator of the idea said, "I thought that the two dorms, being next door neighbors, should be closer in their social programs. I thought our big parking lot would be a good place to combine and have a big street dance."
An Old Idea
Miss Bumgarner had the idea for the dance last year, but because of illness she was forced to leave school for a semester. She said that she returned to school with the idea still in mind and that everyone has worked hard on the plans.
Patricia Patterson, assistant dean of women said, "I think it's fine for them to try it. I hope the weather cooperates."
Nancy Knauss, Garnett sophmore, said, "There has been a lot of cooperation from the house residents and the girls in the dorms. Without cooperation it sure wouldn't be a success. I hope it'll be a tradition."
Mary Sue Taylor, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said, "I have my fingers crossed for good weather. The street dance may set a precedent for novelty parties. I've gone to some at home and they're so informal. We may start a new fad."
Moreau to Go to Louisville
F. J. Moreau, professor of law,
will be the guest speaker Friday at
the University of Louisville to assist
in the oservance of National
Law Day.
Prof. Moreau's subject will be "The Rule of Law and the World."
Wit, Logic Blossom Before Audience
A battle between logic and wit was waged before a packed audience last night as American and English style debate locked horns in Bailey Auditorium.
Ray Nichols, Lawrence junior, and Don Bowen, Salina senior, engaged in the verbal jousting with E. C. Dalrymple - Alford and Fredrick Crawford, of the University of London, in the annual International Debate.
There was no decision in the debate because of the difference in the two styles of debating.
"In England we depend much more on wit and humor. American debate is logical, while ours is more comical." Crawford said.
The KU team took the affirmative side of the question, "Resolved; That Democracy is a Perverted Form of Government."
"Democratic government is perverted because it declares that all men are equal. Would a plumber be elected president?
In opening the debate, Nichols gave four points which he said caused a perverted democratic government.
"Democratic government gives every individual the right to make several choices. How can uninformed people make the proper choices necessary to run a government as large as ours?"
"When we believe in a society in which all men are free, we often neglect duty. The increase of mass democracy has made chivalry die on the vine.
"Democracy takes intellectual non-conformity from mankind and decreases the efficiency of government. Democracy supports conformity in current fads, but neglects the heritage of the past," Nichols said.
In answering Nichols' charges, Alford said:
"Democratic equality does not mean equality of position or intelligence, but equal rights in determining the leaders of the government.
"If the majority of people in a democracy should happen to make a wrong choice, they would at least be suffering from their own mistakes. This is much more tolerable than suffering from the mistakes of someone else.
"We would rather have tyranny of the masses than tyranny of an individual. At least then the people would be doing what they like and not what one selfish person wants for himself," he said.
Seniors who disagree with the senior gift committee's recommendations for the class gift will have an opportunity to write in their own choices, a gift committee spokesman said.
Crawford pointed out that the countries with low standards of living are those with demogogues and tyranny of an individual.
"Mr. Nichols says that democracies cause chivalry to die on the vine. Isn't the duty of citizens to look after the welfare of their own country? This is the duty that democracy inspires.
Write-In on Senior Gift Is Possible
The class gift will be chosen at the annual senior coffee from 10 a.m. to noon Thursday in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. Seniors will be excused from classes for the meeting.
The gift committee has selected three possibilities for the gift: Kansas Union furniture, trophy cases and a commissioned painting.
Feline Fable
Springtime Is Littertime
By Martha Pearse
Spring is a pregnant season bursting with possibilities.
Greek houses have entered into the spirit of the season by announcing blessed events.
Acacia fraternity takes pride in announcing the birth of four kittens. The mamma cat became attached to the Acacias shortly before she was due to bear her offspring.
Mostly fair this afternoon, tonight and Wednesday. Mild this afternoon. Warmer Wednesday. Low tonight 35 to 40 northwest, in 40s elsewhere. High Wednesday 75 to 85.
The Acacias, disturbed by this natural phenomenon, persuaded the sweet young thing to have her babies in the closet. Men are such cowards.
Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma were blessed by a similar event. Another mamma cat, litter-ally bursting with life, climbed a fire escape at the sorority house and
Weather
entered her chosen hospital through an open window.
There she brought forth her family of four. To the dismay of assisting Kappa midwives who stood by during the wee hours of the night, they discovered the feline belonged to their door neighbors, Sellards Hall. The Sellards girls, frantic with worry, were relieved to see the birth announcement from the Kappas.
Drive in Today
Let Us Supply Your Car Needs Leonard's Standard 9th & Ind.
After Six BY RUDOFKER
WHITE DINNER JACKETS
SALES OR RENTALS
the town shop
DOWNTOWN
the university shop
ON THE HILL
- If You Have Said Nasty Things About Student Government
- If You Have Planned a Revolution Against Those in Power
- If You Have Cancelled Your Subscription to the Daily Kansan (because they have favored student government)
COME HOME - ALL IS FORGIVEN!
ASC Appointments Now Being Accepted in the Dean of Students Office
Student Union Operating Board
Traffic & Parking
Student Court
ASC Secretaries (25)
Film Series
Calendar
COMMITTEES
Commencement
Convocations & Lectures
Eligibility
Athletic Board
Student Athletic Seating Board
Public Relations
Housing Labor National Student Assn. Traditions Social Publications
Campus Chest Homecoming Student Health Disciplinary Orientation
ALL APPLICATIONS DUE THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 4:00 P.M.
---
Two of Five Fail English Proficiency
For the third semester in a row a higher percentage of students failed the spring English Proficiency Examination than ever before in the history of the examination.
Out of 407 students taking the examination, 162-39.8 per cent failed. There were 245 students- 60.2 per cent—who passed the examination.
Last fall 31.9 per cent of the students taking the examination failed it. This was previously the highest percentage of failures. The next highest percentage of failures was in the spring of 1958 when 31 per cent of the students who took the examination failed it.
All students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Nursing, School of Education, and
School of Journalism are required to pass the English Proficiency Examination before graduation from the university.
The next examination will be given June 20.
David Dykstra, instructor of English, said yesterday there has been a higher number of failures in the past in the spring examination than in the fall examination.
"More students take the examination in the fall, which means that there will be a higher total number of failures. Many of the students who fail the examination in the fall take it again in the spring. This higher proportion of repeaters will have an effect on the percentage of failures," he said.
Fall Failures Repeat
Mr. Dykstra also attributed the higher percentage of failures this year to the new English Proficiency Examination exemption rule which went into effect last fall.
All who pass English 2H with an A or a B, or English I and II with grades of A, or English IH with A or B and English II with a grade of A, are exempt from the proficiency examination.
"The new rule takes the better students out of the examination. This means that the percentage of poor English students taking the examination is higher and, therefore, the percentage of failures will be higher." Mr. Dykstra said.
All examination papers will be turned over to the Writing Clinic in 112 Strong D. Any student who
took the examination and particularly those who failed it may go to the clinic for counseling from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Each examination paper was graded by a minimum of two and a maximum of four readers. If either of the first two readers failed the paper, it went to a third reader. Each paper required two passing grades or three failing grades.
"We gave the student the benefit of considerable doubt in requiring one more failing grade than passing grade to finish the paper," Mr. Dykstra said.
"Also, if a paper had two passing grades and two failing grades, it was considered a passing paper. However, this situation did not arise often."
Each student was required to write two essays from a choice of 25 subjects for the four hour examination.
The topics ranged from current and campus events to personal experiences and politics.
Subject of Interest "We tried to provide a subject
Wednesday. April 29. 1959
Daily hansan
that could be associated with the interests and backgrounds of all of the students." Mr. Dykstra said.
The compositions were graded on organization, paragraphing, specificity, relevance of content, grammar, usage, punctuation, and spelling.
Mr. Dykstra said that neither grammatical construction nor thought content was given preference in the grading of the paper.
"Both factors are important in any paper. However, if a paper had worthwhile, specific content and was written in unusually incorrect grammar, it was failed. A minimum standard of grammar is really fundamental to any paper," he said.
In explaining the reason for giving a proficiency examination, Mr. Dykstra said:
"One of the purposes is to require students who are not exempt from the examination by good English grades to demonstrate that they can write acceptable prose at least once during the two years before their graduation."
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year. No. 136
COLUMBIA CITY TENNIS CLUB
AUGUST 1954
TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP
FOR THE YEAR 1954-55
PRESENTED BY:
THE COLUMBIA CITY TENNIS CLUB
AND
THE YAHOO TENNIS CLUB
FOR THE YEAR 1954-55
DISTRIBUTED BY:
THE COLUMBIA CITY TENNIS CLUB AND
THE YAHOO TENNIS CLUB
FOR THE YEAR 1954-55
COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT
YAHOO TENNIS CLUB
FOR THE YEAR 1954-55
COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT
YAHOO TENNIS CLUB
POSSIBLE CHOICE—Robert G. Billings, Russell senior, points to a possible location for one of the senior gift choices. Billings is chairman of the gift committee, which has suggested a trophy case, a diorama, and new furnishings for the Kansas Union. With Billings is Larry L. Dunlap, Salina, vice president of the senior class. See page 2 for an editorial offering a write-in choice for a class gift.
Seniors' Coffee Boils Tomorrow
After four years of waiting the seniors will have their chance to leave something to the University, and if this year's gift selection coffee is anything like other years' there should be a rip-roaring time trying to narrow the choice down to one gift.
The 10 a.m. coffee tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom may produce an assortment of suggestions for the class gift to the University.
Three Nominations Made
Suggestions made by the gift committee are a trophy case for Allen Field House. furnishings for the Kansas Union addition and a diorama for Dyche Museum.
The seniors may vote upon one of these choices or write-in their own choice upon the ballot.
Some class members favor establishing a loan or scholarship fund for worthy students.
"I feel that we should give what the class wants to give," he said.
Bill Witt. Garden City, senior class president, said:
Against Grade Award
"I am rather against a scholarship because 1.200 seniors would be contributing to one or two individuals. It is a temporary and intangible thing that only one or two people would benefit from. Perhaps we could give something like this at our 25th reunion," Witt suggested.
Program events at the coffee include a class progress report, a treasurer's report, information about graduation and the class picnic, and the discussion and voting on the gift.
ASC De-feathers 'Fowl'; Destroys Official Roost
"Fowl" magazine, the one-issue humor publication by and for students at the University of Kansas, was given the axe at a meeting of the All Student Council last night. It is no longer the official humor magazine.
In other action the council provided that members who miss more than two regularly scheduled meetings without a written excuse or four regularly scheduled meetings with or without a written excuse will be dropped from the council and replaced.
The council also denied, after long debate, an amended Graduate School request for $250 to be used as travel grants to students with exchange scholarships.
Jim Austin, Topeka junior, and Terence Davis, Frontenac senior, the new president and vice president of the student body, were sworn in along with other new council members.
The original motion concerning the "Fowl" stated that it be designated an official humor magazine to be published at the discretion of the student body president.
The motion was amended to read that the section of the Publications Bill designating the "Fowl" as an official humor magazine be stricken.
The amendment also stated that any funds remaining in the magazine's operating fund be transferred to the ASC treasurer when current obligations are met. The amendment and the main motion as amended passed unanimously, thus abolishing
The program included the installation of the 1959-1960 Associated Women Student officers, a capping ceremony for new Mortar Board members, recognition of new Phi Beta Kappa members, the announcement of the AWS scholarship winner, new residence hall counselors, Jay Sisters, and the presentation of The American Association of University Women's award to an outstanding senior woman.
A presentation of "Our Fair Ladies," an announcement of women chosen by their individual houses as the most outstanding person in house activities, concluded the honors program.
Convocation Honors Coeds
A complete list of women honored yesterday will be found on page three.
Many of KU'S "Fair Ladies" were honored last night at the first annual All Women's Day Honors Night program in Hoch Auditorium.
Davis, vice president of the student body, said:
"Personally I would like to see no official campus humor magazine."
John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. senior and outgoing president of the student body, agreed with him.
"The trend across the country is to do away with these humor magazines," he said. "They're purely trash."
The motion concerning council attendance was passed by a 12-2 vote.
Any council member missing the specified number of meetings will be dropped from the council and replaced.
A motion concerning the Graduate School's request for $300 was amended by the council to $250. Members of the council debated whether the council had sufficient funds to grant this request.
After the final meeting of the old council adjourned and the new council met and nominated candidates for ASC offices. The new council will vote on the nominations at the next meeting Tuesday.
The motion, as amended, was defeated 11-7.
Nominations were made for candidates for All Student Council positions at the meeting. More nominations may be made at the next meeting of the ASC on Tuesday.
Chairman-Larry Blickhan, Prairie Village junior; Ronald Dalby, Joplin, Mo., sophomore; Lawrence Dieker, Westphalia junior; Frank Naylor Jr., Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, and Rudy Vondracek, Timkin junior.
Vice-chairman-Barry Ken Gray, Lyons sophomore, and Theodore Hall, Garden City junior.
Secretary—Sara (Sally) Carnahan, Topeka junior; Martha Rowe, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Sarah Shaffer, Russell junior, and Mary Carol Stephenson, Pittsburg sophomore.
Treasurer--Diecker; Gray; Sharon Hagman, Pittsburgh junior, and James H. Henderson, Wichita junior.
Nominations will be reopened at the next meeting Tuesday.
Today's Kansan
Proficiency List Page 4
Jayhawker Trail Page 5
AWS Honors Page 3
Gift Editorial Page 2
Editor Barr Blasts Bar; Cries 'Foul' to Council
"Fowl," until yesterday the official source of campus humor, appeared today to be an ugly duckling and the source of official confusion
Bill Barr, Dodge City sophomore and editor of the magazine, adopted a "wait and see" attitude about whether another publication will be made.
He indicated he would confer with KU administrators today to see if the magazine could still be published.
John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. junior and past president of the student body, said the action was not meant to be a reflection on the staff members of the "Fowl."
He said it was the ASC opinion that humor magazines over the past years have been an insult to the students and the quality of the publications fail to justify the time and expense involved.
"It should be left up to the members of the staff as to whether the magazine is a worthwhile way to spend its time. The ASC shouldn't dictate how our time is spent," Barr said.
Barr also denied the charge that the magazine was unable to justify the expense of producing it.
