KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU Friday, July 7, 1961 49th Year, No.7 LAWRENCE. KANSAS O AN KU PREVIEWS—Pat Gish, Lawrence, helps future freshman Don Kahl, Tulsa, register for the first of a series of six freshman previews to be held at KU this month. U.S. to Block Red Admission WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The State Department said the United States is considering a variety of measures to block admission of Red China to the United Nations when the issue is raised this fall. Press Officer Lincoln White rejected as untrue reports that the United States would propose having "two Chinas" in the United Nations as a solution for Peking's bid for admission to the world organization. White acknowledged there had been discussion of the "two Chinas" formula, under which both would be seated in the assembly, but he said it concerned how to deal with the idea if it was advanced by some other country. He said the United States continued to support the right of Nationalist China to its Security Council and General Assembly seats and was opposed to seating the Peking government. He also said the United States doubts it can prevent the United Nations from considering the question. Therefore, he said, it is necessary to consider various devices to deal with the problem when it comes up on the assembly floor. White declined to comment on the rising tension between the United States and Nationalist China. Taipeh believes the American government is moving toward U.N. membership for Red China, as well as the admission of Soviet-backed Outer Mongolia. The Chicago Sun-Times reported earlier that the United States had abandoned plans to propose seating two Chinas in the United Nations. The newspaper said the action was reported to have been taken on President Kennedy's orders. 300 Young Musicians To Open Camp Sunday All three groups will be preparing for formal concerts to be given at the end of the second week, and will be working under specially trained junior high conductors, guest conductors and the regular directors of the camp band, orchestra and chorus. Three hundred young musicians will arrive in Lawrence Sunday to participate in the first Midwestern Junior High Music Camp. This program offered to seventh and eighth grade students promises to be one of the camp's most exciting programs. The Junior High Chorus will have from 100 to 175 singers and will also work under a strenuous rehearsal schedule. The junior high camp will run for a period of two weeks and will feature the concert band, the symphony orchestra and the chorus. The Junior High Concert Band and Symphony Orchestra will have from 100 to 125 members each. They will both rehearse from three to four hours daily plus sectionals. Class instruction and other phases of specialized training necessary to the student of this age will be provided. Although they will be housed in Lewis and Templin with the senior high students, the junior high students will not associate with the older campers except at meals and on special occasions. The junior high musicians will check in at 1 p.m. at Lewis and Templin halls. The remainder of the day will be for orientation to camp life. These will include William Beck, Colby (band), Merle Watters, Salina (orchestra), and James Hardy. Special Instructors will be Dick Brumett, brass instructor and director of junior high music, Winfield, brasses, and Don Linde, director of music, Central High School, Tulsa, Oklahoma, wood-winds. wichita (chorus) as guest conductors. 21.058 Government Workers WASHINGTON - (UPI) - The federal government had 21,058 civilians on its payroll in Kansas on Dec. 31, 1960, a congressional committee reported today. The figures were contained in a report by the joint committee on reduction of non-essential federal expenditures. The total number of civilian federal workers throughout the world stood at 2,372,580. The Post Office was the largest employer, using 7,318 of the total. New Students Here For KU Previews One-hundred eighty-four future KU freshmen will leave the campus this afternoon after participating in the first two-day KU Preview to be held this summer. Five more freshman previews will be held this month. A preview for students transferring to KU with advance standing will be held July 27-28. Last year 1,216 prospective freshmen and 127 advanced standing enrolless attended the previews Most of the preview activities are duplicated during Orientation Week. However those attending previews have opportunity to have questions answered on such things as financial assistance, fraternities, sororites, ROTC, or anything else they might want to know before school starts. Attendance at the previews is not compulsory. Carl G. Fahrbach Jr., assistant