KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Tuesday, July 7, 1959 47th Year, No.8 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU NELSON R. KING MALE OR FEMALE?—William Davis, Kansas City, Mo., commercial artist, stops to admire "Pan Kneeeling with Bagpipes" while touring the campus. "Pan," new guardian at Spooner Museum, already has raised a controversy during his short stay. 'Pan with Bagpipes' Is Newest Debate Topic Bronze statues continue to be a source for debate and controversy on the KU campus. Latest object of conjecture is a new statue, Kneeling Pan with Bagpipes" placed in front of Spooner Art Mu- Swedish Movie Due Wednesday "The Great Adventure," a Swedish motion picture hailed by many critics as one of the best films of 1955 will be shown at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Bailey. It is the fifth in a summer series "Film Features of Fact and Fiction," presented by the Bureau of Visual Instruction. "The Great Adventure" was photographed on a Swedish farm, and directed by Arne Sucksdorff. It shows the symmetry of nature in its many and fascinating forms and in its endless rotations of behavior on the part of creatures and men. It depicts how animals prey upon other animals and how man preys upon animals. Soviet Safely Returns 3 Animals from Space LONDON — (UPI) — Two dogs and a rabbit were fired into space by the Soviet Union and returned to earth in "good" condition, Radio Moscow said Monday. The broadcast said the dogs were named Daring and Snowflake. No name was given for the rabbit. The broadcast said the "space vehicle" carrying the animals was launched into the "upper layers of the atmosphere" by a single-stage geophysical ballistic rocket of medium range on July 2. The controversy?—It seems a woman student came upon the statue from the side. Walking around the back she gave it close attention and then remarked to her companion, "She's kind of muscular for a girl, isn't she?" Smaller than life size, the statue is one of the earlier products of Mestrovic, considered by some the world's foremost sculptor. At present Mestrovic is sculptor-in-residence at Notre Dame University. Inspection of the front view dispelled all ideas that the sculptor might have been confused as to what sex he was sculpting. A very red face attested to the fact that Mestrovic had left no doubt. Appraising the muscular back and long hair fashioned in a bun, her companion advised her to try a front view. The statue was obtained for KU through the Kansas University Endowment Assn. and the Swannie Smith Zink fund. The latter fund, sponsored by the John Zink family of Tulsa, Okla., is named for a former University student of the class of 1921, who is now the wife of John Zink, a Tulsa manufacturer, rancher, and art patron. First Midwest Music Clinic To Start Here Reds Mass Aircraft On East China Coast Approximately 500 persons will be on the campus Thursday through Monday to attend the first annual Midwestern Music Clinic, Russell L Wiley, director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp and the Clinic reports. Prof. Wilev said he believes the enrollment will be doubled for next summer. The clinic is sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and the Music and Art Camp. Nineteen artists and three conductors from over the United States will be the guest clinicians. The artists include violinist Henri Temianka of the Paganini String Quartet, cellist Benar Heifetz of the Albenieri Trio, the Chicago Symphony woodwind quintet, trumpeter Don Jacoby, CBS staff artist, Chicago; trombonist Robert Paolucci, CBS staff artist, New York, and others. TAIPEI, Formosa — (UPI) — The official Military Information Service Monday said the Chinese Communists have concentrated 2,300 planes—about two-thirds of the entire Red Air Force—along the east coast within striking range of Formosa The clinic organizations include the supervisors' band, supervisors' chorus, Music and Art Camp band, orchestra, and chorus. Three clinic ensembles are planned — clarinet, brass, and French horn. Two forums on repairs for stringed and for wind instruments will be conducted. Twenty-two national music manufacturing companies will furnish new instruments, uniforms, and music for a 400-foot display gallery at the Music and Dramatic Arts Building during the Clinic. Race Car Driver Killed in Accident Junction City — (UPI)—A Salina race car driver, the father of seven children, was killed in a seven-car smashup at the Plaza Speedway Sunday night, raising the state's week-end death toll from auto racing to three. The driver, Gene Rodine, 31, suffered a broken neck and was dead on arrival at the city hospital. The Geary County sheriff's office said Rodine's car went into a skid and that six other cars hit him. The cars did not go off the track. Wiley Hails Camp At Half-Way Point The Midwestern Music and Art Camp continues to live up to its early predictions of being the best ever held as the 675 members swing into the second-half of the summer program. Students May Sign For Western Civ Students may now register for the summer Western Civilization examination to be given from 8-12 am. July 25. Those planning to take the test must register before July 15 in 130 Strong Hall. Room assignments will be made at the time of registration. Credit Institute To Attract 110 Approximately 110 credit bureau personnel from agencies throughout the Midwest are expected to attend the 10th Credit Bureau and Collection Management Institute here July 12-17. A total of 25 credit hours may be earned by participants toward the required 100 to gain a certificate of achievement from the institute. The institute and KU issue the certificate jointly. Sponsors of the five-day conference are the Associated Credit Bureaus of the Midwest, fourth district; Associated Credit Bureaus of the Rocky Mountain States; Associated Credit Bureaus of America, Inc., and University Extension. Several faculty members will speak, including Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; E.C.Buehler, professor of speech; William Conboy, associate professor of speech and drama, and Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech. Police Aid Royal Couple FORMENTOR, Maiorca — (UFI)—Spanish police guarding the honeymooning Prince Albert of Belgium and his princess Monday fired on photographers pursuing the royal couple. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and camp director, is enthusiastic about the camp. He termed it as being "very good." "We've never had a camp in all its (band camp) history run as smooth as this one. Furthermore, we've never had the talent that we have this year," he said. The founder of the camp said he thought members of the music division of the camp were exhibiting more maturity as the program progresses. He attributed this maturity to the hard work and pressure under which campers work. "The members of the band, orchestra, and chorus prepare a number much more quickly now that they are used to working under pressure. "Most groups (musical) don't obtain 100 per cent efficiency in their work because they don't work hard enough. We approach 100 per cent efficiency because we do work hard and we have this goal in mind. This helps to make a mature musician," he explained. Prof. Wiley said 200 students are enrolled in the band, 115 in the orchestra, and 140 in the chorus. For the Sunday concerts, held at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre and at 8 p.m. in the outdoor theater, the groups practice two hours every morning, supplemented in the afternoon by an hour of sectional practice. Each week a new program of study is given under the directorship of a new conductor, with the Sunday concerts being built around the week's work. Hagerty Back on Job After Appendectomy WASHINGTON — (UPI) — White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty returned to work Monday after an absence of two weeks because of surgery. Hagerty had an inflamed appendix removed at Walter Reed Army Hospital June 22. JACKSON, TEXAS HOLD IT—Three high school students who are cast members of "Once in a Lifetime" show their acting ability. From left, they are Hoite Caston, Independence, Tom Woodard, Des Moines, and Janet Peppler, Halstead. The production opens at the University Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1950 Appeasement in Our Time Let's attend the opening night of a prize-winning historical play. Act. I. Munich-Czechoslovakia. Hitler said he wanted peace. Yes, he certainly did—but he spelled it "piece." A piece of that country and a piece of that country and a piece of that country. And we gave him "piece." The appetite is whetted, not satisfied by appeasement. "As soon as an inch is granted, a mile will be demanded." Act II. Yalta-Poland. Thinking to avoid war, President Roosevelt made major concessions to the Reds. Appeasement as the avoidance of war doesn't appease. Can we not avoid war and still preserve our national honor? Act III. Geneva-Berlin. What did Khrushchev (Gromyko) get? The possibility of a summit meeting? The sheepish appeasement is often dressed in the wolf's clothing of "meeting the person half-way." The curtain falls. What will the critics say? There is an answer. A firm refusal should be the answer—instead of obedience to demands. We may sometime learn that dictators cannot be appeased because their ideals and procedures are so often denied for the sake of getting into power. Those who want appeasement (under whatever term they place it) can be recognized. "Give in to them on this point because then there will be no war." The contrary may be true, as history has shown. There simply is no peace in appeasement. Bilking The Public Fast-talking sharpies have come up with a new crop of schemes to bilk the gullible, the Reader's Digest has reported. To protect ourselves—and stamp out the crooks—we must report attempted frauds or deceptions to the police or other authorities. A nationwide survey of Better Business Bureaus reports these "Five Swindles to Watch Out For." 1. Blank contracts. Some people who wouldn't dream of signing a blank check, Wharton says, apparently can't resist a fast-talking salesman who says "just sign these papers and the car is yours; we'll fill in the details when the secretary gets in tomorrow." Those "details" often add up to several hundred dollars overcharge. 2. Contests and credit checks. Many hard-sell merchants hold ridiculously easy "contests" in which every entrant "wins" second prize—a "credit check" for say, $50. This entitles him to $50 on some item which has been marked up $50 in price. 3. Gyp correspondence courses. They often employ high-pressure salesmen who pose as "registrars" and falsely promise to refund the student's money if he doesn't get a big job. One school is selling a $295 course to girls who want to become airline hostesses. Most major airlines train their own hostesses at the airlines expense. 4. The "Business Opportunity." Often, this is a scheme to sell vending machines at three or four times their value, through advertisements offering $400 to $500 a month for a few hours' work a week, as a "Supervisor" or "Route Manager." 5. Drug and cosmetic frauds. The Better Business Bureau gets ten times as many complaints about these as it did two years ago. One great hoax is the "royal jelly" capsule and cosmetic campaign. The jelly may be extremely nourishing for a queen bee, but it does nothing whatever for humans-except those who sell it. Daily Crossword —Farmington (Mo.) Press ACROSS 1 Inexpensive. 2 Salamander. 10 noire (bugbear). 15 Shilly-shally. 16 Swiff river. 15 Duce-Fuchrer comrade. 17 Rag-to-tiches exponent. 18 Notice; Colloq. 20 Dreams on paper. 21 Winged. 22 Born. 23 Combat missions by planes. 25 School paper. 27 Price cut. 29 Sensational. 32 Catch up with. 32 Shaped like an ancient harp. 37 Plunge. 38 Tax of a tenth. 39 Solar disk. 41 Unwilling. 43 Kitchen appliances. 45 Abraham's wife. 46 Veranda. 47 Fairy-tale dwarf. 49 Olympic field event. 54 A flair for pitch. 16 Reading Gaol poet. Chatter idly. 59 Backstage place. 16 Spanish cloak. 62 Ripening agent. 16 Raison d'— 64 Snake. 63 Ding's companion. 66 Sock chore. 67 Approaches **DOWN** 1 Cowboy apparel. 2 Exclamation of greeting. 3 Poet Guest. 4 Representative. 5 Keep at it. 6 Japanese city. 7 Title. 8 Garland. 9 Parts of an effective law. 10 Sorroge's exclamation. 11 Exculpate. 12 Fatigue. 13 Fendal toller. Puzzle 19 Late West Virginia Senator. 24 Overjoy. 26 Napoleonic Marshal. 28 Suffle. 30 Roman road. 31 Laire. 32 Harem rooms. 33 Long live: Span. 34 Laurel or hemlock. 35 Showed a film again. 36 Percolate through ashes. 39 Jockeys. 42 Displayed. 44 Store worker. 46 Basque court game. 48 Bogged down. 50 Essence of commerce. 51 Relative of the raccoon. 52 Complete. 53 Rips. 54 Ouaint oath. 55 Jason's ship. 57 Rhode Island rebel, 1842. 60 Unit of work. 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 27 28 Tokyo No.1 City in World WASHINGTON — Tokyo is a phoenix among capitals. It has risen from the ashes of World War II fire raids to become possibly the largest and fastest-growing city in the world. Geographers generally agree that the 500-year-old Japanese metropolis has surpassed London and New York. The estimated populations are, respectively: 8,774,000; 8,251,000; and 7,795,500. However, varying dates of census taking, heavy movements of people, explosive birth rates, and differing concepts of metropolitan limits make it almost impossible nowadays to compare accurately the populations of the great cities, the National Geographic Society saves. Size notwithstanding, Tokyo has the dubious honor of being the world's most congested capital. It lacks the open spaces of comparable cities; many streets are narrow and winding. The city is growing at a rate of 300,000 a year. The National Capital Region has a radius of about 5 miles. It takes in three counties, 23 wards, and eight autonomous cities. The complex is administered by a governor and the 120-member Metropolitan Assembly. Tokyo is bursting from its seams, spilling patternless and unchecked across the low, surrounding countryside. The huge concrete buildings and television towers planted so solidly in downtown Tokyo contrast with the disorderly march outward of suburbs. The city is largely built of wood. I have sworn union the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man—Thomas Jefferson Daily Hansan (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Juncau Associate Editor Ray Miller BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office ... Phone 376 Business Manager ... Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism BLOW UP A STORM, by Garson Kanin. Random House. $3.95. It must have been around 1940 that I read Dorothy Baker's great tale of jazz musicians. "Young Man with a Horn." Not since then have I been excited in quite the same way by a novel. "Blow Up a Storm" creates a desire to hear some good jazz, some jazz of the 1920s and 1930s, the kind, perhaps, that Red Nichols creates in a recording of "When the Saints Go Marching In," now being pushed by the disk jockeys. Carson Kanin does blow up a storm in this brilliantly written and always absorbing novel. Kanin is the former film director who made such pictures as "Tom, Dick and Harry" and the noteworthy wartime documentary, "The True Glory." He also is the man who did that wonderful play, "Born Yesterday." In "Blow Up a Storm" he is on ground entirely different from that of the junk dealer and the mistress he wishes he hadn't had educated. Kanin's narrator is a playwright, a former saxophone player in a jazz band of the early 1930s. While touring with his actress wife in Chicago, he receives a phone call that takes him back nostalgically to those years of the depression, to the exciting life he lived as a jazz musician in New York. And as he recalls the past he conjures up those persons who had been so integral a part of his life. First there is Lee Woodruff, who made the phone call. Wood- ruff, the rich boy who played trumpet in those long-gone days and who seemed to have such a monumental and psychotic hatred for Negroes, even those Negroes who become associated with the little band. There is Slug, a big Negro drummer who nervously beats out a drum tattoo, even when he is not near his drums, and who dies so mysteriously in the apartment of Woodruff after a wild nighttime dash across New York from the hospital where he has been taking a cure for drugs. There is Edmonde, the French girl who loves jazz, who is called "Eddie" by the hero, "Madame" by Woodruff, and "Frenchlady" by Slug, who returns to Paris and reenters the lives of all the musicians when the war is over and she has been broken by the Nazi conqueror. There is Don, the southerner with absolutely no racial prejudice, who goes from one narcotics kick to another, who is still dyeing his hair as a middle-aged musician so that he can compete with the new progressive jazz musicians of San Francisco. There is Clara, the beautiful Negro who wanted to pass as white and who failed, whose romance with the narrator perishes in a rough street fight in Harlem, where a colored gang shows itself as intolerant of racial mixing as the white gangs uptown. Garson Kanin, as readers of "Born Yesterday" already know, has a fine ear for the language, for vernacular touches. His jazz talk seems a bit anachronistic, but perhaps musicians have been talking that way for a quarter of a century. He also has an amazing knack of description, and in one long sequence he describes a marijuana session, in a tightly locked New York flat that oppresses first the narrator and then the reader, who almost feels himself in a state of claustrophobia. This book, and these jazz musicians, are a valid part of our culture. Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Jelly Roll Morton, Bix Beiderbecke, Billie Holliday, and Kanin's Woody, Slug, Don, and Clara are memorable figures. "Giving and taking. Discovering and communicating. The blended feeling and the shared living. The good music. The Woody Woodruff Seven. I am listening to it now—here and now—and it sounds. it is, beautiful. What I call beautiful." THE DANGEROUS AMERICAN, by A. E. Hotchner, Signet, 35 cents. After living 31 of his 32 years in St. Louis, Johnny Cella is deported as an undesirable alien to his native Italy. This story relates his adjustment to the new life in a strange environment. Cella has the problems of being low on funds and of not speaking the language. His only contact is underworld characters who attempt to drag him into a narcotics racket. Fortunately, he gets help from two beautiful women—one a hoyden, the other a capable, virtuous wifely type. If the reader can accept the premise of a decorated veteran with a clean police record being deported on a technicality, he will find the novel intriguing and interesting. The account of life under these unusual circumstances is smoothly written, with love and suspense added for an evening of easy, enjoyable reading. -NAP MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT, by Paddy Chayefsky. Bantam, 35 cents. Some day a Ph.D. candidate in American literature may attempt to assess "Paddy Chayefsky and the American Vernacular." Meanwhile, Chayefsky's television and screen plays, and one play, "Middle of the Night," are worth study. It was fashionable a few years ago to praise Chayefsky (see Time, Newsweek, etc., in the "Marty" era). Now the few who follow fashions in criticism find Chayefsky very superficial, his detailed descriptions of the little people of the Bronx dull and over-realistic. "Middle of the Night" is a simple story, the Bantam publication nicely timed for release of the movie, which stars Fredric March. It's about a girl in her twenties, already a victim of one unhappy marriage, who has an affair with, and finally weds, a man in his fifties. His family fights the marriage as much as the girl's family. The story is well told and compassionate, and while it does not have a theme of enduring significance, it does have a lot to say about our marriage and engagement mores and taboos. And the language is, well, Paddy Chayefsky. —CMP Page 3 Texas Cattle Drive Is Way to Relive History Editor's note: The following is an article written by Jack Harrison Hays senior, who will be managing editor of the fall semester Kansan. The article appeared in the Salina Journal. In two years the state of Kansas will be 100 years old. It's about time we were planning our birthday celebration. Oregon is publicizing its centennial this year by sending a wagor train over the old Oregon Trail from Independence, Mo., to Independence, Ore. A wagon trip from Independence, Mo., to Kansas would hardly be worth the trouble of hitching up. But maybe we can go the other way. Surely we can find a stunt as good as Oregon's. We can't let a bunch of lumberjacks outdo us. It seems Kansas owes a social call to those border ruffians in Missouri. We might retrace the route of Coronado into our fair state. This time the travelers may locate those elusive Seven Cities of Gold. Perhaps a pilgrimage to Kansas should come from the south. Will Quantrill and his boys paid a visit to the town of Lawrence back in '63. The only civil thing to do is return the favor. We couldn't follow the Spaniards' route to the end, however. Coronado got discouraged with it all turned around and went back home. We could organize a cattle drive from Texas. If the Legislature can't see spending the money, a little rustling from the Okies along the way will help defray expenses. To give the state that real frontier look in '61, we might outlaw automobiles for the year. The slow-plodding oxen would surely cut down the highway fatality rate. The use of animal transportation would also slow down the rapid transit through the state of tourists and their money. Those numerous soil-bank acres could be planted to sunflowers. We might even do something constructive and give ourselves a useful birthday present—such as a revised state constitution. Perhaps we should plan a statewide centennial exhibit that could be seen by all, whether in the air or on the roads. Maybe we will need to hire some help from out of town for the big celebration. Most of the suitable fellows are living in Hollywood now. The Maverick boys can set up shop in Abilene, and move down the road when the customers get nasty. Watt Earp can have his old job as sheriff in Wichita. Bat Masterson can be Dodge City marshal. Bill Hickey can again wear the tin badge in Hays City. We might even find a place for Flint McCulloch and his wagon train. Planning for the centennial is a problem. But if we think it over we may decide 100 years in this country is long enough, and just give it back to the Indians. Director of NEA To Talk at KU Dr. Ivan A. Booker, director of the Membership Division of the National Education Association, will give an address in Bailey Auditorium at 2:00 p.m. tomorrow. The talk will be open to all University students, faculty members, and the public. Before assuming his present position, Dr. Booker was assistant director of the NEA's division of Press and Radio Relations, and of its Research Division. He has been in charge of the nation-wide promotion of National Education Week and the public relations film project which the NEA carries out in cooperation with the state education associations. GOP State Chairman Challenges Beatty Summer Session Kansan TOPEKA — (UPI) — Republican State Chairman Sam Mellinger today called on Democrat Kansas Corporation Commissioner Marion Beatty to "name names ... under oath" in connection with his charges last week against Gov. George Docking. Beatty resigned as KCC chairman Just week, claiming he had had difficulties making impartial decisions because of interference from the governor. Eutter made from milk of zebus tastes like it. Magazine, Fund Receive Awards The KU Alumni Magazine and Greater University Fund each won two awards at the 4th general conference of the American Alumni Council last week at Makinac Island, Michigan. The Alumni Magazine received the third place award in the category for coverage of students and third place in the alumni news category among institutions with more than 30,000 alumni. The K-Stater Magazine also received an honorable mention in the students category for institutions with from 10,000 to 30,000 alumni. The KU Greater University Fund earned the second place award for a single mailing piece in annual alumni fund raising. The Alumni Assn. received third place for a single piece of dues and membership promotion. A grant of $39,905 for small business research to be done cooperatively by KU and Kansas State University has been made by the Small Business Administration in Washington. D.C. Grant Made For Business The one-year grant is for study of "Management Strategy in Establishment Sizes Operated by Both Independent and Centrally-Controlled Companies." H. K. L'Ecuyer, associate professor of business administration, will be project director. Associate director will be Prof. Leland S. Hobson of the Division of Engineering and Industrial Services of Kansas State University. Prof. L'Ecuyer said the project will consist of case studies of both independent and centrally-controlled companies operating small size establishments, particularly those which are competitively effective in their fields. Services of the Center for Research in Business will be used in connection with work done at KU. Up to four full-time research assistants can be used for the project. However, individuals of the experience and training necessary for this type of work are currently in short supply, Professor L'Ecuyer said. Martha Cook, reading laboratory assistant, announced recently that two courses, one in rapid reading and one in reading and study methods, are open between 1-3 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Students who feel the need to learn better study methods and speed in reading may still enroll in courses in these fields. Courses Available In Study Methods The schedule within these hours may be adopted to fit individual needs. Students who wish to enroll in these courses may do so at 102 Bailey between 1-3 p.m. today through Thursday. Enrollment will be open during the rest of the semester. No credit will be given, and no home work will be involved Labor Institute Draws 100 Men The thirteenth annual Steel-workers Summer Labor Institute brought nearly 100 workers in the steel and allied industries to the KU campus this week. The six-day program will run through Friday. GOP Will Hear Simpson TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Republican State Committee has announced another prominent speaker for its July 11 meeting at Wichita. He is U.S. Rep. Richard M. Simpson, Republican, of Pennsylvania, Simpson will appear with Sen. Thurston B. Morton (R-Ky), the party's national chairman. Tuesday, July 7, 1959 The institute, sponsored by the educational division of the United Steelworkers of America (AFL-CIO) and University Extension, is intended to provide its participants with an opportunity to increase their knowledge and understanding of their union's impact on the economy, its position in the community and its influence in government. Two separate courses are offered at the KU institute: a first-year program for workers attending for the first time, and a second-year course for those having attended previously. First-year men are studying union history, the position of steelworkers in the economy, labor's role in political action, speech and communication, and local union organization and procedure. The second-year program includes discussions of the national economy, community relations, the government and world affairs, stewardship, and the press and the public. Certificates of completion will be presented to those attending the program on Friday, by A. F. Kojetinskov of District 34 headquarters. Other instructors and speakers at the meeting will include E. C. Buehler, professor of public speaking at KU. Thomas Cosgrove and John McColum of the University of Chicago; William Lavelle, representative of the United Steelworkers of America, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Iden Reese, Kansas City, Kan., junior College, and Dr. John Ise, professor emeritus of economics at KU. Ground Water Sources Subject of New Study Among the buried treasures of northeastern Kansas are some sand-filled channels that are sources for ground water and possibly may be developed as underground storage reservoirs for surface water. "Sandstones of the Douglas and Pedee Groups in Northeastern Kansas," by Donald T. Sanders, published by the State Geological Survey, contains 25 pages of general information about these permeable rocks found in below-the-surface channel-like trends. The trends, as interpreted in the report, are ancient river valleys, and the distribution of the deposits shows two drainage patterns. In the report the deposits known as the Ireland and Tonganoxie Sandstones are described in detail. At a position above a subsurface rock unit identified as the Haskell Limestone, the Ireland Sandstone is the dominant sand body. The sand-stone deposits occur in two major trends; the principal channel, which crosses Wabaunsee, Osage, and Franklin Counties, is about 100 feet deep. Below the Haskell Limestone, the Tonganoxie Sandstone is dominant. It has been deposited in a southwest-trending valley, traced through Douglas, Franklin, Osage, Coffey, Lyon, and Greenwood Counties, and in places it is more than 140 feet deep. Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 8h & 9l Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c A summary of present uses of water from buried Tonganoxie-Ireland Sandstone reservoirs is given in the report. Several small communities in northeastern Kansas, for example, obtain all or nearly all of their water supply from such reservoirs. The water systems of Wellsville, Baldwin, and Waverley, are supplied entirely from the Ireland Sandstone; Quenemo gets its supply from the Ireland and from Pleistocene gravels; Overbrook and Tonganoxie municipal wells tap the Tonganoxie Sandstone; and Pomona may obtain water from both the Ireland and the Tonganoxie. Subsurface data on which the study is based were obtained by examination of logs of approximately 1,000 wells drilled in the search for water, oil, and gas. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER P Wash and Wear needs SANITONE CARE Your clothes will look like they've been washed and worn when that's the care they get. Clothes that receive SANITONE CARE show it too, but what a difference. Sanitone Dry Cleaning gives them the look and feel of newness, cleaning after cleaning. If appearance is important to you better give your clothes SANITONE CARE SANITONE CARE KEEPS THAT DAPPER AIR in your wash-and-wear clothes APPROVED CANHONE SERVICE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 10th & New Hampshire VI 3-3711 10th & New Hampshire Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1959 RAPHIS 0140 WHAT IS IT?—Tom Micheletti, Springfield, Ill., and Pat Ryan, Kansas City, Mo., seem to be perplexed as they view some of the art work on display in the main foyer of the Kansas Union. Highway,WaterDeaths Set Record for Holiday By United Press International Traffic deaths and drownings set new records for a two-day Independence Day weekend. A United Press International count showed 272 deaths in traffic, 171 drownings and 52 from miscellaneous causes for an over-all total of 495. None died from fireworks during the holiday period. The previous high for traffic deaths during a two-day Fourth of July holiday was in 1953, when 271 lost their lives. The previous high for drownings for a two-day holiday also was in 1953 when 121 drowned. The high for a three-day Independence Day holiday was 251 in 1955. Texas led the states in traffic deaths with 25. Illinois and Virginia reported 16. New York 15 and Pennsylvania 14. New York led in drownings with 16. Texas had 14 and Michigan 13. The National Safety Council had estimated that 350 persons would die in auto accidents between 6 p.m. local time Friday and midnight Sunday. It said the fact that the toll fell short of its prediction was due to thoughtful driving and emergency police traffic measures. The safety council said that although the traffic death toll exceeded that of the previous high for a two-day Fourth, travel since 1953 has increased sharply. It estimated there were 9 million more cars on the road than there were in 1953 and that they traveled 25 per cent more miles. Coke Root Beer Lemonade Limeade Orange $ \frac{1}{2} $ Gal. 30c Paper Cups with this Coupon FREE Good Tue., Wed., Thurs., Fri. FAY'S DRIVE-IN 914 West 23rd New Task Looms At Tuttle Creek MANHATTAN, Kan. — (UPI) Engineers and contractors Monday worked to fill in a gaping hole in the huge Tuttle Creek Dam in efforts to finally bring the Big Blue River under control. Gov. George Docking touched off a dynamite blast at ceremonies Saturday, channeling the river water through the control tower at the west end of the mile and one-half long dam five miles north of Manhattan. The water had been going through the river channel in the center of the dam, a hole that now must be plugged before engineers are able to control the river. Col. L, E. Laurior, Army engineer at Kansas City, said it would take about 75,000 truck loads of dirt—and six weeks work—to plug the center of the dam. When that is done, engineers will be able gradually to take control of the river. However, they don't expect to begin backing up water until 1962. China Travel Ban By Press Upheld WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The U.S. Court of Appals has upheld the State Department's right to choose the news correspondents it would allow to travel to Communist China. It did so in ruling, 3 to 0, that the department did not exceed its authority in denying permission to author Waldo Frank, 69, of New York to travel to China. Frank sought to go to China as a special correspondent for Latin American newspapers, and to lecture at the University of Peking. Dr. Howard A. Matzke, associate professor of anatomy, has been named a special consultant to the World Federation of Neurologists in Antwerp, Belgium, during July. KU Neurologist to Attend World Federation in Europe Dr. Matzke will confer with and advise Federation officials on organization of an international committee of comparative neurology and the possible creation of an institute of comparative neurology and sites. Comparative neurology, a field in which Dr. Matzke has received many grants during his six years at KU, is the study of animal brains. While in Europe Dr. Matzke will also advise on the disposition of a large number of African animal brains now at the Max Planck Institute at Giessen, Germany. He will also confer with comparative neurologists in Amsterdam, Paris, and London. Dr. Matzke will leave for Europe on July 9 and will return on August 3. C H E A P N E W T B E T E H E D G E A A R E A X I S A L G E R G R E E N H O R N P L A N S A L A T E N E E S O R T I E S T H E M E S L A S H L U R I D O V E R T A K E L Y R A T E D I V E T I T H E A T E N A V E R S E T O A S T E R S S A R A H P O R C H G N O M E S H O T P U T E A R W I L D E P R A T E G R E E N R O O M M A N T A A G E R E T R E A D D E R D O N G D A R N N E A R S TEXACO MED T. 14 Wheel Balancing Modern Equipment BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 Just a Step Off the Campus for all your Beauty Needs "Air Conditioned" Corn's Campus Beauty Shoppe 12th & Indiana 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE X Favorite Date Dress Disheveled? You don't have to miss that important date just because your favorite party dress is a mess at the last minute. Send it to Acme for one-hour Jet Lightning Service. Go out in style with a dress that looks its best - Acme best. acme Acme BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. VI 3-5155 Page 5 Rebecca A STITCH IN TIME—Herbert Camburn, instructor of speech and costume design director, helps adjust the garb of Margaret Kennedy. Derby freshman, a member of the cast of "Servant of Two Masters." Chicago Welcomes Queen With Fireworks and Music Summer Session Kansan CHICAGO — (UPI) — Queen Elizabeth set foot on Chicago soil Monday and received a welcome of fireworks, sirens, cannon salutes, stirring band music and applause. While dignitaries followed the formalities of protocol befitting the first visit to the Midwest metropolis by a British reigning monarch, more than 15,000 spectators jamming the Grant Park landing site gave out with a lusty greeting. Aerial torpedoes burst high in the air and dropped British and American flags. Fireboats and other craft sounded sirens and whistles, and planes droned overhead with a noisy welcome for the Queen and her consort, Prince Philip, as they came ashore for a whirlwind visit in ideal weather. The crowd gawking from the fringe of the landing site was a bit restrained at first. But when the fireworks started, a band played "Rule Britannia," and the sirens and whistles screamed, the spectators got into the spirit of the occasion. The Queen, smiling and waving and radiant in a print dress ruffling in the breeze, walked down a long red carpet and greeted distinguished guests with a handshake. She was given a bouquet by Mrs. Shirley Stratton, wife of the Illinois governor, before she headed down the receiving line with the royal party. Planes droned overhead and cameras clicked and whirred as Her Majesty stepped from the blue-bulled Royal yacht Britannia to start a 13-hour tour of the nation's second largest city. MORRIS '1000' Your BIGGEST small car buy $1650 Equipped 75 mph 40 mpg British Motors "Where No Imported Car Is Foreign" Weather in State Due to Be Mild TOPEKA — (UPI) — The U.S. Weather Bureau says there is "nothing very threatening" in weather outlooks for the next couple of days in Kansas. Rain and hail fell Sunday in a line from Hays to Norton to Conway Springs. It says there may be a few widely scattered thundershowers. Falls included 1.40 inches at Havys, .93 at Norton, with considerable hail, 1.30 at Densmore with hail and wind damage, 1.06 at Webster with wind damage, 1.10 at Stockton, .61 at Pratt, and .95 at Conway Springs. The Blue, Black Vermilion, Delaware, and Upper Marais de Cygne rivers were falling. Lighter falls included .10 at Dodge City and 24 at Garden City. Extreme temperatures were 95 at Garden City and 84 at Concordia. The Kaw was well within bank-ful and was expected to reach $ _{3} ^{2}$ to $ _{4} ^{3}$ bankful in the next couple of days. 20,000 Zebus can't be wrong. Read the Summer Session Kansan. Tuesday, July 7, 1959 New Job for Temple A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, says Temple will replace Rex Grossart, who will be head track coach and football assistant at Bakersfield, Calif. Flovd Temple, assistant athletic director and varsity baseball coach the past six seasons, will take on additional duties during the fall on the KU football staff. Temple, a lettered fullback here in 1948 and '49, coached football at Paola High School in 1950 and '51 as assistant to Hoyt Baker, also a former KU fullback. Temple will continue as baseball coach and as Lonborg's aide. Temple will join a corps of assistants which now include George Bernhardt, Bobby Goad, Bill Pace, Wayne Replogle, Don Fambrough, and Tom Triplette. Replogle will assume Temple's former duties of traveling the Jayhawker Quarterback Club circuit during the football season. Professor Receives Grant in Chemistry The Research Corp. has made a grant of $2,800 to support studies by Dr. Reynold T. Iwamoto, assistant professor of chemistry, of solvent effects on the electrochemical behavior the iodide ion, tri-iodide ion and iodine. A graduate assistant will be appointed for the study. The Research Corp., whose principal source of income is from patients assigned to it by several inventors, supports fundamental studies which have no intended practical application. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Teachers' Vacancies Located In Colorado, California, Dakotas, Washington, Montana, Arizona and Wyoming. COLUMBINE TEACHER'S AGENCY 1320 Pearl Boulder, Colorado HEY! WE'RE SERVING Colonel Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken AT THE BIG BUY Drive In: Place your order at one of the convenient speakers. Drive Up: Drive Out: Pick up your order in handy carry out carton. To our shaded parking area to enjoy your order. A CAR SPEAKER A taxi driver shouting into a loudspeaker. A couple sitting in the car with a coffee cup and saucer. Another couple sitting in the car. Try Our Fried Chicken — It’s "Finger-Licken" Good Highways 10 & 59 BIG BUY SW of Lawrence VI 3-8225 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1959 Drysdale, Wynn Are All-Star Game Hurlers - PITTSBURGH — (UPI)— Don Drysdale, Los Angeles Dodgers righthander, and Early Wynn, veteran Chicago White Sox workhorse, have been named the starting pitchers for today's 26th annual All-Star game. The selections were announced by National League Manager Fred Haney of the Milwaukee Braves and American League Pilot Casey Stengel of the Yankees. Haney said Milwaukee's Lew Burdette, hero of the 1957 World Series, would be the National League's second pitcher, "depending on how things go." Planning Units Common in State All cities with a population of more than 10,000 in Kansas have planning commissions, reports the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas. Without exception, the five largest cities in Kansas are actively planning throughout their fringe areas. Three of these are represented on city-county planning commissions. Of 27 cities surveyed, 13 include fringe areas within the city planning program. Seven extend planning to such areas within a three-mile radius, and six others participate in city-county planning commissions. The city of Manhattan, which is in Riley County, but adjacent to Potawatomi County, is working with planning and zoning authorities in both counties. Wichita's Metropolitan Planning Commission not only gives attention to growth patterns within a three-mile radius of the city limits, but engages in long range planning, makes suggestions for county zoning, and exercises the city's master plan in influencing subdivision growth. The authority to plan outside city limits is broadly granted by Kansas statutes. But terms of the law do not permit Kansas cities to enforce compliance with their master plans in adjacent suburban or rural areas. Attempts to influence the nature of suburban growth outside the city are more often linked to platting requirements for subdivisions or pre-requisites for municipal utility extensions. Regional or metropolitan planning commissions were made possible by 1957 legislation. Although the act leaves all legislative power with respect to zoning and other planning with the co-operating cities and counties, six regional planning commissions were promptly created, three of them serving cities with populations over 25,000. $ SAVE at It will be Drysdale's first All-Star game appearance. The 22-year-old hurler, who leads the senior loop in strikeouts with 122, has an 8-6 record this season and an earned run average of 3.31. LEONARD'S STANDARD Wynn, 38-year-old right-hander, has appeared in four All-Star classics and was the winner of last year's game. He leads the American League in victories, with an 11-5 mark, and has an earned run average of 3.83. But Stengel bypassed Wilhelm, who has won nine games against four losses, because the knuckle-baller had pitched six innings Sunday in losing to the Red Sox 6-3. Before the announcements, there was speculation that Baltimore's Hoyt Wilhelm, a National League castoff, possibly would start against Burdette. National League— John Temple, 2b; Ed Mathews, 3b; Hank Aaron, rf; Willie Mays, cf; Ernie Banks, ss; Orlando Cepeda, b; Wally Moon, lf; Del Crandall, c, and Drysdale, p. 9th & Indiana Haney and Stengel announced the following batting orders: American League—Minnie Minoso, lf; Nellie Fox, 2b; Al Kaline, cf; Bill Skowron, 1b; Rocky Colavito, rf; Gus Triandos, c; Harmon Killebrew, 3b; Luis Aparacio, ss, and Wynn, p. Odds-makers have installed the National League an early 13-10 favorite to score its 11th victory in the classic which started in 1933. Vice President Nixon will throw out the first ball. Stengel won't be worried about what the experts might say in selecting Wynn as starter over other American League pitchers. Last week he was criticized for selecting Ted Williams and Roy Sievers as alternates on his squad. U.S. Governors in Tiflis LONDON — (UPI) — A group of United States governors visited Tiflis, capital of the Republic of Georgia, on their tour of the Soviet Union, Radio Moscow reports. 'Sky Diving' Is Now the Rage sun diving, now sky diving. At least that's what 14 persons trained in rural City Councils they were under the "dive" consists of taking a jump from an airplane and floating down by parachute. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (UPI) First ship, now坪 The divers gathered along U.S. 69 Sunday and drew a crowd of about 500 as they attempted to land in a 50-foot circle. Only one "diver" was successful. Walt Mozenski, 25, an apprentice printer from St. Louis. Another diver, Dane Moore, 24, St. Joseph, had the crowd frightened as he fell free of the plane for several seconds before pulling a rip cord. Danny Willis, Independence, said the "dives" were made by a group planning to form a parachute club. if you can see it... Ansco SUPER HYPAN'FILM PO BOX 1234 MARYLAND 902-567-8900 Ansco 135 SUPER HYPAN PO BOX 1234 MARYLAND you can shoot it with NEW ANSCO SUPER HYPAN - Finest grain super-speed film ever! - Now you take pictures just by existing room light 1 - Daylight Exposure Index 500 to 1,000! - Available in 35mm, roll film, filmpack and sheets CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre BABY GAS This Twin is 5D PREMIUM Phone VI 3-4321 This Twin is 5D-10W-30 OIL Cities Service's power twins work together Downtown — Near Everything for double-action power in your car FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVIC 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE 中国石油天然气股份有限公司 Brewster Scholars Named The appointment of John Walter Matt of Minneapolis and Emerson S. Tjart of Baxter Springs as the Ray Q. Brewster scholars in chemistry at the University of Kansas for 1959-60 has been announced by Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards. Each will receive $500. Matt and Tjart also have been awarded residence hall scholarships, which have an approximate value of $300. The Ray Q. Brewster scholarships. honoring the long-time professor of chemistry and former department chairman, are for entering freshmen who plan to major in chemistry. The donors, who are friends of Dr. Brewster and alumni, placed the choice of the scholars in the hands of Dr. Brewster in consultation with the Summerfield and Watkins committees. Zebus rarely shed in January, except in the southern hemisphere. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! ★ Ends Wednesday CARY GRANT INGRID BERGMAN in "INDISCREET" co-hit DANNY KAYE CURT JURGENS in "ME AND THE COLONEL" Starts Thursday DON MURRAY DIANE VARSI in "From Hell to Texas" co-hit "THUNDERING JETS" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Now Thru Thursday! TYRONE POWER in "MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER" with ER LAURIE, JULIE AD PIPER LAURIE, JULIE ADAMS co-hit BILL MAULDIN'S "UP FRONT" with DAVID WAYNE, TOM EWELL FOR baset tran room smok 1616 LAR Very Phor GRANADA NOW SHOWING! AUDREY HEPBURN in Fred Zinnemann's "THE NUN'S STORY" AUDREY HEPBURN NIC MEN Avä Max VI 2 FIR: priv furn and war Call in Technicolor with Peter Finch Dean Jagger Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT FOR YOUNG MEN, modern 2-room basement apartment with outside entrance. Utilities paid. Also large single room, linens furnished. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Indiana. 7-10 LARGE 3 ROOM first floor apartment bath phone VI 3-7677 before 11 or after UNFURNISHED 2. bedroom house and garage, utility room, fenced in back yard, 2 children accepted. Vacant 1st of July. Can be seen from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. each day. $83.00 per month Also on floor on ground floor, Vacant now. $32.50 per month. If interested call VI 3-4897 or 1728 Tenn. 7-10 NICE CLEAN TWO-ROOM APARTMENT, also 2 sleep rooms. 821 Indiana. now or for fall. See Maxwell. Hawk's Nest days see VI 3-4188. 7-10 7-7 FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, furnished, private bath. Also second floor apartment, furnished. Bills paid. Lots of built-ins and clothes closets, dishes and silver- ware. Near KU, 836 Miss. Reasonable. Call VI 3-7917. 7-14 APARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive September 30 to November 5 Project VI 3-1890 7-31 HELP WANTED Tuesday, July 7, 1959 STENO-SECRETARY. Due to expansion of staff, immediate positions available in pleasant air-conditioned office for both summer season and permanent career positions. Applicants should have pre-eminent business office experience or assistant; be superior in typing and short-hand in speed, neatness, accuracy. Work requires imagination, responsibility, correspondence ability; is interesting and knowledgeable in the workplace by phone Mr. Neil Mecaskey, Maupin-tour Associates, 1236 Mass, phone Vlkeng 3-1211. 7-10 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: RIDE FROM KANSAS CITY to Lawrence, daily; Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9 a.m. or on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 a.m. Coming back everyday at 11:30 a.m. Call Mary Am Leonard at Yellowstone 2-0647. 7-21 SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $1 price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf MISCELLANEOUS EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, themes, theses, etc. Neal, accurate, immediate attention. Reasonableness. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-34-785 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. 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 stocks of cages, stands and accessories for all purposes. Complete line of exotic fish and reptiles. Complete jars, amps, 2 to 60 gal, stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, VI 3-1240. tf WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW--All the latest Dance Studio 908 Missouri, phi. VI 3-6858, Dance Studio 908 Missouri, phi. VI 3-6858, FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers. Barber is imaging at 720 Massachusetts. AAA Emergency Services 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 VI 3-0131 1703 WEST 6TH Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming KU BARBER SHOP-Flatton our space. Open all summer in campus two days a week on 10th Street. RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 1951, Slip Sewing Center, 927 Mass. FOR SALE USED AIR CONDITIONER. Half ton. Furnished at 910 La anytime. First Floor. 7-17 F WANTED WASHING AND IRONING, male students. Phone VI 3-9193. 7-17 Summer Classified Rates 16 issues -----$4.00 Jay SHOPPE CAMPUS Attention SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS Need Something Cool to Wear to Class? Our air-conditioned shoppe is very convenient for between class shopping. Let us fix you up for the summer ahead. Come in . . browse around . . and have a Coke. Never, Never, Never Let him go if he Brings you to . . . DIXON'S The Drive-In at 2500 W. 6th Music with your Meals LET ME DO YOUR BANKING It's Safe and Convenient To Bank-By-Mail! U.S. MILITARY J 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPORIT IN. FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. FIRST NATIONAL BANK After Inventory BOOK SALE Odd$ and ENDS Beginning Wednesday-July 8 KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1959 Assistant Dean Of KU Medical School Resigns Dr. Vernon E. Wilson, assistant dean of the KU School of Medicine since 1953 and acting dean and director of the Medical Center in Kansas City since May 15, resigned Thursday to become dean of the School of Medicine and director of the Medical Center of the University of Missouri in Columbia. "Dr. Wilson has served with dedication and distinction for six years at the University of Kansas School of Medicine. During that time he has made a major contribution to the growth, vitality and excellence of the academic programs at the Medical Center, as well as in the important matters of hospital and patient services. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, a former dean of the School of Medicine, said, "The University of Kansas has suffered a real loss in the decision of Dr. Vernon E. Wilson to take up new responsibilities as dean of the University of Missouri School of Medicine and director of that institution's Medical Center. "His activities as an adviser to the Kansas Board of Social Welfare, regarding especially our mental institutions, have extended his service to the state beyond the confines of the University. Dean Wilson will remain in his present post until the return of Dean W. Clarke Wescoe, who is on leave for a teaching and research fellowship at the University of the Philippines in Manila. He will assume the Missouri deanship November 1. "We wish him well as he assumes his new and important post," Dr. Murphy said. Dean Wilson has been in charge of student affairs at the KU Medical Center and an assistant professor of pharmacology. He has engaged in a 6-year unique study of medical school admissions techniques and a publication will be forthcoming. Four years ago Dean Wilson took the place of Chancellor Murphy on the Governor's advisory committee on state institutions and for the past three years he has been chairman. As assistant secretary of the Association of American Medical Colleges he has been a member of the official accrediting survey team. An alumnus of the University of Illinois, Dean Wilson earned the B.S. degree in 1950 and both the M.S. and M.D. degrees in 1952. Should you see a herd of zebus running down Massachusetts Street, consult your family physician. Three Given Landis Grants The first three Landis scholars have been appointed at the University of Kansas, Irvin Youngberg secretary of the Endowment Assn. announced. Each will receive $25 for the 1959-60 school year. Judy A. Fiscus, a junior in nursing from Wichita, will be the first Maude Landis scholar in nursing. She has held a residence scholarship in Sellards Hall and will enter the Medical Center in Kansas City this fall for two years' clinical training and classwork. Nancy Suellentrop of Great Bend will hold the first May Landis scholarship in mathematics for her senior year in the School of Education. Last year she held a U.G. Mitchell honor scholarship in mathematics. William F. Cronin of Kirkwood, Mo., will receive the first Paul Landis scholarship in business administration. He will be a senior. He has been wholly self-supporting at KU, and his fraternity elected him president for next fall even though his work the past year had required him to live away from the chapter house. The Landis scholarships are supported by an endowment created in 1956 by Miss Maude Landis, now of Claremont, Calif., for many years director of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The endowment was supplemented a year ago by a bequest from the estate of Paul Landis, a public accounting firm executive of Southern Pines, N.C. They and their sister, the late Miss May Landis, were alumni of KU. 'Monkey Saddle' Is Being Re-Saddled The campus "monkey saddle," the wooden structure west of Marvin Hall, will be "up again as soon as possible," according to George M. Beal, chairman of the department of architecture. Dr. Beal said students are rebuilding the "monkey saddle" with different types of connecting units on the plywood. 1. 2018年3月,北京市工商行政管理局对北京中航工业股份有限公司进行立案调查。 Ike Will Meet Press WASHINGTON — (UPI) The White House has announced that President Eisenhower will hold a news conference Wednesday morning. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Dean Woodruff At Harvard Meet Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students at the University of Kansas, has been attending the 41st anniversary conference of the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators at the Harvard Business School. More than 350 student personnel administrators from all parts of the country were registered at the conference, held from June 25 through June 30. During the conference sessions the administrators discussed varying aspects of their jobs. They participated in seminars on administration, group discussions on financial aid, foreign students, student attitudes and behavior, extracurricular activities including fraternities, discipline and student government. Special speakers included David Riesman, author of "The Lonely Crowd," and Lyman Kirkpatrick, assistant director and inspector general of the Central Intelligence Agency. Conference registrants, their wives and children were in residence in the living halls of the Business School. Special programs for wives and children included sight-seeing trips through Harvard and New England, sports programs, and a subway trip and ride on Boston's famous swan-boats. A New England clambake was a special family occasion. A zebu gets wet when it stands in the rain. The geologic and mining history of the Mulky coal, one of the first coals to be mined in Kansas and the uppermost of the commercially important Cherokee coals that occur in eastern Kansas rocks, is recorded in a publication just issued by the State Geological Survey of the University of Kansas. Geological-Mining History Of Mulky Coal Described The eighth in a series of inventory studies made on Kansas coals by the Geological Survey, the Mulky is the first of the inventories of the Chero-kee coals to be completed. In Kansas, the Mulky occurs in eastern Bourbon and Crawford Counties. Its mining area is between the Arma-Mulberry district and Fulton, and it was mined as early as 1842 for fuel at the United States military post established at Fort Scott in that year. Named after the Missouri town of Mulky, the coal also has been called the Osage, Fort Scott, Fort Scott Red, Red, Rusty, Bunker Hill, Mound, Hilltop, and Sunshine. Coal beds of the Cherokee Group rocks occur near the surface in southeastern Kansas and at depth elsewhere in eastern Kansas. The coals have been mined in Bourbon, Cherokee, Crawford, and Labette Counties in southeastern Kansas, and near Atchison, Attichion County, and Lansing and Leavenworth, Leavenworth County, in northeast Kansas. Where mined, the Mulky coal is 7 to 22 inches thick Approximately LP Entire Mercury Classic Catalog Record Sale Monavral – $2.49 $3^{1/2}$ million tons have been mined in Bourbon and Crawford Counties, and reserves (measured and indicated) in the two-county area exceed 170 million tons. Recoverable measured Mulky coal, according to the report, is estimated at 35,265,388 tons. Stereo - $3.98 Bell's The geologic occurrence of the coal, its physical nature and its thickness in relation to adjacent rocks and overburden, and production and analytical data are treated in the report. A map shows the mining area, including locations of active and abandoned mines. Rains Claim 42 in Pakistan The floods were hitting west Pakistan yesterday and scores of villages were reported inundated and cut off near the Kashmir border. Twenty inches of rain also took three lives in Kashmir, it was reported. Kansan Want Ads Get Results KARACHI, Pakistan — (UPI) — Monsoon rains which drenched Karachi all last week killed 42 persons in floods and collapsing houses, unofficial reports said. ANSCOCHROME ..WORLD'S FINEST COLOR FILM Ansco Ansco ANSCOCHROME Color Film Ansco 135 DARKLIGHT ANSCOCHROME - Makes great pictures easier. - Available in all standard sizes. - For making beautiful Printon® color prints. - Exposure Index 32. BUY IT HERE, BRING IT BACK FOR FAST DEPENDABLE PROCESSING CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre • PIZZA • LASAGNA • SPAGHETTI Pick Up and Carry Out Air Conditioned HOURS Sunday-Thursday . . . 5-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday . . . 5-12 p.m. Roberto's 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 47th Year, No.9 KU LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, July 10, 1959 Concerts Feature Artists at Clinic Guest artists of the Midwestern Music Clinic will be featured in Sunday concerts in the University Theatre and the outdoor theater. The programs are as follows: Orchestra-Chorus—Sunday Afternoon, July 12 Daniel Moe and Guy Fraser Harrison, guest conductors; Henri Temianka, violinist; Benar Heifetz, cellist; Margaret Ling, harpist, guest artists. 3:30 p.m.