"The magazine always comes out
in the black at the end of the year. It always leaves money for the next year's magazine to begin operation
There is no ASC appropriation or subsidy involved. The magazine is self-supporting.
Barr also questioned the ASC reasoning that the magazines were on a lower level than the KU campus should have.
"Why does the ASC consider itself above reading the humor that is spoken everyday on this and every other college campus?"
Barr had not heard about the ASC action until contacted by the Daily Kansan in the middle of the morning. He felt the Council should have notified him the magazine's future was under consideration.
"I don't know what to do with this next issue." he said.
Advertising space has already been sold and covers printed. There is a possibility Barr may be able to publish the magazine without official sanction.
Weather
Partly cloudy this afternoon. A little warmer tonight and tomorrow under partly cloudy skies. Low tonight in the 50s. High tomorrow 75 to 80.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 29. 1959
Seniors, Vote HOPE
Hope is the word of the 20th Century. And HOPE is the gift the senior class of 1959 should bestow upon its University—HOPE-Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators.
This is the gift The Daily Kansan proposes for consideration.
Senior class dues are approximately four dollars. Forty per cent of this goes toward the class gift. This is $1.60 per senior, and with this seniors would have a fund of $2,500 for the gift. At an annual rate of interest of 4 per cent, the fund would earn $100 each year.
We propose that this $100 a year be awarded to a University faculty member who has made the greatest contribution to insuring the welfare of his students and increasing the prestige of the University in the arts or sciences during the year.
HOPE will benefit the University not only materially but spiritually. This gift from our senior class will set a precedent that may have repercussions throughout our University, state and even nation.
Other graduating classes have given gifts that can be seen and felt—a bench to sit on, an awning, a clock. They have placed plaques on walls as testimonials to their gifts. But time and weather wear down these witnesses and people hurry by without stopping to read. But HOPE is perpetual. Time cannot blot it out nor weather erase it. And people will not hurry by without noticed.
HOPE is revolutionary. It will stand as a permanent memorial to the Class of '59, and as it is awarded each year it will call to the mind of all students, faculty and alumni that our class was looking forward to recognize where the real emphasis in our educational system must lie.
HOPE speaks of its own time—the 20th Century—our age of nuclear warfare and the possible destruction of mankind. Our main pole of steadfastness today is hope. And our greatest hope lies in better education.
HOPE will contribute to the needs of our age. It will honor an educator who contributes the most toward building a finer KU.
Seniors, go to the class coffee at 10 a.m. tomorrow.
Vote for HOPE! —The Editors
THE PEOPLE
Israel — 'Occupied Territory'
letters to the editor E.D.
Editor:
The description of Israel as a part of the Arab League is the perfect example of the dyed-in-the-wool refusal to see the truth—which both individuals and nations
I was very surprised at the Foreign Student Festival to see a map of the Arab countries in which Israel was marked as a member of the Arab League. Completely incredulous, I asked the Arab representative at the counter, if there had not been a hilarious mistake. Instead she informed me that it was "occupied territory."
How can there ever be progress in international affairs, until a willingness to face realities, replaces faith in the superiority of propaganda and political slogans to facts?
The word "occupied" has purely a military significance, when applied in this context, and has obviously no reality when used to describe the mass immigration of civilian Jews from other parts of the world.
The troubles of the Arab world spring no longer from Western imperialism, which exists only today in Algeria, but from the incompetence of the Arab politicians, whose love of rhetoric seems to have hidden the facts of political life from them.
seem often to prefer to being sensible. It was a poor example of international brotherhood at an international exhibition.
The real enemy of the Arab people is not Israel, but Russian Communism, and the deprivacy of the old ruling class.
Denis Kennedy
Denis Kennedy
Dublin, Ireland, graduate
student
Allen-N-Lewton2
--itt is unlikely that in the near future the American student will continue to have himself treated as in a nursery school, while students in Europe are regarded as adults, responsible, not subject to outside campus rules, and—as in the case of some universities in Sweden and France—live in student houses possibly as a next door neighbor to a student of the opposite sex.
Medieval Morals
Editor:
Not only, however, will the American student not accept being treated like a child any more, but in the years to come the dissemination of the neurotic phobia of the preservation of pure, white
What Dennis Kennedy and Jim McMullan wrote about "strictier closing hours" (Wednesday's Daily Kansan) obviously represents only the preliminary skirmishes of the battle yet to come in the decades ahead of us.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
virginity will turn into a sad joke. Who, even today, would still justify the degrading seclusion of human beings on the grounds of medieval morals or the meaningless concept of sentimental virginity?
No, when one day we shall send our children to college, we will not be able to lock them up behind closed dormitory doors. They will want to be human beings again and proud of it, judge of their own actions.
COEDS WANT A MILLION DOLLAR WARDROBE FOR COLLEGE ---
Harald Meyer Assistant Instructor of Western Civilization
Harald Meyer
COEDS WANT A MILLION DOLLAR WARDROBE FOR COLLEGE --
AND WHAT
DO THEY WEAR
WHEN THEY GET THERE !?!
AND WHAT
DO THEY WEAR
WHEN THEY GET THERE !?!
Poetry Corner
By Augustine G. Kyei
The day called tomorrow;
It's just a few hours off,
Firstly, if today fasty fades off.
The day called tomorrow;
It lies atop the midnight crest,
Within range of another day's
wrest.
I waited for tomorrow,
All day once;
But tomorrow never came.
But there is tomorrow;
Who has seen tomorrow?
The day called tomorrow:
It's all profit,
It's unprofit;
It's all deceit,
It's all defeat;
It's all misery,
It's all mystery;
Man's end can end;
It's a destiny of being;
It's eternity.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas Student newspaper
University of Kansas University of Kansas
triview 1908, dull Jan. 16, 1912,
triview 1908, dull Jan. 16, 1912,
Extension 711, news room
Extension 276, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association
Associated College Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.
Provides oral services to national 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 summer vacation. Second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879.
kity 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Telephone VIking 3-2700
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker ... Managing Editor
Al Jones, John Husar, Jack Harrison,
Jim Cable, Assistant Managing Editors,
Jack Morton and Carol Allen,
Congressman Robby Daugherty,
Doug Yocom, Co-Sports Editors;
Sandra Hayn, Society Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BILL FEITZ Business Manager Robert Lida, Advertising Manager; Howard Young, Classified Advertising Manager; William F. Kane, Promotion Manager; Paul Nielsen, Circulation Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier. Co-
Editorial Editors; Robert Harwil, Asso-
ciate Editorial Editor.
It Looks This Way . . .
By Ray Miller
We have the distinct feeling that the Journal-World's editorial staff was desperate for copy again Monday. They have trotted out that age-old and extremely over-worked "Why the student immunity?" question again.
After the usual vague references to someone called the "University" and "KU officials" who are "guilty" of refusing to release the names of students involved in a wild party, they started throwing terms such as "academic freedom," "responsibility of the individual" and dark threats of there being a "double standard" around.
After nine long, tiring paragraphs, we arrived at the crux (we think) of the editorial.
We quote: "Students involved in such activities still are the ones responsible for them—not the parents, the church. . ."
The next statement the editor makes is that students should have to answer for their actions the same as anyone "not fortunate enough to be enrolled in college at the time he commits a misdemeanor or felony."
We agree with the writer (the editorial was not signed) on this point. However, the writer did not take into consideration the fact that the students did realize they were responsible and paid a total of $115 in damages to the landlord.
Let's face facts: The students involved were guilty of no misdemeanor or felony by virtue of the simple fact that there were no charges filed. The students answered for their actions to the landlady, who chose not to press charges.
If these students had been private citizens, the affair would have been dropped with the paying of damages. Where-oh-where does the Journal-World find justification for wanting to print the names of private citizens guilty of nothing except of having been disciplined by the University for a mistake that they had previously paid for?
If the students involved had been guilty of a misdemeanor or felony as the Journal-World insinuates, their names would have been a matter of public record, obtainable from the police upon request.
The Journal-World has repeatedly said that "the laws that are good enough for the ordinary persons do not appear good enough for students."
It seems that the Journal-World means this in the sense that "the laws that are strict enough for the ordinary persons do not appear strict enough for students."
It is evident that the Journal-World believes in a discriminatory policy which would have a student give up all rights to anonymity and privacy in order to subject himself to "trial by newspaper."
the book world
By Jerry Knudson Instructor of Journalism
AMERICAN HERITAGE, April 1959. $2.95.
A prim portrait of Elizabeth I attributed to Gwilym Streates on the cover of this issue is fair indication of the material within. The lead article, "The Elizabethans and America," first of a five-part series, rather sketchily traces the Elizabethan contribution to the voyages of discovery.
Author A. L. Rowse claims to be the first historian to examine this facet of a vigorous queen's reign. His approach leads him into the rather specious "what-if" school of history. What if Elizabeth had heeded the advice of William Cecil, Lord Burghley, and chose not to challenge Spain's monopoly in the New World? His answer throws little light on history as it did unfold.
***
Possibly of most interest is an article on the Adams papers, "Whatever you write preserve," an admonition which John Adams handed down to his illustrious family. Write the Adamses did, and the preservation of this voluminous mass of manuscripts became a sacred family responsibility until the trustees turned the entire collection over to the Massachusetts Historical Society in 1956.
Thus the carefully guarded family documents became available to scholars without reservation for the first time since John Adams, second president, bought his first blank "Folio Book" in 1776. Historians everywhere eagerly await the Harvard University Press edition of the papers now underway, and the public will be exposed to glimpses of the Adams family through the pages of Life magazine.
This is a remarkable account by L. H. Butterfield of the zeal and self-discipline with which succeeding generations of Adamsses recorded their times. John Quincy Adams, sixth president, despaired that his task was "like the race of a man with a wooden leg after a horse."
Henry Adams, pessimistic descendant, later charged. "The old man did nothing but write, during seventy years without stopping." Historians and the American people can be thankful that this dedication produced the most comprehensive, intact collection of original sources on our national past.
. . .
Elsewhere in this issue, editor Bruce Catton sums up baseball's history in "The Great American Game"; a hoax of Scandinavian seafaring prowess is exposed in "The Case of the Kensington Rune Stone"; the Comstock Lode fever is recreated in "Go It, Washoe!" Sir William Johnson emerges as "Father to Six Nations"; "A Season in Utopia" re-examines Brook Farm; "Puccini in America" traces the genesis of "The Girl of the Golden West," and "The Voyage of NorWest John" follows the John deWolf voyage into the Pacific, Alaska, and Siberia in 1804.
'The Russian Idea' Is Humanities Lecture
Page 3
The last Humanities Series lecture this year will be given at 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 12, by Dr. Georges Florovsky, professor of Eastern church history at Harvard Divinity School. He is an archpriest in the Eastern Orthodox Church.
In his lecture on "The Russian Idea," Dr. Florovsky will analyze the vocation of Russia as interpreted by eminent Russian authors and thinkers.
At 4 p.m. on Monday, May 11, he will participate in an "open conversation" about Pasternak's "Doctor Zhivago" with Prof. George Ivask and Sam Anderson, KU teachers of Russian.
European Fashions Modeled at AWS Show
A style show that featured fashions from prominent designers of Europe highlighted the AWS All Women's Day yesterday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
From the Shetland Islands came seamless sweaters which are knitted on hand looms, kilt plaid skirts of Scottish woolen and woven knit fabrics which won'travel and which do not need to be lined.
The sloping shoulder, cowel collar, jewel and keyhole necklines, cartridge pleated skirts, pockets or flaps below the yoke, handmade buttonholes and elastic waistbands were
featured details of the imported collection.
Other fashion came from Hanro
Liestal, Switzerland; Bleyle, Stutt-
gart, Germany; Gina di Pelazia
Torino, Italy; Bryant, Tillicoultry,
Scotland; Allen Solly, Nottingham,
England; Tullock, Sheltland Islands,
Scotland, and Glen Har, Glasgow,
Scotland.
'Our Fair Ladies' Honored
The groups of women honored are as follows:
AWS Senate officers—Alice Gould, Kansas City, Mo., junior, president; Jann Cameron, Topeka junior, Board of Standing Committees, Tex. sophomore, vice president; Sara Farmer, Pratt freshman, secretary; Diane Hoisington, Paradise sophomore, treasurer; Cecille Coe, McMerson junior, Adjunct Professor; Independent representative; Mary Gay Dillingham, Salina sophomore, ASC Greek representative; Linda Scifers, Pittsburg, and Joyce Viola, Abilene; McMerson represents Sara Farmer; Topkea represents to House; Janet Juneau, Topkea, and Karen Krueger, Yates Center, juniors, Barbara Holm, Prairie Village, and Nan Kimberly; Topkea, sophomores, and Sheila Ryan, Aurora, Mo., freshman, all Senate members.
AWS House of Representatives—Ann Hoopinggarner, presiding officer; Carolyn Caskey, Independence, Mo., sophomore, vice president; Judy Anderson, Garden City freshman, secretary; Sara Carnahan, representative to Senate.
Mortar Board—Beverley Baird, Janet Cameron, Sara Carnahan, and Jane Crow, Topeka; Marilyn Bell and Trudy Gier, McPherson; Alice Gould and Elinor Hadrick; Andrea Pinto; Karlan Ison, Overland Park; Janet Douthitt, Augusta; Barbara Fields, Webster Groves, Mo.; Alice Forsberg, Logan; Sue Suran, Hurgs; Sherri James, Emporia; Phyllis McCampbell, Kansas City, Kan.; Nicole Olsen, Montreal, Alton; Ruth Rieder, Raytown, Mo.; Sharon Shaffer, Chillicothe, Mo., and Jula Stanford, Concordia, all juniors.
Phi Beta Kappa -Helen Adler, Fredonia; Mary Helen Clark, Rozanne Barry and Carolyn Davis, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Fuchs, Erin Ann Cox, batafugae Sue Stout, and Anne Lasater, Wichita; Linda Farmer, Pratt; Barbara Goldsby, White Plains, N.Y.; Marcia Hall, Coffee; Gail Connell, Sacramento; Shane Murray, Lawrence; Eliza Klanze, Bartlesville, Okla.; Gayle Kenoyer, Hugoton; Kala Mays, Lyons; Laurian Seeber, Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y.; Virginia Stephens, Parsons; Barbara Wilson, Madison; Del., and Joyce Isaacson, Macksville.