director of admissions and head of the preview program, said the previews permit the new student to obtain his orientation in greater depth than is possible during the new student program in September. The previews give the new student an opportunity to take placement examinations, confer with faculty advisers, arrange for housing, and become acquainted with the campus. Those attending previews are housed in University dormitories. Meals are served in the Kansas Union. The prospective students attending the first session arrived Wednesday afternoon. A new group will arrive Sunday afternoon. The schedule includes a dinner which all attend on the first day of previews. The remainder of the preview schedule: No. 2, July 10-11; No. 3 July 13-14; No. 4, July 17-18; No. 5, July 20-21; No. 6, July 24-25. Caroline Rescued In Mishap at Pool Bids to Raze Nine Buildings At Sunnyside to Be Opened WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Three-year-old Caroline Kennedy slipped from a raft into four feet of water at a swimming pool last week and was rescued by the pregnant daughter-in-law of a Senator, it was disclosed yesterday. The President's daughter, her mouth full of water, was pulled from the pool by Mrs. William Saltonstall, who jumped fully clothed into the pool. Caroline was a little upset but immediately asked to go back into the water. Mrs. Saltonstall, who has two children and is expecting another in the autumn, is the wife of the son of Republican Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts. The incident occurred at the suburban Washington home of Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy's step-sister. Mrs. Newton Steers, during a picnic for her son Ivan, 3, and his friends. Bids for razing nine of the remaining Sunnyside barracks buildings will open July 19. KU officials hope the site can be cleared by the time school opens in September. The nine buildings are the last of 31 "temporary" structures which were brought to the campus in 1946 to accommodate swollen enrollments caused by thousands of returning GIs. The barracks, often referred to as "slums," have been eyesores for years as well as potential fire hazards. The first eight buildings were torn down in the summer of 1957 to make way for the construction of Summerfield Hall, and thirteen more were razed in the summer of 1959. The Sunnyside site will probably be used for future classroom construction. One building will remain for another year to serve as a temporary shop for housing crews. The university notified all residents last November that they must move out by Aug. 15. KU officials hope the razing can get underway immediately after that date. Most of Budget O.k.d by Regents The State Board of Regents last week cut KU's 1963 fiscal year operating budget slightly, but approved the bulk of a $15 million plus package. The Regents OKed a sum of $15, 276,561 to cover total net operational expenditures for the next fiscal year but chopped off $138,977. What effect the trimming will have on specific projects and services won't be known for about a month, according to KU officials. They said the budget will have to be re-analyzed and some plans readjusted. The KU figure is part of a $53.- 228,864 budget proposed for all state colleges and universities. This represents a 9.4 per cent hike over the $48,631,640 budget earmarked for the 1962 fiscal year which began Sunday. The proposed budget, which goes to the legislature for approval in January, includes an increase of 5 per cent in salary funds. Included in the total request is $34,740,357 from the state's general fund, plus $5,641,762 from fees, $3,916,556 from interest royalties, $5,665,602 from restricted fees, $3,158,787 in federal funds, $105,800 from other restricted use funds and $382,100 for capital improvements. Heavy Rains Batter Area KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — The heaviest rains since those that produced the billion dollar flood disaster of 1951 battered northeast Kansas and northwest Missouri yesterday with amounts ranging to more than five inches. Wind and hail accompanied the onslaught, which disrupted power service, closed industrial plants and threatened flash flooding. The U.S. Weather Bureau reported, however, that no major floods were expected. The rain fell on relatively dry ground, lessening runoff. And streams were generally low prior to the sudden deluge. In the eastern part of Kansas City the Blue River surged out of banks to a crest approximately five feet above flood stage, but the Jackson County sheriff's office anticipated no major damage. The river was expected to reach U.S. 50 by mid-afternoon. Here and elsewhere in the storm area buildings were damaged, trees were strewn across streets and highways and water clogged sewers and filled basements. Meanwhile, the rains in sections of Missouri were expected to produce sharp rises in tributary streams. The Blackwater at Blue Lick, Mo., was expected to crest at technical flood stage last night. The Lamine at Clifton City will crest below flood stage today. The Wakenda at Carrollton will crest 5 or 6 feet above flood stage. The Grand at Chillicothe will crest below flood stage today and at flood stage at Summer tonight. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 7, 1961 Dollars in Space Now that man is embarking on a program destined to take him on the centuries-old dream trip to the moon, or to one of the planets, people are beginning to wonder if the cost of the trip is worth the realization of the dream. PRESIDENT KENNEDY HAS CHALLENGed the Russians to a space race to the moon which may cost the American tax payer as much as 40 billion dollars in the next nine or ten years. The Senate Space Committee has backed up the President's challenge with the approval of a National Aeronautics and Space Administration budget of 1.7 billion dollars for this fiscal year. This amount will be increased yearly in sort of a geometric progression until the project reaches its climax with the landing of an American on the moon. As an index of comparison the 40 billion which might be spent is about one-half the total revenue taken in by the federal government this year. WITH THE POSSIBLE EXPENDITURE of such a large amount of money we can see why some people have doubted the need for such a project. The charges of some scientists that the rocketing of a man to the moon is of no practical scientific value has added considerable weight to these doubts. President Kennedy's plan has been labeled by some as an enormously expensive propaganda device designed to give the United States a victory in the cold war. There is no doubt that Russian competition in outer space has added to the urgency of the advance of American space technology. But according to James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the project holds more than just the prospect of a propaganda victory in the cold war. In fact, Webb warns that if American scientific growth is not pushed as rapidly as our resources will allow in the area of space the United States could find itself falling much further behind the Russians in space technology. So the moon shot project also has great military value. There is also the possibility of benefits to Americans other than the preservation of the prestige and the protection of the safety of the United States. Other military projects have resulted in improvement in the American standard of living. The commercial use of jet aircraft is a good example. Only the government could afford to finance the research which was necessary to develop jet aircraft for military and commercial purposes. Kennedy's space program would, no doubt, uncover solutions to many of the meteorological and communications problems that now baffle scientists. Many other scientific discoveries probably would have civilian applications. Although Kennedy's space plan carries possibly the highest price tag ever attached to a single project, the United States must progress in this vital area of technology. Ron Gallagher Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Refuse from sugar cane. 8 Pedlars. 15 Drive. 16 Geometric curve. 17 Muscle that turns, 18 F. D. R.'s family. 19 Eastern time. 20 Spring flower. 22 Quarrels: Colloq. 23 New Englanders' characteristics. 26 Sinclair Lewis hero. 28 Inserted as something additional. 29 __ victis (woe to the conquered) : Lat. 32 What satellites move in. 35 Impassivity. 37 Hollywood landmarks. 39 Landward. 40 Notre Dame's Brennan, et al. 42 Obtained by craft. 43 Algebra: Abbr. 44 Lunch up: Dial. 47 Gear for telephone operators. 50 Clara Bow: 2 words. 53 Danube tributary. 54 Sand bank off a mainland. 57 Cellar storage space. 59 Certain railroad cars. 61 Yellowish-green silicate. 62 Musical term. 63 Eased up. 64 Fatter. **DOWN** 1 Dull conversationalist. 2 G. I's overseas addresses. 3 An Eisenhower address. 4 Constellation. 5 Dress material. 6 Symbolic bird. 7 More ghostly. 8 Child: Comb, form. 9 Dislikes. 10 He has a by-line. 11 Hooded unions. 12 Paul of Broadway 13 Buttonless jacket. 14 Condition: Suffix. 15 Bodies of water. 16 Notwithstanding. 25 Preposition used in division. 26 ___ Rica. 27 Russian co-operative. 28 Shading off to a bluish-purple. 29 ___ as a beet: 2 words. 31 Remove errors. 33 Excitable person. 34 One of the upper crust. 35 Odd job. 36 Transmit. 37 Septembers: Abbr. 38 Cowboy gear, south of the border. 37 Character in "The Master Builder." 38 Incident. 39 Slangy promise of action: 2 words. 