—University Theatre Part I—Clinic Chorus—To Be Announced Mr. Moe and Mr. Krehbiel, conducting Concerto for Violin and Cello ... Brahms Second movement: andante. Mr. Temianka, Violinist; Mr. Heifetz. Cellist. Part II Camp Orchestra Toccata ... Frescobaldi Violin Concerto in A Major ... Mozart Second movement: andante. Mr. Temianka, Violinist Carnival of the Animals ... Saint-Saens The Swan. Mr. Heifetz, Cellist; Mr. Ling, Harpist Allegro Apassionata ... Saint-Saens Mr. Heifetz, Cellist; Mr. Carney, Conducting Semiramide, Overture ... Rossini Symphony No. $5\frac{1}{2}$ ... Gillis I. Perpetual Emotion; II Spiritual?; III. Scherzofrenia; IV. Conclusion! Mr. Harrison, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Carney, Conducting Band-Chorus Daniel Moe and Guy Fraser Harrison, Guest Conductors Guest Artists: Harold Brasch, euphonium; William Gower, oboer Robert Paolucci, trombone; Don Jacoby, trumpet; Fred Hemke saxophone 8:00 p.m.—KU Outdoor Theatre Part I Clinic Band Coat of Arms ... George Kenny Manzoni Requiem (Excerpts) ... Verdi Nobles of the Mystic Shrine ... Sousa Trombone solo ... Selected La Fiesta Mexicana ... Owen Reed Aria ... Bozza Mr. Hemke, saxophone Dramatic Essay ... Clifton Williams Ode for Trumpet ... Owen Reed "Carnival" Variations Jacoby-McRae Don Jacony, Kenneth Bloomquist, Leo Horacex, trumpets Part II Camp Chorus Sing Unto God...Paul Fetler Music When Soft Voices Die...Lloyd Pfautsch Hosanna...Normand Lockwood Shenandoah...arr. Elie Siegmeister Oh Lemuel...arr. Roger Wagner Mr. Moe, conducting. Part III Mr. Brasch, euphonium Mr. Wiley, conducting Camp Band Camp Band Proud Heritage March ... William Latham Invocation of Alberich from "The Rheingold" ... Richard Wagner Hungarian Melodies ... Vincent Bach Bless This House ... Brake Jubilation, Overture ... Robert Ward Chorale Prelude—"Fervent Is My Longing" ... Bach-Cailliet Aylesford Variations ... Theron Kirk Arioso ... Clifton Williams Montmartre March from "Paris Suite" ... Haydn Wood Mr. Harrison conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wilev, conducting Board Approves Plans For Research Center The board of directors for the new Center for Research in Engineering Science at the University of Kansas held its first meeting Tuesday and approved preliminary plans for the Center's $200,- 000 building a mile west of the main campus. It is hoped detailed plans can be ready so bids can be received in September, according to John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture and CRES director. The eight directors are N. T. Veatch of Kansas City, Mo., and William Muchin of Atchison, from the advisory board of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Charles B. Holmes of Lawrence, from the executive committee of the KU Endowment Assn.; Dr. James O. Maloney, professor and chairman of the chemical engineering department, from the KU faculty, and these ex officio members: Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University; Irvin Youngberg, secretary of the Endowment Assn., and Dean McNown. The Kansas City firm of Neville, Sharp and Simon is preparing plans for the Center's 13,000 square-foot building, which will be financed by the Endowment Association's income from the Solon E. Summerfield Foundation. The Center for Research in Engineering Science, which will be self-supporting, will be headquarters for nationally known research professors. An initial budget of $50,000 has been discussed. Hoecker Checks Uranium Blaze LYNDON, Kan.—(UPI)—A railroad boxcar containing 179 drums of uranium concentrate caught on fire here yesterday and excited this community of some 800 persons with thoughts of radioactive contamination for several hours before the blaze was put out and all danger passed. Dr. Frank Hoecker, professor of radio biophysics at the University of Kansas, who was flown to the scene, checked the area with sensitive instruments and said there was no evidence that any radiation had escaped. "I immediately when I got here I determined that there was no contamination outside the drums which contained uranium ore concentrate. The ore is not highly radioactive; therefore, the gamma ray activity was very low. The only danger I foresaw was that one of these drums could break open and contaminate the area. "I got the call about 9:15 this morning at my home in Lawrence." Dr. Hoecker said, "and immediately asked my brother, Norman, to fly me down here. We came in a two-seated Cessna and the reason I asked him is because he is the only man in the United States I would land with out in this alfalfa field. "But even that was not too great a danger because of the low radiation content. "After checking all the possibilities. I directed the railroad officials to tell the Air Force to go ahead and put out the fire, which had burned a gaping hole in the floor of the boxcar. I directed them to put a spray of water on it and tested all the water that came out and found no radiation. Therefore, there was no contamination." Martin Foster Melissa Fargo Quadraphonic YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN—Steve Brooks, Tarkio, Mo., tries out one of the many instruments on display at the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. The display is part of the first annual Midwestern Music Clinic here. Music Displays Mark Midwest Clinic at KU One of the highlights of the first annual Midwestern Music Clinic, which got underway yesterday, is one of the largest arrays of band uniforms, instruments, and published music ever displayed at KU. Representatives of the entire American music industry, and two representatives from English companies, are displaying their wares in the lobby of the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Total value of the display is estimated at $150,000. Russell L. Wiley, director of band and the Music Clinic, said, "It would be worth anybody's time to see this colorful display, representing every phase of the present-day band and orchestra." The clinic already is considered to be one of the biggest in the United States. Prof. Wiley said he expects the present enrollment of 500 high school and college music directors to double by next year. "We will cover the whole field of music in this clinic rather than limit it to certain branches," he said. The clinic, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and the Music and Art Camp, will feature 19 artists and three conductors as guest clinicians. The teachers, representing 10 states, have a busy program, including forums, clinics and demonstrations by the artists and directors. The clinic will conclude Monday. An artist recital will be presented this evening in the University Theatre, It will feature Benar Heifetz, violencecelo; William Gower, oboe; Harold Brasch, euphonium; Henri Temianka, violin; Fred Hemke, saxophone, and Robert Paoulcuci, trombone. The clinic band will join with the band camp and chorus during the Sunday evening concert Sunday (see schedule, Page 1). The Chicago Symphony Woodwind Quintet will conclude the clinic with a concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Ancient Greece Film To Be Shown Today "Ancient World: Greece," a 68-minute color film presenting a pictorial impression of Greece from earliest times to the Golden Age, will be presented at 8 p.m. today at the Outdoor Theater next to Robinson Gymnasium. The Friday night films are part of the summer recreation program under the directorship of Reginald Strait, associate professor of education and physical education. Preceding the film, a playground is set up to entertain the children. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 10. 1950 'Cramming' Extends Itself In keeping with the hurried atmosphere of the summer session we have heard many complaints in regard to "cram courses." Operating on a tight schedule, instructors must condense courses, which normally take an unhurried (comparatively, that is) four months, into a short eight weeks. Complaints seem to center around the fact that there is no time to absorb the lectures and outside readings (is this the osmosis process we've heard so much about?). The students must "cram" from day-to-day in order to keep up. As if this isn't bad enough, this "cramming process" has not been confined to the mental processes. Latest ominous rumblings coming from the collective mouths of the student body indicate that the "cram" process has extended into, of all things, the gastronomic field. We are inclined to agree with the "rumble." Ever notice how much the Hawk's Nest and cafeteria resemble a grade school at dismissal time? When the cafeteria begins serving meals it is descended upon by hoards of campers, delegates to numerous institutes, prospective students, visitors, ad infinitum. Meantime, the college student attempts to avail himself of the facilities to which he contributes a chunk of his tuition. If he is lucky enough to get served he is forced to "cram" so that he will have time to get to a class so that he can "cram" some more. We realize that people have to eat, but this situation is ridiculous. At the last count there were 14 different women's residence and men's university halls, most of which have kitchen facilities and dining areas. Most (or all) of these are just sitting around gathering dust, waiting for the fall semester. And this, under the circumstances, also seems ridiculous. We realize that attempts have been made, by means of time restrictions, putting off limits areas for various groups, etc. to alleviate the situation. There are numerous ways in which the situation could be rectified. The residence hall proposal undoubtedly will be rejected on a profit basis. But what would be the objection to serving meals in the ballroom, which easily can handle a large group? Speaking of profit, if it can be shown that a cafeteria could be operated at an expense balanced by the gross take, why not do it? Are parts of the University being operated to make a profit, or is it a non-profit institution being supported by the taxpayers and tuition for the benefit of the people of the State of Kansas? —Ray Miller Just What Is NSA? What is NSA? Not many people seem to know. It is the National Student Association, a national student government group to which we belong. That is the extent of most students' knowledge of the organization. All Student Council Bill No. 14 affiliates us with NSA. The bill was passed in 1955 and amended in 1957. This is all fine and dandy, but what does this organization do? Why don't we know more about it? Why didn't we ever vote to join NSA? Who pays for it? The ASC constitution tells us nothing, except that we belong. We pay $180 national dues which come from student fees. We also send several ASC members to a NSA convention every year. The ASC may know what the money and the convention is for, but the rest of the students do not. Let us be enlightened on the subject. Write your local ASC representative and find out what this organization does, its history and its purpose. We're in the dark. Somebody please turn on the lights. —Martha Pearse Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Late statesman of South Africa. 6 Matched. 2 Composer Frédéric Francois — 13 Compared critically. 15 Argument: Slang. 16 Metaphorical narrative. 17 Bad — German spa. 18 Pussycat. 20 Gaelic name. 21 Refluxes. 23 Highlanders' costumes. 24 Occupy a certain place. 25 Dish. 27 Starting point, in a game. 28 China's weights. 30 More helpings of food. 32 Peruse. 34 Roller — 35 Encourages. 36 Pitfall. 40 Refresh one's knowledge (with "on"): 2 words. 42 Elaborately trimmed. 45 Gold: Sp. 47 Accumulate a reserve. 48 Dog ___ manger: 2 words. 49 Carcass of a whale. 51 Singer Berger. 52 Frequently: Poet. 53 Radio aerial. 55 Hard wood. 56 Where trains run. 58 Take for granted. 60 Straight. 61 Equipped. 62 Gather again. 63 Building material. DOWN 1 Seece of great disorder. 2 Extreme conservative: Colloq. 3 Good times. 4 Canopy. 5 Move furtively. 6 More civil. 7 "Das ist ___." 8 Supports for the bridges of Paris. 9 Duster. 10 Satin fabric. 11 Shunt off the track. 12 Bird sounds. 13 Wire rope. 14 Units of force. 15 Small pieces. 16 Ermines. 17 Vestibule. 18 Social prohibitions.. 20 Start of a Christmas hymn. 21 Goddess: Latin. 22 Attention. 23 Complete. 24 Last names. 25 Entrances. 26 German capital. 27 Thin and sickly: Colony. 28 Inlet of the sea. 29 Biased. 30 Marquand's forte. 31 Like a clarinet. 32 Ties. 33 Contort. 34 Alms box. 35 Red Sea to Yellow Sea. 36 Man's nickname. 37 N. C. O. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 15 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 17 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 21 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 34 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 42 43 44 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 48 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 52 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 56 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 60 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 62 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10* 11 Map Shows Divided Reich WASHINGTON — Recess of the Foreign Ministers Conference after weeks of fruitless discussion leaves the jigsaw puzzle of divided Germany as far from solution as ever. Behind the dilemma of conflicting East-West interests are basic geographic facts that are underlined by the National Geographic Society's new map of Germany. Printed in 10 colors, the map features a detailed inset on Berlin and presents 5,165 place names. It was issued to the society's nearly 2,500,000 members as a supplement to the June National Geographic Magazie. e In a new long-range mapping project, such supplements are now distributed in uniform-sized sheets of 25 by 19 inches, for assembly in a growing world atlas. Larger prints, $32_{12}^{2}$ by 42 inches, are still being prepared for framing. On the German map, jagged boundaries point up the postwar partitions that have separated both Germany and Berlin into politically opposed fragments. A broad green streak through the heart of the country marks the division between the western Federal Republic and the Eastern Zone, or "German Democratic Republic." The Germans call this barrier the "Inhuman Frontier." for it bars neighbor from neighbor and parent from child. It cuts through villages, farms, and occasional houses, whose front or back doors must be kept sealed. It is impossible to please all the world and one's father.—Jean de la Fontaine Nobuddy ever fergits where he buried a hatchit—Frank McKinney Dailu Hansan (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Juneau Associate Editor Ray Miller BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office Phone 376 Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism TOWARD A SOCIALIST AMERICA, a symposium of essays edited by Helen Alfred. Peace Publications, $1.50. Here in paperback is a little tract that would seem to have more in common with the fiery proletarian literature of the 1930s than the comfortable writings of our Eisenhower civilization. These are 15 statements of socialism—socialism in the purest sense, socialism that seems to be unaware of Hungary and Tibet, the communes and worldwide subversion, Khrushchev and Mao Tse-tung. Many premises within these pages are not difficult to accept, but not the premise that great social progress has been made in Russia, that socialistic democracy has been achieved there. One premise that does seem sound is that socialism is gaining in the world, that the United States is one of the few holdout nations. Much of the world is socialistic. Many new nations have written socialism into their constitutions; even Chiang Kai-shek and his Kuomintang gave lip service to various forms of nationalization in the constitution they promulgated in 1947. Whether there is a great outpouring from Americans who want socialism is another matter. The United States is rapidly becoming a one-class—the middle-class—society. Workers no longer want to rise with their "class"; they want to rise out of it. The socialistic thinkers whose writings have been gathered in this anthology include Stephen H. Fritchman, Bertha Capen Reynolds. John Howard Lawson, John Thomas McManus, Paul M. Sweezy, Victor Perlo, Carl Dreher, George Olshausen, Scott Nearing, Reuben W. Borough, W.E.B. Du Bois, Homer Ayers and Philip S. Foner. These are not household names in this era of the Saturday Evening Post and Dr. Peale. Some may recall that Lawson was one of the Hollywood writers who took the Fifth Amendment back in 1947. Du Bois, of course, is the famous Negro writer (the footnote on him reveals that he has lived under every president since Andrew Johnson). This tract argues in its opening section that "American workers need socialism." A Unitarian minister writes of the Mexican-American, of the Negro, and the "tragic costliness of monopoly capitalism." A veteran socialist tells of the hardships worked by capitalism upon the American family and contends that socialism can help to dispel both emotional and economic insecurity. Lawson pleads for a return to government subsidization of the arts, describing the vivid Federal Theatre of the 1930s, recalling how the WPA gave work to writers, artists, and musicians. In "Transition to a Socially Based Economy" the writers argue for a shift from capitalism to state control of the means of production, describing such striking examples of corporate growth as the oil industry, urging economic planning. Finally, in "Wanted: An American People's Party," the Socialists move into a number of specific areas. Borough stresses what he sees as the need for public power, and he looks with fondness to the days of the New Deal, the TVA and Grand Couleen Dam. Du Bois returns to the telling theme of the Negro and socialism (and in these pages Little Rock continues to loom as a name of symbolic significance). A final article discusses socialism and the labor union: "The socialist-minded workers have a clear duty to ... participate actively in the everyday struggles of the working class, introducing a greater degree of class consciousness in the course of these struggles, and constantly popularizing the advantages that socialism would bring in America." BEN-HUR, by Lew Wallace, Signet, 50 cents. As M-G-M gets ready to release its whopping new spectacle, a talking version of the famous silent picture, Signet Books is capitalizing on the publicity by issuing an unabridged version of the lushly sentimental and romantic "Tale of the Christ." "Ben-Hur" first appeared in the 1880s, became one of the all-time great sellers, emerged in dramatic versions on stage and screen. Galleys, chariot racing, and the crucifixion—all are in this famous tale. —CMP FOUR SHORT NOVELS, by Herman Melville. Bantam Classics, 50 cents. So recent is the Melville renaissance that in high school literature of a quarter of a century ago the celebrated novelist was virtually unrepresented. This collection demonstrates that Melville deserves to be remembered for more than "Moby Dick" and "Type." The best of these, and the best known, is his harsh tale of the British Navy, "Billy Budd, Foretopman," which is achieving fame comparable to that of "Moby Dick." Two others of these four deal with the sea, "The Encantadas, or Enchanted Isles," and "Benito Cereno." The fourth, "Bartleby," is the story of a scrivener, a law-copier, and it is entirely different in mood and style from the others.—CMP RASHOMON AND OTHER STORIES, by Ryunosuke Akutagawa. Bantam Classics, 35 cents. There is a filmy, fairy tale quality to these tales of Akutagawa, like an impressionist painting or a Japanese print such as those which inspired Matisse. But behind the pale, pink quality lurks the violence that we have come to associate with some of the best Japanese motion pictures. The most famous of these motion pictures, in fact, is the title of this collection, though it is Akutagawa's "In the Grove" that forms the greater basis for the film (and now stage play), "Rashomon." Another tale of love and violence. Kesa and Morito, is the plot of "Gate of Hell." As we come to be more and more interested in the art and literature of the Orient, we should find such collections as this attractively printed and illustrated Bantam reprint very valuable. —CMP Page 3 BOOKS By Richard Gustafson Instructor in English Summer Session Kansan LIFE STUDIES, by Robert Lowell. Farrar, Straus and Cudahy $3.50. Although framed at beginning and end by free verse poetry, the center of Mr. Lowell's work is a charmingly-familiar prose sketch of his boyhood as a Boston Lowell with expectations. His father was a jargon-bellowing naval commodore whose superiors objected to his maintaining shore quarters on Beacon Hill; his mother objected to his father. Pre-adolescent Robert objected to being enrolled at Brimmer girls' school, just becoming co-ed in the lower grades, and whose upper grades were dominated by a strident female militarism. The Lowells had produced poets of renown—Robert, himself, James Russell, and of course—"Remember Amy Lowell, that cigar-chawing, guffawing, senseless and meterless, multimillionheiress, heavyweight mascot on a floating fortress. Damn the Patterns! Full speed ahead on a cigareto!" —says a friend of the family. The piece is lightly treated with all the mild jabbing and loving forgiveness of bemused reminiscence. Mr. Lowell regards his pioneering forbears with the indulgent ease to which their quiet repose entitles them. According to the author, one of the cherished family portraits seems to say, "My children, my blood, accept graciously the loot of your inheritance. We are all dealers in used furniture." Mr. Lowell's prose style has the vivid but jammed effect of thought condensed into rich metaphor which characterizes the prose of many poets. In the poetry the most noteworthy characteristic is his descriptive power. The poems, except for a few in this volume, lack statement and form. They seem quite like the free verse and imagery that the redoutable Amy Lowell nursed a half-century before. The images connote a mood for which there is little formal control, but the pictures are memorable. In the nearly-forgotten family farm— The Pierce Arrow clears its throat in a horse-stall. Then the dry road dust rises to whiten The fatigued elm leaves. As an overscrubbed little boy— I was a stuffed toucan With a bibulous, multicolored beak. Or the family— Family gossip says Aunt Sarah tilted her archaic Athenian nose and jilted an Astor. But at times the vividness bursts into a mottled splash— In his book Mr. Lowell is vivid as a poet and warmly likeable as a personality, but his art lacks melody, formal control, and serious statement. And as for the last, who but a dogmatic reviewer would ask it of a personal reminiscence. He was animated, hierarchical, like a singer snap man in a clothes-press. PENGUIN ISLAND, by Anatole France. Bantam, 50 cents. This is the classic satire about the near-sighted monk who baptized an island of penguins, about the folks in heaven deciding that they must back the mistaken fellow, and about how the penguins behave when they become people. Well, they become people. They go through primitive times, establish their hierarchy of saints, enter the Middle Ages, endure a Renaissance, and come into modern times. Then they acquire a Napoleon, industrialism, fast-moving motorcars, and civilized morality. The digs of the writer are as pungent in mid-century America as they were in early-century France, and they are prophetic as well. Summary: a fine addition to this company's line of classics, and required reading alongside Orwell's "Animal Farm." —CMP THE MEANING OF ART, by Herbert Read. Pelican, $1.25. Read's 28-year-old survey of the history of art has been brought up to date with a new preface. Though a paperback, it is worth $1.25 for the plates alone—Chinese pottery, an Etruscan mirror, Viking, pre-Columbian American, Negro primitives, El Greco, Michelangelo, Rubens, Turner, Delacroix, Rousseau, Picasso, van Gogh, Renoir and Matisse. It is a brilliant and highly understandable study of art from the beginnings up to today—pottery, sculpture, paintings. It may be petty to carp to mention is Jackson Pollock. Surely the American landscapes of the 19th century can compare with those of Turner or Corot; surely a word about Homer, Allston or Whistler would not be amiss. —CMP UP FROM SLAVERY, by Booker T. Washington, Bantam Classics, 50 cents. Today's militant leaders of the NAACP view the placid, acquiescent Booker T. Washington, who was born around 100 years ago, as an "Uncle Tom." Probably he is that, but his story is one of the great American success stories, and his fight for Negro rights has made possible the Adam Powells and Thurgood Marshalls of today. Bantam Classics now has published in paperback the famous work that appeared in Outlook in 1900. It tells of the Virginia slave's efforts to receive an education, of his founding of Tuskegee Institute, of his close association with the great of the land, his friendship with McKinley and Roosevelt and Julius Rosenwald. Here is a log cabin-to-success legend that can rival, if not surpass, anything dreamed up by Horatio Alger. —CMP Summer Totals Largest Since Post-War Years With 3.261 students having paid fees for the University of Kansas summer session, the campus has its largest student body since the "vet-eran-swollen" days following World War II, according to James K. Hitt registrar and director of admissions The total, up about 10 per cent over 1958, includes 2,906 on the Lawrence campus and 355 at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. The summer session student body shows sharp contrasts with those World War II days. While today there are 797 veterans, about 27 percent of the Lawrence campus students, fewer than half of them receive any "GI" assistance. Instruction is heavily concentrated at the graduate level. The 1,190 enrolled in the Graduate School and 68 in the School of Law comprise 43 per cent. On the Lawrence campus men outnumber women only by the slim margin of 1.7 to 1, while at Kansas City there are 210 women to 145 men. There are 592 new students, more than 65 per cent of them in the Graduate School. The operation of five summer institutes for the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Office of Education contributed to the upward swing in the Graduate School but still involved less than half of the 365 new students. Enrollment by schools: Graduate, 1,190; College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 515; Engineering and Architecture, 342; Education, 308; Fine Arts, 120; Business, 115; Law, 68; Journalism, 11; Pharmacy, 10; Medicine—47 nursing students at Lawrence, 355 at Kansas City. Dairy Creates $300 Pharmacy Grant The Steffen Dairy Foods Company, Inc., of Wichita has created a $300 scholarship in pharmacy at the University of Kansas through a gift to the KU Endowment Assn. Dean J. Allen Reese, School of Pharmacy, will choose the recipient for 1959-60 from among men and women coming from the geographical area served by the Steffen Dairy Foods Co., Inc. Academic achievement and financial need will be considered in making the award. Jay SHOPPE Friday. July 10, 1959 835 Mass. JULY CLEARANCE SALE Downtown Store Only - Dresses - Skirts - Summer - Blouses Reduced 40% No Will Calls — No Approvals — No Refunds Formosa Threat Unchanged TAIPEI — (UPI) — Vice Adm. Roland Smoot, senior U.S. military commander on Formosa, says the Communist threat in the Formosa Straits remained unchanged despite Sunday's 1st battle. "But I'll admit frankly that the Communists in the next hour or the next day could make me eat those words," he said. "We'll just have to wait and see what is up their sleeves." (The Hong Kong publication Ming Li News Service said advance model MIG-19 Communist jets used air-toair missiles to destroy a Nationalist bomber May 29, but intelligence sources here denied the reports.) Nationalist China's first missilemen returned from training in the United States to man Nike Hercules missiles guarding northern Formosa. Three planes arrived at Taipei International Airport yesterday with 150 Nationalist officers and soldiers who were trained in the operation of the Nike Hercules missiles at Ft. Bliss, Tex. They will take over the four missile sites around Taipei, which have been manned by U.S. Army crews since their arrival last October. Lawrence Sanitary "ALL STAR" BUTTERMILK THE VIGOR SWIG! COOL FUEL For thirst quenching re- freshment, serve a tall, cool glass of "All Star" buttermilk. It's lower in calories . . . filling and satisfying . . . tones up COOL FUEL Buttermilk Featured at leading food stores. Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. 202 West 6th ry Phone VI 3-5511 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1959 Z THE DANCE MAGNIFICENT—A group of students enrolled in the ballet division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp practice for the ballet recital July 25. Robert E. Bell of the Robert Bell School of the Dance, Oklahoma City, is the camp ballet director. 50-State Linkup For War Memorial FHOENIX, Ariz.—(UPI)—The 50 states of the union were connected this week in a unique conference telephone call made to discuss a fund-raising drive for building a war memorial in Pearl Harbor. Gov. Paul Fannin spoke from his office in the Arizona State Capitol to the 49 other governors or their representatives about plans to raise $122,000 for the construction of a memorial to the 1,102 sailors and marines who went down with the battle ship USS Arizona in Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941. 90 Welfare Workers Attend KU Meetings About 90 state social welfare workers are on campus for a workshop that will end today in the Kansas Union. Representatives are meeting in four groups, dealing with four main phases of social work. Humphrey Plans Pact With Brown on 1960 WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) plans to tell Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California this weekend that he will urge his supporters to back Brown in case of a challenge in that state's presidential primary. $ ^{9} $ Brown is staking a favorite son claim to the big California delegation to be chosen in the primary next June for the 1960 Democratic National Convention. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass), now viewed as the front-running candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, has not committed himself to stay out of California. The word from the Kennedy camp, however, is that he is very unlikely to challenge Brown in the California primary or Sen. George Smathers, another prospective favorite son, in the Florida primary. Kennedy is reported much more eager to enter the Ohio Primary, University Theatre Begins Experiments in Repertory An experiment in repertory, rare in the theater nowadays, will climax KU summer dramatics season this week, when the University Theatre begins a nine-evening run of three comedies in the classic Commedia dell' Arte tradition of the 17th-Century Europe. Humphrey is understood to have assured DiSalle that he would urge his Ohio backers to support the governor in that state's primary. The casts of "Servant of Two Masters" and "Tartuffe' are made up of college students enrolled in the Summer Theatre program. The cast of "Once in a Lifetime" is composed of high school students in the Theater division of the 22nd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp at the University. "Servant of Two Masters" and "Tartuffe" are both drawn from the period during which the Commedia dell' Arte flourished, and "Once in a Lifetime" can be called a modern reflection of the commedia tradition. The first production, Goldoni's "Servant of Two Masters," will be presented Tuesday and Friday. It will be followed by Moliere's "Tartuffe," tomorrow, Wednesday, and Monday, July 20, and Kaufman and Hart's "Once in a Lifetime," Monday, Thursday and Tuesday, July 21. despite the wishes of Gov, Michael V. DiSalle to commit that state's delegation to a favorite son, such as DiSalle. adventuring to Dr. Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, repertory is no longer as popular in the theater world as the more financially stable long-run system, but by taking emphasis from the box-office and placing it upon the drama or the uniting of several dramas, repertory makes possible an approach to a real art theater. Though the Commedia dell' Arte is very appropriate to a summer theater season, it is not a usual fare for amateur summer programs, being more frequently reserved for companies headed by such artists as Jean Louis Barrault and Marcel Marceau. The selection of the commedia and its presentation in repertory therefore "should stand as a challenge to our company and our community." in the University Theatre. Tickets and coupon books are on sale at the Kansas Union ticket center, Bell's Music Store and the University Theatre box-office. All performances are at 7:30 p.m. Now you can shoot color slides,color prints or black and white Automatically!! NEVER MISS A SHOT ing crisis over the United Arab Republic's refusal to let Israeli shipping through the Suez Canal. 127 Electric Eye Cameras United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold has been reported unable to change UAR policy. See the New Kodak Starmatic or the Bell and Howell Infallible $24.95 to $39.95 Beal Returns from Convention Israel considers the problem vital since it regards its access to eastern markets through the canal as necessary for survival and growth. Ben-Gurion on Brief Leave; Cabinet Formation Is Hope MOSSER WOLF Inc. Across from the Courthouse 1107 Mass. JERUSALEM, Israel — (UPI) — Premier David Ben-Gurion went on indefinite leave of absence yesterday during negotiations on forming a new government to replace his fallen cabinet. Thus Ben-Gurion's vacation was destined to be a fairly short one, particularly in view of the continu- His cabinet still is running the country in caretaker status and President Itzhak Ben-Zvi undoubtedly will call on him to form a new coalition to rule until elections in the fall. The 74-year-old Premier, weary from battling members of his own cabinet, said he was going away for awhile because he needed a rest. However, he looked in top condition at a public ceremony. George M. Beal, professor of architecture and director of the Architecture Service, has returned from New Orleans, where he was the delegate of the Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Architecture to its national convention. The mayor of a zebu village doesn't wear a silk hat. Taste of Paradise! COCONUT ISLE sundae An inspired tropical treat from the land of the swaying palms ...delicious Dairy Queen crowned with rich, chewy coconut. Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! Stop by for a treat TODAY! HANDGANIZED AND PASTEERIZED DAIRY QUEEN BOTTLED LONDON MADE ENVIRONMENTALLY SO Dairy Queen Drive-In 1835 Mass. VI 3-3588 Econ-o-wash Customers Save Money Every Time They Do a Wash $ Just ask any of the hundreds of people that now do their wash at Econ-o-wash and they'll tell you the facts. It's even cheaper than washing at home on your own machine, one woman said. And besides the saving of money, you wash in cool comfort. And there's plenty of free parking. Yes, it certainly makes sense to wash at Econ-o-wash, where you save. It's inexpensive—Only 20c to wash, 10c to dry Econ.o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST SELF-SERVICE 24 hours a day 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. Page 5 Bracken, Desmond Are Stars of 'Say,Darling' Comedian Eddie Bracken, singer Johnny Desmond and comedienne Jane Kean headline the all-star cast for the first midwest presentation of "Say, Darling" at the Starlight Theatre July 13-19. "Tom Sawyer," the current Starlight production, runs through Sunday, July 12, with Randy Sparks, Virginia Gibson and Richard France recreating their original roles of Tom, Becky and Huck from the world premiere of the musical last season. The story actually concerns Bissel's experiences when he was hired to come to New York and adapt his best selling novel, "71½ Cents" into the hit musical. New York critics said he etched the real show business characters he encountered in his new musical, and most theatrical personalities were in the first week's audience in New York to see if Bissell had characterized them in his show. Next week's show opened in New York only 15 months ago, and was written by Richard Bissell as a sequel to his highly successful first musical, "The Pajama Game." It ran more than a year on Broadway. Bracken, making his first Kansas City appearance in many years, and his debut at the outdoor theater here, is a veteran of dozens of motion pictures and television productions. He takes the leading role of Jack Jordan, the Iowa author who comes to the big city to adapt his book into a play. Singer Johnny Desmond plays his original Broadway role of song writer Rudy Lorraine in the musical, a fast-talking composer who is hired to do the score for the musical after writing several rock-n-roll hits. The handsome young singer is also a newcomer to the Starlight stage. Jane Kean played at the outdoor theater last year and this week takes the role of Irene Lovelle, a beautiful Hollywood star who needs a good musical comedy role to further her career. Her chances of securing the lead are somewhat jeopardized since she is the ex-wife of Rudv. Full of backstage talk and lively musical numbers, the show won the immediate acceptance of New Yorkers. It is the first new show of the season for the Starlight Theatre since four previous productions were popular repeats from former years. Theater officials have reported a good advance sale for the show, featuring more big name stars in one presentation than ever before in Starlight history. The story originally featured only incidental music, but the score has been augmented for the outdoor presentation here, with the full 35-piece Starlight orchestra used in the production. Deadly Crop To Be 'Grown' WOOSTER, Ohio — (UPI) — Workers are building a foot-high concrete border around an acre of farmland destined to grow perhaps the world's deadliest crop. Next spring, agronomists will seed the land with corn, hay, soybeans and possibly wheat, then spray it with a potent solution of water and Strontium 85. a radioactive material. Then the field will receive the normal amounts of fertilizers and attention any farmer in the northern Ohio region would give his crops. The purpose is to determine the effect of radioactive fallout on crops. The experiment could continue for half a century. Summer Session Kansan Strontium 85, a material somewhat less dangerous but similar in behavior to Strontium 90, the deadly by-product of a nuclear explosion, will be used the first year to cut the risk of contamination as farmhands with Ph.D. degrees tend the crops. Zebus are seldom used as polo ponies. A special concert by the School of Fine Arts and Midwestern Music Clinic will be presented at 8 p.m. today in University Theatre. The program and artists are as follows: Clinic to Give Concert at 8 Benar Heifetz, violoncello; Henr Temianka, violin; William Gower, oboe; Robert Paolucci, trombone; Fred Hemke, saxophone; Harold Brasch, euphonium; Marian Jersild, Ruth Walter, and Sara Hopkins Beene, acompanists. "Concerto in C Major," Haydn, Rondo-Allegretto, Mr. Gower; "Etude Op. 25 No. 7," Chopin; "Habanera," Ravel; "At the Fountain Op. 20," Davidow, Mr. Heifetz. "Piece Concertante," Rousseau; "Cujus Animam," Rossini, Mr. Paolucci. Program: "Temple of Glory," Rameau; "Tambourin," Rameau; "Aria from Suite in E." Bach; "Gigue," Leclaire; "Sonata for Saxophone, first movement," Hindemith; "Prelude and Saltarelle," Planel, and Caprice Enforme du Waltz," Bonneau, Mr Hemke. "Prologue from 'Pagliacci,'" Leonavallo, and "Carnival of Venice," Manning-Brasch. Mr. Brasch. Selected music, Bach, and "Hexapada Suite," Bennett, Mr. Tiemanka. No Comment on Big 8 'Gifts' KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — Reeves Peters, Big Eight conference executive director, said yesterday he had no comment regarding money 'gifts' given to coaches. S M U T S P A I R E D C H O P I N C O L L L A T E D H A S S L E A L L E G O R Y E M S T A B B I E S I A N E B B S K I L T S L L I E P L A T E T E E T A E L S S E C O N D S R E A D S K A T E A B E T S T R A P B R U S H U P F U S S Y O R O O S T O R E I N A K R E N G E R N A O F O F A NT N E N A O A K R A I L R O A D A S S U M E D I R E C T L Y R I G G E D R E M A S S L A T H S School of Education Golf Tournament Starts Monday The annual School of Education Summer Session Golf Tournament for staff members and graduate students will be held Monday and Tuesday at the Lawrence Country Club. Foursomes can tee off at 1 p.m. on either day and must complete 18 holes of play. Two trophies will be awarded, one for the low medalist, and one for low handicap score. Other merchandise prizes will be awarded for second and third places for low medal and handicap play. Values of the prizes will depend on the number of entries. No one will be able to win more than one prize. The handicaps will be computed on the basis of 80 per cent of the difference between par and gross score on one nine-hole round to be drawn by chance after the tournament. Miss Ruth Stoland, secretary to the dean of education, said the tournament was started several years ago and was "just a matter of some of the graduate students and faculty members deciding that it would be fun to have a golf competition." "The first tournament was played at the Hillview golf course. The trophies were presented during a dinner at the golf course immediately after the tournament. "I presume this isn't done anymore because the tournament has grown too large and complicated," she said. Trophies and prizes for this year's tournament will be presented in Bailey Lounge at 11:30 a.m. July 16. Religion Professor At Baptist Sessions Ernest E. Klein, associate professor of religion, is attending the American Baptist Assembly at Green Lake, Wis. The assembly is a conference of 140 Baptist professors of theology and church history, pastors, lay persons, and staff members of the American Baptist Convention. The purpose is to explore and resolve theological problems and encourage scholarship on theological questions. If he mentions any other place,sick the dogs on him. He'll never, never do. DIXON'S The Drive-In at 2500 W. 6th Music with your Meals Jayhawker Covers On Sale for 50c Those who picked up the old cover may replace it with a new one for Free Bring old cover to Concession Stand-Union Bldg. 1958-59 Jayhawker on Sale-$6.00 Page 6 Summer Session Kansas Friday. July 10, 1959 (1) CHEMISTRY AINT WHAT IS USED TO BE!—James Michaels is one of 12 high school chemistry teachers studying here under fellowships this summer. Mr. Michaels received his master's degree here in 1933 and now teaches at East High in Kansas City, Mo. He is working an electroanalytical chemistry problem on a constant current generator he helped assemble. High School Students Are In 'Once in a Lifetime' Cast Twenty-eight high school students, all members of the theatre division of the 22nd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp, comprise the cast of the Kaufman and Hart comedy, "Once in a Lifetime," the third production of the University of Kansas Summe Theatre's "Commedia Carnival." The play will be presented July 13, 16 and 21, in repertory with Goldoni's "Servant of Two Masters" and Moliere's "Tartuffe." A story of show people and Hollywood at the advent of talking pictures, "Once in a Lifetime," is a modern reflection of the Commedia dell'Arte tradition of those plays. Dr. Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama at KU and assistant director of the University Theatre, is the play's director. Students are admitted free to all events of "Commedia Carnival" on I.D. cards, summer campers on their meal tickets, and others on "Commedia Carnival" season coupons. Paul Ackerman, Colby; Ban Buschushn, Kansas City Kan.; Hoite Caston, Bill Clement, Gigi Gibson, Irene Gibson, and Alan Glines, Independence; Margretta Flinner, Manhattan; David Haverty, Ottawa. Mary Godfrey, Byron Leonard. Mike Milroy and Jeff Quinsey, Lawrence; Judy Hayes, Galena; Gail Hickok, Webster Groves, Mo.; Leon Jones and Tom Woodard, Des Moines; Kevin Kirk, Higginsville, Mo.; Naney Kochenderfer and Patsy Cast members are: francis sporting goods Kochenderfer, Maywood, Ill. 731 Mass. TENNIS RACKET Jana McGinnis, Fleasanton; Judy Maddy, Abilene; Jan Pepper, Halstead; Sandra Schmidt, Arlington; Jo Carroll Shelton, Horton; Judy Steitz, Bison; Jean Treloogen, Chanute, and Patricia Young, Alexander. we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service The God of Fields Causes a Mixup Statues of Pan are in the news on other university campuses. At Columbia University, for instance. That school has a three-ton reclining figure of Pan, the god of fields, forests, flocks, shepherds and wild animals. (KU's Pan plays bagpipes.) Columbia is interested in having Columbia is interested in having the statue moved to make way for a new engineering center. going to give Leighh the great god Pan. Someone called the newspaper office to say so. The editors called Leighh's fine arts director. A mystery voice also called the fine arts director. Everybody told the Lehigh public information director. The Lehigh University Brown and White reported that Columbia was Many then began to call Columbia to find out for sure. The word there; Columbia was not interested in giving Pan-to Lehigh. So. Columbia still had Fan on its hands. Lehigh's public information director said no offer had been made An art director said there was no money for transportation anyway But the advertising manager of the Brown and White, who took the first phone call, was still trying. He hoped to see Pan appear on a mountain near Bethlehem, Pa. Drurys Given 2-Year Honor Dr. and Mrs. James W. Drury have been appointed Danforth Associates on the University of Kansas campus for a two-year term. He is associate professor of political science. The Drurys will attend an orientation program Aug. 31-Sept. 6 at Camp Miniwanca, near Shelby, Mich., as guests of the Danforth Foundation. The Danforth Foundation, with the goal of strengthening the moral and religious aspects of higher education, appoints Danforth Associates among faculty and wives. The associates work toward that end through informal, extra-classroom faculty-student relations. The Danforth Foundation, created by the late William H. Danforth of St. Louis, organizer of the Ralston-Purina Co., made the challenge gift that led to erection of the Danforth Chapel here in 1946. Neodesha Student Wins Scholarship Ronald L. Morgan, a 1959 graduate of Neodesha High School, has been awarded the Security National Bank Scholarship in Banking and Finance at KU. The award is $500 for the 1959-60 school year but may be renewed for a total of four years and $2,000. The Security National Bank of Kansas City, Kan., supports the scholarship, which is made annually to an entering freshman who intends to major in banking or finance and plans a career in commercial banking. Morgan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Morgan of Neodesha. He has been editor of the school paper and has been active in speech and dramatics. Terrill's July Clearance Sale Better Dresses Reg. 14.95 and 17.95 Reg. 19.95 to 24.95 $10 $12 Save Up To 50% --- Suits & Coats 4 Suits Reg. 29.95 2 Coats Reg. 29.95 Now $10 Now $15 10 Suits Reg. 39.95 11 Coats Reg. 39.95 Terrill's 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Now and Saturday ★ Now and Saturday GUY MADISON RHONDA FLEMING in "BULLWHIP" co-hit MAMIE VAN DOREN in "GUNS, GIRLS AND GANGSTERS" Starts Sunday GLENN FORD in "IMITATION GENERAL" with Red Buttons GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Ends Saturday AUDREY HEPBURN in Fred Zinnemann's "THE NUN'S STORY" Starts Sunday BING CROSBY DEBBIE REYNOLDS ROBERT WAGNER in "SAY ONE FOR ME" --- SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Ends Saturday Don Murray, Diane Varsi in "FROM HELL TO TEXAS" Co-Hit Dick Foran in "THUNDERING JETS" ICE TE Tornished condition. August phone. iphone. and phone. The utilities. the utilities. Extra Saturday Night Only Double Owl Show! 4 Features In All! Starts Sunday GARAGE private boys. All double c om. Ava Co-Hit LARGE ment. Ven Phone V James Stewart, Kim Novak in "VERTIGO" FOR Yo basement trance. 1 room. iii smoking. 1616 Ind. TWO SI now. Fui- ing room. Separate Phone V UNFURI garage, yard. 2 July C 2 room room or per mor 1728 Te Co-Hit Alan Ladd, Dorothy Lamour in "WILD HARVEST" NICE MENT, Availab Maxwel VI 3-416 FIRST private furnish and cl ware. Call VI ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ APART One av Septem Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED FOR RENT ICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, grimished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned. $62.50 per month. Available August 1. Three room furnished apartent, private entrance and bath, also phone $53.90 per month. Available Aug. Nice sleeping room, private entrance and phone. Free Wi-Fi. See how These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5- 7-31 LARGE THREE ROOM first floor apartment. Very nicely furnished. Private bath. Phone VI 3-7677 before 11 or after 5. 7-17 GARAGE APARTMENT all modern and private. Snack bar in kitchen. Prefer two boys. Keeping rooms able to be single or single. Call VI. contact app. Available for next semester. 7-24 TWO SMALL APARTMENTS available now. Furnished kitchen, complete kitchen, separate bath, large storage closets. Phone VI 3-6255 or see at 646 W. 7-17 FOR YOUNG MEN, modern 2-room basement apartment with outside entrance. Utilities paid. Also large single room, linen furnishes. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Indiana. 7-10 FUUNFINISHED 2 bedroom house and garage, utility room, fenced in back yard. 2 children accepted. Vacant 1st of July. Can be seen from 10 a.m., until 2 p.m. each day. $85.00 per person, per room. Included with sun room ground floor. Vacant now. $32.50 per month. If interested chil VI 3-4897 or 1728 Tenn. NICE CLEAN TWO-ROOM APARTMENT, 2 also 2 sleeping rooms. 821 Indiana. Maxwell, hawk's Nest days or see VI 3-4168. 7-10 FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, furnished, private bath. Also second floor apartment, furnished. Bills paid. Lots of built-ins and clothes closets, dishes and silver- ware. Near KU, 836 Miss. Reasonable. Call VI 3-7917. 7-14 APARTMENTS at 1430 Crescent Drive, Washington, DC 20007 September, Contact VI 3-1880. 7-31 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 BUSINESS SERVICES WASHEED, fluff dried and neatly folded. Weekdays: 2 hr service. Saturday, slightly longer. Single load 505. Gravit's Automatic Laundry, 913 New Hampshire. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Have electric typewriter general rates, Mrs. Tom Brumby VI 3-3428 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers reports, themes, theses, etc. Neat, accl痰, immediate attention. Reasonablerates. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-3485. TYFIST. Make reservations to have thethes, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard demand. Mrs. Leatherwood VI 3-8331, 1736 Tenn. ff. TYPING; Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. **tf** Friday, July 10. 1959 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, V 3-1240. NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our notice. 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 all purposes. Complete one and two and three 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, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dances, air conditioned. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. ph. VI 3-6838. FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly ernie's Barber Shop 720 Massachusetts; KU BARBER SHOP—Flatlot our spec- cies blocks down 14th Street. campus RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the Sewing Center, 927. Mass. Station, sff Mufflers and Tallipse Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c ADS WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tf STENO-SECRETARY. Due to expansion of staff, immediate positions available in pleasant air-conditioned office for both summer season and permanent career positions. Applicants should have previous experience; be superior in typing and short-hand in speed, neatness, accuracy. Work requires imagination, responsibility, correspondence ability; is interesting and has variety of contact person, letter or phone; Mr. Meckey. Be within tour Associates, 1236 Mass., phone VIKING 3-1211. 7-10 HELP WANTED TRANSPORTATION FOR SALE WANTED: RIDE FROM KANASAS CITY to Lawrence, daily; Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9 a.m. or on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 a.m. Coming back everyday at 11:30 a.m. Call Mary Ann Leonardi at yellowstone 2-0647. 7-21 MISCELLANEOUS USED AIR CONDITIONER Half tom. eight. 9 a. anytime. First Floor. 7-17 at 910 a. anytime. First Floor. SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special ½ price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf WASHING AND IRONING, male students. Phone VI 3-9159. 7-17 WANTED LOST MALE BEAGLE PUPPY 3 months old. morning. Call VI 3-8312 after 5. 7-10 morning. Call VI 3-8312 after 5. 7-10 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI3-4416 Owen Fields, Inc. you are fishing for flattery- Wear clothes from Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. Elevator from Men's Store 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 C. B. C. A Tale of Sufferin' Sam or One will get you Four it's cool in the Hawk's Nest Man, was Sufferin' Sam ever. It was $ 9 9^{1 / 2} $ on the comfort index, which is uncomfortable for everyone, even KU students. He'd heard rumors of a spot that was cool as Christmas and two floors down - the Hawk's Nest. Well, he was last seen going into the Kansas Union. And I hear tell that he plans on staying there, in cool comfort, until cold weather sets in some time this winter just a studyin', and a drinkin', and a eatin' and all. Cool comfort eh? Race ya there. KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1959 1960 START OF A LONG PROCESS—Mike Bogan, Rich Hartley, and Judy Murphy, all of Baxter Springs, start the process preceding fall enrollment. Shown registering the preview are, left to right, Pat Patton and Karen Henderson, Lawrence. India Interest in Western Literature Recalls '30s, Shulenberger Says "The interest shown in Western literature by the people of India is much as it was in the United States in the 1930s," Dr. Arvid Shulenberger, associate professor of English at the University of Kansas, says. Dr. Shulenberger recently returned from India, where he held a Fulbright exchange grant to teach American literature at Aligarh Muslim University near New Delhi. "Actually there is little knowledge of American literature in India, but what there is tends to follow along the lines of social reform literature, as it did here in the 1930's. Surprisingly, the most widely read and admired authors are Pearl Buck and Howard Fast." Fast, who was a Communist but later denounced Communism, is the author of "Citizen Tom Paine." "The most fashionable author among the intellects in India is T. S. Eliot," Dr. Shulenberger said. Aligarh Muslim University, where Dr. Shulenberger taught, is a traditionally Moslem university that is now one of the national schools. "A number of American, British Canadian and other foreigners teach there. Accurate enrollment figures are not available, but it is somewhere between 3 to 5,000 students. The medium of teaching is English, but 'British' English, not american," Dr. Shulenberg said. "The University is advanced in theory but not in practice. It is primarily a liberal arts school founded on the British model. The library facilities are good and are growing rapidly with foreign loans and gifts, but the library isn't used very much. "Because the universities observe all the holidays—Christian, Moslem, Hindu and others—about one out of every four days is a school holiday. There are no papers or examinations until the end of the year." "The aims of most Indian students in the universities are first to pass the national examination to become a government civil servant, second to be a teacher, and third to be a businessman." Dr. Shulenberger said. Equal Time Not FCC Author's Intent WASHINGTON — (UPI)—Take it from the author himself: the Federal Communications Act never was intended to nail down equal newscast time for political candidates. Tall, burly Clarence C. Dill, a former senator from Washington state, wrote the first communications law in 1927—"when radio was breaking out all over." Dill also drafted the Federal Communications Act of 1934, which is still the law of the land for radio TV, telephones and telegraph. Dill, a Democrat, says he is being quoted freely in connection with the uproar over the Federal Communications Commission's "equal time" ruling. "When these things come up after 32 years. I feel like I'm coming out of a tomb," he said. Dill. a colorful conversationalist, thinks the FCC "made a mistake" in its interpretation. "I think they were wrong," he said. But he is against changing the wording of the law for fear it will open a "Pandora's box" of trouble. (The FCC held recently that Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Dill lost the senatorial race in 1918. Opponents tagged him "pro-German" for voting against this country's entry into World War I, he says. Balfour But he won in 1922 on a promise of getting the Grand Coulee Dam for Washington state — which President Roosevelt helped him fulfill—and served 12 years in the Senate. 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Spokane before the Federal Power Commission in its bid for a new dam site. At 74. Dill is sandy-haired, bright-eyed and somewhat rumpled looking. He claims he would be an "old man" now if he had remained in the Senate. political candidates are entitled to equal time on radio or television newscasts. Broadcasters have protested.) "It wears you down," he said. "It wears you down," he said. Dill now is a practicing lawyer. He was interviewed in Washington while representing his town of NEW Ray Conniff's Latest Hollywood in Rhythm on LP Records Bell's 'Previews' Scheduled For Entering Freshmen Two of the six University of Kansas "previews" for entering freshmen have been held here this week. Four more are scheduled to Five outstanding prospective additions to KU's national outdoor championship track team were on campus yesterday to participate in the new Preview sessions designed to help orient new students. 5 Track Stars At Previews Considered the nation's top high school track stars, they are Archie San Romani, Wichita, middle distance runner; Bill Stoddard, Oklahoma City quarter-miler; Dave Kirkman, Tula quarter-miler; Kirk Hagen, Oklahoma City half-miler, and Ted Reisinger, Tulsa middle distance runner. San Romani is holder of 4:08.6 record in the mile run—fastest mile time in U.S. high school history. He is also a standout half-miler. Stodard is owner of a respectable :47.9 time in the quarter-mile, and Kirkman has clocked a neat :48.3. Hagen, an 880 runner, has several top times to his credit. Western Civ Signup Deadline Wednesday Wednesday is the deadline for registering for the Western Civilization comprehensive examination which will be given Saturday morning, July 25. Students who wish to take the examination should register immediately at the Enrollment Office. 130 Strong. The program is designed to acquaint the new student with the campus and to administer placement and qualifying examinations. The preliminary orientation to KU does not include all the events of the fall orientation week, but still enables students to get a "preview" of University life and take the required examinations. - run during July and August. Carl G. Fahrbach $Jr_{n}$ assistant director of admissions and director of the "previews," said the office tries to limit the number of enrollments to 200, although there were 209 at the first "preview." In the afternoon, the freshmen are divided into groups according to the school they will enter. A representative from the dean's office of each school talks to the group and answers questions. At the beginning of the two-day session, students are assigned to University dormitories. The first placement examination is given to all enrollees on the first morning. Language, biology, and chemistry qualifying examinations also are given in the afternoon. A "preview" dinner is held in the Kansas Union that evening. The second placement examination and physical examinations are given on the second day. In the evening, representatives from the offices of the dean of women and the dean of men meet with the freshmen in their residence halls. For those who wish a conference with a University staff member, employment, financial assistance, housing, student insurance, etc., the Admissions Office arranges appointments. 