Huge handbags are definitely in the fashion picture. Many shown yesterday were of straw trimmed with leather and of black patent.
AWS Memorial Scholarship winner-
Carolyn Caskey, Independence, Mo.
sophomore.
Residence Hall Counsclors — Shevie Shuman, Kansas City, Kan., senior; Patricia Sortor, Kansas City, Kan.; Judith Khanna, Kansas City, Kan.; Meep-Meep, Shirley Ingmire, Council Grudge Joan Murray, Pleasanton, and Ruth Rieder, Raytown, Mo., all juniors.
Residence Hall Counselors — Peggy Chessmore, Atwood; Lorain Clark, Lawrence, Donis Edmonds, McLouth, Le-Passer, Kansas City, Rickenbenton, Tori Patricia, Smith, Shawne, and Ruth Jean Spangler, Hutchinson, all sophomores.
Jay Sisters—Susan Baker, Holton; Sally Barhydt, and Sherrie Spoignat, Prairie Village; Martha Bevacqua, Merriam; Judith Garrity, Robert Cox; Janet Wright and Sally Spoonable, Paola Maria; Carolina Ontjes and Judy Ningering, Hutchinson; Sandra Cozette Cynthia MacNeal, Martha Rowe, Kathleen Anderson, Mo.; Pricilla Crichley and Linda Scifers, Pittsburgh; Cirginiia Dresher, Lyons; Sandra Edson, Bethany, Moe; Sarah Farmer; Pratt Jean French and Marcus Nelson; Morgan, and Lawanna Steele, Wichita.
Janice Hoke, Rebecca Myers, and Betsy O'Hara; Salina; Karlene Howell, Diane Iara; Carol Keeler, Carol Ott, and Lois Howell; Karol Kemper, Suzy Howell; Clipton Mo.; Harriet Jouy Larned; Nancy Kauffman, Emporia; Pat Lanning, Bartlesville, Okla.; Connie Lillian, McPherson; Lynn Magnuson, Western Springs, Ill.; Racine Male, Russell; Breese Adams; Malyn Simpson; Valley Folsom; Carole Pinkie; Groves, Mo.; Charlotte Roberts and Barbara Wingard, Independence; Sheila Ryan, Aurora, Mo.; Ms. Stes Simpson; Newtontown; Sharon Tilman, Clay Center; Roberts, Pa.; Marissa Ellis; Susan Wendt, Kirkwood, Mo., and Joanne Woodhull, Lawrence, all freshmen.
AAUW Award to outstanding senior woman — Eleanor (Tudy) Youngberg, Lawrence, and Kala Mays, Lyons, honorable mention.
“Our Fair Ladies” from each organized house—Alpha Chi Omega, Phyllis Anderson. Wellington senior; Alpha Delta senior; Alpha Kappa Alpha junior; Senior; Alpha Kappa Academy, Joan Elston, Topeka sophomore; Alpha Omicron Pi, Saar Seaver, Wichita sophomore; Alpha Phi, Sharon Day, Ulysses junior; Chiropractic major; Ohio College; more; Corbin-North College; Joyce Viola, Abilene freshman; Delta Delta Delta; Dorothy Drake, Webster Greves, Mo., Ohio; Oakland College; cinnati; Ohio; senior; Douthart, Mary Ann Markham, Hollywood, Fla., junior; Gamma Phi Beta, Sally Sue Wheat, Overland Park Junior; Gertrude Sellars; Ohio University, GASP upperclass, Jane Crow; Topeka; Grace Pearson, Marilyn Wiggins, Lyons senior; Kappa Alpha Theta, Kelsey Gellau, senior; Kappa Kuma Gamma, Theta, Prentice Mia Miller, Miller, Janet Shirley, Kansas City, Kan freshman.
Pi Beta Phi, Creta Carter, Jennings senior; Sellards, Dixie Widup, Parsons junior; Sigma Kappa, Jane Boyd, Newton senior; Watkins, Marilyn Shaw, Galena junior.
Fashion Show Door Prize Winners—Joan Murray, Pleasanton, and Suzanne Thompson, Des Moines, Iowa, both juniors, and Loree Antenen, Bazine freshman, one dress each, and Wynne Luskow, Lea Lus, one, one cashmere skirt and sweater.
New colors include willow, honey,
putty, seafoam, and olive. Peacock
blue and emerald green will be
frequent fashion go-togethers. The
bright colors are the thing for summer
and sports wear.
Iridessent cottons and tablecloth and windowpane checks will be summer favorites. Shorts will be made of disciplined denim, light weight canvas and tournament cloth.
Sweaters will be shorter this year to emphasize the waistline. V-neck sweaters worn over blouses and sweaters of bold shaker knits will be in vogue. Plaid skirts, jerkins and all silk blouses were modeled. Leotards will be on the scene again next fall.
Swim suits of nulon and lastex with V-necks, deep V-backs and featuring bright colors were modeled. Caps to match the suits, beach coats and robes and beach bags rounded out the necessary accessories.
Seniors Get Ad Awards
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
AAA
Mrs. Clydene Boots Brown, Isabel, and William F. Kane, Stafford, both seniors, are attending the 14th annual college awards program this week of the Advertising Club of St. Louis. Their selection as representatives of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information carries the honor of outstanding senior woman and man in advertising courses.
Bank of America
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
Wednesday, April 29, 1859 University Daily Kansan
MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY
VI 3-0131
Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming
ASC committee appointments are now being accepted in the Dean of Students office
ASC COMMITTEE APPOINTMENTS Last Chance — Deadline Thursday, April 30
Public Relations
Labor
Social
COMMITTEES
Housing
Publications Many Others
Students interested in working in one of these committees apply immediately. Applications due Thursday, April 30.
Stephen Hill Top Speaker
Stephen Hill, Lawrence senior,
won the first annual Delta Sigma
Rho Public Affairs Speaking Contest
last night in Bailey Auditorium.
Hill was awarded a set of Encyclopedia Americana for his speech on "Eternal Vigilance."
In his talk, Hill said that society exists for responsible people and slips away from apathetic people.
"An aware public might be a responsible one. If the public could be made aware through education, then it might become more responsible." Hill said.
Other participants in the contest were Sue Ann Elmore, Stafford junior, Robert Nebrig, Leavenworth junior, and Georgia Erickson, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
They Only Serve The People LONDON—(UPI) One hundred fifty garbage collectors were on strike today because city officials refused to let them sell tidbits plucked from the trash cans.
The orchid grows from the smallest seed in the world.
Health Study Grant Awarded to KU
KU has received a $14,947 grant from the National Institute of Health to support the training of graduate students and postdoctoral trainees in experimental pathology.
The grant is one of 18 made in the United States for training of research scientists in eight basic medical and health related sciences.
The Twentieth Century Fund estimates that only two per cent of the earth's total surface is fully suited to agricultural production.
For Expert
Watch Repair And All Your Jewelry Needs
WOLFSON'S CREDIT JEWELERS 743 Mass. VI 3-4366
(1)
Ivy smartness . . . short sleeve comfort!..
Manhattan
MANSMOOTH LIGHTWEIGHT
BATISTE OXFORD SHIRT
OF 100% COTTON . . . NEEDS NO IRONING
Every inch is ivy with all the important ivy details. And they're there to stay because MANHATTAN'S Mansmooth shirts are just as carefree as they can be. Tailored of 100% cotton they wash easily and dry to a neat, wrinkle-free appearance,they need no ironing.
$4.50 and $5.00
the town shop
DOWNTOWN
the university shop
ON THE HILL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 29.1959
Banquet Climaxes Business Holiday
John Latshaw, resident partner of the E. F. Hutton and Co., investment and banking firm, will be the principal speaker at the annual Business School Day banquet tonight.
The banquet will climax a day of activity that began at 10 a.m. today with the dismissal of all business classes and a debate on "Life Insurance Versus Purchasing Power," by two faculty members.
Mr. Latshaw is in charge of the more than 30 offices of his company from coast to coast. In 1942, shortly after his graduation from Missouri University, he became the youngest member ever admitted to the Mid-West and New York Stock Exchanges.
He will speak on the topic "Invest In America."
During the banquet, scheduled to start at 7 p.m., James R. Surface, Dean of the school, will present scholarships and awards to outstanding students.
Watson Library will sponsor a "Fine-Free" program for overdue books Saturday for the first time in the library's history.
Fines Suspended On Overdue Books
Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will send a car to every organized house Saturday to pick up any overdue books which residents may have.
Overdue books may also be returned to Watson library desks during the library's regular Saturday hours, 7:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. No fines will be charged.
Senior Awarded $1,300
Peter M. Gardner, Osawatomie senior, was recently awarded a $1,300 Harrison scholarship from the University of Pennsylvania College of Arts and Sciences.
Radio Programs
Gardner is majoring in cultural anthropology and will graduate in June. He plans to use his scholarship for graduate study.
KANU
Tonight
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Trio No. 1 in B Major, Op. 8" by Brahms
7:00 Concerto Concert
7:30 News
7:35 The Atom and You
7:50 Wednesday Evening Opera: "Barber of Seville" by Rossini
10:00 News
10:05 A Little Night Music: "Quartet No. 1 in C Minor" by Brahms
11:00 SIne Of
11:00 Sign Off
He Blocked His Own Road
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — (UPI)—Robert Bradford, State Director of Public Works, bought a new house here last year. He'll have to vacate it soon for a public work—it's in the path of a new freeway.
KUOK
4:00 Music in the Afternoon
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
7:05 Musical Pathways
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies and
Sports
8:05 KUOK Album Time
9:05 Wednesday Night Dance
10:05 Dwight Norman Show
11:00 Luckv Strike Melodies
11:15 Dwight Norman Show
12:00 Sign Off
Tonight
List of Those Passing Proficiency
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
Fraternity Jewelry,
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Akins to Harkins
Balfour
411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Anna V. Akins, David H. Allen, Stanley S. Allen, Robert E. Allison, Marilyn E Alpert, Robert A. Anderson, Sara E Alpert, W. Anderson, P. Armstrong G. Bathy, Paula M. Bartlow, George J. Beener, James R. Bell, Joseph S. Bennett, Jerome W. Berryman, Joseph S. Bennett, Mary J. Chester A. Botter, Mary J. Brewer, Jacqueline J. Bright, George H. Briles, Richard W. Brownlee, Thomas A. Bruce, Betty K. Judenth, L. Burnside, Jesse Udallon
Sara J. Carnahan, Beverly J. Caruthers,
Joanna M. Challman, Ralph L. Chappell,
Cue Chowring Thorn, Thomas D.
Dorsey, Cooper, Dorothy J.
Cox, David E. Crawford, Barbara A.
Cukjati, William D. Cunningham, Clifton
Cushman, Don D. Day, George De-
Bertolini, Michael H. Driner,
Driller, Mark A. Dull, Mary A. East-
brooks, Carol N. Edwards, John R. Egle,
Gerald T. Ellott, Donald W. Elston Jack,
Richard R. Endacott, Judith A.
Enna.
Harrington to Nielsen
Marilyn A. Erickson, Norman S. Ernsting, Marilyn A. Evans, Ann K. Fahrbach, Jeffrey Echt, Edith C. Floyd, Eileen Fischer, Cloyd, Alan D Forker, Constance S. Fowler, Carolyn Fox, Jane Fugate, Albert N. Gardner, Robert B. Gardner, Edith M. Garrison, Robert H. Garrison, James R. Gillespie, James R. Gillespie, Maria C J. Gillett, Keith E. Goering, James L. Green, Joan C Gryder, Marjorie E. Hallman, Kenneth D. Kninkinson, Judith E. Harding, Joseph P.
Richard E. Harrington, Gayle F. Harris,
Robert L. Hayes, John R. Hedstrom, Cynn-
laine J. McCormick, James A. Beyer,
James E. Hensley, Marilyn R. Heming,
Eric T. Henry, Deanna L. Hensley.
Official Bulletin
Hometown Correspondent: Deadline
May 4 at Public Relations Office, 222 Street
TODAY
Ph.D. French Reading Exams: 9 a.m.
Saturday, Fraser 11. Leave books with
Mr. De Coster in Fraser 5-B by Thursd-
ay.
Lutheran Gamma Delta, Pastor Britton, chapel services. Danforth, 5-5-20 p.m.
University Theatre, 8 p.m. "Winter's Tale."
Jay Janes, 5:00 p.m., Pine Room. Rush Tea and Meeting.
Quill Club, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room of Kansas mission including of sales cam-
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 1-0330
Statewide Activities Executive Board Meeting, 7 p.m. Alumni Office, 127 Strong
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
M. Whitttier, Martin W. Wilcox, Richard P. Wilcox, Carlee J. Wilson, David D. Wilson, Glee E. Wilson, William F. Woo, Kenneth R. Zabel.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
Holy Communion, 7 a.m. with breakfast.
Cheerleader Tryouts, 7.30 p.m. in 101 Robinson. Salesperson Campus Counsel
University Theatre, "Winter's Tale,
8:00 p.m.
Thomas D. Herlocker, Oscar C. Herrman,
Judy Hirsch, Nancy Holmes, Faxon G.
Hansen, James Heffner, Faxon G.
Uhlett, Kathryn A. Happ, Shirley M.
Hutchson, Barbara L. Hutchinson, Carol
J. Immer, Ise H. Irwin, Ann Isbell, Betty
Rockefeller, Bruce R. Johnson, Jackie D.
Johnson.
Christian Science Campus Organization,
7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
- Portraits
- Weddings
- Engagements
- Application Photos
by photography
Portraits
Weddings
Engagements
Application Photos
by photography
HIXON
STUDIO
Lance F. Johnson, Molly S. Johnson,
Audrey F. Kaull, Frances A. Keith,
Charles R. Kelly, M. Kary H. Keith,
Charles R. Misha, M. Kary H. Susan,
Killeer, Gladys E. Knapp, William E.