50 Chiller. 51 Drink. 52 Short for Abigail. 55 Skill of an Italian painter. 56 River into the North Sea. 58 Man's nickname. 58 Daughter: Abbr. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 | | | | | | | | 16 | | | | | | 17 | | | | | | | | 18 | | | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | 21 | 22 | | | | | | | | 23 | 24 | | | | | 25 | | | | | | 26 27 | | | | 28 | | | | | | 29 30 31 32 | | | 33 34 | 35 | | | 38 | | | | 37 | | | | 38 | 39 | | | | | | | 40 | | | | 41 | 42 | | | | | | | 43 | | 44 | | | 45 | | 46 | | | | | | 47 | | | | | 48 49 | | | | 50 51 52 | | | 53 | | | | 54 55 56 57 | | | 58 59 | 60 | | | 61 | | | 62 | | | | | 63 | | | | | | | | | | | (Answer on page 4) Russians Have Tax Troubles By Fred T. Ferguson GLEN COVE, N.Y.—(UPI) The Soviet United Nations Delegation has apparently found the time convenient to fight another battle in its long "little cold war" with Glen Cove. The delegation permitted its plush 36-acre estate here to be put on tax lien sale by failing to pay $19,602 in city and school taxes. Tax liens on the estate for which the Soviets paid $125,000 in 1952, were sold before—in 1955 for $15,-605. But the Russians found it convenient shortly afterward to retain possession of the "great house" and grounds that cost millionaire George D. Pratt $1.2 million to build. They paid the $15,605 shortly after the sale. The "little cold war" reached a crisis again a year ago when the delegation, through its lawyers, petitioned for a refund of the $200,000 they had shelled out, often belatedly, for taxes on the English Tudor manse. But the delegation stopped pressing the case, before Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev came to New York for the United Nations General Assembly Session last fall. In those days such Soviet leaders as former Premier Vyacheslav M. Molotov and Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko stopped over at Killenworth when in this country. In the current tax fight, the Russians have contended, as they have in the past, that their diplomatic immunity exempts them from tax payment. Khrushchev used the estate for three weekends of relaxing and "politicking" with other Russian delegations and leaders of Red satellite countries and African nations. Khrushchev has said he might attend the next UN General Assembly Session and if he did, might very well want to again stay at the manor. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT Church Morlock and Rom C. Shark Workbook and Ron Gallagher Co-Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinech Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism TELL IT TO SWEENEY, by John Chapman. Doubleday. $4.95 I have got so I react immediately when I see that a history of a newspaper has been written by a prominent member of the staff. Such histories, even when they are labeled "an informal history," are full of rationale and apologies. They get bogged down in details that can't conceivably interest the casual reader. This is too bad, especially when the history concerns the New York Daily News. The Daily News, in my opinion, is not one of the great American newspapers, even though it does have a daily circulation of more than 2 million. But it is gaudy enough and flamboyant enough to have intrinsic appeal—like, say, the old Brooklyn Dodgers or Frank Sinatra. It's a show business newspaper, and a show business man has written this brief history. The Daily News was launched out of a conference on a French manure pile. The conferees were cousins, Robert R. McCormick and Joseph Medill Patterson, who had had an uneasy relationship putting out the family paper, the Chicago Tribune. Their idea was an illustrated daily paper comparable to papers published in London. The Daily News started after World War I. It came along at the right time, for the Daily News fitted well the 1920s. Lindy crossing the Atlantic, Luis Firpo knocking Jack Dempsey through the ropes, and Ruth Snyder in the electric chair—these were among the big stories for the Daily News. The controversial picture of Ruth's execution, one of the most famous of all news pictures, added to the fame and notoriety of Captain Patterson's paper. The comics helped, too. Patterson played an individual role in each of the now-famous comics—The Gumps, with the bumbling Andy shouting "Oh, Min!"; Little Orphan Annie, that celebrated commentator for the far right; Gasoline Alley, which defied convention and let its characters age normally; Harold Teen, sodaslurping teen-agers of the 1920s; Moon Mullins, the American slob (and Daily News reader) personified. Patterson was a creative man, not creative like a Greeley or a Pulitzer but still creative. He was a Socialist in his youth, and he really appeared to love the