3 WAYS TO HAVE A PIZZA Mia Pizza 1. Come down and and have a delicious Hideway Pizza inside in air conditioned comfort. And there's a ball game across the street to watch. La Pizza 勃野 2. Get your Pizza "to tote" at the Hideaway. Take it home, or eat it in the park across the street from the Hideaway. A Z A S 3. If you can't get away from home, the Hideaway will send it to you, with only a 20c delivery charge on the whole order. How ever you get it, you will find Hideaway's Pizza the most flavorful, delicious pizza you have ever tried. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 N. Park VI.3-9111 KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 47th Year, No.10 Tuesday, July 14, 1959 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Fire Again Strikes Mud Hut Hyders Injured In Texas Crash; Condition Good SHREVPORT, La—Dr. and Mrs. Cllyde Hyder, who were injured Thursday near here when their car and a pulwood truck collided, were reported Monday in good condition in a hospital here. According to Dr. Carson Reed, who was reached by telephone at the North Louisiana Sanatorium. Dr. Hvder, professor of English and editor of the University Press at KU, suffered a concussion and laceration of the scalp. Another passenger in the car, the Hyders' daughter, Katherine, 13, was released with a sprained wrist. Mr. and Mrs. Hyder should be released within a "couple of weeks," Dr. Reed said. Mrs. Dwight Prentice of Lawrence, another passenger in the car, suffered a possible back injury. KU Runs Out Of Vaccine The accident occurred at the intersection of U.S. 84 and State Highway 11, just inside the Texas line Both vehicles involved in the collision were badly damaged. "We do not know when exactly but we will get more in. It is difficult to obtain." Dr. Gross said. Watkins Hospital does not have Salk vaccine available now, but expects to get some in soon, according to Dr. Maurice E. Gross, of the health service. So far this year, no polio cases have been reported at the University or in Lawrence. Local doctors have been busy giving inoculations of the vaccine during the past weeks to prevent an epidemic similar to the one in Kansas City. The epidemics in Kansas City and Des Moines have caused a rush on laboratories' stocks of the drug, it was reported. An official at the Medical Arts Center in Lawrence said he felt sure most local doctors had a supply of the vaccine, but "we don't have any backlog at the present." Storms Expected To Cover Kansas TOPEKA — (UPI) Thunderstorms already started in the eastern part of the state were expected to spread over all of Kansas and continue today, the U.S. Weather Bureau said. The weathermen said most of the state could expect locally warmer temperatures today and tonight, with highs today reaching the 90s. Half-inch rains fell in a strip from McFarland south to Cottonwood Falls and Burlington. Scott City reported .70. Cities reporting more than an inch of rain Sunday were Atwood 1.90 Hutchinson 2.86, Kingman 1.37 Kanopolis 1.31, Langley 4 inches LeRoy 1.15, Fredonia 1.51, and Thayer 1.96. Conditions were unsettled over the state. There were locally heavy rains. Extreme temperatures were 88 at Hutchinson and 77 at Forbes Air Force Base in suburban Topeka. TURNER WHAT NOW?-Firemen climb to the roof over the laboratory in the southwest corner of the "Mud Hut" to check for additional signs of fire. The Lawrence Fire Department, using the single pump truck pictured, extinguished the main fire and was looking for smouldering rafters and sections of the roof 30 minutes after arriving on the scene. 2 "Mud Hut." Swift is taking a close look at the apparatus which housed a solvent bath that burst into flames. Remains of the solvent container are shown on the floor underneath Swift. NOT AGAIN!!!—Newell Rodewald, John Lohrenz, and Bill Swift (left to right), all graduate students in chemical engineering, look over the results of the latest experimental accident at the By Ray Miller The "Mud Hut," located behind Marvin Hall, was the scene of heavy damage for the second time within 10 weeks Saturday as the Research Foundation portion of the chemical engineering department continued to be plagued by experimental accidents. The research laboratory, located in the southwest corner of the "Hut." caught fire when a solvent bath burst into flames at approximately 10:30 am Saturday. Newell Rodewald, Lawrence graduate student in chemical engineering, said the accident occurred as Thomas Rogers, graduate research assistant, was removing a solvent bath from a piece of apparatus used to experiment on low-temperature viscosity measurements of menthane. Rogers was alone in the laboratory at the time of the accident. Rodewald said the solvent vapors ignited, and Rogers dropped the vat. The vat contained from two to three gallons of iso-pentane, a component of gasoline. Rogers was admitted to Watkins Memorial Hospital where he was treated for minor burns on the legs. He was not held at the hospital. The fire then spread to other pieces of equipment, climbing to the ceiling where the ceiling boards, rafters and part of the roof ignited. The fire was confined to the laboratory. University officials declined yesterday to make any estimate as to the amount of total damages. "It will be some time before the total cost will be known," said Keith Lawton, director of physical plant. He explained that most of the fire damage was in the attic and that phone lines and electrical lines will have to be replaced. He said that no figure had been set for equipment damaged in the laboratory itself. Damage to the radio lab was mostly due to water and smoke, he added. The Lawrence Fire Department arrived on the scene at 16:47 a.m. and had the fire under control approximately 30 minutes later. As in the case when a piece of apparatus blew up last May 8, injuring two, starting a small fire and blowing out windows, the fire department had trouble with a large crowd of spectators. Station KANU, the KU FM radio station housed in the east side of the building, received a large amount of water damage. The station signed off the air after Phil Morgan, announcer on duty, smelled smoke and determined that the building was on fire. He turned in a second alarm shortly after the initial alarm had been turned in from the laboratory. Fire fighters feared the fire might spread to explosive materials in the laboratory, explode, and injure spectators, who were gathered well in reach of any explosion. Initial concern was expressed over the station's $20,000 record library by Dick Wright, music librarian. By yesterday, however, he said that most of the records seem to be undamaged, with only the record jackets being wet. He expressed more concern over several boxes of tapes and a bi-fi set used to audition records. The tapes and record player were stored in a corner of the record room immediately beneath an air conditioning outlet. Heat from the outlet had charred the boxes of tapes and water had soaked the hi-fi. Wright said damage to the tapes will not be known until they, get a chance to play them. Most of the water, according to station officials, was confined to the master control room. Damage to the equipment in the control room will not be determined until the station is cleaned up. The radio station was off the air (Continued on Page 8) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1959 Horizon-and Van Gogh For just one thing alone, the July 1959 edition of the brilliant new magazine, Horizon (price, $3.95), is worth the money—almost. This one thing is an article entitled, simply, "Arles." Now this is a magic word, for anyone who has loved the sun-splashed paintings of Vincent Van Gogh. Arles is the city in Provence where the wild painter sat in the hot sunlight and reproduced the yellows, reds and greens of the landscape. Horizon's article on Arles begins with an entrancing 17th century map of the city, which was once a great city, founded by the Greeks, named by the Gauls, made splendid by Roman emperors, and holy by Christian saints, as Horizon puts it. There are contemporary photographs of the city, including a full-page view of an Arles avenue that was once an important cemetery in Europe. Another photograph shows a vast arena, where men and beasts once fought for the pleasure of the Roman conquerors. Then come the Van Gogh paintings—seven beautiful pages of them. Here are wonderful reproductions, in the style that already is associated with this unique (yet probably doomed to fail) class magazine. Here is a Van Gogh self-portrait, "The Painter on the Road to Tarascon," the frenzied Vincent, bags, canvases, brushes, on a tree-lined (yet amazingly yellow) cobblestone road. Here is Van Gogh's springtime view of Arles and its peach orchards, so peaceful that one can hardly believe Van Gogh painted it. In the south of France, searching for sunlight and its effects, Van Gogh painted "Cafe Terrace at Night," which almost has noonday glare; a yellow house in the Place de Lamartine, scene of one of his wild quarrels with Gauguin; a drawbridge, done in lovely blues and greens, called "Pont de l'Anglois," and the hospital garden of the asylum, where Van Gogh went after one of his quarrels with the equally temperamental Gauguin. Horizon, in its new issue, is not restricted to Arles, however. This is what makes the issue a treasure. A magazine of the arts, Horizon has a little of each, including somewhat popular arts. Here are other offerings of Horizon: "Metropolis Regained," with photographs and diagrams (including one of the master plan for Fort Worth), a visionary approach to what the city of the future might be. "A Bernstein Suite," a sketch of the already celebrated Leonard Bernstein, almost a legend in his late thirties. "Mrs. Gardner's Palace of Paintings," the story of a celebrated art collection, with color prints of Crivelli, Rembrandt (his "Storm on the Sea of Galilee), so unlike his rich brown and red portraits), Raphael, Botticelli, Titian and Bellini "The Theater Breaks Out of Belasco's Box," an article by Walter Kerr describing designing ventures that are new horizons in themselves. "Where the Dance Enacts Daily Life," several pages of photographs of African natives, who use the dance as an expression of life. "The Last Universal Man," a sketch of Alexander von Humboldt, the great philosopher-scientist-explorer who died a century ago. Finally, what Horizon calls "the greatest Hellenistic literary discovery since the Renaissance," a lost play of Menander, "The Ccurmgeon," which the magazine prints in its entirety.—CMP Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Young horse. 5 Soft leather. 10 Nobel prize physicist. 14 Confess. 15 Gold-plied movie statuette. 16 Resistance group in Greece. 17 Measure out. 18 Meeting for public discussion. 19 Insect stage. 20 Clergyman. 22 Omnipresence. 24 Great Italian actress. 26 Social slight. 27 Government document. 31 Type of harp. 35 Fatima's husband. 36 Churchill's daughter. 38 Squalid. 39 Italian capital. 41 Fire iron. 43 Former middle-weight champion Olson. 44 Leather fastening. 46 Make better in spirit. 48 Recent: Comb. form. 49 N. Y. ballplayer. 51 First extra hole in golf. 53 Mischievous children. 55 Uncanny. 56 Type of industrial set-up; 2 words. 60 Konrad Adenauer, for example. 64 Minstrel. 65 Mr. Dionne. 66 First-rate. 68 Precious stone. 69 Treated with a nostrum. 70 Untitus (permission to depart). 71 Relaxation. 72 Inveigle. 73 Hard wood. DOWN 1 Temporary quarters. 2 At an end. 3 Late French novelist. 4 Sports attire. 5 Blarney. 6 Entertainment for service men. 7 Light tan. 8 Does finger-painting. 9 Royal fur. 10 A representative democracy. 11 His: French. 12 Baptist: Abbr. 13 Englishman's two words of surprise. 21 Enjoys a mid- night snack. 23 Prison: Br. slang. 25 Faulty play in baseball. 27 Social affair. 28 Fond farewell. 29 Mr. Legree. 30 Leased. 32 Foolish. 33 Consent. 34 Material for thread, bristles, etc. 37 Punter on skates. 40 Sir to action. 42 Turncoat. 45 Jewels. 47 Used to be. 50 Embroidered robes of Jewish high priests. 52 Hard taskmaster. 54 Wise lawmaker. 56 Musical instrument. 57 Familiar name for writer Hemingway. 58 Historic spans of years. 59 City in central Italy. 61 Facial expression. 62 Pier Angel's first name. 63 Narrow strip of land. 66 Verse: Abbr. 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 India's Hope In Holy Men WASHINGTON — The Indian government hopes to persuade the nation's holy men to work for the good of the world they renounced. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has urged the holy men, or "sadhus," to support the government's attempt to raise India's villages from their age-old penury. The sadhus have vast influence among India's illiterate millions, and can help in breaking down the walls of ancient customs that have hampered attempts to introduce modern agricultural techniques and industrial machinery. Some leading sadhus already have joined in support of India's five-year plan, but it is uncertain how many others will cooperate in the modernization program. There are hundreds of thousands of sadhus, though no one knows exactly how many, the National Geographic Society says. A sadhu—meaning "one who has renounced"—has given up the pleasures of secular life. He may have been a prosperous lawyer, doctor, or engineer, but when he becomes a sadhu, he leaves his family, position, and possessions, and wanders about the country with a begging bowl, dependent on the charity of the people he meets. His wardrobe consists of a saffron-colored robe or a cloathin. By self-denial, he hopes to turn his thoughts from material things. He undergoes long fasts and vigils, in the belief that only through reunciation, penance, and meditation can a man approach God. An electronics company has announced the development of a weightless fuel utilizing high frequency radio waves. This could be a boon to other scientific advancements. However, the whole thing will probably break down when advertisers start competing for time on the new waves. Dailu Hansan UNIVERSITY (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Juneau Associate Editor Ray Miller BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Officer Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism INVASION: '44, by John Frayn Turner. Putnam, $3.95. This has been the summer of the 15th anniversary of the historic landings on Normandy, and of the subsequent race for the Rhine that culminated in the end of the war less than a year later. In detailed documentary fashion, moving from the foot soldier slogging through the beach to the Eisenhower-Montgomery command, John Frayn Turner tells of D-Day. It is a story that begins before 1944, for the landings had long been contemplated and planned. With the entry of the Americans into the war in 1941, the debate began: Europe or the Pacific? Turner, an Englishman, observes that Roosevelt "wisely chose Europe," and thence went along with the Churchill plan, including the 1943 assault on Sicily that led to the conquest of Italy. D-Day is carefully detailed: Allied paratroopers seizing the exits from the assault beaches; planes humming overhead; amphibious boats moving through the water to deliver Europe and avenge Dunkirk. Eisenhower's now-famous decision is discussed: whether to go ahead in view of adverse weather reports: "Many of the men herded in small landing craft, unused to the sea, were taking their antisickness pills before the craft weighed anchor... The squat craft rode out the storm somehow, while the wind tore at the silver-gray barrage balloons overhead—protection against enemy air activity which fortunately could not possibly exist today." And the landings from the air—men clambering out of gliders into grainfields, into the countryside dotted with trees, lined with hedgerows, marked by canals, the countryside that became so memorable in months to come, as Caen became a familiar word in American headlines. And the GI, as earthy as in a Mailer novel, chewing his gum as he reached dry sand. "Goddam, we're on French soil!" someone shouted. Turner describes well the epochal scene. His report will become an essential part of the history of the war, whether dealing with top level decision or incidental sidelights such as that of LCT 921: "Then suddenly a torpedo erupted volcanically on her port side near the wheelhouse. Spray spurred over the deck as in the middle of a monsoon. A man fell before the blast. The metal hull and casing crumpled as if made of cardboard leaving a great gap through which the sea splashed in." But the craft survived, as "Overhead two hundred and fifty transports towing gliders droned across the sunset sky on their way to the beachhead." It seems almost unfair to point out that in the first sentence of this popular historical study of the first months of the Confederacy, former Kansan Manly Wade Wellman (or his proofreaders) makes a gross factual error. "It was December 2, 1869, and the men rose before seven o'clock that morning in the deceptively quiet little town of Charlestown in western Virginia." THEY TOOK THEIR STAND, by Manly Wade Wellman. Putnam, $4.50. Unfair because Wellman's book is a worthwhile study, told with pace and feeling, of the era that began with the execution of John Brown. Brown died in 1859, not 1869, and western Virginia, of course, had become West Virginia by the latter year. "They Took Their Stand" borrows its title from that popular fighting song of the South, written by a northerner, "Dixie." It details chiefly the experiences of the Confederacy as recorded in diaries, letters and histories. Three persons provide the framework, and not Robert E. Lee or Jefferson Davis, though these two frequently are paraded before the reader. One is the fire-eating Virginian, Edmund Ruffin, who, though well along in years, mounted the ramparts and helped fire on Ft. Sumter. Another is Thomas Jonathan Jackson, a stern and pious man who was not instinctively of military nature but who gained immortality at Bull Run as the great "Stonewall." The third is the South Carolinian, Mary B. Chesnut, who recorded her impressions of the South in wartime in one of America's most famous diaries. Though Wellman builds his narrative around these three and their reactions to the building of the Confederacy, he does not neglect other figures. Here is P. G. T. Beauregard, the Louisianian who commanded the firing at Sumter, whose name became almost the symbol of the southern general. Here is Robert Barnwell Rhett, editor of the Charleston Mercury, who attended the secession convention of South Carolina and published news of the secession ordinance on the front page within minutes of the vote of approval. Here is the withered little Georgian, Alexander Stephens, the unionist who became vice president of the Confederacy. Here is Jubal Early, who opposed secession and became a cavalry leader who ranged far and wide in the Shenandoah valley, stirring up so much trouble for the North that Sheridan's men swept through the valley in 1864 and reduced it to ashes. Wellman does not write with the skill of Bruce Catton, nor the irony of T. Harry Williams, to mention two reputable writers of the Irrepressible Conflict. But he tells an effective tale. From the execution of Brown, the Kansan who swept from Osawatomie to Harpers Ferry like a flaming torch, to Bull Run, where the northern leaders, come to see a picnic and the end of the war, fled with retreating troops to Washington, Wellman does good service to the Lost Cause. Tuesday, July 14, 1959 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 BOOKS By Gilbert M. Cuthbertson THE KANSAS DOCTOR: A CENTURY OF PIONEERING, by Thomas Neville Bonner. University of Kansas Press, $5. Written to commemorate the centennial of the Kansas Medical Society, Bonner's new book, "The Kansas Doctor: A Century of Pioneering," pays tribute to the modern and historical doctors who have pioneered the frontiers of medicine in Kansas. The book is permeated with narratives of hardships, struggles with epidemics and politics. The first governor of the state was Dr. Charles Robinson; the first lieutenant-governor, Dr. Joseph Root, and the first secretary of state, Dr. John W. Robinson. This fact presents eloquent testimony to the role of doctors in organizing the state government. Bonner narrates the stories of Kansas pioneers in medicine itself as well as politics, men who have established a proud, varied and progressive tradition. Among these is Dr. Samuel Crumbine's pioneering in public health, food purification, sanitation—the Dr. Crumbine, "who outlawed the common drinking cup" and "swatted the fly." The roster of distinguished Kansan physicians continues with the Meningers, who made Topeka "the American Vienna;" Dr. Arthur E. Hertzler, the author of "Horse and Buggy Doctor"; Dr. Logan Clendenning, noted writer and physiologist. Here also are recorded the names of Dr. Samuel Williston, noted entomologist and paleontologist, and Dr. Clarence E. McClung, discoverer of the hereditary significance of chromosomes. Particularly outstanding is the development of the University of Kansas Medical School from the struggle over the site, which prompted one Leavenworth doctor to write in 1880: "That department can only succeed in Leavenworth and it will be robbing the medical profession of its heritage and the people of their money to plant a . . . medical school in a little fourth rate, Yankee town (Lawrence)." Today, the University Medical School under the careful supervision of Dr. Murphy and Dr. Wescoe has become the symbol of the period Bonner speaks of as the "Kansas Medical Renaissance." The "Murphy Plan" includes increased training and research facilities, encouragement of rural practice, and expansion of postgraduate education facilities. This program has materially broadened, qualitatively and quantitatively, KU's Medical School. Many KU faculty members, past and present, are honored in this account. The building of hospitals, founding of societies, journals, the Brinkley "goat gland" campaign, the struggles between homeopaths, ectecles, osteopaths, chiropractors—"The Kansas Doctor" summarizes the history of all of these areas. Bonner concludes: "The Kansas doctor might well congratulate himself on the most splendid period of achievement in the entire history of medicine in Kansas." WASHINGTON SQUARE, by Henry James. Bantam Classics, 35 cents. Not one of that select circle of James novels that professors like to tout ("The Wings of the Dove," "The Ambassadors," "The Golden Bowl"), "Washington Square" is early James, understandable James. It is a simple, tightly written story, which film- and play-goers will recall as "The Heiress." It deals with Catherine Sloper, unattractive daughter of a wealthy aristocrat of New York; the father, a kind of Moulton-Barrett tyrant type, and Morris Townsend, man about town who plans to marry Catherine for her money, and is spurned. "Washington Square" lacks a climax, as the film and play did not, and it dwindles away into comparative nothingness after Catherine has renounced the man she once had madly loved. But it is a perceptive portrait of mid-19th century American society, and an always engrossing tale.—CMP LAST TRAIN FROM GUN HILL, by Gordon D. Shirreffs. Signet, 35 cents. A new and rather dismaying publishing twist is represented in "Last Train from Gun Hill." It is the basing of a book upon a motion picture script—and not the most enduring script at that. The film is "Last Train from Gun Hill," which features Kirk Douglas and Anthony Quinn. It is the story of a sheriff whose Indian wife is raped and murdered by the weakling son of a powerful rancher. The rancher also is the former partner of the sheriff, and it turns into quite a situation when the sheriff comes to get the son. The story is fast-moving and highly unimportant; in the tradition of "High Noon," it is no "High Noon," but it is a shade better than "Gunsmoke" and the other cowpoke tales we see on television. —CMP DOCTOR NO, by Ian Fleming, Signet, 35 cents. A mysterious and exciting adventure concerns British secret service agent James Bond. Forsaking cold, dreary London for the sunny Caribbean on a routine investigation, Bond encounters a beautiful blonde, a fire-belching dragon, and a torture maze of a mad doctor. What was to have been a convalescence becomes instead a battle for survival. These elements combine with an easy style to produce interesting, even absorbing, light reading. —NAP THE HOOK, by Vahé Kateha, Simon and Schuster, $2.50. "The Hook" is an interminable small book about soldiers who have been ordered to execute a prisoner, and cannot arouse enough courage or ruthlessness to do it until after a treaty has been signed, ending the war, and then only by trickery. It should be dreadfully compelling, heart-stopping, powerful, graphic, vital, significant, symtomatic of our times, etc. It isn't. It's just tedious.-Alexandra Mason. Psychologist Studying Oskaloosa To Learn Effects of Size of School A University of Kansas psychologist is studying the effect of community and high school size on the life and experiences of high school students by first assembling a staff of "on the spot experts." Roger G. Barker, professor of psychology who is conducting the study through the KU Midwest Psychological Field Station at Oskaloosa, has added eight high school students to the staff as junior research assistants for the summer. They will help collect and analyze data from the schools and five Jefferson County communities they represent. The eight are LeVerna Kesinger, McLouth; Nancy Hamon and Eugene Curtis, Valley Falls; Joye Hensleigh, Winchester; Marilyn Peek, Rock Creek; Roger Brammel and Sonja Hampton Oskaloosa, and Larry Sheldon, Winchester. Other community representatives assisting with surveys are Ted Binkley of Nortonville and Darlene May of Zawakey. The project is financed by a three-year grant of $61,607 from the U.S. office of Education. It is the first project to be supported at KU by the U.S. Office of Education through its co-operative research program. "We hope to gather some much needed information for judging the best size for high schools," Dr. Barker said. "Previous studies have considered almost exclusively the curriculum offerings of schools of various sizes." advantages. Dr. Barker believes the new study may shed light on the question of whether "it may be better to correct what deficiencies the small schools have than to form larger schools and lose the educational benefits of small community schools." Work done at the Midwest Field Station—now in its 12th year—and in Lawrence by Dr. Herbert A. Wright, professor of psychology, shows that small communities and small schools have many educational Since joining the KU faculty in 1947 Dr. Barker has lived in Oskaloosa where he immediately established the Midwest Psychological Field Station. He is the president of the Society for Research in Child Development. research in Child Development. Various government agencies and foundations have provided the financial support for these 12 years and assure its continuation for at least three more with expanded activities. A grant from the National Institute of Health provides for continuance of studies on what children actually do in the situations where they live their everyday lives. Included in this study is a comparison of the life of the children in an English town and is Oskaloosa. The work of Dr. Barker and associates in Oskalaosa has resulted in the publication of two books and numerous articles. Many graduate students have there developed the material for theses for the master's degree and dissertations for the Ph.D. degree. Indeed, Midwest—as Oskalaosa is called in these publications—a county seat town of about 750 persons, now may be the best known of all Kansas towns in the professional world of psychologists, sociologists and anthropologists. The guest book at the station has the names of visitors from many universities in the United States, and also from Norway, Australia, India, Belgium, England, Switzerland, Sweden and New Zealand. Besides Dr. Barker as director, the summer staff of the Field Station includes Clifford L. Fawl, Arthur J. Dyck and Mrs. Louise Barker, research associates; Mrs. Sylvia Dyck and Eleanor Hills of Oksaloa, Richard H. Lawless, Wichita, and Naan Roos, Lund, Sweden, research assistants. The regular office staff of Maxine Mize and Isla Herbert is supplemented for the enlarged program by LaVelle Anderson, Verna Mae Hundley, Marjorie Elkinton and Patricia Gardener. Steel Union Orders Talks NEW YORK—(UPI)—The executive board of the United Steelworkers Union Monday ordered union negotiators to comply with President Eisenhower's request for immediate resumption of contract talks in an effort to avert a strike at midnight today. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges,Rings,Novelties, Sweatshirts,Mugs,Paddles Cups,Trophies,Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER 1 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Men on the Go, Go for Acme Young men in a hurry always remember Acme to keep their appearance at its best. When they are on the go, they need top quality dry cleaning and laundry that is on the go too. And that's Acme 1-Hour Jet Lightning Service. Are you on the go? Then you had better go to Acme. acme BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. VI.3-5155 acme Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14. 1959 Peace Officers' School To Attract 150 to KU The University of Kansas will play host to law enforcement officers from all over Kansas July 27-Aug.1 when they will gather to attend their 13th annual Training School. Carol Elaine Sturgess of Kansas City, Mo., and Donald Duane Soller of Wichita, have been appointed General Motors scholars at KU. Each will receive a stipend based on need of up to $1,200. General Motors Scholars Named Miss Sturgess, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Sturgess, will be a senior at KU majoring in bacteriology. Her appointment fills a vacancy at the senior class level. Solter, who plans to major in physics, was graduated from Wichita North High School in May. He receives one of the three General Motors awards made available to KU each year for entering freshmen and which are renewable for four years. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. D. Duane Solter. Miss Sturgess attended Central High School and Kansas City, Mo., Junior College. She entered KU last fall and held a residence scholarship in Sellards Hall, of which she has been vice president. She has been an honor student throughout her schooling and is in the gifted student program at KU. Upon graduation she plans to study medical technology at the KU Medical Center. Solter was the ranking boy of the senior class at Wichita North where he was a member of the student council. Three times he was an officer of the Stump Club and he served the Science Club as vice president. He was an observer for the International Geophysical Year with his four-inch reflecting telescope. He was a finalist in the Sumnerfield Scholarship competition at KU last fall. His goal is to earn a doctorate degree in physics and enter research work or teaching. Ballet Students Lose $26 During Practice Students practicing the ballet lost more than $26 to a thief between 1 and 3 p.m. Friday in the dressing rooms at Hoch Auditorium. The money was taken from the belongings of Sharon Huggard, Carol Rein, Suzy Doty and Jeff Angwin of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, campus police said. Students have been advised to leave valuables at the police office in the lobby of Hoch. The school is under the direction of the Governmental Research Center at KU. Approximately 150 officers will learn the skills of their trade in 41 hours' instruction. Classes will be held in the Kansas Union. Special courses will deal with jail administration, handling mental cases, financial responsibilities, serving legal processes, and treatment of prisoners. Kenneth E. Beasley, assistant director of the Research Center's training program, says the sessions are "primarily designed for sheriffs who have just recently been elected to office." Regular classes for other officers will include a basic course for novice policemen, police science, and traffic investigation. Beasley said. General daily lectures will be given each morning by instructors from the Highway Patrol, the attorney general's office, members of the KU faculty and guest experts in the area. GOP Position To Van Sickle A senior in political science at KU has been appointed executive secretary of the National Federation of Young Republicans. He is Tom Van Sickle, 22, of Fort Scott, the nation's youngest Republican state legislator. Ned Cushing, Downs banker, recently elected president of the Young Republicans, made the appointment, which is subject to confirmation by the organization's executive council, which will meet next month in Washington. D.C. Van Sickle was elected representative from the 18th District last November. He will have offices in Washington and will co-ordinate Young Republican activities throughout the nation. Treason Charges Dismissed SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—Treason charges in the Powell-Schuman "germ warfare" case were dismissed Monday because the government has failed to obtain grand jury indictments. The defendants were John W. Powell, 40, and his wife, Sylvia, 39, of San Francisco, and Julian Schuman, of New York City, who put out a Communist line magazine—the China Monthly Review—in Shanghai during the Korean War. ATTENTION CREDIT BUREAU and LIFE INSURANCE REPRESENTATIVES If you really want a good steak while you are in Lawrence better stop at... DINE-A-MITE Dine and Dance in Air Conditioned Comfort 23rd & La. VI 3-2942 Anthrasteroids are structural rearrangement products of a class of steroids related to the D vitamins. There has been growing interest in the chemistry and biological properties of these substances because of the possibility that the type of chemical change involved in formation of anthrasteroids from steroids may be closely connected to the origin of cancer-inducing agents in the body. Cancer Institute Gives KU Grant The research is directed by Dr. Albert W. Burgstahler, assistant professor of chemistry. The Cancer Institute of the U.S Public Health Service has granted $5,200 to the University of Kansas to support research for a year on the total synthesis of anthraceroids. Dr. Burgstahler presented a paper at the recent American Chemical Society meeting in Boston on an important first stage in the synthetic program. He also has lectured on this work at the Parke-Davis Co. in Detroit, for which he is a chemical consultant on research. Dr. Burgstahler, who obtained his Ph.D. at Harvard in 1953, had post-doctoral training at the University of London, Columbia University and the University of Wisconsin before coming to KU in 1953. Last summer he was a visiting scientist of the U.S. Public Health Service at the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Disease in the National Institutes of Health, Charles P. Kulier, graduate student from Chicago, is assisting Dr. Burgstahler with the project. Russians Repeat 'Dog Trip' MOSCOW—(UPI)—Russian scientists sent their space dog "Daring" on another flight toward space eight days after an earlier round trip into the heavens, it was learned Monday. Lawrence Men Reappointed To University Fund Board They are Ben Barteldes, appointed to a two-year term by the board's executive committee, and Skipper Williams, reappointed to a three-year term. Barteldes previously has been the fund chairman in Douglas County. Williams has been a board member since its creation in 1953. Two Lawrence residents have been reappointed to the advisory board of the Greater University Fund at KU by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The fund is the annual giving program of KU. Through it, gifts are sought to provide for University needs for which state funds are not available, including scholarship and loan resources, more adequate student housing and unrestricted funds for use where need is greatest. Since the program was begun, more than $600,000 has been given in 21,000 individual contributions. Chairman of the 1959-60 advisory board is Anderson Chandler of Topeka. Asks Congress for $3,435,000 The largest item was $1,550,000 for the office of Saline water in the Interior Department, including $1,005,000 to construct the first demonstration plant for the conversion of sea water to fresh water. WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Eisenhower Monday asked Congress for $3,435,000 in supplemental appropriations for various executive departments for fiscal 1960. It's by tape recording, and it explains the history of the horse since it was a dog-sized, muti-toed Hyracotherium. Evolution of Horses Is Subject of Lecture A two-minute lecture on the 60-million-year history of horses is being given these days in the basement of Dyche Museum. The listener receives visual aid through a display of skulls, hoofs and teeth in six labeled phases of the evolution. Muti-colored lights flash on each specimen as the recording explains the changes that have occurred. Mite Genetics Study Authorized in Grant A supplementary grant of $2,500 has been made by the U.S. Public Health Service for a research project directed by Dr. Joseph R. Camin, associate professor of entomology at the University of Kansas. The study, for which an initial grant of $9,000 was made in December with a 3-year commitment of about $40,000, is on the role of mite genetics in transmission of blood and other diseases. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Teachers' Vacancies Located In Colorado, California, Dakotas, Washington, Montana, Arizona and Wyoming. COLUMBINE TEACHER'S AGENCY 1320 Pearl Boulder, Colorado We Clean All Your Summer Sportswear 10 1 Tennis Court 1 MARIE KEENY If you wear it in the sun for summer fun then we can clean it. Lawrence Laundry is fully prepared to fill all your summer cleaning and laundry needs. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-3711 APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE "You'll Be Glad You Did" Tuesday, July 14, 1959 Summer Session Kansan Paj Management Institute Convenes, Drawing 110 The 10th anniversary Midwest Management Institute meeting convened Sunday on the campus, drawing 110 credit bureau representatives from 12 states and Canada. The program will include hourly classroom sessions and seminars. E. A. McFarland, manager of the KU Bureau of Institutes, says a certificate of achievement from the institute represents 100 credit hours. The maximum credits for one summer session is 25. Credits awarded during the four-year program are standardized and transferable throughout the country. Other schools offering the program are Yale University, University of Illinois, University of Texas, and University of California. McFarland said the KU program compares in size with the program at North Carolina State University, where the institute was founded 12 years ago. McFarland said many graduates of the program return to the campus because the topics of the seminar sessions are rotated annually. "We have had a few members of our first graduating class return to the sessions each year since the institute was founded," he said. Don H. Puffer, president of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America, will speak at the commencement banquet at 6:30 p.m. Friday. Puffer, bureau manager in the Denver area, is a graduate of the KU institute program. Tour of Soviet By 7 Goes On MOSCOW—(UPI)-Seven American governors flew from Uzbekistan to Kazakh Republic Monday during their tour of the Soviet Union, Tass reported. The official Soviet news agency said the seven governors were scheduled to tour Alma-Ata, Kazakh's capital. They went to the eastern republic from Tashkent in Uzbekistan where they were given a banquet by Mayor Madzhid Yuldashev. The governors, who last week conferred with Premier Nikita Khrushchev in the Kremlin, included Le-Roy Collins of Florida, George D. Clyde of Utah, Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey, John E. Davis of North Dakota, Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina, Stephen L. R. McNichols of Colorado and Robert E. Smylie of Idaho. Colonel Becomes General in Army Col. Clair L. Wood, University of Kansas alumnus, has been promoted to brigadier general. Gen. Wood is inspector general at headquarters, Air Training Command, United States Air Force, at Randolph Air Force Base, Tex. A civil engineering student, General Wood was graduated from the University with a bachelor of science in civil engineering degree in 1932. He was a member of the Reserve Officers Training Corps here and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Corps of Engineer Reserve June 4, 1931. Gen. Wood became a flying cadet with the Army Air Corps following graduation here. He received his flying training at Randolph and Kelly fields in Texas and was awarded his pilot's wings in 1933. Gen. Wood served in the European Theater of Operation in World War II, flying combat in medium bombers. He is now a command pilot. Asks Reds to Stop Threats With the general at Randolph AFB is his wife, the former Miss Marv Bennett of Meade, Kan. He is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James B Wood of Liberal. GENEVA — (UPI) — The Western powers called on Russia Monday to scrap its Berlin time-bomb once and for all if it wants a summit meeting. U. S. Secretary of State Christian A. Hertler told Russia's Andrei Gromykov in unequivocal terms that the West will not negotiate under an ultimatum, duress or the continued threat of a new Berlin crisis. The success or failure of our efforts in the area of international relations depends largely on the personnel of our foreign service, Rep. Newell A. George (D-Kan) said Monday upon introducing a measure in the House looking toward the establishment of a foreign service school. George Stresses Foreign Study The George bill is similar to one introduced in the Senate by Sen. Symington (D-Mo) about which State Department officials recently said: "Such an academy would not be in the best interests of the country or the foreign service at this time." "In an age in which one mighty blow by an unfriendly power could completely destroy a large city," George said, "our country has a critical need for competently trained foreign service personnel. Most certainly our record abroad clearly demonstrates this need. The State Department should get its head out of the sand. "Although a number of our universities do have excellent courses in foreign service and languages, either they are not being utilized to the maximum or our State Department is not employing those who have received the proper training." "Too often, people are sent to represent the United States in foreign countries who can neither speak nor understand the language of the country to which they are sent. He stressed the fact that emphasis should be placed upon the teaching of foreign languages in this type of school. "Very few of our college graduates have studied foreign languages to any extent and even fewer have majored in any of them," he said. "Use of the Sunflower facilities will augment the chemical-production facilities at Lawrence and utilize our experienced personnel to increase our services to customers." Mr. Sanner said. Callery Chemical Co. here is negotiating a lease with the U.S. government for use of part of the facilities of the vast Sunflower Ordnance Works near here for development, testing, and production of new high-energy rocket propellants. "This combination of facilities and trained personnel should significantly shorten the time required to develop new propulsion concepts. For example, Sunflower would be ideal for advanced development of certain aspects of the new propellant concept now being explored by Callery under a current contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration." E. G. Sanner, president of the pioneer high-energy-fuel company, said the proximity of the ordnance works to Callery's Lawrence chemical plant and the excellent facilities available at Sunflower provide an ideal combination for advanced work on monopropellants, bipropellants, and solid propellants. Firm Asks Use Of Sunflower Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad C O L T S U E D E R A B I A V O W O S C A R E L A S M E T E F O R U M P U P A P R I E S T U B I Q U I Y D U S E S N U B P A S S P O R T E O L I A N A L I S A R A H D I N G Y R O M E P O K E R C A R L T H O N G R E N E W N E O Y A N K E E N I N E T E E N I M P S E E R Y O P E N S H O P G E R M A N B A R D O L I V A A O N E O P A L D O S E D N U N C E A S E S N A R E T E A K It’s Cooler in one of the “Light-as-Air” Suits Make this your first stop on the way to a successful week-end and a whole summer of cool comfort in a suit that will travel perfectly and keep you looking your crisp, neat best on all occasions. Choose from a wide array of fabrics . . . light as whisper, smart as a whip! $25.55 $25.55 NORMAN BURKE SAVE on Entire Stock Reg. Now Reduced $1.95 $1.50 20% $2.95 $2.25 $3.95 $3.00 Open Your Edmiston's Charge Account Today Open Your Edmiston's Charge Account Today Edmiston's ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC. 845 Mass. Edmiston's Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1959 一 Subdivision Regulation Checks Suburb Growth Kansas cities control suburban growth primarily through regulation of subdivisions within a three-mile radius from the city limits, the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas reports. Twenty-two of 27 cities surveyed use this type of regulation more than any other method, although five municipalities do so in co-operation with city-county planning and zoning commissions. Only five cities, each with a population of fewer than 25,000 inhabitants, practice no subdivision regulation outside their corporate limits. When cities co-operate in regional planning commissions, the power to regulate subdivisions remains with the city governing body. For 35 years the general statutory authority providing for such regulation has applied to all Kansas cities. The recent addition of co-operative powers with counties has been a significant augmentation to provisions of the original statute. At least one city uses its municipal utility extension policy as a "lever" to enforce conformance to subdivision regulations. The city of Lawrence withholds water and sewer extensions to insure subdivision compliance in much the same manner as some other cities use utilities to enforce conformance to city building, lighting and plumbing codes. Center Employe's Dismissal Upheld The dismissal of an institutional worker at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., has been upheld by the three-member Kansas Civil Service Board. The action was taken Friday. The cases of two others who had appealed to the board were dismissed at their own request. After testimony was presented the board ruled that Mabel Belton had been fired with cause by Russell H. Miller, associate director of the center. The board ordered that her name be returned to the civil service register for re-examination. Those who asked that their cases not be heard were Rowena Ellis and Hortense Johnson. Miller said the three had used a scheme to pay for meals in the center cafeteria in reduced amounts. Japan's Kishi Visits London LONDON —(UPI) — Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi of Japan insisted on fulfilling the full official program arranged for him Monday in spite of a 14-hour delay in his arrival here. Family of Man On Way to Russia One of the U.S. Information Agency's most successful exhibits, "The Family of Man," is en route to Moscow for display at the American National Exhibition opening July 25. The photo display, which has been seen by nearly 4 million persons in 28 countries, was assembled by Edward Steichen, dean of American photographers. It consists of 500 photographs, including nine by Soviet photographers, selected from 2 million submitted to New York's Museum of Modern Art by photographers from all over the world. Mr. Steichen will fly to Moscow for the opening, together with his brother-in-law, Carl Sandburg, the poet and biographer of Lincoln. Depicting the kinship of people everywhere, "The Family of Man" will be one of many cultural displays which the Soviet people will see at the exhibition in Moscow's Sokolniki Park. The photographs have such universal themes as love and marriage, the family, play, work, children and old age, and illustrate day-to-day experiences which show the universal hopes and aspirations of mankind. Faculty Members In Malaya for U.S. Two KU physical education faculty are in Malaya this summer as educational specialists for the U.S. Department of State. They are Prof. Henry A. Shenk, chairman of the physical education department, and M.E. "Bill" Easton, track coach. Professor Shenk is teaching in several summer institutes and advising youth organizations on programs in physical education and athletics. Easton is working with coaches and athletes, explaining methods that have produced eight straight triple sweeps of the Big 8 cross country, indoor and outdoor track titles and the 1959 NCAA championship. Zebus do not sit around for days thinking up zebu fillers. SAVE FOR THE FUTURE TIME IS NOW. It's just natural to save for the future. And when you do, we cordially invite you to use our friendly help. SAVINGS BOOK J 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. JUNCTION CITY, Kan.—(UPI)—Army Secretary Wilber M. Brucker said Monday the United States has "the power and the will to fight and win" if Russia pushes it too far in Berlin or elsewhere. Brucker Cites U.S. Power "The Soviets are apt to mistake our calm and peaceful approach as a sign of weakness," Brucker said. "Nothing could be more mistaken than for the Soviets to conclude that we will back down." He said Americans "will not betray those who trust us... will not abdicate our rights, nor shirk our solemn responsibilities in any particular, no matter how threatening the Soviet may be." LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! The Brucker statement, contained in a speech prepared for the dedication of a new bridge between Junction City and the Ft. Riley army post, was the latest such declaration Now Thru Thursday! ROCK N' ROLL SHOW! ★ ★ MITCH MILLER CONNIE BOSWELL BOB CROSBY and many famous stars in "SENIOR PROM" co-hit MARK DAMON in "LIFE BEGINS AT 17" ★ SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Ends Wednesday James Stewart, Kim Novak in "VERTIGO" co-hit Alan Ladd, Dorothy Lamour in "WILD HARVEST" Starts Thursday Julius LaRosa in "LET'S ROCK" Co-Hit Ferlin Husky in "COUNTRY MUSIC HOLIDAY" 42509887881024397520580689623744678547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785478547854785 GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Entertainment that rings all the bells in your heart! BING CROSBY DEBBIE REYNOLDS ROBERT WAGNER in "SAY ONE FOR ME" Extra! Cartoon — News Shows 7:00 & 9:15 by U.S. officials designed to prevent the Russians from underestimating the West's willingness to fight in Berlin. ELECTRIC yardlights discourage prowlers on at twilight, off at dawn (automatically) compare GAS 15 watts equivalent $1.00 per mo. 175w : No equivalent 150w : No equivalent ELECTRIC 15 watts of illumination 8¢ per mo. 75 watts . . . 40¢ per mo. 150 watts . . 80¢ per mo. LAR ment Phon NICE furli condi Augu ment phon 1. Ni and now. utilit GAR privile boys doub p.m. TWC now. ing Sepa Phor CONVENIENT TERMS $2995 PLUS INSTALLATION Electric yardlight includes fixture, 7' post, photo-cell, convenience outlet plug, and 2 colored bulbs. * Handy weatherproof convenience outlet allows you to plug in car polisher, vacuum, barbecue, holiday and garden lighting, lawn mower and hedge clippers. - Photo-cell "electric eye." - No switch needed. - Welcome visitors. - Discountages prorates. - Safety illuminates steps and doors. - Color-lited bulb gives warmth and comfort or a pool, golden glow in summer. - Ten times the light on 2/5 the operating cost of other types lamps. - Low introductory price of only $29.95; plus installation. - Convenient terms may be charged. - Choice of Modern or traditional styles. - Low monthly payments with your electric service bill! - Ask any NPL employee for details on the facility. The HANSA'S POWERand LIGHT COMPANY FIRS priva furni and ware Call APA One Sept • Photo-bell "electric eye." • No switch needed. • Welcome visitors. • Discounters prowers. • Safety illuminates steps and doors. • Colored stinted bulbs give warmth and softness of a pool green glow in summer. • Tow times the light at 2/5 the operating cost of other type lamps. • Low introductory price of only $29.95, plus installment. Convenient terms may be arranged. Choice of Modern or traditional styles. Low monthly payments with your electric service bill. Ask any NPL employee for details on the tariff. HANSAS POWERandLIGHTCOMPANY Summer Session Kausan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT furnished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioner $62.50 per month. Available bedroom $17.50 per month, private entrance, private entrance and bath, also phone. $5.00 per month. Available Aug. sleeping room private entrance and sleeping room private entrance now. These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5. LARGE THREE ROOM first floor apartment. Very nicely furnished Private bath. Phone VI 3-7677 before 11 or after 5. 7-17 GARAGE APARTMENT all modern and private, Snack bar in kitchen. Prefer two double or single. Call VI 3-3019 after 9am. Paintable for next semester. 7-24 TWO SMALL APARTMENTS available now. Furnished, newly redecorated vaults and bathrooms. Separate bath, large storage closets. Phone VI 3-6255 or see at 646 W. 23 St. FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT, furnished, private bath. Also second floor apartment, furnished. Bills paid. Lots of built-ins and clothes closets, dishes and silver- ware. Near KU, 836 Miss. Reasonable. Call VI 3-7917. 7-14 WASHED, fluff dried and neatly folded. Weekdays: 2 hr. service. Saturday, slightly longer. Single load 55c. Gravitt's Automatic Laundry, 913 New Hampshire. APARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive, Wilmington, DE 19815 September, Contact VI 3-1890. 7-31 BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Have electric type equipment. General rates, Mts. Tom Bradi VI 3-3428 TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-1893, 1736 Tenn. tf Tuesday, July 14. 1959 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, V-13-1240. Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & liter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, themes, theses, etc. Neat, accurate, immediate attention. Responsible. Mrs. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-34-785. FYPING: Theses, and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tt NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center—on p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Complete line of exotic fish, aquariums, 2 to 60 gal, umes, 2 to 60 gal, stands, filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, leather, grooming supplies, etc. Everything in the pet fed. Grant's and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. EARN TO DANCE NOW-ALL the latest classes for dance instruction. Janzie Studio, 98 Missoulian, ph. vi 3-6881 FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly Eurtis Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the Sewing School, 1927-1951, Sewing School, 927 Mass. KU BARBER SHOP--Flatton our spec- two blocks down at Street 1. WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tf WANTED: RIDE FROM KANSAS CITY to Lawrence, daily; Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9 a.m. and or Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 a.m. Coming back everyday at 11:20 a.m. Call Mary Ann Leonardi at Yellowstone 2-0647-7 21 TRANSPORTATION TEXACO MISCELLANEOUS Wheel Balancing Modern Equipment BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special 1's price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf FOR SALE USED AIR CONDITIONER Half ton. used on 310 lb. air conditioning at 310 lb. anytime. Floor. 7-17 WANTED WASHING AND IRONING, male students. Phone VI 3-9189. 7-17 LOST: During first week at school a set of Test Manuals. S V I B. Kuder Research Manual and others. Please take to Guidance Bureau. 7-14 LOST Kansan Want Ads Get Results AAA LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 3456789012 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966. Member Best Western Motels COLLEGE MOTEL On U.S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 1703 WEST 6TH Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming VOLVO 1958 4-Speed, $1895 PORSCHE 1951 Coupe, $900 JAGUAR 1955 Coupe, $2295 New 1960 Healey & M.G. out soon. British Motors 704 Vermont-VI 3-8367 G 7-14 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 COMPLETE ANSCO CADET CAMERA OUTFIT A new foolproof system of photography Ansco CADET FASHION & PHOTOGRAPHY --- - Big beautiful color or black-and-white pictures. - Takes 12 big "super-slides" on 127 film. - Large bright viewfinder...double exposure prevention. - Flash attachment, flash bulbs and 1 roll of All-Weather Pan film. $10.75 CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — Next to Varsity Theatre The Hoohawk The Debonaire, Distinctive HOOHAWK The Hoohawk is a Jayhawk from the south. He's a debonaire, distinctive Jayhawk - he has the demeanor of a true southern gentleman. No one who's been to KU should leave without one - after all, they're only $1.95 K Kansas Union Book Store Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1959 Page 8 [Image of an orchestra with musicians playing string instruments and a conductor leading the group]. BEAUTIFUL MUSIC-The Midwestern Music and Art Camp orchestra plays at its Sunday concert attired in white dress. Conductor of the orchestra is Russell L. Wiley. Film on Greece Due Wednesday Sixth in the summer session series, "Film Features of Fact and Fiction," will be presented at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey. The film is "Ancient World: Greece." Sponsored by Harmon Foundation, Archaeological Institute of America, American School of Classical Studies in Athens, and produced by Ray Garner, the film presents a pictorial impression of Greek religious philosophy and the story of seven gods. Mud Hut Fire (Continued from Page 1) for approximately 20 minutes before resuming broadcasting at the transmitting tower one mile west of the campus on Highway 59. Phil Morgan, chief advocate for KANU, said yesterday that the station has resumed its full broadcasting schedule using the KUOK stu- Weekend Toll 9 in State By United Press International The Kansas Highway Patrol Monday said nine fatalities occurred on Kansas highways this weekend, swelling the year's death toll to 281. On July 13 last year,258 fatalities had occurred. The structure, a 50-foot curved roof, was built of plywood, fastened by epoxy resin adhesives. The repair work was done with screws. 'Saddle' to Cost $160,000 The monkey saddle—or "affensatel" in German—which collapsed recently as a victim of high winds, vandals and inadequate adhesives, soon will be repaired, but the work will cost about $160.170. Dean said the damage to the roof does not mean that the adhesives used are inferior. "It merely shows that there are many problems to be The weekend fatalities were: Glenn Edward Krueger, 16, Emporia. A resocialization program for the Veterans Administration Hospital in Topeka was given Thursday by Dr. Charles Valentine, assistant professor of sociology. In both morning and afternoon sessions Dr. and Mrs. Valentine showed slides of field trips to New Britain, Papua and New Guinea, slides taken during their trips in 1954 and 1956. D. L. Dean, associate professor o civil engineering, said expenses will be high "because there aren't enough students here in the summer to aid in the repair work, and we had to hire some of the labor." He observed that welding underwent many failures in experimental stages before it achieved value in industry. He said that not only are the screw fastenings safer for the time being, but that they are cheaper. The resin cost about $250, the screws used in rebuilding $50. Couple Shows Slides At Veterans Hospital Ray Christenson, 56, and Mrs. May Arrwood, 52, both of East Peoria, Ill. Larry Charles Sprenkel, 2, Hill City. The monkey saddle is located west of Marvin Hall on the KU campus. It is an experimental structure built by the School of Engineering and Architecture. Judy Mantzke, 18, Hugoton. Bornholm Hall, 12.005.396, Fri. Kenneth Hill, 17. Topeka. Loraine Allen Tromley, 51, Tulsa, Kenneth Hill, 17, Topeka. You'll meet your enemies - solved in the experimental stages of such structures," he said. He said the fidelity of the records is not what it should be but that they should have full fidelity by sometime today or tomorrow. You'll not only meet your friends, G. Whitings, 86; Cassondy, 89; Orian Tracy Reeves, 77; Yates Center. dios in the basement of Hoch Auditorium. He said KANU plans to use the KUOK studios for the next week or, so, depending on how fast the KANU studio can be cleaned up. EVERYONE GOES TO . . . Old Mission Inn "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 PUB MASTER The Castle Tea Room FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make us love one another.