Daily hansan 58th Year. No. 62 Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1961 Reds Driven Out Of Laos Outpost VIENTIANE, Laos—(UPI)—The pro-western government announced today that its troops recaptured the vital northeastern outpost of Xiang Khouang from pro-communist froces late yesterday. The announcement said fighting was still going on around the town. THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY met in special session to give pro-western Premier Boun Oum a vote of confidence and probably to indorse Laos's protest against Soviet shipment of arms to Red guerrillas. THERE WAS NO IMMEDIATE word as to the fate of northern Phony Saly province, which earlier had been reported in communist hands. The sketchy report of Phong Saly's capture had not been confirmed and was regarded as doubtful. No details of the military situation could be obtained immediately. Pro-communist rebels said today they would regard any armed intervention in Laos by the United Nations "under the United States" as aggression. The United States already has put military forces in the Pacific on the alert as the result of reports of increasing foreign Communist intervention in the southeast Asian kingdom. Diplomat observers said the crisis had reached its "gravest" point. THE WARNING WAS made by the Communist pathet Lao radio and relayed by the official Chinese Communist New China News Agency. Russia's official news agency, Tass, reported that the pro-communist "government" had cabled a warning to U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold against "actions in the United Nations by unauthorized persons." There were reports that the pro-western government of Prince Boun Oum had instructed Laotian delegate Sisouk Na Champassak in New York to protest against foreign communist intervention in Laos. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Morrison Granted Rhodes Scholarship Fred Morrison. Colby senior, has been awarded a Rhodes Scholarship. He is the third KU student in as many years to receive the award — one of the highest academic honors in the English-speaking world. By having three Rhodes Scholars in three years, KU becomes the only state school in the nation with such a record. In the past two years only four schools in the United States have had more Rhodes winners than KU. They are Harvard, Yale, Princeton and West Point Military Academy. MORRISON, who is attending KU on a Summerfield Scholarship, is one of 32 in the nation to be offered the Rhodes honor. It gives full support for two or three years of graduate study at Oxford University in England. Morrison has a triple major in German, mathematics and political science. He plans to study philosophy, economics and politics at Oxford. He has the Gustafson Scholarship from the political science department. Last winter, he was one of three students representing KU on the nationally - televised College Bowl quiz program. They won $2,000 in scholarship money for KU in the two appearances on the show. FRANCIS HELLER. associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that KU's record undoubtedly is unprecedented in the nation's state universities. Dean Morrison was one of two Kansas finalists and the only Kansas student to win the award. He was one of four chosen from 12 candidates representing Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa and South Dakota. Petroleum Geologist To Speak Tomorrow Charles L. Drake, distinguished lecturer for the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, will lecture on "Structure of the Continental Margin of Northeastern North America" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 426 Lindhure. Mr. Drake is a senior scientist with the Lamont Geological Observatory, Palisades, N.Y. Heller is the KU Rhodes representative. Morrison is president of the political science and German honorary societies and is a member of the mathematics honorary society. He has been on the dean's honor roll each semester he has attended KU. He has been a leader in the establishment of the UP campus political party following his election to the All Student Council as an independent write-in candidate last spring. MORRISON PLANS to become a university teacher following his studies. In 1959, Raymond Nichols, son of KU's executive secretary, won a Rhodes scholarship. In 1958, Richard Ontjes of Hutchinson was KU's Rhodes winner. Both are now at Oxford. Morrison will enter Oxford in September following his graduation here in June. Bulletin The Rhodes Scholarship was established in 1904 by the bequest of Cecil Rhodes. It is offered in separate programs to top U.S. and British Commonwealth students. Morrison is the 15th student from KU to receive this honor. WASHINGTON — (UPI) The State Department today made public what it called new hard evidence of "extensive" Soviet and North Viet-Namese airlifts of war materials into embattled Laos and of "substantial numbers" of Communist North Viet-Namese troops. The Department said the North Viet-Namese troops were parachuted into Laos by Soviet and North Viet-Namese planes. 87th Congress Convenes Today WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The new 87th Congress, which will write the legislative record during the first two years of the Kennedy administration, convened at noon today against a backdrop of liberal-conservative conflict. Both the House and the Senate again were firmly under Democratic control. The make-up of the senate was 65 Democrats; 34 Republicans. There were 262 Democrats in the house-21 fewer than last year—and 175 Republicans. THERE WAS a surface note of party harmony among the Democrats. But even before the opening gavels fell, there was intra-mural battling backstage on efforts to change congressional rules to smooth the way for President-elect John F. Kennedy's program. In both the House and Senate, Democrats and Republicans held party strategy meetings before the opening session. In the House, the parliamentary controversy centered on the first serious move in years to "purge" from the key Rules Committee one or more Democratic members who bolted the party's presidential ticket in the November election. Most students had some last minute Christmas shopping to do. Then there was the gift that had to be returned because of the ten pounds gained since Thanksgiving vacation. The possible "purge" was aimed at breaking the power of a coalition of committee Republicans and Southern Democrats to block legislation sought by Kennedy. IN THE SENATE, the fight loomed over a liberal-backed effort to change the rules so filibusters might be halted more easily. Even though Kennedy does not take office until Jan. 20, the outcome of the two showdowns might hold the key to whether Kennedy can win congressional approval, as is, of his five-point priority program. The five-point package includes aid to schools, housing and economically-depressed areas, an increase in the minimum wage and medical care for the aged under the Federal Social Security system. Then comes the get together of the local KU students. Although we are on the same campus during school days it is nice to see each other during the vacation. Final Week Approaches As Yule Memories Fade House members started filling the hopper with bills. The 17-day vacation passed so fast. For many students it was the first time they had seen their families since September. For others the trip home was short. Happy New Year everyone! The awaited Christmas vacation has ended. Finals are less than three weeks away. Someone always has a party for the old high school gang. Old friends get together to reminisce and compare notes on the colleges they are attending. As might have been expected the dream of a White Christmas did not come true. Students whose homes are in Kansas found Christmas day more like the 25th of April than the 25th of December. The vacation was not long without snow. Shortly after Christmas a white blanket covered the ground. At last it was New Year's Eve. the climax to the holiday frolic. Time allowed one day to recover from the celebration of a new year. Alas, the time had come to pick up the dust covered, neglected books, which were taken home with good intentions, and return to KU. Brussels Police Thwart Strikers BRUSSELS, Belgium—(UPI)—Mounted police, charging with drawn sabers, today drove back thousands of rock-throwing demonstrators attempting to march on Parliament. Two rioters, one seriously injured by a saber slash, were hospitalized in Brussels. Other casualties were reported elsewhere in Belgium. An estimated 75000 leftist-led strikers demonstrated against the government in Brussels and other Belgian cities in another day of violence at the start of the third week of a nationwide strike. Wescoe to Give Humanities Talk Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the next speaker in the Humanities Lecture Series at 8 p.m. Thursday. His lecture on "Preparation for a Profession" will be given in Fraser Theater. The Faculty Club will have a reception following the lecture. The tradition of inviting a KU faculty member to give one of the Humanities Lectures each year dates back to 1948-49, the second year of the series. Every year, four to eight visiting scholars in the humanities fields are brought in for a three-day stay on the KU campus. Clifford Osborne, philosophy, was the first KU scholar to give a Humanities lecture. Since 1948-49, in order, the KU speakers have been Prof. John Hankins, English; Prof. Charles Realey, history; Prof. William Shoemaker, Romance languages; Dean Frederick Moreau, law; Prof. Allen Crafton, drama; Prof. George Anderson, history; Prof. J. Neale Carman, Romance languages; Prof. L. R. Land, Greek and Latin; Dean M. Carl Slough, law; Prof. William D. Paden, English; Prof. Jan Chiapusso, music. Western Civ Plan Changed The Western Civilization program has planned a new format for the review sessions which will be Jan 10 and 11 at 7:15 p.m. The new format of the review sessions should make them more valuable to students than they have been previously. Each of the two evenings will commence with a talk lasting from 30 to 40 minutes. These talks will attempt to put the readings in ideological and historical perspective by utilizing patterns of economics, religion, politics, etc. After the talk and a brief intermission, a panel of six members of the staff will attempt to answer questions. Questions may be submitted prior to the review sessions to the Western Civilization program office, Strong Annex C. The questions may be specific or general and may apply to any of the readings or interpretations thereof. The panel will attempt to answer all questions previously submitted and also any which may come from the audience. Weather Generally fair with rising temperatures this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 20 west to middle 20s east. High tomorrow 50 southwest to middle 40s northeast. The demonstrations were started by the Socialists in an attempt to force the withdrawal of a government bill in Parliament calling for austerity and tighter economic controls to make up for the loss of revenue from the Congo. They now have grown into an attempt to overthrow the government. The Brussels clash was the most serious in a day of riots and demonstrations against the Eyskens government. The demonstrations were ordered by leftist strike leaders to coincide with the return of Parliament after a two-week Christmas recess to resume debate on the government's austerity package bill. When the Chamber of Deputies, surrounded by hundreds of gendarms, armored cars and barbed wire, met, former Socialist Health Minister Edmond LeBurton launched into a slashing personal attack against Eyskens. Branding him "a man of catastrophe" and an "apprentice witch doctor," LeBurton warned that even if Parliament—in which Eyskens has a comfortable majority—approves the measure, it never will be applied. "In 1961 you cannot govern against the will of the working class," he shouted amid Socialist cheers, "Withdraw your bill before it is too late and before you bring dramatic and immeasurable disaster on the country." But Eyskens, in a short, mild reply, warned that any decrease in Belgium's economic strength must bring unemployment and lower wages for workers. Eyskens sat down amid an uproar and booing, meowing and desk-thumping from the Socialist benches. KU Athletes In Car Wreck KU's swimming and golf coach and three students were involved in a four-car accident early Friday morning near Perry, Fla., on their return from Ft. Lauderdale after two weeks of swimming and golf practice. No one was injured. Coach Jay Markley, owner of the car driven by Paul Carlson, Lawrence freshman, said that the car, the last in a four-car procession, struck the rear end of a car in front as did the other three cars when a car ahead made an unexpected left turn. He estimated the damage to his car at $400. Carlson was cited by Florida police for failing to reduce speed to avoid an accident and was fined $25. The KU students, Carlson, Edward Poort, Topeka senior and John Kempt, Springfield, Ill., freshman, were returning to Lawrence from the annual Swimming Forum held during the two-week Christmas vacation in Ft. Lauderdale. Markley said that they stayed in Perry until Saturday afternoon while the car was being repaired before continuing the trip back to Lawrence. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 3, 1961 Commune Capitalism? December was a bad month for Red China. The month saw a double setback for the "Peoples Republic of China,"home offices in Peking. But Chou dejectedly headed home with the understanding that the Cqmunist world henceward would play the game by Moscow's, not Peking's, rules. This meant stressing co-existence with the West rather than using armed might. Instead he sent his foreign minister, Chou En-Lai, to speak his piece for him. AND WORSE YET, the Chinese leaders decided that communism, spiced with a little capitalism on the side, might be more palatable. Chou recently announced that the country was suffering from the effects of the "worst combination of natural disasters in the century." Approximately one-half of the arable land (133 million acres) had been blistered by drought, tattered by storms or chomped bare by grasshoppers this summer. First, the Red summit meeting in Moscow early in the month when Khrushchev was given a vote of confidence in his ideological difference with Red China's boss, Mao Tse-tung. The bald one from the Kremlin feels that intrigue, subversion and propaganda can do the same job of conquering the world as Mao's impetuous plan to throw rockets, bombs and hordes of inscrutable nationals at the free-world—and for fewer rubles. MAO WAS CONSPICUOUS by his absence from the conference, billed as a World Series in communist theory. Then comes the word that Red China's marvelous plan for gaining industrial and agricultural superiority is somewhat off schedule. "More than the people's diet is involved. The As Time Magazine puts it; But what it amounts to is incentive pay— you do more work, you get more money. The hard realities of nature had forced Peking's planners to recognize that despite all their emphasis on new steel plants, and the heady dreams of transforming China overnight into a powerful industrial nation, China was still what it had always been—a country whose livelihood depended on agriculture." So the switch is being made from emphasis on the accomplishments of the industrial worker to the government's heaping kudos on the farm workers. But just at the time when so much is needed from so many in the communes, it turns out the workers aren't too happy down on the farm and are making AFL-CIO-type noises. FOR ONE THING, they don't like the way the overseer lead a better life than the common man. It's downright un-communistic. For another, the party credo of "from each according to his ability to each according to his needs" is not working out as idealistically supposed. Too much hoe-leaining and coffee-breaking apparently, for the government now is enforcing "the underlying principle of more income for more work." In other words—Capitalism. "No, no," cries the Finance Vice-Minister Chin Ming, it's only demonstrating "creative socialist distribution." We sadly note the retrogression of the Peoples Republic in adopting the practices of the decadent, capitalist West. Who knows, before long we might see Jimmy Hoffa scurrying off to the Orient to battle for higher wages, shorter hours and collective bargaining for the collectivists of the East. Frank Morgan the took world By Calder M. Pickett Acting Dean, School of Journalism A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN THEATRE, 100 YEARS, 1860-1960. by Daniel Blum. Chilton. $11.50. Here is an ideal birthday gift for the person who, though he has seldom left the Midwest, is theatre-struck. Daniel Blum compiled thousands of photographs for a volume a few years ago, and now he has added pictures and data for 1880-1900 and 1956-1960. It is not a scholarly work. One can gain some insight into theatrical history and into acting styles and costumes, but there is little evaluation by Blum. One has to find for himself the sense of any particular era—the melodramatic flamboyance of the late 19th century, the experimentalism of the 1920s or crusading spirit of the 1930s, the daring adventures in subject matter of the 1950s. BUT THE FUN OF this volume lies in the fact that one can turn to any page and see names and faces and titles that bring memories, even to those of us who have not seen the persons involved. The Booth family belongs to all of us, and so do Adah Menken and Joseph Jefferson and the Drews and Barrymores and Helen Hayes and Lillian Russell. Here is the lovely young Ethel Barrymore, the ingeneue in "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines." Here is the 8-year-old Helen Hayes, fat and round-faced, appearing in "Old Dutch." Here is a jaunty juvenile named Jimmy Durante. Bernardt, Duse and Lily Langtry are in these pages. So are George Arliss, James O'Neill, George M. Cohan and Otis Skinner. There is a strikingly beautiful Tallulah Bankhead, appearing in a 1918 play. And the pages unfold: Maurice Evans, Paul Muni, Katharine Cornell and Katharine Hepburn, Ina Claire, Raymond Massey, Jessica Tandy, Marlon Brando, Ezio Pinza, Geraldine Page. SHAKESPEARE, SHAW, Isben, O'Neill, Kaufman and Hart, Frank Bacon, David Belasco. "Lightnin'," "Abie's Irish Rose," "South Pacific," "Rip Van Winkle," "Anna Christie," "Smilin' Through," "The Guardsman," "The Student Prince," "What Every Woman Knows," "Dead End," "Arsenic and Old Lace," "My Fair Lady," "Harvey" and "The Teahouse of the August Moon." But why list them? The book does the job much better. Here is a way to go dreaming in the world of make-believe. Editor: THE PEOPLE Letters to the editor EO. In order to clear up the misunderstanding which has arisen about my position on athletics, about "pedestals," "ivory towers," etc., let me make my position completely unambiguous. A Clarification My first letter criticizing Chancellor Wescoe was written for one reason: to oppose the use of class time for the honoring of athletic events. As I stated in that first letter, I am not advocating the abolishment of athletics from university life, but wish to see that athletics do not take priority over academic matters. Two or three years ago KU took second place in the NCAA finals; KU was second in the nation, not merely first in the Big Eight. Did Chancellor Murphy call a basketball convocation, or allow the honoring of this event to take class time? No, of course not. We who are very much interested in the academic quality of the University of Kansas were, of course, very sorry to see Murphy leave. But we are more disturbed over the fact that the policies of Wescoe may lead to the lowering of the academic quality of KU. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS TEST TODAY 1. WHAT KIND OF FLY DID I CATCH MY LIMIT OF FISH ON LAST JULY? 2. WHAT FUNNY REMARK DID MY DAUGHTER MAKE AT THE TABLE? 3. WHAT YEAR DID MY BROTHER ESTABLISH HIS OWN BUSINESS? 4. WHAT WAS MY MAJOR INTEREST IN HIGH SCHOOL? 5. WHAT POSITION DID I PLAY ON THE FOOTBALL? 6. WHAT DID 'PAT' SAY TO 'MIKE' ON THE By desiring the subordination of sports to intellect, I do not mean that we should become educated in only a "narrow, technical sense." Indeed, I feel that participation in athletics is a part of a liberal education. To be a spectator, however, has little to do with education, properly speaking, but is a part of the man desiring certain forms of entertainment. I am not opposed to football games, but, since I do not consider the spectator to be receiving an education, I feel that the honoring of football teams is something which should never take class time. REMEMBER I SAID THE TEST WOULD BE OVER CLASS DISCUSSIONS! The case against athletic scholarships is simply that college athletes are being paid to entertain the public. This is what professional athletics are for. I would prefer that the university support a professional team rather than pretend that athletes are here to receive a liberal education. Instead, they are being paid to receive a specialized training in noneducational public entertainment. It is the hypocrisy of the matter which is in question here. I feel that it is definitely necessary for there to be good state universities within easy reach of students who have grown up in the Midwest and who cannot af- The University of Kansas is now among these good universities. And let us hope that KU will continue to move upward as it did under Murphy. This cannot be accomplished by football convocations. John L. Hodge Kansas City senior Washington observers are focusing on a new crisis in government. President-elect Kennedy is almost out of relatives. Short Ones From the Magazine Rack Business in Academe "But the man thing is that there isn't enough money; life is pinched and mean (except for the new expense-account aristocracy who get the big grants). A dean of a college in the Northeast told me that a good deal of his time is spent writing character references to finance companies. Thus a promotion, let us say, to associate professor is likely to be a more desperate matter than a hitch up the corporate ladder. A $400 raise to a teacher with a second or third child on the way can be a necessity for survival." "As a result, academic institutions are not gentle civilized retreats, high, high above the dark jungle of business. Alas, at precisely the time that business has become somewhat less feral, academia now dances to the beat of the tom-tom. It has come to resemble the world outside when the world outside no longer resembles what it was. The competitiveness is exacerbated by the new marginal groups now in academic life. Universities were once dominated by Anglo-Saxon oligarchs, often with independent incomes (the professor's favorite daydream). Today, second- and third-generation immigrant groups of all nationalities, in America's new status revolution, have found their way into academic life, are pouring their energies into it, and threshing about for position. This makes for a much needed vitality but also for sharp elbows and knees when the in-fighting gets rough." (Excerpted from "American Colleges," by David Boroff in the April, 1960, Harper's Magazine.) UNIT REIT Dailu Transan University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extention 316, business office Extension A1, news 10am Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ray Miller ... Managing Editor Carol Heller, Jane Boyd, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull ... Business Manager Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1961 From the Magazine Rack University Daily Kansan ___ The Negro Scholar-1 "One of the most perplexing problems in a society filled with perplexing problems is posed by this question: How can we give adequate opportunity and encouragement to the academically talented and, at the same time, maintain our commitment to the widely cherished principle of democratic education? It is a problem that is certainly as old as the movement for universal education; and it became increasingly difficult and complex as public responsibility increased and as the concept of equality emerged as one of the most important ingredients in the new definition of democracy in the early nineteenth century. "The problem was dramatized by the transition from the Jeffersonian commitment to intellectual excellence and superiority to the Jacksonian commitment to broadening educational opportunity with little regard for intellectual excellence. Unfortunately, this transition implied that it was undemocratic to place emphasis on anything in which all the people could not share. Thus, it was felt that the principle of democracy in education should lead to the establishment of a system in which no special treatment would be accorded to any group or individual. Democratic education in the context of Jacksonian democracy meant equality in the educational process. "For the Jacksonians there was no compromise, no half-way point at which the system could reconcile education for the talented with education for the great numbers. Jacksonianism meant equality, pure and simple, and it made no concessions to the aristocracy of intellect or to the existence of superior talents. Soon, this became the dominant theme not only in the establishment of the educational system of our country but in the shaping of most of our other institutions and practices as well. No special consideration should be given to any group or individual, for equality of condition was a mark of true democracy, it was argued. This position was advanced with a vigor that bordered on passion, and it could be seen in many phases of political and social life as well as in education. "That this country has tended to exalt the doer rather than the thinker is a testimony not so much to an overriding anti-intellectualism in American life as it is the operation of a simple historical fact. The task of developing a new country involved the utilization of brawn almost as much as brains, and the institutions economic, social, and even educational — were essentially the product of experience and urgent necessity... "Only in recent years have our educational institutions given systematic attention to the academically talented. It is a happy phenomenon that belongs primarily to the period following the last war. Perhaps it was belated recognition of the obvious value to the nation of those who had made significant contributions to the national welfare because of their superior talent and training. "Certainly the New Deal and the war years demonstrated their importance and doubtless stimulated the drive to capitalize on such talents in the future by providing greater opportunities for the development of those talents. ... "All that I have said with regard to the growing interest in education, either of the Jeffersonians or the Jacksonians in our society, is subject to substantial, material qualifications when one recalls that ours is a multi-cultured, multi-religious, multi-racial society. "For some Europeans who settled in the New World their commitment to the cultivation of the superior mind was so deep that they were affected only slightly by the curiously pragmatic approach to education in this country... "Meanwhile, the many who sought universal education, or the few who wanted to encourage the superior student, actually had in mind white universal education or the encouragement of the superior student provided he was white. "Perhaps nothing has blighted the drive for universal education in the United States more than the simultaneously held contradictory notion that universal education should be confined to white people. Perhaps nothing has made a caricature of the current drive to identify and encourage the academically talented more than the concurrently prevailing practice of segregated education and cultural degradation that makes such identification and encouragement extremely difficult if not impossible. "If the early Jacksonian demand for equality in education was a perversion and a distortion by demanding the same education for the moron that was provided for the genius, the Negro escaped the influence of that particular perversion. Meanwhile he was subjected to another perversion that was even worse. It was the view, supported in law, that Negroes should have equality in ignorance, and that no black person should have an education, whether he be a moron or a genius. "This position, translated by law into policy, merely reflected a widely held view that a Negro was unworthy and incapable of becoming a participant in, or a contributor to, the culture or even the amenities of a so-called civilized society. The view persisted that Negroes were a degraded lot, pariahs of the land, condemned to be and to remain the slaves and servants of whites. They were not capable of acquiring an education and, in the event that some had the mental equipment, laws were enacted making it a crime for them to learn or be taught. They were to be kept apart in every relationship that did not ensure proper subordination. "After freedom, another body of customs and laws fixed their status. Among them were segregation in education, housing and practically everything else; discrimination in education, with Negroes getting barely the crumbs from the public funds; disfranchisement, which made it impossible to exercise any political influence; and a general denigration by some of the most artful and imaginative schemes of humiliation ever devised by man. (This is the first of two excerpts from a speech by John Hope Franklin, "To Educate All the Jeffersonians," published in the April, 1960, issue of The Superior Student.) Around the Campus Prep Seniors Get Funds The Office of Aids and Awards has announced the selection of 45 Kansas high school seniors as Honor Scholars for the school year 1961-62. Additional Honor Scholars will be named after the March 1, scholarship application deadline. Judy Arlene DeSpain, Wichita; Scott Downing, Defield; Evelyn Twila Fearing, Lawrence; Sharon Sue Fink, Manhattan; Walter E. Foster, Bethel; Joan Fowler, Overland Park; Sydnie Gerard, Leavenworth; J. Fred Giertz, Wichita; Patsy Lee Goins, Marysville. The KU Honor Scholarship is first a recognition of merit. The amount of each award may vary from nothing, when the scholar has no need of financial assistance, up to whatever support is needed by the scholar beyond his family's resources. Funds to support the scholarship program are available through private gifts to the University and the KU Endowment Assn. Some of the scholars will receive already existing "named scholarships" and some may also include a place in a scholarship hall. Ine Honor Scholars are Bob Curtis Allen, El Dorado; Larry D. Ashley, Kansas City; Karl Edmund Becker, Wichita; David Leon Beller, Topeka; James Allen Benson, Hutchinson; Ardrys Sue Boston, Mary Elaine Bowden and David Louis Brack, all of Salina; William Joseph Cibus Jr., Altamont; Mary Jean Curtis, Leoti. The goal of the Honor Scholarship program is to co-ordinate the various sources of student aid so that no KU Honor Scholar will be deprived of the opportunity of enrollment because of financial reasons. These awards go only to those students who have exhibited highly superior academic achievement. Sandra Marie Haywood, Winfield; Robert Michael Hubbard, Wichita; Leanne Je Koehn, Dodge City; Charles Krigel, Prairie Village; Billy Lee Landers, Wichita; Leon McKinley Largent, Garden City; Janet Elaine Loofbourrow, Lawrence; Carolyn Ruth Pennis, Wichita. The 24 men and 21 women Honor Scholars come from 26 high schools in 19 Kansas cities. Robert Harold Price, Salina; Nailia Ramzy, Topeka; Sibyl Nellie Riker, Crestline; James Allen Robinett, Prairie Village; Carol Jeanne Rowland, Manhattan; Allen C. Schuermann, Wichita; Marilyn Scott, Kansas City; Robert Edwards Shenk, Lawrence. Philip Howard Smith, Onaga; Lee Price Solter, Wichita; Rob Wiley Stafford, El Dorado; Cynthia Sue Stiles, Overland Park; Pamela Louise Stone and Lynne Marie Warner, Wichita; Bettie Lou Weaver, Arkansas City; David Eric Wilhelmens, Prairie Village; Kenneth Malcom Wilke, Topeka; and Gary Dean Wilson. Wichita. The selection of 23 Kansas high school senior men as Summerfield Scholars for 1961-62 has been announced. These scholars come from 14 Kansas cities and 17 high schools. The scholars are Mike Duane Bainum, Wichita; Kerry Sterling Berland, Manhattan; Don King Blevins, Wichita; James Kemper Campbell, Paola; William Joseph Campion, Liberal; Harrison Ogden Flora, Leavenworth; Robert E. Gaskins Jr., Wichita. raiph Dale Hile, Kansas City, Roger Forrest House, Kansas City; Roger Wayne Jones, Winfield; John Robert Kannarr, Wichita; David Hiebert Klassen, Newton; Richard Michael Kobeck, Wichita; Johr Cornelius Maloney, Lawrence; Robert Nelson Miner, Great Bend. 23 Summerfield Scholars Selected Peter Andrew Nelson, Bethel; Robert Lynn Oblander, Salina; William Henry Panning, Ellinwood; Lary R. Schiefelbusch, Lawrence; Arlo Willard Schurle, Green; Michael Charles Taylor, Wichita; John Peter Whalen, Wichita, and James Lemuel Worthham, Lawrence. A. M. BARNARD JAMES K. HITT Registrar to Serve On Education Post James K. Hitt, registrar and admissions director, has been appointed to a four-year term on the American Council on Education's Committee on Relationships of Higher Education to the Federal Government. He is the only registrar or admissions officer on the 16-member committee which includes 13 college and university presidents. The American Council on Education includes in its membership about 150 national and regional educational associations and more than a thousand institutions of higher education. The committee meets three or our times a year. Hitt was a Summerfield scholar and undergraduate mathematics major at KU. He has been registrar and director of admissions since 1940 except for army service during World War II. Federal, State Tax Forms Are Available Federal and state income tax forms are available in the Personnel Office, 131 Strong. W-2 Forms for KU employees will be available about Jan. 20 at their respective departments except for hourly students whose W-2 Forms will be available with the paychecks about Feb. 1. Prof. Nelick Heads Navy Reserve Unit Lt. Cmdr. Franklin C. Nelick, USNRF, has replaced Cmdr. Jules M. Busker, Sioux City, Iowa, as commanding officer of the Naval Air Reserve Patrol Squadron 883 based at the Naval Air Station, Olathe. Nelick is associate professor of English and is head of the committee of graduate studies. The change-of-command ceremony took place in one of the air stations two hangars with the station commanding officer, Capt. R. C Dailey and the officers and men of patrol squadron 883 in attendance. Before assuming his command Nelick had served with the patro squadron since joining the Nava Air Reserve in 1952. Increase Planned For Biochemistry KU will expand its graduate training program in biochemistry with a five-year grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, effective Jan. 1. The award provides $30,000 for each of the five years and an additional $700 for the first six months of the program, to be directed by Dr. Russell C. Mills, professor of biochemistry. Engineers to Hold MeetingTomorrow The 11th annual Sanitary Engineering Conference will be held here tomorrow. About 125 engineers and public health personnel will attend the meeting sponsored by the School of Engineering and Architecture, the sanitation division of the State Board of Health, the Practicing Engineers of Kansas and University Extension. John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will welcome the delegates. William G. Riddle of Haskins, Riddle & Sharp, Kansas City, Mo., will preside. Speakers include Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering; Robert E. Crawford, Wilson and Co., Salina; H. R. Hunter, consulting engineer from Wichita; Earnest Boyce, chairman of the department of civil engineering, University of Michigan; Aleck Alexander, U. S. Public Health Service, Dallas, Tex., and George W. Bradshaw, chairman of the department of civil engineering, who will lead a summary of the conference. Grants Up to $900 To Start Next Fall Preference will be given to students from Butler County among other applicants for a scholarship up to $900 a year beginning with next fall. Money for these Sarah D. Knox Scholarships will come from investments of a special bequest of $18,000 received today by the KU Endowment Assn. The scholarships will go to "worthy and deserving students at KU," with preference in selection being to students from El Dorado, Augustus, Douglass and other towns in Butler County. Mrs. Knox, of El Dorado, who died in December 1958, was not an alumna of KU. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said Mrs. Knox's significant bequest is private philanthropy at its best. The Chancellor said: "It helps attack a situation that this year found the University rejecting the scholarship and loan applications of more than 200 students who met all merit and needed criteria. But there were no more funds for them." KU Student Robbed On New Year's Eve Gordon Hogan, Meade graduate student, was admitted to Watkins Memorial Hospital New Year's Eve after being beaten and robbed in a Kansas City parking lot. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the hospital, said that Hogan suffered a fractured jaw after three assailants attacked him as he returned to a friend's car. Hogan's money was taken, but he picked up the wrong keys before returning to the car, so the assailants could not get into the car. Hogan is expected to return to classes in a few days. Two KU Students Get Rotary Fellowships John R. Newcomb, Topeka senior and Lora Kay Reiter, Simpson, senior, are among three Kansas students who have been awarded Rotary Foundation Fellowships for graduate study abroad next year. Newcomb will study at the Royal Academy of Arts in London and Miss Reiter will study at the University of Poiters, Poiters, France. Poet to Read Own Poems Arvid Schulenberger will read his own poetry at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Poetry Hour in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 3.1961 JFK Appoints More to Pioneer 'Frontier' Globe-Trotting Stevenson Will Head U.S. Efforts in U.N. By United Press International Adlai E. Stevenson, twice defeated Democratic presidential nominee, was beaten out for a third try for the nomination last summer by John F. Kennedy the man who has named him U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations in the new administration. Since the 1960 Democratic National Convention which saw Kennedy easily clinch the nomination on the first ballot and subsequently win the Nov.8 presidential election, Stevenson campaigned vigorously for Kennedy. Stevenson stumped mainly in areas he carried in 1956 while running against President Eisenhower for the second time. STEVENSON ALSO GAINED note as a world traveler since his two unsuccessful drives for the presidency. His tours, among others, took him to South America and to Moscow and a celebrated interview with Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. Stevenson was born in Los Angeles, Calif., Feb. 5, 1900. He was the son of Lewis Green and Helen Louise (Davis) Stevenson. He was named after his grandfather, Adalie Ewing Stevenson, vice president of the United States during the second term of President Grover Cleveland Stevenson who now makes his home at Libertyville, Ill., a suburb outside Chicago, attended public school at Bloomington, Ill. He was graduated from Princeton University in 1922, where he was editor of the school newspaper. After graduation he worked on the Daily Pantagraph, a Bloomington newspaper, and also studied law at Harvard and Northwestern University Law School. He was admitted to the Illinois bar in 1926. FROM 1933 TO 1934, Stevenson served in Washington with the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. He returned to private law practice in Chicago in 1935 but was called, back to Washington July, 1941—this time as special assistant and personal counsel to then Navy Secretary Frank Knox. He worked at the job until after Knox's death on April 28, 1944. In 1943, under an appointment by President Roosevelt, he headed a mission to Italy to plan economic support and revival of that country following the war. A series of government jobs followed. He: - Served in London and European theater of war in 1944 as a member of an Air Force survey mission. - Was appointed special assistant to then Secretary of State Edward Stettinius to assist in preparation of the United Nations organizations in 1945. - Was appointed a delegate to the UN General Assembly by President Harry S. Truman in 1946 and 1947. - In November and December of 1957, at the request of President Eisenhower, served as consultant to the Secretary of State in the preparation for the North Atlantic Treaty Council meeting in Paris. In between government appointments, Stevenson ran for and won the governorship of Illinois. In 1948 he was elected to Illinois' highest office by the largest plurality in the history of the state. He had served only one term when he was drafted by the Democratic convention to run for President against Eisenhower. STEVENSON LOST THE election, but in 1956 his party again nominated him, on the first ballot, to challenge President Eisenhower again for the presidency. Stevenson, the father of three sons, now practices law in Chicago with the firm of Stevenson, Rifkind & Wirtz; Stevenson also maintains another office in New York City and Washington, D. C. Among other things, Stevenson is the author of five books and a number of magazine articles. He is also a director or trustee of many businesses, educational and philanthropic organizations. In addition he holds honorary degrees from several colleges and universities, including Oxford, Princeton, Columbia and Northwestern. The tall, lantern-jawed Bowles perhaps has not always obtained what he wanted in public life. For example, there is little doubt that, until recently he hoped to be named secretary of state in the new administration. Nonetheless, he has achieved distinction in politics and diplomacy—his chief endeavors in public life. BOWLES WHO AMASSED a fortune in business began his public career as director of the Connecticut Office of Price Administration in 1942. A year later, in 1943, he became national OPA chief. He resigned in 1946, unsuccessfully sought the Connecticut Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1946, but won it two years later. KU Leads Nation In Faculty Housing By United Press International Chester Bowles, 59, of Essex, Conn. chosen as undersecretary of state in the Kennedy administration, is a former advertising man who retired from business at the age of 40 to plunge into a varied career in public life. By Borden Elniff KU is the only university in this country which offers housing for retired faculty members. Bowles was elected governor by a scant 2,000 votes—a margin so close that Republicans refused to concede his election for two months, delaying his inauguration for four hours. This housing is the Sprague Apartment building at 14th Street and Lilac Lane, completed this spring at a cost of $200,000. Bowles embarked on a program which he described as "competent liberalism," seeking to reorganize the state government. He later admitted that he tried too much during his two-year term and consequently stepped on too many toes. He was defeated in his bid for reelection in 1950. The building contains six two-bedroom apartments renting for $90 monthly and three one-bedroom units at $75 a month. Five of the nine units are occupied. The housing is proving extremely popular with tenants, who praise its convenience and comfort. Mrs. Merthyr Shaad, widow of George C. Shaad, who was dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture from 1927 to 1936, said, "I could not ask for anything more. The apartments are very convenient for elderly people." Other occupants noted the advantages of the building's central campus location. J. J. Wheeler, retired associate professor of mathematics, said he likes the nearness of the units to major campus buildings. "The library is only two blocks away, and my old office space, as well as the Engineering Library, are within walking distance." he said. He added that the Faculty Club is only a block from the apartments Chester Bowles Is Former 'Ad Man' Additional tenants include Miss May Gardner, retired professor of Spanish; Herman Chubb, retired professor of political science; and George J. Hood, retired professor of engineering drawing, and Mrs. Hood. Construction of the three-story brick and reinforced concrete structure began late in the summer of 1959 on the site of old Templin Hall, a men's dormitory. Another apartment is scheduled for winter occupancy by W. C. McNown, retired professor of civil engineering, and Mrs. McNown. BOWLES THEREUPON returned to the national scene as ambassador to India, serving until the Eisenhower administration began in 1953. He won many friends for the United States in that country, urging that for every 10 dollars spent on military defense the U.S. spend one dollar for assistance abroad — backed by technical know-how. He said if this were done, "We will enable the underdeveloped countries to move further ahead in the next generation than in the last 500 years." By United Press International Funds for construction were made possible largely through a gift to the KU Endowment Association by Miss Elizabeth Cade Sprague, now deceased, chairman emeritus and founder of the KU home economics department. Each apartment unit is rented unfurnished, but includes a built-in electric range and oven and a disposal unit, as well as wall-to-wall carpeting. The building is equipped with an elevator. The main entrance to the building is at the front of the structure, facing Lilac Lane. A second entrance is located on the lower level, adjacent to a paved parking lot. Paul D. Wilson, building manager, and Mrs. Wilson live in a basement apartment. The lobby, decorated in tan and green tones, is hung with paintings by Amelia Sprague, sister of the benefactor. In addition, every tenant has ample closet space and access to a basement storage area and laundry facilities. He also said that "We will be catastrophically wrong if we assume that we can build a decent world with atom bombs or that we can secure peace by trying to force the world into an American mold." EASY-WASH 11th & Pennsylvania VI 3-9706 LARGE PARKING AREA Secretary of State Rusk Is Statesman and Scholar By United Press International GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Dean Rusk, a soft-spoken giant is a noted scholar who has served his country as a statesman and a soldier. A hard-driving worker with a fast mind, Rusk has been president of the Rockefeller Foundation in New York since 1952. Prior to that he served with the U.S. State Department for six years in several positions. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-Pacs of all kinds Picnic Supplies GOING ON A PICNIC? He was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Scholastic Fraternity, and received his B.A. degree in 1931. Rusk worked his way through college as a bookkeeper and bank teller. He concentrated his studies on government, economics and international law. LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt. VI 3-0350 IN 1934 RUSK became an associate professor of government and dean of faculty at Mills College, Oakland, Calif. It was during his six years at Mills that he met and married Virginia Foisie on June 19, 1937. Rusk won a Rhodes Scholarship and continued his studies at St. John's College, Oxford University. He received his M.S. degree in 1933 and an M.A. the following year at the University of Berlin, where he saw firsthand the rise of Adolf Hitler. He also found time to study at the University of California Law School for three years. UPON HIS DISCHARGE from the army in February, 1946, with the rank of colonel, Rusk was awarded the Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster. After discharge Rusk was appointed assistant chief of the division of international security affairs in the State Department and served in that post until May, 1946, when he was made a special assistant to Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson. President Harry S. Truman nominated Rusk for promotion to assistant Secretary of State in 1949. Rusk's appointment was to a new State Department post — assistant secretary for United Nations affairs. IN 1950, RUSK was named to the key policy post of assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs. He resigned in 1952 to head the Rockefeller Foundation. Rusk lives with his wife, Ginny, and their children, David Patrick, Richard Geary and Margaret Elizabeth, in Scarsdale, N. Y. The good-looking, baldish Rusk is six feet, six inches tall and weighs about 200 pounds. For relaxation he may turn to golf or tennis and bridge. He is a life-long Democrat and a member of the Presbyterian Church. Try the Kansan Want Ads This Grand Tour of Europe can be yours... next summer! England . . . the Continent . . . touring capital cities, hamlets . . . traveling through beautiful countryside, quaint villages and passing landmarks . . . enjoying good fellowship . . . laughter, conversation and song! And it's all yours when you choose one of the American Express 1961 Student Tours of Europel Groups are small, led by distinguished leaders from prominent colleges. Itineraries cover England, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, The Rivieras and France. There are 12 departures In all, timed to fit in with your summer vacation; ranging In duration from 47 to 62 days . . . by ship leaving New York during June and July . . . starting as low as $1402.50. And with American Express handling all the details, there's a ample time for full sight-seeing and leisure, tool Other European Escorted Tours from $776.60 and up MEMBER: Institute of International Education and Council on Student Travel. For complete information, see your Campus Representative, local Travel Agent or American Express Travel Service or simply mail the coupon. American Express Travel Service, Sales Division 65 Broadway, New York 6, N.Y. Dear Sir: Please send me literature on Student Tours of Europe □ European Escorted Tours—1961 □ City___ Zone___ State___ Proposed Church Merger Brings Varied Reactions The proposed merger of four of the nation's largest Protestant denominations has produced a variety of reactions on the KU campus. Faculty and students have spoken about the recent proposal by the chief executive officer of the United Presbyterian Church in terms ranging from "a wild shot" to a "fine idea." All admit, however, that any move must proceed with caution. The proposal by Rev. Eugene Carson Blake of San Francisco would unite his church with the Protestant Episcopal Church, the Methodist Church and the United Church of Christ. Combined membership would total about 19 million. WILLIAM J. MOORE, dean of the school of religion said: This was a wild shot, and advanced as only a suggestion. It was not meant as a concrete proposal. Dr. Blake made it only to stimulate people's thinking, which I think it has, and for that reason is it good. However, I think it will be 50 to 100 years before such a move is actually possible." On the other hand, Paul R. Davis, professor of religion said: "I FEEL AS MANY DO, that in general the united church movement has great possibilities and should be cultivated. I do not think the diversity of religious heritage should be leveled out in such a merger, for the conformity would be too big a price to pay for unity of the proposal. "With caution, it can be a wholesome, healthy suggestion, and might take place sooner than we think in this fast moving world. People such as Blake have done the spade work, and now as we are becoming aware of the challenge, the pattern for unity may be accelerated. JOHN GRABER, associate professor of religion, commented that although several organizations have seemed interested in the plan, it is debatable whether or not this particular proposal is meant to be serious. Student opinions were just as varied. "Mergers are a coming thing, and in recent years there have been several groups that have joined together," he said. "Im a Presbyterian." Margaret Thrasher, Wichita senior, said. "I consider this a fine idea, but the religions will never be truly united until they share a common ritual. Words may be more of a problem than people, and the ideal may be difficult to make practical. "These religions have a better chance of uniting than some of the others," Miss Thrasher added, "But there will always be fundamentalists who wouldn't join." "We'll have to sacrifice the little things. They'll make the difference." Barbara Bacon, El Dorado junior, commented. "I'm an Episcopalian and the way which we worship will have to be dealt with carefully." "Young people will resolve their differences easier than the old," Sandy Smith, Coffeyville sophomore said. "All I want is a place to worship." Communist Threat Renewed in Korea By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst When student riots toppled the government of South Korean President Syngman Rhee last sping, there were several mixed results. For one thing, the demonstrations brought about the downfall of a government often condemned for having grown old and corrupt. But they also set a precedent of rule by riot, an instrument whereby a minority could make violence an arm of government. This, in turn, opened a natural avenue for communist infiltration into a land whose people are proud of their independence and whose sentiments have a history of anti-Communism. Dr. Dorothy Frost of the American-Korean Foundation is a trained American observer just back from a Korean tour sponsored jointly by the U.S.State Department and the United Nations. The thing that gave her the most concern: "The new communist danger." Dr. Frost witnessed a meeting of the UN and communist truce teams at Panmunjom and saw and felt the hatred flowing back and forth across the conference table. In Seoul, she saw student rioters to the streets against the new government of Premier John M. Chang. "The students regard themselves as the conscience of government," she said. Helping the Red agitation is poverty and unemployment which leaves two million of Korea's 21 million population without jobs in a nation where practically everyone except infants work. Youths with idle hands are turned easily to destructive purposes. Some of their leaders are not students, but professional agitators. Some, when arrested, proved to have "addresses unknown." They are the Communists. South Korea's new budget calls for expenditure of around $500 million of which about half will come from the United States. Dr. Frost insists that the money is being well-spent. In a valley devastated by war, she saw an earthen dam built painstakingly by hand by the Koreans. It lasted only until the first spring floods because the Koreans had no concrete. She saw new buses in the streets of Seoul whose sides were built from pounded-out gasoline drums. She saw a village where the people, with an old generator and waterwheel, built their own rice mill. With its proceeds, they built a brick kiln and then their own church and their own school. Korea, she says, is an important piece of real estate. It also is filled with people who want to be friendly to the United States. Kansas Low in Holiday Death Tolls Kansas marked one of the lowest accidental death totals in the nation over the New Year's holiday, compared with 19 fatalities over the Christmas weekend. United Press International The Christmas total in Kansas was among the highest in the U.S. The latest count showed that from 6 p.m. Friday through midnight Monday there were only 2 accidental deaths in Kansas. Over the nation, the totals were: Traffic ... 338 Fire ... 57 Miscellaneous ... 96 Total ... 491 California had the worst highway carriage with 42 deaths. Texas reported 28, Illinois 20, Wisconsin 18, Indiana 17, New York 16, Ohio 13, and Florida, Louisiana and Missouri 11 each. Pastor's Fortitude Gets KU Backing New Orleans' Rev. Lloyd Foreman, the minister who made headlines by leading his young daughter by the hand through picketing, screaming housewives to break the segregationists school boycott, has been sent a letter of moral support by KU's United Presbterian Center. The letter commends the Rev. Mr. Foreman for his dedication to his Christian conviction and was signed by the Westminster Council. The letter reads; "So often in troubled times when a person with Christian convictions acts according to these convictions and opposes the active, vocal groups which surround him, he seems to be taking a lonely stand, a stand to which only those in opposition give comment. "With this in mind we, the members and officers of the council of the Westminster Center, a Presbyterian student group at the University of Kansas, want you to know that our prayers and moral support are with you. We hope that you will continue your Christian witness by actively supporting school integration in your city." The letter was signed by the 17 members of the council and by the Rev. John H. Patton. Kelly's Law Article Receives Publicity Tuesday, Jan. 3. 1961 University Daily Kansan P An article by William A. Kelly, associate professor of law, has been reprinted in several publications. The article, "The Physician, the Patient and the Consent," published in the March, 1960, "University of Kansas Law Review" was reprinted in full in the "Insurance Law Journal" for April, 1960, and a condensed version was published in the "Personal Injury Commentator" for September, 1960. The article says that for centuries the common law has protected persons against any manner of unwarranted physical contact. It is fundamental that the least touching of another without his consent is wrongful and that goes for physicians as well as for everybody else. There can be no touching of a patient without the patient's consent, so the matter of consent is very important in the law of personal injury. Seven members of the speech and drama department took part in the national convention of the Speech Assn. of America, held in St. Louis Dec. 27 to 30. 7 Faculty Members Attend Convention William A. Conboy, associate professor of speech and drama and department chairman; Wilmer Linkugel, assistant professor of speech; Frank E. X. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama; Bruce A. Linton, professor of speech and journalism and chairman of radio and television; Kim Giffin, professor of speech and drama; Lynn R. Osborn, instructor of speech and drama, and Richard L. Schiefelbusch, professor of speech and director of child research attended the convention. Religion-in-Life Week to Be Replaced by Invitation Plan By Carrie Edwards The return address on a letter to be sent this week to all Greek and University houses will read KU Student Religious Council. . . And the letter will read something like this: There will be no Religion-in-Life Week this year as there has been for more than 40 years. To replace the traditional week of religious forums and a convocation, your Religious Council urges each organized house to invite a religious leader at least once or twice this semester to dinner and to speak after dinner. Lawrence has several outstanding ministers in local churches as well as at KU student religious centers. The council feels that religion is too important to be emphasized for just one week during the school year. Many organized houses last year were hosts to religious leaders during the Religion-in-Life Week. But under this year's suggested plan groups are urged to host ministers at any time during the semester. A postscript to the letter may read that the council is sending letters to local ministers asking them to list the topics on which they would like to speak with student living groups. The council will forward this information to the presidents of the houses soon. A committee of council members is also working to schedule an outstanding religious speaker for an evening meeting in April or May. Jim Anderson, Lawrence junior, president of the council, in an interview yesterday said this leader's speech will replace the annual religious convocation in Hoch Auditorium but will take place in an auditorium large enough to seat all interested students attending it. Another part of this year's proposed program includes letters to be mailed this week from the council to KU religious groups. It will read similarly to this: Student religious groups are Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Kansan office. Only the Kansan office should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Angel Flight Meeting. 7 p.m. Military Science. Building... Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Dunfroth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St John's, Church, 13th, & Kentucky. Epispeic Morning Prayer and Holy Communion. Breakfast follows 6:45 a.m. Geology Department Lecture. "Structure of the Continental Margin of Northeastern America," by Dr. Charles L. Drake, Distinguished lecturer. 426, Lidgley路。 Jane Janes. 5 p.m. Room 306. Kansas Union. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Students taking French Ph.D. Reading Courses in the French Department at Barbara Craig, 120 Fraser, by noon today. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Communion. Breakfast follows. 6:45 a.m. (Closing time). Humanities Lecture. "Preparation for I Profession Changeless W. Clarke J. m. M. Changeless Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. FRIDAY Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. 7:30 p.m. 129 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0249 for more information or a ride. SATURDAY French Ph.D. Reading Examination. 9-11 a.m. 11 Fraser. urged to work out a series of evening meeting exchanges and joint meetings with other religious organizations. The council believes such meetings will create better understanding between any denominational groups now assembling separately. The council also encourages student religious groups to help emphasize religion to all students on campus. Whenever any group has a particularly outstanding guest speaker, it would be worthwhile to the entire campus if that group would make arrangements with the Kansas Union to sponsor that speaker at an open forum. A postscript to this letter may include the statement that most members of the religious council are enthusiastic over its proposed program and are watching to see if the campus prefers and benefits more from all-semester religious emphasis rather than one week of religious speakers. The council president said most members felt anything would be better than what had happened during the last few religious emphasis weeks. Last year as few as ten students attended a religious discussion meeting that had been open to the entire University. Non-Resident Fees To Increase in Fall Tuition for non-Kansas students at KU will increase $60, next fall. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the increase from $165 to $225 puts KU at the average in the Big Eight Conference schools fees for out-of-state students. The Board of Regents raised nonresident fees in the five state colleges from 10 to 35 per cent. This brings in an additional revenue of about $485,000. Law School to Hear Speaker on Labor John L. Holcombe, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Management Reports, United States Labor Department, Washington, D.C., will speak at a School of Law's convocation on Jan. 17, in the Court Room of Green Hall. Commissioner Holcombe will speak on labor law today and discuss the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959, known as the Landrom-Griffen Bill. All interested persons are invited to attend. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) TWO MEN FIGHTING A BODYBOXED MAN 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 PARSONS JEWELRY Serving the community with quality products for 60 years 725 MASS. VI 3-4266 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Jayhawks Slip To 18th on UPI Poll The Kansas Jayhawks emerged from their holiday schedule sporting an overall 6-4 season record — and still clinging to a spot in the nation's top 20 teams. The Hawks, who split their western tour losing to Brigham Young, 70-80 and defeated San Francisco, 60-43, and placed second in the league holiday tournament, were placed 18th on the weekly United Press International national basketball poll. Ohio State, which remained undefended by winning the holiday basketball festival in New York, missed a perfect score in the weekly ratings by a single point today for the third time this season. Following the Buckeye's tournament victories over St. John's and St. Bonaventure, two strong eastern teams rated among last week's first five, 34 of the 35 coaches who comprise the UPI rating board again voted coach Fred Taylor's defending national champions No. 1 in the nation. One coach, however, cast his ballot in favor of runnerup Bradley and picked Ohio State No. 2. Bradley, which stretched its winning streak to 10 with a pair of non-tournament triumphs last week, remained in second place for the fifth week in a row. The Braves' 264 points left them 85 behind Ohio State. North Carolina, Kansas State and Iowa were this week's newcomers in the top 10 group following holiday tournament championships. North Carolina (7-2) won the Dixie classic and jumped from 11th to 5th place; Kansas State (9-2) took the Big Eight tournament and moved from 12th to 7th; while Iowa (8-1). unranked last week, vaulted into the No. 9 spot following its triumphs in the Los Angeles classic. St. Bonaventure, beaten 84-82 by Ohio State in the holiday festival final, moved up one place to No. 3, while St. John's, which lost to the Buckeyes by 5 points in the tourney semifinals, dropped one notch to No. 4. Louisville, with an 11-game winning streak, advanced from 9th to 6th place; U.C.L.A. was 8th, Iowa 9th and Duke remained 10th. Indiana, beaten twice in the Los Angeles classic, St. Louis and Detroit dropped out of the top 10 group. Detroit, St. Louis and Indiana were the first three teams in the second 10 group in that order. Vanderbilt, Utah and West Virginia's Sugar Bowl champions were tied for No. 14. followed by Wichita, Kansas and Auburn. This week's United Press International basketball ratings with first place votes in parentheses; 1. Ono State (34) (9-0) 349 2. Bradley (1) (10-0) 264 3. St. Bonaventure (9-1) 243 4. St. John's (8-1) 168 5. North Carolina (7-2) 164 6. Louisville (11-0) 124 7. Kansas State (9-2) 103 8. U.C.L.A. (7-2) 89 9. Iowa (8-1) 81 10. Duke (9-1) 69 11, Detroit, 52; 12, St. Louis, 48; 13, Indiana, 45; 14 (tie), Vanderbilt, Utah and West Virginia, 12 catch; 17, Wichita, 11; 18, Kansas, 10; 19, Auburn, 8; 20 (tie), Memphis State, Providence, North Carolina State, Southern California and Iowa State, 7 each. 'Nobody Panics This Team Says Devine After Victory MIAMI — (UPI) — Soaking wet Dan Devine, commenting after his Tigers clawed Navy 21-14 in the Orange Bowl, said he had been certain his Missourians would shackle the Middies' Joe Bellino because "nobody panics this team." Devine, fresh from being tossed in the shower by his happy players, said "I was sure we could stop Bellino. In fact, I was never surer of anything in my life. He's a great player but we're a great team." Missouri yielded a touchdown to Bellino when the piano-legged halfback leaped to catch a 27-yard scoring pass. But he was limited to a puny four yards net on the ground. "Our hustling linemen made a major difference," said one of the hustlingest, All America end Danny La Rose. "Our linemen were hustling all the time," said Missouri halfback Mel West, who moved the ball so well a pressbox wagg suggested President-Elect John F. Kennedy, one of the day's 71,218 spectators, name him "Secretary of Offense." In the Navy dressing room coach Wayne Hardin wore a long face. "Our blocking was the biggest disappointment," he said. "They just kept getting through. They stopped our running offense cold and our quarterbacks didn't have time enough to throw." Brightest spot for Navy, even brighter than Bellino's spectacular catch, was end Greg Mather's record-breaking 95-yard touchdown run with an intercepted lateral. Mather said he moved in to help as a Navy linebacker got an arm around Missouri halfback Donnie Smith and then Smith "just pitched the ball back." "I think he was pitching to the quarterback," said Mather, a Woodland Hills, Calif., junior. "I got between them and the ball hit me in the chest. It bounced off my chest and I fielded it as it started to fall on the ground." "My legs started to hurt about the 20," said Mather, "but I kept on going. I figured if I could get to the five and I couldn't run anymore I'd just leap over the goal line." Mather said a Tiger grabbed his leg as he started running, "but the hold wasn't good and I just jerked away. He ran all the way to break the Orange Bowl interception record of 94 yards set by David Baker of Oklahoma in 1958 against Duke. Lane Accepts Vice President Post With A's CLEVELAND—Frank Lane, Vice President and General Manager of the Cleveland Indians baseball club, resigned today to accept a similar job with the Kansas City Athletics. Lane was in Chicago today to sign a contract. Details of Lane's contract were to be announced at a news conference later today. Local sources said they believed Lane would receive a long term contract at a better salary than he received here. He also was in line to receive stock in the Kansas City team. Lane, known for his endless trading of players, was credited with reviving interest in baseball here. Lane had two more years to go on his contract with the Indians. It was reported to call for a $50,000 a year salary and a bonus of five cents per person after home attendance reached 800,000. In one year here, attendance reached about 1,500,000. Lane came here to replace Hank Greenberg as general manager. He built attendance and a winning club, although he failed to produce a pennant winner. But his trades aroused some of the fans, especially last season when he traded Rocky Colavito and Minnie Minoso. He said he was trying to put together a balanced team with a good defense. Frank Gibbons, columnist for the Cleveland Press, said that he doubted that "frantic Frank had many firm admirers when he decided to take the jump to the cow country of Kansas City. Yet, this is more to be desired than the apathy which existed before he arrived." Lane at one time fired popular manager Joe Gordon. Then to everybody's surprise, at the end of the season, he rehired Gordon at a dramatic meeting at the club's stadium offices. Last season, Lane pulled an unprecedented switch when he traded managers with Detroit, sending Gordon to Detroit in exchange for Jimmy Dykes. There was no immediate indication who will succeed Lane in Cleveland. Lane has served as General Manager of major league clubs for more than ten years. The trades the 65-year-old Lane has made seem endless. Nobody knows for sure how many there were. But in all of the frantic trading, he never was able to put together a club which finished better than second. Lane's decision to quit here was a mild surprise. There was a feeling as the 1960 season ended that he would like to move on but he made a major trade after the season ended and it was felt he would stick around for another year or more. Two names as successor, however, popped up immediately. They were Al Lopez, Field Manager of the Chicago White Sox, who managed the Indians to a pennant a few years ago, and Dewey Soriano, president of the Pacific Coast League. Soriano was a candidate for the General Manager's job here before Lane was hired. Attend the MODERN BOOK FORUM DEAN FRANCIS HELLER Will Review "THE WASTEMAKERS" By Vance Packard At In the Music Room of the Kansas Union 4 P.M., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 4 Bridges Leads Kansas In Big Eight Tourney The Jayhawkers emerged from the Big Eight Tournament with something more important than a crown-spirit. Going into the tournament the Jayhawkers seemed to have lost all spirit and were only playing mechanically. But in the post Christmas games the team began to act more like a winning team. The important games begin this week as league play gets under way. The Jayhawkers are ready. The team has the drive it lacked earlier and one man has blossomed in the scoring column. The man is Bill Bridges. Bridges, who was voted the tournament's best, averaged over 20 points in the three games and finished third in the total point output. His usually fine performance in rebounding was 21 grabs beyond the nearest competitor. Wayne Hightower tied for fifth place in individual scoring and was third in rebounding. But the surprise player of the tournament was Henry Whitney, Iowa State forward. Whitney finished second in both scoring and rebounding. His play should make the Cyclones a major upset threat if he continues his tournament pace. Colorado was the big disappointment of the tournament. The Buffaloes, who should have been a major threat, finished in seventh place. The only win came over the Missouri Tigers. Judging from the play in the tournament, the race should develop into a three or four team race if Oklahoma and Colorado play the type of ball they are capable of playing. If not, it will be the old Wildcat-Jayhawk battle. Tournament Standings 1. Kansas State 2. KANSAS 3. Oklahoma 4. Iowa State 5. Nebraska 6. Oklahoma State 7. Colorado 8. Missouri EAGLE LEADERS 1. Henke MU ... 86 2. Whitney IS ... 69 3. *Bridges KU* ... 64 4. Comley KS ... 54 5. *Hightower KU* ... 53 6. Scott MU ... 53 Scoring Leaders Rebounds 1. Bridges KU 64 2. Whitney IS 43 3. Hightower KU 41 4. Henke MU 40 Washington Claims Top Spot After Win Over Minnesota United Press International Schloreld, who emerged as one of the nation's top football stars despite being unable to see in one eye as a result of a childhood accident, added, "I don't think the Gophers are the country's No. 1 team now." PASADENA — Washington's twotime Rose Bowl victors today laid claim to post-season national collegiate championship honors as a result of the Huskies' 17-7 victory over top-ranked Minnesota. "It was a championship bout and when you win a championship match don't you get the title?" Owens asked in reply to whether he considered his Huskies the top team in the nation as a result of yesterday's win. Both coach Jim Owens and Washington quarterback. Bob Schloredt, voted the "player of the game" for the second straight year, felt Washington had deposed Minnesota as the national champion football team. The 97,314 fans who jammed the Rose Bowl for the 47th annual New Year's holiday classic actually saw two football games. The Huskies won the game in the first half when they scored 17 points and the Minnesota Gophers had the edge both in ground-gaining and scoring in the second half when they had a 7-0 margin of superiority. But football being a game of two halves, the Huskies today received the acclaim of the football world for being the only western team to beat The Big Ten twice in a row since the Mid-Western Conference and the Coast have been playing in the Rose Bowl on a yearly basis. BANK BANK These Days Smart Money Is Heading For The BankI There's No Safety Like Bank Safety! J SO COME IN TODAY! ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPARTMENT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 8th and Mass. MOS' Gran Open erniz Plant aqua carmi in thects 2921 --- Buf- a ma- place. Mis- n the develop face if play able of the old 86 69 64 54 53 52 ...64 ...43 ...41 ...40 ot one eye accident, ophers now." eed the the Alw Newly saw wes won in they nenesota both in in the a 7-0 Page 7 图示为手机屏幕中的图像。 of two received world for to beat since since and in the s. CLASSIFIED ADS DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 938 % Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. ti BUSINESS SERVICES PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive, formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Self-Service Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything needs to be stored. Job objects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still. come. Welcome. ti KU BARBER SHOP — 411% W. 14th St. Flinty. Plenty of free par- lure. Clarence. LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. tf PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, probabilities. Sample test questions. Free delivery. Price $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. 3-DAY FINISHING. 35 mm or movie film by Eastman — Raney Drug Store, Hillcrest Shopping Center. 1-11 Aftertages and repair work. Call Mrs Reed, 921 Miss., Ml. 3-7551. ti FOR SALE BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, and diagrams. Complete cross index. Price $0.00. For your call copy VI 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. MUST PART with "Joe," a "52 Pontiac Pedigree and terms at vii M 3-7333. ti HALF ACRE and full acre tracts on beautiful hills overlooking cast side Tuttle Creek Lake. Available after formal plant sales. Easy to find. Easy locations to early buyers. Write for details to "Oak Canyon," Box 516, Manhattan, Kan. 1-3 1959 FIAT. Abrath 750. Spyder roadster in good condition. Reasonable. Call VI 3-3449. 1-3 WANTED WANTED: Betas to rent or buy tuxedos at Otber's for Turkey Trot. 1-3 Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. --- VI 3-0152 MISCELLANEOUS EVERAGES — All kinds of six-packs, ice pid. Crushed ice in water repellent ice plant bags. Plastic, party supplie ice plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 1350. NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one- half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3- 0942. tt 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street parking, private bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9776. tt FOR RENT University Daily Kansan FURNISHED one and two room units, kitchenettes. VI 3-9845. 1-3 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 two p.m. t UNFURNISHED TRI-PLEX APART- MENT. 3 rooms, private bath and en- trance. In the campus, a gym, nice. See any time at 1521 or kenton or phone. J. A. Reed, VI 3-5814. 1-9 VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI .3-9635. tt FURNISHED three room apartment with bath, electric range and garbage disposal. Will be ready Feb. 1. Can be seen now at 1145 Ind. 1-5 . TYPING Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable calls. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen. VI 3-2876. ft TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mc.Meddowley V. 3-8568. tf Typist; former secretary; electric typewriter, experienced in student and graduate typing. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, V 3-2001. tf Experienced typist — term papers, m-manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable salary. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., Carl I. 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Methlinger. I3-4:409-7. Experienced duptist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat; accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. M Mcahan, ftd. Former secretary, electric typewriter. Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work. Phone. Mrs Marilyn Hay, VI 3-2318. RECORDS & Hi-Fi Kief's MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1961 OPEN EVENINGS VI 2-1544 ASK ABOUT OUR RECORD CLUB Watch This Page Thursday for the Coach House Post-Christmas Sale COACH HOUSE Circlits For Town and Country Bird in a tree BIRD TV - RADIO Term papers, theses, types typed. Call Mrs. Walter Hleks, VI 2-0111. tt 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 STEREO Quality Parts Expert Service Guaranteed EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI $S-8379 Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. 1-4 Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Ressonable rates. Barlow. 408 W. 13th, VI. 1648. Experienced typist — will type these, papers, etc. Call Mr. Fulcher. VI 0588 Experienced typist -- will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. tf Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf NEED A RIDE? NEED RIDERS? Riding in a Group Saves Money Find that group under "Transportation" in your DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS VI 3-2700 - Ext. 376 LOOK BETTER - FEEL FRESHER! Let Us Do an Expert Job on Your Clothes THE DRY SANITONE CLEANING WAY As Recommended by HANDMACHER Clothes Manufacturer Quality Guaranteed The image shows a stylized illustration of a woman in a fitted dress with short sleeves and a high neckline. She is posing confidently with her hand on her hip, resting it on the back of a branch-like structure that appears to be part of a garland or decorative element. The background is plain white, emphasizing the figure and the details of the dress. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 N. H. VI 3-3711 OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8:30 P.M. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1961 GRADUATING? ... then you'll want a subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN to take with you! ALEXANDRA BECKER A tip ... Get your subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TODAY - KEEP UP WITH LIFE ON THE KU CAMPUS - Phone KU-376 For Kansan Subscriptions SUBSCRIPTIONS 1 Semester $3.00 1 Year $5.00 Call at Room 111 KANSAN Business Office Journalism Building Daily Hansan 58th Year, No.63 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday. Jan. 4, 1961 Cuban-U.S. Crisis Mounts U.S. Berates Cuba in U.N. . . J. M. B. Fidel Castro "Cuba Si, Yanqui No." Military Break Predicted After U.S. Diplomatic Break Two members of the political science department today questioned the advisability of maintaining the Guantanamo Naval Base after the U.S.—Cuban diplomatic break. This concern was expressed by both Clifford Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, and Earl Reeves, teaching assistant of political science. PROF KETZEL said, "It puts us in a rather peculiar position of maintaining a base in a country we do not recognize. The decision of our government to discontinue relations with the Cuban government was probably welcomed in Moscow and Peking." Mr. Reeves said that there is no sense in operating a naval base in an unfriendly area and if we do not move out it will place us in a "ticklish situation." Wescoe to Deliver Humanities Lecture Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoo will be the featured speaker at the fourth Humanities Lecture Series at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater. "By terminating diplomatic relations with Cuba, we should terminate our military relations as well and withdraw from the naval base," Mr. Reeves continued. "Castro is not obliged to honor the treaty that the U.S. made for the naval base because it was negotiated at the point of a gun. If I were Bulletin WASHINGTON — (UPI) President Eisenhower today warned the Castro regime to keep hands off the $70 million U.S. Naval base at Guantanamo Bay. Castro I could build a good case in the United Nations against the U.S. for the repudiation of the treaty." LARRY PIPPIN, visiting professor of political science, said that it is still really too early to accurately evaluate the situation and determine the motives behind the break. "The Latin American countries depend on the U.S. government to exist." Prof. Pippin said. "It is interesting to note that other governments who have broken off relations with Cuba are of types similar to the pre-Castro type of government." Bookstore Rebates Decrease Due to New Union Addition The greatly expanded facilities and extra services of the Kansas Union have resulted in a decrease of three per cent in the cash refund dividend offered patrons of the Union Book Store, explained Jack Newcomb, general manager of the bookstore. The Union Executive Committee, managing board of the Union affairs voted the change yesterday. It will affect only the twenty-eighth rebate period covering purchases from July 1, 1960 to Jan. 1, 1961. "The total Union enterprise is entirely self-supporting, and the operating costs of such an extensive plant are obviously substantial." Frank Burge, director of the Union said. Patronage refunds are not guaranteed, and have never been placed at a definite figure. Each six month period is evaluated separately and cashier receipts are valid for five years. that it was necessary," Mr. Newcomb said. Weather "With the new plant, costs are even more extensive, therefore with meticulous and careful scrutiny of all areas, the executive committee voted to apply the sum of 3 per cent of bookstore earnings "WE DIDN't relish having to cut the dividend offered our customers, but operating conditions were such (Continued on page 3) The northeast and north-central Kansas weather forecast is for fair and mild today, tonight and Thursday. Highs today and Thursday will be in the middle 50s. Lows tonight will range from 20 to 30. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — (UPI) The United States said today that Cuba's charge of an imminent American invasion was brewed "from the cauldron of hysteria" and makes the Fidel Castro government appear ridiculous. Ambassador James J. Wadsworth said the invasion charge was false but told the U.N. security council the United States would follow its tradition of not opposing full and free debate of any charges levelled against it in the United Nations. He said Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa had a record of being "persistent in error." Roa repeated to the U.N. his charge that the United States planned an imminent invasion under the pretext that Cuba has become an ally of the Soviet Union. "This is typical of the expiring Republican administration in its foreign relations." he said. "Cuba is not alone and if its soil is attacked, the revolutionary government and the people will have the support and backing of those committed to defend her sovereignty and territorial integrity." Roa showed the council photographs of high-explosive bombs with U.S. markings which he said were "North American material airlifted to the counter-revolutionary groups in the mountains" of Cuba. Roa and two aides had been pelted with frozen snow balls by anti-Castro demonstrators when they arrived at U. N. headquarters for the meetings, and U. N. guards had to rescue them. Wadsworth, in answering Roa's charges, said: "Dr. Roa asserts that "there exists a document of the Department of State, circulated to all the foreign ministries on the American continent, in which it is stated that President Eisenhow- U.S.-Cuban Break Worries Europeans LONDON —(UPI)— The break in United States-Cuban relations created deep concern throughout Western Europe today and neutral Switzerland promptly agreed to handle U.S. affairs in Havana. In most countries the Cuban crisis story took banner headlines and pushed the news of Laos off the front pages. Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin attempted to cut off Wadsworth's denunciation of the Cuban charge on a complaint that he was out of order but he was overruled. document. We certainly did not originate any such document..." er's government is prepared to order a military intervention in Cuba in certain circumstances. The U.S. government knows of no such Wadsworth said there should be no doubt that "the real attacker is the Cuban government." "The weapons are character assassination and false alarms," he said. "The target is not just the United States but all those governments of the western hemisphere whose policies the leadership in Havana does not happen to like. And the launching point for this propaganda invasion is right here in the United Nation." Wadsworth recalled that Cuba had raised the invasion charge before the council last year, that it had been referred to the Organization of American States (OAS) and that Castro himself had demanded action in a four-hour speech to the general assembly in September. Cuba, he said, deliberately ignored two U.S. requests to the OAS to look into the facts and "obviously desires only to build false propaganda fires rather than to have its complaints dealt with within the regional organization." . . 'Cubans Love Americans' By Byron Klapper Three KU students returned from Cuba with impressions of overwhelming friendship by Cubans for Americans, extensive building programs, and a failure of the American press accurately to portray the Cuban situation. "The people of Cuba love the people of the United States," said Karl Sparber, Vineland, N. J. sophomore, and one of the three students who visited Cuba. "This was evident wherever we went." "We stopped in the town of Jaguey Grande and 5,000 people were waiting for us. As our bus stopped they swarmed around us cheering and applauding, yelling and shaking our hands as we stepped out of the vehicle. "EVERYWHERE we went they met us this wav." he said. "The press never told exactly what the agrarian reform was and the various aspects of it, such as giving small plots of land to individual farmers, and the establishment of co-ops. Paul J. Bowlby, Long Beach, Calif., graduate student said that the United States press is not telling the truth about what is going on in Cuba. "It didn't explain the urban reform, the low rent apartment housing, or the abolishment of the landlord class, and also that the Cuban government is not doing business with Russia and Red China only, but also with Belgium, France and England," Bowley said. "In Havana they are building like crazy," reported Sparber. In East Havana, modern housing projects are already completed. "Wherever we went there were new housing projects and the people are being charged anywhere from 7 to 15 per cent of their wages to live in them. Sparber said he observed that the people had great faith in what Castro was doing for them. "WE WENT into a small fishing village on Cuba's north shore where the people were living in small filthy shacks. You wouldn't believe it unless you saw for yourself how terrible these living conditions were. Yet they were still very much for Castro because he built a school in that village and they believed he had plans to improve the village soon. BOWLBY SAID that the transportation in Cuba was arranged by the Institution for Friendship of All Peoples but this group acted as an aid and imposed no restrictions on where they could or should go. "We rented a car and saw our first co-op farm at Matanzas, unannounced we did the same thing for Ciudad Libertad (Freedom City) and Old camp Columbia. "I talked to dozens of people and met only two who were dissatisfied with the revolution and one was a pimp under the Batista regime and this is no longer fervently practiced as before," Bowlyb said. The KU students were among the 350 American students who went to Cuba from Dec. 23 to Jan. 3, under the sponsorship of the Fair Play For Cuba Committee. The trip, which included round trip fare from Miami, and room and board in Cuba for ten days, cost the students $100. . Cuba Holds Hate Orgy HAVANA — (UPI) — The Castro-controlled Cuban press and radio launched an all-out hate campaign against the United States today, denouncing the break in relations as a "consumation of Yankee diplomatic aggression." Ignoring the fact the break came after Cuba demanded the American Embassy cut its staff from several hundred to 11 persons, the Cubans sought to construe the Washington action as "proof" of earlier propaganda charges the U.S. had been preparing a military invasion. NEWSPAPER editorialists and radio commentators took the same propaganda line—that the severance of relations was "another step" in the alleged U.S. plan setting the stage for direct attack. Perhaps significantly, Moscow radio earlier took the same line in its radio reference to the break in its international broadcast service. Meanwhile, hundreds of Americans, warned by the U.S. Embassy to get out of Cuba immediately unless they had "compelling reasons" to stay, packed for a hasty return to the mainland. Although Premier Fidel Castro's government had promised "absolute guarantees" of the rights of 3,000-odd Americans in Cuba, three Americans were arrested yesterday by the Dier (secret police) and held without charge. They were released at 2 a.m. today. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER said in a statement handed to reporters; "This calculated action on the part of the Castro government is only the latest of a long series of harassments, baseless accusations and vilification. "There is a limit to what the United States in self respect can endure. That limit has now been reached." The state department immediately announced the United States intends to keep its 1,550-man Guantanamo Naval Base in eastern Cuba. (Continued on page 3) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 4, 1961 A Korean Problem Two editorials in a recent Korean exchange newspaper indicates a trend of thought among Korean students that is at the same time reassuring and disturbing to Americans. The editorial subjects were a nation-wide anti-Communist student rally at Seoul and the trouble Korean students are having in gaining scholarships to study in the United States. The newspaper, "The Argus," published by the Foreign Language School in Seoul, deals first with the scholarship problem. The editorial says that Korean students have been "troublesome guests in the United States especially since they don't like to return home after completing their studies." The editorial then asks the question why; especially since Korean students have been "heroes as bold defenders of Korean democracy and reliable knights in the anti-Communist struggle" as evidenced in the April revolution. THE EDITORIAL ARRIVES AT NO ANSWER to this problem but says that the students now in Korea have a severe problem. First, the country needs an educated leadership from its younger generation; and second, the students must begin to look elsewhere for education opportunities if the United States is not able to meet the demands for student scholarships. "As a result shouldn't we students in Korea with our ever-increasing demand for higher education . . . seek for a chance in Japan or some other place, maybe the Soviet Russia?" To get the other side before commenting, a quote from the editorial concerning the anti-Communist student rally at Seoul Stadium: "... TEN THOUSAND STUDENTS FROM all over Korea gathered to affirm their determination to fight communist influence. He (the school's student body president) was elected during the proceedings to be Foreign Secretary of the Korean National Federation of Student Governments, an organization made up of delegates from over sixty colleges and universities in Korea." If a conclusion can be drawn from two editorials on two differing topics, it would be that the majority of Korean students today are strongly against Communism but that their desire for higher education is nearly as strong as their fight against Communism. The editorial pointed out that perhaps the Soviet Union was the answer to the education problem. THIS ISN'T A GOOD SITUATION FOR THE United States. It can not afford to lose the chance of educating promising Korean students while at the same time driving them into the Communist camp. Staunch allies in the fight for freedom are necessary and must be given as much attention as nations today in the wide gulf of neutralism. Korea is vulnerable to Communism and the United States must continue to aid the nation's drive toward democratic goals. John Peterson Emphasis on Religion A tradition for 40 years on Mt. Oread—Religion-in-Life-Week—is being replaced this year. KU's Religious Council has initiated a substitute plan which asks organized houses to invite religious speakers to dinner once or twice each semester, and asks campus religious organizations to sponsor speakers at irregular intervals throughout the remainder of the year. The council also plans to sponsor an outstanding religious personality in a University-wide forum in the spring. Poor student support for the week-long emphasis program last year made this change necessary. One campus-wide discussion group was attended by only 10 persons. Members of the Religious Council hope that this new prolonged program of religious emphasis will revive student interest and participation. The council is sending a letter to all organized houses this week asking for support and participation in the program. Besides the poor attendance at some of the programs during the Religion-in-Life-Week last year, another factor was in part responsible for the change in policy. Most campus religious leaders feel that one week of religious emphasis is too limited and does not create the continued interest that is desirable. These leaders contend that this program of semester-long emphasis—if pursued with vigor—will lick both the problem of complacency and limited time for religious emphasis. We heartily agree and endorse the efforts of KU's Student Religious Council. — John Peterson BEN HUR; VARSITY; COLOR At the Movies General Lew Wallace's epic novel explodes into life again, this time under the direction of William Wyler, who proves he can handle a sword-and-shield spectacular with the best of them. And this is the spectacular to end all spectacles. It almost makes colossal productions like "Quo Vadis" and "The Ten Commandments" look like low-budget quickies. The most stirring and spectacular scene is the chariot race, reputed to have cost millions to film. "Ben Hur" is billed as "A Story of the Christ” but there is little in the film to warrant this claim. Instead, the contacts between Ben Hur, the exiled Jew returned to his native land, and the then-unrecognized savior occur only twice, and are used to lend dramatic force to the plot. Ben Hur is a compelling figure. A man of stature and power in his own land, he rejects a Roman offer of rewards for his influence over his people. An unfortunate accident gives the Roman governor a sufficient excuse to send him to the galleys and to imprison his family. In the forge of hardship, Ben Hur rises to greatness of soul, but never forgets the cruelty of Rome. This final return to the ancient, ruined house of Hur is stirring. His final meeting with his leprous mother and sister, released at last from prison, is perhaps overdone but moving nonetheless. On the whole, the film is an exciting and reasonably faithful representation of one of the most popular novels ever written. Wallace's story was crudely written in spots, but its vitality and adventure are as appealing today as they were when the book was first published. The screenplay leaned toward the sensational, but the message was undamaged. Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 826, call ff Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Carol Heller, Jane Boyd, Prisella Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Shelley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. Rav Miller Bill Blundell EDUCATION DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors Charleton Heston, who now slips into period costumes as easily as he pulls on his socks, won an academy award for his portrayal of Ben Hur. There were better dramatic performances during the year, but the scope of the film and the extensive, meaty role supplied by Ben Hur gave a good actor a rare opportunity. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell Mark Dull ... Bu Business Manager Short Ones Those stories that circulated through Republican cocktail parties before the election received a counterpart from the Democrats. It went like this: Add one part of anything, particularly new Republicanism, and another part of something else, and then finish it off with a twist of Norman Vincent Peale. MATERNITY WARD STATE BUDGET COMM. WESCOE EATON DU DAILY KANSAN 1960 "It ought to be any time now!" From the Newsstand Pox on White Paper I READ EVERY WORD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF Kansas' "white paper" in connection with its athletic difficulties with the Big Eight. It should prove to be valuable, particularly in the rural areas where the Sears catalog gets pretty thin this time of year. As I understand the white paper, the University has carefully weighed the evidence and returned its verdict: Not guilty. This reminds me of the teller who said he didn't care what the bank examiners, the judge and the jury said, he still was innocent. The white paper is worth examining. This sequence of events is interesting, even though the plot is one of the oldest in the world. It starts out when a football player meets an alumnus, accidentally. This is always happening, and it's one of the strange phenomena of our time. Football players and alumni are always bumping into each other accidentally. It's always a chance meeting, even when it's in the living room of the player's folks in Hooker, Okla. The NCAA didn't care, but he had to promise his wife he'd quit smoking. . . THIS ONE HAPPENED ON THE STREET, AND the two of them flew off to Chicago. There's nothing unusual in that. I had an uncle once who left home on Christmas Eve to get a package of cigarets and got back January 17. To get back to the white paper, when these two got home from Chicago, the conversation must have gone something like this: "Where are you going to college? Gualladet? Pomona Juco?" "I don't know. Where did you go?" "A simple plains institution called Kansas. You don't mean...?" "Well, I might..." "I will call the proper authorities and ask them to process your enrollment." It turns out he had to talk to the football coach, and that proves the registrar should spend more time in his office. You never know when these things will come up. Then thunderbolt struck. The NCAA didn't buy this version of the story, and punished the University. The Big Eight did the same thing. The latter also made the player ineligible for a year in sports, except he can run in track. This proves only that track is not a sport, and I'm glad the conference made that clear. NEXT, SAYS THE WHITE PAPER, THE COACH tried to discourage this player from enrolling. But he insisted and finally, the university accepted him. It's a good thing, too, because the University was on the verge of being accused of prejudice against out-of-state students. The scene now is a little confusing. The school maintains its innocence while anticipating soaring season ticket sales. The coach has just received a hefty raise in salary. And who is taking the rap? The player—the very young man who put himself into the hands of men of the white paper stresses are "men of integrity." This is good, old-fashioned American collegiate athletic justice, although it may bear a disturbing resemblance to good, old-fashioned American collegiate athletic hypocrisy. ... FINALLY, THE UNIVERSITY EXPRESSED ITS anger over the fact the newspapers printed the story, early in the game, that the school and the player might be in hot water with the Big Eight. It accused another school of giving the story to the papers. This isn't true. The University feels, I suppose, that it would have been better to keep this whole mess out of the papers. Then it could have announced, next fall, that the player missed five games because of a severe attack of lumbago. I will agree that might have been better. Had it gone that way, the white paper wouldn't have been issued. And almost anything would have been better than it... (Excerpted from Dick Snider's column, the Topeka Daily Capital, Dec. 18, 1960.) Page 3 The Negro Scholar-2 "The cultural and intellectual blight produced by such a widespread, wholesale effort to destroy the personality and the dignity of the Negro is impossible to measure. One can merely survey it, describe it, and get some sense of the effect of such experiences on the Negro as a person, to say nothing of the effect on him as a would-be scholar. "A course in, say, American institutions and values, or one even in American history, well taught, starts even an ordinarily gifted Negro student to begin considering his own situation, and it doubtless puts a bright young Negro on edge. Freedom, equality, democracy, tolerance, enfranchisement, participation—all these things suddenly begin to take on some specific meaning to him, and he begins to see himself in a new and different light. At best it is distracting. At worst it is traumatic. In any case it starts him thinking about himself and the society that does certain things to him, and he is drawn, to some extent, from his main scholarly activities." "There is one other major consideration that constitutes an important factor in the state of scholarship in the Negro school and college. It has to do with the growing awareness on the part of the young Negro student of his status and his increasing concern with it. The new experiences he begins to have in college, or even high school, awaken in him a keen sense of the intellectual privations and the cultural blight of his earlier life. Education often begins for him a great new search into the nature of the social order and his place in it. "It goes without saying that his (the Negroe's) basic training has been inadequate, and this has made it extremely difficult for him to pursue advanced training. His motivation has been destroyed or seriously impaired since he has come from a home that society has dehumanized and has looked toward a future that is indeed dark as far as intellectual growth is concerned. His appreciation for the better things of the mind and spirit has been numbered by the battle he has had to wake for physical survival in a world that even insisted on purchasing his labor on the basis of race instead of ability or competence. How could there emerge from such a culturally disadvantaged group any considerable number of talented persons whose prognosis for significant academic achievement was promising? This constitutes a major tragedy, perhaps the major tragedy, in American life... "Perhaps he just thinks and gives to this matter little time or attention that is taken from what his main pursuit should be. But, perhaps, he is so oppressed by the very contemplation of his degraded status that he turns much of his attention and energy to it. It could be a W.E.B. Du Bois, who fretted over it, and then turned from his main intellectual interests to devote seventy years to a struggle that ended in despair and disillusionment. It could be a North Carolina student perched on a stool at a lunch counter in a five and ten cents store where he could not eat; perhaps he would then spend five, ten years, perhaps his life—perhaps give his life—in the effort to discover himself in relation to the society of which he is a part. "These observations seem to suggest that if the problem of the discovery and encouragement of the academically talented in the United States is, under ordinary conditions, a difficult and complex one, it is especially difficult and incredibly complex where Negroes are concerned. It would seem that any effort for the planning and maintaining of programs for superior Negro students must be mindful of these difficulties and complexities... "The young Negro genius, if he knew himself, would cry out to his country to utilize his talents for the enhancement of the position of his country. He has neither the voice nor the understanding to assert himself. That is the responsibility that we must assume. If we do, there will, in due time, rise up among us new giants in the land, strong in mind and heart, and dedicated to achieving for the benefit of everyone the things they have hitherto found it almost impossible to achieve." (This is the final excerpt from an address by John Hope Franklin, "To Educate All the Jeffersonians," published in the April, 1960 issue of The Superior Student.) Official Bulletin French Ph.D. Reading Examination. Saturday, January 7, 9 to 11 a.m., Room 11, Fraser. Give books to Miss Craig. Fraser 120 by noon on January 5. Language proficiency examinations in French. German, Latin & Spanish will be at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, January 7. Register with appropriate departmental language Latin, 213 Fraser; German, 210 Fraser; French, 206 Fraser; Spanish, 205 Fraser. TODAY Geology Department Lecture. 4 p.m. 242 Lindley Hall, Dr. Charles L. Drake. Speak on "Structure of the Continental Margin of Northeastern America." Medical Dames. 8 p.m. Parlor C, Kansas, Union, Bridge Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Room 306, Kansas Union Dome, 8 p.m. Epicapish Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Communion Breakfast follows 8:35 a.m. **Der deutsche Verein trifft scl wieder** JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT am 5. Januar um 5:00 Uhr, 502 Fraser. Umsersch期 program: Das Jawhayk Theater "Die Fahrenden Schueler" zeight: "Amerikaner in Deutschland," Stueck in zwei Akten aufgefuhrt von den welbekanten Berufsauspielern in Deutschen Berufserudolf Kerscher. Abendesen in der Mensa. Alle herzlich eingeladen. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 829 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0224 for more information or a ride. Tickets for the Experimental Theatre production of "Anna Christie" by Eugene O'Neill are available beginning today at the Fine Arts ticket office in Murphy Hall. Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m. Fraser Theatre, Chair of the Classics *bcture* for Preparation for a Profession'. 'Anna Christie' Play Tickets Are on Sale Jewish Religious Services, 7 p.m. Danforth, Channel FRIDAY The production will run Monday to Jan. 14. Students may obtain tickets at half price with their ID cards. for which it acquired treaty rights in 1903. (Continued from page 1) Cubans Push Hate Drive The political blow to the American residents of Cuba was far exceeded by the human impact on the thousands of Cubans seeking to flee Cuba and seek political asylum in the United States from the regime of Premier Fidel Castro. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals THE BREAK IN relations caught the Embassy with an estimated 52,000 visa applications pending for final action. They have been processed at the rate of a thousand a week in recent months, but these were handled by a force of 11 U.S. consuls and a host of Cuban aides, and the Cuban cutback in the embassy staff size forced an immediate halt of the issuance of visas. Balfour Some 200 men and women turned away from the embassy yesterday when the visa office closed reappeared this morning and seemed incredulous when they realized the huge glass doors would not again open . The Castro explanation that the staff reduction was ordered to halt "spying" failed to convince many Cubans. One angered waiter, a former union leader, shouted at a handful of people at breakfast "Americans get a free cup of coffee from a true Cuban here. Let the Russians pay for it." A CAB DRIVER who dropped off a couple seeking to pick up the visas for which they had earlier applied exclaimed "they (the Cuban government) have gone crazy" when he learned of the Castro order to reduce the embassy staff. "How are our people going to seek freedom" he asked. "The Americans need a big (embassy) staff just as Cubans would need one in the U.S. for exit visas, if you had a Castro there." 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER The faces of visa applicants at the embassy were tearstained and drawn. Friendly embassy staff members came out on the streets repeatedly to urge them to "please go home, for your sake. There is really no hope of your getting a visa." Wednesday. Jan, 4. 1961 University Daily Kansan Francis Heller, professor of political science, and associate dean of the College, will review "The Wastemakers," by Vance Packard at the Modern Book Review Forum at 4 p.m. today in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Heller to be Speaker At Book Review 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 摄像师 HIXON STUDIO BRUSSELS, Belgium—(UFI) —A slogan-shouting crowd of 10,000 strikers marched through Brussels again today, smashing windows of banks and stores and howling for the resignation of Catholic Premier Gaston Eyskens. For the second straight day the government massed paratroopers, tanks, armored cars, and mounted and foot police to guard against a new reported march on parliament by militant leftist-led strikers. 721 Mass. Crowd Seeks Resignation Of Belgian Premier Eyskens VI 3-0330 At the same time, socialist opposition deputies in a stormy parliamentary session called on Eyskens to quit and hold new general elections in this strike-bound country. The demonstrators, carrying banners and chanting "Eyskens resign" and "Eyskens to the gallows," marched in a column 12-deep through the main downtown streets. Bookstore Rebate Shows Decrease (Continued from page 1) towards the significant operational cost of the union plant," Mr. Burge added. Mr. Newcomb explained that the students still are receiving the benefits of their 10 per cent dividend, for the 3 per cent deducted from the cash refund will be re-channeled into another area of Union services. "KANSAS UNIVERSITY is rather unique in its policy of refunding part of the student's college expense through the bookstore," Mr. Burge commented. "The only other such plan that I'm familiar with is the Harvard Cooperative Association." "The total pack of services offered by the Union necessitated the action taken," Mr. Burge said. "We feel positive that students will receive the benefits of the 3 per cent they have invested in the Union." Try the Kansan Want Ads They set off firecrackers and booed police guarding main intersections. When the column passed one big bank a hail of rocks and steel bolts smashed 24 windows. One socialist speaker in parliament angrily waved his fist at Eyskens and demanded his resignation. This set off an uproar, and was followed by another when another socialist deputy charged that he and three other socialists had been held at rifle point by three armed gendarmes. In the country as a whole, the situation was calm. The strike situation generally was static, with an estimated 500,000 workers still idle, Socialist-led workers in Brussels department stores joined the walk-out today, but they appeared to have very little effect. Police prevented pickets from bothering shoppers, and only about 20 to 30 per cent of the workers were absent from their jobs. All big Brussels department stores remained open as usual. Prof. McKinney to Be Lecturer in Ohio Ross E. McKinney, professor of civil engineering, will be guest lecturer at a conference on "Bio-Oxidation of Industrial Wastes" to be held Jan. 16-20 in Cincinnati, Ohio. The conference is sponsored by the U.S. Public Health Service. Prof. McKinney has been studying biological waste treatment for 10 years on grants from the Public Health Service. EASY-WASH 11th & Pennsylvania VI 3-9706 LARGE PARKING AREA Indiana 1144 835 Mass. JAY SHOPPE 9th Anniversary CLEARANCE SALE (Thurs., Fri. & Sat.) FALL & WINTER SKIRTS SWEATERS REDUCED 40% FALL DRESSES Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price NYLON SLIPS GOWNS REDUCED Now Now 40% FALL COATS CAR COATS Reduced 40% BLOUSES SHIRTS NOW REDUCED (Downtown only) 40% FALL GLOVES Reduced 40% (Campus Shoppe only) Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 4, 1961 The image provided does not contain any text. It appears to be a blank or unmarked page with no visible content. Welcome Back. These Downtown St Happy and Prosper ACME Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Lawrence National Bank 647 Mass. VI 3-0260 The Town Shop & University Shop Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1001 N. H. VI 3-3711 Weave 901 Hornbe 841 Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. VI3-7474 Lawre New Y 926 Penne 830 Shop Downtown Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan P. k Jayhawkers! Stores Wish You a prosperous New Year! Weaver's Dept. Store 901 Mass. VI 3-6360 Hornberger Jewelry 841 Mass. VI 3-3813 Granada Theatre 1020 Mass. VI3-5788 Lawrence Sanitary 202 W.6th VI3-5511 Varsity Theatre 1015 Mass. VI 3-1065 Penney's Dept. Store 830 Mass. VI 3-4114 New York Cleaners 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Norris Brothers 1515 W. 6th VI 3-6911 1st National Bank 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 Parsons Jewelry 725 Mass. VI 3-4731 During 1961 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 4. 1961 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS Head basketball coach, Dick Harp, said today that the only thing the Big Eight Basketball tournament proved was that the league race would be much closer than was expected. Big 8 Tourney Foretells Tight Conference Race "The tournament never proves anything as far as the eventual outcome of the conference race is concerned," he said. "This year's tourney merely showed there would be a close race for the title. We came out of the tournament in about the same shape in relation to the other conference teams as at the beginning of the season." Nebraska showed to be stronger than the predicted eighth place finish at the start of the campaign and that Iowa State could easily be the surprise team of the year, he said. Harp said that there would again be a scramble for the four top spots in the final Big Eight standings judging from the play in Kansas City. Of the KU opener in the tournament, a 78-53 win over Nebraska, Harp commented that KU got off to a good start and didn't let the Cormuskers do what they wanted. But Harp said, "Nebraska will be heard of in conference play." Iowa State impressed the Kansas coach in the Jayhawkers 74-70 victory. The game was close throughout with KU able to maintain the lead to stay out of trouble. Harp said the Cyclones will be considerably stronger when injured 6-11 senior Terry Roberts returns to the line-up. This addition plus sparkplugs Gary Wheeler and Henry Whitney should help the Cyclones forget the loss of Vinnie Brewer. "We had every opportunity to win and they had every opportunity to lose. It was just a matter of who had the most." Harp said of the 68-66 overtime loss in the championship game against Kansas State. In the other games which Kansas played during the vacation, Harp explained that the loss of Wayne Hightower on fouls was very costly in the loss to North Carolina and the excellent shooting of Brigham Young plus a poor KU defense which caused that defeat. In the win over San Francisco Harp said the Hawkers played their best defensive game of the season. The outstanding player for the Jayhawkers both in the tourney and the preceding games was senior center Bill Bridges. "Bridges has developed great confidence in his shooting ability which has resulted in greater point production." he said. Harp called Bridges' performance in Kansas City "one of the best physical efforts put together on three consecutive days I have ever seen." KC Baseball Fans Hope For Trading Magic From Lane KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — Kansas City baseball fans are jugilibullet over obtaining Frank Lane and expect him to pull the Athletics but of the cellar with some of his legendary trading magic. Lane was hired yesterday by Kansas City owner Charles Finley. He previously guided the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox, and Cleveland Indians to first-division finishes and A's fans are hopeful he will do the same for them. Lane replaces Parke Carroll, who has been sharply criticized for trades involving the New York Yankees. Two of the deals which aroused the wrath of Kansas City fans sent slugger Bob Cerv to the Yankees for injury-plagued third baseman Andy Carey, and the American League's most valuable player, Roger Maris to New York in a multiple player deal. Carroll, whose ouster was forecast by United Press International, called Lane, "one of the top executives in baseball. I would like to congratulate Mr. Finley on the choice of Lane. He did a great job of creating interest in Chicago, St. Louis and Cleveland, and I am sure he will do the same thing for Kansas City." Carroll praised both deals as being beneficial to the A's, yet Kansas City finished in the American League cellar and the Yankees won the pennant. Carroll, who had served as Kansas City General Manager since the A's came here in 1955, said he has no immediate plans for the future. Lane, 65, was given a four-year contract. He said he considers every player on the A's roster material for "judicious" trades. "The good players we'll keep in Kansas City, and they will not find their way to Yankee Stadium or any other stadium if they are any good," he said. Lane's salary with the Athletics calls for a reported $100,000 per year. He drew $50,000 a year salary and a bonus of five cents per person after home attendance passed the 800,000 mark at Cleveland. In coming to Kansas City, Lane again joins forces with manager Joe Gordon, who was his skipper at Cleveland until the managerial swap last season with the Detroit Tigers. Lane said there were no hard feelings between himself and Gordon over the managerial trade, adding that he had told Gordon Detroit wanted him "and it was a voluntary decision on his (Gordon's) part." "I think that Frank is the greatest general manager in baseball today," Finley said. Intramural basketball is once again in full strength as today's games are: Intramural Schedule FRATERNITY A—Triangle vs Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4:15—Alpha Tau Omega vs Phi Kappa Theta, 5:15—Sigma Chi vs Delta Upsilon, 4:15. INDFPENDENT A—Bo-Jets vs Tortfeats 7.15: FRATERNITY C—Delta Upsilon 2 vs Phi Kappa Psi #2 4:15- Phi Gamma Delta #3 vs Sigma Alpha Epsilon #4, 4:15-Theta Tau vs Beta Theta Pi #5, 5–DU 3 vs Sigma Chi #1, 5–Sigma Chi #5 vs Phil Delta Theta #5, 5:45-Sigma Nu #2 vs Alpha Epson Pi, 5:45-Kappa Ppsi #3 vs Phil Gam #5, 6:30-Beta #2 vs Phil Delti #4, 6:30-Gamma Nu #1 vs Delta Chi, 7:15-Sigma Chi 4 vs Phil Gam #4, 7:15. Tomorrow's intramural basketball games are as follows: INDEPENDENT A—Hawks vs Delta Functions, 4:15—Joseph R. Pearson #2 vs Templin, 5:15—Battenfeld vs Ace Pearson, 6:15—Pearson vs Jolliffe, 7:15. INDEPENDENT B—Air Force vs AAA, 7:15—Chemistry vs Templin, 7:15. FRATERNITY C—Tau Kappa Epsilon #1 vs Phi Delta Theta #3, 4:15—Theta Chi vs Alpha Tau Omega #3, 4:15—Sigma Kappa #2 vs Phi Gamma Delta #2, 5—Sigma Phi Epsilon #2 vs Phi Delt#2, 5—Sigma Alpha Epsilon #1 vs Kappa Sigma, 6:30—Sigma Chi #3 vs Beta Theta Pt #6, 6:30. Houk's Record NEW YORK — (UPI) — Ralph Houk, New York Yankee manager, appeared in 91 games as a major leaguer and had a lifetime batting average of 272. Lead 'em Both BALTIMORE — (UPI) — Hoey Wilhelm of the Baltimore Orioles holds the distinction of being the only pitcher to lead both major leagues in earned run average. GRANADA MOW SHOWING GRANADA NOW SHOWING! NOW! at 7:00 & 9:00 "Grass Is Greener" 11 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "BEST PICTURE"! METRO GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A Tale of the Christ by GENERAL LEW WALLACE A Tale of the Christ by GENERAL LEW WALLACE BEN HUR CHARLTON HESTON · JACK HAWKINS WILLIAM WYLER HAYA HARAREET · STEPHEN BOYD SCREENPLAY BY PRODUCED BY KARI TUNBERG • SAM ZINBRAIST TUGH GRIFFITH · MARTHA SCOTT ... CATHY ODONNELL · SAM JAFFE NOW SHOWING TECHNICOLOR® CAMERA 6 A Special Limited Engagement mat. at 1:30 $1.00 eve. at 7:30 $1.25 Varsity THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-1065 Intramural Standings Beta Theta Pi 2-0 Phi Delta Theta 2-0 Alpha Kappa Lambda 1-1 Phi Kappa Psi 1-1 Lambda Chi Alpha 0-2 Pi Kappa Alpha 0-2 FRATERNITY A First Division Second Division Kappa Sigma 2-0 Sigma Phi Epsilon 2-0 Phi Gamma Delta 1-1 Delta Chi 1-1 Delta Tau Delta 0-2 Sigma Nu 0-2 Third Division Sigma Chi ... 2-0 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 1-0 Delta Upsilon ... 1-1 Phi Kappa Theta ... 1-1 Triangle ... 0-1 Tau Kappa Epsilon ... 0-2 Wichita Senior Gets Oil Co. Scholarship James H: Henderson, Wichita senior, has been awarded one of ten Mobil Oil Co. scholarships. The award totals $800. Half of this amount was given to Henderson and $400 was awarded to the KU petroleum engineering department in which the student is majoring. The department is to use that money for any purpose deemed appropriate, according to the Mobil Oil Co. Try the Kansan Want Ads INDEPENDENT A First Division Hawks ... 2-0 Joseph R. Pearson No. 1 ... 2-0 The One ... 1-1 Carruth-O'Leary ... 1-1 Joseph R. Pearson No. 3 ... 0-2 GDIA ... 