common man (something which couldn't be said about his cousin Bertie in Chicago). He went out among the people of the metropolis, learning their likes and dislikes and translating these into grist for the Daily News mill. He was a liberal, of sorts, and an early supporter of Franklin D. Roosevelt. But the two broke over internationalism and the beginnings of World War II, and the Daily News became archy isolationist. Since Patterson's death in 1946 it has continued its right-wing swing—a defender of McCarthy, a powerful defender of MacArthur, a spokesman for the class that possibly looks down its nose at the big, trashy, noisy, sensationally successful New York Daily News. THE MAUVE DECADE, by Thomas Beer. Vintage. $1.10. It would be misleading to regard this paperback reprint as a depiction of the Gay Nineties—at least as we think of the Gay Nineties today. Nor is it a social history in the fashion of Frederick Lewis Allen's "Only Yesterday." Rather it is a brittle examination of artistic and literary circles in the period. NOT THAT FRANKIE and Johnnie are omitted, or the Pat and Mike jokes that began to appear in that era. The Dalton brothers moved in on Coffeyville, Kan., in the 1890s, and Thomas Beer retells that story. But generally the descriptions are of figures from the world of art. There is a pattern in this volume, that of a nation slowly moving from Victorianism to realism and naturalism, yet retaining vestiges of the past. It was a paradoxical time, one when Rosa Bonheur's horses adorned parlors and Zola's novels were being read under cover, when Godkin of the Evening Post, staid and respectable, was one force and Hearst of the Journal, wild and flamboyant, was another. Beer begins with Bronson Alcott, he of the Orphic Sayings, the improvident father who dreamed in a Transcendental world and was treated tenderly by Emerson and let his daughter support him with her successful novels. He tells of that daughter, Louisa May, who died in her mid-fifties after a career of keeping her lightweight father in the circles of the great. HE TELLS OF THE Chicago fair and of Ambrose Bierce, the writer of the violent and bizarre who later disappeared in Mexico. He tells of Bryan and the Populists, of the Pullman strike and Eugene Debs, of the Southern Pacific railroad that became "The Octopus" for Frank Norris, of McKinley and Mark Hanna. The nineties were the decade of the Spanish-American war and the Hearst-Pulitzer circulation battle, the decade of the playwright Dion Boucicault and of the increasingly embittered Mark Twain, of parodies on the vastly popular Rubaiyat, of Sienkiewicz's "Quo Vadis" and the beginning of McClure's and the Davis family—Rebecca Harding and her amazingly popular son Richard. Beer writes most vividly of popular and artistic tastes, and of Comstockism. Anthony Comstock embarked upon a crusade to drape all nude statues, except for the ennobling and chaste "Greek slaves" that still were found in many respectable parlors. THE NEW NATURALISTS were another target—Crane learned that with "Maggie" and Dreiser with "Sister Carrie." Oscar Wilde was a name to be railed against from hundreds of pulpits. "Trilby" was scandalous. "Way Down East" was art, and Frances Willard was a national idol. "The Mauve Decade" is an ever-bright pageant, one that can give us many insights into the storied era of John L. Sullivan and Diamond Jim. Fro T --- Page 3 Friday, July 7, 1961 Summer Session Kansa 4.95. history of staff, story," in de- earned Wilde rilby" illard From the Magazine Rack t can n and The Press and Language The newspaper man has no occasion to write in any other way than simply. He has nothing to hide. If he is in possession of the facts, he has only to marshal them in orderly fashion. He is trained to see and evaluate news and once he has done that his mental problem is solved. Muddy writing comes from muddy thinking—nothing else. And since the reporter can have no opinions about the news there is little chance of his getting mixed up in his thinking. The trouble comes in other departments of the paper: interpretive writing such as that of the columnists, the editorial writer and the critic. There we are concerned with opinion, and opinion—unless there is perfect clarity of thought—is bound to becloud the prose. There is another factor: and that is the feeling that the writer must demonstrate his competence, singularly true of the critic but common also to the columnist and the editorial writer. The reader does not think to question the competence of the critic unless the latter has demonstrated his incompetence. But until that time comes, the reader accepts the authority of the critic as the man who has the job—and he wouldn't have it if he were not competent. Yet the