Kobs, Wallace C. Koster, Robert V. Krahl,
Edgar R. Krieger, Richard F. Krueger,
Robert T. Krueger, Susan L. Krueger,
D. Lee, Hazen D. Lee, Stanley A. Lehman,
Barbara M. Lemert, Susan M. Lowry,
Sharon L. Luxford, Neil E. Margurid,
John M. Martin, John L. Massa, Lawrence
Novotny to Zabel
HIXON STUDIO
Marilyn L. S. Sprong, Roger D. Stanton,
Sydney A. Stooppelwerld, Louise Strassburg,
Carlene H. Strong, Joseph H.
Staackenberg, Laundra J. Ullentrop,
Roanne K. Swanson, Swallen
Swartz, James L. Sweet, Anne B. Taylor,
Margaret E. Tolle, Bonnie L. Tomilinson,
Gerald K. Tousele, Charles E. Tuttle,
Bennett E. Uhlig, Lois A. Vanlien, Karen
CAMPING
Stanley E. Vermillion, Donald R. Vesper, Anton A. VIierthalter, Alice I. Wetkins, Michael D. Watkins, Robert K. Weir, Karen J. Wells, Charles E. Wetzler, Earl L. White, James
James R. Mathis, Richard E. Mattingly,
Mary M. Maxwell, John H. Mayer,
Phyllis M. Garcia, Susan M. Gerald,
Pengy P. Peigas, Mc Guire, Gerald
McKain, Linda L. McKinney, Ruth E.
Milam, Jerry G. Miller, Norman F. Misser,
Amor A. Mitchler, Nicholas A. Moore,
Mary W. Morgan, P. Morgan,
E Moser, Paul D. Motkus, Arlen T.
Mueller, Marilyn M. Mull, Donald F.
Munday, Robert M. Myers, Robert A.
Rosemary B. W. Myers, Charles E.
Nelson, Paul M. Nielsen.
Philip R. Rosenshield, William H. Ruedemann, John B. Rust, Leo C. Salters, V. D. Sandford, Eddie J. Schissler, Verlyn Schmidt, Frances A. Schuster, Shvee Smedl, Nicole D. Strickens, Ericrika, Robert E. Sellars, Patricia A. Sells, Ernest Shelby Jr., Charles T. Sherman, Roger L. Singleton, Sherron M. Skaggs, Roger L. Spencer, Katherine C. Smitzev, Martha F. Smith, Mary K. Smith, Donald G. Sooby, Suzan Spainhour, Carol L. Sparks, Norma J. Spresser.
Marion J. Novotny, Meredith A. Nystrom, Nancy L. O'Brien, Robert D.
O Farrell, Robert V. O'ffall, Suzanne J. Parker, L. John L. Patten, Janet C. Peckenschneider, Clark H. Petersen, Marvin D. Peterson, Judith M. Pierce, Barbara P. Pomeyer, James A. Pusateri, Yacouch A. Qandil, Leonora S. Rankin, James J. Ransom, Thomas H. Miller, William L. Reed, Richard C. Rinkel, Harry O. Ritter, Walter B. Robbins, Sidney A. Roberts, Barbara E. Robinson, Orus W. Robuck, Cynthia G. Rogers.
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2.
Wednesday. April 20. 1950 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Along the
JAY HAWKER
trail
Two KU coaches recently have been receiving almost as much publicity as their teams.
By Doug Yocom
Baseball coach Floyd Temple is looking for a captain for his team. The only prerequisite necessary is a minute showing of baseball talent. So far Temple's team has a 0-6 record in the Big Eight.
Last Friday Temple had the misfortune of losing his lead-off hitter, Captain Bob Marshall, who doubles as a football star.
According to reports, Marshall and another player were about a minute late for the bus that was to take the team from the hotel to the baseball field in Ames, Iowa, prior to Friday's game. Marshall and said player had a cab and headed for the Cyclone's field. Soon Temple and Marshall provided some unusual pregame excitement as they engaged in a verbal battle.
Here the reports conflict. Marshall was supposedly dismissed from the squad during the argument. However, Marshall remained on the Kansas bench throughout the game. After the game he hitch-hiked home.
Temple said that while Marshall remained at the game he had been dropped from the squad previous to gametime.
☆ ☆ ☆
The other coach sharing the lime-light with Temple is track coach Bill Easton who insists the best trackmen should have the best of tracks.
Few people disagree. KU definitely needs a new track. Easton and a crew had to toil most of Friday night to dry the cinders to a useable condition for Saturday's relay events. Even then the clockings were consistently slower than usual.
KU is going to have to provide a suitable track if it wants to attract the nation's best athletes to the Kansas Relavs. Easton savs.
KU's track is more mud than cinders. It has been repacked this past week in hopes of preparing it for the Missouri meet Saturday. The new track would be packed so the water could drain through the cinders leaving the surface dry. Yesterday was the first day the team was able to work out on the track since the Relays. Coach Easton says a little rain and there would be no track meet at KU this Saturday.
But the price tag on the new layer of cinders approaches the $70,000 mark. Denzell Gibbens, tennis coach, and Jay Markley, swimming coach, probably have visions of what they could do if they only had an additional couple of thousand a year for scholarships.
But they can't even obtain that. To go a step further, the swimming pool is inadequate and some of the varsity tennis courts have cracks in the cement.
Coach Easton's request certainly is not unreasonable. The Kansas Relays are nationally known. But if they are to continue to be a top attraction, we are going to need additional facilities.
Additional Sports on Page 8
Tom Clark reports on KU's tennis victory over Kansas State on page 8.
23
A Mule is called out sliding back to first.
Kansas Outslugs Mules, Melton Collects Homer
The Kansas baseball team downed the Central Missouri State Mules, 17-10, in a free-swinging, seesaw contest at Quigley Field today.
The Jayhawkers put the game on ice with five runs in the sixth inning after losing the lead three times during the contest.
Bill Clinkenbeard started for Karisas but was replaced by Joe Doolittle in the third after giving up three runs without retiring a man. Tom Holler came on in the sixth
BOX SCORE
Central Missouri State
| | AB | R | H | RB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Ford, 2b | 6 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Flink, 3b-p | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Dey, rf | 4 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
| Newman, cf | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Grenshaw, b | 5 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| Kindienst, f | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Ragner, If | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Roderick, ss | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| George, ss-3b | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Mines, c | 2 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Kubli, p | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gieringer, p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Thomas, 2b | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Harris, 2b | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| — | — | — | — | — |
| — | — | — | — | — |
Kansas
| Runs | AB | R | H | RBI |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Hanson, ss | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Muegler, 2b | 6 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
| Dunigan, rf | 4 | 3 | 2 | 0 |
| Melton, c | 6 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Louferlung, c | 5 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Hill, 3b | 5 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Mailen, if | 6 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Nichols, 1b | 6 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Clinkenbeard, p | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Hollar, p | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Hollar, p | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Totals | 45 | 17 | 19 | 10 |
R H E
Central Mo.-St. 113 040 100-10 10 7
Kansas 233 025 02x-17 19
inning and was credited with the win.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
1025 Mass., VI 3-2966
AfterSix BY RUDOPKER
Kubli started for the team from Warrensburg, Mo. He was followed by Gieringer, Thomas, and Fink. Thomas was charged with the loss
After Six
BY RUDOPKER
WHITE DINNER JACKETS
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ON THE HILL
The Jayhawkers outbit the Mules, 19 to 10. Despite the abundance of base hits, there were only seven extra-base blows in the game. Curtis Melton, Kansas center fielder, homered with teammate Cleveland Dungigan aboard in the eighth inning. Mines homered for Warrensburg in the third.
KU's nine will meet Colorado next in a three game series at Lawrence on May 1 and 2.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Tigers to Challenge KU in Dual Meet
The Jayhawker track team will meet the Missouri Tigers in the last home meet and only home dual meet of the season next Saturday.
By Ted Dielman
Several Kansas boys have been out with injuries and illness the past week and the team has had difficulty in working on on the torn-up track. However, a glance at the times and distances shows that Missouri should be defeated by a fairly wide margin.
Missouri has several men who should win their events but their team lacks the depth that the Jayhawkers have.
No Predictions
Coach Easton says it is hard to make predictions about a track meet because a few boys could always have a bad day and the team could drop as much as fifteen points.
Missouri's Joe Webb is a possible Tiger winner in the pole vault; Webb, a 22-year-old senior reached the 14-foot mark in the Drake Relays.
Henry Wiebe, Missouri's most versatile performer, could mean some firsts in the sprints.
Other possible first-places for Missouri are: James Sanders, mile; Calvin Groff, hurdles; and Richard Cochran, shot.
Doctors Say Beer Can be Training Aid
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — (UPI) • The red-meat-and-milk approach towards building burly athletes is nonsense, according to two Harvard nutrition experts. And when a coach catches his ace backfield man quaffing a class or beer or sipping a cocktail, he shouldn't get too excited. It won't hurt his All America chances one bit.
These are the opinions presented last night by Dr. Frederick Stare and Sr. Jean Maver, both professors of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health.
In the Big Eight Outdoor meet coming up at Norman the weekend of May 15-16 Kansas should come through in its usual style with its eighth straight championship.
Easton, however, says he thinks it will be a "tough meet with plenty of good individual competition." Kansas probably will not win again by the overwhelming (75½ points) margin that it did last year.
Oklahoma should give the Jayhawkers the roughest time this year, with Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma State coming in close behind.
Coach Easton says that the Big Eight Conference is especially tough this year. He says that out of seven field events in the relays this year, teams from the Big Eight won five and broke records in three of them.
At the Kansas-Missouri meet this Saturday seven KU seniors will be participating in their last home meet. They are: Bob Cannon, high jump; Berry Crawford and John Davis, distances; Linda Lida, 440; Jim Londerholm, javelin; captain Ernie Shelby, broad jump, and Tom Skutka, distances.
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B/W film ready by 3 p.m. next day.Color films take only 3 days.
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MOSCOW here we come!
Kansas University students will be aboard the special college student tour seeing Russia this summer. Sam Anderson, Russian instructor at K.U., will conduct a 72-day holiday and exploration excursion through Europe, Scandinavia and the Soviet Union. Departure date is set for June 28th. Space is still available and there is time left to secure your passport, if you hurry. The all-expense prepaid tour will travel by charter deluxe motorcoach first seeing Englang, then across the Channel to Belgium, Holland, Northern Germany and into the wonderful land of the Danes. Sweden and Finland are en route before entering Russia at Leningrad for 31 days of USSR adventure including the Ukraine and White Russia, a Black Sea Cruise, the resort of Yalta and Sochi of the Caucasus. You will be in Moscow for the historic first American National Exhibition. Poland, Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany including the two Berlins, Luxembourg and France are all part of the itinerary. For itinerary and Reservation Application see Maupintour, 1236 Massachusetts, Lawrence. Phone VIking 3-1211.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 29.1959
Saris Said to Be Superior to Skirts
m Dust Meet
Lizzie Dawson, Madras, South India
Campus Club News
Pi Sigma Alpha
Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science society, has announced the initiation of 20 students. They are:
Jerry Smith, Lawrence; Ronald D. Jones, Junction City; Robert Lawrence, Emporia; Dale L. Pohl, Topeka; Ernesto M. Vergara, Vigan Ilocos Sur, Philippines, and Wendell L. Wallace, Omaha, Neb., all graduate students.
Rozanne Barry, Kansas City, Mo;
Helen Cline, Wichita; Verne Gauby,
Marysville; Mrs. Marcia R. Bierlein
Green, Pittsburg; Richard A. Kraus;
Arlington; Leonard Parkinson, Scott
City; Barbara Ann Pessell, Abilene;
Sharon Stout, Wichita, and Ralph L.
Wright, Paolo, all seniors.
Ray Nichols, Lawrence; Martin B. Dickinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Lance F. Johnson, Wyomer, Neb.; Hal B. Krebhiel, Wichita, and Karen Krueger, Yates Center, all juniors.
Nichols was elected president for next year. Miss Barry, Kraus and Don R. Bowen, Salina senior, were named outstanding seniors.
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Lizzie Dawson, 19-year-old sophomore from India, likes to wear her native saris rather than American dresses.
"I prefer saris to skirts because skirts look uncomfortable and the heline cuts off the leg at an unbecoming length. Saris are easy to pack and are very comfortable." she said.
Miss Dawson said that in her home in southern India most of the women wear saris of hand woven cotton or silk. They go barefoot or wear thong sandals.
Miss Dawson has 35 saris which include delicate pastels, floral designs, bright-colored plaids, and gold and silver embroidered silk.
Many students have asked how one puts on a sari. Miss Dawson explains the process in three simple steps. A long slip, a "pavadi" is worn under the sari. The average size of a sari is 6 yards by 52 inches.
1) "Starting on the left at the waist, I wrap the material around the body once.
2) "Bring it around again and
3) "Then bring the other end of the material around in back and put it over the left shoulder.
pleat it along the front and tuck the material in at the waist.
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"Most Indian women have long hair. They usually wear their hair in braids or a bun." she continued.
"No pins or snaps are used on a sari. Just tuck in the material in the right places and it will stay," Miss Dawson laughed.
Do the women in southern India wear cosmetics?
hair ornament," Miss Dawson said. In southern India a baby girl's ears are pierced when she is a year old. "Babies always wear tiny earrings and finger rings as do the older women," she said.
"In my country we put coconut oil on our hair when we comb it. It is very cooling. Since the temperature often gets up to 120 degrees, the oil is very pleasant to have on," she explained.
"The women wear fresh flowers in their hair every day. Jasmine buds and white tiger lilies are a favorite
"Indian girls, for the most part, don't wear lipstick. However they use lots of black eye makeup. The eyes are stressed more in India than in America," she remarked.
Miss Dawson came to the United States when she was 15 and attended North High School in Wichita. Her major is International Relations. She is now living at the Delta Gamma sorority house.
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Wednesday, April 29, 1959 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which aren't paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
WANTED
FOR RENT
FURNISHED APARTMENT OR HOME by September 1, married graduate students, can furnish references, no children. Call VI 2-0467. 4-30
FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, spacious,
nicely furnished, garbage disposal, bath,
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will accept graduate students. Call VI
7677.
THREE ROOM APARTMENT. ground floor, unfurnished, air conditioned. Off-road vehicle generator. air conditioner supplied. 171A Vermont Call VI 3-5561 for 5 p.m. 4-29
APARTMENT for the summer or longer.
