will from ht on Kan- SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU et s KU Friday, July 1, 1960 —The being common copies of disease areas of it has special used in d" for of the 48th Year, No. 6 f the medical on the conduct cedure ach an to in- lining phos- ravenant the more normal uulsion. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Prof. Backus Undertakes Second Career Oswald P. Backus, professor of history, began a second career Wednesday—a career which is rather unusual for a Russian history professor. Prof. Backus was one of 53 lawyers who passed the Kansas bar examination, allowing them to practice before state courts in the state and also in the three federal courts in the Kansas district. He was admitted to the Kansas bar in ceremonies in Topeka Wednesday morning before the Kansas Supreme Court and to federal practice in afternoon ceremonies before Chief Federal Judge Delmas C. Hill. Prof. Backus, who recently spent over a year in Finland and Russia on a Fulbright research fellowship, received a Bachelor of Law degree from the Harvard University Law School last year. He doesn't plan, however, to go into active law practice. "I'm interested in research and interpretation, especially in the field of Russian law. I thought the best way to gain an understanding of foreign law was to study and interpret our own. I also thought it would be valuable to understand the thinking of lawyers so I began work toward becoming a practicing attorney," he explained. Prof. Backus will have some opportunities to practice. Occasionally, cases involving wills and contracts between American and Russian corporations are filed and he will be available for these. "There won't be many, I admit, but there are a few cases filed each year in the Lawrence area involving Soviet laws," he said. Art Award Established Establishment of the Maud Ellsworth Scholarship Fund in Art Education, honoring Prof. Ellsworth on the occasion of her retirement from teaching at the University of Kansas, was announced yesterday by Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education. Miss Ellsworth, professor of art education, retired this last month after 29 years on the staff at the University of Kansas. The fund is being created by former students, friends and associates of Miss Ellsworth. "In the course of her distinguished career at the University, in both classroom teaching and many activities outside the classroom, Miss Ellsworth has immeasurably advanced the cause of art education in Kansas and the Midwest," Dean Anderson said. "She has added cultural enrichment to the lives of countless Kansas children, students and adults through her leadership in this field." Income from the endowed fund, administered by the Endowment Association, will be used to provide an annual scholarship for a student majoring in art education. The scholarship committee includes three associates of Miss Ellsworth in the Schools of Fine Arts and Education; Miss Marjorie Whitney and Miss Evelyn DeGraw, professors of design; and Mrs. Marguerite Kerfoot, instructor of art education. Weather Partly cloudy today. A little cooler over northeast and northcentral areas. High today 85 to 95. Mary Louise DOWN SHE COMES—Jennie Allen, 5, roars down the slide at the University playground in Fowler Grove. The playground is open Monday through Friday nights until 9. Second Summer Play Cast Improves Comedy Paul Osborn's "Morning's at Seven," which opened last night in Murphy Hall, seems to me a piece of quartz in a cameo setting. William Inge, who owes a certain debt to Saroyan, could have handled these aging people caught up in their domestic imbroglios without resorting to such claptrap as this. By Jerry Knudson "Morning's at Seven" seems a corn-belt version of "The Time of Your Life," and I prefer William Saroyan's pathos and charmingly disengaged characters to Osborn's broad farce and cardboard people. For example, the dialogue is sprinkled with such folksy phrases as "bee in a bonnet," "honest Injun," and "Oh, don't be such a goose." The comedy-drama is placed in a superb set designed by Jack Rast Jr. Direction and lighting by E. Arthur Kean and costumes by Caroline Kriesel are competent. Several actors perform miracles. That is, the University Theatre's summer production is far better than the play deserves. Some of Osborn's characters sound suspiciously like Charlie Weaver. But the play itself is something else again. If old people have anything, it's dignity. And this quality does not rule out comedy, for Charlie Chaplin retained his immense dignity in his wildest slapstick. That's why he was funny. These are the characters: Theodore Swanson, an old man addicted to pointless profanity, played by Lou Lyda; his wife Cora, mild, oh so mild, played by Georgia O. Ryther; Aaronetta Gibbs, a ratchety-voiced spinster, played by Kay Carroll. Ida Bolton, brimming with wide-eyed empty-headedness, played by Maurine Jones; her husband Carl, who suffers "spells," played by Millard Denny, and their son Homer, a 40-year-old adolescent, played by David H. Jones. By far the best moments of the play are those quiet interludes when the chattering senility ceases, and the cast maintains excellent dramatic pauses. Myrtle Brown, seven years a hopeful bride, played by Patricia Walters, and Esther and David Crampton, whose resemblance to living persons is not entirely coincidental, played by Sandra Hopkins and Ron Loch. By all means, see "Morning's at Seven" at 7:30 tonight and evaluate the play (and this crotchety critic) for yourself. Desire Rated In New Test Is it possible to tell how well a student will do upon entering college? A standard examination given to Kansas high school juniors for this purpose is the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, but two educators at the University believe this technique neglects the significant areas of intellectual curiosity and persistence. Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education and Tilghman Aley, now assistant to the president of Mesa College Grand Junction, Colo., worked out a supplementary series of self-rating questions sent to about 7,000 Kansas high school seniors in 1959 who had taken the National Merit test the preceding year. About 4,700, or 66 per cent of these students, gave themselves ratings, which were correlated with results of their National Merit test scores in the humanities and science. Students were asked to evaluate themselves on four questions. "How would you rate yourself in terms of: Results showed a remarkable similarity between several levels of student self-awareness in the intangible areas of curiosity and persistence with the tangible areas of scholastic achievement indicated by the National Merit test. —Intellectual curiosity? (Do you frequently ask yourself why a particular thing is so or how do I know it is true?) —Willingness to stand discomfort (a cold, illness, etc.) in completion of a school task? Willingness to spend time, beyond the ordinary schedule, in completion of a given task? —Questioning the absolute truth of statements from textbooks, newspapers, and magazines or of statements made by persons in position of authority such as teachers, lecturers, and professors?" Students used a 5-place scale varying from "considerably below average" to "considerably above average." Results showed that students rating themselves as "considerably below" and "somewhat below" average had no significant differences on their National Merit scores. But students rating themselves as "average" scored significantly lower than those who rated themselves "somewhat above" or "considerably above" average. Plans are underway to check the validity of the students' self-evaluations with the actual college grades which more than 300 of them made this year as freshmen at the University. Items in the self-rating questionnaire "may correlate as well if not better with grades than the usual college entrance or placement tests," wrote Dean Anderson and Aley in the most recent issue of "Science Education." "Regardless of the outcome, it is possible that a new dimension will be added to use in prediction studies of college success," the authors conclude. Last of Directory Appears on Page 8 The final portion of the Summer Session Student Directory Supplement appears on page eight of today's issue of the Kansan. The first part of the supplement appeared in Tuesday's Kansan. Students or staff who missed the original directory or the first part of the supplement may obtain copies in 111 Flint. Kansan Will Not Publish Tuesday There will be no issue of the Summer Session Kansan Tuesday due to the July 4 holiday on Monday. The Kansan will resume publication on Friday. Prof. Carey to be On TV Program J. Sheldon Carey, professor of design and one of America's leading ceramic artists, will appear soon in one of the half-hour Columbia Broadcasting System television series, "Montage." Prof. Carey demonstrates his craft in "The Potter's Wheel," which will be seen later this summer. He has just returned from St. Louis, where he made a Video Tape of the program with Helen Hogen, CBS producer of "Montage." The Design Department at the University is listed in the credits at the end of the film. The show does not appear in this area. This spring Prof. Carey was chosen to show his work in the International Cultural Exchange Exhibit in Geneva, Switzerland, sponsored by the Academic Internationale de la Ceramique. In 1959, Time Magazine described him as one of the "top practitioners" in his field. He was one of three ceramists, and the only American, whose works were reproduced in full color in the magazine's art section. Price Takes New Position G. Baley Price, chairman of the mathematics department at the University, will be on leave for the 1960-61 academic year to be the first executive secretary of the newly organized Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences. He is opening a Washington, D. C., office of the Conference Board today. The Conference Board, which is an outgrowth of a World War II mathematics policies committee, was incorporated in February, 1960, and Dr. Price was elected chairman of the board of directors at that time. A 3-year grant of $75,000 from the Carnegie Corporation of New York will finance the Board and its activities. The grant was obtained by the Mathematical Association of America two years ago when Dr. Price was its president and the funds, which have been held until now, have been transferred to the new Board. Dr. Price said the Washington office is being created to gather information of activities affecting all branches of mathematics and to supply information to the government and to the public. It will also carry on activities common to the six societies. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 1. 1960 Cool in Philadelphia Hot in British Empire BY JERRY KNUDSON THE MORNING OF July 4, 1776, promised a cool day for Philadelphia in mid-summer. When Thomas Jefferson arose at dawn in the threestory brick house at the corner of Market and Seventh Streets, he noted in his Account Book that the temperature was 68 degrees Fahrenheit. His highest reading for the day was 76 degrees at 1 p.m. Throughout his life Jefferson was a meticulous observer of climate wherever he went, and this day at Philadelphia — when adoption of his Declaration of Independence was imminent—was no exception. The 33-year-old delegate from Virginia dawdled on his way to the State House where the Continental Congress was meeting behind closed doors. Jefferson stopped off at a shop to pay for a thermometer he had bought earlier, and he purchased seven pairs of women's gloves for Martha, his wife of four years waiting at their mountaintop home at Monticello. On July 4, 1776, at Oxford, England, Chancellor Lord North conferred honorary degrees on Thomas Hutchinson, late royal governor of Massachusetts Bay, and Peter Oliver, late deputy governor. THE SHOOTING WAR between mother country and rebelling colonies had been going on for more than a year since the clash at Lexington and Concord, but it was a quiet day in the Empire. The year 1776 was a fateful one for Thomas Jefferson, but he had greeted its early months with usual calm. The war was brought to Virginia when Lord Dunmore bombarded Norfolk, but at inland Monticello the fighting seemed remote. Lieutenant of militia Thomas Jefferson dutifully listed the volunteers from Albemarle county, but he also tapped a keg of Madeira wine, vintage 1770, began to stock his hilltop plantation with deer and rejoiced that his prize horse, Fearnought, had added another foal to his stable. At Shadwell, his boyhood home just down the valley. Jefferson's mother had died in March at the age of 57. In his papers, Jefferson recorded the happening with characteristic reticence about personal matters. THE YOUNG VIRGINIAN was to have returned to the Continental Congress at that time, but one of his blinding headaches, probably migraine, kept him bed-ridden for five weeks. By early May he had recovered and with his Negro servant Bob he set off for Philadelphia. He would have preferred to have gone to Williamsburg where the most distinguished of the Virginia Revolutionary conventions was assembling, but he accepted his role at Philadelphia without complaint. Then events moved rapidly. On May 15, 1776, the Virginians assembled at Williamsburg instructed their delegates at Philadelphia to move for secession from the British empire. The "Common Sense" of Thomas Paine was having its effect. On June 7, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced his famous resolution for independence. The inherently shy Jefferson did not participate in the debate on the resolution which took place several days later. THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS decided to postpone action on the resolution until July 1. In the meantime, a committee was appointed to draft an accompanying declaration. The committee consisted of Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston. In the 17 days between June 11, when the committee was appointed, and when it reported to Congress on June 28, Jefferson labored over his draft of the document on a folding writing-box which the cabinet-maker Benjamin Randolph had made from Jefferson's own drawing. In the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson drew from George Mason's Declaration of Rights and the list of charges against George III which Jefferson had sent to the convention at Williamsburg. SIGNIFICANTLY, JOHN LOCKE'S phrase of "life, liberty, and property" was changed to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Later, Jefferson recalled that he had endeavored "Not to find out new principles, or new arguments, never before thought of, not merely to say things which had never been said before; but to place before mankind the common sense of the subject, in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent, and to justify ourselves in the independent stand we are compelled to take." Historians snigger at the validity of the charges lodged against the British monarch, but the fight for independence had to be personalized, and every one of the grievances can be traced to a specific happening. TEN YEARS LATER, Thomas Jefferson met George III face-to-face, and the American's opinion of the Briton was unchanged. Antiquarians haggle about celebrating July 4 as the birth date of the American nation. Intent of separation from the empire was established on July 2 when Lee's resolution was adopted. On July 4 the delegates were merely voting to accept or reject the written declaration. Even so, the action of July 4 did not become unanimous until July 15 when New York finally conceded to join her sister colonies. CANON The Declaration of Independence was not made public until July 8 when it was first released by the Philadelphia Committee of Safety. THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS did not order the document to be engrossed on parchment until July 19, and Jefferson himself could not have signed it until Aug. 2. But for better or worse, July 4 has become the prime American national holiday. It really matters little that July 4, 1776, was only a day among many in a chain of events that was to rend the mighty British empire. What matters are those immortal words of Thomas Jefferson which remain the essence of the American ideal: "... these truths (are) self-evident; that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed." 演奏者 the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THOMAS WOLFE, by Elizabeth Nowell. Doubleday. $5.95. In 1937, F. Scott Fitzgerald, never the warmest friend of Thomas Wolfe, wrote Wolfe a friendly letter in which he advised, as a novelist himself, that the North Carolinian become more of a "leaver-outer" than a "putter-inner." Fitzgerald used Flaubert as his model, heaping criticism upon Zola, and, by implication, Wolfe. For Wolfe was a great "putter-inner." He was a magnificently designed man who wanted to eat up and drink up all the world, especially America, and write about all of it. He might stand on a ferryboat, trying to inhale all the salt air of the ocean. He might feel the warmth and beauty of a Midwest cornfield, the most American thing in America to him. When he visited the mighty Redwoods of California he tried to embrace one of them, and then lay on the forest floor for an hour, just taking in everything about him. ELIZABETH NOWELL, who has edited the Wolfe letters and who had close publishing relationships with Wolfe, has written a fine biography of Wolfe. To the best of my knowledge it is THE book about Wolfe. One reason it is such is that Miss Nowell often lets Wolfe tell the story, out of his letters, his celebrated Purdue speech delivered a few months before his death in 1938, his "Story of a Novel" and his four great books. Miss Nowell grasps this important aspect of Thomas Wolfe: the fact that he tried to include everything in his books as he tried to include everything in his life. Wolfe in time will compare favorably with Whitman. Like Whitman he wrote about and catalogued and listed everything within his ken. He wanted to eat all the food and drink all the liquor and sleep with all the women and ride all the trains and visit all the cities and read all the books. BESIDES BEING a "hungry Gulliver," which another has called him, Wolfe was a paranoiac and an insecure man going from father-substitute to father-substitute. He sensed this need for a father; whether he sensed his persecution mania is another matter. He turned on one father-substitute, Maxwell Perkins of Scribners, because he felt that Perkins was persecuting him. He broke up a party at the Sherwood Andersons when Mrs. Anderson observed that southerners who could not denounce Wolfe for other reasons were referring to him as Jewish. In his tirades he was as wrathful a figure as old W. O. Gant himself, the sculptor-father of "Look, Homeward, Angel." He was a good deal like his mother, too, and though he seemed to fling his money around he held to it as closely as Eliza Gant held to hers. He must have been a frightful, yet exciting, person to know. Big, clumsy, unruly yet sensitive, he was making an impression with his latent genius as early as his years at Chapel Hill. Then at Harvard, in Baker's celebrated Workshop 47; at NYU, where he taught English: in Brooklyn; back in the South years later; in Europe, particularly Germany, many times — this gargantuan writer ranged and ranted about his world. PERKINSWOULD ask him to cut 50,000 words from the long "Of Time and the River," and Wolfe would return with 75,000 words more. A critic would praise a Wolfe novel and chide Wolfe in one critical sentence, and Wolfe would take that one sentence and brood over it and get drunk and try to quit writing and pour out his soul to his mistress, Aline Bernstein, or the forever embattled Perkins. This is an excellent biography about a great man. Fifteen years ago one might have to apologize for being a lover of Wolfe. There is no apology here. Thomas Wolfe looms larger and larger all the time, his stature in literature as giant as was his stature in life. PAT GARRETT, by Richard O'Connor. Doubleday, $3.95. Pat Garrett is the villain among western marshals. Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson and the many fictional additions via television are in the true heroic mold of Gary Cooper and John Wayne. But Garrett's name shall live in infamy. He killed Billy the Kid. WHAT HE KILLED was little better than a coyote, the worst marauding coyote, at that. But Garrett was hated and reviled, denounced in newspaper editorials, victimized in anonymous letters, scorned on the streets of New Mexico villages. Richard O'Connor has produced in "Pat Garrett" an interesting though minor treatment of the man who killed Billy. O'Connor finds it necessary to write as much about Billy, and other personages, as about Garrett, for Garrett is not a character to grasp the imagination. Garrett did not call out the buck-toothed killer on a dusty street at high noon, but waited in a darkened room of a ranch-house and shot Billy as he entered. One would gather from denunciations of Garrett at the time that he owed it to the community to let Billy shoot him down, as Billy surely would have done. THE STORY OF the search for Billy is still of epic scope. And the book goes downhill after that. Garrett became mixed up in Uvalde County, Texas, affairs (one of his friends and associates was an apple-cheeked young lawyer named John Nance Garner). He tried to solve the still-unsolved-today slayings of Judge Albert J. Fountain and his son. And he himself was somewhat mysteriously slain. A footnote to history concerns the presence in the cast of characters of one Albert Fall, Democratic politician and opportunist in turn-of-the-century New Mexico. This is the same Albert Fall who switched to the Republican party and got his name into the Dictionary of American Biography by the celebrated and infamous Teapot Dome finaglings in the Harding administration. Russian Farm Change Studied By KU Writers A new era in Russian agriculture may be close at hand, according to a publication just released by the Governmental Research Center of the University. Changing the entire Soviet agricultural system into a statefarm pattern may be the aim of the decision in 1958 to abandon the Machine-Tractor Stations, conclude the authors of the 97-page study, "The Rise and Fall of the MTS as an Instrument of Soviet Rule." For almost three decades, the Machine-Tractor Stations — monopolies of all major farming equipment, owned and operated by the state—insured Communist control over the collective farms. Payment to the Machine-Tractor Stations for harvesting the crops of the collective farms was a portion of the crop, generally between 20 and 30 per cent of the harvest. Principal author of the KU study is Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science and a consultant on Russian agriculture to the federal government. Co-authors are Darwin E. Sharp of Ottawa, who received the B.A. degree in history from KU in 1959, and Miss Ruth Sturtevant of Mt. Airy, N.C., who received the M.A. degree in political science in June. Collective farms have been the predominant Soviet pattern, although "the state farms have from the beginning, largely because they more closely reflect the communist vision, represented the model-form of socialized agriculture," the study states. The "sovkhozy" or state farms were abandoned by Joseph Stalin in 1934, but they were revived by Nikita Khrushchev for almost exclusive use on the semi-arid Virgin Lands project. Also, the "kolkhozy" or collective farms have come to resemble the state farms closely, the authors point out. By discarding the MTS system, the collectives were forced to buy the farm machinery and accept increased control. Communist party organization has filtered down into the collective farms. Once only 15 per cent of the collectives had party units, but by the fall of 1953 about 80 per cent had party units. Union to Exhibit Illustration Art A display of some of the nation's top illustrative art will be presented in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union July 4-22. The "Fine Art for Illustration" exhibit is composed of paintings which have a specific function illustrating a story, article or poem. It is sponsored by the All-State Insurance Company. Artists represented include Beall Smith, Adolf Dehn, Doris Lee, Arnold Blanch, Paul Sample and Fletcher Martin. Try the Kansan Want Ads francis sporting goods 731 Mass. Tennis we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service Sunday Concert Leo Kucinski and Robert McCowen, Guest Conductors 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Afternoon Part I Chorus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McCowen Alleluia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brahms Brahma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I. How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place Old Abram Brown ... Britten Salutation to the Dawn ... Mueller Robert McCowen, Conducting Part II Summer Session Kansan Orchestra Page 3 Battle Hymn of the Republic ... Ringwald Chorus and Orchestra Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting The Legend of Sleepy Hollow ... Gorton I. Landscape II. Country Dance III. Katrina and Ichabod IV. The Ride of the Headless Horseman Gerald M. Carney, Conducting Part III Alceste, Overture ... Gius Fifth Symphony (Reformation) ... Mendelssohn Fourth Movement, Chorale and Allegro The Tsar Saltan, Suite ... Rimsky-Korsakov I. Allegretto Alla Marcia II. Maestoso III. Moderato and Allegro Leo Kucinski, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Evening Leo Kucinski and Robert McCowen, Guest Conductors KU Outdoor Theatre 8 p.m. Part I The Star Spangled Banner ... Francis Scott Key Brighton Beach ... William P. Latham Overture and Allegro from "La Sultane" ... Couperin-Milhaud Knightsbridge March, from "London Every Day Suite" ... Eric Coates Dance of the Swans from "The Swan Lake Suite" ... Peter Tschaikovsky Ballet Music from Faust ... Gounod VI. Allegretto VII. Allegretto VII. Allegro Vivace American Salute Russell L. Wiley, Conducting VII. Anegro Vivace American Salute Norton Gould Part II Chorus Awake! ... Wagner O Thou Eternal One ... Delamarter Somebody's Coming ... Dello Joio When the Saints Go Marching In ... Schumann Robert McCowan Conducting Part III Band Sand Overture "Phedre" ... Jules Massenet Sunday Morning at Glion from "By the Lake at Geneva" ... Franz Bendel Invitation to the Dance ... Carl von Weber Coronation March from "The Prophet" ... Giacomo Meyerbeer Leo Kucinski. Conducting Grainger Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry VACATION CHECKED! READY TO ROLL! Whether you're planning a week-end trip, or just a short drive — let FRITZ CO. give your car a safety check up and keep it in top shape for you. Δ CITIES FRITZ CO. SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything Friday, July 1. 1960 CITIES Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire SERVICE SERVICE The Kansas White House Conference on Aging will meet here Sept. 7-8 to consider recommendations to the national conference at Washington, D.C., in January, 1961. Meeting on Aged To Be Held Here The Kansas Conference will serve as a workshop session to study proposals made by subcommittees of the KCCA in the fields of education, research, employment, income maintenance, health, rehabilitation, housing, leisure time activities, local community and state organization social services, professional personnel and religion. Dean Frank T. Stockton, Topeka is executive secretary of the Kansas State Interdepartmental Committee on Aging, in charge of the conference. Recommendations will be reviewed by the Interdepartmental Committee which will make final recommendations to the Washington conference. It will he held in conjunction with the Kansas Conference on Aging. held annually at KU since 1951. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Tokyo Runway Sinking Fast TOKYO—(UPI) —Tokyo International Airport's main runway has sunk as much as 3.3 feet in the past 14 years, creating a hazard to incoming airplanes, it was disclosed in a report yesterday. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editors Dick Crocker Guide Key BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office Phone 376 Business Manager Clydene Brown M Cool Off with a cool, easy-to-carefor summer hair style designed for you by the CAMPUS Beauty Shop 12th & Ind. VI 3-3034 835 Mass. Downtown Sale 12th & Indiana Jay SHOPPE Starts July 5 Campus Shoppe Sale Now Underway! DRESSES Reduced 40% Spring and Summer SKIRTS Reduced 40% Spring and Summer: - Bermudas and Slacks - Sports Co-ordinates - Summer Nightwear Reduced 40% Downtown Only - All Summer Hats Now $2.00 - One group, Bras and Girdles Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 1. 1960 KU Enters Seven In Olympic Trials PALO ALTO, Calif.—(Special)The Big Eight Conference will enter 16 athletes—seven of them from Kansas—in the American Olympic track and field trials here today and tomorrow. The top three finishers in each event—providing they have met Olympic qualifying minimums—will represent the United States in the Rome games later this summer. Doctors Will Conduct Clinic Seven members of the University of Kansas Medical Center faculty will conduct a summer clinic at Ruidoso, N.M., July 18-21. The program is sponsored by the New Mexico chapter of the American Academy of General Practice and is supported by a grant from Merck, Sharp and Dohme. Faculty members participating are Dr. Frank F. Allibritten Jr., surgeon; Dr. Franklin C. Behrle, pediatrician; Dr. John F. Christianson, internist; Dr. James E. Crockett, cardiologist; Dr. Mahlon H. Delp, internist; Dr. Donald R. Germann, radiologist and Dr. Kermit R. Krantz, obstetrician. The clinic will be devoted to a discussion of heart disease, cancer, the mother and child and emergencies. VA Office Makes Change of Address The jurisdiction of the Vocational Rehabilitation and Education Division of the Kansas City Veterans Administration regional office is being transferred to St. Louis today. All correspondence by trainees under VA education and training programs in regard to payments and changes in enrollment should now be sent to: Veterans Administration Regional Office, 415 Pine Street, St. Louis 2, Mo. Heading the list of KU entrants and given the best chance to make the Olympic squad—are Charlie Tidwell and Bill Alley. Tidwell is entered in both the 100 and 200-meter dashes and could place, even win, both of them, although the sprint fields traditionally offer the toughest competition for American athletes. Cliff Cushman also is given a chance in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles, although his task will be tough. Alley won't be favored in the lavelin what with Al Cantello in the field, but should be among the top three. Other Kansans entered, who will have to come through with better than average performances to qualify, include Bob Tague in the 800 meters, Bill Dotson in the 1500 meters, Billy Mills in the 5,000 meters and Terry Beucher in the javelin. Other Big Eight entries include Ted Woods of Colorado and Dee Givens of Oklahoma in the 200 meters; Bob Hanekan of Missouri and Miles Eisenman of Oklahoma State in the 5,000 meters; Don Meyer of Colorado and Tony Watson of Oklahoma in the broad jump; Dick Cochran of Missouri in the discus, and Aubrey Dooley of Oklahoma State and J. D. Martin of Oklahoma in the pole vault. Former Kansan Bill Nieder is entered in the shot put, Al Oerter will compete in the discus and Kent Floerke is entered in the hop-step-jump. Try the Kansan Want Ads BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 18 E. 9th Street VI 3-0151 TRANSFER BANK These Days Smart Money Is Heading For The Bank! There's No Safety Like Bank Safety! ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. J The Greater University Fund will aim at broadening the base of private support for KU during the coming year. GUF Seeks More KU Contributors Paul J. Parker of Bartlesville, Okla., who presided at a meeting Saturday of GUF's executive committee, said the major effort would be to increase the number of contributors significantly beyond this year's 5,850. Both the number of contributors and the $243,000 given were more than five times as great is during GUF's first year in 1953-54. GUF seeks to interest alumni and friends of KU in an annual giving program for scholarships, loan funds and other items which are not provided by state support. Lecture to Spotlight Physics J. D. Stranathan, professor of physics, will speak on "Particles of Modern Physics" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. His talk is part of the regular Wednesday afternoon lecture series. Since 1944, there has been an 83 per cent decline in the death rate from acute rheumatic fever. A short course in the operation of and programming for the IBM 650 digital computer and its peripheral data processing equipment will be offered by the Computation Center beginning Tuesday. Center Sets IBM Course The course is scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in 401 Summerfield for the next three weeks. Robert Gray, graduate assistant and laboratory supervisor, will conduct the course. Although there are no formal prerequisites, a knowledge of elementary calculus will be assumed. Enrollment may be obtained by contacting the center at 112 Summerfield or by calling KU 548. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Brake Adj. 98c Grease Job $1 Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. "Can-Can" from The Sound Track On Capitol Records Hi-fi and Stereo BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest Underwater Swim Planned for Channel NEW YORK—(UPI)A 25-year-old blonde housewife flies to London next week to start training for a swim across the English Channel under water. Mrs. Jane Baldasare, who holds the underwater record for long distance swimming (14 miles) and once held the underwater endurance record, predicted she would swim the channel "in about 38 to 40 hours." The former Columbus, Ga., beauty plans to swim the channel's 23 miles between France's Gris Nez and England's Dover. Try the Kansan Want Ads YOU'LL DOTE ON A DQ FLOAT Made in flavors so delicious, satisfying and nutritious. Columbus surely missed the boat he hadn't tried a DQ float. DAIRY QUEEN FLOAT ON DOWN TO DAIRY QUEEN DAIRY QUEEN © 1973, NATIONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO. Floats (ALL FLAVORS) DAIRY QUEEN FLOAT ON DOWN TO DAIRY QUEEN 1835 Mass. I You really save money at the ECON-O-WASH 20c wash - 10c dry Free Parking Air Conditioned 9th and Mississippi Econ.owash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST SELF-SERVICE 24 hours a day 7 days a week Cl S. Gen que fenc weiq Rob mat sona T day for out silic Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Light meal. 6 Pipes. 12 Former tycoons. 14 Station porters. 16 Of the side. 17 Name in British politics. 18 High note. 19 Shows. 21 Chief officer of David. 22 Magdeburg's river. 24 Swords. 25 35 Across, for example. 26 Road fees. 28 Equality. 29 Mme. de — 30 Inveigler. 32 Parts of operas: Mus. 33 Pull apart. 34 Rhode Island rebel, 1842. 35 He played in "Ondine." 38 Burrowings. 41 Having chills. 42 Blame! Slang. 43 Island south of Sicily. 45 Eating place. 46 Cassia plant. 48 Ponce de — 49 Brownie. 50 South American plainsman. 52 Former Kansas Governor. 53 Building timber. 55 Ovid's name for Diana. 57 Mark with grooves. 58 Furniture. 59 Actress Williams. 60 Is elevated. **DOWN** 1 Onion. 2 Famous person. 3 Period of time. 4 Overcome a disease. 5 Rascal. 6 Archer's wrist, wrist. 7 Coty and Plevin. 8 Chemistry suffixes. 9 Small shield. 10 Rutgers' river. 11 Shrub of the rose family. 12 Kind of winter weather. 13 Bedroom shoe. 15 Confusions. 20 Close. 23 New England's pride; 2 words. 25 Pertaining to the breastbone. 27 Swiftness. 29 Loosely woven cotton or linen. 31 Seagaging man. 32 Relative. 34 Fishing gear. 35 Aspects. 36 Watchword of French Revolution. 37 Trumping bridge players. 38 Horace —, educator. 39 Field worker. 40 Fables. 42 Orange juice extractor. 44 Copper's of India. 46 List. 47 Sign of the zodiac. 50 Jacob's wife. 51 Man's name. 54 Carpenter's tool. 56 — standstill: 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 | | | | | Champion Seeks Big Grudge Battle SALT LAKE CITY — (UPI) — Gene Fullmer, two-time Kayo conqueror of Carmen Basilio, will defend his NBA version of the middleweight crown against Sugar Ray Robinson in an October "rubber match" if Robinson will accept reasonable terms. nesday night before an estimated 10,500 spectators at Derks Field. That's what Fullmer said yesterday while accepting congratulations for his impressive technical knockout victory over ex-champion Basilio in their return title bout Wed- "Ive got something I want to settle with Robinson," said the battlescarred champion from nearby West Jordan, Utah. "He's the only man who ever knocked me out. I want to return the favor." Current needs for medical and psychiatric social workers total about 3,600 annually in the United States. FIREWORKS DISPLAY July 4th 8:30 p.m. p.m. Memorial Stadium Tickets at Gate — 50c Advance Tickets — 25c On Sale at Harrell Texaco Station — 9th & Miss. Lawrence National Bank — 647 Mass. Rankin Drugstore — 1101 Mass. Round Corner Drugstore — 801 Mass. The Surplus Store — 904 Mass. Commerce Acceptance — 946 Mass. Zimmerman's Hardware — 1832 Mass. Kief's Record Shop — Malls Shopping Center "This time we will build our equipment beforehand and ship it to Antarctica so we can do the research there," he said. "Our study will be more specific and intensive than on previous trips." (Sponsored by Lawrence Jaycees) Under sponsorship of a $31,955 National Science Foundation research grant, he will attempt to discover the length of time the Antarctic continent has been cold. On previous trips, Prof. Zeller has made collections of rocks on the continent and shipped them in dry ice to the University for study. Edward J. Zeller, associate professor of geology at the University will make his third trip to Antarctica in November. This will be the longest of his three stays on the continent. He plans to return to the United States sometime in January or early February. Previous trips have been for only one or two months. Antarctic Trip Set For Zeller Luciano Ronca, Trieste, Italy graduate student, will accompany him as a research assistant. He will use his own thermoluminescence method to determine the age of rock samples collected. By measuring the amount of light given off by the rocks when heated, he is able to determine the age of the specimens. It is the second year he has been awarded a grant by the National Science Foundation to finance the study. Wagner Ruling Attacked New York Mayor Robert Wagner was criticized yesterday by an attorney for the American Civil Rights Union for denying Nazi leader George Rockwell the right to hold a July 4th rally in New York. Campus BARBER SHOP Open All Summer Just North of Student Union Friday, July 1. 1960 Three films featuring areas throughout the world will be shown at 7:30 tonight at the outdoor theater just east of Robinson Gymnasium. Outdoor Theater Features 3 Films The films are "Japan in Winter," "Australia" and "People of the Andes." Walker to Attend Extension Project T. Howard Walker, director of University Extension at the University of Kansas, is one of a 12-man team which will prepare a plan clarifying the roles of extension services. Walker and the other extension directors at major universities who were designated by the directors of the National University Extension Association, are meeting at Michigan State University's Kellogg Center through July 4. The project is financed by a grant from the center for the study of liberal education for adults. Have more fun on the 4TH Stop at LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE before you head for the road. 9th & Indiana Enjoy Hot Weather Salads at HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd You Have What it Takes CAROLINA HOPKINS To Buy a Hollmark CONTEMPRA RY CARD 25¢ SO GAME SPEND IT WITH US. MOSSER-WOLF 1107 Mass. LAST 2 DAYS ANNUAL SUMMER SALE (We Close at 5 p.m. Saturday for the Summer) These Are Our Final Reductions 20 SPORT COATS Year-round and Summer Reg. $19.95-$42.50 Now 1/2 Price Bargain Table Assorted Values Up to $8.95 One Large Group Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS All Sizes Now 1/2 Price Don't Miss Our $2 41 Pairs 41 Pairs WASH SLACKS Reg. $4.95 to $8.95 Now 1/2 Price 12 SUITS Reg. and Summer Weight Now 1/2 Price One Large Group SWIM TRUNKS Solids and Patterns Now 1/2 Price SORRY — NO ALTERATIONS ON THESE ITEMS ALL SALES CASH ALL SALES FINAL On the Hill the university shop Free Parking at the Rear Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1960 Summer Activities Set For Religious Groups Several campus religious organizations at the University have planned special programs for the summer session. An inter-denominational group meets each Sunday at 5:30 p.m. at the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread, for a buffet supper, a program featuring a guest speaker and discussion. Youth groups meeting with this group include American Baptist, Disciples of Christ, Congregational, Evangelical United Brethren, Lutheran and United Presbyterian churches. Other students are invited to attend. The group will not meet July 3 because of the July 4 holiday. A picnic is planned for the following Sunday, however. Students will meet at the center at 5 p.m. Boeing Awards Grad Fellowship The Boeing Airplane Company has awarded a graduate fellowship for study in engineering to the University for the 1960-61 academic year. The Boeing Fellowship carries a stipend of $1,350 and pays the fellow's fees for one year. It is awarded a male graduate student enrolled in aeronautical, mechanical, electrical or civil engineering or engineering mechanics. Charles Burton Banks Jr., Kansas City, Kans., will be the recipient of the award, John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, announced. Banks received the B.S. degree in aeronautical engineering from KU in 1959. During 1959-60, he was a graduate student and an instructor in the department of engineering mechanics. The Boeing Fellowship is awarded for one year, according to company officials at the firm's Wichita Division. The recipient is selected on the basis of his undergraduate academic achievement, interest and personal qualifications for his chosen field, character and need for financial assistance. The Rev. Paul Davis, pastor of the Congregational Church, will speak the following Sunday (July 10). Other programs will be announced. Methodist students on the campus are meeting at 6 p.m. each Sunday for supper, directed discussion and a worship service at the Methodist Student Center, 1314 Oread. The group also meets at 8 p.m. Tuesdays for refreshments and a vesper service. The Center is also open daily for study, recreation or worship. The Newman Club has planned no activities for the summer although the Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd., will remain open for the summer. Mass is held each Sunday at 9 a.m. in Strong Auditorium and Instructions in the Church will be given throughout the summer at the Center. Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks 1310 W. 6th VI 3-9 VI 3-9757 PUZZLE ANSWER S N A C K B R I E R S S H O G U N S R E D C A P S L A T A R E L A N E U R I N E L A L E V I N C E S I R A E L B E E P E E S S T A R T O L L S P A R S T A E L T E M P T E R S C E N A S T E A R D O R R F E R R E R M I N I N G S A G U E D R A P M A L T A C A F E S E N N A L E O N E L F L L L A N E R O A R N T I E B E A M T I T A N I A S T R I A T E S E T T E E S E S T H E R S O A R S Try the Kansan Want Ads 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) Photo Studio HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss V1 3-2057 821 Mass. REDMAN'S semi-annual SHOE SALE Women's Shoes DRESS SHOES — SPORTS — CASUALS — WEDGIES $2.99 to $6.99 American Girl Risque Harvey Enna Jettick Buskins Heydays Trim Tred Men's Shoes $3.99 to $8.99 Randcraft — Jarman — Wello REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Insect Bites Take High Death Toll CHICAGO —(UPI)— Bees and other insects kill more Americans each year than all poisonous snakes combined, the Journal of the American Medical Association said today. The worst killers are the honeybee and bumblebee and three wasps—yellow jacket, harpoon and polistes—the article quoted Dr. Harry J. Mueller of Boston. Anderson Blames Docking For High Parole Violations KANSAS CITY. Kan. — (UPI)— Atty. Gen. John Anderson Jr. has blamed Gov. George Docking for the high rate of parole violations in Kansas. Try the Kansan Want Ads Anderson told a GOP dinner and rally here Wednesday night that the record of parole violations in Kansas is $2^{1/4}$ times as bad as in the federal system. "The blame can and must be settled at one person's doorstep; that person is George Docking," he charged. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! ★ NOW SHOWING "The Untouchable 7 Thieves" and "Circus Stars" STARTING SUNDAY Edna Ferber's "Ice Palace" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING SATURDAY ONLY "Pillow Talk" 3 Giant Features Plus Fireworks STARTING SUNDAY Frank Sinatra in "A Whole in the Head" Walt Disney's "Darby O'Gill" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING Fabian in "Hound Dog Man" plus "The Toughest Gun in Tombstone" STARTING SUNDAY Bing Crosby, Debbie Reynolds in "Say One for Me" plus Doris Day, Jack Lemmon in "It Happened to Jane" Fireworks Display Sunday Night --- Four Ro rooms. kitchen per mon Nice Cl hall and Partly f 2 BACI floor. baths. P yard an VI 3-622 First fl month, 1 3 blocks Nearly Kitchen stove a parking. From Ur 2 Room Furnishe rent. See or VI 3 FURNIS Georgia, ficiency. FM mu Available only. $7. Spacious neighbor 3 student bath and VI 3-353 TWO 3 MENTS. for eith couples. FOR MI rooms. $. second. fall. Clo. or call Large Summer changing ONE F Rooms Summer 1301 Lo RENT per wee Center. BEVERA cold. Closed p Ice Plan Page 7 (PI)— has g for ans in and at theansas deraler must step; ," he CLASSIFIED Friday, July 1. 1960 Summer Session Kansan FOR RENT Four Room House, including two bedrooms. Attractively furnished. Modern kitchen and bath. $_{12}$ acre garden. 865.00 per month. Phone VI - 31680. 7-15 Nice Clean Apartment. Three rooms. hall and Private bath, private entrance. Partly furnished. Call VI 3-2760. 7-8 Nearly new 2 Bedroom Apartment Kitchen furnished with new refrigerator, stove and automatic washer. Private room. Free WiFi. From Union. Phone VI 3-8554 7-15 FURNISHED A P AR T M E N T. 5420 Georgia, Kansas City, Kan. 3 rm Efficiency, utilities paid, nicely furnished. FM music, private entrance, parking: Available July 10 — Married couple only, $75. 2 Room Kitchenette Apartment for rent. Furnished. Utilities paid. Also garage for rent. See Garner's, 1036 New Hampshire or VI 3-0748. Spacious Three Room Apt. In residential neighborhood. Completely furnished for 3 students. All electric kitchen. Private lift. Entrances. Phone VI 3-6444 or VI 3-3536. 7-1 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on second. Summer rates. Also for renting for UMU, UMSU, Tennesse or call VI 3-9480 at 4 p.m. 2 BACHELOR APARTMENTS. Ground floor. Completely furnished. Private baths. Private entrances. Garages Lorge and jattos. South of Campus 7-8 III 9-3625. First floor furnished apartment. $60 month, utilities paid. Ideal for 3 students. 3 blocks from Union. VI 3-6294. tf When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available for either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:30 pm. tf Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider ex- changing for typing or labor. TI 3-6294. tf ONE HALF BLOCK FROM UNION, Rooms for Men, 1 Single and 1 double. Summer Rates: Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf MISCELLANEOUS RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf BEVERACES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Plenie. party supplies. Ice Plant. 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0330. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do these, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. tf TYPING TYPING WANTED: Experienced. Will dterm papers, dissertations, theses, etc VI 2-1726. 7-1 Would like to do typing in my home phone. Phone Y124611 after a p.m. call. Phone Y124612 after a p.m. ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson. Phone VI 3-6791 after 5 p.m. TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 blks. East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term papers, etc. Phone VI 3-2955 between 4 and 6 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: do these, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone: (312) 550-8976 Former secretary wants to type. Call Ms. Robert Milliken, VI 3-15280, tf TYPIST—General typing, term papers. Mrs Elmer Dunlund, VI 3-5127. Ct uf TRANSPORTATION Would like ride from K. C. Classes 8 to 12:30. Call F1 2-8903. 7-8 Want to join car pool or take riders. Mon-Wed-Friday. Kansas City, Mo. —Lawrence. Leave K.C. at 9:00 a.m. return after 11:20 a.m. Phone GI 7-2713. WANTED: RIDE FROM TOPEKA to Lawrence daily — leaving from Topeka at or about 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Call VI 3-7234 after 7 p.m. 7-12 Would like ride or, to join car pool from K C. Morning class. Call W E 1-8351. 7-24 SHARE CARS Victimity S-M North High School to Lawrence, Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 to noon at 7:00 to 3:30 one or two o'clock. Co. Cal Uxt. Ext. 359 or RA 2-18-1 after 5:00 p.m. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUDRY. Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf KU BARBER SHOP—Only 1½ blocks down 14th St. hill. Flat tops a specialty. Plenty of free parking. 411¹⁴ W. 14th St. Clarence. Wayne and Shorty. tf BUSINESS SERVICES GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday, $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton, instructor. Jayhawk Driving Range, must start on 23rd Street. Phone V 3-9725. DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tt SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes — $10 Washed drying drydry 6/3, $9. Ib. load. Washed, dried. Pickup — delivery. Ruff cleaned. I s- 3077- 8. WANTED TO RENT: Nicely furnished home from Sept. 1, 1960 to June 1, 1961 Doctorate program. Call VI 3-5077 after 3 o'min. Guy B. Homan. FOR SALE PRINTED BILOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742. WANTED NOTICE SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special on-time Time, Life, and Sports illustrated. Both are free! Processed promptly; Call V1 3-09422. German Tutor for PHD reading examinations. Denis Kennedy, Phone VI 3-5552 TUTORING EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS Try the Kansan Want Ads As American as the 4th of July 5C Ice cream has been an American favorite for years. No wonder . . . it's so cool, refreshing, and good-tasting. Have plenty of ice cream over the 4th. Pick up $ _{1/2} $ -gallon of VARSITY VELVET ALL STAR — the best made — from your ice cream dealer today. Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIRY 202 West 6th Phone VI 3-5511 Don't be without a good Typewriter... A good typewriter helps you do your work better . . in less time. College is a big investment and typewritten work plays an important role in college. Stop in soon and see our fine selection of typewriters. SPECIAL New Smith-Corona "Sterling" Portables Now Only $9500 Gray Green Pica-Elite Blue Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1960 Summer Directory Supplement S Ssegur, W. Hubbard, Jr., GR. 500 W. 11 . VI 3-9123 Selfbold, Dona Fae, GRA. 1122 W. Campus . VI 3-7415 Sentney, Suzanne, 4ED Severance, Stanford L. 4, AAS. 1145¹⁵ Penn. VI 2-0677 Shaw, Susanne M. 4ED Sheley, Robert Dean, 4AS Shibley, Susan E. 4AS, 1232 La. VI 3-6242 Shideger, Georgia M. GR *Short, John W. GR, commuting *Shults, Mayo G., GR. 1814 Nalsmith Simmons, Robert J., 4BU. 1515 Engel VI 2-1200 Sinn, Ronald Ridgway, 4AS Simonov, Salvador, 9ZC. 1122 Campus VI 3-7415 Skinner, Edward W. 4BU *Stagle, Gloria J. 4ED, commuting Smith, Carol J. 4AS Smith, Connie J. 3AS *Smith, Joe Elliott, 9ZC. 1515 Engel Smith, Karl David, 4EN, 1539 Tenn. Smith, Neilie M. GR Sneegas, Larry D., 4FA, commuting *Snider, Jennie B., 4ED, commuting *Snow, James W. GR, 500 W. 11 *Solera, Carolyn C., GR. 643 Ind. VI 3-8986 *Sommer, Clara B., GR, commuting Sparks, Carol L. GR, 1122 W. Campus VI 3-7415 Spenable, Sally L. 3AS, commuting *Spotts, James V. GR, 1704 Miss VI 2-0992 Spracher, Frances, 4ED, commuting Stamm, Malie M. GR, 1122 W. Campus VI 3-7415 Stanton, Veda D. GR, 1145 W. 23 VI 3-5727 Stennen, Ernest, GR. 1810 Nalsmith *Stennes, Florence S., GR. 1810 Nalsmith *Stertz, Deloyd E., GR. Stouffer Stockwell, Nancy J. 9ED, commuting Strong, Corlene H. 4AS, 1216 La. VI 3-6723 *Stuart, Alberta W. GR, 724 Ala. VI 3-4136 Stueckemann, Johanna 2AS *Stutz, Anna Keller, 9ZZ, 1122 W. Campus ... VI 3-7415 Suess, Rosa M., GR, 1122 W. Campus ... VI 3-7415 Sutton, Charles R., 3BU Swannie, Donald H., 5EN, 841 La ... VI 3-6075 Swanson, Ronald D., 3FA Swearingen, Thomas H., 4FA T Taylor, Rosamond B., 9ZZ, commuting ... VI 3-9123 Thierry, Sonja Ann, 4ED ... VI 3-9123 Thomas, Barbara Kay, 4AS ... VI 3-9123 * Thompson, Edwin, 9ZZ, commuting ... VI 3-9123 Thompson, I. Virginia, GR, Stouffer ... VI 3-9123 Thornton, John Robert, 4ED ... VI 3-9123 Tobias, Dorothy, GR, 500 W. 11 ... VI 3-9123 Towle, Marian J., 4ED ... VI 3-9123 * Tubach, Lemoine, GR, 1122 W. Campus ... VI 3-7415 Tubbs, Niel Leonard, GR, 500 W. 11 ... VI 3-9123 * Tucker, Buford B., 4EN ... VI 3-7415 * Tupper, Wilma, GR, 1122 W. Campus ... VI 3-7415 U *Underkoffer, Milton, GR 500 W. 11. *Unruth, Sophia Buller, GR 1122 W. Campus VI 3-7415 V Van Dyke, Paul. GR, 500 W. 11 VI 3-9123 Vermilion, Nancy A., 3AS Villarreal, Manuel R., 4AS Visser, Earl Wayne, 4BU W Waldron, William 4EN, 1515 Engel ... VI 2-1200 Wallace, Wayne W. 3AS *Wallis, Bascom, GR, commuting *Ward, Mary Laing, GR, commuting Ward, Ynez G., GR, 1260 Ohio Washington, Grace J., GR, 500 W. 11 ... VI 3-9123 *Waters, Floyd Ronald, 92Z, 500 W. 11 *Waters, Henrietta E., GR Watt, Jewell K., 9ZZ *Weaver, William R., 9ZZ, commuting *Wedd, Ralph H., Jr., GR, commuting Wedgeworth, Billy R., 4ED Weich, Robert G., 3AS Wells, Joe Roswell, 4BU Werp, David Lee, 4BU Weston, Sue A., 3AS Westphal, Walter R., GR, 500 W. 11 Wetmore, David E., GR, 825 R. I. *Wheat, Emmit, GR, 500 W. 11 Wheetley, Doyne W., GR, 1122 W. Campus *White, Fred M., GR, commuting *Williams, Clifford A., GR, 500 W. 11 Williams, Grace D., GR, 500 W. 11 Williams, Wanda L., GR, 500 W. 11 Williamson, Patricia, 3AS Wilson, Bobby Carlos, 2EN Wilson, Elizabeth L., GR, 92Z, 1122 W. Campus *Iman, Charles, 92Z, 1122 W. Campus Winegarden, Kon K, 4AS Winn, David K., 4BU *Winters, Lawrence J., GR Wohlfarth, Richard W., GR, 1000 Miss. *Woods, James H., GR, commuting Woodward, Brinton W., 3AS *Wunsch, Calvin Arno, 92Z, 1122 W. Campus Wyancko, Ron J., 4FA Y Yost, Delma, 9ZZ, 1122 W. Campus VI 3-7415 Younger, Donna, GR, 1515 Engel VI 2-1200 Z Zagar, William R., 3AS, 725 W. 25 ... VI 3-6427 *Zahn, Otto C., GR, 925 Ind. ... VI 3-6427 *Zilliox, Robert E., 9FA, 436 Maine ... VI 3-7505 Kansan Gets MU Position Dr. Garth S. Russell, who received his M.D. from the University of Kansas in 1959, has been appointed research associate in surgery at the University of Missouri Medical Center. Dr. Russell, an authority on tissue transplantation, will be engaged full time at the Lions Eye Tissue Bank at the University of Missouri after July 1. He was director of the Health Department at Great Bend until he entered the KU School of Medicine in 1955, where he held a 3-year fellowship of the American Tobacco Company in the department of surgery and microbiology. Dr. Russell has been serving a rotating internship at Wesley Hospital, Wichita. After three years service in the Army, he received his B.S. degree in 1953 from Kansas State University. JOHN Q CUSTOMER NO. PAYMENT RECEIVED 1 THIS WAY TO CUSTOMER Bells Wear Out As Bachelor Ranks Wear Thin In 1959 your name imprinted FREE It doesn't cost one extra penny to have your name imprinted on all your checks when you have a convenient personal checking account. There is never any charge for deposits and ThriftiCheck cost only a few cents each. Open your low-cost ThriftiCheck personal checking account this week at . . . DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK ThriftiCheck NEW YORK—(UPI)—The din was deafening from the nation's wedding bells last year—more Americans walked down the aisle than ever before. About 1,505,000 couples stood before the altar during 1959 for a 2.7 per cent rise over the preceding year, according to Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. statisticians. The increase reversed a two-year downward trend and was a result of improved economic conditions. Metropolitan said. The year 1958 was the least-marrying year since World War II with only 1,465,000 weddings. Alabama and Arkansas had the greatest increase by states—per state with increases of 25 and 19 per cent respectively. Florida's marriage rate jumped nearly 12 per cent. Yuma, Ariz., which enacted stricter marriage laws in 1956, had only 1,400 weddings last year compared to 14,000 in 1956. Elkton, Nev., also recorded a drop of 9 per cent. School of Education Slates Golf Tourney States reporting drops in the rate included Oklahoma, Vermont, New York, Minnesota, Maryland, West Virginia and Idaho. Tournament rules are posted on bulletin boards in Bailey Hall. Entries, which close Thursday, may be made in 112 Bailey. The annual School of Education Summer Session Golf Tournament for staff members and graduate students will be held at the Lawrence Country Club, July 8. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY Let's blast off early for the 4th! MR. PIZZA 106 N. Park Delivery VI 3-9111 Start with a HIDEAWAY Pizza at a holiday price — Bring Mr. Pizza to the Hideaway and get 20c OFF on the PIZZA of your choice. Sale good tonight (July 1) only. Carry Out KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU Friday, July 8, 1960 d on En- hy be LAWRENCE, KANSAS Sunday Concerts ut Afternoon 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Chorus Requiem ... Brahms I. Behold All Flesh is as the Grass II. Blessed are the Dead Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Part II Orchestra Symphony in B-Flat Major ... Ernest Chausson I. Lento — Allegro Vivo Franz Liszt Irma Vallecillo, Pianist Santurce, Puerto Rico Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Part III Outdoor Overture ... Aaron Copland Symphony No. 8 in B Minor ... Franz Schubert I. Allegro Moderato L'Arlésienne, Suite No. 2 ... Georges Bizet I. Pastorale II. Intermezzo III. Menuetto IV. Farandole Theme Song Irish Tune From County Derry ... Grainger 8 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Port I Band Welsh Rhapsody ... German I. Loudly Proclaim II. Hunting the Hare III. Men of Harlech Symphonic Suite ... Clifton Williams I. Intrada II. Chorale III. March IV. Antique Dance V. Jubilee Gerald Carney, Conducting Part II Girls Glee Club Holiday Song ... Schumann Five Songs for Womens Voices ... Poulenc I. The Good Little Girl II. The Lost Dog III. Coming Home from School IV. The Little Sick Boy V. The Hedge Hog Boys Glee Club Stars of the Summer Night ... Arr: Parker Shaw Wait for the Wagon ... Arr. Hunter Shaw Poor Man Lazrus ... Arr. Hairston Clayton Krebbi, Conducting Part III Band Suite from "The Water Music ... George Frederick Handel I. Allegro II. Air III. Minuet IV. Hornpipe V. Finale Folk Song Suite ... Ralph Vaughan Williams I. March — "Seventeen come Sunday" II. Intermezzo — "My Bonny Boy" III. March — "Folk Songs from Somerset" Pictures at an Exhibition ... Modeste Moussorgsky I. Promenade II. Catacombs Con Mortuis in Lingua Mortua III. The Hut of Baba Yaga IV. The Great Gate of Kiev Donald Johanos, Conducting Thursday Song KU Grad Gets School Post Theme Song Irish Tune From County Derry ... Grainger He was a junior high school principal in the Shawnee-Mission district prior to becoming assistant superintendent in Coronado in 1958, and he had taught in Missouri rural and Kansas City public schools for 13 years. A KU graduate, Dr. Charles G. James, has been appointed superintendent of public schools in Coronado, Calif. Dr. James received his master's degree in education from KU in 1953 and his doctor of education degree in 1955. His undergraduate work was done at Central Missouri State College, Warrenburg. Dr. James' appointment will become effective Sept. 9. He and his wife, Laura, have three children. First Preview Session Draws Large Turnout Chemistry Pair Receives Grant Two professors of chemistry at the University of Kansas have been awarded renewal of an Atomic Energy Commission contract for research on "Metal Effects in Reactions of Metal-Cyclopentadienyl Compounds." More than 200 students planning to enter the University as freshmen this fall will complete a two-day orientation session on the campus today. The preview this week is the first of six such sessions allowing the entering students to get a head start in the entering process. During the two-day period the students have been taking placement examinations and those who so desired have been taking qualifying examinations in language, biology or chemistry. William E. McEwen and Jacob Klienberg have been awarded $10,150 in new funds from the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund for the fourth year. An attempt is made to limit each preview group to 200 students, although that total is sometimes exceeded. For the first session 208 students had pre-registered. The program is designed to acquaint the new student with the campus and to administer these examinations. The preliminary orientation does not include all the events of the fall orientation week, but does reduce that hectic load somewhat. Yesterday morning students were given placement examinations. In the afternoon they met with representatives of the school in which they plan to enroll in the fall. Last night the students attended a preview dinner in the Kansas Union. Students also met with the deans of men and women in a residence hall session. Also made available are individual interviews with staff and faculty members to discuss employment, financial assistance, housing or other phases of university life. The second placement examinations are being given today. Prospective women students are housed in Miller and Watkins residence halls during the previews and the men in Stephenson and Pearson halls. The contract is awarded from Sept. 1, 1960, until Aug. 31, 1961. Weather Considerable cloudiness today with occasional showers or thunderstorms west and central portions. Warmer today. High 85 to 90. The remaining sessions of the previews will be held on Mondays and Tuesdays of the next three weeks and Thursdays and Fridays of the next two weeks. Three Groups Set Sessions for KU Three major workshops or institutes open on the University campus next week as a part of the vast University Extension program. The third annual Management Development Program for Independent Telephone Executives begins Sunday and runs through Aug. 5. Representatives from 22 states and from Puerto Rico and Chile are expected to attend the four-week session. Directing the program are Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business and Richard H. Lashley, assistant professor of business administration. KU faculty members assisting in the program include Edward G. Nelson, professor of economics and business administration; Frank S. Pinet, assistant professor of business administration, and Charles B. Saunders, associate professor of business administration. The United Steelworkers of America will hold its 14th annual regional summer institute, also beginning Sunday. The session winds up next Friday. Staff members will be from both the union and KU. A workshop for county welfare directors and staff will open Wednesday stressing "The Public Welfare Agency's Responsibility to the Community." The featured speaker at the workshop banquet Wednesday night will be Jay L. Roney, director of the Public Welfare Project on Aging, of the American Public Welfare Association in Chicago. The workshop is sponsored by the State Welfare Department in cooperation with University Extension. Junior Receives $160 McManis Scholarship Carolyn Jo Stotts, Havensville junior, has been selected as the recipient of the J. E. McManis Memorial Scholarship for the 1960-61 academic year. The $150 award is given annually from income from a fund created with the KU Endowment Assn., in memory of Dr. McManis who received the degree doctor of medicine from KU in 1902. FRESNO TAKE THAT—Disarming a suspect by use of judo tactics is just one of many facets of training Richard Dunbar (left) of Winfield and Terry Cupps of Wichita must undergo before they can join the Kansas Highway Patrol as troopers. They are attending the recruit training program currently in progress on the campus. Large Contract Awarded to KU The U. S. Public Health Service has announced the award of a one-year $400,000 contract to the University Medical Center to develop agents to detect and identify viruses that may cause cancer in human beings. The contract is part of the National Cancer Institute's expanding virus-cancer research program. More than 100 grants have been made to institutions for work in this aspect of cancer research in addition to numerous studies at the Institute's laboratories in Bethesda, Md. Virus infection has already been established as the cause of many types of cancer in laboratory animals. Scientists have not yet established whether viruses produce cancer in humans though viruses have been found in malignant tissue removed from cancer patients. Under the one-year contract with the University, Dr. Herbert A. Wenner will undertake to develop virus detection agents by producing large quantities of antisera against 60 common human viruses found in the digestive tract. Anisera are produced by a complicated process involving injection of pure virus solution into monkeys. Pardon Given Following Story A Michigan man convicted of second-degree murder was granted a full pardon by Gov. G. Mennen Williams recently following a story in the Detroit Free Press written by Jim Robinson, a graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism at KU. Robinson, a member of the class of 1949, was pulled off his regular state legislature beat last March to investigate an anonymous tip on the innocence of the condemned man. The new assignment was intended as a break in routine for him. The 35-year-old handyman immediately began digging into the 6-year-old case of Walter A. Pecho, convicted of slaving his wife in June, 1954, although he continued to protest his innocence. The prosecution's case apparently had rested on testimony that Pecho's wife, Eleanor, could not have pulled the trigger on the 20-guage shotgun used in the shooting. Suicide was the main line of defense for Pecho. But Robinson, in addition to digging up evidence that had not been uncovered at the trial, got other expert opinion to the fact that suicide not only was possible, but highly probable. Pecho walked free after five years and seven months in prison. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 8, 1960 Pennsylvania High Schoolers Prove Tutor Program Value Dr. Charles H. Boehm, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, is right in enthusiastically endorsing "Project Tutor," a new program introduced in Shenandoah, Pa., to make use of high school honor students as tutors and group study leaders. The program is an answer to charges of overemphasis on spectator sports, and, perhaps, as Dr. Boehm believes, marks a "historic" gain for education in general. IN ANY EVENT, a development which gives well deserved recognition to exceptional students, winning for them respect and prestige from their classmates heretofore reserved strictly for the star athletes, would be worthwhile for that reason alone. But the program in addition affords the honor students unusual opportunities to broaden their experience and at the same time inspires other intelligent youngsters to live up to their potential. That is saying a great deal, but it is borne out by results at the University of Pennsylvania — where "Project Tutor" originated — as well as at Shenandoah. At the high school level, the "tutors" meet with voluntary pupils before class, stepping up their efforts at examination time, and are particularly helpful in move demanding studies such as mathematics, physics, chemistry and the languages. In physics and chemistry, recent progress has brought such enormous changes and classes are so crowded that material was sometimes being passed over with only a fraction of the students getting the idea. BUT THE "TUTOR" project turned the tables and teachers now find themselves inspired by the responsive and alert attention they receive in the classroom. Intelligent students, who hadn't been successful before, suddenly "came alive" with aroused interest when they were given the chance to work directly with others of their own age who knew what they were doing. The Inquiler has recommended before that improved teaching methods and new teaching devices, including TV, movies and testing equipment, should be called upon to ease high school problems. "Project Tutor" is such an innovation which, if promptly and effectively adopted, could strengthen the quality of instruction in several highly critical areas. — Philadelphia Inquirer Slow Students Urged to Drop Out CHICAGO — (UPI) — Students who will not or cannot learn should be allowed to drop out of school, many educators believe. A poll of school superintendents by The Nation's Schools showed 73 per cent of them to be against compulsory attendance at school until the age of 18 or the completion of 12 full grades of school. Sixty-one per cent of the administrators polled would permit students to drop out of school after their 16th birthday. A Michigan superintendent who would permit students to drop out Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 European. 5 Appendix to the Old Testament: Abbr. 6 Composer Straus. 14 Not very good. 15 Boy: Span. 16 Girl in a song. 17 Describing most cowboys. 19 "Dieu et mon ___" motto of British royalty. 20 Calyx parts. 21 Ballplayer Hodges. 23 Small coins: Abbr. 24 Sugar: Chem, suffix. 25 Speak a second time. 27 Barely enough. 30 Watchman. 33 Apple-like fruit. 34 Reduce. 35 Austrian capital. 36 Cobra's relative. 37 Certain teamsters. 38 And so forth. 40 Solid organic alcohol. 42 Household god. 43 Simple. 44 Pickled. 46 Underworld. 47 Deliverer. 48 Airfoil. 49 Collection of anecdotes. 51 Adjective ending. 52 Trial sites. 55 Cash. 56 Marks in printing. 60 Arnold's co-conspirator. 61 Recent. 62 Character in "Topper." 63 Head wind: Slang. 64 Short side track. 65 Marriage: Comb, form. **DOWN** 1 Bachelor of Sacred Scripture. 2 Playwright Anita. 3 "God have mercy on such ___"**: 2 words. 4 Ben Jonson's comedy. 5 Scheme to get. 6 Porkers. 7 United. 8 Cranky old fellow. 9 Roman language before 200 B.C.; 2 words. 10 Anthony. 11 Contrasted with 17 Across. 12 Mine entrance. 13 Rodents. 18 Orient. 22 "O! thus be — when freemen shall stand ****: 2 words. 25 Snake. 26 Port in New Guinea. 27 Sudden, brief spell. 28 __ Rica. 29 Connective symbols. 30 Ill-bred person. 31 __ nous. 32 Olympic events. 34 French seaport. 37 Mechanical carrying device. 38 Wildly gay. 41 Creek. 43 Contemporary of Cardinal Newman. 45 Casts up. 46 Yesterday: Fr. 48 Emancipator. 49 "___ for the ages": 2 words. 50 Emphatic denial. 52 Neighbor of Kiska. 53 On a cruise. 54 Glide along. 58 Weaken. 59 Artful. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 at 14 suggested placing them in a type of work camp. "I visualize something on the order of the old CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) camps," he said. Educators against compulsory school attendance up to the age of 18 called it a waste of time both for the schools and the students. "Forcing students with no interest in school to remain there does not assure their making good use of the opportunities," a superintendent from Pennsylvania said. An Illinois administrator termed compulsory attendance for these students a waste of the schools' efforts and a hindrance to the proper education of those who want to learn. A Vermont administrator summed up the feelings of educators in favor of requiring 12 full grades of schooling for everyone. "We must provide an education for all youth," he said. "Each child should complete a high school course tailored to need, adaptability and capacity." Some educators favoring a compulsory 12 years of school, however, suggested that it provide technical training for those with low academic achievement. BEST SELLERS (UPI) Fiction (Compiled by Publishers' Weekly) ADVISE AND CONSENT—Allen Drury HAWAIJ—James Michener THE LEOPARD—Giuseppe di Lampedusa TRUSTEE FROM THE TOOLROOM— Nevil Shute THE CHAPMAN REPORT—Irving Wal- nce THE CONSTANT IMAGE—Marcia Davenport THE AFFAIR—C. P. Snow THE LINCOLN LORDS—Cameron Hawley A DISTANT TRUMPET-Paul Horgan New Fiction MAY THIS HOUSE BE SAFE FROM TIGERS—Alexander King THE ENEMY WITHIN—Robert F. Kennedy THE LAW AND THE PROFITS Cyrn Parkinson THE NIGHT THEY BURNED THE MOUNTAIN—Thomas A. Dooley I KID YOU NOT—Jack Paar POLICY MEDICINEJ. Adj. Adenauer Jack Van POLK MEDICINE--Joy Adamson PERLE—MY STORY—Perle Mesta SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room ... Phone 711 Editors ... Dick Crocker Clarke Keys BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office Phone 376 Business Manager ... Clydey Brown New Van Cliburn recording "Schumann Concerto" Mon-aural and Stereo BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest CITY OF TOWN Feel good, look good... in drycleaned wash'n wear It's a wonderfully fresh, crisp, dressy, feel and look our expert drycleaning gives your wash 'n wear clothes. No stains. No spots. No wrinkles. No washing and ironing chore you've never had before. We keep the tailored-in fashion of your wash 'n wear clothes alive and appealing. As members of the National Institute of Drycleaning, we have the latest information on the care of wash 'n wear fabrics. Make sure your wash 'n wear clothes look better and last longer. Call us today. HOW TO TELL QUALITY DRYCLEANING - Clothes are clean, fresh and lint free. - Spotst and stains are removed when safe to do so. - Colors are bright and true. - Creases are straight and sharp. No wrinkles. - Entire garment is free from pocket, seam, and button impressions. - Pleats are straight and hemlines even. - removed in cleaning. are replaced. - Lapels and sleeves are rolled, unless creases were specified. - Collar, shoulders and neckline are remolded to original fit. - Customer is notified if problems arise. YOUR CLEANER IS YOUR CLOTHES' BEST FRIEND NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DRYCLEANING 1907 As advertised in the Saturday Evening Post Exclusive in Lawrence at ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. V13-5155 Higginson Given Research Post John Higginson, associate professor of pathology at the School of Medicine, has been appointed to a research professorship in geographical pathology. The professorship will be paid from the income from a cancer research fund of $50,000 bequeathed to the KU Endowment Association by the late Mrs. Martha E. Lewis of Kansas City, Mo. The fund memorializes Mrs. Lewis and her late sister, Katherine Hubbard. Prof. Higginson has utilized this approach in his study of cancer, heart and liver diseases. He has published many papers on geographical pathology. Geographical pathology refers to the pattern of disease and its pathological manifestations to environment, as related to mode of life and sociological situations. Prof. Higginson will continue his teaching and research interests, but he also will be responsible for developing cooperative research in geographical pathology between the University and medical institutions abroad. The appointment became effective July 1. Allies Clean House Page 3 JACKSON, Tenn. — (UPI) — Mrs. W. B. Berry has a maid who is a triplet. Her name is America. One sister is named France, and the third sister, England. Campus BARBER SHOP Open All Summer Just North of Student Union Sports to be Featured In Robinson Films Sports will be the featured topic in the regular outdoor film series at 8:00 tonight just east of Robinson Gymnasium. The three films to be shown are "Olympic Village, U.S.A." "Canada from Sea to Sea" and "Fishin' for Fun." KU Law Librarian To Attend Convention Miss Hazel Anderson, KU Law librarian and legal adviser of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs will attend the biennial convention of that organization July 17-22 in Philadelphia. More than 5,000 delegates and visitors from the 50 states are expected to take part. Brake Adj. 98c Grease Job $1 Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 摄影 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 Two trophies and other prizes will be awarded today in the annual School of Education Summer Session Golf Tournament. Tee off time is 1 p.m. at the Lawrence Country Club. Ed. School Holds Summer Golf Tourney Trophies will be awarded for the low medalist and low handicap scores. Other prizes will be awarded for second and third places in each category. Falls on slippery surfaces are the leading cause of off-the-job injuries to about 210,000 workers in 80 companies. ThriftiCheck -America's most popular personal checking account service is available in this area only at Douglas County STATE BANK 900 Mass. V13-7474 Friday. July 8. 1960 Census Hurts Austin Pride AUSTIN, Tex. — (UPI) — When census-takers announced that Austin's population was some 15,000 below Chamber of Commerce estimates, the Austin Statesman headlined: "Get Bigger or Lost: Ultimatum for Austin?" Summer Session Kansan STODDARD, N. H.—(UPI)—Charles C. Eaton Jr., 13, was the valedictorian of Stoddard Grammar School. He couldn't miss. Bright Future in Sight He was the only pupil in the class graduating from the one-room school. Arensberg's JULY CLEARANCE SAVE up to 50% and more! Women's and Girl's Dress Flats $2.90 to $3.90 Values to $7.95 Connie — Paris Fashion White, Bone, and Pink Leathers Women's Dress Shoes High and Mid Heels $4.90 to $7.90 Values to $13.95 Accent — Jacqueline — Vitality Many colors and styles Arensberg's 819 Mass. Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results Ice Cream For a cool refresher, stop in the HAWK'S NEST and enjoy a dish of ice cream or a soda, sundae, or whatever! KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST 50 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8. 1960 Let's All Have a Party Anderson Relates Problems In Selecting Top Students Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education moderated a radio panel discussion, "The Problems Confronting the Academically Talented Student," which has been published by the Westinghouse Broadcasting Company. The printed pamphlet is a transcript of an original discussion by four educators about gifted students, broadcast on "The American Forum" program. Dean Anderson states the problem of identifying academically talented students; "We talk as though we can easily identify them. We have known lots of gifted youngsters who have been passed over in some of our high schools and universities and as a consequence we are not getting the full measure from the possibilities or sources of manpower that this country needs." Paul Woodring of the Fund for the Advancement of Education stresses the attitudes of home and school in encouraging achievement in learning. "You have to have a climate . . . where it is respectable KUEA Names Aide For Medical Center Marilyn Miller, who received the bachelor of science in business degree from the University in June, has been named an administrative assistant in the KU Endowment Association and will be in charge of the KUEA's office at the Medical Center in Kansas City. Miss Miller's duties will primarily be in connection with a research contract that may soon be enacted between the Endowment Association and the U.S. Public Health Service. Dr. Elizabeth Drews of Michigan State University reports on a study made of the mother's values relating to the child's goals. Such questions were asked as: —Would you prefer that your child would be able to own a white Cadillac versus developing a new mathematical formula? Would you prefer that your child have a swimming pool versus writing original poetry? —Would you prefer that your child would eventually have membership in a country club versus working in a scientific area? Dr. Harriet E. O'Shea of Purdue University discusses the social contacts which gifted students need with those of their intellectual age. Reprints of this panel discussion may be obtained for ten cents from Merkle Press, Inc., 810 Rhode Island Ave., N.E., Washington 18, D.C. Daily SPECIAL 80c HAPPY HAL'S E. 23rd VI 3-9753 Entire Stock Summer Dresses Misses - Juniors - Half Sizes Entire Stock 20% to 50% off Summer Sportswear Blouses Skirts Shorts Swimwear 20% off Entire Stock Summer Fabrics Thousands and thousands of yards! 20% to 50% off terriill's LAWRENCE. KANSAS occupational therapy for chest disease victims at the free, non-sectari an hospital. CHICAGO—(UPI) —Large tax refunds — amounting to $100,000 or more — jumped 50 per cent last year, according to Commerce Clearing House. There were 300 such refunds in 1959 totaling $373 million, compared with 278 amounting to $245 million in 1958. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Three KU women are taking a two-month "on-the-job" training course in occupational therapy at National Jewish Hospital at Denver as part of their requirements for a degree. Mary Karen Smith of Delphos, Kaye Porter of Sterling, and Kathleen Calkins of Lincoln, Nebr., are studying the latest techniques in Occupational Therapists Study at Denver National Jewish has provided 26.336 days of free care to Kansas residents alone under its 61-year-old motto: "None may enter who can pay . . . none can pay who enter." It specializes in tuberculosis, asthma, and other chest ailments. CAMERA CENTER Close Out 20% Off Complete Inventory Discount applies to everything on the shelves. Camera Merchandise and Party Supplies 1015 Mass. CAMERA CENTER VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre SUMMER SHOE CLEARANCE Heels Delmanette, reg. to 19.95 Now 10.90 to 13.90 Town & Country, reg. to 14.95 Now 7.90 to 10.90 Fiancees, reg. to 14.95 Now 8.90 to 10.90 Foot Flair, reg. to 14.95 Now 5.90 to 9.90 Capezio, reg. to 18.95 Now 9.90 to 10.90 Flats Town & Country, reg. to 10.95 ---- Now 4.90 to 6.90 Capezios, reg. to 10.95 --------- Now 5.90 to 6.90 Old Maine Trotters, reg. to 10.95 -- Now 5.90 to 7.90 Handbags --- 1/2 Price Hosiery ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED No Exchanges or Refunds, Please Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Br Of (This port," p. to presse velpomme United ! But ing to perity tended a ques Braz millionier wester low th Latin RIO zilian schek, bassade man w Cabo bitsche lie wor this lar "50 yea But parade cities farmin between roads. sevent produc power Mill alongs class, Janeir urban sand Carioc out w tary f Alth habita familia wage, ployec their gandis backw Brazil Whi literace exceeer easter lion o tween attend 80 per do go stitiut guarai Pre the b impro fortur inus of c coast He tional Brasil Brazil Offers Paradox Of Old, New Methods (This is another "Latin American Report", part of a periodic feature designed to present a continuing picture of developed countries in the nations south of the United States.) RIO DE JANEIRO—(UPI) —Brazilian President Juscelino Kubitschek, in the words of U. S. Ambassador John Moors Cabot, is the man who has awakened the giant. Cabot was referring to Kubitschek's industrialization and public works programs designed to give this largest Latin American country "50 years of progress in five." But whether the giant is awakening to a period of increasing prosperity and opportunity or an extended economic-social hangover is a question. Brazil possesses an estimated 68 million population and half the western hemisphere land mass below the equator and is the logical Latin American pace-setter. But it is a nation of problems and paradox. Modern industries in the cities contrast with antiquated farming methods. Jet airliners ply between towns unconnected by roads. Brazil recently became the seventh nation in the world to begin producing uranium for electric power reactors. Millions live in extreme poverty alongside the wealthy and middle class. Living conditions in Rio De Janeiro are typical of Brazilian urban centers. Eight hundred thousand of approximately 3 million Caricomans live in shantytowns without water, electricity or simple sanitary facilities. Although the bulk of slum inhabitants are workers and their families living on the minimum wage, an estimated 50,000 unemployed inhabit shacks and live off their neighbors. Communist propagandists find easy converts in the backwash of humanity. No city in Brazil is free of this blight. While the average Brazilian illiteracy rate is about 50 percent, it exceeds 90 per cent in some northeastern plantation regions. Six million of the 12,700,000 population between the ages of six and 14 do not attend school in Brazil. More than 80 per cent of Brazilian children who go to school attend private institutions despite constitutional guarantees of free education. President Kubitschek is convinced the best, possibly the only way to improve the lot of millions of less fortunate fellow Brazilians is rapid industrialization and improvement of communications between the coast and the interior. He regards transfer of the National capital from Rio to unfinished Brasilias as his most outstanding accomplishment. The government was officially moved to the new central highland city April 21 amid a display of pomp rarely witnessed in the Americas. But more than two months after the shift, only a skeleton staff is functioning in Brasilia. The bulk of federal employees remain in Rio ministries. Both houses of Congress regularly fail to muster quorums and the federal Supreme Court is in enforced recess. The basic motive in the move is to force Brazilians to build communications and settle the interior. Eighty-five per cent of the population still lives along the 4,899-mile coastline. The Brazilian president has announced he will dedicate the final year of his administration to holding down government spending and the cost of living. Last year, cost of living rose more than 50 per cent. Deficit financing is standard government practice in Brazil. During his four years in office, Kubitschek has developed it into an art. Besides a July 1 pay raise for federal workers, a boost for the military worth 17 billion cruzeiros is under discussion in Congress. Labor unions are agitating to get the minimum wage raised from 6,000 to 10,000 cruzeiros a month. The U. S. Government, private bankers and European countries have declined to consider loans to Brazil unless it makes its peace with the International Monetary Fund. Last year, Kubitschek ordered a break in negotiations with the fund. He also refused fund recommendations for monetary reform and major public spending reductions. francis sporting goods 731 Mass. COBRA we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service Save Steps Write Checks ( MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOT INSURANCE CORPORATION ) 1ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. Save Steps ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPENDIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 8th and Mass. Esso Contributes $5,000 Apparatus The University chemistry department has received from the Esso Research Laboratories at Baton Rouge, La., a gift of equipment valued at more than $5,000. Page 5 The gift is a Podbielniak Hyd-Robot low temperature distillation apparatus, which is used in the fractional distillation of materials which are gasses at room temperature. It will be used in the organic chemistry research program at KU. Try the Kansan Want Ads Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 8. 1960 BERLIN, N. H. —(UPI) —The buzz — not the sting — of a bumble bee was listed as the cause of an auto accident in Berlin. Buzz, Not Sting, Causes Crash Francis Phair told police a bee flew into his car and the buzzing distracted him so much he rammed a parked car. Ticket Supply Exceeds Demand STEPHENVILLE, Tex. — (UPI)— Some days police have a hard time giving tickets. A recent spot check of 300 motorists failed to turn up a single vehicle without the proper state inspection stickers. Fungi can spoil paints. THE WORLD'S SMOOTHEST- RICHEST A TREAT FOR TASTE • A FOOD FOR HEALTH DAIRY QUEEN MALTS • SHAKES 1835 Massachusetts TIRE SALE = NYLON Tubeless Ain Ride FOR '57-'58-'59-'60 CHEVROLET·DODGE·FORD PLYMOUTH·RAMBLER (8 cyl. '58) EASY TERM US HUGE LIFE $14 Plus Tax and Treadable Tire 95 7.50-14 TUBELESS BLACKWALL WHITEWALL $1850 It's new . . . It's NYLON . . . It's TUBELESS! It fits late model cars! Same tread design you see on tires that come on the finest 1960 cars. Pressure-tempering gives NYLON unitized strength. At this price get a set of 4. NEW TUBED-TYPE NYLON 6.70-15 $12.95 7.10-15 $14.95 7.60-15 $16.95 Air Ride TYREX* 6.70-15 $11.95 7.10-15 $13.95 7.60-15 $15.95 Plus Tax and Treadable Tire *Tyrex is a collective trade-mark of Tyrex, Inc. U. S. ROYAL Lawrence Tire and Oil Co. 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8.1960 State Group To Award $500 The Kansas Centennial Commission is conducting three contests in which cash prizes will be presented for a centennial book, a centennial poem and a centennial song. The commission will award $200 in cash to the author of a historical novel about Kansas or Kansans, a biography of a Kansan, or a book of factual material on Kansas, published between January, 1960 and August, 1961. A prize of $100 will be awarded to the best poem submitted. It must not be more than four stanzas or 16 lines and must be the writer's original work. The contest closes Nov. 1, 1960. The winning song, both music and lyrics, will be honored with an award of $200. It must be appropriate as the official song of the Kansas Centennial, must be an original work and not a parody. This contest closes Oct. 31, 1960. Further information may be obtained from the Kansas Contennial Commission, 801 Harrison, Topeka. All entries should be sent to the commission at that address. Children of broad-chested parents mature earlier than those of narrow chested parents, the American Association of Physical Anthropologists was told recently. TEXACO MAJOR CITY Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 New Scholarship Set For Foreign Student A travel scholarship of $500 for a foreign exchange student coming to the University of Kansas has been established by Elmer C. Rhoden, president of the Rhodon Investment Company in Kansas City, Mo. The scholarship is to be used to help defray the transportation expenses of an exchange student from a university in England or Scotland with which KU has exchange arrangements. These universities include Aberdeen, Birmingham, Exeter, Reading and Southampton. 'Brigadoon' Cast Briefed on Tour Col. Jerome Coray, a director of USO, was on campus yesterday to brief the members of the University's "Brigadoon" cast on their coming overseas trip. The KU group will leave the states July 15, arriving in Tokyo July 17. The show will be presented in several Pacific areas. Diamonds! We are now specializing in Diamonds and fine custom-made jewelry. Premier Jewelry 916 Mass. The Fifth Annual Midwest Work Course on Plant Layout and Facilities Planning will be held at the Town House Hotel in Kansas City Sept. 12 through 16. The event is sponsored by the Kansas City Center of the University of Kansas, one of two courses in the Midwest Work Course Series. Work Course Set For Kansas City The companion program is on Materials Handling Analysis. Since its start, in 1956, the series has attracted 143 people from 103 firms in 21 States and Canada. Nearly 20 per cent of the firms have returned two or more years for further training. These facts and the fact that the Plant Layout Course has always been oversubscribed support the University's claim that the program offers information of practical value. Try the Kansan Want Ads Enjoy a complete beauty treatment in the cool comfort of the Campus BEAUTY SHOPPE 12th & Ind. VI 3-3034 $ Free Parking It's almost like having a Money Tree you save so much by doing your laundry at the ECON-O-WASH 20c Wash 10c Dry Air Conditioned 9th and Miss. Econ.o.wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST 24 hours a day SELF-SERVICE 7 days a week BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 18 E. 9th Street VI 3-0151 MICROFILM GRANADA NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! Edna Ferber's "Ice Palace" STARTS SUNDAY! Steve Reeves (Mr. Universe) in "The Last Days of Pompeii" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "Some Like It Hot" SATURDAY ONLY 3 Big Features! STARTS SUNDAY! Sandra Dee and Richard Egan in "A Summer Place" and "Tarawa Beachhead" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING NOW SHOWING! Gary Cooper in "Man of the West" and Robert Mitchum in "Thunder Road" SATURDAY — 2 Bonus Features! STARTS SUNDAY! Clint "Cheyenne" Walker in "Yellowstone Kelly" and "Rally Round the Flag, Boys" Pant to Jacksons Cl N 2-0449. Could like 2:30. Call --- TRA Would like K. C. Morn Iant to jion-Wed- lawrence. urn after VANTED: awrence of t or abut -7234 after OWN MA beautifully ioned, pa ren. Also air condit ph. Ph V HARE CA school to I noon and variable. Cater 5:00 after 5:00 Four Room Rooms. At kitchen an per month. ★★★★★ Nearly n Kitchen fu fove and parking A Uncle Nice Clean ball and 1 Partly fur FURNISHI Georgia. I licensing, i. FM music Available only, S75. 2 Room K Furnished. rent. See or VI 3-0 2 BACHE door. Co paths. Pri vard and 3-6255. FOR MEN rooms. Sh second. S shall. Close. close or call V Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Friday, July 8. 1960 CLASSIFIED ADS TRANSPORTATION Vant to Join or form Car Pool from kansas City. Morning classes. Cail N 2-0449. 7-12 could like ride from K. C. Classes 8 to 2.30. Call F1 2-8903. 7-8 Could like ride or, to join car pool from C. Morning class. CALL WE 1-8351. 7-24 want to join car pool or take riders. Mon-Wed-Friday. Kansas City, Mo... awrence. Leave K.C. at 9:00 a.m. am after 11:20 a.m. Phone GI 2-7213 7-83 HARE CARS Victimity S-M North High School to Lawrence. Mon thru Fri 7:00-9:00 to 6:30 one or two variabie. Call UQ Ext. 389 or R-21848 f: 5:00 p.m. 7-1 KANTED; RIDE FROM TOPEKA to Lawrence daily — leaving from Topeka t or about 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Call VI -7234 after 7 p.m. 7-12 OWN MANOR'S Penthouse Apartment; beautifully furnished, TV, air conditioned, parking. No pets or small children. Also desirable room with TV, radio, air conditioned, breakfast nook snack sar. Ph. VI 3-8000. 7-19 FOR RENT Nice Clean Apartment. Three rooms, hall and Private bath, private entrance. Partly furnished. Call VI 3-2750. 7-8 Four Roem House, including two bedrooms. Attractively furnished. Modern kitchen and bath. $24 acre garden. 565.00 per month. Phone VI 3-3660. 7-15 Nearly new 2 Bedroom Apartment. Kitchen furnished with new refrigerator, cooking space, parking. Available August 15. One block from Union. Phone VI 3-8834. 7-15 CURNISHED APARTMENT. 5420 Georgia, Kansas City, Kan. 3 rm. Efficiency, utilities paid, nicely furnished. FM music, private entrance, parking. Available July 10 — Married couple only, 875. 7-15 Room Kitchenette Apartment for rent. Furnished. Utilities paid. Also garage for rent. See Garner's, 1036 New Hampshire or VI 3-0748. 7-8 BACHELOR APARTMENTS. Ground floor. Completely furnished. Private private entrances. Gatley Gardens. Lard and south. South of Campus. Call VI 3-6255. 7-8 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. To shower and sleeping porches on your bedrooms. Renting for午饭; Close to KU. See UA. Tennessee; r call VI 3-9340 after 4 p.m. tt TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APART- MENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available tor either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:39 p.m. tf. First floor furnished apartment $60 second floor furnished student 3 blocks from Union. VI C-3244 Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider exchanging for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUDRY. Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf KU BARBER SHOP-Only 1½ blocks down 14th St. hill. Flat tops a specialty. Plenty of free parking. 411¾ W. 14th St. Clarence, Wayne and Shorty. tf DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tt GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Ryon Eaton, castor. Jayhawk Driving Range, mile ast on 23rd Street. Phone VI - 3-9725 SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE. Baby's diapers, clothes — $10 month. Family's laundry 6c. $9. lb. toiletry cleaned — delivery — delivery cleaned. VI. 3-8077. rif. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc., and accumulate accurate service. Reasonable rates, Mrs. Barlow, vt 2-1648 — 408 W. 13th St. ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone VI 3-6791 after 5 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do these, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. tf PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • TYPING WANTED: Experienced. Will do technical, dissertation, theses, etc. D 12-7436 TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Veyquist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 biks). East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term papers, etc. Phone VI 3-2955 between 4 and 6 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8660. tf TYPIST—General typing, term papers, theses. Experienced and accurate. Call Mrs. Elmer Lindell. VI 3-5127. tf RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. t WANTED WANTED TO RENT: Nicely furnished home from Sept. 1, 1960 to June 1, 1961 a responsible home-owner; on Dec- cobar a responsible home-owner; d. March 3, 1977 to p.m. Guy B. Hummann 7-19 FOR SALE PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0747. A Buck A Book! Am selling my professional sociology library prior to telling me about a Vetting anime outline; take your pick a dollar per volume. Good hunting!!! SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special course Time. Use the Sports Illustrated. Both pose and speech Processed promptly. Call VI 3-09422. NOTICE Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks 1310 W. 6th VI 3-9757 Eat, Drink, and be Merry at the OLD MISSION INN 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 "The Best Hamburgers in Town" Serving Meals, Snacks, and Beverages REDMAN'S SHOE SALE Women's Shoes Dress and Casual $2.99 to $6.99 Men's Shoes $3.99 to $8.99 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Pens, Pens, Pens We've Got Them! Women love the sheer beauty and writing ease of the Lady Sheaffer. And the Sheaffer PFM (Pens for Men) has plenty of masculine appeal. Snorkel pens are favorites of many people . . both men and women . . for easy filling and dependable writing. The Parker 51 and the Parker 61 are two more of the quality pens found in our selection. Whether choosing a pen for yourself or as a gift, look over our wide assortment. These pens start at $10.00 and come in assorted points and colors. We also have many less expensive pens, such as the Esterbrook ($2.95 to $3.95), which are ideal for campus use. Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 8. 1960 KU Programs Receive Grants Two training programs in the University's psychology department have received renewed support from the U.S. Public Health Service for this year. The graduate training program in social psychology received a grant of $20,342. Jay M. Jackson, professor of psychology. Is the director. Although the program is only two years old there will be 15 or 16 graduate students working toward the Ph.D. degree next fall, which puts KU's program among the four largest in the country. the trainees work with various faculty members of the social psychology staff who are conducting research projects throughout the state. M. Erik Wright, who has directed the program in the past, will hold a Fulbright Lectureship in mental health at the University of Western Australia at Perth during the 1960-61 academic year. The director during his absence will be announced later. The clinical psychology training program has been granted $65,735 During the training period the students work under supervision at the KU Psychology Clinic and spend a year of internship in a hospital, guidance clinic or special mental health agency. The KU Psychological Clinic emphasizes experience with children's emotional, educational and psychological adjustment problems. New Journal Released Here "World Neurology," a new medical journal edited by Charles M. Poser, M.D., of the KU Medical Center, has made its first appearance with a July issue. The international scope of the official journal of the World Federation of Neurology is indicated by the date on the cover, which reads "July, Juillet, Juli, Julio, 1960." Articles in "World Neurology" are published in English, French, German and Spanish. Each article is printed in one of these languages, with abstracts in the other three Dr. Poser was appointed editor-in-chief of the journal when he was on a leave of absence from the School of Medicine last year to serve as medical executive officer of the World Federation of Neurology. The editorial board and consulting editors for the publication include neurologists from 26 countries. Editorial offices are located at the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Delays Mark Early Days of Conventions WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Delegates to political conventions sit through two or three days of speech-making, platform writing and other preliminaries before tackling their big job of nominating a candidate for president. Harmony usually prevails at the warm-up sessions at Republican conventions. But the Democrats invariably get embroiled in one or two preliminary fights in which the slugging gets almost as rough as in the main bout. Tentative convention programs are laid out weeks in advance under the auspices of the national committees of the two parties. This planning includes the selection of convention officers, who, with rare exceptions, are routinely elected by the conventions. The officers include the temporary chairman, permanent chairman and the chairmen of the platform and credentials committees. The temporary chairman gives the keynote speech for the Democrats, but the Republicans are splitting the two jobs this year. Most of the opening session at each convention is devoted to speeches-by host mayors and governors, the chairmen of the national political committees and the keynote speakers. A showdown on seating of contested delegations may come at the opening session during adoption of the temporary roll, or at the second session, after the permanent chairman's speech, on adoption of the permanent roll of delegates. the seating of some southern delegates to the Democratic convention may be challenged under a "loyalty" rule adopted in 1956 and recommended to the 1960 convention by the Democratic National Committee. That rule requires each state delegation to give assurances that the presidential nominee of the convention will appear on the state's ballot under the Democratic Party label. Some delegates balk at giving that commitment before the platform is adopted and the presidential nominee is chosen. A contest over credentials may mean a denial of seats to some delegates or a choice between rival delegations from the same state. After these contests, if any, are settled, adoption of the party platform is the next major item of business. The Democrats will have their quadrennial row between their northern and southern contingents over a civil rights plank. The Republicans will devote one of their preliminary sessions this year to honoring President Eisenhower and to hearing a speech from him. After the preliminaries, the convention moves into its climactic stage with nomination of candidates for president. To avoid boring and losing their TV audiences, each party will limit the number and time of nominating speeches and the time for demonstrations. By hoary tradition, the nominating speech for each candidate is followed by a noisy demonstration in which his followers parade around the hall, waving placards and singing, and trying to give the impression that practically everybody is for their man. 'Annie' Features MacRae Family The debut of Gordon and Sheila MacRae and their four children in the musical comedy "Annie Get Your Gun," is attracting the largest crowds of the season at the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City. The two motion picture, stage and night club personalities have brought their children to play "Annie's" younger brothers and sisters in the Irving Berlin musical. Shelia MacRae plays the title role and Gordon plays the part of expert circus marksman Frank Butler. The show is making its second Starlight appearance, having played in 1956. At that time it set the all time Starlight box office record for a one night performance and played seven nights. This time the show will run two weeks, at 8:15 p.m. through Sunday, July 17. The show opened last Monday night with a near capacity crowd of 7,000 persons. Theatre officials suggested mail order reservations be made for the second week of the performance, when every seat in the house is available on a first come basis. Last year theatre officials said they received hundreds of letters complaining that MacRae had not sung enough in "Bells Are Ringing." This season producer Richard H. Berger has given him ample opportunity, since in the role of Frank Butler, MacRae sings such Berlin favorites as "The Girl That I Marry," "Show Business," "They Say It's Wonderful," and "Anything You Can Do." PUZZLE ANSWER The musical is interspersed with rich comedy scenes, highlighted by the "Honest Injun" attitude of Sitting Bull, played by Starlight favorite Joseph Macaulay. S L A V A P O C O S K A R S O S O N I N O L I N D A B O W L E G G E D D R O I T S E P A L S G I L C I S O S E R E T A L K S C A N T C A R E T A K E R P O M E C U T V I E N N A A S P C A R T M E N E T C S T E R O L L A R M E R E M A R I N A T E D H A D E S S A V I O R F I N A N A E S T A R E N A S M O N E Y A S T E R I S K S A N D R E L A T E N E I L N O S E R S P UR G A M Y Supplies of unused polio vaccine total 26 million doses. Summer Driving is easier on your car when you keep it serviced at LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Ind. VI 3-9830 Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 CAMPUS HIDEAWAY Enjoy a PIZZA in the cool intimate atmosphere of the HIDEAWAY Pizza AIDA or For fast, hot delivery service,CALL VI 3-9111 106 N. Park SALE OF DRESS FLATS Were to $8.95 $3.90 - $4.90 - $5.90 White - Black - Bone - White Straws Natural Straws Many Others. SEVERAL PATTERNS IN ALL MATERIALS. McCoy's 813 Mass. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN accine KU 830 Tuesday, July 12, 1960 48th Year, No. 8 LAWRENCE, KANSAS WELCOM TO THE KU PRE SNEAK PREVIEW—These recent high school graduates are typical of the hundreds of students attending the six "KU Previews" this summer for students expecting to enter the University this fall. The second Preview ends today and the third begins Thursday. Wescoe Seeks News of Matzke A diplomatic check on the well-being of a University of Kansas professor and his family in the violence-torn Congo was requested yesterday from the State Department by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Dean Arden Miller of the KU School of Medicine. Dr. Howard Matzke, professor of anatomy, left with his family June 8 to conduct research at the Institute for Scientific Research in Central Africa at Lwiro, a town in the mountainous area of the Congo. Irwin L. Baird, acting chairman of the KU anatomy department said he last received a letter from Dr Matzke postmarked June 25, five days before the former Belgian colony received its independence which touched off a wave of rioting With Dr. Matzke are his wife and their two children, Judith, 15, and Charles, 11. Dr. Matzke is conducting research on the central nervous system of mammals in the Congo this summer. He received grants for this purpose from the KU Endowment Association, the U.S. Public Health Service, the World Federation of Neurology and the Whitehall Foundation, Inc. Cuba Seeks Council Action in Conflict UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.-(UPI) Cuba asked the United Nations Security Council yesterday to meet and consider the "repeated threats, harassment, maneuvers, reprisals and aggressions" against it by the United States. Weather Temperatures today through Saturday will average four to six degrees above normal west to near normal east. Turning cooler about mid-week and warming at end of week. Normal minimum in 60s, normal maximum 90 to 95. Rainfall will average .30 to .60 inch, occurring as occasional showers or thunderstorms mostly the latter part of the week. Art Campers Star In 3rd Summer Show High school students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be featured in the cast of the third University Theatre summer production Thursday and Friday nights in Murphy Hall. The students will appear in three short plays in "The World of Shalom Aleichem." The productions are designed to cover the fields of farce, fantasy and realism. Curtain time each night will be at 7:30. Book Relates State's Story As a preliminary to observance of the Kansas Centennial, the University of Kansas Press this week published "The Heritage of Kansas: Selected Commentaries on Past Times." A group of selections representing the Old West contains a discussion of the Oregon Trail by Francis Parkman and of the Pony Express by Mark Twain. The stories of John Brown and of a narrow escape during Quantrill's raid on Lawrence, as well as the Rev. Richard Cordley's "Lizzie and the Underground Railway," are among the selections illustrating "the years of violence." The editor of the 359-page book is Everett Rich, native Kansan and veteran English teacher at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia Ordeals of pioneer life are shown in dramatic episodes like the story of a struggle with prairie fire, with grasshoppers or with a tornado. There is everyday life as seen through the eyes of a country doctor like A. E. Hertzler or a country editor like Ed W. Howe. The book provides a panoramic view of Kansas life in older times as seen by more than 40 observers. Beginning with Donald Culross Peattie's article on Coronado, it ends with Carl Becker's famous analysis of the Kansas spirit. Prof. Rich is the author of a successful biography of William Allen White and has been a frequent contributor to the Kansas City Star and other publications. Grant Renewed For Fly Study Robert R. Sokal, associate professor of entomology, will continue his research on the genetics of house-flies with renewal of a $14,500 Army Medical Research contract. It will be the fifth year for the contract renewal for study of Genetics of Houseflies in Relation to Insecticide Resistance. Robert L. Sullivan, research associate at KU is assisting Dr. Sokal with the study. They will continue research to determine how resistance to insecticides is built up and inherited. By building up strains of flies visibly different they are able to distinguish the insecticide-resistant strains from those that are non-resistant. Dr. Sokal, on leave to conduct research in biometry and biological mathematics at the University of London, will return to KU this fall. MOSCOW — (UPI) — Russia announced yesterday it shot down a U.S. Air Force plane that on July 1 violated Soviet air space over the Bering Sea carrying special electronic spying equipment. Reds Report On Shooting A Soviet protest note handed to the United States, Norway and Great Britain, said this latest "provocation" followed the U-2 spy plane incident by two months. The announcement said two of the six-man crew survived and would be prosecuted "with full severity of the Soviet law." The U.S. Air Force at Wiesbaden disclosed on July 2 that an RB-47 which left its British base on July 1 for an electro-magnetic mapping flight off northern Norway was missing, and presumed down. A spokesman acknowledged the possibility it had wandered over Soviet territory. Kennedy Train Rolls Toward Win LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—Sen. John F. Kennedy yesterday rolled to within a whisker of the magic 761 votes needed to capture the Democratic presidential nomination on the first ballot. The Massachusetts senator got a big boost when Gov. Herschel C. Loveless, leader of the 26-vote Iowa delegation, announced he would cast his "first free ballot" for Kennedy. Technically, the delegation must vote for favorite son Loveless on the first ballot So certain did Kenneoy's umph appear to be that the scramble was on among the kingmakers at the Democratic National Convention to pick a vice presidential running mate. Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, whose presidential campaign never picked up speed, was mentioned prominently. Others included Loveless, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey and Gov. Orville Freeman of Minnesota; Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington and Gov. George Docking of Kansas. A United Press International tabulation made just before the opening convention session showed Kennedy had nailed down $714_{1/2}$ first-ballot votes. This left him only a meager $46_{1/2}$ votes short. The honor of supplying some of them could fall to Pennsylvania's 81-vote delegation, where Kennedy's strength has been mounting steadily. The UPI tabulation included 40 known Kennedy votes within the Pennsylvania delegation. But a key member said Gov. David L. Lawrence might deliver as many as 50 to 65 when the showdown poll was completed. David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers Union, said the 37 steelworkers delegates within the group would cast their $18^{-1 / 2}$ votes (or Kennedy. The atmosphere was grim at the convention headquarters of Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson. Kennedy's chief rival, although the Texan's Camp insisted he still was in the fight. But in an appearance before the Pennsylvania delegation, Johnson did not talk much like a man who felt he had a real chance. He praised all of his opponents and told the delegates he had enthusiastically supported Adlaii E. Stevenson in the 1952 and 1956 election campaigns "and stands ready and eager to do so again." Kennedy received a standing ovation from the big delegation. He emphasized that he had run in every possible primary. He asked the delegation to support him in what he termed the most important campaign in many years. Symington predicted the convention's choice would go on to win the November election over Vice President Richard M. Nixon and have "the greatest administration in history." For the most part, he limited his talk to criticism of the Eisenhower administration. With the presidential issue all but settled, a platform writing subcommittee completed its work and turned its draft of party policy over to the full platform committee for ratification. It will go before the convention today. The platform carried a civil rights plank which Northern Democrats called the most far-reaching in history and which brought screams of anguish from Southerners. "Oh, my God. Oh, nav God." was the reaction of Judge T. C. Almon, chairman of the Alabama delegation when told that the plank expressed sympathy for Negro sit-in demonstrations. But he said there would be no bolt by Alabama delegates. The plank also carried a pledge of further election reforms to prevent voting discrimination against Negroes. Barnum Echoes In Conventions By Lyle C. Wilson SPORTS ARENA. LOS ANGELES—(UPI) — If Phinease T. Barnum had anything to do with this Democratic National Convention, or any other, he would price the tickets by heavy-weight fight standards and take down another $1 million. The Greatest Show on Earth! This is a national political convention. Some are showier than others, however. My favorite among those I have covered still is the 1924 Democratic brawl in the old Madison Square Garden, New York City. The old Garden was used to violence and vulgarity. Stanford White was architect of the old pile. He built into it a tower penthouse. The didoes White cut there with this and that lovely from the Broadway stage led, finally, to his death by gunshot at the hands of Harry K. Thaw. White had cut a didoe with Evelyn Nesbitt, a stage dancer and, also, the wife of Thaw. The big circus also used to play the old Garden. But no circus could match what the Democrats accomplished in 1924 from June 24 to July 9, inclusive, an almost scandalous fortnight. The drys, the Ku Kluxers, Southerners and others were for the nomination of William G McAdoo, son-in-law of Woodrow Wilson. The wets, the big cities of the East and others were for Alfred Enmanuel Smith, governor of the state of New York. Smith was a Roman Catholic and religion was a hot and angry issue. The embattled Democrats ballotted 103 times before they named their man, John W. Davis of West Virginia, who had 3L votes on the first ballot and who hung around 60 votes for days before going over the top on the 102nd. New York City firemen planted spare sirens all over the Garden before Smith was put in nomination. When the great moment came, the firemen pulled the switches, Brawny New York cops stood guard to assure that no McAdoo-minded delegate turned off the racket. The Smith demonstration continued for more than 90 minutes. William Jennings Bryan attempted to address the convention before nominations were in order, and the delegates exploded in fist fight disputes for possession of the various states standards. At issue was whether this or that standard should be in the parade to salute Bryan. The Colorado delegation, down front by the press box, was in chaos. A man seeking to carry Colorado's standard into the Bryan parade lost it to a muscular woman who instantly took her antagonist out of the contest by knocking him down and out. The firemen's sirens, the fighting on the convention floor, the whoopit-up rowdyism of the galleries as they cheered for repeal of prohibition, all combined to frighten political parties away from New York City. There has not been a convention there since 1924, although it would be an ideal city by reason of (Continued on page 6) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12. 1960 Classes Heat Up In Final Sprint WEVE REACHED THE half-way mark in the '60 summer session. Four weeks of school remain and then we scatter to our respective homes. But it's this last lap that can ruin a person. Kansas heat in July is exceeded only by Kansas heat in August. Sunday was a perfect example. But, as we all say in letters to friends, when we start talking about the weather, it's time to stop writing. So, to the point, don't let the irritation brought about by sultry weather fray your patience. Many a good grade has slipped to, and below, the borderline because "it's too darn hot to study." Times are much better than they used to be at the University. Back in the early 50s (undergraduate days for this one) air-conditioned classroom buildings and reading rooms were not in the picture. In those days—and for those still meeting in the "hot houses" on campus this summer we assume—it took a lot of cooperation to get through classes without outbursts of temper. IT'S EASY TO blame it all on the weather. It's been said that this is an excellent reason for a shortness of patience. And well we understand it. But remember, there's just about 19 days of classes left. And things could get worse. - Clarke Keys Let's Let Them Know .One of our troubles with government expense may be that too many taxpayers feel it is futile to write letters, or feel they don't know how to write them well enough. The man who will back a village trustee or a member of the Town Board into a corner when he has a squawk about some aspect of local government, will never let out a peep about some action of state or federal government that seems to him outrageous. Not where it will do any good, that is. As a result, state and federal legislators often have little knowledge of what their constituents really want, and mistake the organized outcries of pressure groups for the voice of the people. And that, somehow or other, practically always turns out to be And that, somehow or other, practically always turns out to be expensive. Camden (N.Y.) Advance-Journal Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Drawing room. 6 Educable insect, 10 ___ Marian in "Robin Hood." 14 Official decree. 15 Lampreys. 16 Impel. 17 Remove soap. 18 Fallout hazard. 20 Objective. 21 Nightfall. 23 Cheerless. 24 Away from the wind. 25 Sense. 26 One who disagrees 30 Parachute material. 34 Engrave. 35 Source of obsidian. 37 Consumed. 38 Zorina of the stage. 39 Debate. 41 Snack. 42 Gibbon. 43 On the deep. 44 Tended. 46 Power. 48 Voyagers. 50 Bird sounds. 52 Become lively (with "up") 53 Relative of the guinea pig. 56 Small monkey. 57 Border. 60 Club group. 62 French school. 64 Hudson Bay Indian. 65 Soapstone. 66 Current dance. 67 Tennessee: Abbr. 68 December time. 69 Surface of a stair. DOWN 1 Certain. 2 Like. 3 Catch. 4 W. W. II agency. 5 Narrow, pointed rocks. 6 A kind of weasel. 7 Drip. 8 Antiquity. 9 Sotto voce remark 10 Without a word. 11 Opera recording. 12 Operatic prince. 13 Refute. 14 Hippodrome. 22 Lavinia's husband. 24 ___ Minor. 25 Wife: German. 26 Opera stars. 27 Unsuitable. 28 Mass of loose pebbles. 29 British composer. 31 Popular singer. 32 Mink's relative. 33 Requirements. 36 Symbol of smoothness. 40 Soaks, as flax. 41 Pitcher's error. 43 Violin. 45 Most uncanny. 47 Sharp insight. 49 Each. 4A Anmusing. 53 Account: Abbr. 54 Kefers's colleague. 55 Augury. 56 Announce. 57 Restful place. 58 Where Napoleon stayed. 59 Lake formed by Hoover Dam. 61 Greek letter. 63 Pullman. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 Capsule Profiles Of Leading Candidates Lyndon B. Johnson LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON, 51, the tall lean Texan whose wife, ranch, daughters and family dog all carry the same initials he sports on the cuff-links in his elegantly tailored shirts. As the youngest floor leader ever in the Senate (44 on his election in 1953) he pulled together a dissident minority party. And as majority leader of an out-of-the-White House party, he has compromised the way to legislation in the last four years. "I believe that I am progressive and prudent without being radical," Johnson says. "I think I am conservative without being reactionary." He said he was called a "fighting Liberal" when he first went to Congress, in 1936, and quickly became a protege of President Roosevelt, a "great Democratic Liberal" under Harry S. Truman and a "voting Liberal" against McCarthyism. Johnson has voted with the oil and gas interests of his native state, but despite his Texas roots and some early votes against Civil Rights bills, he piloted through congress after bitter fights in 1957 and earlier this year the only two Civil Rights bills enacted in 80 years. JOHNSON WAS BORN Aug. 27, 1908, in comparative poverty near Johnson City, Tex., where his own Green Acres today bespeak his cattle and farming wealth. He went "on the bum" through the West for a year after high school, returned to whiz through Southwest Texas State Teachers College in three years. His first taste of congress was as secretary to a Texas representative. He had taught briefly before that and served for two years as Texas State Director of the National Youth Administration before his own election to the House in 1936. He was elected to the Senate in 1948. Shortly after Pearl Harbor Johnson was commissioned a lieutenant commander and served seven months on active duty, mostly in the Pacific, before returning to his House seat. Johnson suffered a heart attack in July, 1955, but has had no recurrence. John F. Kennedy JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY, 43, the U.S. Senator for Massachusetts who says if he's too young to be President, Columbus was too young to discover America. Second of nine children of Joseph P. Kennedy, late U.S. Ambassador to Britain, and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, daughter of a mayor of Boston, he became a millionaire at 21—by his father's gift—and displayed almost equal intellectual and political precocity. His first book, "Why England Slept," published when he was 23, became a best-seller. His second, "Profiles in Courage," written in 1954 and 1955 during his convalescence from Spinal surgery, won a Pulitzer Prize for biography. Kennedy won election to congress in 1949, but the most dramatic display of his vote-getting powers came in 1952 when he defeated incumbent Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. in a year when Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower handily carried the state. Prominent in that campaign and in his political efforts since has been his large, attractive and sociable family, and a keen professional organization. KENNEDY HAS SERVED on the Foreign Relations Committee and on the Special Labor and Management Rackets Committee to which his brother, Robert, was counsel. His voting has been generally liberal and internationalist, but independent of party. He won disapproval of some Liberals for failing to take a position on the final McCarthy showdown, during which he was absent from the Senate because of his surgery. His Roman Catholic religion was an issue in primary campaigns until it appeared to have been laid to rest in protestant West Virginia. Kennedy became a hero as a PT boat skipper in World War II, when his boat was lost near New Georgia Island and he and his men survived hours in the water and days on a tiny island before they were rescued. The experience aggravated an old back injury. Kennedy also contracted malaria. Adlai E. Stevenson ADLAI EWING STEVENSON, 60. twice defeated for the presidency by Dwight D. Eisenhower, once declared when he was delayed in reaching a Washington engagement by the welcome to Gen. Charles de Gaulle: "It seems my fate to be always getting in the way of national heroes." Stevenson, then seeking a second term as governor of Illinois, was drafted for the presidential nomination in 1952 with the active support of retiring President Harry S. Truman. He fought a hard primary campaign for the 1956 nomination and won it handily despite Truman's interjection of Averill Harriman as a last minute rival. Relations between Stevenson and Truman are distinctly cool. The former President said recently that Stevenson isn't decisive enough to be President, but he has not suggested Stevenson or any Democrat could have won the last two presidential elections. Stevenson, whose wit and erudition brought the word "egghead" into American politics, has won a large, loyal and vocal following, but little professional political support for the 1960 nomination. STEVENSON WAS BORN in Los Angeles, Feb. 5, 1900, moved to Bloomington, Ill., with his family when he was six. He was educated in local schools, Choate School in Connecticut, Princeton University and the Harvard and Northwestern University law schools, served a time as assistant managing editor of the family newspaper, the Bloomington Pantograph, before taking up his Chicago law practice. He had served as an Apprentice Seaman in the Navy in the last months of World War I. Stevenson first went to Washington as special counsel in the Agricultural Adjustment Administration in the early years of the New Deal. He returned in World War II as counsel and special assistant to Navy Secretary Frank Knox. After Knox's death in 1944 he served in the State Department and for three years as a U.S. representative at the United Nations. Since 1956 he has traveled widely and written and spoken often on world and national problems. He was in the forefront of critics of administration handling of the U-2 incident. Stuart Symington STUART SYMINGTON, 59. U.S. Senator from Missouri, is best known for his seven years as a top administrative official in the Truman administration—and as a millionaire by his own business talents. Now in his second Senate term, the handsome silver-haired Symington has a record of solid liberal voting, has been most identified with his criticism of the administration's defense policies. Symington was born June 26, 1901, in Amherst, Mass., and was graduated from Yale in 1923. While still in his 30's, with the financial backing of wealthy uncles, Symington bought successively into a number of floundering firms, put them in the black and sold at a profit. At 37, he took over the Emerson Electric Manufacturing Co. in St. Louis, scandalized some fellow businessmen with his liberal attitude toward its unionized labor, but in seven years completely reversed its fortunes. WHEN HE LEFT for Washington in 1945,the firm was doing a $100 million dollar annual business and Symington had tucked away a personal fortune of $1 million. His first Washington job was as head of the Surplus Property Board. In 1946 he became Assistant Secretary of War for Air and the following year, with the armed forces reorganization, he was named the first Secretary of the U.S. Air Force. In 1950, Truman named him chairman of the National Security Resources Board, and in 1951 "cleanup" administrator of the Reconstruction Finance Corp., then rocked by the "mink coat" and "deep freeze" scandals. books the took world Page 3 By M. K. McKinney Asst. Instructor of English JEPHTA AND HIS DAUGHTER, by Lion Feuchtwanger, Signet Book. 50c. Jephta's story is told in Judges 10:6-18 through 12:7-47 verses. Feuchtwanger has amplified the story by bringing into sharper focus motives that are only hinted at in the Bible, by adding dialogue, and by bringing into use his store of knowledge of the ancient Hebrews. I think that the author has done an excellent job in retelling this story. ON ONE LEVEL the story is about the bastard son of Gilead and how he comes to be anointed Judge. On another level it is about a man who makes a vow to his tribal god that he must keep, even though it means the sacrifice of his beloved daughter. And on still another level it is a part of the history of the Hebrew Yahweh on his way to becoming the idea of the God of Jesus. In this struggle we see the victory of the Hebrew god over the Ammonite god Milkom. And even though the reader knows the story as told in the Bible very well, he will be fascinated by the presentation of this proud, arrogant man who sometime between 1300 and 1000 B.C. became the fifth Judge of Israel. The language as translated from the German is powerful in its simplicity. For example, after Jephtha had placed his daughter on the altar for sacrifice, we are told, "Then he did with her according to his vow." LOVE BETWEEN father and daughter runs through the whole story, and as far as I can tell, there are no Freudian hints about their relationship. Ja'ala, the name Feuchtwanger gives the daughter, is a willing sacrifice, for she sees the image of Yahweh in her father. Of course the story as told in the Bible is spare. A few more words are used to tell of the sacrifice, but not many. Human life was cheap in the Bronze Age, but I suppose it was little cheaper than it is today. Maybe the difference is that we are more efficient in our killing. At any rate, when Jephta's guards wanted to find out who were the enemy and who weren't, the suspects were made to pronounce "Shibboleth." I WOULD URGE anyone who likes a good story told by a good story-teller to get this. Then I would suggest that he reread the Biblical narrative to see just what the modern writer has done to the old story. If they made the initial sound sibilant (the Ephraimites could not sound "sh"), they were killed on the spot. We are told that Jephta laughed long and loud. I am sure that he will find that both Feuchtwanger and the original chronicler are pretty good narrators. THE WORLD'S LOVE POETRY, edited by Michael Rheta Matrin, Bantam Books, 75 cents. There isn't a great deal to say about this anthology. I suppose that it is as good an anthology of love poems that one can find for 75 cents. The volume contains more than 500 poems, and we are assured that almost all of them have been newly translated by specialists. The range is from the Chinese of about 1000 B.C. to the present day. Twenty-six groups are represented, and the subject matter ranges from the purest idealism of Petrarch and Spenser to the most prudent lust of Anonymous. This book is worth the price, and the lover of poetry will find that a good deal of pleasure can be had in leafing through here to see what various people at various times have written about love. A new miracle THE INCREDIBLE MORRIS 850 A new miracle to top them All! THE INCREDIBLE MORRIS 850 ONLY This little miracle has BIG ideas! Crosswise engine.Front wheel drive.Independent rubber suspension.Tops anything in its class in speed, power, roominess and economy. Letters... The Swimming Pool Editor: $1485 YOU'VE GOT TO DRIVE IT TO BELIEVE IT! British Motors As a member of the picket line demonstrating for the integration of the Jayhawk Plunge, I would like to inform the UDK of the two principles to which we are committed. First, it is our purpose to continue our demonstration until the first Negro is admitted into the pool. Second, that this demonstration must continue legally and non-vio-lently. We would also like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the existence of the large number of Faculty members, students, and members of the community at large who have purchased memberships at the pool and who would not, for the momentary pleasure it brings, compromise their principles for the amount of money they have invested. Their support has been invaluable to the imminent attainment of our goal. Sincerely yours, R. Carrington and the members of the picket line. Sincerely yours. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) News Room ... Phone 711 Editors ... Dick Crocker Clarke Kays BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office ... Phone 376 Business Manager ... Clyde Brown Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12, 1960 This piece of misinformation hardly compared to the massive amount the rumor mills churned up in towns around Los Alamos, N.M., during the wartime years the bomb war being built there. SOCORRO, N.M. — (UPI) — By a quirk of geography, and perhaps fate, a New Mexico wasteland barely aware of 20th Century America became the maternity ward of the Atomic Age 15 years ago. New Mexico Sands Spawned First A-Bomb 15 Years Ago The pre-dawn flash of light at Trinity Site—"brighter than daylight"—was seen scores of miles away. To soothe alarmed ranchers, the military reported there had been an ammunition depot explosion in the area that night. The first atomic bomb was triggered with uncertainty at Trinity Site (inexplicably named) before the startled eyes of its makers. July 16, 1945. One report, prevalent in Santa Fe, insisted windshield wipers were being made for submarines. The blast, far greater than any ever dreamed, vaporized the steel tower that held the bomb and glazed the desert sand. Its power became known to the outside world in a short time. Twenty-one days later Hiroshima was hit, three days after that Nagasaki, and then on Aug. 12—less than a month after the New Mexico test—Japan surrendered and World War II came to an end. The collection of world renown scientists — including Enrico Fermi and J. Robert Oppenheimer—were really racing against a phantom. It was, of course, the unfounded fear that Nazi Germany too was developing the same weapon. Some of the very scientists at the former Los Alamos Boys Ranch School, on a remote mountain plateau, were exiles from Hitler's Europe. Danger — Handle Gently CAIRO — (UPI) — A zoo guard found an abandoned new-born baby outside a lion's cage. To the baby's wrappers was pinned a message from the mother, saying, "Animals are kinder than men." Kansan Want Ads Get Results Fried Chicken at HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd S Your Appearance Is Important- so make sure your clothes are "SANITONE-cleaned." You can depend on quality cleaning where you see the SANITONE seal. APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners VI 3-3711 10th & New Hampshire APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 12. 1960 1924 Demo Convention Sets All-Time Record for Balloting WASHINGTON—(UPI) The Democratic National Convention of 1824 set an all-time record for marathon balloting on a presidential nominee. It took 103 roll calls for the delegates to settle on John W. Davis, an eminent New York lawyer, as the party's standard-bearer. The Democrats met in Madison Square Garden, New York, on June 24. The Republicans had already held their convention in Cleveland and had quickly renominated President Calvin Coolidge. Although there were a dozen aspirants in the Democratic camp, the leading contenders were Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York and former Treasury Secretary William G. McAdoo of California. Smith, an ardent foe of Prohibition and a Roman Catholic, had powerful support from states of the industrial East. McAdoo was champion of the dry forces and the rural sections of the South and West. Democratic conventions operated in those days under a rule, Vice President Spot Important WASHINGTON — (UPI) - Both Democrats and Republicans will try to breed their appeal to the voters when they nominate their candidates for vice president. The vice presidential nominee of each party is chosen after its presidential candidate is nominated. If the presidential nominee is considered to have weakness in certain areas or with certain segments of the voting population, the man chosen for second place on the ticket is likely to have a special appeal to some of those areas or voting blocs. Once the presidential nominee is chosen, national convention delegates defer to his judgment about a running mate. The vice president candidate may be chosen by the presidential nominee himself after consulting a small circle of advisers, or by the group of advisers. In 1856, Adlai E. Stevenson broke away from that tradition by inviting a wide-open convention contest for the Democratic vice presidential nomination. In this contest, Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) narrowly nosed out Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass). Although geographic balance is usually a factor, the Democrats ignored that qualification in 1948 when President Truman of Missouri was chosen to head the ticket and Sen. Alben W. Barkley from the neighboring state of Kentucky was nominated for vice president. Each party has a sizable group of men who are viewed as possibilities for the vice presidential nominations this year. Among the Democrats, Sen. Kennedy probably would be rated first if he failed to win the presidential nomination. Other possibilities include Govs. Leroy Collins of Florida, Herschel Loveless of Iowa, Orville Freeman of Minnesota, George Docking of Kansas, Edmund G. Brown of California, G. Mennen Williams of Michigan and Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey. Possibilities from the senate include Sens. Albert Gore of Tennessee, Henry Jackson of Washington and Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota. On the Republican side, those viewed as vice presidential possibilities include Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Secretary of Interior Fred Seaton, Attorney General William P. Rogers, Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell. Other prospects are Sens. Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky, Kenneth P. Keating of New York, Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, Barry Goldwater of Arizona and Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, and House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana. since repealed, requiring a two-thirds majority for nomination. It is widely, but mistakenly, believed that this rule caused the ensuing Smith-McAdoo deadlock. Actually, neither Smith nor McAdoo was ever able to muster a simple majority of the 1,097 convention votes. McAdoo's highest vote was 530 on the 69th ballot. Smith's peak was 368 votes on the 76th ballot. The roll calls began on June 30 and continued for 10 days and nights. There was no such thing as air conditioning then, and the delegates sweltered in the mid-summer heat as the endless balloting ground on. It was the first year in which national conventions were extensively covered by radio, and from coast to coast, Americans stayed glued to their sets to follow the drama in Madison Square Garden. Soon it became a national joke to quote the too-familiar words that opened each roll call. The clerk solemnly intoned "Alabama," and the delegation leader responded invariably, "Alabama casts 24 votes for Oscar W. Underwood." Davis, a conservative lawyer who had served as ambassador to Great Britain, received on the first ballot only the support of his native state of West Virginia plus a few complimentary votes from other delegations. But after 102 ballots had failed to break the deadlock between the two leading contenders, the delegates were in the mood for a dark horse, and Davis walked off with the nomination on the 103rd roll call. Coolidge easily defeated him in the election. Nine Top Performers Aid KU Music Camp Students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp in session at the University are developing their talents under the study of nine outstanding guest conductors this year. Each of the musicians works one week with students in the band, orchestra or choral division of the camp and directs the students in performances Sunday afternoon and evening. Artists who already have appeared include Lucien Cailliet, conductor, composer and arranger, formerly with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra; Robert McCowan, director of choral music, Iowa State College, and Donald Johanos, associate conductor, Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Eugene Kenney, director of choral music, Texas Tech College, and Victor Alessandro, conductor, San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, are working with the camp this week. Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor, Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra, will appear next week. Leo Kucinski, conductor, Sioux City Symphony Orchestra and American Legion Band; Lloyd Pfautsch, director of choral music, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Tex., and Henri Temiana, conductor, The Temiana Little Symphony and founder and first violinist, Paganini String Quartet, will on campus July 25-31. Robert E. Bell, director of the Robert Bell School of Ballet, Oklahoma City, and director of ballet at Oklahoma City University, is directing the ballet division of the camp. That group will present its summer performance July 28 in Hoch Auditorium. Bell was a featured soloist for many years with Colonel de Basil's Original Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and has been a soloist with the Paris Opera, the Metropolitan Opera in New York and others. The six-week camp closes its 23rd session July 31. Its enrollment of 717 students has been the largest in its history. Junior Gets $250 Steffens Award Virgil D. Thompson, Valley Center junior, will hold the $250 Steffens Dairy Foods Company, Inc. scholarship in the School of Pharmacy for 1960-61. The award for a pharmacy student from the area served by the Steffens company was set up by John D. McEwen, president of the firm. He has long had an interest in pharmacy and set up in the Wichita "Cow Town" an old drugstore typical of the first establishments in Wichita. Thompson will be a junior in the pharmacy school. He took two years of pre-pharmacy work at Wichita University and transferred to KU last fall. Flies Hold Down Milk Production in Vermont BURLINGTON, Vt. —(UPI)—Dr. George MacCollon of the University of Vermont says flies can cost Vermont farmers about $700,000 a year. He said persistent switching and stamping among cows from the pain and irritation of fly bites causes loss of weight and milk production. "The Golden Twenties" will be featured in the Bailey film series at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 3 of Bailey Hall. The film reviews events, personalities, sports and fashions of the 1920's. Commentators include Red Barber, Elmer Davis, Robert Q. Lewis and Frederick Lewis Allen. Television Gets Summer Boost In ratings, revenue and general madness, the quadrennial political pyrotechnics provide television with its most lively subject matter. HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) - Television has jolted itself free from the summer doldrums with razzle-dazzle convention coverage, chasing tired re-runs from the nation's video screens. Summer Home Your for meals, snacks, and refreshments . . . The three major networks—ABC CBS, NBC—will spend some 12 million dollars to bring both conventions to home viewers. 1920's to Be Featured In Bailey Film Series William McAndrew, NBC's vice president in charge of news, says his network probably will air 65 to 70 hours of convention activity. CBS and ABC also plan to spend that much time bringing the conventions to viewers. "Because of space limitations on the convention floor we will all share six cameras, which will take up about 70 per cent of our air time. "All three networks are involved in a camera pool." McAndrew said. "Our individual commentators, however, will provide narration for the audio portions." The "stars" of NBC's team are Chet Huntley and David Brinkley, who joined forces for a daily NBC TV news show following their popular acceptance during the 1956 conventions. The Rock Chalk Cafe John Daly, news chief for ABC and moderator of the panel show "What's My Line," is anchor man for that network. CBS features Walter Crankite and Robert Trout as its anchor men. The commentators in front of the cameras are backed by hordes of competent newsmen who filter and feed the latest development to the personality boys on camera. Closed Sundays All told the three networks have rushed almost a thousand newsmen and technicians to Los Angeles to cover the convention, making it the biggest single show of the TV season. 7 a.m. to Midnight It's cool and convenient . . . just off the campus There will be 13.5 million new workers in the labor force in the '60's. 618 W. 12th VI 3-9886 Exchange Grants To 3 Students Direct exchange scholarships to the Universities of Exeter in England, Aberdeen in Scotland and Clermont-Ferrand in France have been awarded to three University graduates, John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School, has announced. Karen Joanne Krueger, Yates Center, who received an A.B. degree in American civilization and international relations, will study next year at Exeter University. James Parker Mall, Atchison, who majored in French, will be at Clermont-Ferrand. Both are 1960 graduates. Studying at Aberdeen will be Wesley Loyde Hales, Kansas City, Mo., who received his B.S. degree in education in 1956 and his master's degree in education in 1957. The scholarships include tuition and complete maintenance for the 1960-61 academic year. The candidates were selected by the overseas institutions. CHICAGO — (UPI) — Telephone lines will carry proceedings of the Republican National Convention to more than 1,000 radio stations. 9th & Indiana LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE Smoke-Filled Lines Set to You Open The Door Follow the PARADE to the finest banking service that human ingenuity can devise when you pay us a call. Right now, treat yourself to banking at its best. Stop in and get acquainted. J ( MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ) ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 8th and Mass. ZN (Tl port." to pr velop Unitec Wh in th brick MF walk huar Th asker resul year. show The most Lil have same you off y So thro and "tell with wou lecte Mato peal radi nigh join take Or you Mex corn more to it Hrive the tain sect Th you vari wou wor lum rem Cloc tour Dip visit Mex the ica. Ir visit The anti ceiv som dele arri now dur Car Wern Cul tha up two Page 5 Mexico Eyes Leadership Of Northern Latin Americans Summer Session Kansan MEXICO CITY—(UPI)—Do you walk barefoot, or do you wear huaraches, sandals or shoes? (This is another "Latin American Report." part of a periodic feature designed to present a continuing picture of development in the nations south of the United States.) What is the chief material used in the walls of your house — wood, brick, cement, mud, thatch, etc? These are some of the questions asked in Mexico's 1960 census, final results of which are due later in the year. The last census, taken in 1950, showed a population of 25,715,350. The 1960 count is expected to be almost 35 million. Like people anywhere, Mexicans have a sense of privacy, too, and the same nagging feeling that the less you tell the government, the better off you are. So the government issued appeals through the press, radio, television and movie screens for citizens to "tell the truth" to the census takers without fear that the information would find its way to the tax collector's office. And President Lopez Mateos made an eight-minute appeal for co-operation over a national radio and television hookup the night before his entire cabinet joined more than a million census takers in gathering statistics. Helicopters, navy warships and river barges helped carry some of the head-counters into tough mountain and jungle areas and to remote sections of the Yucatan Peninsula. One standard question was: "Do you eat bread made of wheat daily?" Mexico has been predominately a corn eating nation and a switch to more expensive wheat would tend to indicate an improved economy. The question "What language do you speak" probably brought more varied replies in Mexico than it would almost anywhere else in the world. An estimated 25 pre-Columbian tongues are still in use in remote areas of the country. Cuba's President Osvaldo Dorticos closed his 23-day Latin American tour with a five-day visit in Mexico. Diplomatic observers here found the visit significant as a measure of Mexico's determination to become the leader of northern Latin America. In terms of day to day events the visit was relatively uneventful. There were no demonstrations by anti-Castro partisans; Dorticos received an enthusiastic reception by some 7,500 university students, labor delegations and well-wishers on his arrival at the airport; and he was nowhere snubbed, as was the case during some of his earlier stops, at Caracas, for example. Well before his arrival the government gradually revealed its pro-Cuba attitude. It was an open secret that federal agents were rounding up known anti-Castro Cubans here two weeks before the visit. A joint statement issued by the two presidents spoke of achieving "larger proportions" of trade between the two countries and "methodical studies" to pinpoint the most advantageous areas of commerce. The present balance of trade is in Cuba's favor. Mexico's government oil monopoly, Petroleos Mexicanos, was not in a position to offer crude oil as a substitute for the controversial purchase which Cuba recently made from Soviet Russia. But it expects to be before long. In short, the visit was another example of what the financial experts call Mexico's watch-and-wait attitude. Mexico, with a burgeoning industrial complex which in post World War II years has given it a yearly increase in gross national product exceeded only by Japan and West Germany, can afford to extend sympathy — with exports ready — toward the domestic problems of sister Latin American republics. The five-nation South American tour of Mexico's President Adolfo Lopez Mateos last January was another effort to realize Mexico's often-stated wish to see more economic exchange and self sufficiency within Latin America. Cultural exchange treaties were signed with Brazil, Argentina, Peru and Chile (A similar treaty with Venezuela, first stop on the tour, already existed), while the government and private financial leaders on the tour talked about trade and the "Latin American Free Trade Association," which is a regional common market. More trade with another hemisphere was also indicated by the first reports of a recent 25-member Mexican trade mission to the Far East. The group traveled on invitation of Japanese officials who would like to see the present balance of trade three to one in Mexico's favor brought more in line. The most talked about deal which emerged from the Mexican trade mission visit is a plan to produce "Datsun" vehicles entirely in this country, including motors. Mexico's auto industry consists at present of the assembly of U.S. and European cars, trucks and buses from parts turned out, for the most part, at the home factory. The Datsun plan would provide automobiles "made in Mexico" for Latin American export within the common market, as well as for domestic use. Regular jet service on international flights is expected by August, according to officials of the first Mexican airline to purchase jet aircraft. The "Compania Mexicana De Aviacion" took delivery of its first British built Comet IV jet last January, only to face the pilots' refusal to take instruction in jet techniques until they won a contract. Shortly after asking the De Havilland Company of England to take back its jet and cancel orders for three more, the company announced it had decided to recognize the national pilots union as bargaining agent. The contract was signed, pilots started their lessons, and the second jet was flown in from Chicago on a non-stop flight which took three hours, thirty minutes. Overseas Expert Visits KU Today On home leave from his duties as a foreign correspondent in Europe, a former University faculty member is visiting on campus today. Nino Lo Bello, who taught sociology for 10 semesters, went overseas several years ago to serve as a reporter for McGraw-Hill World News and 49 daily newspapers. During his University stay Lo Bello served as founder and faculty adviser of the campus' CCUN, a club that staged several mock Security Councils and General Assembles. He was also a member of the Faculty Fossils softball team which won several trophies now on permanent exhibit at the Faculty Club. Lo Bello said he is selling his large professional collection of sociology, psychology and anthropology books. They are on exhibit at his home address, 1741 Vermont Street, and are for sale as individual books at a dollar a volume, he said. "Aeronaves De Mexico." Mexico's other large carrier which flies abroad, then announced its agents have been talking with U.S. manufacturers to decide which jetliners the company will buy before the end of the year. Newton Senior Given Cerebral Palsy Grant Viola J. Klassen, Newton senior, has received a scholarship from United Cerebral Palsy's research and educational foundation to partially cover tuition for the 1960-61 school year. Miss Klassen is among students in various parts of the country receiving such grants in a program designed to alleviate the shortage of occupational therapists. Braniff International Airways was founded June 20, 1928. UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents "The World of Shalom Aleichem" July 14-15 Murphy Hall 7:30 p.m. ID Exchange Get your tickets now! LAST SUMMER PRODUCTION OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Box Office Open 1-5 p.m. Institute Receives Additional Funds The National Science Foundation has awarded an additional $950 to the University of Kansas for support of the Summer Institute for High School and College Teachers of Mathematics, now in session. Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics and director of the Institute, said the additional funds will cover expenses of a South American participant in the Institute, Osvaldo Sangtiori of Sao Paulo, Brazil. The Foundation's original grant for support of the Institute was $100,925. Tuesday. July 12, 1960 Mother and Baby Be BESiDe YOURSELF With LAUGHTeR ALEXANDER MAYER (YOURSELF) (LAUGHTER) JOSEPH E. STILES COME SEE our New Hallmark Contemporary Cards now ON DISPLAY AT Stiles Receives Art Fellowship Joseph E. Stiles, professor of drawing and painting, has received a fellowship for next winter from the Huntington Hartford Foundation in Pacific Palisades, Calif. MOSSER-WOLF 1107 Mass. As an award to artists having a record of achievement in their field, the fellowships give the artists the opportunity to devote themselves exclusively to their creative activity. Stiles is a 1953 graduate of the University and has studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. He later received his M.A. from the University of New Mexico. His work has been shown in regional, national and international exhibitions. Landlocked Lubbers Sign MONTPELIER, Vt., — (UPI) — Though this is the only New England state without a sea coast, the lure of the sea proved strong for some 65 youths. They were sworn into the Navy on the steps of the State Capitol by Gov. Robert T. Stafford, a commander in the Naval Reserve. Professors' Text Published in Asia It is the only business text named to be printed and distributed by the Kogakusha Co. Lt., of Tokyo, Japan, for exclusive sale in 18 eastern countries. An Eye for an Eye The book is "Cost Accounting" by John G. Blocker, professor of business administration, and W. Keith Weltmer, professor of business and director of executive development; The first printing in May was completely sold in India. A second printing now is being distributed. McGraw Hill Book Co., Inc. has selected a book written by two KU professors as one of 14 texts to be published in a special Asian students edition. MEMPHIS, Tenn.—(UPI)—Bobby Davis was mowing the lawn when the blade hit a rock which went crashing through the back window of a neighbor's automobile. The following week, the neighbor was mowing his yard. The neighbor's mower threw a rock through the back window of Davis' car. Try the Kansan Want Ads Diamonds! We are now specializing in Diamonds and fine custom-made jewelry. Premier Jewelry 916 Mass. MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE at Lawrence Surplus Shop for these values now while they last! 300 Pair Reg. to $4.95 Men's Wash Slacks $299 Reg. 14.95 Sleeping Bags $988 Reg. $11.95 Wash and Wear Men's Blazers $788 Entire Stock Reg. $2.98 and $3.98 Boat-Neck Shirts Reg. to $4.95 Men's Bermuda Shorts $288 $199 One Large Group Reg. to $3.98 MEN'S Sport Shirts MANY OTHER OUTSTANDING VALUES NOT MENTIONED IN THIS AD. $199 Lawrence Surplus 740 Mass. VI 3-3933 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 12. 1960 Non-State Funds Sought New Alumni Plan Starts The University will begin a program designed to increase alumni interest and support with a conference tonight at Great Bend. The conference, the first of its kind, is being sponsored by the Greater University Fund Advisory Board, headed this year by Paul J. Parker, Bartlesville, Okla. The conference will include a workshop session on ways to increase alumni interest in University areas which are outside the scope of permissible state-funds support. These include such programs as loans to worthy students, scholarships and research. "The role of alumni support in these areas is of critical importance to any college or university, and especially so to the University of Kansas as it enters the decade of the 1960s, in which soaring enrollments are inevitable." Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said in discussing the new program. "The importance of student aid resources is made clear by the more than 3,600 loans, representing $700,-000, provided to students in the past school year alone. In addition, 2,000 scholarship applications were processed this spring, for the coming school year. "An estimated 2,000 KU students simply would not be here if it were not for the scholarship and loan resources available to them." Dr. Wescoe continued, "For these funds, the University must depend upon its friends, for not one cent of state money can be used for these purposes. "Alumni support is of equal importance in many other areas which are essential to any distinguished educational institution, such as faculty research, unique library acquisitions, and the unrestricted funds which permit the University to meet needs and opportunities as they arise. It is gratifying to know that alumni of the University of Kansas are keeping pace with the alumni of other colleges and universities across the nation in rallying to the support of higher education." The Greater University Fund is the annual giving program of the University of Kansas. It was begun in 1953 as the vehicle for the modest annual contributions of all alumni and friends, to help meet the needs for which state funds are not available. It is sponsored by the Alumni and Endowment Associations. Big And Little Men Resound In 'Greatest Shows on Earth' (Continued from page 1) the superb transportation, hotel convention and amusement facilities When all memory of that 1924 Democratic National Convention is gone, perhaps some party will give New York another chance. I hope so. There can be drama, however, in any convention. The Republicans assembled in Chicago in 1932 committed to the re-nomination of President Herbert Hoover, despite depression and a rising popular tide against the prohibition amendment and the Voltest Act. Oregon was pledged technically to the nomination of Sen. Joseph L. France of Maryland and a notable anti-prebibitionist. The late Rep. Bertrand H. Snell of New York was permanent chairman. The last thing Snell intended to permit was the presentation of Coolidge's name to the restless Republicans. He feared, and with some reason, that the convention might reject Hoover and stampede to Coolidge. An individual with the improbable name of Sandblast decided to stop Hoover. His strategy was to get before the convention for the Presidential nomination the name of Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts, whom Hoover had succeeded in the White House in 1929. After France and Hoover had been placed in nomination, France approached the platform requesting Snell's permission to address the convention. His purpose was to announce his own withdrawal in favor of Coolidge. Snell suspected something like that. The chairman challenged France's credentials, which were, in fact, invalid. Snell then ruled that France could not speak. The Senator insisted. An official account of the proceedings says that when France continued to insist, Snell called on the Sergeant at Arms to escort the Senator from the hall. What Snell did, actually was to join the Sergeant at Arms in seizing France by his body and clothing. They then flung him down the stairs which led to the rostrum from the rear. That ended the Coolidge-for-President effort in 1332. Sen. Lester J. Dickinson of Iowa was the Republican keynote speaker in 1922. He spoke for two hours and 15 minutes, never once mentioning the issue of prohibition which was hot as a firecracker. The Republicans could not agree among themselves on prohibition, however, and their both-sides-of-the-question plank was almost unintelligible. It was drafted, literally, by a Philadelphia lawyer. And there was the time, of course, when FDR rammed Henry A. Wallace down the Democrats' throats as a vice presidential nominee. That was in 1940, the third term convention. Then was heard the so-called "voice from the sewer" proclaiming without end over the loud speaker system that everybody wanted Roosevelt. That was the year that Wendell Willkie, a Democrat, kidnaped the Republican presidential nomination. Since the Fund began, the number of alumni giving annually to the University has increased from 1,000 to more than 6,000. Last year the University ranked ninth among 183 state-supported colleges and universities reporting to the American Alumni Council in the total amount given to it by alumni. It was 11th in the number of donors for the year. Came 1944 and Harry S. Truman squeaked in, beating Wallace for second place. That was quite a convention too. And 1948 when the Democrats wanted to bench HST but couldn't quite make it. The greatest show on Earth, no less. A three-hour cram course in hospital careers has been set up by Montefiore Hospital in New York City. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals "While it is evident that much progress has been made, and that the Jayhawker spirit is high," Parker said, "the fact remains that only about one in eight alumni of state-supported schools give each year. 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour HOP and FLIP "Alumni giving, however modestly, has been accurately described as the very foundation upon which rests the support of others. It is our long-range goal to double or triple the number of KU alumni willing to consider the University in their contributions program by the time the University's centennial is observed in 1966. TRAMPOLINS Classes — 10 a.m. and 11 a.m. OPEN 5 p.m. TO MIDNIGHT TRAMPOLINS 40c "We must not lose sight of the fact that the University has both an obligation to the students of Kansas and a tremendous opportunity to give them a first-class education," Parker added. "Through scholarships and loans, students are the principal beneficiaries of contributions of alumni and these talented young people are the hope of the future." Next to Happy Hal's East 23rd Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. Brake Adj. 98c Grease Job $1 HOLLYWOOD is America's most popular personal checking account service. ThriftiCheck Doves Drive Politicians From Peaceful Ways to War ThriftiCheck® CONCORD, N.H.—(UPI) —Doves may be the symbol of peace to the poets—but to the politician they are a mere nuance. accounts may be opened in just a few minutes, with a few dollars. The cost is only a few cents a check. ThriftiCheck $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $ While discussing improvements to be made on the Concord City Hall, Alderman William A. Stevens said, "And while you're at it, you might get screens. Even the doves are coming in." requires no minimum balance. Keep as much or as little money in your account as you like. ThriftiCheck® is the safe, easy way to pay bills and keep track of your dollars. Each check personalized, free. ThriftiCheck® OVERSTAND JR The Saturday Evening POST ThriftiCheck® Caries, the medical name for tooth cavities, is called a disease of childhood. available in this area only at Douglas County STATE BANK 900 Mass. Professor Saves Money In Building Spectrometer HANOVER, N.H. — (UPI) -- A Dartmouth College professor is building a mass spectrometer, to teach principles of nuclear physics, cut of inexpensive material bought in a hardware store. John W. Dewdney was given a $3,929 grant by the National Science Foundation to build the unit. He says it will cost about $50. Commercial one cost several thousands of dollars. Try the Kansan Want Ads GRANADA NOW SHOWING! ENDS TONIGHT! "Last Days of Pompeii" STARTS WEDNESDAY! ★ Lana Turner and Sandra Dee in "Portrait in Black" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! "A Summer Place and "Tarawa Beachhead" STARTS WEDNESDAY! "Diary of a High School Bride" and "The Ghost of Drag-Strip Hollow" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Clint "Cheyenne" Walker in "Yellowstone Kelly" and "Rally 'round the Flag, Boys" --- Nicely F trance ar $55 per room nic entrance tioned. couple. 1 WANTED couple to Rent frec care. Jul TOWN 1 Beautifu- tioned, dren. Al air com- b. Ph. Four Ro rooms. kitchen per mon FURNIS Georgia fiency. FM mu Availabl only, S7 Nearly Kitchen stove a parking from Uj FOR M rooms. second. fall. Clr or call First f month, 3 blocks TWO ; MENTS for eit couples; Large Summer changin WANTE home fin by a r torate p.m. Gi PRINTE Complex pages: definiti ★ Summer Session Kansan Page 7 A sor is ter, to physics, bought Tuesday. July 12. 1960 tiven a Science He says mercial of dol- CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT WANTED: reliable graduate student or couple to live in faculty member's home. Rent free in return for lawn and cat care. July 22 to Sept. 1. Phone VI 3-0216. Nicely Furnished Apartment, private entrance and bath, Close to KU, extra clean. $65 per month. Bills paid. Also 3 bedrooms with separate entrance and bath, phone, air conditioned. Garage. Near KU, for boys or couple. Phone VI 3-78300. 7-22 TOWN MANOR'S Penthouse Apartment: Beautifully furnished, TV, air conditioned, parking. No pets or small children. Also desirable room with TV, radio, air conditioned, breakfast nook snack bar. Ph. VI 3-8000. 7-19 Four Room House, including two bedrooms. Attractively furnished. Modern kitchen and bath. ½ acre garden. $65.00 per month. Phone VI 3-3660. 7-15 Nearly new 2 Bedroom Apartment. Kitchen furnished with new refrigerator, stove and microwave washer. Private availability Available August 15- from Union, Phone VI 3-8334 7-15 FURNISHED APARTMENT. 5420 Georgia, Kansas City, Kan. 3 rm. Efficiency, utilities paid, nicely furnished. FM music, private entrance, parking. Available July 10 — Married couple only. $75. 7-15 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on the walls. Bedrooms and sitting or frim close to KU. See at 1416 Tennessee or call VI 3-9340 after 4 p.m. tt First floor furnished apartment. $60 two blocks from university. 3 blocks from VI. Union VI. 3-6294. TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APART- MENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available for either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:30 p.m. tf Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider exchanging for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. WANTED WANTED TO RENT: Nicely furnished home from Sept. 1, 1960 to June 1, 1961. Prepare resume and submit toocate program. Call VI 3-5077 after 3 p.m. Guy B. Homan. 7-19 FOR SALE PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742. A Buck A Book! Am selling my professional sociology library prior to Vermont anytime; take your pick a dollar per volume. Good hunting!!! SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special events. Use our booklet to be illustrated. Both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. tf NOTICE TRANSPORTATION Want to join or form Car Pool from Kansas City. Morning classes. Call EN 2-0449. 7-12 WANTED: RIDE FROM TOPEKA to Lawrence daily — leaving from Topeka at or about 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Call VI 1-7234 after 7 p.m. 7-12 Would like ride or, to join car pool from K C Morning class. Call W1-8351. 7-24 TYPING TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term papers. Phone VI 3-2955 between us. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, vi 2-1648 — 408 W. 13th St. TF EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8600. tf ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone VI 3-6791 after 5 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do theses, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-879. TI TYPING WANTED: Experienced. Will do term papers, dissertations, theses, etc. VI 2-1726. 7-15 TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 blks. East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks Willie's 10-40 CAFE VI 3-9757 1310 W. 6th TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf TYPIST—General typing, term papers. TYPIT—General typing, term papers. Cttf. Mrs. Emm Lindell. VT 3-5127. RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf MISCELLANEOUS BFVERAGE$_{15}$-All kinds of six-paks, ice sold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. tsf BUSINESS SERVICES WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING in my home. Will pick up and deliver. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-9159. 7-22 RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf KU BARBER SHOP—Only 1½ blocks down 14th St. hill. Flat tops a specialty. Plenty of free parking. 411's W. 14th St. Clarence, Wayne and Shorty. GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton,actor. Jayhawk Driving Range. mile on 23rd Street. Phone VI 3-9725. DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes $10 launDRY 65c. 9 delivery Washed, dried, Pickup — 3 delivery. Rugs cleaned. I V 3-8077. tt Campus BARBER SHOP Open All Summer Just North of Student Union Do away with Dead Afternoons! Get rid of them at the OLD MISSION INN 1904 Mass. VI 3-97 Serving Meals, Snacks and Beverages VI 3-9737 HOT SPECIAL Bargain in Records LONG PLAY HI-FI (12 numbers) Reg. $3.98 for 99c with each purchase of CITIES SERVICE GASOLENE Six Different Records CITIES FRITZ CO. △ SERVICE CITIES Downtown — Near Everything Phone VI 3-4321 6th and New Hampshire SERVICE College Outlines for Aid to Study By Barnes & Noble Littlefield Outlines of . . . Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics Psychology ... and Many Other Subjects KU By Schaums Theory and Sample Worked Problems in.. Chemistry Physics Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12. 1960 JACK LONDON KU GOES OVERSEAS—Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., junior, Harry Hopkins, Duncanville, Tex., senior, and Leslie Coover, Junction City junior, pack one of the footlockers that will carry scenery, costumes and props overseas for the KU "Brigadoon" troupe. 18 'Brigadoon' Cast-Members, 10 Trunks Ready for Far East The 18-member cast and crew of the University's vagabond theater troupe is preparing for departure Friday for the Far East. The members of the cast of "Brigadoon" will spend eight weeks touring U.S. military installations and U.S. embassies in the Far East. This is the first KU production to participate in overseas tours, which have been sponsored for the past three years by the U.S. government and the American Educational Theatre Association. The group will arrive in Tokyo on Sunday. Air transportation will take them to performances in Japan, Korea, Okinawa, Taiwan, the Philippines, and other Pacific islands. The usual seven-week tour has been extended one week for the KU group for performances sponsored by the State Department in American embassies in Tokyo and Manila. Each year eight American colleges and universities are selected to send overseas touring dramatic productions as entertainment for American servicemen and cultural exchange programs. Four go to Europe and North Africa, four to the Far East. Individuals traveling abroad worry about living out of suitcases, but the KU theatre troupe must somehow pack a complex musical production of "Brigadoon" into ten Army footlockers. The "orchestra" takes up one foot-locker, with a stereo set, two speakers, and the tape-recorded music of the University orchestra under the direction of Robert Baustian. The remaining nine footlockers must accommodate the elaborate Scottish costumes for the 23 parts—six cast members play dual roles—and other gear necessary for performances in sites ranging from outdoor areas to the American embassies in Tokyo and Manila. Dr. Lewin Goff, director of University Theatre and unit manager for the overseas group, is the only person going along who does not act. He runs the stereo set, in addition to his other duties. Mrs. Goff doubles as a cast member and chaperon. Choreographer Tomi Yadon, stager Sidney Berger, and set designer Jim Gohl all play roles. Everything has been pared to an efficient, versatile minimum, including the script itself which has been reduced to 90 minutes to meet military requirements. Even the footlockers do double duty. They form the basis of an imaginative multi - use setting changed by the players for the various scenes. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—It happened at the 1912 convention of Teddy Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party. Sen. Albert Beveridge of Indiana was presiding. He had been banging his gavel for order but the noisy delegates weren't heeding him. Then, as sometimes happens, the convention suddenly became quiet—while Beveridge was still shouting. His voice boomed throughout the great hall; "Where in the blank is that blankety-blank preacher so we can start the blankety-blank prayer and get some blankety-blank quiet around this place." Political conventions always produce unexpected laughs. All America enjoyed the joke in 1952 when a Puerto Rican delegate to the Democratic convention kept demanding "poll's" of his three-member delegation. The home audience on TV was similarly in on the fun when "Joe Smith" was nominated for vice president at the Republican convention in 1956. Some of the funnier episodes take place backstage. There was, for example, the elderly lady who walked into the headquarters of one candidate at Chicago eight years ago and announced that she wanted to "speak to the man in charge of organizing spontaneous demonstrations." Laughs Abound At Conventions AUSTIN, Tex.-(UPI)-At a recent seminar for justices of the peace, Frank McBee of Austin demonstrated his style of JP weddings. McBee married Toni Fave and Edward Joseph Smith while the other justices at the seminar served as witnesses. Just a step off the campus for all your beauty needs. SALON FLEA MAID UKASE EELS URGE RINSE RADIATION END DARK DRREARY ALEE TEEL DISSETERNYLON INCISE LAVA A ATE VERA ARGUE B ITE APE ASEA LEANED STEAM TRAVELERS GAWS PERK AGOUTIT TTTT HEM COMMTTE ECOLE CREE TALC SAMBA TENM YULE TREAD TEXCO PUZZLE ANSWER Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss.—VI 3-9897 Sizes 5 through 16 100 Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Elevator from Men's Store Campus BEAUTY SHOPPE 12th & Ind. VI 3-3034 Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-205' It's Just a Test Case AN ELECTRIC YARDLIGHT'S THE BRIGHT SPOT IN OUR LIVES You'll have ten times the fun with a photo-cell controlled electric yardlight by your patio. Ten times more light, too, and at less cost! Why not swing your partner 'round a picturesque (yet practical) electric yardlight? $3250 complete with post and bulbs (installation extra) M See The KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY OFC To stay beautiful, Wash 'n Wear n e e d s professional care. 1-HOUR So, don't let that lovely dress get droopy and dingy. Let ACME care for it so it will retain its fresh, crisp look. PERSONALIZED LIGHTNING SERVICE ACME LF 1109 MASS rec wh BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU Friday, July 15, 1960 48th Year, No. 9 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Letter Received From Dr. Matzke No word has been received by the University in answer to a request on the well-being of Howard Matzke, professor of anatomy, who is doing research in the revolt-torn Republic of the Congo. But a letter from Prof. Matzke postmarked July 3—four days after the former Belgian colony received independence—has been received by Warren Rhodes, president of the First National Bank Survey Ranks KU Near Top The American College Public Relations Association has recognized the University of Kansas with "citations of honor" in its annual awards competition. The two citations, each of which placed the KU entries as one of the three best among schools of 5,000 and more students, are in the categories of "education news" and "public relations and development projects." James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor for University relations, is the author of both entries. The "education news" citation was for an article "The Penny Wise Lose Good Professors," which appeared on the editorial page of the Wichita Beacon January 19, 1960. The other citation of honor was for a series of three articles appearing in the Wichita Beacon last January, which included the "Penny Wise" feature and articles on the enrollment increases the 1960's will bring and on physical plant needs at KU. The entry also included two articles appearing in the KU Alumni Magazine: "Where'll We Put Them?" and "There was an Old Woman..." The American Alumni Council, meeting jointly this week in Washington, D.C., with the ACPA recognized KU in two categories. Direct mailings for dues and membership promotion prepared by Dick Wintermote, associate secretary of the KU Alumni Association, received third place. The Greater University Fund received a "special recognition certificate" for preparations of a brochure of color pictures of the campus. The brochure is given as a "thank you" item to GUF contributors. The brochure was prepared by Maurice Barker, executive director. Ex-KU Professor Dies in England Word has been received here of the death of Dr. Thomas Edgar Atkinson, former professor of law at the University, June 29 at Keswick, Cumberland, England. He was 64. An authority on wills, Dr. Atkinson joined the KU faculty in 1920 and remained here until 1935 when he joined the law faculty at the University of Missouri. At the time of his death he was professor of law at the New York University School of Law. During 1942-44, he served as technical adviser to the Missouri Supreme Court Committee on Civil Code, for which he drafted the current Missouri Civil Code. He was commissioner from Missouri to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Law and became draftsman of the Uniform Ancillary Administration Acts dealing with estates that overlan state boundaries. He was a member of the American Bar Assn, American Judicature Society, Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity, the Order of the Coif and the American Association of University Professors. in Lawrence. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Dean Arden Miller of the School of Medicine Monday requested a diplomatic check on the well-being of Prof. Matzke, his wife and two children, but the request has proved fruitless. In the letter, Dr. Matzke said that the situation was under control in his area at that time, 11 days ago. Concerning the diplomatic check requested by KU, Dean Miller said he "received no encouragement whatsoever" when he called the African desk of the State Department several days ago to place the request for information about the well-being of Dr. Matzke and his family, who arrived in the Congo about the middle of June. State Department officials informed Dean Miller they were "totally helpless" to get any information into or out of rural areas of the Congo. Dr. Matzke is doing research on the central nervous system of mammals at Lwiro, a town in the remote mountainous area of the Congo. With Dr. Matzke are his wife and their two children, Judith, 15, and Charles, 11. State Department officials told Dean Miller they maintained contact only with Elizabethville and Leopoldville. Dr. Matzek is working at the Institute for Scientific Research in Central Africa at Liwiro. The State Department concluded that the only way for KU officials and friends of the Matzek family to gain information was "a matter of waiting, until Dr. Matzek can get word out himself." "I anticipate that we will not hear quickly," Chancellor Wescoe said, citing the communications difficulties in the Congo. "Prof. Matzke in a fairly remote part of the Congo. He is not in any of the towns that have been mentioned in the news stories." In the letter to Rhodes, Dr. Matzek wrote that the natives were not bringing in many animals for his research "due to the dry weather and independence," but that he was getting enough "to make the trip worthwhile." Prof. Matzke left June 8 to conduct research at the Institute for Scientific Research at Lwiro. "During these four days, Belgian troops patrolled the roads." Dr. Matzke wrote, "and this area, including the Institute and the homes of the whites, was sealed off. All natives had to have a pass to get in. As a result it has been a very quiet period. We have heard of no incidents anywhere in the Kongo." The letter was written on "the fourth and final day of the Kongo independence celebration." (Dr. Matzke used the regional spelling.) "No one knew what to expect," Dr. Matzkte wrote, "and a great many Belgians sent their families home. One day 17 flights left Numbura for Europe, compared to one normally. The rumors were running rampant." Dr. Matzte summarized the political situation in the Congo: He added, unknowingly, "I don't think there will be for awhile." "There are over 100 different tribes and about 65 political parties. Only two officials in the new government (Continued on page 8) The image shows a large outdoor area with a few tables and chairs arranged on the ground. In the background, there is a building with a large roof and a fence surrounding it. The landscape includes trees and a winding road leading to the building. GOING UP—Construction on Snow Hall addition two has passed the 25 per cent stage as campus construction projects boom in the summer. Other projects well along include the Kansas Union addition, the nuclear reactor and engineering research projects and the remodeling of mathematics department offices in Strong Hall. Labor Likes Demos' Pick LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—Leaders of organized labor are openly jubilant over the nomination of Sen. John F. Kennedy and are ready to give an enthusiastic endorsement of the Democratic ticket in the November presidential battle. AFL-CIO chieftains had strongly advocated Kennedy's nomination in their back-stage discussion with delegates before Wednesday's balloting. They argued the 43-year-old senator was exactly what the Democrats needed to defeat Vice President Richard M. Nixon. The union leaders were elated at the party's platform which among other things contained the strongest Civil Rights plank in Democratic history. The selection of Kennedy also was viewed as a blow at Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa. Weather Temperatures during the next four days, today through Monday, will average 4 to 8 degrees below normal. Cool at the beginning of the period with a warming trend over the weekend. Haugh Talks At Michigan Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education, was guest lecturer at the University of Michigan Monday. He spoke to two graduate classes in the speech department on "Teaching Speech" and "Preparing the Teacher of High School Speech." He also taught a demonstrator lesson to a group of high school students as a feature of the Tenth Annual Conference Series for Teachers of English sponsored by the department of English. The purpose of the demonstration lesson was to illustrate how skills in listening can be developed in the classroom. Attending the conference were graduate students in English and speech enrolled at the University of Michigan as well as English teachers throughout the state who are members of the Michigan Council of Teachers of English. Other participants in the Conference Series included Prof. Harold Martin, Harvard; Prof. Robert Pooley, Wisconsin, and Lee Deighton, Vice President, Macmillan Book Company. Kennedy said the next President must make it clear that there will be no appeasement to the communists. Religious School Picks Seminary Leader as Dean Dr. William J. Moore of Des Moines, Ia., has been named new dean of the School of Religion at the University of Kansas. He succeeds Dr. Harold G. Barr who retired as dean June 30, after 23 years' service to the University. His appointment was made jointly by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, the Kansas Bible Chair of the Christian Church and the Kansas School of Religion Board. For the past 12 years, Dr. Moore has been head of the department of New Testament at Drake University Seminary, Des Moines. He is serving this summer as educational director of an Ancient Mediterranean Civilization - Education tour of the Near East, parts of Europe and England, sponsored by Maupintour Associates of Lawrence. Before returning to KU he will also attend the World Convention of the Christian Church in Edinburgh, Scotland, beginning Aug. 1. Dr. Barr will also attend the convention. He has previously taught at Butler University and at Eureka College, Eureka, Ill. He has also served as a chaplain during World War II and in pastorates of the First Christian Church. A native of Australia, Dr. Moore received the degrees bachelor of arts, bachelor of divinity and master of arts from Butler University, Indianapolis, Ind., and the degree doctor of philosophy from the University of Chicago. During the fall semester, Dr. Moore will teach classes in Life and Teachings of Jesus, Social Teachings of Jesus, English Bible, Survey of the New Testament and New Testament and Modern Thought. He and his wife, Audra, are the parents of three children. A sort graduated from Culver - Stockton College, Canton, Mo., this spring. A daughter, Nancy, will be a freshman at KU this fall and another daughter, Mary, will attend Lawrence High School. The School of Religion is supported by the Kansas Bible Chair and is operated by the Kansas School of Religion, affiliated with the University of Kansas. Talented Serpent Returned to Owner MIAMI — (UPI) — Rodney, the snake who can curl into an ashtray and balance on beer cans, was back showing his talents at home again today. Home is with University of Miami student Charlie Herr, who reported the five-foot indigo snake missing Saturday night. Rodney turned up, coiled in the front yard of Julie Stokes. Miss Stokes, familiar with Rodney because of recent publicity over his disappearance, coaxed a neighbor into putting Rodney into a sack, and took him back to Herr. By way of proving his identity Rodney twisted smoothly into an ashtray, then balanced himself across the tops of six beer cans spaced at intervals. Despite the talent show, Herr confessed himself concerned. "See how empty his stomach is" he sympathized. "I'm going to get him a white mouse right away." Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15. 1960 Niki Scores Points In War Of Words BY PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor IT IS DIFFICULT to escape the uncomfortable conclusion that Nikita Khrushchev has scored some important points in the last week in his all-out propaganda campaign against the United States. He has pressed forcefully his campaign to oust United States influence in Latin America, wherein he is being loudly aided and abetted by Fidel Castro of Cuba. Then there also has been the incident of the U.S. Air Force RB-47 reconnaissance plane shot down by Russia over the Barents Sea. KHRUSHCHEV WAS FIRST in announcing that the plane had been shot down, and gave validity to his charge that it violated Soviet air space by filing protests with the U.S., British and Norwegian governments. With a 24-hour head start, it is doubtful that equal effect will be achieved by the White House rejoinder that he lied in his teeth and that actually the U.S. plane was shot down over open seas in an attempt to create an international incident. The Latin American situation is more complex. Fitting perfectly into the Soviet scheme are the Cuban charges of U.S. aggression soon to be heard by the United Nations Security Council. No matter what the final disposition of the case, it is certain that the full facilities of Moscow radio will be used to beam to South America the Cuban side of the case. AND ONCE AGAIN it may be feared that the truth never will overtake the Big Lie. This week the United States announced a new program of economic aid for South America. Too many Latin neighbors will say that the program springs not from good will but rather was forced by Castro and Russia's new attentions. Others will resent the clear implication that aid will be forthcoming only to those who avoid both Castro and communism. Similar reservations attached to the so-called Eisenhower Doctrine in the Middle East ended in virtual total failure for the program. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Largest part. 5 Sunbeams. 9 Snares. 14 Where Salt Lake is. 15 British statesman. 16 Insurgent. 17 Short letter. 18 Sport. 19 Put on a dramatic act. 20 Greenlander. 22 Out of shape. 24 Kind. 26 Works of French artist, Toulouse-Lautrec. 27 Autocratic ruler. 31 Type of weather. 32 Brazilian macaw. 33 Where Baumont is. 35 Churchill's daughter. 39 Famous arctic explorer. 41 According to protocol. 43 Theatre box. 44 Joints. 46 Harvest goddess. 48 — Davis, red winter apple. 49 Mother. 51 Boredom. 53 Prospero's malevolent servant. 57 Sky color. 58 Alert. 60 Long cut, as in land. 64 Subscriber. 65 Well-known name in films. 67 Make bold. 68 Roman official. 69 Hat trimming. 70 One not to be trusted. 71 More rational. 72 Christmas season. 73 Island source of Italy's iron ore. DOWN 1 Army mascot. 2 Inventor of the safe elevator. 3 Went down. 4 Christian, for example. 5 Member of the press. 6 Noisy activity. 7 Cheer. 8 Paul Pry. 9 Locks of hair. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 10 Cancellation of a claim. 11 Dwelling. 12 __ Piper. 13 Coasters. 14 Castle ditch. 15 Sound of a blow. 16 Injurious to health. 17 Gloomy. 18 Metallic element. 19 Grip. 19 Ranted. 19 Azalea or acacia. 19 Wrap. 19 Lifetimes. 19 Fowl. 19 Indian of Florida. 19 R. R. danger signal. 19 Better-balanced. 19 Traduce. 19 Perhaps. 19 Crochet hook. 19 Secret messages. 19 Order of eola. 19 Bolshiest leader. 19 Bold; Colloq. 19 __ vous garde. 19 Captive; Slang. 19 Small apple. 19 Olympian goddess. 19 East Indian herb. Record Review NEW YORK—(UPI)—You can't feel musical expression in postwar Germany has yet been returned to its former pinnacle on the basis of a recording of Haydn's St. Cecelia Mass, which in its technical thickness and emotional weight is of the kind of musical substance that traditionally only German artists can get off the ground (Deutsche Grammophon-138028-29). These German artists didn't succeed, although Maria Stader was the soprano soloist and Eugene Jochum conducted. You hear in the main the outer facade and buttresses; the inner filigrees and reliefs are missing. You wonder if orchestra and chorus were inadequate for the demands of this difficult score, or if there was insufficient preparation. On the other hand, a German import of Dvorak's Requiem Mass is loaded with musical finesse and dedication, and it's a shame the composition shows its period and reflects obsolescent attitudes. The singers are Miss Stader, Sieglinde Wagner, Ernest Haefliger and Kim Borg; chorus and orchestra were Czech, Karel Ancerl conducting (Deutsche Grammophon-18547-48). A wholly admirable fulfillment of a musical assignment by chorus and orchestra was that of the Chicago Symphony and Chorus of Prokofieff's monumental score of a motion picture, "Alexander Nevsky." With no visual help, it has the sweep and intensity of historical events and their people as recreated by the artistic imagination. This is the way Prokofoieff intended it to come out, this way which conductor Fritz Reiner and his helpers made it come out. Whether so or not (and that you will never know) the performance convinces you it has to be so. Rosalind Elias, Metropolitan Opera mezzo, sang the touching songs (RCA Victor-LSC2395). Many records have gimmicks attached to them, as you know, and the gimmick attached to a recording of three of the concertos grosso of Handel's famous opus six is this: Handel was born in the town of Halle 275 years ago. The three concertos were recorded by a festival orchestra organized in Halle to commemorate that event, although Handel left Halle at the first opportunity and died an Englishman. That is not intended to disparage the playing of the concertos. Indeed, they're very well played, if with emphasis upon the style called "high baroque." Conductor Horst-Tanu Margraf should have relaxed just a little bit, Handel would be embarrassed by such kow-towing (Epic-BC1074). MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — "Mama," asked 3-year-old Mary Louise Colette, "why are you polishing brother?" Short Ones Mrs. John A. Coletta was applying skin lotion on Mary Louise's baby brother. CHEYENNE, Wyo. — (UPI) — Times have changed. ... The kindergarten class at a Cheyenne elementary school grew vegetables as part of a classroom project. The most popular vegetable was spinach. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room ... Phone 711 Editors ... Dick Crocker Clarke Keys BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office... Phone 376 Business Manager... Clydene Brown the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism ANNA KARENINA, by Leo Tolstoy. Bantam Classics, 95 cents. Here is a translation of a classic that should do much to dispel the familiar notion that Russian novels are extremely difficult to read. Joel Carmichael has thrown out the complex forms of address, and from start to finish one is able to identify with no difficulty the characters either in action or under discussion. Otherwise, it is almost platitudinous to write that "Anna Karenina" is a great novel. It has the magnificent sweep that has marked the Russians from Pushkin to Pasternak. It also has brilliant probing characterizations. MOST OF US ARE fairly familiar with dramatic interpretations of "Anna Karenina," and we usually think of the novel in terms of Anna and her great love for Vronsky. But it is apparent that Tolstoy is doing more than writing about a woman who defied convention. He is giving a full-scale portrait of Russia in the 1860s and 1870s. There was a ferment in ideas then, following on the freeing of the serfs, the rising of a new peasant class, and the publication of socialistic and nihilistic ideas. Dostoevsky and Turgenev also were aware of these currents and Tolstoy weaves them into this amazing novel. His central character is not Anna, but Constantine Levin. One would gather that this countryman of the upper classes, who is toying with numerous philosophies in an attempt to find a satisfactory way of life, is Tolstoy himself. He sounds like the Tolstoy about to embark upon "The Kreutzer Sonata," the Tolstoy who would influence so profoundly the American realist, William Dean Howells. LEVIN IS NOT unlike Pierre of "War and Peace." Both are wealthy young men, idealistic young men, awkward young men. Both are literally and figuratively stumbling through life, seeking for a formula of living, an answer to their questions. Levin groping through the philosophers of the 19th century reminds one of Pierre wandering about the battlefield of Borodino, trying to learn the meaning of war. If Levin is the hero, perhaps Kitty, his wife, is the heroine. For, though he describes Anna in the most glowing of words, one gathers that Tolstoy does not like her. Vronsky he clearly does not like. The gambling, horse-riding, essentially shallow Vronsky is the antithesis of Levin. AND IF THE lovers do not come off well, neither does the wronged husband. Karenin is not the villainous Basil Rathbone or Ralph Richardson that we recall from film versions of the novel, but he is far from being heroic. Anna leaves the Karenin home for her illicit relationship with Vronsky, but she does so in part because Karenin is a husband in name only, who cannot understand the terrific demands made upon life by his young wife. Those who have not read "Anna Karenina" are advised that the Carmichael translation, a complete and unabridged one, is designed for today's readers. Those who have read "Anna" may find the new translation a refreshing change from the older ones. In any form the novel remains one of the four or five great novels of the 19th century. JOSEPH ANDREWS, by Henry Fielding. Bantam Classics, 50 cents. SOUTH WIND, by Norman Douglas. Bantam Classics, 50 cents. It is perhaps just the coincidence of these books appearing in the same season that points to common characteristics, but a good argument can be made for their being compared as satires. Fielding's "Joseph Andrews," which antedated the author's "Tom Jones," is familiarly regarded as the ancestor of the modern novel. Douglas's "South Wind" is a biting commentary on manners and morals of the 20th century, as seen through the eyes of an Episcopal minister. "JOSEPH ANDREWS" will recall to many readers the ingenuous "Candide" of Voltaire. Joseph is a youth in a Hogarthian society whose chief problem, one would gather, is to stay out of the beds of numerous amorous females. He stays out, though others in the novel are not so concerned with chastity. His adventures on highway and in friendly inn are in the picaresque tradition, and if his character never seems to be broadened, we must remember that this was, after all, an early novel. "South Wind" is perhaps most like "Penguin Island." All the sins and caprices and minor vices of society are here revealed, and the good Bishop Heard, at the end of the book, finds that he is not quite so sure of heretofore dogmatic matters as he had believed himself to be. The description of the life and martyrdom of the good saint Dodekanus brings to mind St. Mael, the founding father of Penguin Island, as well as the biting travesties of religious relics in both Erasmus and Mark Twain's "Innocents Abroad."—CMP F V Worth Repeating "KU, in trying to squeeze in everyone, has the same problem as the woman who has put on weight over the years. Not only is the student body twice its 1939 size—it is distributed differently. "But the buildings in which students must be taught how to live and work productively in a complex and changing world are either inadequate or actually not in being and cannot be made ready without extraordinary measures." - James Gunn Page 3 Faculty Members Study When Costa Rica Lures Eight University of Kansas faculty members preparing for a trip to Costa Rica next month are finding little time for anything besides Spanish this summer. The group will spend August and the summer of 1961 in Costa Rica in an experimental exchange program with the University of Costa Rica at San Jose. In an effort to obtain a competency in Spanish, the professors, their wives and children are enrolled in one of five special Spanish classes this summer. Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, is executive secretary of the group. "Each of us is spending three hours each day in class and another three to five hours studying in the evening," he said. "Professors who were able to take Spanish I and II classes last year are enrolled in an advanced class this summer. The rest are just beginning." Two separate courses are set up for the wives. One meets three hours daily; the other, three hours each week. A special class for children meets one half hour daily. "The families are an essential part of the program," Prof. Mencher explained. "The wives will be cooking Costa Rican foods and shopping in the markets. The children will be playing with Costa Rican children. "By taking part in the daily life of the Costa Rican families, we expect to gain a better understanding of the people themselves." he said. Prof. Mencher said the faculty members do not plan to make the trip together nor will they live as a group in Costa Rica. "Each of us is planning his own trip and is making his own contacts within Costa Rica," he said. "When Americans get together, they tend to speak English instead of Spanish. We don't plan to establish a little Kansas in San Jose. Each of us will go his own way," he added. Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business and Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will offer their assistance at administrative levels. "The rest of us will speak to classes, serve as consultants and in various other capacities," he said. "Because the program is in the experimental stage, it is uncertain what we'll be doing." but it is far-reaching. We'll probably get more than we give." In addition to their study of Spanish, each of the families subscribes to La Nacion, the leading newspaper in San Jose; Espano, a magazine published in Mexico, and other materials. During the past year they attended frequent seminars for briefing on the social, cultural and political life of the country. The program is being financed through a grant from the Carnegie Corp. of New York to increase the cultural understanding between the United States and Costa Rica. "The program has a specific goal, It also includes a "junior year abroad" program at the University of Costa Rica for KU students. Thirteen began their study at the beginning of the spring semester, 1960, and have been assigned to specific faculty members and special projects in addition to their studies. Others who will participate in the faculty program are Peter Caws, associate professor of philosophy; Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education; George W. Forman, associate professor of mechanical engineering; Charles E. Staley, assistant professor of economics and Jack D. Steele, professor of business administration. The student program is directed by Seymour Menton, associate professor of Romance languages. Deans Waggoner and Surface will leave Lawrence July 23. The remaining faculty members and their families will depart a week later. DURHAM, England — (UPI) — G. B. Harding, in a letter to the Daily Telegraph, told of his new use for fashionable shoes. High Heels Help Harding "I was considering the purchase of a spiked roller to aerate my lawn," he wrote. "This is now unnecessary. The ladies' heels at my daughter's wedding reception did the job very nicely." A change of hair-do gives a woman — or man — a refreshing lift. Try Bar-B-Que Summer Session Kansan at HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd REDMAN'S SHOE SALE Women's Shoes Dress and Casual $2.99 to $6.99 Boyd Repeats KC Vice Charges Men's Shoes $3.99 to $8.99 COFFEYVILLE — (UPI) — McDill "Huck" Boyd, candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, has repeated his charges that "gamblers and a lawless element have taken over in certain areas of Kansas City, Kan." REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Seven Airline Passengers Pay Fines for Drinking Boyd made similar statements in Kansas City Monday and was criticized by Mayor Paul Mitchum who said the candidate had leveled an attack against an entire city. In a statement released at Coffeyville, Boyd said "the breakdown in law enforcement is fueled by gambling with 166 establishments holding federal gambling stamps." WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Federal Aviation Agency reports seven airline passengers have paid fines of $200 each for drinking liquor from their own bottles while in flight. The Agency said they were charged with violating a rule against private drinking on a New York-Montreal flight May 20. It did not identify the seven passengers. Try the Kansan Want Ads Friday, July 15, 1960 Story of Salmon Featured in Series The three movies to be shown on the outdoor screen east of Robinson Gymnasium at 7:30 tonight will be "Salmon, Catch to Can." "Garden of Japan" and "Valley of Light." In the event of rain for any of the weekly movie programs, the films will be shown in Bailey Hall. Bossinger said when he passed the irate driver, the unidentified man blasted the rear of his pickup with a shotgun. BLIOU, Calif. — (UPI) — Walter Bossinger complained to police that he received a unique "blast" from another motorist for following too close behind. Shotgun Urges Driver To Keep Greater Distance Brake Adj. 98c Grease Job $1 Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. While Moustris was trying to figure out what to do with the land-locked Noah's Ark, one of the cats gave birth to three kittens. - 5 dogs, 5 cats, a parrot, 2 doves, 8 pigeons and parakeets, 9 chickens, 2 white mice, 1 squirrel, 1 chipmunk, and 2 guinea pigs. Patrolman Finds Zoo In Small Bungalow TAHOE CITY, Calif. — (UPI) — Placer County's Sheriff, Lt. Robert Moustris, called to investigate reports of strange sounds coming from a small bungalow, found the following inhabitants: KU Barber Shop 1 1/2 blocks down 14th Street Hill 411 $ \frac{1}{2} $ W. 14th "ECON-O-WASH is the GREATEST!" Agitator washers get your clothes super-clean in only 20 minutes . . . without tangling them! Those big dryers fluff-dry clothes in a jiffy... M M While YOU relax in AIR-CONDITIONED comfort. Try ECON - O - WASH soon! Always plenty of hot water, soap, bleach, and change available. 20c Wash - 10c Dry Econ o wash COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY LOW COST SELF-SERVICE 24 hours a day 7 days a week 9th & Mississippi Free Parking --- Page 4 Summer Session Kansas Friday, July 15. 1960 John Raitt Stars in 'Pajama Game'in KC KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(Special)—John Raitt, singing star who crested the original Broadway role of Sid Sorokin in "The Pajama Game," played it for two years in New York and made the motion picture with Doris Day, will open next Monday night, July 18, in that same role in "The Pajama Game," the musical spoof of labor and management problems. The show, set to run for two weeks, is full of lively melodies and spirightly dialogue. Included in the musical numbers are 'Hey, There,' "There Once Was A Man," "Herzando's Hideaway," "Steam Heat," "Small Talk," "Seven and One-Hall Cents," and other popular tunes. Gordon and Shelia Mac Rae, in one of the greatest Starlight box office attractions in history, continue their record setting pace in "Annie Get Your Gun" through Sunday night. During the second week of a performance, such as the one currently in progress, theatre officials point out that all seats are available on a first-come first-served basis, since all of the season tickets purchased are for the first week only of a performance. Raitt is the singer on the original cast long-playing hi-fi album of "The Pajama Game," one of the most successful albums in recording history. Raitt also created the role of Billy Bigelow in the Broadway production of "Carousel." The Starlight has been seeking him for a show for the past five years, but he has starred in "The Chevy Show" during the summer for the past three seasons and contractual obligations have not permitted his appearance here until this year. The musical appeared first at the Starlight in the 1957 season and was a tremendous box office success. At that time many labor unions in Kansas City purchased blocks of seats for the show, which takes hilarious Airman's Father Sure of Mission KANSAS CITY, Mo.-(UPI)-The father of one of two U.S. Air Force officers captured after the Russians shot down an RB-47 reconnaissance bomber is sure the craft was on a legitimate mission. Jean McKone of Tonganoxie, father of Lt. John R. McKone, the navigator aboard the plane which was shot down July 1, is also positive his son is in custody. "The Russians have him," the elder McKone said. "There's no doubt about it. They wouldn't have released the information if they couldn't back it up. I just hope he is still alive." Mkone added: "If we could just create a furor about this the Russians might be persuaded to spare his life. I just don't know." digs as both sides of the labor-man agement organizations. The show portrays life in a Middle West pajama factory, and deals with an employee campaign for a 71%-cent hourly wage increase. A volcanic factory head is portrayed as demanding to know "why that blasted union can run its Coca-Cola machine on plant electricity?" The union crew, headed by a beautiful negotiator, can't seem to quite understand why management won't allow them longer lunch-hours, shorter working days, more coffee breaks and days off for their favorite aunt's birthdays. Mail orders are being purchased now at the Starlight Ticket Office, Dept. JP, 1217 Walnut Street, Kansas City, Missouri. Telephone reservations are also being accepted by calling Grand 1-5510 in Kansas City before 6 p.m. During the evenings reservations may be made at the theatre box office in Swope Park, Delmar 3-9481. Kishi Stabbed By Nationalist TOKYO—(UPI)—Premier Nobu-suke Kishi, stabbed six times by a former member of the dreaded World War II Black Dragon Society, is expected to be hospitalized for at least 10 days, doctors at Maeda Hospital have said. Kishi was knifed repeatedly in the left thigh at a celebration hailing the choice of trade and industry minister Hayato Ikeda as the new standard bearer for Kishi's party when the premier steps down shortly. City children suffer from acute health conditions about half again as often as farm youngsters, according to the Health Insurance Institute. Campus BARBER SHOP Open All Summer Just North of Student Union PIZZA As You Like It The Pizza Hut 644 Mass. VI 3-9760 We Deliver from 6-10 p.m. OPEN 4 p.m. - 12 p.m. — Sunday - Thursday 4 p.m. - 1 a.m. — Friday and Saturday Closed Tuesdays Leave Given To Kaplan Bert Kaplan, associate professor of psychology, will take a leave of absence during the fall semester to make a cross-cultural study of mental health patterns in New Mexico and Arizona. He will conduct the three-year's study of psychopathology under a $46,234 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. Last summer Dr. Kaplan collected extensive data relating to the Navaho tribe under a grant from the KU General Research Fund. "That study suggested a pattern of psychopathology that exists partly within the drunkenness pattern and that is partly related to Navaho kinship and traditional value orientations," he said. He will continue his study of that group and of the Hopi and Apache Indians and of a Spanish-American village in New Mexico in an attempt to discover different ways these people become mentally ill. VanderWerf Gets Contract Renewal "We will obtain data from hospital, police and physicians' records and will conduct surveys of small areas to learn the mental status of these people," he said. "We will describe and compare the patterns of mental illness discovered to see how they may be related to the structure of their individual societies." He will concentrate his research on the attitudes of these people toward mental illness and to a study of drunkenness. Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, will continue research on the chemistry of nitrogen compounds in petroleum with a contract renewed by the American Petroleum Institute. The $14,300 contract is being awarded him for the sixth consecutive year. Hopponen Completes Refresher Seminar Research assistants assigned to the project are Paul Papadopoulos, Navarinov, Thessaloniki, Greece; Lloyd Pine, Emporia; Nathan Lerner, Lawrence, and Victor Heasley, Dorr, Mich., graduate students in chemistry. Raymond E. Hopponen, professor of pharmacy, has completed a Walgreen Refresher Seminar in Pharmacy Administration at the firm's headquarters in Chicago. The refresher course, given persons who have attended two previous seminars, is designed to give educators a first-hand working knowledge of contemporary retail drug business in order to prepare pharmacy students for successful drug store management. Wear a lot of white or light colors during the hot weather. They reflect sunlight and heat. HOP and FLIP TRAMPOLINS Classes — 10 a.m. and 11 a.m OPEN 5 p.m. TO MIDNIGHT 40c Next to Happy Hal's East 23rd WHO AM I? A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy THE NEW YORKER 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 S Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Summer Session Kansan AMF A GLOOMY CAST—Douglas C. Reed, Cassiday junior (second from left), is continuing ROTC Summer Camp training at Fort Riley in spite of having a cast on his foot for the sixweek camp for cadets in the Fifth Army area. (U.S. Army photo.) KU Virus Research Program Receives Health Service Grant Virus research and the production of antisera—agents used to detect and identify viruses—will be stepped up at the University of Kansas Medical Center by a $400,000 contract awarded to the KU Endowment Association by the U. S. Public Health Service. Part of the research program covered by the grant involves a long-term project to detect and identify viruses that may cause cancer in human beings. Researchers now believe that some types of cancer, such as leukemia, may be caused by viruses, said Dr. Herbert A. Wenner, in charge of the project under the one-year contract. The KU Medical Center is the only antisera production center in the United States. This dried blood HAMBURG. Germany — (UPI) — Nazi Germany's most deadly gas, which Adolph Hitler never dared to use, was dumped into the Atlantic Ocean yesterday. Nazi Gas Supply Dumped Into Sea The West German government salvaged lethal nerve gas encased in 150 millimeter artillery ammunition from the bottom of the Baltic Sea where it was sunk on British orders right after the war. A 97-ton steamer, the August Peters, took the salvaged gas ammunition to an undisclosed spot for sinking into the vast depths of the Atlantic Ocean. The strange mission of the tiny steamer, which made one journey in March and is scheduled to make a second and final run late this month, has been dubbed "top secret" by the West German government. serum with antibodies for 40 of the known 61 human viruses is used to identify virus diseases — including the three kinds of polio—which may break out in epidemics anywhere in the United States. A 10-foot-square refrigerator, in one of the School of Medicine's old buildings about one mile north of the KU Medical Center at 39th and Rainbow, contains about 26 gallons of antisera for identifying polio and the 37 other viruses. The five-year stockpile represents an investment of $1,000,000 and years of research. Shipments of the antisera also have gone out to Canada, South America, South Africa, Western Europe, Japan and India. Under the U.S. Public Health grant, the KU Endowment Association is able to renovate and remodel the old buildings. The Kansas Board of Regents recently approved a request to lease the buildings to the KU Endowment Association for $1 a year for this purpose. Dr. Paul Kanitsuka is assistant project director. The project staff occupies all three floors of the Eleanor Taylor hospital building on the original "Goat" hill campus. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss MIAMI—(UPI)—Three American newsmen recuperated in Miami yesterday after arriving from Cuba where the government had jailed them. Three Newsmen Released by Cuba 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 William Moeser of the Miami News, Judson Gooding of Time and Life magazines, and National Broadcasting Company photographer John Hlavacek arrived from Havana aboard a Cubana airliner. Friday, July 15, 1960 They were clean shaven and in good health. They said it appeared their cell, a "clean and neat one," was one reserved for top political prisoners. Moeser and Gooding were detained twice within 24 hours on suspicion of "presenting the (Cuban) revolution in a bad light." Hilavacek was arrested when he took pictures of them following their first release. One out of every 10 automobiles in the United States is in California. New Pharmacy Prof. Selected The appointment of Edward E. Smissman as professor and head of the department of pharmaceutical chemistry of the School of Pharmacy at the University has been announced by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Prof. Smissman has been an active research worker and has prepared 19 scientific publications in the fields of biogenesis and metabolic pathways, biological activity and chemical structure relationship, isolation and structure determination of natural products and synthesis of natural products. Prof. Smissman succeeds Prof. Burchklatter who, after 13 years, has left KU to become professor and chairman of the department of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of Michigan. The National Science Foundation sponsors annual surveys of industrial research and development. He is chairman of the Division of Medicinal Chemistry of the American Chemical Society and has held numerous offices in national associations. He was assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Illinois College of Pharmacy, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of Wisconsin School of Pharmacy and since 1957, has been associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of Wisconsin. Prof. Smissman, 34, received the degree bachelor of science from the University of Illinois in 1948 and the degree doctor of philosophy from the University of Wisconsin in 1953. What's in a Name SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — (UPI)—Franke Davila prosecuted a liquor violation in which Frank Davila paid a $100 fine. Davila number one is an assistant district attorney, and Davila number two is a bartender—no relation. PUZZLE ANSWER M O S T R A Y S T R A P S U T A H E D E N R E B E L I N E P O L O E M O T E E S K I M O L O P S I D E D S O R T P O S T E R S D D I C T A T O R W E T A R A T E X A S S A R A H R O S S R G H T L O G E K N E E S C E R E S B E N M O M D U L L N E S S C A L I B A N B L U E O P E N E Y E D T R E N C H D O N O R R I T A D A R E E D I L E V E L L I A R S A N E R Y U L E E L B A 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 建设者 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. 18 E. 9th Street VI 3-0151 PRINTING by offset. Mimegraphing and Ditto work. COMPACT TYPEWRITER I VARSITY VELVET ALL-STAR Hawaiian CHERRY PINEAPPLE Ice Cream What a wonderful blend of flavors! Delicious ice cream filled with tiny "islands" of cherry and pineapple. It's a new, exotic summer refreshment! SANDWICH 40th Anniversary Feature Flavor from LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK & ICE CREAM CO. 202 W. 6th VI 3-5511 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15.1960 John Perry Named To Fine Arts Post The appointment of John Perry as assistant professor of piano in the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts has been announced by Dean Thomas Gorton. Perry has won several top international prizes in piano in Europe where he has studied piano the past three years at the Vienna Academy of Music. He will succeed Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, who retired after 26 years on the KU faculty. In September 1959, Perry won the highest prize at the International Busoni Piano Competition at Bolzano, Italy. He won the first prize of 100,000 live (about $2,000) from among 43 contestants from all over the world. The decision of the judges, all Europeans, was unanimous. A month later, Perry won the highest prize of the Viotti International Competition for Piano at Vercelli, Italy, from among 70 contestants. A native of Duluth, Minn., Perry received his Masters degree from the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, N.Y., in 1957, where he held a tuition scholarship for all three years and a fellowship in opera coaching. He has studied under pianist Frank Mannheimer and Mrs. Cecile Genhart, chairman of the piano department at the Eastman School of Music. Two of his three years in Europe were under a Fulbright grant, and the third under the Kate Neal Kinyi Memorial Fellowship of $1.500 awarded by the University of Illinois. Insurance Men To Meet Monday The five-day program will be conducted at Gertrude Sellards Pearson dormitory under co-sponsorship of University Extension. The Institute will offer a basic course for those who have not attended a previous institute and an advanced course for persons having two or more years experience in the insurance business and who have attended previous institutes. Members of the staff include Hall L. Nutt, director; Charles E. Black and Bernard C. Haught, assistant directors, all of the Life Insurance Marketing Institute, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. Both courses will be aimed at helping life underwriters to develop effective sales patterns and to aid them in their search for ways in which the power of logic can be used to sell cash value life insurance. Persons attending the Institute will be assigned to special projects coordinated with each day's discussion, in addition to morning and afternoon classes, and will have an opportunity for informal conversation, an exchange of ideas and techniques, and personal counsel. Perry has presented recitals at Merano and Empori, Italy, and in the Brahms-saal in Vienna. In 1958 he accompanied Sarah Dubin, American soprano on tour of Germany, appearing at Köln, Koblenz, Stuttgart, Hannover, Frankfurt and Heidelberg. This year he played with the symphony orchestra in Czestochowa, Poland, and he was selected to represent the United States in piano competition in Poland. Twice in this country, Perry won first Artist prize in the National Guild Recording Competition, and he won first place in the artist's division of the annual contest sponsored by the American Guild of Piano Teachers in 1957. In the summer of 1959 he made a concert tour of the Midwest. $55,600 Contract Renewed by AEC Frank S. Rowland, associate professor of chemistry, has been awarded renewal of a contract with the Atomic Energy Commission for another year's work on "Chemical Reactions of Energetic Atoms." The contract, in the amount of $55,600, is in addition to a similar contract he holds with the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Working on the project with Prof. Rowland will be Mrs. Alicja Sokolowska, research associate, an exchange visitor from the Institute of Nuclear Research, Warsaw, Poland. Graduate students assigned to the research are Vincent Anselmo, New York City; Adolph Beyerlein, Phillipsburg; Lawrence Hathaway, Belin. N.M.; Donald Ormond, Kansas City, Kas., John Root, Shawnee and Yi-Noo Tang, Hong Kong. Before the windshield wiper came into common use, motorists were advised to apply a mixture of kerosene oil and glycerine on windshields to keep the glass clear of rain, snow or ice. The University of Kansas Library has acquired about 1,150 items bound in three folio albums concerning Astley's Amphitheater, a famous London circus and theater which was operated from the late 18th to late 19th centuries. Library Gets Rare Folios Robert Vosper, director of the library, obtained the collection during his sabbatical year in England, 1959-60. Thomas R. Buckman, head of the acquisitions department, said, "This very interesting and colorful collection will be of great use in the teaching and research programs of the English and speech departments." The collection ranges from a rare bill of Astley's Riding School, c. 1780, to an original painting of the later theater's drop curtain, done from memory in 1936. There are more than 220 playbills and more than 300 Juvenile Drama sheets, described as the outstanding items of the collection. The material is regarded as a find by collectors because at the time no one thought that items concerning the circuses and minor theaters of London were worth preserving. Kansan Want Ads Get Results francis sporting goods 731 Mass. TENNIS RACKET we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service C 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 fitting, too! UNSOCIALIZED AND PATTERNIZE DRIVY QUEEN HONORING MARY WASHINGTON Stop by for a treat TODAY! 1835 Mass. DAIRY QUEEN CAMERA CENTER Close Out 20% Off Complete Inventory Camera Merchandise and Party Supplies Discount applies to everything on the shelves. 1015 Mass. CAMERA CENTER Next to Varsity Theatre Kennedy Would Not Hold 'Youngest' Title VI 3-9471 LOS ANGELES—(UPI) — Theodore Roosevelt was 42 years and 10 months old when he became president upon the assassination of William McKinley in 1901. If elected president in November, Sen. John F. Kennedy would be 43 years and 8 months old on taking office in January. Lukinac to Rejoin KU Football Forces The Kansas Jayhawkers have been bolstered for the upcoming football season by the announcement that senior end Chuck Lukinae will compete this fall. Lukinac was not expected to be available for the 1960 season and missed spring practice because of pre-medical studies. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "Wonderful Country" and "Tarzan's Greatest Adventure" STARTS SUNDAY James Garner in "Cash McCall and "A Woman Like Satan" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "Diary of a High School Bride" and "The Ghost of Drag Strip Hollow" SATURDAY ONLY 3 Big FEATURES! ★★★★★ GRANADA NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! Lana Turner and Sandra Dee in "Portrait in Black" STARTS SUNDAY Marlon Brando and Joanne Woodward in "The Fugitive Kind" Summer Session Kansan seen ball that com- Page 7 be and of CLASSIFIED ADS ion. FOR RENT 2 Bedroom Modern Trailer, on private ground. Air conditioned. $60 per month. water paid. Couple only. Phone VI 3-8727. 7-26 Clean two room room apartment. Also sleeping rooms. See Mrs. Maxwell. Hawk's Nest days or evenings call VI 3-4168. 821 Indiana after p. 3-m. Two Room Modern Furnished Basement Apartment for young men. Outside entrance. Bills paid. Also two large single rooms linen furnished. Two other room furnishings. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 7-26 Nicely Furnished Apartment, private entrance and bath. Close to KU, extra clean. $53 per month. Bills paid. Also 3 bedrooms. Free car service. Entrance and bath, phone, air conditioned. Garage. Near KU, for boys or couple. Phone VI 3-7850. 7-22 CLEAN—2 furnished apartments. Good stoves and refrigerators. Private entrances and bath rooms, large closets. 6 windows in basement apartment. Utilities paid. Man and wife only. No drinking. 520 Ohio. 7-29 Three Bedroom House, nicely furnished. Strictly modern. 2 car attached garage. Newly decorated, extra clean. $65 per month. Call VI 3-7830. 7-26 TOWN MANOR'S Penthouse Apartment; Beautifully furnished, TV, air conditioned, parking. No pets or small children. Also desirable room with TV, radio, air conditioned, breakfast nook snack bar. Ph. VI 3-8000. 7-19 Four Room House, including two bedrooms. Attractively furnished. Modern kitchen and bath. $1/2 acre garden. $65.00 per month. Phone VI 3-3660. 7-15 FURNISHED AP ART MENT. 5420 Georgia, Kansas City, Kan. 3 rm. Efficiency, utilities paid, nicely furnished. FM music, private entrance, parking. Available July 10 — Married couple only, 875. 7-15 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on the back of the room for fall. Close to KU. To ku at 1416 Tennesse or call VI 3-9340 after a 4 p.m. call. First 300 foot furnished apartment. $60 three-bedroom apartment. $6244. $3 blocks from Union, VI. 3-6294. TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS Recently re-decorated. Available either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:30 p.m. tl Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider ex- changing for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. Nearly new 2 Bedroom Apartment. Kitchen furnished with new refrigerator, stove and automatic washer. Private room available. from Union, Phone VI 3-8343. 7-15 WANTED: reliable graduate student or souple to live in faculty member's home. Rent free in return for lawn and eat care. July 22 to Sept. 1. Phone VI 3-0316. WANTED Wanted: Part-time secretary-bookkeeper Rowland. Room 12, Malcolm Hall. 7-22 WANTED TO RENT: Nicely furnished home from September 1, 1960 to June 1, 1961 by a responsible home-owner on Doc. Curtis. Call 3-3077 at p.m. Guy B. Horman. 7-19 FOR SALE PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742. NOTICE SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special programs offered by the program. Illustrated. Both new and renewals Processed promptly. Call VI 3-09425. tf TRANSPORTATION full Student now working full time on and Park vicinity. Call VI 3-2270 7-15 would like ride or, to join car pool from & C. Morning class. Call WE 1-8351. 7-24 Neat Accurate Prompt Typing. By ex- perienced typist. Satisfaction guaranteed. Standard rates. Phone VI 3-5239. tf TYPING Theses, Term Papers and reports. Typed fast, accurately. Call VI 3-0540. 7-29 TYPIST. Will do theses, reports, term papers. Phone VI 3-2955 between 10 a.m. p.m. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8660. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc. experience accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, VI 2-1648 — 408 W. 13th St. ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone VI 3-6791. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do theses, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8379. tf TYPING WANTED: Experlenced Will do term papers, dissertations, theses, etc. VI 2-1726. 7-15 TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Veqist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 bliks, East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf TYPIST-General typing, term papers. F. Ferguson, letterate Mr. Mrs. Elmer Lindell, V 3-1527. tf RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. tsf BUSINESS SERVICES WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING in my home. Will pick up and deliver. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-9159. 7-22 RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. ff GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton, actor. Jayhawk Driving Range, mile fast on 23rd Street. Phone: vi-9-725 DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tf SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes $10 Diaper bag, diaper cover 65c, 9c Washed, dried, Pickup - delivery. Rugs cleaned. I - 3807-7 1310 W. 6th Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks VI 3-9757 Hop into Grasshopper Feather-light, so comfortable, you'll want several pairs of these smart, trim and colorful work- and-play Keds. Cool duck uppers, with a perky single tie. Sturdy soles in contrasting white. M and N widths. Only $4.95 White Black Beige us.Keds Only $4.95 U.S. Keds The Keds Blue Label identifies the Shoe of Champions McCoy's 813 Mass. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds When the thermometer starts going up, up up...it's time for you to go down...way down to the cool comfort of the HAWK'S NEST! Have a cold drink and enjoy that air conditioning. ABOUT KEEPING COOL Kansas Union Hawk's Nest Summer Session Kansan Page 8 Sunday Concerts Afternoon 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Agnus Dei ... Morley Ave Maria ... Verdi The Stars are with the Voyager ... Bright Mary Wore Three Links of Chain ... arr: Clokey Requiem ... Brahms VII Blessed are the Dead Eugene Kenney, Conducting Part II Orchestra Russian and Ludmilla, Overture ... Glinka Gowald M. Garman, Curriculum Danse Macabre ... Saint Saens Thomas-Gerton, Conduction Thomas Gorton, Conducting Prelude in E-flat minor ... Shostakovich-Stokowski Symphony No. 3 ... Copland Fourth Movement, Molto*deliberato Finlandia ... Sibelius Victor Alessandro, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Evening 8 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Part I Band Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger The Voice of the Guns March ... Kenneth J. Alford La Fiesta Mexicana, A Mexican Folk Song Symphony, H. Owen Reed I. Prelude and Aztec Dance II. Mass III. Carnival Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Part II Chorus O Magnum Mysterium ... Vittoria Thou Must Leave Thy Lowly Dwelling ... Berlioz Kyrie Eleison ... Dieterich The Song of Galilee ... Chajes Eugene Kenney, Conducting Part III Band Herald Trumpets ... Everett Maxwell Pennsylvania Sketches ... William J. Schinstine I. Penn's Woods II. Indians Warlike & Peaceful III. The Winter at Valley Forge IV. Poor Richard V. Thirteen Stars in a Field of Blue Symphony No. 5 ... Dimitri Shostakovich IV. Finale Theme Song Victor Alessandro, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Letter Received From Dr. Matzke (Continued from page 1) have a little college training, and only seven natives in the whole country out of 14,000,000 have a college degree. All of this means trouble." He added that the Communists "are extremely active." At the beginning of his letter, Dr. Matzke described living conditions at the Institute: "I assure you we are not living in a mud hut, but all the natives do. They are scattered all over the countryside. I understand this is the most densely populated area in the Kongo, and I believe it after watching the daily parades past our house. The last previous word from Dr. Matzke was received by Irwin L. Baird, acting chairman of the KU anatomy department. Prof. Baird received a letter from Prof. Matzke postmarked June 25, five days before the former Belgian colony received its independence, which touched off riots leading to the deaths of many Europeans in the country. "We are presently in the dry season and have had only one shower. As a result it is rather dusty. It is usually cloudy and chilly. We need a sweater or jacket except when the sun is out. Being at 6200 feet is the reason for the pleasant temperatures." High blood pressure affects more than twice as many women as men in the United States. Churchill-Niki Visit A Possibility There was speculation that Onassis's yacht Christiana might proceed to the Black Sea so that Churchill could get together with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev there. VENICE, Italy—(UPI)—Millionaire Greek shipbuilder Aristotle Onassis cruised the Adriatic Sea yesterday with Sir Winston Churchill, Lady Churchill, and ballerina dame Margot Fonteyn and her husband. El Paso, Texas, is the only border city with three international bridges and four international border crossings within its city limits. Thirteen Begin New Studies at Medical Center Thirteen students have begun studies in medical technology this summer at the School of Medicine in Kansas City, Frances Hiatt, registrar, has announced. The 12-month program is offered students who have attended the University or Kansas State University, Manhattan, for three years or who have previously earned a degree from another college or university. Students completing the course will receive certificates of medical technology in addition to the degree bachelor of science in medical technology or a certificate only if they have previously earned the degree bachelor of science. Students enrolled are: Patricia Linn Easton, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Nelson Kavisic, Mission; Jenelle Charlotte Snuffer, Kansas City, Mo., and Janet L. Morgan, Kansas City, Mo., candidates for certificates and the degree bachelor of science from the University. Dorothy Kay Gardner, Louisburg, and Patricia Ryan, Manhattan, candidates for certificates and the degree bachelor of science from Kansas State University. Mary Winona Carter, Topeka; Shirley Olive Miller, Garden City and Earleta Louise Paschall, Independence, Mo., who have previously earned the degree bachelor of arts and now may be eligible for the degree bachelor of science and certificates from KU. Carin Lee Slentz, Lawis, graduate of K-State; Shirley Elnora Megli, Cawker City, graduate of Sterling College, Sterling, Kas.; Sylvia Louise Bays, Arkansas City, graduate of Wichita University; and Daniel Eugene Pipino, Niles, Ohio, graduate of Youngstown, candidates for certificates only. A Case in Point PORTSMOUTH, N.H.—(UPI) A store official of the J. J. Newberry Co. interrupted a company class to announce that the store had been broken into and some $2,000 dollars worth of goods taken. The course was entitled: "Perils of Shoplifting." Diamonds! We are now specializing in Diamonds and fine custom-made jewelry. Premier Jewelry 916 Mass. You'll love the quick service, low prices and quality-controlled food at DIXON'S Farmers Eye Good Year THE DRIVE-IN at 2500 W. 6th TOPEKA—(UPI)—Another good year for Kansas farmers, with wheat production leading the way, has been forecast by the State Crop and Livestock reporting service. Shaded picnic tables, too! The agency said the average yield of 25 bushels of wheat per harvested acre this year ranks as the second highest on record, topped only by the 1958 yield of 28 bushels. The U. S. Department of Agriculture has estimated the 1960 wheat crop at 251,650,000 bushels, the fifth highest on record. It is 20 per cent higher than the 1959 figure and 43 per cent greater than the 1949-1958 average. "Weather during June was ideal for filling wheat heads as indicated by the record test weight," the service said. The 62.5 average weight per bushel-was a record, although State and federal statisticians credited June weather with expanding the wheat picture. protein content so far has been below average. The agency said combining is virtually finished in southern Kansas, past the peak in central areas and well underway in the north. Showers in northern counties, however, have slowed harvesting during the past week. One blight on the Kansas crop picture is in oats production, expected to be the smallest crop in 80 years. The crop will be harvested from the smallest acreage since 1877, the service reported. Kansas farmers planted 5,180,000 acres of sorghum, the same as last year, but about a tenth above average. Moisture conditions were reported now favorable for the crop. Corn plantings at 2,052,000 acres were up 2 per cent from last year, but 8 per cent below average. Current prospects indicate a sharply above average production, but not quite equal to last year's crop. CLEARANCE SALE SWIM SUITS 1/2 price Catalina — Sea Fashions ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED terri LAWRENCE, S KANSAS VI 3-2241 803 Mass. 60 YEARS of "music America loves best" Special 2 LP's for $3.98 From Caruso To Belafonte BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest n bes vir- ansas, s and how- ever, g the KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU crop exin 80 rested since acres year. Curarply not Tuesday, July 19, 1960 48th Year, No.10 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 80,000 is last averre re crop. ROSSI AND GUYTON IN THE ART EXHIBITION ART FOR ALL—Mary Rudloff, a Music and Art camper from St. Louis; Judy Seirer, a visitor on campus from Lucas, and Loretta Nauman, Natoma senior, view the latest exhibit of work by art students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. A new display appears in the South Lounge of the Kansas Union each Saturday. Article Reviews Legal Reversal Time was in Kansas law when it may have cost a negligent businessman less if someone died from injuries suffered on his property than if the injured person lived. But no longer. The little-known story behind a dramatic reversal of judicial opinion concerning liabilities of Kansas property owners is told by Ronald K. Badger, Kansas City third year law student, in the June issue of "Kansas Business Review," published by the KU Center for Research in Business. The reversal, which broke with more than 80 years of Kansas legal precedent, was handed down by the Kansas Supreme Court in 1959 in a case which Badger cites as "Prowant v. Kings-X, Inc." Grounds for the case originated in 1955 when Prowant walked into a Kansas restaurant, took a seat, and fell to the floor when the counter stool on which he was sitting suddenly collapsed. Two concepts dating from English law produced these diverse Kansas alternatives. As Badger describes them, "Under the concept of wrongful death, damages are allowed for the victim's death; under the survival (concept), damages are allowed for expenses, pain, and suffering, incurred during the course of the victim's injury." For a year and a half, Prowant suffered from the injury and in late 1956 he died as a result of the accident. Kansas law at that time allowed Prowant's widow to sue the restaurant owner for a maximum of $25,-000. But, writes Badger, "If Mr. Prowant had not died, the law would not have limited recovery for the injury to $25,000 but would have awarded the amount of damages incurred." kansas enacted a survival statute allowing unlimited damages, as (Continued on page 8) Alaska and Hawaii Featured in Films "The New Alaska" and "Hawaii—The Island State" will be the featured films in the regular film series at 3:30 Wednesday afternoon in Bailey Hall. The film on Alaska shows how the National Forests of Alaska, through timber, water, recreation and wildlife and the multiple use management of the resources, contribute to the expanding economy of the 49th state. The second film is a study of the Hawaiian people and their life in the 50th state. For the period today through Saturday temperatures will average near normal northwest slightly below normal northeast, central and southwest and 4 to 8 degrees below normal southeast. Normal highs 91 to 94, normal lows 61 northwest to 70 southeast. Weather MOSCOW —(UPI)— The Soviet Tass news agency has announced that the trial of American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers will begin Aug.17. Powers Trial Starts Aug.17 Powers, 31, of Albany, Ga., was shot down by a Soviet rocket on May 1 near Sverdlovsk while making what the Russians called a spy flight from Pakistan to Norway. Tass said the case would be "an open court session" of the military college of the nation's supreme court. Powers was charged officially with espionage a week ago. The decision to try him was made by the military college of the supreme court, Tass said. The charge carries a maximum sentence of death and a minimum of seven years imprisonment. Women Again Top Grade Point List If the women go to college to catch husbands, they also find time to capture some good grades in the pursuit, according to the University of Kansas report of grade point averages for 1959-60. Women led men in scholarship ability at KU. The grade point average for women was 1.60 compared to 1.32 for men. The grade point scale is 3 for A, 2 for B and 1 for C. Male students at KU might salvage their pride by pointing out there are many more men than women at the University, making it more difficult for the men to maintain a high over-all average. The all-University average was 1.41, exactly the same as the preceding year. The men's average stayed the same, also, and the women's average dropped only .01. Straight down the list of 62 organized living groups, the averages are almost identical with those of the preceding year, although several houses switched places in the race for grades. Highest averages by categories were for the scholarship halls—1.99 for the women, 1.74 for the men. The all-soriority average was 1.72, compared to 1.37 for the all-fraternity average. Women's residence halls averaged 1.35, compared to 1.07 for men's residence halls. In only one of these categories did the highest male group do better than their female counterparts. Beta Theta Pl, the highest social fraternity with 1.99, was slightly above the highest social sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, with 1.97. The two top houses in each category: National social sororities, Kappa Alpha Theta, 1.97, and Pi Beta Phi, 1.92; national social fraternities, Beta Theta Pi, 1.99, and Alpha Tau Omega, 1.72; women's scholarship halls, Douthart, 2.09, and Miller, 2.02; men's scholarship halls, Foster, 1.84, and Buttenfield, 1.81; women's residence halls, Grace Pearson, 1.64, and O'Leary, 1.52; men's residence halls, Carruth, 1.40, and J. R. Pearson, 1.09 Three Students Get Cherokee Awards One sophomore and two incoming freshmen at the University were announced today as recipients of Cherokee County alumni scholarships totaling $600. They are Emerson Tjair, a sophomore from Baxter Springs and freshmen William J. Robinson and John Deakins, both of Columbus. Regents to Reauest Increase Requests from general revenue for the year beginning a year from July 1 will be $32,406,390, compared with $28,895,583 for 1961, Brighton said. Capital improvements would add $755,050 to this figure. TOPEKA —(UPI)— The Kansas Board of Regents will ask the next legislature for a 12.2 per cent increase in appropriations from general revenue for the 1962 fiscal year, Executive Secretary Hubert A. Brighton has announced. Total 1962 fiscal year requests, including general fees and all operating funds would be $49,369,585, or an increase of 7.5 per cent over the 1961 budget of $45,902,185. This does not include buildings, auxiliary enterprises or capital improvements. An addition of 76 new positions will increase by $516,207 this year's figure over that of the 1961 fiscal year. Brighton explained that new positions are to be added at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University on the theory that a new instructor will be needed for each 17 new students. The Board forecast a total increase of 1,377 students during the 1962 fiscal year. Regents also will ask the legislature to approve an $895,312 allocation for a contributory retirement fund. The state's current retirement fund does not require the employees to contribute and is included in the 1962 budget request at $441,265, compared with $401,901 for the This must be continued, Brighton pointed out, for teachers already retired. The new fund would be based on 5 per cent matching contributions from the employee and the state. Merit raises would boost faculty pay at all colleges by an average of 5 per cent per faculty member and total net salaries for the 1962 fiscal year will be $36,022,281, under the regents, plan. This compares with the 1961 figure of $33,781,408, an increase of 6.6 per cent. The board shaved $812,562 off requests from the institutions and cut out all new projects or programs. Brighton said. Total operating budgets for the University of Kansas and Kansas State are the biggest items. The KU figure is $14,263,053, of which the legislature is to be asked to allocate $10,426,124. At Kansas State the total is $15,121,703, but requests from the general revenue are only $8,643,575. Twenty-four new faculty positions are to be added at KU and 21 at Kansas State, under the requested budget. ★★ Living Group Grade Marks GENERAL STANDINGS All University All Women All Men SOCIAL SORORITIES WOMEN'S SCHOLARSHIP HALLS Douhart Miller ALL WOMEN SCHOLARSHIP HALL Sellards Watkins ALL WOMEN ALL UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS Grace Pearson ALL WOMEN OLeary ALL UNIVERSITY GSP Freshman ALL WOMEN RESIDENCE HALL North GSP Upperclass Cotton SOCIAL FRATERNITIES Beta Theta Pi Alpha Tau Omega Sigma Chi Delta Upsilon Alpha Kappa Lambda Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Tau Theta Chi Lambda Chi Alpha ALL UNIVERSITY Kappa Sigma ALL FRATERNITY Triangle Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Phi Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Delta Tau Delta Alpha Epsilon Pi ALP MEN Pi Kappa Alpha Theta Chi Phi Kappa Psi Delta Chi Tau Kappa Epsilon Acacia Sigma Pi Phi Kappa Theta Delta Sigma Phi Sigma Nu Phi Kappa Sigma Alpha Phi Alpha Kappa Alpha Psi .64 .60 .52 .41 .37 .35 .28 .25 .20 Foster ... Battenfeld ... Jolliffe ... ALL MEN SCHOLARSHIP HALL Stephenson .. Pearson .. ALL UNIVERSITY .. ALL MEN .. MEN'S SCHOLARSHIP HALLS MEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS ALL UNIVERSITY Carruth ALL MEN J. R. Pearson ALL MEN RESIDENCE HALL Oread (Fall Only) Templin Lewis (Spring Only) 1.84 1.81 1.80 1.74 1.65 1.64 1.41 1.22 Close Friend of U.S. Elected in Japan TOKYO —(UPI)—The Japanese Parliament elected Hayato Ikeda, a leading economist who has a long record of close cooperation with the United States, as the new Prime Minister of Japan yesterday. He replaces Nobusuke Kishi forced to resign by a violent left-wing opposition against Japan's military ties with the United States. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1960 Religious Issue Brought Up Again By Lyle C. Wilson Sports Arena, Los Angeles—(UPI)—The Democratic Party has put the big tough question to the voters of this nation again—can a Roman Catholic be elected president? This question was posed last in 1928 with the nomination of Alfred E. Smith, New York Democrat, to oppose Herbert Hoover, Iowa-born Republican. Smith was a Roman Catholic. He Iost. There were other issues, but Al Smith's religion was an angry issue in the 1928 campaign. WHETHER SEN. JOHN F. Kennedy's religion will be an issue, hot or cool, in the 1960 presidential campaign remains to be seen. There is no doubt, however, that Kennedy's religion was an issue in the Democratic National Convention, mostly sub-surface, but it was there. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt raised it in her first anti-Kennedy broadside last week. Mrs. Roosevelt sought the nomination of Adlai E. Stevenson. In furthering that project, she warned the delegates that Kennedy's religion might cost him votes. Persistently reported from Pennsylvania during the long preconvention shuffling was this: that Gov. David L. Lawrence, a Catholic, believed his own religion had hurt him when he ran for governor and that Kennedy might be equally handicapped. Lawrence got aboard the Kennedy bandwagon despite these misgivings. His presence there helped Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson to raise the religious issue by indirection but, nevertheless, effectively. THE ISSUE OF religion thus enlivened at this convention is likely to survive into the presidential campaign. Also likely to survive are other issues with which big name Democrats badly bruised Kennedy before he became their nominee and when they were trying to stop him. The hammer blow most likely to sound throughout the campaign from the Republican hustings was struck by Harry S. Truman with his charge of a rigged convention and his direct question to the young man from Massachusetts: do you think you are ready for the country and that the country is ready for you? The Democrats have raised the issues on which the Republicans could base their campaign against the Democratic nominee. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Deride. 5 Scrawny animal. 10 Leave out. 14 Single. 15 Clean the black- board. 16 Ballerina Kaye. 17 Louise or Victoria. 18 Scandals of 1923: 2 words. 20 Lively. 22 Of the nose. 23 Extended a sub- scription. 24 General: Abbr. 25 Snarl; growl. 26 Caesar's war- ships. 31 Headlong. 33 Fragment. 34 Oriental name. 35 Heroic poem. 36 Noblemen. 37 Cloud. 38 Load. 39 Lew of Hollywood. 40 Japan's chief city. 41 Show-offs. 43 Consequently. 44 Small island. 45 Chanerons. 46 Quench. 51 City just north of Detroit. 52 Seed of a billion- dollar industry: 2 words. 54 Of the same kind. 54 Girl's name. 54 Reproach. 57 City near Carson City. 58 Designer of U.S. flag, 1818. 59 Star from Stock- holm. 60 River to North Sea. **DOWN** 1 Of the upper throat. 2 Namby-pamby. 3 Part of a leaven- ing agent;2 words. 4 Titanium and uranium. 5 English, Irish or Gordon. 6 Summary of principles. 7 Transvaal legisl- ature. 8 Horned viper. 9 Rural poems. 10 Audrey Hepburn 11 Satellite. 12 Marie Wilson role. 13 Chinese weight. 19 At that point. 21 On vacation. 26 Spare — 17 C. G. S. units. 28 Harmless creatures, feeders on mice and rats: 2 words. 29 Vanity case. 30 City in Denmark. 31 Basil. 32 "Me-too" fellow. 33 Fish. 35 Canines: 2 words. 37 Limit. 39 Nimble. 40 At that time. 42 Secured with a fishing spear. 43 Set to work: 2 words. 45 Dizzy and Daffy. 46 Actress MacMahon. 47 Hernando or Pablo. 48 Isolated rock. 49 General trend. 50 Moroccan coast district. 51 Feudal benefices. 51 Lamb's lament. 