0-2 Second Division Third Division Joseph R. Pearson No. 2 ...1-0 Delta Functions ...1-0 Hawks ...1-0 Bo-Jets ...0-1 Templin ...0-1 Tortfeasors ...0-1 Jolliffe ... 1-0 Ace Pearson ... 1-0 Stephenson ... 1-0 Battenfeld ... 0-1 Pearson ... 0-1 Foster ... 0-1 SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER PUZZLE Students! Grease Job ... $1 Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hr on Duty Brakes Reliable Grease Job 81 Brake Adi 98c Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 1101 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE TL. 9-238 Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS Treat yourself to a sparkling new hairstyle for the holiday season . . . let one of Ronnie's skilled stylists create a new coiffure for you. New Styled Haircut & Shaping ___ 1.50 Lustrous Shampoo and Fashion Setting ___ 2.00 Appointment Not Always Needed Open Late Week Nights Cold Waves, From $5.95 Complete Malls Shopping Center — VI 2-1144 WAFFLE SPECIAL At JAYHAWK CAFE B5 14th & Ohio EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT Blueberry — Chocolate — Strawberry — Pecan CHOICE OF HAM OR BACON 75c Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR ICE words or less: one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939% Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; composed formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to midnight. Misc. offices: Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything is on display. Job objects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still. come. Welcome, tr PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions and solutions. Price $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest theater studios, Studio 89, Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. www.missouri.edu/dance KU BARBER SHOP - 411½ W. 14th St Flat tops a speciality. Plenty of free parking. Clarence. FOR RENT 3-DAY FINISHING. 35 mm or movie film by Eastman - Raney Drug Store, Hillcrest Shopping Center. 1-11 Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., V 3-7541. tf I would like to babysit in my home, play, References. Call VI 3-8710. 1-6 3-Room furnished apartment. Off-street. phone 212-495-6800; bath. Rent reduce. Phone VI 3-9776. First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 for 2 p.m. t VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf UNFURNISHED TRI-PLEX APARTMENT. 3 rooms, private bath and enclosure from campus. Join us any time at 1021 Kirsten or phone J. A. Reed. VI 3-5184. 1-9 FURNISHED three room apartment with bath, electric range and garbage disposal. Will be ready Feb. 1. Can be seen now at 1145 Ind. 1-5 If you like to live very close to the campus, one and one-half blocks from the library apartment is available now. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6696 for appointment. 1-10 SIX ROOM lower apartment, newly furnished, private bath and entrance, furnished. Phone VI 3-2302 or VI 3-8501 for 5 p.m. Phone VI 3-10320 or VI 3-8501 for 5 p.m. BOARD AND ROOM next semester. VI 3-4385. 1-10 NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room, steam heat, phone, private bath, private furnished. Also clean two room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, phone. $26.50 per month, bills paid. Close to campus. Enable next semester. Phone 7830. Y-1-10 ROOMS—graduate men preferred. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture, facilities. Adequate study and reation room available. 1221 Oreed VI 5-6798. IV 1-10 HELP WANTED MISCELLANEOUS WELL-PAID, part time position, for ac- cademic secretary. German type. CALL VI 3-7607 1-9 BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Ice cream, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. Kief's RECORDS & Hi-Fi MALLS SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS VI 2-1544 ASK ABOUT OUR RECORD CLUB TYPING BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and course materials, books and diagrams. Complete cover印制. Price $3.00. For your copy call VI 1-2605. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEidlowey, VI 3-8568. Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. Typist: former secretary; electric typewriter, experienced in student and graduate typing. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequlist, 1935 Barker, M 3-2001. tf FOR SALE Experienced typist — term papers, mnu scripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., C.I. 3-74855. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. tf Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter. Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work. Phone. Mrs Marilyn Havi. VI 3-2318. tfl EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resumes rates. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, PM 3-1097. 1-4 EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-9554. tf Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-148. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 at 4 p.m. tf TYPING WANTED—theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell VI 3-6440. 1-10 Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf Experienced typist — will type theses, term papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tf NOTICE STUDENTS: FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. MUST PART with "Joe," *the* 52 Pontiac. Pedigree and terms at VI 3-7333. . . . . MEN'S and WOMEN'S DIAMOND RING, 3/4 carat solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350. Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. tt SHOE ★ Randcraft ★ Bass ★ Jarmans SALE! $ 6^{99} $ to $ 12^{99} $ Regular to 18.95 ★ Dress Flats Heels Sport Shoes $2^{99}$ to $7^{99}$ Regular to 12.95 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. CLEANING SPECIAL 3 SKIRTS, PLAIN SWEATERS PANTS Any Combination No Limit, Any Three for $1 Wed., Thurs., Fri. Only Fast 1 HOUR DRY CLEANING Page 8 University Daily Kansas Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1961 ACME Wishes You a Happy New Year For the coming year let us give your clothes the cleanest clean in town 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1111 MASS. Dial VI 3-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Open Till 8:30 Thursday Evenings Rights Council OKs Boycott of Taverns By Byron Klapper The Civil Rights Council last night approved a resolution to boycott two Lawrence taverns because of their discriminatory policies toward serving Negroes. The council asked for an "all-student boycott of the Huddle and the Downbeat until they extend equal services to all people regardless of race, religion or national origin." The Daily Kansan learned today that the Downbeat is under new management and the tavern is now called the Harbour. THE BOYCOTT decision was reached as a result of complaints to the CRC that the taverns refused service to Negro students. "These are the only two taverns in town that are still known to be segregating," a CRC spokesman said at the council meeting in the Kansas Union last night. THE WHITE students entered the Huddle, sat in a booth, and were served by a friendly gray-haired waitress. A week before the Christmas vacation, two Negro and two white students volunteered to patronize the taverns to check the accuracy of the complaints. The Negro students entered shortly afterward and sat in the same booth. When the waitress saw them she politely informed them that she was sorry, but she would not serve them. When asked why, the waitress answered. "I'm sorry, I only work here. Why don't you speak to the owner tomorrow morning?" When asked if she were instructed not to serve Negroes, the waitress repeated that she was sorry and that the students should speak to the owner. THE FOUR students quietly left the tavern and decided to investigate the "Downbeat" in the same manner. Again the white students were served, but when the Negro students entered the tavern, they were refused service by the owner. At the CRC meeting last night the group also resolved; "Unless we are notified about a change in policy of the taverns in regard to serving Negroes, we will proceed to print and distribute handbills soliciting support for the boycott, and individuals will write letters to local newspapers and city officials." IN A TELEPHONE interview to the Downbeat, it was learned that Jan. 1, the tavern management was changed. Reds Threaten Laos Capital SAIGON — (UPI) — The Communist radio reported today that pro-Red forces in Laos are advancing toward the royal capital of Luang Prabang despite "bitter fighting" by defending royal troops. A broadcast purporting to come from inside Laos said a battalion of pro-Communist guerrillas had arrived to reinforce the leftist troops of Paratroop Capt. Kong Le. The broadcast also reported that Colonel Boupa, commander of the 3,000-man royal garrison in northern Phong Saly province, had deserted to the Reds. It reported "bitter fighting" in the Thakhet area of central Laos and around the Army posts defending Luang Prabang. The Communists said they would seek outside military aid if the United States "continues to intervene" in Laos. Russia has been flying arms to the Communists. Political Prophecy Set "Forecasts of the Coming Administration" will be discussed by two members of the political science department at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. When asked about his policy toward serving Negroes, the manager said, "I have never refused, as far as the Harbour is concerned, entrance or service to any customers in this place as long as they acted like ladies and gentlemen. "I have served Negroes and will continue to do so, but I will not serve any group that comes in here and tells me that I have to." THE MANAGER, who declined to give his name over the telephone, said that he had nothing against Negroes, and that he had several Negro customers, including members of the KU basketball team. In reply to whether a student boycott would hurt her business, Mrs. Delores Sink, manager of the Huddle said: "It could but I'll just take my chances. We don't have to serve them (Negroes) and I don't want to. I have the right to serve anyone I want." "It's usually the white people who are behind all the trouble," she said. "ONE TIME during the football season a colored guy came in and I wouldn't serve him. He then motioned to a white guy through the window, I think it was a professor, who came in and told me that if I advertised in the Kansan I should be broad minded enough to serve all students. "I don't like people coming in here and telling me I had to serve them, she said. Mrs. Sink implied that she had no intention of serving Negroes in the future. (Editor's note: This semester Byron Klapper has been covering the civil rights activities on campus and in Lawrence. Beginning Monday, he will begin a series of articles on the segregation situation in this community.) KU Research To Be Studied Other members of the committee are: William P. Albrecht, English; Ethan Allen, political science; George L. Anderson, history; Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of education; Thomas R. Buckman, director-designate of the Libraries; Dr. Santiago Grisolia, medicine; William W. Hambleton, geology A 14-member committee to examine the role of research at the University of Kansas will be headed by William J. Argersinger, associate dean of the Graduate School. Dan Hopson, Jr., law; Fred Kurata, chemical engineering; Charles D. Michener, entomology; Wiley S. Mitchell, business; Edward E. Smissman, pharmaceutical chemistry; and Milton Steinhardt, music. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Jan. 5, 1961 58th Year, No. 64 Cuba Braces for Attack; Coastal Guns Emplaced HAVANA — (UPI) — Cuba started installing coastal defense guns along the famed Malecon Sea Drive today and declared the area a "military zone." ARMY CREWS immediately started rolling heavy guns into the area and by 11 a.m. they had been emplaced for roughly a mile between Galiano Street and Maceo Park, the start of the Vedado suburb. The first guns to be rolled into position were howitzers and anti-aircraft "pom pom" cannon. Eye-witnesses to the surprise move said "quite a lot" were being emplaced. There was no prior announcement of the government decision to fortify what hitherto has been a "lover's promenade." People were permitted to walk through the area but all vehicular traffic was detoured away from the sea wall. The Malecon overlooks the Gulf of Mexico along its approximately 10-mile expanse. Cuba earlier blamed the Eisenhower administration for its break in relations with the U.S. and implied that things might improve under President-elect John F. Kennedy. College Announces Change In Enrollment Procedure Two changes by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in the enrollment procedure were announced today by James K. Hitt, director of admissions and registrar. They will be effective with the spring semester. The faculty of the College has voted to augment the freshman-sophomore advisers by using a greater number of the College faculty and by using selected faculty members from the professional schools and general University staff members. FORMERLY only selected members of the College faculty served as advisers. This action decreases the number of students assigned to each adviser. A second change in the enrollment procedure for the spring semester is the scheduling of pre-enrollment information conferences in pre-professional interest areas for students interested in a pre-professional curriculum. All such students are asked to attend these meetings before going through the enrollment process. The schedule of pre-enrollment professional information conferences follows: School Date Place Education 4 p.m., Jan. 17 303 Bailey Business 4 p.m., Jan. 18 411 Summerfield Journalism 4 p.m., Jan. 12 205 Flint Pharmacy 4 p.m., Jan. 19 327 Malott Most freshmen and sophomores in the College will see their advisers in their offices rather than on the enrollment floor at the Kansas Union. THE STUDENTS will stop at their advisers' offices to plan their enrollment after picking up their registration materials in Strong Hall, and before going to the Kansas Union to complete enrollment. All other students, College juniors and seniors and students from other schools, will enroll in the same way as before. First, materials will be picked up at Strong Hall, filled out, and then the student will check in at the Kansas Union on Thursday or Friday according to schedule, see their advisers and enroll. THE CABINET issued the statement after an all night session in which it decreed the death penalty for anti-Castro "terrorists" within 72 hours of their conviction. The cabinet statement was the first formal reaction to the severing of diplomatic relations by Washington Tuesday night. There was no mention of the big U. S. naval base at Guantanamo and the cabinet, meeting with Castro, apparently decided to abide by past declarations that the regime will seek to reclaim the base by legal means rather than force. THE CUBAN CABINET statement took the line proclaimed by Moscow — that the main trouble with the United States was the Eisenhower administration. The communique said it "was only logical that the present U. S. administration" climax its term in office by breaking relations with Cuba and threatening "even worse acts . . . which we are prepared to face." The communique said that the "Cuban people consider that relations have been broken with the government of the United States but not with the people." (See related local story on page 8, Break with Cuba . . ) KU Student, Wife Stranded in Cuba A KU senior, his wife and baby who visited in Cuba during Christmas vacation, have not yet returned to Lawrence. Jim Morelan, Humboldt senior and his family had expected to fly into the Kansas City airport Tuesday night after two weeks at Mrs. Morelan's parents' home in Varadero, 80 miles east of Havana. Morelan's mother told officials in the School of Architecture office yesterday the date on her daughter-in-law's passport had expired. The mother said she was not worried about the couple and baby and hoped it would take only a day or two to get the date changed on the passport. Weather TOPEKA — (UPI) — Kansas weather through tomorrow should fit into the same mold that produced yesterday's mild conditions, the weather bureau said today. Highs today were forecast from the 40s to the 50s. KU Student Tells of Strife in Ethiopia JOHN HARRIS By Murrel Bland A KU student spent his Christmas vacation in Ethiopia and returned with a few interesting souvenirs — a set of empty rifle shells from the guns of Ethiopian rebels. Robert Day, Kansas City Kan. sophomore, arrived in the capital city, Addis Ababa, Dec. 22. Day said when he was there that there were still signs of rebel activity. "THE REBELS stay back in the hills away from the city during the day," Day said. "Then during the night they move in toward the city." Day was visiting his parents who now live in Addis Ababa. Day's father is an employee of the Ethiopian Airlines Co. "My parents' home is in a bad place," he said. "The rebel troops are on one side of them and the loyalist troops are on the other side." DAY EXPLAINED that he and his parents had to sleep on the floor for two reasons. "First, we didn't want to get hit by any stray shells," he said. "And also our furniture hadn't arrived." "THE REBELS are made up mostly of members of this body-guard," he said. "These boys He said the furniture had been delayed because of the heavy shipment of tanks. Day said there are three branches in the Ethiopian Military, the bodyguard, the air force and the police force. were in a crack unit during the Korean conflict. The air force has stayed loyal, but there is a split in the police force." On Christmas day, Day went to the town square in Addis Ababa and saw the gallows the loalists had built. "I saw a-rebel hanging there," he said. "I don't know who he was. He was probably tried for treason. They have swift justice in Ethiopia." DAY SAID two days before the revolution, a large irrigation ditch was dug around the airport and the adjoining area. This trench was first used by rebel troops. "The trench is not there any longer," Day said. "It made a convenient grave for the men who died fighting." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 5,196 Our Perilous Skyways The weather was foul. A snowstorm wrapped the sprawling city in an impenetrable white veil, and closed in its airports. ALL COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT making the hazardous approaches to busy LaGuardia and Idlewild airports were under strict ground control. Their every move was monitored. They were held in strict landing patterns, insulated from each other by a cocoon of inviolable airspace three miles in diameter and 1,000 feet deep. It was a stormy night—but with all aircraft under traffic control, nothing could go wrong. Something did go wrong. Somewhere above New York Harbor, two planes collided. One, a TWA Constellation, was opened like a can of sardines. It fell on Staten Island. The other, a Douglas DC-8 operated by United Airlines, staggered on toward the heart of the city. UAL took Gen. Elwood Quesada, who bosses the nations air traffic, to task for implying that that airline was responsible for the crash. While this bickering was going on, families of the slain were burying their loved ones—when there was enough left to bury—and air travelers everywhere decided to take the train this next trip. People began asking, "Why did it happen?" "Who's to blame?" Mortally wounded, the ship fell into teeming Brooklyn, exploded, and set a whole block afire. In all, 136 persons, passengers and unfortunate on the ground, died in this greatest of all air tragedies. IT HAPPENED BECAUSE there are physical limits to what men can do. It happened because the skyways of the nation and the airports they serve are about as adequate to handle the tremendous air traffic and advanced aircraft of today as a two-lane gravel road is adequate to handle 5 p.m. traffic in a large city. The crash was probably due to a human error, made either by one of the pilots or by the harried ground controllers guiding both aircraft. Anyone who has been in the ground control center of a large airport can readily understand how such a tragedy could occur. Controllers must do scores of things simultaneously—scan their scopes, issue landing instructions, clear for takeoff, talk down planes in difficulty, monitor instruments. Saturation, that hazardous point when inflow exceeds the airports' ability to clear for landing, occurs often. Then planes must be "stacked," held in a fixed, circular flight pattern until it is their turn to land. Pilots are no less subject to mistakes. The tremendous responsibility they hold in their hands, coupled with the considerable physical strain of long hours in the air, is conducive to error. Also, pilots not under ground control have the responsibility of taking evasive action if a collision with another aircraft threatens. Two jetliners on a collision course have less than 15 seconds to take evasive action—if they see each other within that time. AND HERE IS a primary fault in our traffic control system. Planes operating under strict ground control are protected (theoretically) only from other planes operating under that system. Many military aircraft and other planes not under ground control are flying every day on the same airplanes as planes under control. This is extremely dangerous. The only solution seems to be mandatory use of strict flight control over all planes at all times, coupled with the use of computers and other mechanical aids in ground control centers. If we do not ease the killing burden placed on controllers and pilots, the tragedy over Brooklyn will be duplicated again and again in other parts of the nation. — Bill Blundell Editor: News or Editorial? Although it is for the UDK staff to set the policies of the paper, I feel that I must question the placement of that article in the paper. This article had the air of an editorial, but it was placed on the first page. If this was actually an editorial, (and it certainly was not first page news), it would have been ... Letters ... I was rather confused by one of the UDK's recent articles. This article lauded the campus Maintenance Department for its excellent job of keeping the sidewalks and steps free of such impediments as ice. more forceful if it had been placed on the editorial page above your editor's name. On the other hand, if this was not an editorial, but instead (as I prefer to believe) a subtle satire, then it still should have been placed on the editorial page. If the author of that article was sincere in his praise, he obviously does not have to traverse many steps in order to get to school. As much as I enjoy standing at the bottom of the stairs East of Fraser and watching the girls from Sellards practicing the art of gracefully slipping and falling. I do not enjoy traversing those stairs myself. I have not taken a poll of the girls in the houses at the bottom of those stairs, but I feel that they would be almost unanimous in their desire for clean steps and dry posteriors. I must admit that I was surprised that the sidewalks were cleaned so quickly after the recent storm. I'm sure that these men must work long hours, and I'm thankful for the clean sidewalks. Perhaps our Maintenance Department needs a mechanical device for cleaning steps. I cannot recall one instance of someone falling on our beautifully tractor cleaned sidewalks. The Maintenance Department seems to be addicted to things mechanical, as our pickup-chasing campus dogs will testify. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS PROOF SNUFF 0-08 BIBLER Well, enough of my personal grips. Back to the real purpose of this letter. I feel that the above mentioned article was ineffectual. If the author was sincere, he obviously does not observe things as closely as people in closer contact with them do (e.g. the girls at Sellards). If he was trying to point out some deficiency, he was far too subtle about it. - SO TIRED TODAY I ALMOST FELL ASLEEP IN CLASS. Karl Smith Wichita senior Short Ones I like the New York Daily News because it's almost a perfect fit for the bottom of my canary's cage.— Fred Alton --- I want a nice, comfy bomb shelter in my backyard with a two-foot lead lining for my birthday.—Tommy Villesman Polls indicate how people feel about a subject or a candidate at the time of the polling.—John F. Day --- Every generation has its favorite writer. Our favorite is the copy writer for Cadillac automobiles.— KU student theme English teachers are working their way to extinction, for they no longer teach students how to write -R. L. Dennis Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3. 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ray willer ... Managing Editor Cewol Haller, Jane Boyd, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Shelley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Edito BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull Business Manager the look world MID By Calder M. Pickett Acting Dean, School of Journalism THE GREAT ADVENTURE, by Pierce G. Fredericks. Dutton. $4.75. Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks sold Liberty Bonds. The tearful were moved by "Just a Baby's Prayer at Twilight." American boys learned how to drink "vin rouge." The 40 and 8 came into being. Sauerkraut became liberty cabbage. Wilson enunciated his Fourteen Points. Alvin York became a national hero. Daring young men formed the Lafayette Escadrille. The "flu" swept the nation and took half a million lives. He starts with April 1917, when America still had not entered the war to end wars. Wilson had squeaked by Charles Evans Hughes the November before because "he kept us out of war." Americans knew little about the European conflict, and those who did know were not at all convinced that this country should be fighting on alien soil. This was World War I, the forgotten war. Pierce G. Fredericks, a picture editor of the New York Times, has written a highly readable history of that war. Though short on scholarship and stylistic brilliance, it moves along with the pace of a popular novel. German submarine warfare had taken American lives, including the lives of 124 aboard the Lusitania. We were woefully unprepared for war, but when Wilson finally went before Congress and asked for a declaration he received cheers and strong support — though not unanimous support. We look back at the First World War now and wonder that it could have been in the same century as the Second World War. Horses and mules appeared to play a bigger role than tanks. We had almost no aircraft. Fighting was little different from that in the Civil War, and our naivete about war is in a class with that displayed 60 years previously. We were busier fighting on the Mexican border, and the commander of our expeditionary forces came from that fight, "Black Jack" Pershing. We were emotional and theatrical, and many were moved by that great announcement when soldiers arrived in France: "Lafayette, we are here!" It was a short war, but it was a deadly one. America lost 116,516 men, 53,402 in battle, the rest by accident and sickness. A total of 205,690 had been wounded. All of this happened for the most part from early 1918 to Nov. 11. In this country, everybody "kept the home fires burning." "Over there," National Guardsmen from Kansas and Missouri, slum boys from New York City, boys from Tennessee who knew how to use their squirrel rifles were fighting in battles in places with such strange names as Blank Mont, the Meuse-Argonne, St. Mihiel, and Chateau-Thierry. Eddie Rickenbacker was becoming an ace, and Grover Cleveland Bergdoll was becoming the most famous draft dodger in history. Teddy Roosevelt's son Quentin was becoming a victim of the air war. George Creel was pepping up Americans with propaganda. LaFollette and Norris and Jeanette Rankin were calling it all futile. Irving Berlin was singing about how he hated to get up in the morning. Young officers named Douglas MacArthur and George Marshall were starting to build reputations. Foch was becoming a hero who would lend his name to unfortunate babies in the United States. Clemenceau was on the eve of achieving a reputation as the bully who opposed Wilson at Versailles. An Austrian paper-hanger was starting to build a rationale for why the Germans lost the war. Christopher Morley was writing doggerel about our first three dead heroes—Gresham, Enright and Hay. Herbert Hoover was feeding starving Belgians, and Billy Mitchell was preparing for his assault on the admirals. The tin can fleet was going after German subs, and rickety planes were clattering across French skies. Fredericks feels that World War I still had not taught Americans what they were fighting for. His conclusion: "... it would be another two twenty years before the nation as a whole stopped being angry about the responsibility and faced up to the fact that problems, as God-from-whom-atl-blessings-flow would be the first to admit, are permanent." Page 3 It Looks This Way ... By Carol Heller The most innocent and natural sounds turn into noisy nuisances in the quietness of Watson undergraduate library. As the silence rings and the minutes drag slowly, students are only too eager to be entertained and detracted from their books ... or on the other hand, if they are cramming for a test, the slightest sound draws hostile glares. FOR EXAMPLE, CONSIDER SQUEAKY SHOES. A MAN wearing a new pair of leather-squeaking shoes suddenly discovers it takes forever to journey across the library floor. Every head raises to contemplate him as he squeaks along. The same thing happens with heel caps, rubber-soled tennis shoes and steel-spiked high heels. It usually leads to a race of tiptoers. A temperamental cigarette lighter is annoying at home, but as it flicks and flicks and flicts and refuses to light in the library, a fellow might decide a smoke isn't worth all those irate stares from all corners of the room. When a man begins a hike across the room in new, stiff-cuffed blue jeans, he usually is walking spraddle-legged before he gets to the newspaper rack. Knock-kneed women wearing nylon hose suddenly wish they were bowlegged as audible swishing sounds accompany their gait. Freshman women with voluminous starched can-can petticoats crackle and rustle as they float along. THE HUNGRY STUDENT WHO SNEAKS A PACKAGE OF potato chips into the library finds that after opening the sack he has lost his appetite. If he closes the sack and abstains, the paper still crackles. If he goes ahead and crackles through to the goodies, the sound of teeth crunching on potato chips draws contemptuous or envious stares. And if the hunger pangs aren't satisfied, hungry-stomach rumblings produce giggles. Students who crack away on sunflower seeds particularly are frowned upon. So are gum-poppers. During flu-time the situation is especially critical. Sniffs are audible, but blowing one's nose into a handkerchief is even worse. Soft blowing produces gurgles and loud honks draw giggles from the observers. Men who seek information from the reference librarian are handicapped. If they speak out loud, they draw hostile stares from nearby students. If they try to whisper, their voices crack and squeak. Even a scratchy pen draws attention. And although a cutie wearing red-plaid bermuda shorts may not make noise as she crosses the floor, she draws her full share of attention. So do a man with a beard and a hand-holding couple. IF YOU WANT TO TREAD INCONSPICUOUSLY THROUGH the undergraduate library, leave your shoes at the door, walk in stocking feet, dress in soft flowing robes of jersey, and leave your cigarettes and potato chips at home. Make sure you're in good health and that you've had your supper. Arrive early and be sure your girl friend sits on the other side of the room so you won't be tempted to throw her kisses across the table. Gargle with lemon juice so your whisper isn't rusty. Bring a pincushion to jab pins into so that if you are tempted to utter curses you will have a substitute temper-outlet. If studying in the library is important enough to you to make all these sacrifices, you will be inconspicuous. But the library surely will become a boring place. Student Disappears from Fraternity A member of Kappa Eta Kappa, professional fraternity, has been reported missing. Members of the fraternity said that Darrell Edward Myers, Overland Park junior, disappeared Tuesday night. Myers' clothes are still in his room. The reason for his disappearance is unknown. Campus police described Myers as a 6-foot, 210-pound man with a stocky build and brown hair. He was driving a 1954 Ford with a Johnson County license tag number JO-6167. Don't look back. Something might be gaining on you - Satchel Paige PARSONS JEWELRY Serving the community with quality products for 60 years 725 MASS. VI 3-4266 Birds on a tree BIRD TV - RADIO O'Neill began the play as a prose description of an old Swede he saw on the waterfront. VI 3-8855 He later developed the study into the play, "Chris Christophersen." then rewrote it into "Anna Christie." This revision focuses on two central characters, Anna and her father. 908 Mass. The story is about the regeneration of Anna under the influence of the sea and a man's love. 'Anna Christie' Is Developed Study STEREO Drama experts say that Eugene O'Neill's "Anna Christie," the KU Experimental Theatre production to be given Monday through Friday, could be considered a study in the evolution of a play. Anna, left with relatives on a farm, flees from their cruelties and turns to prostitution for a living. When she returns to her father he realizes what has happened, but it is also clear to him that she has preserved a clean soul through the hardships of growing up alone. - Expert Service - Quality Parts - Guaranteed Party Chiefs Talk With Baudouin BRUSSELS — (UPI)— Belgium's young King Baudouin appeared today to be trying to mediate an end to the strikes and violence that have shaken this nation for two and a half weeks. The monarch conferred separately last night with Catholic Premier Gaston Eyskens and opposition Socialist Party President Leo Collard. The meeting with Eyskens, which took place after the one with Collard, was kept secret until this morning and no details of either talk were disclosed. KU Debaters Enter Air Academy Meet University Daily Kansan Alan Kimball, Lawrence senior, and William Haught, Alamosa, Colo. senior, recently entered the Air Force Academy's Second Annual National Invitational Debate Tournament. Searching THE CHAIRMAN can be fun — but not when the search is for a lost or misplaced bill receipt. End those time-consuming searches by paying bills with a ThriftiCheck Personal Checking Account and having cancelled checks to prove payments at all times. you'll save paying time, too, by writing checks at home and letting the postman do the legwork. Ask about safe, economical, personalized ThriftyChecks at DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Mass. Ex-Turkish Officials Found Guilty of Treason YASSIADA, Turkey — (UPI)—Former Turkish Premier Adnan Menderes and ex-Foreign Minister Fatin Zorlu were found guilty today of encouraging the anti-Greek riots five years ago. Court sources said punishment would range from six months to two years in prison. The court trying members of the deposed government for alleged treason acquitted former Turkish President Celal Bayer of fomenting the riots. Seven other defendants were declared innocent. Avoid fried meats which angry up the blood.—Satchel Faige A On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) 1961: YEAR OF DECISION Well sir, here we are in 1961, which shows every sign of being quite a distinguished year. First off, it is the only year since 1951 which begins and ends with the Figure 1. Of course, when it comes to Figure 1's, 1961, though distinguished, can hardly compare with 1911, which, most people agree, had not just two, but three Figure 1's! This, I'll wager, is a record that will stand for at least two hundred years! 1911 was, incidentally, notable for many other things. It was, for example, the year in which the New York Giants played the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series. As we all know, the New York Giants have since moved to San Francisco and the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. There is a movement afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoenix—the city, not the baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would of course move to Chicago. It is felt that the change would be broadening for residents of both cities. Many Chicago folks, for example, have never seen an ignaune. Many Phoenix folks, on the other hand, have never seen a frostbite. There are, of course, certain difficulties attending a municipal shift of this size. For instance, to move Chicago you also have to move Lake Michigan. This, in itself, presents no great problem, what with modern scientific advances like electronics and the French cuff. But if you will look at your map, you will find that Lake Michigan is connected to all the other Great Lakes, which in turn are connected to the St. Lawrence Seaway, which There wasn't any ocean... in turn is connected to the Atlantic Ocean. You start dragging Lake Michigan to Phoenix and, willy-nilly, you'll be dragging all that other stuff too. This would make our British allies terribly cross, and I can't say as I blame them. I mean, put yourself in their place. What if, for example, you were a British working man who had been saving and scrimping all year for a summer holiday at Brighton Beach, and then when you got to Brighton Beach there was 'tany ocean'. There you'd be with your inner tube and snorkel and nothing to do all day but dance the Lambeth Walk. This, you may be sure, would not make you NATO-minded! I appeal most earnestly to the residents of Chicago and Phoenix to reconsider. I know it's no bowl of cherries going through life without ever seeing an iguanae or a frosttite, but I ask you—Chicagoans, Phoenicians—is it too big a price to pay for preserving the unity of the free world? I am sure that if you search your hearts you will make the right decision, for all of us—whether we live in frostbitten Chicago, iguana-ridden Phoenix, or narrow-lapelled New Haven—are first and foremost Americans! But I digress. We were speaking of 1961, our new year. And new it is! There is, for one thing, new pleasure in Marlboro Cigarettes. How can there be new pleasure in Marlboros when that fine, flavorful blend, that clean easy draw filter, have not been altered? The answer is simple: each time you light a Marlboro, it is like the first time. The flavor is such that age cannot wither nor custom stale. Marlboro never palls, never jades, never dwindles into dull routine. Each pack, each cigarette, each puff, makes you glad all over again that you are a Marlboro smoker! So, Marlboros in hand, let us march confidently into 1961. May good fortune attend our ventures! May happiness reign! May Chicago and Phoenix soon recover from their disappointment and join our bright cavalcade into a brave tomorrow! \* \* \* © 1961 Max Shulman The makers of Marlboro and of the new unfiltered king-size Philip Morris Commander join Old Max in adding their good wishes for a happy and peaceful 1961. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 5,1961 Highway to Kill Kaw Valley RR BONNER SPRINGS — (UPI) — The last of the old interurban lines that once linked outlying sections of the Kansas City metropolitan area appeared today to be headed for oblivion. Employees of the Kansas City Kaw Valley Railroad were notified last night that it has petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission for permission to abandon the line, after 47 years of operations between here and Kansas City. Demise of the line was speeded by progress in the form of plans for a superhighway for which the road bed would supply space for two lanes. Employees were told that the state of Kansas has agreed to pay the company $250,000 plus an amount not exceeding $30,000 to be used as severance pay for employees. Former Premier Injured in Fall METZ, France — (UPI) — Former Premier Robert Schuman, a hardy 74-year-old, was reported in "satisfactory condition" today at the hospital where he was taken after spending Tuesday night in the open in bitter cold rain. Schuman, known as "the father of United Europe," tumbled into a hole while walking on his grounds at Scy-Chazelles late Tuesday afternoon. He was unable to get up and spent the near-freezing night holding his hat over his head until a passerby found him drenched and numb with cold at 8:30 a.m. yesterday. Good Old Days Gone- Book Tells U.S.Economic Life By Kelly Smith "The Wastemakers" pulls together a great deal of information about the phenomenon of American economic behavior, the capitalistic behavior to which most of us are accustomed. This is the opinion of Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Dean Heller spoke at the Modern Book Review Forum yesterday. AFTER JOKINGLY assuring his listeners that he had indeed read Vance Packards' book, Dean Heller, who is also a professor of political science, explained that it was written almost solely for effect. "Packard is an interesting narrator who points out the planned stimulation of economic consumption at a time when there would appear to be no drive or need for the commodity." Dean Heller added that this was the same type of thing the author stressed in his books, "Hidden Persuaders," and "Status Seekers." In other words, it was an expansion of previously expressed ideas. Goff to Attend Theater Congress Lewin A. Goff, associate professor of speech and drama, director of the University Theater, will be one of six American delegates to the ninth International Congress on the Theater in Vienna, Austria from June 5-10. Prof. Goff led an eight-week tour of KU's production of Brigadoon in the Far East last summer. "THE SOLUTION of this well planned economy seems to be education," Dean Heller said, "without taxes." A. R. B. Did We Win or Not?... FRANCIS HELLER "... they won't come back." He went on to explain that the book gives priority to the virtues of the "good old days," and is an appeal to sentimentality. Dean Heller then returned to Packard's solution of going back to the "good old days," and commented, "I'm not convinced that a return to what used to be is feasible, or will solve the problem. "The book includes a lot of finger pointing and a lot of finger shaking. But perhaps it's good if the public at large needs it called to their attention." "However, it's safe to refer to the 'good old days' because they won't come back, and we all know it." This appeal is overly acceptable because of its easy solution to the problems confronting the twentieth century economy, Dean Heller said. "PACKARD is definitely a determinist, and the only way to combat the matter is for human nature to be regenerated. Home Ec Party Set Hear the play by play of the M.U.-K.U. game on this unique 40 minute 12" Long Play record that will be a collectors item some day. There are 5 numbers played by the KU Band directed by Russell L. Wiley including "I'm a Jayhawk" and the "Alma Mater." Hear Jack Mitchell as he talks about the win (?) over MU. The above cover design was drawn by Dick Bibler, nationally known cartoonist and KU alum. Get your copy at these convenient record counters: grandfather tradesmen did is ignored." The Home Economics Club will hold its annual Twelfth Night celebration at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Home Management House. Dr. John Patton will speak on the meaning of the Twelfth Night celebrations. "Packard yearsn in an old-fashioned way for the days of tradesmen. England, for instance, produces each chair with gruelling individuality. Apparently the possibility that the English people still live in the same house that their a tribute to Victory 1960 A Plan Widening receiving an honorary title of the BU 1960 CHAMPION OF THE BU 1960 BELL MUSIC CO. KIEF'S HI-FI PHOTON HI-FI JAYHAWK HI-FI WEAVER'S FESCO HI-FI RUSTY'S DUCKWALL'S COLE'S KROGER'S HILLCREST DILLONS TODAY Official Bulletin Der deutsche Verein trifft sich wieber am 5. Januar um 5 p.m. uhr. 502 Fraser. Umsonderste program: Das Jayhawk Umsforderungsprogram; "Amerikaner in Deutschland." Sueck in zwei Akten, aufgefuht von den welkheben Berufsauspielheim in Deutsch II. Regisseur: Rudolf Kerscher. Abendes der Mensa. Alle herzlich eingeladen. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin materials by hand. Please Kansas Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Humanities Lecture. 8 p.m. Fraser Theater. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will lecture for a Profession." Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9 p.m. Danfort Chapel. KU Student Speech Association 7:30 p.m. in the library; Film: "Animal Farm." Required of all undergraduate speech majors. For further information contact Dr. Frank Dance or TOMORROW Jewish Religious Services, 7 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Language proficiency examinations in French, German, Latin & Spanish. 1:30 p.m. Latin, 213 Fraser; German, 210 Fraser; French, 206 Fraser; Spanish, 205 Fraser. Register with appropriate departmental secretary. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Communion. Breakfast follows 8:45 a.m. Communion. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 829 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call IV 2-0292 for more information or a ride. Ph.D. French Reading Examination, 9-11 a.m. Room 11, Fraser. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Logan to Harvard SATURDAY James K. Logan, assistant professor of law, has been granted a leave of absence next year to become a visiting professor of law at the Law School. He will complete residency for an S.J.D. degree. PSST! When things get too close for comfort Old Spice STICK DEODORANT comes to the rescue fast! - Old Spice Stick Deodorant brings you safe, sure, all-day protection! - Better than roll-ons that skip. - Better than sprays that drip. - Better than creams that are greasy and messy. NEW PLASTIC CASE PRE-SET FOR INSTANT USE 1.00 plus tax Old Spice STICK DEODORANT - By land or by sea-you need this Social Security! Page 5 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon Kansas' up and down basketball squad travels to Oklahoma Saturday to open its defense of the Big Eight Conference title. There is a full schedule of conference games Saturday to officially open the championship chase which, if the annual Christmas tournament meant anything, should be close. At this time Kansas State must be considered the favorite. The Wildcats, with a 9-2 record, are ranked seventh in the nation on the latest United Press International rankings. The K-State victory in the tourney, although in an overtime win over the mistake-prone Jayhawkers, was a fair example of the Wildcats strength against Big Eight competition. But the pre-season favorite was KU and in the eyes of coach Dick Harp, his team still should be considered as the top conference squad. If the 18th rated Jayhawkers can come home from their two game swing through Oklahoma undefeated they will be off to a much better start than last season when it took a tremendous second semester finish to tie for the title. The first meeting of the Hawkers and the 'Cats will be Jan. 20 in Lawrence. KU vs. K-State Jan. 20 The other Big Eight teams, too, appear to have good balance. Iowa State, Oklahoma and possibly Colorado have a good chance to wrest league domination from the Sunflower teams. University Daily Kansan Colorado has Surprise Team Although the Golden Buffaloes finished seventh in the tourney, they have wonderful physical potential. Led by flashy Wilky Gilmore Colorado will meet Iowa State in their conference opener. The Cyclones finished fourth in the holiday tournament and are tied for 20th in the nation on the UPI poll. The early schedule favors the Cyclones as-they meet some of the weaker teams and this may be a factor in getting them off to a start sufficient to challenge for a top spot. Oklahoma faces KU, K-State and Colorado in its first three games. If Oklahoma can pull a few upsets it could bid for a first division finish. Nebraska Picked Last Oklahoma State, now playing faster basketball may be a threat as soon as it can reduce its mechanical mistakes. The Cowpokes open against Kansas State and then KU. Nebraska, although picked last in the pre-season poll, may be capable of influencing the final standings. Missouri has two of the most feared individuals in the area in Charles Henke and Joe Scott. But if Tiger coach Sparky Stalcup can find a third scorer Missouri could finish higher. The only team which seems to be all but eliminated from league title contention is the Missouri Tigers. So, although KU and K-State lead the pack in overall ability there will be no end to the surprises before the championship is decided in March. It's Sharp! THE Taylor-Made HAND-MOULDED SHOE DRESS CORDOVAN SADDLE This shoe has a burgundy cordovan toe & heel with a black cordovan inset. The newest styling in cordovan leather—can be worn for any occasion. Leather lined. $23.95 the university shop BENT'S APPAREL FRATERNITY A — Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs Phi Kappa Theta, 4:15 — Alpha Tau Omega vs Sigma Chi, 5:15 — Triangle vs Delta Upsilon, 6:15. Basketball Schedule The intramural basketball schedule for Friday is: INDEPENDENT A — Pearson vs Jolliffe, 6:15. INDEPENDENT B — Navy vs Ringers, 4:15 — Cibabs vs Ace Pearson. 4:15 — Concordia vs Battenfeld. 5:45 — Slugs vs Joseph R. Pearson. 5:45. INDEPENDENT C — Medics vs Hucksters. 6:30 — Jim Beam vs Zoology. 6:30 — Liahona vs Templin. 7:15 — Cowards vs Delta Functions. 7:15. ATOs Roll Over Phi Kappa Theta Alpha Tau Omega continued to widen the scoring gap after bursting ahead early in the first quarter to defeat Phi Kappa Theta 56-24, in the first night of intramural basketball following the holiday vacation. Thursday, Jan. 5. 1961 In the other Fraternity "A" division game Sigma甲 edged Delta Upsilon 43-36. Triangle forfeited to Tau Kappa Epsilon. The Bo-Jets downed the Tortfeasors, 53-37, in the only Independent "A" division contest. In Fraternity "C" games Sigma Chi No. 4 beat Phi Gamma Delta No. 43-12, while Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 4 downed Phi Gamma Delta No. 3, 29-11. In one of the lowest scoring games of the night Beta Theta Pi No. 5 beat Theta Tau 19-17. The Betas also won in one of the highest scoring games as Beta No. 2 defeated Phi Delta Theta No. 4, 69-8. Sigma Chi No. 1 beat Delta Upsilon No. 3, 51-15 and Sigma Chi No. 5 downed Phi Delti No. 5. 27-22. There were two four forfeits: Sigma Nu No. 2 over Alpha Epsilon Psi Phi Gam No. 5 over Phi Kappa Psi No. 3, Sigma Nu No. 1 over Delta Chi and Delta Upsilon on Phi Shi. NEW YORK — (UPI) — Denton (Cy) Young pitched in more major league games (906) than any pitcher in history, won more games (511), lost more games (315), and pitched more complete games (751). Record Breaker Intramural Standings FRATERNITY B First Division Sigma Nu ... 2-0 Triangle ... 2-0 Phi Delta Theta ... 1-0 Phi Kappa Psi ... 1-1 Lambda Chi Alpha ... 0-1 Phi Kappa Theta ... 0-2 Tau Kappa Epsilon ... 0-2 Second Division Theta Chi ... 2-0 Sigma Chi ... 2-0 Delta Sigma Phi ... 1-1 Delta Tau Delta ... 1-1 Beta Theta Pi ... 0-1 Sigma Pi ... 0-1 Delta Chi ... 0-2 Third Division Alpha Tau Omega ... 2-0 Phi Gamma Delta ... 1-0 Kappa Sigma ... 1-1 Phi Kappa Alpha ... 1-1 Phi Kappa Tau ... 0-1 Kappa Alpha Psi ... 0-2 Kansas has been represented four times in the College All-Star Game in Chicago. SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hour on Duty Brakes Relined Students! Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj. ... 98c Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Fourth Division Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 2-0 Delta Upsilon ... 2-0 Sigma Phi Epsilon ... 1-1 Alpha Phi Alpha ... 1-1 Acacia ... 0-2 Alpha Kappa, Lambda ... 0-2 Number Rising MINNEAPOLIS — (UPI)— The Minneapolis-St. Paul franchise will give the National Football League 14 teams in 1961. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER TEXACO PT ANTIFREEZE GUARANTEED One Fill Protects All Winter Harrell TEXACO Service 9th & Miss. Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL Jeek and Mary Lombie WEST COAST SAILPLANE ENTHUSIASTS CAMEL The best tobacco makes the best smoke! R. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winsten-Salem, N. C. CAMEL CHOICE QUALITY TURNISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 5, 1961 Museum Displays Egyptian Statues By Martha Moser A display of ancient Egyptian statues — some of them 35 centuries old — is part of the Fleischmann collection now on display at the KU Museum of Art. Also on display as part of the collection are modern paintings, prints and drawings. Students in an ancient art history class are tracing the origins of each of the objects on display in the exhibition and identifying the gods that the figures represent. From this research, Mr. and Mrs. Russell D'Anna, Lawrence seniors and fine arts majors, will compile a catalog of the exhibition. This catalog will be sent to art museums all over the world. OBSERVERS of the Egyptian collection may have noticed the striking similarity of pose and style of sculpture of the statues. "The style of the sculpture is so the appendages won't get broken off," D'Anna said. "The Egyptians believed that the body had to be preserved in order for the soul to remain immortal." Statues represented the body, he said, so many replicas of a dead person were made to insure that at least one would last. The statues date from 1580 to 1100 B.C. Mrs. D'Anna said that the Egyptians didn't change the style of their art or the poses for more than 6000 years. A slight change became apparent in the third century B.C. when the Greeks and Romans began to enter Egypt. "THE FIRST drastic change came when Mohammed came in and took over the government," Mrs. D'Anna said. "The Egyptian art was based on religion and government, essentially the same thing." Pharaohs were naturally elevated of gods, she said. Imhotep, the god of learning, was a wise man elevated to a god 2500 years after his death. Imhotep can be recognized in the Fleischmann collection by his bare head, crossed arms and sitting position. In the exhibition there is also Isis, the sitting figure of a woman holding a baby, her son Horus. Horus is recognizable in other statues by his curl of hair and the finger in his mouth. Horus is later represented as the god of the rising sun, the hawk-headed deity. "Since the style of Egyptian art was prototyped," Mr. D'Anna explained, "the childhood trait of sucking a finger distinguished Horus as a child." AN INTERESTING aspect of Egyptian religion and art is the University Chorus Concert Sunday "The Peaceable Kingdom," by Randall Thompson, will be performed by the 300-voice University Chorus in a concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. This selection is from the Biblical book of the profit Isaiah. The chorus will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of choral music. International Club to Meet The Algerian situation will be the panel topic at International Club at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! NOW! at 7:00 & 9:00 "Grass Is Greener" many animal gods the ancient Egyptians worshipped. The origin of worshipping animal gods was uncertain. D'Anna said, "The animal gods usually represented wild animals, and men probably raised them to gods because they feared or admired them." "The Egyptians admired the dignity, grace and aloofness of the cat," Mrs. D'Anna said. The cats in the Fleischmann exhibition were the embodiment of Bastet, goddess of the town Bast Originally they wore gold earrings "The cats are beautiful." D'Anna said. "They could almost be representative of modern art with their style and form." Other animal gods in the collection are Apis the bull, the renewer of life; and Uraeus the hooded cobra, the protector of Egypt and the symbol of royalty and power. Marian Jersild To Give Recital Around the Campus Marian Jersild, assistant professor of piano, will present selections from Bach, Brahms, Schubert and Frokofiev at a faculty recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Hall. Prof. Jersild has appeared in New York's Town Hall and in Chicago recitals. In 1958, she won a Fulbright Scholarship to study at the Berlin Academy of Music. Gorton Talks Today At NY Conference Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts is a principal speaker today at the one-day meeting in New York City of the National Music Council. His subject will be "The Challenge to Music in Education." Try the Kansan Want Ads 11 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "BEST PICTURE"! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A Tale of the Christ by GENERAL LEW WALLACE BEN HUR BEN-HUR DIRECTED BY WILLIAM WYLER STARRING CHARLTON HESTON • JACK HAWKINS HAYA HARAREEET • STEPHEN BOYD HUGH GRIFITH • MARTIN SCOTT WITH CATHY ODONNELL • SAM JAFFE SCREENPLAY BY KARL TUNBERG • SAM ZIMBALIST PRODUCED BY TECHNICOLOR CAMERA 6B NOW SHOWING A Special Limited Engagement eve. at 7:30 $1.25 mat. at 1:30 $1.00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Language Tests Slated Saturday The written part of language proficiency examinations for students in the College of Arts and Sciences will be given at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. The requirement for students who entered the College in the fall of 1959 is proficiency or 16 hours of language study. The examination places are: Latin, 213 Fraser; German, 210 Fraser; French 206 Fraser, and Spanish, 205 Fraser. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Insurance Careers Will Be Discussed The School of Business will sponsor a lectureship on careers in insurance Jan. 28 in Murphy Hall. ACROSS SIX THOUSAND MILES OF EXCITEMENT OF REAL PEOPLE CALLED "THE SUNDOWNERS!" The principal speaker will be Harry J. Loman, professor of insurance at the University of Pennsylvania and dean of the American Institute for Property and Liability Underwriters Inc. AND ADVENTURE COMES THE ROUSING STORY The program is sponsored by the Insurance Development Fund established with the KU Endowment Assn. DEBORAH ROBERT PETER KERR • MITCHUM • USTINOV BY FRED ZINNEMANN'S PRODUCTION OF THE SUNDOWNERS CD BY SIRARRA GLYNIS JOHNS DINA MERRILL Recording by ISOBEL LENNART MUSIC COMPOSED AND CONDUCTED BY DIMITRI TIONKIN TECHNICOLOR® PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. Directed by FRED ZINNEMANN STARTS SATURDAY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 THIS OFFER EXPIRES SAT., JAN. 14 GRAND GRAND OPENING COUPON Prices Apply Only When Order Is Brought in With This Coupon CLOTH COATS MATCHED SUITS PLAIN ONE PIECE DRESSES Cleaned and Pressed 69 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $ BUSINESS HALF SOLES SHIRTS Laundered Starched As You Like Individually Sealed Collars Turned Free NO LIMIT SHOE REPAIR 1.99 WITH RUBBER HEELS VAL. $5.00 Reg. 22c EA. 17c MIN. 25c DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST MEN'S - BOY'S RUBBER HEELS 49c ONE DAY SERVICE 1300 W.23rd DRIVE IN & SAVE Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. TROUSERS SKIRTS plain SWEATERS BLOUSES SPORT SHIRTS 39℃ ea. DRY CLEANED AND PRESSED University Daily Kansan Page 7 reers passed will sponsers in inry Hall. will be or of in- of Penn- American d Liabili- ENT ed by the Fund es- ndowment [ ] CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR BUSINESS SERVICES WB DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939% Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tf ] Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., V 3-7541. tf 3-5788 KU BARBER SHOP - 411% W. 14th St. Clarence, Florida: Hunt of free paper LEARN TO DANCE NOW--All the latest information. Phone VI 3-60835, Missouri. Phone VI 3-60835, PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; compilations of notes; formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. 3-DAY FINISHING. 35 mm or movie film Bug Store. Bug Store. I11 crest shopping Center. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Connerton Street, Suite 200. Enrichized. Help-Your-Self. Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything available. Includes objects or department needs. Phone VI 5-3291 or better still. come. Welcome. tf RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. SED TYPING PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, prob- lem solutions. Sample test questions. Free delivery. price $4.00. For your co- mpatients, VI 2-1065. I would like to babysit in my home. I can play. References. Call VI 3-8710. 1-6 Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEidlowney, VI 3-8568. **tf** Typlist: former secretary; electric typewriter, experienced in student and graduate typing. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Veqnuit, 1935 Barker, I V-3 2001. tf Experienced typist — term papers, manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable salary. Robert Cook; 2000 R L. C. Cr II V-37485 EXPERIENCED TYPEST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mhengler, VI 3-4409. telfy Experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780. Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work Phone. Mrs Marilyn Lily, VI 3-2318. tl EXPERIENCED TYPIST Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pitti, VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 148. 1648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-9554. tf Experienced typist — will type theses, term papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tt TYPING WANTED—theses, term papers, imports, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell, VU 1-10 Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 HELP WANTED WELL-PAID, part time position, for ac- courts secretary. German language. Call VI 3-7607. 1-9 WANTED Male to share apartment in Shawweee- 0418s if interested. TRANSPORTATION Need a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence from KU Med. Center area. Have classes daily at 8 a.m. Phone JO 2-8750. FOR RENT 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9776 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. tf VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tt 30ARD AND ROOM next semester. VI 3-4385 1-10 UNFURNISHED TRI-PLEX APART- MENT. 3 rooms, private bath and en- tirement in campus, campus, nice. See any time at 1521 Kent or phone J. A. Reed, VI 3-5814. 1-9 FURNISHED three room apartment with bath, electric range and garbage disposal. Will be ready Feb. 1. Can be seen now at 1145 Ind. 1-5 If you like to live very close to the campus, one and one-half blocks from the apartment is available now. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6969 for appointment. 1-10 SIX ROOM lower apartment, newly furnished, private bath and entrance, street view, $75 per month. 20 New Hampshire rooms; $75 per month. Phone VI 1-3200 or VI 3-8501 at 5 p.m. NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room, steam heat, phone, private entrance and bedroom. Also clean two room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, phone. $26.50 per month, bills paid. Close to campus. Enable next semester. Phone V1-10-7830 NICE PLACE TO LIVE—new two bedroom apartment, unfurnished except for new Frigidaire refrigerator, electric stove and automatic washer. One block from Union. Best of neighbors. Private laundry. Available Feb. 1. Phone 8534. I-11 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six bedrooms, bath and entrance utilities paid. Drinking. Married couple only. 520 Ohio. THREE ROOM furnished apartment. First floor, private entrance and bath Near campus. Available Jan. 29. VI 2- 1443. 1-11 Modern 2 room basement apartment. Outside entrance. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Inc. All bills paid. 1-9 ROOMS—graduate men preferred. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture, facilities. Adequate study and reaition room available. 122 I Oread. VI 3-6798. IV 1-10 NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-9042. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350 FOR SALE BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, questions, charts and diagrams. Complete textbook Price $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf MUST PART with "Joe," a "52 Pontiac. Pedigree and terms at VI 3-7333. tfr DIAMOND RING, 3/4 curat solitaire, never worm. Valued at $450, will sell for $350. Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. **tf** 32 FOOT TRAILER. sleeps six. Will take smaller trailer in trade or will finance responsible parties with reasonable down payment. 933 Rhode Island. 1-11 FIRST OF THE YEAR SPECIALS! Full line of new and used mobile homes. Come, see and talk with me at 7th and Arkansas. I 2-0560 or VI 3-7145. 1-11 1955 PLYMOUTH. Belvedere. 4-door, 6- room condition. Cajal Mike Stephens, b-7700 1956 PLYMOUTH, 2-door sedan, 6 cylinder. Standard transmission. Radio, heater, chains. Economical transportation. 155 cm. Must sell. Café. V-11 0509 at 7 p.m. 1953 CHEVROLET, power steering and power brakes. Will sell at low price. Call KU 688 during daytime, VI 2-0327 after 5 p.m. 1-9 I "FIND THE ANSWER, JIM-AND BRING IT BACK" When Jim Boardman took his B.S. in Electrical Engineering at Colorado State, there was one idea uppermost in his mind. He wanted a job in which he could work his way into management via the engineering route. As he puts it, "I didn't want to stick with straight engineering all my life." After talking to eight other organizations Jim joined The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Company. He soon got the kind of action he was looking for. His first assignment: How best to improve widely scattered rural telephone service all over Colorado-a sticky engineering challenge. He was given a free hand to work out his own procedures. His boss simply said, "Find the answer, Jim—and bring it back." Six months later, Jim turned in his recommendations. His plan was accepted. Next stop: Colorado Springs. Here Jim worked out a plan to expand telephone facilities for this burgeoning community. This plan, too is now in operation. Today, at 24, Jim has an important role in planning where, how much, and what kind of telephone service is needed in the Denver area. Here's how Jim puts it: "We get tough assignments—but we also have the freedom to take hold and do a job. I think the future here is unlimited. If a man wants to do it—it's there to be done." DONALD R. HUBBARD If you're a guy who can "Find the answer and bring it back" -you'll want to get with a company where you have the chance. Visit your Placement Office for literature and additional information. "Our number one aim is to have in all management jobs the most vital, intelligent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find." FREDERICK R. KAPPEL, President American Telephone & Telegraph Co. INDEPENDENCE CITY MASSACHUSETTS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES University Daily Kansan Page 8 Thursday. Jan. 5, 1961 Rock Chalk Plans Begin A faculty skit and four fraternity and sorority teams have been selected to present skits in the 1961 Rock Chalk Revue-March 3 and 4. Skits will be presented by Phi Delta Theta and Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Beta Phi; Phi Kappa Psi and Chi Omega and Delta Upsilon and Kappa Kappa Gamma. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will write the faculty skit. Bob Sanders, a student at Kansas State University, has been hired by the Rock Chalk staff to arrange the skit music and overture. Last year five sororities and fraternities presented Rock Chalk skits. First place went to Delta Gamma and Alpha Tau Omega. Second place went to Chi Omega and Delta Upsilon. African Leaders State Unity CASABLANCA, Morocco — (UPI) —Leaders of the "Little African Summit" conference who seek to return deposed Premier Patrice Lumumba to power announced today they had reached "complete agreement" on future policy toward the Congo. Morocco's information minister Moulay Ahmed Alaoui, spokesman for the conference, said the agreement was reached in consultations which began yesterday and continued until the early morning hours of today. Alaoui said the leaders of the eight delegations here were happy to take note of their complete agreement, but he did not spell out the exact nature of the agreement. INFORMED sources said the leaders may agree to go along with continued United Nations intervention in the Congo if the world organization modifies its present anti- Lumumba strategy. The nations represented at the conference contributed about one third of the 19,000-man U.N. force in the Congo, but have either withdrawn their units or have threatened to do so. These nations back Lumumba while the United Nations has favored his rival, President Joseph Kasavubu. The Congo crisis and the Algerian question topped the conference agenda which also included nuclear explosions in the Sahara, the Palestine question and a proposal for a Pan-African charter. ATTENDING the conference which opened yesterday were King Mohammed V of Morocco, the presidents of the United Arab Republic, Ghana, Guinea and Mali, Ferhat Abbas, "premier" of the Algerian provisional government, and representatives of Libya and Ceylon. tine question was added to the agenda at the insistence of U.A.R. President Gamal Abdel Nasser whose government considers itself still at war with Israel. A spokesman said the conference had begun considering the "fundamental principle" which would constitute the projected "charter of a new Africa" proposed by King Mohammed yesterday. The 10-point plan of African cooperation, based on a policy of nonalignment with big power blocs, calls for the creation of an African consultative assembly and an African committee of member nations. These bodies would meet periodically to coordinate political, economic, cultural and military affairs. Nachman Aronszajn, professor of mathematics, has received a renewal of his contract with the Office of Naval Research for another year's support of "Studies in Eigenvalue Problems." Navy Gives Math Contract Speech Lectures Seen Effective A recent survey showed that beginning speech courses could be taught on the mass-lecture system without giving up any high quality of instruction. Kim Giffin, professor of speech and drama, and John Waite Bowers, former KU graduate student and research assistant from Iowa State University, conducted the survey. The comparison of oral and written examinations between students in the KU speech instruction system now with classes averaging 15 and a mass-lecture system showed almost identical improvement in the students knowledge of speech principles and speaking skill, according to Prof. Giffin. Break With Cuba May Jar Western Hemisphere Unity He also said the survey was conducted to find a way to handle the increasing KU speech enrollment without sacrificing the quality of instruction or adding large numbers of faculty members. Avoid running at all times.— Satchel Paige Two KU faculty members, experts on Latin American affairs, indicated today that the U.S. diplomatic break with Cuba could cause a greater rift between the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. "It must be realized that our difficulty with Cuba is a symbol of the overall deterioration of relations between the U.S. and other Latin American countries," said Katherine Nutt, visiting associate professor of history. Informed sources said the Pales- "This break suggests the further deterioration or erosion of the concept of the Western Hemisphere community," added Larry L. Pippin, visiting professor of political science, "and may indicate a new alignment in Western Hemisphere affairs." BOTH AGREED that the implications of the break are not to America's advantage. "In the event it was Soviet planning, which it could be, the situation could be exploited by the Soviet Union to its advantage," Prof. Nutt said. "Perhaps they thought this would draw our attention from Laos." "It is a nuisance to the U.S. that keeps us, in the news and in a bad light before the rest of Latin America. If the events focus on any part of the world, the Soviets are active in another. PROF. PIPPIN said the break may have been motivated by America's frustration in the Cold War with Russia among other reasons. "With the danger of losing out in Southeast Asia where we have lesser relations, Cuba is closer at hand and the break was more direct," he said. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Prof. Nutt said the U.S. had no alternative but to break the 60 year old ties with Cuba. "Castro has done everything to force this," she said, "and there wasn't much point in our not breaking off when he ordered the reduction of the diplomatic staff to eleven people. This would have been a token staff with which it would have been impossible to operate. "I THINK he has overplayed his hand and hurt himself diplomatically, not economically, because it is obvious that Cuba has to and intends to sell its sugar elsewhere." Prof. Pippin speculated that other Latin American countries would not break off relations with Cuba just because the U.S. had. "It would be pretty hard to break off when they would feel the re-ercussions at home. Venezuela couldn't afford to, nor could Brazil because of the impact on the people." 2 Negroes Register KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — (UPI)— Two 18-year-old Negro youths registered for freshman classes at the University of Tennessee today. They were the first Negroes ever admitted to undergraduate classes at the University. GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-Pacs of all kinds Picnic Supplies LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt. VI 3-0350 EXODUS In Stereo and Hi-Fi Records BELL'S 925 Mass VI3-2644 I LOATHE VACATIONS! OR PIZZA CAMPUS VI 3-9111 FAST DELIVERY HIDEAWAY SUPERHORSEMAN Daily hansan Friday, Jan. 6, 1961 EDWARD A. MASER Edward Maser, director of the Spooner-Thayer Art Museum and chairman of the department of art history, is leaving KU to become chairman of the department of art at the University of Chicago. Museum Director Accepts New Post He will assume his new duties July 1. No replacement for Prof Maser has been named. "I think everyone dreams of returning to their alma mater and running things," said Prof. Maser, who took his M.A. and Ph.D degrees at Chicago. "ITS BEEN a hard decision. I've been here seven years. There is a good deal of myself in this museum, and in the department. Both my wife and I have strong sentimental ties with the town and the University. We met and married here, and its hard to leave," he said. Asked if he would receive a raise in salary, Prof. Maser replied: "Yes. Expenses are higher in Chicago. But the salary increase was not a determining factor in my decision to leave." He said he will have more time to pursue his own interests at Chicago. "Frankly, this is a big job here. Running the museum, teaching, administrative duties, and the editorial work I put in on the Register (the publication of the art museum) don't leave me much time for my research," he said SITTING BACK in his chair, Prof. Maser thoughtfully reviewed his years at KU and his work here. He said that when he arrived, the mu- (Continued on page 8) Grumm and Nehring To Discuss Kennedy John G. Grumm, associate professor of political science, and Earl A. Nehring, assistant professor of political science, will discuss "What to Expect from the Kennedy Administration" at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. today in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Algerians Voting ALGIERS, Algeria — (UPI) — Moslem villagers, European settlers and French front-line soldiers in the remote back country started voting today on the first step of President Charles de Gaulle's plan to end six years of war in Algeria. LAWRENCE, KANSAS The most serious incident was at Kerrata near Constantine where the Moslem director of a voting station was slain. Four bomb explosions and an unsuccessful sabotage attempt against an Algiers region radio station caused negligible damage this morning. 58th Year, No. 65 'D-Day' About Here, Language Students The language proficiency examinations in four languages will be given at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Hall. The French test will be given in 206, German in 210, Latin in 213 and Spanish in 205. The Campus Chest will sponsor the Dave Brubeck Quartet with Paul Desmond Feb. 19, to highlight its fund-raising drive. At a meeting of the Campus Chest executive committee last night in the Kansas Union, the group set a $1.50 price on seats for the concert with blocks of seats available to groups larger than 20 people. The concert will be held in Hoch Auditorium. All seats will be reserved and will be sold on a first come, first serve basis. THE GOAL of this $5,500, said Douglas L. Mayor, Kansas City junior and chairman of the drive. Brubeck at KU To Highlight Drive for Funds The funds collected will be delegated primarily to student charities, both on and off the campus. Each year this one major drive is held in order to avoid the confusion which would result if many smaller drives were held during the year. Mayor announced that four trophies will be presented at the termination of this year's drive. A trophy will be presented to each fraternity, sorority, and men's and women's dormitory which contributes the largest per capita donation to the drive. STUDENTS WILL also be encouraged to contribute their Union Book Store rebate slips to the Campus Chest drive. These will then be turned into the bookstore and the funds received will go toward the drive as donations. Northeast and north central- Continued mild and fair today, tonight and Saturday. High today 50 to 55. Low tonight in 20s. Mayor asked that members of the council bring suggestions to the next meeting. The committee will consider them further at that time. Weather Tavern Owner SaysNoNegroes By Byron Klapper A Lawrence tavern manager yesterday took a firm stand against integrating his establishment on the grounds that it would hurt his business. At a Wednesday meeting of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) the council resolved to ask for an all-student boycott of the Downbeat (now the Harbour) and the Huddle unless they changed their policies against serving Negroes. THREE MEMBERS of the CRC met yesterday with K. D. Pringle, manager of the Harbour, to discuss the discrimination issue. "We went to see Mr. Pringle and identified ourselves with the CRC," James McMullan, Long Beach, N. Y., senior and CRC member said. McMullan said they tried to impress upon Mr. Pringle that they were not trying to force anyone to do anything, but simply wished to discuss exactly how he felt about serving Negroes in his establishment. According to McMullan, Pringle said he was sorry but would not allow Negroes in his place because it would hurt his business. Pringle said many of his customers would not patronize his place if Negroes were served. HE MADE a distinction between the Negroes in town and the Negro students, and said the Negroes in town were a different type. He said he feared trouble which could lead to fights. According to McMullan, Pringle said he would serve Negroes in uniform because they were defending the country. The CRC group was unable to speak to the owner of the Huddle yesterday, but has arranged for a meeting. The manager had indicated an unwillingness to serve Negroes. DONALD K. ALDERSON, dean of men, commented on the call for a student boycott of the two taverns. In a Daily Kansas interview he said: "It would be my hope that wherever KU students go in Lawrence or in Douglas County, that as ladies and gentlemen, they would be served. "It seems inconceivable that business establishments in a well known university town would deny service to certain individuals within the student body. It should also be pointed out that students come to KU from all parts of the world. Many impressions are developed on this campus and in Lawrence concerning our nation and its role in world leadership. "At this stage I see no reason for me to further comment on the bovcott urged by the Civil Rights Council." Riots in Belgium Reach New Peak BRUSSELS, Belgium —(UPI)— Troops and police fire volleys of rifle shots over the heads of rioting strikers in Liege today in the worst explosion of violence in Belgium's 18-day-old national strike crisis. OFFICIALS SAID at least 17 gendarmes were hurt. Early estimates placed the number of rioters injured at more than two dozen. Witnesses described the four-hour street battle in Liege as a "nearinsurrection." Earlier, more than 2,000 demonstrators staged a protest march in the Brussels industrial suburb. Wescoe Defines Profession As a Service to Man A profession is not a vocation, a calling or an employment, but a way of life, a service to mankind which has its roots in a formal education and a code of ethics. This was Chancellor W. Clarke Wescow's definition of a profession in the fourth Humanities series lecture last night. "Professional education is under the gun," exclaimed the Chancellor. "And the single thoughtless answer to improve the situation is summed up in one word--acceleration. He went on to explain that all professional experience should consist of a full four year liberal arts program with a liberal arts degree, followed by the advanced degree in a special school. "YOU MIGHT have guessed I don't feel it is the proper answer," he added. "A six year old could have thought of that in simpler terms." "We shouldn't touch the four year program," he said in speaking against the current trend to shorten the undergraduate college career. "Furthermore, it is as important for the gifted child to have a wide background of knowledge as it is for the average student." "THERE IS no substitute for depth of knowledge, and the necessary knowledge is not achieved by speeding. Knowledge being fluid, it only follows that our consideration of it should be fluid." Notebooks and pencils became prevalent in the audience as Chancellor Wescoe began to explain his philosophy of the "professional education" in detail. Chancellor Wescoe contended that three major influences retard the academic revision of the professional curriculums. The first is the group of individuals called the "older generation" who tend to look back with hallowed memories on their education, and resist change. The second retarding factor is the obsolete statutes which are revised long after they sould have been. And the last curtailing force is the influence projected by specialists in the field concerned, who feel certain they know the answers. "TOO MANY curriculums have grown by addition, and almost no subtraction." At this point in the lecture, there were a few silent motioned hand claps from several students seated in the balcony. The Chancellor continually used his experience and knowledge of the medical school, its students, responsibilities and goals, to illustrate his points. "Because of the increase in population, there is an even greater need for professional people, such as the medical profession, to serve the public." The expanding growth of knowledge in human affairs only makes it more important that the collegiate experience constitute a basis for mature judgment enhanced by contemplation, Chancellor Wescoe said. "THE HALLMARK of a mature individual is this judgment, and speed does not enhance its learning. "The collegiate experience should be an end unto itself. It is not a preprofessional course. It is not a stimulant nor a tool to be used by a professional school, not to be sprayed in short intermediary squirts, or rolled on as a jelly deodorant." ALFRED BARRICHE THE WARMUP—Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, listens attentively to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, before Dr. Wesco delivered the Humanities Lecture last night. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 6, 1961 The Super Patriots Ever wonder what puts a cynical gleam in the eye of the veteran newsman? Try reading his mail a while and you'll find out. Each day mail from obscure people with equally obscure return addresses beech the journalist to join a cause and fight for some ideal. Always the cause is half lost, the fight worthy and the ideal the salvation of mankind. Recently we happened to daily too long over the desk and our horrified eyes caught sight of a card pleading with us to enlist in the ranks of the N.A.A.R.M.W.P. Being a sucker for initials (a hangover from the F.D.R. administration) we were compelled to read on. Somebody from down in Sow Belly County wanted us to push the National Association for the Advancement of the Rights of the Majority of White People. It isn't enough to fight for the minority, now you also have to fight for the majority. If there are any "in-betweens" around, we are starting to sympathize with them. THE SUPER PATRIOTS ALSO SEEM TO be out in force this year. They seem to confuse issues about as bad as the "me first," "state first." Federal government first" and minority first' boys. We have another hot little number on our desk from one Jack Franklin, editor of the Student. Statesman, beseeching us to assist in "launching a journalistic crusade to combat the malignant menace of Communist propaganda in this country." If he had left out the word Communist, he might have made a sale. What ever happened to the fierce independence of the American citizen? Maybe we are from the "old school" but we always thought one of the basic principles of the American democracy was the right to be what you wanted to be. NOW YOU MUST THINK TWICE BEFORE you even join a young people's club. Eager Edgar seems to have his FB-eye fastened on the "yunguns." It might be a front, you know, for the Communists. We wonder when they will get around to finding out what is in back. Old Jack Franklin and his "Student Statesman" want to fight fire with fire and out propagandize the propagandists, so to say. Sounds like a vicious circle to me. Maybe we are trying to hold on to our democracy so hard we are losing sight of the very principles for which we are struggling. "Self determination" has been bandied about so much it is starting to sound shopworn, but that seems to be the forgotten criteria. We shake in indignant wrath at the busy-body neighbor who attempts to tell us what to do, yet we get equally indignant at a country which refuses to accept our principles of Democracy. WHEN A FOREIGNER ASKS ME "WHAT is democracy?" I feel like the guy who's been asked "do you still beat your wife?" The question is loaded, friend. It's loaded. I might have joined Franklin's little group (and I'm sure it's little), but I noticed the American Legion is aiding him in distribution "to all major college and university campuses in the United States." They might want to give me some type of award which I wouldn't particularly want. You know what happened to another schoolboy who tried that. God save us from the super patriots—Russian or American. The little people of the small nations of the world must feel the same way. We notice a flood tide of neutralism sweeping over the world. WE WONDER WHY MORE AMERICANS don't stop to remember that their forefathers were little people from other countries where power politics got to be too much for them. "Give me your tired, your poor. Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door." Remember? - Ray Miller Editor: Zeus the Defender ... Letters ... Reference is made to your editorial in the issue of Tuesday, 29 November 1960, entitled, "Zeus, the Defender." This editorial contains a misstatement of fact, i.e. your statement that the Army and Navy are adhering to the doctrine of massive retaliation against heavily populated areas. The Army and Navy have never endorsed this policy. As a matter of fact, the Army has protested this policy ever since 1947; three distinguished soldiers (General Gavin, General Ridgeway, and General Taylor) have left the service as a result of the controversy within the Department of Defense concerning emphasis placed on "massive retaliation." The Army has consistently sought funds to place the Nike Zeus system in preliminary production. The Nike Zeus System is in an advanced state of development and is an extension of the research and development which placed Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules in operation. Your attention is invited to the article, "Danger: Anti-missile Gap" on page 67 of the U. S. News and World Report issue of 14 November 1960 for additional facts on this subject. Additional background material on this subject is contained in General Taylor's "The Uncertain Trumpet," and General Medaris' article in the 27 September 1960 issue of Look magazine, "How to Rescue Our Defense Effort." Clyde L. Jones LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS THRU HISTORY WITH PAK SNAFF G.B. BLEER 5-35 Colonel, Artillery RMS "AT LEAST HE'S TRYIN' TO HOLD OUR INTEREST." (Editor's note: We erred in placing the Army on the side of those who advocate massive retaliation. The Army, its strategic objectives dictated by shorter-range weapons designed for use against enemy military concentrations, is indeed opposed to overemphasis on the Army's ability to deter the release of funds for the Nike Zeus program came not from the Army but from other areas within the department of defense. We did not intend to impute that anything else was true. However, the statement that the Zeus is not yet in the testing phase was true, in that no full-scale tests relied on the Zeus for production objective to replace opponents against a suitable target have yet been conducted. (Army Information Digest, December, 1960). Such tests will not be conducted until later this year or as long as two years after this. The Zeus on site and operational in sufficient numbers to provide effective defense certainly cannot be reached for perhaps as long as two years after this. Zeus should be placed on site, and this writer witnessed advanced testing of this weapon in 1957.) Short Ones It will ever remain incomprehensible that our generation, so great in its achievements of discovery, could be so low spiritually as to give up thinking—Schweitzer --- Show me a woman's pocketbook and I can tell you her fears, hopes and desires--Albert Reuben PILOTS' CHECK-IN EATON KU DAILY KANSAN - 1961 "Oh, A routine landing, thanks. Clipped a Braniff, brushed a Pan-Am Connie and just missed a TWA jetliner. And you?" the look world By Calder M. Pickett Acting Dean, School of Journalism THE SUN ALSO RISES, by Ernest Hemingway. Scribner Library, $1.45. Whether there was a Lost Generation really matters no longer. Whether the Twenties really roared also is of no importance. There were many who thought the generation was lost and that the years in which the generation got lost were roaring years. This is what counts today. Tell a student who was born in 1940 that your parents and many parents like them never drank bathtub gin and he probably won't believe you. Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" is likely to remain the number one chronicle of those who believed themselves part of a lost generation. Hemingway later found himself, and came in time to write some strikingly affirmative things. But in 1926 there was disillusionment in Hemingway, and the impotence of the world about him was reflected in the impotence of Jake Barnes. Is this a great book, one that can say much to the college generation of today? I think it is. Beyond its importance as a reflection of how a good many people thought, it is important for what it says about style. Hemingway seems over-simple at times, and his English almost becomes pidgin English. But he is always forceful and direct, always uses the right word, always tells us right off just what he is trying to say. And despite the essential lack of adornment of characters, plot and setting, "The Sun Also Rises" is consistently vivid. As Jake, Lady Brett, Robert Cohn, Bill Gorton and Mike Campbell drink and eat and make love and watch bulls and fight and fish the reader is caught up in the disillusioned kind of life that Hemingway — even more than Fitzgerald — has captured for us from the lost generation. Worth Repeating Our daughters must be taught that the ideal female is not a male, that a woman must find fulfillment within her own biological needs and that sacrifice and dedication are foundations of the home.—Dr. Morris Gross Dailu Transan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004; trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Fax 876, brussels office Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull Business Manager Friday, Jan. 6, 1961 University Daily Kansan From the Magazine Rack Page 3 A Doctor's Education More medical knowledge has been won during the last twenty years than in all time. To live in the midst of explosive advances in medicine leads to serious thought, for the breathtaking prospects that science is opening up include a host of concomitant problems, especially at the focal point—the medical schools of the nation. Among questions that harass the deans of the 85 U.S. medical schools and give grey hairs to the professors are these: How can the nation's medical schools produce enough physicians to keep pace with the rapid growth in population and the demands of the American public for better medical care? How can a medical student be expected to learn in his four years at medical school and several more in hospitals all he must know in view of the fantastic advances in medicine? In an age of science and specialization, how can doctors develop a compassionate understanding of an ill person and appreciate the far-reaching effects of the illness upon him and his family? What effects will the increasingly vast expenditures for research have on medical education and how can the medical schools maintain a proper balance between teaching and research? ... THE DOCTOR, TEACHER, and student shortages are only a part of the national problem in medical education. Another difficulty is posed by the rapid and massive accumulation of new knowledge during the past two decades. This has created painful pedagogical headaches. The origin of the word "curriculum," as Dean Berry reminds his first-year students, is "race track" and the track at Harvard and other schools is in danger of becoming extremely difficult for the student because of the vast mass of scientific facts, tools, and hypotheses. For instance, the invention of the electron microscope in the mid-forties, an instrument that magnifies objects 100 fold more than does the light microscope, has added tremendously to the range of visible structure. The electron microscope—only one of the new devices now available to extend man's vision—is opening breathtaking vistas for medicine. It is now possible to examine in minute detail the anatomy of any cell at the molecular level—from a reproductive cell carrying genetic characteristics to a brain cell that contributes to the thinking process. Textbooks in many fields are being outdated before they can be printed. Fifty years ago President Lowell warned the Faculty of Medicine that there was a tendency to treat the medical student as if he were a "goose to be stuffed." Dean Berry worries that, with more facts now available for the stuffing, the tendency is again to dominate the medical scene and sacrifice education for vocational training. The School's policy is to teach the principles of medicine to medical students and to leave specialization for the post-doctoral years in the teaching hospitals. "What we seek here," Dean Berry tells the entering medical students, "is education, not training. It is better for a student to know less when he graduates provided he has learned better how to learn. The most important element in education is the student's growth, and the best way to grow is to know what questions to ask. Medical education is good when it is good education." (Excerpted from "Educating Your Doctor" by Bayley F. Mason and Elizabeth Conrad in the Autumn, 1960, issue of Harvard Today.) KU Personnel Get Government Grants A grant awarded three KU staff and faculty members for a study of policy development is the first of its kind ever given by the U. S. Office of Vocational Rehabilitation. The $23,850 grant has been awarded jointly to William Gore, assistant professor of political science; Charles K. Warriner, associate professor of sociology and Robert Dentier, assistant director, Bureau of Child Research. Never give a politician an even break.—Vernon Smylie SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Students! Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj. ... 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hrs, with Mechanic on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Around the Campus Engineers Plan Exposition Theme "Prospects for the Future" will be the theme for the 41st Annual Engineering Exposition held in conjunction with the KU Relays on April 21, 22. Thomas O'Brien, Great Bend junior, and president of the Engineering Student Council, said that the council hopes that the different departmental exhibits will give the public an insight into what an engineer does in college and after graduation. Of the amount, about $1,400 will be awarded a post-graduate parttime teaching assistant in chemistry and $500, to the department of chemistry. Mr. O'Brien said that the position of general chairman and publicity chairman for the exposition are open. They will be filled by petition to the Engineering Student Council. The University of Kansas will receive grants totaling $8,700 from the Du Pont Co. this year to strengthen its research and teaching programs in science and engineering. He said that these petitions can be picked up in the office of John McNown, dean of engineering, and must be returned there by 5 p.m. Jan. 11. An additional $1.800 will be awarded the University for support of its summer research program in chemical engineering. Another $5, 000 has been awarded the University for fundamental research in chemistry. KU Gets Du Pont Science Grant My best friends are guys no honest cop would keep out of the clink for a minute.—A. H. Morton 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 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA AND The Pizza Hut AND The Catacombs Serving the Finest Pizza and Cold Beverage in the Country Available for Private Parties Sun. thru. Thurs. Pizza Hut open Sun. - Thurs., 4-12 & Fri. - Sat., 12 noon - 1 a.m. Catacombs open Sun. - Thurs., 6-12 & Fri. - Sat., 6-1 a.m. Dining & Dancing — DANCE — Sat. night dance to "The Fire Flys" 9-1 a.m. — 50c per person T.G.I.F. SPECIAL (by popular demand) Attend the Catacombs (4) "Four happy hours" 2-6 Fri. — Your favorite beverage FREE!! Entrance Fee! Men $1.00 — Women 50c Renew your taste for real Pizza EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 Burastahler Receives Grant Albert W. Burgstahler, assistant professor of chemistry, has received a Research Corporation renewal grant of $2500 to continue work on "Resolution and Optical Stability of Unsymmetrically Substituted Aryloxyacetic Acids." Regents Consider Quarter System An adoption of the quarter system in the state colleges and universities was under consideration by the Kansas Board of Regents at their last meeting. Under the quarter system students could attend classes three semesters per year instead of the present two semester system. This would enable a fuller utilization of facilities during a greater portion of the school year. Under this system the educational facilities would be in use 11 months of the year. The regents said the proposed change would be studied further if the legislature grants a $25,000 request for research assistance to the board. The board would also consider in its studies, the elimination of duplication in college curricula, development of long-range building plans and operation and maintenance of physical plants. Try the Kansan Want Ads Interviewers to Eye Future Teachers Charles Romine, personnel director of the Jefferson County Schools, Lakewood, Colo., will be on the campus Monday and Tuesday to interview candidates for elementary and secondary teaching positions. On Thursday C. Fred Colvin, assistant superintendent from Wichita will meet candidates for elementary and secondary positions, Frank Creason, from district 49, Overland Park, will interview students interested in positions in music and grades one through six. Students desiring interviews should sign up at the Teachers Apppointment Bureau, Room 117, Bailey. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER JANUARY CLEARANCE of Men's Shoes ROBLEE— Oxfords and Slip-ons Browns and Black Regularly Priced From 14.95 to 15.95 Now $ \mathbf{12}^{90} $ Regularly Priced From 12.95 to 13.95 Now $10^{90} 1090 PEDWIN SHOES- Oxfords and Loafers Brown and Black Regularly Priced 790 10.95 to 11.95 Now and $7^{90}$ and $8^{90}$ 890 813 Mass. McCoy's VI 3-2091 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Fridav. Jan. 6. 1961 Ouija Board Foretells Future Of People, Places, Things The ouija board predicts that the final war will be in 2222. It spelled out an Asian Victory. The United States will reach the moon March 17, 1961, and beat Russia to Mars in 1982. ouija added. Dorothy Kicker, Mission sophomore, said that girls are continually coming to her room to listen to ouija. Some of them take it seriously and others laugh, she added. "It does come up with some weird answers," Miss Kicker said, "but it tells the truth at times. I asked it what floor a girl I wanted to see was on and it told me 'four'. I went to that floor and she lived there." Matrimonial Bureaus might have a riotous time with ouija. It for- tells who a girl will marry (such names like Cax and Randor). Ouija also tells the girl where she will meet him. Miss Kicker said, "One girl was to meet her boy friend in Saw Park. Oulja told her that Saw Park was the worst park west of Sir Nevada. "One girl wanted to know if she would get a letter from her boy friend. Ouiija answered 'no.' When we asked it why, it said 'make pass at coffee pot.' Further questioning revealed that a fraulein threw a coffee pot at him when he made a pass. The coffee pot broke his jaw. The girl's boy friend is in Germany." "Why do gentlemen prefer blondes, ouija?" Miss Kicker said "Because blondes are happier," ouija spelled out on the rectangular board with the little disc. Odd answers are not unusual. Sometimes it spells words that don't exist. When asked if the words were in a foreign language it said "yes." It also said that it could spell out words in 25 languages. Eight Pinnings Announced McCarthy-Cartmell Gamma Phi Beta announces the pinning of Kathy McCarthy, Kansas City junior, to Phil Cartmel, Prairie Village senior. The pinning was announced at the Phi Delta Theta Christmas formal. *** Ontjes-Falletta Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pinning of Miss Carolyn Ontjes, Hutchinson junior, to Mr. John Falletta, Arma junior. Miss Ontjes is majoring in history and philosophy. Mr. Falletta is a chemistry major and is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. The pinning was announced by Karen Kirk and Carol Schmucker, Hutchinson juniors and by Billie Lamkin, Kirkwood junior. Howell-Daubert Phi Kappa Theta fraternity announces the pinning of Larry Daubert, to Barbara Howell, member of Delta Gamma sorority. Both are Great Bend juniors. Thomson-O'Brien Phi Kappa Theta fraternity announces the pinning of Tom O'Brien, Great Bend senior, to Judy Thomson, Wichita junior, a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Fowler-Schnitker * * Acacia fraternity announces the pinning of Joy Fowler, Fort Scott, a member of Alpha Phi sorority, to David Schnitker, Union Star, Mo., president of Acacia. Both are seniors. * * Tobiason-Hiebert Gamma Phi Beta announces the pinning of Joyce Tobiason, Kansas City, Mo., junior, to Jack Hiebert, Wichita senior. Hiebert is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Chowning-Elston Gamma Phi Beta announces the pinning of Sue Chowning, Prairie Village senior, to Bill Elston, Kansas City senior. Campus Society Elite Class Ballets To Improve Figure An authentic Russian ballet master from the famed Bolshoi Ballet Theater is giving ballet lessons to wives and daughters of correspondents and diplomats this winter. MOSCOW — (UPI) — The women of Moscow's foreign colony keep up their figures not by "one, two, three — bend" but by "fourth position, fifth position." Twice a week the "inostranki." as the Russians call us foreign women, gather to struggle collectively through the elementary steps of the classic Russian ballet. Females of all sizes, shapes and ages climb into their "leotards" or rather their black or red toe-to-waist winter underwear. Some discreetly add skirts. Others wear Bermuda shorts. Most of the ladies speak only a few words of Russian. Otherwise they would have heard the patient but occasionally despairing teacher sighing "Ah, terrible! Ah, worse!" as the ladies tried to stretch their arms gracefully. Sweet 16 no longer is the age when a girl first puts on high heels, reports the Shoe Fashion Service. Today, the average teenaged girl starts wearing shoes with at least two-inch heels between the ages of 14 and 15. In some areas, 12-year-old girls wear high heels for parties and school dances. A. J. B. C. EASY-WASH 11th & Pennsylvania VI 3-9706 LARGE PARKING AREA Rosa Lind Prof. and Mrs. L. R. Lind, Lawrence, announce the engagement of their daughter, Rosa, to Gary Lynn Jordan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olin Jordan, of Iola. Miss Lind is a senior in the school of journalism, majoring in radiotelevision. She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega, social sorority, Gamma Alpha Chi, Theta Sigma Phi and Alpha Epsilon Rho, journalism fraternities. Mr. Jordan graduated from Kansas University in chemical engineering in 1958 and is a member of Alpha Chi Sigma, professional fraternity in chemistry. He is a third year law student at George Washington University and is a member of the patent law firm of Shlesinger and Shlesinger of Washington, D. C. The wedding date has been set for June 3. Try the Kansan Want Ads Mary JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Sharon Hide Sharon Hide, Prairie Village senior, has been selected KUOK Sweetheart for the week of Jan. 4 to 11. Before buying a fur, whether it is a fur coat, fur-lined coat, a scarf, stole, jacket or accessory, decide what you need and want most—style, warmth or serviceability. With careful planning and thoughtful buying, it may be possible to get all three. Shoe Repair 1-Day Service Leather Full Soles 399 pr. $5 Val. With Rubber Heels DELUXE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 1300 W. 23rd St. Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. MAN LIKE FINALS ARE NO SWEAT "Cool" your finals with college outlines and study aids from the KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE By BARNES & NOBLE LITTLE- FIELD Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics Psychology . . . and many other subjects By SCHAUMS Theory and sample work problems in Chemistry Physics Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE © University Daily Kansas Page 5 THE MONKEYS Friday, Jan. 6, 1961 A heavily armed militiaman smiles at the camera as he stands before a new bloc of houses on one of the cooperatives that are springing up in Cuba. He smiles, but he stands ready to ward off the attack that he and many of his fellows believe may be launched against the new regime. Castro's Cuba; The Pot Boils Cuba. In the peaceful past, the name conjured up pictures of a carefree resort bathed in winter sunshine, where a tired tourist could find relaxation in any number of ways. Today Cuba is a scare headline, a focus of tension in the Caribbean, a name on the lips of every American. Cuba is not just Cuba anymore; it is Castro's Cuba, a nation in ferment on every social, economic and political level. It is a land of arresting contrasts. The band in the glittering Hotel Riviera plays almost till dawn for fun-loving patrons. In the shadows outside the hotel, guns stand silent and ready, waiting for an attack that may never come. The Castro government almost daily scourges the United States for imperialism, for aggression, for colonialism, for any and all of the charges in the lexicon of international diplomacy. But the people of Cuba turn out in astonishing numbers to greet American visitors, with brass bands playing and a smile on every face The landscape is dotted with architecturally exquisite lowrent housing for workers; but most rural workers still live in conditions beyond the pale of decency. The people want peace and order now more than ever; and yet on the front of a bus one can see a crudely lettered sign: "Terrorists to the Wall." Cuba boils with change. Until the caldron cools, few can know what truly lies within. Text by Bill Blundell Photos by Karl Sparber ... of social barriers and the demand for social reform that is sweeping Cuba. More and more of these buildings are going up. Supermodern apartments rise in East Havana. Built for the workers, who will occupy them at a nominal rental, they are testimony in brick and glass to the leveling 1930 Poverty and disease still walk side by side with progress in Cuba. These campesinos (agricultural workers) are pictured in front of their thatch-roofed behio. These bohios have packed dirt floors. There is no plumbing, no running water. Under such conditions, parasitic diseases flourish. (These photographs were taken during the Christmas holidays, just before the United States broke diplomatic relations with Cuba.) M. An American who fought with Castro in the Sierra Maestra, John Mitchell now serves the regime as the manager of a cooperative. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 6. 1961 Guards Seen as Key To Big Scoring Punch The performance of the guards may well be the big difference when Kansas faces Oklahoma in its Big Eight opener in Norman tomorrow, KU coach Dick Harp has been dissatisfied all season with the showing of his backcourt performers. Oklahoma mentor Doyle Parrack, too, is reported to have worked all week on the erratic shooting of Sooner guards. Parrack got only a 24.3 per cent shooting performance from his guards in the Big Eight tournament and may move one of his forwards to the backcourt to increase the Sooner shooting ability. George Kernak, 6-2 junior, hit on only 5 of 28 field goal attempts in the tourney while the other starting guard, 6-3 Tom McCurdy, pumped in three of six attempts. It was McCurdy's shooting performance which may earn him the starting position for the KU game The shortest man on the Sooner squad, 5-9 sophomore Eddie Evans, will also see considerable action in the backcourt as will 6-6 Joe Lee Thompson. What Coach Parrack considered to be the early season weakness of his squad — the forwards — have developed well and now must be considered one of the biggest Sooner assets. Returning after 19 days out of action due to a shoulder injury will be 6-5 Jack Lee. Lee is the best percentage shooter in modern Oklahoma history. He averaged 6.5 points per game last season but has seen only limited action this year. The other forward will be 6-7 Warren Fouts. This junior was cited by his coach for his fine play in the 60-56 Oklahoma win over Brigham Young, a team which defeated the Jayhawkers 80-70 during the Christmas vacation. *Brian Etheridge, the Sooner's leading scorer last season with a 10. 4 per game average will be the starter at center. Aside from BYU, KU and the Sooners have had three other like opponents. Both posted easy wins over Texas Tech and lost to Kansas State, although the Kansas margin against the latter was much less. Oklahoma lost by 12 to Iowa State while Kansas triumphed by four over the Cyclones. This will be the 88th meeting of the two teams. KU holds a 57-30 edge in the series and possesses a four game winning streak. Harp will be aiming at his 100th victory in his career as head basketball coach. OU's Parrack is looking for his 200th head coaching victory. The Sooners enter the game with an 8-3 season while KU will take the floor in defense of its Big Eight championship with a 6-4 record. Chemistry Slips By Templin, 31-29 In an Independent B intramural basketball game last night the Chemistry Department team slipped by Templin 31-29. The game was close all the way and the score was tied at the end of regulation play. The Chemistry Department held a two point lead gained early in the overtime period. In the only other Independent B game AAA beat Air Force 43-15. The other games in intramural play were in the Fraternity C division with Theta Chi beating Alpha Tau Omega #3, 22-16, Tau Kappa Epsilon #1 defeating Phi Delta Theta #3, 24-13 and Phi Delt #2 winning over Sigma Phi Epsilon #2, 31-16. Phi Gamma Delta #2 beat Sigma Chi #2, 24-16, Beta Theta Pi #6 down Sigma Chi #3, 24-20, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon #1 beat Kappa Sigma 23-15. Along the JAY HAWKER trail The opening weekend of the Big Eight basketball season will see a decisive favorite in nearly all games. A full conference schedule is slated tomorrow night with three games on Monday. Foremost for Kansas fans will be the Jayhawkers' tour. Oklahoma tour. KU will open against the Oklahoma Sooners tomorrow, then travel to Stillwater to battle the Oklahoma State Cowpokes Monday. The Wildcats have too much height for the Cowpokes and should win Saturday to begin their championship bid. KU will be well tested in each game but should win both without too much trouble. A fiery Iowa State squad also has an excellent opportunity to move into the title picture. The Cyclones open against Colorado tomorrow and are expected to show balanced strength in winning this one. The Cyclones are at home again Monday to battle the Missouri Tigers and another win is in store. The battle for last place begins opening night as the Tigers and Nebraska clash in Lincoln. Schedule for IM Basketball Heavy The only other game to be played over the weekend pits Nebraska against Colorado. The Buffaloes shouldn't have too much trouble winning. The nine league winners and the three teams with the highest team pin average that did not win a league championship will be entered in the men's playoffs. FRATERNITY A—Beta Theta Pi vs Alpha KappaLambda, 4:15 p.m. -Phi Kappa Psi vs Phi Delta Theta, 5:15 p.m.—and Pi Kappa Alpha vs Lambda Chi Alpha, 6:15 p.m. Nine men's leagues, three women's leagues and one mixed league were entered in this year's competition. FRATERNITY C—Sigma Alpha Epsilon #3 vs Alpha Tau Omega #2, 7:15 p.m.—and Beta Theta Pi #1 vs Delta Sigma Phi, 7:15 p.m. FRATERNITY B—Lambda Chi Alpha vs Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4:15 p.m.—Sigma Nu vs Phi Kappa Theta, 4:15 p.m.—Fhi Delta Theta vs Triangle, 5:45 p.m.—Sigma Pi vs Delta Tau Delta, 5:45 p.m.—Beta Theta Pi vs Delta Chi, 6:30 p.m.and Theta Chi vs Delta Sigma Phi, 6:30 p.m. Play of the fall leagues of KU bowling ends today with playoffs to determine the hill champions scheduled for tomorrow and Sunday. Most of the league winners have already been decided. Tonight's bowling will decide the others. The INDEPENDENT C—Botany vs. Joseph P. Pearson, 5 p.m.—and Phi Beta Pi vs. Templin, 5 p.m. Fall Bowling Leagues Start Team Playoffs Tomorrow Newman Club of Jayhawk #1 league hard pressed by the Big Blue Navy team, 24-15, goes in tonight with a 25-15 record. Winner of 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST PICTURE "BEST ACTOR" "BEST DIRECTION" "BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY" (COLOR) "BEST ART DIRECTION" (COLOR) "BEST MUSIC SCORE" "BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR" "BEST FILM EDITING" "BEST SPECIAL EFFECTS" "BEST SOUND" "BEST COSTUME" (COLOR) METRO GOLDWYN MAVER WILLIAM WYLERS PRESENTATION OF BEN HUR Matinee at 1:30 Adults $1.00 Evenings at 7:30 Adults $1.50 VARSITY THEATRE... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 One game separates the Fen Pals and Theta Chi #1 of the Hilltop league. The league winners that have already been decided are: Twilight—Shur Shots, Hawk—Sigma Nu #1, Jayhawk #2—English Department, Crimson—Phi Delta Theta #1, Rock—Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Jay—Alpha Tau Omega #2 and Oread—Alpha Kappa Lambda. The only team that has been assured a position in playoff because of high average is the Jim Beam Sleepers with a 761 average. Triangle is a very strong possibility and will be among the top three unless an upset forces them out. The first playoff round is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. tomorrow with each team bowling three games across three lanes. The second round is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Sunday with each team bowling three games. The team with the most pins will be declared hill champion. Trophies will be awarded Sunday night. The women's playoff will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. with the three league winners and the three teams with the highest average competing. The league winners are: Sunset #1—Elliott Team, Sunset #2—Pi Beta Phi and Prairie—Alpha Omicron Pi. The other teams entered are Delta Delta Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Kappa. METRO GOLDWYN MAYER WILLIAM WYLERS PRESENTED BY BEN-HUR VARSITY THEATRE...Telephone VIKING 3 1065 HURRY! Last Few Days Winner of 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST PICTURE "BEST ACTOR" "BEST DIRECTION" "BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY" (COLOR) "BEST ART DIRECTION" (COLOR) "BEST MUSIC SCORE" "BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR" "BEST FILM EDITING" "BEST SPECIAL EFFECTS" "BEST SOUND" "BEST COSTUME" (COLOR) METRO GOLDWYN MAYER WILLIAM WYLERS PRESENTATION OF BEN-HUR Matinee at 1:30 Adults $1.60 Evenings at 7:30 Adults $1.50 Children Always 50¢ VARSITY THEATRE • • • Telephone VIKING 3-1065 TOUR CURR. NATALIE WOOD In The Most Challenging Love Story Of Our Time The FRANK ROSS Production Kings Go Forth LEORA DAMA Refereed by UNITED USA ARTISTS — AND — A ONE-MAN ARMY... A MIGHTY ADVENTURE! ROBERT MITCHUM URSULA THESS GLOBERT ROLAND BANDIDO CINEMA SCOPE ORDER BY € 4 LUNES PLUS TWO BONUS HITS SATURDAY ONLY! Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 FRI.-SAT.-SUN. FRANK SINATRA TONY CURTIS NATALIE WOOD In The Most Challenging Love Story Of Our Time The FRANK ROSS Production Kings Go Forth with LEORA DANA Refereed by UNITED ARTISTS FRANK SINATRA TONY CURTIS NATALIE WOOD In The Most Challenging Love Story Of Our Time The FRANK ROSS Production Kings Go Forth with LEORA DANA Release by UNITED MA ARTISTS – AND – A ONE-MAN ARMY... A MIGHTY ADVENTURE! ROBERT MITCHUM URSULA THESS GILBERT ROLAND Release by UNITED MA ARTISTS BANDIDO CINEMA SCOPE DOOR by La Lume PLUS TWO BONUS HITS SATURDAY ONLY! Sunset ) A ONE-MAN ARMY... A MIGHTY ADVENTURE! ROBERT MITCHUM URSULA THESS GLIBERT ROLAND BANDIDO CINEMASCOOP DOLOR by Co Lamp Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 Across six thousand miles of excitement... across a whole world of adventure comes the rousing story of real people called The Sundowners! THE FRED ZINNEMANN'S PRODUCTION OF THE SUNDOWNERS DEBORAH ROBERT PETER KERR MITCHUM USTINOV TECHNICOLOR® PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. COSTARRING GLYNIS JOHNS · DINA MERRILL Screenplay by ISOBEL LENNART MUSIC COMPOSED AND CONDUCTED BY DIMITR TIOMKIN Directed by FRED ZINNEMANN STARTS TOMORROW! Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. Eves. 7:00 & 9:20 Cont. Sun. Ends Tonite – "GRASS IS GREENER" Granada THEATRE···Telephone VI 3-5788 THE MEN OF THE WEEK FRED ZINNE MANNIS PRODUCTION OF THE SUNDOWNERS DEBORAH ROBERT PETER KERR MITCHUM USTINGV TECHNICOLOR® PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. COSTARRING GLYNIS JOHNS • DINA MERRILL Screenplay by WB • ISOBEL LENNART DEBORAH ROBERT PETER KERR MITCHUM USTINOV TECHNICOLOR® PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. CO STARRING GLYNIS JOHNS • DINA MERRILL • ISOBEL LENNART Screenplay by THE SUNDOWNERS Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST WANTED Lost: Black Leather Purse, containing money and drivers license. If found return to Business Office, Strong Hall, KU. No questions asked... 1-10 BUSINESS SERVICES TO BUY good used trailer house. Contact Ban Lattin, V 1-2100. 1-6 Male to share apartment in Shawnee Male to share apartment in Feb. 1. Call 6418 if interested. DRESS-MAKING and alterations. For- warder, 909'8 Mast. Telephone VI S-3563. Snuffi 928'9 Mast. Telephone VI S-3563. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grants' Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Museum of Science, 677 Walnut Ave. ernized. Help-Your-Self. Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums, and all accessories, daily caramel, birds and cages. Everything that needs to be kept in the objects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still. come. Welcome. tf PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, probabilities. Sample test questions Free delivery. price $4.00. For your call ci1 VI 2-1065. LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest studio. Studio 98. Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. www.missouri.edu KU BARBER SHOP — 411½ W. 14th St Flat tops a speciality. Plenty of free parking. Clarence. 3-DAY FINISHING, 35 mm or movie film by Eastman — Raney Drug Store, Hillcrest Shopping Center. 1-11 Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551. tf I would like to babysit in my home. I would play. References: Call VI 3-8710. 1-6 FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home, Standard calls Call VI 3-1312. FOR SALE BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, bibliographic diagrams, diagram Complete cross index. Price $30.00. For your call copy VI 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-6430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. MUST PART with "Joe," a "52 Pontiac Pedigree and terms at VI 3-7333, tt 32 FOOT TRAILER. sleeps six. Will take smaller trailer in trade or will finance for responsible parties with reasonable down payment. 933 Rhode Island. 1-11 FIRST OF THE YEAR SPECIALS! Full line of new and used mobile homes. Come, see and talk with me at 7th and Arkansas. I 2-0560 or VI 3-7143. 1-11 1955 PLYMOUTH, Belvedere, 4-door, 6 cylinders, overdrive. Excellent condition. Call Mike Stephens, VI 3-7370. 1-9 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE. Two door with radio and heater. Low mileage. In very good condition. Can be seen at 524 La. after 5 p.m., or call VI 3-2599 1-213 EOR SALE: 1957 '21' console Syvania barrels 35 lbs 15 in 1-12 barrels VI 2-16.2 after 60 min. 1-12 1953 CHEVROLET, power steering and power brakes. Will sell at low price. Call KU 688 during daytime, VI 2-0372 after 5 p.m. 1-9 FOR SALE. 1955 one bedroom Safeway trailer store. Equipped with a one ton dormitory and standard storage space. Excellent condition. Phone 7192 1512 at 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-12 For Sale: Good condition Gretse guitar, case: Call Robert Johntz. 3-5750. 1-10 1956 PLYMOUTH, 2-door sedan, 6 cylinder, Standard transmission. Radio, heater, chains, economical transportation 8275 must sell. Must sell. Call V-1- 0509 after 7 p.m. 16 POOT FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 hp Johnson motor. All new, including trailer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. SJ 2-0479. 1-13 RENAULT-DAUPHINE, 1959 Four door sedan, white, like new throughout. One rear seat, three milies Handsome, reliable, economical car. Going abroad must sell. CALL VI 3-1943. 1-10 FOR RENT 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street parking, private bath. Rent reduced Phone VI 3-9776. tf First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-8776 after 2 p.m. tf VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf Jazz Forum UFUNRISHED TRI-PLEX APART- MENT. 3 rooms, private bath and en- tance from campus. nice. See any time at 1421 Kent or phone J. A. Reed. I 3-5814. 1-9 BOARD AND ROOM next semester. VI 3-4385. 1-10 If you like to live very close to the campus, one and one-half blocks from the building, your apartment is available now. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6896 for appointment. 