—Jonathan Swift Air Conditioned MILTON HILL HOSPITAL DIXON'S 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 The Drive-In at 2500 W. 6th Music with your Meals 10 Out of 10 Say. "Econ-o-wash Saves Me Money" In a recent survey, conducted July 9-10, 10 out of 10 EconO-Wash customers said that because they are now doing their wash at Econ-O-Wash, it is cheaper. Here is proof again that you save at Econ-O-Wash. Other customers' comments were: "I like the fact that there are always lots of machines available." "You can come in any time that you want to and wash," said one housewife. "Boy, I like the air-conditioning on hot days like this," was the comment of one KU student. With your friends and fellow students enjoying this kind of service, what's holding you back? Why not try Econ-O-Wash today? It's inexpensive—Only 20c to wash, 10c to dry Econ.o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST SELF-SERVICE 24 hours a day 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 47th Year, No.11 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Friday, July 17, 1959 R THINGS TO COME2—High school graduates attend the third preview session banquet, held Monday evening at the Kansas Union, for prospective freshmen. Shown at the banquet are, left to right: Charles Hammond, Osage City; Ed Godsey, Newton; Don Wilson, Lawrence; Bryont Philgreen, Kansas City, Mo.; June Hortwell, Kansas City, Mo.; Dian Upton, Wichita, and Mary Lieth, Prairie Village. This preview will be followed by three more. McCullers Play Preview Slated A special preview performance of Carson McCullers" The Member of the Wedding" will be presented by the University Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday, July 23 and 24. The play will open the fall season Sept. 10 and Oct. 1-2-3. Summer school students and members of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be the only persons admitted. Reserved seats are available at the University Theatre box office. There will be no single admission sales. On Broadway, "The Member of the Wedding" gave Ethel Waters one of her most famous roles. It launched the careers of Julie Harris and Brandon De Wilde. The play deals with the transition of an adolescent girl into womanhood. Cast members are Joanna Featherston as Berenice, Tomi Yadon as Frankie, Thomas Edward Baumgartel as John Henry, Lou Lyda as Jarvis, Kay Carroll as Janice, Mike Blasingame as Mr. Adams, Margrett Kennedy as Doris, Marguerite Houston as Helen. Bettie Marie Keele as Betty, Suzanne Calvin as Mrs. West, Virdell Edwards as Sis Laura, Moses Gunn as T. T. Williams, Leon Sidney Jones Jr. as Honey Camden Brown, and Daryl Warner as Barney, Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, is the director. 2 Press Club Winners Told Two journalism seniors, Jack Harrison of Hays and Richard Crocker of Wichita, have been awarded journalism scholarships for 1959-60 by the Kansas City Press Club. Each scholarship is for $200, Mike Strawn, retiring club president, announces. Two students at Kansas State University and two at the University of Missouri similarly were honored Scholarships are financed by profits from the club's annual Griddle show. Harrison has served in several positions on the University Daily Kansan and will be fall semester managing editor. This summer he is an intern on the Salina Journal. He also has worked on the Hays Daily News. Crocker will be an assistant managing editor of The Daily Kansan this fall. He is working this summer on the Wichita Eagle, and in high school was advertising manager of the Junction City school paper. University Appoints 16 Summerfield Scholars Appointment of 16 University of Kansas students as Summerfield scholars has been announced by James K. Hitt, registrar and chairman of the Summerfield committee. The Summerfield award is the highest undergraduate honor the University can bestow upon men who are graduates of Kansas high schools. High school seniors earn the honor through competitive examinations and interviews. Others qualify on their academic and leadership records as KU students. All have nearly straight "A" averages. The amount of each scholarship will vary according to need from a single $100 honorarium up to 100 per cent support. The Summerfield scholarship program is maintained by an annual $25,000 grant from the Solon E. Summerfield Foundation to the KU Endowment Assn. Ronnie Ralph Broun, Phillipsburg, liberal arts sophomore; Edward G. Collister, Lawrence, liberal arts The new Summerfield scholars, whose awards are renewable until graduation: juniur; David G. DeLong, Emporia architecture junior; John L. Hodge Kansas City, Kan., liberal art sophomore. Thomas Wayne Loewen, Wichita, liberal arts sophomore; Daniel Clyde McColl, Arkansas City, liberal arts sophomore; William B. McCollum, Leavenworth, liberal arts sophomore; John B. McFarlane, engineering sophomore. Larry V. Moore, Topeka, engineering sophomore; Leo M. Pivonka, La Carse, liberal arts sophomore; Constant Poirier Topeka, liberal arts sophomore; Michael Muphy Roberts, Westwood, engineering sophomore. Jon R. Rutherford, Garden City, liberal arts sophomore; Larry C. Schooley, Kiowa, engineering senior; Carl Mason Sutherland, Prescott engineering sophomore, and Neal Richard Wagner, Topeka, liberal arts sophomore. Asian Area Study Announced at KU The establishment of an East Asian Language and Area Program at the University of Kansas under a contract with the U.S. Office of Education has been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The contract provides $9,315 for the first year to supplement the University teaching budget. Dr. George M. Beckman, associate professor of history, will be chairman of the interdepartmental program, which initially will provide a minor or second major course of study for students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Students from any part of the University, however, will be able to enroll in the various new courses provided by the program. Dr. Beckmann is a specialist in East Asian history and culture and for the past four summers has conducted a summer Asian Studies Institute here with sponsorship by several outside agencies. Dr. Murphy said, "This grant will permit the University of Kansas to make an expanded contribution to the critical national need of many more people skilled in the significant languages of the world. "It is however, just the first of many steps which will have to be taken if the University is to carry out its 20th Century responsibility to the youth of Kansas, the Mid-west and the nation." Dean George R. Waggoner of the College termed the program unusual among the few East Asian studies programs in that it is aimed at the undergraduate student, although enlargement to a graduate level center may come soon. He said that this fall the University would have the first fulltime teacher of Chinese language in a large Midwestern area. Several other institutions have been teaching Chinese language but the professors' primary duties have been in other fields. Dr. Beckmann said the program would start "modestly" this fall with the addition of the professor of Chinese and of a political scientist whose specialty is the area of Far Eastern government. Dr. Beckmann already is teaching East Asian courses. Candidates are being interviewed for the two new positions. A. C. B. George M. Beckmann The interdepartmental program of study is not new in the College Dean Waggoner points out. Such programs in American Civilization, the Humanities and Latin American Area have attained status as full major courses of study for the bachelor of arts degree. Steel Workers Brace For Prolonged Strike PITTSBURGH — (UPI)— Pickets patrolling the nation's idle steel mills girded for a long strike. The government's top labor trouble shooter predicted that a solution won't be "early or easy." Federal Mediation Chief Joseph T. Finnegan said settling the crippling tie-up will take time and "is not going to be accomplished by any magic formula." Finnegan reported to Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell on his fruitless meetings with union and management leaders in New York. Here's Program of Sunday Concerts Orchestra-Chorus Orchestra-Chorus Sunday Afternoon, July 19 Gerhard Schroth and Morris Poaster, Guest Conductors 3:30 p.m.—University Theatre Part I Chorus I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes ... Glarum Breathe on Me, O Breath of God ... Thompson Lord Thou Hast Been Our Dwelling Place ... Lekburg He Watching Over Israel from "Elijah" ... Mendelssohn Mr. Poaster, Conducting Part II Orchestra Symphonic Sketches ... Chadwick Jubilee Poem, for Flute and Orchestra ... Griffis Anne Kepler, flutist Mr. Carney, Conducting Sheep May Safely Graze ... Bach-Cailliet Sheep May Safely Graze ... Bach-Caillet Symphony No. 41 ... Mozart First movement—Allegro Vivace Music for Strings...Jef van Hoof Marche Slave...Tschaikovsky Mr. Schroth, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainge Mr. Carney, Conducting Band-Chorus Sunday Evening, July 19 Gerhard Schroth and Morris Poaster, Guest Conductors 8 p.m.—KU Outdoor Theatre Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Band Ein Heldenleben (A Hero's Life) ... Richard Strauss Napoli, Solo for Trumpet ... Bellstedt Bobby Brooks, trumpet soloist The Italian Symphony ... Mendelssohn Pilgrims' March Saltarello Mr. Wiley, Conducting Part II Chorus Contate Domino ... Pitone Create in Me a Clean Heart ... Gharum Lord to Thee Our Hearts We Raise ... Glinka Joobalai ... arr. Ades Mr. Poaster, Conducting Part III Band Prelude and Fugue in F Minor ... Handel-Malin Sleepers, Wake ... Bach River Jordan Fantasy ... Whitney Folk Song Suite ... Leidzin Mr. Schroth, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, Conducting Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1950 We Learn Facts of Life The attitude of some officials here at the University never ceases to amaze us. We suspect that this amazement is a by-product of our awakening from dogmatic slumbers in the never-never land of naiveness. Being a representative of the official publication of the University of Kansas, we mistakenly assumed that we could expect a certain amount of co-operation from all University officials in regard to obtaining information of interest to students. Ignorance was bliss. Most officials are very co-operative and are ever ready to help us inform our readers. We say most because, we have learned, there are "others." From these others we learned through experience the meaning of such terms as "hedging," "beating around the bush," "passing the buck," "the run-around," "off the cuff," "confidential," and "no comment." Bewildered, frustrated, disillusioned, we at first attempted to rationalize the situation. We are able to sympathize with the reluctance on the part of some sources to divulge information. But, we are left with a small minority who withhold information for no apparent reason. We try not to believe they think the student body as being so insignificant as to not warrant consideration. Notice we said consideration, not preferential consideration or treatment. However, we are amazed to find there apparently are people in the administration of a large, modern and progressive public institution who view the very people who make their jobs possible as being beneath their consideration, or secondary to other individuals. So, faced with the realities of life framed in the reference of personalities and individuals, we emerge from our land of "doxa," shaken, but wiser. Bits of advice given us by our instructors, old hands at the newspaper game, begin to take on significance. We begin to understand the looks of amusement on their faces as we "griped" about the hardships of news gathering. We remember the old newspaper man who, when told by a source that a story is off the record, would reply "Nuts to you, brother—you talk to me and you get quoted." We begin to understand what is meant by "cultivating" sources. And above all we learn the meaning of the word "dig." So, in the last analysis, we find ourselves indebted to that small minority which makes the job a little harder for us. They have created competition among newspaper men, and competition is the foundation of a quality product. We are only sorry that our readers must suffer as we go about the process of learning to be competitors. But we're learning. —Ray Miller Eisenhower Rebuffs Herter on Bohlen Job WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Eisenhower appears to have pulled the rug out from under Secretary of State Christian A. Herter on the question of bringing Charles E. Bohlen back into the State Department as special adviser on Russian matters. The President said Herter had assured him that no consideration was being given to the idea of bringing Bohlen back from Manila, where he is U.S. ambassador, and installing him as special adviser to the secretary on Soviet affairs. This flatly contradicted Herters news conference statement of last week that he had discussed the matter with Bohlen. Herter said then that he was not certain, however, whether the government could "induce him to stay on" because Bohlen was nearing the time when he could retire at full pay. Daily Crossword ACROSS 1 Add a finishing touch; 2 words. 2 Quick kiss. 12 It forms on ship's bottom. 14 Stage; 2 words. 15 Short operatic melodies. 16 Cottonwoods. 18 Red —— of Boston. 19 Spear-shaped. 21 Greek letter. 22 Levantine ketch. 24 Arab lateen-ringed vessel. 25 Algerian cavalryman. 27 Mountain nymph. 29 Most celebrated of the Hebrides. 31 What hookey players are. 32 City of Moravia. 33 Mental status, in regard to confidence, etc. 36 Thing or affair: Shang. 39 Wandered. 40 State in W. Mexico. 41 Grounded. 42 Handle; French. 43 Come ___ (meet by accident). 45 Apply one's self to as work: 2 words. 49 Equanimity. 51 Attaches. 53 Capital of Latvia. 54 Sea eagle. 55 Custodian, as of a school. 58 Rummy game. 59 Hickory cured. 61 Warships. 63 City in Chile. 64 From a certain direction. 65 Woven in meshes. 65 Asparagus tips. DOWN 1 Star of the past, ___ Friganza. 2 Person. 3 Trodden way. 4 Series of eight. 5 Sparkling. 6 Curved hanging garland. 7 Ouarrel. 8 Lounging slippers 9 ___ loss 2 words 10 Part or separate 2 words. | | | 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 | | | | 86 | | | | | | | | 11 Cavity in wood. 12 Deep voice. 13 Booming. 14 Left port. 20 Bristle on barley. 23 Taxi drivers. 26 Cadet on review. 28 Small quantity. 30 Amounts: Abbr. 32 Two-toed sloth. 35 Oregon: Abbr. 36 Flower stalks. 37 Outstanding college student: 2 words. 38 Castle of "Hamlet." 39 Links hazard. 41 Upper parts of dresses. 44 Spider. 46 Striped cats. 47 "It's ___!"; 2 words. 48 Strong-smelling plant. 50 Cast out. 52 Steep in pickle. 56 "What is so rare as ___ in June?"; 2 words. 57 Miss Hayworth. 58 Carson of the old West. 62 Series: Abbr. Steel Basic To Life Today WASHINGTON—Steel, once an expensive rarity, is now the basic metal of modern life. World steel production last year was 301 million tons. The United States held its position as the leading producer by turning out 85 million tons. The record year was 1955 when 117 million tons were produced. There are more than 300 steel-making companies in the United States with a total capacity of 148 million tons a year, the National Geographic Society says. Surprisingly, the world's largest steel plant is not in Pittsburgh, but at Sparrows Point, Md. It can manufacture 8,200,000 tons a year. The Sparrows Point mill produces in one hour almost three times the annual output of the first successful American ironworks at Saugus, Mass. The Saugus plant initiated the domestic iron and steel industry in 1644 by pouring iron to cast small cooking pots. The Sausau ironworks employed 50 full-time workers, who were excused from taxes, military service, and "watching for Indians." Today Sparrows Point alone employs 27,000. Production and use of iron and steel grew slowly in the United States. Steel, relatively rare and costly, was used for the finest tools and instruments. Only 1,000 tons were made in 1810. In the early part of the 19th century, steel cost about $500 a ton. The price now ranges from $135 to $150 a ton. Humor is a drug which it's the fashion to abuse—W. S. Gilbert Life's perhaps the only riddle that we shrink from giving up. —W. S. Gilbert Daily Hansam (Published Tuesdays and Fridays NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Baker Janet Jireau Associate Editor Milly Milly BUSINESS DEPARTMENT the took world BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager 3187 Business Manager Bill Kane By Alexandra Mason Watson Library KING OF PONTUS, by Alfred Duggan. Coward-McCann, 1959. $3.95. There was a king reigned in the East; There, when kings will sit to feast, They get their fill before they think With poisoned meat and poisoned drink. He gathered all that springs to birth From the many-venomed earth; First a little, thence to more, He sampled all her killing store; And easy, smiling, seasoned sound, Sate the king when healths went round. They put arsenic in his meat And stared agast to watch him eat; They poured strychnine in his cup And shook to see him drink it up: They shook, they stared as white's their sh Them it was their poison hurt. Mithridates, he died old. The Mithridates of Housman's poem was Mithridates VI Eupator, King of Pontus, who lived from 132 to 63 B.C. Mr. Duggan gives us a full and detailed account of the life of this extraordinary man. In the second and first centuries B.C., Rome was so torn by civil wars that her hold on the client-kings of the eastern Mediterranean was weak to the point of non-existence. The pirate fleets were out in such strength that communications with Egypt and the East were quite hit-or-miss. The Senate even turned down Egypt as a gift, largely because of the difficulty of getting to it through the pirates, who seem to have been standing beam to beam across the sea. The tax-collecting system was, as usual with Rome, farmed out to private agents who did their best to feather their own nests before their appointments were up. The eastern kingdoms were seriously disaffected. At this time, 111 B.C., there came to the throne of the immensely and mysteriously rich kingdom of Pontus (in what is now northern Turkey) a young king determined to be no Roman's vassal. Mithridates VI Eupator was extremely proud of his royal Persian heritage and proved himself nearly worthy of it. He spent almost his entire life trying to throw the Romans out of Asia Minor, and repeatedly, coming within a hair's breadth of doing it. and. Repeatedly, coming within arm's reach, his power at one time held almost all of Asia Minor and Northern Greece. It took Sulla and finally Pompey, in a long and terrible series of wars, to drive him back to his own strongholds, then to his son-in-law, Tigranes of Armenia, and finally, to the Crimea at the innermost reaches of the Black Sea. There he died, betrayed by his own son, having held out longer against Rome than any other single leader of a people, and, even in the hour of his death, planning one last daring strike at Rome. Mr. Duggan's treatment of Mithridates' career is a sound, straight-forward, historical account, enlivened by flashes of a dry academic humour. His observation that "Mithradates Eupator deserves to be remembered as that freak of nature, an absolute monarch who improved with age" demonstrates his penetration, and his statement that Mithridates "lived in honour and died with pride" his sympathy. All in all, it is a very competent and interesting book on a most interesting and largely neglected figure. By James F. Scott TWO GREAT PLAYS. by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood. Modern Library Paperbacks, Random House, 95 cents. The republication of "The Dog Beneath the Skin" and "The Ascent of F6" by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood provides the reader of Modern Library paperbacks with a glimpse of the dramatic work of two of England's most interesting men of letters. Although the two plays do not make first-rate drama, they catch much of the temper of English life during the troubled 1930's and embody most of the basic ideas one associates with Auden and Isherwood. isherwood. "The Dog Beneath the Skin" maintains the rhythms of comedy in spite of an occasional turn toward a darker mood, while "The Ascent of F6" is properly titled "a tragedy." Each of the plays, however, develops a similar theme: the revulsion of the noble spirit at the spectacle of greed, insensitivity, and mechanical superficiality which has woven itself into the texture of modern civilization. The thematic import of the plays derives chiefly. I would suggest, from Auden and accords well with the mood one finds this poet describing in such lyrics as "September, 1339" and "Under Which Lyre." Isherwood, a more accomplished dramatist, has supplied the sense of the stage and some of the techniques of impressionism which help the works succeed as theater. "The Dog Beneath the Skin," a satire upon the stodginess and bogus respectability of the English bourgeoisie, succeeds imperfectly in spite of its occasionally brilliant sallies of wit. The difficulty of the play lies in its episodic character which never allows all the elements to fuse into an artistic whole. But "The Ascent of F6," because of its controlling symbol (the climbing of a mountain which represents sham idealism), achieves a more consistent, coherent, and artistically satisfying commentary upon the failures of English civilization. In fact, it even rises out of the particular and renders a judgment upon man himself—a creature eternally deceived by the "demon" of his own pride and ambition. It is something of a misnomer to term these two plays "great," because in the last analysis they probably won't stand high among the dramatic works of the twentieth century. Page 3 1967 SEEING THE WORLD—Jimmy Bedford former instructor of journalism, talks to natives in the Belgian Congo on his photographic tour of the world. (He took this photograph himself.) Former KU Instructor 'Photographs World' A former instructor at the William Allen White School of Journalism is "photographically touring" the world on a financial shoe-string. Jimmy Bedford, who taught news photography from 1954 to 1958, left for his globe-circling trip more than a year ago. He is a native of Columbia, Mo., and a graduate of the University of Missouri. He is paying for most of his trip by photography. On the first leg of his journey, he became a "ship's photographer" on a Dutch line steamer from New York to London, where he worked for a newspaper, the "Pictorial." He attended the Brussels World's Fair and visited Wetzler, Germany, where the Leiea camera is manufactured, and Stuttgart, the home of the Kodak Reina. In one of the articles sent to a large regional newspaper during the last year, Bedford described the 1958 "Photokina" in Cologne. He said he was "dazzled" by the displays of 524 camera manufacturers from all over the world. Bedford continued his photographic tour with a coverage of a reindeer roundup in the Scandinavian countries. He traveled in France, Italy, Spain and Portugal, and along the western coast of Africa. Bedford travels light on motor scooter excursions from various centers. He carries a knapsack for his clothes and two suitcases--one a portable darkroom and the other for his photographic equipment. While in Africa, he wrote for the Ghana Daily Graphic and the NIgerian Sunday Times. He also writes feature articles, illustrated with his photographs, for United States newspapers, particularly Sunday news feature sections. In one article he wrote that instead of the expected feeling in the countries he toured of "Go home, Yank," he received "Hospitality Unlimited." He plans to return to the States about Christmas time, but before his return, he hopes to "cover" the eastern countries and end with a tour of Alaska and Canada. No Rain Forecast; Some Rivers Rise TOPEKA—(UPI)—The rain has finally quit in Kansas, it appears today. The U.S. Weather Burcaud said most of the state could look forward to some sunshine today. Most parts of the state will also be warmer, according to forecaster Richard Garrett. Rain continued through Wednesday, especially in southeast Kansas, soaking the ground and leaving rivers full. The Marais de Cygne River crested at a little more than half-bankful at Ottawa and Quenemo. The Neosho went out of its banks at Oswego and was full at all other points. Summer Session Kansan Management Institute Here Largest in 10-Year History The largest Midwest Management Institute in its 10-year history began Sunday at KU with approximately 115 persons registering. Fifteen states and Canada are represented. "Invest in Your Future" is the theme of the program for members of credit bureaus and collection agencies. Donald H. Puffer, president of the Associated Credit Eureaus of America, will speak at the closing banquet Friday. The faculty is Elmer Beth, KU professor of journalism; Dr. E. C. Buchler, professor of speech; Dr. William Conboy, chairman of the speech and drama department; Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech; Bert Hodge, Sacramento, Calif., Retailers Credit Assoc.; Bruce Ward, credit manager, Casper, Wyo.; Tom Hutsell, training director, Western Auto Supply Co., Kansas City, Mo.; N.W. M-Quencing, Credit Service Co., Inc., Billings, Mont.; Carl Roewe, Associated Credit Bureaus of America, St. Louis, Mo.; Charles Schaffer, Credit Bureau of Mason City, Iowa Among courses being taught are oral communications, supervising law of the press, human relations and collection service principles. Classes are divided for first and second year students. and E. A. Uffman, Credit Bureau of Baton Rouge, La. The Institute is sponsored by Associated Credit Bureau of the Midwest, 4th district; ACB of the Rocky Mountain States; ACB of America, Inc., and University Extension. Patrol Recruits In KUTraining The patrolmen will be on the campus until Sept. 20. They have passed extensive screening tests, which were taken by about 300 applicants, and must pass training in Kansas history, law, court procedure, fire arms, accident investigation, handling of evidence, public relations, geography, physical fitness and defense tactics. Classes begin at 7 a.m. Monday through Friday. The recruits finish about 9 p.m. The fifth day of intensive training begins this morning for 21 recruit highway patrolmen at the University of Kansas. T O P O F F S M A C K B A R N A C L E P U T O N A R I E T T A S L A M O S S O X H A S T A T E E T A S A I C D H O W S P A H I O R E A D I O N A A W O L B R U N N M O R A L E S H E B A N G S T R A Y E D C O L I N A B A S E D A N S E U P O N G E T A I P O I S E A D D S R I G A E R N J A N I T O R G I N M S O K E D C R U I S E R S A R I C A E A S T E R L Y N E T T Y P E S A R S The University has been the training center for five years, after having been moved here from Hutchinson because of facilities available on the campus. Conducting the classes under Patrol Capt. Allen C. Rush are KU faculty members, lawyers, fellow officers and representatives of both the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and Federal Bureau of Investigation. Homer Longdorf, program coordinator and member of the University Extension staff, said one aspect of training will be a staged motorcar crash. Recruits will go to the scene, investigate, and follow the case to its conclusion in a mock trial a few days later. On the practice range, patrolmen must pass marksmanship firing with 38 pistols, riot guns and high power 30 caliber rifles. The program is compulsory for recruits. A zebu with a flattop, ridiculous! Friday, July 17, 1959 Starlight's 'New Moon' Stars Earl Wrightson Baritone Earl Wrightson and Jan McArt headline the cast of Sigmund Romberg's "New Moon," opening Monday, July 20, at 8:15 p.m. for a one-week run at Kansas City's outdoor Starlight Theatre. The musical highlights some of Romberg's best loved melodies, including "Lover Come Back to Me," "Stout Hearted Men," "Softly, as in a Mountain Sunrise," "Wanting You." "One Kiss" and other songs from the pen of the master musician of the 1900-1938 period. The Romberg show, with book by Oscar Hammerstein II, Frank Mandel and Lawrence Schwab, is set in the New Orleans of 1792, and spotlights music and more music in the delightful show. Comedian Eddie Bracken, popular singer Johnny Desmond and comedienne Jane Kean play through Sunday night, July 19, in the new comedy about a musical, "Say, Darling," written by Richard Bissell, author of the highly successful "The Paiama Game." Wrightson, one of the pioneers in early television productions, is one of the most famous baritones in the business today. He was the star of his own network show for three years, with Paul Whiteman on his television show for three years and in the Broadway revival of "New Moon" in 1944 with Dorothy Kirsten. Co-starring with Wrightson in the Starlight production, Jain McArt is no stranger to audiences in the Midwest. She won excellent notices during the 1958 season here for her roles in "Fanny" and "The Most Happy Fella." His familiar beard has become a trademark of sorts and he recently has recorded several high fidelity albums for Columbia records among them a recent release this past May titled "An Evening with Sigmund Romberg" with the Percy Faith orchestra. Miss McArt, a soprano, has been hailed as an outstanding artist by New York and Los Angeles critics, who have classified her as "adorable," "a glorious voice, with beauty to match" and a "revelation of lovely vocalism." Rounding out the principals in the production, which will present a cast of 50 singers and dancers, are Richard France, Chele Graham and Gloria LeRoy. Miss LeRoy has been described as another Charlotte Greenwood, for the long-legged dancer-comedienne has the loose limbed qualities of that famous personality. She has toured with Olson and Johnson and takes the role of the overpowering Clotilde in the Romberg classic. France, seen as Huck Finn in the Starlight's production of the new musical "Tom Sawyer," is a versatile dancer and singer who takes the comedy role of Alexander, Miss Graham making her first Starlight appearance, plays Julie in the show. She is a native Texan and a noted Broadway dancer and comedienne. Starlight Theatre officials consider the show one of the finest musicals to play the theater this season, and have reported a heavy advance sale. The demand for tickets is attributed to the popularity of the songs and the fine voices in the production. G GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Complete Line of V Famous Italian Vespa Scooters "The Cadillac of Scooters" Coming Soon from Italy British Motors 704 Vermont VI 3-8367 GIRLS ONLY PIZZA SALE 30c Off Large Pizzas 20c Off Small Pizzas HE MIDDLE Not good on delivery pizza Good for all pizzas eaten in our air conditioned dining room. Friday Night Only! CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 North Park VI 3-9111 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1959 'Simplex' Typesetter Gets New Home at KU By Thomas C. Ryther Assistant Professor of Journalism (From the Topeka Daily Capital) Many a hot linotype sugar nas cooled in the stick since the Simplex one-man typesetting machine was announced in the June, 1899, Inland Printer as the successor to the Thorne typesetter and as the solution to all small-plant typesetting needs. It actually set foundry type, was less complicated, and generally more satisfactory and more economical than competing machines, meaning the linotype. One of the few remaining Simplex typesetting machines to have successfully eluded scrap-iron drives and museum collectors for nearly 60 years finally fell prey to the latter recently and wound up in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. NEW HOME FOR TYPESETTER—This is the Simplex typesetter, one of which has been obtained by the School of Journalism, where it may be seen in the typographic laboratory. Having been freed from a 23-year accumulation of dust, dirt, plaster, corroded oil and other ingredients foreign to its nature, it now occupies a prominent spot in 212 Flint. It is as shiny and new-appearing and its moving parts are well lubricated and free as the day it proudly set its first type. After all these years of being neglected while a linotype not six feet away did its work, old Simplex No. 1499 is once again the center of attraction in its new surroundings, receiving particular attention from visiting editors and printers of its own age group, who have had personal contact with one of its brothers or cousins, way back when. The transformation of old 1499 from its corroded state to one of gleaming free-wheeling-didn't happen over night. Employes of the University of Kansas Press took over the task as a gratis project and spent many hours dismantling, buffing, polishing, oiling and reassembling, during the course of which a good linotype machinist became a Simplex machinist, and about everyone in the plant became at least an assistant machinist. So well was the job done that the machine is once again ready to set type but for the setting of a motor and rounding up shaft, pulleys and a couple of belts. The machine was obtained from Cecil G. McDaniel, publisher of the Cainsville, Mo., News. It was in operation in McDaniel's plant up to December, 1926, after having served a prior stint in the plant of the now defunct New Hampton, Mo., Tribune—and perhaps in other similar plants. McDaniel learned of the school's desire to obtain a Simplex through a classified ad in the nationally circulated Publishers' Auxiliary. His was the only answer, indicating that probably not many of the machines remain outside of museums. McDaniel came up with a machine in perfect mechanical condition, in that there were no broken or missing parts. The school is interested in hearing from anyone anywhere who has had experience operating a "Simplex" Over a period of approximately 70 years many persons labored diligently to perfect a machine that would set type. More than 100 machines and devices were patented and approximately one-third that many were actually built. It would be interesting, but impossible, to estimate the amount of money that was invested and lost in the various unsuccessful machines. Mark Twain is known to have lost a small fortune in the Paige. sure-fire success; it could do anything a printer could except drink and swear. Apparently this was a more serious handicap than might at first be supposed, since the machine was never marketed commercially. He enthusiastically reported on one occasion that the Paige was a Even so, the Paige was a most remarkable machine and well it should have been, since James W. Paige of Rochester, N.Y., spent 15 years perfecting it, and its backers put into it $1,300,000—a heap of money in 1887. It worked,but was so complicated that machinists could not be trained to keep it in operation. Of all the typesetting machines and devices which were tried before the line-casting principle was perfected and forced them all out of business, only the Simplex (its earlier model being called the Thorne, and a later one the Unitytype) was produced in quantity and was actually used for typesetting. It is estimated that well over a thousand of these machines were put into use between the late 80's and 1910 when the Wood and Nathan Co. of New York City made a last valiant effort to market the new and improved Unitytype. The Simplex takes its place in the William Allen White School of Journalism alongside several other pieces of printing equipment of like, or even earlier, vintage. Perhaps the oldest—something over 100 years—is a large George Washington hand press, donated from the State Printing Plant in 1552 by Ferd Voiland, who was then state printer. Then there's the once familiar Prouty or "grasshopper" cylinder press which came to the school from Flovd Ecord of the Burlington Republican shortly after he had purchased the Leroy Reporter from Glick Fockele in 1952. It was manufactured in 1881 and was used in Excelsior Springs, Mo., until 1904, when it was purchased by Fockele. Another press of yesteryear soon to take its place in the William Allen White School is a "clamshell" platen, obtained several years ago from the Randolph Enterprise plant by the late Joseph W. Murray, former managing editor of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, and designated by him for presentation to the school. COOLEY CINEMAS FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE Old Mission Inn "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 Air Conditioned TRESTHOUSE Maloney Is Guest at Riley Dr. J. O. Maloney, chairman of the department of mechanical engineering, went to Ft. Riley Wednesday, representing the University on a one-day tour of the ROTC camp at the fort, where several KU cadets are midway in their six weeks of intensive field training. Dr. Maloney's itinerary began with breakfast at Carr Hall, followed by a welcome from Maj. Gen. Harvey H. Fischer, commanding general of Ft. Riley and the 1st Infantry Division, and a briefing on cadet training by Col. Max V. Kirkbride, deputy commander of the ROTC camp. Along with other educators from 34 colleges and universities, Dr. Maloney was escorted to the training area to observe a demonstration on crew served and individually fired infantry weapons. He also saw rifle and hand grenade firing and heard a discussion on technique of fire. The visit included the 3.5-inch rocket launcher and 106-mm recoilless rifles, lunch in the field, observation of cadets in artillery firing, and an engineer demonstration. The corps also marched in review before the visitors and camp officials. A dinner at the Ft. Riley Officers Club concluded the day. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Hours Sunday-Thursday . . . 5-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday . . . 5-12 p.m. • PIZZA • LASAGNA • SPAGHETTI Air Conditioned Roberto's 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 Page 5 ON THE AIR—Chuck Yaeger, Columbus senior, starts a tape in the KANU master control room, now in use after a week of cleaning-up following a chemical fire in the Mud Hut. The fire originated in a nearby laboratory. Fund Authorizes Algae Research Research to expand the knowledge of the life history of green algae, common fresh water plants, has begun at the University under the direction of Dr. Rufus Thompson, professor of botany. Summer Session Kansan The National Science Foundation has granted $12,600 for a two-year study to help fill wide gaps in current knowledge about the algae "Information shows that we are ignorant of the life-history of 80 per cent of the 6,500 species of green algae." Dr. Thompson said. "Our aim is to fill in the gaps in our knowledge that presently hinder sound systematic treatment of the algae, to clear up inconsistencies in taxonomy and reinvestigate cases that are in great need of substantiation." he said. On the phase of the research devoted to cytology, cell development, Dr. Raymond Jackson, assistant professor of botany, will be associated with Dr. Thompson, Maf Faridi, a graduate student from Pakistan, will be the assistant on the project. Specimens for the research will be collected mostly from ponds in the Douglas County area. Lloyd, Gromyko Hold Secret Lunch Talk GENEVA —(UPI)— Russia lifted partially her cold war veto on secret talks yesterday. At the same time she threatened a critical East-West showdown on her Berlin demands which the West fears would surrender all Germany to Communist rule. British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd conferred privately for two hours over lunch with Russia's Andrei A. Gromyko at the Soviet villa. Friday, July 17, 1959 New York Papers Praise Piano Professor's Recital "A consistent ideal of piano sound and technique" and "His playing gave an impression of technical ability and also of interpretative intelligence" were the evaluations of music critics of the New York Times and the New York Herald-Tribune following a recent recital of Roy Hamlin Johnson, assistant professor of piano at KU. Prof. Johnson, who made his New York debut in the Carnegie Recital Hall, has been a member of the University faculty since 1954. Eric Salzman of the Times wrote: "He chose a difficult program which included Ravel, Balakireff, Beethoven, and the Piano Sonata of Samuel Barer." "The impressionist work of Ravel." Salzman said, "was the most elegant item on the program. This work, much performed this season did not look bad under the sharp, clear light." Francis D. Perkins of the Herald-Tribune said: "The performance of the Barber work was convincing in his projection both of its notes and of its atmosphere, while the rapid movements of Beethoven's 'Walldstein' Sonata were played with ample spirit and momentum and lucidity. Dynamic shading was judicious." "The zest and vigorous momentum with which Mr. Johnson began 'Islamey' showed that he was thoroughly at home in that music, besides giving a persuasive account of his capacity for speed," Perkins concluded. He Said: Let's Have a Coke at DIXON'S She Said: You'll Do! DIXON'S The Drive-In at 2500 W. 6th The Place with Individual Patios Campers Take 108-Mile Jaunt The 85 high school students attending the second session of the 1959 Science and Mathematics Camp at KU traveled to Wyandotte County Lake, north of Kansas City, and back yesterday for outdoor lessons in earth science. The field trip, conducted by the State Geological Survey, was directed by Dr. J. M. Jewett. Other geologists who participated include Stanton Ball, Dr. W. W. Hambleton, A. L. Hornbaker, Herbert Mendoza, and Dr. Ada Swineford of the Geological Survey, and George Coleman of the department of geology. Arrangements for the trip were made by Dr. Robert Baxter, associate professor of botany and director of the camp, and Dr. Henry Horak, associate professor of astronomy and associate director. The field-trip route of about 108 miles included these stops: Dightman Crossing on the Wakarusa River, near Eudora, Douglas County, to observe cross-bedded sandstone and to learn that such rocks, when buried, can be excellent ground-water reservoirs. The limestone quarries near Sunflower Ordnance Works, near De Soto, Johnson County, to study rock formations and conditions of their deposition, to collect fossils and to learn about fossils as a key to the past. A sand and gravel pit near Holli- day, Johnson County, to examine glacial deposits and to hear a story on the Great Ice Age, to collect calcite and other mineral specimens. Wyandotte County Park, to observe landscape and to eat lunch. Wyandotte County Park dam site to study engineering geology and river geology. Peerless Quarries, Inc., near Turner. Wyandotte County, to see limestone being mined underground and to receive instruction in economic geology. A road cut near Turner, Wvandotte County, to observe rock strata and get a lesson in stratigraphy. All along the route geologic features were pointed out. Zebus are never used in milking machine demonstrations. BEST ENGINES! One of 7 Big Bests Chevy gives you over any car in its field CHEVROLET Open invitation to excitement, the Impala Convertible . . . and America's only authentic sports car, the Corvette. You've got more to go on than our say-so: *Every motor magazine has given Chevy's* standard passenger car and Corvette V8's unstinted praise. SPORTS CARS ILLUS-TRATED says it this way: "... surely the most wonderfully responsive engine available today at any price." And if you want the thrift of a six, you still get the best of it in a Chevy. BEST ECONOMY No doubt about this: a pair of Chevy sixes with Powerglide came in first and second in their class in this year's Mobilgas Economy Run—getting the best mileage of any full-size car, 22.38 miles per gallon. BEST BRAKES Not only bigger, but built with bonded linings for up to 66% longer life. Just to prove what's what, Chevy out-stopped both of the "other two" in a NASCAR*-conducted test of repeated stops from highway speeds. *National Association for Stock Car Adve *National Automobile Designers Association *National Association for Stock Car Advancement and Research BEST RIDE A few minutes behind the wheel will leave no doubt about this. MOTOR TREND magazine sums it up this way: "... the smoothest, most quiet, softest riding car in its price class." BEST TRADE-IN Check the figures in any N.A.D.A.* Guide Book. You'll find that Chevy used car prices last year averaged up to $128 higher than comparable models of the "other two." *National Automobile Dealers Association BEST ROOM Official dimensions reported to the Automobile Manufacturers Association make it clear. Chevy's front seat hip room, for example, is up to 5.9 inches wider than comparable cars. BEST STYLE It's the only car of the leading low-priced 3 that's unmistakably modern in every line. "In its price class," says POPULAR SCIENCE magazine, "a new high in daring styling." CHEVROLET NO WONDER MORE PEOPLE ARE BUYING CHEVROLET'S in '59 THAN ANY OTHER CAR! Try the hot one—visit your local authorized Chevrolet dealer! Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1959 U.S. Pavilion, U.S. Art Won Favor in Belgium Special to The Summer Kansan By Jerry Knudson (Editor's Note: Jerry Knudson, former instructor of journalism, is touring Europe this summer. This is the fourth of a series of letters.) BRUSSELS, Belgium—The site of the World's Fair, scene of great doings in 1958, looks pretty forlorn right now. Almost all of the exhibits are dismantled or coming down. Only two remain which may still be visited—the French "Atomium," a gigantic model of molecular structure, and a miniature map of Belgium planted in flowers and shrubs. Otherwise, the wind whistles around the super-modernistic buildings and deserted status. An old woman sits in a deck chair, drowsing in the late afternoon sunlight, while her small white dog sits at her side. Nothing is left of the American pavilion, which caused such ardent discussion in the United States. No one, it seemed, liked our modest spheroid structure or the advanced abstract art on display. Belgians, however, would disagree. Almost everyone I have talked to here agrees that the American pavilion was the best of all. They complain that not enough art works were shown. They particularly liked the section of the exhibit which was called "Unfinished Business"—photographs of U.S. slums, segregation, labor unrest, and other national problems. All other countries, apparently, did not admit that they, too, had domestic difficulties. Europeans liked this American candor. And they liked the lack of estentation obvious in our display. The U.S. pavilion seemed to say, simply, "Here we are. Come and visit us and have a good time." So, to all those junketing businessmen and columnists who spewed forth those bitter words about the inadequacy of the American exhibit at the World's Fair, I say: "Nuts." The complaints about the art display particularly iked me at the Anderson Is Back From U.S. Capital Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has returned from Washington, D.C., where he met with representatives of 26 national organizations to plan the foundation of a National Council for Research in Education. The council will make available a group wherein other organizations of professional educators and specialists in related fields will be able to pool their efforts in educational research studies. As president of the American Educational Research Assn., Dean Anderson served as chairman pro tempore of the interim committee. Dean Anderson said, in explaining the need for such a council, that "it is not enough to encourage teachers to put more effort into the teaching of their subjects." Herbert A. Smith, professor of education, accompanied Dean Anderson. Phil Delavan to Be Interim Cyclone Coach AMES, Iowa—Phil Delavan, freshman track coach at Iowa State, will be the interim-head coach while Burl V. Berry is on leave of absence next year, it is announced by Gordon Chalmers, athletic director. Berry will lecture in Iran on an Fulbright fellowship during 1959-60. Delavan, a native of Glenwood, is the greatest shot putter ever developed in Iowa, holding the Iowa State record at 55 feet 3 inches. He captained the 1958 Cyclone track team. City Manager Post Goes to Graduate time. For the first time at any world's fair, the American show went out on a limb and risked exhibiting contemporary art. None of the safe stuff or the museum relics—here was the life blood of modern American art which need not apologize to anyone. Glenn E. Varenhorst, a 33-year-old graduate of the School of Public Administration and former city manager at Hays and Sapulpa, Okla., has been named city manager of Salem. Ill. It comes as a shock to most Americans to learn that their country, which so long held on for dear life to the cultural coattails of Europe, is leading the Old World. In music, Americans lead the field in musical comedy and jazz. Even our operas by composers such as Menotti are given preference over contemporary European works in Greece, Italy, and elsewhere. Varenhorst now is administrative assistant in the city government at St. Cloud, Minn. He held a similar job in Phoenix, Ariz. Salem is a southern Illinois town of 7,000. In drama Tennessee Williams can hold his own with any playwright in Europe. It is unfortunate, however, that most European have seen only "A Streetcar Named Desire" and not his less violent plays such as "The Glass Menagerie." In architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright sturdy side by side with Walter Groopius. In literature, Americans excel in the short story and solid novels appear on this side of the Atlantic, also. To those who think America is spelled with dollar signs, an examination of the influence of our civilization on Europe would be illuminating. 1952 Dr. Ruth A. Stout Whitey Gompert Gets I-State Post AMES, Iowa — Frank (Whitey) Gompert is the new Iowa State freshman basketball coach, Gordon Chalmers, athletic director, announces. Gompert has been freshman coach and varsity assistant at Colorado for the past two years. He was a former all-Big Seven forward at Colorado. Gompert is a 1949 graduate of New Trier Township High, Winnetka, Ill., where he was an all-state performer. He has a bachelor of science degree from Colorado completing his playing career there in 1953. He served three years with the Marines, including a seven-month tour of duty in Japan. The former Buff star played in the East-West Wish game in Kansas City in 1953 and was an all-Marine star in 1955. He also played AAU basketball for three years in Denver. For All Your Dairy and Ice Cream Needs It's LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK & ICE CREAM CO. BETTLE'S MOTOR CENTER NEA Ex-Head to Speak 202 West 6th Phone VI 3-5511 39 YEARS Products for Over Home of Quality Dairy and Ice Cream Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. ALL STAR DAIRY Dr. Ruth A. Stout of Topeka, immediate past president of the National Education Assn., will speak at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Bailey Auditorium. Subject of the public lecture will be "The Dimensions of Professionalism." The appearance here of Dr. Stout, who is director of field programs for the Kansas State Teachers Assn., is particularly for teachers attending the various National Science Foundation summer institutes. She previously will have addressed NSF institutes in Emporia, Hays, Manhattan and Topeka. Dr. Stout is twice an alumna of KU, earning the bachelor's and master's degrees. She has taught in the public schools and at the university level. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Ends Saturday BING CROSBY DEBBIE REYNOLDS ROBERT WAGNER in "SAY ONE FOR ME" Starts Sunday JERRY LEWIS in "DON'T GIVE UP THE SHIP" with Mickey Shaughnessy LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Now & Saturday 1st Run—1st Time In Lawrence Fred MacMurray, Maggie Hayes in "GOOD DAY FOR A HANGING" co-hit Victor Mature in "The BANDIT OF ZHOBE" Starts Sunday Pat Boone, Christine Carere, Gary Crosby in "MARDI GRAS" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Tonight & Saturday Ferlin Husky in "COUNTRY MUSIC HOLIDAY" co-hit Julius LaRosa in "LET'S ROCK" Extra: Saturday Night Only! DOUBLE OWL SHOW 4 Features In All Starts Sunday Robert Mitchum, Curt Jurgens in "THE ENEMY BELOW" co-hit Esther Williams, Jeff Chandler in "RAW WIND IN EDEN" APART one or Very a single CLEAN APART Good couple drinkin LARG ment. Phone ROOM: from double For up VI 3-60 UNFUJ HOUSI session Phone NICE furnish conditi August phone. phone. 1. Nice now now utilit GARA private boys. double p.m. A TWO now. ing ro Separa Phone APAR One a Septer WASH dents. WAN' erably aparti Camp forrent stiper Call WAN and vision. 307 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED FOR RENT APARTMENT, attractively furnished, for one or two students. Private entrance. Very close to campus. Also very nice single room. Call VI 3-6696. 7-31 CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT, large rooms, large closets. Good refrigerator and stove. Married with 4 children. Utilities paid. drinking. 520 Ohio. 7-31 ROOMS FOR FALL SEMESTER. *i*5 block from Union bldg. Two very spacious double rooms well furnished. $20 and $25 for classroom assistmen. Call for appointment VI 3-6966. 7-31 UFNURISHED THREE BEDROOM HOUSE, Town & Country Addition. Possession after August 15. $85 per month. Phone VI 3-9212 after 5 p.m. 7-24 NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned $82.50 per month. Rent a large apartment, private entrance and bath, also phone $55.00 per month. Available Aug. 1. Nice sleeping room. Private entrance $82.50 per month. Rent now. These listings are neat KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5. Friday, July 17. 1959 LARGE THREE ROOM first floor apartment. Very nicely furnished. Private bath. Phone VI 3-7677 before 11 or after 5. GARAGE APARTMENT all modern and private. Snack bar in kitchen. Prefer two double or single. Call VI 3-3019 after p.m. Available for next semester. 7-24 TWO SMALL APARTMENTS available now. Furnished, newly decorated studio, studio kitchen. Separate but large storage closets. Phone VI 3-6255 or see at 646 W. 23 St. APARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive September, Contact VI 3-1890. 7-31 WASHING AND IRONING, male students. Phone VI 3-9153. 7-17 WANTED WANTED. A STUDENT COUPLE, preferably no children. To live in the campus. Applicants must be Campus Rd. To act as host and hostess for Canterbury Assn. Salary includes Canterbury Assn. plus a small stipend. Apartment is partially furnished. Call VI 3-8208. 7-31 WANTED. WOMAN RIDER to New York and return after Summer sion. CV II 3-8720. 7-31 TXING: First, accurate, experienced. came to campus, 717 Miss. Phone V-31 6972 BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Have electric type-servers. General rates. Mrs. Tom Bridgitt V 3-13428 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka. VI 3-1240. TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theists, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard tess. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 2-8831, 1736 Tenn. fc EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, themes, theses, etc. Neat, accurate, immediate attention. Reasonable. Mrs. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-243-7-485. TYPING: THES and the themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tt NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center, 215 E. 76th St., 30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Complete line of exotic fish and aquatic plants. Cages, 2 to 60 gal., filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, leather, rugs, and more. Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest Dance Studio, 905 Missauga, ph. 3-6283, Dance Studio, 905 Missauga, ph. 3-6283, FINEST FLAT-TOPS. and friendly Ericpier, Barber Shop 720 Massachusetts. Erpier, Barber Shop 720 Massachusetts. KU BARBER SHOP—Flatlock our spec- cles blocks down 14th Street. BENT A SINGER sewing machine by the 3-1971, Sewing Center, 927 Mass., Sif WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tf Muffiers and Tallpipes Installed Free 1 qt oil free with oil & filter change Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. ADS TRANSPORTATION WANTED: RIDE FROM KANSAS CITY to Lawrence, daily; Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9 a.m. or on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 a.m. Coming back everyday at 11:20 a.m. Call Mary Ann Leonardo at Yellowstone 2-0647. 7-21 SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $^2$ price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf MISCELLANEOUS USED AIR CONDITIONER. Half ton. $50.00. Excellent working condition. Sec at 910 La. anytime. First Floor. 7-17 FOR SALE AGFA, Super Regent Camera—as new Phone VI 3-1670. 7-21 HIGH-FIDELITY SYSTEM, including changer, amplifier, FM tuner, speaker, equipment cabinet, speaker enclosure, and record collection. Priced at approximately one-half replacement cost. Call III 3-6303 after 6. 7-31 MOBILE HOME for sale. 1953, 32" Spartan in very good condition. Modern, already located. Ideal for young couple or students. Steeps four. Call 8559 7-31 49 LINCOLN sport sedan Excellent condition, $175. Two-wheel trailer, $30. Metal luggage carrier, $10. 1124 Mississippi, VI 3-8341. 7-24 MICROSCOPE—Bausch & Lomb. Oil Imm. lens, $250.00. 174 Mass. Apt. A. 1-5 p.m. 7-24 HELP WANTED WOMAN, under 35, with BS or AB degree to work with children. Full time, year around employment $3,000 a year. Call Mr. Howard at VI 3-2833. 