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 | | | | 40 | | | | Theater Troubled The production of "The World of Sholom Aleichem" here calls attention to something that is happening in the American theater, something which this reviewer dislikes intensely. It is the adaptation of material never intended for the stage while promising young playwrights go begging. In a theater audience, I have spent an evening with Dylan Thomas and I will spend an evening with Mark Twain. I have glimpsed the world of Carl Sandburg and the world of Sholom Aleichem. I have seen and heard a stirring rendition of Stephen Vincent Benet's "John Brown's Body," complete with a banked chorus that produced sound effects reminiscent of radio. I have sat through the Broadway adaptation of "Compulsion" through all the 40 some scenes required to tell the story of Loeb and Leopold in dramatic terms, producing an episodic highpoint beyond Bertold Brecht's most involved sagas. These have been entertaining evenings, sometimes highly gratifying evenings, but why are adaptations such as these steadily encroaching on the domain of original playwrights? Does this trend betray a poverty of talent in the American theater comparable to the poverty of Hollywood, where the mainstay has always been adaptations? These may be the answers to my first question: The hard commercialism of Broadway, which prefers the tried and true (whether plays or not), the fragmentation in entertainment caused by the impact of television, and the widespread aversion of the American public to reading itself. Someone might try reading poetry again—quietly, to himself—or reading Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward, Angel" and "Of Time and the River." Someone should say, it seems to me, that the world of Sholom Aleichem was his short stories, not the theater, and the world of Carl Sandburg is his poetry, not the theater. Someone should question whether a string of short stories or the witticisms of Mark Twain should crowd legitimate plays off the stage. To distort and stretch and pull and squeeze other material into some kind of dramatic unity, which is seldom achieved, seems to me incredible when 5,000 plays are written in this country every year. Some of them must be worthy of production. Some of them should have the chance to be among the magic circle of 35 or so which reach Broadway each year. New talent must constantly be encouraged. Otherwise, Tennessee Williams and Arthur Miller and William Inge may be the last of the American playwrights.J.K. OTIS AIR FORCE BASE, Mass. —(UPI)—A large sign gives this warning in yellow and black letters to personnel leaving this base: "You are now approaching the most dangerous place on earth—a public highway." Short Ones --- SACO, Me.—(UPI)—A little girl tossed a bottle containing an appeal for foreign pen pals into the ocean here. Some weeks later she received a reply. The finder lives in Ocean Park Beach, three miles away. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room ... Phone 711 Editors ... Dick Crocker Clarke Keys BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office Phone 376 Business Manager Clydene Brown the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism FAMOUS AMERICAN PLAYS OF THE 1930s, edited and with an introduction by Harold Clurman. Dell Laurel Books, 75 cents. If these five plays selected by critic-director Harold Clurman are representative of the 1930s, one must conclude that in American drama of the thirties there was a central mood, a theme. Such a conclusion would not be far wrong. The 1930s were a time of depression, of economic and governmental unrest, of a driving toward world war. The playwrights, unquestionably disturbed by the times in which they lived, were seeking meanings and identifications. In all five of Clurman's choices one finds these themes, attuned to the 1930s. All five hold up well, and one or two of them may still make great sense 50 years from now. THE PLAYS ARE William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life," Robert E. Sherwood's "Idiot's Delight." John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men." Clifford Odets' "Awake and Sing" and S. N. Behrman's "End of Summer." Here is a range from the proletarian protest of Odets to the high comedy of Behrman. All five seems to be saying, in Saroyanish words, "Man is an exalted being. He can, if he tries, make a better world for himself." All five suggest how such a better world can be made. Start with "Awake and Sing." Odets places his Jewish family in New York in early depression. There is revolt among the young and the old, complacency among the middle-aged. The young are not satisfied with the world in which they live; the old are egging them on. Odets sends his heroine off into an extramarital affair, but that is her escape from the drudgery and dullness of a life of conformity. BEHRMAN'S "END OF SUMMER" finds revolt among the wealthy and high-placed. His young malcontents are students at Amherst, one of them a daughter of the idle rich. His people can spend a lovely, placid summer at a beautiful home in Maine, but all the while they are there they are talking about the negative aspects of their life. Sherwood's "Idiot's Delight" places his one-time American vaudeville hoofers in a European country on the eve of war. They are smart and glib—almost like the Sherwood lovers of "Reunion in Vienna"—but when the world comes crashing around them, as Fascist bombs wreck their civilization, they are protesting, and singing "Onward, Christian Soldiers" as they go to their doom. Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" is in the proletariat tradition. His George and Lennie are bindlestiffs following the wheat harvest through the Midwest. They too are dreaming of a better world—a little home and farm of their own, where they can work the soil and raise their rabbits. Their dream is shattered, but it has been a dream worth having. And Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life" places a set of oddly assorted characters in a San Francisco waterfront saloon (almost, Clurman suggests, as a foreshadowing of the beatniks of 1960). Whether Saroyan is telling an allegory is not important, for once again there is a group of individuals who want a better life, and who in the hands of the always optimistic Saroyan are going to get one. ELMER GANTRY, by Sinclair Lewis, Dell Laurel Books, 50 cents. "Sinners! Elmer Gantry is coming!" read the ads for the new motion picture. Dell Books can be absolved of trying to find a sales link with the film. No mention of the movie appears on the cover. But the film is sure to help sell the 33-year-old book. "Elmer Gantry" is a caricature. This may be one of the things that Sinclair Lewis purportedly told Richard Brooks, producer of the film, years ago. Lewis had learned this himself, with the help of the critics in 1927. ELMER IS A monster. Compare him with the other major heroes of Sinclair Lewis. George Babbitt was a slob but a good-natured slob. If he did harm he never did it overtly. Martin Arrow-smith was a good man who only temporarily yielded to commerce. Sam Dodsworth was a booster who had very decent instincts. Elmer Gantry is a stinker. And he knows it. He is the worst of all possible ministers. He has small-town boosterism in his makeup, along with a shallow mind, an itch for every curvaceous choir singer in the congregation, an instinct for popular tastes, a hypocritical desire to crusade and censor. He starts as a drunken bum, a football star in a Kansas Baptist college. He becomes a Baptist minister, seduces the daughter of a deacon, sells farm implements for a year or so, and then becomes associated with Sharon Falconer (Aimee Semple?), a beautiful evangelist who is a sex-mad mystic. Gantry goes from bed to bed in his progress toward success in the ministry. HE RETURNS TO more orthodox preaching, though he retains the techniques of evangelism, and becomes a Methodist preacher. He succeeds to one of the largest churches in Zenith (where Babbitt also lives, of course). At the end of the book, after nearly losing his position because of playing-around with his secretary, he is headed for an important church in New York. This is the book for which Lewis did research in the Kansas city, the book that caused him to make his celebrated request of God to strike him down. It's the book that churchmen have reviled for 30 years, and that churchmen now are criticizing once again in its film version. Sinclair Lewis never learned restraint. Had he ended "Elmer Gantry" midway, before Gantry became a vile Babbitt in minister's clothes, he might have succeeded. The book still is vastly entertaining, a book that makes one wish that Lewis and Mencken were still about, to play hob with some of the charlatans—especially those in politically high places—that abound in America today. Page.3 Kansas Supreme Court Race to Be Different Kansans will cast their votes for justices of the supreme court on a separate, non-partisan ballot this year, the Governmental Research Center here reports. Prior to this election, justices of the state supreme court were elected in a partisan contest between candidates selected by the parties in the August primary. Justices were elected for six year terms, and the terms were staggered so that two or three of the seven justices were up for re-election in each election year. In 1958, however, the voters of Kansas approved an amendment to the State Constitution providing for the non-partisan selection of supreme court justices. If an incumbent justice wishes to remain in office, he still must submit himself to the voters for their approval. However, under the new system his name will appear on a separate non-partisan ballot and will be the only name listed for this position. The voters must then vote for or against retaining the incumbent in office rather than chosing between two or more candidates as in the past. If the vote on retaining the justice is favorable, he is re-elected to a new six year term. An unfavorable vote would result in the office being declared open, and the incumbent would then be replaced by a successor chosen by the governor. The governor must choose his appointee from a list of three names recommended to him by a non-partisan supreme court nominating commission. This new justice must then be approved by the voters in the next general election if he is to appointment would also be used to remain in office. This procedure of fill vacancies on the court resulting from death or resignation. Thus under this new system, justices of the Kansas supreme court will be selected on a non-partisan basis and yet still be subject to the approval or disapproval of the voters of the State. This system combines the advantages of enabling the governor to select justices on the basis of their experience and merit and still reserves to the people the right to pass upon the desirability of keeping them in office. Judge Jay Parker, on the Court since 1943 and Chief Justice since 1957, has announced for re-election as has Justice Clair Robb, a member of the Court since 1955. As noted above, neither of these gentlemen will be opposed on the November ballot. Rather, the voters shall vote only on the question of retaining the two incumbents. Aerial Photos Spot Even Tennis Balls WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States can take aerial intelligence photographs that can spot tennis bails nearly 500 miles away, according to Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis). Wiley, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, described what he called the "encouraging" intelligence photo advance in a newsletter to constituents. "Taken from a point about 100 miles north of Boston," he said, "one set of aerial pictures reveals minute details of the Naval Base at Norfolk, Va., nearly 500 miles away. "So accurate are the photographic details that tennis balls on the courts of the Norfolk Officer's Club are easily distinguishable!" Americans spend twice as much money for recreation, alcoholic beverages and tobacco as they do for medical care. Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks 1310 W. 6th VI 3-9* Guards Needed At Lansing Pen The State Personnel Division has announced a speeded up examination process to recruit guards for employment at the State Penitentiary at Lansing. The Pentitentiary has nearly 15 vacancies which must be filled soon to bring the custodial force up to authorized strength. To permit filling as many vacancies as possible early in August, the Personnel Division is offering the first 50 persons whose applications are accepted the opportunity to come to Topeka for a special examination on Friday, July 29 or Saturday, July 30. Persons who apply too late for the July examination, or who cannot come to Topeka for the test, will be tested the latter part of August in several cities over the state. Men who pass the August examination will have an opportunity to fill any of the present vacancies remaining unfilled at that time, or vacancies that occur during the next few months in Lansing or at the State Reformatory at Hutchinson. The starting salary will be $267 a month and applicants must be 21 years old and not have reached their 55th birthday. Examination announcements and application forms may be secured from the State Personnel Division, 801 Harrison Street, Topeka. Try the Kansan Want Ads Summer Session Kansan Campus BARBER SHOP Open All Summer Just North of Student Union What's the secret to feeling "fresh as a daisy" in the heat of July? Easy Answer . . . letting ACME keep your summer clothes fresh, cool and comfortable . . done the way YOU like them. Tuesday, July 19, 1960 ACME 1109 MASS BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-5155 Pravda Charges Rocky With Lies LONDON — (UPI) — The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda accused New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday of telling nothing but "Lies, lies, lies." Beatnik Platform Calls For Artists' Subsidies Pravda, in a commentary relayed by Radio Moscow, said Rockefeller told "lies by the megaton" while addressing a New York Young Republican Club meeting last Tuesday. NEW YORK—(UPI) The weeklong convention of the Beat Party opened here yesterday to approve a platform calling for the abolition of the working class and a $10 billion subsidy for artists. The platform approved in plenary session Sunday also advocates "making peace with everyone, since all beatmiks are cowards." GRANADA NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "THE FUGITIVE KIND" Marlon Brando and Joanne Woodward STARTS WEDNESDAY! Montgomery Clift and Lee Remick in "WILD RIVER" ✩ LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "PORTRAIT IN BLACK" and "ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW" STARTS WEDNESDAY! Walt Disney's "Shaggy Dog" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "A WOMAN LIKE SATAN" Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1960 IMPORTANT BUSINESS—“A boy of 10 is not very tall, but he casts a huge shadow on the school house wall.” So begins "Education is Everybody's Business," a new animated cartoon which describes the present and future problems of higher education. The film is available to civic, service and parent-teacher organizations for this fall from University Relations. There is no charge to these groups for this special 18-minute film. Young GOP to Be Life Of Chicago Convention CHICAGO—(UPI)—Don't be surprised if the same happy, enchanted faces show up in demonstrations for both Vice President Richard M. Nixon and New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller at the Republican National Convention next week. Young Republicans have marshaled an army of marchers to throw onto the floor of International Amphitheatre at any and every outburst of "I give you a great American..." oratory. Their captains say they won't play favorites. Not in this convention where candidates may be as scarce as Democrats and in this television age when hoopla helps glue dad to the den instead of lawn mower. "We'll have plenty of demonstrators for anybody who wants them," said Maurice Colburn, co-chairman of the Young Republicans Committee on Arrangements. "We're not going to try to force anybody to go cheer for anyone he doesn't want to cheer," he said. "But we'll have Young Republicans to coordinate the demonstration activities—see to it that the color and enthusiasm are put out front." Colburn estimated he would have a pool of more than 5,000 Young Republicans from which to draw manpower needs. They'll serve as guides on preconvention tours of the big stock-yards arena, greet VIPs, at O'Hare and Midway Airports, paint signs for candidates and state delegations, and generally supply the hi-jinks while their elders attend to more sedate matters. The Berwyn (Ill) Young Republican Club opened a "signshop" Friday in a vacant store in suburban Lyons and began production of signs and slogans. Edward Gottschlich, chairman of the sign committee, said the group already had orders for 18,000 signs, ranging from small placards on sticks up to 20-foot-long banners. "When we move the sign shop to the Amphitheatre later this week, we'll have up to 150 persons working at the job." Gottschlich said. Colburn outlined this array of "spontaneous" hoopla: - A water ski show in the Chicago River on Friday and a sports car parade through the Loop that night. - An antique car parade, with clown and hillbilly bands, to entertain State Street shopping crowds on Saturday. "We intended to have the vintage cars parade at night but found many of them didn't have lights to find their way home." - Arrival of a make-believe Abe Lincoln (Illinois State Rep. William G. Horsley) Saturday night after a daylong motorcade from Springfield, state capital and Lincoln's home. "Abe never made it to the 1860 convention at which he was nominated, you know, so we asked him to come to this one." - A huge parade Sunday with 20 marching bands, about 60 other units, YGOP floats, and 80 "Young Republican Lassies" decked out in red Scotch skirts and pom-noms. - A torchlight parade with at least 500 torches after the first evening convention session ends Monday night. - Holdup of a stagecoach or covered wagon in front of the Conrad Hilton Hotel, official convention headquarters, on busy Michigan Avenue. Colburn said "I think they'll be honest-to-goodness Indians" but definitely not the South Dakota Sioux who helped Democratic Rep. Quentin Burdick beat out a Republican for the Senate a couple of weeks ago. Officers Just Relaxing LONDON—(UPI)—Police sped to the Chelsea Branch of Coutts Bank after two "suspicious loiterers" were reported in the vicinity. The "suspicious loiterers" turned out to be bank security guards. I Get an Congo Lures Missionary easy-to-manage HAIR STYLE The Rev. Lamar Williamson said he "didn't like leaving when the chips were down." He vowed to return. PRINCETON, N.J.—(UPI) A-34 year-old Monticello, Ark., Presbyterian missionary recently evacuated from the strike-torn Congo, where he lived three years on the edge of tribal warfare, wants to go back. Williamson arrived here Saturday to rest at the home of his brother-in-law, Dr. Frank W. Bliss. He left the Congo last Wednesday. from the CAMPUS Beauty Shoppe His Kakinda post, where he had been since September, 1957, was located in an isolated rural area in Kasi province, 200 miles south of the provincial capital of Luluabourg. 12th & Ind. Williamson was a teacher of native pastors and also helped run a teacher training program which enrolled more than 100 Congolese. Williamson said his evacuation was a precautionary measure ordered by U.S. officials in the Congo. VI 3-3034 Second-Hand Bargains Available in Buttons "Two of our three stations were in danger," Williamson said, "but at no time did I feel endangered by either the current anti-white outbreak or the tribal warfare." LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—Anvone wanna buy an old Stevenson button? A Symington hat? A Johnson cane? JOHN Q. CUSTOMER No. For the amount TRUMPHIC THOMAS H. COLEMANY By Dick West If so, you can be put in touch with the right party. If you hang on to the stuff for a couple of hundred years or so, it may be worth as much as Confederate money. If not, you can always bequeath it to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. It's obvious that the market for second-hand campaign material isn't exactly booming at the moment, but if you're looking for bargains, this is the time to buy. your name imprinted FREE It doesn't cost one extra penny to have your name imprinted on all your checks when you have a convenient I got to thinking about the possibilities in the used button business as I was going around listening to the losing candidates try to cheer up their campaign workers. personal checking account. There is never any charge for deposits and ThriftiChecks cost only a few cents each. Open your low-cost ThriftiCheck personal checking account this week at . . . Nothing is more depressing than to be cheered up by a losing candidate. I doubt that even the British, faced with the loss of another colony, could put on such a display of stifterlipmanship. ThriftiCheck When I arrived at the Democratic Convention headquarters on the morning after, the Biltmore Hotel lobby, scene of so much frivolity earlier this week, had a wilted look. It looked the way your petunia plants look when you get back from a vacation. Douglas County STATE BANK 900 Mass. A few people were wandering around, eyes glazed and faces blank, as though in a state of shock. I didn't need a medical license to recognize the symptoms of mass hangoveritis. In view of what happened last Wednesday night, every politician on the premises had either a victory to celebrate or a sorrow to drown. And to tell the truth, I wasn't feeling 'too chipper myself. I was a bit startled, therefore, to hear the strains of Dixieland music pouring from the Symington headquarters. Thinking perhaps that they hadn't gotten the word yet, I went over to break the news. A Symingtonian at the door told me the information had indeed leaked out and that the campaign staff was having a party. Somehow, it made me think of the passengers on the Titanic. In the Johnson headquarters, the candidate himself was addressing his flock, making lame little jokes that drew limp little laughs. No Texan need go home with any regrets, he said. Somehow it made me think of the Alamo. That was before anybody knew Johnson would be the vice presidential nominee. A goodly portion of those spear-carriers who did so much to raise the decibel count at the convention hall had returned to the Stevenson headquarters to commune again with their candidate. They almost staged another demonstration as Stevenson, an old hand at this sort of thing, arrived to bestow his benediction. But somehow I couldn't bear to hear another swan song. So I ducked out. PUZZLE ANSWER G I B E S C R A G O M I T U N A L E R A S E N O R A L A K E T E A P O T D O M E A N I M A T E D R H I N A L R E N W E D G E N G N A R T R I R E M E S H A S T Y P I E C E I T O E P O S E A R L S B L U R R E D A Y R E S T O K I O B R A G G E R S T H U S A I T D U E N N A S S T I F L E F E R N D A L E C O F F E E B E A N A K I N A N N E T A U N T R E N O R E I D H A S S O Y S E R Diamonds! We are now specializing in Diamonds and fine custom-made jewelry. Premier Jewelry 916 Mass. MD's $ ^{*} $ say: "Your car needs T. L.C." (tender, loving care) And that's what it gets at FRITZ CO. . . expert,personalized car care. - Motor Doctors, of course CITIES △ SERVICE FRITZ CO. Downtown — Near Everything Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE With K United (Editor dispatch United 1943, whi- it, week, "somewhe in the $ ten by U Hewlett, II had regidor is now for the $ Spokane Honolul Somet- 8 (1943) Irish a brought Kenned Joseph pedo bc the Jan A we and pr PT boaters to an SOS carried native. Three Mate (C Mahon, a son in year-old lives. Their gan the kett Sra gara Is A Japa the lea- reedy and cut To In LISB gro com believe has mu other t He sa be succ of the ing new Prite months beria a digenon music His lat of Eur He s rhythm have natura jazz. E truest "The tom-to form" Pritc He ha blendin With Skill and Luck Page 5 Kennedy's Crew Saved (Editor's Note: The following is a dispatch exactly as it was carried on United Press wires in the fall of 1943, when censors finally approved it, weeks after it had been written "somewhere in New Georgia," deep in the South Pacific. It was written by UP war correspondent Frank Hewlett, who earlier in World War II had himself escaped from Corregidor aboard a PT boat. Hewlett is now Washington correspondent for the Salt Lake City Tribune; the Spokane Spokesman-Review and the Honolulu Bulletin.) United Press War Correspondent Somewhere in New Georgia, Aug. 8 (1943)—UPI)—The luck of the Irish and some first class skill brought lanky Lt. (J.G.) John F. Kennedy, son of former Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, and 10 of his torpedo boat mates from a brush with the Japanese and death today. By Frank Hewlett A week after they had been lost and practically given up, another PT boat went through hostile waters to rescue them in response to an SOS scrawled on a cocoanut and carried through enemy lines by a native. Summer Session Kansan Three men, including Machinist Mate (2nd Class) Patrick H. McMahon, 39, of Los Angeles, who has a son in the Navy, credited the 27-year-old Kennedy with saving their lives. Their extraordinary adventure began the night of Aug. 1, in Blankett Strait, just west of Kolombangara Island north of New Georgia. A Japanese destroyer bore down on the lead boat commanded by Kennedy and manned by a crew of 12 and cut it in two. "I'm certain that destroyer was making 40 knots," said Kennedy. "I summoned the crew to general quarters and then tried to get into position for a shot with the torpedoes. But we were too close." The crewmen were flung into the water. Some were painfully injured. The gasoline went up in flames. One section of the boat didn't burn. "We clung to the unburned bow of the boat for nearly 12 hours," Kennedy said. "And we left it only when it was just a foot above water." They had drifted near a Japanese held island that had a big garrison, but a sudden shift in the current saved them and they finally reached a tiny, unoccupied island. But they were still surrounded by Japanese. McMahon, who was badly burned, said Kennedy, a backstroke swimmer on the Harvard team before he graduated in 1940, towed him three miles. Kennedy particularly lauded the work of Gunnersmate Second Class Charles Harris, Boston, Mass., who he said was invaluable throughout the ordeal, and McMahon, who remained cheerful and never complained though badly burned on the face, hands and legs. Big, blond Ensign Leonard Thom. Sandusky, Ohio, and a former Ohio State football player, recalled how Kennedy swam three times out to Ferguson Passage in hopes of intercepting a PT boat on patrol. He said the distance was several miles. Ensign George "Barney" Ross said Kennedy not only helped the injured by towing them through the water to their first island, but also moved them again to another island after the cocoanut supply, their only source of food and water, became exhausted. It was on this latter island that they found friendly natives. There Kennedy scratched an appeal for aid on a cocoanut husk. A native carried it through the enemy lines to this base. Last night in a PT-boat under the command of Lt. Henry J. (Hank) Brantingham of Fayetteville, Ark., we went through rough water into Japanese-controlled waters to pick them up, Brantingham was a member of the famed squadron in the Philippines at the outbreak of the war which prompted the best seller book "They Were Expendable." There his boat evacuated Philippines President Emanuel Quezon. He is now back in the fray with his own squadron. Kennedy rowed out in a native canoe to meet us and guided our boat through a narrow reef to within a few hundred feet of the island. Rubber boats made two trips ashore and brought back the 10 other survivors, including the trio who needed hospitalization. The injured are in a hospital and Kennedy is now resting his weary, lanky body in his long vacant bunk which his mates never expected him to occupy again. Toms-Toms Go Classical In New Arrangements "The legitimate offspring of the tom-tom well might be a high art form related to Bach." He said in an interview that "the rhythms and drumbeats of Africa have long been accepted as the natural and undisputed father of jazz. But perhaps that is not their truest relationship. Pritchard has just spent seven months in West Africa, mainly Liberia and Senegal, working with indigenous music and establishing music programs in those countries. His latest venture is a concert tour of Europe. Pritchard is not merely theorizing. He has already composed music blending the tom-tom with the old He says that the jungle music can be successfully blended into many of the classics to give them an exciting new scope. LISBON—(UPI)—American Negro concert pianist Robert Pritchard believes that the African tom-tom has much more to offer musically other than basic jazz beats. masters and tested it on African audiences. Brake Adj. 98c Grease Job $1 Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. He said, "by wedding the tomtom to a high art form it is possible to retain all the exuberance and joyousness of jazz and yet produce music that can hold its own in a concert repertoire that includes such masterworks as Bach's Toccata, Mendelssohn's Variations Serieuses and Rachmaninoff's Prelude." Man Uses Children As Shield for Bullets BUFFALO, N. Y. — (UPI) — A 28-year-old man held more than a dozen police officers at bay early yesterday when he barricaded himself in his home with a shotgun and used his two small children as shields. The man finally gave up at the urging of his father, who was also in the house. The family was barricaded for more than an hour. The approximately 120 members of the Full Gospel Assembly burrowed into their shelters July 4 and have remained there since, devouring huge stores of food they took underground with them. They have indicated they had enough food and other stores to see them through at least 40 days underground. Total sales exceeded $160 million. About 80 per cent of towels sold were terry cloth, with the balance in assorted linens, blends and synthetics. NEW YORK—(UPI)—More than $32 million worth of towels and washclothes were sold through variety stores during 1959, the Variety Store Merchandiser, a trade publication, reports. It's a Dry Subject They are waiting either for a nuclear attack on the United States or word from the "Lord to tell us to come out." KU Barber Shop 1 1/2 blocks down 14th Street Hill BENSON, Ariz.—(UPI)—Members of a small religious sect started their third week cooped up in bomb shelters yesterday. VI 3-9760 August Date Set For Civil Service Examination announcements and application forms may be secured from the State Personnel Division, 801 Harrison Street, Topeka, or from Kansas State Employment Service offices. Religious Group Waits for Bomb We Deliver from 6-10 p.m. OPEN 4 p.m. - 12 p.m. — Sunday - Thursday 4 p.m. - 1 a.m. — Friday and Saturday Closed Tuesdays 411 $ \frac{1}{2} $ W. 14th The State Personnel Division also announces that applications are being accepted for Chemist I, Geologist II, Entomologist II, Public Health Dentist I, Veterinarian II, Radio Communications Engineer I, Agricultural Laboratory Technician I, Business Manager, Medical Technician I and II, and X-ray Technician. Kansas civil service examinations for Recreational Therapist I and II, Clerk III and IV, and Beauty Shop Inspector will be given in August in several cities throughout the state. Tuesday, July 19, 1960 PIZZA As You Like It The Pizza Hut 644 Mass. full coverage Your Want Ads Get Everytime when you run A Summer Session Kansan Want Ad Starting Thursday, July 21 diebolt's Annual SUMMER CLEARANCE $45-$55-$60 Dacron & Wool Suits --- Now $29.00 $19.95 Cotton Cord Suits ------------ Now $12.50 $32.50 Dacron Blend Wash Suits ---- Now $22.00 Madras Plaid Sport Coats 20% Off Summer Dress Slacks $6.95 Now $4.50 $8.95 Now $6.50 $10.95 Now $8.50 Cotton Ivy Leagues Now $3.00 $5.00 Sportshirts, ... Now $3.25 $4.00 & $4.25 Sportshirts ... Now $2.75 STRAW HATS — $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price ALTERATIONS NOT INCLUDED diebolt's 843 Mass. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1960 Foreign Student Enrollment Hits All-Time High More foreign students studied in the United States during the 1959-60 school year than ever before, according to an Institute of International Education report. The 48,486 foreign students in American college classrooms continue to represent the largest foreign student population in the world. On the other side of the exchange, the traffic of American students going abroad increased a significant 34 per cent to 13.651. The foreign students in the United States this year came from 141 countries and political areas and studied at 1,712 institutions of higher learning in every state, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Their favorite field of study, as in previous years, was engineering, and more than half of them were undergraduates. The largest number of foreign students (17,175) continued to come from the Far East and the second largest number (9,428) from Latin America. For the second consecutive year the rapidly developing Near and Middle East sent more students (7,110) here for study than did Europe (6,362). The number of self-supporting foreign students has been decreasing rapidly in recent years, but statistics on sources of financial support showed that again this year the single largest group of students-38.3 per cent-were studying on their own funds. Open Doors, IIE's annual statistical report on educational exchange, reported that 2,539 foreign faculty members affiliated with 278 U.S. colleges and universities during the school year. Girls Nation Mock Campaigning Begins WASHINGTON—(UPF)—The 17th annual Girls Nation mock political convention began meetings yesterday leading up to election of president, vice president and other national officers. The Girls Nation is sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary. The 98 high school seniors taking part were chosen earlier at Girls States in 47 states, the District of Columbia and the Canal Zone. Louisiana, Alaska and Hawaii did not participate. Kansan Want Ads Get Results It's No FISH STORY . . You always get top service and products at LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana FISHING Accents Troublesome Factor In First Art Camp Production By Jerry Knudson "They did very well for high school students..." This was the reaction I heard several times upon leaving the Friday night presentation of "The World of Sholom Aleichem" by the University Theatre and the theater division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. It is a condescending reaction which could be used as the standard for this review, but it will not be. Since director Jack Brooking selected a mature play for his high school cast, the performance will be judged by mature standards. I believe that participants in the summer theater program for high school students should be confronted with challenges, but not impossibilities. My scorecard for "The World of Sholom Aleichem" shows one impossibility, which was no fault of the cast, and many challenges successfully met. The impossibility was the director's decision to do the plays in Jewish accent. The discordant results marred them, whereas the problem could have been met forrightly with simple midwestern American accent. Otherwise, the high school cast rose to the challenges presented, except that voice projection might have been better. I found myself straining at times to hear the actors. "The World of Sholm Aleichem" includes three short plays—a farce, "A Tale of Chelm," based on a short story by Aleichem (Saul Rabinowitz); a delightful fantasy, "Bonthe Schweig," by Isaac Loeb Peretz, a contemporary of Aleichem, and "The High School," which calls to mind "I Remember Mama," although the former is far more powerful. Arnold Perl did the dramatic adaptations. The locale and time for all three plays was Russia around the turn of the century. The highlight of my evening was the humorous but painful "Bontche Schweig," a socially conscious fantasy placed in heaven. When a gentle Jewish outcast, played brilliantly by Cal Winter, reaches heaven, he is tried by an angelic police court. The verdict is not for Bontche but against mankind. IT'S SMART TO OWN AN ELECTRIC YARDLIGHT Modern homeowners appreciate the many plus extras they get with their electric yardlight. There's a photo-cell "electric eye" for dusk-to-dawn control; a handy convenience outlet plug on the post for appliances; even colored bulbs for special lighting effects. Be smart . . . buy the smart electric yardlight! Another commanding piece was "The High School." Richly spiced with humor, it traces the exodus of a Jewish family trying to find a school that will accept their son as a student. $3250 (plus Installa- tion). Convenient terms See The HANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY At one point, the son writes to his father that he would not be accepted anywhere, "not even if Spinoza took the examination and Rothschild saw the principal." The biting protest of these two plays, cushioned with laughter, might be a timely lesson for a Lawrence community troubled about a swimming pool. Space limits individual plaudits for acting, but I especially admired the competence of Mike Milroy as the bookseller who introduced the plays; Courtner King as the Defending Angel of "Bontche Schweig," and John Nance as the father in "The High School." "A Tale of Chelm" — Alan Glines, Linda Lou Holt, David Haverty, Mary Godfrey, Gigi Gibson, Larry Ketchum, Darrell Lawrence, Byron Leonard, and Sarah Corliss. "Bontche Schweig" — Miss Gibson, Micki Adams, Miss Godfrey, Miss Corliss, Kittie Williams, Judy Lants, Millie Burnap, Haverty, Lawrence, and Ketchum. Others may find favorites in this listing of the other cast members; Settings by Bob Moberly, costumes by Carolyn Kriesel, and lighting by Lyn Kazmayer measured up to the high technical standards one expects in the Murphy Hall theater. "The High School" — Lucinda Hauser, Judy Hudson, Jeff Quinsey, Haverty Winter, Miss Corliss, Ketchum, Lawrence, Miss Gibson, and Leonard. The summer high school theater students also will present three full-length plays in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall this week. They are "The Bold Soprano." Thursday afternoon; "Medea," 7:30 p.m. Thursday, and "The Glass Menagerie," 7:30 p.m. Friday. Of the nation's families, 6.5 per cent have annual incomes ranging from $10,000 to $15,000. Credit Institute Meets This Week The Midwest Management Institute for credit bureau and collection service personnel is meeting here through Friday. The Institute curriculum is divided into four sections according to the number of years the members have attended. Those who complete the four-year course of study receive special recognition. First and second year classes are concerned with management and communications. Third and fourth year members are in an executive development program with lectures and workshops emphasizing management. Sponsors of the Institute are the Associated Credit Bureaus of the Midwest, Rocky Mountain States and of America, the Kansas State Board for Vocational Education and University Extension. The Institute began Sunday. Enjoy Hot Weather Salads at HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd It's July in Lawrence — but ignore it! Get that 'Aloha, Hawaii' feeling . . . live in gay, cool cottons . . . their up-keep is a breeze when you send them to LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners VI 3-3711 10th & New Hampshire THE FASHION IN HAWAII. APPROVED SAMITONE SERVICE FOR RENT suitable for rom Union TI 3-6696. booms for Union. Larger quiet house students on .6596. ROOM 2 room hou from Union Ohio. Clean two sleeping r Hawk's Nei-4168. 821 Bedroom ground. All water paid 1-8727. Two Room Apartment rance. Billooms line s drinkin no drinkin outh of c CLEAN-2 tovres and ances an windows ties paid ting. 520 C Three Bed Strictly m Newly dee month. Ca Nicely Furance and $55 per m michel nice lioned. Gauche Ph. FOR MEN rooms. She second. Su fall. Close. call VI TOWN MA Beautifully lioned, pair. Also. Air coni dir air. Ph. V First floor month,uti 3 blocks f TWO 3-F MENTS. R for either couples. C 'S Summer Session Kansau Page 7 Insti llection ag here is discording members complete study re- CLASSIFIED Tuesday, July 19. 1960 issues are intent and fourth executive lectures g man- FOR RENT are the of the states and Board and Unit be- RENT: Well furnished apartment suitable for 2, 3 or 4 students. $2 \frac{1}{2}$ blocks from Union. Reasonable rent. Please call T 3-6696. 8-2 kooms for fall semester 15 block from Union. Large singles and doubles in nice duet house. Upper classmen or graduate students only. Reasonable rates. Call: V-2 6696. I ROOM APARTMENT well furnished. 1 room house furnished, shower 2 blocks from Union. Phone VI 3-1909 - 1113 Philio. 7-29 Bedroom Modern Trailer, on private ground. Air conditioned. $60 per month. water paid. Couple only. Phone VI 7-8727. 7-26 Clean two room furn. apartment. Also sleeping rooms. See Mrs. Maxwell, fawk's Nest days or evenings call VI -4168, 821 Indiana after 3 p.m. 7-26 Two Room Modern Furnished Basement Apartment for young men. Outside en- rance. Bills paid. Also two large single rooms, one double. Free meals. Free Graduate students welcome. No drinking or smoking. See first house out of campus, 1616 Indiana. 7-26 CLEAN-2 furnished apartments. Good toives and refrigerators. Private entrances and bath rooms, large closets. 8 windows in basement apartment. Utilities paid. Man and wife only. No drinking. 520 Ohio. 7-29 Three Bedroom House, nicely furnished. Strictly modern, 2 car attached garage. Newly decorated. extra clean. $65 per month. Call VI 3-7830. 7-26 Nicely Furnished Apartment, private entrance and bath. Close to KU, extra clean. $55 per month. Bills paid. Also 3 bedroom nicely furnished apartment. With all conditioned. Garage. Near KU, for boys or couple. Phone VI 3-7830. 7-22 TOWN MANOR'S Penthouse Apartment; Beautifully furnished, TV, air conditioned, parking. No pets or small children. Also desirable room with TV, radio, air conditioned, breakfast nook snack bar. Ph. VI 3-8000. 7-19 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on summer sunrooms for fun at Closet to KU. See at 1416 Tennessee or call VI 3-9340 after 4 p.m. First floor furnished apartment. $60 month, utilities paid. Ideal for 3 students. 3 blocks from Union. VI 3-6294. tf TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available for either men, women...or married couples. Call SI 3-3438 at 3:39 p.m. t f. Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider ex- changing for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. TYPING Neat Accurate Prompt Typing. By ex- perienced typist. Satisfaction guaranteed. Standard rates. Phone VI 3-8239. tt Theses, Term Papers and reports. Typed fast, accurately. Call VI 3-0504. 7-29 TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term papers, etc. Phone VI 3-2955 between 4 and 6 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8660. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc. service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, VI 2-1648 — 408 W. 13th St. ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone VI 3-6791. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do theses, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8791. tf TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 biks). East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf TYPIST-General typing, term papers. TYPIST-Emergency calls. Cvf, Mrs. Emmel Lindeth, VI 3-5127. HOME for sale by owner. Save real estate fee. New three bedroom, ranch style home in Lake Worth corner lot. Low down payment Assume low interest loan. Call after 6. VI - 2-1683. FOR SALE PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742 NOTICE SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special services offered by the Library Illustrated. Both new and renewals Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. ff ADS WANTED Wanted: Part-time secretary-bookkeeper. 20-30 hours per week. See Dr. F. S. Rowland. Room 12. Malott Hall. 7-22 WANTED TO RENT. Nicely furnished home from home. 1, 1960 to June 1, 1961 response to home-owner on Doctorate resume. Cm. I 3-3077 p.m. Guy B. Homeman. 7-19 TRANSPORTATION Ride wanted from 6 blocks north of Hiway 10 on 47th St. K. C. K Classes 8-12:30. Will pay $650 a week. CO 2-7106. 7-19 Would like ride or, to join car pool from K C. Morning class. Call WE 1-8351. 7-24 MISCELLANEOUS RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY. Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice coid. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. tf WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING in my home. Will pick up and deliver. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-9159. 7-22 BUSINESS SERVICES DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tf GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton, instructor. Jayahawk Driving Range, Coach fast on 23rd Street. Phone vi 3-9725 SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE. Baby's diapers, clothes $10 daily by baby 65c. lb. Washed, dried, Pickup — delivery, Rugs cleaned. TI 3-8077. tf LOST POST SLIDE RULE: on campus. Lost about 2 weeks. Call John Bachtel—Room 335, Templin Hall. 7-22 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Get out of the heat! Take refuge in the OLD MISSION INN 1904 Mass. V1 3-9737 Serving Meals, Snacks and Beverages Save Steps Write Checks ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOTT INSURANCE CORPORA. FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. PICK UP A PAPERBACK! Choose some paperbacks from our huge selection . they're so handy and inexpensive. Ideal reading for spare moments or for an evening's relaxation. We carry all sorts of books, so you're sure to find one to suit your mood. Biographies Mysteries Philosophy Historical Novels Westerns Educational Types Best Sellers Classics Come, Browse through our Paperback Department. Kansas Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1960 One-Ballot Convention Seen 100 Years From Lincoln's Bid CHICAGO—(UPI)—One hundred years ago, the infant Republican Party held its second national convention in this city, and after three acrimonious ballots, nominated a lanky lawyer named Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. Next Monday, the Republicans will return to Chicago for their 27th convention. This time there will be harmony all over the place, and it will take just one ballot for them to nominate Richard M. Nixon to oppose Sen. John F. Kennedy in November. But there will be some discordant sounds from Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York when the Republicans offer their curtain-raiser in the form of Platform Committee hearings this week. Nixon has no major challenger for the nomination, although Rockefeller stands ready to challenge the Republican record as written by President Eisenhower's administration. Rockefeller is scheduled to appear before the Platform Committee today to fire another volley. He began firing six weeks ago when he published a manifesto, calling on Nixon to speak out on national issues and laying out an indictment of the Eisenhower administration. He followed up at the National Governors' Conference last month with an attack on the administration's defense program and its plan for medical care for the aged. He said $3.5 billion more a year should be spent on defense and that medical care for the aged should be financed by Social Security payroll taxes instead of federal-state subsidies proposed by the administration. Rockefeller, who retired as a candidate for the presidential nomination last December before he ever announced for it, also unloaded a 6,000-word memorandum last weekend detailing his ideas for the platform. Any platform fireworks ignited by Rockefeller would contrast with the peace and quiet with which the GOP has been writing its campaign documents at recent conventions. The Democrats could not believe they were holding a convention if they escaped a row over the platform. 17 Planes Lost In Red Attacks WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Communists have forced down 17 American planes with a loss of at least 91 lives in the past 10 years. The Defense Department has released this list of the Cold War incidents: April 8, 1950- Navy Privateer shot down in Baltic Sea. Ten crewmen missing. Nov. 6, 1931—Navy P2V downed by Soviet fighters off Vladivostok. Ten crewmen missing. Nov. 19, 1951-Air Force C-47 forced by Soviet fighters to land at Papa, Hungary. Crew members subsequently released. Oct. 7, 1952—Air Force RB-28 shot down by Soviet fighters off northern Japan near Nemuro. Eight crew members missing. March 10, 1953—Air Force F-84 shot down by communist MIG-15 near Sasselburg, Germany. Pilot returned uninjured. Jan. 18, 1953 - Navy P2V damaged by Red Chinese shore batteries off Swatow and crashed in the ocean. Six crew members missing, seven rescued. July 29, 1953-Air Force RB-50 downed by Soviet fighters over Sea of Japan. Sixteen crewmen missing, one crew member survived. Sept. 4, 1954—Navy P2V shot down by two MIG type planes with Soviet markings over open waters off Siberian coast. Nine crewmen missing, one rescued. Nov. 7, 1954—Air Force RB-29 flying routine mission near Hokkaido, Japan, shot down by two MIGs. One crew member killed, 10 injured. June 22, 1955—Navy P2V damaged by Soviet jet fighters and forced to crash land on St. Lawrence Island, Alaska. Aug. 19, 1955—Air Force unarmed T-6 training plane shot down by ground fire over demilitarized zone in Korea. One crewman killed, one injured and returned. March 6, 1958 - Air Force F-86 shot down by North Korean anti-aircraft fire over demilitarized zone. Pilot injured but returned. June 27, 1958 - Air Force C-118 that strayed across Soviet border of Armenia in bad weather forced by Soviet MIG fighters to crash land. Nine crew members, including one injured, returned. Aug. 22, 1956 - Navy PHM shot down by Red Chinese aircraft over open waters 32 miles east of Wencho. All 16 crew members missing Sept. 2, 1958-Air Force C-130 shot down by Soviet fighters near Turkish border. Bodies of six crew members returned, 11 others still missing. May 1, 1960-U-2 Reconnaissance plane shot down by reconnaissance far inside Russia. Pilot Francis Powers held by Russia for trial as svv. July 1, 1960—Air Force RB-47 reconnaissance bomber shot down by Soviet fighters over Barents Sea, north of Russia. Two crew members seized, four dead or missing. Campers to Present 3 Plays This Week Three plays will be presented Thursday and Friday in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall by high school students attending the theatre section of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The plays will be "The Bold Soprano." Thursday afternoon; "Medea," 7:30 p.m. Thursday, and "The Glass Menagerie" 7:30 p.m. Friday. Admission is free. Seating in the Experimental Theatre is limited to 80 persons. Personality Can Show Aptitude CHICAGO—(UPI)—The president of a large employment service says executive proficiency (E.P.) ratings as obtained from some personality tests show the traits necessary for filling a top administrative position. Lon D. Barton, president of Cadillac Associates, Inc., said that while he is opposed to formalized testing as practiced by most corporations, he approves of the "E.P rating." "Do you as a graduating senior have E.P.?" Barton asks of the college student. To find out, he said, answer the six questions he has devised to reveal E.P. traits; —Would subordinates be a source of danger to you in your job? -If you lost your job, would you be concerned about having 'to take one with less prestige and money?' -Is the geographie location of a new position a major consideration in your career thinkings? —If you were fired tomorrow, do you think you could locate a comparable job in less than 90 days? —Have you arrived at a theoretical goal in earnings and job responsibility? —Have you arrived, in your own mind, at the position you can best fill? "The elite corps of the nation's top executives would answer no to all six questions," Barton said. The first complete journey along the famous Sante Fe Trail was made by Pedro Vial in 1792. Macbeth to Ge African Setting Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs. Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals SALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia — (UPI) — Shakespeare has been played in many ways, but plans now being worked out for a performance of "Macbeth" at the African township of Harare, outside Salisbury, are unique. The plan is to play "Macbeth" against a purely African background, substituting Zulu tribal chiefs for the Scottish kings and leaders of the original. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER "The incredible similarity between the blood-and-thunder of the Scotish chieftains and African warriors such as Shaka Zulu and Lobengula is something that I can't get out of my mind," the director said. "The clan wars and the intertribal wars are almost exactly parallel." he said. "What I am proposing to do is to use Africans for the cast, dress them in animal skins like Shaka's warriors—after all Scots wore skins at the time of Macbeth—and use a colorful decor. GREAT BEND - The rate of student demands on loan funds has increased more than 20 times as rapidly in the past decade as the increase in enrollment, about 75 persons attending a regional conference on alumni support of the University of Kansas have learned. Drivers under the age of 25 make up less than 14 per cent of the driving population, but were involved in nearly 29 per cent of fatal accidents in the nation during 1959, according to the National Automobile Club. Loan Demands Show Increase Maurice E. Barker, executive secretary of the Greater University Fund, told the KU alumni that "the patterns of family and college finances have changed so that the only limit to the need for student loans is the availability of funds. "If $100,000 were unexpectedly to be made available today for loans to KU students, it would be committed before October 1. It must be remembered that this hypothetical $100,000 would enable many satisfactory students to attend KU who otherwise will not make it, and many of them will be unable to attend any other college either." Barker said the same problems of student finance exist at nearly every college. Dean C. Arden Miller of the School of Medicine told the KU alumni workers of the significance private support plays in upgrading public institutions. In the discussions attended by KU alumni from 12 counties, it was noted that last year 3,600 loans totaling $700,000 were made to KU students, with all funds coming to the University through alumni gifts. In a different but important area, 90 percent of the land of the Mount Oread campus was made available to the state through private support rather than tax money purchase. Try the Kansan Want Ads Law Change Is Reviewed (Continued from page 1) warranted, so long as the injured person lives—In 1858, and a wrongful death statute in 1868. Then in 1877 the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that injured persons or their survivors could file only one cause of action, either survival or wrongful death. By ruling that the two statutes were mutually exclusive, the Kansas Supreme Court set a precedent which meant that survivors could not seek unlimited damages if the injured family breadwinner died. They were limited to the $25,000 maximum damages allowed by the Kansas wrongful death statute. The 1877 ruling was challenged many times before the reversal in 1959. Attornies for Mrs. Prowant challenged the ruling again by filing suit for $50,000 damages after her husband's death in addition to the $25,- 000 permitted for wrongful death. The Kansas Supreme Court finally decided in 1959 that Mrs. Prowant should recover the total of $75,000, and in so doing changed a Kansas law that had existed for 82 years. TEXCO Prepare your car for the sun with a Wash & Wax BOB HARRELL TEXACO SERVICE & Miss. VI 3-4 TEXACO SERVICE 9th & Miss. VI 3-9897 Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 CAMPUS HIDEAWAY Pizza 106 N. Park VI 3-9111 injured wrong- supreme sessions or only one ival or statutes the Kan- ceedent should not the ini- died. $25,000 by the rate. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN tchal- suit er hus- e$25, death. urt fin- Prow- total of angled a for 82 allenged persal in 3-9897 Friday, July 22, 1960 KU LAWRENCE, KANSAS 48th Year, No. 11 THE COPIES AND IT COMES OUT HERE—Wilson Morris, Lake Charles, two, and Dave Brown, Minneapolis, Minn., two students participating in the Research Apprenticeship program of the Midwestern Science Camp, discuss the workings of KU's Van de Graaff generator in Malott Hall. Morris has been using the generator in a study of the general characteristics and nature of subatomic particles with nuclei as a part of his special summer project. Research Apprenticeships Show Outstanding Prospects Russia has promised to outstrip the United States in the production of young scientists. But if the Iron Curtain nation succeeds, it will have gone a long way — at least in quality — for it appears that it will take a supreme effort to best the quality of American youth if the KU Science and Mathematics Camp Apprenticeship Program is any indication. This summer 25 outstanding graduates of last summer's regular science camp program were invited back for this research participation program. They could work in any particular area of science out of the 20 fields offered in the camp. Field House Precinct Set Students wishing to vote an instate absentee ballot in the Aug. 2 primary elections in Kansas may get the ballots at any polling precinct in Lawrence. The program was scheduled for just three weeks. But most of the participants got so engrossed in their subjects that they will stay on campus through the end of the 5-week Music and Art Camp — since facilities must be maintained for those youngsters anyway. However, Delbert Mathia, Douglascounty Clerk, suggests that studentsvote at Allen Field House, since that polling place is specificallydesigned for KU students and votersshould be able to avoid the congestionat other precincts. Mathia says that since only the state candidates will be listed on the in-state absentee ballots, students should first ascertain the names of candidates in local primaries in their area in order that they can write in the persons of their choice. Recital, Formal On Camp Schedule For the most part, the students work on original projects. Two special events are on tap for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp this weekend. An advanced student recital will be presented at 7:30 tonight in the Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Campers will hold their annual formal dance at 8 Saturday night in the Kansas Union. Robert T. Hersh, assistant professor of biochemistry, will begin a five-year study of molecular morphology this summer with a $66,450 senior research fellowship. KU Awarded Large Grant The purpose of the fellowship is to fcster additional research in the preclinical science departments of schools of medicine, dentistry and public health through investigators in these areas, during the period between completion of their post doctoral research training and their eligibility for permanent higher academic appointments. Prof. Hersh will conduct his research in the area of molecular morphology, especially as applied to macromolecules in living cells and the changes they undergo during aging and disease. He is currently conducting research under a NIH grant on the "Comparative Physical Biochemistry of Microsomes." The grant is being awarded the KU department of biochemistry by the National Institutes of Health. He will remain with the biochemistry department in Lawrence until 1962 and then will move with it to the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. As an example, take the case of Dave Brown, who graduated from high school in Minneapolis, Mnn.. this spring and will enter Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore this fall. Brown's project involves taking an embryo directly from a mother (in this case a mouse) and transplanting it to a synthetic environment to see if development will occur without a mother. Brown admits he got the idea after reading Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" in which life was created in a test tube from inert matter. The youngster previously has been working with tissue transplantation at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Brown's project is the rule, rather than the exception, in this advanced science project. Like the other apprentices, he works directly under University faculty members, in his case Byron S. Wenger, associate professor of anatomy, and James L. Hall, assistant professor of anatomy. His background emphasizes the level of development attained by students in the research participation program. In 1958 Brown's tissue transplantation project won first place in the National Science Fair at Flint, Mich., earned a citation and personal appearance before the American Medical Association, and won him a Westinghouse science scholarship at Johns Hopkins. The apprenticeship program at KU is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and other grants. The entire Science Camp was under the direction of George W. Baxter, associate professor of botany. Weather (Continued on page 4) Temperatures today through Monday will average slightly above seasonal normals with warm at the beginning of the period turning cooler by weekend. Normal highs lower 90s. Normal lows 61 northwest to 70 southeast. Clinic Set to Draw Top Music Artists The second annual Midwestern Music Clinic opens next Thursday at the University with visiting specialists of national and international reputation on hand to help refresh the skills of area high school music teachers. The four-day clinic coincides with the final days of the six week Midwestern Music and Art Camp, a summer program designed for talented high school students. Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director of the music and art camp, also serves as director of the clinic, which is sponsored by the KU School of Fine Arts and the music and art camp. The clinic consists of rehearsals and reading sessions with band, orchestra, and chorus, and forums on musical problems and individual instruments. Guest conductors will include Lucien Cailliet, former professor of music at the University of Southern California and conductor with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, clinic and music and art camp band; Lloyd Pfautsch of Southern Methodist University, clinic and music and art camp chorus, and Henri Ternianka, co-founder and leader of the Paganini Quartet, music and art camp orchestra. Other visiting experts and their specialties will be; Benar Heifetz, Albenieri Trio, violoncello; Fred Wilkins, Radio City Music Hall orchestra, flute; Dave Weber, former soloist with the New York Philharmonic, clarinet; Fred Hemke, prize pupil of Marcel Mulé, saxophone. Byron Autry, trumpet: Louis Stout, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, French horn; Allen Ostrander, New York Philharmonic, trombone: William Bell, New York Philharmonic, low brass and tuba, and Bill Hall, New Orleans Symphony Orchestra, percussion. KU faculty members participating are Wiley, professor of band, Clayton H. Krebblel, associate professor of music education and choral music, and Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education. Highlights of events for the public: Midwestern Music and Art Camp ballet recital, 8 p.m. Thursday, Hoch Auditorium, admission $1.00; artist recital, Summer Concert Course series (Benar Heifetz, violoncello, and Henri Temianka, violin), 8 p.m. Friday, Murphy Hall, admission $1.50; joint concert of Music Camp Orchestra and Supervisors' Clinic Chorus, 3:30 p.m. Sunday, University Theatre, Murphy Hall, and a final concert of the Music Camp Band and Chorus with guest soloists, 8 p.m. Sunday, outdoor theater. No admission charge for the final two events. Gilstrap Joins AFROTC Staff Major Jack Gilstrap has joined the staff of the Air Force ROTC unit here as replacement for Capt. Donald L. Hunter, who has completed a 3-year assignment and will soon report to Otis AFB at Cape Cod, Mass., for duty in the Airborne Early Warning service. Major Gilstrap, a native of Ardmore, Okla., has been adjoint of the Air Force Recruiting Service for the New York region, which also includes New England and New Jersey. He holds the B.A. degree from Long Island University, the B.S. degree from the University of Maryland, diplomas from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces and the Air Command and Staff School, and has attended the Foreign Service Institute of the State Department. He has served in the Air Force and Army Air Corps for 18 years. Peace Officer School Slated About 75 law enforcement officers from Kansas and surrounding areas are expected to attend the fourteenth annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School at the University of Kansas next week. The program is being sponsored by the Governmental Research Center, the Kansas Peace Officers Assn. and University Extension. A minimum of 41 hours of instruction will be offered in each of four courses: basic course for peace officers, police science, basic course in traffic and a special three-day course for correctional officers. Officers will receive training in the collection and evaluation of evidence, ballistics, firearms, fingerprinting, techniques of accident, burglary, homicide and suicide investigation and in other related areas. Members of the planning committee in charge of the training school are Ethan P. Allen, director, Governmental Research Center at KU; Kenneth E. Beasley, assistant director, Governmental Research Center; G. D. Chappell, Douglas County sheriff; Ei Dalhin, assistant chief of police, Kansas City, Mo. James H. Gameson, Lt. Colonel, police department, Kansas City, Mo; Mitchell Geisler, chief of police, Garden City; John Hazelet, chief of police, Lawrence; Delbert Helmer, Coffey County sheriff; Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science; Edward Lloyd, assistant superintendent, Kansas State Reformatory, Hutchinson. H. H. Longsdorf, assistant director, University Extension; James T. McDonald, senior analyst, Governmental Research Center; Eugene Pond, chief of police, Wichita; H. R. Salmans Sr., chief of police, Salina; Logan Sanford, director, Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Harvey Schemedemann, superin- tendent, Kansas Highway Patrol; Ralph Smith, chief of police, Liberal; Lynn Thomas, sheriff, Johnson County and B. M. Wolf, chief of police, Liberal. Fraternity Rush Dates Announced The Interraternity Council of the University of Kansas will conduct its fall rushing and pledging period September 7-10 with no major changes of procedures from recent years. Ben C. Langel, Salina junior, co-rush chairman, said there would be registration during the afternoon and evening of September 7. The IFC will hold an evening party then and most of the fraternities will conduct traditional "train dates" in or near Lawrence. Actual rushing will be the three days September 8-10. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22, 1960 Halt Crashing of Chairs As was suggested several weeks ago, the 23rd Annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp musical units — along with other camp organizations have developed admirably. Last Sunday the groups performed some difficult material in a range from capable to excellent. Thus it is a shame that the atmosphere surrounding the evening band concerts in the outdoor theater area east of Hoch Auditorium has several unpleasant factors. PERHAPS THE LISTENING public — which enjoys the programs to a great degree — needs to be reminded that the concerts begin at 8 p.m., not at 8:10 or 8:15. The lack of courtesy shown the young musicians last Sunday bordered on the disgraceful. It is bad enough that there are latecomers to a musical production, although there probably will be latecomers as long as there are productions. But the crime is compounded at KU by the fact that wooden folding chairs are provided for the latecomers and the chairs were being literally crashed open as late as midway through the third number last Sunday night. Furthermore, the chairs were handed out even though the permanent seating was less than half full. This, of course, brings up another problem — that of the permanent seating itself. In blunt terms, the seating is highly dangerous. And if the University escapes these last two weeks without a spectator suffering a severe accident, it can consider itself fortunate. Footboards, particularly, have no support and the unsuspecting may suddenly find themselves plunging down between the rows of seats. Generally, the board springs back up (another disconcerning experience) but one of these times it is going to break instead. THE MUSIC AND Art Camp directors hope for a permanent outdoor theater in a different location before too long, and such an addition would be a credit to the University. But until that comes along sometime in the future, the Kansan respectfully suggests that immediate attention be given to the bleachers currently in place and that buildings and grounds department crew members be instructed not to hand out those wooden folding chairs after the start of the evening program. Play Serves Purpose Editor: ... Letters ... I was disturbed by the way in which the review of the recent high school theatre production at the University was written. After reading the article carefully several times, I am still uncertain of just exactly what Mr. Knudson's main point is. I gather that his main criteria for the review of this show stems from whether he enjoyed the production and from comments gleaned from members of the audience. If these two criteria were Mr. Knudson's standards, then I feel his review has been unfair to him and the participants of the high school production. Of course, I understand fully that this review is Mr. Knudson's opinions, but I am not sure upon what bias he bases his opinions. I wish that he would have done some deeper research concerning some of the statements Crossword Puzzle that he made. In the first place, Mr. Knudson might have found that the director was in Europe when the selection of the high school show was made. The selection of the play was made by a committee of theatre faculty members, as all of the University Theatre's main-bill shows are. ACROSS 1 Shrink. 7 Throw. 11 Angora. 14 Consonant such as "m." 15 "Rio..." 16 Spaniard's "bravo." 17 Tasso drama. 18 University: Abbr. 19 Connective word. 20 Go paddling 21 Naval units; 2 words. 24 Layers. 25 Strawberry: Fr. 27 Zane and Lady Jane. 30 Adjective for Aida. 32 Dutch measure. 33 Dull gray. 35 Orator's "there-fore." 38 Escape reality. 40 Lachrymatory stuff: 2 words. 42 Right-thinking. 43 Mock. 45 One of the Curies. 46 Put money in bank. 46 Picardy's crop. 50 Atmospheric disturbances. 52 Crocheter's stitch. 54 Tennyson's "Call me early, —" : 2 words. 56 Former U. S. President. 60 American bird. 61 Bearing. 62 Saudi — 64 Japanese money. 64 Queen D'Artaignan served. 63 Least. 67 Dress (with "out"). 68 Lack. 69 Scorches. DOWN 1 Forked end of a hammer. 2 Vishnu's incarnation. 3 Common word in "Bartlett's Quotations." 4 High mark on a test. 5 Gangster's weapon. 6 Inspirit. 7 Packed into a bundle (with "up"). 8 Porter's sound. 9 Starched. Mr. Knudson stated that "The World of Sholom Alechem" is a "mature" play and that the performance is judged by "mature standards." Certainly, I am glad of this. However, he seems to imply that he fully expected to see an immature play and judged it accordingly. 10 Relishes. 11 Gallic caretakers. 12 Medicinal plants. 13 Pithy. 12 Amusement park features. 13 Gauger. 13 Ely or Wight. 17 Spaces. 18 __ avis. 19 Working editor-wise. 31 Girl's name. 34 Thyroid or pituitary. 36 Handed over. 37 Suffixes in chemistry. 39 Incisors. 41 Of flying. 44 Matured. 47 Simple Simon's vis-vis. 49 Metropolis WSW of Montreal. 50 Sting. 51 Role in "Pagliacci." 53 A manual art. 53 sand tract, in Britain. 57 Lincoln and others. 58 Index mark, in printing. 59 Makes knotted lace. 63 Old-time car. 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 | | | | | Without wanting to become too embroiled in the philosophy of educational theatre, I should like to point out that a mature play, one which presents challenges to the participants in the form of theatrical educational experiences, and which can be adequately met, is greatly desired in educational theatre no matter who is doing the show, high school students or university students. Therefore, I feel that a mature play which presents challenges and experiences should be expected to be the rule, rather than the exception. The high school theatre students are at the University of Kansas primarily to learn and to improve their theatrical proficiencies and not to merely please the personal whims of audience members. In my opinion, "The World of Sholom Aleichem" served its primary purpose well and the required Jewish accents added an additional healthy challenge to its participants. Whether these challenges were met satisfactorily, again, is the review's own opinion. I feel that they were. I should not like this letter to be misconducted to mean that I feel reviews from theatre critics should mention only strengths of the productions. I do not. I do think, however, that any review of any play, mature or immature, while based upon personal opinion, should reflect thoughts also based upon accurate information deep thinking, supported statements, good taste, and good writing. It is my hope that the high school students who participated in this production of "The World of Sholom Aleichem" feel that this learning experience was quite valuable to them as theatre students, and that Mr. Knudson will next time spend more time and thought in forming his opinions, as a reviewer. D. Michael Blasingame Gardner Graduate Student SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT News Room Phone 711 Editors Dice Crocker Clark Kess the took world BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office ... Phone 376 Business Manager ... Clyde Brown By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism THE DON FLOWS HOME TO THE SEA, by Mikhail Sholokhov, Signet, 75 cents. Most Americans interested in literature became conscious of the late Boris Pasternak when "Doctor Zhivago" appeared in 1958. The book, as the statement of a man fighting for individual dignity in a collectivized society, naturally attracted readers because it was deemed anti-Communist. But Pasternak has not been alone among Russian novelists of the 20th century. In the Khrushchev party that toured America in 1959 there came Mikhail Sholokhov. He is the author of two vast books about the Cossacks, "And Quiet Flows the Don" and "The Don Flows Home to the Sea." They have the sweep and excitement and historical feeling that mark "War and Peace." ONE MUST READ both books, which Sholokhov envisions as one work, "The Silent Don." Characters, plot and setting move coherently and logically from the earlier work to the latter. Sholokhov tells in these books, which appeared in 1934 and 1940, respectively, the story of pre-war Russia, the days of World War I, the 1917 revolution, and the counter-revolution and war between Reds and Whites that followed. The story is told chiefly through one Cossack family, the Meilekhovs. Gusty, vigorous, profane, superstitious, earthy, eating their cabbage soup, beating and loving their women, drinking their vodka, swinging their sabres, riding their horses, these born soldiers roar across the stepspe and through the Don country in epic fashion. Sholokhov's central character is Gregor, a true son of his part-Turk father. Gregor is savage, fiery and brooding. Wedded to Natalia, who in the earlier book tries to commit suicide because her husband has deserted her, his passion is for Aksinia, wife of another Cossack. Like Pasternak's Zhivago, Gregor cherishes his identity, his freedom, and at the end of the novel he has left the White army and ostensibly awaits arrest and imprisonment or execution by the Reds. SHOLOKHOV IS NO propagandist for communism. His Cossack heroes are true heroes. There are villains among them, but it is obvious that Sholokhov regards Mishka Koshevoi, a Cossack turned Red, as the No.1 villain. (This romantic reader, in fact, was most dissatisfied in the fact that Mishka did not meet his deserved fate at the hands of Gregor.) Though not books of ideology, the Don novels do contain germs of philosophy that have meaning for us today. A Cossack warrior observes, in words that have frightening reality in this world of U-2 and Sputnik, "In this war the idea's the main thing. The one who wins is the one who knows what he's fighting for and believes in his cause. That's a truth as old as the world itself, and it's no use your trying to put it forward as a discovery of your own." Sholokhov, like Pasternak, has a magnificent feeling for the earth, for nature. Passages illustrating this feeling can be selected almost at random. One of the better ones demonstrates the feeling of man in a lovely world being torn apart by war: "ON THE STEPPE stealing in a flood of green to the very edge of the orchards, and in the tangle of wild flax around the borders of the ancient threshing-floor, he could hear the incessant quiet rattle of struggling quails; marmots were whistling, bumblebees were humming, the grass was rustling beneath the wind's caresses, the skylarks were singing in the spurting light of the sunset, and, to confirm the grandeur of man's place in nature, somewhere a long way off in the valley a machine-gun stuttered insistently, angrily, and hollowly." CARNIVAL CROSSROADS, by W. G. Rogers and Mildred Weston. Doubleday, $3.50. "Carnival Crossroads"—and this is a prediction—will be on the left-over sale counters of many bookstores in a few months. We Americans are Americana-crazy, but we like a little more substance. The folks who put together this book are man and wife—man and wife infatuated with both the physical existence and the symbolism of Times Square, their "carnival crossroads." AMAZING WHAT sells these days. One would guess that much good writing goes begging because agents can't be paid or publishers can't be interested. But name-dropping trivia like this gets on the Doubleday list and probably is due for a slight push this summer season. TIMES SQUARE "is a hugely formless eruption, a growth, a kind of civic spasm, and how feverish, seething, and high strung! It is busy like an anthill, but busy aimlessly, madly, with a ceaseless scurrying for the sake of being on the go, for keeping company with others on the go, others never unwound, a perpetual-motion crowd." The Roger's Times Square (the book is amusingly illustrated by Soglow) goes back to the explorer Verrazano. It takes in Peter Minuit and the purchase of Manhattan island for $24. It includes Admiral Howe and General Clinton, Washington Irving and Diedrich Knickerbocker, Walt Whitman, the Crystal Palace, Oscar Hammerstein I (who made the place, really, they say), Adolph Ochs and daughter Iphigene Bertha, who laid the cornerstone for the Times building, Kirk Douglas and Tony Curtis, Frank Sinatra and Alan Freed, George White, neon signs, ogling tourists, the fabulous Rector's, Gentleman Jim Corbett, George M. Cohan, Lillian Russell, Stanford White and Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, Arnold Rothstein the gambler, Father Duffy and the Fighting 69th, shoeshine boys and chestnut and ice cream vendors. S THE STORY IS put together in conglomerate manner, and in about the form suggested above. The story of Times Square still needs to be told. Sunday Concerts AFTERNOON Page 3 3:30 p.m. Part I University Theatre Chorus Requiem ... Brahms V. Ye now are Sorrowful Soloist: Miriam Stewart Hamilton Mass in G ... Schubert Kyrie Gloria Credo Sanctus et Benedictus Agnus Dei Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Part II Orchestra Orchestra Symphony No. 7 in C Major ... Schubert First movement: andante and allegro non troppo The Gypsy Baron, overture ... Strauss Gerald M. Carney, Conducting Ballet-Divertissement from 'Henry VIII' ... Saint-Saens I. Introduction and Entry of the Clans II. Gigue and Finale Symphony No. 2 in B Minor ... Borodine Third movement, andante Fourth movement, allegro Polynesian Suite for Orchestra ... Dai-Keong Lee I. Ori-Tahitian (Tahitian Dance) II. Hula III. Festival Guy Fraser Harrison, Conducting EVENING Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Outdoor Theatre Part I Band Jubilee Concert March ... George Kenny William Tell Overture ... G. Rossin Bugler's Holiday, Trumpet Trio ... LeRoy Anderson Richard Scott, Alvin Lowrey, and Robert Brooks Concertino for Percussion and Band ... Clifton Williams Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Part II Chorus The Last Words of David ... Thompson He's Gone Away ... arr. Clokey Soon ah will be done ... Dawson Gossip Gossip ... Arr. Hairston Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Part III Water Music Suite ... Handel Allegro Air Allegro deciso Legend ... Dvorak Suite Miniature ... Benjamin Dunford March Minuet Air Jig French Military March from 'Algerian Suite' ... Saint-Saens Guy Fraser Harrison Conducting Theme Song Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Tab Faces Charge Of Harming Dog GLENDALE, Calif.—(UPI)—Actor Tab Hunter has been ordered to appear in municipal court within the next two weeks to face a charge of mistreating his pet dog. "This is ridiculous," said the young actor. "I've been around dogs and horses all my life and have always treated them with kindness and affection. These charges against me are totally without foundation. Deputy City Attorney Don Hagler said he issued the charge after four of Hunter's neighbors signed a complaint against the actor. Rent A TRAILER! Local or One-Way Hatchell Trailers U.S. Highway 40 & 59 735 N.2nd,N. Lawrence VI 3-1175 LONDON-(UPI)-Sponsors of a fall municipal engineers' convention which will discuss "the problem of car parking" were perplexed when they announced a site change for the meeting. Parkers Can't Park The new convention site has almost no parking space. The federal government spends $2.3 billion a year to improve roads and highways. 2 Juniors Get $500 Awards Two juniors in the School of Engineering have been awarded Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation scholarships of $500 each, Dean John S. McNown has announced. Both will enter their junior years in electrical engineering at KU this fall. They are Leon Phillip Carr, Salina, and John J. McCormick, Kansas City, Mo. Carr held a scholarship hal- award his first two years at KU. His grade-point average is 2.38. He was graduated from Southeast High School in Kansas City, Mo., in 1958, and he has worked as a surveyor for an engineering firm and at a Kansas City golf course. The Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation of Toledo, Ohio maintains the scholarships, open to juniors in mechanical, electrical, or chemical engineering. The scholarships are renewable for the senior year, and recipients are guaranteed summer employment at one of the Owens-Corning plants or laboratories. McCornick held a KU general scholarship of $206 last year. His grade-point average is 2.21. He was graduated from Bishop Hogan High School in Kansas City, Mo., in 1957, and he attended Kansas City Junior College before transferring to KU in the fall of 1959. He has worked as a grocery clerk, engineering technician and research technician. SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Somewhere along the airways between Hong Kong and San Francisco, $140,000 has vanished, according to a Pan American World Airways spokesman. "We suspect a mix-up of some sort rather than a theft," the spokesman said. But he said police had been notified. Big Money Bundle Missing on Flight The U.S. currency was wrapped in a 22-pound muslin-wrapped package in a green mesh sack. It was being shipped from the Dao Hang Bank of Hong Kong to Crocker-Anglo National Bank here. A second highly valuable shipment — a package of pearls — arrived safely on the same flight. The money was reported to have arrived at Honolulu safely, but was missing when the plane landed here. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 摄影师 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. Summer Session Kansan VI 3-0330 THE WORLD'S SMOOTHEST- RICHEST A TREAT FOR TASTE • A FOOD FOR HEALTH DAIRY QUEEN MALTS • SHAKES DAIRY QUEEN Friday. July 22. 1960 DAIRY QUEEN MILK GROUND WATER COLONIAL TEA 100% NATURAL VEGAN FOODS BEVERAGES AND DESSERTS CITY OF LONDON MADE IN ENGLAND MADE BY ALEXANDER SMITH DAIRY QUEEN COFFEE MILK CHEESE SINCE 1986 1835 Massachusetts NEW YORK—(UPI)—What is a shoo-in? As of next week, it probably will be Richard M. Nixon, according to the political experts. For the Republican Presidential nomination, that is. See You Later, Alligator In a While, Crocodile Amid all the yackety-yak and hoopty-do in Chicago next week, there probably will be a good deal of yawp about fixing and rigging in Los Angeles, but the experts will tell you the GOP nomination is cut and dried. Most Americans will recognize all the slang here except "yawp." It's right here in the new slang dictionary. "Shoo-in: Any probable winner of a sporting event or contest of any kind; one favored or expected to win easily; a winner." In 1835 in America, to yawp was to talk loudly. The word was obsolete by 1910, the year "23 skiddoo" began hitting the skids as a fad expression. Those are the two definitions of "fixed" in the just-published "Dictionary of American Slang" (Thomas Y. Crowell Co.), a rich and racy collection of more than 20,000 examples of slang, including "bones" (dice) with which Chaucer slanged it up in 1386, and "beat it" (go away, scram) which was used by Shakespeare. Former President Truman may be interested to know that on the same page where "fixed" is defined there also occurs a term that leaped to prominence during his last administration, "five percenter." When Harry S. Truman said he didn't like a fixed convention, meaning the Democratic one in Los Angeles, he probably didn't mean it would have "a result predetermined by bribery" but rather that it was "unfair." Americans have been going the whole hog since 1830, getting a wiggle on since 1900, letting George do it since at least 1920, and not knowing from nothing since the 1930's. Some of them have been getting tight as a tick (drum, lord, owl, goat, mink, brassiere, ten-day drunk etc.) since the 1920's. And, starting in 1824, they've been knowing people since they were knee-high to a mosquito, frog, bumble-bee, toad, spliter, grasshopper, hoptoad, toadfrog, or duck. The mosquito usage is the oldest, but the learned dictionary adds; "knee-high to a grasshopper" is now the most common." And while we're in the K's, you might consider the remarkable sectional use of "kiss-off" in advertising, movie, television, and radio circles. In New York, "The California kiss-off" or the "Hollywood kiss" means notice, without warning, of dismissal from a job. Try the Kansan Want Ads KU Barber Shop 1 1/2 blocks down 14th Street Hill 4111/2 W. 14th YOUNG CAPEZIOS ARE BIG WHEELS Black Kid Red Kid Dip shell pump with pivot heel. Wear it only with everything you own. $14.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. V1 3-4255 Page 4 Summer Session Kansas Friday, July 22. 1960 Matzke Family Safe In Uganda Town The wife and two children of a University of Kansas professor of anatomy doing research in the revolt-torn Republic of Congo have been evacuated to safety in Uganda, it was learned in Lawrence Wednesday. Mrs. Howard A. Matzke and the children, Judith, 15, and Charles, 11, are staying at the Imperial Hotel in Kampala, Uganda. Prof. Matzke was expected to join them in a few days. A letter dated July 16 from Mrs. Matzke to Harold Scheve, cashier at the Douglas County State Bank in Lawrence, contained the information. Mrs. Matzke and the children 'Ham' Operator Fails in Effort The news that the family of Howard Matzke, professor of anatomy at the University, was safe in Uganda this week likely will give a KU student a bit more time to study in summer school. Since reading of the concern expressed over the welfare of the Matzke family several weeks ago, Ron Blackburn, Lawrence junior, has been attempting to make contact with amateur radio enthusiast friends in the Congo region. But despite spending up to four hours a day in attempting to make contact with stations he earlier this year had talked with, Blackburn's efforts, much like that of the U.S. State Department, proved fruitless. "I tried to make contact with some friends of mine there." Blackburn said, "But there's been no one 'on' since the start of the uprising. I haven't even had my normal contact with operators in South Africa for about two weeks." Blackburn's last contact with operators in the Congo region came before summer school began. "I hadn't tried to talk with them since then until I read about Dr. Matzke," he explained. Blackburn estimated that there are as many as 300 amateur operators in the vicinity of Lwiro, the town in the remote mountainous area of the Congo where Dr. Matzke was working. He has received letters from some of them following radio contacts. $250 Award Goes To Larned Soph The Pawnee County alumni scholarship to the University has been reviewed for Robert Dean Berryman of Larned. A sophomore this fall, Berryman also held the $250 award during his freshman year at KU. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Berryman. Berryman is majoring in mechanical engineering. There is a need for 5.800 additional physical therapists in America. were flown to Uganda by a chartered plane evacuating women and children from the area around Bukavu, a town 25 miles from Lwiro where Dr. Matzke was conducting research on the central nervous system of mammals at the Institute for Scientific Research in Central Africa. "Things have happened so fast here that we can hardly believe it ourselves." Mrs. Matzke wrote. Mrs. Matzke and the children were evacuated with the wife and two children of a U.S. Army captain who also was doing research at the Institute. Capt. Donald Price and Dr. Matze are bringing the scientific instruments from the Institute to Uganda in a truck owned by Price, the letter stated. They were scheduled to leave the Institute on Monday or Tuesday, July 18 or 19, "at the latest." Mrs. Matzek expected them to complete the overland trip in four or five days, arriving at Kampala, Uganda, today. "We both are very disappointed that our work at the Institute had to be stopped," Mrs. Matzke wrote, but she expressed hope that the research might be continued at Makerere College in Kampala. Otherwise, she said the family will probably fly back to the United States soon after Dr. Matzke arrives in Kampala. The Congo situation became "too close for comfort," Mrs. Matzke wrote. "When all the Europeans were told to leave the Institute, we thought it was time to leave, too." Conditions for research became "impossible," she added. "The natives were frightened and no animals were being collected." When Mrs. Matzke and the children reached Bukavu, 25 miles from the Institute, to begin their evacuation flight, she found the town deserted. More than 1,000 people had left, she wrote. No men were being evacuated at that time. Food was getting short at the Institute because Bukavu had been the source of supply, Mrs. Matzke wrote. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe of the University of Kansas requested a diplomatic check by the State Department about the well-being of the Matzke family on July 11, but Dean C. Arden Miller of the KU School of Medicine learned that the State Department could not get information into or out of rural areas of the Congo. Apparently, the evacuation of the women and children from the Institute was accomplished through the efforts of the men working there. Kansan Want Ads Get Results READING (Continued from page 1) Other students who participated in the program (most of them are still working on campus) included: Research Work On High Plane DIXON'S the most enjoyable place to eat in Lawrence. The three films to be shown in the regular series at 7:30 Friday night just east of Robinson Gymnasium will be "The River of No Return," "The High Road" and "One Road." Dear Sir, I'm sure you'll find Alvin Moody, Whitewater, anthropology; Gordon Patterson, Clifton Hill, Mo., and Thom McGivern, Highland Park, Ill., biochemistry; Ann Ruppenthal, McPherson, and Curtis Robinson, Kansas City, botany; Dan Heldman, House Springs, Mo.; Patricia Sue Zogleman, Norwich; Jim Donaldson, Derby; Karen Lynn Stevenson, Wichita, and Russell Brown, Wichita, chemistry; (Continued from page 1) Rivers, Roads Top Weekly Film Series Kay Rankin, Richards-Gebaur AFB, Mo., entomology; Michael Winn, Kansas City; Wilson Morris, Lake Charles, La., and Sharon Sutton, Eldon, mo.; physics; Bill Berg, Muster, Ind.; Gene DeFelice, Levitown, N. Y., and Lorraine Raiske, Idaho Falls, Idaho, psychology: John Springer, Raytown, Mo., radiation biophysics; Bob Miner, Great Bend, zoology; Keith Parater, Olathe, geology; David Byer, Hamlin and Roland Tindle, Wichita, bacteriology; and Frank Shobe, Great Bend, and Dick Brusch, Munster, Ind., mathematics. DIXON'S THE DRIVE-IN at 2500 W. 6th Fast Food Service Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks 1310 W. 6th VI 3-9757 Campus BARBER SHOP Second Walker Scholarship Given OPEN ALL SUMMER Just North of Student Union Paul Edwin Holt of Caney has been named the second P. F. Walker Memorial scholar in engineering at the University, Dean John S. McNown announced yesterday. Holt will enter the KU School of Engineering as a freshman this fall. He will receive $400 from the scholarship, established by the late Mrs. Charlotte Walker in memory of her husband, Perley F. Walker, who was dean of the KU School of Engineering and Architecture from 1913 to 1927. The nine-member group led by 26-year-old Spencer Apollonio of Rockport, Me., leaves here tomorrow aboard the Canadian icebreaker D'Ilerville for Devon Island in the Arctic on the first lap of the expedition which will continue through 1962. PUZZLE ANSWER MONTREAL — (UPI)—A Maine biologist prepared today to lead scientists from Canada, the United States and Britain into the far north on a rugged research mission aimed at speeding economic development of one of the world's last frontiers—Canada's frozen northlands. Arctic Trip Plans Ready C R I N G E T O S S C A T L A B I A L R I T A O L E A M I N T A U N I V N O R W A D E T A S K F O R C E S T I E R S F R A I S E G R E Y S C E L E S T E A A M L E A D E E R G O P R E T E N D T E A R G A S S A N E D E R I D E E V E D E P O S I T R O S E S S T A T I C P I C O T M O T H E R D E A R T A F T A N I M I E N A R A B I A R I N A N N E F E W E S T T O G N E E D T O A S T S The scientists will be joined by retired U.S. Marine Major Vernon (Buck) Boyd of Siteamboat, Nev., a veteran explorer who toured the Antarctic with the late Adm. Richard E. Byrd. They are the vanguard of an expedition sponsored by the Arctic Institute of North America, a private research organization supported by Canadian and U.S. industries, foundations and colleges. Three per cent of American families have an annual income of $500 or less. "Wife-Approved" MOVING PACKING STORAGE 100 ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE VI 3-0380 Authorized Agents for WIDE APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING DO YOU DO YOU HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? 1 Time 50c If you have a car and want riders, or if you're looking for a ride, put an ad in the Kansan classifieds, and get fast results! 2 Times 75c SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 4 Times $1 Lati F BUE Presid does t ment, about cently Europ VI 3-2700—Ext. 376 His Buenc Europ To of Fr Belgii embou messa Fron at first nation tina's Either nomic suppose to sh grain produce not o ery 1 to do On mean tow aich Unite of nu It sensi Latin American Report Friday, July 22, 1960 Summer Session Kansam Page 5 Frondizi Warns Europe Not to Cut Imports BUENOS AIRES —(UPI)— Since President Arturo Frondizi seldom does things on the spur of the moment, there was nothing impulsive about the plain talk to which he recently treated the capitals of Europe. His speeches were written in Buenos Aires before he left on his European tour. Frondizi went to Europe to judge at first hand the impact of the six nation Common Market on Argentina's farm exports. To the Common Market nations of France, Italy, West Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg, he delivered this blunt message: Either support Argentina and the other Latin American nations economically or risk the loss of their support politically; and, any move to shut out Argentina's meat, wheat, grains, wool, fruit, hides and other products will mean that Argentina not only will not buy their machinery but probably will not be able to do so. On the political front, it could mean that Argentina would lean toward the growing Afro-Asian bloc which threatens soon to control the United Nations by sheer strength of numbers. It also could mean that in such sensitive pocketbook areas as Fidel Castro's seizure of the British Shell Oil refinery in Cuba, Argentina would stay on the sidelines, merely watching. On the economic front, the Belgians at least, were quick to reassure Argentina that the last thing the Brussels government wanted was to lose its export market in Argentina. On the other side of the coin, Argentina, blessed as she is with 100 feet of topsoil in the Pampas and an excellent climate, still has a long way to go toward scientific farming. The British who eat most of Argentina's exported chilled beef, still manage to raise one-third of their needs in their tight little island. The British know how to get much more meat per animal. This situation largely is the inheritance of the pie-in-the-sky preachings to the peasants in the Peron decade; the lack of mechanization and the exodus of the farm laborer to the new industries in the cities. In Hamburg, the president had to listen to complaints from wheat importers that the quality of Argentina wheat had gone down through the years due to the ravages of fungus and insect pests. Finally, shippers complained that the chaotic situation in Argentine loading ports caused their vessels to lose valuable time. Since Peron, succeeding governments have made heroic efforts to remedy this state of affairs but Argentina still has a long way to go. An urgent need is that production costs be lowered. A year ago, the cost of living was rising 10 per cent per month. Today, it is rising at the rate of barely one per cent per month. Most prices seem to have stabilized although a few still are creeping upwards. Goods in the non-essential categories are showing a tendency to come down. One change being considered is installation of a quota system on telephone calls on the U.S. plan which gives subscribers the right to make a certain number of calls but requires extra payment for all calls over the quota. Argentina apparently is ready to make some drastic changes in its telephone system. Another plan calls for the introduction of the party line. In most Latin American countries, the heritage of Spanish individualism flares high and the idea of a subscriber sharing his line with someone else is like having an odd man in a family bathroom. However, Chile has four families on party lines while Argentina proposed to start with two. If you want your own phone that will be all right, of course, except that the bill will be exactly double. Argentina now has 450,000 unfilled applications for telephones. Some applicants have waited as long as seven years. Television fever: For seven years, Argentina had only one television station. It was Radio Belgrano-TV, which started with a brand new 20 K.W. U.S.-built transmitter and still has the best mobile equipment. Over the years, it trained hundreds of announcers, actors, ad-men, cameramen and technicians. Last month, the new Cadete station started and almost every person on the station pair tribute to Belgrano as their alma mater. Sometime this month, other interests are starting a third channel station, and on Aug. 1, Goar Mestre, exiled king of television in Havana, Cuba, hopes to go on the air with his 124 K.W. station from the roof of the 42-story Atlas Building. Some 10 channels have been allotted to interior cities, and Cordoba already is transmitting. Mar Del Plata will be ready this month and Rosario next month. Badgers live on plains and deserts but when in the water they can swim as far as half a mile from shore. 72 HOUR SERVICE Kodachrome and Ektachrome Film Kodachrome Kodachrome A 125-240 Processing by Kodak Kodak Kodak 1200D805 Kodak 1200D805 in Chicago MOSSER - WOLF 1107 Mass. THE Town Shop Annual Summer SALE! DOWNTOWN Suits Summer and Year-Round WERE NOW $20.00 $15.75 40.00 29.75 59.50 44.75 Sport Coats Natural Shoulder WERE NOW $22.50 $16.95 35.00 25.95 39.50 28.95 Slacks Summer Weight WERE NOW $ 9.95 $ 7.95 12.95 10.25 16.95 13.55 Sport Shirts Button-Down & Regular WERE NOW $8.95 $6.90 5.50 3.95 4.00 2.95 Swim Trunks WERE NOW $5.95 $4.50 5.00 3.75 3.50 2.50 Wash Pants Postgrads - Pipers WERE NOW $4.95 $3.75 5.95 4.50 6.95 5.25 Reductions on Bermudas - Beachcombers - Summer Pajamas Ties - Socks - Belts Town Shop 839 Mass. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22, 1960 Starlight to Feature 'The Student Prince' KANSAS CITY. Mo.—(Special)—Monday night, July 25, the enchanting sounds of Sigmund Romberg's immortal music will fill the 7.600-seat Starlight theater as the ever-popular "Student Prince" opens for a one-week stand in the outdoor playhouse. Court to Hold Final Session The last meeting of the Student Court for the Summer Session will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in the Courtroom of Green Hall. All people having filed appeals prior to that time should appear. Medical Center Receives Grants Research to help correct speech problems of children with cleft palate will be made possible by a $10,983 grant awarded by the Easter Seal Research Foundation to the KU Medical Center. It was one of two grants to scientists at the center in Kansas City. Ralph Shelton Jr., assistant professor of speech pathology, will conduct the project with children ranging in age from 8 to 12, covering a period of three years. Radiologic and speech rating procedures in testing children who are being treated at the cleft palate clinic at the University will be used. Ten or more children will be in each group and speech samples will be obtained in filming and recording sessions. Fifteen graduate students of speech pathology will be utilized in the evaluation of results of the tests. During the rating, speech samples will be presented at random, and factors such as distance from the loud speaker and extraneous noise will be controlled. A $10,000 grant from the Easter Seal Research Foundation was also awarded the University to support a career research investigator. He will conduct a study of the relationship between body structure and behavioral functioning as a possible source of psychological understandings about man and his relationships to his environment. The project will also seek to learn the effects which alterations, deviations and disturbances in the physique of man have upon his intrapersonal and interpersonal functioning. The research specialist to head this project will be selected before Jan. 1, 1961, by Dr. M. Erik Wright, professor of psychology and psychiatry, and Dr. Franklin C. Shontz. Polaris Poses New Problem This will be the only Romberg show of the year, and theater officials are expecting the work to draw some of the top crowds of the season. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The unqualified success of the first Polaris missile launches from a submerged submarine has focused attention on one of the toughest problems to confront the Defense Department in the missile era. Singer John Raitt will close in "The Pajama Game" this Sunday night, after a successful week in the modern musical spoof of labor and management. Raitt created the role on Broadway, played it there for two years, made the motion picture version with Doris Day and also is featured on the best selling record album. Tickets are available for the Romberg show by writing the Starlight Theatre Ticket Office, Department JP, 1217 Walnut, Kansas City, Missouri. Ticket prices are as follows: Box — $4; Orchestra — $3.50; Loge — $3; Areng “A” “B” “C” — $2.50; $2; $1.50. All of these seats are reserved and may be ordered in advance. Sigmund Romberg occupies a special niche in the American theater and also at the Starlight, for it was the world renowned composer who conducted the overture to the 1951 opening of the civic theater in Kansas City when his "Desert Song" started the theater's production repertory. In "The Student Prince" Romberg has attained what most critics feel is the pinnacle of his musical ability. The musical numbers have become classics of our time. Such melodies as "Deep In My Heart," "Serenade," "Golden Days," "The Drinking Song," "Gaude amus Igitur," and other immortal songs have raised this show to the top of the show business world. Singers Bill Hayes, Monte Amundson and Richard Torigi take leading roles in the production, along with comic Colee Worth. The entire Starlight theater singing and dancing ensembles will also be featured, including the men's singing chorus, a rousing group that will be featured in several outstanding songs in the production. The question is whether to create a powerful new U.S. Strategic Command that would merge the Navy's soon-to-be-ready Polaris sub forces and the Air Force's bomber and missile units. In addition, there are 1,700 seats which go on sale each night at the theater as $1 general admission seats. There is no advance sale in this section. Telephone reservations are accepted Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Grand 1-5510, or at Delmar 3-9481 after 6 p.m. and on Sundays. The Navy hotly opposes it. Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates Jr. and the Joint Chiefs of Staff have labored over the problem for many months. The Air Force originated the idea of a new nuclear striking arm, combining U.S. retaliatory forces under a single command—most likely an Air Force general. Thus, once again the Pentagon faces the prospect of developing novel weapons faster than it can reach decisions on how to organize and command them. The first penal institution in Arkansas was constructed at the site of the present State Capitol Building in Little Rock. Try the Kansan Want Ads Ten Teachers Attend NSF Program Here Ten college teachers of chemistry from throughout the country are participating in a National Science Foundation-sponsored research program at the University this summer Calvin A. VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, is director of the program, established by the KU chemistry department for the first time this year. It is similar to two previous programs for high school teachers. "We were especially interested in finding teachers who would, on the basis of their experience here, be qualified and equipped to initiate a strong research program at their own colleges." Prof. VanderWerf said. Applicants were screened by the department of chemistry. All have previously earned masters degrees and some, the degree doctor of philosophy. The teachers participate in research programs being conducted by senior members of the KU faculty, in the laboratories and libraries of the chemistry department. In addition, they attend a series of lectures and seminars that provide them with an intensive grounding in the organization of research. Those participating in the program are Dr. David E. Clark, Fresno State College, Fresno, Calif.; Sister Helen Joseph COVER, CSJ, Fontbonne College, St. Louis, Mo.; Dr John A. Davis, Washburn University, Topeka; Dr. Wesley DeCoursey, McPherson College, McPherson; Dr Richard Javick, King's College, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Prof. Oscar Jones, Grambling, Louisiana; Dr. Philip Kinsey, Evansville College, Evansville, Ind.; Prof. Edward C. Morris, William Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa; Dr. Robert Pfeiffer, University of Santa Clara, Santa Clara, Calif., and Mrs. Dorothy Tobias, Camerson State Agricultural College, Lawton, Okla. 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. Daily SPECIAL 80c HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd Coming Monday July 25 A New Kingston Trio LP BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest CHICAGO—(UPI) - Crowd engineer Andy Braun has assembled a stable of "Judas goat" demonstrators and vows there'll be no gallery packing at the Republican National Convention if he has his way. GOP Wants Meek Lambs Frain said he devised a plan to keep non-partisan tab on demonstrators when they're admitted to International Amphitheatre for flag-waving, drum-thumping rallies next week—and to lead them off the floor like sheep when the chairman pounds his gayel. "There'll be no gate crashing" he said, "and none of the stuff like what happened out in Los Angeles last week." Frain, an old hand at ushering people in and keeping them out, referred to the way partisan forces packed the galleries and demonstrations went unchecked at the Democratic Convention. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! ★ NOW SHOWING! Montgomery Clift and Lee Remick in "Wild River" STARTS SUNDAY! Dirk Bogarde in "The Wind Cannot Read" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! Alan Ladd in "Shane" and Walt Disney's "3rd Man on the Mountain" STARTS SUNDAY! Audrey Hepburn in "The Nun's Story" and Walt Disney's "Sleeping Beauty" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "Shaggy Dog" SATURDAY ONLY! 3 Big Features! STARTS SUNDAY! "Wild River" and "13 Fighting Men" FOR RE one or Kitchene condition ing. Phc Spacious neighbor 3 studer both are VI 3-353 FOR RI suitable from Ur VI 3-669 3 ROOI 2 room from U Ohio. Rooms Union. quiet he students 3-696. 2 Bedr ground water 3-8727. Clean sleeping Hawk's 3-4168. Two Ro Apartment, trance, rooms, ers in h No drill south c CLEAN stoves trances 6 wind ities paing. 52 Three Strictly Newly month. Nicely trance $55 per room r entranced. couple FOR N rooms. second fall. C or call Friday, July 22, 1960 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT FOR RENT: Extra nice apartment for one or two graduate or senior men, college students. Ideal conditions. Utilities paid. Private parking. Phone VI 3-8534. 8-2 Spacious Three Room Apt. in residential neighborhood. Completely furnished for 3 students. All electric kitchen. Two entrances. Phone VI 3-6540 or VI 3-3358. 8-2 FOR RENT; Well furnished apartment suitable for 2, 3 or 4 students. $2 \frac{1}{2}$ blocks from Union. Reasonable rent. Please call VI 3-6696. 8-2 Rooms for fall semester $\frac{1}{2}$ block from Union. Large singles and doubles in nice classroom. Upper classmen or graduate students only. Reasonable rates. Call WI 3-685-2777. C-8 3 ROOM APARTMENT well furnished. 2 room house furnished, shower, 2 blocks from Union. Phone VI 3-1909 — 1113 Ohio. 7-29 2 Bedroom Modern Trailer, on private ground. Air conditioned. $60 per month, water paid. Couple only. Phone VI 3-8727. 7-26 Clean two room furn. apartment. Also sleeping rooms. See Mrs. Maxwell. Hawk's Nest days or evenings call VI 348. 821 Indiana after 3 p.m. 7-26 Two Room Modern Furnished Basement Apartment for young men. Outside entrance. Bills paid. Also two large single bedrooms in house. Graduate students welcome. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 7-26 CLEAN—2 furnished apartments. Good stoves and refrigerators. Private entrances and bath rooms, large closets. 6 windows in basement apartment. Utilities paid. Man and wife only. No drinking. 520 Ohio. 7-29 Three Bedroom House, nicely furnished. Strictly modern, 2 car attached garage. Newly decorated, extra clean. $65 per month. Call VI-3-7830. 7-26 Nicely Furnished Apartment, private entrance and bath. Close to KU, extra clean $55 per month. Builts paid. Also 3 bedrooms, enclosed with fireplace and bath, phone, air conditioned. Garage. Near KU, for boys or couple. Phone VI 3-7830. 7-22 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on wooden floors. Floor for fire. Close to KU. Seat at 1416 Tennessee or call VI 3-3340 after 4 p.m. First floor furnished apartment. $60 3 blocks from Union. VI 3-6294 TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available for either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:30 p.m. tf Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider ex-changing for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc. Accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Bailow, 2-1648 - 408 W. 13th St. Vf Neat Accurate Prompt Typing. By experienced typist. Satisfaction guaranteed. Standard rates. Phone VI 3-5239. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do these, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil VI 3-8379. tf TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term report(s). Phone VI 3-2855 between 6 p.m. ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson. Phone VI 3-6791. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8606. tf TYPIST-Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 blks). East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken. VI 3-5920. tf Theses, Term Papers and reports. Typed fast, accurately. Call VI 3-0504. 7-29 TYPIST——General typing, term papers. Craig L. Burridge, Jr. Curtis, Ct. Mrs. Emmel Lindahl, VI 3-5127. FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1955 Pontiae 2 door sedan. Top shape, new W.W. tires. Must sell. Special low price. See F. Ostovar at 1637 N. H. St.-or call VI 3-6930. 8-2 MOBILE HOME — 1956 — Angelus — 41 by 8. Carpets. Immediate possession. Phone VI 3-0924 or VI 3-6052. 8-2 HOME for sale by owner. Save real estate property for sale. Warm full basement. Attached garage on corner lot. Low down payment. Assume low interest loan. Call after 6. VI 2-1683. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-7424. HOUSE FOR SALE or lease with option to buy. Small down payment or trade in. Or car. Suitable for two families. Moving to Calif. Aug. 20. Phone 2-1100. 8-2 BUSINESS SERVICES SMITTY DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes — $10 Baby's diaper, laundry 65c — $10 Washed, dried Pickup — delivery. Rugs cleaned. VI-3 8077-8 BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. 18 E. 9th Street VI 3-0151 GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton. Instructor Jayhawk Driving Range. Instructor on 23rd Street. Phone 1-9725. Mimeographing and Ditto work. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. REVERSE TYPEWRITER WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING in my home. Will pick up and deliver. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-9159. 7-23 PRINTING by offset. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tf NOTICE WANT RIDE: From Highland Park, Topeka to Lindley Hall. Call VI 3-9493 after 2:30 p.m. or Friday and Saturday. 8-2 SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special opportunities in the course. Illustrated. Both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-0942. ff Want Ride: To or in vicinity of Los Angeles, California after August 6. Share expenses. See or write H. L. Oei between 8-12 a.m. 1328 Ohio. 8-2 TRANSPORTATION Would like ride or, to join car pool from K. C. Morning class. Call W1-8351. 7-24 FOUND Found: Small coin purse between Campus and Templin. Owner obtain by identifying purse and contents. Sarah Ayres, Templin Hall. 7-26 WANTED MISCELLANEOUS Wanted: Part-time secretary-bookkeeper, 20-30 hours per week. See Dr. F. S. Rowland, Room 12, Malott Hall. 7-22 BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice BEVERAGE. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant. 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. tsf RENT A SEWING MACHINE Only $1 White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you! Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 COOL OFF With a Summer Salad! For real hot-weather eating enjoyment, choose one of the crisp salads offered in the Hawk's Nest and Cafeteria. Eat in air-conditioned comfort. What a delicious way to cool off! KANSAS UNION Hawk's Nest & Cafeteria Geology Campers Help Fight 5-Day Colorado Forest Fire What does one do at a geology field camp besides study rocks? "Fight forest fires" might be the quick reply of Dr. Louis F. Dellwig, director of the Geology Field Camp near Canon City, Colorado, and his 28 students who this week returned to Lawrence after five weeks of out-door study at the camp. Vivid in the memory of these field campers is their rush to the fighting line to help subdue blazing timber on Crimpton Mountain in the vicinity of the camp northwest of Canon City and Royal Gorge. The fire, which started during a severe electrical storm on the night of June 25, fanned through the brush and timber at varying intensities, as rekindled by wind, until July 1. It was brought under control Thursday, June 30, because of the help of the KU geology campers. The staff of the Bureau of Land Management was*so grateful for the cooperation of the group in the effort to stop the 300-acre forest fire on federal land that R. G. Thompson district manager of the The letters said in part, "... The support and untiring effort of these men was most commendable and through them and the Bureau fire fighters, the forest fire was stopped . . . their call to duty and demonstration in the face of this emergency shows that our American spirit is still very much alive. I compliment you and the parents of these fine sons from the State of Kansas." Canon City office of the Bureau of Land Management, wrote letters of appreciation to Dr. Dellwig at the camp and to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Dr. Frank C. Foley, chairman of the University's geology department. Earlier, the Canon City Daily Record, in a news story dated June 30, quoted Thompson as saying, "Without their help we could not have controlled the fire." The KU Geology Camp has been the out-door classroom for field courses in geology every summer since its establishment in 1922. Dr. Dellwig, associate professor of geology and assistant chairman of the geology department, has been camp director for the last 5 years. W. Kenneth Hamblin, assistant professor of geology, has been assistant director of the camp 3 years, and this year Lee Gerhard was graduate assistant. Kansans who attended the 1960 summer camp, and during the course became fire fighters, are: Joseph Ashby, Topeka; Neil Ashley, Chanute; William Barkes, Topeka; Wayne Boster, Wichita; John Cramer, Independence; William Dryer, Great Bend; David Epp, Tribune; Gary Hackett, Newton; Robert Hay, Kansas City; James Hoffman, Marysville; William Kane, Topeka; Werner Kuhlman, Washington; Robert Russell, Lawrence; William Siesser, Parsons; Lloyd Spangler, Fairview; Douglas Vincent, Overland Park; Robert Walters, Lawrence; William Ward, Hays; Milo Wynne, Baxter Springs. Out-of-state students included: James Howard, William Lyons, Dume Sackett, Mary Smith, William Stewart, Robert Tedrick, Judith Thomas, Rodney Warren, and Charles Zandell. Try the Kansan Want Ads Page 8 American Orders Bother Koreans Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22, 1960 SEOUL-(UPI) - The present Korean government is faced with a number of problems arising from a determined American effort to assure effective use of U.S. aid funds to Korea. The problems are so difficult and require such drastic changes in ROK-U.S. economic relations that the interim government headed by Prime Minister Huh Chung is going to hand them over to a new government to be formed following the July 29 general elections. The proposals, made in line with a new U.S. aid policy adopted after the April revolution have, in some cases, stirred hard feeling among Korean officials and brought criticism of undue pressure or attempts at interference in Korea's internal affairs. They arose when the United States put down a series of proposals aimed at assuring effective use of American aid dollars and preventing their use for political purposes. Americans use nearly 780 gallons of petroleum a year per person—about 13 times the amount used by the average person elsewhere in the free world. Ambitious Officer Returns to Area Lt. Col, Peter A. Helfert, who wanted a KU degree enough to drive thousands of miles for it outside his duty hours, will return to the area as executive officer of the Army ROTC unit at the University of Missouri this fall. Col. Helfert, while a major assigned to the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, commuted outside of his full time assignment during the post World War II years to earn the B.S. degree in education in 1949. He also holds a master's degree from Columbia University. Light meals are best on hot days. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Landon Gives Support To Attorney General TOPEKA —(UPI)— Atty. Gen. John Anderson Jr. received the endorsement of Alf Landon, 1936 Republican candidate for President, yesterday in his bid for the governorship of Kansas. Anderson currently is battling Mecill Huck Bovd of Phillipsburg and William H. Addington of Wichita for the GOP nomination in the Aug. 2 primary. Landon, himself a former governor, said he was highly impressed by Anderson's "industry, courage and accomplishments" in 14 years as county attorney, state senator and Attorney General. "He's made some politicians mad at him because of his decisions from start to finish." Landon commented, "But his record of being sustained by the highest courts in the land is nearly 100 per cent." The former governor praised Anderson's law enforcement record, particularly his suppression of "slot machine racketeering." He pointed to Anderson's role in obtaining a new time sales finance law requiring a ceiling on interest charges as "courage of the highest order." "Unquestionably this law will save ordinary citizens millions of dollars, citizens who formerly were ganged by unscrupulous dealers in the sale of automobiles and household appliances. "John Anderson had to challenge a billion dollar corporation in the courts. He never hesitated. He won his case and the legitimate dealers joined him is asking for and getting the necessary legislation. "More recently," Landon reminded, "he has filed an action to enjoin a house trailer company and four finance firms from making illegal contracts with G. I.'s for their trailer homes." Landon said Anderson gained valuable knowledge of state problems and experience of the way chief executives dealt with them while he was a state senator. francis 731 Mass. sporting goods Tennis Balls we're in the racket for restringing bring yours in! one day service Campus WEST FINAL CLEARANCE OF SUMMER STOCK Reductions One-Third to One-Half Price All Sales Final Private Parking on Naismith Drive CAMPUS HIDEAWAY MR. PIZZA BASEBALL-a favorite summer sport PIZZA-student's favorite food Enjoy Both at the HIDEAWAY 106 N. Park VI 3-9111 510 Ca Un Ab dates TO State leasee candi sues Tho 1. age 1 instrat popu excel child of ta 2. gran finan 40 1 costs Wi Ande all a Al 3. and the 5. for trat 1960 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU KU Tuesday, July 26, 1960 ays. 48th Year, No.12 Candidates Give Unified Replies About Education TOPEKA — (UFI) — The Kansas State Teachers Association has released answers by gubernatorial candidates to questions on school issues raised by the faculty group. The teachers asked if the candidates would favor: 1. Legislation which will encourage the formation of school administrative units of sufficient pupil population and valuation to provide excellent school programs for all children and youth and efficient use of tax resources and teachers. William H. Addington, John Anderson Jr. and McDill Huck Boyd all answered yes. 2. Enactment of a foundation program of state participation in school finance which will provide at least 40 per cent of total public school costs from indirect tax sources. All replied in the affirmative. Addington said yes, Anderson said the legislature certainly should give it serious consideration, and Boyd said he would want to evaluate the program with respect to other needs. 3. Inclusion of kindergarten pupils and public junior college students in the state's school finance program. 4. Full finance of budget and building requests of the state Board of Regents for the state's colleges and universities. Addington and Anderson replied yes and Boyd said the board should "do all it can" to fully finance the requests. 5. Creation of a retirement system for college teachers and administrators. All replied in the affirmative. All replied in the affirmative. 6. Action leading to appointment of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction by a state board of education. All replied yes. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 7. Action leading to the appointment of a county superintendent by a county or intermediate unit board. All said they would favor such action. Veterans to Sign Forms Next Week Veteran's certification forms for the entire period of July 1-August 6 will be signed August 4, 5 or 6 in the office of the Veterans Service. No certification will be made for the month of July only. The one certification necessary will be for all of July and the first six days of August. KU Students Win Awards Two students in the chemical engineering sequence of the KU School of Engineering have been awarded $500 scholarships for the 1960-61 school year. Darryl S. Roberts, Wichita senior, is the recipient of the Frontier Chemical Company Scholarship and John E. McElhiney, Aurora, Mo., senior, will receive the Universal Oil Products Company Scholarship. Roberts, who also held a scholarship in the School of Engineering last year, is a member of Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, and was president of Carruth Hall last semester. Both are annual awards. McElhiney is a member of Sigma Tau, national honor society in engineering, and Alpha Chi Sigma. He has served on the Engineering Student Council. AFROTC Staff Gains and Loses The Air Force ROTC unit at the University gained and lost an officer this week for its summer complement. Major Elery W. Watson returned from Webb AFB, Big Springs, Texas, where he had been administrative officer to the Air Force ROTC training unit. Capt. K. L. Shook left Thursday for William AFB, Chandler, Arizona where he will have a 6-week assignment. During four weeks he will be a tactical officer for the ROTC camp at which many cadets from KU will take their summer training. Nixon, Rocky Join to Whip New Opposition International Amphitheater, Chicago — (UPI) — Richard M. Nixon joined forces with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller at the Republican Convention yesterday in an effort to quell a right-wing rebellion against their liberal platform policies. Nixon, already assured of the presidential nomination, arrived on the Chicago battleground shortly after the GOP's 27th national convention opened in the midst of a surprise row over civil rights, defense, and foreign policy. Temporarily at least the GOP unity theme was shattered. Nixon also was under pressure from a group led by William G Stratton of Illinois to let the convention hold a "wide open" contest for his vice presidential running mate. The governors did not want the man who appeared to be the favorite for the post—United Nations Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. The convention's opening session got underway at 12:15 p.m., edd., with a round of speech-making and with the 1.331 delegates in a mood to enjoy themselves. The first day's highlight was a speech last night by the GOP's grand old man, former President Herbert Hoover. Nixon and Rockefeller pledged to fight on the convention floor if necessary against conservative Republicans who threatened to scuffle the strong civil rights policy laid down by the two leaders at their secret New York conference last week. Weather For the period today through Saturday temperatures will average near normal west and 2 to 5 degrees below normal east. A little warmer eastern sections in mid-week. KING AND QUEEN—Ronald Best of Kansas City, Mo., and Anne Kepler of Tulsa, Okla., were named king and queen of the 23rd Midwestern Music and Art Camp Saturday night. MARY AND JEFFREY Dr. Matzke Reports Family All Safe Now "All safe," was the complete message of a cablegram from Dr. Howard A. Matzke, University professor of anatomy who was forced to leave the Congo by the recent violence within the young republic. The cablegram was received at 10 Monday morning by Irwin L. Baird, acting chairman of the KU anatomy department. The cablegram was sent at 10 a.m. Uganda time. Dr. Matzke and a U.S. Army officer also doing research at the Institute, drove overland to Kampala. They brought scientific instruments from the Institute in a truck. Dr. Matzke's wife and two children, who were with him at the Institute for Scientific Research in central Africa, were flown to safety in Kampala, Uganda, last week. The overland trip required about four days, according to a letter Mrs. Matzke wrote July 16 to Harold Scheve of Lawrence soon after she and the children arrived in Uganda. "We hope that sometime in the next few days we will hear more about Dr. Matzke's plans," Dr. Baird said. In her letter to Scheve, Mrs. Matzke mentioned the possibility of continuing their research at Makerere College in Kampala. Dr. Matzke was doing research in the Congo on the central nervous system of mammals, which promised to be helpful in research on certain human diseases, such as Parkinson's disease, cerebral palsy, tremors and forms of paresis. He and his family went to the Congo about the middle of June so that his research could be conducted in an area where experimental mammals usually are readily available. Early reports of difficulties suffered by White citizens and visitors to the Congo early in July caused concern in Lawrence over the welfare of the Matzke family. The University early attempted to get information on the family through the U.S.State Department, but those efforts failed. One letter was received in Lawrence from Dr. Matzke dated July 3 — some four days after the Congo uprisings began — reporting that no violence was present in the Lwiro area, the location of the institute. A local "ham" radio operator also attempted to make contact with amateur radio operators in the central African region, but he, too, met with failure. U.S. Levels Piracy Blast UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI) The United States accused Russia yesterday of a "criminal and reckless act of piracy" in shooting down an RB-47 reconnaissance plane. It said a Soviet fighter plane tried to force the RB-47 onto Soviet territory before it was shot down over international waters. U. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge said secret U. S. electronic devices based in England tracked the plane throughout its entire flight. He asked if Russia was seeking a pretext for war. In a formal resolution Lodge challenged Moscow to submit the case to investigation by a commission of the United States and Russia and a third party acceptable to both, or to take it before the International Court of Justice at The Hague. Russia immediately rejected the demand. The United States wanted the commission to inspect the site, examine the wreckage and question the survivors and other witnesses. Familiar Face Returns to KU The Rev. Donovan E. Hull, new director of the Wesley Foundation for Methodist students at the University of Kansas, is no newcomer to the KU campus. He received the degree bachelor of arts from the University in 1952 with a major in zoology and during his four years here was a leader in campus activities. He joined the varsity cheerleading squad as a sophomore and became head cheerleader the following year. He was president of the YMCA and of the senior class, active in Wesley Foundation and a member of Sachem, senior men's honorary society. He is also active in the National Methodist Student Movement and will serve as dean of the regional MSM Conference at DeKalb, Ill., Aug. 29-Sept.4. As director of Wesley Foundation, he succeeds Dr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Price, who retired June 30 after 40 years' service to Methodist students. His relationship to the Prices, however, is not only professional. His mother's brother's wife, Mrs. Ethel Miller of Wellington, is the sister of Mrs. Price. Before coming to KU this summer, the Rev. Mr. Hull was director of Weslev Foundation at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. He was previously associate director of the United Christian Fellowship, an ecumenical group at Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio. In addition to his studies at KU he holds the degree bachelor of divinity from Garrett Theological Seminary, Evanston, Ill., and has done graduate study at the Harvard Divinity School. His wife, Dixie, is a graduate of Greensboro College, N.C., attended Garrett and Northwestern University at Evanston and received her master's degree from Northwestern. Before their marriage in 1954, she was director of Christian Education at the Broadstreet Methodist Church, Statesville, N.C. The couple has two sons, David, 2. and Robert, nine months. The Rev. Mr. Hull is the son of the Rev. Ernest Hull, pastor of Zion Methodist Church in Wichita. He was born in Sublette, attended schools in Liberal and Kingman and was graduated from Clay County Community High School, Clay Center, in 1948. Film to Feature Population Growth "Population Explosion," one of a CBS Reports series, and "Space Scientist," introducing the man who designed the space pioneer capsule, will be the featured films shown at 3:30 Wednesday afternoon in 3 Bailey Hall. "Population Explosion" gives a close and sobering look at the grave consequences of the abnormal high current rate of growth of the world's population, which may double in the next 40 years. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1960 Portrait of Probable GOP Nominee - Nixon IF FOR NOTHING else, Richard Milhous Nixon will go down in history for having raised the vice presidency to a new level of importance in the American political system. President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave him the opportunity. The young Californian, ambitious but carefully self-disciplined, made the most of it. He became the nation's first real "understudy" for the presidency. In 13 years of public service, Nixon already has lived what would have been, for most men, a political lifetime. Picked from private life by a newspaper advertisement seeking a 1946 GOP congressional candidate, he moved swiftly to the vice presidency in six years which spanned both House and Senate membership. Three times Nixon was pushed close to the point of becoming "acting president" by Eisenhower illnesses. Each time that role was averted The vice president took on added duties under presidential direction but never the power of executive decision. FROM THE OUTSET of his first term. Eisenhower made a "working partner" of the Quaker-bred young attorney from Whittier. Calif. A politician to his fingertips, Nixon has paced his pre-convention campaign with care. Following New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's December announcement that he would not seek the GOP presidential nomination, Nixon on Jan. 9, his 47th birthday, made his long-deferred announcement that he would be a formal candidate in the presidential primaries — but not personally campaign in them. Nixon piled up impressive votes in the eight primaries in which he was entered. In most of them he had no Republican opposition. NIXON WAS BORN Jan. 9, 1913 at Yorba Linda, Calif., the son of Frank A. and Hannah Milhous Nixon. As a youth, he worked in the family grocery store, learned to play the piano and excelled in debate. He was graduated from Whittier College in 1934 and won a scholarship to Duke University, where he earned his law degree in 1937. Back in Whittier, he opened a law office and soon met Patricia Ryan, a slender, brown-eyed graduate of the University of California who was then teaching at Whittier High School. They were married in 1940. Nixon has enjoyed general good health throughout his public career. Except for an occasional cold and a tendency to pick up a virus infection when he is run-down from campaigning, he has had no illness of note. In 1957, he made his first use of reading glasses, for close work in his office. He stopped smoking several years ago. His drinking is carefully restricted. After the 1956 campaign, Nixon thinned himself down to keep his weight below 170. Portrait of a Man Available for Draft NELSON E. ROCKEFELLER has worn paper clips on his glasses to keep them from skidding down his nose — not because he can't afford new ones, but because he's too busy to send them out for repairs. A member of one of America's richest families and grandson of John D. Rockefeller who founded an oil dynasty, he has overcome in the eyes of many observers the political handicap of being born to wealth and influence. He has demonstrated that his viewpoint is not bound by dimes and dollars. He is governor of New York and a public servant. He is a philanthropist and a patron of the arts. He has been assistant secretary of state and has served in Washington at a policy level in the past three administrations. But most significantly, in regard to the present and future national scene, he is a bright luminary on the Republican political horizon. ROCKEFELLER HUMSELF, as does the overwhelming majority of professional politicians and pollsters, virtually concedes the 1960 GOP Presidential nomination to Vice President Richard M. Nixon. He is but 51 years old. He can afford to wait four more years, or even eight more years, should Nixon win this year and decide to run a second time. Rockefeller has been rebuffed by the party pros in his bid for the White House. But he has managed to come back bright-eyed and unembittered. A friend attributes that to the "feudal, Spartan but secure simplicity" of his upbringing. Early in life he found out he was going to have to make his own way. He got a 25-cent weekly allowance as a boy, supplemented it by shining the family shoes and kept books which were inspected closely by his father and grandfather, America's first billionaire. HIS FAMILY SAW to it that Nelson and his four brothers and one sister didn't become spoiled. "I was totally unconscious of being a rich boy," Nelson has said. "When we lived on the estate at Tarrytown, my brother Laurence and I had the shoeshine concession at our house. We got a nickel a shine. "We also had gardens to take care of and we'd sell vegetables to the family. We had some rabbits and we'd sell them to the Rockefeller Institute for Social Research." A new Republican campaign song contains the information that Dick Nixon is "Heaven-sent." Democrats wonder if he was sent out along with Lucifer. Convention Notes, News Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower will get a gold bracelet from Republican women when she visits the convention with President Eisenhower tonight. The bracelet, engraved with the Presidential Seal, will be presented by Mrs. Peter T. Gibson, president of the National Federation of Republican Women. *** There's one point on which the Republicans and Democrats agree for sure. Every state is a great state. . . . Virginia Republicans are pushing Rep. Richard H. Poff as a favorite son candidate for the GOP vice presidential nomination. There are advantages in solidarity. Whereas the Democrats took three nights to present a platform, nominate and select a presidential candidate and nominate and select his running mate, the Republicans plan to cram the whole slate into Wednesday night's schedule. Rep. Charles A. Halleck, the House GOP leader, has an additional chore in his duties as permanent chairman of the convention this week. But it might hurt the TV ratings. He has to try to make up some lost ground scored by Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida, the Democratic chairman who captured the fancy of the nation's TV audiences from Los Angeles. And it's too bad that Gov. Robert Meyner of New Jersey won't be on hand to add a little spice to the television interviews. The Republicans are giving their womenfolk more of a say than ever in their convention proceedings. Mrs. Clare B. Williams, assistant chairman of the GOP national committee, said that never before had so many women attended a national political convention or held so many top posts. She said there were 609 female delegates and alternates on tap and 11 females in key convention jobs. The Democrats had 606 women delegates and alternates at the Los Angeles convention. Republican National Chairman Thurston Morton, answering a newsman's query on whether Vice President Richard M. Nixon might throw open the GOP vice presidential race: "That could be, but we would confine it to a small number of candidates acceptable to him. A situation like that could develop." Wisconsin Rep. Melvin Laird, Platform Committee vice chairman, announcing the committee rejected key language of the Nixon - Rockefeller recommendations on defense and other planks: "We're writing the platform in this committee." Former New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, telling newsmen the Nixon-Rockefeller platform pact was not an effort to pressure the convention; "I am sure that they were not trying to dictate to the convention. The agreement they reached has improved the GOP prospects this fall. They are two strong men, both seeking the best interests of the nation." --so nist view ficial will lift r Gerr Euro - * * Alaska delegates to the Republican National Convention said Chicago's 90-degree heat of the past few days proved no hardship. Mrs. Lucille Harkabus, Fairbanks' women's shop operator, said the temperature was 90 degrees back home when she left. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) WARNINGS AND NOTICE News Room DEPARTMENT Phone 711 Editors Dick Crocker BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office... Phone 376 Business Manager... Clydeene Brown the look world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism FAMOUS AMERICAN PLAYS OF THE 1940s, edited and with an introduction by Henry Wewell. Dew Laurel Books, 75 cents. Here is an arbitrary selection of American drama. The obvious name is missing, and one of the five plays selected pertains more to the 1950s. One selection admittedly is not the best work of the play-wright. Another seems sheer capriciousness. But the selections are in line with the arbitrary kind of theatrical criticism that has characterized the drama in the last 15 years or so. Few critics would agree on a list of 10 best in any year. Hewes, and Kronenberger of Time magazine, are notorious members of the critical cult that contends: "It is my list; therefore it is the best possible list." NOW THAT THE sniping is out of the way it can be said that these still are five fine plays. Hewe's selections are Thornton Wilder's "The Skin of Our Teeth," Arthur Laurents' "Home of the Brave," Arthur Miller's "All My Sons," Maxwell Anderson's "Lost in the Stars" and Carson McCullers' "The Member of the Wedding." Where are "A Streetcar Named Desire" or "The Glass Menagerie"? Where is "Death of a Salesman"? Where is "The Iceman Cometh"? Where are "Born Yesterday" and "State of the Union"? The latter rates not a mention in the introduction, which deals more with the theater than with the drama—a strange approach, for the text is more important in such a collection than the physical stage and the rapport between cast and audience. "The Skin of Our Teeth" belongs in such a selection, however. Audiences may have been puzzled by it, or have walked out on it, but like Wilder's other dramas it has that quality of agelessness that made John Mason Brown call Wilder "the philosopher of antitime." To Wilder, the problems of the caveman in the ice age easily can become the problems of man in the 20th century, and Wilder freely swings back and forth to demonstrate his point. "HOME OF THE Brave" also was a non-commercial success, and it enjoyed greater fame as a motion picture. Hewes appears to regard the play more as a military vignette occurring on a Japanese-held island than a drama or prejudice. The Jewish hero became a Negro in the movie, and for my money his problem was greatly heightened in the process. "All My Sons" surely must play second fiddle to Miller's "Death of a Salesman." But, although a weaker play, it has a family conflict, a problem with which Miller often seems concerned, and it deals, like "Salesman," with the subordination of spiritual to material values. Also like "Salesman," it has the quality of being able to rip at the insides of its viewer, or reader, as in the climactic scene in which the son finds that the long-admired father is a crook whose shoddy wartime practices may have caused the death of his own son. "LOST IN THE STARS" is Hewes' nomination as the best work of Maxwell Anderson, an amazing comment when one considers Anderson's beautiful historical dramas, and also his "Winterset." But it is a fine play, a musical drama based upon Alan Paton's eloquent "Cry, the Beloved Country." Like "Street Scene" and "Regina" it stands as a musical which didn't quite measure up but which made ample pretensions of giving near-operative stature to the Broadway drama. "The Member of the Wedding" is a beautiful play which I freely list as one of the best of the 1950s rather than 1940s. But Hewes seems overly concerned with the Broadway production that starred Ethel Waters and Julie Harris. Surely a particular production is irrelevant. It is the poetic quality, the textual beauty of two children growing up with an old Negro, that makes it a great play. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Mr FOOTBALL COACH RAH! COACH! RAH! 2 AS SEEN BY-- HIMSELF--- Mr. FOOTBALL COACH RAH! COACH! RAH! AS SEEN BY--HIMSELF-- --THE (MIC) ALUMS (MIC) COACH W-19 BANK The STUDENT BODY THE TEAM THE FACULTY THE (NIC) ALLUME (NIC) COACH W-14 BANK $ BANK JHE STUDENT BODY----THE TEAM----JHe FACULTY. FI R The Force nounce Univer Flight record Vo To The units t and u Folio 1952. Center "1960" of inf for th The one so- tion o litalic the vc The vr- tationi neqrui ballotipe bale lication amend Poli Kansa plaine are frame county Stat levels compo eleccte mitte in the electic men party by sta names politic litical Reg voting generation i heavil To re to the re a reg provis ration Also formal sketch as pro office. At physi lots c tion clerk differ the ball Ru Re HA Russia East fleet many cordi ports Ac of N Gerrent ship and subr Wo CH L. J alley for office "I polic Page 3 ous e to ay- ical or ear. em e it that toned the cost "g." manan n"? ach, ical ver it, ness anti- age and .. cess, s to Jap- be- was eath conid it maableactic is a eath reely newes urread on is thilay. work ders set." ton's and but e to Summer Session Kansan Flying Program Renewed for KU The Erhart Flying Service has recently been awarded a new Air Force ROTC contract for the school year of 1960-61, it was announced by Lt. Col. Robert P. Ash, Professor of Air Sciences at the University of Kansas. The Erhart Flying Service has conducted the Flight Instruction program since January 1957 with a perfect safety record. The University of Kansas Air Force ROTC was one of the first units to offer flight training. Air Force ROTC cadets at 162 colleges and universities are now getting flight training as part of their a regular course of instruction. Voter's Guide To Be Published The booklet brings together into one source more complete information on procedures, platforms, political parties, and candidates than the voter might otherwise possess. The voter is informed of the registration and voting procedures and requirements in Kansas, and the balloting process is discussed. Sample ballots are included in the publication. Proposed constitutional amendments are briefly summarized. Political party organization in Kansas is diagrammed and explained. Both of the major parties are organized on a hierarchical framework, beginning with the county committee. Following a procedure started in 1552, the Governmental Research Center here will soon publish the "1960 Voter's Guide," a source book of information for Kansas voters for the coming general election. State law requires the successive levels of party committees to be composed of persons originally elected as committeeemen and committeeewomen in each of the precincts in the state at each party's primary election. Equal representation of men and women on the various party committees is also required by state law. The guide contains the names of county, district and state political party officers, and the political party platforms. Registration is a requirement for voting in both the primary and the general election, but in either election it is required only in certain heavily populated areas of Kansas. To register, one must appear before the registration officer and apply for a registration certificate although provision is made for absentee registration under certain conditions. Also offered for the voter's information is a brief biographical sketch of each candidate of the Kansas parties for state and national office. At the actual election persons physically unable to mark their ballots can now so declare to the election board and one judge and one clerk from the board, representing different parties will accompany the voter to the booth and mark the ballot as he instructs. Russia Boosting Red German Navy HAMBURG, Germany —(UPI)— Russia is building up Communist East Germany's small and outmoded fleet in a move to match West Germany's growing Naval strength, according to Western intelligence reports. Soviet efforts to give the Communist Navy more fighting punch are viewed by West German defense officials as a communist action that will strengthen Bonn's attempts to lift restrictions imposed on the West German Navy by the Western European Union. Adm. Arleigh Burke, U.S. Chief of Naval Operations, has seconded German motions to change the current tonnage limit for surface warships from 3,000 tons to 5,000 tons and permit the country to build submarines larger than 350 tons. Woman Steals Police Car CHICAGO—(UPI)—Mrs. Florence L. Jantas, 33, found parked in an alley in the police car she had taken for a drive an hour before, told officers; "Ive always been fascinated by police cars." Started only four years ago, FIP — Flight Instruction Program — has proven its value in a variety of ways. Many Air Force ROTC cadets become interested in the Air Force as a career because of FIP and qualified basic cadets are encouraged to continue ROTC instruction since the flying portion is only available to seniors. Another important aspect is learning early whether or not a cadet is suited for flying training, eliminating costly pre-flight and some expensive flight sessions. Slightly more than 36 hours flying time is logged by cadets who successfully complete the prescribed course and they are eligible to take a flight check for a private pilot's license, although this is not mandatory as far as the Air Force is concerned. Actual flying instruction is provided by private instructors using private planes. Some of the schools maintain their own flying instruction units, while others use a civilian contractor. All ground school subjects are taught by regularly assigned Air Force ROTC instructors and FAA certifies and monitors the flight operations. At the University of Kansas, Captains Kenneth L. Shook and Elbert H. Austin conduct the ground school. Studies based on data furnished by the Air Training Command indicates cadets who have finished the FIP are eliminated from the Air Force training program less than half as often as cadets without the FIP training. It actually costs about $8,-400 less to train a cadet who is a FIP graduate, a considerable saving. Try the Kansan Want Ads Two University of Kansas graduate students have been awarded travel costs by the Fulbright program to supplement their awards in the KU program of direct student exchanges with individual universities abroad. Students Given Travel Awards MAYFLOWER MAYFLOWER MAYFLOWER Coomes is working toward a Ph.D, in history. He has received two University Fellowships and one University Scholarship, annual awards open to graduate students at KU. Dependable "Hands" Kahle is working toward an M.A. degree in English, and he held a University Scholarship in 1958-59. The two recipients are Edward J. Coomes Jr., Kansas City, Mo., who will study history at Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, and Robert Charles Kahle, Topeka, who will study medieval German literature at the University of Kiel, Germany. The original awards were made by the University of Kansas, which maintains exchange agreements with the German universities and others in England, Scotland, France, and Switzerland. The Fulbright supplement covers round-trip travel expenses for the two appointments, both for the 1960-61 academic year. Mayflower Warehouse men are experts in every phase of moving and storage. They are trained and fully responsible Bats Leave Belfrey POLICE HADLEIGH, England — (UPI) — The Very Rev. W. J. Brown reported in his parish magazine he had rid his belfry of "no fewer than 750 bats by borrowing a motorcycle, starting it up in the church and blowing its horn continuously." The Hawthorn is the official state flower of Missouri. Watching every move you make! Lawrence Flume V1.3. 0171 TRANSFER & STORAGE CO., INC. • PACKING • CRATING 609 MASS. Bill VILLEE Tuesday. July 26. 1960 NEW YORK—(UPI) A physician who is given to asking psychological questions of his patients was surprised by how many housewives, "seemingly happily married," now and then imagine themselves suddenly leaving home, husband and children. Query Shows Women Think of Leaving Home His newest report was on 400 run-of-the-mill persons who go to a doctor with a physical complaint. Sixty per cent were women and 10 per cent of these had those occasional fantasies of walking out on their families. Palmer took these women and his other patients to be representative. While taking blood pressures and otherwise looking his patients over, Palmer asked about feelings of ten- "A few even go out and start off only to return after two or three blocks," said Dr. Robert Sterling Pelmer of Boston in reporting on how much a doctor can learn about people by asking the right questions and how much better the people feel when they answer them. Palmer is not a psychiatrist but an internist, treating the range of common body complaints. But he has long been a student of the effect emotions have on body functions and as long ago as 1950 he published a scientific run-down on personality types and high blood pressure. Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks VI 3-9757 1310 W. 6th ston or anxiety and if they thought they had a particular disease, leading up to this question: "Do you ever ask yourself what you are getting out of life?" Somewhat later, when they had dealt with that one, Palmer had two more for them: "Do you ever ask yourself the meaning of life?" and "Do you have a sense of dread or forboding, panic or terror?" Palmer reported to the New England Journal of Medicine that most of the 400 were "more than willing" to answer the questions, and in some detail. Following scientific methods, Palmer tabulated the answers and found that 47 per cent of the 400 said yes, they did ask themselves what they were getting. "A few felt cheated by life and some said they more often asked themselves what they had given to life." As for the meaning of life, only 34 per cent said yes and they often asked a question of their own, "Doesn't everyone?" TEXICO Prepare your car for the sun with a Wash & Wax BOB HARRELL TEXACO SERVICE & Miss. VI 3- VI 3-9897 M Summer Success ... The girl who has learned to let ACME take care of all her laundry and cleaning, even wash'n wear! ACME 1109 MASS BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-5155 CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Page 4 Summer Session Kansas Tuesday. July 26. 1960 High Tribunal To Try Powers BY PHIL NEWSOM On Aug. 17, Francis G. Powers achieves the dubious distinction of becoming the first American to be tried in open Soviet court on spy charges. UPI Foreign Editor Thus, on' is birthday, the 31-year-old pilot whose U-2 high-alitude reconnaissance plane was shot down over Sverdlovsk last May 1, becomes an individual pawn in a show trial whose primary objective will be to further the Soviet campaign labelling the United States an aggressor nation. The official Soviet news agency Tass announced the trial date and said the case has been "accepted" by the "Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the U.S.S.R."-a court usually reserved for high ranking officers only. Conviction could result in a prison sentence of from seven to 15 years or death before a firing squad. There was no indication of the defense which Powers will be permitted after 108 days in the hands of Soviet interrogators. A grim story lies behind the three-judge Collegium which is Soviet Russia's highest military court. The late dictator Josef Stalin used it as his favorite instrument to eliminate possible rivals. His favorite prosecutor was the late Andre Vshinsi who afterward became Stalin's chief cold war spokesman before the United Nations and in world councils. In three spectacular trials in 1936, 1937 and 1938 Stalin purged the Communist party of most of the leading "old Bolsheviks." They were the giants of early communism, but one and all, they "confessed" to the crimes of treason and sabotage as charged by Stalin. They included former Premier A. I. Rykov, and two former presidents of the Communist International, Gregory Zinoviev and Nikolai Bukharin. Diplomats, cabinet ministers, economic experts and honored soldiers disappeared one after the other, victims of Stalin's terror apparatus. Comparatively few of them met their fate in public. In 1837, Stalin had Marshal M. N. Tukhachevsky, vice commissar of war and civil war veteran, and seven other generals tried and executed in secret. Later, some of the judges also were liquidated. So sweeping were the purges that years later Nikita Khrushchev revealed they left the Soviet Union's defense completely unprepared for the German onslaught. Beyond the date and the court that will try him, little else of the Powers case is known. U. S. officials have not been permitted to see him since his capture on May 1. Third Pharmacy Award Received The third George Guy Hall Scholarship in pharmacy for the 1960-61 academic year at the University has been awarded to Bonnie J. Eaton, Wichita junior. The $208 scholarship covers tuition for two semesters. Miss Eaton will enter the Pharmacy School this fall after two years in pre-pharmacy at KU. Earlier this spring Hall scholarships were awarded to Donald C. Dyer, Hutchinson, and Larry Stark, both pharmacy juniors. The scholarships memorialize the late George Guy Hall, longtime pharmacist and civic leader in Oakley. They are made possible by a gift from his widow, Mrs. Edith Hall, who now lives in Salina. It's Hard on the Hand PHENIX CITY, Ala. — (UPI) — County officials have agreed to buy a "cheap, used" siren for Sheriff Lamar Murphy's car after the officer complained he had to "bang on the sides of the cars" to attract the attention of traffic violators. HUTCHINSON—(UPI)—Back to the salt mines means more to Kansans than thoughts of Siberia or returning to the job after the coffee break. State Salt Mines Meet Many Needs For catacombed through the central and southwest parts of the state are beds of salt from 650 to 1,000 feet below the surface. And carved out hollows offer space for storage of various materials from liquid radioactive wastes to valuable art works. There is a total of at least 1680 acres available or twice as much space as occupied by Central Park in New York City. Carey Salt Co. of Hutchinson has leased 128 acres to Underground Vaults and Storage Co., Inc., for storage of records, microfilm and magnetic tapes. The underground storage facilities will be ready for use in January. but already customers from six states,including banks,insurance companies and other business firms have made arrangements for their use. The Atomic Energy Commission, in another part of the same group mines, is making tests to see if radioactive wastes can be stored in the salt beds. Some authorities feel that the tests already have shown the salt beds to be the safest place to put the atomic wastes. Success of the tests could mean that Kansas would become a major reactor fuel center in the future. It is felt that the mines are both near the center of the U.S. mainland and are far from high priority targets and out of the fallout pattern of other targets. There also has been mention of the salt mines as an underground Pentagon. Several valuable paintings from Wichita are being stored in the mines this summer because it was feared the high humidity above ground would damage the canvases. The paintings are from a gallery where there is no air conditioning at present. U.N. Forces Move Toward Showdown LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo — (UPI)—United Nations troops moved relentlessly into the interior of the Congo yesterday, taking over from Belgian and Congolese forces and heading for a showdown in "seceded" Katanga province. U. N. officials were trying to work out some way to avoid taking the province by force. Gaston to Deliver Six Music Lectures E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the music education department at the University, will deliver a series of six lectures on music therapy August 8-10 at the University of Denver's Lamont School of Music. Prof. Gaston was one of the pioneers in the new science of music therapy. He has earned many honors, which can be summed up in the presentation to him of the first honorary life membership by the National Association for Music Therapy. Lecture subjects include "The Necessity of Music," "Music in Our Age," "The Influence of Music on Behavior" and "Music in Therapy." Real estate holdings by United States insurance companies as of March 31 were $3,712,000,000, up $262 million from the previous year. Wanted Baby Sitter! CLASSIFIED SECTION. ADVERTISER AT WORK! Whether it's to aid distraught mothers, busy retailers or manufacturers, advertising is ready with a helping hand. On the pages of this newspaper, right on through the classified, you'll see ads that are working hard to help advertisers sell their products or services. Advertising helps by spreading the word throughout the length and breadth of the land. As more people are informed, more products are sold. The demand snowballs and causes greater production, resulting in constantly improved products at lower cost. WELCOME TO THE NEW HOME OF WELCOME TO THE NEW HOME Nowhere else in the world is advertising used so effectively and extensively—and nowhere else is there such a high standard of living. Advertising helped to bring on this high standard of living. Thus, you are the one who benefits from advertising! advertising works for you! nidagpndi wel CW Page 5 ited of up ear. Cyclones Slap Cuts With Laundry Fines AMES, Iowa—It literally doesn't pay an Iowa State football player to cut a class—not under Coach Clay Stapleton's system inaugurated last year. "We believe our players are here to get an education and it is our responsibility to do all in our power to see to it that they get an education," Stapleton explains. "No athlete can progress his academic program by not attending class. We have not had too much of a problem with class cuts but we want to have even less in the Delegates See A 'New Nixon' TOPEKA—(UPI)—The Kansas delegation to the Republican National Convention is in Chicago to help Richard M. Nixon become President of the United States, and confident the country will soon see a "new Nixon." That Nixon will be nominated is as certain, according to the Kansans, as what the racetrack fraternity calls a "boat race." And they are ready to go along with Nixon on any candidate he chooses for a running mate. This frees the Sunflower delegation from frustrations of the stormy nature that plagued their Democratic counterparts at Los Angeles. For excitement, they looked past the convention to the November election. Kansas has 21 votes in the convention, and Sam Mellinger, state chairman from Emporia, said they undoubtedly would go to the present vice president. "I feel the people are going to see a new Nixon after the convention." "The sentiment is overwhelmingly for Nixon," Mellinger said, "although officially we are uncommitted." "Until now he has been unable, through politeness and because of his office as vice president, to state his views on a number of things. "As vice president," Mellinger explained, "he necessarily has to be identified with the administration of President Eisenhower." "We spent about four hours with him in Washington some time ago," the state chairman said, "and I was amazed at the capacity he has for knowledge of so many issues at his age. "He knew at that time his position on all major issues, but was not at liberty to reveal it." Mellinger said there was "nothing cut-and-dried" about the party's selection for vice president, but said Kansas would go along with Nixon's choice. He said United Nations Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Kentucky Sen. Thruston Morton, Interior Secretary Fred Seaton and Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater all have support in Kansas. He said a Nixon-Lodge ticket would be "formidable" with the international situation as tense as it is. "Lodge has probably more than anyone in the free world had day to day contact with the Russians and knows more how to handle them," Mellinger said. He felt New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller also would make a strong partner for Nixon, although Rockefeller has adamantly refused to consider such a possibility. But so did Texas Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson before the Democratic convention, it was pointed out. As a Kansas State University graduate, Seaton has much support in the state, Mellinger said. Seaton also is felt to have wide knowledge of area farm problems. Mellinger said Nixon would demand the same kind of vice president he has been. "He has cut a pattern for vice presidents, and when he is president, and I'm sure he will be, I expect he will expect as much from his vice president." Mellinger said. future." Nixon's chances for beating Sen. John F. Kennedy in November are "superb," Mellinger said. The Great Seal of the United States was adopted by Congress June 20,1782. The Stapleton system is simple: when a football player misses more classes than college regulations permit he loses his $15 laundry allowance for a month. A repetition of the excess cut eliminates the laundry allowance for the entire school year. Nor does Stapleton leave this to chance. He has each of his coaches responsible for a limited number of players. They are checked out weekly with their professors so that there is no chance of the staff not knowing when a man cuts. Stapleton is just as thorough in seeing to it that studies are kept up. When a player drops below his — Stapleton's — established level in classroom work he must attend nightly study hall. This study hall is supervised by members of the coaching staff, too. It is our belief that we must combine education and athletics toward graduation for all our athletes," Stapleton said. "We do our best to bring in only athletes qualified to do good academic work. We do our best to see to it that they keep that goal in mind. We want good teams, to be sure, but we also want to be able to send our players out of Iowa State well prepared for their chosen profession." Maser to Lecture At U. of Chicago Edward A. Maser, director of the University Museum of Art, is in Chicago today to give a lecture at the University of Chicago. Prof. Maser, who is also chairman of the department of art history, will give an illustrated lecture tonight on Giuseppe Zochhi, an 18th century designer-artist of Florentine mosaics. Zochhi did work for the Medici recognized as unique in the history of decorative arts. A book by Prof. Maser on Giovanni Domenico Ferretti will be published by Sansoni of Florence during the coming year. The pulp and paper industry in the United States owns and operates nearly 50,000 square miles of forest land. ThriftiCheck -America' Dr. Howard Baumgartel, chairman of the human relations program at the University of Kansas is on the faculty of the 14th Annual Summer Laboratory in Human Relations Training at Bethel, Maine July 17 to August 5. most popular personal checking account service—is available in this area only at Baumgartel on Lab Faculty The National Training Laboratories of the National Education Association conducts the laboratory. Participants from all parts of the country and a number of other countries represent a wide range of occupational interests but share a common concern with problems of working with people in a training, consultant, leadership or administrative capacity. The laboratory program provides opportunity for exploring and practicing basic skills in human relations. An interdisciplinary team of social and behavioral scientists drawn from universities over the country serve as the staff. Working in small groups, participants use their own experience as a laboratory example of group development and an opportunity to test theories about group growth and social change. Douglas County STATE BANK 900 Mass. Summer Session Kansan An important element of the program is its emphasis on community and organizational relations and on planning ways of applying laboratory experience in each person's back-home job. Tuesday, July 26, 1960 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Oldfather Snares Medal Play Award Charles Oldfather, law professor, won the medal play trophy in the recent School of Education golf tournament. Football Coach J ack Mitchell was low man in the handicap play and runner up in medal competition. Bill Heitholt, former KU basketball player, and Richard Schiefelbusch, professor of speech, tied for third in medal play. There was a three-way tie for second in handicap play: Oldfather; Merlin Gish, former KU football star, and Clyde Babb of University Extension. The Law Wives Bridge club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. Law Wives Meet Tonight Try the Kansan Want Ads KU Barber Shop 1 1/2 blocks down 14th Street Hill 411 $ \frac{1}{2} $ W. 14th They Lost Pounds But Gained Girl LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Frank Sherman and his wife Bernice lost 159 pounds to gain a daughter. The Shermans were told three months ago they must lose weight if they hoped to adopt a one-year-old girl whom they have raised from birth. At that time Sherman, 39, weighed 320 pounds and his 37-year-old wife weighed 250. They appeared in court recently scaled down to 277 and 214 respectively. Eighty out of every 100 families in the United States carry life insurance. The average amount for each family is $11,500. Superior Judge Ben Koening ruled at the closed hearing that the couple could keep Janet, who celebrated her first birthday last week. at HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd Fried Chicken You Spend LAWRENCE LAUNDRY will return them so clean and crisp they'll be almost like new each time! a lot of time in sportsclothes these days . . . so be sure they look their sportiest. A LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners VI 3-3711 10th & New Hampshire Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 26, 1960 KU Display Shows Problems Faced by Snakes of Kansas Snakes have problems, indicates a 40-foot-long display opened this week on the second floor of the Museum of Natural History. The problems stem from fact and fiction. Fact, in that snakes have been forced to evolve specialized methods of getting food because—as every one knows—snakes have no leg with which to pursue prey, and— as few people realize—snakes lack teeth adapted to tearing or chewing. Fiction, in that most snakes suffer bad reputations. The dictionary offers one definition of the snake as "a worthless or treacherous fellow," referring to his human counterpart. But in graphically presenting the three main methods by which snakes get food, the KU display notes that many snakes are valuable friends of the farmer. The display also warns about poisonous snakes found in Kansas. Six months in preparation, the display includes 31 life-like casts of common snakes in Kansas that were among the casts bequeathed to KU by the late Dr. Glenn C. Rinker, a dentist and competent naturalist of Hamilton. The display states that "Dr. Rinker, a dentist by profession, made scientific collections, studied animal life, and interested others in natural history." He also gave about 5,000 specimens of mammals to the KU museum. The snake models are made by pouring latex rubber over recently Kansan Tastes Political Whirl EDITORS' NOTE: Lanny D. Unruh, 17, Newton, won the American Legion high school oratorial contest and addressed the publican National Convention yesterday. By Lanny D. Unruh Written for United Press International CHICAGO—I can truly say that I have had a taste of politics — in fact, quite a mouthful. I am most proud to be even a small part of government in the making. Although this is a Republican convention, I do not claim to be a Republican—nor do I label myself a Democrat. Actually, at the moment I am quite earnestly trying to analyze the high points of both parties. Rather than analyzing, however, I find myself looking and listening and admiring. Everywhere I turn there is excitement. Everyone is hurrying in opposite directions at the same time. There are big people, little people, important people and seemingly-important people. I was privileged to sit in on a press conference of Nelson Rockefeller's. It is certainly a strange feeling to see and hear a national celebrity in person. Mr. Rockefeller answered questions that he had answered perhaps a dozen times in the past. He also burned his finger on a hot moke. The activity of the politicians and delegates is extremely interesting, but behind the scenes it is even more fascinating. In the huge basement of the hotel headquarters alone, hundreds of typewriters pound out the news. In the press rooms and in the giant amphitheatre a multitude of television and movie cameras bring every detail to every part of the country. The convention as a whole is tremendous, but of course the highlight of my entire visit was my opportunity to address the convention itself. I realize that I was speaking for every high school student in the nation. live snakes, producing molds from which casts are made. The body markings are clearly indicated, and these are painted to reproduce the original coloration. Dr. Rinker's casts range in size from the tiny worm snake to the large bull snake. All of the snakes represented have eating problems. The most primitive method of obtaining food is illustrated by a representation of a coachwhip snake swallowing a gopher. The coachwhip snake is able to swallow creatures up to twice as big around as the normal circumference of its own body. In Kansas such snakes help farmers rid fields of troublesome gophers. Snakes like the coachwhip have loosely-hinged jaws which enable them to grasp their prey and swallow victims alive, "Powerful digestive juices complete the killing process," the display explains. Other snakes helpful in controlling rodents are more advanced—they crush victims before swallowing, perhaps avoiding indigestion. Best known of these constrictor snakes in Kansas is the bull snake, which the display states "will rid a barn of rats and mice much more effectively than will cats." Finally, the most specialized method of obtaining food is represented by poisonous snakes. Only six poisonous species are native to Kansas, and four of these are rattlesnakes—the timber rattler, prairie rattler, diamond-back and Massasauga. The other two kinds are the copperhead, easily recognized by its "hourglass" markings and locally abundant in the eastern one-third of Kansas, and the cottonmouth, found only in extreme southeastern Kansas. All poisonous snakes native to Kansas are called pit-vipers. They have small heat-detecting pits one on each side of the head—used to locate warm-blooded animals at night. An animated model made by George P. Young, KU taxidermist, shows a close-up profile of a poisonous snake's head in the act of striking. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals "The mouth is opened, the fangs are erected, the snake strikes and venom is forced from the glands through the ducts into punctures made by the fangs," the explanation reads. Visiting scientists who attended a national meeting of directors of natural history held at KU in late May praised the display. Balfour 411 W.14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER But J. Knox Jones Jr., assistant curator of herpetology, says the museum staff realized the display was successful when it passed the "smudge-test" soon after the permanent display was opened to the public. "Our janitors found that the glass in front of the snake display is well-smudged at the end of each day," Jones said. He was happy that most smudges are found at the level of children. Refreshing as a summer breeze . . . --- a new hair style from the Campus BEAUTY SHOPPE 12th & Ind. VI 3-3034 SUNBATH $1.00 per $100 at our bank USE TRAVELERS CHECKS Leave All Of Your Cares At Home! [MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION] J S1 FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 8th and Mass. Airman's Body Starts Trip Home MOSCOW — (UPI) — The body of Capt. Willard A. Palm, of Oak Ridge, Tenn., pilot of the American RB-47 shot down by the Soviet Union over the Barents Sea July 1, began its homeward trip by air to the United States yesterday. Soviet officials formally turned the body over to U. S. officials and it was placed aboard a Dutch KLM airliner which took off for Amsterdam on the first leg of the journey. Mass of Boy Scouts See Wild West Rodeo COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. — (UPI) — Fifty-five thousand Boy Scouts streamed into a giant arena for Rodeo Day at the National Boy Scout Jamboree yesterday. The Rodeo Cowboys Association provided its best performers. And the weather was at its hottest, dustiest, wild westiest best for a rodeo on the 2,000 acres of the Reverse J. Diamond Ranch covered with the tents of the jamboree encampment. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! Audrey Hepburn in "The Nun's Story" and Walt Disney's "Sleeping Beauty" LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING! "Wild River" and "13 Fighting Men" STARTS WEDNESDAY! Richard Burton in "Bramble Bush" GRANADA NOW.SHOWING! NOW SHOWING "The Wind Cannot Read" STARTS WEDNESDAY! "The Story of Ruth" Tuesday, July 26.1960 Summer Session Kansari Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Experienced Typists will do accurate typing on theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Roberts, 2000 Rhode Island, Plane 3-7485. 8-2 TYPIST: Will do theses, reports, term papers, etc. Phone VI 3-2955 between 4 and 6 p.m. tt Neat Accurate Prompt Typing. By ex- cellent standard rates. Phone us at $25.00 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do these, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8379. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will do theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. Phone VI 3-8650. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Six years experience term papers, theses, etc.. Electric typewriter. Fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. VI First floor furnished apartment. $60 2-1648 - 408 W. 13th St. tf ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes papers paper paintings etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone 3-6791 TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 biks) East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf Theses, Term Papers and reports. Typed fast, accurately. Call VI 3-0504. 7-29 TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf TYPIST-General typing, term papers. TYPIST-Engel Lindell, VI S-5127. cf. Mrs Elmer Lindell, VI S-5127. FOR SALE FOR SALE Pressure cooker -- fans lawn mower antique dishes planters VI Pressure 1-29 HOME for sale by owner. Save real estate tax by买下 three bedroom ranch house on 24th Street corner lot. Low down payment Assume low interest loan. Call after 6. VI - 2-1633. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742. FOR SALE: 1955 Pontiac 2 door sedan. Top shape, new W.W. tires. Must sell. Special low price. See F. Ostovar at 1637 N. H. St. or call VI 3-6930. 8-2 MOBILE HOME — 1956 Anglus I possession Phonie VI — 2-0924 or VI — 3-6022 8-2 8-1 HOUSE FOR SALE or lease with option to buy. Small down payment or trade in, or car. Suitable for two families. Moves to Calif. Aug. 20. Phone VI-2-1100 FOR RENT FOR RENT: Extra nice apartment for one or two graduate or senior men, furnished. Ideal for conditions. Utilities paid. Private parking. Phone VI 3-8534. 8-2 Spacious Three Room Apt. in residential neighborhood. Completely furnished for 3 students. All electric kitchen. Freezer. Dining amenities. Phone VI 3-6480 or VI 3-3536. 8-2 FOR RENT: Well furnished apartment suitable for 2,3 or 4 students. 2½ blocks from Union. Reasonable rent. Please call VI 3-6696. 8-2 Rooms for fall semester '5' block from Union. Large singles and doubles in nice quiet room. Upper classmen or graduate students only. Reasonable rates. Cases 3-6966 3 ROOM APARTMENT well furnished. 2 room house furnished, shower, 2 blocks from Union. Phone VI 3-1909 — 1113 Ohio. 7-29 2 Bedroom Modern Trailers on private ground. Air conditioned. $60 per month. water paid. Couple only. Phone VI 3-8727. 7-26 Clean two room fire apartment. Also sleeping rooms. See Mrs. Maxwell. Hawk's Nest days or evenings call VII 3-4168, 821 Indiana after 3 p.m. 7-26 CLEAN—2 furnished apartments. Good stoves and refrigerators. Private entrances and bath rooms, large closets. 6 windows in basement apartment. Utilities paid. Man and wife only. No drinking. 520 Ohio. 7-29 Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Two Room Modern Furnished Basement Apartment for young men. Outside entrance. Bills paid. Also two large single rooms. Inns room. All students graduate. Students welcome. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 7-26 Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. 6th & Vt. Three Bedroom House, nicely furnished. Strictly modern, 2 car attached garage. Newly decorated, extra clean. $65 per month. Call VI 3-7830. 7-26 FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping porches on second. Summer skirts. Seats at two renting for Tennessee or call VI 3-9340 after 4 p.m. tff First floor furnished apartment. $60 month, utilities paid. Ideal for 3 students. 3 blocks from Union. VI 3-6294. tf TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available for either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-3438 after 3:30 p.m. tf Large single room. Close to Campus. Summer rates $17. Would consider exchanging for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. BUSINESS SERVICES SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes $10 Woolen diapers 65c, 9c. lined Wound, dried Pickup — delivery. Rue cleaned; VI 3-8077. **tf** GOLF CLINIC 5 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Roy Eaton,ructor. Jayhawk Driving Range, Mike last on 23rd Street. Phone VI:m-3725 RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience. 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tf DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. t Rent A TRAILER! NOTICE SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special benefits. Both new and new students illustrated. Both new and new sports Processed promptly. Call VI 3-09423. tf Local or One-Way TRANSPORTATION U.S. Highway 40 & 59 735 N. 2nd, N. Lawrence VI 3-1175 Hatchell Trailers Want Riders to N. Y. C. Prefer drivers. Will leave to suitriders, but can go anytime after Aug. 3. Total expenses 85-10 Contact Don Kisslin — 1601 Tenn. VI 3-8579 or Milt Diamond — 1229 Ohio St. 3-0915. 8-2 WANT RIDE: From Highland Park, Topeka to Lindley Hall. Call VI 3-9493 after 2:30 p.m. or Friday and Saturday. 8-2 Ride Wanted to Los Angeles after Aug. expenses. Can drive. Phone 3-90468 Want Ride: To or in vicinity of Los Angeles, California after August 6. Share expenses. See or write H. L. Oel between 8-12 am.; 1338 Ohio. 8-2 Would like ride or, to join car pool from K. C. Morning class. Call WE 1-8351 7-24 Found: Small coin purse between Campus and Templin. Owner obtain by identifying purse and contents. Sarah Avres, Templin Hall. 7-26 FOUND MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Plain, party supplies. Ice Plant. 6th and Vermont. VI 3-0350. tf LOST RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf LOST: Reward, Slide Rule. Name of owner on case and slide number 838896. Call All Mouhsing, VI 3-0681 — 1420 Ohio. 7-29 Phone for Clydene or Betty for Summer Classifieds Extension 376 Fashions & Accessories For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 J As Much Fun As A Circus! Come on over to the BOOK STORE and pick out a stuffed animal to take home with you. They're wonderful gifts, and we've got a lot for you to choose from...including that old favorite,the KU Jayhawk! Kansas Union Book Store Temple of the Elephant and Cow (Lahore) Tuesday, July 26, 1960 Summer Session Kansan BATTLEH Cadet Marvin D. Nestler, Atchison senior, during last week's Educators' Day at the Army ROTC Summer Camp at Fort Riley. VISIT ROTC CAMP-Dean of Men Donald Alderson (left) and Donald Metzler, Associate Dean of the School of Engineering, talk with Alderson, Metzler Represent KU at ROTC Summer Camp Donald K. Anderson, Dean of Men, and Donald E. Metzler, Associate Dean of the School of Engineering, were among the 49 representatives from 32 colleges and universities throughout the middlewest who gathered at Fort Riley last week for a comprehensive tour of the ROTC camp where cadets from each of their schools are among the 1277 students participating in this 6-week camp. This was the annual "Educators Day" which is held during each summer camp to enable institutional representatives to watch the cadets go through a normal training day and to become acquainted with the facilities utilized in the production of future Reserve Officers. Successful completion of a Summer Camp is one of the requirements leading to a commission as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Army Reserve. The first stop on a tour of the camp was at the 3.5 inch Rocket Launcher and 196 mm Recoilless Rifle combined range where many of the visitors took advantage of the invitation to fire the launcher and the spotting rifle on the 106 mm. The latter is a special .50 caliber weapon mounted on top of the rifle and used for zeroing in on the target. After a visit to the 81 mm Mortar area, the group "jeeped" to one of the many demonstrations presented. This was a realistic showing conducted by the 1st Engineer Battalion of the 1st Division on the banks of the Kansas River which passes through the army post near the ROTC area. Here Combat Engineers from the division made a successful river crossing under heavy fire from Aggressor Forces. As soon as a pontoon bridge was floated across the river, infantrymen and Cadets proved its capabilities by immediately double timing to the far bank and dispersing; two M-59 Armored Personnel Carriers, amphibious track carrying vehicles weighing 15 tons, amazed the educators by swimming the river, lumbering up onto the extreme bank and carrying on 1st Lt. Dennis A. Rupprecht, 1st Engineer Battalion, gave a continuous explanatory narration as exploding mines, underwater charges, simulated artillery fire, tanks, machine guns, rifles firing blanks, all under cover of smoke, gave realism to this combat conditioned exercise. Following the field mess, the group moved to the Artillery Range. A 1960 ROTC graduate, 2nd Lt. Anthony C. Germann of the State University of Iowa, acted as a forward observer and demonstrated the simplicity of an indirect fire command and mission. The 7.62 mm Rocket, more commonly called the Honest John, was brought before the stands on its launching platform, a five-ton truck. A counter mortar radar set was exhibited and its detecting abilities were explained. The educators next moved to a shady mess area where a typical field lunch was served. Many of the visitors took advantage of the chance to be transported to the lunch area in H-21 Helicopters. with through the attack; a 106 mm Recoilless Rifle, mounted on a jeep, was backed onto a raft supported by three pontons powered by two outboard motors and ferried 200 feet to the west side of the river. A final stop was made in the field at the Armor demonstration. The armor had no trouble selling itself with its mobility, protection, shock action and fire-power. Following the demonstration, many of the educators climbed over and into the tanks to get a first-hand view of their operation. Upon returning to the cantonment area, the group visited Company "C" of the ROTC unit, commanded by Major Hugh R. Primm, Michigan State University, where they saw the kitchen and oarracks and witnessed the arrival of the Cadets from their various field areas. Following a brief rest and refreshment period at the Cadet Chapel Center where they met Chaplain (Capt) Vaugn F. Leeming, 1st Division Chaplain who devotes his full time to the Cadets during the Summer Camp period, the educators moved to the parade field to witness a review by the entire Cadet Regiment under its Cadet Commander. At the conclusion of the parade the Cadets formed by schools in pre-designated areas and met with Deans Alderson and Metzler to discuss pertinent problems and to receive news from their college campus. The concluding event of the day was a reception and dinner at the Fort Riley Officer's Open Mess with General Parker as host. Campus BARBER SHOP Painless Summer in the air-conditioned Spend a OPEN ALL SUMMER Just North of Student Union OLD MISSION INN 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Serving Meals, Snacks and Beverages Page 8 Such a development is still some time ahead and any changes now in NATO strategy on European and other overseas bases is considered remote. Launchable from a submerged submarine and operating over range from 1,100 to 1,500 miles, the Polaris missile could replace American land bases, at least in some parts of Europe. Moreover, it would deprive the Soviet of a heavily used propaganda element against the smaller nations of NATO. The new result of such development, the sources argued, would be a lessening of friction within the Western defense alliance. Polaris Could Change Policies The new missile, it was argued, might make it possible for the United States gradually to reduce its foreign bases. Some defense experts, maintain it will be difficult for the Russians, if not impossible for a long time to come, to neutralize this latest weapon. LONDON—(UPI)—The success o, the Polaris missile has set off diplomatic speculation that this medium range ballistic rocket could lead to a drastic change in the concept of American and NATO bases abroad. SPEEDY QUICK FAST That's the kind of service you get at 9th & Indiana LEONARD'S Standard Service He replaces William Chestnut, housing manager since 1951, who will resign Aug. 13 to take employment with the Allen Press, a Lawrence printing firm. Pulliam Joins Housing Staff As housing manager, he will supervise maid, janitor and laundry service, hall sanitation and conference work in all Universiy dormitories and will work with proctors and housemothers in KU's nine scholarship halls. Ernest Pulliam, a longtime resident of Lawrence, has joined the University of Kansas staff this month as housing manager. Mr. Pulliam has owned and operated the Blue Mill Cafe in Lawrence for the past 15 years and has lived in Lawrence since February, 1944. MY DADDY SAYS AN ELECTRIC YARDLIGHT OPERATES FOR LESS Compare and you'll see. A photocell controlled electric yardlight gives any degree of illumination —from soft to very bright—for just pennies a month. Other yardlights only glow, and cost a dollar a month to operate. So choose electric DO YOU $3250 complete with post, bulbs, convenience outlet plug (plus installation) See THE KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY DO YOU HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? 