1-10 SIX ROOM lower apartment, newly furnished, private bath and entrance. Parking Bldg. 820 New Hampshire or month. Phone 914-3200 or VI 3-8501 after 5 p.m. 1-10 NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room, steam heat, phone, private entrance and entrance. Also clean two room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath, phone. $26.50 per month, bills paid. Close to campus. table next semester. Phone VI 7839 1-10 NICE PLACE TO LIVE—new two bedroom apartment, unfurnished except for new Frigidaire refrigerator electric Owner Orders from Union, Best of neighbors. Private parking. Available Feb. 1. Phone V1 3-8534. 1-11 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six baths and a and entrances Utilities paid. Drinking. Married couple only. 520 Ohio. **tf** THREE ROOM furnished apartment. First floor, private entrance and bath. Near campus. Available Jan. 29. VI 2- 1443. 1-11 Modern 2 room basement apartment. Outside entrance. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Inc. All bills paid. 1-9 ROOMS—graduate men preferred. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture. facilities. Adequate study and recreation room available. 1221 Oread, G6798. 1-10 3 ROOM furnished house. $5 per month. 2 bedroom house, $65. Newly painted. very nice furniture 3 room private apartment. $80. T. A. Hemphill, 3062. 3062 FOR RENT. 2 or 3 boys, large furnished room. $160/month. Taxes paid. Jack Hawk. 2471 Ohio. 1-12 Featuring Dick Wright "The Kenton Era" Try the Kansan Want Ads Sunday, Jan. 8 Student Union-Big 8 Room 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 6, 1961 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney. VI 3-8588. $V$ TYPING Experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780. Mrs. McMahan, ff Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. Experienced typist — term papers, manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt to have accurate rates, reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I., Carl P. 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. t Typist: former secretary; electric typewriter, experienced in student and graduate typing. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequil, 1935 Barker, VI 3-2001. tf Former secretary, electric typewriter. Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work. Phone. Mrs Marilyn Hai, VI 3-2318 tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson. VI 3-5833. tf Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reassume Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. tt TYPIST. experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason-able rule. Call Mrs. Earl Wright. VI 3-9554. tf TYPING WANTED—theses, term papers, reports, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell VI 3-6440. 1-10 Experienced typist — will type theses, term papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tf Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tt Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, MO 3-1097. tf TYPING. Themes, term papers, etc. typed with neatness and accuracy by experienced typist. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Alvin Johnson. VI 3-9577. 1-12 STUDENTS; FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. NOTICE Attend the Lawrence Assembly of God 13th & Mass. J. J. Krimmer Pastor HELP WANTED WELL-PAID, part time position, for accurate skilled secretary. German typing. Cail VI 3-7607. 1-9 TRANSPORTATION Need a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence from KU Med Center area. Have classes daily at 8 a.m. Phone JO 2-8750, 1.9 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Plant bags. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . . . 0350. 0550. HOME COOKED MEALS served family style at Mrs. Metken's, 721 Mo VI 3-4094. Make reservations. Dinner at 5:30 p.m. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • HOUSE FOR RENT Rental Payment Between $70 & $100 per month - unfurnished - available immediately Call Moore Associates VI 3-2571 FINAL CLEARANCE Women's Dress and Casual Shoes - Delmanettes 1390 Formerly to 19.95 NOW - Fiancees and T&C $ 9^{90} $ to $ 10^{90} $ Formerly to 14.95----NOW - Town & Country Casuals 590 to 790 Formerly to 10.95 NOW - Capezio's 690 to 1090 Formerly to 17.95 NOW - Old Maine Trotters 690 to 790 Formerly to 10.95 NOW Entire Stock Not Included All Sales Final Please ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 6.196 Shulenberger on Shulenberger Delights Many at Poetry Hour The room quieted as the tall, thin man took one last drink of coffee and opened his book. By Lani Mortenson "Since this is my own poetry I will have to read from the text." Arvid Shulenberger, associate professor of English, said at yesterday's Poetry Hour. "A poet is always afraid that he will quote from a wrong version if he tries to recite his own works from memory." Prof. Shulenberger has had many of his poems published. Recently a volume of his works has been printed. He also has written and published a novel. He put his left hand in his trouser pocket and lowered his long lanky frame onto the speaker's stand. The other hand was kept busy turning pages between the short poems which he read. He read a tragic poem with an unusual ending: A little girl was in a field during harvest when the A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. farmers who were working suddenly heard a scream. They ran to the source of the sound and found the body of the little girl. She had been killed by the threshing machine. The men immediately burned the machine as if it had been the sole cause for the incident. Arvid Shulenberger "Yes, that was a true story." Prof. Shulenberger answered a question from the audience in the Music and Browsing Room of the Union. Quiet laughter rippled from the listeners as he read the short poems with which he closed the hour. Suddenly it was over. The room was silent for an instant before the applause broke out. Prof. Shulenberger closed his books and turned to leave. Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach.-George Bernard Shaw. A poet can survive everything but a misprint—Oscar Wilde Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office 2:31 Strong, before 2:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Bring the material to The Daily Kaiser. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Jewish Religious Services, 7 p.m. Dan forth Chanel. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. p.82 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. VI 2-0249 for more information on a radio show. Beverly, 9:30 p.m. Epispcial Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.r. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Ph.D. French Reading Examination 9-11 a.m. Room 11. Erazer Language proficiency examinations in French, German, Latin & Spanish 1:30 p.m. Latin, 213 Fraser; German, 210 Fraser; French, 206 Fraser; Spanish, 205 Fraser. Register with appropriate departmental secretary. Catholic services, 8 & 10 a.m. Fraser Theater. Coffee social at Union followin- ing 9 a.m. SUNDAY Canterbury Faculty-student Fellowship Supper. 5-7 p.m. Canterbury House. Father Turner, University Chaplain, will speak. MONDAY Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Charles Romine, Pers. Dir., Jefferson Co. Schools, Lakewood, Colo. (secondary) will interview Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday. Student Religious Council. Noon, Wesley Foundation. Quester program of Wesley Hall speak sessions. NSA Committee. 4 p.m. Student Union. Union will be posted on Union Bulletin Board.) Maser to Leave (Continued from page 1) seum was in poor shape, due to the confusion born of the administrative change. He said he tried to renovate the museum and tie it in with the classroom work of the art students, making it a laboratory in which they could see applied, in all the various materials of art, the ideas they gained from their academic studies "The museum used to be an awful hole, you know. It was filled with nothing but quilts and bric-a-brac in glass cases," remarked Prof. Maser. Once he had started the integration of classroom work with the museum, Prof. Maser said he felt the major part of the work had been done. "NOW I CAN sit back and watch it work. So I thought perhaps it would be time to move on." he said He tried to explain the mixed emotions he felt at leaving the University and the, work he has done here since 1953. "The Germans have a saying for it," he said. "Laughing with one eye, crying with the other. That's how I feel." I never met an intelligent full- back.—Bill Bailey Who Won Hiqley's CHRISTMAS PRINCESS CONTEST? Martha Ryan- Shown Below Modeling Part of the Complete Wardrobe She Won COME IN TODAY! SEE THESE AND OTHER EXCITING STYLES at 935 Mass. Higley's READY-TO-WEAR 935 Mass. FACILITIES FOR PUBLIC TRANSPORT CHRISTMAS PRINCESS S Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday. Jan. 9, 1961 58th Year, No. 66 Nehring Chosen GOP Consultant Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science, was selected as the one political science professor in the nation to be a special consultant to Sen. Thurston B. Morton, Republican national chairman. This announcement was made jointly by Sen. Morton and Rhoten A. Smith, director of the Citizenship Clearing House. PROF. NEHIRING will serve as a consultant through a fellowship provided by the Clearing House. The Citizenship Clearing House is a national organization established to help develop political leadership. Its primary focus is on college students and teachers. Prof. Nehring said that he was selected from a group of three finalists. "The purpose of this program is to select a political science or government professor who has been engaged in governmental research or some similar type of work, and then to give him a chance to learn about politics by working directly with the party chairman," he said. He said that the fellowships are valuable to both the party and the professor involved. "IN THE PAST, these fellowships have helped institute closer relations between political parties and universities." he said. "The information I will gain will aid me in teaching my future classes. I also hope to help Sen. Morton by making my knowledge about politics available to him." He said that this is the program's fourth year. $ ^{*} $ PROF. NEHIRING will take a year's leave of absence starting Feb. 1, when he is due in Washington. He has already rented his home and made arrangements for his wife and family. Prof. Nehring is the campus representative for the Clearing House and the faculty adviser to the Young Republicans. Alan Fiellin, professor of political science at Dartmouth College, was selected as the Democratic Party consultant. Weather Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and Tuesday. Warmer west and central this afternoon and over extreme east portion tonight. Low tonight near 20 northwest to 30 southeast. High Tuesday in the lower 50s. HIVOCA GENERAL BURGLAR'S KEY - Edward Julian, director of the KU photographic bureau, holds a rock similar to the one used by the burglar or burglars to smash the window of the bureau's door to gain admittance. The amount of photographic equipment stolen adds up to one of the largest burglaries in KU history. GOP Takes State Reins TOPEKA — (UPI) — John Anderson today became the 36th governor of Kansas. Chief Justice Jay S. Parker swore the 43-year-old Anderson into office at noon. An inaugural parade started the day's activities. It carried Anderson, the inaugural party, the wives and families of elected officials, party officials, and military aides from the state house to the municipal auditorium where the ceremony was held. Guard rode in the first car of the 3-car parade, which will travel along Topeka's main thoroughfare. Hotels and motels were packed as people from all over traditionally Republican Kansas came to see the Republicans take command of the statehouse for the first time in four years. Retiring Gov. George Docking, his wife, and Maj. Gen. Joe Nickell of the Kansas National (See page 3 for Gov. Anderson's inauguration speech.) Denver University Drops Football DENVER — (UPI) — The University of Denver announced today it is quitting intercollegiate football participation immediately because of "the growing magnitude of cost" associated with the sport. The announcement came from Chancellor Chester M. Alter, who said the decision was a unanimous one by the school's board of trustees. The school will continue other fields of intercollegiate sports, the announcement said. Photographic Lab Theft Nets $2,218 One of the largest burglaries in KU history struck the photographic laboratory in the basement of Watson Library early Saturday morning. Cameras, lenses, and other photographic equipment valued at $2.218 was stolen from the photographic lab between 4:30 a.m. and 8:20 a.m. A rock was used to smash through the glass in the front door to gain entrance. The lock was then opened from the inside. Campus police said fingerprints were taken from the cash drawer. Items stolen included 17 Leica cameras, 11 screw mounts, 8 Leica mirrors, 9 magnifiers, 12 focusing devices, 14 viewfinders, 42 lenses, and other pieces of equipment. PERRY RIDDLE, KU photographer, reported the theft upon entering the laboratory for work Saturday morning. The night watchman had last checked the laboratory at 4:30 a.m. Campus and Lawrence police investigated the theft. Kansas City police have been notified. According to Joe Skillman, chief of Campus police, this is one of the largest burglaries since he has been chief. Missing Student Returns to Class Late last night Darrell Edward Myers, KU's missing student, called his home in Overland Park and informed his parents that he was back at school and all right. Myers had been missing since last Tuesday when he failed to return to his classes after the Christmas vacation. Prior to the Christmas vacation he had been attending his ROTC classes only, and had seemed disturbed about his classes. During his disappearance police bulletins had been issued and his description had been given to local and area authorities. In a telephone interview this morning with his mother, it was learned that Darrell had been in New Orleans, La. When asked why her son had not informed her as to his whereabouts she said that she didn't think that Darrell realized how worried they would be. "The less said the better," said Mrs. Myers. "We are happy that he is back and wish to thank all of his friends for their interest." ASC Resolution Backs Boycott A resolution on racial justice will come before the All Student Council tomorrow night for final approval. The resolution backs student boycotts of discriminating merchants. Tom Kurt, Pratt medical student, read the resolution before the National Student Association Committee on Dec. 12. THE RESOLUTION recognizes "that racial discrimination exists in both the North and South" and condemns any such violations of human dignity. The resolution urges state and national legislators to initiate strong measures which will lead to racial justice. Several sections of the resolution closely relate to the action taken by the Civil Rights Council last week against two local tavernas. The taverns refused to serve Negro students. The council asks students not to patronize the establishments. The resolution reads in part: "WE BELIEVE that persons and merchants open to the public operate in the public domain, and can be justifiably enforced to obey public laws and ethics. "However, we believe that the private domain (country clubs, brotherhoods and fraternities) is separate from the public domain and here racial justice can be enforced by superb good example, but cannot be mandated by sheer force. "We encourage action in the form of selective buying and through the use of boycotts by students who are interested in the equality of all races and creeds. "We commit ourselves, as students, to attack discrimination and to work toward establishing social justice." 'They Refused Me Because I Am Black' (Editor's note—This is the first in a series about discrimination in Lawrence involving KU students and townpeople, and exploring action by student groups.) By Byron Klapper There are deep human feelings involved when a dark skinned person who is clean and well dressed goes into a public place to be served and is told: A graduate student from India, P. Gangdhara Roa, who recently left KU to return to India, put his feelings on paper and published them in a book called, "Roa's Poems." One poem, which had no title read in part: "TM SORRY but we don't serve Negroes here." "I never told you before I went to down-town At some places to eat They refused me to serve Because I was black. I don't want To sell myself By telling them That I am from India I am a human first And an Indian next Is it not the truth?" Roa said that this was the first time in his life he found that skin color was a factor which determined human preference. ROA IS NOW BACK in India telling people about the United States. Since Roa left there have been improvements. Some attribute this to the Civil Rights act passed by the Legislature of the State of Kansas, which makes it a misdemeanor for a restaurant to refuse service to anyone because of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry. BUT THERE appear to be some lingering problems. The Civil Rights Council at KU recently discovered that two Lawrence taverns refused service to Negroes. The council sent students to these taverns, and although the white students were served, the Negroes were not. Telephone calls to other taverns in the city have indicated that there are at least two or three others which also support policies of discrimination. ONE TAVERN manager said he would not serve Negroes because he was afraid he would have trouble which would lead to fights. If the police were called in The management of three other taverns claimed in telephone interviews that integration on their part would hurt their business. to break up fights it would be difficult to get his beer license renewed, the tavern owner said. Many of their white customers would not patronize their place if Negroes were served, they said. Some tavern managers said they had no personal objections against Negroes, but just could not take the chance. IT SHOULD BE POINTED out that not all Lawrence taverns practice discrimination. During a telephone conversation with one of the non-discriminating beer parlors, the manager said that since he began serving Negroes he never experienced any trouble, police were never called in, and he suffered no loss of business. He said his clientele consisted of both college students and townspeople, and he could not see why the other taverns do not have completely open places. SHOULD THE PERSONAL feelings of some tavern owners, or the feelings of customers, be the controlling factor in whether Negroes should be served ? Has one the right to refuse for others what he demands for himself? In other states, the problems which could not be solved on a local level by the people, because of their personal feelings, were solved by the state in the form of laws. (The next article will discuss some of the legal aspects of the discrimination situation in taverns.) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 9. 1961 The Era Ends Today in Topeka, an oath will be administered that will end one era of government and begin another. The eyes of the University have watched the one ending with certain trepidation and are watching the one beginning with hopeful expectancy. ALL WAS NOT GOOD WITH THE OUT-going administration, nor was it all bad. One cannot judge any figure or part of government as one differentiates the good guys from the bad guys in a TV western. And when working in the public service it is impossible to please all of the people all of the time as Abe once said. George Docking was elected governor in 1956 by a plurality of 115,361 votes, the first Democrat to be elected in 20 years. In 1958 he was re-elected by a plurality of 102,470 votes. From this margin it is obvious that his "fiscal sanity" policy of holding a tight rein on the state budget won immense favor with many — but not all. IN 1956 THE UNIVERSITY AND KANSAS education itself entered a four-year period of "dwarfmanship" rather than the "growthmanship" that bulging classrooms and the demands upon education necessitated. While the system was not completely strangled, it was stunted through the determined efforts of Gov. Docking and his rationalization that things were good enough as they were. During his tenure, he consistently vetoed or exerted pressure to stop measures designed to meet the minimal needs of the state schools. Building construction, faculty salaries and faculty retirement provisions all met with the incessant hatcheting of the governor as they were submitted and re-submitted. As a consequence, many teachers moved on to other states, the schools were handicapped in their bargaining for talented faculty and administrative members, classroom and office space is now at a premium and KU lost an outstanding educator in Chancellor Murphy. WE ARE NOT SAYING THAT ALL IS lost or that the University has been put into a position from which recovery is hopeless. Nor can it be said that the plight of Kansas education is all one man's fault. The University has moved forward slowly during the out-going governor's stay in the capitol but it is despite his efforts rather than because of them. We are, of course, biased toward education and its welfare. We are well aware that this is not the only area of consideration for the state officials. But as a child of the state, education has been neglected by the parent for four years too many. It is with this in mind that we bid farewell to the ex-governor and welcome the new governor. May he smile more favorably on the child, nourish it and provide for its growth more than did the man who leaves today. — Frank Morgan Statistics Lie? Statistics, the old saying goes, can be used to prove anything. Right now, they are being used to try to prove that the United States, like the old gray mare, ain't what it used to be. What this all stems from is the fact that a new game seems to be in vogue this year. It's called "Show How the United States Is Going Downhill." The easiest way to play it is by using statistics. The most original statisticians get bonuses—they get to predict the year when utter decadence finally will crumble our country. If these "proofs" and predictions are taken at face value, Uncle Sam might as well toss the Russians the towel right now. IT ALL LOOKS PRETTY HOPELESS. A glance at many magazine and newspaper stories today gives only a slight twist to the old theme, "By 1970 the Russians will be producing more ..." The figures and quantities change, but the context never does—the United States, while actually in a position of superiority, is made to seem inferior. However, statistics can prove many things besides inevitable downfall. They can prove, for example, that if we cut our steel capacity by 60 per cent, the Russians could match our yearly production. They can prove that if we blew up two-thirds of our hydroelectric plants, the Russians could match our hydroelectric output. They can prove that if we scuttled 80 per cent of our merchant fleet, our civilian navy would be only as large as the Soviets. They can prove that if we ripped up 14 of every 15 miles of concrete roads, we would have no more paved highways than the Russians. THIS IS NOT TO SAY THAT THE STATISTicians are doing the nation a disservice. Americans need to be warned that to remain in the same spot is, in reality, to lose ground. But America deserves to be patted on the back once in awhile, too. Statistics, it would seem, have not done this very often. Statistics give credit to the Russians for things not yet accomplished. At the same time, they give no indication of the flexibility of America as a nation. Perhaps, this is the inherent shortcoming of statistics. Taken in the right dosage, statistics are valuable medicine that can help perk up the old gray mare. And by the way, if the same expert who points out the old mare's statistical shortcomings is needed to pick out another horse's statistical good points, who wouldn't favor that old gray mare? Dan Felger Segregation Blasted Editor: This letter is written with reference to your issue of Friday, Jan. 6th., specifically, to the laudable comment by Mr. Donald K. Alderson, the dean of men. I could not help but be impressed by the depth of insight with which he pondered. In fact, that comment set at nought the blatantly poignant and ignorant claims by certain individuals to place their interests above those of their own motherland, namely, the great power and force called the U.S.A. The practitioners of the noble art of restaurant segregation, or any other form of segregation, for that matter, have very gracefully sounded out their candid opinions. These opinions are, indeed, praiseworthy, knowing that racial segregation breeds its own excuses to justify the practice. Yes, individuals have every right to concoct whatever pleases and satisfies their whims and fancies! The emphasis on the worth and dignity of the individual—among ... Letters ... others, being able to act and speak without fear or favour—is a great asset to the U.S.A. Indeed, such a trait that makes other humans, suffering and belabouring under the yoke of domination and tyranny, very often hanker after the freedom of life in the U.S.A. Sometimes, however, such freedom to live so blindfolds some individuals that they never do realize—or maybe some of their acts are deliberate—the repercussions of their own inconsiderate acts and misdeeds to other people from far and near. Yet it is very important also to remember that the world of our day is more interdependent than ever before. Local conditions in every country, today, have a good chance of erupting into such proportions as merit the forum of international affairs. Whoever did suspect—U.N. Secretary Hammarskjold did — that the strife-torn Congo would suddenly jump from the backwoods and the dismal gloom of the jungle to the open fields of the international cold war? I still remember an apt description of Lawrence by Mr. E. R. Zook of the Chamber of Commerce, over two years ago, that it is the Gibraltar of the Midwest, that is, the international cross-roads of the Midwest. That description I thought, was very accurate and correct, except that there is no segregation in Gibraltar. From these and other crossroads, the foreign student will return home with his education. No matter how prejudiced he becomes — if ever — there is the U.S.A. gift of education he will forever treasure back home. As a gift of treasures, he will always make every effort to defend or preserve it; for that is what has helped him improve to face the challenges of life. In defending it, I think that he attempts also to defend the U.S. and her "good name" of which we are all proud. Truly, if only it were possible, he would not like to defend the U.S. with some "lousy" corner of his conscience pricking him! Augustine G. Kyei Ghana student LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS TOMORROW, U.S. SCHOOL PRIZEWAY CALL PACTS 150 - 230 ORAL EXAM TO DAY B. Bler 5-36 "-] REFUSE YOUR QUESTION ON TH' GROUNDS MY ANSWER MAY TEND TO INCRIMATE ME." From the Magazine Rack Accelerating the Gifted The demand of the talented student is for a clear break from the high school pattern. He wants a new level not only in course content but in maturer and deeper approaches to learning. Acceleration by itself will only seem to parallel what good students are becoming increasingly familiar with in high school. As David Riesman has said, the student wants to feel that "something earthshaking" has happened when he comes to college. Because students are coming to college better prepared and better informed than previously, "the demands put on the colleges today for superlative quality are ever so much greater than most of us recognize." WITH THE POSSIBLE exception of areas of protracted preprofessional and professional education—medicine for example—the virtues of acceleration per se are far outweighed by the need for penetration in depth, for syntheses needed for the matured insight, and for the realization of the interdependence of knowledge and values. This takes time. Gavin De Beer of the British Museum has for these reasons said that his impulse always is to hold the bright student back. A weakness of our American culture has been the worship of speed as such—often the most effective way of missing as much as possible between any two given points. The proper place for acceleration is primarily at the level of propaeductics and the mastery of skills, tools and data—mathematics, languages, etc. This points to the grades and to the high school. At these levels, as is rapidly being demonstrated through the advanced placement and other programs, students can move ahead without loss and can arrive in college prepared for richer fare than it has been the custom to offer them. AT ITS BEST acceleration in college can give the abler student time—time to explore more fields prior to his decision on a major, time to take more work in other fields once he has realized the interinvolvement of disciplines, time to delve more deeply into his specialty and to take a graduate course or two as a senior. Its greatest contribution will be manifested in the undergraduate's power to press for richness as a junior or senior. The maximum benefits of acceleration, however, will only be realized when the climate of the college favors the intellectual rather than the vocational goals of education. It is when the latter goals prevail that acceleration is treated as the preferred educational strategy for the gifted. If we concern ourselves with the climate and equality of education, the limits of acceleration will become clear. (Excerpted from The Superior Student Magazine; the editorial is from the November, 1960, issue.) Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service. United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. O'Neill Play Poses Stage Problems Page 3 Imagine fog billowing over the ocean, the movement of a ship. You then have the setting for "Anna Christie," the KU Experimental Theatre production opening tonight. Portraying Anna is Joyce Malicky, Baldwin senior, a familiar face in musical comedies. This will be Miss Malicky's first attempt at serious drama. She said she has always believed she could handle dramatic roles, but she has always been cast in musical parts. "Ama is the hardest part I've ever played," she said, "but it isn't insumountable. Perhaps the most difficult thing is the fact that the audience is so close to the stage. They will be watching everything the actors do. The front row is only about five feet from the stage," she said. The central characters are Anna, a young girl, her father and her lover, Matt Burke. After the first act, the story is of Anna's turn from prostitution and her cleansing by the sea and the love of a man. "It isn't really hard to understand Anna," Miss Malicky said. "But you have to remember that she is basically a good girl. After the first act, she is on stage all the time and it is hard to sustain her part. The audience must see all the Rehearsals started before Thanksgiving vacation and resumed for three weeks before the Christmas vacation. When the cast returned, they had only one week of rehearing before opening. changes in her; if they lose interest, the play loses much of its impact." "It's also just three weeks before finals," Miss Malicky said. "Theatre people are in school, too. We get to the theatre for make-up at six in the evening and leave around midnight. Then we study. It's a pretty rough grind." "They didn't make dresses then like they do now," she said. "Zippers evidently were unheard of, this costume has at least 25 hooks and eyes and as many snaps. Those little things take a lot of extra time to fasten." she said. Miss Malicky will wear a costume of the period of her part. O'Neill said after he finished writing "Anna Christie" that he had become so involved with the characters he didn't know how to end the play, so he just stopped writing. Instead of a fantastic finish, he gave it a rather common-place, believable end that has reality about it. "Anna Christie" opens at 8 tonight and runs through Saturday in the Experimental Theatre, Murphy Hall. Anderson Pledges Progressive Years TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson today pledged his energy to keeping pace with the changing social and economic structure of government, so that Kansas might aggressively continue the progress of its first 100 years. In his inaugural address, the new Republican governor paid homage to the state's founders and leaders who nurtured its growth from a period of bloodshed to a period of agricultural and industrial development. "TRULY, THE contribution of the founders of our Kansas government was great," Anderson said, "yet we here today must consider it as a foundation and framework upon which Kansas shall continue to build for the future. "THEREFORE, THE challenge today for those charged by the people of Kansas with the responsibility of government is that of maintaining the steadfast courage and faith of our forefathers in the continuation of a state government on the forward-looking path of serving and bettering the lot of all people. "Government must not and cannot stand still," he emphasized. "If those charged with the responsibility of administering the affairs of government for the people fail to keep pace with the changing social and economic structure, we do not stand still, we fall behind." "The poor, the rich, the humble, the proud, the strong, the weak, the fortunate and the unfortunate must be the beneficiaries in the years to come of a government progressively administered in the interests of all the people." Anderson declared. He said more could be accomplished for the gains of minority groups through "dignity, faith, courage and enlightened thinking of our people than by enactment of laws. "LET US EARNESTLY hope and pray that we can live in this era and with this problem without division, rancor, riot and ugliness, but with the courage, dignity, wisdom and faith of our forefathers for the good of all people." he said. The governor acknowledged that Kansas still is undergoing a transition from a primarily agricultural state to an economy "substantially based on both agriculture and industry." "Agricultural industry will," he predicted, "during the second century, continue to be of the utmost importance. Yet in recent years our families have been moving in great numbers from the farms to our cities. "FURTHER INDUSTRIAL development in the state must be provided to meet this transition," he said. "The vast resources of minerals and fuels and our water resources, together with a willing and able labor force in the state, are available for this industrial expansion. State government must play its part in seeing that we meet these needs of the people." Anderson said government also must assume responsibility emanating from changes in medical science which have brought an increase in the number of senior citizens. "I CANNOT CLOSE without saying that with all the efforts of those in all positions of government at all levels we shall have little success without the desire of the people for good government. "Before the law of our land was established, the moral law fixed the manner in which we should deal with man," he said. "The need for recognition of the moral law as the very foundation upon which our laws are written is as great today as it ever was." William A. Conboy, associate professor of speech and drama, is the newly-elected vice chairman of the Business and Professional Speaking Interest Group. "I pledge that I will sincerely." Anderson promised. "to the best of my ability, honestly, fairly, impartially and faithfully execute the office of governor of this great state." Frank E. K. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama, secretary-treasurer of the Business and Professional Speaking Group; Mrs. Cecil Coleman, instructor of speech, chairman of the nominating committee of the General Semantics and Related Methodologies Interest group. SAA Elects Faculty Members to Offices Business School Meeting Tomorrow Five speech and drama faculty members have been elected to offices in the Speech Association of America (SAA). Freshmen and sophomores entering the School of Business will receive an introduction to their field at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Gale R. Adkins, assistant professor of journalism and speech, secretary of the Radio, Television, Film Interest Group and Dr. Bruce Linton, professor of speech and journalism. The program will include a "Sermon on Business" by Jack D. Steele, professor of Business, and a faculty panel discussion on the courses suggested for the pre-Business major Following the faculty panel, Bertram L. Trillich Jr., assistant professor of Business, and ten seniors will lead a core discussion on a marketing case. Dana W. Stevens, instructor in Business, will conclude the program by reviewing the goals of the School of Business, and explaining the function of the placement bureau. New Fellowships Available Monday, Jan. 9, 1961 University Daily Kansa Fellowships for graduate study in Poland and Romania are being awarded for the academic year of 1961-62. The fellowships are being offered by the governments of the two countries. Candidates must be United States citizens and at least 21 years old. Application forms may be obtained in 306 Fraser. Try the Kansan Want Ads Visiting Professor to Teach Course on 'Race Problems' Everett C. Hughes, visiting Rose Morgan Professor, will teach a new course in race relations during the spring semester. Students in the class will analyze the novels and personal documents expressive of the aims and attitudes of "underdog" groups. The course is slanted toward students exhibiting a proficiency in a foreign language, as many of the materials which might prove valuable in the course are not available in English. Proficiency in a foreign language is not a prerequisite for the course, however. Prerequisites for the course are sociology 1 or 50 or anthropology 2, 8. or 52. Students who are interested in the course but do not have the necessary prerequisites are to contact the sociology department to see if they may obtain special permission to take the course. Prof. Hughes, former chairman of the department of sociology at the University of Chicago, taught an undergraduate course in the department of sociology and anthropology on occupations and professions and conducted a graduate seminar in that area in the Fall semester last year. He recently completed a three-year study of the students at the KU medical center in Kansas City. While at KU, he is initiating a research project on the study of student cultures here Applications Accepted The Dean of Students office is now receiving applications for places in the men's residence hall system during the spring semester. Information or applications may be obtained at 228 Strong. Peter Gunn, Preachers Ally? HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — (UPI) — The Hollywood Church of Religious Science, in announcing today a jazz accompaniment to church services Jan. 15, noted that attendance is up 15 per cent when a band with "Peter Gunn-type sounds" performs. 8,000 Management Opportunities! That's right. There will be 8,000 supervisory jobs filled from within the Western Electric Company by college graduates in just the next ten years! How come? Because there's the kind of upward movement at Western Electric that spells executive opportunity. Young men in engineering and other professional work can choose between two paths of advancement one within their own technical field and one within over-all management. Your progress up-the-ladder to executive positions will be aided by a number of special programs. The annual company-wide personnel survey helps select management prospects. This ties in with planned rotational development, including translers between Bell Companies and experience in a wide variety of fields. Western Electric maintains its own full-time graduate engineering training program, seven formal management courses, and a tuition refund plan for college study. After joining Western Electric, you'll be planning production of a steady stream of communications products-electronic switching, carrier, microwave and missile guidance systems and components such as transistors, diodes, ferrites, etc. Every day, engineers at our manufacturing plants are working to bring new developments of our associates at Bell Telephone Laboratories into practical reality In short, "the sky's your limit" at Western Electric. Opportunities exist for electrical, mechanical, industrial, civil and chemical engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business majors. For more information, get your copy of Consider a Career at Western Electric from your Placement Officer. Or write College Relations, Room 6106, Western Electric Company, 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. Be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when the Bell System team visits your campus. Western Electric MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM BELL Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Altamont and Laurelfield, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, M; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, M; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Ill.; and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distribution centers in 32 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway. New York 7. N. Y. --- University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 9. 1961 Grumm and Nehring Differ on Kennedy The Kennedy administration hopes to march on to its New Frontier quickly, said John Grumm, assistant professor of political science. He predicted the success of Kennedy's program at the Current Events Forum Friday. Prof. Grumm and Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science, discussed the coming administration and Kennedy's choices for cabinet posts. KENNEDY WILL start with a four-point legislative program and should complete it within the next six months, Prof. Grumm predicted. The first piece of legislation, federal loans to depressed areas, already has started through Congress. It should be ready for Kennedy's signature shortly after his inauguration, Prof. Grumm said. "THIS BILL was veted by President Eisenhower. The veto probably harmed the Republican party since the bill affected 600,000 people," Prof. Grumm said. The Federal aid to education bill has been bottled up in the Rules Committee, which has to pass on proposed legislation on the House calendar before it goes to the floor, Prof. Grumm explained. Prof. Grumm said he believes the prospects for the bill seem good because of the committee's reorganization. Grumm also discussed an increase in the minimum wage bill which Kennedy supports and which, he said, President Eisenhower did not favor. Kennedy also wants to revive the plan for medical aid to people receiving social security. He is disatisfied with the bill which was passed in the last Congress, Prof. Grumm said. Prof. Nehring, in discussing the bills, said; "I don't have the confidence that Prof. Grumm does in Congress passing the proposed legislation." BOTH DID agree, however, that Kennedy's greatest achievements Law Students Hear Civil Law Proposals Emmet Blaes, attorney from Wichita, explained the proposed revision of the Kansas Code of Civil Procedure to law students in a convocation held Friday morning at the law school. He explained that the last revision of the codes was made in 1009, and fifty years have passed bringing change in procedural rules. Mr. Blae is a member of the State Advisory Committee, which will endeavor to develop a system of pleading in Kansas, largely paralleling federal rules. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER would come in the first six months because of the prestige accompanying a new president to the White House. Kief's RECORDS & Hi-Fi MALLS SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS VI 2-1544 ASK ABOUT OUR RECORD CLUB Prof. Grumm said that later in his administration Kennedy will turn to the foreign policy area and will favor an expanded student exchange program with Africa and Latin America. Prof. Nehring said he thinks Kennedy plans to run the administration with a firm hand. Kennedy will set the policies and the Cabinet will carry them out. "THE GROUP OF MEN Kennedy has selected for the cabinet are solid and efficient but not spectacular," Prof. Nehring said. "THE SELECTION of Kennedy's brother as attorney general will create further criticism. I am not convinced that Kennedy was looking for the best person in the United States to fill the position," Prof. Nehring said. Prof. Nehring and Prof. Grumm agreed that Kennedy took a great deal of time selecting his Cabinet. Kennedy seems to weigh each of his decisions carefully, they said. There's no such thing as atomic energy for peaceful purposes.—Abdul Gammis Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 131 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication, not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewer will be Charles Romine, Pers. Dir., Jefferson Co. Schools, Lakewood, Colo. (Elem. & Secondary.) TODAY NSA Committee, 4 p.m. Student Union. NSA will be posted on Union bulletin board) Quill Club. 8 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewer will be Charles Rohr. Attend School's schools. Lakewood, Colo. (Elem. & Secondary). Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Humanities Forum. 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk zoom, Kansas Union, Speaker, Prof. Ed- ward F. Grier, assoc. prof. of English. *Reading Whitman Manuscripts.* Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Canterbury House, East follows. 6:45 a.m. Canterbury House, West follows. Naval Reserve Research Co. 7:30 p.m. Room 04, Military Science Bldg. "Sea- man's Navy in Space, LCDR C. F. ALLEN, USNR, CO, USN & MCTC, Topeka" Math Club & Pi Mu Epsilon. 7:30 p.m. Parlor A, Kansas Union Prof. John B. Hornblad, University of Justice*. Color Film, "The Thinking Machine." Refreshments, "Everyone invited!" Jay Janes. 5 p.m. Room 306. Kansas Union. WEDNESDAY Math Club Meets The Graduate Math Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in 102 Strong Hall. Fred Womack, Jr. Lawrence graduate student, will speak on "Elliptic Integrals." Water Pollution Problem Under Control in City Suds Only Worry By Karl Koch Municipal water pollution — a $4.6 billion problem to the nation's local governments — is well taken care of in Lawrence. KU is one of the city's largest consumers, using about 10 million gallons a month, or about 10 per cent of the city's total output. ROBERT J. MOUNSEY, city water superintendent, said that the city uses four operations to guarantee its users clean water. "First," he said, "We chlorinate the water to kill bacteria. Then we oxidize away the organic material. "Next, we add lime, soda ash, and alum to clarify the water," Mr. Mounsey said. "Then comes more chlorination, and finally, thorough filtration." Mr. Mounsey estimated that it costs Lawrence $183,000 a year for sewerage treatment. THE BIGGEST LOCAL water pollution problems he said are raw sewage from towns upstream, and, oddly enough, detergents used in local homes. The suds from the detergent pile up and prevent free water flowage through the control system. Mr. Mounsey credited the people of Kansas for the success of pollution control in the state. "THE PEOPLE OF Kansas are becoming more aware of the varied uses of water for recreation and industry. "The State Board of Health has done a great job on Kansas rivers treating sewage and industrial waste," Mr. Mounsey said. "Communities throughout the state are working on their own local water pollution problem." These efforts, coupled with the present progressive federal aid program, should result in Kansans being worry-free while the nation as a whole engages in one of the more important battles of the coming decade — the fight for effective pollution control, Mr. Mounsey said. Grier to Speak at Humanities Forum Edward F. Grier, associate professor of English and chairman of the American Civilization program, will be the speaker at the Humanities Forum meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. His talk on "Reading Whitman Manuscripts" will be illustrated with slides. KING SIZE Winston It's what's up front that counts FILTER-BLEND is yours in Winston and only Winston. Up front you get rich golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking. Smoke Winston. Winston FILTER·CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVO R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! Page 5 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Hightower Sparks Hawks Past OU University Daily Kansan Sparked by a 16-point flurry by injured Wayne Hightower, Kansas took the lead midway in the second half and were never threatened as it opened the Big Eight conference race with a 58-55 win over Oklahoma in Norman Saturday. Hightower, who had been hampered all week with an injured thigh, hit for 11 points in the second half to pull the Jayhawkers ahead with 11:40 left after being behind 32-30 at intermission. Although Kansas was at a great height disadvantage, it was able to compete on an equal basis on the boards and defensively. Once Coach Dick Harp's men took the lead they showed an effective defense and hustle to keep their hosts from challenging the lead in the final minutes. The Oklahoma forwards and center were able to score only 17 of the Sooners' total which showed the fine defense of the shorter Hawkers. Jerry Gardner and sophomore Nolen Ellison, at the guards, hit for 16 and 11 points respectively to keep the pressure off Bill Bridges and Hightower. Kansas-OSU Tilt On Radio Tonight The KU Sports Network will carry the play-by-play broadcast of tonight's Kansas-Oklahoma State basketball game at 7:55 p.m. The game will be on 11 stations which ties the existing record for KU basketball coverage. Tom Hedrick will do the broadcast. The stations in the Lawrence area on which the game can be heard are KJAY in Topeka and KUOK in Lawrence. It was the outside shooting of McCurdy which kept Coach Doyle Parrack's team ahead for the first three quarters. Tom McCurdy led the Sooner attack as he popped in seven field goals and two free throws to tie Hightower and Gardner for game scoring honors. Kansas got a break with 13:30 remaining in the game when, 6-7 Oklahoma forward, Warren Fouts, fouled out. This hurt the Sooner's rebounding strength at a crucial point when KU was leading only 40-39. The win gave the Jayhawkers a 7-4 season mark. Start Spring Bowling Soon The 13 fall bowling leagues completed competition with the playoff being held over the weekend. Bascom C. Fearing, manager of the Jay Bowl, said leagues are now being formed for the spring semester. He urged any bowlers interested in joining the leagues to obtain an entry blank at the Jay Bowl office. The leagues are open to any student or staff member. Mr. Fearing expressed hope that more faculty and staff teams would join the leagues. A meeting of team captains will be held Feb. 8 to make final league plans. Bowling in the spring leagues is scheduled to start the week of Feb. 13 and continue through May 6. Thirteen leagues participated in fall bowling. Fearing said that more bowlers are expected to enter the spring leagues. The Missouri Valley Conference, already loaded with basketball talent, may further enhance its prestige this week with the addition of Memphis State, Louisville and Marquette. The conference is recognized as one of the finest basketball loops in the country. Present members are Cincinnati, Bradley, St. Louis, Wichita, Drake, Tulsa and North Texas State. United Press International Three May Be Added to MVC 1TH NATIONAL MOTOR BANK DRIVE IN TODAY! **FRATERNITY C** — Phi Kappa Sigma vs Phi Gamma Delta, #6, 4:15 p.m.—Delta Tau Delta #2 vs Sigma Phi Epsilon #1, 4:15 p.m. —Phi Gamma Delta #1 vs Beta Theta Pi #3, 5 p.m.—and Delta Upsilon #1 vs Phi Kappa Psi #1, 5 p.m. Intramural Schedule Louisville is unbeaten this year and Memphis State has lost only one game. Marquette, which has been up and down this season, shows a victory over Wichita. FRATERNITY A — Phi Gamma Delta vs Delta Chi, 4:15 p.m.— Sigma Nu vs Delta Tau Delta, 5:15 p.m.— and Sigma Phi Epsilon vs Kappa Sigma, 6:15 p.m. 9th & Tenn. AT THE FOOT OF "THE HILL" INDEPENDENT B — Carruth and O'Lennay vs Templay, 5:45 p.m.-Air Force vs Battenfeld, 5:45 p.m.-Chemistry vs Concordia, 6:30 p.m.-Gunners vs Ringers, 6:30 p.m.-Slugs vs Ace Pearson, 7:15 p.m.-and Navy vs Cibabs, 7:15 p.m. Conveniently Located to Offer the Following一 The intramural basketball schedule for tomorrow is: ★ OPENING NEW ACCOUNTS ★ MONEY ORDERS ★ CHECKS CASHED ★ RECEIVING DEPOSITS J FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 8th and Mass. An invitation to join the conference is expected to be extended to the three schools at the Missouri Valley Conference's annual winter meeting in Pittsburgh, Pa., this week. Nice guys finish last.-Leo Durocher. JOB WITH A FUTURE? If you're looking for a position that offers unlimited opportunities—a business that will be built from your own ability and imagination—you should look into the advantages of life insurance sales and sales management. Provident Mutual will start you on your training program now-while you're still in college. Give us a call or write for the free booklet, "Career Opportunities!" It may open up a whole new area you've never considered before. Supervisor BILL LYONS Oklahoma State coach Henry Iba will send his Cowboys against Kansas tonight in Stillwater after dropping a 68-58 decision to Kansas State Saturday. With 20 points against K-State, Fritz Greer wrested the top scoring honors for the Cowboy squad from center Eddie Bunch who hit 13 against the Wildcats. 1722 W. 9th, VI 3-5692 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia The Cowboys have a 6-5 season mark and finished sixth in the Big Eight holiday tournament. O-State Tries Comeback Against Kansas Tonight Along with Greer in the backline is Coach Iba's junior son, 6-1 Moe Iba, who tallied 13 in Saturday's loss. The top Cowboy forward is 6-4, 200-pound junior, Cecil Eppler. Eppler has been a consistent O- State point getter, with over 12 points a game so far. Iba is the leading returning scorer from last season's team which twice defeated the Jayhawkers. So far this campaign, although hampered with injuries, he has produced almost 11 points per contest. The balanced scoring of the Cowboys has been one of the main reasons for the early season success of Iba's 30th squad. Traditionally noted for a tight defense, Oklahoma State is now putting much stress on offense and is averaging better than 10 points per game more this season than last. The only drawback to this strategy has been the number of mechanical mistakes. The other starting position will be filled by 6-3 forward Dave Miller, who is scoring at a seven point per game clip. Another concern of Coach Iba has been his reserves. This is shown in the scoring ability of, 6-5, Ray Reins, who is the sixth man for the Cowboys. He got only 2 points against K-State which is slightly better than his performances in five previous games. This will be the 52nd meeting of the Jayhawkers and the Cowboys, KU claims 30 wins to 21 for O-State in the series which started in 1926. KU's center Bill Bridges needs only five rebounds tonight to break the existing Big Eight conference rebounding record which is held by Kansas State's All America Bob Boozer. Of Bridges, O-State's coach Iba says, "He is the most improved player in the conference." Go very light on the vices, such as carrying on in society. The social ramble ain't restful.—Satchel Paige Announcing...the prettiest stockings ever! Berkshire Stockings Berkshire Stockings And Berkshire's NYLOC* Run-Barrier is guaranteed to stop runs starting at top or toe from entering the sheer leg area→ We've got Berkshire stockings -with seams and without-in every shade and color Registered 1 pair - $1.35 3 pair - $3.90 KIRSTEN'S HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 9. 1961 African News Briefs Violence Flares in Africa Bv United Press International By United Press International The rising tide of nationalism continues to erupt into armed violence on the African continent as riots run wild in Algeria and armed troops march in the Congo. IN ALGIERS. ALGERIA two Moslems were killed in scattered outbursts of violence in the aftermath of the three-day referendum which endorsed President Charles de Gaulle's blueprint for peace in Algeria. Rampaging Mossems, many waving the green-and-white banner of the rebels who have fought a six-year war for independence, clashed with security forces, looted homes, smashed cars and terrorized Europeans in at least the towns in this North African territory. In Boufakir, 24 miles south of Algiers, French security forces opened fire on a mob of 2,000 Moslems when a funeral for a known rebel leader erupted into a riotous pro-rebol demonstration. Two Moslems were killed, bringing the death toll since Friday to 38. Scores were wounded in scattered incidents during the voting. In Batna, 180 miles southeast of here, Moslems ran riot, swinging axes and shovels and smashing European-owned cars. They included scores of veiled women and bare-footed children. IN LEOPOLDVILLE, THE CONGO, followers of jailed former premier Patrice Lumumba were reported to have formed a new independent state by sending troops into secessionist Katanga Province. Informed sources said that Remy Mwamba and Joseph Ilunga, cabinet ministers in Lumumba's old government established the state of "Lualaba" at Manono on the upper Congo and brought in 1,500 troops to enforce it. The United Nations command said today a "number" of troops moved into Manono from pro-Lumumba Kivu and Oriental provinces and that they were "well received." The U.N. said it had no other details. Manono is the fourth independent state to emerge in the Congo since the new country won independence from Belgium last July. It is located in the swampy country of the upper Congo river, also known as the Lualaba River - some 300 miles north of Elisabethville. KU Student Rescued By Campus Police A KU student was pulled to safety Friday afternoon by Campus Police after breaking through the ice on Potter Lake. Capt. Willard Anderson and Lt. Fenstemaker were cruising near the lake when they noticed four boys skating. They warned the boys that the ice was unsafe, but Tony Simpson, 441 Arkansas street, continued to skate. When he was about 50 feet from shore he broke through the ice and had to be pulled to shore by Fenstemaker and Anderson. Try the Kansan Want Ads 11 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "BEST PICTURE"! the METRO-GOLDWYN.MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S PRESENTATION OF BEN-HUR TECHNICOLOR LAST THREE DAYS! FILMED IN CAMERA 65 VARSITY N. H. Cleaglske To Speak Tonight Evenings only at 7:30 $1.25 N. H. Cleaglake of the Institute of Technology at the University of Minnesota will address the local organization of the American Chemical Society at 7:30 tonight in Malott Hall. He will talk on "Automatic Process Control in the Process Industries." NOW! At 7:00 & 9:20 DECADAY KERR ROBERT MITCHUM PETER USTINOV DEGRAH KERR ROBERT MITCHUM PETER USTINOV THE SUNDOWNERS GENEVS JOHNS DINA MERRILL TECHNICOLOR* Screenplay by ISOBEL LEMART Directed by FRED ZINEMANN Presented by WARNER BROS. GRANADA THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Algeria's Referendum Only Beginning of Cure ALGIERS, Algeria — (UPI) — In the shadowy, dusty Casabah, at the Cafe Grand Ismaila, bearded Moslems in turbans, robes and with slipped feet sit slack coffee and gaze impassively at the young French soldier with the tommy gun under his arm. At the St. George Hotel, fronted by lush gardens and green grass, flowers and date palms, prosperous Frenchmen and their wives also sip black coffee and good Algerian wine. There, a world away from the Casbah, Algiers is French in the same way that Beirut and Saigon were French in a sprawling but now dwindling empire. And between the Moslem and the Frenchman stands the young soldier. He is there today and he will be there on guard tonight as the 10 p.m. curfew falls across Algier's dark, deserted streets. He was there yesterday enforcing the peace while Algerian Moslems and Algerian Europeans balloted in President Charles de Gaulle's referendum, called to chart a course for Algeria's future. Among the European settlers it in the back country and in the cities, a terrible fear underlies their opposition to De Gaulle's plan for an independent Algeria. It is a fear of what will happen to them if the French soldier ever leaves. The Moslemse will outnumber them 19 to one in both manpower and weapons then and the thought brings a shudder of dismay. "It will be another Congo," one colon said. That is why they believe De Gaulle's referendum settled nothing. The big test is still to come, they say, and they believe it will be violent. Here in Algeria, De Gaulle's grand plan for an "Algerian Algeria" is a shadowy thing which even French administrators seem not clearly to understand. De Gaulle has promised to Algerianize local governments to eliminate European domination. He also said that in the event of Algerian independence, the European population must be protected. Among poverty-stricken Arabs seen voting in the rural polling places, there appeared few who could meet the responsibility of government. Certainly, there is no confidence among the Europeans. Equally, there is as yet no real proof that the majority of Moslems here wish to be represented by the rebel FLN. There were many Moslem abstentions in the voting yesterday in Algerian cities, and it probably was due to fears of FLN retaliation. In any event, the task facing De Gaulle here is monumental. Citadel Cadets Fired First Shot of Civil War Today,1961 By United Press International A group of cadets at the Citadel lined the shore of Charleston Harbor in South Carolina, and with the pull of a lanyard, changed the course of history. When the Cadets touched off the salvo of 17,24-pound artillery shells in the direction of the Yankee merchant ship "Star of the West," they triggered the War Between the States. the firing on the merchant ship took place Jan. 9,1861. TODAY CADETS at the Citadel will again line the shore and cut loose a barrage of rounds at a ship moving up the harbor. The action is part of a centennial pageant, which will re-create the events with near-authenticity. Commanding the Cadets 100 years ago was Maj. P. F. Stevens, head of the military institution. History credits cadet G. E. Haynsworth with the dubious honor of pulling the lanvard on the first shot, Today, a famous military hero headed the cadets. Gen. Mark W. Clark of World War II and Korean THE CENTENNIAL weekend at Charleston began Saturday with a full dress parade by the Cadets, a speech by Civil War historian Bruce Catton and a military ball complete with hoop skirts for the ladies. Yesterday, Virginia began its observance of the centennial with a quiet ceremony at the tomb of the greatest Southern General — Robert E. Lee. The ceremony coincided with one at the tomb of the northern General — Ulysses S. Grant — in New York. War fame, portrayed Major Stevens, and Cadet Richard Law was to fire the first round. Clark is president of the Citadel. Firehouses Untrustworthy Now YONKERS, N. Y. — (UPI) — The firehouse of Engine Co. No. 6 caught fire yesterday but no one was home to put it out. The company was out fighting another fire when it learned of the blaze and rushed some of its equipment back to put out the fire in the hose drying tower. YOUR CLOTHES YO CAN LOOK LIKE NEW- TRY OUR DRY SANITONE CLEANING METHOD! As Recommended By Worsted-Tex QUALITY GUARANTEED LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 N. H. VI 3-3711 OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8:30 P.M. Lost: mone turn No q Expe term 0558. Typis curate ground and r TYPI secret repor Mrs. STUD MEM half I Illust newal 0942. Monday, Jan. 9, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 ute of city of local Chem- Malott omatic In- ss In- 20:20 RSNART MANNART BROS. 5788 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS LOST TYPING Lost: Black Leather Purse, containing money and drivers license. If found return to Business Office. Strong Hall. KU. No questions asked... 1-10 Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. tfr Typist: former secretary; electric typewriter, experienced in student and graduate typing. Regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequlet, 1925 Barker, IV 3-2001. tf Experienced typist - term papers, manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable effort. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., Car I3-74855. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tlf Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahon tf Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work Phone. Mrs Marilyn Hill, VI 3-2318 t EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resonate Mt. Barlow, 408 W. 19th V1 2-1648. TYIPING WANTED—theses, term papers, etc., etc. Mrs. Mary Russell. VIII. 6400 V-1 10-1 Experienced typist — will type these, papers, etc. Call M.Fulcher, VI 0558. Expert typing and secretarial service Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tt Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. tt TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-954. tf TYPING. Themes, term papers, etc. typed with neatness and accuracy by ex- piredied typist. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Alvin Johnson, VI 3-9577. 1-12 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will print theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY and STAFF advantage on one-half price rates on Titan Labs and Sparks Illustrated magazines—both new and reels. Processed prompt. Call VI 9042 STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE An academic year for American undergraduates at the University of Aix-Marseille with classes in English or French to satisfy curriculum requirements. Students may live in French French Language and Literature European Studies REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTESI 100 pages. Notes are written in extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mineographed and sound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI - 01430 after 4 p.m. If Tuition, trans-Atlantic fares, room and board at about $1,700. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, notations, charts and diagrams Complete online Price $3.00. For your call copy VI 2-1065. WELL-PAID. part time position, for accurate skilled secretary. German typing. Call VI 3-7607. 1-9 32 FOOT TRAILER, sleeps six. Will take smaller trailer in trade or will finance for responsible parties with reasonable down payment. 933 Rhode Island. 1-11 WANTED DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. tf Applications by March 15th For information write by air- mail to MUST PART with "Joe." a '52 Pontiac Pedigree and terms at VI 3-7333. tt FIRST OF THE YEAR SPECIALS! Full line of new and used mobile homes. Come, see and talk with me at 7th and Arkansas. VI 2-0560 or VI 3-7143. 1-11 Male to share apartment in Shawnee Hospital on February 1. Call Vi- 1-8418 if interested. INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES 1955 PLYMOUTH, Belvedere. 4-door, 6 cylinders, overdrive. Excellent condition. Call Mike Stephens, VI 3-7370. 1-9 FOR SALE HELP WANTED 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE. Two door with radio and heater. Low mileage. In very good condition. Can be seen at 534 La. after 5 p.m., or call VI 3-2599-1 1234 'OR SALE. 1955 one bedroom Safeway raler room. Equipped with a one ton refrigerator and space. Excellent condition. Phone V-57912 after 5 p.m., except weekends. 1-12 INSTITUTE FOR 21 rue Gaston-de Saporta AIX-EN-PROVENCE 1953 CHEVROLET, power steering and power brakes. Will sell at low price. Call KU 684 during daytime, VI 2-0372 after 5 p.m. 1-9 FOR SALE: 1957 '21' console Syvania 1958 '30' console 45 lbs barbells VI-2 1623 after 6:30 I-12 For Sale: Good condition GRETS guitar, case. Call Robert Johntz. 3-5770-1-10 RENALTA-DAUPHINE. 1959. Four door sedan, white, like new throughout. One door with sliding doors. Handsome, reliable, economical car. Going abroad must sell. Call VI 3-1943. 1-10 16 FOOT FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 hp Johnson motor. All new, including trailer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. SI 2-0479. 1-13 1956 PLYMOUTH, 2-door sedan, 6 cylinder. Standard transmission. Radio, heater, tire chains. Economic transportation. Must sell. Call V1-20509 after 7 p.m. 1958 RANCH WAGON. $750; or 1951 Lin- cina in excellent condition. CVI II. 3-2231. — 1-13 FOR RENT VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tt 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street parking, private bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9778. tf First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking, Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. tf UNFURNISHED TRI-PLEX APART- MENT. 3 rooms, private bath and en- tance. Call campus, campus, nice. See any time at 1521 Kent or kent. J. A. Reed, VI 3-5814. 1-9 FOR RENT: 2 or 3 boys, large furnished recreation room apt. Private bath, utilities paid. Jack Hawk. 2417 Ohio. 1-12 If you like to live very close to the campus, one and one-half blocks from the apartment is available now. Reasonable rent. Call VI S-6696 for appointment. 1-10 SIX ROOM lower apartment, newly furnished, private bath and entrance, 250 sq ft. $139,000. Hampshire, $75 per month. Phone VI 3-2300 or VI 3-8501 for 5 p.m. 1-10 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room, steam heat, phone, private entrance and bath. $15 per month. Linens furnished. Also clean two room furnished apartment, private entrance and bath. phone. $26.50 per month, bills paid. Close to campus. Available next semester. Phone VI 3-7830. 1-10 NICE PLACE TO LIVE—new two bedroom apartment, unfurnished except for new Frigidaire refrigerator, electric stove and automatic washer. One block Union. Best of neighbors. Private parking. Available Feb. 1. Phone 8534. I-11 Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hour on Duty Brakes Relined SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Grease Job ... $1 Students! Brake Adj. ... 98c Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Shoe Repair 1-Day Service Leather Full Soles 399 With Rubber Heels pr. $85 Val. MISCELLANEOUS MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Mod- ified for kids. Includes pet plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything needs cleaning and watering. Pet ects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome. ff DELUXE PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; final Tetra VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. 3 ROOM furnished house. $55 per month. 2 bedroom house. $85. Newly painted. 1 very nice furnished 3 room private apartment, $$0. T. A. Hemphill, VIII. $902. D CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 1300 W. 23rd St. Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. ROOMS FOR MEN STUDENTS: Do you need a quiet room? Have four singles, two doubles for second semester. Rent reduced. Call VI 3-9340 after 5 p.m. for appointment to see. Three blocks east of KU. 1-13 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six sink, bath a and entrance. Utilities paid. Drinking. Married couple only. 520 Ohio. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. BOARD AND ROOM next semester. VI 3-4385. 1-10 ROOMS—graduate men prefered. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture and bath facilities. Additional study and research room available. 1221 Oread, V-36798. I-1-12 HOME COOKED MEALS served family style at Mrs. Metsken's, 721 Mo VI 3-4094 Make reservations. Dinner at 5:30 p.m. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Giant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . 0350. PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions. Price $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. Modern 2 room basement apartment. Outside entrance. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Inc. All bills paid. 1-9 KU BARBER SHOP — 411 $ \frac{1}{2} $ W. 14th St. Flat tops a specialty. Flenty of free parking. Clarence. Would the party who took a brown brief case from Room 86, Strong Hall, please mail notes to Harry Miller. 1116 N. H. 1-11 WEDDING INVITATIONS — Call for appointment to see invitations, napkins, thank you folders, etc. Excellent quality, low in price. Phone VI 3-4206. 1-15 LEARN TO DANCE NOW-AH the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. 908 Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 1-7551. tt BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS-MAKING and alterations. For- warding. Telephone VI 3-5263. Sniff- 193%*. Telephone. VI 3-5263. FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard rates. Call VI 3-1331. 3-DAY FINISHING. 35 mm or movie film Drug Store, Drug Store, crest Shopping Center. 1-11 TRANSPORTATION Wish to join or form car pool from Overland Park area next semester. Five days a week. Call RA 2-4725. 1-13 Need a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence from KU Med. Center area. Have classes daily at 8 a.m. Phone J2-8750. 1-9 Weaver's Our 104th Year of Service annual sale Hanes seamless stockings save up to $1.05 on every box service sheer——— (reg. $1.35) $1.15, 3 prs. $3.30 (reinforced sheer——(reg $1.50) $1.25, 3 prs. $3.60 microfilm mesh————(reg $1.50) $1.25, 3 prs. $3.60 stretch sheer——— (reg. $1.65) $1.35, 3 prs. $3.90 sheer heel demi-toe———(reg. $1.65) $1.35, 3 prs. $3.90 all sheer sandalfoot---- (reg $1.95) $1.65, 3 prs. $4.80 short, medium and long colors: south pacific, bali rose and barely there monday, january 9 thru saturday, january 14 Weaver's Hosiery Shop—Street Floor University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 9. 1961 Integration Halted At U.of Georgia ATHENES, Ga—(UPI)—Two Negro students today began the process of registering for the University of Georgia with a notable minimum of incidents but a federal judge ordered a postponement before they could finish. Attorneys for the students—Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes—said they would appeal immediately and Judge Elipert Tuttle of the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals set a hearing (at 1:30 p.m. Lawrence time) today in Atlanta. THE STUDENTS had begun the federal court-ordered process of becoming the first Negro students in the university's 175-year history Space Exploration Breeds Insecurity LONDON — (UPI) — It just had to happen in the space age — people are developing a morbid dread of man's probing of the heavens. What is believed the first medical report of a nervous condition in which the patient fears he is going to fall off the earth were placed on record by Dr. Raphael Kerry, a psychiatrist. The new complaint has no official name as yet but Dr. Kerry is tentatively calling it "space-phobia." He found variations of the condition in four intelligent men and women who came to him for advice after they had read about satellite and rocket launchings or watched television programs about space. One of the "space-phobiacs" was a schoolmaster who said he found himself worrying that he might float off the earth and into orbit. "It's the space that's getting me," he said. "The curvature of the globe makes everything insecure. We are surrounded by a hostile envelopment." when Federal Judge W. A. Bootle in Macon, Ga., postponed the integration order he issued last Friday. Bootle's new order was to allow the state of Georgia time to appeal his previous order that the students be admitted immediately. -Bootle's ruling came as the first student protest demonstration of the day was being put down by university officials. As part of the registration process Miss Hunter, who plans to study journalism, was in the university's journalism building to confer about classes. A group of students began congregating outside and soon several students began a football-type yell: "Two, four, six, eight — we don't want to integrate. Eight, six, four, two — we don't want nijagaboos." THE CHANT was just beginning to spread when Dean of Men William Tate shouldered his way through the crowd to the heart of the demonstration and ordered two of the students to stop. He asked for their identification cards. He took one of them and ordered the other man, who had no card, off the campus. The chanting did not subside entirely, however, and chanting students followed Miss Hunter as she walked back to the registrar's office. Dean Tate continued to move through the crowd, urging calm. The two students met back at the registrar's office and were told of the Macon court decision. They said they would remain in Athens pending the results of the afternoon hearing in Atlanta. A LEADING OFFICIAL of the university who declined to be identified said the university had decided to "move in complete good faith in accepting the federal court order and we are going more than the last mile to help them get enrolled." Dr. Miller to Talk At Faculty Forum The Faculty forum for tomorrow will feature Dr. Arden Miller, Dean of the University of Kansas Medical School, who will speak on "New Subsidies for Education in Health Sciences" at noon. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. George Docking today denied executive clemency for three condemned men and granted seven commutations, one of them apparently illegally. Docking Denies Clemency to 3 Applications of Lowell Lee Andrews, Earl Wilson and Richard Eugene Hickock—all of whom have some form of action pending before the state supreme court—were denied. Docking's pardons attorney, Dale A. Spiegel, had said he would recommend that the governor take no action. Docking's denial means the men will have to begin again in their clementy efforts, with the ultimate decision up to the incoming governor, John Anderson. THE CLEMENCY action which may be contrary to the law, concerns Kenneth Tague, who was convicted in Sedgwick County District Court Jan. 8, 1960, for permitting gambling to be set up and used and with keeping an open saloon. Anderson, in his last hours as attorney general, said the action "evidently is void" because the law states the governor cannot act until 30 days after the case has been referred to the state board of probation and parole, or until after the board has made a report on the case. Tague's case was referred to the board Dec. 16 and the board did not act. "There have not been 30 days since then, so the action is void," Anderson said. 'Brigadoon' Story Delights Children at Faculty Club One of the children turned off the lights and the photographic record of the KU cast of "Brigadoon" flashed on the screen. Larry Sneegas, Lawrence senior, and Marva Lou Powell, Topeka senior, told about the adventures and troubles of the group at the Faculty Club's children's night last night. The pictures had been taken by Sneegas and Miss Powell during the tour of the "Brigadoon" cast last summer. During the three months of the trip the group went to Japan, Wake Island, Korea, Taiwan, Okinawa and the Philippines. "We staved overnight in different Japanese homes while we were in Tokyo," Sneegas said. "The Japanese people are very polite and we were treated with the greatest respect every place we went in Japan." One of the pictures was of a cog railway on a Japanese mountain side. "We went up the mountain on a bus," Miss Powell said. "It took us 25 minutes to get up. The train is only used for the downhill trip Fleming May Get Oregon Presidency Arthur Sherwood Fleming, secretary of health, education, and welfare, has been indicated as a possible selection for the presidency of the University of Oregon, according to the Portland Reporter recently. George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, has also been considered for this office. Mr. Fleming is a former president of Ohio Wesleyan University and currently serves in the Eisenhower cabinet. Henry F. Cabell, president of the state board of higher education for Oregon, has emphasized that probably no final decision on a president for Oregon University will be announced until the board meets Jan. 24. and it only took us four minutes to get back down." Gigantic bronze Buddhas and temples with pointed roofs were shown to the audience as the trip through the Oriental nations was related. The Japanese people are much more industrious than the Korean people, Sneegas said. Their homes are nicer and they are more polite to visitors. "We were met and we welcomed by KU graduates everywhere." Miss Powell concluded. "They gave us the greatest hospitality in every stop that we made." Summer Institute Noted in Magazine The National Science Foundation Mathematics Institute held here in the summer of 1960 received notice in the November, 1960, issue of "Americas," a monthly magazine published by the Pan American in English, Spanish and Portuguese. An article, "A Summer of Science," by Flora L. Phelps, a participant, reviewed the summer institute for high school and college teachers of mathematics. Osvaldo Sangiorgi, mathematics teacher from Sao Paulo, Brazil, said the demonstration class in algebra was "a real laboratory for educational research." Thirty pupils from the Lawrence public schools were in the class. "Institutes like this are an imperious necessity in the Latin American countries both to give greater educational unity in our two continents, and for the benefits they will bring to individual countries," Sangiorgi said. If your stomach disputes you, lie down and pacify it with cool thoughts.—Satchel Paige The law is not a beast but a haven for routine minds.—R. C. Heege If I had it to do over again, I'd become a monk—V. Smylie One Thing Everyone Enjoys is A Subscription to the Daily Transan. Subscribe Now for Next Semester! One Semester . . $3.00 One Year . . . $5.00 Available at the Kansan Business Office, Room 111, Flint Hall, Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 376 C. S. M. HENRY YOUNG GRADUATE 004C 0 Daily hansan much bream omes polite d by Miss e us every ne ation there in notice ce of magazine an in these. matics , said gebra luca- from were im- Latin give our neefits coun- Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1961 u, lie cool a ha Heege n, I'd 6 58th Year, No. 67 'I Didn't Know' Intrepid Cub Given 'Appraisal' of UDK By Martha Moser (The city-editor assigned Martha Moser to get a copy of a speech delivered on the radio Sunday by the publisher of a local weekly newspaper who criticized the Dally Kansan. This story is a result of her attempt.) This sounded fairly reasonable and I was about to pass the incident off as some horrible faux pas on my part when the man said that the speech I was to get must be the one he gave over the radio Sunday. Speech? The man said he knew nothing of any speech. He explained that he was owner and operator of his business and that if anyone should know what was going on around his place, he surely would be the one. LAWRENCE, KANSAS "TIM SORRY, though. I can't give you the speech now," he said. "It's on the press and hasn't been printed yet. I'm afraid I said some things in my speech about your newspaper that weren't too nice." Sometimes the cub reporter is assigned the duty of picking up a manuscript of a speech so one above him can write a story. That happened to be my position yesterday afternoon downtown. Walking into the store, I introduced myself to the man behind the counter and told him why I was there. The Daily Kansan had sent me to pick up a manuscript of a speech. "You did?" I said pleasantly. "About those articles that have been appearing in the paper," he replied. "Oh, the series on discrimination in Lawrence." "Yes," the man said. He crossed his arms on the counter. "I don't approve of what you're doing up there," he continued. "Stirring up trouble with those articles." I EXPLAINED that I really had nothing to do with the series. "Well, you ought to look into it and find out what's going on up there," he said. "You'd better wake up and see what they're doing." The man turned as if to leave then turned back. I was puzzled why I was suddenly being chided for a situation in which I had no part, but I smiled. "It's not funny," he said. "All that trouble because Negro students couldn't buy beer in two taverns. I don't see why you people think drinking is necessary to going to school." I BEGAN INCHING my way backward toward the door. "If they want to drink beer, let them drink beer and forget about going to school. They can go to a beer hall and drink a gallon of it." "That's your boy-friend from the Bronx, for you, writing those articles. I've seen those people back there and they're nothing to be proud of. I had made it to the door. The man continued: "Well, I'm sorry I can't give you the speech now," he said. "It's quite all right," I answered "I have it, now." Students Report Several Thefts William Freeman, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, reported to campus police that someone took approximately $90 and a table radio from his room at 1120 New York St. The money was in a red metal box and contained small change and bills. Over the Christmas vacation someone stole several books and two shirts from the room of Charles Feyth, Topeka freshman, and Fred Holden, Parsons junior, in Templin Hall. The total value was estimated at about $18. A shed located in back of the University Nursery School at 1100 Missouri St. was broken into sometime yesterday and toys were scattered onto the floor. No estimate of damages has been made. Final Examination Changes Announced Two changes in the fall semester final examination schedule have been made by the calendar committee. They are as follows: 2 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday sequence will meet for examinations at 1:30-3:20 Thursday, Jan. 26, instead of 10:10-12 noon Monday, Jan. 23. English 1, 1A, 1H, all sections, will meet for examinations at 10:10-12 noon Monday, Jan. 23, instead of 1:30-3:20 Thursday, Jan. 26. ASC to Check Greek 'Clauses' The National Student Association committee of the ASC made plans yesterday to investigate discriminatory clauses in the constitutions of social fraternities and sororites on campus. Committee members will contact Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Donald K. Aiderson, dean of men in an attempt to obtain the addresses of the national offices of the fraternities and sororities. Max Eberhart, Great Bend junior, said that many of the fraternities have already removed such clauses from their constitutions. The Civil Rights Council recently asked students to boycott two local taverns because they refused to serve Negro students. Edward McMullan, Long Beach, N. Y., senior and member of the CRC and NSA committee pointed out that action against Lawrence merchants and businesses was "hypocritical" unless an attempt to prevent discrimination on the campus could be initiated. Negroes Return To U. of Georgia The NSA committee will present a resolution on racial justice to the All Student Council tonight. The resolution backs student boycotts of discriminating merchants. ATHENS, Ga. — (UPI)—Two Negro students who broke the University of Georgia's 175-year old segregation barriers with a barrage of legal maneuvers returned to the campus today. Charlayne Hunter, 18, and Hamilton Holmes, 19, drove from their Atlanta homes to the campus here after Federal Judge W. A. Bootle in Macon, Ga., signed an order restraining state officials from following a 1956 segregation law requiring that funds for the school be cut off the minute it is integrated. As they returned there were these developments: The atmosphere at the school this morning was one of uncertainty but school officials moved among groups of students to advise that classes were remaining open for the time being. The campus was quiet today but four students were arrested during demonstrations last night. A small cross was burned in front of a dormitory and several news cameramen lost pieces of equipment to the exuberant students. MEANWHILE, GEORGIA Attorney General Eugene Cook left early today for Washington where he went before Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black to make Georgia's last legal appeal against the integration — a request that the integration order be staved. The Georgia legislature, whose halls have rung with some of the south's most vigorous pro-segregation speeches, showed signs today of resigning itself to the eventual integration of the school. Several leaders of both houses indicated they would introduce bills to repeal the laws which require closing of the school when the Negroes enter. Absenteeism at the University was heavy this morning because of confusion over whether classes would be open. The University's administrative council went into session early today and four hours later still was conferring. GOV. ERNEST VANDIVER announced last night that a 1956 segregation law would go into effect the minute Negroes showed up at the 175-year-old school, cutting off funds and stopping operation of the University. State officials said this law was interpreted to mean "not a stamp could be used" after funds are cut off. The mood of the students was quiet this morning but four students were arrested during demonstrations last night. Katanga Head Voices Threat LEOPOLDVILLE, Congo —(UPI) —Moise Tshombe, president of Katanga Province, told the United Nations today he will send troops into the newly-created "Lualaba State" if U.N. forces do not disarm pro-Lumumba troops there by midnight. Tshombe's ultimatum said followers of deposed Premier Patrice Lumumba who invaded the province and set up a capital at Manono, 400 miles north of the provincial capital of Elisabethville, had violated a neutral zone created to keep warring tribesmen apart. The United Nations replied only that it is a technical question whether Manono lies within the neutral zone or just outside it and whether the pro-Lumumba troops are in the town or on the outskirts. A spokesman said it also is possible the troops detoured around the neutral zone. The troops are believed to be from Kivu or oriental provinces or both. Observers were impressed by the move of hundreds of miles they would have had to make to reach Manono. Weather Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow with little change in temperature. Low tonight 15 to 20 northwest to the 20s southeast. High tomorrow 45 to 50. Tavern Problem May Stimulate Litigation By Byron Klapper (Editor's Note: This the second of a series about discrimination in Lawrence involving KU students and townpeople, and exploring action by student groups; with Ronald K. Badder, Kansas City, Kan. senior in the School of Law.) Can taverns legally discriminate? The Civil Rights Council has been attempting to get taverns to abandon their discrimination policy. But some tavern owners say "No." The situation in Lawrence may require a court decision to determine whether taverns come under the Kansas laws prohibiting discrimination in public places. KANSAS HAS A LAW which makes discrimination illegal in hotels, restaurants, and places of public entertainment, for which a municipal license is required. Badger said that to his knowledge there has been no court decision classifying taverns. But an opinion was requested by the Wyandotte County Attorney regarding the inclusion of taverns under the present law. The issue centers on whether taverns will be defined by the courts as places of public entertainment or amusement. ATTY. GENERAL ANDERSON. on July 22, 1959, rendered the opinion that the taverns were not included under the Civil Rights Act. "... It would appear doubtful that an establishment wherein only cereal malt beverages are sold to the public, would be a place of public entertainment or public amusement." Anderson said: CIVIL RIGHT SUPPORTERS argue that taverns may come under the law for the following reasons: 1) It is readily observable that taverns generally provide objects of entertainment such as pin-ball machines, juke boxes and television. A few provide space for dancing. 2) Drinking beer in itself may not be considered entertainment. But when drinking beer is combined with the entertainment facilities in the tavern, the combination takes on a characteristic of entertainment. 3) The Kansas Supreme Court, in 1939, defined a place of entertainment and amusement as a "place to which people resort for the purpose primarily of being entertained or amused. (Brown V. Meyer Sanitary Milk Co.) While the attorney general has rendered an opinion that taverns do not come within the purview of the law, one could argue that the definition above includes taverns. THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT also requires that places of public entertainment or amusement be licensed by the city. The city of Lawrence does require a license for taverns. Thus, taverns do fulfill that requirement of the Civil Rights Act, Badger concluded. The clause in the Civil Rights Act stating that a municipal license is required of a place of public entertainment or amusement has given the city the choice to decide whether a place of public entertainment falls under this act. This means that if a movie theater is not licensed by the city, the state cannot prosecute a theater owner for discrimination. 4 Speaking of the Civil Rights Act, Harry A. Bailey Jr., Lawrence graduate student said in a Daily Kansas interview: "IN THE COURSE OF one year, the great majority of the establishments affected by this law have obeyed it, and have experienced little or no loss of business. This is due to the fact that all the establishments were equally affected." We reserve the right to. . . "It would seem logical on the basis of previous experiences, that if all taverns within a community desegregated, there would be no loss of business. "Since Negroes have the right to attend desegregated schools, movies and restaurants, it would seem logical that they would also be able to drink beer in the various taverns in the community." BAILEY, a political science student, said he believed that some tavern owners realized it is wrong to segregate, but they sincerely feel they would suffer a loss of business. This would not be the case if taverns, like restaurants, were included under the Civil Rights Act, because all would be affected he said. (The next articles which will appear in next week's paper will discuss housing and a recent history of civil rights in Lawrence.) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1961 The Years With Ike When he goes home this January, he will be just another man for the first time in more than 50 years. There'll be no more bubble-top limousines waiting, no more secret service men—the state will have finished with him, and the state is not merciful when a servant has completed his service. But in one way he still will be more than "just another man." He will carry with him from the capitol steps the almost tangible love of his people; and he probably will carry this great love to his grave. This has been Eisenhower's greatest strength and the force that has lifted his administration above mediocrity—the love of the people. He has been loved and respected—worshipped, if you will—as F.D.R. never was. For eight years, he held the American people together by the force of his commanding personality. Unified in their deep respect and love, they were able to move as one. It is impossible to gauge the effect of personality. Perhaps it was the Eisenhower reputation that so endeard him to the people; greatest of soldiers, winner of the war, keeper of the peace. This is true, to some extent; but it is also true that Eisenhower perpetuated this image while he was president. His personal life was always spotless. The faint breath of scandal that touched his administration never besmirched him. In every way, he uplifted the presidency in terms of its function as ceremonial altar of the republic. --then that the effects of policy made and carried out decades before can be seen stamped on the years that followed. Not since Washington has a president infused his office with such dignity. Eisenhower came to power at a time when the nation was discouraged with the presidency and disgusted with the unfortunate scandals of the otherwise competent Truman administration. The people sought a leader they could respect, a man who could raise the presidency to the high level it occupied in years past. They found the man in Eisenhower. Dixon-Yates and the Adams-Goldfine affair failed to touch the president. The people considered him apart from such things. Also, they never thought of him as a party chieftain, with the faint breath of corruption hanging about him that politics and patronage on a high level seems to exhale. --then that the effects of policy made and carried out decades before can be seen stamped on the years that followed. Armed with their support, he was able to repudiate the Democratic cry for more federal spending in 1958; send federal soldiers to Little Rock to enforce the ruling of the Supreme Court; send Marines to Lebanon to put teeth in the Eisenhower Doctrine; side against the Anglo-French alliance in their conflict with Egypt, and gain re-election by a huge plurality in 1956 while his party went down to defeat around him. The people stood by him in 1957-58, when the recession struck. They never blamed him for it, but they did have the greatest confidence that he could "make it right." And when the recession was over—it cannot be said that his policies alone were responsible for the recovery—they gave him credit and considered their trust in him well-placed. Eisenhower always had the support of the people; but what will history say of him? The people have made mistakes before. The true measure of a presidency can never be taken except from the vantage point of the future. It is As the nation's chief diplomat and responsible for its foreign policy, Eisenhower's record is spotty. He used his commanding presence, his awesome reputation to the best advantage in the unique policy of personal diplomacy he followed. He was the first president ever to carry his cause to many foreign lands. On the whole, his policy was successful and will set a precedent for presidents to come. --freshman, portrayed an Irish seaman with an accent that would fool the Blarney Stone. Bat Burke finds Anna as a result of fog and shipwreck and declares love immediately. Bettcher acts and reacts, never letting the emotion of the character escape him. His accent stays, too, although at times in his anger, it is hard to understand all of his lines. But if he was personally successful, his foreign policy was not. Since the death of Dulles—and perhaps sometime before that—the policy followed by the United States was one of reaction, not action. We were prone to locking barn doors after horses had been stolen. History will record that we failed in Latin America and in Cuba, that we were lax in Africa, that we were deficient in the Middle East and Near East. In the allied presidential role of commander in chief of the armed forces and defender of the peace, the Eisenhower record is stronger than it first appears. We trailed the USSR in space, we suddenly found ourselves vulnerable to attack by a militarily superior force. This was true in 1957. It is no longer true. The Eisenhower defense measures have been wise. The tremendous outpouring of federal funds following Sputnik has given us a reliable mass-produced ICBM (Atlas) and the beginnings of a defense against missile attack (the Nike Zeus). The Strategic Air Command and the North American Air Defense Command are effective deterrents, as is the standing army of more than one million men. Polaris and its nuclear-powered host submarine are unparalleled offensive weapons. SEATO and the Bahgdad Pact were Eisenhower era alliances. He also deserves much credit for the modernization and standardization of NATO forces in Europe. As a party leader and a leader of Congress, he has been a failure. The image he created as a non-political president has harmed him in his attempts to force legislation and unify his party. Caring little for party labels, he has relied on his personal qualifications and power to ram his programs through a Democratic Congress. Many of his failures could have been successes had he led his party and his Congress instead of standing apart from them. --freshman, portrayed an Irish seaman with an accent that would fool the Blarney Stone. Bat Burke finds Anna as a result of fog and shipwreck and declares love immediately. Bettcher acts and reacts, never letting the emotion of the character escape him. His accent stays, too, although at times in his anger, it is hard to understand all of his lines. But history judges the president by the peculiarities of the time in which he served. The burning issue of the Eisenhower years was not domestic policy, war policy, labor vs. management, colonialism, economics, or any of the others. It is the posture of the United States in relation to that of its ideological and military foe, Soviet Russia. In this Eisenhower has been a good president, if not a great one. He was slow to foresee future events, this is true; but he was quick to react with all the strength of his office when a threat did arise. History will say of him that he kept the peace and unified the nation in some of the most difficult years any president has ever had to face. History will say that if he did not advance very far, he at least held the line with wisdom and courage, and provided a secure foundation on which to build a lasting peace. Bill Blundell At the Theater Eugene O'Neill would have been proud of the KU Experimental Theatre production of "Anna Christie" last night. As the audience settled into the swivel chairs and the lights dimmed to darkness, a fog horn blown at the back of the book. Two longshoremen entered the saloon, mattered lines the audience could not understand and then exited. Chris Christopherson, portrayed by Tom Woodard, Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, enters slightly drunk. Woodard began hesitantly, but seemed to gather confidence with each line and assumed his role with ease and a convincing attitude. His stance always was that of a seaman, old and a bit bent, but not broken. Bob Bettcher, Wilmette, Ill. Anna Christopherson, so well done by Joyce Malicky, Baldwin senior, needs little said. Her portrayal is a tribute to the role. Miss Malicky sustained the character and convincingly showed the changes in Anna's life. A lighter character, although by no means less important, is that of Marty Owen, done by Karen Saad, River Forest, Ill., sophomore. She is a loud, happy-go- Set around 1924, the play does not seem dated although the costumes are of that time. The suit Mat Burke wears and the 1920 black gown Anna wears do not violently assault the sense of balance the actors set. lucky waterfront woman, who can understand problems of men. Miss Saad's laughs seemed a bit forced, but the character is an outgoing, rowdy one that calls for roughness. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Just how much of a production is acting and how much is directing no one knows, but here a medium is achieved. The ensemble work was good; transition accomplished without disconcerting noises or interruptions and the acting was of high quality, meritig better attendance at future performances. — Carrie Merryfield BULLER P. "BETTER PAY ATTENTION — HE'S IN A FOUL MOOD TODAY." From the Newsstand Pride in Our Youth Now and then Kansas citizens read about some of the antics and projects by students at state schools and the nature of the events is such to make folks wonder if the youngsters deserve the opportunities the citizenry is helping to provide via taxes. But in most cases, Kansans can take great pride in the younger generation they have helped to spawn. For as is so often the case at Kansas University, a goodly number of the "wild hare" activities fostered by students are the products of the imaginations of out-of-state students. It's imperative to halt right here long enough to say there is absolutely nothing wrong with out-of-state students. Most of them are valuable additions to the campus and conduct themselves in a way that reflects credit on their points of origination. It is also good for Kansas students to have a chance to mingle and become acquainted with youngsters from other parts—all parts—of the U.S., just as it benefits them to get to know us and our ways. Yet it is interesting to note how often the most troublesome student malcontents and alleged working liberals hail from such states as New York, New Jersey, California and such and from cities like Brooklyn, Chicago and Los Angeles. One immediately gets the impression that home-bred youngsters are a little less reluctant to throw themselves into capricious and often questionable projects than those who are operating a much longer way from "home." It is also interesting to note that all the KU Rhodes Scholars of recent years hailed from Kansas cities—Blaine Hollinger of Russell, David Ontjes of Hutchinson, Raymond Nichols of Lawrence and now Fred Morrison of Colby. Time and again the top scholars, the top leaders and the top campus personalities, who are associated with the most worthwhile projects, are of Kansas origin. And it all gives the onlocker considerable confidence in the future, and renews his belief that while there are invariably advantages elsewhere, there still is considerable merit to being born and bred out "on the prairies" and "in the sticks." (Reprinted from the Lawrence Journal-World, Jan. 6, 1961.) Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376. business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull Business Manager Carol Heller, Jane Boyd, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1961 University Daily Kansa From the Magazine Rack Page 3 The Medical Student The medical program is set to the slowness and intellectual activity of the least able but passable student. The abler student marks time while the tail-end catches up with him. I was shocked two years ago when a small group of able freshmen told me that they found the first year of medical school less stimulating intellectually than the last year of college. Education, to attract and hold the best minds, must be stimulating and challenging. If we accept college grades as at least one index of the best mind, medicine is not attracting the same quality it did just ten years ago.—Robert A. Moore, President of the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center. MEDICINE IS finding increased competition for the pool of top ranking students because it no longer occupies the unique position as a profession which it held in the past and shared largely only with law and the ministry. The professional opportunities open to the college graduate are now much broader and provide the prestige, intellectual satisfaction and financial rewards comparable to those offered by medicine. As the scientific and technological bases of our existence further broaden, we can anticipate only increased competition from engineering schools and graduate programs outside of medicine for the relatively ever less adequate pool of good students.John A.D.Cooper and Moody E. Prior, Northwestern University Medical School. In order to attract and hold talented students, medical schools have been experimenting with Honors and other special programs. Several of these have been reported in previous issues of this newsletter and others with different approaches are included in this issue. THE SOURCE of the problem facing the medical schools, and nearly every other professional school, is the rapidly expanding accumulation of knowledge in the professional field itself and in the sciences basic to the profession. In consequence, professional education has become increasingly compartmentalized and the total period of training has become inordinately long. There have been changes, too, in the concept of the role of the professional in modern society, with a corresponding demand for broadening the professional training in humanities and the behavioral sciences. All these and other developments are leading to reconsideration of established programs leading to professional degrees. The preceding paragraph is generalized from a statement by Drs. Cooper and Prior. THEIR SOLUTION to the problems of medical education may itself be generalized for other professions. Starting with talented high school students who have had Honors and advanced placement work in high school, Northwestern has adopted a special pre-professional program for the first two years of college designed to lay the foundation both for the student's professional training, which begins in the junior year, and for his continued liberal education during the period of his professional education. This program parallels the development of general Honors in conjunction with departmental Honors programs in four-year liberal arts programs. Other Honors devices employed in the liberal arts phase of the medical program are seminars and the abandonment of grades. An additional advantage of the Northwestern program is that by assuring the entering college student of admission to medical school the usual baleful competition for grades and the attendant insecurity of the premedical years are reduced. Instead of a contest whose reward is admission to medical school, the pre-medical program becomes part of a continuous program of intellectual and professional development. Critics of this approach are certain to point out that it seems to threaten the hard-won gains in establishing the liberal arts as a vital part of the education of professional men. Those who adopt such programs will therefore be under special obligation to avoid so subordinating the liberal arts to professional training that they lose their liberalizing character and become merely a phase of vocational education. By designing its program for superior students who are already advanced in their liberal education before entering college, Northwestern hopes to avoid this danger. IT IS ALSO IMPORTANT that in the effort to gain time the student not be placed under constant pressure to do only what is "essential" for his career. All students, and particularly the best, need time for maturation of their capacities, time for the sequential development of basic concepts, insights and skills, time for contemplation and, most of all, time to explore lines of inquiry which become attractive in themselves without regard to their eventual professional utility. Abbreviating the length of professional education is more likely to promote the achievement of excellence if it is founded on the premise of the Northwestern program; namely, that since it is in any case "impossible to impart the entire content of medical and surgical science to the student, the aim should be to put him in a position to complete his education throughout the remainder of his life." In other words, it is only the formal phase of professional education that is shortened; the whole education is conceived as a life-long process, a conception shared by all Honors programs. (Excerpted from N. D. Kurland's "Medicine and the Talented Student" in the November, 1960, Superior Student.) Around the Campus Study Grants To 24 Here Twenty four KU graduate students are studying this academic year with support of National Defense Education Act Fellingshows. The awards carry a stipend of $2,000 for the first academic year of study after the baccalaureate degree, $2,200 for the second year and $2,400 for the third year. The fellowships are available only to students working toward Ph.D. degrees in programs of graduate study which are new or expanded programs. Recipients are selected by the graduate schools participating in the program, with preference given to persons interested in teaching in institutions of higher education. In addition to the amount paid the recipient, an accompanying grant up to $2,500 is made to the University. First-year recipients of the fellowships are Ingeborg Bader, Elmwood Park, Ill., German; Richard C. Basinger, Phillipsburg, Mo., mathematics; James W. Douglass, Lawrence, English; George Gastl, Shawnee, mathematics; Alfred Gray, Dallas, Tex., mathematics; Wilhelm Grothmann, Hereford, Germany, German; Ester Anne Little, Lawrence, English; Harold Craig Lyera, Lawrence, bacteriology; Wilbur L. Nahrgang, Ft. Worth, Tex., German; Anette Ruder, Hays, English, and Mary Wheat, Hastings, Neb., mathematics. Second-year recipients are Ira Astride Ameriks, E. Orange, N. J., German; Robert H. Deming, Hartford, Conn., English; Helena Holz, Lake Benton, Minn., German; Barbara Margaret Jackson, Portland, Ore., English; Yvonne Janicki, New Brunswick, N. J., German. Martin Traugott Lang, Ventnor, N. J., mathematics; Thavorn Laphisophon, Bangkok, Thailand, bacteriology; James Terrence Mcqueeney, Kansas City, Mo., English; Louis P. Mallavia, Shoshone, Idaho, bacteriology; Raymond Elmer Pippert, Lawrence, mathematics; Martha Jane Schmidt, Gordon, Neb, bacteriology; Edward W. Crossby, Lawrence, German, and Erna Marie Moore, Lawrence, German. Cartography Book Now Very Valuable In 1905 the KU library paid $31.25 for "An Essay on the Early History of Charts and Sailing-Directions" by the Swedish scholar Periplus. It was the most expensive single volume purchase of the year. The volume, now considered one of the two most important late 19th century works on the development of cartography, now sells for $200. Last night at twelve I felt immense, KU Donor Dubious A year-end contributor to the Greater University Fund sent $5. With it came this note: "I now have three children in college. If you get more than you need, please set it aside for a loan to me." KU Enrollment Ranks at Top KU's 10.012 students form the largest total enrollment in Kausas, according to comparative enrollment figures recently compiled by an official of Wichita University. Seven state and municipal colleges — Fort Hays State Teachers College, Emporia State Teachers College, Pittsburg State College, Washburn University, Wichita University, Kansas State University and KU — were included in the study. KU also had a six per cent gain in enrollment this fall and a 13 per cent increase for the five-year period covered in the study. Kansas State's relative enrollment was the largest in Kansas. The student body increased from 6,706 in 1959 to 7,539 last fall, a 12.4 per cent increase. Emporia State ranked second with an 11.4 per cent gain from 3,423 to 3,714. Emporia State is the fastest growing college of those compared over a five-year period from 1956 to 1960. The college had a 55 per cent increase in enrollment during this period. In the five state colleges, the freshman class in 1960 was 19 per cent larger than the 1959 class. The sophomore class gained two per cent, the junior class gained six per cent, and the senior class had a loss of one per cent. Armitage Gets Grant Kenneth B. Armitage, professor of zoology, is recipient of a $15,000 National Science Foundation grant to continue his studies of the social behavior of the marmot. The three-year grant will enable him to complete a study of the rodent begun a number of years ago in northwestern Wyoming. Professor Wright on Tour Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology, is in consultation with social scientists in Washington, D.C. Prof. Wright just completed lecture engagements at Clark University in Wooster, Mass., and Duke University in Durham, N. C. 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT JIM'S CAFE Professor to NSTA Post Herbert A. Smith, professor of education, is chairman of the advisory board for a new film research project of the National Science Teachers Assn. The first project is a study aimed at discovering how to produce motion picture films to communicate best the activities and methods of research scientists. The National Cancer Institute, a division of the U.S. Public Health Service, has made a grant of $149,700 for this study by the NSTA. The University of Oklahoma at Norman will be the site of the project for the research and production of six 15-minute films contemplated in the program. Prof. Smith is a past president of the National Science Teachers Assn. and for the past year and a half has been on leave to set up and direct the high school science program section in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, as authorized by the National Defense Education Act. 11 Join Professional Speech Association Eleven undergraduate students in the KU speech and drama department have become members of the Speech Assn. of America, a professional organization. They are Leland D. Cole, Great Bend senior; Larry Gene Ehrlich, Russell senior; Anna Fry, Greeley, Colo., freshman; Anita K. Gould, Phillipsburg junior; Lawrence R. Knupp, Great Bend senior; Daryl E.Lewis, Great Bend junior; Jeanette M. McDonald, Satanta senior; Carol A. Muroki, Wailuke, Maui, Hawaii; senior; Diana Jo Osterhout, Topeka freshman; David N. Rockhold, Winfield senior, and Joyce A. Viola, Abilene junior. ASC to Meet Tonight The All Student Council will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. Shoe Repair 1-Day Service Leather Full Soles 399 pr. With Rubber Heels $5 Val. DELUXE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 1300 W. 23rd St. Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. MARTIN The Pizza Hut AND The Catacombs Serving the Finest Pizza and Cold Beverage in the Country Available for Private Parties Sun. thru. Thurs. Pizza Hut open Sun.- Thurs., 4-12 & Fri. - Sat., 12 noon - 1 a.m. Catacombs open Sun.- Thurs., 6-12 & Fri.- Sat., 6-1 a.m. Dining & Dancing DANCE Sat. night dance to "The Jewels" 9-1 a.m. — 50c per person T.G.I.F. SPECIAL (by popular demand) Attend the Catacombs (4) "Four happy hours" 2-6 Fri. — Your favorite beverage FREE!! Entrance Fee! Men $1.00 — Women 50c Renew your taste for real Pizza 646 Mass. EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1961 KU Student Tells of Cuban Support for Castro Policies It appears as if the majority of the Cuban people are supporting Castro, according to Jim Morelan, Lawrence senior, who spent Christmas vacation in Cuba. "MOST OF the people I saw were with Castro," Morelan said. "It was apparent to me that there are good as well as bad aspects of the Cuban revolution." Morelan said that the agrarian re-form movement in Cuba has given the farmer a share of the land and helped him economically. Morelan's wife is a Cuban citizen. He and his wife visited his wife's parents, who live in Veradero, a town 90 miles east of Havana. Morelan said: "My father-in-law has been affected very little by the revolution. He works for an electrical company. He still has the same job and the same salary. The only difference is that the company is now nationalized." Morelan described the urban reform program. "THIS PROGRAM has made it possible for people to own their own homes," he said. "They still make their payments, but now it is toward the purchase of the home and not just rent." Morelan said that Cubans are not against Americans, but rather they are opposed to American monopolies. "Cubans want to nationalize; he said. "They feel that Americans, with their monopolies, are hurting them." Morelan said that he talked to various Cuban citizens in the Veradero area and found no signs of discrimination against Americans. He left Cuba on Jan. 4, the day after the U. S. broke off diplomatic relations. "We were busy packing, so I didn't get to hear much about the diplomatic break," he said. "How-ever my wife's parents did seem to be a little worried because of this move." Johnston to Speak At Math Club John B. Johnston, assistant professor of mathematics, will speak at a joint meeting of the Math Club and Pi Mu Epsilon on "What is a Lattice?" at 7:30 p.m. today in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. A color film "The Thinking Machine" will be shown. Professor Elected A Science Fellow Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, has been elected a fellow of the New York Academy of Science in recognition of his achievements in science. Election to fellow in the academy is an honor conferred upon a limited number of members who have done outstanding work toward the advancement of science. Prof. Leone, a KU faculty member since 1949, is known for fundamental research in serology and cell problems. The U. S. Public Health Service is supporting studies directed by Prof. Leone at the rate of $14,000 a year and the Atomic Energy Commission has contracted with him for a $14,000 project. Last 'Night on the Town' Hectic New Year Greets JFK NEW YORK — (UPI) — President-elect John F. Kennedy knew last night as he flew in his private plane from Boston to New York that he had one more chance for a night on the town in Manhattan. On Jan. 20 he embarks on what he calls "that high and lonely office" of the presidency. Between today and inauguration, he knew he must devote his time to completing his new administration and writing his inaugural address. He leaves New York at noon. Against this background, he decided that he wanted to see one more good Broadway show, this time a whoop-up musical with comedian Phil Silvers, "Do-Re-Mi." He wanted to see the show with his good friend, Grant Stockdale, Miami, Fla., real estate man. But there was one drawback: No tickets. AT LAGUARDIA FIELD, press secretary Pierre Salinger popped into a mobile communications car provided by the New York Telephone Co. and called the St. James Theater. He explained that the President-elect wanted two tickets. The gruff voice on the other end in effect told Salinger to get lost, the place was sold out A reporter in the car with Salinger called the drama critic of his news organization. The critic had left home to cover a new opening. The critic's wife, however, gallantly volunteered to call the St. James and tell the manager that the call from Salinger was on the level. By this time, Kennedy's four car motorcade was in Manhattan and having every confidence that his tickets were assured, Kennedy and Stockdale decided to have dinner at one of the President-elect's favorite restaurants, Le Pavillon. They pulled up in front of the plush establishment. But again, a drawback: Monday night, the place was closed. THEN THE PRESIDENT-elect thought of another restaurant, but he wasn't quite sure of the name. New drawback: No telephone list- It was only 50 minutes before curtain time at the St. James. The man who shortly will become the world's most powerful leader began to look a bit hacked. The procession moved on, minus motorcycle escort to the dismay of casual motorists who tried to break through. Kennedy directed the motorcade to "21," another famous New York feeding establishment. Fortunately it was open, and the joy of the dinner jacketed Maitre d'Hotel at the front door upon sighting the President-elect vanished rapidly when the restaurant host then saw the accompanying secret service men and New York detectives. THE REPORTER called the critic's wife again on the car radio-telephone. Joy without end. The theater had tickets if Salinger would only call, which he did immediately. Kennedy and Stockdale were a few minutes late, but the by-now grateful management held the curtain. The first floor of the St. James had been sold out to a theater party, but some of the considerate patrons swapped seats so the President-elect could have two on the aisle, fourth row. Nuclear Alignment Research Gets Aid Temperatures in a physicist's lab at KU will make midwest winters look red hot by comparison. The ultra-frigid temperatures will be created by Richard C. Sapp, assistant professor of physics, for research on nuclear alignment. The study will be assisted during the coming year by a National Science Foundation grant of $11,600. Working with Prof. Sapp, will be Walter W. Strohm JR., Wichita, and David K. Brice, Sulfur Springs, Tex., graduate students. The physicist said his alignment project is a continuation to some extent of research on "Nuclear Orientation at Low Temperatures" begun in 1958 by J. W. Culvahouse, assistant professor of physics, in collaboration with Prof. Sapp. Such experiments at KU are aided by the helium liquefier, a complicated instrument for producing temperatures as low as 459 degrees Fahrenheit below zero. Physicists can perform experiments in the machine itself or, as in Prof. Sapp's newest study, siphon the liquid helium into a cryostat for experiments involving other equipment. There was loud, prolonged applause as he took his seat. Then the lights went down and Kennedy relaxed for the first time since he left the airport. He seemed to enjoy the rollicking comedy of Silvers and his leading lady, Nancy Walker, as they whirled through a musical comedy about the juke box rackets. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing AT INTERMISSION, the President-elect exercised the privilege of any male theater patron and adjourned to the gentleman's lounge to smoke a cigar. New drawback: Ladies at the door peering at him. He gave up, got a drink at the water fountain and headed back for his seat through a jam of well-wishers, many of whom wanted to tell him of their roles in his election. FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) He was not about to get caught in the crowd again. The instant the show ended, he did not wait for the first curtain call, but raced up the aisle behind his security men and into a waiting car. Camera 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO IT WAS 11:15 P.M. when Kennedy's last relatively free night in Manhattan ended. The next time he's here, he'll be President. There won't be any question about theater tickets and Le Pavillon will be open at any hour of the day or night if he so much as drops a hint. But it won't be as much fun. VI 3-0330 Cuban Gunners Shoot Own Plane by Mistake HAVANA, Cuba — (UPI) — The Cuban press printed a terse announcement today hinting that jumpy anti-aircraft gunners may have shot down one of their own air force planes. The stories said officers and one civilian were killed in the mysterious crash of a Cessna plane near Varadero airfield. They hinted that over-zealous militiamen, tense from a 10-day around-the-clock "invasion" alert, may have shot the aircraft by accident. THE ACCIDENT DREW this comment from the Communist Socialist Party: "In doubly painful tragic circumstances three members of the revolution died . . . victims of painful confusion due to a zeal to fulfill revolutionary duties and a desire not to waste a single minute from Wendt Named WRA Head Women's Recreation Association elected spring semester officers at the W. R. A. Board meeting last night. The officers will be installed the first meeting in February. Heading the organization is Suzy Wendt, Kirkwood, Mo., junior. Other officers are president-elect, Kathy Riedel, Wakeeney sophomore; vice-president, Sue Naylor, St. Louis, Mo., junior; recording secretary, Nancy Lintecum, Prairie Village sophomore; corresponding secretary, Pat Kirby, Kansas City sophomore; and treasurer, Helen Ro Haren, Kansas City senior. Dorothy Hartbauer, Overland, Mo., junior, business manager; Lindsey Easton, Lawrence freshman, publicity manager; Jerry Patterson, Lawrence junior, play day assistant; Joan Berry, Ft. Riley freshman, hockey manager; Marilyn Cromb, Shawnee Mission sophomore, volleyball manager. Individual sports manager, Sonja Halverson, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore; swim meet manager, Linda Larabee, Liberal sophomore; and softball manager, Janice Hoke, Salina sophomore. the tasks required by the fatherland and the revolution." Government-controlled unions today started daily anti-American rallies, which will build up Friday to a "gigantic" demonstration of support for Premier Fidel Castro against the "yankee invasion threat." Jesus Soto, leader of the CTC union federation, described the rallies as "spontaneous" demonstrations of support for Castro and his chief lieutenants and "an overwhelming notification to Yankee imperialism of our determination to conquer our aggressors or die defending the homeland." Individual unions will hold mass meetings in various parts of the city today, tomorrow and Thursday to drum up enthusiasm for Friday's "gigantic concentration" outside Cuba's "White House." The Castroite press linked Cuba's current "invasion" scare yesterday with the annual U.S. Naval Maneuvers now beginning in the Caribbean. AT LEAST FOUR Cuban diplomats have asked for asylum in the United States rather than return to Cuba following the U.S. break of diplomatic relations with the Castro regime. State Department and immigration officials said today their applications are being considered. Hungerford Writes Waterbug Article What may be the world's most complete and authoritative publication on Gerridae has been published as parts 1 and 2 of the 41st volume of the University of Kansas Science Bulletin. Gerridae are waterstriders, those waterbugs that float so easily atop a stream or pond. The authors are Herbert B. Hurgerford, professor emeritus of ontology, and Ryuichi Matsuda, research associate. Their work leading to the publications was financed by successive annual grants from the National Science Foundation since 1956. Two birds on a branch. BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Expert Service - Quality Parts - Guaranteed NOTICE! we will be closed Wednesday, January 11, to prepare for our 1961 GIGANTIC January CLEARANCE SALE! doors will open Thursday, January 12 at 9:30 a.m. DON'T MISS OUR AD IN WEDNESDAY'S PAPER SHOP EARLY SAVE! diebolt's 843 Mass. SHOP EARLY SAVE! e and oanaway of roonon TC nief ngmur the she ayy v's u- a's ay a-ne o- ne toofro o- ai- Tuesday, Jan. 10. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 GRADUATING THIS SEMESTER? GENERAL EDUCATION EXAMINATIONS Keep Up on KU News Next Year With a Subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clip this coupon and mail it or drop by the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall Only $3.00 per semester ($5.00 for a full year) University Daily Kansan Flint Hall, K.U. Lawrence, Kan. Please mail the University Daily Kansan to Name ... Address ... City ... State ... Enclosed Find Check For ☐ $5.00 For One Year ☐ $3.00 For A Semester Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 10, 1961 Hawks Defeat O-State,73-68 Three outstanding individual performances led the Kansas Jayhawkers to a hard fought 73-68 win over scrappy Oklahoma State last night in Stillwater to give Coach Dick Harp's team its second straight Big Eight win. Bill Bridges broke the existing Big Eight career rebounding mark as he snared five caromes for a total of 399. The old mark of 398 was held by Kansas State's All America forward Bob Boozer in 1957-58-59 with 398 Not only was the husky senior the top KU rebounder, but he also led Kansas scoring with 20 points. Bridges hit all four of his field goal attempts in the first half and connected on four of six in the final 20 minutes. The 6-6 center also tallied on four of five attempts from the free throw line. It was a crucial basket by Bridges which gave the Jayhawkers a 61-59 lead late in the game after the hosts had pulled up to tie the battle at 59 all. It was the consistent scoring punch supplied by Wayne Hightower which was greatly responsible for KU maintaining the lead in the second half. The lanky junior totaled 18 markers for the game but hit for 13 in the second half. Hightower's performance continued to move him up the ladder of all-time Kansas scorers as he slipped past mid-fifties Jayhawker star Dallas Dobbs. Hightower has now amassed 843 points in his two seasons to surpass Phi Delts in IM Romp With the highest score of the night Phi Delta Theta downed Triangle 61-15 last night. It was mainly control of the rebounds and good ball handling that enabled the Phi Delt队 to beat Triangle in Fraternity B basketball. In Fraternity C games Sigma Alpha Epsilon beat Delta Upsilons, 30-21, and Beta Theta Pi No. 1 beat Delta Sigma Phi. 41-8. In other Fraternity B games Lambda Chi Alpha beat Tau Kappa Epsilon 31-7, Phi Gamma Delta downed Phi Kappa Tau, 54-28, and Delta Tau Delta beat Sigma Pi, 28-25. Theta Chi topped Delta Sigma Phi, 31-14. Forfeits were awarded to Sigma Nu and Beta Theta Pi over Phi Kappa Theta and Delta Chi respectively. Phi Kappa Theta had to forfeit because they used an ineligible player. --for 60 years Phi Beta Pi and Templin, in Independent C. were both named losses when they failed to show up at the scheduled time. Intramural basketball games to be played tomorrow afternoon and evening are as follows: FRATERNITY A — Tau Kappa Epsilon vs Delta Upsilon, 4:15 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs Sigma Chi, 5:15 — Triangle vs Alpha Tau Omega, 6:15. INDEFENDENT A — Hawks vs One, 7:15. FRATERNITY B — Phi Kappa Psi vs Triangle, 6:30 — Phi Delta Theta vs Sigma Nu, 6:30 — Lambda Chi Alpha vs Phi Kappa Theta, 7:15 — Sigma Chi vs Delta Chi, 7:15. INDEPENDENT C — Carruth-O'Leary vs Zoology, 4:15 — Jim Beam vs Liahoma, 4:15 — Medics vs Templin, 5 — Chemical Engineers vs Joseph R. Pearson, 5 — Cowards vs Templin, 5:45 — Botany vs Phi Beta Pi, 5:45. K-State Picked Sixth While KU Is 18th Ohio State leads the current United Press International basketball ratings for the sixth week in a row. Bradley is second and St. Bonaventure is third. Kansas State placed sixth on the poll. Dobbs' 837 three season total. High- tower now stands as the eighth best scorer in Kansas basketball history. Kansas tied for the 18th spot with DePaul just behind Wichita. Forward Al Correll tied his individual collegiate mark pumping in 14 tallies. He had set this personal mark in the recent conference tourney. The scoring punch of Correll was most felt in the opening minutes of each half. The defense of this trio was also an outstanding factor in the Kansas victory. As a result of the defensive hustle along the KU front line, the Cowboys were forced to depend upon their fine guards for scoring honors. Moe Iba and Fritz Greer, the O-State guards, hit for 20 of the losers' halftime total and 41 points for the game. Greer hustled his way to top scoring honors for the game, which was the second straight league loss for the Cowboys, as he harassed the Hawkers with 23 points. Iba scored 18 points for the losers as he hit on six of six tries from the free throw line. The outstanding shooting by both teams was important. Especially good was the free throw percentages. Kansas made 13 of 15 attempts for 86 per cent. Oklahoma State made 22 of 25 tries for 88 per cent. The field Kansas made 30 of From the field Kansas made 30 of 54 fantasy 50 per cent. The latter, worse, was 27. The general tone of the game was one of careful offensive patterns and hustling defense. Since the biggest lead in the game was KU's 48-40 margin early in the second half, neither team could afford to break loose with any great offensive displays. Kansas resorted to its pattern offense to keep the lead throughout the game, offsetting the same type of offense of the Cowpokes with fewer mistakes and better shooting. As the Jayhawkers prepare for their third straight conference victory, head coach Dick Harp will begin work on his 101st head coaching win. Last night's win gave Harp a 100-58 mark for his five plus seasons at KU and William Jewell. FG FT TH Hightower 8 2 18 Correll 5 4 14 Bridges 8 4 20 Gardner 3 0 6 Ellison 4 2 10 Ketchum 2 1 5 Kansas (73) Totals ... 30 13 73 | | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Epperley | 4 | 5 | 13 | | Miller | 2 | 1 | 5 | | Bunch | 4 | 1 | 9 | | Iba | 6 | 6 | 18 | | Greer | 7 | 9 | 23 | | Totals | — | — | — | 23 22 68 Oklahoma State (68) Haltime: Kansas 38- Oklahoma State 34 KANSAS 44 Bill Bridges set a new Big Eight conference rebounding record last night in the Kansas win over Oklahoma State. The Hobbs, N. Mex., senior has grabbed 399 rebounds to eclipse the old mark set by Kansas States' Bob Boozer who was an All America forward in 1959. Two Placed on NCAA Probation PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — The NCAA today placed the University of North Carolina and Loyola University of New Orleans on probation for one year and barred their basketball teams from competing in the National Collegiate Basketball Championships and any other invitational basketball events. Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA, said Arizona escaped penalty because the school made its own investigation on recruiting irregularities and reported voluntarily to the NCAA. The university president also has declared his intention not to renew the appointments of two assistant football coaches involved in the irregularities. The NCAA also placed the University of Arizona on probation for one year but did not impose any sanctions. The sanctions against North Carolina and Loyola also bar them from such tournaments as the National Invitational Tournament and the Holiday Festival. The coaches named were end coach Van Howe and line coach Ron Marcinaik, whose contracts expire this June. All three probations were effective immediately. Try the Kansan Want Ads Jim Beam Wins Fall Bowling Title In the fall league playoff held last weekend the Jim Beam Sleepers bowled a total of 5865 pins to edge the Newman Club which scored 5840. The champions posted an 845 for their first game Saturday afternoon to start their bid for hill bowling champions. The five bowlers dropped a little their second game as they scored 746 but they came back strong to finish Saturday's games of the playoff with an 816 and a 2907 handicap series. The Newman Club bowlers started strong, posting games of 824, 800 and 708 during Saturday's bowling to total 2936 for their handicap series. This total put them in top position as they led the Jim Beam Sleepers by 29 pins. Sunday the Newman Club broke the 800 mark only once, scoring 896 for the playoff hi-ten. Their other two scores for the day were 666 and 738 which gave them a playoff total of 5840 pins. Once again the Jim Beam Sleepers started their day's bowling with a good game as they scored 812. They stayed in the 800 range their second game with an 867, and then dropped slightly, putting together another good game with 787 pins. The Sunday total of 2943 gave the Jim Beam Sleepers a playoff total of 5865 pins, topping the second place Newman Club, by 29 pins. Elliott's team of the women's division scored 2500 pins to win the women's playoff which was held Saturday afternoon. Kansas Fencers Lose To Detroit; Beat I-State Highly-rated Detroit University edged KU, 16-11, to capture first place in a triangular fencing meet Saturday at Ames, Iowa. Host team, Iowa State, lost to both KU and Detroit to place third. In this meet individual fencers competed in only one of the events, spee, foil or saber, in the three-event match. Three fencers from a team made up a squad for each event and competed against all three members of the opposing squad in the event, thus making nine individual matches in each of the three events and 27 in the meet. The Jayhawkers won only one 9-match squad event, the epee, 7-2, over the Detroit team. They lost, 5-4, in the foil squad event and were shut out. 9-0, in the saber. Against Iowa State the Jayhawks captured two of the three squad events, the epee, 7-2, the foil, 6-3, and lost the saber 5-4, defeating the Cyclones. 17-10. John Dillard, KU captain, and Paul Shaffer, were high men for KU in the foil event for the entire meet. Each won five matches while losing one. Tom Palmitesta, a member of the KU three-man saber squad, lost his six matches after suffering a bruised hand in the first match against Detroit. Herb Kasold and Meredith Wilson won five and lost one as high KU scorers in the epee squad event. "We did very well against the Detroit team," John Giele, KU fencing coach said today. "They have one of the best teams in the Midwest. This match was kind of a warm-up for Detroit's meeting with the Air Force Academy this week." The match was the first of the year for the KU team. The next meet is scheduled for Jan. 30, here, against the University of Illinois. The team will journey to Colorado Springs on Feb. 18 for a triangular meet with the Air Force Academy and another school yet to be selected. Meet results: **Event** **KU** **Detroit** Epee 7 2 Foil 4 5 Saber 0 9 Total 11 16 **Event** **KU** **IS** Epee 7 2 Foil 6 3 Saber 4 5 Total 17 10 Individual Kansas scoring, all events; FOIL — John Dillard (team captain), and Paul Shaffer, 5-1, and Floyd Dillon, 0-6. EPEE — Herb Kasold and Meredith Wilson, 5-1 and Stan Patterson, 4-2. SABER — Steve Corson, 3-3, Tom Palmitesta, 0-6, and Mike Harris, 1-5. Phi Epsilon Kappa Names Officers Stan Patterson, Lawrence junior, was sworn in as president of KU's professional Physical Education fraternity, Phi Epsilon Kappa, at the fraternity's annual installation Friday. Other officers installed were Jim Talley, De Soto junior, vice president; Wendal Parker, Leavenworth senior, secretary; John Hanson, Tonganoxe senior, treasurer; Dan Gomez, Hutchinson graduate student. sergeant at arms; Bob Abbey, Schnectady, N. Y.; senior, historian; and Dean Barnes, senior, guide. BOSTON — (UPI) — Ted Williams had a batting average of .406 in 1941, the last major leaguer to hit over .400 for a full season. Ted Was Last NOW! At 7:00 & 9:20 DEDUAH KERR ROBERT MITCHUM MITCHUM USTINOV THE SUNDOWNERS DYNAMIC JOHNS DINA MERRILL TECH #COLOR Authorized by BOOKLAND LENNABY Directed by PEYZEL ZHIMMER MANHE GRANADA TREATRE...Telephone VOICE 3-5781 PARSONS JEWELRY with quality products 725 MASS. Serving the community VI 3-4266 11 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "BEST PICTURE" I METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S PRESENTATION OF BEN HUR TECHNICOLOR LAST TWO DAYS! FIRE IN CAMERA 65 Evenings only at 7:30 $1.25 Tuesday. Jan. 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS coke 896 ther and total eeep with 812. their then ther pins. the total conds. di- the held e all cap and ere- tter- Tom Harris, ninor, KU'sation atation Jim resl- ven- Han- urer; luate Ab- his- nor, LOST Wil- .406 er to Lost: Black Leather Purse, containing money and drivers license. If found return to Business Office, Strong Hall, KU. No questions asked... 1-10 WANTED LADIES' EYEGLASSES, black front, gold earpiece. no case. Missing since Dec. 15. Reward. Call VI 2-1340, Beverly Weaver. 1-16 FRESHMAN MALE who is interested in football and who would be interested in managing a football team. Notify James TI 0-204 or Clyde Kensington, 7514. 1-12 WRITER of comedy to write for a comedy team from London www.writer.com Renslinger VI 3-7514 1-12 TYPING Experienced typist — term papers, mnuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompts are accurate work, reasonable skills. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I. C. Calv 3 M-7485. EXPERIENCIED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tph Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter. Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work. Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hai, VI 3-2318 t. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonablerate. Mrs. Barlow. 40 W. 18 W. VI. 2f- 18 Mrs. Barlow. 40 W. 18 W. VI. 2f- 18 TYPING WANTED-theses. term papers, sports, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell. V1-10 6440 Experienced typist — will type theses, term papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tf Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920. tt Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tt Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley VI 2-1487. vi TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason-able rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-9554. tf TYPING. Themes, term papers, etc. typed with neatness and accuracy by ex- perienced typist. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Alvin Johnson. VI 3-9577. 1-12 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney. VI 3-8568. tf FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard rates Call VI 5-3131 Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. ttc Wish to join or form car pool from Over- door to Manchester. Five-time a week. Call RA 2-4725. 1-13 STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-9042. TRANSPORTATION NOTICE MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of stx-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. lenth, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . 0350. HOME COOKED MEALS served family style at mrs. Metsken's, 721 MO. VI 3-4094. Make reservations. Dinner at 5:30 p.m. WEDDING INVITATIONS — Call for appointment to see invitations, napkins, thank you folders, etc. Excellent quality, low in price. Phone VI 3-4206. 1-13 FOR RENT 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bath rent reduced. Phona, VI 3-9776 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. tf VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf FOR RENT: 2 or 3 boys, large furnished recreation room apt. Private bath, utilities paid. Jack Hawk. 2417 Ohio. 1-12 If you like to live very close to the campus, one and one-half blocks from the library or apartment is available now. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6969 for appointment. 1-10 SIX ROOM lower apartment, newly furnished, private bath and entrance, off street parking lot, 1200 Neff大厦, per month. Phone 325-8304 or VI 3-8501 after 5 p.m. 1-10 NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room, steam heat, phone, private entrance and bath. $15 per month. Linens furnished. Also clean two room furnished apartment, private entrance and phone. $26.50 per month, bills paid. Close to campus: Available next semester. Phone VI 3- 7830. 1-10 NICE PLACE TO LIVE—new two bedroom apartment, unfurnished except for new Frigidaire refrigerator, electric and authentic washer. Onward from UniFi's Best of neighbors. Private parking. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-8534. 1-11 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six baths, a bath and a entrance. Utilities paid. No married. Married only. 520 Ohio. **tt** BOARD AND ROOM next semester. VI 3-485. 1-10 3 ROOM furnished house. $55 per month. 2 bedroom house, $65. Newly painted. very nice furnished 3 room private apartment, $80. T. A. Hemphill, M. 3902. 1-12 1956 PLYMOUTH. 2-door sedan, 6 cylinder, Standard transmission. Radio, heater, chains. Economical transportation. 8755 oak. Must sell. Call V-11 oak after 7 p.m. ROOMS—graduate men prefixed. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture and facilities. Additional study and recreation room available. 1221 Oread, 6798. 1-12 FOR SALE: 1957 '21' console Syvania barrels 95 lb 18-inch 45 lb barrels V 1-26.12 after 6:30 L 1-12 ROOMS FOR MEN STUDENTS: Do you need a quiet room? Have four singles, two doubles for second semester. Rent reduced. Call VI 3-9340 after 5 p.m. for appointment to see. Three blocks east of KU. 1-13 6 FOOT, FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 up Johnson motor. All new, including railer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. VI 2-0479. 1-13 REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf FOR SALE FIRST OF THE YEAR SPECIALS! Full line of new and used mobile homes. Gome, see and talk with me at 7th and Arkansas. V 2-1056 or VI 3-7143. 1-11 DIAMOND RING. 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Worn at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and diagrams and diagrams Complete cross index. Price $3.00. For your call copy V1 2-1065. FOR SALE. 1955 one bedroom Safeway trailer owner. Equipped with a one ton storage space. Excellent condition. Phone VW7912 after 5 p.m., except weekends. 1-12 1955 RANCH WAGON, $750; or 1951 Lincoln, $285. Both in excellent condition. Call VI 3-3231. 1-13 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE. Two door with radio and hearth. Low mileage. In very good condition. Can be seen at 554 La. after 5 p.m. or call VI 3-2599. 1-800-769-2121 23 FOOT TRAILER. sleeps six. Will take smaller trailer in trade or will finance for responsible parties with reasonable down payment. 933 Rhode Island. 1-11 RENAULT-DAUPHINE, 1959. Four door sedan, white, like, new throughout. One window, less than nine inches. Handsome, onewindow, economical cane. Going missing. must sell. CV I 3-1943. 1-10 MODEL 58 Automatic 10 gauge shotgun and assortment of shells. Also Kay auditorium size guitar. Both in perfect condition. Call VI 2-0503 after 5 p.m. 1-12 For Sale: Good condition Gretsch guitar. case. Call Robert Jontzt. I3-5770. 1-10 1953 CHEVROLET: Two door, radio, heater, $175 or nearest offer. Also will trade "Hemmi" chemical engineer's slide door; "receiver slide rule in equally good condition." said Rangan KG Expt. 498 between 4 and 5 point or see at 102-1 1-12 G 1951 Semi-convertible Rambler. Blue. $241.37, Call Dr. Dance, KU 374 or VI 2- 1117 after 7 p.m. 1-12 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 393% Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. **If** BUSINESS SERVICES PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; common topics; formerly known as the Tetra notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest studio equipment, Studio 64, Missouri. Phone VI 3-868-88. 9f 3-DAY FINISHING, 35 mm or movie film by Eastman — Raney Drug Store, Hillcrest Shopping Center. 1-11 Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 WILL BABYSIT at my home all day. Babysit inquez, 836 Mississippi, to 7:30 p.m. 1-12 MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Grant's weekdays 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ferries, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything must be kept clean. Fish orsects or department needs. Phone VI 3- 2921 or better still. come. Welcome tf Between $70 & $100 per month PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions. Give the answer $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. Rental Payment HOUSE FOR RENT Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551. tf - unfurnished - - available immediately --only $39950 Call Moore Associates VI 3-2571 ANNOUNCING ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA America's Standard Authority Since 1829 Now available to college students on a time payment basis. No previous credit record necessary! (Levantercraft binding. Prices of other bindings, to $600, on request) Small down payment and monthly payments as low as $15.00 Student owners of this great work at K.U. include: Richard Barnes, College William D. Baxter, Gr-Biol. E. M. Caple E. M. Caple John W. Coleman, Med. James W. Coy, College David E. Crawford, College Danny Crouse, Fine Arts John A. Davis, Grad. T. E. Davis, Arch. Larry P. Dike, College Peter Falkner, College Max F. Fuller, Educ. Brandford Giddings, Chem. Gary Hale, Journalism Keith W. Harper, Engr. Don W. Hataway, College John Hedrick, Ind. Mgmt. Richard Hensleigh, College Robert Hilke, Engr. James E. Hoffman, Med. Fred Jones Jr., Grad. Dennis Kindswater, Engr. Robert J. Korte, Pharm. David Leslie, Zool. Richard McClain, Bus. Dennis Mallory, Educ. Gordon Mantz D. E. Marsh, Engr. Donald Martin, Law Ed Melby, Grad. Jessie Milan, Grad. James Miller, Pol. Sci. Ivory V. Nelson, Grad. Stephen K. Neweomer, Bus. Rex D. Parsons, Law Ira G. Paulin, College Don Fünstreuter, Educ. Dan D. Powers, Gr-Chem. Joseph Puglies, Arch. Kenneth P. Ring, Gr-Geog. Charles Rogers, Fine Arts James O. Sampson, Math. Gerald Shockley, Engr. Jerry C. Smith, College Franz I. Stangl, Fine Arts Ronald Tagg, Grad. John Wellman, Gr-Zool. Gary White, Fine Arts John E. Wilkinson, Law James E. Young, Bus. Encyclopedia Americana - College Division - San Francisco, Calif. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 10. 1961 Woodrow Wilson Group to Aid KU Graduate Research KU will receive $6,000 from the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation to support advanced graduate students and to strengthen graduate education in general. The Foundation said grants totaling $1,814,000 will be given to 75 graduate schools in the United States and Canada. Other Big Eight schools receiving grants are the University of Colorado, $7,000, and the University of Oklahoma, $4,000. Size of the grants is based on the number of Woodrow Wilson Fellows currently enrolled in the respective graduate schools. The grants need not be awarded to Woodrow Wilson Fellows, but must be used mainly for the support of graduate students KU Gets Grant for Summer Institutes A total of $155,755 will be provided to KU in support of three summer institutes for science and mathematics teachers. The National Science Foundation donated $141,040 and the Atomic Energy Commission provided $14,715 to this program in its fifth year at KU. The institutes are part of a vast program to improve the teaching of science and mathematics by upgrading the qualifications of teachers and familiarizing them with the newest developments in their fields. This year 38 college or university teachers and 65 high school teachers will receive the standard National Science Foundation stipend of $75 a week with $15 a week allowances for dependents. The largest grant. $100,800, is for an 8-week KU program on mathematics for 30 college and 45 high school teachers. Western Civilization Review Sessions Set The Western Civilization department will conduct final review sessions for the Western Civilization examination from 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in Bailey Auditorium. The final examination will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication, not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewer will be Charles Romine, Pers. Dir., Jefferson Co. Schools. Lakewood, Colo. (Elem. & Secondary.) Nurses' Club. 7 to 8 p.m. 110 Fraser Election of next semester's officers. Humanities Forum. 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Speaker, Prof. Edward F. Grier, assoc. prof. of English, "Reading Whitman Manuscripts." Naval Reserve Research Co. 7:30 p.m. Room 104, Military Science Bld. "Sea- man" Navy in Space, LCDR C. F. ALLEN, USN, CR, USN & MCTC, Topka" Math Club & Pi Mu Epsilon. 7:30 p.m. Parlor A, Karla Union. Prof. John B. Baker, Jr. at Attorney "A." Color Film, "The Thinking Machine." Refreshments. "Everyone invited!" Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church. 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Cantonment Mass follows. 8:45 a.m. Canterbury House. Jay Janes. 5 p.m. Room 306. Kansas Union. THURSDAY Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewers are: C. Fred Colvin. Asst. Supt. (el. & sec.) Wichita, Kan. Asst. Supt. (adj. & sec.) 49 (mus. & le) 46-20, Forest Park, Kan. Philosophy Club. 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union, William Earle,匠 of Philosophy at Northwestern University, on "The Immorality of Moralism." Medical Dames. 8 p.m. Kansa. Union Guest speakers Dean C. Arden Miller & Dr. R.C. Mills will discuss the KU Medical School Program. Never underestimate the cunning of a single woman aged 30.—Robert Molander interested in college teaching careers, during their second or later years of training. Three Woodrow Wilson Fellows who entered KU last fall are Sandra Irsay, Arlington, Va., economics; Jessie Ann Root, Overland Park, French, and Fred Allen Womack Jr., Fort Worth, Tex., mathematics. Second-year Fellows are Donald Ellensteine, Gardner, economics; A.W. Smalley, Shreveport, La, chemistry; Robert L. Woodley, Toppea, English; and David P. Young, Ferguson, Mo., chemistry. During the 1960-61 academic year, fellowships were awarded to 13 KU seniors, a number exceeded at only two publicly supported universities in the nation. An unprecedented number of first-year Woodrow Wilson fellowship nominations, totaling 10,700 and representing an increase of 24 per cent over the previous year, are being processed by the Foundation's regional committee. Winners for the 1961-62 academic year will be announced in mid-March. Approximately 5,000 GOP supporters flocked to the Municipal Auditorium in Topeka last night to meet incoming Gov. John Anderson, his wife and state officials and to attend the formal Inaugural Ball. 5,000 to Topeka For Inaugural Ball It seemed to be an evening for waiting. Men waited in lines the length of the auditorium to check their coats. At least a thousand formally dressed couples waited in lines crisscrossing the flag-decorated downstairs of the auditorium to meet and congratulate the new governor and his official family. Long lines of people surrounded the ballroom floor and waited for the governor and his wife to enter from a hidden platform and lead the Grand March. Uniformed guardsmen and the Topeka and Olathe high school band members formed an interesting contrast with the silks and satins worn by the governor's guests. Several KU couples attended the ball. One who has given serious thought to his own future will not speak disparagingly of dust.—George R. Walker Laotian Premier Says Soviet Troops Have Joined Invasion VENTIANE, Loas — (UPI) — The pro-Western government of Premier Boun Oum charged today that Soviet troops had joined those from Communist North Viet Nam in an invasion of Laotian territory. There was no confirmation from Western sources. Information minister Bouavan Norasing told a news conference that "three battalions" of Russians, Vietminh and Pathet Lao troops took part in the attack on Laotian territory. (In London, a foreign office spokesman said Britain had no evidence to support reports from Vientiane that Russian troops are fighting in Laos alongside Red Viet Minh and Pathet Lao guerrilla forces.) Bouavan based his charge on a report received from Col. Kham Khong, government commander at Paksane to the east of this administrative capital. The report also said that "one division" of Communist Viet Minh troops were moving by road from the town of Hong Het to Ban Ban, another town in the province of Xlieng Khoung which borders North Viet Nam. In Washington, Soviet Ambassador Mikhail A. Menshikov today held a 30-minute talk with Secretary of State Christian A. Herter on the crisis in war-torn Laos. Menshikov, accompanied by an aide, emerged grim-faced from the session but acknowledged in response to questioning, that the conference concerned the southeast Asian kingdom. The Russians and Americans have repeatedly accused each other of intervening in the internal affairs of Laos. The United States is supplying military aid to the rightist government of Premier Prince Boun and Russian planes are airlifting war material to the Communist-led forces of the Pathet Lao. Three fourths of our teachers are women, many of them young and quite likely to use extra money to buy pretty dresses. The outcome (of indiscriminate doubling of salaries) would be earlier marriage, motherhood, and one less teacher.—Francis Keppel DR. FROOD IS SPEECHLESS! MAKE MONEY! Dr. Frood is unable to answer letter from perplexed student. Your help needed. Lucky Strike will pay $200 for best reply to this letter: LUCKY STRIKE CLASS A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED" CIGARETTES Dear Dr. Frood: How can a man such as yourself be so wrong so often, so stupid so consistently and yet, at the same time, have the intelligence, good sense and outstanding good taste to smoke, enjoy and recommend the world's finest cigarette--Lucky Strike? Perplexed If you were Dr. Frood, how would you answer this letter? Send us your answer in 50 words or less. Try to think as Frood thinks, feel as Frood feels. For instance, his answer might be "HAVEN'T YOU EVER HEARD OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?" You can do better. All entries will be judged on the basis of humor, originality and style (it should be Froodian). Lucky Strike, the regular cigarette college students prefer, will pay $200 to the student who, in the opinion of our judges, sends the best answer to the letter above. All entries must be postmarked no later than March 1, 1961. Lean back, light up a Lucky and THINK FROOD. Mail your letter to Lucky Strike, P. O. Box 15F, Mount Vernon 10, New York. Enclose name, address, college or university and class. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! A. T. Co. Product of The American Ribaeco Company -- "Ribaeco is our middle name" Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 58th Year, No.68 Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 TOPEKA — (UPI)— The Kansas House of Representatives today unanimously passed a bill which would raise the pay of legislative officers, clerks and employees as the 1961 session of the legislature moved into its second day. No Incidents As Negroes Enter University of Georgia Classes ATHENS, Ga. — (UPI)— Two Negro students reported without incident today for their first classes at the University of Georgia. Only the silent stares of fellow students greeted the arrival of Hamilton Holmes and Charlayne Hunter, both of Atlanta, when they showed up for classes at 9 a.m. They were ordered admitted to the University by federal courts. A GROUP OF girls in Miss Hunter's dormitory, outside which a boisterous student demonstration In Atlanta, State Treasurer George B. Hamilton said he is with-holding funds totaling $2,152,901 from the school until a 1956 law severing state funds from an integrated school is clarified. Hamilton said he was not named in a federal injunction prohibiting the governor and the state auditor from cutting off the funds. Auditor B. E. Thrasher said the school could run for a month without the funds. Rep. Edward Beaman, R.-Hoyt, who introduced the bill, said it would be the first raise granted in "12 to 15 years." House Passes Bill to Raise Pay Salaries for the officers and employees were raised an average of $1 to $3 a day. The secretary of the senate and chief clerk of the house would get $1,800 for a general session and $624 for a budget session under the bill. There would be an additional $12 a day for preparing the index to the Legislative Journal. The House also approved a routine resolution setting up procedures and fees for obtaining legislative documents before adjourning until tomorrow. took place last night, accompanied her to her first class in psychology on the main campus. Holmes was picked up in a residential section shortly before 9 a.m. by Dean of Men William Tate who then took him on a leisurely ride around the campus before they went in through a back door of the biology building for classes. Tate himself had difficulty finding Holmes' classroom and they wandered through a number of corridors before finding the proper room, a large empty theater-type laboratory. Dr. R. B. McGee of Bristol, Tenn., head of the zoology department shook hands with Holmes at the entrance of the lab and the Negro went to a seat on the front row. ABOUT 15 STUDENTS were in the lab lecture room at the time. No one sat next to Holmes but students were in the row right behind him. Most students have accepted the arrival of the two Negroes with considerable calm. One girl in Miss Hunter's dormitory said her father had telephoned he was coming for her but she told him in tears that she liked the University and had no intention of going home because of the Negro girl's appearance. Miss Hunter stayed in her dormitory room last night and heard the echoes of the demonstrations outside. She was welcomed to the dormitory yesterday by a delegation of approximately 15 girls who said they would "make her welcome." Holmes said he spent last night in Atlanta where he had gone to "pick up some clothes." TATE ADVISED Holmes about conducting himself should there be any demonstrations or harsh words from students. Tate told Holmes the University was fortunate to have him and Miss Hunter as the first representatives of their race on the campus inasmuch as "you both seem to be serious students." Holmes said he had gotten along 'much better than I expected" in its registration attempts here. Holmes will live off campus but under university regulations. Miss Hunter is required to live in a dormitory or a sorority house. Post-Korean Veterans May Get GI Bill Aid WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough, D-Tex., and 30 other senators sponsored legislation today which would make 4.5 million post-Korean war veterans eligible for the G.I. Bill of Rights. An identical bill passed the Senate last year, 57-31 but died in the House veterans committee. YARBOROUGH said the bill was patterned after the World War II and Korean War acts but that the benefits were scaled down. Medical Aid Urged for Aged It would provide educational benefits for those who served between Jan. 31, 1955 and July 1, 1963. WASHINGTON —(UPI)—A special task force today urged President-Elect John F. Kennedy to push for a broad plan of medical aid to the aged under social security. The proposal would cover 14.5 million persons at an annual cost of about $1 billion. Guest Speaker Set For Philosophy Club William Earle, professor of philosophy from Northwestern University, will speak to the Philosophy Club at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "The Immorality of Morality." The report was given to Kennedy before he completed a busy day of activities in New York and flew to Washington for an afternoon of conferences on space and the gold problem. The medical aid task force was headed by Dr. Wilber J. Cohen, professor of public welfare administration at the University of Michigan. It recommended legislation which would go considerably beyond the Kennedy-Anderson Bill which failed to pass Congress last year. Kennedy, who is returning tonight to his pre-inaugural retreat in Palm Beach, Fla., arrived here at 2:17 p.m. (EST). The billion-dollar program would be financed by increasing social security withholding taxes by one half of one per cent. Of this amount, one fourth would be paid by the employer and one-fourth by the employee. Reds May Launch Space Spectacular WASHINGTON — (UFI) — Russia has deployed three missile tracking ships in the Pacific in a move that may indicate some new space spectacular is in the works, the Navy reported today. The ships appeared to be bearing down on an area in the Pacific, 1,050 miles southeast of Oahu, Hawaii, where previous Russian missiles have been fired. The Navy said that late yesterday the three ships were in a large triangular ocean area centered 1,200 miles west of Oahu. The nearest ship was 400 miles west of Midway Island. On their present course and at the 10-knot speed they are making, the Navy said the ships should reach the previous impact area by Saturday. The area consists of 44,800 square miles. The veterans would receive one and one-half days schooling for each day of service, not to exceed 36 months. Payments would be $110 monthly for single veterans and up to $165 a month for a married veteran with two children. Yarborough said 46 percent of draft-age men are inducted and that the other 54 per cent have "a head start in the economic struggle unless these veterans are furnished some educational training." IT ALSO would provide for guaranteed home and farm loans and for vocational rehabilitation for disabled veterans and for on-the-job training programs. He said professional and technical training for the 4,500,000 veterans will aid the national economy "and greatly improve the attitude and moral of men called to service." Hemingway Ill at Clinic ROCHESTER, Minn. — (UPI) — The Mayo Clinic announced today that novelist Ernest Hemingway, who entered the famed diagnostic institution Nov. 30 under an assumed name, is being treated for hypertension. A brief clinic announcement said Hemingway's condition "is regarded as satisfactory." "HE HAS RECEIVED no surgical treatment and none is contemplated," the Clinic said. "It is necessary, however, that his right to privacy be respected and that he have the benefits of rest and quiet." Hypertension is an abnormally high arterial blood pressure. It is at times accompanied by organic changes such as in nephritis and diabetes, and by nervousness, headaches and dizziness. But the announcement did not elaborate beyond naming the ailment. Weather KANSAS--Generally fair with little change in temperature this afternoon, tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 20 to 24. High Thursday 45 to 50. Civil Rights Bill Tabled by ASC Tom Kurt blasted the All Student Council for "cowardice and the inability to meet its responsibilities" last night after the Council tabled the resolution on racial justice. The Council voted 9-7 to table the National Student Association committee's resolution before any discussion was brought up. THE RESOLUTION ENCOURAGES SELECTIVE BUYING and student boycotts against merchants who discriminate, to further the interest of equality of all races and creeds. It says in part that "we commit ourselves, as students, to attack discrimination and to work toward establishing social justice." After the resolution was tabled, Kurt, graduate representative, said: "I am disappointed in the Council's action. I think it showed cowardice and inability to meet our responsibilities if we don't bring this out into the open. "AS A COUNCIL WE MUST ALWAYS EXERCISE LEADERSHIP and action on all issues concerning student rights and we are failing the students here." Max Eberhart, Great Bend junior representing the fraternity district, asked that the Council make a more thorough study of the resolution before adopting it. "The NSA committee concerns only a few people but the ASC represents the entire student body," Eberhart said. "The passage of JOHN HALDREY THOMAS L. KURT "The tabling shows a lack of courage . . ." this resolution will be of importance to the students, the city of Lawrence and the state legislature." Integration and racial justice have been issues on campus since last spring when nearly 100 Negro students marched in protest of student body president Ron Dalby's endorsement of the All Big Eight President's resolution which condemned sit-ins. THIS YEAR RACIAL JUSTICE HAS BECOME A TOPIC OF controversy on campus since the Civil Rights Council announced two weeks ago a boycott of two local taverns that discriminated against serving Negroes. The ASC's discrimination resolution has been tabled since late October in various committees. Two other resolutions were referred to special committees for further consideration. The tutor-pupil matching service resolution again came before the Council after three months in the ASC Labor committee. The resolution was first brought before the council on Nov. 29, 1960. THE LABOR COMMITTEE REPORTED THAT UNIVERSITY department heads interviewed felt that the service would be feasible but were not sure the ASC could successfully conduct such a service. Kurt recommended that the Council put the service on a trial basis for one semester. He also suggested that a KU-Y adviser supervise the service with the consent of the KU-Y cabinet. The resolution was sent to the committee on committees until the KU-Y cabinet makes a decision. Another resolution, also introduced by Kurt, was sent to the labor committee. It calls for an investigation of student wages and hiring standards. Kurt said that he felt students were working at much too low a salary level. Kirk Cottingham, Newton senior and chairman of elections, announced that spring ASC elections would be March 21-22 for the primaries with the general elections March 28-29. PAUL CACIOPPO, OVERLAND PARK SENIOR, AND RUEben McCornack, Abilene freshman, are the only two University Party or independent candidates for student body president remaining. The other candidates were disqualified last night for missing the meeting. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 Let the People Say HAS THERE EVER BEEN A PROBLEM IN the history of mankind with as many complexities and ramifications as is presented by the current fight for the equality of human rights? Though the problem has been with the United States since this country's founding, it was at first a sectional problem. Then it spread up from the South, down from the North, and out from the East until it became of major concern in Lawrence, Kansas. Now it is. There has been and is discrimination in Lawrence which affects University students. Now all are effected. Whether it is a Lawrence merchant, a home-owner or a student, each person has had the issue stand before him. He can either back away and ignore it, or face it and determine some course of action. In the past, it was possible to be rational and aloof. It was always happening in Little Rock or Mobile or Atlanta—not here—we had no problem here. We did, of course, but it was not an overt problem. THE ALL STUDENT COUNCIL HAD THE issue squarely in front of it last night in the form of a resolution to be voted on and it backed away a few paces to reflect and consider. Several members said they personally did not want to act without deliberation. Others expressed bitter disappointment over the Council's failure to act on the issue. The resolution was tabled—a measure which pigeonholes it until the next meeting. It was a moderately strong proposal, first presented in October. Apparently this course will be taken at each future meeting to escape decision. Was this cowardly? Irresponsible? Or an example of the Council's ineptitude? Certainly not. It was a reflection of the magnitude of the dilemma. How could it be expected that the group could solve the problem when others, more directly concerned, have been searching for the answer for over 100 years? THE ASC WAS SEEKING, AS THE REPresentative student government of the University, to set forth the school's position. This is the organization's purpose and obligation. However, this is a precedent-setting issue. Though representative of the student body, the ASC is not qualified to speak for 10.012 individuals on an issue that involves sentiments as personal as one's fundamental beliefs. But something must be done. The resolution has been submitted, discussed, referred to committees, discussed again and tabled. The Council must take some action for this is a case when inaction booms forth louder than any forward step. It is for this reason that the Daily Kansan believes the Council should not be empowered to act on the issue. The issue should be taken out of the Council's hands until it is assured by some indication of either the approval or rejection of the resolution by a majority of those concerned—the student body. THIS COULD BE DONE BY A REFERENDum. It would require that 20 per cent of the students sign a petition for a referendum to be submitted to the Council.The Council must then set a voting date within seven days of receipt of the petition. The Daily Kansan recommends that this action be initiated by the ASC at its next meeting on Feb. 7. In no way would this be a usurpation of responsibility or power vested in the Council. It would be a solution to the first step in the dilemma: What is the position of the University student body? The will of the majority, voiced by a referendum, would give the Council the directions it has failed to take before. OTHERWISE, THE WEIGHT OF DECISION will grow heavier until the ASC is finally forced into a decision that speaks for the personal principles and philosophies of the representatives rather than those they represent. The Editors Lousy Logic We have waited in vain for five days for the Lawrence Journal-World to print the second half of their January 6 lead editorial. It was impossible for us to believe that the newspaper would print such a compilation of half truths and distortions without further amplification. But now it is evident that the editorial is going to be allowed to stand on its own merits—which leaves it in a very shaky position. So we will explore the editorial and attempt to glean some semblance of reason and purpose for its existence. First the paper says "...a goodly number of the wild hare activities fostered by the students are the products of the imagination of out-of-state students." THEN THE PAPER QUALIFIES THIS profound observation by saying there "is nothing wrong with out-of-state students." Then it qualifies the qualification by stating that "most of them" are valuable additions to the campus and show proper conduct. Next, with nothing more than the premise that not all out-of-state students are living up to the Journal-World's accepted code of ethics (whatever they are), it points out "how often the most troublesome student malcontents hail from such states as New York, New Jersey," etc. At least it professes to point this out. How often do they hail from other states? We always assumed an accusation required some documentation. Where is the second half of that editorial showing readers some fads? Of course this perverted line of reasoning was carried to its absurd conclusion. We find it worked something like this: 1. "Wild-hare antics" at colleges are bad. 2. Some anties are fostered by out-of-state students. 3. Therefore out-of-state students are bad. From this one "immediately gets the impression that home-bred youngsters are a little less" bad. THIS IS A REVELATION IN THINKING. Imagine what one can do to in-state students with this line of reasoning. Take a hypothetical case. 1. Kansans read about a Kansas boy who murdered his parents. 2. The boy was a student at KU. This is easy to counter. One third of the Hilltoppers in the current Jayhawker, who are designated such by the annual for outstanding service to the University, are out-of-state students. 3. Therefore, one can figure that home-bred youngsters at KU are a little less restrained in their manners than out-of-state students. The only attempt at giving the editorial some meaning was by pointing out that KU students are Rhodes scholars. LET'S FACE FACTS. FOR EVERY Accomplishment by a home-bred youngster we can cite one by an "outlander." For every so-called "wild hare" activity involving an out-of-stater we can cite one involving a Kansas youth. Is it the activities of the Civil Rights Council?—headed incidentally, by Kansas students. Was it the trip to Cuba taken by some KU students over Christmas who wanted to see for themselves what was going on there? So what is it the Journal-World is talking about? The point of the editorial escapes us, chiefly because there was none. It must have been in the second half that wasn't published. The Journal-World must have been attempting to criticize the activities of some students. If so, it failed. It did not have the courage nor honesty to be specific. Ray Miller STUDENT BODY RACIAL JUSTICE RESOLUTION ASC ASC EATON EU DAILY EANSAN-PB1 "Think we should toss it up to him?" Sound and Fury By Edward Lopatin NYC graduate student The ASC resolution, which appeared in your paper Jan. 9, pointed out that public places should obey public laws and ethics. However, private places (such as country clubs, brotherhoods and fraternities) are not in the public domain and therefore, "cannot be mandated by sheer force." These private places, however, should be made to see the "ethical light" through an educative process the resolution continued. I AM CONFUSED BY ALL THIS, AND THE CONFUSION is due to the words "public" and "private" and their ethical implications. I would like to know what the ASC means by "public." Is "public" that word marked on the store owner's license and nothing more? If this is all "public" means then there is no question of ethics involved. Is "public" rather a word we devise in framing laws in order that certain of our ethical compulsions shall be realized? "Public" may mean more than this, but this is all it need mean in this discussion, for we are here concerned with ethical considerations, unless I have terribly misinterpreted the resolution. SINCE THE ASC SAYS "WE BELIEVE THAT PERSONS and merchants open to the public operate in the public domain, and can be justifiably enforced to obey public laws and ethics," I take it it is talking about the latter "public." In that case, what is the difference, ethically speaking, between the tavern owner and, say, the brotherhood when it comes to refusing service because of race? What, ASC, will you say when the tavern owner says that he doesn't want to serve people with white skin and the brotherhood says that it does not want to admit people with white skin? Will you say, "You, tavern owner, beware of 'sheer force' since you are operating a public business; and you, brotherhood, don't have to worry as much as he does, since yours is a private affair?" Since this is mainly a question of ethics and not, strictly speaking, law, for all law does not have appreciable ethical implications, then the tavern owner has no less right to refuse service than the brotherhood. The tavern owner simply does not want to serve certain people for the same reason that the Brotherhood doesn't want to admit them. There is no ethical difference here—it still amounts to a refusal of some service on racial grounds. THE POINT OF ALL THIS IS THIS: SINCE YOUR ARGUMENT, ASC, is based on ethical considerations, which you have indicated, and if you are to be consistent, then I cannot see why you do not endorse the same measures for fighting prejudice to be applied to all bodies which make refusals of service on racial grounds. This would naturally include all those bodies which you have called "private." I am assuming, of course, that you do not like bodies which discriminate in this way and will do what you can to eliminate the practice. Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004, triweekly 1098, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St 50, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT ... Managing Editor John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors Whitman Discussed at Forum A two-volume set of the writings of Walt Whitman which is being compiled by a KU professor and a Drake University professor will be published soon. "Every biographer of Walt Whitman speaks of the litter of manuscripts on the floor of the front room of Whitman's house," said Edward F. Grier, associate professor of English. "It is upon this litter that I am working," he said. Prof. Grier addressed the Humanities Forum last night about the Whitman project. His duty is to find and edit the prose manuscripts and notebooks of Whitman and to provide the fragmentary prose which explains the printed material. The first step in the process is to find the manuscripts themselves, Page 3 Prof. Grier said. The process involves corresponding with many libraries and individuals all over the world who might possess some of the material, he said. "Often I 'have gotten only the photostats of the manuscripts and not the real thing," he said. "This means that I cannot accurately examine the paper or the type of medium used for the writing. I am trying to group the papers chronologically and I must rely on the paper and the handwriting employed." The accurate transcriptions of the manuscripts into a printed text is the next step in the process, Prof. Grier said. The case was slated for the January session but postponed so more research could be done. The case involving the validity of the freshman election ballots has been postponed until the next session of student court, Feb. 14. "There are many problems involved in this since the flyspecks can not always be separated from the commas or the pin holes from the periods," he said. Ballot Court Case Postponed "IT'S GETTING close to finals and we felt that we would be too busy to prepare the case adequately," he said. Jed Hurley, Wichita second year law student and one of the student court judges, explained why the case was postponed. Reuben McCormack, Abilene freshman and a losing candidate for freshman class president, requested an injunction in the December session of the court to prohibit Kirk Cottingham, Newton senior and ASC election committee chairman, from destroying the ballots. McCornack claimed that the ballots had not been counted properly. The court issued the injunction and served it to Cottingham. Cottingham later said that he would abide by the injunction. LEE WOODARD, Wichita second year law student, said that Cottingham would have to present evidence in the next court session that the ballots were properly counted. "If Cottingham doesn't present sufficient evidence, then the court will probably appoint a special committee to recount the ballots," he said. "The committee would be made up of ASC members." Official Bulletin TODAY Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication, not bring to the office. The Daily Keeper Notice should include name, place date, and time of function. Jay Janes. 5 p.m. Room 306. Kansas TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Mother-Krist follows. 4:55 a.m. Centerbury, House American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers. 7 p.m. 300 Fowler. Speaker: Mr. Roger Baker, quality engineering and gauging supervisor, Ben- Teachers Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewers are: C. Fred Colvin, assistant superintendent (el. & sec.). Wichita, Kan., and Frank Creason (mus. & 1-6), District 49. Overland Park, Kan. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. Baptist Student Union. 5 p.m. Evening vespers and discussion on the Summer Missions Program led by Lloyd Decker. 221. Oread. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich wiedervereinigt in den Altersverband. Wahl des neuen Vorstandes. Grosses Semester-finale - Schallplatten. Tanzen. Schlagenungen! Alle herzlich eingeladen. SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER POWER Students! Grease Job $1 Brake Adj 95 Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hours on Duty Brakes Relined Brake Adj. ... 98c Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals dix Aviation Corp. "Training for Quality." Balfour Christian Science Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforth. 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Philosophy Club 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Dr. William Earle, professor of Philosophy, Northwestern "The Immorality of Morality." Medical Dames. 8 p.m. Kansas Union Dean C. Arden Miller and Dr. R. C. Mills will discuss the KU Med. School Program. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 829 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0292 for more information or a ride. Poetry Hour. 4 p.m. Browsing, Room. Kansas Union. James E. Seaver, director of Western Civilization Dept., will read from works of "Lutetius." "The notebooks have been the most interesting part of the project so far. One of the most striking features of the notebooks is Whitman's complete alienation with the American society when they were written. There is also an amazing lack of emotion in the writing for a poet," Prof. Grier said. Catholic services. 8 & 10 a.m. Fraser Theater. Masses for students. Coffee social at Kansas Union following 10 a.m. Mass. University Daily Kansan MONDAY NSA Committee. 4 p.m. Kansas Union. MONDAY Prof. Grier closed the meeting by showing slides of pages from one of the notebooks. On the pages shown a poem grows and develops during a visit to the sea shore in New Jersey. Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 Afro-Asian Racial Problems Talk Topic Race relations in Africa and Asia will be emphasized in a symposium at 6:30 p.m. today in Westminster Center. The discussion topic for the women's dessert meeting will be "Women in the Changing World." Celeste Patton, wife of the Rev. John Patton, minister to United Presbyterian students, will lead the conversation with six foreign students. Old age isn't so bad when you consider the alternative.—Maurice Chevalier Anderson Selects KU Graduate for Position TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson today appointed James C. Canole, currently chief draftman in the state architect's office, as state architect. Canole, 35, is a 1949 KU graduate and has served under four different state architects over a period of 11 years. He replaces John Brink, who served during the administration of former Gov. George Docking. I think that I shall never see a billboard lovely as a tree. — Ogden Nash THE BIG EVENT OF THE YEAR Ober's JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE (Starts Thursday) SUITS $50 to $79.50 Values $36.95 to $58.95 SPORT COATS $35 to $45 Values $24.95 to 33.95 JACKETS $12.95 to $22.95 Values $10.35 to $15.95 TOPCOATS $45 to $75 Values $33.95 to $56.95 IVY COTTON SLACKS SLACKS $12.95 to $17.95 Values $9.95 to $11.95 $5.00 to $6.95 Values $3.75 to $4.45 SWEATERS $10.95 to $19.95 Values $7.95 to $11.95 SPORT SHIRTS $5.00 to $6.95 Values $3.25 to $3.95 821 Mass. Ober's Ph. VI 3-1951 THIS OFFER EXPIRES SAT., JAN. 14 GRAND OPENING COUPON Prices Apply Only When Order Is Brought in With This Coupon CLOTH COATS MATCHED SUITS PLAIN ONE PIECE DRESSES 69℃ NO LIMIT Cleaned and Pressed HALF SOLES SHOE REPAIR WITH RUBBER HEELS 1.99 VAL $5.00 BUSINESS SHIRTS Laundered Starched As You Like Individually Sealed Collars Turned Free NO LIMIT Reg. 22c EA. 17c MIN.25c DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST MEN'S — BOY'S 49c RUBBER HEELS ONE DAY SERVICE TROUSERS 1300 W.23rd DRIVE IN & SAVE Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. SKIRTS plain SWEATERS BLOUSES SPORT SHIRTS 39 ℃ ea. DRY CLEANED AND PRESSED Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1967 Sig Eps Trim Kappa Sigma; Phi Gams Win Sigma Phi Epsilon played to a 40-38 win over Kappa Sigma in Fraternity A basketball last night in one of the closest games of the evening. The score was tied 8-8 at the end of the first quarter and 18-18 at the half. The Sig Eps pulled ahead 32-27 in the third period but a late Kappa Sig surge brought the final two point margin. In another close game Sigma Nu beat Delta Tau Delta 40-37 while Phi Gamma Delta beat Delta Chi 54-33. In Independent B games, the NCAA Talks Center Around 'Red Shirting' PITTSBURGH — (UPI) The National Collegiate Athletic Association put aside its big stick today and settled down to the new business phase in the windup of its 55th annual convention. Spirited discussions were anticipated on five major legislative proposals backed by the group. A special committee on Recruiting and Financial Aid set up in 1958 offered the proposals after intense study which included two surveys. NCAA members will vote on the proposals which include legislation aimed at ending "red shirting" and extreme bidding for high school athletes. Certain to touch off varying opinions is the "pre-registration" amendment which would require high school athletes to sign certificates after determining a choice of college. This certificate would commit the athlete to a particular school and would bar him from meeting with other recruiters. An athlete who would change his mind after signing a pre-registration certificate would be penalized by losing a year of eligibility. A "five-year" rule was proposed as a means of halting the practice of "red-shirting." It stipulates that an athlete must complete his competition within five years after matriculating for a four-year course. Most major college conferences have a five year rule in effect at present. Other proposed amendments include a national transfer rule and legislation pertaining to recruiting and all-star high school games. The powerful 18-member NCAA Council which showed mercy Monday in lifting suspensions against three schools contrasted its action yesterday in handing out penalties. North Carolina, Arizona and Loyola University of New Orleans were found guilty of violating the recruiting code and were placed on one-year probations. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Kyle Rote was considered the leading candidate to take over as backfield coach of the New York Giants today—but Allie Sherman isn't expected to encourage him to accept the job. Sherman New Giant Coach Instead, the new head coach of the Giants hopes to enduce Rote, the team's leading pass-catcher, and quarterback Charley Conerly to play at least one more season. Sherman, though, admitted that Conerly "is our number one quarterback as long as he has the desire to play," and soffeed at the idea that the graying, 39-year-old veteran has grown too old for the pro game. Sherman, who signed a three-year contract at an estimated $25,000 a year, said he will retain Howell's entire staff. Cisabs downed Navy 29-27, Chemistry beat Concordia 39-17 and The Ringers beat the Gunners 39-29. Battenfeld was awarded a win over Air Force due to a forfeit. Also a forfeit gave the Slugs a win over Ace Pearson. In a fraternity C game that went into an overtime period Phi Kappa Psi #1 beat Delta Upsilon #1 40-38. Phi Gamma Delta #1 downed Beta Theta Pi #3 51-28 and Delta Tau Delta #2 beat Sigma Phi Epsilon #1 27-14. Phi Gamma Delta was awarded a forfeit over Phi Kappa Sigma. The intramural basketball schedule for tomorrow afternoon and evening is as follows: INDEPENDENT A — Carruth- O'Leary vs Joseph R. Pearson, 4:15 —GDIA vs Joseph R. Pearson #3, 5:15-Bo-Jets vs. Delta Functions, 6:15-Tortfeasors vs Templin, 7:15. FRATERNITY B — Sigma Pi vs Delta Sigma Phi, 4:15-Beta Theta Pi vs Theta Tau, 4:15-Phi Gamma Pi vs Alpha Chai Omega, 7:15. FRATERNITY C— Phi Delta Theta #1 vs Delta Sigma Phi, 5—Sigma Alpha Epsilon #3 vs Phi Gamma Delta #6, 5—Beta Theta Pi #1 vs Phi Kappa Sigma, 5:45—Alpha Tau Omega #1 vs Beta Theta Pi #3, 6:30—Delta Tau Delta #2 vs Phi Kappa Psi #1, 6:30—Phi Gamma Delta #1 vs. Delta Upsilon #1, 7:15. PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Memphis State and Louisville have declined membership in the Missouri Valley Conference. MVC Declined by Two Prospects The two schools turned down an invitation to join the conference yesterday. Present members are Cincinnati, St. Louis, Drake, North Texas State, Wichita, Tulsa, and Bradley. Both Cincinnati and St. Louis reportedly are thinking of withdrawing, but conference Commissioner Norvall Neve declined comment, other than that both schools are still members. Never chase a higher pair.—Marvin Phelps INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — (UPI) — The first Indianapolis "500" auto race on Memorial Day of 1911 was won by Ray Harrour with an average speed of 74.59 miles per hour. First "500" Winner Three Time Winner NEW YORK — (UPI)— St. John's University of Brooklyn has won the National Invitational Basketball Tournament three times, in 1943, 1944 and 1959. SKI TRIP The International Club is organizing a Ski-Trip to Winter Park, Colorado, between semesters. Approximate cost $60, all inclusive. Those interested plan to attend meeting in Kansas Union Thurs., 6:30. Room No. to be announced. "MIDWEST'S TOP HAIR STYLISTS" Ronnie's fashion BEAUTY SALONS January $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Sale! MALLS CENTER SAVE NOW... VI 2-1144 Our Italian Import . . . Reg. $20 Custom Cold Wave ... $10 Complete Budget Cold Wave . . . 5.95 Complete 10 OPEN LATE WEEK NIGHTS APPOINTMENTS USUALLY NOT NEEDED WeaverS Weaver's Our 104th Year of Service What's but really new? SCOUBIDOU Sandler's frolicking flat! Crazy? The Utmost! The Hottest Thing Since Pizza! Sandler reaches way out for the Newest Young Fashion. $1095 ● red ● green ● black ● beige Weaver's Shoe Shop — Second Floor SANDLER OF BOSTON SCOUBIDOU Crazy? The Utmost! ier's frolicking flat! $1095 SANDLER OF BOSTON Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 University Daily Kansnm Page 5 Around the Campus CWENS Schedules Initiation Rites Members of the AWS Senate and past members of the Jay Sister board will also be initiated. CWENS, the service organization of sophomore women, will hold its first initiation for members at 5 p.m. Sunday in Corbin Hall. Forty women will be initiated and five honorary memberships will be bestowed. Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe, Mrs. Donald Alderson, Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Elinor Hawkinson and Janet Noel are the honorary initiates. CWENS takes the place of the Jay Sister program and acts as sisters to freshman women. The organization also has helped with teas and receptions around the campus. Western Civ Review Today Last minute cramming for the Western Civilization examination Saturday is underway. Review sessions last night and tonight at 303 Bailey hopefully will fill in the blank or cloudy spots in the students' memories. The review sessions, which begin at 7:15 p.m., are different this year than they have been in the past. Each review will begin with a talk lasting about 30 minutes. These talks will attempt to put the readings in ideological and historical perspective by utilizing patterns of economics, religion and politics. After the talk, a panel of six members of the Western Civilization staff will answer questions from the audience and questions submitted by students to the Western Civilization office, Strong Annex C. There is precious little in civilization to appeal to a yeti (abominable snowman).—Sir Edmund Hillary ORGANIZATIONS TEAMS, HOUSES We Offer SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICE on All: TEAM EQUIPMENT UNIFORMS BALLS, SHOES OTHER EQUIPMENT Also SPECIAL DISCOUNT on TABLE TENNIS EQUIPMENT THE SPORTSMAN SHOP 715 Mass. VI 3-6106 Ski Trip Plans Made Students who wish to go on the International Club ski trip to Colorado between semesters are asked to call Astrida Blukis at VI 3-4271. The trip price is $60. This includes transportation, hotel room, tows, equipment, instructors for beginners, and insurance. The club will go by bus if 25 people sign up. The number of women who deliberately set out to kill their husbands is surprisingly small. — Dr. Kenneth Hutchin Business Described as a Mission Business is a mission, not a job. This is the opinion of Jack D. Steele, professor of business. Prof. Steele spoke at the School of Business meeting last night. "As we enter the 1960's our economic system is challenged more than ever to prove its productive capacity," he said. HE POINTED out that half the people in the world are hungry and many are living little better than cavemen. "The major role in the solution of these problems will be played by businessman," he maintained. Prof. Steele said that there is a general criticism that businessmen have no culture, that they are crude, crass and commercial. "What most people believe to be culture—music, art and so on, would not exist without the economy," he said. PROF. STEELE described part of the businessman's goal as creating "an economic system that is so efficient that we can have this culture. "If we look at society or civilization as our reference point we need chemists, physicists and people like that," he said. "But their theories do not benefit society until an engineer can make a workable model," he said. "Even then it doesn't benefit society until it can be produced and distributed." Modern man is not becoming sinless; he is just becoming lacking in the sense of sin.—Church of England's Archbishop of York --save! save! save! Thursday, January 12-9:30 a.m. 1961 clearance sale! diebolt's 843 Mass. save! save! save! 1961 clearance sale! FAMOUS save! SUITS BRANDS were $39.95 ... NOW $ 31.61 were $50.00 ... NOW $39.61 were $60.00 ... NOW $48.61 were $65.00 ... NOW $53.61 were $69.50 ... NOW $55.61 FAMOUS TOPCOATS were $32.50 . . . NOW $ 21.61 were $35.75 . . . NOW $23.61 were $45.00 . . . NOW $30.61 were $50.00 . . . NOW $33.61 were $55.00 . . . NOW $38.61 were $60.00 . . . NOW $43.61 FAMOUS JACKETS BRANDS were $14.95 . . . NOW $10.61 were $18.95 . . . NOW $13.61 were $23.95 . . . NOW $17.61 were $26.95 . . . NOW $20.61 were $32.50 . . . NOW $24.61 FAMOUS SWEATERS BRANDS ENTIRE STOCK $ \frac{1}{3} $ OFF! 1/3 FAMOUS SPORT COATS BRANDS were $30.00 . . . NOW $24.61 were $35.00 . . . NOW $28.61 were $37.50 . . . NOW $30.61 were $39.95 . . . NOW $ 31.61 FAMOUS CAR COATS BRANDS were $22.95 . . . NOW $15.61 were $27.95 . . . NOW $18.61 were $39.95 . . . NOW $26.61 were $35.00 . . . NOW $23.61 1/2 FAMOUS DRESS SHIRTS BRANDS while they last! values to $5.00 $12 OFF! CORD FAMOUS CORD SUITS BRANDS extra special were $29.95...NOW $19.61 while they last ! FAMOUS SPORT COATS BRANDS were $19.95 . . . NOW $12.61 FAMOUS CORD SUITS BRANDS extra special were $32.95 . . . NOW $22.61 --- Page 6 1 2 3 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 11, 196 Poetry Hour Set The speaker at the Poetry Hour tomorrow will be James E. Seaver, director of Western Civilization. He will read from the writings of Lucretuis at 4 p.m. in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. KU Professors Receive Research Grants Edward E. Smissman, professor and head of the pharmaceutical chemistry department, will continue a study of plant antibiotics with a $25,990 renewal grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. A two-year study of the effects of vitamin deficiencies upon the heart will be done by Duane G. Wenzel, professor of pharmacy, with an $8,650 grant from the National Vitamin Foundation. A two-year study of the effects of If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him - Voltaire Wichitan to Speak C. Fred Colvin, assistant superintendent of the Wichita Public Schools, will speak to SNEA members at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Bailey Auditorium. His subject will be "Why Do We Interview?" My dandying days were extended a decade by the toupee—John Bernier. Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for year by Alexander's 11011 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL. 21208 Keep the juices flowing by jang- ling around gently as you move.— Satchel Paige B HELD OVER BEN-HUR U N Evenings only at 7:30 $1.25 VARSITY NOW! At 7:00 & 9:20 DISCOUNT KERR MOCKET MITCHUM BOUNDOW ORBORN KERR ROBERT MITCHUM INTED USTINOV THE SUNDOWNERS CLYMS JOHNS DINA MERRILL TECHNICOLOR* Excerpted by HENRIEL LEWIS Directed by FREID ZOONMANN PRESENTED BY TARANLEE BOSS -WAFFLE SPECIAL-EVERY WED. NITE - 5-8 P.M. GRANADA TREATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Your Choice of STRAWBERRY, BLUEBERRY, PECAN or CHOCOLATE WAFFLE 1340 Ohio* JAYHAWK CAFE Choice of Ham Bacon or Sausage Hot Coffee 70c HELD OVER! 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE"! 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE"! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A Tale of the Christ by GENERAL LEW WALLACE DIRECTED BY WILLIAM WYLER STARRING CHARLTON HESTON · JACK HAWKINS HAYA HARAREET · STEPHEN BOYD HUGH GRIFITH · MARTHA SCOTT WITH CATHY ODONNELL · SAM JAFEE SCREENPLAY BY PRODUCED BY KARL TUNBERG · SAM ZIMBALIST TECHNICOLOR CAMERA 65 EVENINGS AT 7:30 ADULTS $1.25 THEATRE ... Telephon VIXING 3-1065 MATINEES VARSITY AT 1:30 SATURDAY & SUNDAY Carl's GOOD CLOTHES CLEARANCE SALE SUITS, SPORT COATS DISCOUNTED 20% to 40% SPORT SHIRTS DISCOUNTED 331/3% DISCOUNTED 25% CORDUROY SUITS ROBES DISCOUNTED 25% WOOL SHIRTS DISCOUNTED 25% JACKETS DISCOUNTED 331/3% TOPCOATS DISCOUNTED 25% SWEATERS DISCOUNTED 331/3% ONE GROUP SHIRTS WERE TO $5 Now $3.35 ONE GROUP RAINCOATS WERE $11.95 Now $6.95 Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the office at 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second duplication. LOST WANTED LADIES’ EYEGLASSES, black front, gold earpiece. No case. Missing since Dec. 15. Reward. Call VI 2-1340, Beverly Weaver. 1-16 K-E SLEEVE RULE with black carrying case. $5.00 reward. Call VI 2-1542. 1-13 FRESHMAN MALE who is interested in football and who would be interested in managing a football team. Notify James V 1-2049 or Clyde Kensington. 7514. 1-12 WRITER of comedy to write for a comedy series. Bachelor's degree or Corydle Kensinger, VI 3-7514 - 1-12 TYPING Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780. Mrs. McMahan. tf EXPERIENCED TYPEIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tlfr Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work. Phone Mrs. Marilyn HA, VI 3-2318 t f EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Typhist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. Experienced typist — will type theses, papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI, 6558. Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable for Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. Expert typing and secretarial service. Hicks, V I-20111. VI 3-5920 or Mt Hicks, V I-20111. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate works. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, PEI 3-1097. tf TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason- nable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3- 8554. tf Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. TYPING. Themes, term papers, etc. typed with neatness and accuracy by ex- perienced typist. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Alvin Johnson, VI 3-9577. I-12 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-856. tf FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard calls Call VI 51-3217 Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. tfr THEMES, thees. etc. Fast accurate work —theater secretary. Phone VI 3-1573. Experienced typist — term papers, m-nuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable time. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I., Ct II-7-3455. TRANSPORTATION Wish to join or form car pool from Over- york. Five miles to Mineerville. a week. Call RA 2-4725. 1-13 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supply Ice Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI - 6350. WEDDING INVITATIONS — Call for appointment to see invitations, napkins, thank you folders, etc. Excellent quality, low in price. Phone VI 3-4206. 1-13 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT FOR RENT 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street phone 3-4776. Bath. Rent reduce phone VI 3-9776. First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 for 2 p.m.t. VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily. $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tt FOR RENT: 2 or 3 boys, large furnished ties paid. Jack Hawk. 2417 Ohio. 1-12 NICE PLACE TO LIVE—new two bedroom apartment, unfurnished except for new Frigidair refrigerator, electric stove and automatic washer. One block of neighbors. Parking. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-8534. CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six bedroom, plus bath and entrance. Utilities paid. Married couple only. 520 Ohio. ROOMS—graduate male prefers. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture and facilities. Additional study and reaction room available. 1221 Oread, VI 3-6798. 3 ROOM furnished house. $55 per month. 2 bedroom house. $65. Newly painted. 1 very nice furnished house private apartment, $$0. T. A. Hemphill V. 1-12 3902. ROOMS FOR MEN STUDENTS: Do you need a quiet room? Have four singles, two doubles for second semester. Rent reduced. Call VI 3-9340 after 5 p.m. for appointment to see. Three blocks east of KU. 1-13 BUSINESS LOCATION available for rent to students for a restaurant or rooming on your possibilities. Location on Lawrence's business street. Located in VI 315-787 1-17 ROOMS FOR MEN—ONE HALF BLOCK SOUL FOR MEN—ONE HALF QUEUE Saat at 130 Lai, or call VI 3-4092. GROUND FLOOR furnished apartment. Utilities paid. Close to campus, $70. Second floor apartment for women, $55. Sleeping room, $25. Call VI 3-6291- 1-74 FURNISHED APARTMENT, recently re-decorated. Two large rooms, practically new furniture. Sound-proofed ceiling. Two shared baths. For rent or lease to two women or couple. 1129 Vt., Call VI 3-2149 mornings or after 5 p.m. (1) BOARD AND ROOM for next semesters Reasonable price. Call VI 3-9562. 1-13 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone I 3-6313 after p. 1-17. Large seven room furnished house. Single bed. Also five room house, newly decorated inside and out. Near post office. Call VI 3-3184. 1-17 TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator $80. Phone VI 3-7655. -1-17 BASEMENT APARTMENT for men student entrance, utilities 1-17 151 W. W. 222 NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. attribute to Victory 1960 Did We Win or Not... BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and charts and diagrams. Complete cross index. Price $3.00. For your call copy V 2-1065. FOR SALE REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $540 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. 32 FOOT TRAILER. sleeps six. Will take smaller trailer in trade or will finance for responsible parties with reasonable down payment. 933 Rhode Island. 1-11 FIRST OF THE YEAR SPECIALS! Full line of new and used mobile homes. Come, see and talk with me at 7th and Arkansas. VI 2-1560 or VI 3-7143. 1-11 Available Everywhere Records Are Sold 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE. Two door with radio and radio hear. Low mileage. In very good condition. Can be seen at 534 La. after 5 p.m., or call VI 3-2599. 1-800-763-3592. 16 FOOT FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 hp Johnson motor. All new, including trailer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. VI 2-0479. 1-13 FOR SALE. 1955 one bedroom Safeway trailer owner. Equipped with a one ton storage space. Excellent condition. Phon. Viola 7912 after 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-12 FOR SALE; 1957, 21* I console Syllabus 95 lb. 158 mm. 95 lb. barrels. V 1-26234 after 6:30. 1-12 1956 PLYMOUTH, 2-door sedan, 6 cylinder. Standard transmission. Radio, heater, economical transportation $275 or best offer. Must sell. Call V-1 2059 at 7 p.m. 1955 RANCH WAGON. $750; or 1951 Lim- Cable in excellent condition. Call VI 3-3231 - I-13 MODEL 58 Automatic 10 gauge shotgun and assortment of shells. Also Kay auditorium size guitar. Both in perfect condition. Call VI 2-0503 after 5 p.m. 1-12 1953 CHEVROLET: Two door, radio, heater, $175 or nearest offer. Also will trade "Hemmi" chemical engineer's slide rule for regular slide rule in equally sized form. Call Rangana 498 between 4 and 5 pin. or see at 1607 Tenn. 1951 Seml-convertible Rambler. Blue, $241.37. Call Dr. Dance, KU 374 or VI 7- 1117 after 7 p.m. 1-12 1959 REGAL MOBILE HOME -51' x 10', two bedrooms, must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-0734 after 5 p.m. for appointment. 1-17 TUXEDO and dinner jacket combinat- ion in a condition Low price. Call VI 3-5466. 1-17 STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939 $^{1}$ Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tt PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture, comprehensive diagrams and definitions; formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest instruction videos at 90 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6848. 3-DAY ENISHING. 35 min or movie film Drug Store, Drug Storage Crest shopping Center. 1-11 MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 8 e.p.m. Most stores offer food and plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything from fishing rods to doors or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still. come. Welcome. tf PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions and delivery. Price $4.00. For your copii call VI 2-1065. Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed. 921 Miss.. VI I-37551. tt WILL BABYSIT at my home all day. See Mrs. Marquez, 836 Mississippi, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. 1-12 PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS' COACH HOUSE Cobblestore Tennis and Gymnastics ★ WINTER CLEARANCE Blouses ★ Dresses Sweaters ★ ★ ★ Skirts COACH HOUSE Crested Hill, NY 10036 COACH HOUSE Chair for Trend and Class Pants REDUCTIONS UP TO 1/2 COACH HOUSE Chelsea 14 Ways and Conditions MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SHOE SALE! ★ Randcraft ★ Bass Jarmans Dress Flats $699 to $1299 ★ Heels Sport Shoes Regular to 18.95 $299 to $799 Regular to 12.95 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 11, 1961 WORLD-WIDE MOVING PACKING·STORAGE WORLD-WIDE MOVING PACKING · STORAGE North American VAN-LINES INC WORLD-WIDE MOVING ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE VI 3-0380 LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. WIFE- APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING North American VAN-LINES INC. WORLD-WIDE MOVING ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE VI 3-0380 LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. WIFE APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING WIFE APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. sale BUY TWO PAIRS sale BUY TWO PAIRS NUNN-BUSH SHOES $17.90 to $19.90 Some Higher SHORT TIME ONLY FREEMAN SHOES $10.90 to $14.90 Some Higher NUNN-BUSH SHOES $1790 to $1990 Some Higher SHORT TIME ONLY FREEMAN SHOES $1090 to $1490 Some Higher BUY NOW and SAVE Nunn-Bash WIDE VARIETY STYLES AND LEATHERS ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837 MASS. ANNUAL WINTER the town shop SALE Begins 9:30 a.m. Thursday, January 12 SUITS Were Sale Price $45.00 $33.75 60.00 45.00 69.50 52.25 TOPCOATS Were Sale Price $45.00 $33.75 55.00 41.25 65.00 48.75 SPORT COATS Were Sale Price $35.00 $26.25 39.50 29.75 42.50 31.75 SWEATERS Were Sale Price $12.95 $9.75 13.95 10.75 15.95 11.75 22.50 16.75 Bulky Crews, Boatnecks, Cardigans Shawl Collars SPORT SHIRTS Were Sale Price $5.00 $3.75 5.95 4.50 8.95 6.75 12.95 9.75 JACKETS AND CAR COATS Were Sale Price $19.95 $13.95 29.95 22.75 39.95 28.50 Special Bargain Groups of Socks, Shirts, Ties, Mufflers, Gloves THE Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 58th Year, No. 69 Ike Says Cuba Is Real Threat WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Eisenhower told Congress today in his farewell State of the Union Message that "Communist penetration of Cuba is real and poses a serious threat." Eisenhower listed Cuba under the Fidel Castro regime as one of four key battle grounds in the cold war struggle that is still going on. The others were Berlin, Laos and Africa. FISENHOWER told Congress: "There is the continuing Communist threat to the freedom of Berlin, an explosive situation in Laos, the problems caused by Communist penetration of Cuba, as well as the many problems connected with the development of the new nations in Africa." He said the problems prevailing in the four areas "call for delicate handling and constant review" when President-elect John F. Kennedy succeeds him Jan. 20. The President also made plain his belief that the new administration should continue to oppose admission of Red China into the United Nations or to recognize the Communist regime. (DEAN RUSK, who will be secretary of state in the Kennedy administration, said today he sees "no prospect at the present time" for establishing normal relations with Red China. (Rusk, testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations committee which must approve his nomination, said recognition of Red China would require abandonment of the Nationalist Chinese government of Chiang Kai-Shek.) Eisenhower termed the Communist Chinese government "belligerent and unrepentant. Red China has yet to demonstrate that it deserves to be considered a 'peace-loving' nation," he declared. New Housing Additions Set A new dormitory and 60 more units for Stouffer Place have been approved for construction and the buildings are expected to be ready by Sept. of 1962. The cost of the new dormitory will be $1,300,000. The new Stouffer units will cost $600,000 said J. J Wilson, director of dormitories. "WE SHOULD have housing for about 1200 more students by 1965, which would not keep up with the enrollment increase that is anticipated." Mr. Wilson said. The new Stouffer units will be divided into five buildings of 12 units each. There are presently 20 buildings and 240 units. The new dormitory will be built immediately south of Lewis. It will house 444 students and is planned for use as a women's dormitory. Construction will probably start in March. Contracts will be let and revenue bonds will be issued Feb. 15. THE PLANS for the new Stouffer units have not been opened for bid yet, but Ellis and Bond, associate architects for the project, think the plans will be ready for bids by April 15. Construction will probably start in June. Mr. Wilson said the new buildings will enable the university to house about the same percentage of students that it presently houses. There are three more buildings planned but as yet funds for their construction have not been approved, Mr. Wilson said. DISAPPROVAL OF DISCRIMINATION PETITION—Marvin W. McKnight, Lawrence senior, looks on as Stephen Baratz, Brooklyn graduate student, signs the petition against racial discrimination posted on the Jayhawk Blvd. information booth. The petition also calls for a referendum on the NSA resolution now before the ASC. Kurt Says Resolution Is Misinterpreted by Public Thomas L. Kurt, Pratt graduate student, today said there is public "misunderstanding and misinterpretation" regarding the National Student Association committee resolution on racial discrimination now pending before the ASC. The Council Tuesday night voted to table the resolution by a vote of 9-7. "Many people have thought that I wrote the resolution in toto and endorsed it as such. I did write the resolution. . . sans amendment II (the boycott issue.) We encourage Action in the form of selective buying and through the use of boycots by students who are interested in the equality of all races and creeds. ACCORDING TO KURT'S letter to the Daily Kansas, publicity on the resolution has revolved around that part of the document concerning boycotts of discriminatory merchants and selective buying. THE AMENDMENT to which Kurt refers reads: We also encourage publication of names of merchants and other persons operating in the public domain who are now supporting discrimination in their establishments. Kur' said he will propose that the resolution be presented in full to the student body in the spring general elections for vote on each individual amendment. Here is the text of Kurt's letter: (The text of the resolution will be run tomorrow in the Kansan.) be run tomorrow in the Kansan.) Kurt said, "I am not in favor of endorsing boycotts and selective buying at KU, because I do not think this the express opinion of the majority of students. . . Otherwise, I believe the resolution presents a conservative stand on racial issues." KURT ACCUSED the Council of "cowardice and the inability to meet its responsibilities" following Tuesday night's tabling action. Today he said, "(Council) action on the issue has been painfully procrastinated." There are many things about the Racial Justice Resolution pending before the ASC that have been misinterpreted or misunderstood. Many people have thought that I wrote the resolution in toto and endorsed it as such. I did write the resolution (more than three months ago) sans Amendment II. This amendment was introduced by Mr. Charles Menghini, Independent Co-Chairman of UP and a member of the NSA Committee. Amendment II endorses boycotts, selective buying, publication of the names of discriminating merchants and persons, etc. . . . and has aroused much recent controversy. Kurt's Letter Editor: I AM NOT IN FAVOR OF ENDORSING BOYCOTTS AND selective buying at KU, because I do not think this the express opinion of the majority of students, nor do I think these could be effective if adopted. Otherwise, I believe the resolution presents a conservative stand on racial justice. I would have liked to see the ASC pass the resolution without Amendment II. Instead, because of not voting on it at all, action on the issue has been painfully procrastinated. NOW BECAUSE OF THE MAGNITUDE OF THIS ISSUE, I (Continued on page 8) Petitions Call for Boycotts, Mandate By Bryon Klapper Forty student signatures were on petitions at 12:15 p.m. today supporting some boycotts and calling for an all-student referendum on the resolution tabled Tuesday by the All-Student Council. A sign above the posted petitions at the booth in front of Flint Hall read: "Show your disapproval of discrimination, sign petition here." Two thousand students must sign the petition for the council to call a referendum. AS STUDENTS passed the booth, some stopped to sign, others walked by, casting glances of curiosity, and others completely ignored the booth. The Civil Rights Council, which printed and posted the petitions, voted last night to use the papers to determine student opinion on the ASC resolution on racial justice. THE PETITION READS: "We, the undersigned students of the University of Kansas, support boycott of any place of business which refuses service to any person on the basis of race, religion or national origin, and we also call for an all-student referendum on the resolution proposed by the NSA representative to the All-Student Council." The petition was approved at a meeting of the CRC in the Kansas Union last night, after a discussion of the ASC action to table the resolution. Stephen S. Baratz, Lawrence graduate student, stated that the ASC tabled the resolution because it was unaware of the feeling of the student body on this issue. Circulating a petition among the student body would provide a clear statement of the feelings of the students, Baratz said. ANOTHER MEMBER of the CRC said that because of ASC did not take a stand, it is not likely that it would put forth much effort to getting a petition to the student body. The CRC was one of the organized bodies on campus fighting for civil rights. Therefore, members said they felt justified in circulating a petition. The petitions were distributed to members of the CRC as well as being placed at the information booth. After the meeting last night, CRC members visited a bowling alley on 9th St., the skating rink on 23rd St. and nine Lawrence taverns to determine whether these places discriminated. BRUCE WRIGHT, Salina sophomore, told the Daily Kansan that the meeting broke up into three groups of four or more students, with Negro and white students in each group. The group which visited the bowling alley reported that the lanes were all in use, but they were told that, had there been room, the students would be permitted to bowl. At the skating rink the mixed group, was told they could not skate except in private parties, and of the nine taverns visited, five refused to serve the Negro students, Wright reported. New GI Bill May Mean Cash to KU Veterans About 250-300 KU veterans may get hundreds of thousands of dollars from Uncle Sam if a new "Cold War" GI Bill, introduced in the U.S. Senate yesterday, is made law. The bill would apply to men who served or will be serving in the armed forces between Jan. 31, 1955 and July 1, 1963. It would provide one and one-half days of schooling for every day in service. Translated into cash, this means that an unmarried veteran who has served for two years would receive $110 each month for 36 months, which is the time limit for benefits. This information was given by Edwin R. El- ATHENS, Ga. — (UPI) — Two Negro students were suspended temporarily from the University of Georgia early today when police had to use tear gas to break up student rioting. Georgia Suspends Negro Students At Macon, Ga., Federal District Judge W. A. Bootle ruled that a state law of cutting off funds from any integrated school is "patently unconstitutional." The Judge said he would issue later today even a broader and much more sweeping injunction against the law than the one now in force. The Negro students, Charlayne Hunter, 18, and Hamilton Holmes, 19, were taken from the campus early today. Gov. Ernest Vandiver said he had no immediate plans to return them, but Dean of Students, Joseph Williams said he, not Vandiver, removed them. He emphasized that the removal was temporary. bel, professor of physical education and director of KU's Veterans Service. A MARRIED VETERAN without children would receive $135 per month and a married veteran with children $160 per month, said Prof. Elbel. He said that "a conservative estimate" of those entitled to benefits would be 250-300. KU now has 671 veterans who are not drawing money from the old GI Bill. The benefits are to be given only to help veterans who are planning college careers or who are interested in graduate study. Prof. Elbel said that only those who are in the early stages of their college work or who are anticipating advanced study in the future would be benefited. "IF A VETERAN has already completed his schooling on his own, he gets nothing. Of course, if he is interested in further study, this bill would help him out," he said. The bill must be passed by the Senate or it dies. If it passes the Senate, it will be referred to the powerful House Rules Committee, which in the past has smothered money measured by voting not to place a given bill on the House calendar. This means that the bill dies when the session is over and must be re-introduced during the next session. Weather Northeast and north central generally fair through Friday. A little warmer tonight. Highs today middle 50s. Lows tonight middle 20s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 Rally 'Round, Yankees... SHADES OF OL' STONEWALL THE STARS and Bars and Mammy the chop-lickin' cawhnpone, the South has risen again! No, no iron balls have thudded into the masonry at Ft. Sumter this time—jest a whole toteful of stories in our magazines that tell how the South could have won the Civil War. Fact is, stranger, you kain't hardly pick up a magazine any more without gifting told about how if'n this "if" had happened, they Yankees would have run farther and faster at Bull Run or else General Lee would never have had to give up his sword at Appomatox. Not that this is 'specially bad—it keeps them Rebs happy, and it keeps the national economy from bein' based solely on cotton raising. But when a Yankee starts woofin' about how the South might have won the Civil War—and there are some doing just that—that's going a mite too fur. Fact is, them Rebs is skinnin' the pants of the North publicity-wise by gitting there "fustest with the mostest." And the way they're doing that jest ain't fair. LIKE YOU HEERD BEFORE, STRANGER, they're using a whole passel-full of "ifs" to win the War. Fust of all, they create a sity-ation where Generul U. S. Grant falls of'n his horse, lands on his head and expires. Regardless of whether or not this implies that the Yankee can't ride his horse nohow, this deprives the Bluecoats of their leader, and the South wins every battle thereafter because a horse threw a generl. Ain't that something! Tarnation, stranger, why should the South have all the "ifs" on their side! Maybe if n the North had some of them "ifs", it would have whupped the South worse'n it did. Take fer instance the scene at Generul Lee's tent afore the battle at Fredericksburg: The orderly gingerly shook Generul Lee, and upon hearing a moan of awakening, briskly said, "Generul, suh, it's oh-six hunner and the water's hot fer shaving." THE GENERUL SAT UP ON THE EDGE of his cot. He rubbed his hand over the snowlike stubble brought on by not enough sleep and too many worries. "Take that water away, son," he commanded. "The North's got a general—Grant's his name—that looks like he never shaves, and he's winning battles same as I am. Think I'll try it his way." "But, suh," the orderly pleaded, "if'n the men see you the way, they're going to be worried about you, thinkin' you is sick or something. Ifn't they think that, how kin they have any head fering Yankees?" WELL, STRANGER, SUPPOSE THAT GENERUL Lee didn't shave and the fears of his orderly came true. And if'n that happened, suppose the battle at Fredericksburg was a turning point in the war. 'Course, that's if'n Generul Lee didn't have a beard in the fust place. You kin see that this ain't anymore ridiculous than Generul U. S. Grant falling off his horse and landing on his head. That's the way the South is winning all these battles in the magazines, though. Now, ain't that ridicyious—ifn't you agrees, stranger, why then you jest ain't a-whistlin' "Dixie." letters to the editor New Yorker Confused Editor: The other day I came to the realization that there was something about me that was different. It was not the way I talk, or the way I dress, or the way I think, but yet others seem to feel that this was it. I repeat my name, my address, my place of birth to myself . . . but wait, that seems to be what they were talking specifically about, my place of birth. I was born in New York; Brooklyn to be exact. But that’s foolish I think, Brooklyn is in the United States and that means that I am a citizen of this country and protected by the constitution and the bill of rights. Is not the freedom I took for granted in the East to be honored in the Midwest? Is not Kansas part of the Union? I dismiss these considerations by reminding myself that this state has been part of the Union since 1861, a hundred years. But then why I wonder, are some of us treated as different when we are all equal? I PLAYED AROUND WITH this question and to my amazement discovered that these same considerations must go through the mind of a Negro when he is not served in a local tavern, not given a job for which he is qualified, or not permitted to live in a place for which he is willing to pay the rent. He too must wonder whether the rights of being an American still pertain to him in this situation. But at the same time he too must know that as an American he cannot be deprived of these rights regardless of how differently others feel him to be. And he too might feel so strongly about these rights, cherish them so greatly, that when an attempt is made to hedge on the promises the constitution makes to him, he will stand up to these infringements with a simple statement of faith in his country and of love for its freedoms. THESE SIMPLE STATEMENTS may take the form of asking others not to patronize an establishment that denies him his birthright, or picketing such an establishment, or voicing to others how he feels. What is germaine to all of these is a belief in, and a love of the country in which he lives, and an affirmation of this belief in democratic action. I wonder to myself that if this is the way I feel, and possibly the way the Negro feels, how does the Kansan feel? Is he too not jealous of these self-same privileges? Does he not guard his birthright and respond to any hint of its infringement? Of course he does. The rights granted the Negro and the New Yorker are the self-same rights granted to him, and he would feel the same as I or the Negro should they not be taken as a basic assumption of his life. The interest which he has invested in obtaining the full benefits of the Negroes' constitutional heritage attests to the fact that the Kansan, as an American, has a stake in the freedoms granted to the Negro as an American. These are his rights that he is fighting for and not only those of the Negro or the New Yorker. Stephen S. Baratz Brooklyn graduate student * * * I hope you realize how your article of Jan. 9th in the UDK is going to affect the KU alums of Korea. Kansan Corrected Editor: Larry Sneegas did not say at the faculty children's supper Sunday, Jan. 8th., that the Japanese people were any more or less hospitable than the Korean people. The KU alums in Korea treated the cast of Brigadoon to a wonderful reception in the Korea House in Seoul, Korea, and gave us one of the most entertaining evenings of the whole tour. Larry Sneegas Lawrence senior • • • Ise Blasts Segregation Editor: I see again that some of our students are leading the movement for justice and decency — against the restaurant segregationists. We are handcapped, hamstruck in all international affairs by the segregationists who give us our international black eye—or is it a dirty shirt—and this student movement represents not only fairness and justice and morality, but the highest kind of patriotism. Surely there is no place in Kansas, the home of John Brown, for treasonable segregation—now more than a hundred years out of date. All honor to these patriotic students! John Ise professor emeritus of economics --- Kansan Staffer Praised Editor: I wish to thank Byron Klapper and the Kansas staff for the series of articles on the discrimination problems which exist in Lawrence. As a member of the Civil Rights Council, I can only hope that these articles will inform the student body and other interested persons about what the Council is trying to do. With the support of such organizations as the ASC, the KU-Y, and the United Presbyterian Council, plus the student body, I think there is real hope that something can be done about discrimination, not only downtown, but at the University as well. I am also very pleased by the proposed resolution on racial justice to be voted on by the ASC. Daily Hansan Carolyn Shull Lawrence sophomore University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Extension 71. news room Extension 376. business office Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711 news Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St 50 St., New York 22, N.H. New service; U.S. Press International Society; semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at or after post office under act of March 3, 1873. NEWS DEPARTMENT Paul Miller Ray Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Penneman and Bill Blundell Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull Business Manager KANSAS DOCKING EATON KU DAILY KANEAN, 1961 "I thought you would never get here." From the Podium The Russian Writer "Sholokhov, their greatest novelist, was brought here by Khrushchev, I think with the hope that when Eisenhower went back he would take Hemingway back to them. Sholokhov, so the rumor persists, was originally slated to divide the Nobel Prize with Pasternak, and I wish the joint award had been made because it would then have been accepted. But the moment they ignored the most powerful novelist in the Soviet Union and gave it all to the poet with one novel, it became a political award. "What in fact will they write? The ones who want to play safe will write animal stories. Jack London is, of all American writers, the most widely sold in the Soviet Union—$8\frac{1}{2}$ million copies of Jack London's animal stories. Love stories in fur are not only a very safe thing to write in Russia, but everyone agrees that they are pretty good. Folk tales and fantasy are very much in demand and this, also, is safe because in this if you want to take liberties you can write double-talk. The art of double-talk in Russia...is an art. If you are audacious and want to go beyond any of these safeties, then you write fiction or poetry and you break out of this iron maiden just as far as you dare. The old ones dare quite a lot. I asked Leonov, who is one of their most rugged novelists and the only one thus far to receive the Lenin Award, which carries with it 75,000 rubles; he told me that three times in his career he was in hot water because of what he had written, twice because of his novels, one of them being "The Thief," and once because of a play which during Stalin's last years he was forbidden to put on the boards... "THEIR THEMES, of course, are severely limited. They write about their defeat of Hitler because it is their greatest victory in Russian history, the most meaningful, and the one that hurt them the most. We have no idea of how badly they were hurt by the German occupation and how much more thoroughly the Germans beat up the country than Napoleon ever did. They published census figures when I was there last August which showed 55 per cent women and 45 per cent men in the sixteen Republics. My friends in the Embassy told me that translating this into quick terms indicated that the Russian loss of man power in the Second World War was even greater than the 15 million which they have acknowledged... "ON BALANCE, what do you see? You see a people starved for many centuries, now more book-hungry than our reading public. There is no question about it, they are more hungry than we are, by and large. They have much more reverence for the poet than we do, they read thousands, hundreds of thousands of volumes of poets each year... "There is no reference to racial injustice in their contemporary writing although you cannot travel anywhere in Russia without feeling the anti-Semitism. There is never a mention made of it, nor of labor unions. There is no enlightened criticism. You never see a person that corresponds to Elmer Davis. You never read a man that had Henry Mencken's sauciness and audacity. You don't have anybody interested in the preservation of the country with the thrust and drive of Bernard DeVoto. I could wish them a greater latitude. I think they have been given a little more of it recently under Khrushchev; how much more they may receive, I don't know. That they want it I do know..." (Excerpted from a talk by Edward A. Weeks, the editor of The Atlantic Monthly, at the Harvard Foundation Law School Luncheon.) Worth Repeating Most news broadcasts last five minutes. Of necessity they must be incomplete, if not biased. Give me a decent article, in a decent newspaper, written by an unprejudiced reporter who knows how to write, and I can read two columns in five minutes, and be much closer to truth and fact.—Joshua Whatmough Page 3 Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 University Daily Ransan Page 3 Band Concert Set for Sunday 76 trombones lead the big parade. There will not be a parade, and there are not 76 trombones, but nevertheless the University Concert Band will play at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. Featured on the program will be "Music for a Festival," a composition in 11 movements written for the brass ensemble with band accompaniment. Russell L. Wiley, professor and director of band, said: "This work is typically English in form and delightfully refreshing, and as thoroughly enjoyable to listen to as it is to play." The seven piece percussion ensemble includes William Hargraves, Great Bend; Alan Cohn, Prairie Village, seniors; Ronald Leslie, Goodland junior; Robert Miller, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Thomas Daniels, Bird City; James Anderson, Wichita; James Tamer, Norton, Va., and Michael Landwehr, Brooklyn. N.Y., freshmen. Trumpet players of the brass ensemble include Robert Isle, Lawrence junior; Charles Snodgrass, Lawrence sophomore; Linda Galliart, Larned freshman, and Russell Branden, Lawrence senior. Robert Whaley, Norwalk, Conn., junior, will be the tuba solist in "Fantasie, Theme and Variations on The Carnival of Venice" by Jean Baptiste Arban. OTHER WORKS on the program to be played by the 130 piece band will be the Northwards March from "Four Ways Suite" by Eric Coates, "Symphony in B Flat" in two movements by Paul Fauchet, and "Inglesina, Symphonic March" by D. Delle Cese. ANOTHER SPECIAL feature of Sunday's program will be an arrangement of "Concertino for Percussion Ensemble and Band," by Clifton Williams of Texas University. Playing the trombones with the ensemble will be Thomas Taylor, Prairie Village junior; William Booth, Sedalia, Mo., and Steven Hedden, Colby, freshmen. THE BLUES ON THE ROCKET TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson, stressing increased spending for the state's educational program and reform in the penal system, urged the 42nd Kansas Legislature today to prevent an overzealous desire for economy from standing in the way of progress. Anderson devoted almost half of his hour-long message before a joint session of the House and Senate to revisions in the educational system, making state aid conditional upon adoption of a textbook rental plan and consolidation of school districts. SLIPPIN' AND A SLIDIN'-Members of the University Band try out their trombone techniques at last night's band practice session. The band is getting ready for its University Band Concert to be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. vided for junior colleges and municipal universities, financing to provide for further building and attractive salaries for faculty at the institutions of higher learning, and continuation of the $15 per pupil emergency fund for other schools through fiscal 1962. Gov. Stresses School Needs He urged that state aid be pro- Junior colleges and municipal universities, which receive no state aid, would come in for partial assistance conditional on their adherence to state educational criteria. He also suggested that Wichita and Washburn Universities may sometime be absorbed into the state school system. OBER'S January Clearance Sale Suits - Topcoats - Siacks - Jackets Sweaters - Sport Shirts - Sport Coats DON'T MISS THIS BIG EVENT Ober's F The Pizza Hut AND The Catacombs Serving the Finest Pizza and Cold Beverage in the Country Available for Private Parties Sun. thru. Thurs. Pizza Hut open Sun. - Thurs., 4-12 & Fri. - Sat., 12 noon - 1 a.m. Catacombs open Sun. - Thurs., 6-12 & Fri. - Sat., 6-1 a.m. Dining & Dancing — DANCE — Sat. night dance to "The Jewels" 9-1 a.m. — 50c per person T.G.I.F. SPECIAL (by popular demand) Attend the Catacombs (4) "Four happy hours" 2-6 Fri. — Your favorite beverage FREE!! Entrance Fee! Men $1.00 — Women 50c Renew your taste for real Pizza EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 Lt. Cmdr. Drabent will have completed 20 years service in the U.S. Navy by the end of this semester. Around the Campus Lt. Cmdr. Drabent To Be TV Writer Lt. Cmdr. E. A. Drabent, assistant professor of naval science, is retiring in June and plans to write television scripts. He recently sold a teleplay to the television show "Wagon Train" and has another script under consideration by the producers of Boris Karloff's "Thriller." Lt. Cmdr. Drabent enlisted in the Navy in 1941 and attended Duke University as a NROTC student. Children's Theatre Group to Kansas City The KU Children's Theatre will present four performances of "Greensleeves Magic" in Kansas City today and tomorrow. The group also will present two performances at Wichita High School Jan. 21. Under the direction of Jed Davis, assistant professor of speech, students performed at Wyandotte High School at 9:45 and 1:30 p.m. today. The children's fantasy was presented for six performances at the University Dec. 7-10. Film on Picasso To Be Seen Tonight The color film "Picasso" will be presented at 7:30 and 9 p.m. today in the lecture room in the Museum of Art. This free, 50-minute movie survey of this artist's life will be the fifth this year in the University's films on art series. Student Is Chosen For N.Y. Seminar S. H. Hashmi, graduate student from Hyderabad, India, has been selected by the Institute of International Education in New York to participate in a Seminar on "Contemporary America" to be held in Washington, D.C. The Institute of International Education in New York selected Hashmi as one of 20 foreign students from the United States to join in the seminar. He received his master's degree in political science from the Osmania University in India. The Philippine Board of Scholarships for Southeast Asia offered him a scholarship in 1957 which enabled him to secure his master's in public administration from the University of the Philippines. TEXACO MARFAK LUBE JOB Truck Repair To insure quieter, smoother over-all car performance give your car a Marfak Lube job. BOB HARRELL TEXACO 9th & Miss. VI 3-9897 DRASTIC REDUCTION on all winter & holiday merchandise PRE-INVENTORY SALE MOTOR COATS Values $10.98 - $35.00 ----NOW $5.00 - $10.00 DRESSES, sizes 5 thru 15 Values $9.98 to $49.98 NOW $3.00 to $20.00 SPORTSWEAR INCLUDES SWEATERS SKIRTS JACKETS BLOUSES Values $3.98 to $17.98 NOW 2.00 - $7.00 SLEEPWEAR — CHALLIS & FLANNEL P.Js. & GOWNS Since Small Medium Large Values $3.98 to $7.00 NOW $1.00 GLOVES — ALL WINTER GLOVES GLOVES — ALL WINTER GLOVES Were $1.00 to $2.98 NOW 50c to $1.00 All sales final — no exchange — refunds or lay-aways on sale mdse. Please OBER'S Junior Miss Elevator From Men's Store Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 Togetherness KU Gym Is Called Poorest in Big 8 By Jean Spangler "KU probably has the poorest indoor recreational facilities of all the Big Eight schools. Yet it conducts one of the biggest intramural programs in the conference." Henry A. Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman of KU's physical education department, said this recently as he reviewed how already-crowded conditions in his program were not likely to be relieved soon. "Our department has been affected by the enrollment increase the same as other branches of the University. But unlike many departments, little attempt has been made to meet our biggest single problem: the need for additional indoor recreational facilities." TODAY TWO BUILDINGS MUST MEET THE DEMANDS of over 9,000 students. Robinson Gymnasium was built in 1906 when the student body numbered roughly 2,500. Shortly after the war, Robinson Annex, a converted army barracks adjacent to Malott Hall, was brought into use as a "temporary" emergency measure. Prof. Shenk warned that "this is all the space with which we face a future enrollment of 12 to 15 thousand within the next few years. "Few people realize the wide variety of indoor activities which are sponsored by the University," he said. "In addition to the minor varsity sports such as the gymnastic, volleyball, swimming and fencing teams, room must be reserved for intramural sports such as basketball, ping pong, volleyball, badminton and swimming. "THIS FALL, THERE WERE 142 BASKETBALL TEAMS with more than 1500 members, competing in the men's division. If each team was to play eight games, 568 separate contests had to be scheduled. "Add to this another 160 games played by 35 women's basketball teams. By way of comparison, it would take the varsity team over 28 years to match this schedule," Prof. Shenk said. "This does not even take the practices for each team into consideration. Actually, there is so little practice time possible, students rarely have the opportunity to gain additional athletic skill through practices." Taking a look at the over-all program of physical education, it is evident that gym space is only part of the need, Prof. Shenk said. "THE SWIMMING POOL, WHICH IS ONLY 20 BY 60 feet, is decidedly inadequate for the extensive schedule it must meet. KU should have at least one more, much larger pool to provide more space for Quack Club, life-saving and swimming classes, recreational, intramural and varsity swimming. "We have only two handball courts. The demand calls for many more. We have no gym for fencing enthusiasts." Poland will offer 15 scholarships to American students for study in Polish universities for the academic year 1961-62. Interested students should see Herbert Weatherby, director of Aid and Awards, at 222 Strong. Poland Will Offer 15 Student Grants The awards are expected to provide tuition, living accommodations, a monthly stipend and medical care. The U.S. government is expected to offer three travel grants to supplement these awards. 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 Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Shoe Repair 1-Day Service Leather Full Soles 399 With Rubber Heels pr. $5 Val. DELUXE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 1300 W. 23rd St. Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Weaver's Our 104th Year of Service annual sale seamless stockings save up to $1.05 on every box. monday, january 9 thru saturday, january 14 Weaver's Hosiery Shop — Street Floor Weaver DENVER — (UPI) — Workmen finished installing a $28,300 iron spike fence around the Denver mint yesterday to stop people from trying to reach through ground floor windows into storage bins full of coins. There is no safety in numbers or anything else.—James Thurber Earl H. Dearborn, KU graduate of 1938, has been appointed assistant director of the Experimental Therapeutics Research section at Lederle Laboratories Division, American Cyanamid Co. KU Graduate Appointed Keep Your Mitts Off! Factual knowledge (in medicine) has already exceeded the comprehension of a single individual George W. Thorn New Broadway Shows in Stereo and Mono Camelot - Tenderloin 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 The Unsinkable Molly Brown BELL MUSIC COMPANY POWER TWINS CITIES SERVICE NEW5-D PREMIUM GASOLENE Has All Five 1. ANTI-CARBON The first gasolene to reduce harmful carbon...a new high in engine cleanliness! 2. EXTRA-HIGH OCTANE 3. ANTI-RUST In actual tests it eliminated rust in the entire fuel system! Protects against knock in new and older engines! 4. ANTI-STALLING Eliminates stalling caused by carburetor icing under severe fall and winter conditions! 5. UPPER-CYLINDER LUBRICANT Contains an anti-oxidant. Stops oil from oxidizing! THE WORLD'S FIRST B-DIMENSIONAL GASOLENE NEW5-D KOOLMOTOR 10-W-30 MOTOR OIL EASIER STARTING FULL BODIED AT NORMAL OPERATION AND HIGH SPEEDS KLWN-Cities Service Sports Report Mon. thru Fri. — 12:45 CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Downtown—Near Everything 8th and New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE --- duate ssist- ental at ision, Page 5 cine) pre- ual. Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 University Daily Kansan American Male Defends The American Woman At every cocktail party, in every interview with movie actors, businessmen, and even some diplomats, and in almost every magazine and newspaper, the refrain is the same: "American women talk too much." American women talk too much. "American women do not have the feminine charm of the Oriental women. "There just isn't any comparison. I'll take the Japanese woman for her pleasant way of accommodating a man, the Chinese for her grace and intelligence and the Vietnamese for pure beauty. The American woman? Maybe for her money, but what else does she possibly have?" What, the, he asks, is the truth about the US woman living abroad? Is she monster or myth? His answer is that she is pretty wonderful and indispensable to her husband, and he wouldn't trade her for half a dozen of the seductive Oriental beauties. The criticism that she talks too much can be turned into one of her finest attributes, he says. In an article written by Robert Klaverkamp, United Press International correspondent abroad, the American woman is defended. THE MUCH-MALIGNED American housewife, taking care of her family in a foreign clime, in most cases doesn't even have time to defend herself, he says. Since Japan is largely a man's world, she isn't even at the club or party where she's being crucified verbally. And her husband is either remaining discreetly quiet or agreeing with some of the criticism he continues "Any man who doesn't enjoy matching verbal wit with a woman isn't worth his salt, and even good companionship is barren without a little conversation now and then." R & R Used Furniture 9th & Maine We Buy and Sell Clean Used Furniture THE ORIENTAL BEAUTY may exude sex appeal, he continues, but if she's smiling and agreeing with everything you say and do, "this little tableau can bore even the most supreme Casanova egoists." He contends that a woman who speaks her mind is a refreshing commodity, and American women are best at this even if they sometimes puncture an ego in the process. "Being a bit of the gregarious helps in this department and the American woman loves mixing at a cocktail party. She can engage and disengage herself from all of her guests more often in an evening than Khrushchev can blow hot and cold over Berlin. And the guests love it." "WHO CAN BUNDLE the kids off to school in the morning, get Papa on his way, line up a speaker for the monthly meeting of her women's group, lunch downtown with three of her friends, study Japanese for two hours in the afternoon, and be ready to accompany her husband in the evening while he entertains a couple of visiting firemen from San Francisco? Maybe not a typical day, but some American women have been known to do more." He cites the following examples for the American woman's ability to shine through with variety being the spice of life: Also, he says, the American woman is the best hostess. HE CONTENDS that there is beauty in a woman who can talk intelligently about more than two or three subjects. And finally to the looks of the American woman. What does Mr. Klaverkamp say? "They look good!" 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT JIM'S CAFE ... On the Hill. Delta Chi Jim Carr, Carthage, Mo., sophomore, has been elected president of Delta Chi fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers are Dean Daniels, Chanute senior, vice president; Steve Stazel, Fredonia sophomore, secretary; Jerry Andre, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior, treasurer; Kirk Bond, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, corresponding secretary, and Doug Walcher, Wichita sophomore, sergeant at arms. Delta Upsilon The Delta Upsilon fraternity pledge class recently announced the election of their second semester officers. They are Jerry Woods, Larned, president; Tom Hamill, Colby, vice president; Chuck Heath Salina, secretary-treasurer. All are freshmen. Re-elected to office were Pete Alyward, Ellsworth sophomore, social chairman; Bo Guenther, Augusta freshman, and Derril Gwinner. Ellsworth freshman, song leaders. . . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon recently elected spring semester officers. They are Jim Hodge, Baltimore, Md., senior president; Clark Stewart, Nashville senior, vice president; Mike Roverson, Abilene junior, recorder; Max Eberhart, Great Bend junior, treasurer; Tom Kerr, Kansas City junior, assistant treasurer, and Jim Warner, Wichita sophomore, correspondent. Also elected were Larry Diehl, McPherson senior, chronicler; Kent Converse, Larned sophomore, herald; Jim Talley, De Soto junior, intramural manager; Charles McIwaine, Wichita senior, pledge trainer; Rex Romeiser, Salina sophomore, assistant pledge trainer; Dave Hall, Wichita senior, house manager; and Don McKillop, Kansas City sophomore, warden. Stocking colors for fall reflect the new concept of color coordination. Jet brown blends black and brown; black amethyst, a gem tone, is for wearing with the amethyst costume. To wear with black or brown, there's green onyx. PARSONS JEWELRY Serving the community with quality products for 60 years 725 MASS. VI 3-4266 SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Grecase Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipse Installed Free Open 24 hours on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Students! Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-Pacs of all kinds Picnic Supplies GOING ON A PICNIC? LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt. VI 3-0350 BEFORE You Leave the Campus Attention! VI 3-1171 JANUARY GRADS Don't Forget to Have Your Senior Picture Taken at ESTES STUDIO If you bought a Jayhawker and will not be here next semester, we will be glad to mail the Jayhawker to you Just leave your name and address at the Jayhawker office KIRSTEN'S Costume Accents Costume Accents 30 $100 And $200 LOADS OF BEAUTIFUL NECKLACES, EARRINGS, BRACELETS, PINS, AND CIRCLE PINS At KIRSTEN'S HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 Around the BIG 8 As the Big Eight championship race moves into its second weekend of competition, conference coaches are showing the usual pessimism but a few are pleased with their team's performances thus far. Such surprises as the upsurge of the Nebraska team with two wins and the outburst against the basketball regime at Missouri point to a very interesting night of action Saturday as all eight squads play. ★★ AT MISSOURI basketball coach Wilburn "Sparky" Stalcup has been hung in effigy. At least some students are perturbed over the miserable showing of the Tiger team on the hardwood. Stalcup's squad managed only two wins in its first 12 games and is now wallowing in the depths of an eight game losing streak. Citing this season as the fifth straight losing effort at MU and what will probably be the worst in history, a student publication, the Maneater, is laying the blame at the feet of athletic director Don Faurot and the school administration. The complaint is centered around the lack of scholarships awarded in basketball as compared to the rugged schedule which the Tigers face. The publication suggested the situation might be relieved by placing less interest on football and switching some of the aid the gridders receive to the basketball team. ★★ IOWA STATE coach Glen Anderson's team comes to Lawrence Saturday and then travels to Manhattan as the Cyclones face the two top contenders for the league title. The Cyclone cagers, edged by one point by Colorado last week, must now upset someone like Kansas or K-State as well as Colorado to have a chance for the title. ★★ KANSAS STATE coach Tex Winter is worried about the possibility of an upset against Oklahoma Saturday. Since OU has lost three straight and the Wildeats have a nine game winning streak, a 10-2 overall record and are listed among the top 10 teams in the nation. Winter said, "Things couldn't be any more set up for us to be run over." Of Oklahoma, Winter said, "Any team that plays Kansas that close (58-55) can beat anybody in the league on a good night." ★★★ NEBRASKA has already won more games this season than all last year. The Cornhuskers have posted an 8-4 mark. As the Huskers prepare for Colorado, coach Jerry Bush attributes better reboundings and improved play from his guards for the surprising showing. ★★ OKLAHOMA'S Doyle Parrack said of the Sooner's loss to KU, "Actually we played our best game of the year. We thought if we could hold their inside men we could win. Defense was the best phase of our game." ★★ OKLAHOMA STATE has never beaten Missouri in Columbia but will have another opportunity as the teams square off Saturday. The Cowboys will come to Kansas Monday for the return match. KANSAS ... 2 0 Nebraska ... 2 0 Kansas State ... 1 0 Colorado ... 1 1 Iowa State ... 1 1 Oklahoma ... 0 1 Oklahoma State ... 0 2 Missouri ... 0 2 WON LOST Big Eight Standings KU Gymnasts Face K-State The KU gymnasts will meet Kansas State tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in Robinson gym. The meet will feature three of the best gymnasts in the area with cocaptains Mike Dziura and Bob Rector for Kansas State and player-coach Bob Lockwood participating for KU. Kansas lost in its first meeting with the Wildcats as Lockwood led all scorers with 26 points. Dziura and Rector had 22 and 20 points respectively. Lockwood has been high point man in every meet so far as the Jayhawkers have compiled a 2-2 record and placed second in a triangular meet. The KU coach's 124 point output so far has already shattered the season mark of 102 points which he set last year. Other top performers for Kansas will be Mike Zwink on the horizontal bar, Clayton Lang on the parallel bar and Don Clifford in humbling. Mercy Bowl Heads New Bowl List PITTSBURGH - (UPI) - The NCAA yesterday approved four new college football bowl games for next season, including one called the Mercy Bowl. The Mercy Bowl will be played in Los Angeles Thanksgiving Day for the benefit of families of 16 California Poly football players killed in a plane crash last fall near Toledo, Ohio. It was approved as a one-shot endeavor with proceeds to go to the Cal Poly Memorial Fund. Other bowls receiving the NCAA stamp included; The Aviation Bowl at Dayton, Ohio; the Presidential Bowl at Washington, and the Gotham Bowl in New York City, all Dec. 9. The Gotham Bowl had been approved a year ago, but no contest was played this past season because the committee could not find suitable opponents. However, the bowl's sponsors applied yesterday for re-certification. Last night's intramural basketball was plagued with forfeits as five teams failed to have enough players to play. Two of the forfeits were Fraternity B games giving Sigma Chi and Lambda Chi Alpha wins over Delta Chi and Phi Kappa Theta. KU Swimmers Open Season The other three forfeits were in the Independent C division. Jim Beam was awarded a win over Liahona, Carruth-O'Leary over Zoology, and the Cowards were given a victory over Templin. The KU swimming team leaves early tomorrow morning for its first dual and first conference meet of the 1961 season. Triangle beat Kappa Psi, 25-23, and Phi Delta Theta beat Sigma The team will meet Iowa University tomorrow at Iowa City, and Iowa State University Saturday, at Ames. Coach Markley predicts a victory for All America Eldon Ward, Wichita junior, in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle events. "Another victory should go to Dick Reamon in the 200-yard individual medley," said Coach Markley. He also predicted that Reamon, Topeka junior, would win the 200-yard butterfly event. Coach Markley also felt that Karl Pfeutze, Prairie Village junior, would win the 200 breaststroke, and Bill Murdock, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, would be a close second. "Murdock has been out for a few days with the flu, and he'll swim the breaststroke in the medley relay." Sale of GIRLS' SPORT SHOES 4. 90 and 5.90 "The team has a few outstanding individual swimmers." continued Coach Markley, "but we lack necessary depth. We can't win a meet by winning a few first places, and letting the other team take a second and third in every event." Phi Kappa Psi Wins; Five Forfeits in IMs Tie patterns in Suede and smooth leathers — green, black, red & brown 15 Last season the Jayhawker swimmers beat Iowa State for the first time in history. So, the Cyclones will be out for revenge as the squads open their schedules. SUEDE LOAFERS in GRAY & BLACK MAINE AIRES, VINER and GLAMOUR DEB Were $8.95 813 Mass. McCoy's NOW! Performance At 7:30 p.m. Adults $1.25 WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE!" from METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S PRESENTATION OP. BEN HUR A TALE OF THE CHRIST TECHNICOLOR® FILMED IN CAMERA 65 Matinees Saturday and Sunday at 1:30 Varsity THEATRE ··· Telephone VI 3-1065 Nu. 25-11, in the Fraternity B games which were played. In Independent C games Joseph R. Pearson beat the Chemical Engineers, 33-19, and the Medies downed Templin No. 1, 45-23. Also Botany beat Phi Beta Pi, 16-10. The intramural basketball schedule for tomorrow afternoon and evening is as follows: INDEPENDENT A — Battenford vs Foster, 4:15 — Hawks vs Joseph R. Pearson No. 2. 5:15 — Ace Pearson vs Jolliffe, 6:15 — Stephenson vs Pearson, 7:15. FRATERNITY C — Delta Tau Delta No. 1 vs Beta Theta Pi No. 4.5:45 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 2 vs Phi Kappa Psi No. 2, 6:30 — Tau Kappa Epsilon No. 2 vs Delta Upsilon No. 2, 6:30 — Phi Gamma Delta No. 3 vs Beta Theta Pi No. 5.1:5 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 4 vs Sigma Chi No. 1, 7:15. FRATERNITY B — Phi Kappa Tau vs Pi Kappa Alpha, 4:15 — Kappa Alpha Psi vs Kappa Sigma, 4:15 — Sigma Phi Epsilon vs Alpha Kappa Lambda, 5 — Alpha Phi Alpha vs Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 5 — Delta Upsilon vs Acacia, 5:45. NOW! At 7:00 & 9:20 ДЕСЛОВАН KERR ROBERT MITCHUM JOHN STINOV DEGRAHN KERR ROBERT MITCHUM PETER USTINOV THE SUNDOWNERS BY STEVEN GLYMUS JOHNS DINA MERRILL TECHNICOLOR Directed by ISOBEL LENNIART Directed by FREE ZINNEMAN PRODUced by WARLEA BROS. STARTING SATURDAY! JERRY LEWIS IS FABULOUS FUN AS CINDERFELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) THORPEPRES THE BOSS BOYARD ED WYNN JUDITH ANDERSON HENRY SILVA-ROBERT HUTTON COUNT BASIE and his World Renowned Band featuring Joe Williams ANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI as "The Princess" Produced by Jerry Lewis - Associates Producer—Ernest D. Chukkanov - Writing and Directed by Frank Talbin-Musician Names Selected by Nick Castle - New Songs by Harry Narnaby and Jack Brickins - A Paramount Release TECHNICOLOR Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 University Daily Kansan CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 LOST LADIES' EYEGLASSES, black front gold earpiece. No ease. Missing since Dec. 15. *Reward* Call VI 2-1340, Beverly Weaver. 1-16 HELP WANTED MEDICAL SECRETARY, female. Part time Monday through Friday. Mechanical duties in words for 6 or 8 minutes. No medical terminology. For appointment call VI 3-3680. -1-18 Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hay, VI 3-2318. tlr TYPING Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan, tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter.Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tt Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mar. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2 1648. Experienced typist — will type theses, term papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tf Expert typing and secretarial service. Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5920 or Mrs. Hicks, VI 2-0111. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf Experienced typist - will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason-onable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-9554. tf TYPING. Themes, term papers, etc. typed with neatness and accuracy by ex- perienced typist. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Alvin Johnson. VI 3-9577. 1-12 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf FORMER SECRETARY will take interi- nate home Standard calls. Call VI 3-1312 THEMES, theses, etc. Fast accurate work —former secretary. Phone VI 3-1573. Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. tfr Experienced typist — term papers, munscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable hours. Robert Cook; 2000 R. I. Can'fli V 3-7455. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type these, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Methlinger, VI 3-4409. tl TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell, 1511 W. 21st St. St. 3-6440. 1-18 FOR SALE BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and diagrams. Complete cross index. Price $3.00. For your call copy I 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. tf 16 FOOT FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 hp Johnson motor. All new, including trailer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. SI 2-0479. 1-13 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE. Two door with radio and heater. Low mileage. Very good condition. Can be seen at 534 La. after 5 p.m., or call VI 3-2599-1-128 FOR SALE. 1955 one bedroom Safeway Home sale. Equipped with a one ton Ventilator. Large storage space. Excellent condition. Phone: 7912 7912 after 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-12 1951 Semi-convertible Rambier. Blue. 1951 after dance Bance KU 374 or V-12 112 after 7 p.m. HOUSE, for sale by owner. Three bedrooms, full basement, fenced yard, attached garage, exceptional closet space. Office from Schwartz School. Call VI 3-4801. 1-18 FOR SALE: 1957 21" console Syvanna 85 lb 15" barrels VI-2 1623 after 6:300 1-12 barrells VI-2 1623 after 6:300 1-12 1955 RANCH WAGON, $750; or 1951 Lim- cell in excellent condition. Call VI 3-3231. MODEL 58 Automatic 10 gauge shotgun and assortment of shells. Also Kay auditorium size guitar. Both in perfect condition. Call VI 2-0503 after 5 p.m. 1-12 1953 CHEVROLET: Two door, radio, heater. 175 or nearest offer. Also will trade "Hemmi" chemical engineer's slide rule for regular slide rule in equally good condition. Call Rangan. KU 1607498 between 4 and 5 p.m. or see at 1607498 Tern. 1-12 TUXEDO and dinner jacket combination. Excellent condition. Low price. Call VI 3-5465. 1-17 STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 ATTENTION: Do you need a complete calculator for personal use? S. C. the amazing Zirina calculate copatte of all numbers for $125. S. E. & E. included. Call VI 12-0715. Bob Edminston, for demonstrator appointment. 1-16 1959 REGAL MOBILE HOME-51' x 10' two bedrooms, must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-0734 after 5 p.m. for appointment. 1-17 FOR RENT First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. tf 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street parking, private bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9776. tf VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf FOR RENT: 2 or 3 boys, large furnished recreation room apt. Private bath, utilities paid. Jack Hawk. 2417 Ohio. 1-12 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six bath, two a nd d entrance. Utilities paid. No Married. Married only. 520 Ohio. ROOMS—graduate men preferred. Single $40, double $25 to $30. New furniture and bath facilities. Additional study and rec room room available. 1221 Ischl. V-1-12 6738. ROOMS FOR MEN STUDENTS: Do you need a quiet room? Have four singles, two doubles for second semester. Rent reduced. Call VI 3-9340 after 5 p.m. for appointment to see. Three blocks east of KU. 1-13 3 ROOM furnished house. $55 per month. 2 bedroom house. $65. Newly painted. also very nice furnished 3 room private room; $80, T. A. Hemphill VI, 5-12 3902. BUSINESS LOCATION available for rent to students for a restaurant or rooming on campus possibilities. Located on Lawrence's busiest street. Lots of parking. V 3-1578. 1-17 Thursday, Jan. 12, 1961 ROOMS FOR MEN—ONE HALF BLOCK from Union. Well-heated and quiet. See at 1301 La. or call VI 3-4092. tff GROUND FLOOR furnished apartment. Utilities paid. Close to campus, $70. Second floor apartment for women. $55. Sleeping room, $25. Call VI 3-6249. 1-7 FURNISHED APARTMENT, recently redecorated. Two large rooms, practically new furniture. Sound-proofed ceiling. Two shared baths. For rent or lease to two women or couple. 1129 Vt. Call VI 3-2149 mornings or after 5 p.m. 1-12 Large seven room furnished house. Single beds. Also five room house, newly decorated inside and out. Near post office. Call VI 3-9184. 3-17 FRESHMAN MALE who is interested in football and who would be interested in managing a football team. Notify James II 2.0406 or Clyde Kensington, 1-1251, 7514. SMALL APARTMENT for one student Furnished, bills paid. Near campus. Call VI 3-0054 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. 1:18 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6313 after p.m. 1-7. TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $80. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-17 BASEMENT APARTMENT for men students. Private entrance, utilities paid. 1520 W. 22nd Terr. 1-17 WANTED MEN'S FURNISHED apartment. Close to Union. $60, all utilities paid. 1230 Oread. Call VI 3-2999. 1-16 BOARD AND ROOM for next semester. Reasonable price. Call VI 3-9562. 1-13 LARGE THREE ROOM apartment, well- furnished, centrally located. First floor, private entrance and bath. Reasonable cost. Call VI 3-6696. 1-18 WRITER of comedy to write for a comedy team. Notify James Beu. VI 2-0250 or Clyde Kensinger, VI 3-7514. *1+12* TWO ROOM well-furnished apartment. Large living room-bedroom, kitchen and living room. reasonable rent. Five minutes from campus. Call VI 3-0189 after 5 p.m. 1-18 DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939½ Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tt BUSINESS SERVICES TRANSPORTATION PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 complete outline of lecture; comprehensible formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. Wish to join or form car pool from Overland Park area next semester. Five days a week. Call RA 2-4725. 1-13 WILL BABYSIT at my home all day. See Mrs. Marquez, 836 Mississippi, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. 1-12 Alterations and repair work. Call Te Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551. tf RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest jances. Marion Rice Dance Studio. 908 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. tf PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions for vii Price $4.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Flat, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 91-742-8300. WEDDING INVITATIONS — Call for appointment to see invitations, napkins, thank you folders, etc. Excellent quality, low in price. Phone VI 3-4206. 1-13 HOUSE FOR RENT Rental Payment Between $70 & $100 per month - unfurnished - - available immediately - Call Moore Associates VI 3-2571 THE ONLY THING I LIKE ABOUT STUDYING FOR FINALS IS THE PIZZA BREAK MR. PIZZA CAMPUS VI 3-9111 FAST DELIVERY HIDEAWAY Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 12. 1961 Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication, not bring Barbara Mann. The Daily Kansan, Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Teachers 'Appointment Bureau Interviews. Interviewers are: C. Fred Colvin, Assist. Teacher, Frank Creason, District 49 (Mus. & I-6), Overland Park, Kansas. Poetry Hour. 4 p.m. Browsing Room, Kansas Union, James E. Seaver, Dir. of Western Cliv. Dept., will read from works of "Lucretius." Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich wieder am 12. Februar, um 5 uhr, 502 Fraser. Wahl des neuen Vorstandes. Grosses Semester - finale - Schallplatten. Tanzen, Erfrischungen! Alle herzlich eingeladen!! Baptist Student Union. 1221 Oread. Evening Vespers at 5:00. There will be a discussion on the Summer Missions Program led by Lloyd Decker. American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers. 7 p.m. 300 Fowler. Speaker is Mr. Roger Baker, quality engineering and guaging supervisor, Bendix Aviation Corporation. "Training for Quality." Philosophy Club. 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Dr. William Earle, Prop. of Philosophy at Northwestern will speak on "The Immorality of Morality." Christian Science Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforthe, Chapet Medical Dames. 8 p.m. Kansas Union, Guest speakers, Dean C. Arden Miller and Dr. R. C. Mills will discuss the KU Medical School Program. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcalp Morning Prayer and Holy Caterpillar Breakfast follows. #45 a.m. Caterpillar House ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. FIRST OF ALL FIRST OF ALL THE STRIDE RITE Firstie · firm counter · broad heel seat · finest of fit, ... and the very best beginning for your baby's first steps. White 2 to 6 $5.50 FIRST OF ALL THE STRIDE RITE Firstie THE STRIDE RITE Firstie White 2 to 6 $5.50 Study in Rumania Available Next Year Rumania will offer several scholarships to American graduate students for study in Rumanian universities for the academic year, 1961-62. This is part of an exchange arrangement between the U.S. and Rumania. The U.S. government will offer travel grants to supplement these awards. The Rumanian awards will pro vide tuition and a monthly stipem sufficient to cover living expense The deadline for application is Jan. 14. The largest single edition of the Jayhawker in history will be available to students Feb. 3-4. Jayhawker '2 Ready Feb.3 "Over 1,500 man hours have gone into the preparation of the 134 page issue," Russ D'Anna, Lawrence senior, and editor of the Jayhawker said. This issue will include the rest of the football season with a special feature section on the players, a basketball preview, and cross country. BIRD TV - RADIO Birds on a branch 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 STEREO - Expert Service - Quality Parts Kurt's Letter on Resolution - Guaranteed (Continued from page 1) believe that students should be able to vote on the resolution and amendments separately in the spring elections. The ramifications of this long resolution otherwise have just recently become so complicated and embroiled that the ASC might be blamed for any action taken on the resolution by those who have not analyzed each point carefully. Therefore at the next ASC meeting I will move that the resolution be referred to the students for vote in the spring general election. I believe this would be the best action possible on an issue which personally concerns every student at KU. Tom Kurt Pratt graduate student SKI TRIP The International Club is organizing a Ski-Trip to Winter Park, Colorado, between semesters. Approximate cost $60, all inclusive. Those interested plan to attend meeting in Kansas Union Thurs., 6:30. Room No. to be announced. 1961-62 CONSTRUCTION PLANS INVESTMENT $80,000,000 EXPENSE -$32,000,000 NOT AVENUE $18,000 "IT'S HERE-IF YOU WANT TO WORK FOR IT" Even before Ron Spetrino received his engineering degree from Case he had good job offers from six companies. He joined The Ohio Bell Telephone Company —his reason: "I was convinced an engineer could go further here—if he was willing to work for it." As soon as Ron got his feet on the ground in telephone engineering, he was tapped for a tough assignment. The job-to engineer switching equipment modifications needed to prepare Cleveland for nationwide customer dialing of long distance calls. Ron wrapped it up in five months, and found he had earned a shot at another tough assignment. In this job Ron helped engineer a completely new long distance switching center for Cleveland. This switching center connected Cleveland with the nationwide customer dialing network. It was about a year later that Ron put the finishing touches on the specs for this $1,600,000 project. Today, as a Supervising Engineer, Ron heads a staff of five engineers and is responsible for telephone switching in much of the greater Cleveland area. He supervises the design and purchase of $3 million worth of equipment a year. And even more important, he is charged with developing the technical and managerial skills of his staff. Ron knows what he's talking about when he says, "In this business you have to do more than a good job. We expect a man to be a self-developer. We expect him to take responsibility from his first day on the job and think for himself. You don't get ahead around here by just doing time." PETER SMITH If you want a job in which you're given every chance to prove yourself, and real responsibility right from the start—you'll want to see your Placement Office for further information. "Our number one aim is to have in all management jobs the most vital, intelligent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find." FREDERICK R. KAPPEL, President American Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL VICTIMS MEMORIAL AVE. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001 BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Daily hansan 58th Year, No. 70 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, Jan. 13, 1961 Police Detain 19 KU Students After Sit-in at Local Tavern THE DEPT. OF PUBLIC SERVICES Student Action Surprises Heads Of Rights Groups Leaders of the CRC and the LLPD last night denied that members of their organizations led the student sit-in and said they were "stunned" to learn that the action had been taken. Called at his home last night, Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics and president of the LLPD. said: "I knew nothing about it—and if I had known, I would not have approved." Prof. Shaffer explained that the measure taken was not a policy of the LLPD. BUT WHILE being interviewed previously at the Lawrence police station, Prof. Shaffer defended the student action and said he did not think the demonstration was "overdone." "You can do whatever you want in your own home," he said to news- Students detained by Lawrence police stand in line as officers take down their names. After detention at the police station, these sit-in demonstrators were released and allowed to return to campus. See page 10 for picture page on last night's sit-in demonstration. men, "but you must remember that here you are dealing with a public place." Marvin McKnight, Lawrence senior and chairman of the CRC, was also interviewed at the police station. Both he and Prof. Shaffer hurried there when they received word that students were being detained by the police. Asked what he thought the possible effects of the sit-in might be, McKnight replied: "It will crystallize opinion on both sides. Many of the apathetic will have their consciences jarred; other people will be antagonized. Actually, everybody is making such a serious thing of this—and yet these students are not boisterous, not out of order; they are just peacefully requesting their rights." "The first I knew about it was when Prof. Shaffer called me," said McKnight. He said he was "very surprised" at the sudden and apparently spontaneous student action. Leader of Group Tells How It Started By Michael B. Landwehr as told to Rav Miller This afternoon, two other students and myself, one a Negro, went downtown shopping. We passed this place (Louise's Bar) and I was thirsty and wanted to go in for a small glass of beer. When we got inside, we sat down and I said "I'd like a small glass, please." The woman behind the counter wouldn't serve us. She just (Continued on page 12) Weather There will be no immediate breakdown in the pattern of the weather. The weather bureau forecasts moderate daytime temperatures and cool nights. The overnight low will be from 20 to 25. The University Daily Kansan weather bureau forecasts heavy snows during final week. The End of a Demonstration Just Another Thursday Night— By Fred Zimmerman An old woman dropped another nickel into the pinball machine and unenthusiastically watched as the lights blinked on and off. Six or seven townspeople sat quietly at the bar drinking their beer. Country-western music blared from the jukebox. It was just another Thursday night at Louise's bar, a 15-stool tavern on Massachusetts Street. Louise Williams, the middle-aged proprietress, was alone behind the bar, serving an occasional refill and joking with the regular customers. Then the door opened and 10 university students walked in. Most of them wore suits and ties, and they said nothing as they sat down at the bar. Four of the students were Negroes. This was no longer just another Thursday night. The first Lawrence sit-in in 12 years was beginning. "No service, boys, no service," the woman said. Two or three of the students asked for a soft drink. "No service, I said." The woman was nervous. A member of the group standing near the door quietly motioned for a few more students to enter. Soon all the available stools were occupied, and a line of students was standing against the wall, leaving only three or four 'eet between themselves and the persons at the bar. When the proprietress had refused them service several times, the students stopped speaking, except among themselves in whispers. The woman went to the back of the bar and began conversing with her regular customers, several of whom were standing in a group watching the students. The proprietress then went to the cash register, took out a dime, walked again the length of the bar, down the narrow aisle to the pay telephone near the door and phoned the police. There was trouble. Officers arrived and began escorting the students to the station. The first Lawrence sit-in in 12 years came to an abrupt end. Returning to the bar, the woman called out: "You'd better get out boys. There's going to be trouble." The students sat motionless, and exchanged nervous glances. Chancellor Hopes for Legislation "Students from the University made clear their point that some establishments in our community open to the public choose not to serve all members of the public. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe issued the following statement regarding the sit-in demonstration that took place last night: "It has also been made clear thereby that Kansas statutes presently allow such discrimination. "Thoughtful persons have suggested that the present legislature consider amending the civil rights statute, and there is every reason to believe that the legislature will act. "All of us at the University believe in the rule of law, and consequently hope that this will be the manner in which the question will be resolved." Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, indicated that no disciplinary action has been planned against the students who participated in last night's sit-in. Donald Alderson, dean of men, said that he did not have enough information at the time he was questioned this morning. He said no decision would be reached on action to be taken until the administration had talked to the students involved. All Are Released; Leaders Pledge Further Action By Frank Morgan "Let me have your attention! You have two choices—either you leave right now as the owner wants, or we will have to take you to the police station." Upon hearing these words by Lawrence police officers, nine KU students, who were sitting at Louise's Bar, $1017\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts St., decided to accompany the officers. This was the first sit-in in Law- rence in more than a decade, and the students indicated clearly that it would not be the last one. The nine were part of a group of approximately 40 students who had assembled to "demonstrate against Sit-in Spokesmen Promise More Action "Until the authorities of this state make it illegal to congregate in a public place, we shall continue with such positive action as we deem appropriate and necessary to resolve the situation. And until the situation has been met and conquered, we will not be satisfied." Spokesmen for the sit-in demonstrators made this joint statement to the Daily Kansan last night: the tavern's policy of racial discrimination." They had agreed to demistrate by a "non-violent, peaceful sit-in." Five white and four Negro students were taken to the station. —Michael Landwehr and Tom Heitz WHEN THEY had left in the patrol cars, 10 more students entered the tavern and were refused service. They waited for the police to be summoned once more to take them to the station. In this group were five white and five Negro students making a total of 19 students taken into custody. The sit-in had been organized by Michael Landwehr, Brooklyn, N.Y., junior, after he and a Negro friend had been refused service in the tavern yesterday afternoon. Landwehr invited residents of his dormitory, Carruth-O'Leary, to return and protest the discrimination. "I went from room to room and told them what had happened," he said. "I was so mad about it that I just wanted those that felt the same way to do something with me." THE STUDENTS entered the tavern at 8:15. They sat on the empty (Continued on page 9) ASC Resolution Now Has 108 Backers As of 11:20 a.m., 108 persons had signed the petitions posted on Jayhawk Blvd. supporting the ASC resolution against racial discrimination. As a reader service, the Kansan has reprinted the complete text of the resolution on page two. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 13. 1961 How Far... How Fast? A SHORT DISTANCE UP THE KAW FROM Kansas City sprawls the town of Lawrence . . . Lawrence, Kansas. Nothing special about the name. Just Lawrence, Kansas. And nothing really special about the town either. The high school—Lawrence High—has a good football team. The farmers from the flat wheat-producing plains drive into the town every Saturday, spend some money, return to the farm. The workers from the Co-op gather in various taverns throughout the city to drink beer most nights. The churches, as might be expected in an area called the Bible Belt, are full each Sunday . . . Lawrence, Kansas. IF THERE IS SOMETHING THAT SETS Lawrence apart from other Kansas towns, it is the University on the hill. Kansans and particularly those Kansans from Lawrence-speak of the University with pride. The native of Lawrence marvels at the beauty of the campus in his childhood, walks hand-in-hand along its sidewalks with a girl in his youth, and, in his old age, sits on his porch and watches the flags atop Fraser Hall flapping in the breeze. The University and Lawrence are one to the native of Lawrence. Historically, it has always been this way. TO THE STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY that same University that is a source of pride to the town of Lawrence—Lawrence and the University are one also. This is true-for four years. But four years is very little time. It is very little time for the student at the University to learn to appreciate the town as the town has learned to love the University. BUT FOUR YEARS IS NOT TOO SHORT A time—in some cases—for the student at the University on the hill to become disenchanted with Lawrence. And then he becomes convinced that he has a stake in shaping the history of Lawrence. But is the town of Lawrence his? Or does it belong more to the Co-op worker, the farmer who comes in on Saturday afternoons, the Lawrence churchgoer? FOUR YEARS. FOUR YEARS FOR THE student to throw himself into the struggle . . . and then his place is taken by another student with just four years. But the history of Lawrence is not measured in terms of four years to the Co-op worker, the farmer, the man who attends Sunday School in a Lawrence church as a boy and watches his children married in the same church years later. Can victory be achieved in four years—or is that trying to go too far too fast? At the end of four years, the student leaves, perhaps to carry on the Struggle elsewhere. But Lawrence is anchored to the Kansas plains. It has not left the scene of battle in the past. Lawrence cannot leave the scene of battle now. Dan Felger Text of ASC Resolution Resolution on Racial Justice Be it resolved by the All Student Council of the University of Kansas: 1. We, the All Student Council of the University of Kansas, recognizing that racial discrimination exists in both the North and South, condemn any such violations of human dignity. 2. We believe that racial discrimination conflicts with basic religious and moral principles. 3. We as students especially condemn discriminatory practices in the area of education, such as biased admission policies and expulsion of students who exhibit support of integration. 4. We urge state and national legislators to initiate strong measures which will lead to racial justice; and we pledge our support of these measures. 5. We recognize and condemn shameful conditions of discrimination which exist in labor hiring and wage rates, voting registration, housing and services of merchants. AMENDMENT I A. We believe that persons and merchants open to the public, operate in the public domain and can be justifiably enforced to obey public laws and ethics. B. However, we believe that the private domain* is separate from the public domain and here racial justice can be enforced by superb good example, but cannot be mandated by sheer force. C. We believe that prejudices rooted in a person's inner conscience can best be solved in the private domain by heroic good example. 6. We encourage leaders in business and education to realize their moral obligation to resolve racial discrimination by actively cooperating with representatives of minority groups. AMENDMENT II A. We encourage action in the form of selective buying and through the use of boycotts by students who are interested in the equality of all races and creeds. B. We also encourage publication of names of merchants and other persons operating in the public domain who are now supporting discrimination in their establishments. 7. We sympathize deeply with students who are being persecuted for attempting to exercise their rights as human beings through methods which endorse the principle of peaceful resistance. 8. We deem it unfortunate that the minority groups are forced to demonstrate for those rights which are due them and are freely accorded to other Americans. 9. We commit ourselves, as students, to attack discrimination and to work toward establishing social justice. *The private domain includes all country clubs, brotherhoods, fraternities, etc. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS 10.5 BLEE "PHOTOGRAPHY MAGAZINES? SOME STUDENT IN HERE HAS THEM ALL CHECKED OUT." If young men keep going into law for the money there'll be no one left to defend the poor guy found sleeping under a bridge. R. C. Heege Short Ones UNI PRITT Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, annually 1924. Telephone VIking 3-2700 University of Kansas student newspaper Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St., New York 22, NY. Represented by National Mall. Mail submission rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as an act of Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ray Millet - Managing Editor Carol Heller, Jane Royle, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editors; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Blippendl Bill Blipendl Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mark Dull Business Manager DISCRIMINATION IN SCHOOLS SEGREGATION XXX KANSAS EATON ROD DAILY KANSAN 1961 NORTHERN LIGHTS. From the Newsstand Richard Wright Recalled I was far from imagining, when I agreed to write this memoir, that it would prove to be such a painful and difficult task. What, after all, can I really say about Richard? Everything founders in the sea of what might have been. We might have been friends, for example, but I cannot honestly say that we were. There might have been some way of avoiding our quarrel, our rupture; I can only say that I failed to find it. The quarrel having occurred, perhaps there might have been a way to have become reconciled. And, in fact, I think that I mysteriously and stubbornly counted on this, the way a child dreams of winning, by means of some dazzling exploit, the love of his parents. HOWEVER, HE IS DEAD now, and so we never shall be reconciled. The debt I owe him can now never be discharged, at least not in the way I hoped to be able to discharge it. The saddest thing about our relationship is that my only means of discharging my debt to Richard was to become a writer; and this effort revealed more and more clearly as the years went on, the deep and irreconcilable differences between our points of view. This might not have been so serious if I had been older when we met—if I had been, that is, less uncertain of myself, and less monstrously egotistical. But when we met, I was twenty, a carnivorous age; he was then as old as I am now, thirty-six; he had been my idol since high school, and I, as the fledgling Negro writer, was, very shortly, in the position of his protege. This position was not really fair to either of us, since, as writers, we were about as unlike as any two writers could possibly be. But no-one can read the future and neither of us knew this then. WE WERE LINKED together, really, because both of us were black. I had made my pilgrimage to meet him because he was the greatest black writer in the world for me. In Uncle Tom's Children, in Native Son, and, above all, in Black Boy, I found expressed, for the first time in my life, the sorrow, the rage, and the murderous bitterness which was eating me up and eating up the lives of those around me. Richard's work was an immense liberation and revelation for me. He became my ally and my witness, and, alas! my father. I remember our first meeting very well. It was in Brooklyn, it was winter. I was broke, naturally, and shabby and hungry and scared. He appeared from the depths of what I remember as an extremely long apartment. Now his face, voice, manner, figure, are all very sadly familiar to me. But they were a great shock to me then. It is always a shock to meet famous men. There is always an irreducible injustice in the encounter for the famous man cannot possibly fit the image one has evolved of him. My own image of Richard was almost certainly based on Canada Lee's terrifying stage portrait of Bigger Thomas. RICHARD WAS NOT like that at all. His voice was light and even rather sweet, with a Southern melody in it; his body was more round than square, more square than tall; and his grin was more boyish than I had expected, and more diffident. He had a trick, when he greeted me, of saying, "Hey, boy!" with a kind of pleased, surprised expression on his face. It was very friendly, and it was also, faintly, mockingly conspiratorial—as though we were two black boys, in league against the world, and had just managed to spirit away several loads of watermelons. (Excerpted from "Richard Wright: A Personal Memoir" by James Baldwin in the Jan. 1, 1961, New America.) the took world Page 3 By Edgar Wolfe Assistant Professor of English RAO'S POEMS, by P. Gangadhara Rao, Padma Publications, Madras, India, 1960, 64pp. Surprising it may seem that a book of poems published in Madras, India, during the past year should contain at least seven poems directly concerned with the University of Kansas. There is, for instance, a poem conveying certain impressions of the Hawk's Nest, including some uncomplimentary to the hamburgers and the spaghetti, and another celebrating the Union's Music Room, where the music seems to "make people stick/ To the chairs as if stuck" and where sometimes one is made aware of a "humanitarian friend/ Who loves to cut and collect/ All the news ardently/ Before the others read." The author is Mr. P. Gangadhara Rao, who was a graduate student here four years ago. The book is prefaced with an excellent short critique by Kenneth S. Rothwell, assistant professor of English, and Mr. Rao in a poem called "Thanks" mentions appreciatively both Prof. Rothwell and "The kind, considerate" Prof. Arvid Shulenberger, also of the KU English Department. Rao liked the University and hated to leave, even though he tells how deeply hurt he was in the town when "At some places to eat/ They refused me to serve/ Because I am black." At such times, apparently, he refused to try to gain service "By telling them/ That I am from India/ I am a human first/ And an Indian next." In spite of his bitter experience with discrimination,Mr. Rao concludes: "I saw many places/ As I know many people/ But you are the best/ I like you most." Mr. Rao is a genuine poet and even his often unidiomatic use of English has an engaging quality. His verses are generally brief, cryptic, and personal, revealing a feeling toward life which is kindly and appreciative, stoical and yet optimistic, in spite of his being acutely aware that the individual's life must terminate. Many of his poems are concerned with the mystery of Time and that mechanism of measurement, the "damned clock," which whether it works properly or not "watches others carefully/ Like a boss in the chair." Best perhaps of the poems concerned with the time-beset nature and the brevity of our lives may be this one: Wind is singing with its melodious voice Rose is looking with her bridal eyes Thought is wondering of its wonderful past 1 nought is wondering of its wonderful pas Time is shouting with its brutal voice Devil is waiting, malicious watch dog Another favorite theme is that of love, not only the love of woman but the love of life, mankind, the world, and nature. "I, the platonic lover," he calls himself in one place, but he is more than platonic when he writes: Machine without motion Life without love Man without mission Life without love Love without lust Terrible. Perhaps the humane gentleness which is most characteristic of Rao is best revealed in this poem: Where there is No anger and jealousy No envy and enmity No pride and vanity No remorse and resentment Lead me kindly there Lead me kindly there Where there is Harmony and humanity Love and sympathy Unity and understanding Courtesy and kindness Lead me kindly there Lead me kindly there. I would like to assure Mr. Rao that they mean something to me. I hope he continues to write. I am very glad that something pushed Mr. Rao (as he would say) to "stretch" his "imagination/ to color white surface" with his "mysterious feelings/ Which do mean nothing/ Many a time/ To others." University Daily Kansan Anti-Nixon Reporters? Several newsmen are scheduled to become targets of GOP attack in this session of Congress for their coverage of the Presidential election. The complaints, centered largely among Republican members of the House, will use members of the Washington press corps as primary targets. . . A tip-off to what may come is contained in comments made by Vice President Nixon to friends since the election. His verdict: biased reporting cost him the election, especially in Illinois and Missouri. . . . MR. NIXON simply "cut off" from his party list a large number of reporters who formerly were invited to his affairs. He makes little effort to disguise his resentment toward them, and, at the same time, his shock at their attitude. As for Washington newsmen, they are accustomed to be scape goats. Most feel that if Senator Kennedy got the better press in the election (and most will not even grant this) it was only turnabout and fair play for the treatment given Democratic candidates in earlier years. Furthermore, many feel they had little to do with the outcome, that Nixon foredoomed his fate when he elected to debate with Kennedy. Elaborating on his previous remarks, Mr. Klein told E&P this week that Mr. Nixon felt some reporters had applied a double standard to the candidates. "It is not important that the reporters were overwhelmingly Democrats," Mr. Klein said. "What is important is that they let their feelings affect their copy. Some of them were definitely biased against the vice president." BUT NEWSMEN here do have a practical cause for concern. There are rumors that Nixon aide Jim Shepley, on leave as head of Time magazine's domestic correspondents, compiled a "little list" during the campaign of reporters, noting their attitudes, overheard remarks about Nixon and what they had written. . . Speaking to Republican Club members at West Palm Beach, Fla., the man who headed the GOP's Operation Dixie charged that reporters who abandoned objectivity "and were working for the opposition through their writing" were responsible for Mr. Nixon's defeat. . . He accused many reporters who are members of the Newspaper Guild of "reflecting the viewpoint of labor bosses who have been trying for years to pin the big business label on the Republican Party." "To expect some of these reporters to report objectively," he declared, "is a little like assigning a fox to guard the chickens." In his view, columnists have the right to be biased "if they come by it honestly." Mr. Klein emphasized that the main objection was to the enthusiasm which some of the press built up for Kennedy and showed up in their copy. "We have the biased stories," he said. "We know it happened. It was a general thing although it did not affect all the reporting. They would be with Kennedy a while, then would come over to us and would be harder on us than they were on him." (Excerpted from a news story in the Jan. 7, 1961, Editor & Publisher.) There is no use worrying about Julius Rosenwald's adage of forty years ago that "endowed cats catch no mice." Today we should remind ourselves that unendowed cats seldom win blue ribbons—Harold J. Seymour BEST SELLER BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Attend the Lawrence Assembly of God 13th & Mass. J. J. Krimmer Pastor 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 Friday, Jan. 13, 1961 BROADCASTER WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Douglas Dillon has indicated to Senators considering his nomination as treasury secretary that he would like to see top income tax rates cut as part of a general tax review. Dillon Indicates Top Income Tax Cuts The first of President-Elect John F. Kennedy's cabinet appointees to appear before Congress, Dillon also said he has "liquidated" his investment banking business interests and placed his remaining stocks in a special trust to remove any possible conflict of interest. Nixon Is Labeled Man of Good Will BALTIMORE — (UPI) — Richard Cardinal Cushing, the Archbishop of Boston, said Wednesday he would unhesitantly name Vice President Richard M. Nixon the good will man of 1960. The prelate noted that during the recent presidential campaign the vice president "never exploited the religious or any other issue that would tend to divide the American people." Try the Kansan Want Ads For All Kinds Of Fresh Baked Pastries DRAKE'S BAKERY 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 ENTIRE STOCK OF RENTAL TUXEDOS Originally $60 Values NOW ON SALE $25^{00}$ There Is Also a $10 Reduction in Price on Our Stock of New Tuxedos. See Them Today the university shop "Wife-Approved" MOVING PACKING STORAGE ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE VI 3-0380 LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. WIFE APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 13. 1961 一 Supreme Court to Consider Constitutionality of Sunday United Press International Sometime during the next few months, the U.S. Supreme Court will hand down a decision that could change your way of life. It will decide whether Sunday is constitutional. Not Sunday as a day of the week, but Sunday as a day of rest and worship, recognized and protected by law. Pending before the court are four cases challenging Sunday closing laws in Massachusetts, Maryland and Pennsylvania. But the basic issue is much broader than the specific statutes of these states. It is whether any governmental body in the United States has a constitutional right to accord a special legal status to a day which is considered holy by many but by no means all Americans. Jewish groups and some small Christian bodies like the Seventh Day Adventists, who observe Saturday as the Sabbath Day, have long contended that Sunday observance laws violate the first amendment's guarantee of governmental neutrality in matters of religion. In the past, with a single exception, lower courts have upheld the constitutionality of Sunday closing laws. They have ruled that states have a right to enforce a shutdown of general business activity one day a week, not for religious reasons, but to protect the health and welfare of workers. The choice of Sunday for this day of rest may have been prompted originally by the tenets of the Christian faith, the courts have said, but it can now be justified on the grounds of social custom and long-standing tradition. The single exception was a ruling in 1959 by a Federal Court in Boston. It held Massachusetts' Sunday law unconstitutional on the grounds that it "furnishes special protection to the dominant Christian sects" and discriminates against those who observe a different Sabbath. Some Washington observers believe there is a better-than-fair chance that a majority of the Supreme Court justices will take the same view as the Massachusetts Court. If that happens, the relatively small minority of Americans who observe a Saturday Sabbath will feel that a great injustice has been corrected. But the vast majority of Americans—not only the practicing Christians who go to church on Sunday, but also the millions who regard Sunday as sacred to other purposes such as golf, late-sleeping or University to Get Zoo BERKELEY, Calif. — (UPI) — The University of California has laid plans for a 20-acre zoo for the use of its psychologists, zoologists and anthropologists. It isn't that the scientists are getting younger — they will use the zoo to study behavior of fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds and small and medium sized mammals of all varieties. The zoo is being financed by a $667,700 grant from the National Science Foundation. MILK family outings—may find their way of life rudely altered. Overloaded With Unwantables? Try Kansan Want Ads Get Results The trend toward "Business-as-usual" on Sunday—which has been very conspicuous in recent years—would doubtless be tremendously accelerated by the total removal of present legal restrictions, however riddled with exceptions and loopholes they are. Without Sunday closing laws, it is hard to see how downtown department stores, chain groceries and other retail and service businesses could long resist the competitive pressure to keep open seven days a week. And if Sunday becomes just another shopping day for customers, it will perforce be just another work day for millions of employees. There may be a way out of the dilemma—a solution that neither destroys Sunday as an institution nor denies the rights of minorities. Twelve states have adopted laws which exempt from compulsory Sunday closing jobs those who observe another day as their holy day of rest. When a law of this kind was challenged in Ohio in 1959, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review the case on the ground that no "substantial federal question"—i.e., no major constitutional issue—was involved. Colgate University Orders Fraternities To Remove Discriminatory Clauses The Student Senate of Colgate University has passed a resolution for elimination of fraternity discriminatory clauses by October 1966. The Intercollegiate Press Bulletin reported that Colgate fraternities which do not meet this deadline will be suspended from the University. Commenting on the resolution, the Colgate Maroon said: "By October 1, 1966, all the fraternities presently having restrictive clauses will have had a maximum of five summer conventions in which Ulcer Factory BETHEL, Vt. — (UPI) — Town Manager Donald R. Thomas said he resigned to write a book slated to be titled "Life in the Uleer Factory." He said it will deal with "the trials and tribulations of town management." to act to eliminate the clauses from their nationals. "If at the end of this period they are unsuccessful, they will probably be forced to go local or be suspended. It is gratifying to see the predominance of the moral concern over the 'comfort' and 'security' of membership in national fraternities. This expression represents a strong oath of loyalty to the University, far outweighing any loyalty to restrictive 'fraternalism'." Seagondollar to Talk At Tuesday Forum The last Faculty Forum of the semester will be held Tuesday noon in the English Room of the Kansas Union. L. Worth Seagondollar, professor of physics, will speak on "Modern Weapons." IBM GETTING DOWN TO CASES . . . WITH AN ELECTRONIC COMPUTER A young lawyer may spend many years searching through the countless volumes in a law library before he ever gets a chance to plead a case. His job is to research the cases which may provide legal precedent. It's a very necessary but tedious task. Recently it was demonstrated that an IBM computer could accomplish electronic retrieval of statutory law. Nearly 2,000 statutes pertaining to a specific area of the law were stored in the computer's memory. In response to inquiries, the computer searched its memory at electronic speed and on instructions pointed out either citations or the full text of relevant statutes. This was accomplished in minutes. It might have taken a young lawyer the entire day. Putting computers to work in unusual ways is not new at IBM. Computers are now doing remarkable jobs in interesting and important areas of business, industry science and government. If you are interested in a company that offers you an exciting career with virtually unlimited growth potential, then you should investigate IBM. Positions are open in research, development, programming and manufacturing. The IBM representative will be glad to discuss any one of these fields with you. Your placement office can give you further information and arrange for an appointment. Or you may write, outlining your background and interests, to: Manager of Technical Employment, IBM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N.Y. You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. IBM will interview February 9 and 10. IBM Seaver Discusses Poet Lucretius Page 5 The poet died about 55 B.C. and some of the scientific principles which he included in his major work, "De Rerum Natura," were very advanced for his time and for centuries to come, Prof. Seaver continued. Lucretius, Roman philosopher and poet, performed a rare feat when he wrote a long scientific theory in poetic terms, James E. Seaver, associate professor of history, said yesterday. PROF. SEAVER was speaking to the Poetry Hour in the Music and Browsing Room of the Union. "The work was written in si Folk Music Blossoming "There is a new, late flowering of folk-music. By this I don't mean the kind of smooth folksy cabaret dispensed at the smart 'Gate of Horn' night-club by such professionals as Josh White and the Kingston Trio, but authentic rough rural stuff well below the line of potential commercialisation. This has two distinct forms. In the hillbilly clubs and saloons west of Broadway near Belmont Street, where Confederate flags are hung over the bar, the entertainment is a local brand of country-and-western imported from the Kentucky highlands. These are mountain ballads, still strongly flavoured with the English-Scottish border songs taken over to Virginia and North Carolina by early Scottish and Irish settlers, and nasally sung to a guitar, fiddle, jew's harp, or jug. In the Negro bars in the area of Cottage Grove Avenue and Halsted Street the blues are being sung and played with a volume and variety to be found nowhere else in the United States, not even in the Mississippi Valley where the blues were born. There are some subtle and complicated qualifications here. In the flasher bars, where the customers are sharply dressed and arrive in cars with tail-fins as gleamingly spear-like as any around Lincoln Park, the blues are given modern injections of tough, swinging rhythm-and-blues vaudEUville style of the forties from which rock-and-roll derived, and in their worst guise have ironically soaked back a lot of the inflexions of the most moronic kind of white rock-and-roll — the over-amplified guitars and the honking saxophones. "BUT THERE are scores of places — saw-dust dives into which a white man won't get admission unless escorted by a Negro known there — where blues in the old manner, crude, funky and sad, are to be heard any time after midnight... "THE BLUES are a plaint, a protest music that grew out of suffering, indignity, and rotten living conditions. There is still good cause for the blues to be sung in modern Chicago. When the blues die and are heard no more it will probably be a melancholy day for such folk-song-hunters as I, but then Chicago will be a healthier city." (Excerpted from "Black. White, and Fall." by Robert Alison in the April 1960 Encounter.) Radio, TV Clinic Here Jan. 20, 21 About 25 radio and television newscasters from at least three states are expected to attend the Radio and Television News Clinic Jan, 20 and 21 at KU. Lectures will be given and discussion groups will be led by personnel from the participating radio stations and from the KU faculty. The clinic is sponsored by the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters, the KU Radio and Television Committee, the School of Journalism and the University Extension. A medical student should marry a girl who can support him. It's abnormal; but it works.-Lamar Soutter books," he said. "Almost all of the manuscripts are preserved with only fragments lost. He was the first poet to advance the Epicurean philosophy." Epicurean philosophy includes the materialistic withdrawal from the world, Prof. Seaver explained. According to the theories, everything is made out of atoms and space. The soul, upon death, merely dissolves into its respective atoms and disappears. Therefore there is no need to fear an after-life because there is none. "Lucietius began this poem with an attack on religion," Prof. Seaver said. "He believed that the traditional religions inspired superstitions and evil. This was proved by a story of a girl given in sacrifice to appease the gods of the good winds so that the war ships could make a speedy trip and a successful raid on another city." THE ATOMS which make up the various substances are of different shapes, Prof. Seaver said. According to Lucretius the different shapes result in our senses. The foods which taste sweet are composed of round atoms and they slip down easily, the bitter foods are composed of atoms with sharp edges Prof. Seaver said. As Prof. Seaver explained portions of the poem he read the sections first in English so that the audience knew the content of the selection, then he read them in the original Latin so that the listeners could grasp the musical quality of the lines. "INCLUDED IN the latter part o the poem is a remarkable account of biological evolution," Prof. Seaver said. "Lucietius states that life came from the sea to land. Nature experimented with all sorts and shapes of bodies. The lack of food and competition caused certain animals to die out." The poet had no source but his own powers of reason to arrive at such a fact, Prof. Seaver said, and it was quite a while before the scientific world caught up with his thinking. "As you can imagine, this poet had a large influence on poets and philosophers until today," Prof. Seaver concluded. John L. Holcombe, a commissioner in the United States Labor Department, will speak to future barristers at a Law School convoction at 10 a.m. Tuesday in Green Hall. Barristers to Hear Labor Official Labor economists and interested students are welcome to attend the lecture, which will be followed by a question and answer period. Mr. Holcombe was appointed the head of the Eureau of Labor Management Reports by James P. Mitchell, secretary of labor, in Dec. 1950. The Bureau was created to implement the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act known as the Landrum-Griffin Bill. Seniors who haven't had their pictures taken for the Jayhawker should make appointments with Estes Studios by the end of final week. If they don't their pictures probably will not appear in the yearbook, according to Frank Naylor, Kansas City senior and class president. Seniors Urged To Get Pictures The seniors are getting organized on other graduation items. NAYLOR SAID senior ring committee representatives will call on each organized house beginning next week to take orders for the senior class rings. The rings can be seen at the Kansas Union Book Store. The cost of the rings will be approximately $32. "These are the only officially recognized rings." Navor said. Senior class gift suggestions from anyone interested will be taken by Ken Brown, Herington senior, at VI 3-5366. The gift fund presently is $2,500. The final amount for the gift will depend on the sale of the senior calendars. THESE CALENDARS can be obtained at the Alumni Assn. office, 127 Strong. Seniors must present senior cards to receive the calendars free. Plans for a class migration to the KU-K-State game, Feb. 22, and the spring party still remain tentative. Friday, Jan. 13. 1961 University Daily Kansan 'Angel' Cast Named The members for the cast of the University Theatre production of Thoma. Wolfe's "Look Homeward, Angel" have been selected. The play, a Ketti Frings adaptation, will be presented Eeb. 7, 9, 10 and 11. The members of the cast are: Sharon W. Barlow, Olathe senior; John C. Welz, Webster Groves, Mo. junior; James William Hawes, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student; Kenneth L. Hill, Olathe sophomore; Barbara Ann Runge, Higginsville, Mo., senior. Reuben R. McCornack, Abilene freshman; Leura L. Earnshaw, Shawnee graduate student; Ronald A. Loch, Oklahoma City, Okla. graduate student; Michael A. Jackson, Prairie Village junior; Becky M. Davis, Cheyenne, Wyo., freshman. Ardith E. Webber, Bartlesville Okla., senior; Charlsia Schall, Lawrence senior; Daniel J. Kocher, Topeka sophomore; Marilyn R. Miller; Clathe sophomore; Mary, Ann Harris, Independence, Mo., junior Husband at Fault This Time MEMPHS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Adam May was getting gas for his automobile when a woman motorist drove up to find out why her car was everheating. The attendant raised the hood. The radiator was missing. May said the woman telephoned her husband and learned that he had the radiator removed for repairs and had neglected to tell her. GINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER PUMP Students! Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hrs, with Mechanic on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Darryl Patten, Hitchcock, S. D. graduate student; Keith K. Jochin, Lawrence sophomore; Vicki L. Loebsack, Topeka freshman, and Glenn E. Cochran, Raytown, Mo, freshman Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech, is the director of the production. Johnson Appointed Highway Director FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 摄影 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO DRASTIC REDUCTION VI 3-0330 NOW $3.00 to $20.00 on all winter & holiday merchandise - PRE-INVENTORY SALE TOPEKA —(UPI)— The State Highway Commission has approved the appointment of Walter Johnson, State Highway Engineer, as acting Highway Director. SLEEPWEAR — CHALLIS & FLANNEL P.Js. & GOWNS Sizes Small, Medium, Large Values $3.98 to $7.00 NOW $1.00 Gov. John Anderson made the appointment Wednesday, Johnson, who has been with the Highway Department for the past 31 years and has served as Highway Engineer since 1955, will temporarily replace Maurice Martin, Highway Director during the last three years of the administration of former Gov. George Docking. MOTOR COATS Values $10.98 - $35.00 ------NOW $5.00 - $10.00 All sales final — no exchange — refunds — or lay-aways on sale mdse. Please SPORTSWEAR INCLUDES SWEATERS SKIRTS JACKETS BLOUSES DRESSES, sizes 5 thru 15 Values $9.98 to $49.98 Values $3.98 to $17.98 NOW 2.00 - $7.00 GLOVES — ALL WINTER GLOVES Were $1.00 to $2.98 NOW 50c to $1.00 OBER'S Junior Miss 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing Elevator From Men's Store SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES INVITES Mathematicians & Physical Scientists TO DISCUSS CAREERS IN Scientific Computer Programming WITH STL REPRESENTATIVES, ON-CAMPUS Challenging new problems in the areas of aerodynamics, celestial mechanics, tracking and trajectory analysis, systems simulation, and test evaluation require individuals with more than the usual inclination toward, and qualifications in, computer-oriented mathematics. Space Technology Laboratories' Computation and Data Reduction Center, located in Southern California, is one of the nation's largest and most advanced computational facilities. Its staff members daily utilize two IBM 7090's and sophisticated data reduction systems to solve problems arising in the Air Force ballistic missile program and in space flight studies. STL offers opportunity for: association with a superior technical staff headed by progressive management; participation in unusually challenging computation and data reduction problems; professional growth; and for advancement within a stimulating and creative environment. Arrange for an on-campus interview by contacting your placement office, or, address your resume to: College Relations, Space Technology Laboratories, Inc., PO. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California. STL SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES, INC. a subsidiary of Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 13. 1961 BEAT IOW KU PROBABLE STA IOWA STATE (6-5) F ... Henry Whitney (6-7) F .. F ... Marvin Straw (6-4) F .. C ... Sam Barnard (6-6) C .. G ... Gary Wheeler (5-10) G .. G ... John Ptacek (6-4) G .. Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1001 N. H. VI3-3711 Cooper-Warren Mortuary 1020 N. H. VI 3-1120 Independent Laundry & Dry Cleaners 740 Vt. VI 3-4011 - Friend Lumber Company 1029 N. H. VI 3-0360 Waters Hardware & Gifthouse 919 Iowa VI 2-0580 Estes Studio & Photo Service 924 Vt. VI 3-1171 Lawrence 647 Mass. Norris B 1515 W. 6th 1st Nati 746 Mass. Weaver 901 Mass. J. C. Pe 830 Mass. Lawren 202 W.6r Friday, Jan. 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 WA STATE LE STARTERS KANSAS (8-4) F ---- Wayne Hightower (6-8 1/2) F -------- Al Correll (6-3 1/2) C ---- Bill Bridges (6-5 1/2) G ---- Nolen Ellison (6-1) G ---- Jerry Gardner (5-11 1/2) KU awrence National Bank 647 Mass. V13-0260 lorris Brothers 1515 W. 6th VI3-6911 st National Bank 746 Mass. VI 3-1044 Weaver's Dept. Store 901 Mass. V1 3-6360 J. C. Pennneys 830 Mass. VI 3-4114 Lawrence Sanitary 202 W.6th VI3-5511 Granada Theatre 1020 Mass. VI3-5788 Varsity Theatre 1015 Mass. VI3-1065 Sunset Drive-In RFD 1 VI 3-9172 ACME Laundry 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Dillon's 1800 Mass. V1 3-9788 Book Nook 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. VI 3-1044 1948. 1949. 1950. 1951. 1952. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday: Jan. 13, 1961 Wheeler, Whitney Lead Iowa State Henry Whitney will lead the Iowa State Cyclones into Allen Field House tomorrow night to face the league-leading Kansas Jawhakers. Kansas will be playing against one of the tallest teams in the conference against the Cyclones. Whitney is the leading Iowa State scorer and rebounder. He is averaging 15.9 points per game for Coach Glen Anderson. The 6-7 forward has also pulled down 137 rebounds. He is leading KU's Bill Bridges 25-13 in league rebounding thus far . Iowa State has a tall trio to bolster the center spot. Probable starter is 6-11 Terry Roberts. Also seeing a great deal of action should be 6-8 Bob Stoy who is the Cyclones' fourth best scorer and 6-6 Sam Barnard who is only one point behind Stoy. The playmaker for the Cyclones is 5-40 guard Gary Wheeler. He is averaging 12.7 points per game to rank as the second best on the I-State team in this department but has been most valuable as the "quarterback" of the Cyclone offense. John Ptacek, 6-4, is the other backcourt performer for the Cyclones who are trying for their second conference win against one defeat. Because of his fine play in the Big Eight tournament. Whitney was picked by nearly all the coaches as the most improved player in the league. He had 23 points in the Cyclones' 76-72 loss to KU in the tourney. Opposite Whitney at forward will be 6-5 Murrell who is ally backed up by 6-4 Marv Straw who is third in Cycle scoring. Kansas will be placing its newest found weapon, phenomenal shooting from the field, on the line tomorrow. As a result of the fine Jayhawker射击 last weekend the team shooting average is 39.9 per cent. The leading individual shooters for KU are Bridges, 45.2 per cent. Nolen Ellison, 44.7 per cent, and Jerry Garner, 43.2 per cent. Wayne Hightower continues to lead the Jayhawkers' scoring with a 15.2 point per game average. Betas Down Phi Kappa Sigs Two high scoring games provided most of the thrills in last night's intramural basketball. In Fraternity C play Beta Theta Pi #1 beat Phi Kappa Sigma by the overwhelming score of 52-6. Also in Fraternity C competition Sigma Alpha Epsilon #3 downed Phi Gamma Delta #6 49-16. In other Fraternity C games Phi Delta Theta 1 beat Digma Phi 30-10, Beta Theta Pia #3 beat Alpha Tau Omega 1 35-14, Phi Kappa Psi #1 downed Delta Tau Delta #2 30-25, and Phi Gamma Delta #1 beat Delta Upsilon 1 51-26. The Bo-Jets beat the Delta Functions 44-42 and Carruth & O'Leary beat Joseph R. Pearson #1 42-37 in Independent A basketball. Also GDIA and the Tortfeasors were given wins over Joseph R Pearson #3 and Templin because of forfeits. In Fraternity B games Beta Theta Pi beat Theta Chi 44-19 and Sigma Pi was given a forfeit over Delta Sigma Phi. Basketball Leads CHICAGO — (UPI) — A survey by the National Federation of State High School Athletic Associations shows that 19,459 schools competed in basketball during the past year, compared to 11,564 in football. Tire Shop SERVICE SERVICE SERVICE YES, SERVICE IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ASSET OF THIS STANDARD STATION Bob Cousy shows no sign of let-up and neither do the Boston Celties. Get Service for Your Car and Do a Service for Yourself, TRADE AT Cousy led the Celtics to a 124-118 overtime victory over Syracuse Thursday night after the Nats had rallied from a 17-point deficit to force the game into an extra session. BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE Cousy Scores 33 In Overtime Win 601 Mass. By United Press International Corner of 6th & Mass. The victory kept the Celtics two games in front of the second-place Philadelphia Warriors in the Eastern Division of the National Basketball Association. The Warriors downed the St. Louis Hawks, 111-102, and Detroit defeated Cincinnati, 124-112, in the other scheduled games. Cousy, who led Boston with 33 points, opened the overtime session with a field goal and made good on three free throws before the game ended. Dick Barnett paced the Nats with 33 points. Wilt Chamberlain and teammate Al Attles were the big guns in Philadelphia's victory over St. Louis. Chamberlain scored 37 points while Attles registered 21 in addition to giving a brilliant exhibition of ball hawking and feeding. Clyde Lovellette was high man for the Hawks with 29. This game is the toughest to pick but the edge is given to the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Bailey Howeil scored 33 points in leading the Pistons to their victory over the Royals at Fort Wayne, Ind. The Pistons came on to win after trailing 68-83 during the third quarter. Oscar Robertson led the losers with 31 points. Along the JAYHAWKER trail The fourth game pits Oklahoma State against Missouri. Unless the Tigers are exceptionally inspired because of the recent activities in Columbia, the Cowboys should defense their way to victory. of the night. By Bill Sheldon The big game is the battle here in Allen Field House as the league-leading Jayhawkers face potent Iowa State. A full slate of games will be played Saturday night in Big Eight championship play. All the games should be close, or at least interesting. But this should be the case almost every night of the play. Since KU has been playing, according to Coach Dick Harp, its best basketball of the season, it should be more than a match for the Cyclones. Things to watch for in this one will be the individual battle between Kansas' Wayne Hightower and high scoring Henry Whitney for I-State and improved offensive play for KU along with the inspired play of sophomore guard Nolen Ellison. Monday night the Jayhawkers should beat Oklahoma State and Colorado should bow to Oklahoma. Another important duel pits Kansas State against Oklahoma. The Wildcats are facing a tough luck Sooner squad and the determination of Oklahoma to upset the ninth ranked K-Statters could play an important part in the outcome, but a win for the Wildcats is predicted. Surprising Nebraska risks its first place tie with KU against Colorado in what could be the closest game Thus far the predictions for basketball are: 43 right, 14 wrong for 75 per cent. Shoe Repair 1-Day Service Leather Full Soles 399 With Rubber Heels pr. 85 Val. DELUXE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 1300 W. 23rd St. Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. FORD UsedCars Here Is the Finest Selection of Good Used Cars We Have Had for a Long Time. A University Ford Used Car Is Your Best Transportation Buy. 1960 Ford Country Squire, White, Radio, Heater, Cruise-O-Matic PS PB PD&V V-8 ... 2795.00 1960 Ford 4-Door Ranch Wagon, White, Radio, Heater, Fom BUL WW, 6 Cyl... 1895.00 1960 Ford 4-Door Ranch Wagon, Brown, Radio, Heater, Overdrive, 7000 Miles (Near New) V-8 ... 2695.00 1960 Ford Convertible, White, Radio, Heater, Cruise-O-Matic PS, V-8 ... 2995.00 1959 Ford Galaxie 4-Door, Blue/White, Radio, Heater, Cruise-O-Matic, V-8 ... 1895.00 1958 Ford Fairlane 500 2-Door Vict., Tan White, Radio, Heater, Ford-O-Matic, V-8 ... 1595.00 1958 Chevrolet Impala 2-Door H. T., White, Radio, Heater, Auto Trans., V-8 ... 1695.00 1958 Mercury 4-Door Montekey, Tan/White, Radio, Heater, Merc-O-Matic (Like New) V-8 ... 1695.00 1956 Mercury 2-Door, Blue, Radio, Heater, Merc-O-Matic, V-8 ... 895.00 1956 Mercury 2-Door H. T., Black, Radio, Heater, Merc-O-Matic (Like New In and Out) ... 395.00 1957 Ford 2-Door Fairlane, Grey/White, Radio, Heater, Fordomatic Air Cond. PS., V-8 ... 1395.00 1957 Ford Skyliner (Flip Top) White/Yellow, Radio, Heater, Fordomatic PS, V-8 ... 1595.00 1957 Chevrolet 2-Door (210) White, Radio, Heater, Powerglide, Air Cond., V-8 ... 1196.00 1956 Ford Fairlane Convertible, Black, Radio, Heater, Fordomatic, V-8 ... 895.00 1956 Ford 6-Pass, Country Sedan, Turquoise/White, Radio, Heater, FOM, V-8 ... 795.00 1954 Ford 2-Door Vict., White, Radio, Heater, FOM, V-8 ... 495.00 1953 Studebaker 4-Door, Grey, Heater ... 295.00 1959 Chevrolet Biscayne 4-Dr, Black ... 1895.00 UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont OPEN EVENINGS VI 3-3500 Page 9 All Are Released (Continued from page 1) stools or lined up against the walls. Several of them asked the proprietress for a soft drink. She replied that she could not and would not serve them. ne repeated. The table sat still. Finally the proprietress phoned the police. The officers arrived in five minutes, entered and asked the woman what she wanted done. She replied that she wanted the students to leave. "FOR WHAT REASON?" Heitz asked. Landwehr and Thomas Heitz, Kansas City, Mo., junior, identified themselves to the officers as the spokesmen for the students and were told they would have to leave. "Disorderly conduct." answered the officer in charge. "The lady refuses to serve you and doesn't want you here. This is her right." "Sir, what about the Kansas statute which states that no business place can refuse service because of race?" Heitz asked. Landwehr announced the choice to the students. "Any of you who want to leave, please do so," he said. "And don't feel you have to stay. But those who do stay will be arrested." "I only know that we were called and we have our orders," the officer said. "You'll have to leave or we'll have to take you to the station." Several students rose, explained their reasons for leaving and walked out. Nine students remained. They were escorted to the waiting patrol cars. AT THE POLICE station, the desk sergeant took the names of the students as a formality. They were not booked or charged as the incident was a civil matter and not within the jurisdiction of the city officials. University and city authorities were notified and arrived at the station. County Attorney Wesley Norwood, after conferring with City Police Chief John C. Hazelet, said further action, if any, would depend upon the tavern owner filing charges this morning. The owner had closed her establishment and was not available for comment. The students were released at 11:30 p.m. After they had been released, Chief Hazelet was asked if this would be the procedure his department would follow in any future sit-ins. He said that unless it is a criminal offense (involving violence) or charges are preferred, no arrests will be made. NOW! Performance At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan Adults $1.25 WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE"I from METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S PRESENTATION OF BEN HUR A TALE OF THE CHRIST TECHNICOLOR® CAMERA SS Matinees Saturday and Sunday at 1:30 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day it is published. Do not bring Bulletin folder to the Day Kaiden Kimin office should include name, place, date, and time of function. Foreign Students. Please return the Rotary Club luncheon nominee ballots to the Dean of Student's Office, 228 Strong Hall, by Tuesday, Jan. 17. Jewish Religious Services. 7 p.m. Dance services will let out in time for film series. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for a lecture on "Preparation for a Profession" has been mimeographed, and copies may be obtained free by anybody wishing to have one. Requests should be made to James E. Gunn at the University Relations office in 233 Strong Hall or to prof. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the Humanities committee, in Flint Hall. Copies Available Of Wescoe Lecture Official Bulletin Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship. 7:30 p.m. Discussion of formal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0292 for more information or a ride. Book the Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Dunforthe Chapel. TODAY SUNDAY Catholic services, 8 & 10 a.m. Fraser Theater. Coffee social at Union follow- ing 9 a.m. Hiliel Cost Supper. 5 p.m. Castle Tea Room, 13th & Msss. MONDAY Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 18th & Kentucky Friday evenings and Holy Communion, Breakfast follows 6:45 a.m. Canterbury House. NSA Committee. Every Monday at 4 p.m. A room in the Student Union. Engineerettes. 8 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union. We are going to make the imperialists dance like fishes in a saucepan even without war.—Nikita Khrushchev FRI.-SAT.-SUN. WILL ROGERS, JR. By Karl Koch Bizarre Cheating Tests Staff BUT IN SPITE of the students' sleight-of-hand, some faculty members still feel the situation is well in hand. James E. Seaver, associate professor of history and director of the Western Civilization Department, said strict controls prevent basically honest people from taking an opportunity to cheat. The battle lines are being drawn. The semi-annual final examination conflict between instructors and students is only a week away. Prof. Seaver's department administers the Western Civilization examination. WILL ROGERS, JR. "The Boy From Oklahoma" COLOR BY WARNERCOLOR PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. COSTARING NANCY OLSON WEB The students' ways of evening out the odds — commonly known as cheating — are many and bizarre. "We have never had any actual cheating since I have been here," he said. "We remove all possibility of cheating," Prof. Seaver said. "Careful proctoring by teams of instructors, numbering of exams, checking of identification cards, and alternate seating remove almost all chance of the student cheating." SOME STUDENTS still may slip through, Prof. Seaver admitted, but the strict controls make cheating a risky business. "The Boy From Oklahoma" Several students feel that it can. One student said that a friend of his has a foolproof system. "It's simple," he said. "My friend puts several of his fraternity brothers in the closest restroom. "During the first half of the exam he writes out the examination questions. Then he asks the proctor to be excused. WB WARNER BROS. PRESENT CLYDE MICKEY BEATTY SPILLANE AND HIS GIANTIC HE'S A MOVIE 3-RING CIRCUS STAR NOW! CINEMA SCAPEO WARNER-MACROPHONE SOUND work feverishly on the questions. Several minutes later he returns to the testing room and spends the rest of the time copying the correct answers on the exam." ALSO STARRING PAT O'BRIEN WRITTED BY PAUL F. PHILIP MACDONALD JAMES EDWARD GRANT MB "Then," added the student, "he rushes to the restroom and he and his fraternity brothers RING OF FEAR - AND - ANOTHER UNIDENTIFIED student told me of a method that is much easier, especially for the out-of-shape student. WHAT IS the student's answer to this system? Can it be beaten? SATURDAY ONLY! "There is a wristwatch for sale," he said, "that is fitted with a roll of paper. You pencil in the answers you want and at the test you merely wind the 'watch' until the answer you want appears on the dial." TWO BONUS HITS SUNSET PLUS Prof. Strassenburg felt that the only really effective means of controlling cheating at KU is alert proctors. 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER However, Arnold A. Strassenburg, assistant professor of physics, has not had the same luck as Prof. Seaver. Prof. Strassenburg spoke of students coming into exams with notes written on paper or various parts of their anatomy. He did not elaborate. "I suspect," he said, "that some students have gone into the rooms ahead of the tests and have placed notes where they plan to sit." Balfour "We have found people cheating," he said, "even though we have a system of proctors." DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway AO The older methods of printing on cigarette packs, eye glass cases, or crib notes seem pretty unsophisticated when compared to wristwatches or fraternity brothers, but they are still in heavy use according to several other students. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry JERRY LEWIS BRINGS EVERYBODY'S FAVORITE STORY TO FABULOUS NEW LIFE... AS CINDERFELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) f is for fella and a feast of fun! TECHNICOLOR® JERRY LEWIS BRINGS EVERYBODY'S FAVORITE STORY TO FABULOUS NEW LIFE... AS CINDER FELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) "f" is for fella and a feast of fun! TECHNICOLOR® co-starring ED WYNN · JUDITH ANDERSON · HENRY SILVA ROBERT HUTTON with COUNT BASIE and his World Renowned Band featuring Joe Williams ANÑA MARIA ALBERGHETTI as "The Princess" Produced by Jerry Lewis · Associate Producer—Ernest D. Gluckman · Written and Directed by Frank Tashlin Musical Numbers Staged by Nick Castle · New Songs by Harry Warren and Jack Brooks · A Paramount Release STARTS TOMORROW! Eves. 7:00 & 9:00 Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. Cont. Sun. LAST TIMES TONITE — "THE SUNDOWNERS" f is for fella and a feast of fun! TECHNICOLOR® GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 13, 1967 The Marks Of a Sit-in All was quiet . . . no one smiled . . . few spoke . . . these were the marks of the KU sit-in. Seven police officers came in . . . no one moved . . . the officers offered an alternative — go home or to jail . . . seven went out . . . nine remained. . . The student demonstrators sat quietly . . . "May I have a Coke?" one said . . . "I'm sorry but I can't serve you," was the reply . . . the juke box played on . . . the students sat . . . "May I have a Coke?" he asked again . . . "I can't serve you. You'll have to leave. I can't serve you" . . . no one moved . . . the police were summoned. . . Police filled the three waiting patrol cars with those who had remained . . . they drove to the police station. . . All was quiet . . . no one smiled . . . few spoke . . . these were the marks of the KU sit-in. MEN IN HOLIDAY CARNIVAL JOHN GRAFFEL Photos by Ray Miller Text by John Macdonald . . . The police were summoned . . . . . Go home or to jail, boys . . . . . . Police fill the waiting patrol cars . . . . . . The drive to the station . . . STATE OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 7030-36 OFFICIAL USE ONLY CLASSIFIED ADS University Daily Kansan LOST Slide rule, in or around Union, $5 reward, Call Ext. 376. 1-13 FOR SALE LADIES' EYEGLASSES, black front, gold earpiece. No case. Missing since Dec. 15. Reward. Call VI 2-1340, Beverly Weaver. 1-16 RAPID SALE, going overseas; 1954 Chevrolet, 4 drs. Belair, radio, heater, auto transmission, power steering, good tires. $425 — First come gets the deal. Call VI 3-9287 or see it at 9-A Sunny-side. 1-17 BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists charts and disagrams. Complete course Instructions Price $0.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion Mimecographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Wanted at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. 16 FOOT FIBRE-GLASS BOAT and 75 hp Johnson motor. All new, including trailer, life jackets, and ski-tow ropes. Call George Smirl. SI 2-0479. 1-13 HOUSE, for sale by owner. Three bedrooms, full basement, fenced yard, attached garage, exceptional closet space and classroom. Extended from Schwieb School. Call VI 3-4580. 1955 RANCH WAGON, $750; or 1951 Lincoln, $285. Both in excellent condition. Call VI 3-3231. 1-13 TUXEDO and dinner jacket combination. Excellent condition. Low price. CALL VI 3-5465. 1-17 STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 ATTENTION: Do you need a complete calculator for personal use? S. C. the amazing Curta calculate copilete of all four Harris medical functions, at a price of E & E. Included. Col II 20175. Bob Edminson, for demonstration appointment. 1-16 1959 REGAL MOBILE HOME-51' x 10' two bedrooms, must see to appreciate Call VI 3-0734 after 5 p.m. for appoint- ment. I 1-17 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. WEDDING INVITATIONS — Call for appointment to see invitations, napkins, thank you folders, etc. Excellent quality, low in price. Phone VI 3-4206. 1-13 FOR RENT 3-Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bath. Rent reduce. Phone TI 3-9776. First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking, Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m.t VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six bath and a nd entrance. Utilities paid. No Married only. Only 520 Chito. **tt** One bedroom furnished apartment for for rent V-3-1811, or V-3-0661. Rent for 4+ years For Rent — Quiet, large room for men. Private bath, private entrance. One block south of KU, Phone VI 3-3295 Basement sleeping room with kitchen. Outside entrance. Utilities paid. C18 C19 BUSINESS LOCATION available for rent to students for a restaurant or rooming on Lawrence's busiest possibilities. Located on Lawrence's busiest street. Lots of parking. V3-15787. 1-17 ROOMS FOR MEN--ONE HALF BLOCK Room 1301 La. or call VI 3-4092. ROOMS FOR MEN STUDENTS: Do you need a quiet room? Have four singles, two doubles for second semester. Rent reduced. Call VI 3-9340 after five p.m. for appointment to see. Three blocks east of KU. 1-13 GROUND FLOOR furnished apartment. Utilities paid. Close to campus. $70. Second floor apartment for women. $55. Sleeping room. $25. Call VI 3-6291-1-74 FURNISHED APARTMENT, recently redecorated. Two large rooms, practically new furniture. Sound-proofed ceiling. Two shared baths. For rent or lease to two women or couple. 1129 Vt. Call VI 3-2149 mornings or after 5 p.m. 1-12 EOARD AND ROOM for next semester, Reasonable price. Call VI 3-9582. 1-13 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6313 after p. 1-17. Large seven room furnished house. Single beds. Also five room house, newly decorated inside and out. Near post office. Call VI 3-9184. 1-17 TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $80. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-17 Semi-basement recreation type apartment. Apartment in quiet type home. Accommodate 2 or 3 boys. Twin beds + dressing room + private bath, private entrance. Contact Mrs. Callahand. Concession corner. Union Bldg. 1-19 SMALL APARTMENT for one student. Furnished. bills paid. Near campus. Call VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. 1-18 LARGE THREE ROOM apartment, wellfurnished, centrally located. First floor, private entrance and bath. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6696. 1-18 TWO ROOM well-furnished apartment. Large living room-bedroom, kitchen and living room. Fully furnished with reasonable rent. Five minutes from campus. Call VI 3-0189 after 5 p.m. 1-18 One-half block from Union, 1 suite of 2 rooms for 2 students, also large single room, finished. Very reasonable rent. For appointment call VI 3-6985. Private parking. Large attractive 4 room apartment. Private bath. Close to downtown and KU. Nice house, off street parking. Reasonable rent $55 a month. Ph. VI. 3-6063 BASEMENT APARTMENT for men students ATTENANCE entrance utilities 1-17 1520 W 123d TH MEN'S FURNISHED apartment. Close to Hill Ct, Silicon Valley utilities paid 1230 Oro- ciat Ca, Ville-du-Port 976. TYPING Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work Phone Mrs. Marilyn HAI, VI 3-2318, ft EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf Expert typing and secretarial services. Hicks, V 1-2011; VI 3-5920 or Mt Hicks, V 2-0111. FORMER SECRETARY will take exam in home. Standard rates. Call VI 3-1312. Experienced typist --- will type theses, papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3- 0558 Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. V1 26-78. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist — will type term opapers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2- 1487. tt TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason- onable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright. VI 3- 3554. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mc.MeidLewis, VI 3-8568. tf Friday. Jan. 13, 1961 Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johansen, VI 3-2876. ttf THEMES, thesees, etc. Fast accurate work- former secretary. PHONE VI 3-1573. Experienced typist — term papers, mnuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service accurate work, reasonable time. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I. Carv I 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Methlinger VI 3-4409, tel TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. V. Mary Russell, 1511 W. 21st St. VI 3-6440. 1-18 Experienced typist; will do term papers, thesis, etc. Near, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan tf NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one- on-tail price rates on Time, Life and Sports illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-9042. GRADUATING STUDENTS! Wanted! 24 part time delivery boy. Sun- $15.25 br. Must have car. Call 1-17 1-17 HELP WANTED MEDICAL SECRETARY, female. Part time Monday through Friday. Mechanical word reading 10 words or minute. No medical terminology. For appointment call VI 3-3680. 1-18 BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939 $^2$ Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tf PRINTED BIOSLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; composed formally known as the Theta notes; Call I 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW-AH the latest Studio, Studio 98, Milton, Phone VI 3-683-881 www.dancemilton.com RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tt PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, probabilities. Sample test questions. Free delivery. price $4.00. For your copy VI 2-1065 MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Mod- uled by the office for pets. Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything can be found at our pet stores or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome. tf TRANSPORTATION Wish to join or form car pool from Over- ahead on Friday. Five -13 in week. Call RA 2-4725. PATRONIZE YOUR - ADVERTISERS • Nationwide TRAILER RENTAL VI 3-7377 Reserve your trailer now for the move to your job 6th & Wis. CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Limited number of trailers for one way rental anywhere Additional trailers can be obtained if reservations are made in advance. C & J HEY LOOK! MY DOG CAN TALK! HEY LOOK! A HEY LOOK! MY DOG CAN TALK! ALL RIGHT NOW, BOY... WHAT'S ON THE TOP OF A HOUSE? ATTENTION SENIORS! THE TIME TO GET SENIOR PICTURES TAKEN & ALL ANNOUNCEMENTS ORDERED (AT THE UNION BOOKSTORE) IS NOW NOW NOW! SMART ALECK! MY DOG CAN TALK! AL JACKY & LUCKY SMART ALECK! FARON Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 13, 1961 News Briefs MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay—Uruguay has ordered the Cuban ambassador and the Soviet embassy's first secretary to get out of the country in an action which may presage an open break with Castroite Cuba. The nine-member presidential council voted 6 to 2 last night, with one member absent, to expel Ambassador Mario Garcia Inchaustegui and Embassy Secretary Mijail K. Sanmoilov. The official announcement offered no explanation for the order, nor did it say whether any deadline had been set for the departure of the two diplomats. Councilman Cesar Battie Pachecho, however, described Garcia as the representative of a "government of thieves and bandits" and denounced his "more than notorious intervention in (Uruguay's) internal affairs." --demonstration and told them of a procedure we should follow. WASHINGTON—Treasury Secretary designate Douglas Dillon said today the Kennedy administration will ask Congress to enact a tax reform program this year. Dillon, appearing at a Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing, said tax reforms should be given urgent attention. "It is one of the major questions facing the new administration." he said. "It would be hoped to get some action at this session of Congress." Dillon did not discuss details of the program which he said have not been worked out yet. --demonstration and told them of a procedure we should follow. BRUSSELS, Belgium—The Coalition government of Catholic Premier Gaston Eyskens won parliamentary approval today for its austerity program which set off the country's four weeks of strikes and violence. Eyskens directed his forces from a sick bed as they swept to a victory of 115 to 90 votes, with one abstention, in the chamber of deputies. The bill now goes to the senate where approval is only a formality. Approval by the lower house of parliament came in the face of bitter opposition from the socialists who had set off the nationwide series of strikes and violence in attempts to kill the austerity program. In winning, the government rejected out of hand socialist offers to end the country's strike chaos through a national summit conference of "men of good will." --demonstration and told them of a procedure we should follow. WASHINGTON—President-elect John F. Kennedy's nomination of his brother Robert to be attorney general was questioned today by a Republican senate leader on grounds of inexperience. However, Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee which began hearings on Kennedy's confirmation defended his selection. They said there was a "strong parallel" in the legal careers of Kennedy and the present Republican Attorney General William P. Rogers. Sit-in Leader Tells His Story (Continued from page 1) stood in the back of the bar and wouldn't move. My Negro friend said he didn't want to cause any trouble so we got up and left. I was irritated when we got outside but when I got back to the dorm (Carruth-O'Leary) I started thinking about it and got madder and madder. I TALKED to Andrew Katai (Elizabeth, N. J., graduate student) about it and he told me what had happened to a group of students in the same place Wednesday afternoon. Stephen Baratz (Brooklyn, N. Y. graduate student) and three others, one a Negro, went into Louise and were served. However, they were charged 25 cents for a regular 10 cent beer. Then I went from room to room in the dorm and told them what had happened and what I intended to do. I invited them to come with me but told them if they didn't feel as I did they didn't have to. Most of them were as angry as I was about what happened. After hearing about the Baratz incident I found a friend of mine (a Negro) and talked him into going back to the bar with me. "I TRIED to get as many people as possible. I called the frats and every group I could think of. Then I decided this shouldn't be just a local affair with only the local people looking in and called the Kansas City Star. I called the Lawrence police at 3 o'clock and asked what would happen if a sit-in was organized. The desk sergeant said he didn't know. Then we had a meeting in O'Leary lounge. I told the students that this wasn't going to be a violent I TOLD them we would be quiet and orderly and to make no demonstration of any kind, no talking to outsiders, and only the leaders would do the talking. The idea was that if she (the proprietress) came over to serve us, we would have the Negro served first. If she asked to serve a white, the white was to ask that the Negro be served first. They had to receive first class service. Someone suggested I call Tom Heitz, (Kansas City, Mo., junior) and he stressed non-violence over the phone. There was to be no congregating next to the doors and we would only put an amount of people in the bar that could comfortably stand or sit. Those that couldn't get in were to move away from the building. WE ALL MET at the A & P parking lot across the street (from the bar) and Tom enumerated the rules and regulations of non-violence. There were approximately 40 of us. We divided into small groups with about equal numbers of Negroes and whites. (Hetz participated in stand-ins in Kansas City this summer with the NAACP and was acquainted with the principles of non-violent demonstrations.) Then the first group went into the bar. International Club will elect next semester's officers and dance to records at 9:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. International Club To Elect Officers JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Leone Receives Grant Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, has received a $28,067 renewal grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for two additional years of study on "Potentiation of Antigens by Gamma-Ray Irradiation." Christianity Transformed "We can say that in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries the old medieval ideal of Christianity is no longer with us," said Vaclov Mudroch, instructor of history. Mr. Mudroch made this statement in a speech last night to the History Club on the "Transformation of Religion from Medieval to Modern Times." He said there were many reasons for this, one of which was nationalism. As an example he cited the case of Germany. He said Germany did not attack the Soviet Union to destroy a godless society, but under the slogan of blood and soil. He also pointed out that the United States went to war to make the world safe for democracy a political idea-not Christianity. Mr. Mudroch said the dissolution of Christian ideas came with the development of science. Describing the eighteenth century rationalists, he said: Some carried this to the final conclusions and said that the universe was really Godless he added. "What these people were trying to establish was a world dominated by reason with a place for God in the background. They of course influenced all subsequent decades." "This made it easy for Nietzsche to say 'God is dead,'" he said. Wonderful COOK-IN dessert... We cannot tell a lie...there's nothing more scrumptious than Varsity Velvet 'ALL-STAR Ice Cream and Cherries Take home plenty today! es Pick up a $ \frac{1}{2} $ gallon at your ice cream dealer today! Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. VL 3-5511 202 W.6 VI 3-5511 the litical uction e deg the s, he ing to be by in the in- es." final un- dded. zsche Riots Break Out In Belgian Streets BRUSSELS, Belgium - (UPI) Police fired at rioting strikers in Liege today, wounding two. It came as most of the rest of Belgium, particularly in the Flemish north, returned to work after 26 days of crippling strikes and violence. The street battle exploded in the industrial Walloon area of the south, where Socialist party and trade union leaders vowed to maintain their strike against government austerity plans "for months if necessary." The new fighting came when about 500 hold-out strikers attacked and smashed a streetcar in the Liege suburb of Chenee. The strikers had gone there straight from a mass meeting that had decided to continue the Socialist-led walkout in the Liege area. GENDARME REINFORCEMENTS poured into the area after the street car was attacked. The demonstrators swarmed after them, and the hard-pressed police opened fire to free themselves. When the rioters attacked, passengers fled the streetcar. The demonstrators poured into the car, breaking windows and wrecking the inside. Stones and bullets began flying when a Gendarme Jeep Patrol reached the scene and radioed for help. Only minutes before, the rioters had heard national strike leader Andre Renard bitterly complain over the failure of workers in the Flemish regions to continue the antigovernment strike movement. ABOUT 3.000 persons attended the rally at Grivegnes, another Liege suburb, and cheered Renard wildly. Renard has been championing the French-speaking Walloons' demands for autonomy within the kingdom. Earlier, the national Socialist party and labor leaders proposed a plan for economic expansion and full employment as a substitute for the government austerity plan. The government of Premier Gaston Eyskens jammed its austerity bill through the lower house of Parliament last Friday, and expects to win even more handily in the upper house where it has a bigger majority. JFK Selects Head to AEC PALM BEACH. Fla.—(UPI)President-Elect John F. Kennedy will name Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, chancellor of the University of California, to the important post of chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, it was learned today. Seaborg will replace John A. McCone, who already has submitted his resignation to President Eisenhower, effective Jan. 20 as top man on the commission. Kennedy was expected to announce the appointment later today. Kennedy rounded out the postmaster general's staff with three appointments today. He conferred with Postmaster General-Designate J. Edward Day by telephone and named: $\bullet$ Michael Monroney, 33, son of Sen. A. S. (Mike) Monroney, D-Okla, as executive assistant to the Postmaster General. ● Frederick C. Belen, 47, of Lansing, Mich., assistant postmaster general for postal operations. BeLEN presently is chief counsel and staff director of the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee. *Ralph W. Nicholson, 44, New York advertising executive of New Rochelle, N.Y., assistant postmaster general for finance. Hodding Carter to Give Annual WAW Lecture Hodding Carter, Pulitzer prizewinning editor of the Delta Democrat-Times of Greenville, Miss., will give the 12th annual William Allen White Lecture Feb. 10 at the University. Mr. Carter has received national recognition as a small-town newspaper editor in the tradition of William Allen White, whose birthday is the occasion for the citation and luncheon. Through books, speeches and editorials he has become known as a southern liberal who has worked for a progressive South and for a moderate solution to the racial problem. HE WILL SPEAK at 3 p.m. in Fraser Theater, at which time he will receive the 1961 National Citation for Journalistic Merit of the William Allen White Foundation. Dolph Simons, editor of the Lawrence Journal-World and foundation president, will make the presentation. At 9:30 a.m. in Flint Hall the foundation board of trustees will hold its annual meeting. At 12:30 p.m. a buffet luncheon will be held in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union and a Kansas editor will receive the foundation's Kansas Citation for Journalistic Merit. A dinner in his honor will be sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi fraternities. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize is 1946. The editorial cited was a plea for understanding which described the record of the Nisei Americans of the 442nd Infantry Regiment whose motto was "Go for Broke!" CARTER HELD a Guggenheim fellowship in creative writing in 1945, was named a fellow of Sigma Delta Chi in 1954, and won the Eliah Loveiov award in 1952. In the summer of 1940 he took leave of absence from the Delta MR. CARTER is the author of nine books and co-author of four. These include "Lower Mississippi," "The Winds of Fear," "Flood Crest," "Southern Legacy," "The Angry Scar: The Story of Reconstruction," "John Law Wasn't So Wrong," and two juvenile books on Robert E. Lee and Lafayette. Democrat-Times to help establish the experimental daily newspaper PM in New York. In World War II he was the officer in charge of the Cairo-based Middle East editions of Yank, the Army newspaper, and editor of the Middle East edition of Stars and Stripes. His autobiographical "Where Main Street Meets the Rivers," published in 1953, sets forth his creed and his journalistic experiences, including his fight to get started in newspaper work in the depression, the violent years in Tangipahoa Parish in Louisiana, and a four-year editorial war on the Huey Long machine. PARIS —(UPI)— The Algerian Moslem rebels offered today to negotiate a peace with France. French sources said President Charles de Gaulle might take them up on it soon. The Algerian "provisional government" said it was ready to talk about conditions for a referendum in which the Algerian people will be allowed to decide their own future. Moslems Offer Peace With France But it warned that the six-year-old Algerian war would continue if De Gaulle pushed ahead with plans to set up a new provisional administration in the revolt-torn territory as a first step toward independence. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Lawrence Police Adopt 'Hands-Off' Sit-in Policy Lawrence Police Chief John Hazellet and KU Chief Joe Skillman have adopted a "hands-off" policy in the event of future sit-ins in the Lawrence area. In a conference at the KU Traffic office in Hoch Auditorium this morning, the two chiefs said they would take action against sit-in participants only on the basis of a warrant signed by a judge. "If the persons conducting the THEY WOULD BE ON HAND, however, at the scene of any sit-in to preserve order. They added, however, that this did not mean police would not act immediately in the case of a violation of city or state law committed in an officer's presence. Monday, Jan. 16, 1961 sit-in are orderly, do not block sidewalks or entrances, and do not create a public disturbance, we will take no action." Chief Hazelet said. "If, however, one of the persons involved signs a complaint and a judge issues a warrant, we will arrest the person or persons named in the warrant." Chief Hazelct explained that in order for a person to obtain a warrant he must obtain a complaint from the city or county attorney, take it to a judge and sign it in his presence. On the basis of this complaint the judge may or may not issue a warrant of arrest, the chief said. Law enforcement officers must execute the warrant, if issued. "Anybody has the right to file a Patton Says Students Hedge on Sit-in Ideals The campus Presbyterian minister said last night that University students do not have the guts to follow their ideals as far as integration and other such problems are concerned. The Rev. John H. Patton at Sunday Evening Fellowship at the Westminster Center said holding ideals is not enough; "A FEW YEARS ago some white members of a work caravan in West Point, Miss., had to make an agreement with teachers and officials not to ride in cars with Negroes nor speak to Negroes on the streets. "We Christians don't have the guts in our two to five years on campus to make an intensive study of conditions and prejudices as they exist and to take appropriate action. For that action might get us into trouble after graduation." "This was reasonable since the white people,would have been endangering their lives and property and the lives and property of many other persons if the convictions of the white workers had been pushed too fast too far. Similar intelligence judgments should be taken elsewhere," the minister said. "It is not sufficient only to have ideals, but we must have the intelligence to put them into action at the right time with the right strategy." The Rev. Mr. Patton backed up his call for intelligent judgment of the situation by recalling an incident in Mississippi. The Presbyterian minister said he was not implying any condemnation of students participating in the sit-in Thursday. Another possibility, Heitz said, is that the Civil Rights Council may get its resolution on the agenda if it achieves the necessary 2,000 signatures. THE REV, MR. PATTON said judgments on each moral situation and the best line of action must be made by each individual. Tom Heitz, Kansas City, Mo., junior and a leader of the recent Lawrence sit-in, said in the discussion that the All Student Council would probably pass a referendum bill discouraging sit-in demonstrations and encouraging legal means toward integration in public establishments. Discussion varied on all facets of integration and its effects. Heitz emphasized that such a referendum or resolution, if one is presented to the ASC, is definitely only informative and in discussion stage "There may be a rewording of the proposed resolution before the ASC which would in effect make it a referendum, or there may be another bill proposed for a middle-of-the-road stand," Heitz said. HE TOLD HIS audience that he had talked to three members of the ASC yesterday and that the members thought it was almost imperative that the council as a representative body on campus do something in light of the sit-in Thursday. A. R. Rev. John Patton F. ROBERT SEARCY, Shreveport, La., senior, said that "most educators within sociology agree that race is mythical, that there is no pure race. "Yet individuals at KU, which is supposed to be an educational institution, recognize the term race in papers and petitions circulated. Is that education?" Weather Mostly cloudy this morning, becoming sunny and warmer this afternoon. Generally fair tonight and Tuesday. Colder tonight. Highs today 40 to 45, lows tonight lower 29s. complaint but they must be prepared to prove beyond a doubt in court the truth of the allegation in the complaint." Chief Hazelet said. On the basis of former Attorney General John Anderson's interpretation of Kansas law, Chief Hazelte felt a complaint sought against a tavern owner for discrimination would not be granted. In his opinion, Anderson said: Under the Kansas law, discrimination is illegal in hotels, restaurants, and places of public entertainment or amusement, for which a municipal license is required. Pro-Communist units were said to be especially active in the Nam Nhiep Valley where they drove government forces out of Ta Viang four days ago. Ta Viang is 20 miles south of Xieng Khouang. in his opinion, Anderson said: "...it would appear doubtful that an establishment wherein only cereal malt beverages are sold to the public, would be a place of public entertainment or public amusement." AS FAR AS can be determined, there has been no court decision clarifying this interpretation, and until the legality can be clarified by a judicial decision, law officers must abide by the attorney general's interpretation. Chief Hazelet said. County Attorney Wesley Norwood said this morning he could not say whether he would issue a complaint against a tavern owner for discrimination until he was acquainted with the facts of the particular case. "I would not want to go out on a limb and say I would or wouldn't until I was acquainted with the circumstances," Mr. Norwood said. He said that in the event he denied to issue a complaint, he would advise the party concerned on other methods of obtaining one. Pro-Communists Advance in Laos VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) Five days of rocket strikes by Laotian government pilots in U.S.-supplied planes have failed to halt the advance of pro-Communist forces in the strategic Plain of Jars region, informed sources said today. Reports from the region said the Pathet Lao rebels were continuing to push into government territory from the plain, which has been in rebel control for some time. Government T-6 training planes, all obsolete American models, strafed and rocketed rebel positions in the Ta Viang stronghold yesterday to try to keep the Reds from consolidating their gains. Returning pilots reported the insurgents were constructing air strips at Ta Viang, using a number of trucks. For the first time, the Laotian pilots reported a direct hit—one of the planes knocked out a truck with a rocket. Travel Restriction Set on U.S. to Cuba WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States today imposed restrictions on travel to Cuba similar to those in effect for Red China and some other Communist countries. The State Department announced that Americans will not be allowed to go to Cuba unless they have passports specifically authorizing such a trip. The Department said all outstanding U.S. passports "except those of U.S. citizens remaining in Cuba are being declared invalid for travel to Cuba unless specifically endorsed for such travel." ... Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 16, 1961 For Better or Worse For want of a better simile, the sit-in is like a land mine. For those who use it, it is most effective. For those it is used against, its power is overwhelming to say the least. By careless handling, however, the user can suffer a worse fate than would befall the enemy. THE SIT-IN STAGED BY KU STUDENTS at Louise's Bar last Thursday night resulted in damage to both sides and created as many problems as it solved. The one question that those concerned had hoped would be answered went unresolved: "Does the Kansas anti-discrimination law pertain to taverns and bars?" There was one big question answered though — "What would happen if a sit-in were to occur in Lawrence?" Fortunately, the demonstration was an orderly one unmarked by violence. After service was firmly but quietly requested, and denied in the same fashion, the police arrived. They were patient, almost pedantic, in explaining why the group could not stay, and the consequences of remaining against the owner's wishes. The rights of every person were scrupulously protected. There was not a hint of violence or even disorder. The students were taken to the police station and detained there. It was immediately made clear that the students could not be held by the city for they had violated no city regulation. The spokesmen were told they could leave anytime but were asked to stay to give their explanation. They did. The meeting ended at 11:30 and the students left. At the end of the evening's activities it was apparent that progress had been made in the matter of discrimination in Lawrence. But with the forward movement, the mines in the path towards integration were spotted which well could seriously damage the progress made thus far. IN THE BATTLE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS currently being waged in every part of the country, the "sit-in" tactic is the most powerful weapon for direct action yet to be used. In some cases it has failed. In others it has crumbled the walls of segregation. The honor of the method is unquestionable; by quietly but determinedly requesting rights where there were none before, the Negro has shown those opposed to integration that it isn't quite as harmful or hard to take as imagined. But what of the "rights" of the merchants marked for sit-ins? Is there a point when the procedure steps over the line of injustice for the minority and trods upon the owner's rights? He has always had the privilege of operating his establishment as he see fit, within the limits of the law. Certainly it is a terrible thing when a person with black skin cannot purchase what he needs or wants merely because his skin is not the same as the merchant's or as that of the merchant's customers. However, we are not speaking of the rights of the Negro alone but of the natural rights of man. And this is where the sit-in could become the liability of the battle rather than an asset. For when it is used, principles are at odds. And principles are the trigger of emotion. HAD NOT ALL ACTED AND REACTED with the presence of mind exhibited Thursday night we might now be writing of the tragedy rather than the success of the demonstration. Integration in Lawrence could have been set back to the point where it started, and the great progress that has been made, lost. A lot was at stake. The sit-in has achieved great gains. But only when thoughtfully and deliberately planned does it succeed and make gains. The odds of its failure and subsequent tragic consequences are too great when it is spontaneous. To tread cautiously and carefully through the mine-laden battlefield of integration will lower the odds on the possibility of a fatal trip. — Frank Morgan ... Letters ... Editor: ASC Member Asks for New Resolution One member of the Civil Rights Council is quoted in the UDK on Jan. 12 as saying the ASC is not likely to circulate a petition because of the Council's recent tabling of the civil rights resolution. This is probably true, but some members of the Council are in favor of a referendum to give students a chance to voice their opinion. This referendum can be called by the ASC and I believe it should be. But, the importance of careful preparation before the referendum cannot be exaggerated. I VOICED MY DISAPPOINTMENT THAT THE RESOLUTION was not considered in the Jan. 10 ASC meeting because I believe it should have been at least discussed. But, the resolution has several faults that should be corrected before a referendum is taken on the subject with which it deals. In its present form, it is too long, too complicated with the two amendments, and the wording has not been carefully enough considered and prepared. I feel the resolution is mostly the work of one man and does not reflect a cross-section of campus opinion. Therefore, I propose to ask several campus leaders to join me in considering civil rights and formulating a resolution to present to the student body for referendum. Fred Morrison, our Rhodes scholar; Chuck Menghini, of the NSA committee; John Erickson, ASC member from the fraternity district, and Tom Kurt, who formulated the original resolution, are those I have invited. I have asked Carol McMillen, our NSA coordinator, to set the subsidiary NSA committee, established last October for just such purposes, to the task of studying the ramifications of civil rights action by the students, the attitude of the University administration and the state administration, and any other factors they may consider pertinent. I have asked them to submit a report and recommendation to our committee on civil rights after this consideration. Further, members of the CRC and leaders of the sit-in demonstration will be asked to appear and present their viewpoints. THUS, I THINK YOU CAN SEE THAT AFTER THESE DIFFERENT viewpoints are considered a resolution can be arrived at that will best express the majority will on civil rights; at least of those interested in the subject at all. We will try to formulate a short, direct, but complete resolution that will have the best chance of passage in the Council and careful consideration by the student body. It is hoped that the resolution can be passed and thus, a firm base established from which student action can progress in this time of dire need for action of some reasonable kind. The time has come when the students of the University of Kansas must make a statement of principle and join the crusade for equality of men in the United States. Alan Reed Leavenworth junior Our reason for approving the amendment was simple. The resolution contains some fine phrases in which everyone professes to believe; morally, at least. We have learned by a century of experience that words are not enough to grant the rights of the Constitution to all citizens. With this view in mind, a provision was included in the resolution which would change it from a statement of moral views to a statement of action. This action is to be effective through the use of boycots and selective buying at public establishments, which are practicing discrimination, by all interested students. And we encourage publication of names of merchants who discriminate against non-white students attending the University of Kansas. NSA Motives Mr. Kurt is not in favor of Amendment II because he doesn't believe it expresses the opinion of the majority of the students, and thus does not believe selective buying techniques and boycotts will work. Due to the interest aroused by Amendment II of the Racial Justice Resolution, I deem it necessary to explain my motives and the motives of the NSA Committee members who voted for it. We must remember, at the same time, that some members of the committee voted against the amendment. Editor: Tom, you certainly have the right to be skeptical. To you and other skeptics I say the following: You may be right, but you may be wrong. If you are wrong we shall have won a small battle in the fight against prejudice. And on this battlefield, no victory is of little significance. Pass the Racial Justice Resolution and Amendment II. Discover how effective students can be when they decide to act in a rational and mature manner. Charles Menghini Pittsburg Junior Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Fax 855-345-1234 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors ...The cause or disturbing element that is so important, according to the student newspaper (Daily Kansan) that appears to be supporting the campaign, is discrimination on the part of two Lawrence Tavern owners who refused to sell beer to Negro students. How terrible it must be for anyone to be denied the right to buy beer in two places. There must be at least a hundred places in Lawrence where anyone can buy a lot of the stuff if he wants it. It is truly a great crusade in which the student newspaper is engaged. If the boys and girls, immature as they are in their thinking, succeed in breaking the barrier that has been set up against these thirsty beer drinkers. I am sure those crusading young journalists will be called to some paper of worldwide influence to further demonstrate their ability. The young man who is writing the articles has a by-line. In other words he wants credit for his work and I am glad to give him all the recognition due for the faithful discharge of his assignment. His name is Byron D. Klapper. The student directory says that he is a sophomore in the College and his home address is given as 735 Mace Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Mr. Abels and Integration I have been in the Bronx in New York which makes it much easier to understand why this youngster reacts as he does to this momentum and world shaking problem of colored students being denied the right to buy beer in two places even tho it is available to them by the can or ton in dozens of others. . . . All of this would not be worthy of mention except for this fact which can be substantiated by checking the files of the Kansan for the present school year. There have been numerous stories and communications that undoubtedly have been written to stir up bitterness and hatred. I am sure that the majority of the boys and girls on the Kansan staff are not aware of the facts about what is happening to them. I have been surprised and not a little disturbed to see these stories and communications. They indicate that there must be a woeful lack of information on the part of the students. They fail to recognize the fact that they are being used in what appears to be a highly organized and carefully directed scheme to stir up trouble in the university and in our community. The community is being hurt and the University is certainly being placed in a most embarrassing position at this time. . . The series of articles written by an out of state student with the Bronx, N. Y., background simply cannot reflect the ideals and aspirations of the thousands of Kansas boys and girls who are mature in their thinking and are interested in getting an education. In a recent broadcast I gave facts about one of the Civil Rights organizations at the University attempting to integrate the fraternities. They gave up on that effort. It is much too close to the everyday life of the students. The Civil Rights agitators and peddlers of hate and violence haven't accomplished any thing worthy of note and their objective has dwindled from integration of the fraternities and sororites down to gaining admittance to two places where beer is sold. It isn't much for the leadership to brag about. I am sure that a Sophomore from the Bronx in New York knows all the facts about "the segregation situation in this community." I only hope we can reward him someday by decorating the campus with bronze statue of him holding a beer bottle in one hand and a copy of the Daily Kansan in the other. Now, let's look at the entire situation for just a moment. Throughout the more than 30 years we have been in the business section of Lawrence there has always been the best of cooperation between all the people of the community. Lawrence has been fortunate in having some outstanding colored people who helped work out the problems as they came along. I am proud of the fact that many of them have been my friends. . . What I am trying to say is there are opportunities, plenty of them, for everyone who is qualified and makes the successful effort to find his place in this great world. Those opportunities are of more value than the drinking of beer in a tavern. Opportunities are not made available by agitators who preach nate and talk about the use of force and the violation of law. The boys from the Bronx and the professors who are encouraging him in his hate campaign, should be told some of the facts of life by school authorities. Through the many years of personal observation I have seen a great deal of change in our community. The Negroes have won their way into better jobs and have done it by being ready and prepared for the opportunities when they came along. That is the only way anyone, regardless of who he is, gets ahead in this land of freedom in which we live. I have many friends in University circles in various jobs. I resent having them forced to defend themselves against the type of programs that are being carried on under the somewhat meaningless name of Civil Rights. It is unfair to the school to have publicity that gives the wrong impression given prominence in the official school paper. It is injurious to the school, it hurts the community and it simply cannot do any good whatsoever among the students. Freedom of speech and the press does not carry with it a license—to tear down or hinder the progress of the nation that makes it possible. In a great University where is available all of the marvelous accomplishments of man as he struggled to the present level of culture and where the people expect effort on the part of all who teach to hold high the finest and truest standards and ideals we find a sophomore from the Bronx, N. Y. filling the student paper with abuse and bitterness because a few negro students are denied beer in two taverns. Obviously he has the approval and help of one or more persons in some places of authority. Let's keep our school worthy of the sacrifices necessary to support it. (Excerpted from the Lawrence Outlook, Jan. 12, 1961. Mr. Ed Abels, the author, is the well-known editor and publisher of this Douglas County weekly newspaper and has a weekly broadcast of editorial material on Sunday afternoons over the Lawrence radio Station KLWN.) Page 3 Around the Campus Program Set At KU, Bonn An official graduate exchange program between KU and the University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, has been announced by J. H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school. Under the agreement with the Rheinische - Friedrich - Wilhelms-University, a graduate student or graduating senior will be able to study in Bonn during the academic year 1961-62 while a German graduate student will attend KU. The stipend consists of a cash award to cover room and board plus remission of the tuition fees. The candidate will be selected by the University of Bonn before April 15 Applications must be in by March 1. Former Governor To Speak at Lewis Alfred M. Landon, former governor of Kansas and presidential candidate against Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, will give a short speech at the Lewis Hall dedication dinner at 6 p.m. tomorrow. Luther N. Lewis gave the bequest which made the construction of Lewis Hall possible. The hall is a memorial to his father and mother, Alexander and Mary Francis North Lewis. Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, will introduce members and friends of the Lewis family. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will introduce Mr. Landon. Education Methods Pioneer to Speak Waldo Sweet, pioneer of new methods in teaching foreign languages, will give two lectures Wednesday at Fraser Theater. The professor of classical studies at the University of Michigan will speak at 4 p.m. on "Construction of Learning Materials for Foreign Languages." At 7:30 p.m. he will discuss "Testing Achievement in Foreign Languages." Both the University and the Law- rence Public Schools are using techniques for teaching beginning Latin developed by Mr. Sweet. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Foreign Students: Please turn in the Rotary Club nomination ballots to the Foreign Student Adviser by 5 p.m. tomorrow. NSA Committee. 4 p.m. Kansas Union. Baptist Student Union. 1221 Oread. Baptist School. 5 p.m. Kansas Union. Engineerettes. Watkins Room, Kansas Union, 8 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Communion. Breakfast follows 6:45 a.m. and ends at 9:30 a.m. Baptist Student Union. 1221 Oread. 12:30, Devotional period. Geology Department. Dr. Charles Nevin will present a 2-part lecture on "Sorting, Grading and Bedding of Sediments." The 1st part will be given at at the San Diego Union, Student Union. The 2nd part in Room 426, Lindley Hall at 3:45 p.m. Angel Flight Meeting. Military Science Bldg. 7 p.m. Naval Reserve Research Co. Room 104, Military Science Bldg. The New University of Kansas Reactor. 2D LT. L. CUNNIGHAM, USAR. 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Jay Jones. Room 306, Kansas Union 5 p.m. Tom Rea Article Appears In Encore Magazine The Kansas Community Theater Plan is the subject of the principal feature article in the first issue of Encore, a new magazine devoted to community and little theaters and to school and religious drama. Tom P. Rea, instructor of speech and director of the Kansas Community Theater Plan, is the author of the article. A series of experimental workshop plays will be presented today, tomorrow, Wednesday and Friday in the Experimental Theatre. Experimental Plays Set for This Week Two 15-minute plays will be presented today, starting at 4:00 p.m. There will be a 15-minute discussion period after each play. Monday, Jan. 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan Tomorrow, Wednesday and Friday the plays will begin at 3:00 p.m. Students graduating this spring from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences should consider teaching opportunities in private schools. This is the opinion of Mary Abell Watson, director of the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers, a non-profit recruitment and placement agency. College Graduates To Private Schools She said, "Many livalal arts students do not realize that it is possible to obtain teaching positions without a degree in education. Independent schools prefer teachers with a thorough liberal arts background to those who have specialized in methods courses." MISS $ ^{W} $ WATSON said this does not mean there is not a need for teachers with training in education. She said it indicates, however, that students who have not taken education courses can find interesting and rewarding positions in the teaching profession. "Private school positions offer the young man or woman who wishes to devote his life to the teaching profession a pleasant and gracious way of service in an attractive and interesting environment," Miss Watson said. Students interested in further information regarding job opportunities should write the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers, 22 East 42 Street, New York 17, N. Y. John M. Reiff Gets Maytag Scholarship John M. Reiff, Wichita senior, is one of 10 engineering and commerce students at eight midwest universities who has been awarded special scholarships by the Maytag Co. Foundation, Inc. Each of the scholarships amounts to $200. Those receiving the grants are selected by college faculties. A full schedule of Greek Week activities is being mapped out according to Paul Ingemanson, Topeka senior, who is Interfraternity Council co-chairman for the event Greek Week Plans Made Greek Week will be March 19-25 "It is a week of Greek activity having a three fold purpose." Ingemanson said. "They are to encourage friendly competition among the Greek houses, to enable Greeks to become better acquainted and better appreciate what they have in common and to do some project as a unit." Ingemanson said that the Greek Week project has not been selected. The schedule and committees appointed free Greek Week events. - Sunday, March 19) Queen judging. Interfraternity and Panhellenic council co-chairmen are Roger Schmanke, Ottawa sophomore and Janis Tomlinson, Prairie Village sophomore. The schedule and committees appointed for Greek Week events are: ● Wednesday, Scholarship Banquet. Co-chairmen are Gene Lee, Wichita sophomore and Elaine V. Benson, Mission sophomore. - Tuesday, Exchange Dinner. Cochairmen are Dick Peil, Atchison junior and Shelia Ryan, Aurora, Mo. junior. ● Thursday, Interfaternity Sing. Carl Martinson, Dew Soto sophomore and Toni Delmonico, Wichita sophomore are co-chairman. Ingemanson said there will be a speaker for the Scholarship Banquet. He said that there is also a possibility of having a concert on one of the open nights of the week. Gail Goodman, Shawnee Mission senior is the Penhellenic co-chairman for Greek Week. - Saturday, Chariot Race. Harvey Martin, Salina sophomore is chairman. "Our plans are not yet complete." Ingemanson said. "Final plans will be made a few weeks after the start of the second semester." Members of the Kansas State registration and examining board of architects met Friday with members of the KU architectural department to prepare for the professional examinations for architects. The examinations will be given Jan. 25 through 28 at Marvin Hall. Fifty-six candidates are eligible for registration in Kansas. Officials Plan for State Architectural Exam Never open on less than 14 points. -S. Levine Russian Flying Object-Hit or Miss? WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Russians shot an object into the air, it fell — or flew — we know not where. The Defense Department says there has been no trace of the missilelike object since it was detected flying out of Russia and heading toward the Pacific Friday night. The object was tracked for six minutes by a U. S. Air Force radar station at Shemya Island, Alaska. A department spokesman said yesterday there had been no further radar or visual sightings of the object which might have been an attempt to launch a satellite or send a rocket into the Soviet Pacific testing zone. The Navy last week spotted three Soviet missile-tracking ships heading toward the testing grounds, about 1,000 miles from Hawaii. Card-Carrying Members Only WOLVERHAMPTON, England — (UPI) The local engineers union announced yesterday it will buy a $280 piece of sculpture but only paid-up union members will be permitted to see it. SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES INVITES Mathematicians & Physical Scientists TO DISCUSS CAREERS IN Scientific Computer Programming WITH STL REPRESENTATIVES, ON-CAMPUS JAN.17,1961 Challenging new problems in the areas of aerodynamics, celestial mechanics, tracking and trajectory analysis, systems simulation, and test evaluation require individuals with more than the usual inclination toward, and qualifications in, computer-oriented mathematics. Space Technology Laboratories' Computation and Data Reduction Center, located in Southern California, is one of the nation's largest and most advanced computational facilities. Its staff members daily utilize two IBM 7090's and sophisticated data reduction systems to solve problems arising in the Air Force ballistic missile program and space flight studies. STL offers opportunity for: association with a superior technical staff headed by progressive management; participation in unusually challenging computation and data reduction problems; professional growth; and for advancement within a stimulating and creative environment. Arrange for an on-campus interview by contacting your placement office, or, address your resume to: College Relations, Space Technology Laboratories, Inc., PO. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California. STL SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES, INC. a subsidiary of Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc. MAGOO DON'T BE SHORTSIGHTED Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 16. 1961 News Briefs NEW YORK—President Eisenhower, in a speech to the people of Leningrad; said America shares the fault for the deterioration of Soviet-American relations since World War II. The people of Leningrad never heard the speech. It was canceled when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev called off Eisenhower's projected visit after the U2 incident. The Columbia University Press revealed the speech today in publishing a collection of 30 of the president's addresses entitled "Peace with Justice." --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. WASHINGTON—House Democratic leader John McCormack says President-elect John F. Kennedy is inheriting one of the worst international situations in the U.S. history. McCormack, D-Mass., also charged last night that President Eisenhower had given the country "very weak leadership at the world level." He blamed the Republicans generally for bringing on the current recession through "lack of leadership" and predicted the economic situation would get worse before it gets better. He said he believed Kennedy had the courage and "guts" necessary to help reverse the tide. Concerning the economic situation, he said "There's no question we're in a recession. The present recession had gone far beyond the mild stage. I don't want to say anything to unnecessarily alarm, but I've got to be objective." --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. WASHINGTON—The Census Bureau reports that approximately 46 million students were enrolled in American schools and colleges last fall. This was an increase of 16 million, or 53 per cent, over the number 10 years ago, the bureau said last night. Only about a quarter of a million students were added by the inclusion of data for Alaska and Hawaii. . . . JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—Terrorists dynamited the city's main Jewish synagogue early yesterday in the fourth recent incident against religious property. Offices in a wing of the synagogue were wrecked but no injuries were reported. During the two previous days, church property was stolen or damaged at Anglican, Baptist and Hervormde Kerk churches. --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. MOSCOW—Russia announced yesterday it will help Indonesia build two atomic reactors for "peaceful aims." Contracts signed in Jakarta call for Russia to send specialists to Indonesia for preparatory work on the reactors, and to train Indonesians in Russia "in the peaceful uses of atomic energy," the news agency Tass reported. --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. WASHINGTON—Civil Defense Director Leo A. Hoegh has announced a plan to provide the nation's 150,000 gasoline filling stations with emergency radios and preparedness posters. Hoegh said last night nearly every major American oil company had agreed to cooperate in the distribution with the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization and Purolator Products, Inc., Rahway, N. J. He said Purolator would give battery-operated transistor radios, marked with the Concead frequencies of 640 and 1240, to the stations. They will be accompanied by posters listing five points of personal preparedness for every citizen to remember in defense emergencies. --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. MEXICO CITY—The National Maintenance Workers Union went on strike yesterday against Eastern Airlines in support of demands for higher wages. Eastern flies between Mexico City and New York and New Orleans, with service to Washington and some New York flights. The union is seeking a 30 per cent wage increase. Eastern has offered local workers a 5 per cent boost. --in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— always keep NoDoz in proximity. VATICAN CITY—Pope John XXIII today elevated four leaders including Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis, to the Sacred College of Cardinals. The pontiff told a gathering of 29 cardinals in a secret consistory at the Vatican Palace, however, that the joy of the day was tempered by "widespread fears and tensions." Be perspicacious! Not this; a student who studies drowsily no matter how much sleep he gets. Thist! Perspiciousious ... sharp! NDÕdz keeps you awake and alert—safely If you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn't?) the word to remember is *NoDoz®*. NoDoz alerts you with a *safe* and accurate amount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulant. NODOZ STRE AHAZI TABLETS SAFE AS COMES The safe stay awake tablet — available everywhere. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. Lawrencian Counts Beaver in Kansas Beavers in Kansas? Yes, at least 23,000 of them. A census of the paddle-tailed furbearers was made by F. Robert Henderson, who was a staff member of the State Biological Survey until last June 30 and is now a game management consultant in Lawrence. He describes his findings in a book-let published by the Survey Dec. 16, 1960, and edited by E. Raymond Hall, director of the Survey and professor of zoology. It is the first major report dealing exclusively with Kansas beaver. Henderson found permanent colonies of the rodent in 100 of Kansas' 105 counties. Two counties, Douglas and Ellis, were selected for intensive study and the remaining counties were visited and the number of beaver estimated. For four months, Henderson counted beaver from a boat, and from a low-flying airplane and by spot-checking streams at two-mile intervals. The census indicates that there are approximately 875 beaver in Ellis County and 915 in Douglas County. He outlines a management plan, including an annual census, to learn how many beaver can safely be taken without depleting the breeding stock. Envied Motorist WARSAW — (UPI) — One of the most invied people in Poland today is a young man who owns a 1924 Chrysler car with 720,000 miles to its credit. The Chrysler Corp. is reported to have offered to trade him a new Chrysler for the old car if he can get it to Detroit. ASK ABOUT OUR STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS ECONOMY CHECKING ACCOUNTS Offering - ★ Personalized Checkbook Free ★ 10c Per Check Charge No Charge for Deposits ★ No Maintenance Charge Come in Today! MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOTIT INBURANDE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 8th and Mass. PSST! When things get too close for comfort Old Spice STICK DEODORANT comes to the rescue fast! fast! - Old Spice Stick Deodorant brings you safe, sure, all-day protection! - Better than roll-ons that skip. - Better than sprays that drip. - Better than creams that are greasy and messy. NEW PLASTIC CASE PRE-SET FOR INSTANT USE 1.00 plus 10x Old Spice STICK DEODORANT By land or by sea-you need this Social Security! / . --- Library Favorite Spot Final Cram Sessions Begin With final exams scarcely a week away, there is a last desperate effort among students to tuck the seeds of wisdom into some fertile nook of the brain. This procedure requires particular conditions, and one look into Watson Library seems to show that students massed here are finding the optimum ones. Paul Yancy, Kansas City freshman, said there aren't as many temptations at the library. "At home." he said, "there are the radio, bed, hi-fi, television. . . ." "I CAN CONCENTRATE better better at the library," Beverly Bennett, Lawrence junior, said. "I study there nights frequently and come up often between classes." Carroll Johnson, Chanute sophomore, offered, "I study there for variety." There are some students, too, who prefer studying at home but also have a reason for frequenting the library. "I'm doing research for two term papers," Peter Soyke, graduate student, said. "But I prefer to work in my room where I can relax when I want to." Jim Ellis, Chanute sophomore, said that he was doing research for an English theme. "I DONT STUDY here very much," he said, "but I can't get the information any place else." In spite of the increased numbers using the library, John Nugent, head librarian of the circulation department, said that the library has been able to handle the extra work. "A new charging sysem is now in use at the circulation desk," he said. "With the new system, we are now able to check out a book the same day it is returned. Before, it might have taken days until we had the time to check the book in and return it to the sacks." WATKINS LIBRARY promises to be a haaven for those who want outside material, a place to study or merely the smugness of knowing that another shares his plight. But couples who want to sit together had better come early, and the cold stares will get you if you dare speak aloud. Sinatra, Fitzgerald Tops in Playboy Poll CHICAGO — (UPI) — Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald were named the nation's top male and female vocalists in Playboy magazine's 1961 jazz poll, the magazine announced today. Sinatra and Miss Fitzgerald won top honors not only from the magazine's readers but also in a poll of last year's winners, the magazine said in its February issue. Jazz musicians who were named most popular by both groups were: J. J. Johnson, trombone; Stan Getz, tenor sax; Gerry Mulligan, baritone sax; Barney Kessel, guitar; Ray Brown, bass, and Lambert, Hendricks and Ross, vocal group. Whitman won't last.—G. E. Maxwell QUALITY GUARANTEED PRETTY AS A PICTURE! And Why Not, She Has Her Dry Cleaning Done THE DRY SANITONE CLEANING WAY WHY DON'T YOU? QUALITY GUARANTEED LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 N. H. VI 3-3711 OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8:30 P.M. DRY SANITONE CLEANING WHY DON'T YOU? QUALITY GUARANTEED LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 N. H. VI 3-3711 OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8:30 P.M. LAWRENCE Monday, Jan. 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan F Students at Dairy Farm Drink Dried Milk LONDON —(UPI)— Seventy agriculture students at a dairy farm in Lincolnshire drink dried milk instead of milk fresh from the farm's 50 cows. "It may sound odd but its a simple case of economics," the farm director said yesterday, explaining the dried milk is cheaper. Kansan Want Ads Get Results The practice of dentistry is an exercise of conscience. If many of us are good because we have to be, the dentist is good because he wants to be.-Byron S. Hollinshead MILITARY On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf","The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) HOW SMALL CAN YOU GET? To answer this question it is necessary first to define terms. What, exactly, do we mean by a small college? Well sir, some say that in order to be called truly small, a college should have an enrollment of not more than four students. Today let us address ourselves to a question that has long rocked and roiled the academic world: Is a student better off at a small college than at a large college? I certainly have no quarrel with this statement; a four-student college must unquestionably be called small. Indeed, one could even call it intime if one knew what intime meant. But I submit there is such a thing as being too small. Take, for instance, a recent unfortunate occurrence at Crimscott A and M. Crimscott A and M, situated in a pleasant valley nestled between Denver and Baltimore, was founded by A. and M. Crimscott, two brothers who left Ireland in 1706 to escape the potato famine of 1841. As a result of their foresight, the Crimscott brothers never went without potatoes for one single day of their lives—and mighty grateful they were! One night, full of gratitude after a hearty meal of French fries, cottage fries, hash browns, and au gratin, they decided to show their appreciation to this bountiful land of potatoes by endowing a college. They stipulated that enrollment should never exceed four students because they felt that only by keeping the college this small The fallback was stolen by Gypsies could each student be assured of the personalized attention, the camaraderie, the feeling of belonging, that is all too often lacking in higher education. Well sir, on the morning of the big game against Minnesota, its traditional rival, a capricious destiny dealt Crimscott a cruel blow—in fact, four cruel blows. Sigafoos, the quarterback, woke up that morning with the breakbone fever. Wrichards, the slotback, was unable to start his motorcycle. Beerbohm-Tree, the wingback-tailback, got his necktie caught in his espresso machine. Langerhans, the fullback, was stolen by gypsies. Well sir, things went along swimmingly until one Saturday a few years ago. On this day Crimscott had a football game scheduled against Minnesota, its traditional rival. Football was, of course, something of a problem at Crimscott, what with only four students enrolled in the entire college. It was easy enough to muster a backfield, but finding a good line—or even a bad line—baffled the most resourceful coaching minds in the country. Consequently, alas, none of the Crimscott team showed up at the game, and Minnesota, its traditional rival, was able to score almost at will. Crimscott was so out of sorts that they immediately broke off football relations with Minnesota, its traditional rival. This later became known as the Dred Scott Decision. So you can see how only four students might be too small an enrollment. The number I personally favor is twenty. How come? Because when you have twenty students and one of them opens a pack of Marlboro Cigarettes, there are enough to go around for everybody, and no one has to be deprived of Marlboro's fine, mild flavor, of Marlboro's easy-drawing filter, of Marlboro's joy and zest and steadfast companionship, and as a result you have a student body that is filled with sweet content and amity and harmony and concord and togetherness and soft pack and flip-box. That's how come. . . . © 1961 Max Shulman You will also find twenty cigarettes—twenty incomparable unfiltered king-size cigarettes—in each pack of Marlboro's new partner in pleasure—the Philip Morris Commander. Welcome aboard! Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 16. 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Faces Last Place O-State Oklahoma State comes to Allen Field House to meet the first place Kansas Jayhawkers at 7:35 tonight riding a three game Big Eight losing streak. The Cowboys were 82-73 victims of the Missouri Tigers Saturday night. They come to Lawrence seeking their initial conference win. Kansas beat them 73-68 last Monday in Stillwater. The first KU win was featured by outstanding shooting by both squads with each hitting over 50 per cent of its field goal attempts. KU Loses Swim Meet The one Cowboy who gave the Hawkers the most trouble was 5-11 The University of Iowa and Iowa State University defeated Kansas in its first two dual meets of the season, 66-38 and 74-30 respectively. KU vs. IOWA Dick Reason, Topeka junior, was the only double winner on the KU team. He won both 200-yard butterfly events, and was the lead-off man in the winning freestyle relay at Iowa. With only seven men, the Jayhawkers won three events at each meet. 400-Yard Medley Relay - I. 1. Iowa 2. Kansas (George Tiller, Bill Murdock, Dick Reamon, Eldon Ward) 3:57 4 220-Yard Freestyle: 1. Bill Claerhout (I); 2. Glover Wadington (I) 3. Mike Cassidy (K); 2:06.4 50-Yard Freestyle: 1. Bill Meyerhoff (I); 2. Ward (K); 3. Tom Cromwell (I). :23.4 Diving: 1. Dan Suits (1); 2. Jim Robbins (I); 3. Keith Bras (K) points: 215.7 200-Yard Individual Medley; 1. Charles Mitchell (I); 2. Cooper Weeks (I); 3. Karl Pfuetze (K) 2:11:6 200-Yard Butterfly: 1. Reamon (K); 2. Ray Carlson (I); 3. Bob Cramer (I). 2:15:3 200-Yard Backstroke: 1. Les Cutler (1); 2. Eric Matz (1). 2:09.2 440-Yard Freestyle: 1. Wadington (I); 2. Mike McWilliams (I); 3. Cassidy (K). 4:50.2 200-Yard Breaststroke: 1. Vokulek (I); 2. Howard Heid (I); 3. Pfuetze (K). 2:31.0 400-Yard Freestyle Relay: 1. Kansas (Reamon, Tiller, Cassidy, Ward); 2. Iowa. 3:38.6 KU vs. IOWA STATE 400-Yard Medley Relay: Iowa State: 4:01.5 220-Yard Freestyle: 1. Patterson (IS); 2. Ward (K); 3. Roscoe (IS). 2:12.9 50-Yard Freestyle: 1. Tiller (K); 2. Hostetler (I); 3. Hort (J); 24.6 200-Yard Individual Medley: 1. Witherell (IS); 2. Reamon (K); 3. Pfuetze (K); 2:15.6 Diving: 1. Eckelberger (IS): 2. Ervin (IS): 3. Bras (K) points: 233 200-Yard Butterfly: 1. Reason (K): 2. Drake (IS), 2:16.9 100-Yard Freestyle: 1. Witherell (IS); 2. Ward (K); 3. Roscoe (IS). :50.6 200-Yard Backstroke: 1. Pierce (IS): 2. Hart (IS), 2:10.8 440-Yard Freestyle: 1. Patterson (IS); 2. Cassidy (K); 3. Elson (IS). 4:57.1 200-Yard Breaststroke: 1. Pfuetze (K); 2. Höstetter (IS); 3. Murdock (K); 2:35.5 400-Yard Freestyle Relay: 1. Iowa State; 2. Kansas. 3:27.7. (Pool record. Old record 3:28.6.) guard Fritz Greer who tallied 23 points. Greer had another outstanding night in the Missouri game which gave O-State a 6-7 season mark by scoring 27 points. In last week's game the Cowboys tried to keep KU center Bill Bridges away from the basket, thus lessening his effectiveness as a scorer and rebounder. This may well be Coach Henry Iba's strategy tonight considering the 29 point production of Bridges in the KU romp over Iowa State. Kansas enters the game with a 9-4 record and three wins without a loss in Big Eight play to place them one half game ahead of twice victorious Kansas State. Cecil Eppertley, 6-4 forward, scored 13 points in the earlier meeting and 14 in the Missouri loss for O-State. He teams with Moe Iba, who had 18 last Monday, to provide an additional scoring punch for Oklahoma State. The center for the last place Cowboys is 6-7 Ed Bunch who was held to nine by KU but tallied 13 against Missouri. The other starter for O-State is likely to be 6-3 Dave Miller. He had five in the loss to Kansas. KU Gymnasts Lose To Kansas State The Kansas State Wildcats captured five first-place spots of seven events in defeating KU $ 69_{1 / 2} $ to $ 49_{1 / 2} $ in a gymnastics meet held here Friday. The Jayhawks, in losing their third meet of the season, were led by player-coach Bob Lockwood, high man for the meet with 21 points, and Don Clifford. Lockwood won first place in the horizontal bar event while Clifford easily topped the tumming competition. The Jayhawks scored most of their points on second, third and fourth places in the seven events. The Wildcats won the first three events, the free exercise, trampoline and side horse, to take an early lead. Bridges, Hightower's Antics Lead to Win Over Iowa State By Bill Sheldon Laurel and Hardy, Martin and Lewis and Abbott and Costello were great comedy teams, but the duo of Bridges and Hightower may become equally as famous. Bill Bridges and Wayne Hightower not only led all performers on the basketball court in KU's 90-59 trouncing of Iowa State Saturday but they put on a tandem comedy act which caused a lively crowd of 9,000 to roar with laughter throughout the one-sided Big Eight game. Some of the moves the 6-8 junior made with the ball as he weaved through the hapless Cyclones' defense for his 14 field goals were absolutely fantastic. When away from the hoop the slender Philadelphiaian executed feints with his head, hips and feet which left defenders befuddled and the fans laughing. So effective was Hightower's defense that Henry Whitney, the Cyclones' top scorer in their previous games, was held to five points. He eventually fouled out late in the game. Having what must be the best game of his career, the 6-6 senior scored 29 points, grabbed off 23 rebounds and squelched three Iowa State centers, allowing them only nine points before leaving the game. Although Hightower scored 31 points to capture the game scoring honors, this fact was almost forgotten by the end of the rout. What was best remembered was the fantastic maneuvers and antics of the agile All America candidate. The tremendous overall performance of center Bridges also kept the crowd buzzing. Under the basket he was almost unstoppable. He seemingly wound himself around defenders for scores which appeared to be impossible. Hightower was constant motion, blocking shots on defense, rebounding adroitly, scoring from many positions and putting on a one-man ballet for the screaming crowd. There seemed no way for the losers to stop the furious charges of Bridges as he blasted goalward for rebounds and tip-ins. But Bridges was also effective away from the basket as he hit on 11 of 20 field goal attempts. KU Bridges was strikingly aggressive despite an injury to his right elbow. His spirit and hustle often seemed to lift the entire KU team to increase its ever growing margin. The point production of Bridges and Hightower alone more than equalled the Cyclones' scoring. Together the Kansas duo scored 60 points. The outstanding pair of Bridges and Hightower teamed together many times for crowd pleasing two-man plays ending in baskets. On one occasion, midway in the second half, they looked like volleyball players as they tapped the ball over the basket a half dozen times before Bridges flipped it through the cords. For Iowa State there was only one bright spot. This was the effective long-range shooting of 5-10 guard Gary Wheeler who tallied 20 points. Hitting Rookie There's no such thing as an ugly woman.—Robert Harper PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Lloyd Waner of the Pittsburgh Pirates holds the major league record for hits made during a rookie season. Waner collected 223 for the Pirates in 1927. Big Eight Standings | | Won | Lost | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | KANSAS | 3 | 0 | | Kansas State | 2 | 0 | | Colorado | 2 | 1 | | Nebraska | 2 | 1 | | Iowa State | 1 | 2 | | Missouri | 1 | 2 | | Oklahoma | 0 | 2 | | Oklahoma State | 0 | 3 | LAST THREE DAYS! Games tonight: Oklahoma State at Kansas; Oklahoma at Colorado. BEN-HUR AT 7:30 P.M. ADULTS $1.25 VARSITY NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS as CINDERELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) ED WYNN • JUDITH ANDERSON ANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI as "The Princess" A Paramount Release • TECHNICOLOR® GRANADA THEATRE • Telephone YXN63 3-5781 JERRY LEWIS as CINDERFELLA SALE 1st Anniversary SALE SPECIAL PRICES on GUITARS, BONGOS, DEMONSTRATOR and RENTAL INSTRUMENTS January 16-21 ODELL'S & BELL'S MUSIC SHOP HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Open Evenings Until 8:30 p.m. SALE [ ] [ ] [ ] Monday, Jan. 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to you by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion LOST LADIES' EYEGLASSES, black front gold earpiece. no Case. Missing since Dec. 15. Reward. Call VI 2-1340, Beverly Weaver. 1-16 SLIDE RULE in or around Union. $5 reward. Call KU 376. 1-20 FOR RENT LADIFS right-handed glove. Black leather, Black leather, Strong Ball. Call KU 201, Mrs. LADIFS VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf ROOMS FOR MEN: One block from Union. New furniture and bath facilities. Single. $35; double $25. Call John Long, V 1-67894 after 3 p.m. 1212 Iorel. 1-20 APARTMENT — Three large rooms, private bath and private entrance. Furnished or unfurnished. Ideal for a couple or two or three boys. Inquire of Raymond Anderson. Anderson Furniture, 812 N. H., VI 3-2044. 1-20 THREE BEDROOM HOME adjacent to campus. Garage and basement. Immediate possession. Call VI 3-3425. If no answer, call VI 3-3666. 1-20 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking, Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-5776 after 2 p.m. fm. CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six baths and a ward entrance. Utilities paid. No marriage. Married only. 520 Ohio. tf 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bent. Reduce if Phone Vi 3-9776. For Rent — Quiet, large room for men. Private bath. private entrance. One block south of KU*Phone VI 3-3293. One bedroom furnished apartment for rent v. 3-1181 or vi. 3-6661 for l-19 Basement sleeping room with kitchen. Entrance. Utilities paid. QI 3-6312 1-19 BUSINESS LOCATION available for rent to students for a restaurant or rooming possibilities. Located on Lawrence's busiest street. Lot 1-17 of parking. VI S-15787. BOOMS FOR MEN—ONE HALF BLOCK Quiet. Seat on 1301. La. or call VVI 3-4002. GROUND FLOOR furnished apartment. Utilities paid. Close to campus, $70. Second floor apartment for women, $55. Sleeping room, $25. Call VI 3-6291 - 174 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6213 from p. 1.m-1. Large seven room furnished house. Single beds. Also five room house, newly decorated inside and out. Near post office. Call VI 3-9184. 1-17 TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $80. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-17 Semi-basement recreation type apartment, in quiet private home. Accommodate 2 or 3 boys. Twin beds—dressing room — private bath, private entrance. Contact Mrs. Callahan. Concession counter, Union Bldg. 1-19 SMALL APARTMENT for one student Furnished. bills paid. Near campus. Call VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. 1-18 TWO ROOM living room-bedroom, kitchen and large living room-bedroom, kitchen and large room-bedroom. Fivetime for one or two occupants. Five-minute call. Call VI 3-0189 after 5 p.m. 1-18 Large attractive 4 room apartment. Private bath. Close to downtown and KU. Nice house, off street parking. Reachable rent $55 a month. Ph. VI 3-6900. -1-6900. BASEMENT APARTMENT for men students. Private entrance, utilities paid 1520 W. 22nd Terr. 1-17 MEN'S FURNISHED apartment. Close to Hospital facilities paid. 1230 Or- ginic Vi. 511-259. NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-6842. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS HELP WANTED Wanted: Part time delivery boy, Sunny, $12.50 hr. Must have call Call 1-17 1-17 MEDICAL SECRETARY, female. Part- time Monday through Friday. Mechanical imaging machine 30 words per minute. Medical terminology. appointment call VI 3-3680. 1-18 WANTED JRADUATE WOMAN to share apart- ment with a child in Missi- lissippi, two doors north of Union BUSINESS SERVICES PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; com- pile programograms; definition; formerly known as the Theta VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $450 DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Fornals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $139 \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7541. tf LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. tf PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, prob-婆 solutions. Sample test questions. Free delivery. Price $4.00. For your copi call VI 2-1065. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Mod- ly. Fully stocked with pets and plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything is on display. All collects or department needs. Phone VI 8-3921 or better still, come. Welcome If. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Picnic. party supplies. Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI T 1250350. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil. VI 3-8379. Expert typing and secretarial service. VI, 3-5920 or Mt. Hicks, IV 2-6111 FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard calls. Call VI 51-3823. experienced typist — will type these papers, etc. Cal Mrs. Fulcher. VI. 0555 Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term paper. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th, V1 2f-648. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th, V1 2f-648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist -- will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. THEMES, theses, etc. Fast accurate work former secretary. Phone VI 3-1573. 820-495-1573 TYPIST. experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers, Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-8554. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf HOUSE FOR RENT Rental Payment Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johanssen, VI 3-2876. Experienced typist — term papers, menu scripts, reports and dissertations. Promp service at least accurate work, reasonable price. Dr. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., Cal V III-7855. Between $70 & $100 per month - unfurnished - available immediately EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger VI 3-4409. tlf TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell, 1511 W. 21st St. VI 3-6440 1-18 Call Moore Associates VI 3-2571 Experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1708, Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter, Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work. Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hay, VI 3-2318. CLIP THIS COUPON STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1:20 TUXEDO and dinner jacket combina- tions Low condition. Low CVI VI 3-5465. 1-17 ATTENTION: Do you need a complete calculator for personal use? See the amazing Curta calculator capable of all operations, a collection of $125, F.E.T. included. Call VI=2-0175. Bob Edminston, for demonstration appointment. 1-16 HOUSE, for sale by owner. Three bedrooms, full basement, fenced yard, attached garage, exceptional closet space. 201-758-3491, School. Call VI 3-4801. 1-18 FOR SALE REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely) revised, outline of lectures, word lists of course notes, diagrams and diagrams. Complete course index. Price $3.00. For your copy call VI 2-1605. Same Day Service SKIRTS DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, sellor worm. Worn, Valued at $450, will sell for $350. Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. 29 Plain--or any sweater. Reg. 59c ea. Beautifully Dry Cleaned Hand Finished. No Limit. RAPID SALE, going overseas: Spring, Sunday; $15, $20, $30, ironing bed, $64, $8A, Sunnyside, 1-15 FOR SALE: 1955 One bedroom Safeway trailer home. Equipped with a one ton refrigerator condition. Space. Excellent condition. Phone VI 5-7912 after 5 p.m. except weekend. 1-20 1959 REGAL MOBILE HOME- 51' x 10' two bedrooms, must see to提醒. Call VI 3-0734 after 5 p.m. for appointment. 1-17 NOTE: No Limit—But you must bring this coupon in WITH your order. Famous DeLuxe SINGING FAMILY BUNDLE 5 Lbs. Only 79 c SHIRTS ca. 9c—PANTS ca. 29c When Included in Family Bundle Family Pounds Additional Pounds Only 12c Each SAME DAY SERVICE Note: No Limit But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Ordér 25e 20℃ SHIRTS LAUndered TO PERFECTION: STARCHED AS YOU LIKE! SHIRTS HAND-FINISHED ON HANGS 25C EACH Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49c pr. --- Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES 199 pr. 83 vml. With Rubber HEELS DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT 115 FIRES Drive In and Save—Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Except Sunday 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 Majestic Coordinates At MATCH-TRIX by Majestic KIRSTEN'S HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Page 8 University.Daily Kansan Monday. Jan. 16. 1961 Aid to Latin America Seen to Ease Tension SAN FRANCISCO - (UPI) - A massive aid program for Latin America is seen by one group of experts as a means of easing tensions between the United States and the nations of South and Central America. The group was the San Francisco Assembly of the United States and Latin America — 70 business, labor and civil leaders who reported Saturday on a two-day meeting sponsored by the World Affairs Council of northern California. Such a program, the group said, would involve a "dedication of effort and mobilization of skills and resources at least comparable to the Marshall Plan," which aided the economic recovery of Europe after World War II. The problem underlying all U. S.- Latin American relations, the assembly said, is the "pervasive gap between the wealth of the few and the poverty of the many." The emergence of "fundamental and long-held dissatisfactions and differences" is reflected in current strains between this country and Latin America, the assembly's report said. Among the recommendations was "a formidable increase in economic assistance" to South American governments which are trying to help the people. The Assembly also called for expanded cultural exchange contracts and improvement in communications. It also said it is imperative that the organization of American States be maintained. Mrs. Edward W. Scripps, wife of the president of the Scripps League Newspapers, Inc., presented letters from 20 directors of the Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) affirming the need for greater understanding among American nations. Scripps, himself an IAPA director, said, "The directors voiced an all-inclusive feeling of the need to improve freedom of the press." As an example, Scripps cited this letter from Romulo O'Farrill, publisher of Novedades, Mexico City: "The people of every nation of our hemisphere must work together very closely and fight aggressively so that this area will be an example to the world. (This is) an area where individual freedoms are preserved above all, an area where democracy will prove to be the JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL The letters from IAPA directors were in response to requests from Mr. and Mrs. Scripps for recommendations to the conference. Both are members of the World Affairs Council. Students! Mrs. Took Got Took best form of government and our philosophy brings peace, prosperity and happiness to our people." Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj. ... 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free Open 24 bats on Duty Brakes Rellined NORWICH, England — (UPI) — Mrs. Margaret Took, 22-year-old bride of three weeks, cried about her choice of packing cases today. Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont Mrs. Took, getting ready to go to Singapore where her husband works, used a new trash can—a wedding gift—to pack her new things in and then placed it outside the door for the movers. The power to exact affidavits of belief only exist if the Congress has an independent power to proscribe belief.—Mark DeWolfe Howe The garbage men came first. Every man seeking an ultimate life standard today must remember that he himself is the source of valuation of all which has value to him, according to William Earle, professor of philosophy at Northwestern University. Professor Talks On Man's Values Mr. Earle read his paper, "The Immorality of Morality," to the Philosophy Club last week. "Each man is absolutely on his own when the chips are down." Mr. Earle said. One is under no obligation to judge good by other standards, he added. "It is time to re-examine the whole subject of morality," he continued. "The forbidding face of morality has been relaxed, and we find ourselves more willing to relax and to mix a little bad with the good to make the good better." One member of the audience asked Mr. Earle what moral principles should be taught a child. He said: "Children should be brought up according to one's own values, but of course when they are grown up they will kick them off anyway." U of Georgia Gives Silent Greeting to Negro Students Always split your openers.—Tennessee Jones ATHENS, Ga. — (UPI) — Two Negro students whose court-ordered presence on the University of Georgia campus sparked student riots last week returned for classes today under escort of state detectives and were silently accepted. eral instances, pushed aside newsmen and photographers who got in the way. The reception of Charlayne Hunter, 18, and Hamilton Holmes, 19, first Negroes to attend the school in its 175-year history—was calm, almost detached. Where scattered cat-calling had followed them last week only silent stares from small groups of curious students followed them today. Athens police detained a white man driving on a campus street in a car containing a confederate flag and segregation stickers. He was released after questioning. STUDENTS HAD been warned by the campus administration that an outburst of any sort could mean suspension or explosion. Every faculty member was empowered to pick up the identity card of any offending student. The atmosphere of the campus swept by a chilly, wind-driven drizzle, was in complete contrast to last week's excitement. Agents of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) accompanied the two to their classes and, in sev- POLICE ALSO investigated an incident last night involving a white man who pulled a pistol on a guard in front of the dormitory where Miss Hunter had stayed. The man disarmed the guard and left. Both Negroes spent last night at their homes in Atlanta and were driven the 60 miles to the campus today. Miss Hunter went first to her room at Central Myers Dormitory. Holmes presumably stopped at the undisclosed off-campus address where he is staying. Then, the two Negroes whose suspension was forced early last Thursday by several hours of rioting, went back to school. I'm a sucker for actors.—Brooks Atkinson TROMP THOSE COWBOYS KU Let us clean your clothes before the big final week gets here! 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1111 MASS. Dial VI 3-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Open Till 8:30 Thursday Evenings Daily hansan Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 58th Year, No. 72 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Campus Chest Aids Many in Distress At the end of the Campus Chest drive, after Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond have gone home, a weary group of KU students hope to be seated in a smoke-filled room with lots and lots of money. The expected thousands of dollars will have come from KU students who contributed to the largest fund raising drive of the year. The drive will run for Feb. 13-18. An airplane crash, around Christmas time, killed many members of the football team from California State Polytechnic College. Surviving wives and children of these football players will receive a percentage of the money collected during this year's Campus Chest Drive. LAST YEAR'S DRIVE totaled more than $4,000. The progressive goal for 1961 has been set by the Campus Cbest committee at $5,500. Douglas L. Mayor, Kansas City junior and chairman of the drive said: "If every student contributed one dollar, we would have the biggest campus chest in the nation." The present goal calls for only 50 cents per student. ALMOST 300 STUDENTS will be ringing doorbells of fraternities, sororites, dormitories and private apartments for contributions during Campus Chest week. On Feb. 11, a "kickoff breakfast" will be held in the Kansas Union Reds Claim Attack by U.S. MOSCOW — (UPI) — A Soviet ship claimed it was "molested" for 25 minutes today in the Arabian Sea by a destroyer flying the American flag. The official Soviet Tass news agency said word of the incident was received in a radiogram to Moscow from the captain of the Soviet motor vessel Andreyev. The radio message said the destroyer Ingraham molested the Soviet vessel for 25 minutes and twice approached to within one cable length—600 or 700 feet. It said the destroyer approached the Andreyev flying the American flag and "bearing the number 694 on its side." Tass said the Soviet ship and crew expressed its "profound indignation" at the destroyer's action. The agency added that the Andreyev was on a cruise from Archangel to Basra with a load of timber. Tass gave no further details immediately of how the destroyer allegedly molested the Andreyev. No Hope Left for Tower Survivors Aboard the U.S.S. Wasp at Sea (UPI)—Rear Adm. Allen M. Shinn today gave up all hope of finding any survivors in the wreckage of a "Texas" radar tower that collapsed into the storm-swept Atlantic Sunday night. Shinn, directing search operations from aboard this navy carrier 60 miles off the New Jersey coast, suspended surface search operations. Of the 28 men aboard the tower, 26 are missing and presumed dead. One body has been recovered and another was sighted but lost. "I don't honestly think there is anybody alive today in or out of the wreckage." Shinn said. Any of the men possibly thrown clear of the tower when it toppled in the northeaster Sunday night long since would have died of exposure, Shinn said. where the members of the Interfraternity Council, service fraternities, some freshmen women's organizations, and fraternity pledge classes will receive instructions on how to solicit funds. A key speaker will also be present. The speaker has not been named. The Campus Chest drive will end with a concert by Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond on Feb. 19, in Hoch Auditorium. TICKETS FOR THE CONCERT will sell for $1.50 per seat. Tickets may be bought in blocks beginning Feb. 8, and single seats will be sold beginning Feb. 9. Funds received from ticket sales will go to the Campus Chest as part of the overall contribution from this university. The fraternity, sorority, and men's and women's dormitories with the largest per capita contribution will be awarded trophies. STUDENTS ARE ALSO URGED to contribute their Union rebate slips toward the charity drive. These slips will then be redeemed at the Kansas Union for seven per cent of their face value, and the students who turn them in will receive credit for contributions for their house. Forty per cent of all Campus Chest funds will go to the World University Service, an organization dedicated to aiding students all over the world. WUS SPENDS most of its funds to improve student health programs. In the United Arab Republic, examinations have shown that large numbers of students have active tuberculosis. The WUS will assist the University of Alexandria in procuring the necessary X-ray equipment. Other organization which will receive a percentage of the Campus Chest total will be the American Heart Assn., Infantile Paralysis Society, Damon Runyon Cancer Society, Tuberculosis Assn., The Committee on Friendly Relations Among Foreign Students, KU Travel Fund and the Near East Foundation. 1962-05-18 1962-05-18 ON STAGE dinners will be served before each performance of "Look Homeward Annel." From left to right, around the table, are Becky Davis, Cheyenne, Wyo., freshman, closest to the camera; Mike Jackson, Prairie Village junior; Mrs. Charlsia Schall, Lawrence senior; Dan Kocher, Topeka sophomore; Mary Ann Harris, Independence, Mo., junior; Laura Earnshaw, Shawnee graduate student; and Pepper Webber, Bartlesville, Okla., senior. Play Cast Eats on Stage The cast of "Look Homeward, Angel," by Thomas Wolfe, is seen eating dinner on the stage of the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. Although the actual dinner was not part of the play, director Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech, said the cast would be able to more realistically "project" themselves into the first scene if they remained in character and costume before the play, and ate dinner on the set. In the first scene the characters are gathered on the veranda discussing the meal they have just finished. The meal was prepared by Mrs. Jack Brookings, the director's wife. The play will open its four-night run Feb. 7. The Cast of "Look Homeward Angel" includes the characters: Miss Davis as Mrs. Clatt; Jack son as Jake Claff; Mrs. Schall as Mrs. Snowden; Miss Miller as Miss Brown; Kosher as Mr. Ferrell; Miss Harris as Laura James; Miss Earnshaw as "Fatty" Pert, and Miss Webber as Floumie Mangle. Weather Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Continued mild. Low tonight 25 to 30. High tomorrow in the 50s. Laotian Troops Seize Red Town Key Airstrip VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — Laotian government troops captured the red stronghold town of Vang Vieng and its strategic airstrip noth of Vientiane and U.S. supplied planes poured rocket fire at retreating pro-communist troops, advices from the front said today. The pro-Western regime of Premier Prince Boun Oum, moving to consolidate its hold on the key area, about 68 miles from Vientiane, took immediate steps to establish an advance outpost at Vang Vieng. LAOTIAN FIGHTER aircraft doubled their rocket firepower to batter the retreating Communist troops. Three American-made T-6 trainer planes took off from Vientiane carrying four rockets each under their wings. They had carried only two of the five-inch rockets on previous missions. The fourth of the old T-6 planes supplied by the United States was temporarily out of action because of engine trouble. CAPTURE OF VANG VIENG, a key supply base that had been handling Soviet air-dropped equipment, was considered the most significant victory in a month for the pro-Western government forces. The retreating rebels left behind a 105 mm. Howitzer and at least one 120 mm. mortar. They also left a sizable quantity of trucks and jeeps, most of them still in working order. Col. Kouprasith Abhay, commander of the government forces which retook Vang Vieng, left to install his headquarters there this morning. He intended to make the town, with its valuable airstrip a forward base for further operations against pro-communist rebels in the surrounding mountains. Gym Lags Behind KU Enrollment Boom By Linda Swander (Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles on Robinson Gymnasium. The series was prompted by an article appearing in the Daily Kansan Thursday.) Nestled between Flint Hall and Hoch Auditorium, an ivy colored building stands. It has watched students come and go for 55 years. It has watched the University grow into a great educational institution. But the old building is bending under the weight of its years. Its steps show the wear of thousands of feet, its walls bulge from the overflow of students. It has grown small as the University has grown large. This old building is Robinson Gymnasium. Today the gymnasium is inadequate for KU's growing enrollment. It has only one basketball court, one swimming pool, two handball courts, no dance studio for the women and no wrestling facilities. IN 1905 the legislature appropriated $100,000 for a new gymnasium. Previously, physical education classes, mostly in callisthenics, were held in Old Snow basement and then in the north dome of Fraser Hall. The appeal by Chancellor Francis Huntington Snow for a new gymnasium had stressed the use of the building as an auditorium. The funds were granted and the building was named after the first governor of Kansas, Charles Robinson. The gymnasium occupies one of the prime locations on the campus. Situated on Jayhawk Boulevard across from Strong Hall, it is at the geographic core of campus activity. The gymnasium was originally built for a student body numbering between 2,500 and 3,000. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said that when the plans for the construction of University buildings were made at the turn of the 19th century, the administration and Board of Regents did not anticipate that enrollment would ever rise as high as it has today. The old gymnasium has suffered a lot of wear and tear over the last 55 years, Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department, said. Many times during heavy rain or snow storms the roof of the building leaks and intramurals and other activities have to be canceled because of water on the courts. FIFTY YEARS ago the facilities in the gymnasium proved adequate for the University's limited enrollment. But no longer. Prof. Shenk said recently, "With more than 10,000 students and an increase of more than 3,000 expected in the next few years, the building has become outmoded. Robinson Gymnasium has the poorest facilities in the Big Eight Conference." Shortly after World War II, Robinson Annex, a converted army barracks adjacent to Malott Hall, was brought into use as "temporary" emergency measure. The annex, still in use, houses physical educational classes. "Although the 20 by 60 feet swimming pool is well built for its size, it is not adequate. The pool is used for varsity swimming, recreation, intramurals, Quack Club and life-saving and swimming classes. MORE THAN one pool is desirable on a campus this large. Ohio State University has three pools for the men alone," Prof. Shenk said. The gymnasium has one basketball court. There are 142 men's intramural basketball teams plus the women's teams. The courts are in use most of the time and the teams have little opportunity to practice. BECAUSE OF the lack of space, the gymnasium has no facilities for wrestling or room for a women's dance studio, he added. (Editor's Note: Tomorrow's article will compare the KU gymnasium with those of other universities.) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 A Record Questioned The recent burglarizing of the photography bureau and the theft of the two Rembrandts has aroused my curiosity about the efficiency of our campus police. I remembered numerous unsolved crimes but I could think of only one which had been solved. To satisfy this curiosity, I went to the Kansan files to search for stories of campus crimes. The clips from the past two years confirmed my suspicion. From crimes committed during this period, $15,403.86 in actual cash or the value of the stolen articles remains unrecovered. The record is not completely black. A sofa and several bicycles have been recovered. Also two boys were caught while stealing car batteries. Still $15,403.86 is a rather large sum to have on the books un-recovered. THERE SEEMS TO ME TO BE THREE possible reasons for such a large sum to still be in the hands of criminals. The first reason is that the criminals are extremely intelligent or lucky or a combination of both. The second reason is that the police are incompetent or extremely unlucky or a combination of both. The third reason is a mixture of the other two. The criminals are intelligent and lucky and the police are incompetent and unlucky. Whatever the cause it makes for a hopeless situation for KU students. We realize that if anything is stolen from us we probably will never see it again. It is rather disheartening to have so little faith in our public defenders. But this is the status they have earned in the last two years. In looking back through the files I wondered just how many crimes didn't find their way into the pages of the Kansan. But the ones found put the total sufficiently high. THE UNRECOVERED ITEMS INCLUDE: hubcaps ($20), transistor pocket radio ($35). electronic tubes ($37.36), car battery ($15), several billfolds (no value given), cash from second Field House robbery ($146.50), checks from the second Field House robbery ($70), eight tickets to the Syracuse game ($28), a professor's purse and contents ($24), briefcase and contents ($25), five bogus banquet tickets ($10), a forger at the Delta Sigma Phi house ($110), two Rembrandts (valued by the Nelson Atkins gallery at at least $2,000), 400 programs for the Nebraska game sold at 25 cents each ($100), undisclosed amounts of change from various vending machines, professor's purse and contents ($50), first Field House robbery ($6,845), two sofa cushions ($50), a string of cat burglaries ($237), items from cars ($200), ash trays ($8), records ($15), more vending machines ($20), equipment and money from various departments ($100), the cat burglar again ($100), skeleton ($150), posters ($165), shoplifting in the bookstore one year ($2,500), cat burglar at the Kappa Sigma House ($125) and the photo lab ($2,218). It seems almost impossible to believe that the programs for the Nebraska game, which were sold at the stadium, couldn't be recovered. Some of the other items may take a little thought, but most anyone would have thought to send a couple of men out of uniform to the stadium to hunt for 25 cent programs. Yet they were not recovered. I FIND IT HARD TO PASS OVER THIS appalling record lightly. Maybe our campus police are only good for directing traffic and ticketing cars, or maybe they aren't getting the leadership necessary. Or maybe some agreement should be made with the K.B.I. to investigate robberies, or another man hired to cover this. One thing for sure, the blame for this record lies somewhere in the west end of Hoch Auditorium. Ralph Wilson Mr. Abels Answered Editor: Open letter to Mr. Abels. Dear Mr. Abels: I read an excerpt of your article in the January 16th issue of the University Daily Kansas. It is not an easy task for me to write this letter. I am not a "well-known editor and publisher"; I am not a speaker; I am not as mature as you seem to think you are. As a matter of fact I am not even an American. I came from a place compared to which the Bronx, N. Y., this hotbed of treason, is peaceful, narrow-minded, and conservative. I AM FROM BUDAPEST, Hungary. You are a well-traveled, intelligent man, (I found out from your article you got as far as Bronx, N. Y.). I don't have to tell you what sort of a place Hungary is. But before you write in your paper that I am actually a communist influitor who's only objective is to apply a "highly organized and carefully directed scheme to stir up trouble in the university and in our community" and thus devitalize this strategically, economically, socially, and educationally so very important metropolitan area of Lawrence, I might say that I am in political exile here because of my participation in the anti-communist Hungarian revolt in 1856. And that both of my parents and myself served prison terms under the communists for political reasons. ...Letters... We, Mr. Abels, do not fight for our right to drink, we fight for a cause, for an ideal. "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal . . ." This includes the Negroes also. Maybe we are immature idealists when we hail these ideas, but we are proud of it. This principle holds true for the Bronx, N. Y. as well as for Lawrence, Kansas. The "Civil Rights agitators and peddlers of hate and violence" must have found their way into Georgia, Louisiana, Arkansas and the Supreme Court also. YOU SEE. Mr. Abels, the United States is looked upon by foreigners as the land of freedom, and the land of equal opportunities, and this would not be so if people like you were in the majority here. One must wonder about freedom when certain sections of buses are off limits to Negroes, when a Howard-Johnson restaurant refuses to serve a high official of an African country while on a goodwill-mission in this country, and when a tavern, open to the "public," can afford to select its customers on the basis of the color of their faces. You write the following in your article: "The Negroes had won their way into better jobs . . . " This is exactly what they have done. They have won their jobs and didn't acquire them through equal opportunities. They are required to prove over and over again that they are worth as much as our white master-race. Your article is a very good example of demagogism, however it is far from perfect. If you are interested in supporting your thoughts I can recommend highly such a work as "Mein Kampf" by Adolph Hitler. As supplementary reading, perhaps you could look up some articles and speeches by Sen. McCarthy and Joseph Stalin. Andrew Katai Elizabeth, N., J., graduate student (Editor's note: Andrew Katai was among those KU students who staged a sit-in at a local tavern last Thursday night.) In Friday's paper you reported that, when asked about the student sit-in, I allegedly commented: "I knew nothing about it — and if I had known, I would not have approved." Daily hansan --tion of various facilities — including taverns — here is through the small group method, such as was employed at the tavern in question before the sit-in. It is pointed out that the average person or couple does not normally spend an evening out with 45 or 50 friends . . . and that it is more than likely four to six persons. Comment on Sit-Ins Editio University of Kansas student newspaper Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Managing Editor Just to keep the record straight: The first part of your report is correct, i.e., I did not know about the sit-in in advance. The second part is a misinterpretation of my comments. I delinquently did NOT state that I would have approved or disapproved of the sit-in. As to my reported comment at the police station: I did point out that there is an essential difference between a person's private home and his business. A man can invite to his home whomever he wishes. A public business, though it may be privately owned, does not—in my opinion—have the right to refuse service to anyone because of his race, creed, or country of origin. To do so, I firmly believe, is a violation of moral integrity, common decency, the spirit of the American Constitution, the basic intent of Kansas anti-discrimination legislation, and all that American Democracy is supposed to stand for at home and abroad. Ray Miller Harry Shaffer Harry Shanter Assistant Professor of Economics LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS POST NO BILLS "I SURE AM GLAD I FOUND OUT ABOUT HER! I CAN'T STAND A GIRL THAT'S STRONGER THAN I AM." Guest Editorial May Good Sense Rule Things are not so organized, and there is not this singleness of purpose, on the other side of the fence. Thus there is the chance trouble will develop, providing there is a wrong combination of circumstances and emotions at the wrong time. Unfortunately an important issue like racial integration at any level generally pairs drastic opposites: Those who don't want to make any progress, ever, and those who want to make it all at once. So pre-aligned are most individuals that too often the steadier type of guidance which prevails and benefits many other causes seems almost non-existent. The end result is that the air is constantly charged, and the situation is ripe for conflict, not only of an ideological but of a physical nature. THE GROUP - PRIMARILY students — pressing the integration movement of certain facilities in the community is pledged to non-violence. Its members say that while they may be persistent in the quest of their goals, they will remain peaceful at all times. This is encouraging. This is the situation in which Lawrence now finds itself, following the Thursday night sit-in demonstration at a local tavern. It is not a pleasant prospect, but there is good reason, for hope that sanity will prevail at all points of variance between the two poles and that unfortunate incidents of a violent nature can be avoided. Sincere and dedicated though the integration group may be in its pledge of non-violence, unfortunately this group does not exercise full control over the situation. Thus the danger of ugly trouble persists. THEEREFORE, LET US HOPE the citizenry is as eager to avoid physical conflict as are the integrationists, and that both sides conduct themselves in such a way as to avoid it. If this can be done, the suitable level for a harmonious meeting of the minds may be achieved after all despite the wide range of philosophies involved . . . There are those who believe the way to peaceful, orderly integration of various facilities — including taverns — here is through the small group method, such as was employed at the tavern in question before the sit-in. It is pointed out that the average person or couple does not normally spend an evening out with 45 or 50 friends . . . and that it is more than likely four to six persons. Student leaders — and some of the adults who prod as well as advise and guide them — give every indication there will be more sit-in type of activity until certain goals have been achieved. The frequency cannot be forecast, since even the integration groups may not have any long-range plans. All sound-thinking persons will agree this is the only sure route to valid progress. But whatever the developments, it is fervently hoped that the demonstrators will stick to their policy on non-violence and that other citizens will show the same dedication to common sense. SOME OF THE STRONG ADVOCates of integration and civil rights here are quick to say that a demonstration like Thursday's sit-in could be more harmful than helpful and that it gives the impression of a bully going around looking for a fight. (Excerpted from the Lawrence Journal-World, Jan. 14, 1961.) Perhaps operators of public-type facilities like taverns would be wise to serve small integrated groups — which are often test groups — as they appear, providing their behavior is compatible with that of other customers. Then there is no great cause to give rise to large group demonstrations. This may well be the surest way to bring about orderly, peaceful, harmonious integration in the long run. SOME CITIZENS PREFER TO take the head-in-sand approach toward this subject, acting on the false assumption that if you ignore something long enough it will go away. This is unlikely in this case, however, and perhaps the best advice for everyone is to learn to live with the development. Worth Repeating Let those who object to birth control declare themselves in favor of higher mortality instead. The world's present population problems could be solved for a long time by a few mass famines, by a world-wide repetition of the Great Plagues or, for that matter, by a few well-placed H-bombs. Do we want to see them solved this way?—Dennis H. Wrong Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 University Daily Kanson Page 3 JACKSON SMITH NEWS EXECUTIVES—Kansan news staff positions for the spring semester have been filled by the persons pictured above. They are left to right, first row: Betty Sue Thieman, Tulsa, Okla., junior, society editor; John Peterson, Topeka, managing editor, and Carrie Edwards, Lawrence, seniors, assistant managing editor. Back row: Thomas N. Turner, Montgomery, Ala., junior, city editor; William Blundell, Lawrence graduate student, assistant managing editor; Frank Morgan Jr., Webster Groves, Mo., senior, co-editor; Lynn M. Cheatum, Wichita, senior, assistant managing editor, and William G. Sheldon, Hinsdale, Il., freshman, sports editor. New Kansan Executives Appointed The executive staff of the University Daily Kansan has been selected for the spring semester and has assumed its duties. John Peterson, Topeka senior and former co-editorial editor, is the new managing editor succeeding Raymond H. Miller, Lawrence senior. The managing editor is the chief executive of the paper and is the final authority for the daily policy and makeup. John Massa, Kansas City, Mo. senior, is the new business manager, succeeding Mark Dull, Kansas City, Kan., senior. DANIEL G. FELGER, Mishawaka, Ind., senior, and Frank Morgan Jr., Webster Groves, Mo., senior, were appointed co-editorial editors. The managing of the paper is the responsibility of a staff composed of the managing editor and four assistants, each of whom is in charge one day a week. The new assistant managing editors are William E. Blundell, Lawrence graduate student and former co-editorial editor; Lynn M. Cheatum, Wichita, and Carrie Edwards, Lawrence, seniors. By United Press International HAVANA—A revolutionary firing squad early today executed three Cubans barely an hour after they had been court-martialized as "terrorists." One was convicted of trying to assassinate Premier Fidel Castro. having a stop day since I have no tests on Monday anyhow. I didn't benefit a whole lot from the one last year anyhow." They were shot against the floodlighted wall of the Cabana fortress-prison, where hundreds of "war criminals" died during Castro's first year in power. Meanwhile, the U. S. stiffened travel regulations, banning all Americans except newsmen and businessmen with established connections from going to Cuba. Restrictions like those on travel to Red China and other communist countries were imposed. Cuban Officials Execute Three Although no one is certain exactly how many persons the Castro regime has executed, the deaths of the three "terrorists" are believed to have increased the total to more than 630. The total includes three Americans killed as "invaders" late last year. Today's executions were the first announced officially this year. Official sources have denied reports that there have been a number of secret executions at La Cabana and in the Escambray Mountains, where Castro troops are battling anti-government guerrillas. The action put Cuba in a category similar to that of Red China, North Korea, North Vietnam and Albania, all communist countries, where travel by Americans is banned without special permission. Stan Smith, Sterling, sophomore, said, "I think not having it is lousy, it is a good idea, it kind of relieves the pressure. You might call stop day the lull before the storm." Controversy arose over stop day in the spring semester of last year. ASC proposed that there be a stop day between classes and examinations. Students Dislike Considering Sunday As a 'Stop Day' Chancellor Murphy backed the measure as did the faculty. The only question was whether to take the day from classes or from summer vacation. Five out of six students interviewed by the Kansan today were chagrined about there not being any stop day this semester. They favored stop days generally and did not like considering Sunday as a stop day substitute. THOMAS N. TURNER, Montgomery, Ala., junior, is the city editor and responsible for the assignment of student reporting duties. William G. Sheldon, Hinsdale, Ill., freshman, moves up from assistant sports editor to sports editor. Betty Sue Thieman, Tulsa, Okla., junior, is in charge of society news. Felger, Morgan, Donna J. Engle, St. Louis, Mo., and Ralph E. Wilson, Overland Park, both seniors, will alternate weekly as the fourth assistant. F. Mike Harris, Chanute, is the advertising manager; Tom L. Brown, Lawrence senior, is circulation manager; Richard Horn, Kansas City, Mo., is classified advertising manager; William Goodwin, Independence, is promotion manager, and Marlin Zimmerman, Lawrence, is national advertising manager. All are seniors. Jon Shaffer, Iola, junior, said: "Sunday is not much of a stop day. Why should it even be considered one since we would get it off anyway?" Sam Clester, Bell Plain, sophomore, said, "I really don't mind not James K. Hitt, registrar and chairman of the Calendar Committee, said the Sunday after classes end and before final examinations start will give students time to study. THE SELECTION of these executives was made upon application to and approval of the Kansan Board, the governing body of the student newspaper. The Daily Kansan serves as the official student newspaper of the University and also provides practical training for journalism students. Students of any school may hold positions or contribute material. Applications for reportorial, feature writing, business or subsidiary positions for the spring semester may be submitted at the Kansan newsroom for consideration. PARSONS JEWELRY Serving the community with quality products for 60 years 725 MASS. VI 3-4266 MONTANA The Pizza Hut above the Catacombs The Catacombs below the Pizzza Hut N DANCE Wednesday, Friday & Saturday Wednesday ---- 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. "FIRE FLYS" Friday 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "FIRE FLYS" Saturday ___ 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "THE SHADES" The Catacombs Available for Private Parties 7 Nights a Week RENEW YOUR TASTE FOR REAL PIZZA 646 Mass. EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 MAGOO DON'T BE SHORTSIGHTED — GIVE 1. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 17. 1961 1 Sandra Aldrich Engagement Plans Told Mr. and Mrs. John H. Aldrich of Clinton, Iowa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra, to Jerry Work, son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Work of Belleville, Mich. Miss Aldrich is a senior and is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Work, a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity, will complete his senior year at KU upon termination of duty with the United States Coast Guard. An August wedding is planned. Many Pinnings Announced Few-Henderson Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Louise Few, Lyons senior, and Jim Henderson, Wichita senior. Miss Few is majoring in elementary education. Mr. Henderson is a petroleum engineering major and is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. ... Abel-Snoot Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pinning of Martha Abel, Clay Center junior, and Al Snoot, Knoxville, Tenn., senior. Miss Abel is majoring in elementary education. Mr. Snoot, who attends Memphis State University, is majoring in psychology. He is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Meschke-Bloskev Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority recently announced the pinning of June Ann Meschke, Hutchinson junior, to Terry Blaskery, Kansas City sophomore and a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. The pinning was announced by Miss Meschke's pledge daughter, Loretta Jewett, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore. A party at the Stables followed the announcement. Peterson-Albright Lewis Hall announces the pinning of Nancy Peterson, Kansas City junior, and Jerry Albright, Haven senior. Miss Peterson is majoring in elementary education. Mr. Albright is majoring in physiology. Knight-Hohnbaum Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pinning of Sue Ellen Knight, Neodesha junior, and Fredrick Hohnbaum, a Hiawatha senior. Mr. Hohnbaum is a member of Triangle fraternity. 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 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Final Cramming Brings Moans, Groans Moans and groans. Resolutions and procrastination. Muttered pledges that next year the vacation will be used for study rather than parties. Such is the picture at the girl's dormitories. Suppositions whether deadlines can be altered and whether professors can be persuaded. Hopes that the nights will be 30 hours long. And that 8 o'clock classes will be held at 10 o'clock. Do you suppose? Sounds of typewriters where once were the sounds of cards and seven no-trump bids. Blaring radios and phonographs now strangely muted. Sounds we never heard before Breakfast lines dwindling. Bleary and bloodshot eyes not easily disguised. All night or almost all-night study fests. Classes cut. Professors facing almost empty classrooms. Daily assignments not done. Fewer people on campus. Sleep? What's that? Do you suppose they'll miss us? Short dates. Refusals to go dancing during the week. Dates to the Frantic calls to pizza houses five minutes before closing hours. Coffee pots empty. Fingernails eaten for snacks. Ashtrays full and falling on the floors. library to study. Less partying; More studying. What happened to the holiday formal dances and dinners? We're nervous? None! Books opened for the second time (the first was for mid-seme- ters.) Desks used for the first time. Pencils sharpened and dulled. Files brought out. Notes reviewed. Why didn't they tell us the answers were in the books? Tranquilizers and no-doz dinners Strong black coffee breakfasts, Cigarette lunches. Term paper suppers Vitamins and fingernails for snacks Quite a Menu, No? Dictionaries. Reference books. Thesaurus and guide to English usage. Who's Who in America, Russia, France, New Guinea. Speller guides. Text books. How do you spell "fissiology"? Term papers due. Final projects not ready. No more paper. Erasers don't erase. Spilled ink. No more information, 50,000 words left to do. Padding exercises. Did we make the deadline? Studying where once we played. Reading what before we just glanced at. Looking at notes that were taken and forgotten. Attempts to guess the questions on the exams. Finals coming! On the Hill Delta Sigma Phi Delta Sigma Phi fraternity has elected officers for the spring semester. The officers are Doug Reed, Cassoday, junior, president; Karlos Sieg, Wellsville senior, vice president; Dwain Jenista, Caldwell senior; Kent McCall, Kansas City, Mo., junior, treasurer; and Doug Newport, Independence, Mo., junior, sergeant at arms. Renwald-Brawner Sigma Nu fraternity announces the pinning of Steven Brawner, Merriam junior, and Miss Susan Renwald. Miss Renwald is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority at Missouri University. WESTERN CALIFORNIA MILITARY ACADEMY Susie Gaskins, Prairie Village senior, was selected White Rose Queen of the seventy-sixth annual White Rose formal of Nu chapter of Sigma Nu fraternity. Miss Gaskins is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mink's in the pink. Leitman Furs Inc., New York, recently showed a scalloped mink shawl collar dyed pink to match a cashmere sweater. 1 LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS: Dear Dr. FROOD: DR. FROOD'S THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: A penny saved is a penny earned. And if you could out away a penny a week for one year . . . why, you will have fifty-two cents! RP Dear Dr. Frood: Our college mascot is a great big lovable Saint Bernard. He loves everyone—except me. In fact, he has bitten me viciously eight times. What can I do to get him to like me? Frustrated Dog Lover DEAR FRUSTRATED: Mother him. To carry this off, I suggest you wear a raccoon coat, let your hair and eyebrows grow shaggy and learn to whimper affectionately. A man carrying a large bag. Dear Dr. Frood: Most of my life here is extracurricular. I carry the drum for the band, pull the curtain for the drama society, wax the court for the basketball team, scrape the ice for the hockey team, clap erasers for the faculty club and shovel snow for the fraternity houses. Do you think these activities will really help me when I get out of college? Eager DEAR EAGER: I don't think the college will let you out. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Dear Dr. Frood: On New Year's Eve I foolishly resolved to be more generous with my Luckies. My friends have held me to this, and I've been forced to give away several packs a day. What do you think would happen if I broke this resolution? Resolute DEAR RESOLUTE: It's hard to tell, really. Lightning, a runaway horse, a tornado—who knows? SLX FOR ONE DOLLAR Dear Dr. Frood: Before vacation, my girl and I agreed to exchange Christmas presents. I sent her a nice hanky. You can imagine how I felt when I awoke Christmas morning to find a sports car from her. What can I do now? Distraught CLASS A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE ITS HUNTER CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. DEAR DISTRAUGHT: Remind her that Easter giving time is just around the corner. C Dear Dr. Frood: Can you help me convince my girl that I'm not as stupid as she thinks I am? Anxious DEAR ANXIOUS: Perhaps, but you'll have to convince me first. TO GET A QUICK LIFT, suggests Frood, step into an elevator and light up a Lucky. Instantly, your spirits will rise. When you savor your Lucky, you're IN—for college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. They're a wised-up bunch who've known all along that Luckies taste great. Get the cigarettes with the toasted taste—get Luckies. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! $ \textcircled{C} $ A.T.Co Product of The American Rilaceo Company - "Rilaceo is our middle name" Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 GRADUATING? ... then you'll want a subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN to take with you! I will do my best to make sure that you get the most out of this experience. A tip... Get your subscription to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TODAY - KEEP UP WITH LIFE ON THE KU CAMPUS - Phone KU-376 For Kansan Subscriptions SUBSCRIPTIONS 1 Semester . . . $3.00 1 Year . $5.00 Call at Room 111 KANSAN Business Office Journalism Building Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 17, 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS O-State Beats KU With Stall Tactics Oklahoma State Coach Henry Iba's "here we are, come and get us" strategy worked to near perfection as the last place Cowboys handed Kansas its first Big Eight loss last night, 54-49, before 3,000 fans in Allen Field House. After O-State had surged to a 19-14 lead midway in the first half, they changed tactics. From that point until the finish the Cowboys employed a semi-stall to keep the free-wheeling Jayhawkers from opening a scoring lead. A times the winners held the ball for a full minute before weaving through the KU defense. The Cowboys moved the ball up and down the sidelines until they spotted an opening then broke to the basket for short shots. This type of play helped O-State connect for 18 of 37 field goal attempts for 49 per cent. Kansas was frequently a foul victim as it tried to adapt to the slow style of play. Bill Bridges fouled out with eight minutes remaining to play. Jerry Gardner left in the final minute. KU tried to break O-State's lethargy, but was unable to do so mainly because of poor shooting and inadequate rebounding. KU shot for only 28 per cent from the field and 65 per cent from the free throw line. The Jayhawkers tried 58 shots. Although KU had a decided height advantage, it was out-rebounded 35-33. This proved important as Kansas seldom was able to get more than one good shot before losing the ball. At the start KU'tried to repeat its performance of Saturday's convincing victory over Iowa State but poor shooting and ball-handling errors allowed O-State to take control midway in the first half. Oklahoma State built its margin to 10 points on two occasions as it moved to a 33-27 halftime lead after Gardner and Wayne Hightower pulled KU back from a 31-21 deficit. Kansas came back to start the second half with a more aggressive defense and quickly chopped the Cowboys' lead to 33-32. Hightower, who led all scorers with 26 points, pulled KU even at 39-39 with 14:07 remaining. The Allan Correll gave the Jayhawkers life once more as he sunk a pair of free tosses with 46 seconds remaining making the score 50-49. game was tied three more times but two free throws by Moe Iba gave O-State the lead for the last time with 5:11 to play. With KU behind 44-43 and 6:29 remaining to play Kansas' Jerry Gardner and O-State's Eddie Bunch exchanged blows at mid-court. Players from both squads jumped to the floor but officials and coaches prevented further fighting. Shortly after Gardner stepped to the foul line and momentarily gave KU the lead before Iba sunk his crucial free tosses. KANSAS (49) | | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hightower | 10 | 6 | 26 | | Correll | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Heyward | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Dumas | 0 | 2 | 2 | | Bridges | 0 | 3 | 3 | | Gardner | 3 | 2 | 8 | | Ellison | 1 | 3 | 5 | TOTALS 16 17 49 O-STATE (54) | | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Gordon | 4 | 0 | 8 | | Epperley | 7 | 4 | 18 | | Bunch | 3 | 5 | 11 | | Greer | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Iba | 3 | 9 | 15 | TOTALS 18 18 54 Halftime: Oklahoma State 33, Kansas 27. Ohio State Still On Top in Ratings NEW YORK—(UPI)—St. Bonaventure, beaten only by Ohio State this season, moved into second place behind the unanimously-claimed Buckeyes today in the United Press International college basketball ratings. For the second week in a row, all 35 members of the UPI Board of Coaches made Ohio State their no. 1 choice. St. Bonaventure, with a 13-1 record, advanced one notch to second place and Bradley dropped to third after losing to Houston for its first defeat in 14 games. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry "It is always the same story when you play Oklahoma State. If you let them get control of the game you are in trouble. That is what happened tonight." "I'm taking the positive outlook. That is that they played better basketball and it was what they did well and not what we did poorly that beat us," continued Harp. These were the words of KU's Coach Dick Harp after he had seen his team fall to Oklahoma State for its first league loss. "They denied us the cheap shot and we didn't react well enough; we didn't have the necessary poise to get the good shots," he said Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER PUEL GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Harp Praises O-State Students! How will this loss affect the remainder of the Jayhawkers' play? Harp said; When asked how he felt about coaching against the type of basketball which Oklahoma State used, the KU coach said, "I have no resentment for that type of basketball but I sure hate to sit on the other side of it. I don't think it would draw people to Allen Field House." "The future is entirely dependent upon the character of the squad. This game doesn't have much effect Harp said, "I knew the game was lost when we failed to properly execute a maneuver after the time out with about one minute left to play. But, we first broke down when they got that quick six point lead in the first half." hustle under the boards was almost unbelievable. We played the game with only seven men and four were in all but a few minutes." BALTIMORE, Md. — (UPI) — Roger Maris, the American League's Most Valuable Player, was honored last night as baseball's "Sultan of Swat" at the Maryland Professional Baseball Player Association's Eighth Annual "Tops in Sports" banquet. "The game went pretty much the way we planned it except for several bad mistakes which almost cost us the win. We tried to keep the ball on the outside to bring Bill Bridges away from the basket," he said. "We knew our short men couldn't match Bridges, Wayne Hightower and Allan Correll for rebounds." Maris, who hit 39 homers in leading the Yankees to the American League pennant, was the fifth slugger selected for the "Sultan of Swat" award. Iba said, "We were very fortunate to win. We played a whale of a ball game. The boys are real tired after a game like that because we play most of our games with six players and with our type of play the boys get pretty exhausted. Maris Honored Iba lauded the play of KU center Bridges, saying, "He's probably the best rebounder in the conference and a real fine shooter." Down the corridor Oklahoma State Coach Henry Iba talked quietly and there were little signs of joy which usually prevail in the dressing room of a winning team. The veteran coach also praised the work of his center, Cecil Epperley for keeping Bridges away from the basket most of the game. Iba's final comment was. "Our Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free Open 24 hrs, with Mechanic on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont In conclusion, Harp commented, "We kicked away a wonderful chance to make a run for the roses this semester." GOING ON A PICNIC ? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-Pacs of all kinds Picnic Supplies LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt. VI 3-0350 upon the Kansas State game (Friday) because we would have had a heck of a time beating them without losing tonight." Try the Kansan Want Ads LAST TWO DAYS! --to BEN-HUR AT 7:30 P.M. ADULTS $1.2 VARSITY NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS as CINDERELLA ( A Jerry Lewis Production ) ED WYNN- JUDITH ANDERSON ANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI as "The Princess" A Paramount Release • TECHNICOLOR® GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone W486 3-5750 JERRY LEWIS as CINDERFELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) Entire Stock - Fall & Winter Separates Included Terrill's January Sportswear Clearance ★ ★ ★ SWEATERS SKIRTS Now ★ ★ KORET of CALIFORNIA ★ PANTS ★ JACKETS 1/3 ★ LAMPL ★ OLD COLONY ★ BULKY SWEATERS ★ BLOUSES ★ JUSTIN McCARTY ★ 1/2 Off GRA men Miss ★ JANE IRWILL Typi curagrou and ★ BRAEMOOR Expe tern 0558 803 Mass. Terrill's VI 3-2241 Tuesday. Jan. 17, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 al- the and min- SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS lague's ooored n of national nation'sports" lead american slug of --of WANTED GRADUATE WOMAN to share apartment. $30 per month. Second floor, 1234 Mississippi, two doors north of Union. TYPING ROOOMMATE: Female January graduate interested in sharing apartment with her husband, Kelsey Gailey. Plus area or south. Call Dorothy Biller. VI 3-7070 or KU 376. 1-20 Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf Expert typing and secretarial service Hicks, VI 2-0111, M 3-5920 or Mt Hicks, VI 2-0111 FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard calls Call 5 I-3132. Experienced typist — will type theses, papers, etc. Call M.Fulcher, VI, 0558. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson, VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2t- Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. tt THEMES, thee. etc. Fast accurate work —former secretary. Phone VI 3-1571 —1-17 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reason- able rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright. VI 3- 9554. tf Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johanssen, VI 3-2876. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, PI 3-1097. tf Experienced typist — term papers, manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable pay. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., Ctl. 3-74855 TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell. 1511 W. 21st St. VI 3-6440. 1-18 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger VI 3-4409. tp Experienced typist: will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780; Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hai, VI 3-2318. tl EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patii. VI 3-8379. LOST SLIDE RULE in or around Union. $5 reward. Call KU 376. 1-20 SORORITY PIN, lost on campus Wednesday. Jan. 11. If found, please call Martha Belah. VI 3-6060. 1-20 FOUND WOOL GLOVES with leather palms. GLOVES. Auditorium. Nearly new. Call VI 3-6869. I-17 WRISTWATCH—men's. Phone VI 3-3590 after 6 p.m. 1-19 HELP WANTED Wanted: Part time delivery boy, Sunday. $1.25 hr. Must have car. Call VI 3-1086. 1-17 MEDICAL SECRETARY, female. Part time Monday through Friday. Mechanical timing machine typing 10 words per minute (now offered monolography). appointment call VI 3-3680. 1-18 FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1955 One bedroom Safeway trailer home. Equipped with a one ton storage space. Excellent condition. Phone: 7912 after 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-20 RAPID SALE, going overseas. Spring, inventory on board. $9, 8A Sunisyle. 1-18 ironing board. $5, 8A Sunisyle. 1-18 BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and diagrams and diagrams. Complete cross index. Price $3.00. For your copy call VI 2-1065. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAOND RING, 3/4 cart solitaire, never d worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. HOUSE, for sale by owner. Three bedrooms, full basement, fenced yard, attached garage exceptional closet space with walk-in closet. School. Call VI 3-4801. 1-18 TUXEDO and dinner jacket combina- tion condition Low power Call VI T-5-3465 - 1-17 STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 1958 REGAL MOBILE HOME-51' x 10', two bedrooms, must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-0734 after 5 p.m. for appointment. 1-17 HI-FIDELITY STEREO phonograph— special closeout — one only in each color, walnut or cherry wood. Single and double piece. 20 watt stereo — brand new, priced to sell. Downtown TV, 1027 Mass. 1-20 NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time. Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. tt BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-packs, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags Plicen, party supplies. Paper bags 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . 0350. MISCELLANEOUS ANNOUNCING the OPENING M & M Office Supplies 710 Mass., VI 3-0763 BIRDY ON BRAMBLE BIRD TV - RADIO BUSINESS SERVICES VI 3-8855 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive notes formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50 LEARN TO DANCE NOW-All the latest dances. Marion Rice Dance Studio, 908 Missouri. Phone VI 3-6838. tf FOR RENT STEREO MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In-Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Avenue, daytime location. Excuse Yourself. Excite Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything from bird feeders to objects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still. come. Welcome. tf DRESS-MAKING and alterations. For- warding. Dress for 93% w/. Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tui. 939 % w/. Mass. Telephone VI 3-5263. tui. 908 Mass. HON OFFICE FURNITURE PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and examples. Sample test questions Free delivery. price $4.00. For your copy VI 2-1065. Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., I v 3-7551. tf Expert Service WE RENT almost anything See or buy a car or truck For sale future, 812 New Hampshire, VI 3-2044-1-20 APARTMENT — Three large rooms, pri- nished or unfinished and unfurnished. Ideal for a couple or two or three boys. Inquire of Anderson Furniture 812 N. H. VI 3-2044 1-20 ROOMS FOR MEN: One block from Union. New furniture and bath facilities. Single, $35; double $25. Call John Long. V 1-37689 a 3 p.m. 1221 Oread. 1-20 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9776 - Quality Parts - Guaranteed VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd, VI 3-9635. tt FURNISHED APARTMENT, well-furnished, three rooms and bath. 900 block on Indiana. Call VI 3-8316 daytime. VI 3-9027 evenings. 1-20 NICELY FURNISHED apartment—three bedrooms, two baths, privileges children or pets. 1400 Ohp 1-20 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six bedrooms, bath and entrance Utilities paid. No Married couple only. 520 Ohio. **ff** One bedroom furnished apartment for rental one-bedroom unit for rent Vl 3-3601, Vl 3-3601. For Rent Quiet, large room for men block south of KU. Phone VI 3-2393 BUSINESS LOCATION available for rent to students for a restaurant or rooming on their possibilities. Located on Lawrence's busiest street. Lots of parking. V 3-1578. 1-17 ROOMS FOR MEN—ONE HALF BLOCK from Union. Well-heated and quiet. See at 1301 La, or call VI 3-4092. tf GROUND FLOOR furnished apartment. Utilities paid. Close to campus, $70. Second floor apartment for women, $55. Sleeping room. $25. Call VI 3-6249-1-17 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6313 at 6 p.m. 1-17 Large seven room furnished house. Single beds. Also five room house, newly decorated inside and out. Near post office. Call VI 3-9184. 1-17 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 two p.m. f t TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $80. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-20 Semi-basement recreation type apartment, in quiet private home. Accommodate 2 or 3 boys. Twin beds—dressing room —private bath, private entrance. Contact Mrs. Callahan. Concession counter, Union Bldg. 1-19 TWO ROOM well-furnished apartment. Large living room-bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Reasonable rent. Five minutes from campus. Call Vi 3-0189 after 5 p.m. 1-18 APARTMENT FOR MEN, one block from Union. Phone VI 3-6723. 1-20 Large attractive 4 room apartment. Privileate bath. Close to downtown and KU. Nice house, off street parking. Reasonable rent. $55 a month. Ph VI 3-6891 BOOM AND BOARD next semester. Phone VI 3-4385. 1-20 FOUR ROOMS and bath — entire second floor — for rent to boys. All utilities in campus. All zona 16. Memberling, VI 3-124day, VI 0902见6 p.m. 1-20 FURNISHED APARTMENT, first floor, three rooms. 1316 Kt. Utilities paid except electricity. Rentable rent. Car on Vi 3-6888 or VI 2-1964 fat 5:30 1-20 TRAILER SPACE: $18.50 a month. $9 a month when not occupied. Rancho Moto. 11% miles north of Lawrence, Hiway 24. Call VI 3-9845. if LARGE FIVE ROOM furnished apartment between KU and downtown. Available Feb. 3. Call VI 3-5690. 1-20 Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 She Deserves a "Wife-Approved" MOVE by North American Van Lines ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE VI 3-0380 LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. Authorized Agents for North American VAN LINES, Inc. Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL "For flavor, you can't beat Camel's" Rod Triplett AVALANCHE HUNTER, SQUAW VALLEY SITE OF '60 WINTER OLYMPIC GAMES CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND The best tobacco makes the best smoke! CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC OIL ENJOY CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY CAMEL CHOICE QUALITY TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARITES Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 Around the Campus Engineers Hold Meet KU Exchange The Engineering Student Programs Set KU has announced a new exchange program with a Bonn, Germany, university for the 1961-62 academic year. Under an agreement with the Rheinische - Friedrich - Wilhelms - Universitat, a KU graduate student will study in Bonn next year while a graduate of that school attends KU. Announcement of the program brings to 12 the number of schools with whom exchange agreements have been made for the 1961-62 academic year. Agreements have been concluded with the universities of Birmingham, Reading, Southampton and Exeter, in England; Aberdeen, Scotland; Kiel, Mainz, Tubingen and Hamburg, Germany; Clermont-Ferrand, France, and Zurich, Switzerland. Additional agreements with schools in France, England and Spain are pending. Exchange scholarships include tuition and maintenance. Applicants may apply for Fulbright Travel Grants or for special grants. Applications for 1961-62 grants will be received by J. A. Burzle, professor of German and Fulbright adviser, 306 Fraser, before March 1, and candidates will be informed of their selection by April 1. Scheerer to Speak Martin Scheerer, professor of psychology, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at a meeting of Sigma Xi, national scientific honorary society. The talk, which is open to the public, is entitled "Hypnotic Age Regression." It will be held in Room 303. Bailey. Dr. Scheerer, who received his PhD. degree from the University of Hamburg, Germany, has held teaching positions at Columbia University, the New School for Social Research, Wells College, Brooklyn College and the College of the City of New York. FREE AS A BREEZE... That's how you'll feel when you've made a start on an adequate life insurance program. Many new plans, especially attractive to college students, merit your consideration now. Life Insurance is the only Investment which gives you a combination of protection and savings and it's excellent collateral for the future. Wed' welcome the opportunity to tell you more about some of the latest policies and innovations available to you. Just phone or stop by to see us. BILL LYONS Supervisor 1722 W. 9th, VI 3-5692 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia The Engineering Student Council held a coffee at 11 am. today in the Kansas Union. Seniors in engineering fields answered questions from underclassmen about the various engineering departments and curriculums. No male can beat a female in the long run because they have it over us in sheer, damn longevity.—James Thurber Professor to Discuss Foreign Languages Waldo Sweet, professor of classical studies at the University of Michigan, will speak at 4 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. today in Fraser Theater. Official Bulletin A pioneer of new methods in teaching foreign languages, Prof. Sweet will talk on "Construction of Learning Materials for Foreign Languages" at 4 p. m. and will discuss "Testing Achievement in Foreign Languages" at 7:30 p.m. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Foreign Students: Please turn in th Rotary Club nomination ballots to the Foreign Student Adviser by 5 p.m. to day. Angel Flight Meeting. Military Science Bldg. 7 p.m. Naval Reserve Research Co. Room 104; Military Science Bldg, The New University of Kansas Reactor. 2 DL T. L. CUNNINGHAM, USAR. 7:30 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TOMORROW Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Baptist Breakfast follows. 6:45 am. Cambridge House. THURSDAY Jay Janes. Room 306, Kansas Union. 5 p.m. Poetry Hour. 4 p.m. Browsing Room. Kansas Union. Harold Orel, Associate Professor of English, will read miscellane- ous Victorian humorists. Ten-Shun WINSOOKI, Vt. - (UPI) - They love a parade at St. Michael's College. Air Force ROTC Capt. Robert Wilkins reports that 110 cadets turned out to try for a place on the 30 man drill team. The team has won four straight New England titles in drill competition. HIqley's 935 Mass. 1st ANNIVERSARY SALE! DRESSES WINTER COTTONS } ½ PRICE COCKTAIL DRESSES WOOL SLACKS PLAIDS & SOLIDS 1/3 OFF DYED-TO-MATCH SKIRTS & SWEATERS 1/3 OFF ALSO: — Jewelry Cotton Knits Hats Girdles Coordinates Lingerie Wool Knit Suits Slippers Robes Gloves Blouses NOTICE: — Our store will be closed at 12:00 noon Tuesday, Jan. 17. For the benefit of our customers who are students and working girls we will be open Tuesday evening from 5:00-8:30 p.m. to begin our big storewide sale. 25% & 50% DISCOUNT — EVERYTHING MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR ALL THE LOVELY SPRING MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1961 58th Year, No.73 Anderson Slashes KU's Request by $1.5 Million Gov. John Anderson made his budget recommendations to the state legislature today which included cutting KU's proposed budget for fiscal year 1962 by $1,584,803. The biggest part of the reduction came from the elimination of the KU medical center requests. The Governor's recommendation for operations and research at KU cut the requested $17,832,701 down to $17,543,898, a difference of $288,803. His capital improvements recommendations pared KU's requested $3,514,900 down to $2,234,900, a difference of $1,280,000. CHANCELLOR W. CLARK WESCOe said this morning that there would be no way of knowing where the cuts had been made in KU's budget until he had seen the recommendations. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, was present at the Governor's address and will return to KU later this afternoon. The governor's method of financing capital improvements to meet an unexpected rise in enrollments was through a diversion of funds for building of mental hospitals and charitable institutions, a choice which already has aroused the opposition of several state legislators. THE GOVERNOR also provided for construction funds to meet burgeoning enrollments at state institutions of higher learning. He did it by recommending that the entire 1.75 mills for state charitable and mental hospital funds and the Kansas educational building fund be appropriated during fiscal years 1962-63 for building purposes at the seven state-supported schools. "I recommend that for the calendar year 1961 that no taxes be levied for the Kansas charitable institutions and mental hospital building fund," Anderson said, "and that the levy for the Kansas educational building fund for this one year be increased from one to 1.75 mills with the additional amount to be appropriated for fiscal years 1962 and 1963 for building purposes at the seven state schools." He said this would provide additional appropriations of $3.4 million for educational buildings. Another $1.7 million would be needed for the total building program, which he said he planned to provide for in his message to the 1962 budget session. GOV. ANDERSON proposed general fund operating expenditures of $30.8 million for the board of regeents and the institutions it administers, an increase of $2 million over fiscal 1961. "This amount will provide the 5 per cent increase in unclassified salaries recommended by the board and the increases in the salaries of classified employees in accordance with the present civil service ranges," he said. The chief executive said his budget provides 116 new teaching and maintenance positions at the institutions at a cost of $675,000. He also included $446,000 in addition to the building projects in the board of re-gents report on general building. AN APPROPRIATION of $15,000 was recommended by the Board of Regents for research studies into curriculum needs, duplication of studies, further development of long-range building plans, possible adoption of tri-semester or quarter system and operation of physical plants. Anderson said he deferred the University of Kansas Medical Center program because, "I believe there should be further study of the factors related to expansion of the physical plant, such as the plans for increasing the number of doctors, nurses and technicians to be trained at the medical center, the cost of operating the expanded facilities, and the amount of non-teaching medical service that should be provided at the center." Shaffer Foresees More Sit-ins By Fred Zimmerman "I believe there will be more sit-ins here." Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics and president of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy (LLPD), said in an interview yesterday. Prof. Shaffer is a central figure in the civil rights controversy in Lawrence. He and the LLPD rallied community support this summer for an anti-discrimination protest to the city commission when that body was considering the case of the Jayhawk Plunge, a local swimming pool. HE SAID HE favored all three of these measures, "so long as they are peaceful, non-violent, and within the law." Prof. Shaffer also predicted that students would engage in selective buying and boycotts of establishments refusing to serve Negroes. Asked if he, personally, would participate in a sit-in. Prof. Shaffer replied that he did not go to taverns. He was then asked if he would engage in a sit-in at a restaurant, should one occur. Prof. Shaffer answered he did not think that as president of the LLPD he should take part in an action the league did not sponsor. "A university professor is a free citizen of the country, and therefore can engage in any peaceful action within the law. I don't feel that I represent the university. I have taken to Chancellors Murphy and Wescoe about this. My position does not conflict." He stated that if the league should choose to sponsor such an action, or if he were not its president, he would join any "peaceful, non-violent demonstration." IN ANSWER TO another question, he said he did not feel that his status at the University disqualified him from participation in a civil rights demonstration. Prof. Shaffer added that "both Dr. Murphy and Dr. Wescoe believe strongly in civil rights. Before Dr. Murphy left he told me his only regret was that he could not stay to see the pool (Jayhawk Plunge) integrated. I asked Dr. Murphy if I could quote him on that, and he said, 'Anything I say you can quote.'" The pool was picketed this summer, and it eventually closed, but was reopened as a private club. PETER M. MORRIS One morning during the hassle 10 dead carp were found on Prof. Shaffer's doorstep. Another morning there was a crude paper-sack effigy, with a stick through its heart, and an attached note saying, "You will never swim again." PROF. SHAFFER SAID he understands the pool may be re-reopened as a private club again. He indicated that the LLPD may investigate the legality of a "club's" discrimination against Negroes. "That will be decided after the league elections in March," he said. Harry Shaffer Shaffer said that during the pool controversy Ed Abels, editor of the Lawrence Outlook, threatened to picket the chancellor's office to have Shaffer fired. "I told him to go ahead, that was his right." Commenting on the sit-in last Thursday, Shaffer said that although he had nothing to do with its planning or execution, as soon as he heard about it he called Marvin McKnight, Lawrence senior and chairman of the CRC, and both hurried to the police station, "to see if those boys needed any help." HE ADDED THAT he notified Charles Oldfather, professor of law and a member of the LLPD, and asked him to come to the station, "in case the students needed any legal assistance." He said Prof. Oldfather often advises the LLPD on the legal aspects of various civil rights actions. Although declining to term himself an "adviser" to students who are pushing anti-discrimination measures, Shaffer said that he has "talked to them, and encouraged them to take actions that are peaceful and non-violent." Shaffer stated that any sit-in should be preceded by an attempt to reason with the proprietor of the establishment. Concerning the sit-in at Louise's Bar, Prof. Shaffer said Steve Baratz, Lawrence graduate student and member of the CRC, told him that prior to Mid-Year Graduates May Get $2 Refund (Continued on page 6) A refund of $2 will be available to mid-year graduates who have paid the full $10 senior dues said Frank Naylor, Kansas City senior and senior class president. Naylor said that application for the refund can be made at the Alumni Office by surrendering the senior ID card with the holders mailing address on the back side. The mid-year graduate can make application any time between now and the time he leaves Lawrence. Refund checks will be mailed to the graduate. 