Unfurnished bedroom, living room,
kitchen and dining area, good location.
Call VI 2-0114 after 5 p.m. 4-29
UNFURNISHED APARTMENT, 5 rooms with basement and private bath, clean and in good condition. Nice neighborhood and within walking distance to KU.$75 per month plus utilities. 1629 Kentucky. Call George Frye, VI 3-7191.
THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. for two men. Sixty dollars with utilities. 919 Indiana. 5-4
MODERN THREE ROOM APARTMENT,
furnished, close to campus, offstreet
parking. Call VI 3-0218. 5-4
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicnic, party supplies, plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350.
FOR SALE
SPECIAL SALE OF BOOKS at 50 cents and $1.00. The Book Nook, 1021 Macon
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.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING for the best used car buy in town, contact Larry Swinson, campus representative for Combs Motors, 19th and Massachusetts. Business phone, VI 3-0951. Residence Phone VI 3-8359. 4-29
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON.
6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone
green. Original owner, 20,700 miles, ex-
cellent condition. VI 3-5297 after 4 p.m.
WESTMINSTER HALL at 1221 Oread is being replaced. The building is for sale and interested individuals or organization contact Dr. John Patton at 1221 Oread. 4-30
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. The price is $2.50, free delivery For your copy, call VI 3-7553, 805 Ohio
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CAR INSURANCE? If you are over 25 and a safe driver, you may qualify for coverage at VI 3-5445 or at VI 3-9244 after 5 p.m. Representing Charlton Insurance Agency, serving Lawrence since 1861. 5-1
WESTERN CIVILIZATION STUDY GUIDE. Get your copy now or by the bookstore. Free delivery on orders over weeks. Free delivery Sundays and wednesdays, only $3.00. Call VI 3-7553
1954 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, radio,
heater, new white top, 43,000 miles.
Exemplarily clean. See at 738 Rhode
Island after 5 p.m.
5-4
55 AUSTIN HEALEY, excellent condition, radio and heater, red, whitewalls Dick Thomas, 7925 Park, K. C. Missouri Delmar 3-9748 5-4
AIR CONDITIONER, one-half ton, 110
defrigerator type. Call V3-98-14-08
5 layer, p 5.
(954 COLONIAL HOUSETRAILER. 20
oot, insulated, one bedroom, good com-
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nne's Trailer Court, north row,
trailer east. 139 Perry St. 5-4
HOUSE, assume GI 41% on equity on half year old, three bedroom house, at nine dollars a month daaws laws, nine dollars a month payment including taxes and insurance. Call VI 3-7241.
51 CHEVROLET TUDOR, must sell. Radio, heater, nylon tires, good paint. very good running. See Charles Bentz at 115 Ohio or call VI 3-1909. 5-5
PISTOLS, RIFLES, SHOTGUNS. Have 33
Rifles, 20 Shotguns. Have 1138 Mississippi. Call VI 2-0051.
1955 GLOBEMASTER TRAILER 38 foot. One bedroom, one study room, carpeted living room. Call VI 2-0564 after 5 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at
regular rates. Will type themes, term pa-
theses, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI
3-8660. tf
FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating massage therapists. 730 Massachusetts.
TYPIST: Experienced, theses, term papers and reports. Fast, accurate. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave., phone VI 3-2001. tt
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
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
Leonard, call VI 8-5283. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
theses, etc. Done at standard rate, fast
accurate service, free pick up and
delivery. Call VI 3-9508. tf
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 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, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. eight years experience in teaching tennance curricular work. Cm VI 3-1240 Mrs. John L. Glinka, 1911 Tennessee, tf
LEW'S MASSAGE CENTER: 10212½ Mass Swedish massage, steam cabinet, etc. massage, professional professions masseur. Introductory rates available for limited time. VI 3-2132. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Former secretary will type themes, term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS.
Ola Smith.
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RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the
1971-1971, Singr
Sewing Center, 927 Mass.
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can help your advance reservations at a special student-faculty rate. Call V12. 0124. tf
LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Riee Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. April 29. 1959
M
Brimmers Blossom on Business Day
Businessmen Boost Boaters
Customs come and go. Some are forgotten while others are resurrected. Take, for example, the cause for straw hats.
Pictured above is the Business School Council wearing the brimmers. J. Vincent Meyer, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior and council member, said that the council was in hopes of reviving the custom of wearing the hats on Business Day.
"It's kind of a rivalry between us and our hats and the Law School with their canes," he said.
Council members shown are Cornelius Boersma, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Meyer; Samuel M. Reynolds, Kansas City, Kan., senior; Stewart R. Horejsi, Salina senior; Thomas M. Conner, Prairie Village junior; Phillip E. Loncar, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Larry D. Dunlap, Salina senior.
Five to Miami U.Meet
Five faculty members will leave tomorrow for Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, where they will attend the Midwest Conference of Political Scientists.
James Titus, assistant professor of political science, will attend the meeting.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Kenneth Beasley, assistant professor of political science; John Grumm, assistant professor of political science; Earl Nehring, instructor of political science, and
Prof. Grumm will read a paper, "Classification of Political Parties, Traditional and Modern." Prof. Beasley will participate in a discussion of "The Role of the Political Scientist in Public Affairs."
Dean Heller is the general chairman of the program committee for the conference. The conference will last through Saturday morning.
Come In For A
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Eighteen students have been selected to participate in the final annual cheerleading tryouts at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Gymnasium.
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6 Cheerleaders To Be Selected
Two pep club representatives, William Fricke, Jefferson City, Mo, Ku Kus, and Carol J. Abernathy, Kansas City, Kan., Jay James, both juniors, are automatically on the squad.
Three men and three women will be selected for next year's cheerleading squad. Three alternates will also be selected.
The men trying out are Barry Ken Gray, Lyons; Paul Brown, Kansas City, Mo., and Kirk Cottingham, Newton, all sophomores; Bruce Bee, Mission, and Jerry Palmer, El Dorado, both freshmen, and Peter Anderson, Lawrence senior.
The women are Sharon Zimmerman, Lawrence junior; Jane Perry and Judith Mott, Lawrence; Jill Jordan, Topeka; Judy Nordstrom, Newton; Linda Wittlake, Leawood, and Heather Graham, Kansas City, Mo., all sophomores. Diane Ira, Kansas City, Kan.; Peggy Shank, Hiawatha; Sherrie Scogin, Prairie Village; Jane Blair, Lawrence, and Laura Richmond, Mission, all freshmen.
Beard is Too Tough to Yield
COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UPI) — Prison barber "Slick" Cameron reported to the warden yesterday that he's quite unable to comply with regulations and shave off the mustache of new prisoner Tom Campbell.
The handlebar decoration is a tattoo, the Ohio penitentiary news reported.
Tennis Team Avenges Earlier Loss to K-S
By Tom Clark
Five Jayhawkers avenged an earlier 6-1 tennis loss to Kansas State yesterday afternoon with an impressive 5-2 victory over the Wildcats. KU's record is now 4-6.
Coach Denzell Gibbens sends his netmen against Missouri Friday and the team travels to Washburn of Topeka Saturday. So the Jayhawkers have a good opportunity to even their won-lost standing for the first time this year.
Dave Coupe headed the KU victory march by capturing his seventh straight singles triumph and he teamed with Jerry Williams for a doubles win. Lynne Sieverling and Sal Lekagul returned to action in victorious fashion after missing last week's road trip. Sieverling avenged an earlier loss to Winston Tilsey with a hard three-set victory.
Jerry Williams and Coupe staged a belated but successful rally in the third set of their doubles match. Down 4-3, they rallied to win the next three games including two service breaks in the process.
After winning the opening set, Sieverling relaxed in the second set allowing Tilsey to pick up the deciding service break. The count went to 3-3 when Sieverling applied the clincher winning the next three games.
Pete Block continued his winning
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ways with a tough three-set victory over Ed Frankel. Lekagul's victory was his sixth consecutive.
PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE
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The results:
Lynne Sieverling, KU, defeated
Winston Tilsey, 6-3, 10-12, 6-3.
Jim Holwerda, KU, defeated Jerry
Williams. 6-2, 6-4
Pete Block, KU, defeated Ed Frankel 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.
Tilsey-Holwerda, KS, defeated Block-Sieverling, 8-6, 6-0.
Dave Coupe, KU, defeated Lee Atkins, 6-1, 6-1.
Coupe-Williams, KU, defeated Atkins-Frankel, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.
Sal Lekagul, KU, defeated Steve Poort, 6-0, 7-5.
Shakespeare's Play to Open
"The Winter's Tale" by William Shakespeare will open at 8 tonight in the University Theatre. Tickets are available at the box office and in the Kansas Union.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
56th Year, No.137
Thursday, April 30, 1959
HOPE Put on Ballot; Seniors Vote for Gift
HOPE—Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators—was included as a late suggestion on the senior class gift ballot.
About 500 students gathered at the senior coffee at 10 this morning in the Kansas Union Ballroom to hear reports on class progress and to vote for the traditional class gift.
The HOPE gift was suggested in an editorial in yesterday's Daily Kansan. Under this plan, the portion of senior class dues designated for the class gift would be invested with the KU Endowment Association. The 4 per cent interest which it would draw annually would be awarded each year to an outstanding KU professor or instructor.
The three other suggestions included on the ballot were trophy cases for Allen Field House, accessories for the new Kansas Union ad-
Billings, Kindred Receive Awards
Robert Billings of Russell and Lynn H. Kindred of Emporia, both three-letter guards on the KU basketball team, will share the "Phog" Allen Award for 1959. Both men are seniors.
The $50 prize is given each spring to the graduating senior with the highest scholastic average among those participating in intercollegiate sports.
Billings has also received the Alpha Tau Omega Thomas Arkle Award, the highest award the national fraternity can give an undergraduate.
The winner of the award is chosen from candidates of 118 chapters.
Billings was presented the award by the national president at the fraternity's Founders Day Banquet in City Mo., April 17.
TV's Godfrey Has Cancer
NEW YORK —(UPI)— Surgeons found a cancer in Arthur Godfrey's left lung today and began to remove the section of the lung affected by it.
Man Flees From Woman's Scream
There was no indication from the announcement that Godfrey would be an invalid as a result of the operation—the thing he said he feared the most. But a long convalescence can be expected as in most lung operations.
An unidentified man who grabbed a KU woman in Robinson Gymnasium last night was frightened off by her screams.
by her scream. In a report to the campus police, the woman said she had been practicing dancing in Robinson Gymnasium. After she showered, dressed and was about to leave, an unknown man grabbed her by the shoulders. The man told her not to scream and that he would not hurt her. She screamed and the man released her.
A male student who was in the building said he got a glimpse of the fleeing man.
The Lawrence police department has assigned a detective to investigate.
Weather
Mostly fair tonight, increasing cloudiness tomorrow, continued warm. Low tonight mid 40s northwest to lower 60s southeast. High tomorrow in the 80s.
dition (room furnishings, a memorial campus map, a grand piano for the Big Eight Ballroom, or furniture and accessories for the new patio), and a Kansas scene in a panel display for the Museum of Natural History.
All three were suggestions of the senior gift committee.
"We tried to be as fair and complete in the suggestions as possible. An example of this is the fact that the ballots were all run again last night by Dick Wintermorte after working hours in order to include HOPE," said Robert Billings, Russell, and chairman of the gift committee.
Billings listed four criteria used by the gift committee in selecting its recommendations: practical need and use, actual benefit for as many people as possible, a tangible object, and an object of lasting value.
"In addition to the final suggestions included on the ballot, the committee also considered a huge sun dial for the campus, a fellowship for a professor, a tuberculosis ward for a hospital in Southeast Asia, and "University of Kansas" painted on the KU smoke stack." Billings said
Ballots will be counted late this afternoon and the results of the voting will be announced in tomorrow's Kansas.
Ann Underwood Kindred, Lawrence, class treasurer, announced that the class was now $750 in debt and would be approximately $1,500 in debt by the time senior dues are paid.
"The senior class always runs on deficit financing for 90 per cent of the school year." she said.
Profits come from the senior calendar,announcements,class rings and ticket sales.
The class dues will be $3.50. This will include senior caps and gowns, one-half of the senior picnic costs, the class gift, and other miscellaneous expenses.
Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, congratulated the class on the honors which its members had received.
"However, the honors aren't the most important element of a good class. It is the class unity and pride with a friendship and interest in one another that really counts," he said.
"All universities are run backwards. They ask little of the students while they are in school, but expect help and cooperation after they graduate.
"There are always alumni who hold back and are not willing to do any work for the University after they graduate. It is the alumni who are active and interested that keep a university going," he said.
Seniors Subdued Spiritless at Coffee
By Saundra Hayn
An apparently spiritless senior class listened quietly to committee reports and voted for a senior class gift this morning. Students who are approaching the long-awaited Commencement seemed unexcited about caps, gowns, picnics, and breakfasts.
"What is all this about HOPE what is it for?" one senior asked his neighbor.
Although some of the will-be graduates chatted with friends, most of the group sat in stony silence.
If the coffee had been for obedience school students, the audience would have been ideal. When speakers made jokes, the audience laughed. When Bill Witt, Dodge City senior and class president, told
everyone to stand and stretch, the audience stood and stretched. When they were told to sit, they sat with the promptness of first grade children.
A lively discussion on gift suggestions was expected, but only two seniors took advantage of the allotted one minute discussion period.
Appearing overwhelmed by the concept of inflation which may cause senior dues to be less effective and which has made the cost of senior activities more expensive, the Class of 1959 maintained a mummified state.
The class philosophy may have been typified by a senior woman who, at the first of the discussion, smiled and said, "I'm really not in the mood to think right now."
Watch Out Sarge, Here Comes the New Major
The four men, Robert Ohmart,
Scott City junior, who made the original purchase, Ralph Payne,
Robert Gillespie, and Alan Handle-
ley, all Prairie Village freshmen,
have been bottle feeding "Major."
as they named the pup.
The pet craze hit the campus with spring, and along with the usual dogs and cats one fraternity has acquired a three-week-old coyote.