1 Time 50c If you have a car and want riders, or if you're looking for a ride, put an ad in the Kansan classifieds, and get fast results! 2 Times 75c 4 Times $1 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN VI 3-2700—Ext. 376 KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 48th Year, No. 13 KU Friday, July 29, 1960 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Music, Art Camp To Finish Sunday The 23rd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp will close out with a 'bang' Sunday with the final round of concerts by the camp orchestra, chorus and band. The orchestra and chorus will present the final afternoon concert at 3:30 in Murphy Hall. The band and chorus will close out the camp at 8 Sunday night at the Outdoor Theatre east of Hoch Auditorium PROF. RUSSELL L. Wiley, director of the camp, will conduct the band in the playing of the "1812 Overture," with the crashing finale. THE SUNDAY CONCERTS will feature appearances by guest artists on campus this week for the music clinic conducted jointly with the camp. The final programs: AFTERNOON AFTERNOON 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Requiem ... Brahms Lord, Make Me to Know Here On Earth Have We No Continuing Place Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Opening Chorus of Peasants (Cavalleria Rusticana) ... Mascagni Varsity Choir Der Abend ... Brahms I Want to Be Ready ... Arr. Hutton Lloyd Pfautsch, Conducting Part II Orchestra Russlan and Ludmilla, overture ... Glinka Capriccio Espagnol ... Rimsky-Korsakov Alborado Variazioni Scena e canto gitano Fandango austriano Gerald M. Carney, Conducting Water Music ... Handel Allegro Air Andante Allegro deciso First Cello Concerto ... Saint-Saens Benar Heifetz, Cellist Carmen Suite, No. 1 ... Bizet Prelude and Argonaise Intermezzo Segnedilla Les dragon d'Alcala Les Toreadors Henri Temianka, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Gerald M. Carney, Conducting EVENING 8 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Band Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Part I Fugue in G minor ... J. S. Bach* Nabucco Overture ... Giuseppe Verdi* Waltzes from Rosenkavalier ... Richard Strauss* The Veterans' March ... Gabriel Pares* * arr. by Lucien Cailliet Lucien Calliet, Conducting Part II Chorus All the Earth Doth Worship Thee ... Hande Wondrous Cool Thou Woodland Quiet ... Brahm Ground Hog ... arr. Hart I'll Praise My Maker ... arr. Pfautsch Johnny Comes Marching Home ... arr. Fissinger Lloyd Pfautsch, Conducting Part III Toccata ... Girolamo Frescobald Carnival of Venice ... Del Stagirn The Magic Trumpet ... James F. Burko Byron Autrey, Trumpet Soloist Inglesina, Symphonic March ... D. Delle Cesco O Isis and Osiris ... W. A. Mozart William J. Bell, Tuba Soloist 1812 Overture ... Peter Tschaikovsky Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Enrollment Sets New KU Record Attendance at the University reached an all-time high of 11,783 during the fiscal year 1959-60. James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, reported today. The figure which is 328 or 3 percent more than 1958-59 record represents the number of individuals who attended KU at some time during the year. The most enrolled at one time was 9,435 in the fall semester. Although the University's single semester high of 9,751, produced by a large WW II veterans attendance, came in 1948, that year KU served 11,199 individuals, 584 fewer than in the year just ended. Women more than accounted for the entire increase. Their registration was up 636 to an all-time high of 4.427. This more than countered a decline of 308 men. The latter decline stemmed directly from a combination of stricter probationary requirements, higher entrance standards and a national trend away from engineering studies. These caused the number of individuals in the School of Engineering and Architecture to drop 312 to 1,862. Hitt noted that Graduate School enrollment had continued its remarkable climb to 1,802. up 168 Registration in the other schools was: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 3,660, up 213; School of Education, 1,020, up 71; School of Medicine, 928, up 62; School of Fine Arts, 596, down 8; School of Business, 512, down 5; School of Law, 141, down 8; School of Journalism, 87, down 11; School of Pharmacy, down 34, in a shift from a 4-year to a 2 and 3-year program. KANU to Suspend Broadcasting Sunday Radio station KANU-FM will be off the air for an indefinite period starting Sunday. R. Edwin Browne, station director, said repairs would be made at the transmitter in preparation for an increase in power this fall. He hoped the shutdown would be no longer than a week to 10 days. Camp Students Receive Honors Twenty one outstanding students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp nearing a close here have been selected for special honors. Anne Kepler, Tulsa, Okla., was named the outstanding girl in the music division of the camp and is the recipient of the $50 Chancellor's Award. She plays flute in the band and orchestra and was also selected queen of the camp at its formal dance last weekend. Ben Clinesmith, Ft. Scott, was chosen the outstanding boy musician and is the winner of the Phi Mu Alpha national music fraternity medal and $50 scholarship to the school of his choice. Runners-up in the music division are Shirley Braming, Oak Park, Ill., violinist in the orchestra, and Alvin Lowrey of Winfield, who plays trumpet in the band and orchestra and is a bass in the chorus. Lowrey was also presented a $50 scholarship to attend the 1961 session of the camp, provided by Edward Down of the Audio House in Lawrence. In the theater division, John Nance of Wichita was named the outstanding boy and Lucinda Hauser of Marion, the outstanding girl. Nancy Schroeter of Kansas City, Kans., is the outstanding student in the speech and debate section. Outstanding girl and boy in the art camp are Cynthia Conner, Oelwein, Iowa, and William Friday, Roseburg, Ore. Ken Moffett of Pryor, Okla., was selected as the outstanding art camper enrolled in another division of the camp. Others named to the honor rol in the art division are Fred Bower, North Olmsted, Ohio; Sandra Caswell, Oakley; Gordon Cathey, Fort Worth, Tex.; Jane Dvornik, Lafayette, Ind.; Roger Gilkeson, Great Falls, Va.; Patricia Anne Kirtley Oklahoma City, Okla. Berry Klingman, Galesburg, Ill.; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla.; John Luton, Alexandria, Va.; Judy McDanel, Alton, Ill., and Debra Morast. Kansas City, Kans. The six-week camp ends Sunday. The campers will present their final orchestra and band concerts Sunday afternoon and evening. Two Seniors Get Marcy Awards Two engineering seniors have been awarded Frank E. Marcy Scholarships in Chemical Engineering for the 1960-61 academic year. Daniel Gilbert DiCanio, Long Island City, Queens, N.Y., is a recipient of a $500 award and Larry Eugene Wood of Wymore, Nebr., of a $475 scholarship. The awardee are made possible through contributions of Mr. Marey, a disintinguished graduate of the University of Kansas, to the KU Endowment Association. DiCanlo is a 1956 graduate of Brooklyn Technical High School. He is author and associate editor of the Kansas Engineer, a publication of the University of Kansas School of Engineering and Architecture, and is employed during the school year at the Varsity Theater in Lawrence. Wood is a 1957 graduate of Wymore.Public High School. He has been named to the dean's honor roll in the School of Architecture and Engineering three of the four semesters he has attended KU. He was the recipient of a Stansbury Scholarship during the 1957-58 school year and of a General Scholarship from the University in 1959. He is a member of Sigma Chi social fraternity. Weather Today through Monday temperatures will average above normal especially in the west. Precipitation will be spotty with scattered showers averaging .25 or less west and .25 to .50 east. Normal high temperatures are in the lower 90s THE MIDDLE SCHOOL BASEMENTS CENTER FOR STUDIO ARTS & CULTURE THAT LUCKY OLD SUN-While students and faculty search out the cooler climes of the University this month, the work of KU's department of buildings and grounds goes right on. Here Mike McCaffrey and Gene Dunigan keep up the gardening work despite the rays of the sun. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 29, 1960 Time to Vote Is Here The Summer Session Kansan below presents brief sketches on the men running for governor of the state and the U.S. Senate seat at stake in Kansas. It is the hope that as many as possible will vote not only in November but in next Tuesday's primaries. For Governor TOPEKA—(UPI)—The Kansas governor's race features a Democratic governor seeking an unprecedented third term and three prominent Republicans looking for a chance to unseat him. Here are the candidates. DEMOCRAT GOV. GEORGE DOCKING, the sixth Democratic governor in Kansas history, hung up a record in 1958 when he became the first of his party to win a second term. He announced on his 56th birthday last Feb. 23 he would seek a third. The Lawrence banker made his first bid for elective office in 1954, winning the Democratic nomination for Governor. But he was defeated by Lt. Gov. Fred Hall in the general election. In 1956 he triumphed over Warren W. Shaw in the general, after turning back former Gov. and Secretary of War Harry W. Woodring in the primary. He was unopposed in the 1958 primary and defeated Clyde M. Reed Jr. that November. Docking, born in Clay Center, received an A.B. in economics from the University of Kansas in 1925. He worked as a bond salesman before going into banking in Topeka. He soon joined his father in the First National Bank at Lawrence and became its president in 1942. He now is chairman of the board of the Union State Bank of Arkansas City. Docking and his wife, Virginia, have two sons, Robert, president of the Union State Bank in Arkansas City, and George, a Kansas City, Kan., lawyer. REPUBLICAN WILLIAM H. BILL ADDINGTON of Wichita, the first to announce for the governorship, is a former paratrooper who has been trooping the state in pledge to hand out 250,000 campaign cards. Addington, 36. was elected state representative from Morton County in 1958 after serving as Highway Commissioner from 1955 to 1957. A 1948 political science graduate of the University of Kansas after attending Wentworth Military Academy, he owns a four-million bushel grain elevator in Elkhart and a 100,000-acre ranch in Wyoming. His wife, Donna, is a former National Committeewoman of the Kansas Young Republican Federation and now is co-director of region 7 of the Young Republican National Federation. The Addingtons have one son, Mark, 19. JOHN ANDERSON JR., currently state Attorney General, has 14 years of public service under his belt at the age of 43. A native of Olathe, he was graduated from the University of Kansas Law School in 1944. Anderson was a law clerk for two years for Walter A. Huxman, U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, before being elected county attorney of Johnson County in 1946. He was re-elected in 1948 and 1950, and became state senator from Johnson County in 1952. He served in the Senate until appointed Attorney General in March, 1956. Anderson subsequently was elected to the office in 1956 and re-elected in 1958. He married Arlene Auchard of Lawrence in 1943 and they now have three children. McDILL HUCK BOYD, whose name is mentioned here last only because it oddly comes last in the alphabet, is a newspaperman making his first bid for elective office. Boyd, 53, is publisher of the Phillips County Review at Phillipsburg. He is former president of the Kanssds Press Association, the State Highway Association, and former chairman of the State Board of Regents. Boyd has long been active in community and party affairs. He served in national GOP headquarters in 1936 and in state headquarters in 1938, 1940, 1946, 1948 and 1952. The current campaign, however, marks his first venture as a candidate. His wife also has been active as a community and party worker and currently is treasurer of the sixth district Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs. For Senator TOPEKA—(UPI)—Primary battles face both parties in the race for U.S. Senator from Kansas. But a spirited campaign by two well-known Democrats overshadows for interest the Republican race between the incumbent and a newcomer. Here are the candidates. —REPUBLICAN— ANDREW F. SCHOEPPEL, the incumbent, is a two-time governor of Kansas seeking a third term in the Senate. Schoeppel, 66, was born on a Barton County farm and graduated from Ransom High School. He attended the University of Kansas for two years before enlisting in the Naval air service in World War I. Following the armistice, he entered the University of Nebraska, receiving a law degree in 1922. Schoeppel's political career began in Ness County, where he served as county attorney mayor, councilman, city attorney and member of the school board. He was chairman of the Kansas Corporation Commission from 1939 to 1942, when he won the governorship. He was returned to the office in 1944 by a record majority, carrying all 105 counties. Schoeppel was first elected to the Senate in 1948 and re-elected six years later. He was named to the interstate and foreign commerce committee and the select committee on small business. HENRY P. CLEAVER of Lawrence, is making his initial campaign for public office. A farmer and landowner, he has been active in the affairs of the Quaker church and the state Republican party. Cleaver is a graduate of Baker University, Baldwin, with a major in history. He attended Washburn Law School in Topeka for one year and has one year of radio and television training at the University of Kansas. He served in the army during World War II and in the occupation of Germany. Cleaver lists his qualifications as experience in finance, farm problems, industrial problems, labor and management problems and international affairs. —DEMOCRAT— JOSEPH W. HENKLE SR., currently is serving his second term as lieutenant governor, the only elective office he has held. He is the first Democrat to win two terms in the office. Henkle, who will be 56 Aug. 26, is a native of Ponca City, Okla. He came to Kansas in 1915, working for a meat packing firm in McPherson before going into the lumber business at Dodge City in 1929. Two years later he joined Natural Gas Pipe Co. of America and remained 14 years with the company, becoming main operations engineer. In 1944, Henkle joined the Navy but was discharged a year later with a service-connected disability. Returning to Kansas, he started the Henkle Lumber & Hardware Co. at Great Bend. FRANK THEIS, current Democratic National Committeeman for Kansas, takes a long record of party service into the senatorial campaign. Theis now is chairman of the 14 state Democratic midwest conference and has been chairman of the state party committee, a member of the national advisory committee on political organization, president of the state Democratic clubs and president of the Young Democratic Clubs of Kansas. He resigned as state democratic chairman this year to run for the senate. The 49-year-old Democrat has held offices as city attorney in his hometown of Arkansas City, chief council for the office of Price Stabilization in Kansas and as attorney for the State Tax Commission. Theis was born in Yale, Kan., and graduated with honors from the University of Kansas in 1933. He received his law degree from the University of Michigan in 1936. Theis and his wife, Marjorie, have two children, Franklin, 18, and Roger, 11. Happy musician playing a saxophone. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism MARTIN EDEN, by Jack London. Dell Laurel Books, 50 cents. It is likely that one can learn more about the complex Jack London from this novel than from any other. It is generally considered to be autobiographical, and it is one of American literature's more telling descriptions of the pangs of a writer. In this fascinating story appear the many threads that constitute the philosophy — if that is the word — of Jack London. In his time he was considered one of the important names in literary naturalism. Time has marred his reputation somewhat, but he is a vigorous and vibrant figure. "MARTIN EDEN," like London himself, was an adventurer gold-seeker, cowboy, common sailor, hoodlum, oyster pirate, South Seas adventurer, Barbary Coast tough. Like London he came to know the great world of literature and ideas, and to revel in it. And in that world he learned especially from Herbert Spencer, who was riding high in the early 20th century as the darling of the Social Darwinians; from Nietzsche; from the idealists, though he could not accept their philosophy. Eden — and London — was Darwinian, materialist, socialist and a bit of a Fascist. He believed firmly and absolutely that the fittest survive, but to him the fittest was not a money-lender. London put Spencer and Nietzsche together and got this: "The world belongs to the strong — to the strong who are noble as well and who do not wallow in the swine-trough of trade and exchange. The world belongs to the true nobleman, to the great blond beasts, to the non-compromisers, to the 'yes-sayers.'" Shades of Hitler. Or there is this description: "THE SPEAKER, A clever Jew, won Martin's admiration at the same time that he aroused his antagonism. The man's stooped and narrow shoulders and weazened chest proclaimed him the true child of the crowded ghetto, and strong on Martin was the age-long struggle of the feeble, wretched slaves against the lordly handful of men who had ruled over them and would rule over them to the end of time. To Martin this withered wisp of a creature was a symbol. He was the figure that stood forth representative of the whole miserable mass of weaklings and inefficients who perished according to biological law on the ragged confines of law. They were the unfit." Martin Eden is like the dog Buck, of "The Call of the Wild" — the brute; the superman like Wolf Larsen of "The Sea Wolf." Yet he also is the tender, compassionate socialist, the lover of mankind, a figure as paradoxical as Jack London himself. THE MAN WHO WAS THURSDAY, by G. K. Chesterton, Capricorn books, $1.15. By M. K. McKinney Asst. Instructor of English The subtitle of this book is "A Nightmare." The author doesn't tell us whether the adventures herein related were a nightmare that happened to Gabriel Syme, a poet, but he does hint at it strongly in the last two paragraphs. The story tells of his adventures with a group of anarchists named after the days of the week. After insinuating himself into one of their meetings, he is elected Thursday. The rest of the story tells of his finding out who the others are. I WOULD RECOMMEND this book to anyone who likes language and to anyone who likes a good mystery. This isn't just another detective story (and I don't mean this perjoratively); it has a good deal more in it than what one usually finds in the ordinary whodunit. When we find out just who the president of the anarchists is, we aren't sure about what he represents. But it is fun speculating. I don't want to give any more hints about the plot. I found it interesting all the way through. I found myself being drawn to the very end — irresistibly and rapidly — then I reread the story more leisurely to see how Chesterton put together his plot and to examine his paradoxes and other manifestations of a brilliant style. At times I found myself paying more attention to his words than to what was going on. For example, we are told, "An artist is identical with an anarchist . . . You might transpose the words anywhere." By Jon Muller THE DECIPHERMENT OF LINEAR B, by John Chadwick, Modern Library Paperback, $0.95. The decipherment of an unknown or unidentified written language can be an achievement of the utmost importance in the study of ancient peoples. Linear B is the name given to one of the scripts used by the ancient inhabitants of Crete, and the decipherment of this script gives us a key to discover the manner of living of the people of this early Western European civilization. Many attempts had been made to discover the language used in Linear B and to decipher the writing, but all of these attempts proved fruitless prior to the decipherment by Michael Ventris in 1952. CERTAIN OBVIOUS ideographic signs gave clues to the meanings of some words but the occurrence of these signs was not large enough to supply more than a hint. One of the first steps in the rigorous analysis was the identification of the script as syllabic. This rather elementary deduction was drawn from the number of signs (87); too few for ideograms and too many for an alphabet. Eventually, values were assigned to several signs. That the language was Greek was a shock to almost everybody, including Ventris, the decipherer. Latin Revolt Foils Zoologist Revolution can pose more dangers to scientists than the perils of the jungle. William E. Duellman, assistant professor of zoology, and John Wellman, Detroit, Mich., graduate student, are in Guatemala where a small revolution has produced a nationwide state of siege. Writing to E. Raymond Hall, director of the KU Museum of Natural History, Prof. Duellman reported. "We bought some stamps at the Guatemala City post office, walked one-half block to a barbership. No sooner had we sat down than "Boom!" A bomb had wrecked the post office." Page 3 Prof. Duellman, who has a National Science Foundation grant for investigating the biological relationships of frogs, reached an impasse in his collecting when the government imposed a nationwide 9 p.m. curfew. No use trying to collect tree frogs in daylight. The KU zoologists had to do a lot of talking to keep outpost guards from confiscating their small bore collecting guns and other scientific equipment while en route back to Guatemala City. Prof. Duellman and Wellman were glad they had been no closer than a block to a riot in which one person was killed. son was killed. Attempts will be made to get to two more field areas before the pair head northward into Mexico for additional field collecting. The National Science Foundation made a 3-year grant of $10,800 to Prof. Duellman for the research. Babies Favor Red According to Tests SAN ANTONIO, Tex.—(UPI)—If babies had their way they'd be wearing red instead of the traditional blue and pink, according to Lt. Col. Vincent I. Hack of Brooke Army Medical Center. Hack said he based his findings on recent tests with babies of up to six months that show the infants invariably prefer red. Last Robinson Films To Be Shown Tonight "Water Ways and Fly Ways of the North," and "Discovering Germany" will be the last films in the Robinson Film Series. The films will be shown at 7:30 tonight east of Robinson Gymnasium. Insurance Limits Lowered at Airport WASHINGTON — (UPI) The Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) has cut the flight insurance limit at Washington National Airport in a frank effort to reduce the temptation for potential airline saboteurs FAA chief Elwood R. Quesada said passengers henceforth will be able to buy only $165,000 instead of $425,000 in flight insurance at the government-operated airport. Other terminals are not affected. He said "the casual ease with which insurance of great magnitude can be acquired at airports can be associated either directly or indirectly with tragic aircraft incidents." Of the 12 known airliner sabotage cases since 1946, five involved an insurance motive. Six Games Set For U.S. Team A six game schedule for the U.S. Olympic basketball team before it defends its world title at Rome next month has been announced by Dutch Lonborg, athletic director at the University and manager of the team. Four games in this country will send the Olympic team against the Cleveland Pipers at Canton, Ohio. Aug. 5 and again at Morgantown, W. Va., Aug. 10; Denver Truckers at Cincinnati Aug. 13; and New York Tapers at New York Aug. 17. Money from those games will go into the U.S. Olympic fund. Two games were scheduled in Switzerland with tentative dates set as Aug. 20 in Lausanne and Aug. 22 at Lugano, both against Swiss competition. (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) NEWS DEPARTMENT SUMMER SESSION KANSAN News Room ... Phone 711 Editors ... Clarke Keys Clocke Keys BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Office... Phone 376 Business Manager... Clydeene Brown Fashions & Accessories Summer Session Kansan For Every Occasion Sizes 5 through 16 Elevator from Men's Store Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 Friday, July 29, 1960 String Concert Is Tonight The KU Concert Course will present Henri Terniama, violinist, and Benar Heifetz, cellist, in a program of sonatas by Beethoven and Brahms tonight at 8 in the University Theatre. The program will include the Brahms Sonata in A major, Op. 109 and the Beethoven "Kreutzer" Sonata, Op. 47, for violin and piano, and the Beethoven Sonata in A major, Op. 69, and the Brahms Sonata in E minor, Op. 38, for cello and piano. The assisting pianists will be Marian Jersild, assistant professor of piano at KU and Olga Heifetz. Mr. Temianka has appeared as violin soloist with many of the leading orchestras under such conductors as Mitropoulos, Steinberg, Reiner and Szell. He has appeared on numerous occasions in Lawrence as the first violinist of the famous Paganini Quartet. Mr. Heifetz, also a favorite with Lawrence audiences in his role as cellist of the Alberneri Trio, has had a distinguished professional career which has included many years solo cellist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and with the N.B.C. Symphony under Toscanini. West Berlin claims to have the brightest street lamp in the world. It is equipped with a 65,000 watt bulb. Willie's 10-40 CAFE Finest Mexican Foods Your Favorite Cold Drinks VI 3-9757 1310 W. 6th A New KINGSTON TRIO LP at BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest PORCELAIN You don't have to go far to get good food...just come over to your KANSAS UNION for tasty food, fast service,and budget-minded prices. Mojito COFFEE SHOP HALLOWEEN Hawk's KANSAS UNION COFFEE SUGAR Nest and Cafeteria Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 29, 1960 A Review Fry Able to Mix Anger With Humor By Jerry Knudson Christopher Fry returned to the University stage this week in the production of "The Lady's Not For Burning," and he will return again to lead off the 1960-61 University Theatre season Sept. 28 to Oct. 1. I personalize the gifted British dramatist's work because in any production of his plays, the evening is his. Those interested in the quality of this particular production, directed by Virgil Godfrey, may see it in the fall. In 1952 my Kansan review of "A Phoenix Too Frequent" referred to Fry as "a master of the English language." It is not difficult to stand by that impression, although there are those who would disagree with me now. The angry young playwrights of Britain today have stolen Fry's thunder, for the moment at least, and their predecessor has slipped into the background. In "The Lady's Not For Burning," Christopher Fry looked back in anger with a vengeance, but he had the saving grace of humor, what Walt Kelly has called "the cleansing lash of laughter." His successors are simply angry Hey Buddy Ike Sent Me CHICAGO —(UPI)—Jack Christensen, who bluffed his way into an Iowa barnyard alongside Nikita Khrushchev last year, crashed the Republican National Convention in the Chicago Stockyards this week. "I just told lots of fibs," the husky bluffer from Mason City, Iowa, said. But Christensen, who once saw action as a tackle on a football team at a school he never attended, roamed the convention hall as though he were Richard M. Nixon's running mate. He wore no badge, only a stern look of authority. Christensen, 30, his eyes darting about as though he were directing operations of the Secret Service, a one point joined a line of guards keeping crowds away from the convention podium. Christensen, who got a friendly pat on the stomach when Krushechev thought he was a well-fed farmer, said he got into the swing of the convention Tuesday night by crashing a party thrown in a swank ballroom by New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. When challenged, he said, "Tm with the hotel." Why does he do it? "Some people drink, some people smoke—I do this," he said. Corbett First for Oxygen SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—James J. Corbett was the first boxer to use oxygen during a fight. He used it between rounds of his bout with Jim Jeffries at San Francisco in 1903. and the "protest" of their characters reminds me of the tantrums of children baffled by a world in which they cannot have their own way. In Fry's plays, however, there is the rich clash of ideas reminiscent of George Bernard Shaw. "The Lady's Not For Burning" is the best case in point, and its revival by the University Theatre deserves praise. In this play Fry looked back to the 15th century, "either more or less or exactly". The ambiguous time is necessary because Fry was compressing man's recent history into one evening of theater. The essential antagonists are man and God. One does not appear, but at the end of the play He is waiting Jennet Jourdemayne, the Lady, represents the rationalism of the 18th century—man's faith in himself and his own capabilities. At the opposite extreme is the medieval Church, ridiculed in the person of the chaplain, who still has his moments which invite understanding. In between stands Thomas Mendip, who finds himself "guilty of mankind." I believe he represents Fry's own disillusionment with the results of the Enlightenment, and his own groping efforts toward affirmation of something beyond men. As the play progresses, the lady discovers she has a heart as well as a mind, and Mendip is willing to avoid self-destruction (since he cannot accomplish it by any means). Humanism and mysticism join in the final line of affirmation: "May God have mercy on our souls." It is an ending which floods the stage with hope, a hope that the angry young men and the Beatniks of today avoid. I suspect, because they are incapable of facing the pain that is embedded in hope. It is easy to be indignant or resigned. It is difficult to affirm, and the western theater is indebted to Christopher Fry because in an age torn between indignation and resignation, in an age riddled with skepticism, he had the courage to seek salvation. 11 KU Engineers Get Scholarships Eleven engineering students from the Kansas City area who will attend the University this fall have been awarded scholarships by the Engineering Club of Kansas City. Those who received the awards for the first time are Jerry W. Havenhill, Lake Tapawing senior; Bruce L. Knight, Kansas City, Mo.; John E. Lastelic, Kansas City, Kas.; John W. Lord, Prairie Village; Richard E. Moore, Merriam, and Kenneth Seibel, all freshmen. Scholarships were renewed for Raymond Bossert and Ferdinand J. Fisher, both of Kansas City, Mo., and Roy F. Groves Jr., Kansas City, Kas, all Juniors; John Cessna, Independence, Mo., and Robert Johnson of Kansas City, Mo., both seniors. Wendell K. Castle, instructor of design, has a one-man show of sculpture in the Little Gallery and Frame Shop in Westwood. The gallery at 5002 State Line Road lies just outside Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas. Castle's show, which includes some sculptured furniture, opened Sunday and will continue through August. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays with Thursday evenings open. About 200 persons attended the opening. Formal Attire is NOT Required at DIXON'S Drive on out for a meal you'll enjoy DIXON'S THE DRIVE-IN AT 2500 W. 6TH Fast Food Service The artist earned the bachelor of fine arts degree with an industrial design major from KU in 1958. He worked in a laboratory at Orlando, Fla., on the design of the interiors of proposed space ships but returned to KU for graduate study. He has completed most of the work for a master of fine arts degree. Last March Castle received a purchase prize in sculpture in the biennial Mid-American show at the Joslyn Museum in Omaha, Neb. He received an honorable mention in the Wichita Art Association's 1960 National Decorative Arts Show. Castle's 27 sculptures in the Kansas City show are in wood and copper. One walnut stool is composed of 126 pieces of wood. Another piece was carved from 1,300 pounds of oak. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Design Instructor Shows Sculpture Delicious Bar-B-Que at Happy Hal's East 23rd Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER South Koreans Vote In Nationals Today SEOUL, Korea —(UPI)— More than 10 million South Korean voters go to the polls today in the most crucial elections since the Republic was founded 12 years ago. And for the first time the Democratic party is favored to win. The caretaker government of Premier Huh Chung has promised fair and free elections. Charges of irregularities in the March 15 elections triggered demonstrations that forced former President Syngman Rhee to resign. Rhee and his Liberal party had held power since the Republic was born. Luck Not Involved In Turkey Shoots TOPEKA —(UPI)— An Attorney General's opinion this week legally confirmed something marksmen have known for a long time—that chance is not involved in hitting the bullseye. This makes it legal for school organizations to conduct turkey shoots as a means of raising money, Atty, Gen. John Anderson ruled. But he also held that lotteries are out for school groups. delectably different NORDICA COTTAGE CHEESE NORDICA COTTAGE CHEESE NORDICA creamed pastry cheese COTTAGE CHEESE America's greatest danger is its prosperity.—James Wrightson Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIRY 202 West 6th Phone VI 3-5511 DO YOU HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? 1 Time 50c WILL TRAVEL? If you have a car and want riders, or if you're looking for a ride, put an ad in the Kansan classifieds,and get fast results! 2 Times 75c 4 Times $1 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN VI 3-2700—Ext. 376 SATUR DAT SEPT SEPT OCT. OCT. OCT. OCT. NOV. NOV. NOV. NOV. Al As SHOI Bill All sententiative States squad longest sights : mark. Alley 283 feet says he the Oly month. It has the 6-foe Short H the wor Alley arm siir wooden sight of that doc his care Alley, Universi collegiat inches. With a has a of delive "I sor throw," success "I hop it. I woj Olympic win." Raw-l sleeps 8 training javelin. In the C. D. E. A. B. C. D. E. Friday. July 29. 1960 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 1960 BIG EIGHT FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 1960 SATURDAY DATES IOWA STATE KANSAS STATE OKLAHOMA ST. COLORADO KANSAS MISSOURI Home NEBRASKA OKLAHOMA SEPT. 17 DRAKE Home SO. DAKOTA ST. ARKANSAS Little Rock T. C. U. Home S. M. U. Home TEXAS Away SEPT. 24 DETROIT Away Sept. 23(N) KANSAS Home MISSOURI Away BAYLOR Away KANSAS STATE Away OKLAHOMA St. Home MINNESOTA Home OCT. 1 NEBRASKA Away COLORADO Away KANSAS STATE Away SYRACUSE Away PENN. STATE Away IOWA STATE Home PITTSBURGH Home OCT. 8 KANSAS Home NEBRASKA Away TULSA Away ARIZONA Home IOWA STATE Away AIR FORCE ACADEMY Denver KANSAS STATE Home TEXAS Dallas OCT. 15 COLORADO Home MISSOURI HOME HOUSTON Away IOWA STATE Away OKLAHOMA Home KANSAS STATE Away ARMY Home KANSAS Away OCT. 22 MISSOURI Away OKLAHOMA Away KANSAS Home NEBRASKA Home OKLAHOMA St. Home IOWA STATE Away IOWA STATE Home COLORADO Away KANSAS STATE Away OKLAHOMA ST. Home KANSAS STATE Away NEBRASKA Away NEBRASKA Away MISSOURI Away COLORADO Away NOV. 5 OKLAHOMA Home OKLAHOMA ST. Home KANSAS STATE Away MISSOURI Away NEBRASKA Home COLORADO Home KANSAS Away IOWA STATE Away NOV. 12 KANSAS STATE Away IOWA STATE Away NEBRASKA Away KANSAS Away COLORADO Away OKLAHOMA Away OKLAHOMA St. Home MISSOURI Away MISSOURI Away OKLAHOMA Away NEBRASKA Away NOV. 19 Col. of Pacific Away—(N) ARIZONA Away COLORADO Away OKLAHOMA St. AIR FORCE ACADEMY Home KANSAS Away OKLAHOMA Away OKLAHOMA St. Away NOV. 26 OKLAHOMA Home Alley Sets Next Goal As 300-Foot Throw SHORT HILLS. N.J.—(UPI) Bill Alley, one of KU's five representatives on this year's United States Olympic track and field squad and holder of the world's longest javelin throw, has set his sights squarely on the 300-foot mark. Alley, who threw the javelin 283 feet, 8 inches two weeks ago, says he will try for the mark at the Olympic Games in Rome next month. It has been a lifelong ambition of the 6-foot, 3-inch, 227-pounder from Short Hills, N. J., to become one of the world's great athletes. Alley has been strengthening his arm since boyhood by throwing wooden spears. He has never lost sight of his goal despite bone chips that doctors once feared would end his career. Alley, 24, is a 1960 graduate of the University, where he set the U.S. collegiate record of 273 feet, 10 inches. With a ready smile, he admits he has a somewhat unorthodox style of delivering the javelin. "I sort of lope down the line and throw," he said. "I attribute my success mainly to strength." A persistent trainer, Alley said he was working on his speed. "If I get more speed I feel I can throw 300 feet." he said. "I hope to be the first man to do it. I wouldn't say I will do it in the Olympics, but I'll be throwing to win." Raw-boned, brown-haired Alley sleeps 8 or 9 hours when he is in training—rising at 6 a.m., to hurl the javelin. He doesn't smoke or drink In the off-season, he lifts weights and occasionally drives golf balls or plays tennis. He predicts his stiffest competition will come at Rome from Al Cantello of the United States, Juarz Sidlo of Poland, Carlo Levore of Italy and Michael Marquet of France. A student as well as a practitioner of the javelin throw, Alley says he has great admiration for his Swedish and Finnish counterpartie "You know," he said, "Finland has held the world's javelin throw record 15 times since 1912." He says he uses a variation of the traditional Finnish javelin style. "The difference is mainly in their run," he explained. "The Finns use three steps at the end of the run to get into a throwing position while I take five steps," he said. "They rely more on the run while I put more body weight into my throw." Alley has designed his own javelins of aluminum and wood, which conform to AAU but not Olympic specifications. He took courses in aeronautical engineering as background for perfecting his javelins. "To be the best in any sport you have to try many things that seem ridiculous," he said. Alley was undefeated in college competition the past two years. His only defeats came in the AAU trials at Bakersfield, Calif., and the Olympic trials in Palo Alto, Calif., earlier this month when he sniked himself. However, a week later at west Chester, Pa., in the AAU invitational, the soft-spoken athlete broke the world record. During the past two weeks he has made 10 throws over 260 feet in official meets. Never losing sight of his aim, Alley puts his philosophy thusly: "If what you did yesterday seems great, you haven't done much today." Ingo's Movie Life Could Fade Away Great Scot! Whatta Lot! BUTTERSCOTCH Yours for extr-ra enjoyment because DAIRY QUEEN is made with More LEAN of the MILK! You get more proteins and minerals in DAIRY QUEEN—less lat. HOLLYWOOD—(UPI)—Ingemar Johansson will be fighting more than the heavyweight championship in his next bout with titleholder Floyd Patterson. A movie career will also be on the line for the big Swede. Johansson is one of a growing number of athletes—such as boxers Rocky Marciano and Archie Moore and baseball stars Duke Snider and Don Drysdale who have been attracted by the financial lure of acting. we And insiders here feel that the handsome Scandinavian, who has already made one film and signed to do another, is major movie material—if he can beat Patterson. Otherwise, they feel, the public will regard him as just another has-been trying to cash in on his brief success. © 1957, DAIRY QUEEN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO HOMOGRANIZED AND PASTEURIZED DAIRY QUEEN BROADWAY CENTRE DEVELOPMENT DAIRY QUEEN The average summer humidity rate in Tucson, Ariz., is only 30 per cent. D 1835 Mass. MayFlower MAYFLOWER MAYFLOWER Dependable "Hands" Mayflower Warehousemen are experts in every phase of moving and storage. They are trained and MILITARY ADMINISTRATOR Watching every move you make Lawrence France V1.3 0171 TRANSFER & STORAGE INC. • PACKING • CRATING 609 MASS. Bill VILLEE Texan Strikes Water While Mowing Grass Watson was mowing the grass at the home of Mrs. Bob Evans and struck water. The mower caused a round plot of grass to crumble, revealing an old water well that had been covered years ago. PARIS, Tex. — (UPI) — Wilbert Watson has topped the old story about Texans digging for water and getting oil. Junior Receives $500 Scholarship Theodore Earl Batchman, Great Bend junior, has been granted the Schlumberger Collegiate Award for the 1960-61 academic year. The $500 scholarship is awarded to a student in electrical, mechanical or petroleum engineering, physics or geology by the Schlumberger Foundation of Houston, Tex. Batchman is a 1958 graduate of Great Bend High School. An electrical engineering major at KU, he has been a member of the Wesley Foundation cabinet, member of Student Religious Council and sophomore class representative at Carruth Hall. In addition to the scholarship, the Schlumberger Foundation also has renewed an additional $500 grant to the University of Kansas Endowment Association. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 摄制 M. WILLIAMS Jay SHOPPE Downtown 835 Mass. Jay SHOPPE Downtown 835 Mass. On Campus 12th & Ind. $1.00 Down LAY-A-WAY Skirt 'n Sweater SALE Jay SHOPPE Choose yours now! From a large selection of lovely new spice colors for fall. Bobbie Brooks or Sidney Gould Fur-blend Sweaters from $8.98 to $14.98 Matching Skirts from $7.98 to $14.98 $1.00 DOWN HOLDS YOUR SELECTION TILL SEPTEMBER 10th. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 29, 1960 30 AFROTC Cadets Attend Summer Camp Thirty advanced Air Force ROTC cadets from the University are taking summer training at seven Air Force Bases throughout the United States. Ten have just completed a 4-week course in officer training and instruction in technical subjects while 20 will attend August sessions. Cadets receive instruction in air base orientation and defense, survival training, weapons qualifications and staff organizations and functions of the Air Force. The 20 who will depart Sunday for bases are: To George Air Force Base, California: Garv W. Bermann, Lenexa Harold W. Bergmann, Lenexa; Robert L. Bowersox, Kansas City, Kansas; Alan S. Cohn, Prairie Village. To Williams Air Force Base, Arizona; Paul D. Dozer, Herington; David F. Folkerts, Seward; Richard G. Foreman, Cueamonga, Calif.; Roy M. Gallagher, Jr., Overland Park; Gerald E. Gordon, Lawrence; Neil K. Hall, Kansas City, Kansas; Richard H. Lee, Kansas City, Kansas; Dale R. McKemey, Downs; Donald L. McMillen, Chanute; Gary D. New, Russell; Terry R. Schoeni, Athol; Robert G. Smith, Jr., Merriam; David K. Winn, Woodside, Jl.; George A. York, Jr., Osawatomie; To Lennard Air Force Base, Virginia; Peter R. Frey, Vineland, N.Y. To Lincoln Air Force Base, Lincoln, Neb.; Charles D. Tommey, Independence, Mo. To Langley Air Force Base, Virginia; Peter R. Frey, Vineland, N.Y. The 10 who have just returned from the 4-week July training period. From Ellsworth Air Force Base when only the best is good enough... 9.95 to $10.95 Black, grey, cocoa buck Black, brown leather AAAA to B to 11 ...they're naturally oldmaine trotters Royal College South Dakota; Richard A. Claflin, Bonner Springs; Leland R. Elliott, Topeka; Gerald L. Gilihan, Law- rence; John F. Hansen, Tonganoxie; Joseph C. Morris, Emporia; John L. Stevens, Ames, Iowa. From Fairchild Air Force Base, Washington: John Durrett, Prairie Village. From Webb Air Force Base, Texas; Gary Esplund, Bloom; Kenneth Krebhiel, McPherson, and Orley Lake, Haven. Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Journalist Takes Kentucky Post Harry O. Ritter Jr., who received the master's degree in journalism from the University in June, will become instructor in journalism at the University of Kentucky in Lexington in September. Ritter formerly was editor and publisher of the weekly Hartford Times. He resumed his studies and earned the B.S. degree from KU in 1959. His master's thesis was a study of the newspapers and editors of Burlington (Kansas) during the 1859-1914 period. Mrs. Ritter has been secretary to the dean of the School of Fine arts for the past two years. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Seven to Attend Vienna Meeting Seven representatives of the University Entomology Department will attend the Eleventh International Congress of Entomology at Vienna, Austria, Aug. 17-25. They are Charles D. Michener, professor and chairman of the entomology department; Robert E. Beer, associate professor of entomology; George W. Byers, assistant professor of entomology; Robert R. Sokal, associate professor of entomology currently on leave for study at the University of London. Robert L, Sullivan, research associate and Kent Wilson, Fort Worth, Texas, and Carl Rettenmeyer, Meriden, Conneticut, graduate students in entomology. The Congress is held every four years and is attended by entomologists from throughout the world. Try the Kansan Want Ads Rent A TRAILER! Local or One-Way U.S. Highway 40 & 59 735 N.2nd,N. Lawrence VI 3-1175 terri's Hatchell Trailers Clearance Sale ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK Dresses Values to $12.95 ------- $ 6.88 Values to $14.95 ------- $ 8.88 Values to $19.95 ------- $10.88 Values to $25.00 ------- $12.88 Misses — Juniors — Half Sizes Fabrics Sportswear Entire Stock Reduced 40% Pongee Prints Bates Disciplined Prints Dan River Ginghams Pampered Cottons Signature Prints Sailcloth Prints Values to $1.49 yd. Now 79c Yard Children Seek Contentment According to Doctor terrills LAWRENCE KANSAS WASHINGTON-(UFI)—The Defense Department has announced the location of 18 sites for Titan intercontinental ballistic missile launching platforms that will ring McConnell Air Force Base at Wichita. The towns near each site are Leon, Smileyville, Rock, Oxford, Wellington, Mayfield, Conway Springs, Viola, Norwich, Rago, Murdock, Kingman, Mount Vernon, Potwin, Degraff, Haverhill and Keighley. EAST LANSING, Mich.—(UPI)— "Children in our culture are taught not to think for themselves but to seek and be content with rewards and approval," says Dr. Harold H. Anderson. The nation's system of rewards and punishments wastes one of our greatest natural resources, the creative power of its youth, the Michigan State University psychologist contends. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING "The Tingler" "Atom Submarine" PLUS 2 BONUS FEATURES SATURDAY! STARTS SUNDAY "Last Train to Gun Hill" "Five Pennies" ☆ ✩ ★ LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! NOW SHOWING "Bramble Bush" SATURDAY — 3 BIG FEATURES STARTS SUNDAY "The Story of Ruth" GRANADA NOW SHOWING NOW SHOWING "The Story of Ruth" STARTS SUNDAY "Circus of Horrors" S Spacious D in new box frigerator. 1 private ent graduate ma Nice clean dent. 2 ble month. Pho Reasonably ments. Lars Very close Phone VI ; Rooms for r drivers or daundry privi pus and rooms — 1 Reasonable Very Space Entire first with garage downtown. FOR RENT one or two Kitchenette conditions. ing. Phone Spacious T neighborho 3 students. bath and € VI 3-3536 FOR REN' suitable for from Union VI 3-6696 Rooms for Union, Lars quiet house students or 8-696. 3 ROOM 2 room hour from Unic Ohio. FOR MEN rooms. Sho second. Su sall. Close. or call VI CLEAN - 2 stoves and arrances at b windows patients paid. paid. 520 C First floor month,util blocks fr TWO 3-R MENTS. Re or either couples. Ca Large sin Summer hanging Friday, July 29.1960 Summer Session Kansan (PI)— caught out to awards old H. --- Page 7 wards of our cre- michi-ologist CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT Spacious Daylight basement apartment in new house just south of hill. Req. Bachelor's degree or private entrance. Prefer 2 seniors or graduate male students. Phone VI 5-6313. Nice clean private room for serious student campus $18 per month phone VI 3-6096 Rooms for rent to women. Graduate students or working women. Cooking and laundry privileges. Two blocks from campus and Student Union. Blackwood rooms — 1224 Ohio — Ph. VI 3-5139. Reasonable rent. 3-2 Reasonably priced 2-3-4-room apartments. Large rooms, nicely furnished. Very close to campus. Private parking. Phone VI 3-6696. 8-2 Very Spacious 2 bedroom apartment. Entire first floor, fully furnished. Modern with garage. Very convenient to KU and downtown. Phone VI 3-6696. 8-2 FOR RENT: Extra nice apartment for one or two graduate or senior men. Valid Union. Ideal sunny conditions. Utilities valid. Private parking. Phone VI 3-8524. 8-2 Spacious Three Room Apt. in residential neighborhood. Completely furnished for students. All electric kitchen. Private entry entrances. Phone VI 3-6484 or VI 3-356-82-82 Rooms for fall semester $V_{2}$ block from University. Large singles and doubles in nice room house. Upper classmen or graduate students only. Reasonable rates. Call VI-6-696. 8-2 FOR RENT; Well furnished apartment suitable for: 2,3 or 4 students. 1$^2$ blocks from Union. Reasonable rent. Please call VI 3-6969. 8-2 1 ROOM APARTMENT well furnished. 2 room house furnished, shower, 2 blocks from Union. Phone VI 3-1999 — 1113 Ohio. 7-29 CLEAN-2 furnished apartments. Good stoves and refrigerators. Private entrances and bath rooms, large closets. 8 windows in basement apartment. Utilities paid. Man and wife only. No drinking. 520 Ohio. FOR MEN OR WOMEN, cool basement rooms. Shower and sleeping perches on walls. Summer attaches to renting for call. Closet to KU. Server at Tennessee or call VI 3-9340 after 4 p.m. First floor furnished apartment. $80 studio and student blocks from Union. VI 3-6294. TWO 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Recently re-decorated. Available or either men, women, or married couples. Call VI 3-1348-3320 p.m. fm. large single room. Close to Campus. summer rates $172. Would consider ex- hanging for typing or labor. VI 3-6294. FOR SALE 18' Trailler suitable for travel or temporary living. John Nettleton, 1417 E. 15th. Ph. VI 3-9775. 7-29 For Sale; Cute Seal Point Slames Kitten. 2½ months old, house broken. $15. Call RI 8-0956. Mrs. Frank Molby, Rt. No. 4 near Clinton. 7-29 FOR SALE — Pressure cooker — fens power — artique dishes — nucs fens. HOME for sale by owner. Save real estate fee. New three bedroom, ranch home with fireplace and corner lot. Low down payment. Assume low interest loan. Call after 6. VI 2-1683. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Complete outline of lecture and lab; 60 pages; comprehensive diagrams and definitions. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0742. FOR SALE: 1955 Pontiac 2 door sedan. Top shape, new W.W. tires. Must sell. Special low price. See F. Ostarov at 1637 N. H. St. or call VI 3-6930. MOBILE HOME — 1956 — Angelus — 41 by 8. Carpets. Immediate possession. Phone VI 3-0924 or VI 3-6052. 2 HOUSE FOR SALE or lease with option to buy. Small down payment or trade in, or car. Suitable for two families. Moving to Calif. Aug. 20. Phone 2-1100. 8-2 TYPING Experienced Typist: Standard rates, will do theses, reports, term papers. Call VI 3-8853 after 5 or during the day stop by I Strong. Barbara Meek. 8-2 Experienced Typists will do accurate typing on theses, term papers, manuscripts. Cite Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robbins, Cook, 2000 Rhode Island. phone 3-7485. 8-2 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do these, dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Standard rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8379. tf Campus BARBER SHOP Neat Accurate Prompt Typing. By experienced typist. guaranteed timely delivery. Phon. WI 3-520-6789. OPEN ALL SUMMER Just North of Student Union TYPIST: Will do these, reports, term papers, etc. Phone VI 3-2955 between 4 and 6 p.m. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Do these, term, papers, dissertations, etc. Phone number: (800) 723-4567 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Six years experience term papers, theses, etc. . . Electric typewriter. Fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. VI First floor furnished apartment. $60 2-1648 — 408 W. 13th St. tf ALL TYPES OF TYPING: Themes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Earl Pearson, Phone VI 3-6791, tf TYPIST—Professional work with electric typewriter at reasonable rates. 8 years experience Thesis and other typing. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. (3 blks. East of Mass. St.) phone VI 3-2001. tf Theses, Term Papers and reports. Typed fast, accurately. Call VI 3-0540. 7-29 TYPING — Complete secretarial service in my home. Guaranteed accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Milliken. VI 3-5920. tf TYPIST-General typing, typem papers. TiPST-General typing, typem papers. Mrs. Elmer Lindell, VI 3-5127. NOTICE SUMMER STUDENTS, faculty and staff members: Take advantage of special resources. Visit www.summerillustrated.com. Both new and renewals. Process promptly. Call VI 3-09422. tf francis sporting goods 731 Mass. BUSINESS SERVICES Tennis we're in the racket for restringing SMITTY'S DIAPER & LAUNDRY SERVICE Baby's diapers, clothes — $10 diapers and diarchy 6c, 9 b. Washed, dried, Pickup — delivery, Rufs cleaned. VI 3-8077. bring yours in! one day service GOLF CLINIC 2 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. $1 includes balls. Ryton Eaton, instructor. Jayhawk Driving Range, Must have on 23rd Street. Phone: VI-3-9725. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUDRY. Shirts and pants finished. An attendant present, for added convenience 613 Vermont. VI 3-4141. tt DIAMONDS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Premier Jewelers offers a wide selection, the finest stones, and friendly help in choosing your diamond. tf Ride Wanted to Los Angeles after Aug. expenses. Can drive. Phone: VI 3-6648. TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED. Leaving for New York City August 6, 7, or 8. Share expenses. Contact Martin Tessler - 514 Malott. IV 3-2700, ext 508. 8-2 Want Riders to N. Y. C. Preter drivers. Will leave to suit riders, but can go anytime after Aug. 3. Total expenses $5-10 Contact Don Kisslin — 1601 Tenn. VI 3-8579 or Milt Diamond — 1229 Ohio St. 3-0915. 8-2 WANT RIDE: From Highland Park. To 2:30 p.m. on or Friday and Saturday. 8-2 Want Ride: To or in vicinity of Los Angeles, California after August 6. Share expenses. See or write H. L. Oei between 8-12 a.m. 1338 Ohio. 8-2 MISCELLANEOUS RENT A SEWING MACHINE. Only $1 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf LOST BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water-repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant. 6th and Vermont. VIII 3-9350. t LOST: Reward. Slide Rule. Name of owner on case and slide number 838896. Call All Mouhise, VI 3-0681 - 1420 Ohio. 7-29 Try the Kansan Want Ads 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. Your for meals, snacks and refreshments . . . Summer Home The Rock Chalk Cafe 7 a.m. to Midnight Closed Sundays It's cool and convenient . . . just off the campus . . . 618 W. 12th VI 3-9886 D Don't Forget... You'll want a Subscription to next semester's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN D TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER $3.00 FULL YEAR $5.00 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building Your Daily Kansan will be mailed to you. X U.S. Takes New Strides in Peru (Editor's note: The following is another of the series of reports on Latin American countries.) LIMA. PERU—(UPI)—This Latin laboratory of experiments, ideas and hopes is drawing increasing interest from the United States. Earlier this month, $2 million in U.S. government "seed capital" was put at the disposal of Peruvian savings and loan associations to improve lower and lower-middle class housing. This is the first time the United States government has extended credit to a foreign, private home-financing institution anywhere. . . The step was historic. It was the first gesture in President Eisenhower's program for expanded aid to Latin America. in the world," said Vance Brand, managing director of the U.S. Development Loan Fund. Under the financing, Peruvians will be able to obtain low-interest loans for construction of medium and low-cut private dwellings. And, it has built-in guarantees that the money will be made available for lower income groups—not siphoned off into the hands of the well-to-do. Prior to the U.S. help, Peru's housing programs bogged down in prohibitive interest rates. Brand stresses that it is only "seed capital" which the United States is providing. To Peruvians, he said "the future, the financial responsibility and the final success are in your hands." And Brand has confidence in the future of Peru. The good news came to Peru just 12 days before the first anniversary of Premier Pedro Beltran's decision to take on the responsibility of forming a new government. Last year, Beltran was asked by President Manuel Prado to select a new cabinet to head off certain economic disaster. Beltran, publisher of one of Lima's leading daily newspapers, long had been an outspoken critic of the government and the revolutionary Apra party which joined forces with Prado in 1956. He is highly regarded throughout the world as an excellent economist —but, at home, he is unpopular now that he heads the government. Friday. July 29,1960 The primary reason for Beltran's unpopular reputation is his austerity program for the nation which he brought with him to the premiership in an effort to do the job Prado asked him to do. And it has paid off in new health for the Peruvian economy. Beltran has been either directly or indirectly responsible not only for getting the U.S. housing aid, but for obtaining loans amounting to $76 million from the World Bank for port development, highways, industry and agriculture. During the administration, a new $15 million oil refinery was completed outside Lima. Peru today has a businesslike government and its inflation has been checked. If world market prices hold firm on her sugar, cotton, coffee and metal exports, the "voice of the opposition and the qualms of some local businessmen will be quieted considerably. Yet Beltran the man remains unpopular. One answer is that there's still widespread poverty in Peru and no one man could possibly wipe out centuries of misery in the winking of an eye. The aid from America should help lessen the clamor from the opposition for speed in erecting new housing for the needy-one of the main programs agitated for by firebrand Fernando Belaunde Terry who heads the popular action movement. The most powerful of Beltran's opposition, Belaudne Terry is described by some of his supporters as a moderate. However, it is common knowledge his party has been infiltrated by communists. He holds that he alone represents the voice of the people since the Apra party aligned itself with Prado. If Belaunde Terry should win in the 1962 presidential elections, observers feel that foreign investments, including the U.S. aid program, would not be jeopardized as long as fundamental democracy is preserved. Presently, he has a good chance of coming out on top in the elections. But, the great projects Beltran has been and is initiating, boldly backed by United States' capital, may well have the effect of taking the wind out of Belaunde Terry's arguments two years from now. Though Peru has begun to emerge into modern times, the hinterlands still wear the visage of 17th century poverty and ignorance. Most of the hungry, and there are many, don't know what nationalism means, what communism is or where the United States is located. Peruvian development, though slower than canyons being grooved by nature, is imperceptibly changing the face of the nation's economy. As the wealthy gradually recognize the democratic way, and invest in their homeland instead of hoarding their riches in Swiss banks, the nation will some day achieve the evolution of a healthy, democratic and well-fed land. Robert W. Bernard, assistant instructor of French, has been awarded travel costs by the Fulbright program to supplement his French teaching assistantship award. Bernard Receives Travel Award The original award, made by the French government, provides a part-time job teaching English in French high schools. Bernard also will study French at the Lycee de Garçons, "Janson de Sailly," in Paris during the 1960-61 academic year. He is from St. Paul, Minn., working toward his M.A. degree in French at KU. Our legs are becoming external appendixes...James Wrightson NOW! BRING YOUR KODAK EKTACHROME FILM here for processing BY KODAK Just ask us for "Kodak Processing" 72-hour Service to Eastman Kodak in Chicago MOSSER-WOLF 1107 Mass. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Summer Session Kansan 18 E. 9th Street VI 3-0151 TASCHEN Page 8 Extension to Hold Plant Short Course Republican Gavel Given to Library Ladybugs do not die at the end of the season as do many other insects. They hibernate for the winter. An intensive technical short course that in four years has attracted 103 industrialists from 21 states and Canada will be given Sept. 12-16 at the Town House Hotel in Kansas City. Permanent convention chairman Rep. Charles Halleck (R-Ind) presented the gavel to Darby after the President's speech at the Republican National Convention. The fifth annual work course on Plant Layout and Facilities Planning will be conducted by University of Kansas Extension. Enrollment will be limited to 25. Rchard Muther is the technical director and Edward S. Avison of KU Extension is the coordinator for the course which has a fee of $300. CHICAGQ—(UFL)—Former U. S. Sen. Harry Darby of Kansas has been given the gavel used during President Eisenhower's speech and it will be presented to the Eisenhower Library at Abilene. Your Vote Will Be Appreciated 108 RALPH FREED X for Douglas County SHERIFF - Kansas University Graduate - Lawrence Businessman CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 N. Park VI 3-9111 Summer Fun Relaxation MR. PIZZA Pizza Relax and enjoy the finest PIZZA served anywhere . . in the cool atmosphere of the HIDEAWAY. Su A 17