8 Alf Landon . . . Speaks at Dedication Alf Landon Compares Old Kansas to Congo Alfred M. Landon, former Kansas Governor, spoke about the comparison between the Kansas pre-Civil War days and the present world situation last night at the Lewis Hall Dedication Banquet. "Kansas was as much in periphery then as the Congo is today," Mr. Landon said. "The fighting in Kansas was supported by outsiders as is the fighting in the Congo now. "THE CONGRESS, PRESS and public did not think of discussion or hope of agreement between the North and the South. People do not think there can be an agreement between the communistic and capitalist worlds today. This is a larger scale comparison in our life. The same fears exist today." "I'm not sure but what history will begin and end with John F. Kennedy—as it did with Abraham Lincoln. The next four years will be peace of a kind, but we won't enjoy it. "IT IS A GREAT ERA of service. We can get along if we adjust to circumstances. Mr. Landon reminisced about his first meeting with Luther N. "Luke" Lewis during his speech. "One hundred years ago, the Catholics and Protestants were at mortal war with each other. They learned to get along. I'm not pessimistic. In time, communism and capitalism can live together without mortal danger to each other." Luther N. Lewis represented the alumni association which supported Landon's fraternity house, Phi Gamma Delta. Mr. Landon said that Mr. Lewis believed "money should be spent before it was let loose." "NOW THE LEWIS' HAVE established communication with generations of Kansans," Mr. Landon said. "Nothing is more fitting to the memory of these wonderful people. "To listen and know the background of the Lewis family, the state for which they have contributed so much, brings back memories of a good life, as I say, a peaceful, happy life of earlier days." Ike Advocates Amendment Changing Inauguration Date WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Eisenhower recommended today a major revamping of the Presidential election timetable so that a new chief executive would take command at least 80 days before a new Congress convenes. Eisenhower, at his farewell press conference, did not dwell on details of his suggested constitutional amendment. But it is known that he favors shorter election campaigns and an earlier inauguration of an incoming President If Congress continued its custom of convening the first week in January, Eisenhower's plan would mean that a new president would take over the White House sometime in October. This, in turn, would necessitate a new legal election date which is now the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. Eisenhower indicated that his proposed 80-day period between inauguration and the convening of Congress would allow the new President to set his policies and prepare messages such as the state of the union and the budget for his first Congress. Two of the latest constitutional amendments adopted dealt with the Presidency. One—the 20th adopted Oct. 15, 1933—changed the inaugural date from March 4 to Jan. 20 and set the date for Congress to reconvene Jan. 3. The other—the 22nd, ratified in 1951—limits a President to two terms in the White House. Weather A brief break in the June-in January weather situation was forecast for Kansas today. The weather bureau said cooler air and a weak low pressure area had moved into Northwestern Kansas this morning and would move eastward across the state, bringing the possibility of some light snow in the northeast tonight. High temperatures today were forecast from 45 to 50, followed by overnight lows in the 20s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1961 Apology to Joe While a great amount in cash and goods stolen from KU students over the past two years remains unrecovered, the blame cannot be placed on the Campus Police department as stated in yesterday's editorial. It was an error in judgment to question the efficiency of the campus police when they have no adequate facilities to investigate robberies and burglaries. Though the record sheds light on an appalling situation, the responsibility for the investigation of such crimes falls on those agencies which have investigative branches. The campus police do not have a detective bureau nor provisions for one. Daily Hansan of the items stolen were taken in areas that are almost impossible to guard such as the Kansas Union. A case in point: the theft of two Rembrandts from the Spooner-Thayer Art Museum. The etchings were not under lock and key. They were easily accessible to anyone gaining entrance to the museum. They are responsible for traffic control and security. The fact that no student has been killed or injured in a campus automobile or pedestrian accident, despite a greatly increased traffic volume, attests to the efficiency of the department. With an undermanned staff, we are surprised that Chief Joseph Skillman is able to maintain any blasmance of security at all. Many Perhaps, in light of the amount of unrecovered property, the administration might consider adding a person highly trained in investigative methods to the campus police staff. Then we would not have to rely so heavily on other agencies, who in the past have not been able to apprehend the criminals or recover the stolen goods. It is apparent that something must be done for the point made yesterday regarding the hopelessness of recovering stolen property is still a valid one. We apologize to Chief Skillman and his staff who have done a fine job within their assigned areas of responsibility. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3. 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Carol Heller, Jane Boyd, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell John Peterson and Bill Blundell Co-Editorial Editors Our Readers Speak - Carol Heller, Jane Boyd, Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. Business Manager Letters on Mr. Abels, Sit-ins, Integration and the UDK "Muckraking" Revealed Editor: Let me say now that while I apparently hold a more conservative viewpoint than the UDK editorial staff, Byron Klapper, and the CRC, I too am in favor of ultimate non-segregation, and in the equality of man. Perhaps in a little more gentle, dignified manner than you seemingly advocate, but with less hard feelings and resentment in the long run. I AM HOWEVER, A FIRM BELIEVER in freedom of personal expression and of belief, therefore, I hold that discriminators and segregationists also have a right to exist and voice their views. I believe that an individual should have the right to dispose of his personal property in any way he should choose, including manner and choice of distribution. I believe also, that before the UDK, as the voice of the students, takes it upon itself to descend from the Hill and pass judgment upon the local merchants and townspeople, it should make certain that it is in a position to do so. I think the Bible mentioned something along this line in a sage saying about those who are without sin throwing the first rocks. I am truly disappointed to find that the UDK has not completely purged the campus of its sins before settling its wrath elsewhere. It seems that if you were true to your alleged editorial policies there would have been many more articles encouraging greater social intercourse between the races on the Hill than there have been. I understand that the UDK had a part in ridding the housing office of its "White" and "Negro" separate housing lists, but have you checked to see if any more of the segregated rooms have really been made available to the colored students? Your articles on the Greek "segregation clauses" have certainly been along your editorial vein, but have there been enough? Have they been vehement enough? Have you run a series on this close-to-home story? Have you demanded any legislation along this front? Have you pointed your both accusing and judging finger at what I am sure must seem to you a sorry mess indeed? Or was it TOO close-to-home? HAVE YOU REALLY BEEN true to your policies here on the Hill? I don't remember any tear-jerking articles stressing the moral importance of exchange dances between fraternities and sororities of the different races. Have you come out strongly for more dating in a non-discriminate manner, or for more inter-racial marriages? I don't think so, but still you feel it is your privilege and duty to pass sentence upon the morals, manners, mores, and economic ac tions of people who make Lawrence their home for a lifetime, not a four year visit. Whether you realize it or not we are guests of the city of Lawrence. We are here to obtain an education, not to reform our hosts. I know it isn't often that a mere college newspaper editor has a chance to whoop it up with a "Crusade," but don't you feel that you have contributed little more than discontent, and agitation to the town, some students, and many businessmen? If conditions are so bad here in Lawrence it is surprising to me that there have been no large scale spontaneous demonstrations by the colored people of Lawrence to secure their own rights? Why do a few students feel it is their calling to descend on local taverns like avenging angels, striking the fetters from our beer-starved comrades? I hope I would not be insulting our many fine out-of-state students if I mentioned that it might not be their place to crusade, demonstrate, or raise a huge protest against policies of a people, a town, and a state where they have not, nor will not, ever permanently make their home. Especially when I am certain there is much good work along these lines that might be performed at home, saving the cost of tuition for these greater works. Most out-of-state students are here to seriously seek an education. Not act as semi-professional agitators. Most have more pressing studies and social and cultural activities to attend to than to be able to while away their time staging demonstrations in local businesses. Were these mostly students from Lawrence who valiantly struggled to be admitted where they were obviously not wanted? Is there some magical attraction that these bars hold above all the others that welcome Negro customers? Have the downtrondden colored people of Lawrence raised a great "Halleujah" at the various blows struck for their acceptance by the CRC, and the UDK? Or were the students merely protesting in their own self-interest? Just what percentage of the students in the CRC are from Lawrence anyhow? IF YOUR INTENT WAS TO draw attention to the UDK as a force of some magnitude on the campus you have done so. If your purpose was to establish yourselves as journalists you have managed this too, and in the best "muckraking" style. If you felt it was your job to alienate some of the townspeople against, not only the editors, but the paper and the entire student body, then you have certainly accomplished this- Your editorialization on both page one and page two have been great in the grand Chicago Tribune manner. Your selection of one- sided articles and slanted headlines shows real thought and planning. Bully for you! Good show! But I hope you don't think you're repensing my views. Or those of a good many other students who believe that while desegregation is a good and coming thing, editorializing in news articles, agitation, and "yellow journalism" have no place in a college newspaper. B. L. Redding Sr. Kansas City, Kansas, senior --so eloquently for, because like the South, they are seeing their mythical and totally unrealistic world crumble. They have degenerated to such a level that they are trying to strike back by seeking a scapegoat to distract attention and channel feelings away from the problem and to a view in accordance with their own. Hitler did this, Stalin did this and more recently it is being practiced by Fidel Castro. These peoples' values and judgments are being seriously threatened and because of this, they have seriously narrowed their vision by seeing as a solution the placing of blame on an individual and a geographic area. Sit-in Recalled The group that participated in the sit-in demonstration Thursday originated on the KU campus and was composed of students from here. This sit-in is news today but is it the first time a group of KU students have staged a demonstration like this? Is the problem one of our generation or does it go back in KU's history. The problem is obviously not new and neither are the methods taken to alleviate the racial discrimination issue. At Kansas University in 1948 a group known as C.O.R.E., Committee on Racial Equality, organized a sit-in which took place at a local cafe that refused to serve Negro students. A group of students, Negro and White came into this cafe and sat down—they were refused service and politely were asked to leave, yet they remained. The police were summoned by the proprietor and the demonstrators removed from the premises. Sounds a little familiar, doesn't it? Retrospectively looking at the basic problem, we find that the number of merchants, townpeople and students in favor of racial segregation has decreased in geometrical bounds. The number of merchants that refuse to serve Negro students is very small, while discrimination was extremely prevalent not too long ago in this town. Twelve years ago there existed a "gentleman's agreement" in the Big Six which precluded the participation by Negro athletes in conference sports. There has been considerable progress on a controversial social transformation, this progress has displayed a gradual tendency toward integration and anti-discrimination. Demonstrations like the one Thursday night do nothing but impede the progress of the "Negro Cause." The justifications for the action are nebulous and such actions, per se, are of detrimental consequence. The end is inevitable but a natural, gradual process will be the vehicle of change. This type of demonstration is not new at KU, rather it is old. It is too late to mitigate Thursday's incident but not too late to view such actions in the future with caution and discretion. Mike McCarthy Again. Mr. Abels Prairie Village senior Editor: Four years ago, when I came west from New York, virtually everyone like Mr. Abels thought of New Yorkers as gangsters, union organizers and rabble rousers. What you, the midwesterner, has done was to stereotype New Yorkers, not on the basis of knowledge, but on a basis of fear. What Mr. Abels saw of the Bronx was a preconceived idea. He saw what he wanted and not what is real. Had he been objective he wouldn't seek to denigrate New York and consequently Mr. Klapper. Social behavior is complex and mentally tiring, so we therefore adhere, as though to a raft, to those ideas which represent our understanding. MR. ABELS' UNDERSTANDING, as most midwesterners, is fairly limited because the midwest has isolated itself by preconceived ideas. I offer as proof to this theory of isolation the fact that the midwest is two to five years behind in clothing style and fifty years behind in architecture. Architecture is quite a measure of an area's cultural and intellectual level. This can be easily substantiated by the better architects. This is a prime manifestation of vested interest and a vested interest in understanding is more preciously guarded than any other treasure. If this is broken down, so then is a person's self-concept and his phenomenal self. In effect the person would become a lost soul having lost his values and his perceptions. It is for these reasons that Mr. Abels so imprudently calls people and organizations pink and is seeking to belittle and berate New Yorkers. This is the only way he can maintain his self. He furthers this by proclaiming all the marvelous accomplishments of man. What he is really saying is that man is now able to kill as many people with one plane as all the planes did in World Wars I and II. WE FOUGHT WORLD WAR II because some people felt they were better than everyone else. If we give it some thought it becomes obvious that we are in effect still fighting the same war. A war of equality. What is being fought for is not a place to drink beer but an age-old religious ideal and the same ideal that is in our dauntless constitution. This area more than any other should be acquainted with the firm religious belief that all men were created equal. If this is not so, why then are we fighting Communism, fought Nazism, fought tyranny, but will not fight segregation? There can be no half ideals as is now being practiced, for this is hypocrisy. I PITY MR. ABELS AND THE too many midwesterners he speaks No! Mr. Abels and his cohorts must learn the facts of life. New Yorkers learn them the first time someone picks on us either mentally or physically. Last, but by no means least, how could any objective person believe that Mr. Klapper and or the New Yorkers, so influenced the midwesterner? Did we use mass hypnosis or just lick the state of Kansas? If this is so, then Mr. Abels in one breath calls the boys and girls of Kansas, mature thinking individuals and subtly in the next breath contradicts this. I would like to give the Kansas boys and girls credit for being mature thinking individuals but only a few have demonstrated being such. Steve Hurst Bronx, N.Y., senior ... Plaudits for Sit-inners Editor: Congratulations to Michael Landwehr and Tom Heitz and all the other students responsible for showing that KU men can become aroused to action on vital issues. It gives me a great deal of pride, as I'm sure it does others, to see KU linked with integration in a manner much more democratic and constitutional than the linkage earned by the University of Georgia students. The administration should not only support this type of peaceful demonstration but encourage it. This sort of active non-violent display should be one of the character developing facets an institution of learning should try to instill. It is at the University that basic values and ideals, either in terms of Judaeo-Christian ethics or philosophical truths, not only be talked of in terms of antiquity but instituted in terms of the present. It is always appropriate to speak up for the rights of others and complacency on such matters should be discouraged. Milton Diamond Grace Diamond Grace DiAngelo Lawrence Graduate Students P. S. A commendation is also due the UDK staff on their editorial support for what is not always the "popular" view but what is usually the correct one. Page 3 Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1961 University Daily Kansan KU Professor Cites U.S. Power By Karl Koch A scientist who witnessed the first explosion of an atomic bomb gave an account to the Faculty Forum yesterday of the role of modern weapons in our country's arsenal. L. Worth Seagondollar, professor of physics, told of the atomic and hydrogen bombs, the guided missiles, and other facets of our retaliatory strength. "I have received unconfirmed evidence," he said, "that we are ahead of Russia in nuclear weapons." PROF. SEAGONDOLLAR described how the type of nuclear weapon an enemy has can sometimes be determined. "A large nuclear radioactive cloud produced by an atomic explosion gives an idea of distribution of the atoms in the dust cloud," he said. In speaking about our defense against missile attack, Prof. Seagondollar said that at present we could detect an enemy missile about 4,000-5,000 miles from our coast. "You can sometimes determine what type of weapon was used from this cloud." "A counter-intercontinental ballistic missile with a nuclear warhead would be the most logical defense against an enemy missile," he said. Reed Seeks Student Referendum on Sit-ins IT COULD EXPLODE in front of the oncoming missile, he said, scattering debris. "Because of the high rate of speed of the oncoming missile, it would be destroyed by collision with the debris," he said. Alan Reed, Leavenworth junior and a member of the All Student Council, has drawn up a resolution which neither condemns nor upholds sit-in demonstrations to be introduced at the Feb. 7 ASC meeting. Reed said that the ASC "as a whole is in no position to either condemn or uphold sit-in demonstrations at the present time. I believe that a referendum is the proper channel for student opinion on the matter. "THE DECISION to ask active students to be cool, to ask those For Meals-Dog Favors Braniff WICHITA FALLS, Tex. —(UPI) —They call her "Minnie the Mooch- er" and she's quite a mystery around the Wichita Falls airport. Minnie is a small, black dog, apparently she has taken up residence at the municipal airport. She meets all of the incoming flights of Braniff International Airways and isn't the least bit interested in the planes of other airlines. The reason she is apparently attached to Braniff planes is because she discovered that Braniff flights usually have meals aboard, and that other planes landing at Wichita Falls don't. When a Braniff plane arrives, Minnie goes out and sits at the bottom of the ramp and waits until she is invited aboard. She never boards until she is invited, and most stewardesses let her come in for a few minutes. They usually have a tidbit or a meal ready for her. She works for her meals. When the planes take off they scare rats out of the grass around the airport and Minnie runs them down and kills them. Dwight Maston, Braniff's manager at Wichita Falls, said for breakfast a couple of days ago she ate eight eggs, 11 slices of Canadian bacon and three slices of toast. The mystery is, how can she tell one airplane from another? Feb.15 Is Date For Dorm Bids Gov. John Anderson said .25 mill of the total 1.75 mills for the building fund is used for dormitory construction and distributed among the five state-supported colleges and universities. He said the $500,000 has been accumulated over a period of two to three years. The State Architect's office said cost of the new building is $1.8 million, of which $1.3 million would be paid from federal funds. The remaining $500,000 would come from the educational building fund. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Bids will be taken here Feb. 15 on construction of an eight-story women's dormitory at KU. The total estimated cost of the building includes equipment and roads. The cost is subject to contractors bids. Construction of the new building has been approved by the State Board of Regents. with strong convictions to desis. for a time is produced by the legal situation at the present time. The decision whether or not taverns fall under state civil rights legislation must be made before further action is feasible. A. We commend the nineteen students who took part in the sit-in demonstration for their courage and conviction; "It can be injurious to the prestige of our University, both locally and nationally, if students here illegally demonstrate. It would appear to observers that they could have waited until their legal right was clarified." Be it resolved by the All Student Council of the University of Kansas; THE MOTION READS: B. But, we feel that further such demonstrations would be injurious to the prestige of the University, embarrassing to our administration and harmful to the real cause of civil rights; C. Therefore, we urge all students of this University to refrain from further demonstrations until legal procedures are completed and the position of taverns with respect to our state civil rights legislation is clarified. MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Nancy Sword has a neighbor whose washing machine does the most unusual. Every now and then the washing machine backs up, and the soapy water comes out of the vent pipe on the roof instead of going down the drainpipe. Prof Seagondollar also mentioned the necessity for a defense against sabotage. Wrong-Way Suds "An atomic bomb could be made that you could carry in a suitcase," he said. "These atomic suitcases could be placed in various places in our country." Thus an outright frontal attack would be unnecessary. In analyzing our present military policy of massive retaliation potential as a deterrent to war, Prof. Seagondollar said: "I have a very strong feeling that the time is coming when we will have to change or modify our deterrent philosophy." MENTIONING THAT arms races throughout history have ended in war, Prof. Seagondollar said, "It seems to be that we're buying time until something else can be done. "It itud to appear to me that since the U.S. and Russia look at armament similarly, we may grow closer together. But I'm afraid that they have a desire to conquer rather than live side-by-side," he said. "I believe that the safest defense against full-scale war is a powerful deterrent arsenal." Religious Question MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Three year old Susan Kallaher had been told about the baptismal font at church, and when she walked past it with her father, asked "Is that where they criticize babies?" January Cleanup SPORTS CARS at British Motors VI 3-8367 VI3-8367 1960 MORRIS MINOR CONVERTIBLE — Pearl grey with red top & interior, comfort, & sports car handling at small car cost. FIAT ABARTH 750 ZAGATO COUPE — 1960 MGA 1600 ROADSTER — 1960 FIAT ABARTH 750 ZAGATO COUPE Italian racing car, red. This fine car is just as much at home on a race course as the streets. A top condition, low mileage car, red with red interior; a trade in on a new coupe. 1957 TRUMPH TR-3 SPORTS ROADSTER — 1956 JAGUAR XK 140 M.C. - Disc brakes, competition springs & shocks, overdrive, in British racing green with black leather interior. 1956 JAGUAR XR 140 M.C. A 210 h.p. sports touring fixed head coupe in black with red leather interior, overdrive and wire wheels. 1953 MG TD This exceptional car with classic MG styling is finished in black with leaf green leather interior. GOOD UTILITY BUYS 1957 RENAULT DAUPHINE 4-DR, with radio & heater 1953 FORD V-8 4-DR., radio, heater & automatic 1953 FORD 6 4-DR., Stick—way above average — With a recent rebuilt, lots of good trouble-free transportation M The Pizza Hut AND The Catacombs above the Catacombs below the Pizzza Hut DANCE Wednesday, Friday & Saturday Wednesday ---- 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. "FIRE FLYS" Friday ___ 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "FIRE FLYS" Saturday ___ 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "THE SHADES" The Catacombs Available for Private Parties 7 Nights a Week RENEW YOUR TASTE FOR REAL PIZZA 646 Mass. EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 MAGOO says: Don't Be Shortsighted Give to Your Campus Chest. February 13-18 with Dave Brubeck on February 19 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1961 Adali Foresees UN Seat for Red China WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Adlai E. Stevenson said today that admission of Red China to the United Nations "may be impossible to prevent" and amounts to a "probability" at some future date. The twice-defeated Democratic presidential candidate made the statement in testifying before senators considering his nomination to head the U.S. delegation to the United Nations in the Kennedy administration. HE SAID it would be "highly optimistic" to expect Communist China to reform if allowed into the U.N. But he added: "On the other hand, it may be impossible to prevent." Stevenson denied a suggestion by Sen. Bourke Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations committee, that he had taken a "consistent position" of advocating UN membership for Red China. He said this was not correct. But he added that the time will come when this country will "face the probability" that the Peiping regime will be admitted to the world organization. STEVENSON was one of 11 of President-elect John F. Kennedy's appointees appearing before senate committees. The Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved nomination of three high justice department appointees in the new administration. They were Archibald Cox of Boston to be solicitor general; Byron (Whizzer) White of Denver as deputy attorney general, and William Horsley Orrick Jr., of San Finals Press Library Staff The approach of final examinations finds hectic activity at Watson Library. "The shortage of members keeps the staff from doing much except check out books," said John M. Nugent, head of the circulation department. He said that there was a great increase in the use of bound magazines and the reader's guide to periodical literature. But the books haven't lost out. "I've had them ask for ten books at a time—sometimes more," said Annaloy Nickum, Lawrence sophomore and student assistant. What made things even more difficult, Mr. Nugent said, was that all the material on special topics is not in Watson. A book on geology might be in the stacks or in the branch library at Lindley. The reference room has received its share of student traffic as the semester draws to a close. The questions ranged from a request for a record of the Mexican Hat Dance to the names of the people who came over on the Mayflower. There was also a request for enrollment instructions. Francisco to be assistant attorney general in charge of the civil division. OTHER NOMINATION developments included: Harold Orel Will Be Poetry Hour Guest —John B. Connally, navy secretary-designate, told the Senate Armed Services Committee, his position as co-executor of a Texas oilman's wealthy estate does not involve conflict of interest. Harold Orel, associate professor of English, will read from the writings of miscellaneous Victorian humorists at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Lutherans Crusade in Space CHICAGO — (UPI) — A committee of the Lutheran Churchmen of America Executive Council meeting here has resolved to extend church-sponsored Boy Scout programs to "any planet in outer space that may be discovered in the forthcoming interplanetary era." Dentler to Study Social Behavior A $2,300 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service will support a University study of the social behavior of junior high school youth Dr. Robert Dentler, assistant director of the Bureau of Child Research, is conducting the survey in an attempt to understand social origins and determinants of early misconduct and truancy. Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you Alexander's 1101 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE 712-239 Following this idea, Dr. Dentler, with the assistance of Lawrence Monroe, Lawrence graduate student in clinical psychology, will sample students from a large urban junior high school in Kansas City or Topeka. Hunting at Home Quoting from Albert Cohen, criminologist at the University of Indiana, Dr. Dentler said, "What is needed is not more data in the field of truancy. What is needed is to find out more about our present data. We need to get information from the children themselves." COOPER Me. — (UPI) — Mrs. Josephine Leighton didn't have to put much effort into her hunting this season to bag a 200-pound deer. Jewelry KIRSTENS Sportswear HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER The 69-year-old housewife spotted the 10-point buck standing near the barn as she was doing the dishes. She picked up a rifle and dropped the deer with a single shot. "MIDWESTS TOP HAIR STYLISTS" Ronnie's Fashion BEAUTY SALONS MIDWEST'S TOP HAIR STYLISTS Ronnie's fashion BEAUTY SALONS January ½ Price Sale! SAVE NOW... MALLS CENTER VI 2-1144 Our Italian Import . . . Reg. $20 Custom Cold Wave -------------------- $10 Complete Budget Cold Wave . . . 5.95 Complete OPEN LATE WEEK NIGHTS APPOINTMENTS USUALLY NOT NEEDED Carl's GOOD CLOTHES Carl's GOOD CLOTHES CLEARANCE SALE SUITS, SPORT COATS DISCOUNTED 20% to 40% SPORT SHIRTS DISCOUNTED 331/3% CORDUROY SUITS DISCOUNTED 25% TOPCOATS DISCOUNTED 25% ROBES DISCOUNTED 25% JACKETS DISCOUNTED 331/3% SWEATERS DISCOUNTED 331/3% ONE GROUP RAINCOATS WERE $11.95 Now $6.95 WOOL SHIRTS DISCOUNTED 25% ONE GROUP SHIRTS WERE TO $5 Now $3.35 Page 5 Inge Surprises Sigma Nus By Ron Gallagher I was on phone duty at the fraternity during the dinner hour when a middle-aged man opened the front door and casually ambled in. "Im William Inge," he finally said. THUS BEGAN AN unexpected visit to the Sigma Nu fraternity by a man whose writing talents have engineered four hit plays and as many movies in the last decade, and whose name is legend in the entertainment world. "I'm Ron Gallagher," I said introducing myself to the man who at first had identified himself only as, "an old alum." Forty-seven-year-old Inge was soon at home in the house he had lived in while earning his bachelor degree at KU. In just a few minutes he was surrounded by a group of his fraternity brothers interested in the life of a playwright. He also inquired of their interests. "Anyone here interested in writing?" he said. "OUR ENGLISH instructors don't think we can write," one fellow said jokily. "I wasn't much of an English student myself," the quiet spoken Pulitzer Prize winner said. "I was a pretty poor student. It took me three semesters to make my grades to be initiated. Sometimes you change a lot when you get out." He talked about the movie he will be working on when he reaches Hollywood. It will be based on his recently published book "All Fall Down." "Most of the work is done," he said. "I just have to turn it into a shooting script." HE SEEMED TO BE glad to be away from New York, where he lives most of the time. "I get awfully sick of New York," he said. "I'm kind of a small town guy." Mr. Inge was born and lived in Independence for several years. "When I was in school none of the present houses were here," he said speaking of the homes and Greek houses in the area west and south of the Sigma Nu house. "It was just open nature." "I used to have to walk along there late at night because I was always in a play," he said. "All that lonely way back with the coyotes yipping all around." MR. INGE SQUELCHED a rumor that had been floating around the Sigma Nu house for some William Inge time. According to the story Mr. Inge was voted least likely to succeed by his fraternity brothers because of his continual but fruitless efforts at play writing. C. M. H. "I wasn't interested in writing at all when I was at KU." he said. "I wanted to be an actor." He lost his desire to be an actor after graduating from KU and went to Tennessee to earn a masters degree in English. He taught and worked for a St. Louis newspaper for several years after that. He wrote his first play in 1945. His first real success was "Come Back Little Sheba" which opened in New York in 1950. It was followed by "Picnic," "Bus Stop" and "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs." "PICNIC" won a Pulitzer Prize in 1953. Several of his plays have also been produced as motion pictures. "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" is currently appearing on movie screens throughout the country. Wednesday. Jan. 18. 1961 University Daily Kansan Mr. Inge has written an original movie, "Splendor in the Grass," which will be released next July. Mr. Inge stayed in Lawrence overnight and spent the day at the University. He plans to leave soon for the rest of his trip to Hollywood. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material. The Day Kansai National Office should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin German Ph.D. Reading Examination, Sat. Feb. 11. Candidates must sign up in 306 Fraser between Jan. 25 and noon Feb. 3. Jay James. 5 p.m. Room 306. Kansas Union. Episcopal Holy Communion. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass, 6:30 a.m. St. Labors Church, 19th & Kentucky Episcopal Holy Communion, 12 noon. Canterbury House. Foreign Students: At 3 p.m. a representative of the United States Internal Revenue Service will be in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union to discuss tax identification and tax form preparation and how to make the necessary preparations for leaving the United States. Poetry Hour. 4 p.m. Browsing Room, Kansas University. Dr. Harold Orel. Assoc. Prof. of English will read miscellaneous Victorian Humorists. Phi Delta Kappa. 6 p.m. Kansas Union. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Catering Mass last follows. 6:45 a.m. Canterbury House. Mathematics Department Lecture and Coffee. Coffee, 3:50 p.m., 113 Strong, Lecture, 4:15 p.m., 103 Strong, Dr. Don Morrison and Dr. Joe G. Hankin, Sandia Corporation. Sandia Problems of the Mathematics Research Department of Sandia Corporation." Philosophy Club. 4 p.m. Sunflower Room, Kansas Union Dr. Alfred Lande, Emerging Professors. Ohio State University will present "Dualism: Science and Hypothesis." Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. p.82 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0298 for more information or a ride. On Ice OXFORD, Ohio —(UPI) —Patrons of a local theater were forced to sit through two evening performances with their coats on recently when the heating system broke down. The movie: "Tee Palace." Ask a Silly, Etc. BOSTON — (UPI) — "What is mother's native tongue?" was one of the queries on a questionnaire submitted to first-graders at a Dorchester grammar school. One boy's answer was: "Red." Attention Vacation Skiers This Is Operation Deep Freeze SKI PARKA END OF SEMESTER SPECIAL A Reg. 24.95 Now 1995 Styled by Duofold Manufacturers of the ★ Famous 2-layer Duofold Sport Johns ALL SIZES IN STOCK 3 Time Choice of the U.S. Winter Olympic Teams The Sportsman's Shop 715 Mass. VI 3-6106 THE CITY SUN You'll Enjoy Reading the Daily Kansan— for the "Latest" from the "Most" on the Campus! P. S. - Your Parents and Friends will enjoy reading the DAILY KANSAN, too . . . $ 3.00 per Semester - $ 5.00 Full Year Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 18, 196 New Tensions Appear In Strife-Torn SE Asia By United Press International Possible new outbreaks of fighting in Southeast Asia resulted in a call to President Eisenhower for the United States to take part in a 14nation conference in Laos. State Department officials said today that President Eisenhower had replied to a Cambodian proposal for the conference but declined any further comment. Two regiments of Communist Chinese troops penetrated 250 miles through North Burma to within 10 miles of Thailand this month, however, Burmese officials said today that permission was granted the Red troops to move across the country. It was believed the bulk of the Red forces have withdrawn again to the Chinese side of the border, where they remained poised. Various fragmentary reports of such activity in that area had circulated in the past several days, bringing denials from Peiping and comments from Rangeoon that the size of a Chinese border survey party was exaggerated. IN LAOS pro-Western fighter planes doubled their rocket firepower yesterday to attack pro-Communist rebel forces retreating Fellowship Available At Cornell University The $4000 Hannibal C. Ford Fellowship will be awarded to one outstanding graduate in engineering for his first year at Cornell, University. The fellowship will allow for all expenses including tuition, fees and similar expenses plus a cash grant of $2500. The fellowship is offered to men only and applicants should write to the Dean of the Graduate School, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. for application forms. Applications must be filed by February 10 of this year. Looking Ahead MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Nurse Olga Lindenmayer said a new parent had a sign pinned to a baby crib at the hospital nursery saying "Miss America of 1978." northward from Vang Vieng, 65 miles from here. Three U.S.-built T-6 converted trainers swooped down on rebel units who left behind arms, trucks and jeeps as they fled from prowestern troops who recaptured the stronghold of Vang Vieng. (The Tass news agency reported in Moscow that leftist rebel Paratroop Capt. Kong Le said the aerial attacks had caused "serious material damage and grave casualties" among civilians but "insignificant losses" to his (troops.) More Sit-ins, Says Shaffer (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) the sit-in he (Baratz) had asked Louise Williams, proprietress of the bar, why she had charged a Negro 25 cents for a drink that normally costs a dime. Shaffer said that if Baratz had done this, the sit-in was fair to to the woman. BARATZ DID NOT take part in the sit-in, but was at the police station soon after the students were brought in, and he waited there about two hours with McKnight, Shaffer and Prof. Oldfather. Prof. Shaffer said he received a call the morning after the sit-in from the assistant of an N.A.A.C.P. lawyer in Topeka. The man asked Prof. Shaffer if the students needed bail, and offered to come to Lawrence to put up bond for them. Prof. Shaffer said the sit-in does no more than show that a problem exists. "SOME PEOPLE say there is no civil rights problem in Lawrence. The people who say this just don't have any contact with the problem. "Minority groups cannot rest anywhere in the country until we accomplish the goals democracy stands for — freedom, justice, fair play, and equality for all." LAST DAY BEN-HUR AT 7:30 P.M. ADULTS $1.25 VARSITY SALE ENDS JANUARY 21ST WALT DISNEY'S SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON TECHNICOLOR' FILMED IN PANAVISION They dared countless perils and turned a lost island into an exotic paradise! STARING JOHN DOROTHY MILLS McGUIRE JAMES JANET MacARTHUR MUNRO SERIES HINAKAWA KIRK CORCORAN PANKER HD REID TANLOR SOON GRANADA THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5789 Any Cloth SOON GRANADA THEATRE TELEPHONE VIKING 3-5788 COAT 20 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{c} $ ea 84 C Any Matched SUIT Note: No Limit But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25c SAME DAY SERVICE or Any Plain 1-Pc. DRESS Deluxe Cleaned Beautifully Pressed SHIRTS Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! SHIRTS HAND-FINISHED ON HANGING 25c EACH Drive In and Save—Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Except Sunday 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals JERRY LEWIS 25 CINDERFELLA (A Jerry Lewis Production) ED WYNN · JUDITH ANDERSON ANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI as "The Princess" A Paranormal Release • TECHNICOLOR --- GRANADA THEATRE...Telephone VIA 3-570 Balfour NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT --- THU-FRI-SAT VAN HEFLIN CHARLES LAUGHTON UNDER TEN FLAGS UNI DUE LANEAL TITLE MYLENE DEMONGEOT JOHN ERISON-FOLCO LULL CECIL PARKER ALEN NICOL ELEONORA ROSSI DRAGO JOHN CRAFTY DANA MAYLAND DENNIS DURAN NEVER BEFORE REVEALED M.G.M presents a TWENTY-FILM PRODUCTION THE DAY THEY ROBBED THE BANK OF ENGLAND Starring ALDO RAY ELIZABETH SELLARS PETER OTOOLE - HUGH GRIFITH KIERON MOORE - ALBERT SHARPE Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Her name is Bobbie Williams... SOON! "GIRL OF THE NIGHT" A REMARKABLE NEW MOTION PICTURE BASED ON THE FACTUAL BEST- SELLER "THE CALL GIRL" A VANGUARD PRODUCTION - PRESENTED BY WARNER BRDS. VARSITY THEATRE - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Weednesday, Jan. 18. 1961 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25 for billing. All ads must be called or brought to a desk by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST Page 7 SLIDE RULE in or around Union. $5 reward. Call KU 376. 1-20 SORORTY PIN, l忘 on campus Wed- day. Please please, l忘 Martha Abel, VI 3-6060. FOUND WRISTWATCH—men's. Phone VI 3-3590 after 6 p.m. 1-19 MEDICAL SECRETARY, female. Part time Monday through Friday. Mechanical knowledge in words per minute. Know medical terminology. Appointment call VI 3-3680. 1-1F RAPIDOGRAPH No. 1 fountain pen. Owner call J. L. VI. 3-8029. 1-20 HELP WANTED TYPING Expert typing and secretarial service Hicks, VI 2-0111, MIS 3-5220 or MIS Hicks, VI 2-0111 FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard rates Call VI 3-1312 Experienced typist — will type theses, papers, etc. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI, tf 0558. EXPERIENCIED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter.Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Paterson, VI 3-5833. Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typist, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mr. Barlow. 408 W. 10th. V1 2-1648. Mm. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type issues, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEidlowen, VI 3-8568. tf TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 8-954. tf Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johansen, VI 3-2876. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1997. tf Experienced typist — term papers, mnuscripts, reports and reports. Prompt services neat accurate work, reasonable Mr. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., C.I. II-37485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Methlinger, VI 3-4409. tp TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell, 1511 W. 21st St. VI 3-6440. Experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan, tf Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. tfr EXPERIENCED TYPIST Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER POWER Students! FOR RENT Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free Open 24 Hours on Duty Brakes Relined ROOMS FOR MEN: One block from Uni- on. New furniture and bath facilities Single. $35; double $25. Call John Long I 3-6798 after 3 p.m. 1212d. Iorel 12 APARTMENT — Three large rooms, private bath and private entrance. Furnished or unfurnished. Ideal for a couple or two or three boys. Inquire of Raymond Anderson, Anderson Furniture, 112 N. H., VI 3-2044. 1-20 WE RENT almost anything See or inquire about rentals person on ture, 812 New Hampshire, VI 3-1404. 1-20 THREE BEDROOM HOME adjacent to campus. Garage and basement. Immediate possession. Call VI 3-3425. If no answer, call VI 3-3666. 1-20 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bent. Rent reduce Phoore, PH 3-9776. VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont FURNISHED APARTMENT, well-furnished, three rooms and bath. 900 block on Indiana. Call VI 3-8316 daytime. VI 3-9027 evenings. 1-20 NICELY FURNISHED apartment--three privileges. children or pets. 1400 Abbott 1-20 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six windows, both a bath and entrance door, and added Married couple only, 520 Ohio. **tf** One bedroom furnished apartment for vacation (TV 3-1681 or VI 3-6661) rent 1-yr For Rent — Quiet, large room for men. Private bath. private entrance. One block south of KU. Phone VI 3-2393. TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $50. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-20 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking, Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. t f TWO ROOM well-furnished apartment Large living room-bedroom, kitchen and breakfast room. Ensuite or two, enabled bath. Live minute from office. Call PU 3-0189 after 5 p.m. 1-18 Semi-basement recreation type apartment, in quiet private home. Accommodate 2 or 3 boys. Twin beds—dressing room — private bath, private entrance. Contact Mrs. Callahan. Concession counter, Union Bldg. 1-19 Large attractive 4 room apartment. Private bath. Close to downtown and KU. Nice house, off street parking. Reasonable rent. $55 a month. Ph. VI 3-148 ROOMS FOR MEN- ONE HALF BLOCK from Union. Well-heated and quiet. See at 1301 La. or call VI 3-4092. tf LARGE FIVE ROOM furnished apart- ment in a beautiful two-story five-bed. C, Call 3-5690 1-20 FOUR ROOMS and bath - entire second floor - for rent to boys. All utilities - for rent to campus. Call 612-3088 Kimberling. VI 9-1234 call, VI 3-1202 6p.m. ROOM AND BOARD next semester. Phone VI 3-4385. 1-20 FURNISHED APARTMENT. first floor, three rooms. 1316 K. Utilities paid except electricity. Reasonable rent. Machiem VI 3-6888 or VI 2-1964 after 5:30. 1-20 TRAILER SPACE; $18.50 a month. $9 a month when not occupied. Rancho Moto 馆. 1½ miles north of Lawrence, Hiway 24. Call VI 3-9845. tt APARTMENT FOR MEN, one block from Union. Phone VI 3-6723. 1-bock CLEAN. FURNISHED basement apartment. Large rooms, large closet, six windows. Good stove and electric refrigerator, private bath and entrance. Utility paid. Married couple only. No drinking or pets. 520 Ohio. 1-20 STUDIO APARTMENT: Completely furnished. For one or two graduate students. Two minutes from campus. Available rent. Call VI 3-6496 a-fi 1-20 p.m. LARGE, NICELY FURNISHED. quiet room for boys. Private bath and entrance. Four blocks from campus. 1617 Oxford Road, evenings or Sunday. 1-20 ROOMS FOR BOYS: Clean, quiet, convenient. Single or Double. See or call Clayton Crenshaw, first floor, 1234 Oread, VI 3-7199. 1-20 FREE ROOM for male student. Well- furnished and very close to campus. Exchange room for work around the house. Call VI 3-6696. 1-20 AVAILABLE for second semester—one-half block from campus. Very desirable large room, also one smaller one. In quiet house, private parking lot. Very reasonable rent. To upperclassmen or graduate students. Call VI 3-6696. -120 GRADUATE WOMAN to share apart- ment with graduate student in Mississippi, two doors north of Union. WANTED ROOMMATE: Female January graduate interested in sharing apartment with DORothy Barker, Kansas City. Plaza area of south, Call Dorothy Boyer, Plia 3-7070 or KU 376. 1-20 WOMAN GRADUATE student to share apartment. Call VI 2-0726 e.p.m. 1-20 NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF MEMBERS; Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0942. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicc. party supplies. Plant. 6th & Vermont. phone VI. 0350 BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS-MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, ola. Ola Smith 932% Mass. Telephone VI .3-5263. tr PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture, com- piled with text and formatting formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery $4.50 Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551 H RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267 LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest theater productions. Studio, 981 Missouri, Phone VI 3-6838. PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions Price $4.00. For your call, call VI 2-1065. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn Open week days 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Hot Plants and Gardens, hot Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums, and all accessories, daily carnival games and all accessories. Pet bed field for your bobbles-projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2821 or better still, come. Welcome t STUDIO GIRL COSMETICS shown in the home by trained beauty adviser. For appointment, call Louise Schiup. VI 3-2697. 1-20 FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1953 One bedroom Safeway trailer home. Equipped with a one ton formal air conditioning. Room size: Excellent condition. Phone VI 5-7412 after 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-20 RAPID SALE, going overseas: Spring, mattress, frame, large size; $25; rug, $12; ironing board, $. 9A Sunnyside. 1-18 BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists and charts and diagrams. Complete cross index. Price $3.00. For your copy call VI 21-865-4722. DIAMOND RING, 3/4 card solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350. Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and comprehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 at 4 p.m. tf HOUSE, for sale by owner. Three bedrooms, full basement, fenced yard, attaches garage exceptional closet space. School: Call VI 3-4801. School: Call VI 3-4801. STRING BASS, BASE, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition. Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 HI-FIDELITY STEREO phonograph — special closeout — one only in each color, walnut or cherry wood. Single and double piece, 20 watt stereo — brand new, priced to sell. Downtown TV, 1027 Mass. 1-20 MUST SELL! 1955 Plymouth six, overdrive. Excellent condition, laughably low price. Call Mike Stephens, VI 3-7370. 1-20 1956 PLYMOUTH, Savoy, four-door V-8. Automatic transmission. In good condition. Call L. A. Jennings. VI 3-4920 after 5 p.m. 1-20 WORLD-WIDE MOVING PACKING·STORAGE North American VAN LINES INC. WORLD-WIDE MOVING North American VAN-LINES INC. WORLD-WIDE MOVING VI 3-0380 ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. WIFE APPROVED MOVING North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING S A 1st Anniversary SALE LE January 16-21 SPECIAL PRICES on GUITARS, BONGOS, DEMONSTRATOR and RENTAL INSTRUMENTS ODELL'S A S & BELL'S MUSIC SHOP HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Open Evenings Until 8:30 p.m. SALE Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1961 Others Outclass KU Gym Compares Poorly By Linda Swander (Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles on Robinson Gymnasium.) How does Robinson Gymnasium compare with other gymnastiums at universities in the Big Eight and Big Ten Conferences? The following survey shows that KU's gymnasium facilities are inadequate as compared to schools in the Big Eight and Big Ten Conferences and some Kansas high schools. Kansas State University has separate facilities for the men and women. There are three basketball courts for the men plus facilities for wrestling, tumbling and general exercise. One year of physical education is required. THE UNIVERSITY of Nebraska has two swimming pools, six to eight basketball courts and facilities for wrestling. Iowa State has two swimming pools and wrestling facilities. The University of Missouri has a swimming pool for the women. Regularly enrolled students are required to take at least one year of physical education. The University of Oklahoma has one pool for the men, wrestling facilities and eight basketball courts. Students are required to take courses in physical education. OKLAHOMA STATE has wrestling facilities. It requires physical education of all students. The University of Colorado offers courses in wrestling and boxing. It has separate gymnasiums for the men and women and two swimming pools. At least a year of physical education is required. Co-recreational sports highlight the physical education program at Iowa State University, Iowa City, Iowa. "Play-Nites" are conducted for students and faculty twice a week. "Family-Nites" are held once a month. A special attraction at Purdue University, LaFayette, Ind., in a recreational gymnasium. Use of the recreational gymnasium is paid for through the student activity fees. The gymnasium has two outdoor swimming pools, an indoor pool and an outdoor ice skating rink, which can be converted into a tennis court in the summer. Special clubs have been organized for enthusiasts in riding, table tennis, cycling, sailing and judo. THE MENS' AND women's gymnasiums at Purdue have separate facilities, each with a swimming pool. The first article on Robinson gymnasium mentioned Ohio State University which has three swimming pools for the men alone. The University has one gymnasium for both men and women students, one swimming pool, one basketball court and no facilities for wrestling. The women's gymnasium at K-State is as large as Robinson Gymnasium. "The gymnasium facilities are not adequate for the entire student body and the teaching staff is not big enough." Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department, said. PROF. SHENK said the inadequate space at KU prevents a faculty recreation program. Many Kansas high schools have better gymnasium facilities than does KU. The five public high schools in Wichita each have a swimming pool. None of the schools has more than 3,000 students. "Ninety per cent of the universities in the United States require students to enroll in physical education courses. The University decided in 1936 not to require physical education. Pharmacy Senior Wins Scholarship Paul Woodson Davis, St. Joseph Mo., senior, is recipient of the Gold Medal Pharmacy Alumni Scholarship for the second semester. The scholarship was established by the fifty-year pharmacy graduates of last spring. Davis will receive $130 of the amount set aside by the group and the remaining $120 will be awarded a senior in the fall, 1962. Davis is a member of Rho Chi, Look, just forget about this absurd idea that you can't go to Heaven without an Ivy League education—Wilbur J. Bender pharmacy honor fraternity and has been on the Dean's honor roll every semester he has been in school. His overall grade point average is 2.52. No Forum Fridav There will be no Current Events Forum this week or next week due to the approaching final examination pperiod. SKIERS! You need this- ZERO-KING POPOVER JACKET 100% SUPIMA COTTON - Supima threads swell upon contact with water giving double water repellency — washable $ \mathcal{G} $ sanforized — complete with breast pocket $ \mathcal{G} $ action sleeves only $ 1 0^{9 5} $ the university shop 1420 Crescent Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers leading the FASHION PARADE Be two smart feet ahead with sleek new Crosby Square lightweights. In colors, styles, and leathers to complement your wardrobe, compliment your good taste. Come in today. 1495 CROSBY SQUARE 14. 95 REDMAN'S SHOES JANUARY CLEARANCE At Lawrence Surplus PRICES REDUCED AGAIN! Men's SPORT SHIRTS 1/3 OFF Reg. $3.98 ---- Now $2.66 Reg. $2.98 ---- Now $1.99 MEN'S SWEATERS Reduced 40% Reg. $9.95 ---- Now $5.97 Reg. $6.95 ---- Now $4.17 Reg. $5.95 ---- Now $3.57 All Remaining Men's CORDUROY SLACKS Reg. to $5.95 $3.77 Entire Stock MEN'S PARKAS Reg. to $16.95 ___ $10.00 Sizes 36 to 46 Entire Stock - Men's WINTER JACKETS Reduced 1/3! Reg. $21.95 ... Now $14.64 Reg. $19.95 ... Now $13.30 Reg. $16.95 ... Now $11.30 Reg. $14.95 ... Now $ 9.97 Reg. $12.95 ... Now $ 8.63 Reg. $10.95 ... Now $ 7.30 Reg. $ 8.95 ... Now $ 5.97 Reg. $2.98 Hooded Sweat Shirts -- $1.99 Reg. $1.59 to $1.98 Crew-Neck Sweat Shirts $1.00 Many Other Outstanding Values Not Mentioned in This Ad LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts St. Phone VI 3-3933 Tests Reveal Student Goals, Professor Says The nature of a language test decides what the student wants to study, but it is difficult to test accurately, said Waldo Sweet associate professor of Latin at the University of Michigan. "To accurately test, the examination must be of the same activity as the class work," he said. "It is incongruous to give a written test to a class that has done only laboratory work." The major problems for the instructor of a language are defining goals and seeing if the student does what is expected, he said. "Often I am asked why I study Latin," Prof. Sweet said. "To that I have an answer, but I've never used it. Sometimes I'll say the reason is to keep from asking questions like 'Why study Latin,'" he said. Waldo Sweet A. F. H. The goal he set forth in Latin instruction was to comprehend the text as an art form and an expression of the culture. To do this the knowledge must precede the appreciation, hence the need for adequate testing, he said. "By the open-book method, we give a student a line of Latin and tell him to find the page and line number," he said. "If he knows the test well, he can find the line location easily." The open-book test and the closed-book test forms were suggested by Prof. Sweet. "This is the best single device I know for accuracy." Prof. Sweet said. "Students don't like it as well because there is no way to bluff it. They must be well acquainted with the text to answer exactly." Prof. Sweet advocated testing Latin by the use of "closes." These are lines with one or two words omitted. The student must supply the correct word. Thursday, Jan. 19, 1961 He suggested other methods such as a scrambled line, leaving the student to correct it; comprehensive questions, dictation and variances from the original manuscript. "The Latin texts often have parallels," he said. "The instructor reads the parallel and asks the student to quote the original manuscript. This is a good method, but many students feel this is only memorizing the text." Prof. Sweet said conversation and grammar courses in modern languages could not use these methods as easily as could a course in modern language literature, but they were adaptable to literature courses. "An elementary language course should stimulate a student to take a literature course," he said. "By the testing in the advanced course, we can judge the effectiveness of the first one." CRC Discusses Student Petitions Bruce E. Wright, Salina sophomore and member of the Civil Rights Council, last night told a small group of the CRC that he had more than 800 signatures on the petitions which were circulated around campus and posted at the information booth last week. Two Grads Hold Top State Posts The petitions asked that students support boycots of any place of business which practices discrimination, and also called for an all-student referendum on the resolution proposed by the NSA representative to the All-Student Council. Two KU graduates hold top posts in this session of the state legislature. The two, both graduates in journalism, head key committees in the House and Senate. John J. Conrad, of Greensburg, was recently appointed chairman of the Ways and Means committee. He is the publisher of the Kiowa County Signal in Greensburg and a 1943 KU graduate. He received a Ph.D from the Sorbonne, Paris, in 1951. Glee Smith, of Larned, is chairman of the Senate judiciary committee and of the education subcommittee on college building. After receiving his B.A. in journalism in 1945, he took a degree in law at KU and has practiced in Larned since then. Wright said that more petitions were still being circulated. The petitions will be continued next semester in an attempt to get the needed 2,000 signatures to force the student council to take some action on a Civil Rights resolution. The sit-in was staged by approximately 40 students from one of the dormitories because a Negro student was discriminated against in a Lawrence tavern. Most of the students who participated in the sit-in were not members of the CRC. The group, acting in an unofficial capacity, also discussed whether to sanction last week's sit-in. Most of the members present agreed with Wright and decided to limit the meeting to discussion instead of the formation of official policies. It was suggested that the CRC try to incorporate those students who participated in the sit-in into the council and that the council endorse the action. Wright said he felt it would be dictatorial for the small group to pass any resolutions for the CRC without any officers present. Weather Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Colder east and south portions this afternoon and tonight. Warmer Friday but turning colder again tomorrow night. Low tonight generally near 15. High tomorrow 35 to 40. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 58th Year. No. 74 No $1.5 Million Slash KU Welcomes Budget Gov. John Anderson, in his budget recommendation to the state legislature, expressed complete approval of KU's request for a $17,-832,701 operating budget for fiscal year 1961. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS were elated at the governor's message which endorsed the proposed faculty salary increase and retirement plan, and the Board of Regent's program for building construction. THE "I don't see how I could help but be pleased," Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said yesterday afternoon. "The recommendations relative to the operating budget were identical to the Regent's request. Those relative to capital improvements will allow the building program to move forward as we had planned." It was erroneously reported in yesterday's Daily Kansan that the governor had recommended cutting the budget by $1.5 million. This was due to United Press International's misinterpretation of the budget's figures. THE BUDGET is comprised of two parts: educational and general (operating) expenditures ($15,257,-116), and auxiliary enterprises ($2,-521,925). Both were approved in toto by the governor. This is the first time in several years that the governor's office has not recommended cuts in the proposed budget. It now goes to the legislature for consideration and final approval is expected in March. The governor recommended that funds for the $3,555,000 KU building program be allotted over a period of two fiscal years (fiscal year 1962 begins July 1, 1961). THIS PLAN calls for five per cent contributed by the state and the total ten per cent to be placed in an annuity fund sponsored by the Teacher's Insurance and Annuity Association. This will allow a faculty member to retire at approximately 50 per cent of maximum salary instead of the approximate 25 per cent now allowed by the present provisions. Gov. Anderson set aside in reserve for legislative action the $280,803 request for KU's funded retirement plan out of the $15,257,-116 operating budget. **THIS IS THE reason for the error in yesterday's paper. The UPI report only listed the "capital improvements" (building funds) that Gov. Anderson recommended for fiscal year 1962. This amount ($2,234,900) is $1,210,000 less than the requested $3,555,000 but was John Anderson recommended for appropriation for iscal year 1963. He recommended that the $1,375,-000 engineering building receive $750,000 in FY 1962 and $625,000 in FY 1963. All this will be drawn from the educational building fund which annually draws about $3 million for construction in the state's colleges and universities. WASHINGTON — (UPI)— The Senate foreign relations committee today tentatively approved Chester Bowles as undersecretary of state pending his formal nomination by President-elect John F. Kennedy. Bowles Gets Tentative OK The governor recommended approval of funds for an addition to Dyche Natural History Hall. More than half of the $835,000 addition is available from federal grants and private contributions and the Regents' request of $350,000 was recommended for allotment in FY 1963. A SUM of $30,000 was recommended to plan for remodeling or replacing the now vacant Blake Hall east of Watkins Hospital. The governor's method of financing capital improvements to meet the unexpected rise in enrollments at the state schools was through a diversion of the mill levy for building of mental hospitals and charitable institutions. During the emergency, the governor recommended the total levy of 1.75 mills would be available to the Regents for school buildings and dormitories. This would be appropriated He recommended that the $1,800,-000 addition to Watson Library receive $800 in FY 1962 and $1 million in FY 1963. This was as the Regents requested and will allow construction to begin in the summer with completion expected by the summer of 1963. Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., said after the hearing that a poll of most committee members showed no opposition to Bowles' nomination. Other members were to be polled later so the nomination could be sent to the Senate as soon as it is formally received after Kennedy's inauguration. The action came on a poll of most committee members after a three-hour and 15-minute hearing in which Bowles was questioned at length about his views on Red China and said he did not think the United States should recognize the Peiping regime. Bowles said he is nervily opposed to recognition of Red China-or its admission to the United Nations at this time. Answering further question Bowles added that a current magazine article notes that Red Chinese leader Chou En-Lai attacked Bowles for his views. On the possibility of a communist attempt to stage a coup d'etat on Formosa, Bowles said he hoped that it "would never occur." But he said that if it did, the United States should "not allow" Formosa to link up with the mainland communist powers. Bowles concluded that the matter of recognition of Red China is "completely unnegotiable . . . at the time being." Sparkman summarized by asking if Bowles was saying that this country should not give "formal recognition" to Red China or recommend its admission to the United Nations. "That is my view," Bowles replied. Bowles again emphasized the importance of India and Pakistan becoming strong and resolving their differences, with American help. during fiscal years 1962-63 for building purposes. THE GOVERNOR deferred the requests for the KU Medical Center saying, "I believe there should be further study of the factors related to expansion of the physical plant, such as the plans for increasing the number of doctors, nurses and technicians to be trained at the medical center, the cost of operating the expanded facilities, and the amount of non-teaching medical service that should be provided at the center." Chancellor Wescoe indicated that the governor's position was reasonable but added that the building program at the medical center is at a critical stage. "I THINK there are certain critical items in the building program that should be taken care of immediately," he said. "It might be pointed out that construction there has been at the least possible cost to the state of any medical center in the nation." Ike, JFK Confer On U.S. Security Today's White House meeting lasted a little more than two hours. This was the second meeting between the outgoing and incoming president. WASHINGTON — (UPI) - President-Elect John F. Kennedy was brought up to date by President Eisenhower today "on a number of matters affecting" U. S. security in various areas of the wgrld. THE TWO MEN, who were joined by six key cabinet aides, had what was described as "a full discussion of the current world situation." "World areas under discussion included the Far East, Africa, Western Europe and the Caribbean," according to a joint statement issued by the White House after the meeting. Eisenhower and Kennedy first met alone in the President's office and then in the cabinet room with their top advisers. THEO WHO JOINED Eisenhower and Kennedy were Secretary of State Christian A. Hertter, Treasury Secretary Robert B. Anderson, Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates, Secretary of State-Designate Dean Rusk, Treasury Secretary-Designate C. Douglas Dillon and Defense Secretary-Designate Robert McNamara. the three-paragraph statement issued by Eisenhower's Press Secretary James C. Hagerty and Kennedy's Press Secretary Pierre Salinger did not go into any details except to mention generally the world areas which were discussed. Nixon Still Unsure Of Political Future WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Outgoing Vice President Richard M. Nixon said today he has "no plans at the present time" to run for office in 1962 or 1964, but he would not rule himself out of the political picture. Nixon told reporters he "will not make any decision or consider a decision on that at the present time." Heading for a month's vacation and then a law practice in California, Nixon said the "verdict of history" will not sustain a Democratic charge that the Republicans left a "terrible mess in Washington." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 19, 1961 Kennedy's Burden When President-elect Kennedy takes office Friday he no doubt will immediately be harassed by both the Communists and our allies to make clear the United States position on further testing of nuclear weapons. From the Communists will come a sweet-sounding invitation to arrive at a decision on the question of underground testing, either at the Geneva negotiations or at a summit meeting. From our allies will come sincere pleas for a quick choice of whether or not we are going to share our scientific secrets concerning nuclear weapons with them, thus expanding membership in the "Bomb Club" to include some nations not now considered major world powers. SO FAR THE GENEVA TALKS HAVE been fruitless. The United States is insisting upon an effective inspection system to insure compliance with a test ban should the Russians agree to a ban. The Soviets want us to honor their word that no tests would be made. Although he has not publicized his policy plans on either of these problems Kennedy has indicated that he will attempt to establish an agreement deadline for the next Geneva conference. If an agreement is not reached within a reasonable time Kennedy has indicated that he would favor the United States resuming tests. Republican leaders also favor issuing an ultimatum to the Soviets calling for quick agreement or the resumption of full-scale underground tests. American scientists have advised Kennedy that the present test ban gives Russia an advantage because the weapons not under the two- nation ban serve the Red's military needs best. They maintain, however, that the United States must have better nuclear weapons that the underground tests would develop, in order to deter Soviet aggression. France's recent entry into the realm of nuclear powers will pose another problem for the new president. It is now the fourth nation to enter the world's "Bomb Club" and the second in Europe. Our European allies, as well as France, are clamoring to share the nuclear secrets of England and the United States for fear that war might result from another Berlin crisis. IN SOLVING THESE PROBLEMS BOTH the eastern and Western powers must now consider that four more nations, Red China, Israel, Japan and Sweden, and possibly others, anticipate having nuclear weapons in a short time. It is no longer the responsibility of only a few nations of the world to determine the use of weapons which could destroy the world. Nations such as Israel, which has only a fraction of the world's population, soon may be able to start a nuclear war and thus must be considered in any test ban talks. It Kennedy does have a plan to facilitate accord on the test-ban dilemma thereby insuring against a global nuclear war, he must, of course, proceed with caution. But more important, he must push ahead before it is too late for talking. He must also be cognizant of the importance of these small but potentially potent nations in any worldwide settlement. — John Macdonald A Familiar Fable Long ago, long before guns were ever invented, people fought wars by throwing rocks. While this would seem to make the wars pretty even, it actually had the opposite effect. The armies of some kingdoms had good, hard, baseball-sized rocks for throwing. Other armies only had the cindery kind that couldn't make a dog yelp if you plunked him squarely in the ribs with it. Since this was an age of power, some nations grew big and strong while others remained comparatively weak. Thus, it happened that two kingdoms grew more powerful than the rest. One was far to the west and the other was about an equal distance to the east, which was probably just as well because they didn't like each other very much. Each one was always looking for a way to gain the upper hand. And, one day, one of the kingdoms thought it had found the answer. . . . BESIDES THE GOOD, HARD, BASEBALL-sized rocks for throwing, there were plenty of hut and castle-crushing boulders laying around throughout the kingdom. "Why," some of the earls and dukes wondered, "can't we use some of those boulders in a machine that could catapult them into the Eastern Kingdom if we ever had to?" So, they summoned the wise men, and some wondrous machines were built. They were made of stout trees bent almost parallel to the ground with some huge boulders balanced on the limbs and the tip of the trees secured to the earth by a strong vine. But meanwhile, the other kingdom had been building some similar war machines. And they could hurl the castle-crushing boulders just as far. Soon, everyone was spending the whole day looking around his respective kingdom for big trees and big rocks. Sometimes the rocks and trees were found nearby. Sometimes they couldn't be found at all, and then the kings of the smaller countries obtained both trees and rocks by trading something cheap for them like human dignity or valuable land. But finally everyone had the wondrous war machine. This was a bad situation . . . each day the prime ministers would order the guards of the machines to take a few practice swings at the vines with sharp swords. There was always the chance the swing might be carried too far... soon the Eastern and Western kingdoms realized this. They knew that the trees had to be allowed to grow straight and tall again and the boulders dropped in the ocean. Both the big kingdoms wanted to do just this, but they didn't trust each other enough to act alone. "Why do you want war machines?" they asked the smaller kingdoms in an effort to clarify their own problem. The answer always was the same. "War machines mean respect!" This, the big countries decided, was tragic—anyone who had the war machine thought he had respect, too. And this was all the smaller nations really wanted anyway... respect. But the big kingdoms knew respect really meant other things. Things like having enough oxen to till the fields and having enough grain to feed the people. Most of the small countries were not as well off as the Eastern and Western kingdoms in this respect. Yet these countries wanted to be treated as equals since they had war machines too. The whole idea was foolish. There was only one thing to do: both large kingdoms conferred on the problem. "What we'll have to do," they decided, "is shape our castle-crushing boulders into grist stones for our flour mills. Maybe these other kingdoms will do the same—we hope." Worth Repeating And, things turned out just the way they hoped. Soon everyone was well-fed. Then, everyone found it easy to respect everyone else... At least that's the way Mother Goose tells it. At least that's the way Mother Goose knew — Dan Felger My greatest pleasure when a young English instructor was polishing my brilliance in front of a captive audience. And when some student made an error-especially one that received a wide audience-I thrust myself forward, and with acid voice or pen dipped in vitriol I had the student skewered. I possessed everything then but the quality that makes a bright young man a teacher-understanding.-Q. P. Banes Short Ones The Chinese Communist dove of peace may be flying high these days—but it's still roosting in Mr. Nehru's backyard, D.F. . . . Communism, Mr. K. boasts, will put a car in every man's garage—apparently garages aren't too popular in Russia.-D.F. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extinction 711 news room Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Sundays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ray Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT John Peterson and Bill Blundell ... Co-Editorial Editors THE PEOPLE letters to the editor No Apology Wanted Editor: Editor: I was about to send my first letter to the editor congratulating the Kansan and Ralph Wilson on the editorial, "A Record Questioned," when I read the editorial appearing the, following day, "Apology to Joe." Charles Martinache Pittsburgh junior * * * South Shall Sing As far as I am concerned the apology was completely unnecessary and a waste of time, effort and space. The first editorial actually discussed the situation with which the University is faced: an "incompetent" police force. However, the apology referred to the force not as "incompetent" but as having, "no adequate facilities." It would appear that if this is actually the case, and it may well be, then the force should not be referred to as the Campus Police department, or even as those "responsible for traffic and security." Instead, the name given them should be fitting, perhaps, as suggested in the first editorial, "traffic directors and ticket givers." In conclusion I might add that I sincerely hope that further editorials in the Kansan will follow the style indicated in "A Record Questioned" and that no further "Apology to Joe" editorials waste your space. Consequently, many pedestrians are forced to run, one way or the other, to avoid being hit. Once again, it is this agility that prevents accidents, not the "competent, but under-manned police force." Concerning directing traffic, the apology lauded Chief Skillman and his staff for their fine record in campus automobile accidents. May I suggest that the major reason for lack of injuries in traffic accidents could very well be the agility displayed by many of the students attempting to cross Jayhawk Boulevard between classes. Once drivers on campus leave the corner where the "traffic directors" are controlling the flow of traffic they seem to be completely ignorant of the fact that there are "campus police." By the same token it appears that the "police" are ignorant of the fact that there are drivers any place on the street except where the "traffic director" is. According to unconfirmed reports, there now exists in certain quarters of that section of the nation known as the South an undercurrent of sentiment that all Yankees are not all bad. I do not wish to argue the various pros and cons of this proposition, but only to remark a rather interesting item which may relate to it. That the motivations of this man—one John Brown—were worthy is questionable (the often seemed driven less by love for the Negro than by a profound hate for mankind in general), but that he was an insane, brutal, bloodthirsty terrorist there can be no doubt. If Brown were indeed an excellent It concerns a letter in the Jan. 12 production of the UDK which set up as a shining example of patriotism, fairness, justice and morality a certain gentleman who was hanged in the state of Virginia slightly over one century ago. Editor: example of Yankee patriotism, fairness, justice, and morality, it is no wonder the southern states seceded from the Union; William Sherman would have been their hero. Of course, I prefer to interpret this sentiment about Brown as the product of an individual rather than that of Kansans in general (who must have more in their long history to boast of than one lunatic). But one must sympathize with a stunned Southerner of the time who, listening to rampant Northerners sing "John Brown's Body" with a righteous fervor, had to think the worst. Perhaps, even now, we are not always all right, and perhaps — just perhaps — all Southerners are not really all bad. Gerald Prager Cincinnati, Ohio, junior No Heart Editor: You are businessmen first and, possibly, Americans second. You have answered a question which you are not even aware of. You know who you are. If you admit that national feeling is significant, in these times, you must adhere to that which is yours. "All men are created equal." It is a cliche by now, but cliches exist because they best express something. (This particular one is, in theory, our foundation.) This election year was fraught with the cry "We, as Americans, must gird ourselves to the challenge of the Communist world." The pity was, few took time to examine what it meant to be an American. The question overlooked is, then, will I lose business if I serve the wrong people? For some, the answer has been a fearful "yes." The choice is taken. Thirty cents for your beer, then, and you can drown in it. The movement of the cash drawer means more to you than the best of the heart. Terril H. Hart Mission senior Rao Recalled Editor: All of us here in the University Library are delighted that the poetry of our good friend P. Gangadhara Rao has recently been receiving due recognition in the Kansan. We'd like, however, to make one small correction in the record and thereby proudly claim Mr. Rao as one of our own colleagues. In fact he came to KU not as a student but as a cataloger in the Library after completing his professional training at the University of Minnesota, and then two years later he returned to practice his profession in his own country. It's easy to understand why many people thought he was here as a student because Mr. Rao thoroughly enjoyed the friendliness and the social facilities of the Kansas Union. As some of his poems indicate, the Lawrence community unhappily did not readily offer him much of an opportunity for social life. In light of recent happenings it is interesting to recall that Mr. Rao's most poignant poem on the matter of segregation was based in an incident at a local "tavern." I still remember the distress with which he came to see me following that initial experience. Robert Vosper Director, KU Library --- Page 3 Cuba Accuses Six Of Anti-Castro Plot HAVANA—(UPI)—Six U.S. citizens accused of being members of a force trained in the United States to seek overthrow of the government of Fidel Castro were captured while trying to land by boat in Cuba, the government press said today. The six men, all said to be former U.S. Army or Air Force men, were accused of trying to link up with "alleged counterrevolutionaries" in Pinar Del Rio, Cuba's westernmost province. James W. Drury, associate professor of political science, has accepted temporary appointment as a visiting associate professor with the University of Southern California for duty in Lahore, Pakistan, from February to September. Prof. Drury Accepts Pakistanian Post Prof. Drury's major responsibility will be to work with the faculty of the University of the Punjab in establishing a training program in public administration. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication, not posting any notice. The Daily Kansas Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. German Ph.D. Reading Examination. Sat., Feb. 11. Candidates must sign up between Jan. 25 and noon. Feb. 3 in 306 Fraser. TODAY Foreign Students: A representative of the United States Internal Revenue Service will be in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at 3 p.m. to discuss the preparations for a major budget reform and to make the necessary preparations for leaving the United States. Petry House 4 p.m. Browsing Room Kansas Union. Harold Orel, assoc. prof. of English will read miscellaneous Victorian Humorists. Phi Delta Kappa. 6 p.m. Kansas Union Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St John's, Church, 13th. & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Cemetery. East follows. 8:45 a.m. Canterbury House, Hotel Mathematics Department Lecture and Coffee. Coffee, 3:50 p.m., 113 Strong, Lecture, 4:15 p.m., 103 Strong. Dr. Don Morrison and Dr. Joe O. Hankin, Sandia Corporation. Problem of the Mathematics Research Department of Sandia. Corporation." Jewish Religious Services. 7 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Philosophy Club 4. p.m. Sunflower Room, Kansas Union, Alfred Lande, professors enter campus, physics, Ohio State university will present "Dualism: Science and Hypothess." Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 829 Mississippi Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call VI 2-0292 for more information or a ride. Death Rate Drops NEW YORK—(UPI) — The accident death rate at ages 65 and over has decreased from 224 per 100,000 in 1949 to 164 in 1958—more than 25 per cent in less than a decade. Falls are still the leading cause of accidental deaths in this age bracket. Motor vehicle accidents rank second with fires and burns third. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals THE CUBAN NEWSPAPERS THE CUBAN NEWSPAPERS said the men were part of a group trained by former Cuban Sen. Rolando Masferrer under the "protection of (Allen) Dulles" Central Intelligence Agency." Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Informed sources said the men were believed to have been seized sometime ago but that the announcement was delayed to build up the revolutionary regime's "case" against the United States on the eve of President-elect John F. Kennedy's inauguration. THE GOVERNMENT CLAIMED the Americans contended they had landed in their boat because they were "lost." But it said the men identified photographs showing Miami, Fla. "training grounds" for anti-Castro forces. It was also claimed that the group jettisoned weapons when they sighted Cuban naval vessels approaching. The cabinet decreed today that employees of the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo who do not live on the base must get special government passes to travel to and from work hereafter. PERSONS AFFECTED by the order — about 3,200 of the Base's 4,000 Cuban employees and probably some American civilians — will be required to get their passes from Guantanamo City authorities within 10 days. Hodges Approved As Commerce Head WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Former North Carolina Gov. Luther H. Hodges today won unanimous approval by the Senate Commerce Committee to be Secretary of Commerce in the Kennedy administration The order was one of a number of minor anti-American measures approved at a night-long cabinet meeting that adjourned before dawn. The Committee vote was 17-0 for the 62-year-old Hodges, who will be the oldest member of President-elect John F. Kennedy's cabinet. Pre-Enrollment Set For Music Students Pre-enrollment has been announced for juniors in music education. Elin K. Jorgensen, professor of music education requested that juniors sign for an appointment for pre-enrollment at the music education office between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Friday, and between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. Saturday. The KU Experimental theatre production of T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral" goes into production February 23-25 The production will be given in the Trinity Lutheran Church at 13th and New Hampshire. Tickets must be picked up at the University theatre box office prior to arriving at the church. No tickets will be sold or reserved at the church. Eliot's Play Set in Church The cast includes: Moses Gunn, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student, in the role of Thomas Becket; John Heckworth, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student, as first Priest; Gene Baily, Neodesha sophomore, as second Priest; Larry Solter, Kansas City, Mo., junior, as third Priest; Glenn Cochran, Raytown, Mo., freshman, as first templet-knight; Larry Sneegas, Lawrence senior, as second templet-knight; Bob Bettcher, Willmette, Ill., freshman, as third templet-knight; Paul Ackerman, Colby freshman, as fourth templet-knight; John Welz, St. Louis, Mo., junior, as the herald. The chorus of the women of Canterbury include: Lee Bethea, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; Sara Maxwell, Columbus, Mo., junior; Judy Mayhan, Emporia sophomore; and Janet Sue Pepper, Newton freshman. The production is directed by Ron Loch, Oklahoma City, Okla., graduate student, and the assistant to the director is Laura Earnshaw, Shawnee graduate student. Dominican Republic Truck Imports Cut University Daily Kansan WASHINGTON — (UPI)— The United States today announced a ban on exports to the Dominican Republic of trucks, parts to be used for trucks, crude oil, gasoline and some other petroleum products. The Commerce department said shipments from the United States to the Dominican Republic of these items would be blocked "in furtherance of U.S. foreign policy and pursuant to the Jan. 4 resolution of the Council of the Organization of American States." GOPs Oppose Changes In Rules Committee WASHINGTON — (UPI) House Republican leaders took a unanimous stand today against a Democratic plan to liberalize the House rules committee by enlarging its membership. The plan, drafted by Speaker Sam Rayburn and approved overwhelmingly by Democratic members at a party caucus yesterday, is designed to smash a threatened rules committee roadblock against key measures on President-elect John F. Kennedy's liberal legislative program. THE REPUBLICAN policy committee, comprising 27 key GOP members, approved without dissent a resolution assailing the plan as an effort to "pack" the committee. Republican whip Leslie C. Arends, Illinois, said the "great preponderance" of the 174 GOP House members would follow the committee's recommendation and vote against the Democratic move to enlarge the rules group from 12 to 15 members. He declined to forecast the outcome. "THERE IS NO JUSTIFICATION for a change," said Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis., chairman of the GOP policy group. Rayburn is said to be counting on picking up at least 20 Republican votes when the issue comes to the House floor, probably next week. He needs these votes to offset defections by an as yet undetermined number of Southern members who intend to back rules chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va., in opposing the plan. Mental Hospital Cut Criticized TOPEKA A — (UFI) — Dr. George W. Jackson, director of institutions, disapproved of Gov. John Anderson's budget recommendation to cut off the mental hospital building fund levy for a year. "We have no assurance," Dr. Jackson said, "it will last for only a year. Once those guys (educational officials) get their snout in the trough, you'll never get it out." Anderson told newsmen that he was merely "shifting the emphasis" for a year. He said the Division of Institutional Management does not have plans for new construction, while the institutions of higher learning are in dire need of more buildings. In Stock- "WONDERLAND BY NIGHT" LP by Bert Kaempfert On Hi-Fi and Stereo BELL'S MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 DAVE BRUBECK C. F. H. WILSON DON'T BE SHORTSIGHTED Support your CAMPUS CHEST February 13-18 DAVE BRUBECK CONCERT With Paul Desmond on February 19 PLAN NOW TO ATTEND BLOCK SALES FEB. 8 Individual Ticket Sales Feb. 9 $1.50 PER SEAT — RESERVED Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 19, 1961 An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS? We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming, but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books. Used Books-What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get? At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester. With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used. | You paid | We buy back | Current Patron refund | Total you get back | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | For New Book $5.00 | $2.50 or 50% | .35 or 7% | $2.85 or 57% | | For Used Book $3.75 | $2.50 or 66 2/3 % | .26 or 7% | $2.76 or 73 2/3 % | What About Books No Longer Used at KU? During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at KU. The best offer he can make on good current books is about 25% of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at 45% of the current list price. The extra 5% allowed the stores is for freight costs which actually means the store pays him the same price, 50% list, that it pays the students for used books. What Do Other Book Stores Do? The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books. What Are Old Books Worth? We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future. An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber. Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library. New Books We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20. With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks. We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books. Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so. The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report. From Each Dollar Income: Paid to Manufacturers ... 72.7c Operating Expenses ... 17.2c Patronage Refund to Customers ... 9.1c Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ... 1.0c Total ... 100 cents Net Income ... 0. KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE - Thursday, Jan. 19. 1961 University Daily Kansan Dean Taylor Finds Europe Enjoyable During Christmas vacation, Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Eleanor Hawkinson, assistant to the dean of women, went to Europe. Page 5 "We were supposed to spend New Year's Eve at the Moulin Rouge in Paris." Miss Hawkinson said. for either of us. Dean Kay wrote, "We were only on the continent for 16 days and saw only four countries so it was a quick trip." One of the most interesting features of the trip were the two girls who went with Dean Taylor and Miss Hawkinson. They were the 12-year-old daughter and 13-year-old niece of George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "The parents of a KU student learned that we would be in Paris and invited us out to dinner while we were there." Miss Hawkinson said. MISS HAWKINSON commented that the girls enjoyed the trip very much but that at one point they became tired of European cooking. THE GROUP spent Christmas day in Madrid, Spain, and then went on to Paris for New Year's day. During the trip they visited Spain, Portugal, France and England. "The plans were changed at the last minute and we went to the Mont Marte where the artists are. We ushered in the new year in a little Parisian cafe there." "They gave us the choice of a Parisian restaurant or the American Officer's Club. On the girls' insistence we went to the Officer's Club where we could get some real American cooking." Burgalars Even Take Stove WATSONVILLE, Calif. —(UPI)— Retired farmer John Kareczz and his wife returned from a two-month vacation yesterday and found that their house was no longer a home. BOTH MISS Hawkinson and Dean Taylor agreed that the trip was very interesting but it was over too fast. Burglarls had taken almost everything, including the kitchen stove. Karchesz told police that even the rugs were rolled up—apparently ready for removal. Poe is our most overrated writer Malcolm Sturdley PETER L. WILSON Sally Pringle Delta Gamma Ready for a Rainy Day? You will be—in one of our raincoats. And for this tiny price — $11.98 C COACH HOUSE Clubhouse For Town and Country Plaza K.C. Blue Ridge K.C. KU Campus Lawrence Plans for New Gym Indefinite (Editor's Note: This is the last in a articles on Robinson Gymnast.) .um.) By Linda Swander Plans for a new gymnasium at KU are so far in the future that an estimated cost of the building has not been made. The Board of Regents has outlined a building program up to 1970. Any additional construction on campus must be approved by the state legislature upon request of the Board of Regents. A STUDY MADE by James Gunn, administrative assistant for University Relations, estimates that the enrollment at KU in 1970 will be 16,657. This estimate is based on national figures on college population throughout the United States. Unless new gymnasium facilities can be arranged there will be approximately 200 intramural basketball teams trying to play on two basketball courts. At the present time there are 142 men's teams. Articles in newspapers and magazines have stressed the importance of physical skill and fitness among the young adults of today. With a gymnasium built to accommodate only 2,500 to 3,000 students, in 10 years KU will not be able to offer students a chance to develop physical skill and fitness. 'THE GREATEST need at the present time is for a classroom building," Chancellor W. Clarke Wesoe said in commenting on the need for a new gymnasium. Chancellor Wesco said he was aware of the need for additional physical education facilities. When Allen Field House was built in 1952 a new gymnasium was considered but the money for it was not available, he said. "Other departments in the University have suffered from the enrollment increase. Classes are being conducted in army barracks behind Strong Hall. The art department has poor facilities," Chancellor Wescoe said. THE CHANCELLOR suggested that the ideal place for a classroom building would be on the present location of Robinson Gymnasium. The gymnasium occupies one of the primary locations of the campus. Any future plans for the present gymnasium would have to include expansion. The present gymnasium occupies all the space available at its present location. Chancellor Wescoe implied that the logical place for a gymnasium would be in the vicinity of the field house and outdoor playing fields. THE CONSTRUCTION of a classroom building seems to depend upon a new gymnasium. Looking into the future, this is how the KU administration would like to arrange for the new buildings. Through an appropriation by the state legislature for a new gymnasium and for a classroom building both problems could be solved. A new gymnasium could be constructed on a site near the field house and a new classroom building could be built on the present site of Robinson Gymnasium. Rocky Enter Transit Strike NEW YORK—(UPI)—Gov. Nelson A Rockefeller summoned negotiators for 660 striking jogboatmen and 11 affected railroads to his offices today to press for a settlement of a 10-day-old walkout he described as "one of the most serious New York has faced in a long time." Rockefeller stepped into the strike situation after Mayor Robert F. Wagner tried and failed yesterday to work out a compromise in a similar meeting at his official residence, The governor emphasized he has no real power to settle the interstate labor dispute, which is subject to federal authority, except the power to rally public opinion. The strike, which has crippled access to New York by rail and cut into the metropolis' food supplies, threatened to harass additional hundreds of thousands of persons later today if an expected heavy snowfall materializes. I'll just use the standard font to represent the text. The image shows two men in a business setting. One man is holding a telephone, and the other is seated. The background is neutral with no distinctive features. The text at the top of the image reads "THE FOUNDER OF THE ABBEY." Loren Gergens briefs two of his salesmen on new telephone services for business customers. "I DIDN'T WANT TO BE STOCKPILED" When Loren Gergens was working for his B.S. degree in Business Administration at the University of Denver, he had definite ideas about the kind of job he wanted to land. He was determined to profit from the experience of several of his friends who had accepted promising jobs only to find themselves in "manpower pools"—waiting to be pulled into a responsible position. "I didn't want to be stockpiled," Loren says. "That's no way to start." From his first day challenges were thrown at him thick and fast. First, he supervised a group of service representatives who handle the communications needs of telephone customers. Then As a senior, Loren talked to twelve companies and joined The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Company, an associated company of the Bell Telephone System. he served as manager of several telephone business offices. In these jobs Loren had to prove himself on the firing line, make right decisions and carry them through. He knew his next jump depended on only one man—Loren Gergens. In July, 1960, he was made Sales Manager in Boulder, Colorado. "I'm on the ground floor of a newly created telephone marketing organization. And I can tell you things are going to move fast!" Loren says. "It's rough at times, but hard work is fun when you know you're going somewhere—in a business where there's somewhere to go." If you're interested in a job in which you can be your own prime mover—a job in which you're given a chance to show what you can do, right from the start—you'll want to visit your Placement Office for literature and additional information. D. R. "Our number one aim is to have in all management jobs the most vital, intelligent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find." FREDERICK R. KAPPEL, President American Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL PYRAMID WASHINGTON D.C. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 19, 1961 Betas Move Into Top Notch in IMs Last night's intramural basketball games brought a series of one-sided scores that started with Beta Theta Pi beating Alpha Kappa Lambda 73-34 in Fraternity A play. The Alpha Tau Omega team continued with the one sided scoring, defeating Tau Kappa Epsilon 54-30. Sigma Chi and Phi Kappa Theta played the only close game with Sigma Chi winning 52-46. In Independent B games AAA beat Battenfeld 53-16, Cisabs beat the Gunners 50-21 and the Slugs beat Navy 32-23. Chemistry and Carruth & O'Leary were awarded forfeits over AFROTC and Concordia. In Fraternity C play Phi Delta Theta #2 beat Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1, 32-16, and Beta Theta Pi #6 downed Kappa Sigma, 29-12. Also Sigma Chi #3 beat Sigma Phi Epsilon 2, 42-26. In the only scheduled game in Independent C, the Medics were given a forfeit win over Jim Beam when Jim Beam failed to have enough players to start the game. IN TUESDAY NIGHTS games Beta Theta Pi Fraternity A basketball team took over top spot in their division by beating Phil Delta Theta, the previous top team. 53-49. Also in Fraternity A Lambda Chi downed Alpha KappaLambda in an overtime period, 38-34 and Pi Kappa Alpha was awarded a forfeit over Phi Kappa Psi. Tuesday night's highest scoring game was in Fraternity C play as Beta Theta Pi #2 beat Delta Chi 54-24. In other Fraternity C games Delta Upsilon #3 beat Theta Tau 29-17, Phi Gamma Delta #5 beat Phi Delta Theta #5 27-18, Phi Gamma Delta #4 beat Phi Delta Theta #4 23-16 and Phi Gamma Delta #2 beat Phi Delta Theta #3 29-26. Also Sigma Nu #2 downed Phi Kappa Psi #2 30-28, Tau Kappa Epsilon #1 beat Alpha Tau Omega #3 36-3, Sigma Chi #4 beat Sigma Nu #1 25-18 and Sigma Chi #2 downed Theta Chi 41-26. Sigma Chi #5 was awarded a win over Alpha Epsilon Pi due to a forfeit. INTRAMURAL STANDINGS FRATERNITY A DIVISION I Beta Theta Pi 4-0 Phi Delta Theta 3-1 Lambda Chi Alpha 2-2 Phi Kappa Psi 1-3 Pi Kappa Alpha 1-3 Alpha Kappa Lambda 1-3 DIVISION II DIVISION III Sigma Phi Epsilon ... 3-0 Phi Gamma Delta ... 2-1 Kappa Sigma ... 2-1 Delta Chi ... 1-2 Sigma Nu ... 1-2 Delta Tau Delta ... 0-3 Sigma Chi ... 6-0 Alpha Tau Omega ... 4-1 Delta Upsilon ... 3-2 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 2-2 Phi Kappa Theta ... 1-4 Tau Kappa Epsilon ... 1-4 FRATERNITY B DIVISION I DIVISION II Phi Delta Theta ... 3-0 Sigma Nu ... 3-1 Triangle ... 3-1 Lambda Chi Alpha ... 2-1 Phi Kappa Psi ... 1-2 Tau Kappa Epsilon ... 0-3 Sigma Chi ... 3-0 Theta Chi ... 3-1 Beta Theta Pi ... 2-1 Delta Tau Delta ... 2-1 Sigma Pi ... 1-2 Delta Sigma Phi ... 1-3 DIVISION III Phi Gamma Delta 2-0 Alpha Tau Omega 2-0 Kappa Sigma 1-1 Pi Kappa Alpha 1-1 Phi Kappa Tau 0-2 Kappa Alpha Psi 0-2 DIVISION IV Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 2-0 Delta Upsilon ... 2-0 Sigma Phi Epsilon ... 1-1 Alpha Phi Alpha ... 1-1 Alpha Kappa Lambda ... 0-2 Acacia ... 0-2 INDEPENDENT A DIVISION I Hawks ... 2-1 Joseph R. Pearson No. 1 ... 2-1 The One ... 2-1 Carruth - O'Leary ... 2-1 GDIA ... 1-2 Joseph R. Pearson No. 3 ... 0-3 DIVISION II Hawks ... 3-0 Bo-Jets ... 2-1 Joseph R. Pearson No. 2 ... 1-2 Templin ... 1-2 Delta Functions ... 1-2 Tortfeasors ... 1-2 Bill Dotson was chosen captain of the 1961 KU cross-country team last night at the annual cross-country banquet in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. DIVISION III Cross Country Teams Honored Ace Pearson ... 3-0 Stephenson ... 3-0 Jolliffe ... 2-1 Battenfeld ... 1-2 Pearson ... 0-3 Foster ... 0-3 Mills has been named to both the NAAU and NCAA All America teams on the basis of his fifths in both the four mile NCAA championships and the 10,000 meter race in the NAAU championships. Senior Billy Mills, the Big Eight individual champion, was voted by his teammates to receive the Julius Marx's Captain's Trophy as the honorary captain of last fall's squad. INDEPENDENT B DIVISION I Chemistry ... 4-0 AAA ... 3-1 Templin ... 3-1 Carruth - O'Leary ... 2-2 Concordia ... 2-3 Battenfeld ... 1-4 AFROTC ... 0-4 DIVISION II Cisabs ... 5-0 Ringers ... 3-1 Gunners ... 2-2 Slugs ... 2-2 Joseph R. Pearson ... 1-2 Navy Blue ... 1-3 Ace Pearson ... 0-4 PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Deacon Phillip of the Pittsburgh Pirates was the winning pitcher in the first World Series game ever played. He beat Cy Young and the Boston Red Sox, 7-3, on Oct. 1, 1903. First Victor NEW YORK — (UPI) — Babe Ruth struck out an average of four west Conference football team in a times for every 25 official at-bats during his big league career. Even Babe Struck Out Also honored at the dinner was the undefeated freshman squad which won 14 postal meets last fall. The Kansas freshmen also won the first national postal championship which is sponsored by "Track and Field News Magazine." Allan Carius, Cicero, Ill., placed second in the national meet and first in the Big Eight postal which the freshmen also won. He was selected the honorary captain. Seven members of the freshman squad were given miniature gold track shoes symbolic of their Big Eight conference championship. Patterson to Sign Title Bout Contract NEW YORK — (UPI) — Heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson and Sweden's Ingemar Johansson are scheduled to sign the official contracts today for their March 13 "Rubber" title bout at the Miami Beach, Fla., Convention Hall. Johansson, who arrived in New York from Sweden earlier this week, will leave immediately to begin training in Florida. Patterson has been training at virtually full speed for the last month. Patterson, 26, of Rockville Centre, N. Y., lost the title on a third-round knockout to Johansson on June 26, 1959 but became the first man ever to regain the heavyweight crown when he kayoed the Swede in the fifth round of their return bout last June 20. Missouri Picks Three Jayhawkers Kansas was named the best defensive opponent and three Jayhawker football stars were selected by the Missouri Tigers yesterday on their all-opponent team. Halfback Bert Coan, center Fred Hageman and guard Elvin Bashem were first team selections by the Tigers. Bashem tied for one of the guard spots with Bill Popp of Penn State. On the second team from Kansas were All America quarterback John Hadl and halfback Curtis McClinton. Olympic Reason ROME — (UPI) — The Olympic symbol of five interlocking rings of blue, yellow, black, green and red represent the five continents of the world, and at least one of the colors is found in the flag of every nation Winning Golfer NEW YORK — (UPI) — Gene Sarazen is the only golfer who has won these five big events: The U.S. Open, the P.G.A., the Masters, the British Open, and the P.G.A. Seniors Championship. Winning Golfer smartly styled imported look! Continentals SUPERBLY CRAFTED BY FREEMAN $14.95 A to D to 13 Black or Brown Two continents team up to bring you this outstanding shoe! From Europe comes the slender distinguished styling . . . topped off with the American tradition of expert craftsmanship, luxurious leathers, and wonderful feeling comfort. ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers MAKE YOURSELF COMFORTABLE ... WEAR HYER All-Kangaroo ELITE BOOT SALE Hyer's Annual JANUARY FACTORY CLEARANCE - COWBOY BOOTS - WELLINGTONS - HUNTING BOOTS - SQUARE DANCE SHOES SAVE UP TO 50% C. H. HYER & SONS, INC. Olathe, Kan. Open 9-5 Mon.-Sat. University Daily Kansan Page 7 A. B. C. CAROLYN GRIESEL Griesel-Boyd Engagement Told Miss Griezel attended the University of Kansas last year and is presently employed at Hallmark Cards in Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Griesel of Kansas City announce the engagement of their daughter, Carolyn, to Richard Boyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Boyd of Columbus. Mr. Boyd is in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Two Campus Pinnings Are Announced Wees-Adams Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority recently announced the pinning of Ann Wees, Prairie Village senior, to Don Adams, Abilene senior and member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. The pinning was announced by a skit presented by Miss Wees' sorority sisters. A party at the Stables followed. Sigma Nu fraternity announces the pinning of William Monty, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore, and Miss Paula Roscoe. Miss Roscoe is a student at Washburn University at Topeka. * * Roscoe - Monty Linings of shoes protect both the feet and the shoes. They may be all leather or fabric in the forepart and leather in the heel area. Fabric linings should be closely woven to hold shape, unsized and treated to resist perspiration, fungus growth or mildew. For comfort, linings must be perfectly smooth and have no wrinkles. R & R Used Furniture 9th & Maine We Buy and Sell Clean Used Furniture SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Students! Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free Open 24 hrs on Duty Brakes Relied Thursday. Jan. 19. 1961 Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-Pacs of all kinds Picnic Supplies Delta Gamma sorority recently elected spring semester officers. They are Judy Coffman, Topeka junior, president; Brenda Morris, Caney junior, first vice president; Sally Pringle, Kansas City, Mo., junior, second vice president; Carol Cline, Wichita sophomore, scholarship chairman; Sherry Scogin, Prairie Village junior, rush chairman; Janet McIntosh, Chapman junior, social chairman; Lois Fruedenthal, Overland Park sophomore, corresponding secretary, and Joyce Campbell, Abilene sophomore, recording secretary. Delta Gamma ... On the Hill... LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt. VI 3-0350 Also elected were Carol Betlock, Leoti sophomore, treasurer; Deane Roche Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, house manager; Sharon Dobins, Lawrence sophomore, activities chairman; Judy Fitts, Topeka sophomore, junior representative to standards board; Mary Kay Manrose, South Bend, Ind., junior, rituals chairman; and Pat Batt, Algonquin, Ill., cultural chairman. * * Foster Hall Foster Hail recently elected spring semester officers. They are Bill Huttsell, El Dorado Springs, senior, president; Bob Dizelbiss, Kansas City senior, vice president; Gary Richards, Rock River, Ohio, junior secretary; and Dennett Crawford, Wichita junior, treasurer. Also elected were Larry Moore, Topeka junior, social chairman; Stanley Seidel, McPherson sophomore, scholastic chairman; Russell Woody, Hill City freshman, intramurals chairman; Bob Dizelbiss, Kansas City senior, song leader; Robert Everly, Salina sophomore, publicity chairman, and Ted Childers, Wamego junior, political chairman. Alpha Tau Omega . . . Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe were recently honored by a tea at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house. Chancellor Wescoe is an alumnus of the fraternity. Among the guests attending the tea were fraternity and sorority housemothers and presidents, faculty members and chapter alumni. Miss Mary McKnight, Alma senior, and Miss Mary Nell Wood, Salina junior, both members of Pi Beta Phi sorority, assisted Mrs John Skie, Alpha Tau Omega housemother, as hostesses. Sigma Chi Sigma Chi fraternity recently elected its spring semester officers. They are: Joe Morris, Emporia senior, president; John Reiff, Wichita senior, vice president; Roger Hall, Coffeyville junior, secretary; Floyd McHenry, Newton sophomore, corresponding secretary; John Krizar, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, sergeant at arms; and Dave Norris, Winfield, sophomore, historian. Kappa Sigma The Kappa Sigma fraternity pledge class recently held a semiformal dinner and dance at the chapter house. Music was provided by the "Starliners." Chaperones were Mrs. Edna Stewart, Mrs. Annella Ankrom, Mrs. H. W. Jenkins, and Mrs. Wilfred Shaw. Sigma Gamma Tau --be in style every season of the year. Because she would be in style, however, she would be one of the 45 million women shopping or working in peach-colored sheath dresses and peach - colored pointed - toed shoes. Sigma Gamma Tau, aeronautical engineering honorary society, recently announced new officers for the spring semester. Officers are A1 Fleming, Bartlesville, Okla., senior president; John Porter, Kansas City, Mo., senior, vice president; and Wilbur Jorgenson, Greenleaf, senior, secretary-treasurer. Those who pledged and their sororites are Sandra Smith, Wichita sophomore, and Sandra Shrout, Leawood sophomore, both Alpha Delta Pi; Nancy Borel, Falls Church, - Va., sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Barbara Bunich, Overland Park sophomore, Ruth Ann James, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Second semester open rush pledge bids were recently given to 12 girls. The pledging climaxed two weeks of dinner dates to the sororities for the girls. Twelve Pledge In Open Rush Martha Jones, Timken sophomore, Patricia Morrison, Wichita sophomore, and Susan Olson, Topeka sophomore, all Alpha Chi Omega; Carolyn Shepherd, Lawrence sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi; Nancy Evans, Prairie Village freshman, Anne Sutherland, Iola sophomore, and Joanne Dodge, Salina sophomore, all Delta Gamma. Fashion Conscious Female Faced With Frustration By Donna Engle In these days of knee-length skirts, pointed-toed shoes, and dyed-to-match outfits, the American female is frustrated constantly. She never knows whether next month will bring shoes with even more pointed toes and needle-thin heels or shoes with square toes and block-like heels. She never knows if she will dare leave her home next month in a now stylish pumpkin dyed-to-match skirt and sweater, for by then "pineapple yellow" might be the color worn when stylishly clad. She never knows if fashion designers will require her to become an imitation Audrey Hepburn or Jayne Mansfield, (Granted it takes more than the clothes to be an imitation Mansfield or Hepburn.) If she wishes to end her frustration, she has two alternatives. She can follow a "dress a season" plan which would allow her to be stylishly dressed at a minimum cost. Following this plan, she would visit her favorite department store and inquire about the season's newest dress styles and colors. She could purchase a stylish peach-colored dress and accessories to wear during the season and a new lounging robe. She could plan her week's activities so she could wear the peach-colored outfit for five consecutive days. On the sixth and seventh days she could plan to remain at home in her robe so the dress could be sent to the cleaners (unless she can find a cleaner that specializes in one-hour service). By following the "dress a season plan," each American female could By becoming a non-conformist, she would not have to remain in her home two days a week waiting for a clean dress. She would not feel distressed when she reads that waistlines are going down, although she has not finished paying for the dress with the waistline which was up. Nor would she be left holding the "sac." If she does not desire to follow the "dress a season plan," she has another alternative. She can become a non-conformist and buy and wear clothing which suits her figure and personality, although it may not be the latest fad. The American female no longer will be frustrated when she decides for herself if she wants to be one of the 45 million women in the peach-colored sheath dresses or one woman in an apple-red princess style dress amid the sea of peach-colored sheaths. Leather and Fur Teammates Leather and fur show up as teammates in both dressy and casual coats and jackets. Among the most popular furs are Canadian lynx, civet cat, raccoon, fox, Norwegian blue fox, mink, leopard, and beaver. They are shown with smooth, crushed, and sueded leathers. In lower-priced brackets, wool shearling is used for lining waist-length jackets or car coats with brushed leather exteriors. PARSONS JEWELRY Serving the community with quality products for 60 years 725 MASS. VI 3-4266 SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! NOW IN PROGRESS 1961 clearance sale! 843 Mass. diebolt's FAMOUS SUITS BRANDS were $39.95 NOW $31.61 were $50.00 NOW $39.61 were $60.00 NOW $48.61 were $65.00 NOW $53.61 were $69.50 NOW $55.61 one group FAMOUS SPORT COATS BRANDS were $30.00 NOW $24 61 were $35.00 NOW $28 61 were $37.50 NOW $30 61 were $39.95 NOW $31 61 FAMOUS JACKETS BRANDS were $14.95 NOW $10.61 were $18.95 NOW $13.61 were $23.95 NOW $17.61 were $26.95 NOW $20.61 were $32.50 NOW $24.61 FAMOUS DRESS SHIRTS BRANDS while they last! values to $5.00 1/2 Off! SAVE! SAVE! 1961 clearance sale! SAVE! FAMOUS CORD SUITS BRANDS Extra Special! Were $32.95, NOW $22.61 FAMOUS TOPCOATS BRANDS were $32.50 NOW $21.61 were $35.75 NOW $23.61 were $45.00 NOW $30.61 were $50.00 NOW $33.61 were $55.00 NOW $38.61 were $60.00 NOW $43.61 FAMOUS SWEATERS BRANDS Entire Stock 1/3 Off! FAMOUS CAR COATS BRANDS were $22.95 NOW $15.61 were $27.95 NOW $18.61 were $39.95 NOW $26.61 were $35.00 NOW $23.61 FAMOUS SPORT COATS BRANDS while they last! were $19.95 NOW $12.61 FAMOUS CORD SUITS BRANDS Extra Special! Were $29.95, NOW $19.61 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 19. 1961 MR. MERCHANT: Even if you could shout your sales story from the rooftops of Lawrence for 24 hours. .. ... ...You couldn't reach nearly as many college students as the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN does in one hour Every weekday afternoon beginning about 3 p.m., students pick up their copies of the University Daily Kansan. And you can believe they really READ the Kansan... from the first page to the last...news, editorials, and advertisements. The point we're trying to make is this: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN IS THE ONLY WAY TO REACH THE PROFITABLE CAMPUS MARKET. No other medium can even approach the Kansan's campus coverage. When you place an ad in the Kansan you can be sure that you are getting little if any waste circulation. We think you'll find, as many already have, that Kansan advertising is very profitable for you. Why not give the Kansan a try? Just call VI 3-2700, extension 376, and the Business Manager will call on you. Or if you wish, write to University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, University of Kansas. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Business Office "The surest way to reach the campus market." A B A we n The can't seduc TI we w cream A to me graph dren "J pictu thung pect vinci aften M week curta dolls wour D awai S ment open B not y coul leave The cent child met, day. Thursday, Jan. 