Major's formula is milk, cream,
egg yolk, and syrup mixed and
Four members of Lambda Chi Alpha have adopted a small handful of orphaned coyote, which they purchased from Lloyd (Spike) Hout, janitor at the Military Science Building.
Hout found four pups southwest of Lawrence and brought them home. It didn't take long to find buyers for the little puppies even though the chances of keeping one alive was very slim, since they were only about two weeks old.
warmed under a hot water faucet. Feeding times vary between three and four hours, and by the looks of the pup it is in good health. It is almost as wide as it is long.
Major's home is a cardboard box filled with old sheets and a fur piece the men dug up. On cool nights a light bulb is placed in the box for heat.
"I guess we will have to change its name, though," said Payne. "It seems he is a she."
Her eyes are just beginning to open, the "parents" report, but even without eyes she can find her favorite resting place. All one has to do is put a hand down in front of her and she will crawl into the open palm, tuck in her tail, rest her head on the wrist and fall asleep.
Plans for her summer vacation have already been completed. A trip to western Kansas to spend the summer at Ohmart's home in Scott City is in the offing for the little prairie wolf.
West Diplomats End Paris Meet
PARIS — (UPI) — The four Western foreign ministers wound up their Paris conference today and announced "complete agreement" on Western strategy to meet the Soviet Union.
In an official communique, the ministers announced they had reaffirmed their determination to ensure the freedom of West Berlin.
They expressed willingness to engage in negotiations with the Soviets "to ensure a just peace in Europe."
Despite official secrecy on details, responsible sources said the foreign ministers of Britain, France, the United States and West Germany had agreed to seek unification of East and West Berlin under four-power guarantees. It could set the pattern for German reunification.
This would be an answer to the Soviet demand that West Berlin be made a "free city". If the Soviets did not accept it, then the West would call for maintenance of existing rights in West Berlin under
agreement with the Soviet Union and with a U.N. observer stationed in Berlin.
The closing communique made these points;
1. The ministers reaffirmed the West's determination to protect the rights of the West Berlin population and Allied rights and obligations there.
2. The ministers reaffirmed their willingness to negotiate with the Soviets "with a view to establishing a just and durable peace in Europe."
3. The ministers reached "complete agreement" on their position to be presented at the Geneva conference.
4. The results of their meeting will be discussed with the North Atlantic Council.
Highway Patrol 'Wrecks' Two Cars
The professionals are using every prank in the book to trick the students—or at least that's the way 16 members of the Highway Patrol police school see it.
The student troopers investigated a staged "accident" this morning on Naismith Road near Allen Field House.
Two highway patrol cars, which doubled as the wrecked vehicles, were parked off the street. One was resting on the shoulder near a fence, the second straddling the center strip.
Capt. Allen Rush, supervisor of the program, said the mock accident is just one method used to make the students practice the things they have learned.
"This accident has been set up for the student to derive certain logical
"We don't stop at any lengths to create a realistic situation," he said.
Pointing to the two wrecked cars, Capt. Rush told some of the tricks employed to test the prospective troopers' reasoning abilities.
“In one of those cars there is an open liquor bottle, but it isn’t filled with whiskey. Instead it has vinegar in it. I’ll bet the student who finds it will put the driver under arrest. It’s these things we are alerting them to,” he said.
conclusions. Each team works independently, being very secretive about the information they get," he said.
He said that there is no joking among the students investigating this mock accident.
Nor do prospective troopers find their day an easy one.
"This is serious and they know it," he explained.
"The training lasts for two months here at the University. They work from about six in the morning to midnight each day.
"The students go through such an intricate screening program that by the time they get here, they are a pretty diligent group. It took 350 applications to obtain these 16 students." he added.
Capt. Rush said several people had stopped to see if anyone was injured in the accident.
"Tomorrow we anticipate more spectators as we will have another mock accident using badly wrecked cars." he said.
1960
COYOTE PUP—Members of Lambda Chi Alpha provide a feast for a newly acquired pet. From left are Robert Gillespie, Ralph Payne, Alan Handley, all Prairie Village freshmen, and Robert Ohmart, Scott City junior. The pup is Major.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1959
Step for Better ASC
The 1958-59 All Student Council relinquished its position to the newly elected council last night, but not until it took definite action to help insure a more effective ASC for next year.
In the action the council provided that members who miss more than two regularly scheduled meetings without a written excuse or four regularly scheduled meetings with or without a written excuse will be dropped from the council and replaced.
We congratulate the ASC for passing this regulation. It was one of the 14 issues presented by The Daily Kansan prior to the election.
This move is not aimed at forcing persons to attend meetings in which they are not interested. But it will insure that all council members maintain an active interest in the work of the ASC and are present to participate in it.
If a member no longer wants to serve, he can be replaced immediately instead of his name remaining on the roll while he contributes no time to the council.
This is the first move toward achieving an effective student government. The old council has paved the way. It is now up to the new council to fulfill its responsibilities. —Pat Swanson
Life Is Playground for Adults
Are we making a playground out of college. This question was asked by Jerome Ellison, a professor at the University of Indiana, in a recent issue of the Saturday Evening Post. The author supported his affirmative answer by examples such as queen contests and college pranks.
"Are we making a playground out of college?"
After reading the article, the American adult would question the necessity of spending tax only to expand the playground for the college youngsters.
I have a question I would like to ask of the author.
Are adults making a playground out of life? Are our actions so much out of the pattern set by our elders as to make them unreasonable and without basis?
The reply that "times are changing" is always given to an accusation of shocking action. Our actions which parallel the changing times are not as shocking as the times themselves.
Society is in a perpetual evolution, and the actions of young people are geared to this evolution. If conditions are such as to require a college education, the young person adheres to it. If the society provides an ethical or moral code, the person follows it.
If studies and the inevitable extracurricular
We in college are only following the pattern set by adults in their lives. If they choose to live a life filled with superficiality and frivolity, are we expected to conduct ourselves in college in a different manner?
activities are as complex and as necessary as they appear to be, we adjust ourselves to the requirements.
Mr. Ellison suggests the abolition of cars on campuses. If our elders find it so necessary to drive cars in the "outside world," why should college students not be allowed to live in equal status in our mobilized society?
Another question asked is "What on earth is the matter with young people today?"
We think there is nothing the matter with us— that we are normal university students. The only ones who seem to be qualified to judge on the worth of young people today are the young people of yesterday.
Supposing our judgment were passed out of our elders' hands and our jurors were our peers, what then would be the decision? And similarly, the judges of our elders should be their peers.
The adult world should be cross-examined before its slightly blurred carbon copy, the college world, is examined. —Janet Juneau
Villain Unaware
...Letters...
Unhappily it does not, as you suggest, require either dramatic background or talent to "put one over" on a Daily Kansan reporter. And while I have been of late generously credited with both in your pages, I am afraid I must demur. I do not expect to bring truth to these hallowed pages-I have dealt with the Daily Kansan before, but a certain innate desire for the light drives me to try once more.
Your reporter, upon calling me.
asked if I were Marvin Carlson and whether I had recently received a fellowship for next year. As my name is, unhappily, Marvin Carlson, and I have, to my present sorrow, received a fellowship for next year, I naively assumed that she was interested in me. A wiser man might have seen through the ruse but alas, I succumbed to her story.
The "yarn" I "spun," except for the usual typographical errors and misunderstandings, was a true picture of my humble but honest background. Even the rather
strange version which appeared in the Daily Kansan did not awaken my suspicions as I am injured, as I say, to the "freedom of the press."
Now I find that willy-nilly I am forced into the role of an unscrupulous villain, the betrayer of trusting youth and the disseminator of idle fancies. I can only cry nay, as a voice crying in the wilderness, extending abject apologies to poor Marlan and your hapless readers, by now probably as confused as I am.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler
MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
T-15
© PAUL E. ROX 4
BLACKWATER, KY.
"I THOUGHT I MADE IT CLEAR—THERE IS NO HOMEWORK FOR THIS COURSE."
But enough, I can do no more except to gasp, with my closing breath, that I am not a theater major, as you have in your zeal reported twice, but a major in English. Cry you mercy, good sirs.
Wichita graduate student
Marvin Carlson
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
UNIVERSITIES
Dailu hansan
Telephone VIking 3-2700
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Member Inland Daily Press Association
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service Noted Press International
submarine semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays,
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Douglas Parker ... Managing Editor
Al Jones, John Husar, Jack Harrison,
Jim Cable, Assistant Managing Editors
Jacob Morton and Carol Allen,
Cohit Ciohara, Co-Sports Editor;
Doug Yoom, Co-Sports Editors;
Saundra Hayn, Society Editor;
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bill Feitz Business Manager Robert Lida, Advertising Manager; Howard Young, Classified Advertising Manager; William F. Kane, Promotion Manager; Paul Nielsen, Circulation Manager.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Pat Swanson and Martha Crosier, Co-
Editorial Editor Robert Hawil, an-
Editorial Editor
A
ACCUSED -Linda K. Plake and Steve Callah, falsely accused lovers, perform a scene from "The Winter's Tale."
laughing
theater
ALICE LANEZ
By John Husar
If an old saying is true, some caretaker in an old cemetery near Stratford-on-Avon may have heard a sound like bones rattling underneath unmarked sod last night. Through mystic powers old Will Shakespeare may have been awake then.
The brain behind those bones, if they are what's left of old Will, created some of the world's most brilliant plays, among them "The Winter's Tale," presented last night in the University Theatre.
Shakespeare's insight into the stronger human emotions, his ability to draw characters, and the beauty of his sensitive, poetic lines flower in this story about a thoughtless king's suspicious mind. The terrible ends resulting from the king's punishment of his innocent queen on unfounded charges of adultery and treason illuminated man's need to understand and to trust others to a degree. Shakespeare also warned against trust without understanding by contrasting a conflict between a thief and a fool.
Shakespeare ends with the printed word, however, and it takes a pretty imaginative theater group to produce him. The KU artists picked up the playwright's work and made it into a creation of their own.
Director Virgil Godfrey cut and rewove parts of the play, winding up with three closely-knit acts instead of five. He also instituted an enchanting ballet which sealed together the play's three parts. Tomi Yadon's choreography for these "fairy dancers" was delicate and regal, fitting the show's mood and settings.
Bill Henry's tasteful settings ingeniously used the stage facilities to symbolically enhance the atmosphere. His crowning effect was a tapered series of lighted candelabra suspended from the ceiling. Herbert L. Camburn's rich and detailed costumes and E. Arthur Kean's gorgeous lighting headlined the season in those two departments.
In fact, the show was so technically outstanding, Shakespeare himself seemed to fade from the most important spot. Too many times we were caught absorbing the wonder of it all while letting the lines slip past without notice. This can be both good and bad. Future audiences may not come to see a Shakespearean play, but rather a lavish production designed from a Shakespearean play.
Two pairs were outstanding in their deft handling of difficult roles. They are Al Rossi and Steve Callahan as the king's servant and his wronged friend, and Bob Moberly and Louis Lyda as the thief and the fool. Others of importance were Marvin Carlson, John Welz, Karl Garrett and Joyce Elliott.
The acting, too, showed understanding. Sidney Berger's characterization of the king was masterful and correct with the exception that his voice was often a loud monotone. Linda K. Plake could have been a more animated queen, but Sara Maxwell was fiery, strong and yet compassionate as the queen's lady.
What of the bones rattling? Well, if they did belong to old Will, and provided there was no earthquake in that cemetery last night, the sound of bones just might have been from a pair of four-century-old hands applauding another successful opening of one of their self-authored plays. This time the bones couldn't roll over.
Worth Repeating
How big does the class have to be before the student can be reasonably comfortable coming to class unprepared?—Dean George Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
***
The problem for people in America today is other people.—David Riesman.
...
I can't abide the existentialists who say that life is impossible and that you must hold your nose.—Archibald MacLeish
Around The Campus Chem.Award Committees Open DinnerTonight For Senior Class
Page 3
Ten major fellowships and other awards will be announced at the Honors Awards Dinner of the Chemistry Department, at 6:15 tonight in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Dr. Arthur W. Davidson, chairman, will preside and announce the awards and the winners of the National Science Foundation Fellowships for next year. Newly elected members of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and Phi Lambda Upsilon also will be honored.
The principal speaker will be Dr. Farrington Daniels, physical chemist from the University of Wisconsin. Special guests will be Dr. Daniels' daughter and son-in-law, Prof. and Mrs. James Drury of the political science department.
Gale R. Adkins, assistant professor of journalism and speech, has been invited to supply an article for a forthcoming school broadcasting issue of SHIKSHA, Indian quarterly education journal.
Prof. Adkins Writes For Indian Quarterly
The international publication will include articles describing broadcasting for classroom use in the United States, England, Canada Australia, India, Sweden, Germany, Russia, and other countries.
The article prepared by Professor Adkins, entitled "School Radio Broadcasting in the United States," describes several types of school broadcasting. The KU Jayhawk School of the Air is an example of the broadcasting services described
Delta Delta Delta
Offers 2 Awards
Delta Delta Delta sorority is offering two scholarships to any two qualified undergraduate women for the fall semester.
Each scholarship is worth $100. Applications may be obtained in the Dean of Women's office and must be returned by May 11.
Applicants are judged on the basis of financial need, academic record and usefulness of career.
Since the plan was initiated in 1946, Kansas Tri Deltas have awarded 14 scholarships, totaling $1,425.
Griswold Lectures for ASC
Dr. Ernest Griswold, professor of chemistry, has completed a weeklong lecture series on "Ion Association in Solution," for the American Chemical Society.
University Daily Kansan
Applications for senior class committees are due Monday at the Alumni office, 127 Strong.
Committee positions open are:
announcement, alumni relations,
breakfast, senior calendar, senior
gift, reception, regalia, publicity,
ring, senior day, senior picnic, special
events, and sporting events.
Letters of application should contain the applicants preference for chairman or member of a committee, a preference of three committees, qualifying experience and grade point average.
Additional information can be obtained from Richart Barnes, Seneca junior, VI 3-3355, and Janet Cameron, Topeka junior, VI 3-8505.