7-21 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER BANANA sundae Sun-ripened taste treat! A treat from the tropics ... delicious Dairy Queen crowned with chunks of sun-ripened bananas. Served fresh from the frezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! Come in for a treat TODAY! MELLOWER AND PASTAWHEE DAIRY QUEEM Dairy Queen Drive-In 1835 Mass. VI 3-3588 A New Jazz Soundtrack BELL'S on LP and Stereo "M SQUAD" Is the HEAT driving you... N KRAZY P It's Air Conditioned in the... Hawk's Nest KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 17, 1959 DOWN WITH THE OLD AND UP WITH THE NEW—Workers continue construction on the new Sprague Apartments, quarters for retired faculty members, which are located on the site of the old Templin Hall on the southeast corner of the campus. Geologist Checks Coal Beds As Part of Survey Inventory Coal beds that have been a main source of fuel in southeastern Kansas for more than a century are getting a geologic check-up, in anticipation of new roles for Kansas coals in industry. Dr. Walter H. Schoewe of the State Geological Survey, University of Kansas, is in charge of the investigation. This summer he is visiting localities in Bourbon, Cherokee, Crawford, and Labette Counties to get data on the geologic occurrence, geographic distribution, and mining history of several of the commercially important Cherokee coals. Coal beds he will examine include the Bevier, Fleming, Mineral, Scammon, and Weir-Pittsburg (the thickest of the beds), all of which have been or are being mined. The study is a continuation of the Geological Survey's coal inventory program begun in 1942. In view of industrial trends that point to new uses for Kansas coals, the inventory studies are aimed at obtaining all possible information on coal resources, especially coal reserves. Kansas coals, for example, are a potential source of liquid fuels and a variety of products for the chemicals industries, to say nothing of their being a possible source of germanium for electronics equipment. Fall Hair Fashion Unveiled on Coast SEATTLE—(UPI)—A secret—only slightly less guarded than plans for a space ship—was revealed here when hairdressers saw the official fall and winter style for women's hair. Called the "American Caprice," the new hair-do was modeled for delegates to the 39th annual convention of the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Associations, Inc. The delegates will return to spread the word of the new trend throughout the association's 50,000 members. "Women should enjoy the style," said Mrs. Luella Bailey, the association's style director of the official hair fashion committee. "It can be easily managed and is utterly feminine." Husbands and fathers will be happy to learn they don't face financial disaster. The new fashion is adaptable to all basic hat patterns. To date eight inventory reports on Kansas coal resources have been issued. They include all bituminous coals in eastern Kansas (except the Cherokee coals) and the lignites in central Kansas. The most recent inventory report, Bulletin 134 Part 5, concerns the Mulky coal the uppermost of the Cherokee beds. When inventories of the remaining Cherokee coal beds are completed, basic data on the quality, quantity, and mineability of all Kansas coals will be available. CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE ON CAMPUS 1144 Indiana Kansan Erred-Cost Of 'Saddle' $160-170 Visit our campus Jay Shoppe this Friday and Saturday. We're having a Fall preview of dyed-to-match skirts and sweaters . . . plus many other The Summer Session Kansan got some figures badly mixed up in its Tuesday, July 14, story of repair work on the "monkey saddle." Beautiful Fall Dark Cottons go-to-gethers Life Insurance Institute Starts Sport Suits It will cost only $160 to $170 to complete repairs, not $160.170. A careless writer let a hyphen become a comma—hence the error. Approximately 110 persons arrived on campus Monday to attend the 13th annual Life Insurance Marketing institute. Car Coats Both a basic and an advanced course are being offered to participating salesmen. The Institute staff is composed of members of the Life Insurance Marketing Institute at Purdue University. They are Hal L. Nutt, director, and Bernard Haught and Auburn C. Lambetn, assistant directors. Storm Coats Dean Gorton at Medical Center Come in and join us in our preview of fashions for Fall Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts underwent surgery Wednesday at the University of Kansas Medical Center at Kansas City, for the removal of his gall bladder. Doctors said yesterday that his recovery is satisfactory. You can't tell one zebu from another without a program. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 KANU-FM Back in 'Mud Hut' Station KANU, the university's FM radio station, has resumed broadcasting from its studios in the Mud Hut. The station was forced to move from its regular building following an accidental chemical fire in an adjoining chemical engineering laboratory July 11. The station had been broadcasting from the KUOK Studios in the basement of Hoch Auditorium. Studio engineer Ralph Picker said the station was able to resume broadcasting from the Mud Hut Monday afternoon. "Other than one or two shorts. and a burned-out transformer, damages to the master control room equipment didn't amount to anything," he said. Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, said damages to the building itself were in the area of from $2,000 to $3,000. No estimate has been made as to the amount of damages to laboratory equipment and the KANU radio station. Station officials said yesterday the largest studio and a small announcer's studio are still undergoing repairs. They did not know when damages would be totally repaired. 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 "I SAVE MONEY AT ECON-O-WASH" In a recent survey,10 out of 10 asked,answered,"I save money at Econ-O-Wash." It's inexpensive-Only 20c to wash,10c to dry Econ-o-wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. بىر KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Tuesday, July 21, 1959 47th Year, No. 12 KU bkgd LAWRENCE, KANSAS A woman and a man are embracing each other in an intimate pose. A child sits on the floor, playfully touching her face. The background is indistinct, but appears to be an indoor setting. REHEARSAL—Tommy Baumgartel, Lawrence freshman (class of 1969), Joanna Featherton, Kansas City, Kan., senior and Moses Gunn, St. Louis graduate student (left to right), are shown practicing for the forthcoming production of "The Member of the Wedding." The play is being produced by the University Theatre and will be given July 23 and 24. Orientation Center to Begin Here for Foreign Students Fifty foreign students beginning a year's study at universities and colleges in the United States will attend a six-week orientation center here starting Thursday. J. A. Burzle, professor of German, is director of the Center. The session includes academic work, activities, and opportunities for various impressions of the American people. Field trips will be taken by the students to towns, cities, and points of interest in the Lawrence area. Special guests including University faculty will present lectures over a range of topics designed to acquaint the foreign student with the "American way of life." Daily orientation lectures will be given on American education. Fleet Admiral Leahy Is Dead WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Fleet Adm. William D. Leahy, wartime chief of staff to President Roosevelt, died here Monday. He was 84. American politics and political rights, and community life. Entertainment and social life will be covered with special programs and events such as a "get-acquainted" party. A film series will be a part of the orientation process. Death came at the Navy Medical Center in nearby Bethesda, Md., the Navy reported. Leahy was the man who, as chief of naval operations from 1937 to 1939, sold Congress on the idea of building a big Navy. A cerebral vascular accident was listed as the cause of death. With him was his son, Rear Adm. William L. Leahy, commander of the Norfolk Navy Ship Yard at Portsmouth, Va. Douthart Hall Women Lead All Houses in Scholarship Disease Center Lease Is Signed A 10-year lease for a communicable disease center to be constructed in Kansas City, Kan., has been signed between the General Services Administration and the University Endowment Assn. The building will be operated by the Public Health Service, according to Franklin G. Floete, GSA administrator. Annual rental of the building will be $62,060 and will be paid by the government. The building will have 18,643 square feet of floor space. Maurice L. Breidenthal of Kansas City, association president, says of the lease: "The Endowment Assn. is pleased that it is to proceed with the construction of the laboratory which will benefit the University of Kansas Medical Center as well as the work of the Communicable Disease Center of the U.S. Public Health Service, since the facility will further extend health services and research (or the entire state and area." The building will be constructed across the street from the Medical Center on land owned by the association. It will replace facilities in the center now used by the federal service. The building now used by the public health service agency was constructed 10 years ago by the association. Meserve Named Fulbright Fellow Dr. Walter J. Meserve Jr., associate professor of English at the University of Kansas, has been appointed a Fulbright fellow in the United States Educational Exchange program to lecture on American literature at the University of Manchester, England, during the 1959-60 year. He previously had been given sabbatical leave by the University for this purpose. The appointment is one of aproximately 400 made for college and university faculty members. Dr. Meserve has been a KU teacher since 1951. Residents of Douthart Hall, a women's scholarship residence, led all University of Kansas housing groups in academic standing for 1958-59 with a 2.11 grade point average. They also were the only group to exceed a B average last year. All Is Not Lost— Get a Directory Still puzzled about where that pretty blonde who sits in front of you in your history class lives? And horrors! You've lost the Summer Session Directory. Or spilled iced tea on it, Cheer up. Things will get better. Extra copies of the Directory which was published in the June 16 issue of the Kansan are available in the Business Office, 111 Flint. Aide to Dean Is Appointed Miss Janet Noel will become an assistant to the dean of women at KU effective Aug. 1. She will fill the position of Miss Donna Younger, who is transferring to the position of head resident of O'Leary Hall so that she might make more rapid progress in her candidacy for the master's degree. Miss Noel holds the M.A. degree from Ohio University where she prepared a thesis on student government. She earned the A.B. degree from the University of Wichita where she was president cf the student council and a member of Mortar Board. She also was a member of the Y.W.C.A., of the yearbook staff, of Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science society, and of Kapa Delta Pi, honorary society in education. Topeka Mercury Lowest Since '88 TOPEKA — (UPI)— Topeka recorded its lowest temperature for this date since 1888 Monday, and temperatures over the state made comparable plunges in the unseasonable cool spell. The Topea reading and the overnight low for the state was 58 degrees. The previous low for Topea on this date was 59, recorded in 1888. The undergraduate scholarship report released today by James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, shows averages based on a system of an A grade as 3.00, b as 2, C as 1, D as 0 and an F as -1. Women again did markedly better than men. The all-women's average was 1.61, but was down from 1.64 of a year a.o., and compared to 1.32 for all men, who lost .01 from the previous year. The all university was 1.41. Although differences are but a few hundredths of a point, the all-undergraduate marks were a five-year low. One assumption is that standards of grading have risen, for other studies show that during the period the quality of entering students also has gone up. Simultaneously there seems to have been an increase in the attention of students to academic matters. Pi Beta Phi won the scholarship cup among sororites with a 1.98 average. Kappa Alpha Theta was second with 1.92, a reversal of their positions a year ago. Chi Omega was third with 1.88 while Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Kappa Gamma were fourth and fifth with 1.74. Beta Theta Pi again won the fraternity scholarship trophy with 1.84, but Alpha Tau Omega with 1.76 posed the strongest challenge in several years. Phi Delta Theta was third with 1.60 followed by Sigma Chi, 1.58 and Upsilon I. 1.55. Jollife topped the men's scholarship halls with a 1.89 average. The all women's scholarship hall average for four halls was 1.98, nearly all B; for five men's scholarship halls, 1.79; for 13 sororities, 1.72, and for 29 fraternities, 1.36. The average in women's residence halls was 1.35 and in men's residence halls it was 1.20. Pointing up the slight downward trend in average grades: 6 of 9 scholarship halls fared worse in 1958-59 than in the previous year; 8 of 13 sororites had declines, while 16 of 29 fraternities fell off. Ike to Meet Reporters WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Eisenhower will hold a news conference Wednesday morning, the White House announces. Токк Керкин Persian Hannah LET'S BE RIGHT!!!—State highway patrol recruits are shown undergoing class room instruction in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. They are listening to a 50-minute lecture on uniform traffic laws, one of 14 lectures they will have on that subject. The 21 recruits (not all pictured) started training July 13 and most will graduate Sept. 20. Classes start at 7 a.m. Monday through Friday and finish about 9 p.m. In the background is instructor-trooper Joe Murphy (in uniform) and Lt. Carl Gray. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 21, 1959 More Marrying Earlier The marriage rate, which declined sharply during the recession, is on the rise again. In 1957 and 1958 marriages in the United States decreased by about 4 per cent each year. Statistics available for early 1959 indicate that the rate is going up. In addition, many more Americans are approaching marriage as the baby-boom children reach adulthood. And they are marrying at an early age. The earlier marriages will have a strong effect on the birth rate in the years ahead—and unfortunately, probably, on the divorce rate, too. The Population Reference Bureau, Inc., notes that last year the average age of first-time marriages in the United States was 23 for men and 20 for women, the lowest averages in our history. In 1958 more than 45 per cent of the women marrying for the first time were teen-agers. And one of 20 divorced women who remarried was in her teens. The rate of teen-age marriages in a specific state can be controlled by law. The Statistical Bulletin of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. reports that states with the most marked decreases in marriages are those states that have raised the age limits. Whether this has much effect on the national rate is debatable. The few states with increases in marriages last year generally adjoined those that had advanced the age requirements. Apparently the state line, in many instances, simply is the gateway to early marriage. Teen-age marriage seems to be a current sociological trend that only economic recession can reverse. But if early marriages in our age are inevitable, the divorce rate indicates that they often are not permanent.-Kansas City Star Conformity: The Menace Juvenile delinquency, which is seen everywhere in the United States, is a problem which remains unsolved today. The teenage delinquents have been the brunt of many criticisms, some just, some not. We wish to stand up for these offenders. It is not simply the teenage delinquent's fault that he commits errors which brand him a delinquent. For, we believe, no teenager is basically a better human being than his delinquent friends. They must learn to be delinquents. We assert that it is the society which teaches the teenager to be a delinquent. And when we say society, we mean parents, teachers, and adults in general. They are responsible for this problem which they continually complain about. One of the basic causes of teenage delinquency is one of our societies' demands on the teenager: Conform. And adults are the ones who force upon these youths the idea that they should conform—should strive for acceptance by their fellow teenagers. Conformity, to a degree, is essential, but conforming for the sake of conforming is senseless. The delinquents, themselves, have minds of their own, certainly. But their thinking has been moulded by adults since their childhood. If parents would not spare the rod; if they would guide their children along the path of healthy individualism; and if all adults would take a bigger interest in youth, juvenile delinquency would diminish. The Daily O'Collegian Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Ready money. 5 Perform again. 10 Trade. 14 Expression of surprise: 2 words. 15 Emotional warmth. 16 Murder. 17 "The ___ and I." 18 Bread-spread: 2 words. 20 Common saying. 22 Fine. 23 Resting place. 25 Evenly scored contest. 26 Realtor's sign: 2 words. 29 Political decampers. 33 Chopping tool. 34 Type of sweater. 36 Nuncupative, as a will. 37 First public appearance. 38 Menagerie. 40 Five-dollar bill: Slang: 2 words. 41 Notices. 42 Spirit. 44 Witness. 45 Crossed out. 47 Deeply convinced. 49 Family member. 50 Kind of breakfast juice. 51 Lean back. 54 ___ ultrate (furthest limit): 2 words. 58 Lowered in worth. 60 Pueblo Indian. 61 Incense. 62 Pontifical ornament. 63 Black. 64 Circulates. 65 Foxily. 66 Go; Poet. DOWN 1 Torsorial tool. 2 Nautical术语. 3 Skier's delight. 4 Trump cards. 5 Child's plaything. 6 Fluff a line, as in radio. 7 Conform. 8 Be a match for. 9 Where Washington crossed the Delaware. 10 Body's framework. 11 Lose strength. 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 | | | | 12 Helper. 13 Single thickness or fold. 14 Lockup. 21 Cook. 24 Caught. 26 Vanished. 27 Daisy. 28 Resist authority. 29 Football team's punter. 30 Jagged. 31 Resort prices. 32 Unpleasant driving weather. 35 ___ roast. 38 Bargains on the lot; 2 words. 40 Creator of Captain Nemo. 42 Means. 43 Wash. 44 Statuesque. 48 Male relative. 50 Contemptible. 51 Decorate again. 52 Cry of revelry. 53 Secure. 55 Part of the ear. 56 ___ my word! 57 Where Karachi is. 58 Canine. 59 Look-alike of the oarfish. Pakistan Will Move Capital A seaport and industrial center, Karachi is the Moslem republic's largest metropolis, the National Geographic Society says. In 12 years since the partition of British India, the refugee-choked city's population has grown from 300,000 to 1,500,000. WASHINGTON — Pakistan is making long-range plans to move the federal capital inland from overcrowded Karachi. Seas of mud and straw huts surround Karachi's handsome, 19th-century buildings and broad avenues. Vital facilities—water, light, and housing are strained to the breaking point. The new capital will be built on a green plateau in the mountainous north near Rawalpindi. To the east is Kashmir, a pocket of lush valleys guarded by the Himalayas. To the west are Khyber Pass and the bare, bulking shoulders of ranges in the North-West Frontier Provinces. Rawalpindi was once British India's largest military station. Tales of frontier wars with tribesmen have been told and retold in fiction. The city is now the Pakistani Army's headquarters. A healthy climate, availability of food, water, and building materials, as well as defense, were factors in the selection of the Rawalpindi site in the fertile Punjab. The new capital will not rise overnight. The move will be made in stages over a considerable period of time as resources of the young, hard-pressed nation permit. Journalists have always been our most old-fashioned class, being too busy with the news of the day to lay aside the mental habits of fifty years before.—Frank Moore Colby Dailu Hansan (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Janet Jimmel Associate Editor Mary Mill BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMINT Business Manager 316 Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By W. D. Paden Professor of English CONSORT FOR VICTORIA, by Vaughan Wilkins. Doubleday, $3.95. A good many readers will be delighted with "Consort for Victoria," which is an almost perfect novel for a drowsy afternoon in a hammock or a languid air-conditioned evening. According to the publisher, Mr. Willkins novels are "known for their sound historical background as well as for their fast pace and suspenseful plotting." In a university, it may be worthwhile to admit the pace and the suspense, and consider the very odd fashion in which the book is related to history. On Oct.15, 1839, the youthful Victoria of England managed with some natural awkwardness to inform her cousin, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, that she wished to marry him, and received his cordial assent. This is history, and Mr. Wilkins has made it the prologue and epilogue of his novel. But he has not treated it as history, or provided an authentic background. At that time the monarch of England had large power in the state and a conventional, rather insecure, hold upon the loyalty of the people. When in 1831 the young Charles Darwin had been forced by the closing of all the London shops to interrupt his preparations for the voyage of the Beagle, he had yielded to an impulse he himself called childish and paid a guinea for a good view of the coronation of William IV. "The King looked very well, and seemed popular," Darwin wrote a sister, "but there was very little enthusiasm; so that I can hardly think there will be a coronation this time fifty years." He was in error. In the England of our day, royalty manifests a high, even a grim, sense of responsibility, and steady moral worth, and vast popular appeal, while it practices a set of gestures no more than ceremonial. Within the past two years Elizabeth II has ceased to receive and greet the season's debutantes as a sign of their formal acceptance by society, for the custom roused bitter criticism from the left. Royalty, in other words, cannot acknowledge any specially close relation to the wealthy and the powerful, lest by that act it imply less sympathy with the poor and the oppressed. Many of us welcome stories about English monarchs; we accept them as romantic figures, whatever their epoch. And as their present values have been evolved within the last century, the earlier monarchs suffer strange metamorphoses when they are recalled to mind. One must accept the fact that Mr. Wilkins has written a fantasy, set in the British Court of 1839 but designed to excite the emotions while flattering the vanity of those fairly young women of the 20th century who, despite their essentially noble natures, pass their days in undistinguished commercial occupations. Then one may admire the skill with which the story is made to whiz sweetly onward, through a sequence of crises and revelations, to the final embrace of honest sentiment, matrimonially inclined. THE RETURN, by Herbert Mitgang. Simon and Schuster, $3.50. By Alexandra Mason Watson Library "The Return" is first the story of a former GI who goes back to Sicily, the scene of his combat experience, and there finds again a woman he had known during the war. Joseph Borken is a geologist who, although working for an organization, cannot be an organization man. After his second sojourn in Sicily he leaves his job and strikes out on his own with his newly wife and his newly discovered self. It was once said that, since Lincoln books, doctor books, and dog books sold well, the all-time best-seller would be "Lincoln's Doctor's Dog." "The Return" has important and timely subjects strewn thickly enough through its pages to be considered a good try at "The Thinking Man's Lincoln's Doctor's Dog." Beyond this fairly simple sequence of events, Mitgang's book contains international power rings, atomic energy, big business, the struggles of Sicilian peasants against feudal landlords, fascism, communism, European and American attitudes toward Europeans and Americans, and, finally, an eruption of Mt. Etna. The book is quite well, even very well, written, although Greene and Hemingway are perhaps too obvious models in style as well as in subject. Still, although one cannot point to any one outstanding flaw or sign of ineptness, it remains a book which you put down without pleasure, without displeasure, and never pick up again. The carefully unstipulated emotions which are hinted at remain unstipulated. At the beginning of the book Joseph Borken doesn't know who he is, at the end he obviously does; but the reader doesn't. It would appear that the subjects involved either are too close to the author or were chosen because of their topicality. At any rate, they are not at the right distance to write about. It seems very likely that Mr. Mitgang will write a really good book some day; he can write. But this is not the book. DOCTOR AND SON, by Richard Gordon. Doubleday. $2.95. Another chapter in the farcical life of Simon Sparrow, M.D. Like the earlier members of the series ("Doctor in the House," "Doctor at Sea") it is aimed at the film industry; unlike them it will not be a very amusing film. Dr. Gordon seems to be running out.—Alexandra Mason. More important than winning the election, is governing the nation. That is the test of a political party—the acid, final test.-Adlai E. Stevenson Page 3 BOOKS By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THE PUBLIC PAPERS OF CHIEF JUSTICE EARL WARREN edited by Henry M. Christman, Simon and Schuster. $4.50. History already seems to have accorded an important place to Earl Warren. For many years he was the progressive governor of California, admired by Democrats and Republicans alike, carrying out liberal policies that brought him national attention. He lent stature to the losing Republican ticket in 1948, when he was second man to Thomas E. Dewey. In 1953 he went to the Supreme Court as the first court appointee of President Eisenhower. The following May he wrote the opinion of the unanimous court in Oliver Brown et al v. Board of Education of Topeka. That was the now-historic segregation decision which set aside Plessy v. Ferguson of 1896. Warren has been under attack from much of the right wing ever since the 1954 decision. Right now the right is chortling over the swing of the Warren court away from the left, particularly in decisions concerning civil liberties and subversion. This collection of his papers will do little to make the far right happy, for here Warren is revealed even more as a man of deep liberal thinking, in the tradition of Jefferson, Lincoln, Wilson, Roosevelt and Truman. The editor of these papers has divided them into four segments: Warren's speeches as governor of California, his addresses as chief justice, his decisions on the high bench, and his appraisal of the future of the law as revealed in a 1955 article in Fortune. His speeches as governor contain the same warm humanity and high intellectual content that one finds in the speeches of Adlai E. Stevenson. In a 1951 address before the National Education Assn. he says that "A nation that abandons its social objectives is on the road to decadence." In a speech before the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith in 1948 he speaks against intolerance. Addressing the American Public Health Assn. in 1951 he scouts the fear of socialized medicine, saying that social progress "has been the hallmark and the glory of the American nation from the beginning." In a 1952 Lincoln Day address, Warren digs at those who use the name of Lincoln as a "trademark of the party." His internationalism is evident in speeches of welcome at the 1945 opening conference of the United Nations and at the 1951 Japanese Peace Treaty conference. In St. Louis, in 1955, the chief justice is revealed as one who has nothing but contempt for those who fear the Bill of Rights, who prate patriotism and investigate left-wingers. In the same year he is shown as a progressive not ashamed to speak for the great LaFollette of Wisconsin. Most of the Warren court decisions have been a surprise to those who hoped that a good safe Republican would counteract the dangerous tendencies of Roosevelt-Truman appointees (Warren has been far more liberal than either Roosevelt's Frankfurter or Truman's Tom Clark). In 1954 Warren spoke in Pete Hernandez v. State of Texas for a person of Mexican descent who had been denied equal protection under the law. In Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Steve Nelson he struck down state sedition acts (which appear to have been restored in recent court decisions, with Warren, Black and Douglas dissenting). This book should prove a valuable source for students of Warren. And the inspiring messages give hope in a time when the Supreme Court, which has been so distinguished under Earl Warren, is under so much irresponsible attack. THE NARROW CORNER, by W. Somerset Maugham. Bantam, 35 cents. THEATRE, by W. Somerset Maugham. Bantam, 35 cents These are two of the popular story teller's less distinguished novels, though each has its own fascination. "The Narrow Corner" is a story of the islands of Southeast Asia; the cover advertises it as being about "a golden English girl who charmed men to their destruction." That both over-simplifies, and falsifies, the novel. On its more interesting levels it is the story of how the Orient acts upon four decidedly different men—a doctor, a ship's captain, a Danish trader, and a spoiled scion of Australian anistrocity. "Theatre" is a thin story of an English actress, Julia Lambert, and her affairs d'amour. Except for the fact that Maugham has style considerably beyond that of most of today's hacks, it is really little better than a soap opera, though its subject matter—illicit love—is something that many of the radio-TV dramas, as well as the films, are afraid to handle. A book like "Theatre," incidentally, always leads one to wonder: What ever has kept Hollywood from making a movie of this? Twenty years ago, obviously Bankhead or Davis; today, well, June Allyson would probably be trying for the part. -CMP SYMBOLISM, ITS MEANING AND EFFECT, by Alfred North Whitehead. Putnam Capricorn Books, 95 per cents. Alfred North Whitehead, one of the greatest philosophers of the 20th century, deals in this brief paperback with a subject that has engrossed social scientists and humanists—especially in literature—in recent years, that of symbolism. The book constitutes the Barbour-Page lectures delivered in 1927 at the University of Virginia. Whitehead sets the stage in his dedication, in which he speaks of Virginia itself, which symbolizes so much to many Americans, and also of the Washington Monument, a much more concrete symbol. Especially pertinent in his observation that symbolism is not an exact thing, that symbols have different meanings to different individuals and different peoples. He here compares Walt Whitman's "The wide unconscious scenery of my land" with Shakespeare's "...this little world. This precious stone set in the silver sea,..." Poetry, music, religion, these are among the topics touched on by Whitehead—CMP Tuesday, July 21. 1959 Summer Session Kansan A study of the infection of cultured cells by histo-chemical methods will be carried on by Dr. Cora M. Downs for three years under a new $25,500 grant from the National Science Foundation. Cells Infection Study Planned Cells will be infected with viruses and rickettsiae. Dr. Downs will use the fluorescent antibody technique, which she is so famous for perfecting, in the study. The fluorescent antibody technique is a histo-chemical method which shows how an agent damages a cell, by the use of various stains. Used for quick identification of disease in diagnostic work, this technique will be used for basic study to find out how infection takes place and how it injures the cell. The objectives of the research are to show where in the cell the infection takes place, the nucleus or cytoplasm, how early the infection shows up in the cell, and how much infection is necessary in a cell before it shows up. There are various methods of obtaining this information. Studying at Oxford University, England, during the 1959-60 academic year under a National Institutes of Health Research Fellowship, Dr. Downs reports that, "Some of my staff and students will carry on my work while I'm away. Both the Public Health Service and the National Science Foundation have approved this arrangement." Her work at Oxford's Sir William Dunn School of Pathology will be a continuation of the same type of study she is doing here. Dr. Downs will return in September, 1960. Gentleman zebus prefer blondes; but marry brunette zebus—except in the southern hemisphere. Heart Research at KU Is Vacation for Girl, 17 Working in $\overline{a}$ University laboratory on vertebrate heart research is Martha Jean Wolfford's idea of a summer vacation. Miss Wolford, of Charleston, W. Va., a 17-year-old graduate of Stonewall Jackson High School in Charleston, attended the first session of the KU Science and Mathematics Camp June 14-27. Evidence of her high school ability came as a junior when she won first place in a regional science fair. That enabled her to compete in the national fair. As a senior she won grand prize in the state science fair, with a project on the effect of such drugs as adrenalin, acetylcholine and digitalis on living turtle hearts. Her prize was a scholarship to the University of West Virginia. Because she became so interested in research, and demonstrated so much ability, she persuaded camp officials and her parents to let her remain on the campus at her own expense. She is working under the direction of Dr. Irwin L. Baird, assistant professor of anatomy. In high school she was particularly interested in science, and she plans to enroll in pre-medical training at the University of West Virginia, in preparation for a career in research. She says that the science camp 'has been a wonderful experience, and it makes me more eager than ever to get deeper into the science field.' Miss Wolford has a small laboratory at home. She says her parents always have been co-operative and have helped her with her experiments, as well as providing all the equipment she needs. Her father, James E. Wolfford, is an electronics specialist and operator of the Electronics Specialty Co. In high school she took all the science courses she could, such as physics, biology and mathematics. She studied Latin and Spanish, worked on the school paper, was president of the Junior Red Cross, treasurer of the Spanish Club and was elected to Quill and Scroll. Grid Star to Enroll Here Bob Emmett, all-city halfback from Chicago, will enroll at KU this fall. he has informed Jack Mitchell, football coach. Emmett, a 6-footer, weighs about 190 pounds. Mitchell says Emmett was one of the outstanding 1958 high school football stars in Chicago and was named to several all-Illinois teams. Teachers' Vacancies Located In Colorado, California, Dakotas, Washington, Montana, Arizona and Wyoming. COLUMBINE TEACHER'S AGENCY 1320 Pearl Boulder, Colorado VINCENT LAMBERT To Keep Sport Clothes Sporty See Lawrence Laundry Frequent trips to Lawrence Laundry for cleaning and free repairs can keep your summer sport clothes at their peak of condition. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-3711 APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE "You'll Be Glad You Did" Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1959 ALEXANDER BROOKS BUDDING CHEMISTS-Bill Pokorny, Halstead high school student is working in the apprentice program for graduates from last year's band camp science program. At the right is George Axelrad, New York graduate student. Entomology Professor Plans Research into Crane Flies Basic research on the biology and classification of crane flies in North America will be carried on under the direction of Dr. George W. Byers, assistant professor of entomology at the University of Kansas. The study is supported by a $7,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. Dr. Byers will study the life history of the crane fly, its internal anatomy, and the incidence of the crane fly in North America. Assisting him will be Larry Mason, a graduate student at the University of Kansas. During a six-week summer field trip through 12 states in the Northwest. Dr. Byers, accompanied by three students, collected more than 50,000 insect specimens for the Entomological Museum. Among them was one crane fly type from the Black Hills, 500 miles from the nearest place it had been found before. Dr. Byers believes it likely that they are isolated here, and have been for several thousand years. The crane fly presents no immediate economic problem in the United States. However, in Europe the crane fly is of great economic importance as it sometimes destroys as much as three-fifths of the hay crop. FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE AIRLINES Old Mission Inn "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 By Ethel Strainchamps SCHOOL 'Intellectual Snobs' Make Fetish Of Nonconformity for Its Own Sake There is a serious flaw in much of the social criticism reaching us today by way of the mass media. It is written from the viewpoint of people who move in literary and academic circles and it is therefore irrelevant to the state of affairs in society at large. (Editor's Note: Because of its timeliness and pertinence for University students, we are reproducing, in part, this article from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.) It is true, according to their critics, that the conforming pseudo-intellectual, upper-Bohemian, culturally elite nonconformists in their arcane haunts (not to be confused with Beatniks in Nirvana) are cool to television. They are said to accept only Edward R. Murrow, Omnibus, Sid Caesar and Leonard Bernstein This is true, I think, of a spate of recent magazine articles that seem to have been aimed at undermining the self-confidence of intellectuals, or non-conformists, or nonconforming intellectuals. academic intellectuals back into safer ways of behaving and thinking... Also, besides liking Stevenson and disliking Nixon, they are as one in their distaste for American movies, best-selling books, James Gould Cozzens, Detroit cars and Madison Avenue ads. They live in old houses or new ones that they have helped some avant garde architect design. Seemingly the criticism is directed against "pseudo-intellectual snobs," just plain "intellectual snobs," "conforming nonconformists" the "cultural elite" or "Upper Bohemians." The weapon being used against them is the threat of being typed. Some body, probably Russell Lynes, editor of Harpers Magazine, discovered a few years ago that nonconforming intellectuals were identifiable by certain attitudes and tastes they had in common, and ever since they repeatedly have been charged with "following a line" and being no more independent in their choices than more conventional faddists. They drive old model or European made cars, buy paintings or travel abroad instead of joining the country club; send their kids to Ivy League colleges; read the quarterlies and Reporter Magazine instead of Time and the Reader's Digest and prefer Beethoven, Each and Bartok to Rodgers and Hammerstein or Irving Berlin... People outside the literary-academic circles...must be wondering Not long ago on a radio panel show somebody asked Robert Frost if he thought anti-intellectualism was particularly prevalent today and he said, "It comes in waves. Right now I think there's a wave of it being started so as to defeat Adlai Stevenson again" A snob must at least have the illusion that he has something enviable, and surely intellectuals are too smart to suppose that the world covets braininess. Writers and professors may do so, but they are deluded if they project this attitude beyond their own immediate circles what all the dither is about. If "intellectual snobbery" is not a contradiction in terms anywhere, it is certainly an unimaginable attitude here in Missouri... It seems rather far-fetched to think the social critics in question have this end in view, even though it is true that an admiration for Stevenson is a badge of merit with some intellectual liberals. Of course much of the criticism has been written for the eyes of those who may need a little deflating. Unfortunately, editors of mass-eirculation magazines have picked up the scholarly chit-chat and are spreading it into other areas. For example, a neat knife-job on conforming academic nonconformists that appeared in American Scholar, the Phi Beta Kappa magazine, was gleefully reprinted by Time, apparently to shudder the budding non- The logical deduction for an observer of this scene is that there may be an intrinsic superiority in certain ideas, activities, objects, people and methods, and that those who see it will sometimes say so, even at the cost of their reputation for nonconformity. WHO AM I? A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy His Sliderule Lost, A Student Beseeching I'll Help Him Out, With a Search Far-Reaching! For a sure, quick, inexpensive method to reach the KU market, put the Mighty Midget—classified ad to work for you—buying—selling—hiring renting—finding. The little man with the powerful punch that can carry your message to 6,000 readers weekly For further information telephone KU 376 Summer Session Kansan Summer Session Kansan Page 5 11 Mo.; Joyce Donovan, Morrowville; Barbara Hite, Kansas City; Eleanor Hawkinson, assistant to the dean of women; Gail Suhabier, Elmhurst, Ill., and Brian Fukins, Kansas City, Mo. NEW STUDENTS—High school graduates attending a recent "preview" are introduced to the nourishing part of college life. Pictured are (from left) Samuel Short, El Dorado Springs, Soaring Economy Predicted for '59 WASHINGTON — (UPI) — New government data on national output indicated Monday that the U.S. economy may climb to a staggering 500-billion-dollar annual production rate by the end of the year. The new figures, issued by the Commerce Department, showed that the nation's gross national product (GNP) in the first quarter of 1959 was at a 470 billion dollar a year rate, three billion higher than previously reported. The second quarter (April through June) production figures, which will be released this week, will show a GNP at the annual rate of 482 billion dollars, an all-time high. Commission Advised GENEVA —(UPI)— Secretary of State Christian A. Herter proposed Monday that the Geneva deadlock over Berlin be broken by converting the present Big Four conference into a permanent commission on Germany with East and West German advisers. Building Control Outside City Limits Found Uncommon Only a few Kansas cities exercise building control and inspection outside their corporate limits, reports the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas. Five of 27 Kansas cities with a population over 10,000 were found to enforce building controls. Such regulation is usually based upon utility extension requirements. In some cases the authority is vested in county boards of commissioners to enact zoning regulations. Liberal and Emporia require fringe dwellers to conform to city building, electrical and plumbing codes before certain city owned utilities are extended to the premises. In Liberal, private gas and electric Khrushchev Cancels Scandinavian Visit STOCKHOLM — (UPI) — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Monday abruptly canceled a scheduled tour of four Sandinavian nations. A formal Soviet note said the surprise decision was due to a bitter press campaign against the visit and threats of anti-Soviet demonstrations. utilities aid enforcement by suspending service to fringe dwellers who fail to comply with city codes. So Smart... A Hutchinson and Manhattan, through co-operation with city-county planning commissions, have influenced the passage of county zoning regulations which require issuance of building permits for all structures erected within three miles of the city limits. One city, El Dorado, seeks to enforce building control within a three-mile radius of the city by virtue of its power to regulate subdivision of that area. And she is the same way about money. Carries her cash in a fountain pen and writes a check when she needs funds. Tuesday, July 21. 1959 YOU are cordially invited to open a checking account at your earliest convenience. 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. The Dutch are master dairymen. They have been keeping breeding records on all their cows since 1870. They were the first people in the world to practice artificial insemination of their livestock, beginning in 1872. J Special to the Summer Kansan By Jerry Knudson Amsterdam is a beautiful city—clean, quiet, and solid as the sturdy Dutch dignity. Worthy of visits are the Rijksmuseum, where the most famous Rembrandts may be seen, and the Stedemuseum, which houses a dazzling collection of Van Goghs. Holland survived the German invasion and occupation during World War II—one may see the warehouse where Anne Frank and her family hid from the Nazis—and the terrible floods of 1953 which swept over most of southeast Holland near the Belgian border. Sturdy, Good-Natured Dutch a Rugged Race Each farmer is required to clean his canals and ditches twice a year. The object of all this work is the herds of sleek Holstein cows grazing placidly on the flat Dutch countryside. The Dutch never fill in a body of water—they always pump the water out. The extensive system of canals—more than 1,800 miles of them or enough to reach from New York to Kansas City—is used to drain off the back seepage of water as well as for irrigation purposes. Right now a great national project is underway to drain the Zuyder Zee and turn it into lush farming land. The project is scheduled to be completed by 1985. More than half a million people will be able to live on the new polders, or drained lakes. As a result, the rate of production is amazingly high. Each cow produces about six gallons of rice milk a day which will make a five-pound, round Dutch cheese. The Dutch want to export more of this cheese to the U.S. Right now, they are hampered by import laws demanded by the dairymen of Wisconsin. Dutch dairy imports are strictly limited to less than half a million dollars a year. Yet the Dutch buy 11 million dollars worth of goods from us. AMSTERDAM, Holland—Only one word really fits the Dutch, and that is "sturdy." (Editor's Note: Jerry Knudson, former instructor of journalism, is touring Europe this summer. This is the fourth of a series of letters.) But the Dutch are profiting from the ever-increasing American tourist trade. Last year more people visited the Netherlands than in all the 12 years preceding the war. Of course, the World's Fair at Brussels helped. These good-natured people have carved out a life for themselves on the very shelf of the continent and are continually pushing back the North Sea. Good Queen Juliana reigns over her tiny realm like a housewife presides over her pantry, and the Dutch are a happy people. VOLUME II See Us often your best Summer Sportswear Demands ACME to keep A their best. Often - and soon. summer togs looking Care SUNSHINE acme BACHELOR 1109 Mass. LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-5155 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE Page 61 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21. 1959 New Problems Harass Germany, Burzle Says While Germany is becoming the new economic Mecca of Europe, economic and political growing pains are causing consternation to the man in the street, according to J. A. Burzle, professor of German. Recently returning from a year's sabbatical leave of absence from KU, Dr. Burzle spent a year in Munich doing research on the country's contemporary literature. Terming the Germans in the western zone as the most "Ameri- canized country in Europe" he observed that the materialistic trend is not without its ill effects, similar to those plaguing the U.S. "They are experiencing an economic recovery equal to none. It's an incredible feat, what they have done in rebuilding the nation in the last few years," Dr. Burzle said. He explained that Germans have supermarkets, TV, all types of other electrical appliances, and many automobiles. "Women have taken on a new role. They used to be devoted to the home, but now many housewives are going to work, earning extra money for the added amount of luxuries found there today," he said. Dr. Burzle said that since more and more housewives have left the home some children are being referred to as "key children" because Weary Marines Brace For Rest of Long Hike LONE PINE, Calif. - (UPI) A column of weary marines rested their aching feet here Monday in preparation for the second half of their scheduled 175-mile hike. The leathernecks, members of the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, Calif., began the grueling march last Monday from 10 miles south of the Death Valley National Monument. Their route was planned to take them from the lowest point—252 feet below sea level in Death Valley—in the continental United States to atop Mt. Whitney, 14,490 feet high. C A S H J R E A C T S W A P O H N J A O R D O R K I L L M O N O G R A P E J E L L Y B Y W O R D P E N A L T Y R O O S T T I E F O R S A L E B O L T E R S A X E S L I P O N O R A L D E B U T Z O O V V N O T E E Y E S M E T T L E S E E D E L E T E D E A R N E S T D A D P R U N E R E C L I N E N E P L U S D E V A L U A T E D H O P I D O D R M I T E R E B O N G O E S S L Y L Y W E N D if you can see it... Ansco Ansco 135 SUPER HYPAN FILM 300 WORD TAPE & LABEL SUPER HYPAN 24 HOLOGRAMS you can shoot it with they carry a house key on a string around their necks, a practice seldom necessary in the old German household. This has resulted in a new problem in Germany—juvenile delinquency. NEW ANSCO SUPER HYPAN - Finest grain super-speed film ever 1 "In education, the same problems of enrollment, growth and lower academic standards are seen on all levels," Dr. Burzle said. He was quick to point out, however, that this problem is being combatted actively. - Now you take pictures just by existing room light! - Daylight Exposure Index 500 to 1,0001 Dr. Burzle said many Germans are in doubt about the strength of their democratic system. "Politically speaking, the Germans are finding their way in a new system of government. During the recent Adenauer crisis the average German felt complete consternation and was deeply annoyed," he said. This was in reference to the Chancellor's recent decision to vacate the chancellorship for the position of president, which is considered a figurehead position, and then his reversal of the decision to keep his present post. It is felt that if a vote of confidence had been taken, Adenauer would have lost by a sizeable margin. - Available in 35mm, roll film, filmpack and sheets I CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre Dr. Burzle reports that there is less outward concern over the Berlin crisis than there is in the United States. "The people in West Germany seldom talk about it. They seem to be living in a day-to-day fashion, feeling that if something comes of it, there is nothing they can do about it. They are trying to live life as fully as possible during their recent prosperity. "The West Germans are still mortally afraid of Russia and the Communist system. They have experienced such a life during the Nazi period—there is never any danger of them accepting the Communist line. Hope for ultimate reunification for the German state remains in most German hearts he says, but they have no illusions about how distant the dream is in reality. "They much prefer the status quo to any real change in the German setup as it stands today," he said. They know that any real gain by either side would result in war, a war which would mean not only the end of Germany but of everything." Course Offered On Plant Layout The Midwest Work Course on Plant Layout and Facilities Planning, offered by the University of Kansas Extension Center, will be held Sept. 14-18 in the Continuation Study Building of the KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. The course is aimed specifically at helping plant managers plan consolidations and expansions and to lay out new buildings or rearrange existing plants. Each evening the entire group of enrollees will meet with staff members to study actual problems of the enrollees' firms. Enrollees will present specific problems facing their companies, and the experience of all will be brought to bear in an attempt to arrive at solutions. Richard Muther of Richard Muther and Associates of Kansas City, consultant to industry and authority inplant layout, will be technical director. Muther recently returned from an extended trip to Europe, during which he was consultant to major industries in England, Switzerland and other countries. Professor Named To AFROTC Unit Capt. Kenneth L. Shook has been assigned to the Air Force ROTC unit at the University of Kansas as assistant professor of air science. Capt. Shook, a native of Kansas who earned a music education degree from KU in 1939, comes from the Palm Bench (Fla.) Air Force Base where he was an instructor in amphibious flight training for the school of the Military Air Transport Service. He previously served three years in Tripoli, North Africa as a flight commander in an Air Resupply squadron and in the airsure rescue command in France since recall to active duty in 1951. During World War II he was a B-24 bomber pilot with 30 combat missions. Kansan Want Ads Get Results LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 V VESPA OF ITALY Scooters 130 miles per gallon 55 miles per hour EASY PARKING LOW UPKEEP $359.00 Financing Arranged $ British Motors "Where No Imported Car Is Foreign" 704 Vermont Social Will Aid Korean VI 3-8367 A public ice cream social will be held from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday south of the Plymouth Congregational Church in Lawrence to obtain funds to help Charlie Cho, a Korean student, complete his training in the KU Medical School. Sponsors will be the First Methodist and Plymouth Congregational Churches. The social will be held on part of the parking area near the church. The goal of $1,600 has been set to help finance Cho's education. Cho hopes to return to Korea upon completion of his medical education. In that event, funds collected to help him will be considered part of missionary programs. If he remains in the United States to practice medicine, he plans to repay the amounts raised by the churches. ___ If you play with a cat, you must not mind her scratch. LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Now Thru Thursday MAMIE VAN DOREN JEFF RICHARDS in "BORN RECKLESS" ★ co-hit VENETIA STEVENSON JEFF RICHARDS in "ISLAND OF LOST WOMEN" GRANADA NOW SHOWING Ends Wednesday JERRY LEWIS in "DON'T GIVE UP THE SHIP" with Mickey Shaughnessy, Dina Merrill Starts Thursday ALAN FREED JIMMY CLANTON in "GO, JOHNNY, GO" --- SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Ends Wednesday Robert Mitchum in "ENEMY BELOW" co-hit Jeff Chandler, Esther Williams in "RAW WIND IN EDEN" Starts Thursday Alan Ladd, Ernest Borgnine in "The BADLANDERS" co-hit Victor Mature, Leo Genn in "TANK FORCE" EXPER reports mediate hannse TYPIN Close 7677. EXPER mediat dissert writer VI 3-30 TYPIS' theses, perieni Leathe EXPEI reports immed Mrs. J NOTH shop. 1218 C pim, capurs and oums, 2, lightn lightn, groom Everyy and G! LEARl dances Dance FINES barber Ernie' WASH ticut. RENT week Sewin KU B ialty. two b --- SUMM specials Sports Call ★ Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, these, etc. Reasonable rate. Immediate attention. Call Mrs. Charles Johanssen. VI 3-2376. 7-81 TYPING: Fast, accurate, experienced. to campus, 717 Miss Phone V-31 7872 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Have electric typewriter, general rates, Mts. Tony Brendel VI 5-3428 TYPIST: Make reservations now to have the types, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931, 1756 Tenn. EXPRIENCIED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, VI 3-1240. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, themes, theses, etc. Neat, accurate, immediate attention. Reasonable. Mrs. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-243-7-3485 TYPING: Theses and themes. Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. tf NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center—1218 Chn. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Complete line of exotic fish and exotic plants. Stainless steel aquariums, water heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dance studios in New York City. Dance Studio, 908 Michaelph. phi 1-836-8587. FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly at Ernest's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts KU BARBER SHOP - Flatlot our spec- tacles, two blocks down 14th Street. campus. RENT A SINGER ENERGY machine by the Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Engr. Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Engr. WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tj MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $1 price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf FOR RENT LARGE FOUR-ROOM APARTMENT, unfurnished. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Private entrance and path. NEeded. All bills paid. Phone VI 75-3458. APARTMENT, attractively furnished, for one or two students. Private entrance. Very close to campus. Also very nice single room. Call VI T-6896. 7-31 CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT, large rooms, large closets. Kitchen and store. Marriott couple, no children. Utilities paid. 7-31 drinking, 520 Ohio. ROOMS FOR FALL SEMESTER, '1' block from Union bldg. Two very spacious rooms well furnished $20 and $25. For upper basement Call for appointment VI 3-6969 7-31 UNFURNISHED THREE BEDROOM HOUSE, Town & Country Addition. Possession after August 15 $85 per month. Phone VI 3-3212 after 5 p.m. 7-24 Tuesday, July 21, 1959 NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioning. Room 1. Three room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, also room 2. Nice sleeping room, private entrance and phone. $13.50 per month. Available now. These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7850 -7-31 GARAGE APARTMENT all modern and private. Snack bar in kitchen. Prefer two double or single. Bring rooms on p.m. Available for next semester. -7-24 TWO SMALL APARTMENTS available now. Furnished, newly redecorated. Living room, studio beech complete kitchen, dining area, closets. Phone VI 3-6255 or see at 646 W. 23 St. APARTMENTS at 1430 Crescent Drive September, Contact VI 3-1890 7-31 FOR SALE '49 LINCOLN sport sedan. Excellent condition, $175. Two-wheel trailer, $50. Metal luggage carrier, $10. 1124 Mississippi, VI 3-8341. 7-24 MICROSCOPE -Bauch & Lomb Oil lcm. lamps $250.00 1745 Mass. Apt. 611 N.Y.C. - ADVERTISERS • PATRONIZE YOUR AGFA, Super Regent Camera—as new Phone VI 3-1670. 7-21 HIGH-FIDELITY SYSTEM, including changer, amplifier, FM tuner, speaker, equipment cabinet, speaker enclosure, and record collection. Priced at approximately one-half replacement cost. Call VI 3-6303 after 6. 7-31 MOBILE HOME for sale. 1953, 32' Spartn in very good condition. Modern, alrently located for young couple or students. Sieces four. Call V-71 0559 HELP WANTED WOMAN, under 35, with BS or AB degree to work with children. Full time, year around employment. $3,000 a year. Call Mr. Howard at VI 3-3833. 7-21 WANTED WANTED: Two Riders to Houston Texas. Ride: 3-138, by 1-78 Dallas. Call VI. 3-138 WANTED. A STUDENT COUPLE, preferably no children. To live in the Mount Evergreen Campus Rd. To act as host and hostess for Canterbury Assn. Salary includes meals paid plus a $5 stipen. Apartment is partially furnished. Call VI 3-8202. 7-31 WANTED WOMAN RIDER to New York to visit after Summer station. Call VI T-8720. 7-31 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: RIDE FROM KANSAS CITY to Lawrence, daily; Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9 a.m. or on Tuesday and Thursdays at 8 a.m. Coming back everyday at 11:30 a.m. Call Mary Ann Leonard in Yellowstone 2-0647. 7-21 TEXICO Kansan Want Ads Get Results Wheel Balancing Modern Equipment BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 G GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER ATTENTION EMPLOYMENT COUNCILING and PEACE OFFICER TRAINING REPRESENTATIVES If you really want a good steak while you are in Lawrence better stop at... DINE-A-MITE Dine and Dance in Air Conditioned Comfort 23rd & La. VI 3-2942 TAKE HOME SOME GOOD LEISURE READING Browse through our large stock of paper and cloth bound books Select from such series as: Anchor Books Meridian Books Evergreen Penguin Books Mentor Books Many Others Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 21, 1959 PARK HILL COUNTRY CLUB MORE CAMPUS CONSTRUCTION—Summertime is the season for construction at KU, and the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house, Gower Place, is no exception. A four-story addition is being built to the south of the present structure. Extensive remodeling is being done inside. O'Leary Hall Changes Sex O'Leary Hall, which has a capacity of 100, is being changed this fall to a residence hall for upperclassmen women, because the demand for women's dormitory facilities has exceeded the normal capacities of Corbin-North College, Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Grace Pearson Halls. With O'Leary, the University will have dormitory facilities for ap- proximately 800 women and places for 200 more in the scholarship halls. Carruth Hall, a twin of O'Leary immediately to the north, will continue to accommodate 100 men. The two halls share a common front entrance but otherwise are wholly separate. Despite the shift, there will be a net gain of 332 places in the men's residence hall system this fall. The opening of Olin Templein Hall for 432 men at West 15th and Engel Road provides modern dormitory facilities for 948 men with scholarship hall places for 250 more. Luther N. Lewis Hall, a twin of Templein on West 15th, will be ready with another 432 beds in February. Construction costs in the U.S. which went up about 100 per cent from 1922 to 1929, have risen 103 per cent since World War II. CHAMBERY, France —(UPI)— A modern-day Hannibal with a one-elephant army set out Monday to conquer the Alps. Man, Elephant Assault Alps Prof. J. M. Hoyte of Cambridge University is trying to prove a point, and he borrowed a two-ton Indian elephant from the Turin, Italy, zoo to help him do it. The elephant, a frisky 12-year-old known unimaginatively as Jumbo, set out from the little village of Fort-de Montmelian on the route that Hoyte says Hannibal used in 218 B.C. to launch an attack into the heart of the Roman empire. Historians know that the Carthaginian general at the age of 26 led 30,000 men, 5,000 horses and 37 elephants across the Alps from Gaul—which is now France—into the Roman stronghold of the Po valley—which is now part of Italy. What the historians do not know is what mountain pass Hannibal used. Academic speculation ranges over a wide variety of passes, from the 4,500-foot Mongine to the 6,000-foot Little St. Bernardo. Prof. Hoyte, who is the same age Hannibal was when he made his Alpine assault, believes the Carthaginian used the Clapier pass, which rises 7,300 feet in the chilly Alpine air. The films are presented by the bureau of visual instruction and are free to faculty and students. Film on Flemish Painting To Be Shown Wednesday "Golden Age of Flemish Painting," a 53-minute color film, the seventh in a summer series, "Film Features of Fact and Fiction," will be shown at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey. Protests Steel Picket Line PITTSBURGH —(UPI)— Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. asked the courts Monday to break up mass picket lines of striking United Steel-workers. In the Wednesday film, Paul Haasaerts, Belgian art critic and film maker, analyzes the work of six Flemish primitive painters of the Renaissance—Jan van Eyck, Roger van der Weyden, Dirk Bouts, Hieronymous Bosch, Hugo van der Goes, and Hans Memling. The film covers the 15th through 17th centuries. The musical background is selections from Flemish composers of that period. Pamela Brown, English actress, is the narrator. Price-Wage-Tax Control Advocated MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich.—(UPI)Presidential control of fluctuation in prices, wages and taxes has been urged by seven of the nation's top economists. The recommendation was among several aimed at combatting inflation and spurring economic growth. It came out of a three-day conference called and planned by Gov. G. Mennen Williams at his summer mansion. Put a little lemon juice in mashed potatoes to keep them really white. Love is an egoism of τὴν Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Private Parking on Naismith Drive FINAL CLEARANCE Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK REDUCED ALL SALES FINAL ANSCOCHROME ...WORLD'S FINEST WORLD'S FINEST COLOR FILM Ansco Ansco ANSCOCHROME Color Film Ansco 135 DAYS ANSCOCHROME - Makes great pictures easier. - Available in all standard sizes. - For making beautiful Printon® color prints. - Exposure Index 32. BUY IT HERE, BRING IT BACK FOR FAST DEPENDABLE PROCESSINGI CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre 1424 Crescent Road Campus West To be awake is to be alive.—Henry Ihoreau PHILIP EVERYBODY IS SAVING AT ECON-O-WASH In a recent survey, 10 out of 10 asked, answered,"I save money at Econ-O-Wash." It's inexpensive-Only 20c to wash, 10c to dry Econ.o.wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 47th Year, No.13 Friday, July 24, 1959 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 一 HOME FOR SIX WEEKS—Japanese students arriving for the six-week Foreign Student Orientation Center at KU are pictured at the train station Tuesday. They are (foreground, from left) Yukio Kudo, Kazuhiko Goto, Keisuke Katakota, (train steps, from bottom) Fuji Kamiya, Masahiko Machida, and Masami Yabune. Sunday Concerts to Mark Finale of 22nd Band Camp The Sunday concerts July 26 will mark the finale of the 22nd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The six-week camp began June 14 with the highest enrollment in its history-518 students. On Saturday at 7:30 p.m., in Hoch Auditorium the ballet division of the camp will perform in a recital open to the public. Robert Bell, director of the Robert Bell School of Dance in Oklahoma City, teaches the camp ballet section. Guest conductors during the final week are Victor Alasdroom, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, and Eugene Kenney, director of choral music at Texas Technological College in Lubbock, Tex. They will conduct the concerts at 3:30 p.m. in University Theatre and at 8 p.m. in the outdoor theater Sunday. Nixon in Moscow The campers' last social event was a formal dance last Saturday. They MOSCOW —(UPI) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon arrived in Moscow for an 11-day good will tour yesterday. He was met by a chorus of anti-Americanism led by Premier Nikita Khrushchev himself. Nixon and his wife Pat were greeted warmly at the airport by an official party headed by First Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov. 1-Hour Strike in Havana HAVANA —(UPI)— Havana, a city of more than a million people, and the rest of Cuba, were paralyzed for one hour yesterday by a strike called by organized labor to demand the return of Fidel Castro to power. elected ballet student Patricia Medeke, Oklahoma City, queen, and Jack Fuerst, trombone player of Cicero, Ill. king of the camp. Murphys Leave For Stay in Latin America Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Mrs. Murphy left by plane yesterday for San Jose, Costa Rica, on a combination business-vacation trip in Latin America. The Murphys will spend 10 days in Costa Rica. The chancellor will meet with the executive committee of the Council on Higher Education in the American Republics. He is committee chairman. Dr. Murphy said "the purpose of the council is to explore ways and means to bring United States and Latin American institutes of higher education closer together. "The executive committee will plan an agenda for the over-all council meeting in Santiago, Chile, next February." Dr. Murphy plans to spend a week with friends in Costa Rica, with the aim of seeking stronger relations between KU and Costa Rica University. He and his wife will vacation in Central America, including Guatemala and Mexico Murphy Names 19 To Board of Fund The appointment of 10 new members and the reappointment of nine others on the advisory board of the Greater University Fund of KU has been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Accepting reappointment are Alfred G. Hill, Swarthmore, Pa.; Robert E. McElfresh, New York City; Dean G. Ostrum, Portland, Ore.; Farel R. Lobaugh, Washington; Lester Suhier, Cross River, N. Y.; Richard L. Becker, Coffeyville; Sam W. G. Lowe, Colby; James E. Taylor, Sharon Springs, and Paul O. Masoner, Garden City. New board members are John T. Stewart Jr., Wellington; Dr. Robert Sohbler Jr., McPheson; Dale W. Maxwell, Columbus; H. Bernard Fink, Topeka; W. A. Smiley, Norton; Vern H. Schneider, St. Louis; Mrs. Oscar Renn, Arkansas City; Mrs. Verne Alden, Wellsville; Mrs. Margaretta Billings, Russell, and Dale W. McNeal, Kansas City. Foreign Students Hold Party Tonight The KU Foreign Student Orientation Center will hold its "get-acquainted party" at 8 p.m. today in the cafeteria of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. University students and faculty members are invited to the function, which will include a short program. J. A. Burzle, professor of German, is director of the center. Tonight the students will be greeted by the Hon. John Weatherwax, mayor of Lawrence, and Dr. John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School. Five students in the School of Fine Arts will present a musical program, and the film, "The Sotnd of a Million," will be shown. The five students are Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb., graduate student, violinist; James Avery, Burlington graduate student, pianist; Sharon Tebenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., sophomore, soprano; Richard Wright, Junction City special student, tenor, and Loretta Nauman, Alton senior pianist. The 60 students from 19 countries arrived here this week for the six-week session which began yesterday. The KU Center is one of six in the United States and was selected by the State Department. After the session at KU, the students will go to colleges and universities over the U.S. for a year's study in various fields ranging from physics to home economics. The objectives of the Center are (1) to provide an opportunity for students to become adjusted to the social environment of the United States (2) to introduce them to American society and culture, (3) to prepare them for academic and administrative procedures in institutions of higher learning, and (4) to give those students who need it confidence and facility in the use of the English language. The students are housed at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall and are eating their meals at the Kansas Union. The orientation program includes field trips, special guest lecturers, and films. During the session, Dr. Burzle said, the students will come in contact with American families in Burlington, Kan., and Kansas City. Field trips will be taken to Kansas City where the students will visit museums and theatrical productions, manufacturing plants and the assembly line process. Faculty Moving Into Summerfield The faculty members of the KU School of Business are beginning to move into the new home—the Summerfield Hall, behind the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. James R. Surface, dean of the School of Business, said everything but the first floor has been approved by state officials. "Some of the faculty have already set up offices in the upper floors," Dean Surface said. While the kevs to the million-dollar project will be turned over to the University July 25. Dean Surface said the school will not conduct summer classes in the building. "We will be ready in plenty of time for the fall semester schedule, however. "We are delighted at the opportunity to have our group under one roof. Previously, the Business School offices and classes have been located in several buildings on the campus," Dean Surface said. Included in the new building are four case discussion rooms, especially designed for that type of class work with 64 swivel chairs in each room. Also housed in the new glass-faced structure will be the KU computation facilities, the economics department, the secretarial training department and the business research department. Sends Foreign Aid Report WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Eisenhower sent Congress yesterday a report calling for continuing long-range financing of the foreign aid program's development loan fund. The report was third in a series prepared by a presidential committee. Final Program of Sunday Concerts Orchestra-Chorus Sunday Afternoon, July 26 Victor Alessandro and Gene Kenney, Guest Conductors 3:30 p.m.-University Theatre Part I Chorus Vere Languores ... Vittoria Ave Maria ... Breckner Lachrymosa ... Mozart Stomp Your Foot ... Copland Have Ye Not Known ... Thompson Ye Shall Have a Song ... Thompson Mr. Kenney and Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting Part II Orchestra Consecration of the House, Overture ... Beethoven First Roumanian Rhapsody ... Enesco Mr. Carney, Conducting Symphony No. 7 ... Bruckner First Movement: Allegro Moderato Symphony No. 5 ... Sibelius Fourth Movement: Allegro Molto Mr. Alessandro, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Carney, Conducting Band-Chorus 8 p.m.—KU Outdoor Theatre Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Part I Band Nobles of the Mystic Shrine ... Sousa Overture to "William Tell" ... Rossini Mr. Wiley, Conducting Port H Chorus Echo Song...di Lasso Easter Anthem...Billings Fa Una Canzone...Vecchi Elijah Rock...Hairston O God Beneath Thy Guiding Hand...Hatton Mr. Kenney and Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting Part III Band Water Music Suite ... Handel Allegro, Air, Minuet, Hornpipe, Finale Ballet Music from "William Tell" ... Rossini Symphony in F Minor No. 4 (Finale) ... Tschaikovsky Mr. Alessandro, Conducting Presentation of Awards Part IV Band Overture, 1812 ... Tschaikovsky Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, Conducting Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday July 24,1950 Concerts, Recital Anyone? We admit that we gripe about "the campus being overrun by band-campers," but there are some benefits. For example, the concerts. A heterogenous group gathers and brings forth homogenous sounds. Perhaps if some of the summer students have been too busy or have found an excuse to avoid previous concerts, you will take advantage of one of KU's cultural opportunities and attend the last concerts presented by the camp students Sunday afternoon and evening. These concerts are the culmination of six weeks of concentrated musical study and training. Time is also running out for art appreciators. The last exhibition of the art center of the camp is on display in the South Lounge of the Union. They're not painful; in fact, you might possibly enjoy them. The ballet division of the camp will-present a recital at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium. For an evening of pleasure, this production is recommended. To the campers themselves—we hope your stay at KU has been a pleasant and a profitable one. —Janet Juneau Alaska Peak to Honor Botanist The highest peak of Alaska's Katmai National Monument, the spectacular volcanic wilderness that comprises the largest unit in the Nation's park system, will be named for the man who explored it. The United States Board on Geographic Names has approved changing the name of 7,600-foot Knife Peak to Mount Griggs. The action honors Dr. Robert F. Griggs, the former George Washington University botanist who led six National Geographic Society expeditions to Katmai four decades ago. Dr. Griggs named many prominent features in Katmai for those who helped make the explorations possible, but neglected to name anything for himself. Now 77, he teaches at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Griggs' early expeditions so impressed President Woodrow Wilson that he created the Katmai National Monument in 1918. In his proclamation, President Wilson declared, "This wonderland may become of popular scenic, as well as scientific, interest for generations to come, inasmuch as all its phenomena exist upon a scale of great magnitude, arousing emotions of wonder at the inspiring spectacle, thus affording inspiration to patriotism and to the study of nature." President Wilson's prediction is at last coming true. Seaplanes now ferry guests to the area's blue mountain lakes. Katmai this summer is attracting thousands of visitors. Sprawling over 2,697,590 acres of southern Alaska's Aleutian Range, it is more than twice the size of Delaware. Before 1912, Americans were hardly aware of Katmai's existence. It was known to a few ship pilots navigating the unfrequented Shelikof Strait between Kodiak Island and the Alaskan mainland. Katmai sprang into prominence in June, 1912, when a volcano in the region erupted. Volcanic ash fell over all of northwestern America. The National Geographic Society, in cooperation with the United States Geological Survey, sent out a reconnaissance expedition that same year. Three years later Dr. Griggs began his exhaustive survey of the territory and the effects of a blast surpassed only by Krakatau in 1883. Daily Crossword ACROSS 1 Exclamation. 2 Assuage. 3 At an end: Colloq: 2 words. 4 Turning over a new leaf. 5 "The ___ Mutiny." 6 Currer Bell: 2 words. 7 Nothing: Fr. 8 Gnawing animal. 21 About: Abbr. 22 Lees. 24 Aqua ___. 25 Implements. 27 Unes of men. 27 Positive: Abbr. 2 Frenchman. 30 Prayer. 31 Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, etc. 36 Of an arm bone. 36 Character in "Gone With the Wind." 38 Plan. 40 Luther of the stage. 41 The gamut. 43 Prior to. 44 Seized. 46 Four-poster. 47 Baseball initials. 48 Water bird. 50 Cheese. 52 European capital. 53 Cells. 54 Drudge. 54 Auk genus. 56 Wit stealth. 56 Noted violinist. 62 Set aside for a special purpose. 63 Stops. 64 Be quiet! 65 Classified items. **DOWN** 1 Rainbow. 2 Quering sound. 3 1929 novel by Hemingway: 4 words. 4 Gardner and others. 5 Egyptian sun god. 6 Be located. 7 Manifest zeal: Colloq. 8 Israeli port. 9 Member of a Tai race. 10 Middle West capital: 2 words. 11 Loosen. 12 Equals. Puzzle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 17 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 57 62 65 63 14 Originals: Abbr. 15 Equipment. 18 Talk big. 22 Theatre. 23 Wandered over. 24 Europeans. 25 Dance. 27 Greek letter. 29 Subtle atmosphere. 31 Small Japanese receptacle. 32 Oregon's capital. 34 With a broad smile. 35 Dodger player. 37 Time immemorial. 39 Postal abbreviation. 42 Old Testament book. 45 Source of iodine. 47 Return periodically. 48 Last one in. 49 Egg. 51 Love to excess. 52 Puff up. 54 Enclosures. 55 Purposes. 57 Relative of a lemming. 58 Numerical prefix. 59 Began. 60 Yards: Abbr. Improvements In Monument WASHINGTON — Summer visitors to Washington find ultramodern equipment in a popular memorial whose origin goes back to days before there even was a federal capital. The 555-foot Washington Monument, which honors the first President, was finally opened to the public 89 years after George Washington's death, says the National Geographic Society. Intermingled in its biography are accounts of false starts, setbacks, and triumphs, patriotic oratory and hoodlums. The monument's latest improvements include a new elevator, floodlight system, and aircraft-warning lights. Doors on opposite sides of the elevator relieve the old single-door congestion. Sight-seers reach the 500-foot viewing level in one minute, compared with 12 "precarious minutes" in 1888. They hear amplified records giving monument details. The idea of a lasting memorial to General Washington was born when the Continental Congress, meeting at Philadelphia in 1783, authorized an equestrian statue to be set up wherever the seat of government should be located. George Washington himself approved the project, and confessed that he found such evidence of his countrymen's esteem "the most pleasing reflection of my life." Eight years later, Pierre L' Enfant's layout of the embryo cap by the Potomac set aside a site for the statue on the Mall between the Capitol and White House. The golf links lie so near the mill that almost every day the laboring children can look out and watch the men at play.—Sarah Norcliffe Cleghorn Dailu Hansan NEWS DEPARTMENT (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Juneau Associate Editor Ray Miller BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office Phone 376 Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism SAFE CONDUCT, by Boris Pasternak, Signet, 50 cents. Originally published by New Directions, this autobiography—self-styled—and poems and short stories now are available in paperback. They reveal the same pull of nature and nation that made passages of "Doctor Zhivago" so worth reading and remembering. Pasternak's autobiography is a strange one; for brevity and incompleteness one can point only to those of Franklin or Darwin. It really isn't an autobiography; it's a near-poetical impression of life. It describes the young Pasternak, studying music, giving it up because he lacked absolute pitch. Law was his next choice; he gave that up for philosophy. It tells how he went from Moscow to Marburg, Germany, where he studied and recited in the seminar and fell in love and became versed in Kant and Hegel, and then in Plato. Of this city, he says: "Marburg shone in an operatic glare upon the hill. If the brothers Grimm could come here again, as they came a hundred years ago, to learn law from the famous jurist Savigny, they would leave here once more as collectors of fairy tales... I met only students. They all looked as though they were performing in Wagner's Meistersinger..." Equally expressive are his impressions of Venice. "...something smooth slipped softly by my wet feet. Something malignantly dark like swill and touched by two or three gleams from the stars. It rose and fell almost imperceptibly and was like a painting dark with age in a swaying frame. I did not at once understand that this image of Venice was Venice. That I was in it and that I was not dreaming this." Pasternak's appreciation of nature is a sensual one, a thing almost mystical, that recalls the raptures of the romantic poets. The young Pasternak is in love, and he is penning his hymn to the earth: "Because it was spring, which was roughly completing the eviction of the cold half-year and all around on earth lakes and puddles like mirrors which have not been hung, lay face upwards, and told of how the wildly capacious world was cleaned and its site ready for the new tenant. Because it was then possible for the first being who so wished, to embrace afresh and live through again all life which exists on earth." This last year, when Pasternak first accepted, and then declined, the Nobel Prize, there were American mutterings: "Why doesn't he leave Russia? Why don't he get out?" Because Russia is his country. His writings are full of it, full of beauties that we in the West know nothing of. His love for Russia appears in these stanzes from a poem, "Spring 1944": 1ms spring there is a change in everything. More lively is the sparrows' riot. I shall not even try to tell of it, How bright my soul is and how quiet. My thoughts and writings are quite different, And from the choir's loud octaves singing The mighty voice of earth is audible Of liberated countries ringing. A dreamer and a thinker in the night. Moscow is dearer than the world.Her dower Is to be home and source of everything With which the centuries will flower. The breath of spring across this land of ours Wipes winter's marks from off its spaces And washes off black rings that tears have made Round red eyes of Slavonic faces. . . . 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 Friday, July 24. 1959 Summer Session Kansai r'age ? ARAGAN ALL CARTOONS AREN't FUNNY—Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, and Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, show cartoons to students in the art division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The display was in the reading room of Flint Hall. The students are (from left) Linda K. Biffle, Norman, Okla.; Sharon Traxler, Kansas City, Mo.; Suzi Post, Topeka; Virginia Koci, Wichita; Chris Ruhe, Kansas City, Mo., and Ray Garcia, El Paso, Tex. Graduate Named San Jose Dean flies, mites and other arthropods that live on the ants and within the ant colonies. Grant Made in Entomology A paper on these research findings will be presented by Carl W. Rettenmeyer, graduate student and principal research assistant, at the International Congress of Entomologists in Vienna in August 1960. Ike Hits Waste In Foreign Aid WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Eisenhower sent to Congress yesterday a report acknowledging waste and maladministration in the foreign aid program and calling for steps to end it. The report, prepared by a presidential study committee of former government officials, was transmitted to Congress by Eisenhower without comment. The report also recommended that nations receiving aid seek to guarantee increasingly honest government at their end. The committee, headed by William H. Draper Jr., also recommended long-range financing of the Overseas Development Loan Fund, a proposal that the President himself once opposed. A recent KU graduate has been named dean of the college at San Jose State College in California. He is Dr. John W. Gilbaugh, who had been assistant to the president since February and who joined the San Jose faculty in 1956 as associate professor of education. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad Dr. Gilbaugh received the doctor of education degree from KU in October 1953. He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees from Pittsburg State Teachers College. Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals He will be chief academic officer of California's oldest and largest state college, which has 750 full-time faculty members and expects 12,000 students this fall. E. Beer, associate professor. Balfour In Kansas Dr. Gilbaugh's career includes principalships at Mound Valley and Manhattan and superintendencies at Winona and Humboldt. He was assistant professor of education at Kansas State University before going to San Jose State. 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Dr. Gilbaugh is author of two books in his professional area and of a novel, "The Bull with Golden Horn." The latter describes the experiences of a school superintendent in a small Midwestern town. A H A E A S E A L L U P R E F O R M I N G C A I N E R H A R L O T T E B R O N T E R I E N H A R E C I R D R E G S P U R A H O E S R O W S P O S G A U L A V E I S L E S U L N A R M E L A N I E A R R A N G E A D L E R S O L F A E R E T O O K B E D R B I S L O N E D A M B E R N E O V A P L O D A L C A S U R R E P T I T I O U S L Y E L M A N E A R M A K E D R E S T S H I S T A D S The National Science Foundation has granted $5,800 to two KU entomologists to continue their research in "Arthropod Associates of Army Ants." francis The grant continues a study started by Dr. Michener and Dr. Beer in 1956 under foundation sponsorship. The study was based on field work on Barro Colorado Island, Panama Canal Zone. The entomologists are studying the behavior of army ants and associated beetles, sporting goods Tennis racket and balls 731 Mass. The scholars are Dr. Charles D. Michener, chairman of entomology and Elizabeth M. Watkins distinguished professor, and Dr. Robert we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service MID-SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Of All Seasonable Merchandise Entire Stock Summer Suits $39.75 Values — $28.95 $50.00 Values — $36.95 $55.00 Values — $39.95 $65.00 Values — $44.95 $69.50 Values — $47.95 Summer and Regular Weight Slacks Short Sleeved Sport Shirts $8.95 Values — $4.95 $9.95 Values — $5.95 $13.95 Values — $8.95 $15.00 Values — $9.95 Sport Shirts $3.95 Values — $2.75 $5.00 Values — $3.75 $5.95 Values — $3.95 Dress Shirts (Mostly Whites) $3.95 Values — $2.75 $5.00 Values — $3.75 821 Mass. Summer and Regular Weight Sport Coats $25.00 Values — $16.95 $35.00 Values — $22.95 $40.00 Values — $25.95 Entire Stock Swim Trunks 1/2 price Bostonian Shoes $16.95 Values — $ 9.95 $19.95 Values — $11.95 $26.95 Values — $16.95 Ober's VI 3-1951 oldmaine SPEAKING OF ELEGANCE... NATURALLY oldmaine trotters $9.95 to $10.95 All New Fall Styles All Colors — leather and bucks. Complete Sizes. Royal College Shop A. KINGLEY AUTOMATIC Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 24, 1959 MRS. MARK TURNER AND SINCE 1952, THEY HAVE BEEN SEALED TO FIND A NEW FORMER COSTUME FOR THEIR NEXT CINEMAS. SUMMER CAMP ROYALTY—John Fuerst, Cicero, Ill. and Patricia Mideke, Oklahoma City, Okla., were crowned king and queen of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Prof. and Mrs. Russell L. Wiley presided at the coronation ceremonies during a dance at the Kansas Union Saturday night. Pat is studying ballet; John plays baritone in the band. Math Students to Be Feted A breakfast at 8 a.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union will honor members of the senior demonstration class at KU's Summer Institute for High School and College Teachers of Mathematics. The class members have received advanced training in mathematics for the past six weeks under sponsorship of the National Science Foundation. The students-numbering 29-were selected from more than 100 applicants from across the country. Training included a course entitled Introductory Probability and Statistical Inference, taught by R. N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics, and Elementary Number Theory, taught by John B. Johnston, assistant professor of mathematics. G. B. Price, chairman of mathematics, said the classes originally were designed for teachers attending the institute but that much emphasis now is placed on the instruction itself, as a benefit to participating students. At 6:30 p.m. Monday, a final banquet will be given in the union for all members of the institute, as well as the staff. The institute will end Aug. 1. 3 Housemothers Named for Fall Three new housemothers for 1959-60 in Jolliffe, Pearson and Stephenson halls for men—have been selected. They are Mrs. Cleo Wood of Kansas City, at Jollife; Mrs. Ruth Fox of Lawrence, at Pearson, and Mrs Frank Spurrier, former housemother at Sigma Chi fraternity, at Stephenson. Emily Taylor, dean of women, says: "Student living groups employ women of executive ability, social poise, pleasing personality, vital interest in students and their activities, and good moral character. "It is also very important that the housemother have a general understanding of university and college studies. The position is a strenuous one, requiring long hours and a great deal of physical vitality and vigor." The duties of a housemother include planning menus, ordering food, supervising and often hiring house employees, aiding and chaperoning students in their social events, and assisting students with various problems. Dean Taylor adds that the housemother is the official hostess of the house and its dining room. "She plays an important role in setting the tone of the house," she says. In fraternal groups, the house hires the housemother with the approval of the dean of men or dean of women. The University hires housemothers in resident and scholarship halls. The housemother is considered an official representative of her dean and is responsible to that official and to her house and its advisory board, the dean adds. Speech Research Grant Awarded The University of Kansas has received a grant totaling $41,466 from the U.S. Office of Education to conduct a three-year research program in speech improvement for kindergarten and first grade children. The local study, which is a part of the cooperative research program begun by Congress in 1956 with a 1-million-dollar allotment, will be directed by Margaret C. Byrne, assistant professor of speech and drama, and director of the KU Speech and Hearing Clinic. This is the second project at KU sponsored by the Research Program. The projects concern education of the mentally retarded, identifying and developing unusual talent, educational aspects of juvenile delinquency, and staffing schools and colleges. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 FRIDAY ONLY PIZZA SALE 20c Off All Pizzas No coupon necessary Not good on delivery pizza A.K. Pizza Good for all pizzas eaten in our air conditioned dining room. Running through Sunday night, July 26, is the Sigmund Romberg musical, "New Moon," starring baritone Earl Wrightson and Jan McArt. Music in the long popular show includes such standard favorites as "Stout Hearted Men," "Lover Come Back to Me," "Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise," and "Wanting You." When the curtain opens at 8:15 p.m. Monday on "The Great Waltz" theatergoers will hear one of America's finest singers in the popular field in the person of Vic Damone. He has been the star singer with Guy Lombardo. Stan Kenton and other major bands, a successful recording artist and featured in the motion picture "Kismet" for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Damone also has been a popular night club star, drawing near-record salaries for his Las Vegas appearances and work in other selected supper clubs across the nation. This Friday Night Only! CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 North Park VI 3-911 Strauss Music Theme Of 'The Great Waltz' The lilting strains of Strauss waltzes and the voices of Vic Damone and Claramae Turner will highlight the next Starlight Theatre presentation, "The Great Waltz," playing July 27-Aug. 2 in the outdoor theater. Miss Turner, who sings under famed impresario S. Hurok, is making her first Starlight appearance in the role of Countess Olga Baranskaja. Her contralto voice has been praised by leading critics across the nation, who have termed her "superb," "glorious and inspirational," "truly great," and "brilliant quality." To earn such plaudits from hardened music experts in New York and California, Miss Turner has worked with the Metropolitan, San Francisco and Chicago Lyric operas and sung some 75 roles. In Menotti's "The Medium" she created the role of Madame Flora and she won widespread critical acclaim for her performance as the Mother Superior in the American premiere of Poulenc's "The Carmelites." Musical highlights of the show include "The Blue Danube," "With All My Heart," "You Are My Song," "Love Will Find You," "Morning," "On Love Alone," and "Love's Never Lost." Toscanini himself selected her to sing Urica in his final operatic performance, Verdi's "The Masked Ball." The story deals with the Strauss family, Johann senior and junior, and the rise of the waltz in Vienna, world music capital. Johann Sr. is at the pinnacle of fame and determined his son shall not rise to his stature. The Countess has heard young Johann and resolves to let the world hear him. Through the Countess' machinations, the elder Strauss misses a performance and young Johann conducts the orchestra for the first performance of "The Beautiful Blue Danube." MARYVILLE, Mo.—(UPI)—Harry Bowls is nursing a broken right arm—fractured when he attempted to crank his Model-T Ford, vintage of 1923. Old Ford a Bit Rough Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Taltipipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE Top O' Twelfth SIDNEY GOULD BACK TO CAMPUS WEAR BACK TO CAMPUS WEAR Versatile ripple rib cardigan in a luxurious Fur Blend by Sidney Gould with $ \frac{3}{4} $ sleeves and collar leading to plunge neckline. Hidden tab makes collar convertible and allows for a charming over the shoulder fashion. Side vents with button detail adds real import touch. Sizes 36-40. Available in Dove White, Black Knight and Rondo Red. Friday, July 24, 1959 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 I will be waiting for you. Mary Ann MIXED EMOTIONS—Nancy Johnson, summer band camper from Burlington, packs her clothes with mixed emotions, as do most of the 600 campers who will leave Sunday. Varsity Velvet "ALL STAR" PEACH ICE CREAM Creamy vanilla filled with fresh bits of fruit. Feature Flavor for August FRESH PEACH ALL STAR PEACH ALL STAR PEACH Pick Up A Half-Gallon Today Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. 202 West 6th Engineering Pay Up, Totals Down Phone VI 3-5511 Better pay and high demand do not always bring greater supply. At least not when the items of supply are human beings who must first be conditioned by four or five years of technical and scientific education. "Good employment conditions for engineers graduating in 1959 contrast sharply with the decreased enrollments," according to Dr. John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Starting salaries continue to rise steadily because of general inflation and the short supply of engineers, Dean McNown said. Yet nationally the number of engineering freshmen dropped 11 per cent last year. At KU the decline was 17 percent. Based on voluntary returns from about three-fourths of the engineering students graduating from KU in June, the average starting salary was about $500 a month. This is $100 more than in 1955. Dean McNown believes the dearth of freshman engineers is cause for national concern. The Engineers Joint Council gives three reasons for the lag: 1) the publicity given to limited layoffs and cut backs in the short and shallow depression of 1957-58; 2) the rigors of the engineering curricula; and 3) the diversion of potential engineers to other scientific fields. Dean McNown believes an upgrading of requirements in mathematics had something to do with the fact KU's 1958 freshman engineering class was down more than the national average. There is statistical evidence to show that 1958 freshmen were significantly better prepared in mathematics than 1957 freshmen. Hence the loss may have been mostly from the more poorly prepared students. "However, we'll have to wait until 1962 to be certain about whether the smaller but better prepared 1958 freshmen will produce as many graduates," Dean McNown added. Many of the June 1959 graduates have gone to work in this area. Greater industrialization of the region helped provide jobs for 19 students in Kansas and 13 in Kansas City, Mo. Another 20 remained in the midwest. Ten went to California. Eastern companies that formerly hired large proportions of the KU graduating class obtained only eight of 75 reporting from the June class. The new Sperry Gyroscope plant in Salt Lake City, Utah, attracted four KU seniors. Only Raphael Diaz, who is returning to his native Cuba, accepted foreign employment. the town shop ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Summer Suits - COTTON CORDS, $20 Values ... $16.95 - DACRON-COTTON, $40 Values 31.95 - DACRON-WOOL, $50 Values 36.95 Sport Coats - DACRON-COTTON, $30 Values ___$19.95 - DACRON-ORLON, $32 Values ... 22.95 - WOOL TWEEDS, $35 Values ... 24.95 Slacks - COTTON SLIM PIPERS, $6 Values ___ $ 4.75 - DACRON-COTTON, $12 Values ... 8.95 - DACRON-WOOL, $16 Values ... 11.95 Sport Shirts - SHORT AND LONG SLEEVE - BUTTON-DOWN and REGULAR COLLARS $4 Values -- $2.95 $5 Values 3.70 BERMUDA SHORTS — PAJAMAS — TOPCOATS — SOCKS — ALL AT LOW CLEARANCE PRICES the town shop 841 Mass. St. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 24, 1959 Our Good Will Envoy Turns in His Portfolio Special to The Summer Kansan By Jerry Knudson (Editor's note: Jerry Knudson, a former instructor of journalism, is touring Europe this summer. This is the fifth of a series of letters.) From this moment on, I am going to be mean, nasty, rude, and unhearable. HAMBURG, Germany—With this letter I hand in my resignation as "good will ambassador" to Europe. You see, it all started like this Before I left the states I received a letter from the President telling me how important it is that Americans traveling in Europe act well since they represent the entire country. I glowed with patriotism and hurried off to Europe with righteous halo in place. But now I am handing it back to the striped-pants State Department boys because... In Germany, someone stole 40 marks (10 dollars) from me. In Spain, people shove, push and prod in the theaters and elsewhere when there is no reason to do so. In France, the people sit like clods and will not speak even when spoken to. In Paris, the owner of a photographic shop flew into a rage when I told him he had promised my pictures a day earlier. In Holland, a young man refused to shake hands with an American. Americans I have seen in Europe have behaved with irreproachable manner. Usually, they are warm and gentle people. We hear nothing except how mercenary we Americans are, and yet people here seem interested in nothing except the almighty American dollar. I have yet to see an American drunk on the streets of any European city, believe it or not. I have yet to see an American be rude or unfriendly. Generalizations are dangerous, of course, but from my limited observations, I would say the Germans are terribly offensive, the French are clannish and unresponsive, the Belgians are detached. On the other hand, the Spanish are wonderful—open and demonstrative as children, completely guilleless. The Dutch, too, are friendly and good-natured. There have been other exceptions to my list of grievances, such as the shop keeper in Amsterdam who rented me a brand new portable typewriter for a day and then would accept no money for it, or the railway clerk in Hamburg who gave me some small change to get my baggage out of hock because the exchange office was not yet open. These, however, are exceptions. Others are unbearable. So ends my declaration of war against unfeeling Europeans and the do-gooders at home so conscious of the impressions which we make. Why not send letters to Europeans? Time seems out of joint in Europe. Hula hoops are going great guns in Spain while the Charleston is 3 Outdoor Films To Be Run Tonight Three outdoor movies will be shown tonight as the last in the series of films planned for the recreation program of summer students. They are "Yellowstone." "The Great Land Alaska," and "Banfl and Lake Louise." The films will be shown at 8 p.m. east of Robinson Gymnasium. the most popular dance in Paris. "Hang Down You Head, Tom Dooley" is selling well all over the Continent, but so is "Don't Fence Me In" and other songs almost forgotten in the states. Language translations are often very funny. Charley Brown of the "Peanuts" comic strip is hilarious, even in Danish (Lucy becomes "Trina"). In Germany it is a treat to listen to the Chipmunk Song in German or in France to see animated cartoons such as Tom and Jerry in French. Here's the real kicker: In France, Pepe La Pew, the romantic skunk with that heavy French accent in our country, speaks flawless English! The wing surfaces on supersonic jet bombers are joined by rivets made of a special stainless steel containing 24 per cent nickel. SALE on LP's "Beat Up" Classics and Jazz They've Been Here Too Long BELL'S PIZZA SPECIAL. • 20% Off on everything • Good only inside and pick up Begins Sunday, July 26 Ends Saturday, August 1 Roberto's 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 Plenty of Parking in Rear Roberto's Herter Charges Red Plot GENEVA —(UPI)— Secretary of State Christian A. Herter charged yesterday that Russia is trying to make the West its "unwitting accomplice" in a plot to hold all of West Berlin for ransom. Herter sharply rejected a new "concession" offered by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at the session of the Big Four Foreign Ministers' Conference. Gromyko bledged that Russia would take no "one-sided action" during a possible Berlin truce or the negotiations following it. The U.S. leader pointed out that the Russian offer still had a big string tied to it—insistence that a Berlin truce must have a time limit. Gronyko's pledge was part of a speech to the 22nd plenary session of the conference. Western sources said the speech indicated "no great change" in the Russian position. LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Now & Saturday Mark Stevens in "GUNSMOKE IN TUCSON" plus Jack Palance in "THE MAN INSIDE" Extra: Owl Show Saturday Night! ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Starts Sunday Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Anthony Franciosa, Orson Welles in "THE LONG HOT SUMMER" GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Now & Saturday Alan Freed in "GO, JOHNNY, GO" co-hit "THE YOUNG CAPTIVES" with Steve Marlo Starts Sunday! Sal Mineo, Christine Carere Barry Coe, Barbara Eden Gary Crosby, Terry Moore Jim Backus in "A PRIVATE'S AFFAIR" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Now & Saturday Now & Saturday Alan Ladd, Ernest Borgine in "THE BADLANDERS" co-hit Victor Mature, Leo Genn in "TANK FORCE" Extra: Double Owl Show Saturday Night! Starts Sunday! Walt Disney's "PETER PAN" co-hit Patty McCormack in "KATHY O" Page 7 Summer Session Kansan CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE '49 LINCOLN sport sedan. Excellent condition, $175. Two-wheel trailer, $50. Metal luggage carrier, $10. 1124 Mississippi, VI I 3-8341. 7-24 MICROSCOPE -Bauch & Lomb Oil Lum lumi $250.00 1745 Maps Apt. 3 N.Y.C. HIGH-FidelITY SYSTEM, including changer, amplifier, FM tuner, speaker, equipment cabinet, speaker enclosure, and record collection. Priced at approximately one-half replacement cost. Call VI 3-6033 after 6. 7-31 MOBILE HOME for 1953. 32' Spartan in very good condition. Modern, already located. Ideal for young couples or students. Sleeps four. Call 8-7-31 0559. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rate. Immediate attention. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen. VI 3-2876. 7-31 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED Error Free — Out- put Agnes Lungren 1345 Vermont V-1 9-3893 TYPING: Fast, accurate, experienced. to campus, 717 Miss Phone V-7* 7872 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertation ethics, etc. Have electric typewriter. General rates, Mrs. Tom Bradi II 3-3428. TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931, 1736 Tenn. ft. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka. V 3-1240. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, themes, theses, etc. Neat, accurate, immediate attention. Resonate. Mrs. Robert C. Cook. Phone 7-243 m-7485. TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard. call VI 3-5263. tf NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence-cour- shop. visit Grant's Pet Care Center, 8 a.m., Wednesday 8 a.m., to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for all purposes. complete Stainless steel aquariums, 2 to 60 gal. filters, heaters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dog, cat, pet care. Grooming, litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. LEARN TO DANCE NOW - All the latest Dance classes in Hamilton Dance Studio - Mississippi - 3-681 FINEST PLAT-TOPS, and friendly friendships, at fascinating magazines, at Prince's Boutique. KU BARBER SHOP—Flatton our spec- tacles and campuses off campus bicycles down in Street RENT A SINGER sewer machine by the Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singe Sewing Center, 927 Mass. Singe WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut Call VI 3-2906. tt FOR RENT PREFER SENIORS or graduate students. Two nicely furnished rooms. Linens furnished. 839 Miss. Call VI 3-2909 between 1 and 2 p.m. and after 6. 7-31 TWO BEDROOM APT. Attractively furnished for 3 boys. Also three room apartment. Private entrance and bath campus. Reasonable call. VI 3-6696 7-31 FREE RENT FOR RESPONSIBLE COUPLE for living in professor's house during August. Call VI 3-3961. 7-28 FREE RENT APARTMENT. Would exchange free rent of furnished apartment for yard work. August only. Phone VI 3-7655. 7-31 LARGE FOUR-ROOM APARTMENT, unfurnished. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Private entrance and bath. Newly installed. All bills paid. Phone 7-24348. APARTMENT, attractively furnished, for one or two students. Private entrance. Very close to campus. Also very nice single room. Call VI 3-6696. 7-31 CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT, large rooms, large closets, office rooms, and stove. Married couple, on children. Utilities paid drinking. 520 Ohio. T-31 ROOFS FOR FALL SEMESTER. 1/2 block from Union bldg. Two very spacious rooms well furnished. $20 and $25 plus classmates. Call for appointment VI 3-6969 NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioner, $420. Room number 1. Three room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, also phone, $5.50 per month. Available Aug. 1st. Three room furnished apartment and phone, $13.50 per month. Available now. These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5. UFEUNRISHED THREE BEDROOM HOUSE, Town & Country Addition. Possession after August 15. $85 per month. Phone VI 3-2312 after 5 p.m. 7-24 GARAGE APARTMENT all modern and private. Snack bar in kitchen. Prefer two bedroom or single. Call office for sleeping rooms double or single. Call office for p.m. Available for next semester. 7-24 APARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive, Washington, DC 20006 Phone: 31-8900 Contact VI 31-1890 7-31 WANTED: Two Riders to Houston Texas. GAME OF WEEK: Must host 1, by way Dallas. Call VI #3-135 WANTED WANTED. A STUDENT COUPLE, preferably no children. To live in the campus. Applicants must have Campus Rd. To act as host and hostess for Canterbury Assn... Salary includes rent and utilities paid plus a car. The apartment is partially furnished. Call VI 3-8202 7-31 WANTED WOMAN RIDER to New York sion CVI VI 3-8720. 7-31 TWO RIDERS WANTED to Ft. Worth, Dallas or Houston..Call VI 3-2543. Hartan Watkins-Leaving August 1. 7-31 NEED A RIDE to Pittsburgh, Pa. on or off road at KU 540, between 3:30 and 7:00 p.m. at KU 540. TRANSPORTATION MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $ \frac{1}{2} $ price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. ff GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Styles as M Styles as New as Tomorrow from Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. Transitional and Fall clothes arriving daily The Sportsman's Shop 715 Mass. VI 3-6106 SUMMER SALE Tennis Rackets MacGregor "Master" ___ $10.95 MacGregor "Intercollegiate" ___ 21.00 Wilson "Kramer Autograph" ___ 26.50 $ 8.95 16.95 21.95 Tennis Balls MacGregor or Wilson, Case of 3 ___ $1.98 Professional Restringing $4.50 & $5.50 PRESIDENT If there's one of you or any number who want a quick snack or a fast meal try the HAWK'S NEST. 6:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Monday-Friday C Mary Queen of Scarlet Or if there are two or so and you want a delicious meal come in to the UNION CAFETERIA at any of these hours: 6:30-8:30 a.m., 11:00-1:15, 5:00-6:30 p.m. mins A happy face. Kansas Fred A man's face with a winking expression. A woman's face with an open-mouthed smile. A But if you've a whole group, call the CATERING DEPARTMENT for special occasions. KU 509. Union Food Food Services Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 24, 1959 KING FERN CAT'S DELIGHT—The new $220,000 mammalian genetics laboratory at the back of Snow Hall is ready for occupancy with the exception of certain amounts of equipment. The new building will house mice used for cancer research. Job Security Sessions On A five-week Employment Security Counselors Institute supported by the United States Employment Service began here this week with 20 persons enrolled. The institute, first of its kind at KU, is a concentrated training program to supplement professional training of employment counselors and interviewers. In addition to 100 hours of classwork, the students will receive practical experience in interviewing. The program is divided into nine areas such as basic principles of guidance, psychology of individual differences, personality adjustment and mental hygiene and personnel appraisal procedures. Institute teachers include members of the KU faculty and Guidance Bureau staff and Gerald Green, assistant director of the Vocational Rehabilitation Office, Kansas City, Mo., Dr. Ralph Kron of the University of Michigan and Dr. Donald Harder of the University of California. FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE I Old Mission Inn "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned The Castle Tea Room 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 BEST WELCOME TO THE MUSEUM OF HISTORY. Genetics Laboratory Nears Completion The new mammalian genetics laboratory, located adjacent to the north side of Snow Hall, should be ready for occupancy by Sept. 1, according to J. A. Weir, associate professor of zoology. Built at a cost of $220,099 and inaptly dubbed the "Mouse House," the new structure is connected to Snow Hall by an entrance way. Professor Weir said that the building is finished and has been accepted from the contractor by the University. At present, he said, certain amounts of equipment are being fabricated within the building in preparation for receiving some 3,000 matings of a special inbred strain of mice used for cancer research. Each mating consists of a male, female, and from two to ten offspring. Professor Weir said transfering of the "live material" from the laboratory's present location at the stadium will take some time as a set "ritual" has to be followed during the operation. The mice are being raised and maintained for the Cancer Chemotherapy Screening program at the Universities of Michigan, Florida, and KU. The new building will be staffed by Prof. Weir, who will direct the genetics project, four graduate zoology students, two laboratory Extend Polio Vaccinations KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — A mass vaccination program extended to suburban areas yesterday as the 59th polio case of the year was recorded among residents of the city proper. Five deaths have occurred. technicians, an animal husbandry expert, and other members of the department of zoology concerned with mammalian genetics. Besides research in cancer, the mammalian laboratory will provide facilities for research in mammalian genetics to train graduate students. 5 from KU Train At Boeing Program The building was primarily financed by a $190,000 anonymous gift. One University of Kansas professor and four engineering students are among the 38 faculty and students from 13 Midwestern colleges and universities participating in the eighth summer technical program at the Boeing Airplane Co., Wichita division. Ammon S. Andes, chairman of the KU aeronautical engineering department, is the teacher. Students are Larry L. Jones of Milford; Dean T. McCall, Kansas City, Mo.; John F. McDonald, Mission, and James Metzger, Lecon. VESPA OF ITALY Scooters 130 miles per gallon 55 miles per hour $359.00 $100 Down and $6 a Week for 12 months British Motors 704 Vermont VI 3-8367 CAROLYN Always a Washer and Dryer Available at ECON-O-WASH 24 HOURS A DAY It's inexpensive-Only 20c to wash, 10c to dry Econ.o.wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY Econ o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 47th Year, No.14 KU Tuesday, July 28, 1959 LAWRENCE, KANSAS GETTING ACQUAINTED - Foreign students attending the Orientation Center at KU "socialize" at a party Friday evening. Pictured are (from left) Pay-juan Lin, China; Irene Lai Ho, China; Christos Constantinides, Manchester, England, graduate student and president of the KU International Club; Aristidis Papadopoulos, Greece, and Jose Nieto, Mexico. 1960 Budget Request 6.1% Over 1959 Figure A KU budget request of $12,868.105 for the fiscal year of 1961, starting July 1, 1960, has been termed operational but minimal by Ray Nichols, executive secretary of KU. The budget the Kansas Board of Regents is seeking shows an increase of $738,009 over the current year's figure of $12,130,096, or about a 6.1 per cent boost. In calling this increase minimal Nichols explained: "The 5 per cent increase proposed for faculty salaries does not close the competitive gap with other schools with which we have to compete for our faculty members. "If granted, the 5 per cent increase will bring us to a scale we had requested a year ago, but because other colleges have received substantial increases this year, the differential between ours and their pay scales is about the same as it was." Salaries constitute $9,686,459 of the proposed budget—a 5 per cent increase over the current year's $9,110,721. The figure also includes salaries for four new faculty teaching positions and three new janitorial jobs. "Our budget requests would provide only for restoration of the four faculty positions we sought last year, but which the legislature cut out. "We usually hope to add one new faculty member for every 15 to 20 new students, but this will not be possible, since we anticipate an increase in enrollment this fall of 300 students." Mr. Nichols explained Based on a formula set by the Regents, the University was allowed to seek increases in only three categories—the 5 per cent pay boosts; in the operating funds to take care of the new buildings, and restoration of cuts made from the current year's budget. The KU requests include nonsalary items totaling $3,376.875, to be used for supplies and operating expenses. Other requests made by KU, mostly for restoration of 1959 figures, are for: $30,000 in seasonal help, primarily during the growing season, for Buildings and Grounds. $25,000 more in student help, particularly in operation of the physical plant. An increase of $100,000 over the present $300,000 general research funds. $30,000 in utilities for the Snow Hall Addition, the Nuclear Reactor Building and the Kansas Union addition. $60,000 for a start in the Language Culture Centers for Russian and East Asian studies. Nichols pointed out that this would be only seed money to start the centers, but would make it possible for KU to receive outside money in the form of grants and from federal sources. The Summer Session Kansan will issue its final paper Thursday instead of Friday, Publication of The Daily Kansan will resume Sept. 17, the first day of enrollment, with a two-section paper. Final Paper Will Be Issued on Thursday Gulf Area Towns Clean Up Debris HOUSTON — (UPI)— Residents of a dozen towns and cities from Freeport to Houston are still cleaning up the destruction left by Hurricane Debra. Damage from the hurricane which moved in at dusk Friday was estimated at 4 to 5 million dollars. But no loss of life or even a serious injury was reported from the storm which lashed the coast with winds up to 105 miles an hour. Camp Awards Made at Concert Heaviest damage was at Freeport, Galveston, Texas City, La Marque, La Porte, Seabrook and Kemah. Outstanding students of the 22nd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp were announced at the band concert Sunday evening. The honorees, selected by the vote of instructors of the camp, received recognition certificates. The outstanding boy in the music division was John Fuerst. Cicero, Ill., and the girl was Anne Kepler, Tulsa, Okla. The runners-up were Ron Roberts, Tulsa, and Linda Galliart. Larned. Recient of the "Chancellor's Award" was Richard Maximoff, Dallas. Don Magdanz, Omaha, Neb., received the award for the "student most interested in electronics." The speech and debate award was made to Courtner King, Lawrence. Patricia Young, Alexander, and Hoite Caston, Independence, were named the outstanding students in the theater division. Gizella Denes, Omaha, was named the most outstanding girl in the ballet division, and Jeff Angwin, Pittsburg, the most outstanding bow Runner-up was Sharon Haggard. McAlister, Okla. The outstanding boy in the art division was Robert Comings, San Francisco, and the outstanding girl was Charolotte Shoemaker, Darian, Conn. Fire Behind Marvin Causes No Damage A small trash fire behind Marvin Hall at 1:30 p.m. yesterday brought two pump trucks and an aerial ladder truck from the Lawrence Fire Department to the campus after receiving an alarm from an unidentified person. The fire, located near a trash receptacle near the southwest corner of Marvin Hall, was extinguished minutes after the fire department arrived on the scene. The origin of the fire was not determined but was thought to have started from a cigarette. Damage was confined to several empty boxes and assorted trash. Music Camp Ends With Small 'Bang' They have folded their clothes, packed their suitcases and not too silently have crept away to their respective homes. The 675 high school students attending the 22nd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp have ended their summer instruction at KU and have removed easels, flutes, violins, leotards, slide rules, and sheet music from the campus. The camp finished Sunday with a "bang"—fireworks during the "1812 Overture" which concluded the weekly band, orchestra, and chorus concerts. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and director of the camp, said the groups have improved many times over. "They show more maturity and finesse than they did six weeks ago," Prof. Wiley said. He said that this camp was the largest and the finest in its history. Prof. Wiley said there were no plans to make departmental additions to the program next year. "We do have elaborate planning in process now, which will expand the camp further next year within the six departments now included in our program." Prof. Wiley said. He said the camp undoubtedly will be larger next summer. "We will continue to increase the program and the enrollment until we reach the peak our facilities can handle." Prof. Wiley said. More than 25 KU instructors comprised the camp faculty. The campers heard recitals and received instruction from 28 guest clinicians and conductors who were here to attend the first annual Midwestern Music Clinic which met in cooperation with the Camp July 9-13. Another part of the music program was a $150,000 display of every phase of the music industry exhibited by representatives of national music companies. The art section of the camp was directed by Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, and Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design. Robert Bell of the Robert Bell School of Dance in Oklahoma City, Okla., conducted the ballet classes. Under the direction of Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama, students participated in three of the University's summer plays. (Continued on Page 6) JAPAN 1964 TOUGH TO TANGLE WITH—Recruits at the Highway Patrol Training School learn the techniques of judo. Harley Kruse, Geneseo, throws Charles Hanna, Dodge City, to the ground in an easy hip throw. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28, 1959 For Realism About Schools Despite ominous warnings, earnest pleadings, and cold facts, the people of Kansas continue to sit in complacency while petty politics make hash out of our educational system and jeopardize the future of our youth. The Board of Regents recently announced a proposed budget for the next fiscal year. Instead of a budget that meets the requirements for next year—one that should be an incentive towards ambitious educational projects—we find a cautions, "minimal" budget that clips the wings of thinking educators. No doubt, by the time the proposed budget runs the gamut of election-conscious politicians we will find it far from adequate for the next fiscal year. And the ironical part of the situation is that "trimming" happy politicians will cut it in the name of the "poor taxpayer." We are taxed, taxed again, and then taxed some more for good measure. The more we are taxed, the more the expenditures seem to mount. Expenditures must be cut, expenditures must be held down. With this we all agree. But why must schools suffer? Why do we have a Board of Regents that obviously is not acting in the best interests of the state educational system—that won't fight for a good budget? Education costs a great deal these days. Industry, in order to meet rising costs, can apply modern methods of mass production to market a product more cheaply, can raise the price of its products, or as a last resort, can curtail production. Can we mass-produce educated people? Can we raise the price tag on an educated person? Can we curtail the "production" of our educational system? A common sense answer will supply us with a big "no," although it seems that some of the above methods are being tried. What remains to be done is to meet the rising costs of education with a realistic outlook. It takes a certain amount of time, teachers, and facilities to educate a person. These all take a certain amount of money. If we attempt to cut down on any one of these factors we will wind up with a second-rate school system and a second-rate class of citizens. By all means let's have a minimal budget. Then the politicians can really have a poor taxpayer to cry about. —Ray Miller Orientation Center Is Honor KU can add another feather to its cap. It has the decided distinction of being one of the six centers in the U.S. selected by the State Department for foreign student orientation. Our Midwestern university evidently suits the qualifications of the Department or at least has the ability to fulfill the objectives such as providing an opportunity for students to become adjusted to the social environment of the U.S. The University has a "suburban" location in the sense that it is close enough to rural areas to acquaint students with that part of America, while being close to a city which can afford the student a glimpse into metropolitan life. These two elements plus the atmosphere of a small town give the foreign students a three-sided picture of American society and culture. The University's academic standings in various fields will attest to the fact that KU is well qualified to prepare the foreign students for academic and administrative procedures in institutions of higher learning, which is one of the objectives of the program. Daily orientation lectures on topics concerning American education, politics, political rights, and community life, will give the students the theory of the "American way of life." Daily Crossword Puzzle —Janet Juneau ACROSS 1 Duties. 6 Punctuation marks. 11 Small pilchard. 13 Schoolroom equipment. 16 Make large profits; Slang; 2 words. 17 Theatrical performance. 18 Inlet. 19 Floors of London buildings. 21 Cockney's wish. 22 Aborigine of Peru. 24 Parts of the face. 25 Football kick. 26 Allen and others. 27 Posed. 28 Tenant's document. 29 Choose. 29 Failed to bid again. 34 Eager. 36 Revive (with "up"). 37 Not genuine. 37 Scrollings. 45 Substance or an atoll. 46 The Anguilla 48 Accurate. 49 Greek letters. 50 Lifeless. 52 Spanish artist. 53 Girl's nickname. 54 Speak ill of. 57 Italian pronoun. 58 Phrase of denial. 60 Papers. 62 Pluck. 63 Name. 64 Broods. 65 Town official, in Canada. DOWN 1 A viscid syrup. 2 Oklahoma city. 3 Sloth and envy. 4 Famous Coach Rockne. 5 Rebels of 1857-58. 6 Half a college year. 7 Salver. 8 Food. 9 Just before omega. 10 Ladies of Spain. 11 Be frugal. 12 Straightener. 14 Rest. 15 Trickled slowly. 15 Bring up. 16 To the degree that: 3 words. 17 Goes AWOL. 18 "Mighty — Rose." 19 Corrupt. 21 __ de la Plata. 23 Exclamation of disbelief. 25 Notations on bank calendars: 2 words. 27 Type of railway. 28 Spud. 29 Element. 30 What children should be. 32 Architet. 32 Girl's name. 34 Bristly. 37 Hook's com- panion. 39 Diplomat of Ben Franklin's time. 44 Liveliness. 45 Part of a theatre. 46 Formal observance. 47 Sign on the Rialto. 48 Fifty-four: Rom. | | | 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 | | | | | | | | | Fleet Heads To Far North WASHINGTON—A vast supply fleet is steaming north this summer with thousands of tons of stores for lonely outposts in the Canadian Arctic, a huge land of growing possibilities. This year the Canadian Ministry of Transport is moving a record 80,000 tons of supplies along with missionaries, traders, Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers, and health and welfare representatives. Inhabitants of the scattered settlements along the desolate, treeless coastlines regard the arrival of a supply ship as the high point of the year, the National Geographic Society says. For some Arctic dwellers, a supply vessel means the essentials of life—and perhaps a few luxuries—for the whole year. For the waiting sick, it means medical care. For accused criminals, it means a legal trial. For far-flung posts of the Canadian police and isolated radio and weather stations, it means the annual inspection. rew settlements have any docking or cargo- handling facilities. So more than 1,000 men will go north by sea and air to help get the shiploads of supplies ashore by tender. The task is not easy. Many unloading points are beset by drifting ice even in August. The vessels will operate from Quebec to Hudson Strait and Baffin Island. Some will travel still farther north up Foxe Basin to Cornwallis and Ellesmere Islands where there are Canadian-United States weather stations. We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it.—G.B. Shaw Dailu Hansan (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Jument Release Editor Millie BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager Phone 376 Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism WE COME FROM THE SEA, by Hans Hass. Doubleday, $6.50. "...the evidence of many branches of natural science makes it certain that all the phenomena of life on this globe of ours—a world that was once fiery and fluid—yes, all the phenomena of life, ourselves included, are but the products of an astounding evolutionary process which first became manifest—possibly about one and a half thousand million years ago—in the seas which were then beginning to cool. Still, when we come to think of it, is such a method of creation really less flattering to our self-esteem, less wonderful, less divine?" Hence the title of Han Hass's beautiful book, "We Come from the Sea." Hass is a Darwinian through and through, and in this book he, like Darwin, studies organic creations of the Galapagos, those islands off South America which pointed Darwin toward "The Origin of Species." He studies life in many other places, for Hans Hass is one of the greatest skin-divers, working at this fabulous new pursuit since long before World War II. American filmgoers may recall "Under the Red Sea," Hass's skin-diving film of 1952. Diving under the Red Sea has been just one of the underwater efforts of Hass. In this wonderfully illustrated book he takes the reader from the waters of the Middle East to the Caribbean to the Great Reef of Australia to the Galapagos and back. It is exciting adventure throughout. As he tells of shark and barracuda he carries photographs of these monsters of the deep, some of these photographs in beautiful color. He illustrates his adventures off the Great Reef with lovely photographs of sea life and coral. Silverfish, sea perches, the turtles of Galapagos, the peacock fish of the Red Sea, anchovy as thick as swarms of locusts, sea lions, a giant clam that holds captive a plaster leg, an angel fish, a unicorn fish—all are the subjects of Hass's adventures and all are shown in photographs. For Hass does not skin-dive for sport, or to kill, but to educate. He tells of the giant octopus, and soffos at the Hollywood movies that show Kirk Douglas or John Wayne fighting this monster for their lives. He chases the great sperm whale, much as Ahab in "Moby Dick," but there is no fear or hate in Hans Hass. He thinks all living creatures beautiful, especially as they show those particular features that set them apart from other creatures, and he admits to being laughed at when he describes the beauty of the shark. His Darwinism is a thread throughout. As we came from the sea, says Hass, so we are returning to it. "Maybe our new sport has another aspect in addition to those we have talked about up to now," he writes, "for it takes us, naked as nature made us, back into the domain of nature and among living animals, it puts us into a solitude from which a lot of things in the world above look somewhat different. "What we are suffering from today is our ever-increasing divorce from nature. When we are surrounded by the fish and the waving tendrils of seaplants we may regain a little of our lost humility." "The Feather Merchants" was vastly amusing in 1944—it's hard to believe it, but that was 15 years ago. Shulman, as numerous advisers of college humor magazines know, is THE model for many young writers. Shulman's technique of exaggeration, his rambling incidents that depart from the plot, his borderline use of sex as a theme, are beloved by many youths of 20 or thereabouts. Books about soldiers who practically revolutionize military discipline before they get through are a staple in our literature, "No Time for Sergeants" being one of the most famous. Here are two that have at least one thing in common: both authors put in time at the University of Minnesota. THE FEATHER MERCHANTS, by Max Shulman. Bantam, 35 cents. SOMETHING ABOUT A SOLDIER, by Mark Harris. Signet, 35 cents. This novel is about Pvt. Daniel Miller, on leave in Minneapolis. Out on a party in a local bistro, he and a friend concoct a story in which Miller is identified as one Robert Jordan, a heroic soldier who blew up a bridge and killed many fascists in World War II. He gets in a jam, of course, and people believe him—a credulous reporter, Daniel's parents, the girl who had spurned him. The bistro sequence is a bright parody of Hemingway, and the book is still good fun. "Something About a Soldier" is not entirely humor. There is something wry underneath, despite the cover's screaming about "the hilarious experiences of an oddball G.I. who stood the Army on its head for 121 dizzy days." There is bitterness here, and irony; by standing the Army on its head, Pvt. Jacob Epp gets himself discharged and is the lone member of his old outfit to survive the war. There is some fine writing, and perceptive writing, here. Mark Harris has a much surer sense of the vernacular than Max Shulman, and he seldom departs from the possible to make a point. Jacob, who falls for a waitress in a Georgia PX: Captain Dodd, his superior officer, who is making time with the waitress, and the waitress herself are believable people. One can understand this high-IQ hero, this Jewish youth who reads voraciously and pastes end-the-war slogans on windshields. The greatest reservation about "Something About a Soldier" is this: There is always the gnawing worry that Mark Harris has been trying here for another crazy tale of a crazy GL, and it's a situation with more pathos than humor. Page 3 BOOKS By W. D. Paden Professor of English GOD BLESS OUR QUEER OLD DEAN, by W. Storrs Lee. Putnam's, $3.95. This book seems to draw upon the experience and advice of a number of the members of the National Association of Deans and Advisors of Men (NADAM) and the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA). It evinces a remarkable candor in relating instances of adolescent behavior—normal, irritated, drunken, and once or twice insane—and records with a kind of restrained fury the conduct of parents who have never grown up. One chapter sketches the history of undergraduate discipline in the United States before 1890, when deans of men were invented; another notes the very different kinds of problems that deans of men faced in 1918, 1928, 1936 and 1946; a third analyzes the feckless behavior of a typical academic committee. It is not easy to decide what group of readers the author had in mind. The reader starts out with an avid interest, which dulls as he slowly realizes that the anecdotes, which are good, could have been interchanged among the chapters without much effect on the whole. Any particular purpose that the author may have had seems to have been drowned in the flood of his anecdotes; it is possible that the text was originally written as a series of ten articles for some organ of NADAM or NASPA. Each chapter has its full-page line-drawing, unsigned but obviously done by someone who knows universities and has a neat sense of humor. The index is inadequate. The preface by Robert M. Strozier, for 11 years the dean of students at Chicago and now the President of Florida State, is another matter. It is impersonal, compact, and consistent in its clear evaluations of ideas and ideals. By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THE BEACH BUMS, by Jack Owen. Coward-McCann, $3.75. They live at Waikiki, those who aren't at Malibu. They spend most of the day in worn-out swimming trunks, soaking up the sun, getting tanned. Some of them swim, some of them ride the surf. All of them drink. They sleep around, and they trade girls. They talk big about becoming writers. They go from bar to bar. They get beat up. Then they just give up. They have no aims. They have no special frustrations. They're registering no particular protest. They're negative. They're nothing. These are the bums that a young Mississippi,writer named Jack Owen is writing about. What Owen is trying to say is not clear. Why Coward-McCann has chosen to publish this novel also is not clear. If these beach bums were even the beat bums of San Francisco, who may make a lot more sense than some of us think, there'd be a point to this trivial little novel. Roger Anderson is Owen's hero, writing a novel of the South, then tearing it to shreds. He drinks every night. He goes from dame to dame, and from pal to pal. Libby to Bunny, Bill to Jack. The relationships are unsavory. The friendships border on the homosexual, but aren't even as definite as that. Some of the description is good, some over-detailed. Who cares to be told every day that the hero arose, showered, got dressed? Who cares for his descriptions of every male, every female, none of them worth remembering? MAN OF MONMARTRE, by Stephen and Ethel Longstreet. Signet. 50 cents. Add to such lurid novels as "Lust for Life" and "Moulin Rouge" another: "Man of Montmartre." The book, published a year ago, is now in paperback, and it's a highly readable, seemingly well-informed story. Here is the wild life of Maurice Utrillo, whose lovely Impressionistic prints of Montmartre are on many of our walls (one of our friends observes that she has a jigsaw puzzle of one of our favorites). Utrillo does not stand in art history alongside Cezanne, Gauguin, Van Gogh, Renoir or Degas. Nor does he stand even alongside Modigliani, whose wild orgies, most of them under the influence of drugs, make up part of this story. Utrillo came a generation after Renoir and Monet, yet his work is more like theirs than like that of a truer contemporary, Picasso, or another, Matisse, both of whom were experimenting with art forms as Utrillo was making his way. The novel deals chiefly with the frequently sordid life of Utrillo's mother, Suzanne Valadon, herself a talented painter. Utrillo was her illegitimate child; her careless handling of him made him an alcoholic at 10, and sent him to as many institutions as even Van Gogh occupied. His attempts to find himself in painting are of great interest. But what gives this book much of its appeal is the fact that the great painters of around 1880 on are leading characters: Renoir and Degas, for whom Suzanne modeled; Lautrec, who bought cognac and wine for the teenage Utrillo; Modigliani and Soutine, Utrillo's drinking companions. FATHERS AND SONS, by Ivan Turgenev. Bantam Classies, 50 cents. Though not generally classed alongside the works of either Tolstoy or Dostoevsky, "Fathers and Sons" is a significant novel of the 19th century because of the extraordinary prescience it exhibits. For the revolution that lay ahead is suggested in the conflict herein presented, between "fathers and sons." Turgenev wrote the novel in 1861, and created considerable controversy over both theme and characters. Of particular interest was the character Barazov, who represented the coming generation, a nihilist, bound to destroy philosophical ideas, spiritual values, and Russian traditions. It is fortunate that this fine series, Bantam Classics, has brought forth another notable work, in a new translation by Barbara Makanowitzky.-CMP Fourth Grant To KU Chemist A two-year grant of 6,680 has been made by the American Chemical Society's Petroleum Research Fund to Dr. Albert W. Burgstahler, assistant professor of chemistry at KU, for fundamental research on stereospecific angular alkylation, a new technique which may have applications in several industries. Tuesday, July 28, 1959 Summer Session Kansan This is the fourth research grant received from as many agencies by Dr. Burgstahler in 1959. The others are from the National Science Foundation, the Research Corp.'s Frederick Gardner Cottrell Fund, and the Cancer Institute of the U.S. Public Health Service. The four total $21,-280. Preliminary work on the project, which is concerned with the introduction of carbon atoms into certain complex organic molecules, was supported by the Research Corp. and the University research appropriation. The June 20 issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society reported successful preliminary applications of the method made by Dr. Burgstahler and Ivan C. Nordin, Lindsbord graduate student. The new methodology has created considerable interest among chemists and led to invitations for Dr. Burgstahler to lecture last spring at Iowa State University and the University of Wisconsin. He also discussed potential applications in the pharmaceutical industry with chemists of the Upjohn Drug Co. in Kalamazoo, Mich. Successful Oil Century Is Prospect for Kansas Kansas has been in the oil exploration business for 99 years, and one need look only casually at the statistical record or at the oil and gas activity throughout the state to conclude that the Kansas petroleum industry in another year, 1960, can boast a century of success. True, oil and gas production in 1958 did not come up to the totals of 1957. But 1957 was a peak year in a succession of peak years. Besides, compared with the national trend, Kansas is holding its own, according to Edwin D. Goebel, in charge of the oil and gas division of the State Geological Survey of the University of Kansas. Goebel is senior author of "Oil and Gas Developments in Kansas During 1958," which will be available in early fall. Drilling activity also was down, but 136 new oil fields, 16 new gas fields, and 5 oil and gas fields were opened during the year. Counting Production of oil in Kansas in 1958 totaled 119,942,094 barrels, according to the statistical records of the State Geological Survey, a decline of 3.3 per cent from 1957. The value of the 1958 crude oil output was $362,225,124, compared with $380,845,912 for 1957. This can be attributed to decrease in price and production. Natural gas production for 1958-353.9 billion cubic feet (14.65 psia) valued at $58,953,118—was down 7.7 per cent in both production and value. drilling permits issued for well drilling and wells of record, more than 5,550 wells were drilled in Kansas during the year. Of the 4,190 wells of record, 1,846 were oil wells, 227 gas wells, 58 both oil and gas wells, 1,884 dry holes, and 175 salt water disposal wells. Proved reserves of liquid hydrocarbons (as of Dec. 31, 1958, were estimated at 1,121,986,000 barrels, only 1.2 per cent under that of the previous year. Natural gas reserves, however, were estimated at 20.2 trillion cubic feet, an increase of 4.9 per cent over the previous year. The most significant development of the year was the Sherman County discovery that opened the Llanos field and brought commercial oil production from Lansing-Kansas City rocks at a depth of about 4,500 feet. Add to this the opening of Sappa Creek field in Rawlins County, late in 1958, and the Rueb field in Cheyenne County, and northwestern Kansas emerged in 1958 as fertile exploration territory. The clothing the zebu wears is normal for the zebu. There's A Secret ... to looking fresh and neat on these hot days. This Fellow's Secret is having his sport shirts hand finished and his slacks dry cleaned at Acme BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. VI 3-5155 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE E65 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, Juiv 28, 1959 I MAN AND MICROSCOPE—Robert E. Beer, associate professor of entomology, has advised vacationing home owners to be on the lookout for ants, beetles, and silverfish. Ants, Beetles, Silverfish Pox Vacationing Home Owners Home owners planning to be away for awhile on a summer vacation trip should make a frontal attack on three insects—carpenter ants, carpet beetles and silverfish. This is the advice of Robert E. Beer, associate professor of entomology at KU. This summer Dr. Beer is the entomology specialist at the University of Michigan Biological Station near Pellston, Mich. Dr. Beer said the female carpenter ant is the troublemaker. It is twice as big as the half-inch male, which she kills after mating, and bores into wood. "Persons living in wooded areas and occupying homes made of natural timbers should be especially on the lookout for the carpenter ant," Dr. Beer said. Dr. Beer said that in summer many people get excited about carpet beetles. "The one eight inch long dull black or mottled brown beetles are especially fond of unattended carpets, cashmere sweaters, bearskin rugs, stuffed mooseheads, or any other animal fibers," he said. "Home owners gradually become aware of these critters when they return home from a vacation, turn on the vacuum cleaner, and suck half the carpet into the bag," Dr. Beer said. Silverfish are three-quarters o an inch long, each with three long tail-like filaments. Dr. Beer said that the body, covered with specialized hairs which resemble fish scales, is quite flattened and the insect looks like it has been stepped on. "The silverfish or fish moth, would walk many miles for library paste. In unattended houses they quickly eat book bindings and actually chew wallpaper right off the wall," Dr. Beer said. He suggests that DDT, sprayed in crevices and other areas, would hold in the attack against the little "monsters." A 12-lane double-deck suspension bridge to be constructed over the Narrows in New York Bay will be the longest in the world when completed in 1964. THE SHOW THAT ROCKED THE MET EXCLUSIVE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT EXCLUSIVE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT NOW EVERYONE CAN SEE IT! S. HUROK presents ULANOVA "The World's Greatest Ballerina"—Life And The Breathtaking BOLSHOI DANCERS in PROKOFIEV'S BALLET OF ROMEO AND JULIET The only complete film version! In color! Starts Tomorrow ROCKHILL Art Theatre NOW EVERYONE CAN SEE IT! Suzanne Adams, Cynthia Anstrom, David Armentrout, Janet S. Barer, Arthur S. Becker, Janet Beineke, David E. Bell, Walter H. Birkby, Daniel C. Broom, Gary M. Broom, William Brewer, James F. Brinkman, Mickey S. Brown, Jack K. Bruner, Edward E. Bush, Barbara Buster, Judith Calhan, Betty D. Campbell, Robert G. Campbell, Marilyn Carter, Mary-Lucille Carroll, Thomas H. Clark, James Keith Christensen, Margaret A. Clancy, Jack C. Clifford, Beverly J. Clutter, Carol L. Cobery. Bonnie Frederiksen, Vivian French, Carol Fuller, Johanna Gerber, Brenda Gosney, Robert Grantham, Judith Gray, Sharon Hagman, Mary Hamilton, Billy Brown, Jeffrey E. O'Connor, Richard Harris, John Harrison, John Harvey, James Heaton, Charlotte Heinlein, Paul Nensleigh, Cynthia Hester, Barbara Holm, Jon Holman, Fawn Booker, Joan E. Pritchard, Richard Jones, Kane, Kane, Louise Kimball, Carolyn Kreye, Karen Kukuk Edward Coleman, Jay M. Conner, Ada S. Cox, Roy Cozad, Barbara J. Craig, Yles J. Criss, Belva Dauber, Dorothy J. Criss, Joan Fogle, Patricia Datalia, Judith Earl, Mary S. Eggleston, Adun Eley, Else Morem, Jean Elston, Joan Elston, Joanna Featherston,INKleen, Fyde, Fiscu, John Fletcher, Sylvia Fogle, Nancy Ford, James G. Foreman. Students Pass English Exam The following students passed the English Proficiency Examination given June 20.1959: Douglas Kuper, Sandra Latimer, Sally L'Ecuyer, Arlene Leffler, Neon Leiker, Delano Lewis, Virginia Lewis, Maureen Lloyd, Cwan Logen, Elizabeth Longran, Suzanne Loveail, Newell Mason, Sharon Marshall, Kenneth Martinez, Karl Mason, Clifford Mauton, Peggy McCormack, Vv. Miliana LaFaum McMurry, John Meckes, Gerry Merritt, Walter Morgenstern, Flaine A. Moser. Richard Mountford, Karlyn Moyer, Cliff Mullen, William Mullens, Leonard Munker, H. Lee Myers, Loretta Nauman, Frank Naylor, Virginia Nellis, Susan Nelson, Bettie North, Gary Odaffer, Richard Oxandale, Damon Patton, Jane Perry, Earlene Feree, George Pletcher, Taylor Carter, Roger Prueff, Sara Punsley, Rollin Quinn, Gary Rankin, Marion Redstone, Brenda Reppert, Audrey Reynolds. Barbara Reynolds, Nancy Rhinehart, Melvin Rice, Sandra Rickards, Charles Roberman, Donna Schmidt, Milicent Sample, William Schmidt, Lucy Screechfield, Janet Scribner, Farrokh Shakrohi, Marilyn Sheaffer, Marilyn Shore, JoAnn Small, Robert Smith, Bill Smith, Norma Spresser, Joe Spurrier, Eugene Swanson, Kathryn Swenson, Claudine Talbott, Jane Tasker, James Taylor. ROCKHILL Art Theatrical Venue as do "...Vo.1-7039 Sara Tharp, William Toalson, Judith Todd, Nancy Topham, Mickey Todd, Andrew Traskett, John Vakas, Ramon Villareal, Marietta Warder, Celia Welch, Lynette Whitney, Dixie Woodring, Ruth Worley, William Wright, Carol Agher, Sara Yaeley. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Graduates Total 38% Of Summer Enrollment Graduate School enrollment in the University of Kansas summer session reached a new high of 1,258, or 38 per cent of the student body, Dean John H. Nelson reports. This represents a growth of 254 or 25.3 percent over the 1958 summer session. universities, colleges and junior colleges enrolling more than three-fourths of the nation's students were able to find fewer than 10,000 new full-time, well trained faculty members. The largest increase in graduate study came in education, up 31 per cent to 674. Gains in other departments averaged 16 per cent. Bull-Fighting Scenes Captured by Knudson The trend is "most encouraging," Dean Nelson said, "because graduate study creates almost the entire supply of new teachers for the colleges and universities and represents the principal means of improving the competence of teachers in the elementary and secondary schools." Graduate enrollment for the current summer session approximates fall semester figures of just two years ago. However it is short of the record all-time high of 1,411 last fall and 1,341 of the spring semester. Dean Nelson emphasized that the upward trend in graduate study should continue to be accelerated. One cannot disregard the demands of a growing science and technology, but let's look just at the needs of higher education. Last year those "Los Toros...Spain's Exciting Tradition," a full-page picture feature by Jerry Knudson, former instructor of journalism at KU, appeared Sunday in the Topeka Daily Capital. Knudson has been touring Europe this summer, and his letters have been appearing in the Summer Session Kansan. The last letters—from Switzerland and Italy—will be published Thursday. Read Kansan Classifieds TRY LEONARD'S Standard Service 706 W. 9th PIZZA SPECIAL. Begins Sunday, July 26 Ends Saturday, August 1 • 20% Off on everything • Good only inside and pick up Roberto's 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 Plenty of Parking in Rear Roberto's Tuesday, July 28, 1959 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 History,Babies,Safety Patrol Task Busy One From answering questions about Kansas history to pursuing criminals to delivering babies in cars at busy intersections—the highway patrolman has a unique job $ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $ When the current group of highway patrol recruits are graduated from a two-month school at the University of Kansas, they will be able to do these tasks plus a multitude of others which require skill, knowledge, bravery, physical agility and perhaps, above all, the ability to handle all types of people. "The school is held once or twice a year but rarely more often than that," said Capt. Allen Rush, director of training. "We usually have about 500 applicants from which to select 20 or so recruits." The State Legislature determines the expansion of the highway patrol. Basic requirements for the recruits are at least a high school education, age 22 to 34, minimum height 5 feet 10 inches, weight 165. They must pass a rigid driver's test, vision test and physical examination which includes reflex and agility tests. This is the second school which has required the applicants to pass a battery of psychological tests also. The recruits attend their first class of the day at 7:30 a.m., six days a week. They have Saturday afternoon and Sunday off, but the other five days their last class ends at 8:30 p.m., and then they must type their notes for the 10 hours of class that day. The school, which began July 13 and will end Sept. 20, is patterned after the FBI National Academy in Washington. D.C. More than 25 courses will be taught by the end of the school. They include a wide variety such as physical training, first aid (elementary and advanced), public speaking, Kansas history and geography (they must know every Kansas highway by heart as well as all historical spots and every milestone in Kansas history), auto theft investigation, chemical tests, courts and their jurisdiction, plaster casting and fingerprinting, photography, disaster operations, communications and radio procedure, driver's license examining and fire arms training, as well as other subjects. A new course initiated this year at KU for the first time in the Midwest is pursuit driving. Emphasis in the course will be placed on safety. In addition to learning to expertly maneuver their cars in both normal and unusual situations, the recruits will be taught how far to pursue a felon without endangering their own lives or lives of the public. "We are very enthused about this course," Capt. Rush said. "Pursuit driving is a skill that needs to be taught. It is necessary at times but not at the risk of lives of the public. The course has been taught in California and in the East but never in this part of the country. We will stress when to pursue and how far to go." Practicality and reality are the theme of the training school. A fake accident will be staged and the recruits will handle every step of the investigation through a mock court trial in the KU Law School court room in which they will participate. Paul E. Wilson, associate professor of law will be judge. Instructors for the school are experts in their fields. They include special agents of the FBI, department heads of the highway patrol, policemen, university professors, judges and other specialists. Atty. Gen. John Anderson will be a guest speaker on "Courts and Their Jurisdiction." "For the most part highway patrolmen are the citizens' representatives of Kansas to tourists," Capt. Rush said. "This is why the troopers have an extensive course in Kansas history and geography." Their history teacher is Nyle Miller, Topeka, executive secretary of the Kansas Historical Society. The importance of good human relations is stressed throughout the school. They are taught to be firm with offenders of the law but not arrogant. This often requires a maximum amount of patience and understanding. A true test of the recruit's patience will come during the two weeks of field service after completion of the school. They all will be put on duty directing traffic at the State Fair at Hutchinson. Missourian Receives Engineering Honor The appointment of Gael Noble Florea of Hopkins, Mo., as the first P. F. Walker Memorial scholar in engineering at the University of Kansas has been announced by Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards. He will receive $450. The late Mrs. Charlotte Walker left $10,000 to the University of Kansas to endow the award memorializing her husband. Perley F. Walker came to the University as professor of industrial engineering. He became acting dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture in 1913, filling that position until his death in 1927, except for World War I service in the Army Engineers, where he rose from major to full colonel. Before That Trip Better Stop in for a Checkup '51 Porsche Coupe $895 Vespa Scooters Dunlop Tires British Motors B 704 Vermont VI 3-8367 Soil Programs Are Broad Methods now in use to encourage wise use of the soil involve technical assistance, research and education, financial aids and incentives, regulatory programs, and direct action programs undertaken by particular governmental agencies. The methods which national, state, and local governmental agencies have adopted in programs of soil conservation in Kansas are on a broad scale, reports the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas. While government became concerned with soil conservation many years ago, the depression of the 1930's provided the impetus for greatly expanding and shaping the role of government in fostering conservation. The "dust bowl" dramatized the cumulative effect of years of neglecting the soil. Farmers became more receptive to new ideas, especially the idea of protecting and rehabilitating their land through conservation farming. In their distressed circumstances, the financial assistance and incentive payments available for application of soil conserving practices were doubly attractive to farmers. the remaining soil would be a menace. When the need was recognized much research and experimentation were required before mass application of conservation measures could be undertaken. Another impediment was that changing established cropping and production patterns involved considerable cost in the form of temporarily reduced income. Long established farming habits which were rooted in traditional attitudes toward land use and ownership presented an obstacle to development of the social responsibility which was necessary in order to prevent the depletion of the nation's soil resources. Prior to the depression years, there was little awareness that some day the unused supply of land would be exhausted and the depletion of Isern Scholarship Winner Is Named To break through these barriers required education, demonstration, direct assistance of various kinds, and in some cases, compulsion. On a broad scale, these things could be provided only through organized public action, in other words through governmental agencies, including the land-grant institutions of higher learning. The Isern scholarship is given annually to a graduate of Ellinwood Rural High who plans to attend the University of Kansas. The award comes from an annual gift to the KU Endowment Assn. by Mrs. Elwyn S. Shonyo of Ellinwood. The $500 Edward H. Isern scholarship at the University of Kansas for 1959-60 will be held by Leon Joseph Boor, a 1959 graduate of Ellinwood Rural High School. The selection of Boor, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Boor, Great Bend, was made by a University committee after screening nominations by Sam Stitt, principal at Ellinwood. The selection criteria are scholastic achievement, need, character, promise of future growth as a KU student, and active church membership. One reason zebus are used as news fillers instead of hippopotami is that zebu is easier to spell. MEN 11 and Women 14 --- Everybody appreciates the fine laundry and dry cleaning service at... LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-3711 APPROVED SAMITONE SERVICE "You'll Be Glad You Did" X Summer Session Kancan Page 6 Tuesday July 28, 1959 Rooks County Scholars Named The appointment of three high school graduates as Judge W. B. Ham scholars from Rooks County at the University of Kansas and the renewal of Ham awards to five Rooks County students already at KU are announced by Spencer E Martin, director of aids and awards Winning appointment on the basis of competitive examination among seniors nominated by county principals are Patricia Ann Darnell and Judith Merlene Wilkerson of Plainville and Roger Allen Mitchell of Stockton. Renewals go to LeAnne Hull, Woodston; Bert A. Taylor, Plainville; Gordon Craig McKinnis, Stockton; Patricia A. Glendening, Stockton, and Larry Bradford, Zurich. The range of Ham scholarships next year will be from $100 to $275, with most receiving $250 for the two-semmeter year. Judge W. B. Ham memorial scholarships for Rooks County residents attending the University of Kansas are supported by income from 750 acres of land near Stockton which was given by heirs of the late Judge Ham to the KU Endowment Assn. Miss Darnell, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Darnell, Plainville, will study business education at KU. She was co-editor of both the school yearbook and the newspaper, a member of the student council, an officer of the Future Homemakers and active in music and dramatic organizations. Miss Wilkerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merle E. Wilkerson, Plainville, plans to study journalism. She was co-editor of the yearbook and school paper, an officer of the Future Homemakers, on the student council and a member of several music organizations. Mitchell's parents are Mr. and Mrs Glenn F. Mitchell, Stockton, he being superintendent of schools there. In addition to the Ham scholarship, he has received a place in a men's scholarship hall. Mitchell will major in science at KU, probably in physics. He was delegate to the 1958 Sunflower Boys' State, earned three letters each in basketball and baseball, and one each in track and baseball. He was an organizer and later president of the school's Science Club. Camp Ends (Continued from Page 1) In the music section of the camp, the chorus was directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education. G. M. Carney, associate professor of music education, directed the orchestra, and Prof. Wiley conducted the band. 'Paddlewheel' Shot Set WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States plans to launch a "paddlewheel" satellite from Cape Canaveral, Fla., around Aug. 7 to test feasibility of using solar power to operate radio equipment aboard space probes to be fired later at the planet venus. Contrary to popular belief, the zebu did not originate in the newsroom of the Summer Session Kansan. AAA COLLEGE MOTEL AAA Member Best Western Motels On U.S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. to business district. 1703 WEST 6TH Kiley to Teach In Radio-TV Kenneth Kiley, a graduate of Stanford University, has been appointed an instructor in radio and television and a member of the University Committee on Radio and Television, it was announced today by Dr. Bruce A. Linton, chairman of the committee. The appointment was made jointly by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and the department of speech and drama. Kiley received his master's degree in radio and television from Stanford University in 1956 and then was recipient of a Fulbright award to study European theater at the Free University of Berlin. MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 At Stanford, Kiley has worked in various capacities at television stations KQED and KEYT and radio station KIST. For a year he was client service executive in the West Coast office of A.C. Nielsen, radio and television audience measurement company. Woolly Apple Aphid Guilty Don't blame the elm trees for "glomming" up your car windows, sidewalk and everything else near them. The real culprit, says a KU entomologist, is a wooly apple aphid. The deluge of syrupy substances that appears to fall from elm trees periodically during the growing season and which is at the season's maximum here now is oft called "elm juice" or "bug juice." Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming The wooly apple aphid means no harm to motorists or housewives, according to Earle A. Cross, KU entomology instructor, but merely is meeting a biological necessity for his existence. The woolly apple aphid alternates between elm and apple tree leaves. Right now he's busy on the elms but fortunately will soon move on to the apple trees in this area. The aphid sucks the sap from the elm leaves. The sap has a high sugar and low protein content, Cross explains. The aphid needs much protein and so must voraciously consume elm leaf sap to get enough. The female zebu does not pin up her hair at night. Journalism Gets New Instructor Appointment of Clarke Keys as instructor in reporting and photography was announced today by Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the University of Kansas. Mr. Keys, a graduate of the school in 1954, is a sports writer on the Topeka Daily Capital and also has been a reporter for the Lawrence Daily Journal-World. While in the Air Force he served as a pilot and did public information and photography work. As an undergraduate he was chairman of the University Daily Kansan Board and held several executive positions on the Kansan, including the managing editorship and editorial editorship. Hawaiian Election Drive Nears End HONOLULU—(UPI)—The greatest political campaign in Hawaiian history entered its final hours with the voters being cajoled by adjectives in nine languages and 12 dialects. Every conceivable means of communication has been used by candidates pounding down the stretch in the 50th state's first election. The traffic jam on television has been so heavy that movies which normally ran two hours with commercials have taken twice that time. And by tonight the voters will have elected two U.S. senators, one member of the House of Representatives, a governor and 62 members of a state legislature. Of the six candidates running for the House and Senate seats, three are oriental—two of which are heavily favored to win. ___ Seek Accord at Festival VIENNA —(UPI)— Two rival groups of American delegates to the Communist-run seventh World Youth Festival met again Monday to iron out differences that have kept a number of Americans out of the festival. Representatives of the New York and Chicago delegations met for several hours in an attempt to heal the rift that broke out Saturday night over accreditation and use of democratic methods inside the delegation. Save for the Future A SQUIRREL HOLDING A NUT It's just natural to save for the future. And when you do, we cordially invite you to use our friendly help. SAVINGS BOOK 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. 1ST FIRST Jewelry Delegates Convene Delegates to the second annual Jewelry and Silversmithing Workshop convened yesterday at KU for sessions to continue through Aug. 7. Sponsor is the KU Department of Institutes and Conferences. Two semester hours' credit will be given to those eligible in the course, John Pattinson, representative in charge of the program, reports. He said the conference will consist of more than discussion of theory, that students actually will design and carry out their projects. Robert Montgomery, KU instructor in design, will instruct the students in Bailey Hall annex. They will learn about techniques, processes and tools required in their respective crafts during the two-week session. Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes—Henry Thoreau LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Ends Wednesday Paul Newman Joanne Woodward in "THE LONG, HOT SUMMER" co-hit Lana Turner in "PEYTON PLACE" Starts Thursday "SAGA OF HEMP BROWN" "PARTY CRASHERS" ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Extra! FIGHT PICTURES! ! Johannson-Patterson Championship Fight ✩ SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Ends Wednesday Walt Disney's "PETER PAN" co-hit Patty McCormack in "KATHY O" Starts Thursday "BRAVADOS" ENCHANTED ISLAND" ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Ends Wednesday Sal Mineo, Christine Carere, Barry Coe, Barbara Eden, Gary Crosby, Terry Moore, Jim Backus in "A PRIVATE'S AFFAIR" --- CLASSIFIED ADS Tuesday. July 28,1959 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED — Error Free — Outstanding for neatness. Agnes Lungren 1345 Vermont. VI 3-993. 7-31 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rate. Immediate attention. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen. VI 3-2876. 7-31 TYPING: Fast. accurate. experienced. TYPING to campus. 717 Miss. Phone V-731 717 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Have electric type- general rates. Mrs. Tom Brady. VI 3-4281 TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses term papers, etc., typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-1831, 7360 Tenn. tfr EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, VI 3-1240. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard. call VI 3-5263. 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 stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for all purposes. Complete line of exotic fish and exotic plants. Stainless steel aquariums, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats: beds, toys, leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. PHONE VI 3-2921. Welcome. LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dances, air conditioned. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838 FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. KU BARBER SHOP—Flattop our speciality. Open all summer. Just off campus. two blocks down 14th Street. tf RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf WASHING AND IRONING. 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tf FOR RENT ROOMS FOR FALL SEMESTER. 1/9 block from! Union bldg. Two very spacious doub! rooms well furnished $20 and $30 assoc classmen. Call for appointment. VI 3:4696. 7-31 PREFER SENIORS or graduate students. Two nicely furnished rooms. Linens furnished. 839 Miss. Call VI 5-2009 between I and 2 p.m. and after 6. 7-31 TWO BEDROOM APT. Attractively furnished for 3 boys. Also three room apartment. Private entrance and bath in campus. Reasonable rate. Cali V 3-6896 7-31 FREE RENT APARTMENT. Would ex-change free rent of furnished apartment for yard work. August only. Phone VI 3-7655. 7-31 APARTMENT, attractively furnished, for one or two students. Private entrance. Very close to campus. Also very nice single room. Call VI 3-6696. 7-31 CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT, large rooms. large closets. Good refrigerator and stove. Married Good kitchen. Utilities paid. drinking. 520 Ohio. 1-731 NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. Private entrance and bath, air addition, two bedrooms, August 14th. Three room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, also phone. $5.00 per month. Available Aug. and phone. $13.50 per month. Available now. These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI S-7830 after 5 saturdays. APARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive, Boston, MA 02115 September Contact VI 3-1890. 7-31 TRANSPORTATION NEED A RIDE to Pittsburgh, Pa. on or about August 1. Contact Bruce Herman at KU 540, between 3:30 and 7:00 p.m. 7-31 RIDE WANTED TO NEW YORK. Leave about Aug. 15. Either one or both ways for two people. Share expenses. H. Kohl. Ext. 347. 7-28 SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $ _{2} $ price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf MISCELLANEOUS 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. FOR SALE HIGH-FIDELITY SYSTEM, including changer, amplifier, FM tuner, speaker, equipment cabinet, speaker enclosure, and record collection. Priced at approximately one-half replacement cost. Call VI 3-6303 after 6. 7-31 MOBILE HOME for sale. 1953. S2. Spartan in very good condition. Modern, al-ly located. Ideal for young couple or students. Steeps four. Call V7-21 0559 TRAVELO 23 FT. HOUSE TRAILER Good shape. See at Skylite Trailer Court; Lawrence, or inquire at BE 1-8278. Kansas City, Mo. 7-31 WANTED WANTED. Two Riders to Houston Texas, would be assigned 1, by way of 7-28. Dallas Call II - 3-1353 B WANTED. WOMAN RIDER to New York and vicinity. Leave after Summer session. Call VI 3-8720. 7-31 TWO RIDERS WANTED to Ft. Worth, Dallas or Houston—Call VI 3-2543, Harlan Watkins—Leaving August 1. 7-31 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 TEXACO T MADE 1948 Wheel Balancing Modern Equipment BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE THE CHANGE IN THE TERRESTRIAL LANDMARK Old Mission Inn "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 CHURCH OF THE NUNS Sell Your Used Books Thursday and Friday, July 30-31 We still need many titles for Fall Semester,1959. An off-campus buyer will be on hand to make you an offer on those titles we cannot buy. K Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28, 1959 Fleas Show Industry Of Courageous Danes Special to The Summer Session Kansan By Jerry Knudson (Editor's note: Jerry Knudson, former instructor of journalism, is touring Europe this summer. The following is the sixth of a series of letters.) COPENHAGEN, Denmark—In a curious way, the flea circus in the Tivoli Gardens here is a microcosm of Denmark itself. The industrious fleas pulled chariots many times their weight and size, played football, walked tightropes, and juggled balls. As I left the tent, I asked the young Danish barker, "Are these fleas unionized?" To which he responded, "No, but they sure stick together." And so do the Danes. These brave and courageous people harassed the Germans umerrically during the grim occupation days of World War II. By their stoic reticence, the Danes infuriated their conquerors. Winston Churchill speculated as to who had conquered whom. A spontaneous public strike erupted in Copenhagen during the summer of 1944. The Danish Council was formed in September 1940, after the small country capitulated on April 9, 1940. Young Danes were trained to parachute into Denmark. At that time the underground Danish Resistance Movement had few arms. Arms-dropping by parachute was first attempted in 1942. By the end of the war, there were 289 drop sites in Jutland, alone. Railroad sabotage was particularly effective, while the underground press successfully spit out a steady stream of resistance literature. The press organizations became recruiting centers from which the | | T | A | S | K | S | S | T | O | P | S | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | S | A | R | D | I | N | E | S | M | A | E | R | S | | C | L | E | A | N | U | P | M | A | T | I | N | E | E | | R | I | A | | S | T | O | Y | E | S | | O | P | E | | I | N | C | A | E | Y | E | S | S | D | R | O | P | | M | E | L | S | | S | A | T | L | E | A | S | E | | P | R | E | F | E | R | R | E | P | A | S | S | E | D | | | A | V | I | D | | R | A | K | E | | | | | S | P | U | R | I | O | U | S | H | A | R | E | M | S | | C | O | R | A | L | E | E | L | T | R | U | E | T | | E | T | A | S | | D | E | D | A | S | E | R | T | E | | N | A | N | 3 | L | A | N | D | E | R | M | I | O | | I | T | I | S | N | OT | D | A | I | L | I | E | S | | C | O | U | R | A | G | E | E | N | T | I | T | I | E | | | M | O | P | E | S | E | R | E | V | E | | | Resistance drew many of its best people, the English-language Scandinavian Times reported in a recent article. In Copenhagen today one may see mementoes of this valiant struggle in the Museum of the Danish Resistance Movement, opened in 1957. Elsewhere in Europe there are grim reminders of the world conflict touched off by a ruthless, little man in Germany. In Hamburg, immense bomb bunkers stand stark against the sky. Children fly kites near these massive concrete structures which have now been converted into apartment houses. One supports a television broadcasting antennae. Everywhere one runs across men missing arms or legs or eyes—the most pathetic reminders of world war. Crossing into Switzerland, one sees the concrete tank traps which formed Switzerland's "Maginot Line" and saved the tiny mountain country from German occupation. One of the world's unique breweries, the Carlsberg complex, is located in Copenhagen. All of the profits from this gigantic industry go into a philanthropic trust fund. The most photographed site in Copenhagen is the statue of "The Little Mermaid" basking on her rock in the harbor sunlight. Another sell-out tourist attraction is the changing of the guard at Amalienborg Palace. The brilliant blue-uniformed Royal Guards with immense fur-covered drum major's hats and rattling sabers click around the cobble-stoned square—a splendid show for young and old alike. The Danes are a serene people. Little old women sitting on benches in the Town Hall Square pull out huge cigars and puff them placially. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad The development and follow-up on a program of speech improvement for kindergarten and first grade children will be carried on at KU under a 3-year contract for $41,466 with the U.S. Office of Education. Miss Margaret Byrne, director of the speech and hearing clinic at KU and assistant professor of speech, is the project director. This will be the first large scale research on speech improvement programs in these two school levels. Previous studies have provided less than three pages of professional literature and have lacked continuity. Miss Byrne and Dr. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research, began work in this area two years ago with the Greater University Fund providing the "seed" money. Two pilot studies have been underway in the Lawrence public schools and were completed in May. Miss Byrne and the summer staff for the project are now preparing the syllabus for the initial program. During the first year of the study she will be assisted by two graduate assistants. Consultants on the project are Dr. Robert Ridgway, head of the elementary education program at KU; Dr. Seymour Rosenberg, experimental psychologist in the Bureau of Child Research; William McClelland, speech correctionist for the Lawrence school system, and Miss Jo Anne Simmons, speech correctionist in the Wichita public schools. This is the second research program at KU that the U.S. Office of Education has assumed sponsorship for this summer. Speech Program Receives $41,466 Getting Ready For That LONG TRIP HOME? Better get your car ready too – with a complete "TRIP-CHECK" from FRITZ CO. Downtown — Near Everything Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE The average Zebu has never tasted pizza. MISSION 2013 Still Seek Housing Bill He is Ralph Coldren, 38, a newspaperman with 14 years' experience. He succeeds Fred Wufekuhler, who has purchased controlling interest in the Paragould (Ark.) Daily Press. A former University of Kansas student and World War II veteran has been named night managing editor of the Hutchinson News. WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Senate Housing Chairman John Sparkman (D-Ala) says congressional leaders are determined to pass housing legislation this year, either by overturning President Eisenhower's veto or by drafting a new bill. Sparkman made the statement as his Senate housing subcommittee called Gov. David L. Lawrence of Pennsylvania and Mayors Richard J. Daley of Chicago and Frank A. Sedita of Buffalo to testify on Eisenhower's veto of the big Democratic housing measure. The production of pure, inbred strains of mice for cancer research will be continued at KU with support by a U.S. Public Health Service grant of $52,239. Mouse Production Gets Boost from $52,239 Grant Hutchinson News Names Ex-Student Production of the mice, used in cancer chemotherapy research, is under the supervision of Dr. John Weir, associate professor of zoology and director of the Mammalian Genetics Center at the University. The laboratory produces about 70,000 mice a year. Part of these mice are used for research done at the University, part are used for research conducted elsewhere by the National Cancer Institute. By September the research portion of the mammalian genetics program will be moved to the new Mammalian Genetics Center behind Snow Hall. Production of the mice will continue in the remodeled laboratory quarters under Memorial Stadium. Chemotherapy research requires an enormous supply of inbred mice. This demand is added to the already large demand for inbred mice from other fields of research. Kansan Want Ads Get Results The objectives of cancer chemotherapy are to test a wide variety of chemical compounds on pedigreed tumors which have been transplanted to the pure strains of mice. With both factors uniform the efficacy of the chemical compound in stopping or slowing down the tumor can be tested. 731 Mass. francis sporting goods Tennis Racket and Balls we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service 24 - 24 Hours a Day - Cool Air Conditioning - 40 Washers - 14 Dryers - Close to Campus TRY IT TODAY It's inexpensive—Only 20c to wash, 10c to dry Econ.o.wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST | 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE | 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. Econ o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 47th Year, No.15 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, July 30, 1959 KU Office Shuffling Is Prospect For Strong Hall A lot of reshuffling is due to take place soon in Strong Hall. The moving of the University of Kansas School of Business to the newly completed Summerfield Hall will mean that various offices and departments will be remodeled and changed around in Strong. According to George B. Smith, dean of the University, the office of the Graduate School will be moved into the old location of the School of Business in the west wing of the building. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will shift its offices to the south part of that wing on the second floor. Graduate School offices will be shared by Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor, and a seminar-conference room to be used by the Board of Regents when it meets here. The present College office will be occupied by the Public Relations staff and by James Gunn, assistant director of public relations. In the basement, rooms of the School of Business will be taken over by the history department, and the philosophy department will move into the old quarters of the history department in the west wing of the first floor. Vacancies created by the moving of the philosophy department will be used by visiting professors from time to time. The department of mathematics will move into remodeled seminar rooms in the east wing on the second floor. Maurice Barker, director of the Greater University Fund, will move into the office vacated by Public Relations. In Strong Hall Annex D, space being vacated by the secretarial training department will be used by graduate teaching assistants in mathematics and English. Annex A, formerly used by Business Research, will be divided, with half of the area going to the psychology department and half to the offices of Herman B. Chubb, professor emeritus of political science, and W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science, both of whom have been in the west wing of Strong Hall. Freighter, Steamer Collide off Cape Cod Dean Smith said he hopes the entire moving can be completed by next summer, but that the College and Graduate School offices probably will be moved by fall semester. BUZZARDS BAY, Mass.