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan page 9 Ad Men Are Clever But Can't Do All Well By Carol Heller It is easy to understand why people resent advertising men. Ad men make us lose our sense of will power. They convince us we need new cars. They send us running downtown to clothing sales when we really can't afford to buy any new clothing. They entice us into buying seductive perfumes. THEY FORCE us to pass up cherry pie and whipped cream so we will be pencil-slim for the modern fashions. They subject us to creams and lotions and powders in search of beauty. And ad men accomplish these things effortlessly. When it comes to medical topics, they are still skillful. It is simple to show a photograph of a child with polio. People instantly recognize crippled children with their braces and wheel chairs. But we sympathetic with ad men in their problem of trying to depict an intangible thing such as a mental illness victim. THEY HAVE many ideas, but none of them are convincing. For instance, the picture of a beautiful young woman embracing a child is often used to illustrate a mental health advertisement. "The Mentally Ill Can Come Back," reads the caption. But the picture of the mother and child is a loser. It could portray anything. The little girl probably was throwing a tantrum at the prospect of being left with a babysitter. She might have been convincing her mother that she should stay up and watch television after her father ordered her to bed. Another illustration frequently used for mental health advertisements shows a father and five little children standing on the porch watching the mother, suitcase in hand, walk up the sidewalk toward them. The caption reads, "The Mentally Ill Can Come Back," but again, the picture could be interpreted many ways. MOST LIKELY, the mother has been away on vacation for a week and the family eagerly awaits her return. Inside the house, curtains have been torn down, ashes swept under the rug, lipstick dolls drawn on the walls, jam hurled at the ceiling and pajamas wound around the washing machine wringer. Dishes are stacked to the ceiling. No wonder the family eagerly awaits Mother's return. Still another illustration frequently used to convey the agony of mental illness victims shows a woman with disheveled hair, wide opened eyes and a look of screaming horror on her face. This advertisement could mean anything. It could be the expression the mother assumes when she walks into her chaotic household after her family greets her on the porch. Or maybe the chocolate fudge just boiled over while she was trying to answer the telephone and the doorbell and change the baby's diaper and keep the twins from running the bathtub over. Perhaps her husband came home with lipstick on his collar. She might have just seen a spider. She might have even just sat on a tack. SOMETIMES WE see an advertisement showing a nude figure huddled up miserably on a bed. People who have experienced Kansas in August would never think of a mental illness victim when they see this advertisement. The ad men would have no problem in portraying mental health illness if they could but employ music. If they could record "New Orleans," Revel's "Valse Espagnola" and Rachmanioff's "Murder Prelude" all at the same time, everyone would understand immediately the painful confusion of the mentally ill mind. But unfortunately, or fortunately, the advertising people have not yet discovered a way to use music in their advertisements. They could write pages of descriptive copy, but no one would read it. This leaves them but one alternative: abstract art. The picture of a harassed-looking woman can be interpreted many ways, but there is only one way to interpret a Jackson Pollock painting. Get the message? State Aid for Blind Lagging The educational needs of 80 per cent of the visually handicapped children in Kansas are not being met, a KU researcher charged today. Dena Motley, research assistant in the bureau of child research, told United Press International there also is "serious question as to whether the services now being rendered are best meeting the needs of the children who do receive such services. She said Kansas ranks in the lowest third among the 43 states with community programs for education of blind children along with sighted children in the public schools. Miss Motley said the two local programs, undertaken two years ago in Prairie Village and Wichita, serve only 8 per cent of the blind children in Kansas. She said specialists are agreed on the desirability of educating such students in regular schools for the blind in their home communities. Estimates indicate more than half the visually handicapped children in Kansas live in 12 counties, each having 16 or more visually handicapped children. Miss Motley said more than one third of these are concentrated in Wyandotte, Johnson, Sedgwick and Shawnee counties. BEGINNING OF THE MONTH NEW KANSAN AD STAFF—The new advertising staff of the UDK for the spring semester was named today by the Kansan Board. From left to right are: Richard Horn, Kansas City, Mo., senior, classified advertising; Milo Harris, Chanute senior, advertising manager; John Massa, Kansas City, Mo., senior, business manager; Marlin Zimmerman, Lawrence senior, national advertising manager; Bill Goodwin, Independence senior, promotion manager, and Tom Brown, Lawrence senior, circulation manager. The new staff members will begin duties Feb. 6. UDK Ad Staff Sets Sales Record Mark Dull, Kansas City senior and retiring business manager of the University Daily Kansan. announced the fall 1960 retail sales staff has broken the all-time retail sales record. This year's retail staff sold 2,500 column inches more retail advertising than the previous record set last fall, a substantial $15\%$ increase over the previous record. The last record, previous to 1959, was set in 1955. Children's Theatre Starts Kansas Tour The K. U. Children's Theatre production of "Greensleeves Magic," an original folk tale by Marian Jonson, moved lock, stock and sets to Wandotte High School in Kansas City last week. The show played to over 1800 per performance during its fourperformance run in Kansas City bringing the total audience to over 10.000. The company of 23 actors and actresses did all of their own stage crew work. Three lighting technicians and one sound technician were the only extra members of the company. Jed Davis, director, said one of the principal reasons for the tours of the Children's shows is the opportunity for people in the theatre to adapt to less advantageous playing conditions. On Saturday the company will again move, this time to Wichita. Berlin to be Defended By U.S., JFK Says BERLIN — (UPI) — President-elect John F. Kennedy pledged in a message to Berlin published today that the United States would fight if necessary to defend West Berlin. Kennedy said, in the message published in a special issue of the "Berlin Illustrated," that a strong stand on Berlin and a strong U.S. policy toward Russia were the two essential elements needed to restore the unity of Germany. TOUCH LIFT A CAR TEXACO MARFAK LUBE JOB To insure quieter, smoother over-all car performance give your car a Marfak Lube job. BOB HARRELL TEXACO 9th & Miss. VI 3-9897 THE RETAIL STAFF members are Milo Harris, Chanute, Bill Goodwin, Independence, Mike McCarthy, Prairie Village, Dick Horn, Kansas City, Warren Haskins, Kansas City, and Duane Hill, Chanute, Rudy Hoffman, Hutchinson, is the Advertising Manager. All are seniors. Mark Dull was a member of the fall 1959 retail sales staff that set the previous retail advertising sales record. He led that staff with an individual sales record. He was promotion manager of the UDK before accepting the position of business manager. He has served on the Kansas Board for two years. "The position of Business Manager of a daily collegiate newspaper is good on-the-job-training for the college student. It gives him a chance to flex his muscles in coping with the every day problems of running a newspaper profitably," he said. "IT GIVES HIM a chance to apply the knowledge received in advertising courses." Dull attended the All Collegiate Press Convention in Chicago during Thanksgiving. There he was able to compare the campus newspaper and its problems first hand with college newspapers all over the nation. Dull is also currently the president of the Kansas chapter of Phi Kappa Psi. Curing With Kindness SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — (UPI) — Insurance man Ray Waddell and glass firm owner E. B. Vester destroyed a bandit's nerve with a kindness during a holdup. The pair talked the bandit out of his gun, bought him some groceries, gave his dog some food and the bandit $2. Television is the new oplate of the masses—James Slinkard 1 Sale of MEN'S SHOES LOAFERS And OXFORDS In BROWN And BLACK ROBLEES—Regularly 12.95 to 15.95 Now ------------------ 8.90 to 12.90 PEDWINS—Regularly 10.95 and 11.95 Now ------------------ 7.90 and 8.90 McCoy's 813 Mass. McCoy's VI 3-2091 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 19, 1961 Around the Campus KU Musicians On N.Y. Radio The University of Kansas department of music theory and composition has been invited to participate in a New York City radio station's annual American Music Festival next month. Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory, is head of the department. Symphony No. 2 for Orchestra by John W. Pozdro, associate professor of music theory, will be performed over station WNYC at 2 p.m. (Lawrence time) Feb. 16 by the Eastman School Orchestra. The symphony was first performed by the Eastman group in 1958 at the 28th Annual Festival of American Music and has since been performed by the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra. Dr. Pozdro has been a member of the theory staff of the School of Fine Arts since 1950. He received his Ph.D. degree in composition from the Eastman School of Music in 1958 Theatre Plays Class Projects Scenes from plays being presented at 3 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Experimental Theatre are class projects. Discussion with the audience may follow presentations. Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama, said these scenes in this actor's workshop are semester projects of the directing class. Each student chooses a 15-minute scene from the play of his choice. Tryouts for the parts and rehearsals have been held during the last six weeks. When the productions are ready at the end of the semester, they are presented in the Experimental Theatre. If time permits, there will be a discussion in which the audience is encouraged to participate, Prof. Goff said. Wescoes to Visit Alumni in Dallas Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe will be special guests of the Dallas KU Alumni Club next week. The Chancellor and his wife will be in Dallas on Jan. 25 to attend a dinner and party in his honor. It is reported that elaborate plans are being made to welcome the Chancellor and Mrs. Wescoe to the Fort Worth and Dallas area so that the couple may be introduced to the KU alumni there. The Dallas KU Alumni Club is one of many such clubs of KU alums in major cities throughout the United States. The alumni office reported that in March the Chancellor will attend similar functions in Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and New York City. Goodwill Industries to Meet More than 80 directors and other personnel of the Goodwill Industries of America, Inc., will meet here Feb. 5-8 for a conference on services to the mentally retarded. The national conference marks the intensifying of efforts to set up educational programs giving the mentally retarded background for employment. Air Force ROTC Officers Promoted Maser to Speak At Faculty Club Edward A. Maser, director of the KU Museum of Art, will speak at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Faculty Club on "Collecting and Using KU's Art Treasures." He will illustrate his talk with color slides. They are Capt. Elbert H. Austin, instructor of senior-year cadets and Capt. Kenneth L. Shook, instructor of sophomores. Both men have been with the Air Force since 1942. Two University of Kansas Air Force ROTC officers have been selected for advancement to the grade of major. VARSITY MOW SNOWING! Van Heflin "Under 10 Flags" And "Day They Robbed The Bank of England" Captain Austin came to his present position in 1958, and Captain Shook joined the ROTC staff in 1959. The University of Kansas will sponsor a Certified Public Accountants Examination Review Course in Law and Auditing beginning Feb. 11 in Topeka. The first English translation of a standard source on ancient mythology has been published by the University of Kansas Press. It is "The Myths of Hyginus," translated and edited by Mary Grant, emerita professor of Latin and Greek whose retirement last June ended a 39-year teaching career at KU. The book includes a detailed Introduction on Hyginus and his work as well as notes on the individual myths. Newton to Instruct CPA Review Class The course will be presented by the Kansas Society of CPA's and is designed to prepare candidates for the law and auditing sections of the CPA examination to be given May 17-19. Sports Car 'Rallye' Planned for Feb. 5 Mary Grant Has Work Published All persons interested in sports cars are invited to attend the February rallye of the Jayhawk Sports Car Club, to be held Sunday afternoon. Feb. 5. Additional information may be had from John Cook, Lawrence fifth-year architecture student, at VI 3-778. Instruction will be conducted by Sherwood W. Newton, associate professor of business. Television is shooting itself to death. J. C. Vogt GRANADA MOW SHOWINGI Jerry Lewis In "CinderFella" Technicolor --- A WHOLE NEW WORLD OF EXCITEMENT IS YOURS They turned a lost island into an exotic paradise! A WHOLE NEW WORLD OF EXCITEMENT IS YOURS They turned a lost island into an exotic paradise! WALT DISNEY'S SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON Actually filmed amid the spectacular splendor of the tropical West Indies! STARRING JOHN DOROTHY JAMES JANET MILLS·McGUIRE·MacARTHUR·MUNRO TECHNICOLOR' WALT DISNEY'S SWISSFAMILY WALT DISNEY'S WALT DISNEY'S SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON STARRING JOHN DOROTHY JAMES JANET Actually filmed amid the spectacular splendor of the tropical West Indies! COMING SATURDAY! Born in the city "Stone Fruit Farmer" by JOHNAN WYTS ALL ANDERSON KEN NANKINIAN LOWELL S HAWLEY BY BULUZA VENTURA TROPHOTO, INC. © Walt Disney Production GRANADA (TNEATRE) ... telephone VIKING 3-5783 THE CALL GIRL BY DR. HAROLD GREENWALD IT POSSIBLE TO BRING SUBJECT MATTER LIKE "GIRL OF THE NIGHT" TO THE MOTION PICTURE SCREEN? BY STICKING TO THE FACTS OF A DELICATE THEME BY FOLLOWING IN PURPOSE AND EXECUTION THE PREMISE OF THE WIDELY-DISCUSSED BEST-SELLER BY MAKING AUTHENTIC, EXCITING AND UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT BY RECOGNIZING THAT THE STORY OF BOBBIE WILLIAMS HAS A MEANING FOR YOUNG WOMEN EVERYWHERE ADULTS ONLY! No One Under 16 Admitted 1 ENRING ANNE FRANCIS LLOYD NOLAN KAY MEDFORD FORM in hor STARTS SUNDAY! Varsity THEATRE ---- Telephone VI 3-1645 Expert scripts service rates. VI 3-5 EXPE tentio etc. N rates. Typis curate ground and r Exper Call Hicks Thursday, Jan. 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of more than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25 for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the office by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST SLIDE RULE in or around Union. $5 reward. Call KU 376. 1-20 SORORITY PIN, lost on campus Wednesday, Jan. 11. If found, please call Martha Abel, VI 3-6060. 1-20 LOST AT STABLES — light colored trench coat with yellow lining, zipper inside. Phone VI 2-1266 after 5 p.m. 1-20 Lost or Stolen: Pink French coin purse. Contains I.D. drivers license, and about Please return to Strong Hall II Office or call, Sharon Jelen, VI 1- 1340. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard calls Call VI 31-5218. Experienced typist — will type theses, papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI, 0558. EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson. VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable price. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. Experienced typist — will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-148. tt TYPING; Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-858. U Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, VI 3-1097. tf TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, theses, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3-9554. tf Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-2876. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409.tf Experienced typist — term papers, manuscripts, reports and dissertations. Prompt service, neat accurate work, reasonable time. Robert Cooke, 2000 R.I., Cif II 3-7485. Experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter. Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate, neat work. Phone Mrs. Marilyn Hai, VI 3-2318. tlf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Not, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, V1 3-8379. Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf --- Expert typing and secretarial services. Hicks, VI 3-5320 or Mt Hicks, VI 2-0111 FOUND WRISTWATCH—men's. Phone VI 3-5500 ifter 6 p.m. 1-19 RAPIDOGRAPH No. 1 fountain pen. Owner call J. L., III 8-3092. 1-20 FOR RENT ROOMS FOR MEN: One block from Union. New furniture and bath facilities. Single. $35; double $25. Call John Long, VI 3-6798 after 3 p.m. 1221 Iored. 1-20 APARTMENT — Three large rooms, private bath and private entrance. Furnished or unfurnished. Ideal for a couple or two or three boys. Inquire of Raymond Anderson. Anderson Furniture, 812 N. H., VI 3-2044. 1-20 WE RENT almost anything — See or call us for your rentals. Anderson Furniture, 812 New Hampshire, VI 3-2044. 1-20 THREE BEDROOM HOME adjacent to campus. Garage and basement. Immediate possession. call VI 3-3425. If no answer, call VI 3-3666. 1-20 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street bath. Bath. Rent reduced. Phone VI 3-9776 VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily, $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf FURNISHED APARTMENT, well-furnished, three rooms and bath. 900 block on Indiana. Call VI 3-8316 daytime. VI 3-9027 evenings. 1-20 NICELY FURNISHED apartment—three children or pets. 1400 Abbott. 1-20 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, six baths, a bath and 4 entrances. Utilities paid. No Married. Married only. 520 Ohio. **tf** One bedroom furnished apartment for one person or rent for one person or VT 3-1141 or VT 3-6661. For Rent — Quiet, large room for men. Private bath, private entrance. One block south of KU. Phone VI 3-2339. ROOMS FOR MEN—ONE HALF BLOCK QUARTER SESSION Quiet Saat at 1301 La, or call V I S-4092. TWO BEDROOM apartment, practically new. Two blocks from campus. Automatic washer, range and refrigerator. $80. Phone VI 3-7655. 1-20 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking. Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after p. m.f. Seni-basement recreation type apartment, in quiet private home. Accommodate 2 or 3 boys. Twin beds—dressing room — private bath, private entrance. Contact Mrs. Callahan. Concession counter, Union Bldg. 1-19 Large attractive 4 room apartment. Private bath. Close to downtown and KU. Nice house, off street parking. Reasonable rent. $55 a month. Ph. VI 3-618-2000. ROOM AND BOARD next semester. Phone VI 3-4285. 1-20 LARGE FIVE ROOM furnished apartment between KU and downtown. Available Feb. 3. Call VI 3-5699. 1-20 FOUR ROOMS and bath — entire second floor — for rent to boys. All utilities paid. Close to campus. Call Zora Kemberling, VI 3-1234 daytime. VI 3-9082 after 6 p.m. 1-20 CLEAN. FURNISHED basement apartment. Large rooms, large closet. six windows. Good stove and electric refrigerator, private bath and entrance. Utility paid. Married couple only. No drinking or pets. 520 Ohio. 1-20 TRAILER SPACE, $18.50 a month, $9 a month when not occupied. Rancho Motoel. 1½ miles north of Lawrence, Hoiway 24. Call VI 3-9845. tf STUDIO APARTMENT: Completely furnished. For one or two graduate students. Two minutes from campus. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6896—1-20 p.m. LARGE, NICELY FURNISHED. quiet room for boys. Private bath and entrance. Four blocks from campus. 1617 Oxford Road, evenings or Sunday. 1-20 ROOMS FOR BOYS: Clean. quiet, convenient. Single or Double. See or call Clayton Crenshaw, first floor, 1234 Orcad, VI 3-7199. 1-20 FREE ROOM for male student. Well- furnished and very close to campus. Ex- change room for work around the house. Call VI 3-6696. 1-20 AVAILABLE for second semester—one- half block from campus. Very desirable large room, also one smaller one. In quiet house, private parking lot. Very reasonable rent. To upperclassman or graduate students. Call VI 3-6696. 1-20 ATTENTION! Individual rooms four doors from Union. Excellent cooking facilities available, clean linen 'furnished weekly'. Excellent study conditions, $20 a month. Call or stop by 1222 Miss., VI - 0418. 1-20 MODERN 2 ROOM basement apartment, outside entrance. No drinking or smoking. Also large single room for young man. Graduate students welcome. Linens furnished. See first house south of campus, 1616 Ind. 1-20 Basement apartment for boys — private entrance, utilities furnished. 1520 1-2 One-half block from Union. 1 suite of 2 rooms for 2 students, also large single room for furnished. Very resemblent. For a full n in n ent, call VI-1 6966. Private parking. Two rooms. $25 and $30. Cooking and washing privileges. Parking space. For graduate woman. VI 3-2399. 1230 Oread — next to Union. 1-20 Trailer house, 8' x 33', with wall to wall carpeting. In ideal location. Married couple only. No pets. Phone VI 3-3617. 2-13 HARP, BASEMENT APARTMENT for Workshops and entrance W 20th St. STI 3-4363 1-20 FURNISHED APARTMENT. first floor, three rooms. 1316 Kli. Utilities paid exe- ptelectricity. Reasonable rent. Marchesi VI 3-6881 or VI 2-1964 after 5:30. 1-20 MPARTMENT FOR MEN, one block from Union. Phone VI 3-6723 - 1-20 NOTICE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-9842. BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, definitions, texts and diagrams. Complete index. Excel $30.00. For your call copy V1-2 106-253. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1955 One bedroom Safeway trailer home. Equipped with a one ton tonneau conditioner, storage unit, Excelsior Room. Phone 7912 at 5 p.m. except weekends. 1-20 IEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice old, Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, phone supply plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI (350) REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in an extremely analytical and com- prehensive fashion. Mimeographed and bound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI 2-0430 after 4 p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 carat solitaire, never worn. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 Inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. STRING BASS, case, bow, electrica, amplifier hookup. Brand new condition Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-2¹ above the Catacombs below the Pizzza Hut The Pizza Hut AND The Catacombs JACKY N D C HI-FIDELITY STEREO phonograph — special closeout — one only in each color, walnut or cherry wood. Single and double piece. 20 watt stereo — brand new, priced to sell. Downtown TV, 1027 Mass. 1-20 MUST SELL! 1955 Plymouth six, overdrive. Excellent condition, laughably low price. Call Mike Stephens, VI 3-7370. 1-20 Wednesday ---- 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. "FIRE FLYS" DANCE Wednesday, Friday & Saturday Friday 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "FIRE FLYS" E TRANSPORTATION 1956 PLYMOUTH, Savoy, four-door V-8. Automatic transmission. In good condition. Call L. A. Jennings, VI 3-4920 after 5 p.m. 1-20 Saturday ___ 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "THE SHADES" RENEW YOUR TASTE FOR REAL PIZZA The Catacombs Available for Private Parties 7 Nights a Week 646 Mass. EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Columbus, Ohio, on U.S. 40. Will take two, share expenses, driving. Call Al. VI 3-9635. 1-20 BUSINESS SERVICES Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI 3-7551. tt WANTED LEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest studio, Studio 98, Missouri. Phone 3-648-8756. Mail us at: learnto舞动now.com WOMAN GRADUATE student to share modern apartment. Call VI 2-0726 after 6 p.m. 1-20 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tt DRRESS-MAKING and alterations. For- naly wedding gowns, etc. (2-363), Bridal gowns, etc. 3-5263. ROOMMATE: Female January graduate interested in sharing apartment with Kansas City, Mo. Plaza area of south, Cordorothy Bot. VIA 3-7070 or KU 376. 1-20 PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions and solutions price $4.00. For your copt call VI 2-1065. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence, Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Mod- lum or indoor. Store includes: Plants, Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything needs are included. See reuctions or department needs. Phone VI i-7291 or better still. come. Welcome. tf STUDIO GIRL COSMETICS shown in the home by trained beauty adviser. For appointment, call Louise Schlup, VI 3-2697. 1-20 CHILD CARE in my home. Call VI 3-4685, Mrs. Wiederaenga, 1403 Haskell. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS VI 3-8855 BIRD TV - RADIO STEREO 908 Mass. Expert Service - Guaranteed Quality Parts IS YOUR BATTERY "TIRED"? Let Us Give It a SLOW FULL CHARGE of New Energy (Rental Battery While We Charge Yours) We Will Check Your Generator and Voltage Regulator KOOLMOTOR 10W-30 HEW 5D CHANGE YOUR OIL TO KOOLMOTOR 10W-30 The Year-Round Type for Easier Starting The Year-Round Type for Easier Starting KLWN-Cities Service Sports Report Mon. thru Fri.—12:45 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE 8th and New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 Downtown—Near Everything FRITZ CO. △ CITIES SERVICE University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 19, 196 Dangerous Intersection Worries City Planners By Byron Klapper City planners are concerned over what is to be done at the "dogleg" intersection of 9th Street and U.S. Highway 59, Iowa St. Unlike other intersections where there is cross traffic, a person traveling west on 9th Street is required to make a right hand turn on U.S. 59 for about 50 feet, and then a left turn in order to continue on 9th Street. In order to adjust the intersection so as to eliminate the "L" in the road and replace it with a gentle curve, it would be necessary to construct a road through a gas station presently situated on one corner of 9th Street and U.S.59. This intersection has been the scene of considerable traffic congestion, especially during the morning and evening hours, and it presents a serious danger area for cars traveling in either direction. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Lawrence City Planner, told the Daily Kansan he would like to see the intersection straightened out, but he is presently confronted with numerous difficulties. A traffic light would back-up traffic and cause a blocking of the intersection which would just add to the congestion. Furthermore, there are definite requirements which an intersection must meet before the highway department would approve traffic lights, and that street does not warrant it, Williams said. Williams said the gas station owner is reluctant to let the city cut through his property. The owner suggested that traffic lights be placed at that intersection, but that would be impractical, Williams said. At present the city planners are still trying to convince the gas station owner to allow them to use his property and to compensate him for it. Williams said. ANOTHER PROJECT that the city planners are concerned with is the fact that there is one bridge across the Kansas River connecting north Lawrence with the downtown area. "The present bridge is inadequate as far as traffic goes," the city planner reported. "If traffic growth continues at the present rate we will need something to facilitate the movement of traffic in the near future." Williams suggested two possibilities: (1) Build another bridge across the river within the next ten years. (2) Widen the existing structure. (2) When the crossing is completed, The bridge now has a 30 foot roadway and five feet of sidewalks. The bridge could be widened to have a 40 foot roadway and "hanging sidewalks." IF A NEW bridge were built, it would be necessary to widen Tennessee and Kentucky Streets and make them major arteries of Lawrence. Williams explained that an artery is a road which facilitates the movement of traffic from one end of the city to the other. Tennessee St. would probably run directly into the new bridge, the city planner said. When asked about slum conditions, Raymond Wells, a KU graduate student assisting the city planner, said he did not feel one could call any part of Lawrence a slum. "In order for a slum to exist there must be crowded conditions, poor lighting and ventilation, and dilapidated buildings. There are undoubtedly houses which should be replaced or cleaned but I would not consider these places slums," Wells said. ASKED IF there were any immediate problems facing the city planners office, Wells said that there were no immediate tasks facing them. He said that Lawrence was ahead of many other communities of its size in solving its city planning problems. Keeping Ahead... Running of your household bookkeeping is easy with a ThriftCheck® Personal Personal Checking Account. You pay all bills with ThriftiChecks and - automatically — cancelled checks become proof of payment, checkbook stubs a record of expenditures. And your bill paying is done in record time tool Open your account soon at Douglas County State Bank Changes Announced In Finals Schedule The Calendar Committee announces the following changes in the final examination schedule for the fall semester of 1960: 2 p.m., Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday sequence will be examined at 1:30-3:20 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 26 instead of 10:10-12 p.m., Monday, Jan. 23. The surest ally of the educational process is the mother of a family who has discovered for herself the manifold benefits and enduring satisfactions which higher education can confer.—Erwin N. Griswold. English 1, 1A, 1H, all sections will be examined at 10:10-12 p.m. Monday, Jan. 23 instead of 1:30- 3:20 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 26. Mayor John Weatherwax made the proposal to discuss the problem. Dr. Ted A. Kennedy, one of the five commissioners, said he would prefer that human rights problems be discussed and perhaps solved in meeting rooms rather than at local business places. 900 Mass. cally in past months. About 40 KU students were involved in a sit-in demonstration last Thursday evening at Louise's Bar. Last summer, a group of students picketed a local swimming pool because Negroes were not allowed to use it. 'Rights' Group May Be Born City Manager Harold Horn said he will place discussion of the topic on the agenda for next Tuesday. Among problems would be the amount of authority such a group would have and how its members would be selected. The Lawrence City Commission this week discussed the possibility of setting up a human rights or human relations council for the city. I can see nothing objectionable in the total destruction of the earth, provided it is done, as seems likely, inadvertently- Evelyn Waugh Mayor Weatherwax said that some consideration should be given to forming such a group, in view of the recent sit-in demonstrations, picketing of business places that discriminate against Negroes and in view of letters which various groups and individuals have sent regarding these incidents. Many are culled: few are chosen. - Charles L. Whipple Two incidents have occurred lo- I GIVE UP LET'S TAKE A PIZZA BREAK GIRLS SQUARED JOB BOOK ONLY 2HW MATH 2A CMUPUS HIDZEWAY MORE LINES HOME STUDY PE. MANUFACTURER OTHER AFFILIATES V13 9111 CAMPUS VI 3-9111 FAST DELIVERY HIDEAWAY n ble in earth. likely, osen. [Picture of a man with light skin and short hair, wearing a dark suit with a white shirt. The background is plain black.] [Note: The image is cropped to just the face of the individual.] President John F. Kennedy Problem Areas for JFK Laos— VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — Communist - supported rebels attacked pro-Western forces at the strategic road junction of Sala Phou Khoun Monday, it was reported today. Pro - Western and Communist sources differed as to the outcome of the battle. Sala Phou Khoun commands the roads linking Vientiane and the 'royal capital' of Luang Prabang with the Communist-held plain of Jars. Its possession is vital to the government campaign to regain control of the plain and its important airfields. Information minister Bouavani Norasing told reporters that Red-backed troops launched an attack on the government garrison at Sala Fhou Khoun Monday. Government reinforcements arrived the next day, he said. A Communist broadcast purporting to come from Laos claimed today, however, that the road junction had fallen Tuesday after a few hours of what it called "fierce fighting." It said defeated government troops were "now fleeing in the direction of Luang Prabang." Congo— LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo — (UPI) — The United Nations has sent a strong note to pro-Lumumba authorities in Stanleyville warming them not to mistreat 12 Belgians arrested there in retaliation for the transfer of ousted Premier Patrice Lumumba to a prison in Katanga Province. Austin Selected Regents Chairman Whitley Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal, today was elected chairman of the Kansas Board of Keegans. Austin, a Republican appointed to the Board by former Democratic Gov. George Docking, succeeds another Republican as chairman. Re-election of the previous chairman, Ray Evans, had been expected prior to today's meeting. Austin, although an appointee of the former governor, has been a frequent critic of Docking. His term on the board expires next Dec. 31. A UN spokesman said the note was issued by UN chief representative Bajeshwar Dayal of India. He said the prisoners included three women. He said that when UN officials tried to intervene in the arrests, they were "told not to interfere." Europeans in the pro-Lumumba stronghold of Kivu Province today sought United Nations protection against reported terrorism against them by Congolese. Russia- MOSCOW — (UPI)— The Soviet Union welcomed the end of the Eisenhower administration today and looked to President John F. Kennedy for improvement of Soviet-American relations. Since the American U2 reconnaissance plane was downed over Russia last May 1, the Kremlin has insistently blamed the "imperialist" Eisenhower government for the world's tensions and any deterioration in U.S.-Soviet relations. "A new page in United States history begins," Trud said. "People expect a new fresh wind, bringing improved relations between the great powers, the United States and the U.S.S.R., leading to mutual understanding and cooperation." Commenting on the inauguration, the trade union newspaper Trud said "the peoples of the entire world look forward hopefully." Observers said Soviet policy now would be characterized by watchful waiting until Kennedy has indicated his official reaction to recent Soviet overtures for improved relations. HAVANA — (UPI) — Premier Fidel Castro today suspended indefinitely all pending military trials of "anti-revolutionaries," including six imprisoned Americans, in an apparent peace bid to President Kennedy, reliable sources said. Cuba- But the move came too late to save two Cuban "terrorists" from a firing squad. They were shot at dawn in grim La Cabana Prison, raising to ten the total number of executions since Sunday. Dailu hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 58th Year. No. 75 Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 Kennedy 35th President WASHINGTON — (UPI) — John Fitzgerald Kennedy began his presidency in a time of awesome troubles today by summoning the world's peoples, communist and non-communist, to "a grand and global alliance" against "tyranny, poverty, disease, and war." At 12:51 p.m., EST, 11:51 Lawrence time, Kennedy, at 43 the youngest man ever elected president and the first Catholic, solemnly took the oath of office as the nation's 35th chief executive. To the 172-year-old oath he added, as George Washington had done, the words "so help me God." Then head bared to a freezing wind in a city glittering under a seven-inch blanket of snow, he addressed himself not only to his countrymen but to "my fellow citizens of the world." The new president had begun the most solemn day of his life by attending a special mass "in honor of the Holy Spirit" at 9 a.m. Then he had ridden to the Capitol from the White House with his predecessor, Dwight D. Eisenhower who, at 70, is the oldest man ever to serve in the White House. The ceremony was slow in getting started, and he took the historic oath 40 minutes later than the scheduled time. Before and after the invocation. Kennedy made the sign of the cross. The ceremony, solemnized by four moving prayers and a moving poem read by 86-year-old Robert Frost, had its awkward moments. As the proceedings began, blue smoke suddenly gushed from the lectern. ★ ★ ★ Some observers thought they saw fire at the bottom of the lectern. A technician and a fireman crawled over the red carpet at the new president's fee, spotted the trouble, and took care of it. Frost went to the lectern with a sheaf of papers, but the strong and freezing wind blew them into disarray. He finally gave up trying to rearrange them and read his poem off from memory. 'Let the Word Go Forth—' ★ ★ ★ Selected passages from President John F. Kennedy's inaugural address: "Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans—born in this century, tempered by war, disciplined by a cold and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage—and unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed, and to which we are committed today... "To...the United Nations, our last best hope in an age where the instruments of war have far "Let every nation know, whether it wish us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend or oppose any foe in order to assure the survival and success of liberty... "To those peoples in the huts and villages of half the globe struggling to break the bonds of mass misery, we pledge our best efforts to help them help themselves, for whatever period is required—not because the Communists are doing it, not because we seek their votes, but because it is right... outpaced the instruments of peace, we renew our pledge of support—to prevent its becoming merely a forum for invective—to strengthen its shield of the new and the weak—and to enlarge the area to which its writ may run. . . "Let us begin anew—remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness, and sincerity is always subject to proof. Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate... Let both sides, for the first time, formulate serious and precise proposals for the inspection and control of arms—and bring the absolute power to destroy other nations under the absolute control of all nations. . . "With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our needs, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own. ..." "My fellow Americans, ask not what your country will do for you—ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man... Murphy Instrumental City Moves to Desegregation By Byron Klapper (Editor's Note: This is the last in the series of articles defining the problems of discrimination and segregation in Lawrence.) The recent sit-in demonstration and the actions of the Civil Rights Council this semester have been attempts to cope with a discrimination problem that has existed in Lawrence for many years. IN SPITE OF the problem that exists today, Lawrence has made great strides toward desegregation in the last decade. Most Lawrence citizens can remember the day when there was not a restaurant in the city that would serve Negroes and there was a special section reserved for them in the movie theaters. John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, related the dominant role that former Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy played in eliminating much of the discrimination in the city. "Dr. Murphy came out with sledge-hammer blows against segregation. "He spent many hours talking with theater and restaurant owners and advocating desegregation at the Chamber of Commerce. The results of his work against segregation in downtown Lawrence are plain today," Prof. Ise said. PROF. ISE said that we cannot pretend to be leaders in a democratic world unless we treat Negroes fairly. "A Negro ought to feel he is as good as anybody because he is MATTHEW B. MURRAY John Ise JUSTIN W. HILL, president of the Lawrence Paper Co. said in an interview that he did not foresee an immediate change in the attitude of individuals who now refuse to serve Negroes. Many Lawrence residents and as good as anybody. No white man knows what it means to be a Negro who never knows whether he will be insulted when he goes somewhere." he said. businessmen view the problem differently than Prof. Ise. "I don't think that passing laws will improve the feelings of people toward Negroes. Neither will the sit-ins of student groups get to the depth of the problem. You don't make friends by forcing things on people. In fact it will cause just the opposite reaction," Mr. Hill said. Mr. Hill, who employs both Negroes and whites in his firm, said that before Negroes will be accepted by whites as equals, they will have to raise their standards of living to the accepted level of the community. It is up to the Negro (Continued on page 14) Weather The weather bureau says it will be mostly fair today becoming partly cloudy by evening and locally cloudy and colder tonight. It will be partly cloudy and continued rather cold Saturday. Highs today are forecast for the middle 30s, lows tonight in the middle teens. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 Goodbye Ike Today, one of the most popular and most honored figures ever to ride across the American scene passes from the view of the public he has served so well for 50 years. Dwight David Eisenhower, the man from Abilene, soldier, statesman, author and patriot, left the house on Pennsylvania Avenue this morning to retire to his farm at Gettysburg. When Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected the 34th president of the United States in 1952 he was a popular war hero. Now at the age of 70, the oldest man to serve as President, he has still retained the immense popularity that swept him through two presidential elections despite increasing criticism of his administration. Eisenhower is one of the few presidents in American history who had the opportunity to choose between foreign and domestic policy. He has given more attention to foreign policy and let the domestic chips fall where they may. Before the first six months of his second term were over, the President was asked in a press conference whether he regretted having made the decision to seek re-election. He answered that if one did one's duty then there was no room for regret. And the preoccupation with McCarthy, the heart attack and his recovery had meant that so much during the first term had been evaded and postponed. THE ATTITUDE TOWARD THE PRESIDent was both more critical and more expectant. He had been given a great vote of confidence, and the feeling was growing that he should get on with trying to solve the problems facing the nation. Foremost among these was the issue of integration in the schools and the related question of the serious deterioration of the American public-school system. It was here that one of the Eisenhower concepts of the presidency has become most evident. The President had been urged repeatedly to take the lead in helping to ease the way toward a peaceful adjustment to the profound social change that had been decreed by the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren. An example of the Eisenhower aloofness to the job as president can be demonstrated by a statement made in September of 1955. He was asked whether he endorsed the ruling of the Supreme Court on the segregation question or whether he merely accepted it as the Republican platform did. "I think it makes no difference whether or not I endorse it. What I say is the—Constitution is as the Supreme Court interprets it; and I must conform to that and do my very best to see that it is carried out in this country." It had been a long, long time since a president of the U.S. had so narrowly interpreted his role. What was most revealing was the suggestion that his own personal opinion did not matter. It was as though the President were a distinguished spectator who would do his duty when called upon but only then. President Eisenhower has been a forceful leader in the area of the cold war. During the seven and one-half years he has been in office. Eisenhower has constantly worked to end the present world stalemate. If Eisenhower's public record had ended with his military career, it seems safe to assume that a high place of public esteem would be secure for him. But he went on to become President of the United States in a time when this office was never of greater importance for the country and the world. During Eisenhower's administration the presidency declined both in authority and prestige. The office, under Eisenhower, has resembled much more nearly what it was in the late nineteenth century, when a ceremonial president was content to let the tides of economic destiny have their way. But this is what today's majority wanted. Because of his repeated illnesses, the President has delegated perhaps more authority than any other man to occupy the White House. He has done this in part by default and in part because of his own belief and his conditioning in the chain-of-command system of the Army. The paradox, in view of his indifferent and hesitant approach to the powers of his office, is that with the overwhelming popularity he carried, Eisenhower failed to use the backing he had to act. IT IS HERE THAT THE MAGNIFICATION of the office, to which Roosevelt contributed so much with the glitter of his personality, is seen in sharp perspective. After the glamour of FDR and cult of personality that adhered to him, it was for a time, at least, something of a relief to have Harry Truman in the White House. In the popular interpretation he was just a plain, ordinary American, proving that any American boy could be president, and his popularity in the polls rose to a high point. But this did not last for long. Soon many of his fellow citizens were discovering that he was a small man, not big enough for the presidency, "just a politician." In contrast, Eisenhower was above politics, he was a big man; he stood for something. The desire, one might say, the necessity, was for a new personality, inflated by one device and another, to fit the new dimensions of war and crises, the dimensions of the big man, the leader. With his self-deprecation, his determined modesty, Adlai Stevenson ran counter to the popular desire. WHILE THE OFFICE ITSELF HAS SUFFERed a serious erosion of power in Eisenhower's tenure, the magnification of the personality is still in evidence. For his failure to use the powers of the office, Eisenhower, in the interpretation of weak and strong, must be put down as a weak president. But any assessment has also to take into account the fact that he brought to the office so little preparation for what is surely the most difficult and demanding position in the world today. The unreasoning expectations were so high in the light of a towering reputation that had little or nothing to do with politics or government. — Susanne Shaw And Again, Mr. Abels Editor: I would like to comment on Mr. Abels' editorial, reprinted in Monday's UDK. Mr. Abels has apparently missed the point of the campaign currently being waged against discrimination. The fact that there "... must be at least a hundred places in Lawrence where anyone can buy the stuff (beer) if he wants it" is irrelevant. It is not the right to buy beer that the Civil Rights Council is defending; it is the right to be served, regardless of one's race, religion, or country of origin. It is my hope also that the CRC will soon extend its activities into areas other than taverns and housing, the two main areas so far. MR. ABELS MENTIONS "numerous stories and communications that undoubtedly have been written to stir up bitterness and hatred." Perhaps I err in this, but it seems to me that Byron Klap- ... Letters ... per and the Kansan staff have done a good job of objective reporting, and there certainly has been nothing deliberately written to stir up bitterness and hatred. Moreover, the Civil Rights Council itself, in its statement of purpose, pledges to use legal and non-violent methods to achieve its goals. Incidentally — this is a bit off the subject — I do wish I had heard Mr. Abel's 'expose of "... one of the Civil Rights organizations at the University attempting to integrate the fraternities." Somehow, I knew nothing about that, even though I am both a member of a fraternity and a CRC officer. AS A FINAL POINT, I WISH to protest the use of what I shall call the "Brooklyn smoke-screen." Mr. Abels seems to insinuate that one Byron Klapper and other non-Kansans are behind all this activity. This is an example of the old "scapegoat" tactic, so successfully used by Hitler against the Jews. The idea is to pick some minority group (Brooklynites, in this case) and blame all one's troubles on it, thus directing the people's attentions away from the fact that it is actually the system which is at fault. Mr. Abels would have us believe that the activities of the CRC are evil, when actually the evil lies in the system of discrimination being attacked. And I hate to damage a nice theory, but unfortunately I am not from Brooklyn. As a matter of fact, I was born and raised in Kansas. Alan D. Latta Wichita junior Short Ones College students sometimes mature during their four-year stay. More often, they become confused and overwhelmed—R. G. Descord IKE EATON KU DAHL KAKANIGI "Boy, does that feel good!" International Jayhawker By Aqil A. Asfoor Jordan Freshman People, before getting acquainted with each other, are strangers. They see each other every day. Maybe they take meals and drink in the same place and walk in the same direction to their jobs, classes or study halls at the same time. This is the case here on the KU campus. But, despite this they are still strangers—at least in how they feel about one another. WHEN A BOY IS DESIROUS OF BECOMING A FRIEND OF a girl, he has to know her first; and, in order to do this, he needs to be introduced to her-by a friend of hers or, more often, by himself. Since the latter method is deeply concerned with psychological feelings, it should be performed most courteously and tactfully. To make this acquaintance the boy, consequently, has to seek an excuse for himself before taking the initiative of speaking with the girl for the first time. After the introduction has been made it is the boy's duty at this critical period to direct the conversational flow towards strengthening the acquaintance with the girl in a respectable manner. One of the most important steps to be taken by the boy, if he is really interested in the girl, is for him to take a fast move by politically obtaining her proper address; this will enable him to have a good control on the process of further operations pertaining to making a friendship with the girl. THE BOY, HOWEVER, IS ADVISED TO ACT SMARTLY AS to know how much interest the girl is giving him; and, therefore, he should respond to this interest; otherwise, there will be a lack of good understanding between the two of them. It is advisable, too, that the boy, at this particular stage of developing a friendship with the girl, should not display over-anxiety towards setting a date with her right away, unless she obviously implies otherwise. Another important item which the boy should take into consideration is that he should practice a great deal of respect in order to give the girl a good idea about how he feels about her. WHEN THIS HAS BEEN DONE, THE NEXT THING FOR the boy to do is to call the girl for a date or to invite her to some party where they could further their friendship. This, of course, will aid in determining to what extent their friendship could develop. Also, it will minimize the affectation of formality between the two of them, resulting in a great advancement toward their friendship. Once the boy and the girl have reached the level of a close friendship, only then, by analyzing their likes and dislikes, beliefs and common interests, will they be able to decide if anything other than this friendship will develop between them. UNIT WRITE Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. R. Represented National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT stay Miller ... Managing Editor Carol Heller, Jane Boyd Priscilla Burton and Carrie Edwards, Assistant Managing Editors; Pat Sheley and Suzanne Shaw, City Editors; John Macdonald, Sports Editor; Peggy Kallos and Donna Engle, Society Editors. Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan BANANA BREAD Page 3 the took world By Calder M. Pickett Acting Dean, School of Journalism A FEVER IN THE BLOOD, by William Pearson. Avon, 50 cents. "How many senators can you name who ever got the nomination in the twentieth century? Harding did, sure. Truman did, but he wasn't Senator when he got it. Believe me, Roberto, this is something I've studied. Senators wear the wrong toga. When a state's senator and its governor come from the same political party, it's the governor, not the senator, who controls the most patronage, and contrary to what they tell you in kindergarten, control of a state delegation is not something brought by the stork. Two years from now I want to control ours." So big Dan Callahan, fighting district attorney, makes the primary race for governor. And it's a brutal, tough, but curiously indecisive race he makes. William Pearson, when he appears unsure how to resolve an enigma, just bypasses it, the way Al Capp extricates his comic strip people when they're in an impossible mess. Pearson, as the quotation makes clear, did not have the fore-sight to see what would happen in 1960. A senator did make it, and governors were knocked off all over the country. Strange things are happening to American politics. George Leader, triumphant in Pennsylvania, had become a nonentity two years later. Pat Brown is in trouble in California. Loveless couldn't move from the state-house of Iowa to the U.S. Senate. Freeman fell in Minnesota, Docking in Kansas. There seems to be a kiss of death on the governorship these days. "A Fever in the Blood" is written in recognition of the once well known fact that one got to the White House by way of a prominent governorship. Three men have the "fever" — Callahan; a 50-year veteran of the Senate named Alex Simon who wants to cap his career in the statehouse; Sam Hoffman, a judge who keeps a silver flask in his desk and wouldn't mind having political lightning strike him. The election campaign involves a murder trial and stacked evidence, a mystery concerning how former OSS man Callahan lost a leg in Italy, a Fourth of July political picnic that is climaxed by the district attorney's car running down a Negro child, and a bribery attempt. In some ways it is a completely cynical novel. It is cynical because Pearson is telling us that one has to be cynical about politics. Even the fair-haired boy who passes for hero of this novel is making compromises at the end of the book. Are all these compromises necessary? We don't think so. In time they subvert a man, making him a Huey Long or a Bob Munson, the majority leader of "Advise and Consent." Perhaps this view is idealistic nonsense. Yet there seem to have been many great men who did little compromising—men like the heroes of John Kennedy's "Profiles in Courage." Dan Callahan, William Pearson's district attorney, has greatness in him, but not enough of it to balance the dog-eat-dog thinking that came out of his jungle-like boyhood. Pearson could have given us a tragedy of some meaning if Dan Callahan had been able to realize what had happened to him. As it is, we wind up merely hating the man, and it's hard to have compassion for someone you hate. Worth Repeating What, after all, can college teachers hope to achieve during four painfully unsettled years in the life of a student? All that can be done is to set the stage hopefully for a lifetime of study. If a student develops the habit of reading with discrimination, he may be reasonably well educated by the time he is thirty. Independent study provides an impetus in this direction. At the very least, the independent study candidates learn their way around a library—a rare skill, I might add, among young and old.—David Boroff Editor Wilson Corrected Editors An open letter to Ralph Wilson Dear Mr. Wilson; When I first read your article about the Campus Police department, I thought that a cub reporter was late with one of his assignments and scraped the bottom of the barrel. But later I found out that you held the position of assistant managing editor of the Daily Kansan. Now don't you think that a reporter in your position should have done a little more research on that article? Let's take a look at some of the facts. In your article you stated that there were a number of "unsolved crimes." First of all you mentioned a transistor pocket radio valued at $35. The person that took the radio in now in the Lawrence City Jail charged with the theft of the radio. THE BILLFOLDS TAKEN IN the second Allen Field House robbery, $146.50. The people from whom this money was taken left this money in lockers which were left unlocked. The checks taken were all cashed in Topeka and persons at the places where they were cashed were unable to remember from whom they came. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation was notified at the time of the theft to be on the lookout for these checks. Eight tickets to the Syracuse game, $28. The theft of these tickets was reported after the game. A professor's purse and contents $24. The purse was left out in the open and some Klepto took it. Can you hold the department responsible for this? A FORGER AT THE DELTA Sigma Phi house, $110. A story in your own paper reported that this man had been captured and is now in jail here in Lawrence. Yet you say that this case is unsolved! The two paintings, $2,000. In the first place the paintings were in a public room which was left unguarded by gallery officials. Anyone could walk in or out and not be noticed. This theft only took place a little over three weeks ago. What do you want, a miracle? Four-hundred programs for the Nebraska game, $100. Again the theft was reported THE NEXT DAY!! THE FIRST FIELD HOUSE robbery, $6.845. When this robbery was reported the Lawrence Police Dept., the Douglas County Sheriff, Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION started investigations. Do you expect the KU-PD to publicize this fact? A string of cat burglaries, $462. The man responsible for these is serving a jail term right now for his crimes. Items stolen from cars, $200. How many of these cats were left unlocked? If you want the answer, it is close to 8 or 90 per cent! ... Letters ... Equipment and money from various departments $100. How much of this was left out in the open? Skeleton, $150. Either the skeleton has been returned or we are the only campus in the world that has a ghost skeleton. This skeleton was returned and has been "back in school" for over a year. SHOPLIFTING IN THE BOOKstore, $2,000. Mr. J. J. Newcomb, head of the bookstore, does not hold the Campus Police responsible for the policing of the bookstore. He said it is the responsibility of the bookstore to hire a detective to watch for shoplifters. No formal complaint has ever been filed with the department. The only time they have been called in is when a shoplifter has actually been caught. There are several other factors that should not be overlooked. Many times thefts are not reported for days or even weeks after they have happened. Your paper should also be aware of the fact that there is a state law for bidding the publication of names, etc., of juveniles involved in crimes. As for the training of the men, they are right now in the process of taking classes from the Federal Bureau of Investigation on crime detection. Each year the men give up their own time to take these courses. And for most of the men this is the third or fourth time that they have done this. SO AS YOU CAN SEE THESE men are good for something besides writing tickets or directing traffic and all is not as black as you have made it out to be. Keith Conquest Prairie Village freshman I suggest that next time you "look before you leap!" On Mr. Abels In reference to the excerpt from Mr. Ed Abels' discourse on integration in Lawrence, Monday, January 16, 1951, we would like to express our opinions. First of all, Mr. Abels, the people that attend this University are men and women, not boys and girls, as you repeatedly referred to them. And, they do have mature minds in spite of your beliefs. The fact that the sit-in was not an unorganized, on-the-spot movement, but a well mannered thought-out action proves this. Secondly, it is very obvious, sir, that you do not like nor trust New York. This is your prerogative. But is not your prerogative to use this as a basis for your criticism of facts. There is also a hint that you believe that the New York students of this University have ". . . a highly organized and carefully directed scheme to stir up trouble in the University . . .." We do not believe this, and we think you should have facts before making such an implication. Your profession is one which is supposedly known for its objectiveness. At times this is accomplished. At this particular time, namely, your discourse, this is not accomplished. Also, the point in question is not the fact that there "must be at least a hundred places in Lawrence where anyone can buy a lot of the stuff (beer) if he wants it." This is a very tite observation. The point involved is that a person should be allowed to go into any public place for anything. And, lastly, you yourself said "it is unfair to the school (KU) to have the publicity that gives the wrong impression given prominence in the official school paper." This, sir, is the same thing we say to you about your article! Anthony C. Reed Hutchinson senior Jack Viola Kansas City, Mo. sophomore Stan Haywood Wichita junior Al Feinstein Long Beach, N. Y. junior . . . Open letter to Steve Hurst: New York Ain't So Hot Editor: Open letter to Sleeve Hurst. Maybe it is because I was born and raised in the benighted Midwest, but I don't see exactly what you were driving at in your letter published on 16 Jan. Your field of fire is great; you range from architecture to Castro and really do not make much sense with any of it. Your logic scarcely deserves the name. On one hand, you roundly criticize Mr. Abels for condemning New Yorkers on geographical location but on the other hand you snidely look down your nose at Midwesterners because they are "backward." To prove this contention you offer such absurd proof as clothing styles and architecture. I MYSELF, AM AN OUT-OF-state student, and I have met and made the acquaintance of both students from Kansas and from New York. With a few exceptions, I consider the Kansas students to be far superior to and more mature thinking than the self-proclaimed intellectuals from New York. Mr. Hurst, you yourself say that New Yorkers have a bad reputation. Maybe you wonder why? Although there are exceptions, they bring most of it on themselves. For the most part they are ill-mannered, uncoath, overbearing, and thoroughly convinced that New York is the center of the universe. From your letter you seem to be the epitome of this booish attitude. Well, Mr. Hurst, I have been to New York City and if the slums and the filth that I observed there are 50 years ahead of us, then I for one am happy to be "backward." Well, Mr. Hurst, these are "the facts of life" as I and some of my friends see them. And I truly hope that you don't think that we barbaric Midwesternes are "picking on you physically or mentally." David Williford David Winfield Evansville, Ind., junior Te Deum Not because of victories I sing, having none, but for the common sunshine, the breeze, the largesse of the spring. Not for victory but for the day's work done as well as I was able; not for a seat upon the dais but at the common table. —Charles Reznikoff You are young and contemptuous. If you were the sentry, you would not fall asleep— of course. Wounded you would not weep. —Charles Reznikoff One of my sentinels, a tree, sent spinning after me this brief secret on a leaf: the summer is over— forever. —Charles Reznikoff The nail is lost. Perhaps the shoe; horse and rider, kingdom too. —Charles Reznikoff MAKE YOURSELF COMFORTABLE WEAR HYER All-Kangaroo ELITE MAKE YOURSELF COMFORTABLE . . WEAR HYER All-Kangaroo ELITE BOOT SALE SHOE Hyer's Annual JANUARY FACTORY CLEARANCE O - COWBOY BOOTS - WELLINGTONS - HUNTING BOOTS - SQUARE DANCE SHOES 22 地球 SAVE UP TO C. 50% C. H. HYER & SONS, INC. Olathe, Kan. Open 9-5 Mon.-Sat. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Fridav. Jan. 20, 1961 WE'RE BEHIND YOU HAWKERS Probable Starters Kansas - (9-5) F ------- Wayne Hightower (6-8 1/2) F ... Al Correll (6-31/2) C ------ Bill Bridges (6-5 1/2) G ___ Jerry Gardner (5-11 1/2) G ___ Nolen Ellison (6-1) Alpha Delta Pi Pi Beta Phi Alpha Omicron Pi Sigma Kappa Alpha Phi Acacia Chi Omega Alpha Epsilon Pi --- • Delta Delta Delta Alpha Kappa Lambda Delta Gamma Alpha Phi Alpha Kappa Alpha Theta Delta Tau Delta Kappa Kappa Gamma Delta Upsilon Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 WRECK SILO TECH Probable Starters Kansas State — (11-2) F ___ Larry Comley (6-5) F ... Pat McKenzie (6-6) C ------ Ced Price (6-5) G ___ Al Peithman (6-1) G ___ Dick Ewy (6-0) Kappa Alpha Psi Phi Kappa Tau Kappa Sigma Pi Kappa Alpha Lambda Chi Alpha Sigma Alpha Epsilon Phi Beta Pi Sigma Chi Sigma Nu ( ) . Phi Delta Theta Sigma Phi Epsilon Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Pi Phi Kappa Psi Theta Chi Phi Kappa Sigma Triangle Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 20, 196 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Warren Haskin It was just about this time last year when we played our friends up the Kaw that they decided to give us the label "Snob Hill." To many this was enough of an insult to really pour it on our Silo Tech friends after the Jayhawkers won the first encounter last year at Lawrence, 64 to 62. It must have been forgotten fairly fast, however, because a few weeks later, the Wildcats showed no mercy as they tromped KU 68 to 57. Then came the final game, the play-off for the Big Eight championship. One year later, a new basketball season is well underway and the Jayhawkers are right where they ended last season-picked to win the championship. A few changes have taken place including the best rebounder in the league last year, Bill Bridges, turning into a top-notch scorer. One thing that is sure to happen will be one team winning by a close margin. But which team will be on top? First of all, the Jayhawkers will be facing a team that is riding a 10-game winning streak. Tex Winter's Purple hasn't lost since December 9 at UCLA. Their victims since have included USC and North Carolina, the Big Eight tournament field, and their first two league foes. Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. They went into the conference lead at 2-0 Monday when the Cowboys upset KU here. Coach Harp's team can regain the lead by winning before the two weeks for the examination break. The last meeting between the two teams was in the Big Eight tournament finals where KU lost in a bitter, 66-69 overtime contest. Secondly, the Wildcats have impressed many sports writers around the country and are currently ranked among the top 10 teams in the nation. Naturally, this means KU will go into the game the underdog. The way the picture looks right now, it would be hard to predict a KU victory. But there are a lot of little things that don't show in the main picture. They look like little dots in the background now, but before the night is over, you might be noticing more dots than ever before. A point to look for is Wayne Hightower having a good scoring night. He is in second place in the Big Eight scoring derby and a good night could move him into the leadership. Bill Bridges is currently averaging 15.6 and if he maintains this during the final 11 games of 1961, he can reach the coveted 1,600-point total attained by only 14 pervious conference players. Another little dot in the background of the overall picture is guard Dee Ketchum. This fireman has come to the rescue of the Jayhawkers many times in the past three years and tonight should be no exception. Two other guards who will have to be hot are Nolen Ellison and Jerry Gardner. KU must hit from the outside or they are doomed. Both of the hustlers are capable of hitting 20 points on a given night. Tonight has to be the night for one of them. After discussing five of the KU players, there is still one left who could mean the difference between victory and defeat. This is the regular forward Al Correll. After my rambling on here, you can see as well as I do that I don't have the faintest idea who will win tonight. But I do have a hunch . . . and that's all it is . . . that Coach Harp will be able to have pleasant memories after the game. I'll go with KU by a score of 79-74. KANSAS 55 KU'S SCORING KING—Wayne Hightower, Kansas' leading scorer will lead the Jayhawkers as they battle league-leading Kansas State at 7:35 tonight. Hightower is averaging 20.5 points per game. In Big Eight competition the 6-8 junior is averaging 22.7 points per game, the best in the conference. He needs only 12 points tonight to take over sixth place on Kansas' all-time career scoring lists. He has totaled 898 points thus far, moving past 1957 KU star Gene Elstun's total scoring mark Monday night. Sig Eps Trounce Sigma Nu Action last night in intramural basketball was light with only six games on the schedule and one of them turning into a forfeit. The most one-sided affair of the evening was Sigma Phi Epsilon's trouncing of Sigma Nu. The Sig Eps coasted to an uncontested 57-30 victory in Fraternity A division play. The closest A division battle of the night was the 36-30 win posted by Delta Chi over hard-fighting Kanna Sigma. In another Fraternity A game Phi Gamma Delta hung on to sup pass Delta Tau Delta, 57-48, in the highest scoring contest of the night. The only other competition was in the Independent C division. Botany and the Chemical Engineers were the winners of two close, low-scoring games. Botany set down the Cowards, 24-19 while the Chemical Engineers won over Phi Beta Pi, 21-16. BALTIMORE — (UPI) — Johnny Unitas, sensational quarterback of the champion Baltimore Colts, couldn't make the Pittsburgh Steelers team in 1955. K-State, NU Swim Here The Hucksters also posted a win in this division as they were awarded a forfeit over Templin. The KU swimming team will have its first home meet of the season when it takes on Kansas State and Nebraska in a triangular meet at 2:30 tomorrow in Robinson Pool. In dual meet competition with Nebraska, the KU swimmers have won nine and lost 20 meets. With K-State, the Jayhawkers have won 17 meets, lost 10, and tied one. Jeff Farrell, Olympic Gold Medal winner from Wichita, and ex-Oklahoma University star, presently holds the KU pool record for the 100-yard freestyle, with a time of 51.9 seconds. Last night in practice, All America Eldon Ward, Wichita junior, KU's ace freestyler was clocked at 50.4 seconds for the same event. Dick Reamon, Topeka junior, hit a time of 2:09 for the 200-yard butterfly, a time which betters the conference record by nine seconds, the pool record by 4.6 seconds, and Reamon's own varsity record, set at Iowa University last weekend, by 6.2 seconds. Tomorrow's meet will be the first triangular meet between the three schools. Getting Ahead 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 721 Mass. 摄影师 Cowboy The Pizza Hut HIXON STUDIO AND The Catacombs VI 3-0330 Friday 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "FIRE FLYS" below the Pizzza Hut Saturday ------ 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. "THE SHADES" The Catacombs Available for Private Parties 7 Nights a Week above the Catacombs Wednesday ---- 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. "FIRE FLYS" Wednesday, Friday & Saturday 646 Mass. EAT HERE OR CARRY OUT VI 3-9760 RENEW YOUR TASTE FOR REAL PIZZA DANCE Sport Shirts Slacks Slacks Sport Shirts - Rubber Heels TROUSERS CLIP THIS COUPON SALE ENDS JANUARY 21ST 5 Neckties 49℃ea. Beautifully Dry Cleaned and Hand Finished NOTE: No Limit—But you must bring this coupon in WITH your order. FAMILY BUNDLE 5 Lbs. Only 79¢ SHIRTS ea. 9c—PANTS ea. 29c When Included in Family Bundle Flat-Front & Jammy Chefs Finished Additional Pounds Onl Note: No Limit But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25c SHIRTS SAME DAY SERVICE 20 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $ Laendered to perfection! Starched as you like! SHIRTS HAND-FINISHED ON HANGERS 25c EACH Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES 299 pr. With Rubber HEELS val. Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES 199 With Rubber HEELS pr. $3 val. DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST Drive In and Save—Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Except Sunday 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 Friday, Jan. 28, 2024 University Daily Kenan Page 7 K-STATE EATON KU DAILY KANSAN "All right podner, draw again." New Colorado Snow Excites KU Skiers Members of the KU Ski Club expressed enthusiasm today when they read of 12 inches of new-fallen snow at Colorado's ski resorts. David Cory, Wichita senior and president of the club, reported that there were still two or three openings for the Jan. 28 Colorado ski trip. The group will spend three days at Arapaho Basin and the fourth day at Loveland Pass ski resort. For details of the trip contact Cory or the KU-Y. The real New England Yankee is a person who takes the midnight train home from New York.—Leverett Saltonstall The Kansas Jayhawkers will be seeking revenge tonight in Allen Field House as they face league-leading Kansas State before an expected capacity crowd. Jayhawkers Seek Revenge Tonight Against K-State KU lost to K-State, 69-63, in the finals of the Big Eight tourney in December and now face the Wildcats with a 2-1 mark in conference play. The Wildcats have posted a 2-0 record. "K-State has fine overall balance and reserve strength. They usually play about eight men and there is little difference in ability among those eight." Harp said of the main strength of the visitors. "Kansas State is a real fine team, one of the better teams in the country," said Kansas Coach Dick Harp. The Wildcats, who are riding a 10 game winning streak were ranked fifth on the latest United Press International poll. The Wildcats' season mark is 11-2. In its first two league games Kansas State has held its opponents to an average of 57.5 points per game which is the second best in the Big Eight. "Tex Winter (K-State coach) feels this is the best defensive team he has had," said Harp. "Winter sticks with a zone more than any other coach in the conference and uses it as a basic defense. They may start in a man-to-man but will probably switch to a 1-3-1 zone if they get into trouble. They also use a full court press if neces sary. But, none of these things should bother us if we are playing a good game," said Harp. The leading score for the Wildcats is 6-5 junior forward Larry Comley with 19.1 points per game. Of Comley, Harp said, "He is a great shooter. He shoots frequently which is uncommon for a K-State player but if we can freeze him out of the shots he wants to take we will be in good shape. "One of the main differences from last season's K-State squad is the improvement in the backcourt play, Al Peithman, a 6-0 sophomore, is one of the top youngsters in the league and he is a good shooter, Dick Ewy, 6-0 junior, is also a fine guard," said Harp. The other two starters for the Wildcats should be Ced Price, 6-5 senior center, who is averaging 16.2 points per game and 6-5 forward Pat McKenzie. Pirates Sign Vern Law; Cubs, Indians Add to List United Press International The World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates continued to line up their key stars without fanfare or trouble today when 20-game winner Vern Law returned his signed contract in the mail. Law is the sixth member of the World Champions to agree to terms for 1961. Winner of the Cy Young Award as the Major League Pitcher of the Year, Law received a big boost estimated to put him in the $30,-600-a-year class. Terms of the contract were not revealed but Law's quick acceptance indicated he had received a substantial increase. Law was the biggest "name" to agree to terms Thursday but the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs The Indians announced the signing of shortstop Woodie Held, catchers John Romano and Valmy Thomas and pitcher Mike Lee, and the Cubs announced the signing of seven players bringing their satisfied list to 32. also were active in the pen and ink league. The players signed by the Cubs were Lou Johnson, Ben Johnson, Sam Drake, Nelson Mathews, Walt Bales, Moe Morhardt and Keri Hubbs. Lou Johnson, Drake and Mathews played briefly for the Cubs last season. There is only one real "statesman" once in a blue moon in one nation and not a hundred or more at a time—Adolf Hitler What careers are available?" "Where would I work?" "What would my first assignment be?" I A A DOOR IS OPEN AT ALLIED CHEMICAL... AND THIS MAN CAN GIVE YOU THE FACTS You'll want to note the date below. Our interviewer will be on your campus then, ready to answer your questions about a career in the chemical industry . . . and to point out the advantages of pursuing that career at Allied. You'll find it worth your while to get the facts about a company that has twelve research laboratories and development centers, over one hundred plants, and a nationwide network of sales offices. It's worth learning all you can about a company that makes over three thousand different products—chemicals, plastics, fibers-with new ones coming along every year. Come prepared to ask our interviewer what you want to know: What kinds of jobs? Which products? What opportunities for advancement? Which location? FOR THE CAREER FACTS YOU NEED SIGN UP NOW FOR AN INTERVIEW! BASIC TO AMERICA'S PROGRESS Allied Chemical 61 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 6, N.Y. DIVISIONS: BARRETT • GENERAL CHEMICAL • NATIONAL ANILINE • NITROGEN • PLASTICS AND COAL CHEMICALS • SEMET-SOLVAY • SOLVAY PROCESS • INTERNATIONAL ALLIED CHEMICAL CAMPUS INTERVIEWS A future for: Chemists, Chemistry Majors, Engineers (Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical) Page 8 University Daily Kansan Fridav. Jan. 20. 1961 Beat Those - Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners 10th & N. H. VI 3-3711 - Lawrence National Bank 647 Mass. VI3-0260 - Granada Theatre 1020 Mass. VI 3-5788 - Varsity Theatre 1015 Mass. VI 3-1065 - Sunset Drive-In RFD1 VI3-9172 - Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. VI 3-7474 - Moore Burger Drive-In 1414 W.6th VI3-9588 - Campus Beauty Shoppe 1144 Ind. VI 3-3034 KU 54 Friday. Jan. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 e Wildcats! 54 - ACME Dry Cleaners & Laundry 1111 Mass. VI3-5155 - Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. 202 W. 6th VI 3-5511 - Griffs Burger Bar 1618 W.23rd VI 3-9347 - 1st National Bank of Lawrence 746 Mass. V13-0152 - Hadl Motor Company 318 E.17th VI 3-4850 - Cooper-Warren Mortuary 1020 N. H. VI 3-0261 - Estes Studio & Photo Service 924 Vt. VI3-1171 KU 1 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 20, 1661 Military Might Marks Big Parade WASHINGTON — (UFI) — The United States amassed a dazzling display of military power today for President John F. Kennedy's triumphal procession to the White House after solemn oath-taking ceremonies at the capitol. Mighty missiles, aircraft, battlefield weapons and 16,000 members of the armed forces — all symbols of the nation's power to prevent war—were mobilized for the three-hour march down Pennsylvania Avenue. Thirty-two thousand civilian participants ranging from high-ranking federal and state dignitaries to high school bandsmen and Boy Scouts were on hand with 40 colorful floats and 40 military and civilian bands to complete the pageantry. STARTING POINT of the parade was the capitol plaza — the scene of Kennedy's swearing in. Its climax was Kennedy's special reviewing stand in front of the White House. "World Peace Through New Frontiers" was the theme. It derived from Kennedy's acceptance speech at the nomination convention last summer. There were precedent breakers for an inaugural parade. For the first time, 50 states were represented, marking the admission of Hawaii and Alaska. Marking scientific advance was an assembly line space vehicle that had been orbited and recovered. Four years ago, there was no successful U.S. space vehicle in existence. Leading the parade as grand marshal was retired Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin, the famed World War II Frost's Inaugural Poem Tailored To'New Frontier WASHINGTON — (UPI) — In 1942, when the United States was engaged in the biggest war in its history, Poet Robert Frost wrote a 16-line poem entitled "The Gift Outright." It was about the American Revolution, and its theme was the need for a people to expend themselves in defense of a land before it really is theirs. President-elect Kennedy asked the white-haired New England poet to read "The Gift Outright" at the Inaugural ceremony. Frost agreed that the poem was appropriate to the advent of a new administration which is pledged to the conquest of "New Frontiers," and to a period in history when the United States again faces grave international dangers. Here is the complete text of the poem: "The Cift Outright" "The land was ours before we were the land's. Before we were her people. She was ours In Massachusetts, in Virginia. But we were England's, still colonials. Possessing what we still were unpossessed by. Possessed by what we now no more possessed. Something we were withholding made us weak Until we found out that it was ourselves We were withholding from our land of living. And forthwith found salvation in surrender. THE NEW PRESIDENT, escorted by the 100-member U.S. Army Band and 3rd U.S. infantry troops in dress blues, was near the vanguard of the procession in an open car with his wife Jacqueline and Sen John Sparkman, D-Ala. paratrooper, selected by Kennedy in contrast with the custom of assigning the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. Such as we were we gave ourselves outright Following was Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson accompanied by his wife Ladybird, his daughters Lynda and Lucy Baines and Speaker Sam Rayburn. (The deed of gift was many deeds of war) Others in the presidential section and joining Kennedy in the presidential reviewing stand were Chief Justice and Mrs. Earl Warren, former President and Mrs. Harry S. Truman, Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, a joint congressional committee, cabinet members, Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and the chiefs of the military services. To the land vaguely realizing westward. But still unstoried, artless, un-enhanced. THE OLD GUARD Fife and Drum Corps, dressed in Revolutionary War uniforms, brought up the rear of the presidential escort. The service academies sent 8,650 cadets, 1,750 from West Point, 3,800 from Annapolis, 1,750 from Colorado Springs, 600 from the Coast Guard Academy and 750 from the Merchant Marine Academy. Such as she was, such as she would become." In the exhibition of military night, there was displayed for the first time a half-scale model of the 2000-mile-an-hour B70 bomber. The millions along the oarate route and around television screens saw a 60-ft. model of the Minute Man intercontinental ballistic missile, a Polaris missile, a bomber- The Air Force paraded the X15 rocket ship designed to carry man to the fringes of space and the Navy both its A4D Eantam bomber and huge F4H Phantom interceptor. carried "Hound Dog" missile and a Thor space booster. A TRANSIT navigation satellite, of the type already successfully used, gave an idea how ships and aircraft may be guided in the future. Of special sentimental interest for Kennedy was a 35-ft. boat marked PT-169. Carried on a truck bed, it was identical with the motor torpedo boat in which Kennedy almost was killed when it was rammed by a Japanese destroyer in 1943. In the PT-169 were his former crew members. The Army displayed an array of missiles ranging from its Nike-Zeus anti-missile missile to its new Pershing ballistic weapon for supporting battlefield troops. Most of the marching military men were attired in dress or street uniforms. But the Second Airborne Battle Group of the 82nd Airborne Division, which Gavin once commanded and which won 3,000 purple hearts in World War II, marched in full battle dress. Even blued steel bayonets were used. THE 2ND BATTALION of the 8th Marine Regiment, a distinguished unit of the Pacific fighting in World War II. also was in combat-ready uniform. Military and civilian elements were alternated in the parade in an effort to prevent the procession running on into the night as it did in the two Eisenhower inaugurals. Parade chiefs reasoned that the military units would keep up the precise pace and compel civilia marchers to do the same. The contingent representing Kennedy's home state of Massachusetts included the 115-member Boston Latin School Band and Color Guard, representing the oldest high school in America. Kennedy's father and grandfather attended the school. The Massachusetts Military Academy sent a cadet corps from Boston and the 26th (National Guard) infantry Division in Cambridge sent its band. Capital Catholics Eat Meat Today WASHINGTON —(UPI) — President John F. Kennedy and all other Catholics in Washington were permitted to eat meat today even though it's Friday. Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle granted a special dispensation from the usual rule of abstinence from meat on Fridays in recognition of the fact that inauguration day is a legal holiday. The dispensation applied to all Catholic visitors to the city as well as residents of the Archdiocese of Washington. "Wife-Approved" MOVING PACKING STORAGE ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & STORAGE VI 3-0380 LARRY SMITH ETHAN SMITH JR. WIFE APPROVED MOVES North American WORLD-WIDE MOVING IBM WILL INTERVIEW FEBRUARY 9-10 IBM Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degrees are invited to discuss opportunities in: Marketing and Sales Engineering and Science This is a unique opportunity to find out about the many career opportunities at IBM. The IBM representative can discuss with you typical jobs, various training programs, chances for advanced education, financial rewards, and company benefits—all important factors that affect your future. SOME FACTS ABOUT IBM An Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one of the exceptional growth rates in industry. It has been a planned growth, based on ideas and products having an almost infinite application in our modern economy. Diverse and Important Products: IBM develops, manufactures and markets a wide range of products in the data processing field. IBM computers and allied products play a vital role in the operations of business, industry, science, and government. Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratory and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie and Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vermont; Lexington, Ky.; San Jose, Calif.; Bethesda, Md.; and Rochester, Minn. Headquarters is located in New York City with sales and service offices in 198 major cities throughout the United States. The Accent is on the Individual: No matter what type of work a person does at IBM, he is given all the responsibility he is able to handle, and all the support he needs to do his job. Advancement is by merit. The areas in which IBM is engaged have an unlimited future. This is your opportunity to find out what that future has to offer you. Call or stop in at your placement office to arrange an appointment with the IBM representative for the date above. If you cannot attend an interview, write or call the manager of the nearest IBM office: Mr. W. H. Jennings, Branch Manager IBM Corporation, Dept. 882 1400 Baltimore Avenue Kansas City 41, Mo. BA 1-0575 IBM You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 11 Allies Welcome End of Lull in U.S. Policy Making By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst As a new administration takes over in Washington, there also ends a period which United States' allies dread and abhor. It is that period of interregnum between the November elections and inauguration day in which the U.S. allies feel that United States policy drives and that major decisions are put off while an old administration waits to turn over leadership to a new one. To be sure, firm steps have been taken in the last two months. THE EISENHOWER administration moved to slow the flight of gold from the United States. It broke off relations with Cuba and served stern warning against any attempt by the Castroites to export their revolution to other Latin American nations. The United States has given strong support to Communist-threatened Laos, even at the risk of a shooting war. But America's allies feel that these were steps forced by circumstances and do not necessarily represent the thinking of the new administration. At the French foreign office in Paris there is fear of the consequences of the United States' go-it-alone policy in Laos. The French believe that the absence of a united policy there is just one more opportunity for Nikita Khrushchev to drive a wedge between the western allies. NATO FACES momentous decisions, among them one on an American proposal that NATO be armed with nuclear-tipped Polaris missiles and that NATO itself be made nuclear power. But, while there is a difference of opinion among the NATO allies on the merits of the proposal, no firm decision can be taken until the new Kennedy administration declares itself. To implement the proposal new legislation must be passed by Congress. West Germany awaits anxiously proposals the new administration may make for settlement of the Berlin question. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has a personal problem. He is in the midst of an election campaign and wants to demonstrate quickly that cordial relations exist between him and the new administration. INAUGURATION DAY in Washington signals the start of new dip- romatic activity in Western Europe, and meetings carefully scheduled to take place after the world learns of President Kennedy's policies. In Brussels there will be a meeting of foreign ministers from France, Italy, West Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. A vital subject will be the United States' attitude toward the European common market. President Charles de Gaulle of France and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan have a meeting scheduled, and so do De Gaulle and Adenauer. These will involve sweeping reviews of disarmament, nuclear weapons, the Soviet Union, Red China and the possibility of a spring summit. Then the trek to Washington will begin. Cigar Smoking Returns to Capital NEW YORK - (UPI) - The country's cigar makers are hoping to get a big lift out of the new administration in Washington. President Kennedy is a cigar smoker — the first one to occupy the White House in this century. The only President of the past particularly noted for his love of cigars was Gen. Ulyshes S. Grant. But what really raises the manufacturers' hopes is that Kennedy, at 43, is a cigar smoking young man of world prominence and distinction. They have been hoping for a quarter century for somebody like that to come along. --- --- One-Stop Shopping makes it easy to make the right buy at your Chevrolet dealers! No need to look farther than your Chevrolet dealers to find the car you're looking for. There under one roof you can pick from 30 models-almost any type of car for any kind of going. A whole new crew of Chevy Corvairs for '61, including four wonderful wagons unlike any built before in the land. Thrifty Chevrolet Biscaynes, beautiful Bel Airs, elegant Impalas and six spacious Chevy wagons-all with a Jet-smooth ride. Come in and choose the one you want the easy way-on a one-stop shopping tour! BET SMOOTH RIDE CHEVROLET E181 C181 New '61 Chevrolet IMPALA 2-DOOR SEDAN Here's all anyone could want in a car! One of a full line of five Impalas with Chevy's sensible new dimensions, inside and out. New '61 Chevrolet 4-DOOR BISCAYNE 6 NOW-BIG-CAR COMFORT AT SMALL-CAR PRICES These new Biscaynes—6 or V8—are the lowest priced full-sized Chevies. Yet they give you a full measure of Chevrolet roominess. 1981 New '61 Corvair 500 LAKEWOOD STATION WAGON One of Corvair's wonderful new wagons for '61, this 6-passenger Lakewood gives up to 68 cu. ft. of storage space. 412 New '61 Chevrolet BEL AIR 2-DOOR SEDAN Beautiful Bel Airs, priced just above the thriftiest full-sized Chevies bring you newness you can use. Larger door openings, higher easychair seats, more leg room in front, more foot room in the rear. New '61 Chevrolet BEL AIR 2-DOOR SEDAN 1951 New lower priced 700 CORVAIR CLUB COUPE. Corvair brings you space, spunk and savings in '61. Thriftier sedans and coupes with more luggage space. That rear engine's spunkier too, and there's a new gas-saving rear axle ratio to go with it. ... See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 100 Years Ago- Slavery Issue Divided Kansas By Karl Koch "Cheering and music and all manner of exultation" greeted the news that on Jan. 29 Kansas had become a state, according to a 1861 issue of the Lawrence Republic. The editor of the same paper exuberantly wrote on Jan. 31: "She (Kansas) has been a virgin territory so long, we feared the fate of all over-ripe maidens; but as some women, like fruit, are sweetest just before they begin to decay, Kansas, in her maturity, was more attractive than in her youth." Kansans who favored statehood had good reason to be exuberant; the struggle to become the 34th state had been hard. The conflict between freestaters and the pro-slab forces had delayed any positive action by the territorial legislature. The Lecompton constitution was submitted to the voters in Dec., 1857. It offered the alternative of outright slavery, or slavery with the proviso that no new slaves were to be brought into the state. Free- staters refused to go to the polls and the constitution was rejected. Later in 1858, after the freestaters had gained control of the territorial legislature, the Lecompton Constitution was again put to a vote. The freestaters hoped this time there was no choice as to the slavery question. The pro-slave party snubbed the polls and the constitution was again rejected. In 1858 Congress passed the English bill, which offered Kansas immediate statehood if it accepted the Lecompton Constitution. If Kansas failed to approve the Constitution it would have to wait until its population was 93,000 before becoming eligible again for statehood. Kansans were not to be pushed; the bill was defeated for the third time. Finally on Oct. 4, 1859, after the free-staters had gained a considerable majority of the Kansas settlers, the Wyandotte Constitution was accepted by the people. The Republicans and Democrats immediately begin to struggle for state offices. The Republicans, starting a tradition that has seldom been violated, carried the entire state ticket, and elected the U.S. congressional representative. Merely being organized proved not to be enough, however. Now Congress had to be convinced. Claims that Kansas did not have the necessary population for admittance, and that Kansas had illegally annexed the Cherokee Strip in setting its boundaries, brought hopes of statehood to a swift halt. Congress tabled the Kansas admission bill, keeping Kansas from participating in the national elections of 1860. In December 1860 the bill was introduced into the Senate. With the elections safely behind, there was little opposition. On Jan. 29, 1861, President Buchanan signed the bill admitting Kansas to the Union. Kansas had finally gained the stars; but only through great difficulty and years of waiting. Union Memorial to War Dead The star-covered bunting decorating the speaker's stand had 129 gold stars in its center. A crowd of more than 3,000 watched as the memorial to the 129 lives represented by these stars was dedicated. "This parchment contains the names of those who gave proof of their great love for their country in the greatest war for humanity that the world has ever known," the speaker said. "Countless martyrs have fallen in the great fight for human rights. And from across the waters came the cry for help from the sons and daughters of Columbia-land. These 129 people paid the supreme price. "WE ARE ENDEAVORING TO show that we honor, love and claim them. They belong not to us, not to any nation, but they belong to humanity. This building and you men and women shall perish, but the freedom these dead fought for shall not pass away." The speaker was Sherman Elliott. On April 30, 1926, he read the names of the men and women in whose memory the Kansas Memorial Union was built. He then presided over the laying of the cornerstone of the building. The list of names was placed in a copper box in the cornerstone which was then lowered into place by a group of ex-service men. Also in the box, still in the cornerstone of the original part of the Union building, are the front pages of 11 newspapers who aided in the memorial campaign, a copy of the Kansas City Star containing the news of the declaration of war and a copy containing the news of peace, a photograph of Gov. Ben S. Paulen, a copy of the Graduate magazine giving the history of the memorial drive, a picture of the Jayhawk and three roses. THIS CEREMONY represented a six year drive for funds to finance the construction of a five story Union building for KU students. The fund drive started in Nov., 1920, when students pledged $150,165 toward the cost of construction. A student total of $186,203 was added to the faculty, alumni and private donations to finance the building. On Feb. 23, 1923, came the news the entire University had been waiting for—the state senate had passed a bill authorizing the construction of the building. The site was chosen, the bids let out and in April, 1926. the cornerstone laying ceremony took place. The main floor of the Kansas Union was officially opened for all visitors for the Homecoming game on Saturday, Nov. 18, 1927. Students, alumni and friends thronged through the building to see what they had paid for. This was just the beginning of the Kansas Union as today's students know it. Since 1927 two other major additions have been added to the facilities offered by the Kansas Union. It is now in six levels and contains meeting rooms, eating facilities, offices, a bookstore and a bowling alley. The first of the additions came after World War II and the second was completed for the Homecoming game in 1960. Although the two additions were financed with federal and state funds, the original part of the Union may stand apart from the other buildings on campus. It is the only one which was paid for by student, faculty and alumni donations. The average Ph.D. thesis is nothing but a transference of bones from one graveyard to another.-J. Frank Dobie M. (Those Bear Finals That Is) WHAT, ME WORRY? WE'RE LOADED FOR BEAR — Carryout Snacks for Finals ★ FOUNTAIN DRINKS ★ HOT COFFEE or CHOCOLATE ★ ASSORTED SANDWICHES ★ COOKIES & CRACKERS ★ FRESH FRUIT JAYHAWK CAFE-1340 Ohio ★ FREE BLUE BOOK WITH EACH ORDER CARRIED OUT THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF AFRICA MANY STUDENTS use the last few days of classes to make up for all the work left undone earlier in the semester. Watkins Library, instead of the Hawks' Nest, becomes the campus' Grand Central Station. Weary eyes peer at required readings and no-doz stimulated students promise themselves they will do the text reading earlier next time. But next semester comes and like New Year's resolutions the bleary eyes and the good intentions are soon forgotten in favor of Coke dates and bridge games. oldmaine trotters Vassar take a course in Italian! Italian-accented fashion, that is beautifully interpreted in this slender shoe with the handsewn details. Burnt Ivory Saddle Leather - AAAA to B to 10 10.95 ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP "People Watching" Is Pastime University Daily Kansan Page 13 Pen, Ink, Eaton Spell Laughs On election night in the UDK newsroom — to employ the vernacular — all hell broke loose. Tom Eaton was in his element — watching the swirl of human activity — and trying to capture the scene on paper with the quick, deft strokes which characterize his well-known cartoons. The room was jammed with humanity. Paper was flying; teletypewriters were clacking away; shouts, cross-shouts, and countershouts of voting results produced a cacophonous symphony. Gleefful whoops or muttered oats went up from the partisans watching their man pull ahead or fall behind on the tote board. Chaos reigned. IN ONE CORNER a tow-headed young man, dressed in a hooded sweatshirt, jeans and tennis shoes, sat and calmly surveyed the confusion while he doodled on a large art pad. Unofficially designated as "KU's Pfeiffer." Tom's work can be seen in almost every University publication. His editorial cartoons in the UDK have depicted everything from campus and state to international problems in a pungent manner. He draws panels and cartoons for the Jayhawker annual. He illustrates advertising for the UDK and the Jayhawker. His cartoons appeared in the two issues of Spectrum, the campus literary magazine. And he does it well enough to make many professional cartoonists look like first grade finger-painters. "I hope my style is my own," he says. "Certainly, I'm not trying to copy anyone, but I do admire the work of Walt Kelly (PoGo), Gus Arriola (Gordo), Hank Ketcham (Dennis the Menace), and several others, all of whom work in a simple, direct-line style. One line instead of twenty, emphasis on expression — this is good stuff." Where does he get his ideas for Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 EATON (CAND FRIEND) by EATON his sometimes bitterly satirical and at other times outrageously humorous cartoons? From people-watching. "ILL TAKE IDEAS from anywhere and anyone, so long as they aren't old or hackneyed," he says. "Some of my best items have jumped in my lap as I sat in the Hawk's Nest and just listened to conversations around me. "Freshman girls are the best. Freshman girls are beautiful creatures. The ideal situation for me is to inconspicuously find a seat beside a group of freshman girls and watch them with beady eyes while sipping my coffee and writing down what they say . . . Great!" Tom's home is Wichita, where he began his cartooning career on his high school newspaper. Until his senior year, he had intended to study engineering in college. "I was scheming and plotting to wangle a berth at M.I.T," he says, "but sometime during the year I changed my mind and decided to do what I did best and enjoyed most. "Uncle Sam beckons for awhile and then — there are eighty million things I'd like to do," he says. "I plan to hit Australia, to herd sheep for awhile, to see Brasilia, Rome, and all the tourist traps. Eventually I'd like to come back and either be a political cartoonist or do a comic strip, probably the comic strip . . . a funny one first and then, possibly, a serious, adventure-type one, maybe in collaboration with someone." IT BECOMES apparent when talking to the elfin-faced artist, that he considers cartooning a serious business and one which calls for as much work as talent. "Cartooning is just as much an art as concert piano playin or fine painting," he says. "It is an art and probably the most nerve-wracking profession there is — being funny seven days a week, 365 days a year, every year. And besides that, once every seven days in color! Is spite of late hours, no-doz pills, tranquilizers and other accompaniments of finals, students are remaining unseasonably healthy. Watkins Hospital, usually busy at this time of year, has admitted few patients recently. "It's a way for me to get a lot of satisfaction out of life, give other people a little too, and — buy groceries." "It has been pretty quiet around here," Dr. Maurice Gross said. "Those admitted are just colds." Students Healthy He said that their is no flu epidemic in the country now and the hospital has given very few flu shots. As Rutherford B. Hayes's inaugural day fell on Sunday, he broke precedent by taking his oath privately at the White House. Longest Versus Shortest Elderly William Henry Harrison delivered the longest inaugural in history. Consisting of nearly 8,500 words, it required one and three-quarters of an hour to orate. At the other extreme was George Washington's second inaugural—only 135 words. Monroe Didn't Like Speech The custom of a new President delivering an inaugural address was opposed by James Monroe's friends, who held that the practice was anti-republican and not authorized by the Constitution. The Cabinet considered but decided against dispensing with the speech. ATTENTION, SKIERS! White Ski Parkas. $1.98 Thermal-Knit Long Johns. $1.69 Boot Socks. 69c to 98c Hooded Sweat Shirts. $1.98 Water-Proof Parkas. $4.98 Wide-Vision Goggles. $1.98 LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 MASSACHUSETTS ST. VI 3-3933 SELL YOUR USED BOOKS Monday thru Saturday, Jan. 23-28 When you finish your exams, sell us those books you no longer need that have been readopted for next semester. We will buy those titles the University has advised us will be used again during Spring Semester, 1961. An Off-Campus Buyer will be here Jan.24 thru 28 to make you an offer on those titles no longer used at K.U. KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE University Daily Kansan Friday Jan. 20, 1961 Page 14 City Makes Progress On Civil Rights Issue (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) and Negro leaders to raise the standards of their race, he said. During another interview a member of the Lawrence City Commission said he felt there have been more changes in attitudes toward human rights in the last five years than in the past 25 years. DR. TED A. KENNEDY, a city commissioner, said that at the next meeting of the Commission members would discuss further the formation of a human rights commission for Lawrence. "To my knowledge this is the first time the city in its official capacity has shown an interest in the civil rights problem," Kennedy said. "The function of such a commission would be to determine whether there is a problem. You could get a good argument on this, but I think the action at the pool this summer and a more recent episode have pointed out that the students feel there is a problem," the commissioner said. PAUL E. WILSON, professor of law and one time assistant attorney general of Kansas, indicated through a resume of Kansas history that the attitudes toward the rights of Negroes has changed from past indifference to present concern. "During the early history of the state we had a tradition of benevolence toward the Negro. Yet whites did not conceive of Negroes as equals," Wilson said. Lawrence was the center of free-state activity, and many of its settlers were sponsored by the New England Emigrant Aid Society. BUT WHEN the first constitutions were submitted for ratification, many of them contained clauses to expell Negroes and establish Kansas as a "free white territory." The Wyandotte constitution, which was eventually adopted, had no such Negro exclusion clauses. Prof. Wilson said suffrage 100 years ago was limited to white male citizens. During the period between 1876-1879, no restrictions were placed on education for Negroes, but in 1879 the state legislature enacted a law requiring segregation in the elementary schools for first class cities. The law provided that Negro children were to receive the same educational facilities as white children. THE STATUTE which provided for separate but equal schooling remained until 1954 when it was declared unconstitutional by the U. S. Supreme Court on the basis that segregation in schooling produced inequality. Equality of opportunity includes more than just equal facilities, the court said. Only within the last five years, through an amendment of the state Civil Rights Act, have Negroes been permitted to eat in Kansas restaurants or attend a movie theater without having to sit in a special section. PROF. WILSON said if the State Supreme Court is called on to express an opinion as to whether taverns would be included under the Civil Rights Act which makes discrimination a misdemeanor, the interpretation would probably be broadened to include taverns. As a result of the recent action by student groups to attempt to integrate a few Lawrence taverns, there has been speculation that a test case may be brought against the Kansas statutes. Final week is breathing down our necks and even the journalism students find it necessary to take a "break." As a result, today is the last day of publication of the University Daily Kansan for the fall semester. Class enrollment is scheduled for Feb. 2 and 3. The UDK will resume publication Feb. 6. Today is Final UDK Issue for Semester Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 121 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. D not bring Bulletin materials. The Daily Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. German Ph.D. Reading Examination. Sat., Feb. 11. Candidates must sign up in 306 Fraser between Jan. 25 and noon Feb. 3. TODAY Students who are or will be juniors in music education second semester preenroll with Dr. Elin K. Jorgensen, pro-音乐 education, today by appointment. Mathematics Department Coffee and Lecture. 3.50 p.m. Coffee, 113 Strong. 4.15 p.m. Lecture 103 Strong Dr. Donorrion and Dr. Lee De Castro. Calvin College will present. Some Problems of the Mathematics Research Department of Sandia Corporation." Philosophy Club. 4 p.m. Sunflower Room, Kansas Union. Dr. Alfred Lande, Prof. Emeritus of Physics, Ohio State University. Present "Dualism; Science and Hypothesis." Jewish Religious Services. 7 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship. 7:30 p.m. 825 Mississippi. Bible study and informal discussion. Refreshments. Call I 2-0292 for more information or a ride. TOMORROW Students who are or will be juniors in music education second semester pre-enroll with Dr. Erik Borgensen, pro-tenure staff; students today by appointment from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. SUNDAY Catholic Services, 8 and 10 a.m. Fraser Towers at the social at Union follow- ing, 10:00 Mass. MONDAY Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Mystery Mass follows 6:45 a.m. Canterbury House. NSA Committee. 4 p.m. Kansas Union. Her name is Bobbie Williams... "GIRL OF THE NIGHT" FROM THE BEST-SELLER "THE CALL GIRL" BY DR. HAROLD GREENWALD Adults Only No One Under 16 Admitted STARTS SUNDAY! Varsity THEATRE --- Telephone VI 3-1065 Cuban Professor To Teach Here Marta de Castro, visiting assistant professor of art history from the University of Havana in Cuba, will teach Latin American art history the spring semester, a class that has not been offered at KU in four years. The course, Latin American Art; from Pre-Columbian Times to the Present, is a survey of the art and architecture of Middle and South America from the great Indian cultures through Colonial times to the achievements of the 20th Century. Prof. de Castro received her MA degree at the University of Columbia and her Ph.D. at the University of Havana. She has written a number of books on Cuban art and speaks English fluently. Prof. de Castro will also hold a seminar on Cuban architecture. Model UN to Discuss Congo, Cuban Issues This year's model United Nations will consider the Congo and Cuban issues. The delegates will be required to contend with a theoretical crisis for which no preparation will be given. Registration for the Mock UN will be held in Hoch Auditorium from Feb. 6-18. Choice of countries will be on a first-come first-served basis. Our American professors like their literature clear and cold and very dead.-Sinclair Lewis UN sessions will convene April 14-15. --- VARSITY MOW SHOWINGI VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Van Heflin "Under 10 Flags" And "Day They Robbed The Bank of England" THEY LIVED THE ADVENTURE OF ADVENTURES! WALT DISNEY'S SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON Shipwrecked...Battered by the seas...Menaced by the jungle... Attacked by ravaging buccaneers! TECHNICOLOR' FILMED IN PANAVISION* Actually filmed amid the spectacular splendor of the tropical West Indies! They dared countless perils and turned a lost island into an exotic paradise! GRANADA THEATRE . . . . Telephone VIKING 3-5788 STARTS STARTS TOMORROW! Cont. Sat. & Sun. From 2 p.m. Ends Tonite "CinderFella" ARRY YLOR THE KIDS ARE FOUND Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 15 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms: cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST LOST: Two French text books and a blue folder containing notes. Please call VI 3-1505. Lucy Yu. 1-20 SLIDE RULE in or around Union. $$ reward. Call KU 376. 1-20 SORORITY PIN, lost on campus Wednesday, Jan. 11. If found, please call Martha巴勒 VI, 3-6060. 1-20 LOST AT STABLES — light colored trench coat with yellow lining, zipper inside. Phone VI 2-1266 after 5 p.m. 1-20 FOUND FOR RENT RAPIDLOGRAPH No. 1 fountain pen. Owner call J. L., V.I. 3-8092. 1-20 ROOMS FOR MEN: One block from Union. New furniture and bath facilities. Single. $35; double $25. Call John Long, I.V. 3-6789 after 3 p.m. 1221 Oread. 1-20 APARTMENT — Three large rooms, private bath and private entrance. Furnished or unfurnished. Ideal for a couple or two or three boys. Inquire of Raymond Anderson. Anderson Furniture. 812 N. H., VI 3-2044. 1-20 THREE BEDROOM HOME adjacent to campus. Garage and basement. Immediate possession. Call VI 3-3425. If no answer, call VI 3-3666. 1-20 3-4 Room furnished apartment. Off-street parking, private bath. Rent reduced Phone VI 3-9776. tf VACANCY, available after Christmas in large contemporary home. Two home cooked meals daily. $75 per month. 2006 Mitchell Rd. VI 3-9635. tf NICELY FURNISHED apartment-three rooms and bath, laundry privileges. No children or pets. 1400 Ohio. 1-20 FURNISHED APARTMENT, well-furnished, three rooms and bath. 900 block on Indiana. Call VI 3-8316 daytime. VI 3-9027 evenings. 1-20 CLEAN FURNISHED basement apartment. Good stove and refrigerator, windows, patio, bath and entrance. No drinking. No marrying. Couple only. 520 Ohio. ROOMS FOR MEN- ONE HALF BLOCK from Union. Well-heated and quiet. See at 1301 La. or call VI 3-4092. tf LARGE FIVE ROOM furnished apartment between KU and downtown. Available Feb. 3. Call VI 3-5690. 1-20 First floor apartment with private entrance. Also apartment available on second floor. Parking, Utilities paid. Reasonable rent. Phone VI 3-9776 after 2 p.m. ROOM AND BOARD next semester. Phone VI 3-4385. 1-20 FOUR ROOMS and bath — entire second floor — for rent to boys. All utilities paid — campus. Call campusblering V. 51-2124 daytime. VI 3-0002 after 6 p.m. 1-20 TRAILER SPACE: $18.50 a month. $9 a month when not occupied. Rancho Motel, 1½ miles north of Lawrence. Hiway 24. Call VI 3-9845. tf CLEAN. FURNISHED basement apartment. Large rooms, large closet, six windows. Good soap and electric refrigerator, private bath and entrance. Utility paid. Married couple only. No drinking or pets. 520 Ohio. 1-20 STUDIO APARTMENT: Completely furnished. For one or two graduate students. Two minutes from campus, 5 pm. Please rent. Call VI 3-6499 after 5 p.m. 1-20 ROOMS FOR BOYS: Clean, quiet, convenient. Single or Double. See or call Clayton Crenshaw, first floor, 1234 Oread. VI 3-7199. 1-20 LARGE, NICELY FURNISHED. quiet room for boys. Private bath and entrance. Four blocks from campus. 1617 Oxford Road, evenings or Sunday. 1-20 FREE ROOM for male student. Well- furnished and very close to campus. Exch change room for work around the house. Call VI 3-6966. 1-20 AVAILABLE for second semester - one- haalf block from campus. Very desirable large room, also one smaller one. In quiet house, private parking lot. Very reasonable rent. To upperclassen or graduate students. Call VI 3-6696. 1-20 ATTENTION! Individual rooms four doors from Union. Excellent cooking facilities available, clean linen furnished weekly. Excellent study conditions. $20 a month. Call or stop by 1222 Miss., VI 3-048. 1-20 FURNISHED APARTMENT, first floor, three rooms, 1316 KU. Utilities paid ex- p. Electricity. Reasonable. Dale Mochi VI 3-6888 or VI 2-1964 after 5:30. 1-20 SHARP BASEMENT APARTMENT for boys. Private bath and entrance. 1638 W. 20th St., VI 3-4263. 1-20 MODERN 2 ROOM basement apartment, outside entrance. No drinking or smoking. Also large single room for young man. Graduate students welcome. Linens furnished. See first house south of campus. 1616 Inc. 1-20 Basement apartment for boys - privately entrusted, utilities furnished. 1520 - 120 Torr Two rooms, $25 and $30. Cooking and washing privileges. Parking space. For graduate woman. VI 3-2399. 1230 Oread — next to Union. 1-20 Trailer house, $8' \times 33'$. with wall to wall carpeting. In ideal location. Married couple only. No pets. Phone VI 3-3617. 2-13 APARTMENT FOR MEN. one block from Union. Phone VI 3-6723. 1-20 One room, 3rd floor, $20. First floor un- merged. 1167. 885, Call VI 3-2399, 1220 Oread, 1-20 Basement apartment in new house close to KU. For two or three male graduate students or seniors. Private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6313 after p. 1-20 For rent: Furnished 2 bedroom house suitable for 3 boys. $40 per month each, all utilities paid. Close to Campus. Avail-able Feb. 1. Call VI 3-8138. 1-20 TYPING experience typist — will type theses, papers, etc. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI, 1958 EXPERIENCED TYPIST—will type term papers, theses, using electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Doris Patterson. VI 3-5833. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service caterer. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th, V1 2-68. Mrs. Bartow. 408 W. 13th, V1 2-68. Experienced typist -- will type term papers, theses, reports, etc. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mrs. Costley, VI 2-1487. tt TYPIST, experienced in typing themes, themes, term papers. Fast service, reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Earl Wright, VI 3- 5544. 3t TYPING; Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. New rates. Mrs. McEldowney. VI 3-8568. tt Experienced typist. Former secretary will type letters, research reports, themes and term papers. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Call Miss Pope, MI 3-1097. tf Experienced typist. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Johannsen, VI 3-287t. Experienced typist — term papers, m.nnuscripts, reports and dissertations. Must be accurate work, reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I. Call t 3-7485 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4:409. t experienced typist; will do term papers, theses, etc. Neat, accurate work, standard rates. Two blocks south of campus. 1816 Arkansas, VI 3-1780, Mrs. McMahan tf Former secretary, electric typewriter Experienced in theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Accurate. neat work Phone Ms. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. t. FOR SALE: 1955 One bedroom Safety trailer home. Equipped with a one ton garage and large space. Excellent condition. Phone II 8-7812 1921 after 5 p.m., except weekends. 1-20 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattl, VI 3-8737 Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. tf BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: Completely revised, outline of lectures, word lists, diagrams and diagrams Complete cross index, Price $0.00. Your copy call VI 2-1065. If FOR SALE Expert typing and secretarial service Hicks, I. V-2011; M. I-3529 or M. It- Hicks, I. V-2011 REVISED WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES! 100 pages. Notes are written in extremely analytical and compre- ensive fashion. Mimeographed and sound. $4.00. Free delivery. Call VI : 0430-4 a p.m. tf DIAMOND RING, 3/4 carat solitaire, nevr worm. Valued at $450, will sell for $350 inquire at Kansan Business Office, ask for Betty, or call KU 376. TYPIST with electric typewriter will type term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Mary Russell, 1511 W. 21st St. VI 3-6440. Lt. 1-20 STRING BASS, case, bow, electrical amplifier hookup. Brand new condition Call VI 3-1034 after 6 p.m., ask for Herb. 1-20 MUST SELL! 1955 Plymouth six, overdrive. Excellent condition, laughably low price. Call Mike Stephens, VI 3-7370. HI-FIDELITY STEREO phonegraph — special closeout — one only in each color, walnut or cherry wood. Single and double piece. 20 watt stereo — brand new, priced to sell. Downtown TV. 1027 Mass. 1-20 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Columbus, Ohio, on U.S. 40. Will take two, share expenses, driving. Call Al, VI 3-9635. 1-20 TRANSPORTATION 1956 PLYMOUTH, Savoy. four-door V-8. Automatic transmission. In good condition. Call L. A. Jennings. VI 3-4920 after 5 p.m. 1-20 FORMER SECRETARY will take typing in home. Standard rates Call VI S-1313 STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS: Take advantage of one-half price rates on Time, Life and Sports Illustrated magazines—both new and renewals. Processed promptly. Call VI 3-0842. NOTICE For Sale: Remington typewriter. Call Bill McLiver. V- 39-03501. 1-20 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE; 1955 Olds 2-door Holiday. Radio, heater, hydramatic. Good mechanical condition. $425. Phone VI 3-6774 between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. 1-20 EVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent coated paper bags. Picnic. party supplies (Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone V13j350. DRESS-MAKING and alterations. For- 9289 'a', Mails, Telephone VI 3-8263, Smiti 1970. BUSINESS SERVICES PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; com- formerly known as the Theta notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. Alterations and repair work. Call Mrs. Reed, 921 Miss., VI-3-7551. tf MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Chap. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon- Sunday through Saturday. Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything can be seen in the store and acts or department needs. Phone VI-8291 or better still, come. Welcoming tr STUDIO GIRL COSMETICS shown in the home by trained beauty adviser. For appointment, call Louise Schilp. VI 3-2697. 1-20 CHILD CARE in my home. Call VI 3-4368. Mgr. Wiederaenga, 1403 Ecking Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophics, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. uEARN TO DANCE NOW—All the latest studios, Studio 9, Studio 10, Missouri. Phone 3-681-8387. www.uearn.com PHYSICS 5 STUDY NOTES: Complete outline, definitions and equations, problems and solutions. Sample test questions. For delivery, price $4.00. For your copy, call VI 2-1065. WANTED ROOMMATE: Female January graduate interested in sharing apartment with two other girls in Kansas City, Ky., VI.3-7070 or KU 376. 1-20 PATRONIZE YOUR • 'ADVERTISERS • WOMAN GRADUATE student to share modern apartment Call VI 2-0726 a1- 831-495-4233 Beth Israel Synagogue Attend the Lawrence Assembly of God 13th & Mass. J. J. Krimmer Pastor SINCLAIR POWER-X THE SUPER FUEL Students! Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj ... 98c Mufflers and Tallipipes Installed Free Open 24 bin on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vermont HE HAD THIS SILLY DOG-BISCUIT, AND HE SAID SPEAK,BOY,SPEAK! COME ON, PAL! SPEAK,YOU MANGY MUTT!! AND STUFF LIKE THAT... HEY LOOK! SO I SAID, ATTENTION, SENIORS! PLEASE, ORDER YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS (AT THE UNION) AND HAVE YOUR SENIOR PICTURES TAKEN!!! (AT ESTES STUDIO ... N131171!) - THAT'S WHAT I SAID, AND Boy, you SHOULD HAVE SEEN HIS FACE... THEN I WENT OUT AND DUG UP THIS BONE ... JON EATON 1981 Page 16 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 20, 1961 STOP THE WILDCATS! KU 2 KU Jerry Gardner, Kansas Guard Let's show those fellows up the Kaw who the best team in the state is! Then let us show you where you can get your clothes cleaned - the cleanest in town! 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1111 MASS. Dial VI 3-5155 10% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Open Till 8:30 Thursday Evenings THE END