Douglas Yocom, Lawrence junior,
vice president; Rael Amos, Oswego
junior, secretary, a nd Richard
Crocker, Wichita junior, treasurer
Six new members were also initiated at the meeting. They are:
Jack Harrison, Hays junior, was recently elected president of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity. Other officers are:
Harrison Chosen SDX President
Raymond Miller, Lawrence junior; Carl John Peterson, Topeka junior; Harry Ritter, Kansas City, Kan, senior; Crocker, Thomas J. Trotter, Independence junior, and Ted Dielman, Canton junior.
Family Relations to Be Social Work Theme
Social Work Day will be held here Monday with "The Dynamics of Family Interaction" as the theme.
Guest speakers will be Dr. Werner W. Boehm, social work professor at Minnesota University, and Dr. Stuart A. Queen, visiting professor of sociology and anthropology at Wichita University and a former KU professor.
The program, co-sponsored by the KU social workers alumni association, will seek to identify psychological and sociological concepts. These ideas will help the caseworker understand family relationships and aid his diagnosis and treatment.
Dr. Jacob Kleinberg, professor of chemistry, will be the guest lecturer for the famed Reilly Lecture series this week at Notre Dame University.
Kleinberg Goes to Notre Dame
Dr Kleinberg will lecture on the unusual oxidation states of the elements.
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"FRISBEES"
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WALKING SHORTS
the university shop
Radio Programs KUOK
Tonight
6:15 Jayhawk Jump Time
4:00 Sign On and Uninterrupted
7:40 Editorial Time
7:45 Lucky Strike Melodies &
Sporty
9-05 Music from Beyond the Heavens.
8:05 KUOK Album Time
10:05 Rich Wood Show
Thursday. April 30. 1959
11:00 Lucky Strike Melodies
11:15 Rich Wood
12:00 Sign Off
KANU
Tonight
4:30 Jazz Cocktail
5:00 Twilight Concert: "Partita No.
2 in D Minor for Unaccompanied Violin" by Bach
5:00
7:00 Concert Hall
7:30 Contemporary Concert: "Sonata for Piano" by Ginestera
7:55 News
8:00 University of the Air. Psychological Aspects of Creativity
9:00 Everybody's Classics
9:55 News
10:00 A Little Night Music: "Concerto Grosso in D Minor" by Vivaldi
Britain Owes Much to Beer
11:00 Sign Off
LONDON — (UPI) — Jocelyn Simon, financial secretary to the British treasury, spoke up in Parliament yesterday in praise of beer.
Official Bulletin
"It was the substitution of beer for gin which startlingly cut the death rate in this country," Simon said. It is the staple drink in Britain's pubs, where, he said, "a vigorous, racy social life is pursued, with that absence of friction which science tells us owes much to suitable lubrication."
Homeetown Correspondents: Deadline for turning in town is brooklyn's 4 Month 4 at Potrillo Street, 230 West 48th St.
Ph.D. French Reading Exams: 9 a.m.
Saturday, Fraser 11 Leave books with
Mrs. Morrison
Senior Class (1960): Committee membership and chairmanship applications must be turned in to the Alumni Office, 127 Strong, by Monday.
TODAY
Cherleader Tryouts, 7.30 p.m. in 101 Robinson.
Christian Science Campus Organization,
2:30 p.m. Dearborn Church
7:30 p.m., Danfort Chapel,
University Theatre, "Winter's Tale"
University Theatre, "Winter's Tale," 8:00 p.m.
Poetry Hour, Merrell Clubb, professor of English, Odes and Sonnets of Keats.
4 p.m. Trophy Room of Kansas Union-
gram; folk dancing. Everyone invited.
TOMORROW
Newman Club Mass., 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 11th and Kentucky.
Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m.
and Holly Communion, 7 a.m. you breakfast.
and John's Communion, 8 a.m.
ASTE Annual Banquet, 6:30 p.m., Sunflower Room of Kansas Union
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
Course of the Bible Study, discussion, refreshments.
SATURDAY
International Club Picnic. 3-7 p.m.
Lone Star Lake. Take musical instruments, games and cars. Refreshments and Snack provided.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30,1959
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
ATO Wins Top Berth In IM Swimming Match
By Dave Butcher
Alpha Tau Omega outsplashed defending champion Phi Gamma Delta to win the intramural swimming meet last week.
The ATOs took only one first place but their team had enough balance to win. Three second places and two thirds completed their scoring. They finished with 42 points. Phi Gamma Delta was second with 33 and Beta Theta Pi third with 32.
Other teams competing were Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Psi, Empire Club, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Delta Upsilon.
Results are as follows;
160 yd. free style relay; 1. Beta
Theta Pi, 2. Alpha Tau Omega,
3. Phi Gamma Delta, 4. Sigma Phi
Fosilon, Time: 1:26.5.
60 yd. butterfly; 1. Allen, Sigma Nu; 2. Pfuetze, Beta Theta Pi; 3 Gilles, Alpha Tau Omega; 4. Lee Phi Gamma Delta, Time; 38.1.
60 yd. free style: 1. Layton, Sigma Nu; 2. Jones, Alpha Tau Omega; 3. Weems, Sigma Pi Epsilon; 4 McGowan, Sigma Nu. Time: 331.
60 vd. back stroke: 1. Johnson,
Phi Gamma Delta; 2. Schultz, Alpha
Tau Omega, 3. Lynch, Beta Theta
Pi; 4. Zimmerman, Empire Club.
Time: 41.6
60 yd. breaststroke: 1. Hunt, Delta Upsilon; 2. Pfuetz, Beta Theta Pi; 3. Winkler, Independent; 4. Ranson, Phi Gamma Delta.
Diving: 1. Kerr, Sigma Phi Epsilon: 2. Bras, Phi Gamma Delta; 3.
Williams, Sigma Phi Epsilon.
OU Has Talented Brave
NORMAN, Okla. — Wahoo McDaniel, who will probably be Oklahoma's starting left end next fall, rode a bucking wild buffalo bareback the full length of the arena during the recent student Frontier Week Rodeo here last week. Wahoo and center Bob Scholl won the double bareback ride.
40 yd. free style; 1. N, Jones, Alpha Tau Omega; 2. Mayor, Phi Kappa Psi; 3. Layton, Sigma Nu; 4. Walters, Alpha Tau Omega. Time; 20.9.
60 yd. individual medley: 1, Hunt,
Delta Upsilon; 2. Shaw, Empire
Club; 3. Allen, Sigma Nu; 4. Gilles,
Alpha Tau Omega. Time: 36.0.
160 yd. medley relay: 1. Phi Gamma Delta; 2. Beta Theta Pi; 3. Alpha Tau Omega. Time: 1:41.1.
Golf Tournament Scheduled May 9
The intramural golf tournament will be held Saturday, May 9, at the Lawrence Country Club.
The tournament will begin at 7 a.m. All golfers must report at this time.
Team entries will be accepted at the Intramural Office until Wednesday, May 6. Each team must be composed of at least four players.
There will be a greens fee of $1.50 per golfer.
SUMMER JOB HUNTING IS HERE
APPLICATION PICTURES
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A strong Missouri team defeated the Jayhawkers $10_{1 / 2}^{1 / 4}-4_{1 / 2}^{1}$ earlier in the season at Columbia.
M
The KU golf team will play Missouri today at the Topeka Country Club.
KU, Missouri Battle Today
KU's team was a preseason choice to come out fairly well in conference play this year. Members of the team say they think their chances would be better if they could work out more.
The University and the Lawrence Country Club failed to reach a financial agreement on rent at the beginning of the season. As a result of this some of the team is forced to drive to Topeka to practice. This often means as few as three practices per week.
Some of the team members, however, have student membership at the Lawrence club and get to work out more often.
The KU team has seven more matches scheduled before the Big Eight Conference meet May 15-16 at Norman.
The team's record at present is one win, two losses, and one tie.
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Leonard's Standard
Arkansas Victorious In Triangular Meet
PITTSBURG, Kan. — (UPI) Arkansas University scored 72 points last night to take a triangular track meet from Pittsburg (Kan) State and Southwest Missouri State of Springfield.
Pittsburg was second with 70 points and Springfield followed with 28 1/7. Arkansas swept the twomile run, winning in 9:43.2. No records were broken.
Terry Arend of Arkansas, who won second place in the decathlon at the Kansas Relays, entered six events and placed in all of them for a total of 13 points.
He was second in the 100-yard dash, second in low hurdles, and second in the high jump. He also was third in high hurdles, third in broad jump and third in javelin.
One of the few soapstone quarries ever worked by New England's Indian tribes is located in Johnston, R.I.
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MOSCOW here we come!
Kansas University students will be aboard the special college student tour seeing Russia this summer. Sam Anderson, Russian instructor at K.U., will conduct a 72-day holiday and exploration excursion through Europe, Scandinavia and the Soviet Union. Departure date is set for June 28th. Space is still available and there is time left to secure your passport, if you hurry. The all-expense prepaid tour will travel by charter deluxe motorcoach first seeing Englang, then across the Channel to Belgium, Holland, Northern Germany and into the wonderful land of the Danes, Sweden and Finland are en route before entering Russia at Leningrad for 31 days of USSR adventure including the Ukraine and White Russia, a Black Sea Cruise, the resort of Yalta and Sochi of the Caucasus. You will be in Moscow for the historic first American National Exhibition. Poland, Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany including the two Berlins, Luxembourg and France are all part of the itinerary. For itinerary and Reservation Application see Maupintour, 1236 Massachusetts, Lawrence. Phone VIking 3-1211.
Brain Needed?
Page 5
Computer System Aids Research, Instructors
An obscure mathematics computation center in Strong Annex C serves the dual purpose of aiding research and teachers.
The center was built among the many classrooms in Annex C in the spring of 1957.
AEC Gives KU Institute $22,731
The Atomic Energy Commission has entered into a contract for $22,731 with KU to provide the operational costs of a summer institute on Radiation Biology for High School Teachers, June 8- August 1.
The A.E.C. is also lending 20 special teaching kits which KU will in turn lend to teachers successfully completing the summer institute The kits, each valued at over $600 will be used by the teachers in the high school laboratories.
The National Science Foundation is providing $20,000 to cover stipends, allowances for dependents and travel costs for 20 teachers. The A.E.C. is underwriting the cost of faculty and additional laboratory equipment.
The summer institute faculty will include Dr. Gerald E. Cosgrove, a staff member at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and nine members from the KU staff.
Prof. Mills Awarded Grant for Research
A $10,000 National Science Foundation research grant has been awarded Dr. Russell C. Mills, professor of biochemistry and chairman of the biochemistry department.
He will direct a two-year project on enzymes that allow energy to be drawn from food.
It uses an IBM electronic digita computer and supplementary pieces of punched card accessory equipment along with several smaller computers for less important work.
The center will move into new quarters on the first floor of Sumerfield Hall when the new building is ready late this summer.
The huge "electronic brain" is employed to increase the speed of providing numerical answers to research and development problems by adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing almost instantaneously.
At the same time the computing center is used as an aid for courses in mathematics, electrical engineering and advanced accounting.
The center was installed after several directors of research projects at the University had to obtain computation service at a high cost in distant centers. Existing computers owned by the University at that time were too small.
Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics, currently directs the activities of the computation center.
Wescoe to Leave For Philippines
Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the KU Medical School and director of the KU Medical Center, will be a visiting professor of pharmacology at the University of The Philippines School of Medicine this summer. Dr. Wescoe's job is under the auspices of the China Medical Board of New York.
He will leave Kansas City with his family May 15, and will stay five months. He is the only faculty member from KU going to the Philippines.
Dr. Wescoe was in Japan on a shorter trip in 1956, when he served on a team in the teaching of anesthesiology.
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Thursday, April 20, 1950 University Daily Kane
More than 300 Kansas science students and teachers will gather here tonight for the 91st annual Kansas Academy of Science.
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! ENDS TUESDAY!
STUDENT DISCOUNT
ROCKHILL Art Theatre
Troost at 46th...Va.1-7071
The Academy, established in 1868, meets annually to discuss scientific research completed by its members. Every fourth meeting is at KU.
Science Academy To Open Tonight
The Academy will close Saturday with a meeting of the Kansas Entomological Society.
Chairman of the local committee, is Dr. Ernest Griswold, professor of chemistry.
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7. No Kools, your throat feels
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10. Assists
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12. Kind of ribs or mites
13. God (Latin)
14. 2nd-century assetic, in
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16. He looked homeward, angel
17. A hot time
18. Kools are Snow ___
19. Kools give you fresher taste
20. Transportation luxury
21. Tatter, dressed in goggles
22. Cheese that's made backwards
23. River literally in England
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26. Mumby gal
27. Dissolve
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4. He'd be flowery with a Y
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11. It may be lovefilled or Olmedo
12. Filter part of a Kool
13. The good guy
14. Olmedo's love movie classic
15. What a Singer does
16. He change coated wild and wild couples
17. She loves me, she loves me no
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 30, 1959
... On The Hill ...
Jolliffe Hall
Jolliffe men's scholarship hall held its annual Honor's Day Banquet Sunday. L. Worth Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, was the speaker. Doug Scott, Ottawa senior, was given the Jolliffe Honor Student Award for the year.
. . .
Alpha Phi
Elizabeth Gray, Topeka freshman, has been elected president of the Alpha Phi pledge class.
Other officers include Peggy Houston, Joplin, Mo., vice president; Ann Kelley, Independence, Mo., secretary; Anne Gile, Delphos, treasurer; Martha Bavacqua, Merriam, scholarship chairman.
Marilyn Burdorff, Augusta, activities chairman; Delores Dummermuth, Waterville, song leader; Charla Hood, Overland Park, social chairman; Sue Antenen, Ness City, quarterly reader, and Darlene Trueblood, Mission, standards chairman. All are freshmen.
* *
Alpha Phi Alpha
Delano Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., junior, has been elected president of Upsilon chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
Other officers are Ernest E. Smith,
Chanute junior, vice president;
Kenton Wesley Keith, Kansas City,
Mo., sophomore, secretary; Reginald
T. Buckner, Kansas City, Kan.
junior, treasurer; S. N. Townsend,
Kansas City, Kan., junior, corresponding secretary and T. C. Warren,
Joliet, Ill., sophomore, house manager.
Sigma Kappa
***
Sharon Stump, Seneca freshman has been elected president of Sigma Kappa sorority pledge class.