—(UPI)—A Norwegian freighter and the steamer Luckenbach collided in fog off Cape Cod Tuesday night, the Coast Guard reported Wednesday. The Luckenbach, with a crew of 48 or 49, suffered moderate damage to its bow, the Coast Guard said. The freighter Francisville reported it was "holed and flooded in the engine room." Room 8 in Strong, formerly the computation center of the School of Business, will provide added classroom space. Work is being carried out by Buildings and Grounds. The State Legislature has appropriated about $40,000 to be used for the location of offices vacated by the School of Business. Since July 1, all such improvement work exceeding $10,000 must be approved by the Legislature. History offices in Annex F will be replaced by offices for junior staff members. No loss of life was reported. The Luckenbach had just passed through the Cape Cod canal en route from Boston to West Coast ports with general cargo when the collision occurred near Hens and Chickens Buoy in Buzzards Bay. Summer Session Nears End; August Has Busy Schedule TOMMY BROWN CRAM TIME—Students take advantage of the cool Hawk's Nest to do last minute final studying. Pictured are Barbara Boley, Kansas City, Mo., Sara Anderson, Kirkwood, Mo., and Fran Schryver, Kansas City, Mo. All are seniors. Ike Gives Qualified OK To Labor Reform Bill WASHINGTON — (UPI)—President Eisenhower Wednesday gave his qualified blessing to a substitute labor reform bill unveiled in the House this week. He told a news conference that the measure, sponsored by Reps. Phil A. Landrum (D-Ga) and Robert F. Griffin (R-Mich), came much closer to his ideas for dealing with union corruption than the Senate Bill and one approved by the House Labor Committee. He does not think that Russian missile superiority gives the Soviet Union an advantage at Geneva. He noted the United States fired an intercontinental missile Tuesday night and that this nation also has other means and methods which fully counter-balance Soviet The President said he thought the new legislation went far toward correcting the evils exposed by the Senate rackets investigation. He said he had not studied all of the bill but had been advised it would come a long way closer to carrying out his recommendations than other measures. On other topics which came up at his news conference, the President said: The Landrum-Griffin bill carries stricter curbs on secondary boycotts and organizational picketing in line with administration recommendations. He would not comment on whether the record-breaking profit reported by the United States Steel Corp. Tuesday for the first half of 1959 should permit a wage increase without a price increase. He said he repeatedly had answered such questions by saying he would not discuss such subjects during negotiations lest he appear to be favoring one side or the other. strength during the transition from conventional weapons to long-range missiles. The House-approved reduction in the foreign aid appropriation, cutting more than 700 million dollars from his original program, would seriously damage the U.S. position in the world. But he said he was hopeful that the Senate would restore much of the money chopped out by the House. —He has not yet decided whether to veto the TVA self-financing bill, but he wishes the measure had been passed by Congress without a provision freeing TVA from budget control by the administration. —He is gratified that some of the winners in the Hawaiian election are of Asian extraction and believes the result is a very fine example of democracy at work. With the departure of the Band Campers and the advent of finals, the KU campus took on a topsy-turvy aspect during this last week of school. Vice President Praised by Ike WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Eisenhower said yesterday Vice President Richard M. Nixon has acquitted himself splendidly on his tour of the Soviet Union but that only time will tell whether tensions will be reduced as a result of the visit. Eisenhower said Nixon was not authorized to invite Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to visit this country. He ducked a question as to whether a Khrushchev visit could result from Nixon's trip. Reporters accompanying Nixon on the trip have written that they considered it almost certain the Vice President would suggest a visit to the United States by Khrushchev when Nixon returns to Washington. There has been no official announcement of this, however. On other aspects of Soviet-American affairs, the President said he is not ready to say that the Geneva conference of foreign ministers should end because of a stalemate between the East and West. But he volunteered that there still has been no progress that would justify a summit conference. Eisenhower made it clear he believes the Geneva conference should be recessed, if necessary, to permit Secretary of State Christian A. Herter to attend a meeting beginning Aug. 12 in Santiago, Chile, of the foreign ministers of this hemisphere. The President said he believes all could agree that Nixon has acquitted himself splendidly on the Soviet trip. He said this is what you would expect from a man in such a high office of government. Crowd Greets Nixon in Urals SVERDLOVSK, U.S.S.R.—(UPI)—Vice President Richard M. Nixon flew into this industrial city of the Urals Wednesday after another of his rough and tumble debates with Russian hecklers. His greeting here was warm and friendly, as it was on arrival and departure from the western Siberian city of Novosibirsk. But the warmth ran somewhat cold when Nixon was subjected to some tough give-and-take by three men in Novosibirsk before he left there Wednesday morning. The three men identified themselves as workers, but their technique and questions reflected the well-indoctrinated Communist Party adherent. The first and most vigorous exchange came when Nixon visited the dam on the Ob river. There, he took on a fanatical 30-year-old man named Grigori Fedorovitch Belausov, who identified himself as an electrician at the Novosibirsk hydroelectric station. Belausov challenged American foreign policy, demanded to know why the United States had military bases in many countries outside its borders, at times shouted directly into Nixon's face, repeatedly interrupted the vice president, and spoke with such vigor that some of his colleagues had to calm him down. The normally bustling morning crowds of college students, campers and various conference attenders disappeared. Faces on the once busy sidewalks are few and far between. Instead, the once half-deserted afternoons became the scene of rushing students who braved the afternoon heat in search of knowledge in preparation for the final exams which end tomorrow. By Monday morning the campus will be deserted by the 3,262 students who participated in the Summer Session academic pursuits. As the students leave, many offices over the campus will close until the start of fall semester. However, in what seems to have become the newest tradition at KU, building projects on the ever-widening campus will continue. Newest of the projects is an extensive remodeling and relocation project in Strong Hall. Final touches to rooms in the west wing and various other sections of Strong Hall will supply the climax to the recent move of the School of Business to Summerfield Hall. While the campus will see the end of the 1958-59 school year for the regular student body, a cosmopolitan group of students will just be getting studies under way. A group of 60 students from over the world will be attending the Foreign Student Orientation Center under the direction of Dr. J. A. Burzle, professor of German. The students are here to get a look at the American way of life before going to other colleges and universities throughout the nation. The program will continue until Sept. 3. Also on the schedule for August are an English workshop, Credit Union League, Advanced Drivers Education, Advanced Cosmetologist's Conference, Water and Sewage program and an Acacia fraternity conference. The Highway Patrol school, which will continue through Sept. 3; the Employment Counseling program which will conclude Aug. 21; the Jewelry and Silversmithing workshop which will end Aug. 7. Other activities going on during the "deserted" month of August are: Orientation begins Sept. 14 as entering freshmen come to the campus three days early to take placement exams, physical checkups, and to acquaint themselves with faculty advisers and the campus in general. The campus will come "back" to life with September's fraternity and sorority rushing programs, followed by the orientation program for the fall semester. The campus will be back into full swing by Sept. 17 as an estimated record number of students start standing in lines for the seemingly endless process of registration and enrollment, which will conclude Sept. 19. On Sept. 21 the circle will come full and a new school year will get underway with all its associated complexities, but minus the summer heat. Cool Front in West; Rain Likely in State TOPEKA —(UPI)— A cool front moved into the northwest part of the state Wednesday, forcing temperatures down in that area. The U.S. Weather Bureau said the clash of warm air with cool air would make conditions favorable for thunderstorms. Temperatures in the east were not expected to plunge. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Thursday, July 30, 1959 Summer Mistake (Edifor's note: The following article was found on a crumpled piece of paper in the corner of the newsroom. KU readers might appreciate the careless abandon with which the anonymous author practiced his typing.) At the close of a session, the traditional "goodbye" editorial appears in the Kansan. No college newspaper would be worth its proverbial salt without such an editorial. Not wishing to create a last-minute furor on campus, nor bring the wrath of the readership upon my head, I will present the expected editorial. How now, brown cow, asdfghikl: 234567890 How now, brown cow, assignedjk12 234567890 First, let me speak to those who declare that the summer has been a complete loss. All is not lost. After all, your car has a protective coat of aphid juice from the elm trees. Now is the time for all goo men to come to the aid of this writer, qwertyuip⁴/4. News ran rampant on the campus with the Kansan printing 574 inches of book reviews. Literacy will not die. In the same scholarly vein, 15.7 per cent (a record low) of you who took the English proficiency examination this summer failed. College wardrobe costs are lower in the summer. Merchants report that the demands for sweaters and parkas during the summer decrease significantly, boy is summer ever dull... 11...11 and hot toooo For the young at heart: (1) playground equipment in Fowler Grove east of Robinson Gymnasium, (2) bubble baths in the Chi Omega fountain, (3) Campanile Drive, and (4) zebu fillers. Bread, milk, tomatooooes, toothpaste, pick up clothes at laundry. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy zebu. rrrrrr i think it8s time to get the typewriter cleaned, the in on and of in off. Regular session students miss the cozy warmth of research rooms in Watson Library. The thermometers in the Kansas, education, card catalogue, and reference rooms and the stacks read 86 degrees plus, on a recent afternoon. On the other extreme, the temperature in the Kansas Union was 61 degrees, and persons taking the Western Civilization examination in Bailey Auditorium Saturday caught head colds. (The linotype operator assumes no responsibility for this journalistic masterpiece.) Hear Ye, Hear Ye Calmly we sit down in class. And prepare to take notes so we can pass. The instructor is ready, and so are we To absorb knowledge in exchange for a fee When what to our wondering ears does appear? The racket of saws, the clatter of boards Are all a part of the NOISE in hoardes. Chattering voices, a rumbling truck Education in any form is out of luck. The sound of jackhammers is what we hear. Tis summertime, and as the general rule, "Buildings and Grounds" are repairing the school. Daily Crossword Puzzle -J.J. ACROSS 1 Trades. 6 Source of bubbles. 9 Call to a bellhop. 14 Lone Ranger's companion. 15 Wartime agency. 16 Ancient Egyptian city. 17 Musical instrument 18 __ Aviv. 19 Good terms. 20 Poem. 21 Gay social gathering: Slang. 24 __ Moines. 25 Well-known war correspondent. 27 Mountain range. 28 Nuisance. 29 Civil War group. 31 Overlay a role. 33 Change for the better. 36 Fine in texture. 38 Demonstration of public approval. 42 Freight train: Slang. 43 Pacific islands. 45 Sleuth. 46 Shore bird. 47 Wayside hotel. 48 Sudden wave of prosperity. 51 Type of modern band: Slang. 53 Balkan. 57 Ripple sound. 58 Fearless. 60 Volume: Abbr. 61 Mowgli's wolf friend. 63 Spire final. 64 Greek letter. 66 Symbol of agriculture. 67 Fragment. 62 f-faced god. 67 Playing card. 69 Heavenly being. 70 School organization. 75 Descendants. 76 Arrived: 2 words. 77 Placed in a vertical position. 78 Sea sickness. 79 Banner. 10 Demon fought by Carrie Nation. 11 Gaseous compound. 12 Commercial papers. 13 Rendezvous. 22 Benjamin Frank- In invented one, 23 Lighthouse keepers' problem. 25 Self-conceit. 28 Jellying properties of certain fruits. 30 Follower of a Greek theologian. 32 Powerful person. 33 Gypsy. 34 Stowe heroine. 35 Distant. 37 One's entire assets. 38 Piece of connective pipe. 39 Commit a faux pas. 41 The Little Corporal. 44 Bush leaguer. 48 Inky. 49 "The Old __ Bucket." 50 Cesare Siepi's forte. 52 Taunts. 54 Straightens. 55 Prankster. 56 Trumpet sound. 58 Flower holder. 59 Japanese general and premier. 62 Book of the Bible: Abbr. 65 Player on a team. 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 Swans Are River Hazard WASHINGTON — British shipping, which has had to contend with everything from the Spanish Armada to Nazi submarines, faces a new and unlikely threat-swans. Britain's swan population has grown rapidly in recent years. The graceful birds are impeding river traffic so seriously that the Corporation of Stratford-on-Avon, in Shakespeare's birthplace, has decided to deport about half the local swans to quieter streams. Swans at Stratford swarm about the banks to get handouts of bread and cake from visitors. Pilots of motor launches that take tourists on river cruises must battle the swans for berths. Swans further disturb the peace at Stratford by staging mass take-offs that churn up long stretches of water and threaten to overturn punts and canoes. The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals will investigate applicants for surplus swans to determine whether they can offer the birds all the comforts of Stratford. Despite such behavior, swans are much loved in England, and great pains are taken to assure their welfare. The great secret, Eliza, is not having bad manners or good manners or any other particular sort of manners, but having the same manner for all human souls: in short, behaving as if you were in Heaven, where there are no third-class carriages, and one soul is as good as another. — "Pygmalion," G. B. Shaw A nap, my friend, is a brief period of sleep which overtakes super-annuated persons when they endeavor to entertain unwelcome visitors or to listen to scientific lectures. —G. B. Shaw Daily Hansan (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editor Janet Juneau Associate Editor Ray Miller BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager 378 Business Manager Bill Kane the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THE GOD THAT FAILED, edited by Richard Grossman. Bantam, 50 cents. Here is a brilliant anti-Communist tract that appeared first in 1950, the year in which the late Senator McCarthy was getting his start. But it is no McCarthy-type tract. Rather, it should accompany those works which suggest that some kind of moratorium should be declared for those persons who became enchanted with Communism in an earlier period, and later left the party. Six great writers—two of them American, one French, one Italian, one British, and one German—tell how they became Communists, or how they flirted with communism, or why they left the party. But not one suggests that association with communism, per se, is bad. Three of them were drawn into active party participation; three, more or less, worshipped from afar. Here are brief quotes summarizing their position, or their reasons for becoming interested in communism, or why they left the cause, which to all was essentially a religion—hence the title: Arthur Koestler—"I served the Communist Party for seven years—the same length of time as Jacob tended Laban's sheep to win Rachel, his daughter. When the time was up, the bride was led into his dark tent; only the next morning did he discover that his ardors had been spent not on the lovely Rachel but on the ugly Leah. I wonder whether he ever recovered from the shock of having slept with an illusion..." Ignazio Silone—“...my faith in Socialism...has remained more alive than ever in me. In its essence, it has gone back to what it was when I first revolted against the old social order; a refusal to admit the existence of destiny, an extension of the ethical impulse from the restricted individual and family sphere to the whole domain of human activity, a need for effective brotherhood, an affirmation of the superiority of the human person over all the economic and social mechanisms which oppress him.” Richard Wright—"I found myself arguing alone against the majority opinion, and then I made still another amazing discovery. I saw that even those who agreed with me would not support me. At that meeting I learned that when a man was informed of the wish of the Party he submitted, even though he knew with all the strength of his brain that the wish was not a wise one, was one that would ultimately harm the Party's interests." Andre Gide—"One painter whom I met in Russia told me that subtlety and originality were no longer what the country wanted, not what was now needed. He said that an opera was no use to the workers if, on leaving the theater, there were no tunes that they could whistle. What was now needed, he insisted, were works which could be immediately apprehended and understood...He admitted that even Beethoven would have found it impossible, in the Soviet Union, to make a come-back after initial failure." Louis Fischer—"I believed that a temporary suspension of freedom would enable the Soviet regime to make rapid economic strides and then restore the freedom. It has not happened. The Soviet dictatorship has been barren of groceries because it has been barren of liberties. There can be no material security of economic democracy without political democracy." Stephen Spender—"I have listened to a Communist poet explaining to a Hampstead Literary Society on the occasion of a Keats anniversary that, although Keats was no Marxist, we could at least claim that in being the son of an ostler, and ill with consumption which the State did not attend to, he had the merit of being a victim of capitalism." MUSIC AND IMAGINATION, by Aaron Copland. Mentor, 50 cents. Here are the Charles Eliot Norton lectures given at Harvard in 1951-52 by Aaron Copland, considered by many to be America's greatest living composer. They eloquently set forth the problems and concepts of the musician—particularly the composer—in 20th century industrial America. "One of the primary problems for the composer in an industrial society like that of America is to achieve integration," he writes, "to find justification for the life of art in the life about him. I must believe in the ultimate good of the world and of life as I live it in order to create a work of art. Negative emotions cannot produce art; positive emotions bespeak an emotion about something." Copland, whose compositions include the ballet music for "Rodeo" and "Billy the Kid" and "Appalachian Spring," writes about the listener, about concerts which emphasize only the 19th century romantic classicists. He speaks fluently of sound, of oriental music, of the work of such persons as Varese, Ives, Thompson and Schoenberg in the field of sound. Berlioz he gives credit for the "mixing of colors" to create the modern orchestra. Schoenberg is the pioneer in the 12-tone scale, which still has not achieved full acceptance in our society. Especially amusing are Copland's comments on criticism. "The late Paul Rosenfeld," he says, "once wrote that he saw the steel frames of skyscrapers in my Piano Variations. I like to think that the characterization was apt, but I must confess that the notion of skyscrapers was not at all in my mind..." Dictators ride to and fro upon tigers which they dare not dismount. And the tigers are getting hungry."—Sir Winston Churchill The Constitution does not provide for first and second class citizens.—Wendell L. Willkie Page 3 BOOKS By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THE LIVELIEST ART, by Arthur Knight. Mentor, 50 cents. There seem to be two kinds of histories of the movies. One is the gushy sort of thing which devotes most of its attention to Garbo, Mary Pickford, Valentino, and even Tab Hunter—gossipy, inexact, as perceptive as if Louella Parsons had written it. The other is technical, a book about directors, dwelling almost exclusively on "the film as art," isolating it from its social context. Arthur Knight, the film critic of the Saturday Review, has tried to write a serious history of the movies that does not ignore social implications. For the most part he has not succeeded. His book, up to 1939, is a rewrite of Lewis Jacobs' "The Rise of the American Film." From then on it is almost entirely in the Jacobs vein—a book about "the film as art." It would be a shallow person indeed who insisted that a history of the movies should not spend considerable time on "The Birth of a Nation," "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari," and "Greed." These are the landmarks; from such pictures have been drawn the substance of films of today. But equally persuasive to many have been the pure boxoffice films," Hell's Angels," "Mutiny on the Bounty," "The Thin Man," and "Gone with the Wind." In this paperback reprint of a 1957 book, which Knight has revised to include a few very recent films, may be found the familiar story of the early silent pictures—George Melies, Edwin S. Porter of "The Great Train Robbery," Griffith, Mack Sennett, Chaplin. There is little new here. Nor is the story of the 1920s new. The story of the rebellious Erich von Stroheim is a little tiresome. We'll admit it—he was a giant. But that kind of expensive genius can bankrupt any industry, and Knight's admiration for him and his wastefulness is provoking. There is also the story of developments abroad, from Eisenstein and "Potemkin" in the twenties to the Japanese and "Gate of Hell." This is a valuable section, although Knight has spent a little too much time on the propaganda films the Germans and Italians were grinding out for Hitler and Mussolini in the 1930s. "The Liveliest Art," is, however, another good source book for students of the film. But Knight fails to realize that the historica films, the westerns, the sea stories of the late 1930s, and since, have been more than escapist, that they have been affirmations of people who have evidenced a genuine interest in, and concern for, the past "Stagecoach" was an epocal Western, but it also was of historical importance, made, like "Gone with the Wind," in a time when America was tottering on the edge of war, when Americans were looking for positive values in a world falling about them. THEY CAME TO CORDURA, by Glendon Swarthout. Signet, 50 cents. This is a revolting, sickening book. One puts it down with a feeling of shock, of revulsion. Probably it is honest; certainly it attempts to be realistic. But it is based upon false premises, and it stretches credulity to the breaking point. It deals with a major, during the 1916 campaign against Pancho Villa, who, after showing cowardice himself, is given the assignment of taking a woman prisoner and five Congressional Medal of Honor winners out of action, to a city some distance away, so that they may be given recognition. Five winners out of one campaign—a lieutenant, one of those to be recognized, makes the point when he says this is incredible, that there could not be five. All five are venal, or villainous, or vicious. None of the five wants the award. Only the major, who reveals that he has more courage than any of the others, has sparks of decency. Only the major does not come through alive. BLUE DENIM, by James Leo Herlihy and William Noble. Bantam, 35 cents. The problems of teenagers—in fact, teenagers themselves, at least in novels, in movies, on broadway and on television—are becoming a bit tiresome. Anyone could tell from this title that "Blue Denim" is about teenagers; blue denim is the teenage badge, the symbol. This is a play that lasted a short time on Broadway but is likely to have wide audiences in movie theaters this summer, for "Blue Denim" is now a film. Our special concern here is a boy of 15, shut out by parents (naturally), in silent rebellion (what else?), who fathers the child of a next door girl (they are in love), makes it possible for her to have an abortion (he has a wise friend who knows about such things), and sits down with dad in the last act to have a talk about things (which our hero obviously knows about). Sweeping social significance, obviously. Let us pray that the text of this play will prove completely mystifying to readers of 50 years hence.—CMP CITIZEN TOM PAINE, by Howard Fast. Bantam Classics, 50 cents. Back in 1943, before Howard Fast had become known as (1) a pretty fuzzy native Communist, or, (2) a vocal anti-Communist, this vastly entertaining biography of Tom Paine appeared. So popular did it become that it acquired status even in the Modern Library, and Fast became a kind of popular expert on the great propagandist of the American Revolution. "Citizen Tom Paine" has new status, in the Bantam Classics series. Though a historical novel, it likely will tell the story of Tom Paine better than many works of more substantial nature. It is fast-moving, propaganda-loaded, and worth reading. Paine to some still might be, as Theodore Roosevelt said, "a dirty little atheist," but he was a great and persuasive writer who helped to shape the revolution, and histories will continue to accord him space alongside Jefferson and Sam Adams, unless the revisionists decide in a few years that Paine's role in the Revolution, after all, was a meager one.—CMP 4 to Participate At AEJ Session Four members of the faculty of the William Allen White School of Journalism will participate in sessions of the annual convention of the Association for Education in Journalism at Eugene, Ore., Aug. 25-29. Dean Burton W. Marvin will appear on a panel of journalism administrators. As chairman of the accrediting committee of the American Council on Education for Journalism he will report to AEJ on the accreditation program. He also will preside at a meeting of the accrediting committee Aug. 25 and will represent the School of Journalism at the annual meeting of the American Assn. of Schools and Departments of Journalism. Calder M. Pickett, associate professor of journalism, will present a paper in the historical research session on the impact of technology upon six New York newspapers. George Link, assistant professor of journalism, will present a paper on findings of a survey of education for advertising made by him and James E. Dykes, associate professor. Elmer F, Beth, professor of journalism, will make annual reports in his capacity as secretary-treasurer of both AEJ and AASDJ. Speakers at the convention will include Allan Nevins, historian and retired professor of history at Columbia University; Sen. Richard Neuberger (D-Ore), and Dr. Frank Stanton, president of the Columbia Broadcasting System. Thursday. July 30,1950 Summer Session Kansan Weekly Newspapers Of Payton Are Sold The Citizen Publishing Co., which publishes weekly newspapers at Overbrook, Carbondale and Scranton, has been sold to Frank Boyd of Topeka, former newspaperman and printer. Boyd will assume ownership Aug. 1. The company has been owned by Dwight Payton, president of the William Allen White Foundation. Mr. Payton recently became an editorial writer on the Oklahoma City Daily Oklahoma. His son, Marick Payton, has been operating the newspapers since May 1. The Paytons took over the Overbrook Citizen in 1941. A zebu has never been known to run across a lawn screaming, "Look mom, no cavities." MacRaes in Rehearsal For 'Bells Are Ringing' The biggest stars in Starlight Theatre history, Gordon and Sheila MacRae, are in rehearsal this week at the outdoor theater for the opening Monday, Aug. 3 of their 2-week stand in "Bells Are Ringing." The MacRaes will be making their first musical comedy appearance in the nation in the hilarious musical that ran three years on Broadway. It concerns the antics of a befuddled young lady at a telephone answering service who becomes personally involved in the problems of her clients. Sheila MacRae takes the role of the telephone operator and Gordon MacRae portrays a playwright who lacks confidence in his ability. MacRae has been at the top of the motion picture and recording industries for the past 10 years. His movies with Doris Day grossed millions of dollars, and his starring roles of Curly in the cinemascope version of "Oklahoma!" and Billy Bigelow in "Carousel" were top box office attractions. His albums of the sound track have been great sellers. Sheila MaeRae is a bouncy, blonde. former actress and comedienne who retired shortly after her marriage to take over the household chores. Recently the two decided to team up for night club engagements, and their act has been touted as one of the best in the field. A New York critic saw their performance at one of the plush supper clubs there and called them "the greatest team to hit New York since the Yankees!" The theater has made the highest percentage contract with the MacRae of any stars appearing there during the nine-year life of the outdoor theater. It was one of the smartest moves they've made, in the opinion of producer Richard H. Berger. The opening night performance Aug. 3, has been sold out for several days. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Kingston Trio at Large on LP BELL'S PIZZA SPECIAL. Begins Sunday, July 26 Ends Saturday, August 1 ● 20% Off on everything ● Good only inside and pick up Roberto's 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 Plenty of Parking in Rear Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Thursday, July 30, 1959 LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS RECORDS OFFICE GRADES FALL TEAM BOLT FO BICKER, ELEMONTANIAN "I'm gonna have a 'snap' next semester—looks like I'll be taking the same courses I had this summer. Ze Dress Above Ze Knee, That's Ze Word from Paris PARIS—(UPI)—Skirts must be lifted above the knee, Dior designer Yves Mathieu Saint-Laurent decreed yesterday in an exclusive interview that blew the lid off the current Paris fall fashion season. The brilliant, young, 23-year-old designer's interview with UPI came less than 24 hours before he presents his fall collections. His word on shorter skirts flew smack against the lengthening hemlines that other designers have been showing all week in this world fashion capital. But audacity is a Dior tradition. The late, great Christian Dior made his name in 1947 with a "new look" that lengthened hemlines while all the other fashion houses were hiking them. The world followed Dior—and has ever since. Now Saint-Laurent—who took over brilliantly after Dior's death two years ago—has made his bid to equal the master's major stroke of a dozen years ago. "La jupe sera au dessus des genoix." Saint-Laurent told UPI. In plain English that meant, "The skirt will be above the knees." Whether the fashion world would follow him was a gamble. But gambling—and winning—is also a Dior tradition, backed up by a world fashion empire and the fortune of French textile magnate Marcel Boussac. Dior has branches in Europe, the United States, South America and the Far East. "The secret of my silhouette is in the skirt and the way it is worked,' Saint-Laurent said. But he was shooting the works. Just about everything else about the Dior line will be different from what the other designers are doing, Saint-Laurent said. Suit jackets will be short (those of others are longer this season). Shoulders will be narrow (the rest of the fashion pack has broadened them). Collars will be small (hardly a Paris dressmaker has failed to feature the broad collars this week). Fabrics will be soft and supple (others are stiff). Colors will be bright and sharply contrasted (other designers are using muted colors that blend together). Necklaces will ride high on the neck (others keep jewelry well away from the face). Party Has Votes Democrat Asserts EL DORADO, Kan. — (UPI) — Democrats have the votes even though Republicans may have the money, State Treasurer George Hart, a Democrat, says. Speaking at the Kansas Democratic picnic, Hart said, "I said it before and I'll say it again. I am proud to be a Democrat and we Democrats might not have much money, since it looks like the Republicans have all the money, but we do have the votes." 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 The KU study is not directed at solving any particular problem but low temperature applications are becoming increasingly important in space technology and in electronic installations. The graduate assistants and staff for the project have not yet been named. 9:00 A.M. UNTIL 5:00 P.M. Open Evenings By Appointment Dr. Kurata and assistants will study materials such as liquid hydrogen and liquid helium, which will involve temperatures as low as minus 455 degrees Fahrenheit. The National Science Foundation has granted $7,400 in order that Dr. Wilson can complete the study. Dr. Kurata holds the B.S. degree from the California Institute of Technology and the master's and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan. He has been a member of the KU faculty since 1947. Grant to Support Study of Dinosaurs Is Research on Gas Subject of KU Grant The National Science Foundation will support basic research at the University of Kansas on phase and volumetric behavior of normally gaseous materials at extremely low temperatures with a two-year grant of $54,000. Dr. Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering, is the project director. Set Hall of Fame Drives Jerry Waugh is the low medalist in a summer session golf tournament organized by the School of Education with a 77 for 18 holes. Charles Oldfather won second in a playoff with Eskil Anderson. Other medalists were Richard Schiefelbusch, Keither Anderson and James Seaver tied for fifth and Spencer Martin. Arthur K. Heitholt topped the handicap division with Eskil Anderson second. Following were Jerry Waugh, William J. York, Walter Mikols, Floyd Temple and Charles Oldfather. GREAT BEND, Kan.—(UPI) The state campaign to raise money for the Agriculture Hall of Fame has been detailed for Kansas chairmen. J. A. Mermis Jr., Kansas chairman for the nationwide campaign, told the 12 state district directors to organize county fund-raising drives middle Paleocene that consists of more than jaws. These Paleocene mammals, appearing at the threshold of the Cenozoic (Age of Mammals), are the subject of a study directed by Dr. Robert Wilson, associate professor of zoology at the University of Kansas and associate curator in vertebrate paleontology at the Museum of Natural History. Jerry Waugh Is First In Golf Tournament "The vanishing dinosaurs left large areas unoccupied and the mamals which then were no larger than house cats began to develop and expand," Dr. Wilson said. When dinosaurs began disappearing from the earth 70 million years ago the existing small mammals began to grow and spread over the land. "The Paleocene mammals' strategic position in time frequently makes possible the solution of problems in mammalian classification which would otherwise remain obscure," he said. Speedy After Two Whiskeys Field parties from KU under the direction of Dr. Wilson have obtained more than 500 identifiable specimens of the period from the San Juan Basin in New Mexico. The collection, which is one of the six largest of Paleocene mammals in the world, contains 350 specimens from the Kutz Canyon representing more than 25 species of mammals. The collection contains the only specimen of a primate as old as LONDON—(UPI)—Three volunteer motorists went through a road safety program on BBC television Tuesday to prove that alcohol slows up reactions, but they didn't react very well. The average time it took them to cover a specially selected obstacle-strewn course before imbibing was 43 seconds. After two large whiskies each, the demonstrators clocked in at the average time of 39 seconds. WHO AM I? A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy His Sliderule Lost, A Student Beseeching— I'll Help Him Out, With a Search Far-Reaching! For a sure, quick, inexpensive method to reach the KU market, put the Mighty Midget—classified ad to work for you—buying—selling—hiring—renting—finding. The little man with the powerful punch that can carry your message to 6,000 readers weekly. For further information telephone KU 376 Summer Session Kansan A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy S Summer Session Kansan --- Summer Session Kansam Page 5 [Image of a flat, sandy area with several workers and machinery.] surfacing with asphaltic concrete. The work is being done under a state contract. Exact date of completion is undetermined. NEAR COMPLETION—A parking lot located between Hoch Auditorium and Marvin Hall is receiving finishing touches in preparation for New Senator Hopes to Visit Ancestral China HONOLULU —(UII)— Hawaii's Hiram L. Fong, the first U. S. senator of Chinese parentage, is a 52-year-old millionaire lawyer-businessman who once shined shoes and sold newspapers to help feed his family. Thursday, July 30, 1959 The Republican senator said Wednesday upon his election that he would welcome a chance to visit Communist China, the site of his ancestral home. tion, Finance Factors, Ltd., said. "As a senator, I must always give everything a scientific approach and to get a scientific approach I must be informed and to be informed I must go and see," the president of the 17-million-dollar loan corpora- The new senator's political career includes 14 years in Hawaii's territorial legislature, six as House speaker, and four as vice speaker. An ex-Army major, he also was judge advocate of the 7th fighter group of the 7th Air Force. Officer Tickets Mayor's Car CHICAGO — (UPI) — Detective Jack Muller, the champion ticket writer on the Chicago Police Department, went as far up the city ladder as he could go, ticketing the Cadillac limousine of Mayor Richard Daley. "I'm only doing my duty," said Muller, the scourge of the privileged parker. Muller, who's been transferred to a far North Side district, was in the Loop Tuesday to appear as a complaining witness against tavern owners who sell peanuts without a food license. He walked out of court and spied the mayor's air conditioned limousine in front of City Hall. The mayor's embarrassed driver dashed out of the building as Muller finished writing the ticket and drove the car into the city parking garage across the street. About this time, Muller was just getting warmed up. He ticketed 23 other cars, including a 1959 Oldsmobile belonging to State Rep. Bernard J. Fio Rito. The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation—Henry Thoreau THE SHOW THAT ROCKED THE MET EXCLUSIVE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT NOW EVERYONE CAN SEE IT! NOW EVERYONE CAN SEE IT! S. HUROK presents ULANOVA "The World's Greatest Ballerina"—Life And The Breathtaking BOLSHOI DANCERS in PROKOFIEV'S BALLET OF ROMEO AND JULIET The only complete film version! In color! Starts Tomorrow Shows: 7 & 9 ROCKHILL Present as 46th ...Vn.1 - 2038 Prima Pizza SUMMER STUDENTS We wish to thank you for the pleasure we have derived from our association with you and the fine business we have had due to your patronage. Remember us when you return for the Fall semester. We are always happy to serve you be it a delivery, carry out, or inside order. Large orders or Pizza parties are a specialty with us. However you like your PIZZA, the Hideaway has it-Eat it here,Pick it up Have us deliver it. Campus Hideaway 106 North Park Pizzeria VI 3-9111 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Thursday, July 30, 1959 Hard-Headed Swiss, Shallow Yanks Are Impressions of Tourist Abroad Special to the Summer Session Kansan By Jerry Knudson (Editor's note: Jerry Knudson, former instructor of journalism, is touring Europe this summer. The following are the seventh and eighth of a series of letters.) Zurich, Switzerland—The Swiss are the hardest-headed business men in all Europe. ___ The other day an elderly British woman, who is married to a Swiss and has lived here 28 years, collared me and let go with a tirade against her husband's countrymen. "Peasants," she snorted. "They were all peasants before the war, and look at them now—damned millionaires!" The woman, it seemed, owned a scissors-making firm and had just lost a large order because the Germans are now producing scissors more cheaply. "Think, of it," she yelled at me, "buying from the Germans! Why, this country wouldn't have lasted three minutes during the war if Hitler could have spared a half million men." She went on to tell me that the Swiss worker labors under almost impossible conditions — no fringe benefits, long hours, short pay. Whatever the reason, the Swiss franc is one of the most stable monetary units in Europe. This is not so elsewhere. The French economy is constantly bobbing back from disaster, plagued with a yo-yo political instability. Things look much brighter since Gen. De Gaulle has assumed power and inaugurated the economicpolitical bloc of the French Community of Nations which met recently in Madagascar. Spain is currently having economic nightmares, despite the 2 billion dollars of military aid the U.S. has pumped into the country since 1953, when both countries signed a Mutual Defense Agreement. Polaris Debut Likely in 1960 ! WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The chief of the Navy's $2,600,000,000 Polaris missile program said yesterday that the weapon is "on schedule" and will be operational by the end of 1960. Rear Adm. William F. Raborn made the statement to a reporter as he prepared to defend the missile project in testimony before the House Space Committee. The committee opened the second day of hearings in which military witnesses sought to dispel the professed concern of members about test "failures" at Cape Canaveral, Fla. Lt. Gen, Bernard A. Schriever, head of the Air Force Research and Development Command, testified Tuesday that there was "no cause for alarm" in the Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile program although he was upset about five failures this year. The failures caused a 60-day delay from July 1 in getting the Atlas into the hands of combat units. The Atlas entered some testimony of its own late Tuesday when the second consecutive successful Atlas firing came off smoothly at Cape Canaveral. The Air Force said the missile performed smoothly on the 5,000-mile flight to a pre-decimated impact area near Ascension Island. Then there's that romantic tune beginning, "Every little Z should have a bu." S W A P S G U M F R O N T T O N T O O P A L U X O R O R G A N T E L A M I T Y O D E S H I N D I G D E S P Y L E A N D E S P E S T G A R E M O T E R E F O R M D E L I C A T E O V A T I O N R A T T L E R M A R I A N A S T A I L E R S N I P E I N N B O M O C O M B O S E R B L A P V A L I A N T V O L B A K E L A E P I O M E G A C E R E S O R T J A N U S K N A V E N O S O N S E T The peseta recently was devalued (from 42 to 52 to the dollar) in an attempt to retrench the country's gold standard and trade balance. But this is only a stop-gap measure Behind the economic chaos lies the bigger dilemma of roiled political waters. What will happen when Generalissimo Francisco Paulino Hermenegildo Teodulo Franco Bahamode dies? (Besides giving the tombstone engraver a stiff headache?) For the last three years, Prince Juan Carlos has been groomed for a revival of the monarchy, but a Falangist-sponsored king might be denied by the people who hate Franco. Perhaps a revolution, trapping the 20.000 American civilians and military men now in Spain, will occur before then. Something must happen — and soon The Falange-church-army alliance maintains shaky control over the country. Spain today fears imminent violence. While the population has risen from 25 to 30 million in the last 20 years, agricultural production has remained the same. More than 20,000 people live in caves outside Madrid alone. Whatever happens in economy-weak Spain will affect all Western Europe because today the economic community — despite disgruntled Swiss scissors makers — stretches from Italy to Sweden, from the Soviet Zone in Germany to Ireland. European countries will stand or fall together, economically and militarily. ROME, Italy — My experiences with youth hostels this summer has been one of steady disillusionment. Rather than serving as gateways to foreign cultures, I find they are converted into miniature American colonies by junketing students. These shallow youth spend the entire day drinking, talking, or playing bridge inside the walls of the hostel. The foreign culture remains safely outside. Most objectionable among student travelers are those from the supposedly distinguished Ivy League schools. These youngsters are noblish, self-centered, and almost completely disengaged. Their vocabulary consists mainly of two words—"fantastic" and "fascinating." They seem to have spent all their time fitting into the mold of Ivy League smoothness, with the result that they are poorly educated. Their brains are as smooth as their well-cropped heads, but they might as well be spending the summer at the Westchester Country Club, since they are trying to remake Europe to fit this image. One wonders how long the Ivy League schools can continue to perpetrate their gigantic fraud on American education. For my money, almost any large Midwestern school is more virile and dynamic. Princeton be damned. Honest ignorance is at least understandable. Like the young American couple who were asked if they had seen St. Peter's. The husband turned to his wife and said, "I don't know. Have we. dear? Rome is the most exciting European city I have yet visited (and only London is left in the running). The Eternal City with its seven ancient hills is truly lovely. It makes almost everything else in Europe seem rather thin. From the Forum and Coliseum to St. Peter's and Vatican City, the city is studded with fountains and tree-lined streets. Around every corner is another monument, through every window a postcard view. The Italian people join my list of "good guys" in Europe, along with the Spanish, Dutch and Danes. The Italians are childishly quarrelsome and exuberantly noisy, but one cannot help admiring the nerve with which they go forward to meet life. One of the most imposing structures in a city of imposing buildings is the monument to Victor Emmanuel, built in 1909. Its gaudy white marble is piled tier on tier like a giant wedding cake in flamboyant splendor. Pope John XXIII, who holds public audiences every Wednesday, looks like a happy farmer. Outside the entrance to the secluded Vatican City — where 1,500 people live—stand Swiss guards in brilliant scarlet and orange costumes. They are recruited from noble Swiss families and serve two years in Rome. The list of attractions in Rome is almost endless—the Appian Way, Catacombs, Castle San Angelo, museums, galleries, and churches by the score. Pizza here makes American pizza taste like cardboard by comparison. And, naturally, one washes it down with America's contribution to world culture-Coca Cola. FROM DRIVE-INS TO DINING ROOMS, THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER THE TOPS IN FOOD IN LAWRENCE 127 "The Best Hamburgers in town" Air Conditioned Old Mission Inn 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 THE HOTEL 'Debate' Hidden in Dirty Shirt NEW YORK — (UPI)— The taped Moscow debate of Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was "smuggled" out of Russia in a dirty shirt to permit its immediate showing on U.S. TV networks, it is disclosed. Philip Gundy, vice president of the Ampex Corp., of Menlo Park, Calif., brought the tape into New York by plane Saturday morning. Gundy said he'd expected Nixon and Khrushchev only to make a few ordinary remarks before the cameras at the American fair's demonstration of video tape, and was amazed to discover he'd taped instead a bit of "living history." After the two men watched a play-back of the tape, Gundy said, his first thought was to get the record to the United States "as fast as I could." LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING Now thru Saturday Rory Calhoun in "THE SAGE OF HEMP BROWN" co-hit ★ EXTRA ! EXTRA ! JOHANNSON vs PATTERSON CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT PICTURES !!! GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Now and Friday June Allyson Jeff Chandler in "STRANGER IN MY ARMS" Starts Saturday Rock Hudson, Jean Simmons Dorothy McGuire, Claude Rains in "THIS EARTH IS MINE" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Now thru Saturday Gregory Peck in "THE BRAVADOS" with Joan Collins co-hit Dana Andrews Jane Powell in "ENCHANTED ISLAND" Extra: Saturday Night DOUBLE OWL SHOW ★ Page 7 irt Nixon a few cam- dem d was in- ed in- ery." Thursdav. July 30, 1959 Summer Session Kans hed a said, et the as fast CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE SPANISH I and II texts Coronage winger washer in good condition. Call VI 3-8140 or see at 2010 Rhode Island. HIGH-FIDELITY SYSTEM, including changer, amplifier, FM tuner, speaker, equipment cabinet, speaker enclosure, and record collection. Priced at approximately one-half replacement cost. Call VI 3-6030 after 6. T-31 MOBILE HOME for good sale. 1953, 32" Spartan in very good condition. Modern, allure located. Ideal for young couple or small students. Sieele four. Call VI 0559. 7-31 BUSINESS SERVICES TRAVELO 23 FT. HOUSE TRAILER Good shape. See at Skyline Trailer Court. Lawrence, or inquire at BE 1-8278, Kansas City, Mo. 7-31 TYPING WANTED Error Free - Out- reach Agnes Lungs 1345 Vermont VI-3-0993-7-31 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rate. Immediate attention. Cali Mrs. Charles Johannsen. VI 3-2876. 7-31 TYPING: Fast, accurate, experienced. Close to campus, 717 Miss. Phone VI 3- 7677. 7-31 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, error free, immediate service on term papers, theses, dissertation, etc. Have electric type-general rates, Mrs. Tom Bradi II 3-3428 TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Standard rates. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-1893, 1736 Tenn. ff. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, reports, theses, etc. Reasonable rates, immediate attention, accurate work. Call Mrs. John L. Glinka, VI 3-1240. tf TYPING: Theses and themes, Byron Leonard, call VI 3-5263. ff LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances, air conditioned. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri, ph. VI 3-6838 WASHING AND IRONING 837 Connecticut. Call VI 3-2906. tt Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. NOTHING LIKE IT in Lawrence—our shop. Visit Grant's Pet Supply Center—1218 Chm. Open weekdays 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Birds and animals, complete stocks of cages, stands, and accessories for alloses. Complete line of exotic fish and ocean animals. Aquariums, 2 to 60 gal, stands, filters, lighting, and all accessories. Everything for dogs and cats; beds, toys, leather, grooming, litter, sweaters, blankets, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. Phone VI 3-2921. Welcome. FINEST FLAT-TOPS, and friendly barbers, and fascinating magazines, at Ernie's Barber Shop, 730 Massachusetts. KU BARBER SHOP—Flattop our specialty. Open all summer. Just off campus, two blocks down 14th Street. tt RENT A SINGER sewing machine by the week or month. Call VI 3-1971, Singer Sewing Center, 927 Mass. tf FOR RENT FOR RENT TO YOUNG MEN, large single room. Linens furnished. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Indiana. 7-31 ROOMS FOR FALL SEMESTER. 1/2 block from Union bridg. Two very spacious rooms. Two well furnished $20 and $25 up to appclassesm. Call for appointment VI 3-6896. 7-31 PREFER SENIORS or graduate students. two nicely furnished rooms. Linens furnished. 839 Miss. Call VI 3-2009 between and 2 p.m. after, and after 6. 7-31 TWO BEDROOM APT. Attractively furnished for 3 boys. Also three room apartment. Private entrance and bath in the campus. Reasonable rate. Call I 3-6699. 7-31 **FREE RENT APARTMENT. Would ex- change free rent of furnished apartment or yard work. August only. Phone VI 1-7655. 7-31 APARTMENT, attractively furnished, for one or two students. Private entrance. Very close to campus. Also very nice single room. Call VI 3-6696. 7-31 AFARTMENTS at 1420 Crescent Drive, Buffalo, NY 14201 September. Contact VI 3-1890. 7-31 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT, large rooms, large closets. Good refrigerator and stove. Married drinking. Utilities paid. Drinking. S20 Ohio. 7-31 NICE THREE ROOM APARTMENT, furnished. Private entrance and bath, air conditioner, 50 per month. Available room, three room apartment. private entrance and bath, also phone. $5.00 per month. Available Aug. beeping room, private entrance and phone. Also available now. These listings are near KU and have utilities paid. Phone VI 3-7850 after 5. TRANSPORTATION NEED A RIDE to Pittsburgh, Pa., on or about August 1. Contact Bruce Herman at KU 540, between 3:30 and 7:00 p.m. 7-31 MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: take advantage of special $ \frac{1}{2} $ price rates on Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Buy now, pay later. Call VI 3-0124. tf WANTED WANTED. WOMAN RIDER to New York and vicinity. Leave after Summer session. Call VI 3-8720. 7-31 TWO RIDERS WANTED to Ft. Worth, Dallas or Houston—Call VI 3-2543. Harlan Watkins—Leaving August 1. 7-31 WANTED: RIDE TO CALIF., preferably LA., this Fri., Sat., Sun. Contact Bill Mullins, VI 3-9706 before Friday noon. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS G MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you! GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service S AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI3-4416 Fraternity Jewelry, Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Have a Nice VACATION We'll see those of you in September that want the best in dairy products. Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. ALL STAR DAIRY 202 West 6th Phone VI 3-5511 L.E. NOV. Yes-the Union Cafeteria is OPEN in AUGUST Come in to eat, drink, or just study in air conditioned comfort (Hawk's Nest will be closed until the first of September) Kansas Union Cafeteria Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Thursday. July 30, 1959 [Image of a construction site with visible steel beams and walls in the background. In the foreground, there are large piles of concrete blocks scattered across the ground.] CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES—Work is still being done on the new United Presbyterian Center for college students at 12th and Oread Streets. The building will be ready for occupancy about the first of January. Faculty director of the Center is Dr. John H. Patton. Wild Horse Annie Campaign Gains WASHINGTON — (UPT) — A congressional subcommittee has sucumb to the impassioned pleas of "Wild Horse Annie" and approved legislation to outlaw motorized roundups of wild horses. Chairman Thomas J. Lane (D-Mass.) said his House Judiciary Subcommittee approved the bill without amendments even though the Interior Department had asked that it be modified. The department had opposed a complete ban on mustang roundups by truck and airplane. It sometimes sends out mechanized cowboys itself to corral wild horses that prey on livestock. The campaign on behalf of the mustangs, which are roaming some Western states in dwindling numbers, was waged by Mrs. Velma B. Johnston, also known as "Wild Horn Annie," of Wadsworth, Nev. River 'Big Greasy,' Two Say of Missouri ST, JOSEPH, Mo. — (UPI) —The Big Muddy has also become greasy, a federal hearing on pollution of the Missouri River has been told. Witnesses were two river men of long experience, Cecil R. Griffith and Ora J. Wheeler, both called by the government. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad Aluminum Walkout Delayed NEW YORK — (UPI) — A Friday strike deadline against the nation's biggest aluminum producers has been postponed until 30 days after settlement of the steel strike, which is going into its third week with no end in sight. With 500,000 steel workers on strike, an estimated 78,000 others laid off transport and mining jobs, and steel production at less than 15 per cent of national capacity: —Chief Federal Mediator Joseph F. Finnegan, after separate conferences with both sides, said he saw no immediate prospects of a quick end of the strike but he is still trying. —The United States Steel Corp. largest of the nation's steel companies, reported that its net profits in the first half of this year had set a record of $254,948,496—about 10 cents on each dollar of sales. —Roger M. Blough, U.S. Steel chairman, said the firm would not raise prices unless it were forced to make an "involuntary settlement" by government intervention. —David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers Union. characterizes the profits of U.S. Steel and other steel firms as "astronomical," and asked: "How can they possibly justify the phony, inflation, issue at a time when they themselves are rolling in unprecedented wealth?" reminded still-operating steel firms that they must give priority in delivery to defense contractors. —In Washington, the Commerce Department announced that it has Hawaii Vote Winners Are of Oriental Blood Kansan Want Ads Get Results HONOLULU —(UPI) A Japanese-American war hero and a Chinese-American millionaire have captured congressional seats in Hawaii's first election as the nation's 50th state. A Republican resurgence marked Tuesday's election, with more than 90 per cent of the island state's 183,-000 voters jumping across party lines. The GOP elected the governor, lieutenant governor and one U.S. senator. The Democrats, in firm control of island politics for the past five years, nailed down the other U.S. Senate position and the lone seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. In the state legislature, the Republicans held a 13-12 lead in the Senate with several seats undecided. In the House, the Democrats led 33-18. Republican William F. Quinn launched himself into national prominence and touched off a horn-tooting, firecracker-popping, spree by supporters when he defeated Democrat John A. Burns, former delegate to the House of Representatives. The 40-year-old Republican came to the islands in 1947 as an attorney. A native of Rochester, N.Y., he was educated at St. Louis University and Harvard Law School before serving in the Navy during World War II. While in the Navy he was decorated for his service on Okinawa. HONOLULU—(UPI)—William F. Quinn, governor-elect of the 50th state, had lost his only previous try at public office when President Eisenhower appointed him Hawaii's territorial governor in September, 1957. He made his first bid for political office in 1956, when he ran unsuccessfully for a territorial House seat. The following year he was tapped by Eisenhower to replace lontime Republican Gov. Samuel Wilder King. Quinn says his political philosophy is to weigh the political aspects of any problem, then base his final decision on whether it is "ethically or morally right." Barker Describes Growth of Fund Gifts are used for projects not available in state budgets, including scholarships, fellowships, library collections and grants. Maurice Barker, executive secretary of the Greater University Fund of KU, presented a slide lecture Tuesday in the Holiday Inn at a meeting of the Optimist Breakfast Club. Slides illustrated growth and achievements of private donations to KU, beginning with creation of the Endowment Assn. and culminating in the fund's receiving about $207,000 in gifts from more than 7,000 individual donors. He said donations to the fund are used in their entirety instead of as an endowment, making it possible for gifts from KU alumni and friends to vary in size and number. TRY LEONARD'S Standard Service 706 W. 9th The earliest electrical hearing aid was larger than a console TV set and weighed more than the person using it. N.Y. To Our Loyal KU Customers THANKS Thanks for making our opening this summer a success. We'll still be here in September to do your washing at the same low price. Econ.o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day. SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week 9th & Miss. 9th & Miss. THE END