Other officers are vice president,
Jan Krehbiel, Wichita; secretary,
Jan Pilley, Prairie Village; treasurer,
Sigrid Wolf, Dundee, Ill.; social chairman, Robynn Graham,
Kansas City, Mo.
Activities chairman, Barbara Wade, Mayfield; philanthropy chairman, Donna Evans, Overland Park; standards committee member, Judy Bock, Topeka; scholarship chairman, Linda Gump, Wichita, and rush chairman, Judy Clausen, Prairie Village.
All are freshmen.
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Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity held an exchange dinner with the Alpha Chi Omega sorority recently. Chaperones were Mrs. H. W. Jen-
Chaperones were Mrs. H. W. Jenkins and Miss Merle Munson.
Triangle
Triangle fraternity had the seven girls who rode on their relays float as guests at a dress dinner recently. They are Kay Crumly, St. Francis, Judith Duncan, Overland Park, and Barbara Hanson, Kansas City, Mo., all juniors; Glenda Price, Topeka; Linda Rundle, Bonner Springs, and Sue Stinson, Lawrence, all sophomores; and Jean Walters, Lincoln freshman.
The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce will hold an orientation meeting at 6:45 p.m. today in the Oread room of the Kansas Union for women entered in the "Miss Lawrence" contest.
Beauty Contestants To Meet Tonight
The winner of the contest will receive a $500 scholarship.
Fashion Predicts a Cool Summer for KU Men
"Cool, man, cool," will be the byword of all KU men when warm weather descends upon us. This doesn't mean cool from the standpoint of the jazz man, or the weather man, but rather a new light-weight mode of living.
There is no longer reason to sweat out the summers just because you are male. Science has taken pity and thanks to new fabrics and weaves, you can feel as cool and comfortable as the gals.
Here's how the "cool" look shapes up for spring. Blue, especially ice blue, is the big color in everything from suits to undershorts. It will also be used for ties and socks.
The textured look is news in suits; raw silks and slubbed fabrics combine elegance and casualness to conform to any occasion.
With that blue suit, select a blue and white horizontal pin stripe shirt, with tab collar. Girls still favor the neatness of a tab collar, so why not take advantage of a good thing?
There is increased interest in ties and handkerchiefs that are specially designed to complement your shirt.
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Although days may be warm here on Mount Oread, hot weather is bound to come soon; so keep a weather eye on these new sheer fabrics.
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Jealousy comes more from self- love than from true love.
For example, a blue and white shirt with a horizontal stripe might take a solid blue tie in a textured weave, brightened with a subtle vertical motif. The handkerchief will repeat the theme set by the tie, in a border design.
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Thursday. April 30. 1959 University Daily Kansar
UNFURNISHED APARTMENT, 5 rooms with basement and private bath, clean and in good condition. Nice neighborhood and within walking distance to KU.$75 per month plus utilities. 1629 Kentucky. Call George Frye, VI 3-7191.
THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished,
for two men. Sixty dollars with utilities.
919 Indiana. 5-4
MODERN THREE ROOM APARTMENT,
furnished, close to campus, offstreet
parking. Call VI 3-0218. 5-4
APT. FOR MEN; quiet, cool basement apartment, modern, outside entrance. Parking available. Smoking or smoking. Can be seen first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 5-6
ROOM AND BOARD for three or four
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FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop. 730 Massachusetts. ff
TYPING: Fast, accurate, dependable, at regular rates. Will type them, term papers, theses. Phone Mrs. Donna Virr, VI 3-8660. tf
TYPING OF REPORTS, term papers
theses, etc. Done at standard rates. Fast,
error free service, free pick up and
delivery. Call YI 3-9508. tf
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Secretarial experience. Phone VI 3-7894.
TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron
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TYPING OF TERM PAPERS, reports,
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limited time. VI - 3123-12
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Former secretary will type themes. term papers and theses. Fast, accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf
NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 1218 Conn. Open weekdays 8 am to 6:30 p.m. birds and animals stock of cages, furniture and accessories Fish and Exotic Plants. Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats. leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, toots. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. tf
DRESS MAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Formals, welding gowns, etc. Ola Smith.
941½ Mass. Ph. VI 3-2636. tf
RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971. Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tt
PLANNING A TRIP? A representative for Sheraton Hotels, on campus, can make your advance réservation to special student-faculty rate. Call VI 3-824
TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. 1736 Tenn. tt
LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, et al. General rates. Mrs. Tom Brady. VI 3-3428
GUARANTEED ALTERATIONS, trousers,
new izippers, new pockets, new cuffs—re-
paired. Dresses, skirts, coats made.
correct size and length. CV II T5-751-1
TUTORING ASSISTANCE in preparation for the Western Civilization exam, oriented toward your area needs. Call VI 3-9635 between 5:30 and 7 p.m.
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER to do thesis.
term papers etc. Experienced typist. Call
VI 3-6249. 5-11
LAWN MOWING, have new lawn mower.
Will mow your lawn by job or hour.
Call VI 3-5973. 5-11
WANTED: washing and ironing. Will wash and iron a bushel basket for $10.00. A would like students' laundry bundles I do dresses by one or ten. Also, rugs, blankets, curtains, bedspreads and mending. 420 Indiana St. 5-6
Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad
WANTED
FURNISHED APARTMENT OR HOME by September 1, married graduate students, can furnish references, no children. Call VI 2-0467. 4-30
WANTED: child's playpen, must be in good condition. Call VI. 2-0027. 5-6
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicc, party supplyiant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 0350.
SPECIAL SALE OF BOOKS at 50 cents
and $1.00. The Book Nook. 1021
M30-45
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 3-0124. tf
1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON, 6 cyl., 2-door, standard shift, 2-tone green. Original owner, 20,700 miles, excellent condition. VI 3-5297 a 4 p.m.
WESTMINSTER HALL at 1221 Oread is being replaced. The building is for sale to individuals or organizations should contact Dr. John H. Patton at 1221 Oread. J-40-2
BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES; contains complete outline of class lectures for entire semester, all word lists and definitions, charts, and diagrams not found in the text. The complete cross index of over 600 terms Everything defined accurately and concisely. The price is $2.50, free delivery. For your copy, call VI 3-7533, 805 Ohio
WESTERN CIVILIZATION STUDY
GUIDE. Get your copy now for
weeks only. Digital copies are
ordered by weeks. Free delivery. Sundays and
Wednesdays, only $3.00. Call VI-75281
1955 GLOBEMASTER TRAILER. 38 foot.
One bedroom, one study room, carpeted
living room. Call VI 2-0564 after 5 p.m.
1954 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. radio,
heater, new white top, 43,000 miles.
Exceptionally clean. See at 738 Rhode
Island after 5 p.m.
5-4
55 AUSTIN HEALEY, excellent condition, radio and heater, red, whitewalls. Dick Thomas, 7925 Park, K. C. Missouri. Delmar 3-9748. 5-4
1954 COLONIAL HOUSETRAILER, 30 foot. insulated. one bedroom. good com-
fort. John Keyes. Ernie's Trailer Court, north row. trailers east, 139 Perry St. 5-4
51 CHEVROLET TUDOR, must sell. Radio, heatler, nylon tires, good paint, very good running See Charles Bentz at 115 Ohio or call VI 3-1909. 5-5
PISTOLS, RIFLES, SHOTGUNS. Have 33
guns for sale or trade. Peter Des Jardins,
1138 Mississippi. Call VI 2-0051. 5-5
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CAR INSURANCE? If you are over 25 and a safe driver, you may qualify for car insurance at VI 3-5444 or at VI 3-9244 after 5 p.m. Representing Charlton Insurance Agency, serving Lawrence since 1861. 5-1
One way and local, ready to go any where,
where you want. Preservas
tions now being accepted.
UNDERWOOD PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, 4 years old. $35. Portable Electrical Trailer, aluminum, two bedrooms, front and rear, bath, shower, stove, refrigerator $1,950. Waltfer Truck Highway Skyline Trailer Court on Highway 10. 5-6
CROFT TRAILER RENTAL
one mile east of Mass, on 23rd.
Call VI 3-7377
NATIONWIDE TRAILERS
Audio House
HIGH FIDELITY
1011 N.H., Phone VI 3-4916
THE Premier JEWELRYSHOP
"A Safe Place to Buy Diamonds" 916 Mass.
916 Mass.
FINE DETAILS OF A DIAMOND ON A CURBED BELT.
Treasured Beyond All Other Gifts
Precious when given, even more precious through the years. The diamond you give will be an enduring symbol of a happy life together.
"A Diamond Is Forever"
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section.
FREEMAN Moccasins
Love that leisure leather! Genuine Moccasin styling gives you real "let-down" comfort and casual good looks in wonderful feeling FREEMAN
FREEMAN (UK)
FREEMAN (US)
PLIABLE BOOTSKINS BROWN OR BLACK A TO D TO 13 13.95 TO 14.95
SOMETHING TO SAY
ROYAL COLLEGE SHOPS 837 Mass.
Page 8
University Daily Kansas
Thursday. April 30, 1959
Break With Family Hard for Students
One of the main problems of college students is in breaking away from family supervision, three University educators said recei
supervision, three University educators said recently. College students have the problems of any individual breaking away from family supervision, said Harry J. LaPine, assistant professor of education and a counselor at the Guidance Bureau.
"After the break, it is difficult at first to perceive the responsibilities of adults, but the student learns to adjust," Prof. LaPine said.
Donna Younger, assistant to the dean of women, said there is no problem common to all college students.
"There are different manifestations. Students have to adjust themselves to budgeting their time and to a group living situation," Miss Younger said.
Howard Baumgartel, assistant professor of human relations, said before college, students do what their parents want.
"In college, students change to their own goals. There is nobody around to tell them what to do," Prof. Baumgartel said.
He said some students do not have the correct image of an educated person.
"For this reason, they fight education and view the demands of teachers as unreasonable. Maybe it is hard work, but it will be that wav
later in professional life" he said. Prof. LaPine said students often change their reasons for coming to college after they get there.
"The college student usually develops reasons of his own. His goals are a part of his philosophy.
"The college student has average or better intelligence. In college, he learns to employ his intelligence to adjust to life. He learns that a college education is more than getting a degree," he said.
Prof. Baumgartel gave three reasons why students come to college improving social status, intrinsic interest in learning, and parental pressure.
"Of course, there are subtle reasons such as meeting or finding a mate,' he said.
Prof. Baumgartel said those who continue their education incorporate middle class values to get ahead postponing gratification by working now to get something better later.
He said those who quit college may do so not through a lack of ability, but because of psychological difficulties.
Asked to 'Explain'
Harry's Talking Again
Truman, in his final salty lecture session at Columbia yesterday also told students that "witch hunters
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Former president Truman was invited today to appear before the House Committee on Un-American Activities and "explain fully" his remarks at Columbia University that the committee "is the most un-American thing in the country today."
in the House and Senate are charging things that do not exist."
Kansan Board Appoints Staff
Rep. Francis E. Walter (D-Pa), chairman of the committee, sent a telegram today to Truman at his New York hotel saying:
Jack Harrison, Hays junior, has been named managing editor of The Daily Kansan for the fall semester. George DeBord Jr., Kansas City, Kan, junior, and John Husar, Chicago, Ill., senior, will be co-editorial editors.
"Respectfully request that you explain fully by giving bill of particulars what is un-American in the jurisdiction, composition and conduct of the House Committee on Un-American Activities."
Assistant managing editors are Carol Allen, Leavenworth; Richard Crocker, Wichita; Jack Morton, Hutchinson; Raymond Douglas Yocom, Lawrence. All are juniors.
Other staff members appointed are Rael Amos, Oswego junior, city editor; Thomas James Trotter, Independence junior, sports editor; Janet Juneau, Topeka junior, assistant sports editor; Carolyn Frailey, Sulphur Springs, Tex., junior, society editor; Sara Pfeifer, Parsons sophomore, assistant society editor; Saundra Hayn, Wichita junior, associate editorial editor.
The appointments were approved yesterday by the Kansas Board.
6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m.
Photo-Finishing
Walter added "your appearance before the committee for that purpose will be most welcome."
FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak)
摄录师
HIXON STUDIO
DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK
721 Mass. VI 1-0330
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
DEAD
END?
When you see this sign there's just one thing to do—turn around and take a new route. If you've reached a dead end in planning your career, maybe you should do the same.
A few minutes spent with the head of our campus unit will bring to light the many advantages of a career in life insurance sales. Take the time now to look into the possibilities.
Miller, Foster JRP Win Sing
PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia
Miller, Foster and Joseph R. Pearson Halls took first place trophies in the third annual Inter-Residence Assn. Spring Sing last night in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Miller Hall won first place trophies in both women's large ensemble and women's small ensemble divisions.
Winner in the men's large ensemble division was Foster Hall with "Roadway." The small ensemble winner was Joseph R. Pearson, singing "Practice Makes Perfect."
BILL LYONS
Miller's large ensemble sang "The Lovin' Tree," and "Two Hearts in Three Quarter Time" was the winning selection of the small ensemble.
Emily Taylor, dean of women presented the trophies to the winners.
Supervisor
1722 W. Ninth
Janet Cameron was mistress of ceremonies for the event and Charlotte Stryker was chairman. Both are Topeka juniors.
VI 3-5692
Chorus to Present Oratorio Sunday
"Solomon," the seldom-heard oratorio by Handel, will be presented in Hoch Auditorium at 3:30 p.m. Sunday by the University Symphony orchestra and a chorus of over 200 voices.
The performance, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music, is being presented in observance of the two hundredth anniversary of Handel's birth.
Soloists will be Miriam Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, soprano; Joseph F. Wilkins, professor of voice, tenor, and Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, bass-baritone.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS SHAKESPEARE'S "THE WINTER'S TALE" Tonight and May 1-2 8 p.m.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE KU Students Free Admission With I.D. Card
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
PAT READ
INDIAN TRADER
5 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
Jantzen
You will find these "Scottish Moor" swim shorts as comfortable and carefree as wearing kilts. The cotton treated to dry wrinkle free. Choose in authentic tartans. $14.95
Ober's Jr. Miss
821 Mass.
Elevator from Men's Store