critic too often wants to demonstrate it anyway—especially if he hasn't any cogent thoughts about the event or the art he is discussing. That's where the critic reaches into his lingo repertory and spoils his piece with obfuscation. I think that is the reason for obscurity professorial language. They are too much concerned with demonstrating their competence which, as with the critic, has never been questioned. What they say and what they write, they feel, must be important, brainy, cryptic, arcane. That is the reason for their allergy to journalistic English. It is transparent, and they call it over-simplified; it is direct, and they call it childish. It is usually correctly spelled; but spelling being arbitrary cannot therefore possibly be important. Thus the transparency of newspaper English exposes the man who does not know grammar; its simplicity unclothes the brain where no thinking is in progress. If it is correctly spelled, you are never in doubt as to what word the writer is reaching for. No other discipline than journalism is making a stipulation of grammatical accuracy, a requirement of orthography, or a study of communicative English. ... It is the problem of journalism schools—and I speak now out of my experience as an editor rather than in my new capacity of teacher—that they cannot send their graduates out into the world of practical newspapering illiterate, in the sense that illiteracy—and I use the word in its literal sense—is no particular handicap to the engineer, the lawyer, the doctor and, I am most happy to say, the teacher. It is rather a pity that a person can be graduated with a mastery over the substance and have a sadly deficient grasp of its medium. The newspaper world is still full of editors who know too little of what is going on in journalism schools. They repetitiously cry: Give us good liberal arts graduates. I am quite sure that what they really mean is: Give us reporters who can spell and write understandably... Lord Conesford has written: "There are three good reasons why we should fight for our language: The need for clarity of thought, the need to be understood, and the duty to enrich and not to injure the noblest language and the richest literary heritage in the world."... Didn't Robert M. Hutchins say to the editors of America: "Do you realize that the written word may become an anachronism?" (Excerpted from an article "The Bulwark of Sound Writing" by Carl E. Lindstrom in the Quill Magazine.) Yes, we might lose, but today the daily press and the journalism schools are giving battle. It sometimes looks like a rear-guard action but the cause is a good one: The preservation of functional written English. Worth Repeating The professional man, above all, should know his field thoroughly, and this knowledge includes an understanding of its origins, its past, and its present, and a capability to deal with its future. From the standpoint of ethics he should be aware of his relationships to others and of the interdependence of individuals. He should know the art of communication, for to be incapable of writing in a literate fashion or incapable of speaking articulately truncates his professional worth and his professional growth. Beyond his professional activities, he should be capable of making a contribution outside his own field of endeavor. To do the latter, he should be cognizant of the humanities and the social sciences.—W. Clarke Wescoe We are overfed, overindulged egocentrics. We are pampered, petulant, and selfish individualists, suspended in a state Reinhold Niebuhr calls "sophisticated vulgarity." We are unwilling to implement the ritual we mouth on Sundays and share with our neighbors. We have contrived a series of deals with pseudo-truth which has left us bloated with food and drink but ideologically naked. For too many of us the brotherhood of man has degenerated into a glorification of the rugged individual and his ability to acquire and keep more material goods than the neighbor he does not love.—John Scott ...Letters... Co-editors University Daily Kansan Dear Sirs. Once again as I pick up the Kansas I find fuzzy thinking on the editorial page! In an unprovoked attack on Mr. Goldwater, we are asked to sneer with Mr. Morelock at the thought that conservatism could be considered dynamic. Now what could be more dynamic than a dog-eat-dog laissezfaire free-for-all, the logical end of reaction? (Goldwater, for all his caution over the Birch Society is strictly speaking reactionary rather than conservative.) No ed., you were misled by the word "conservatism." You thought it meant maybe the security of boyhood, when it actually means a retreat from civilization — for better or for worse. And what could be more static' in the state which awaits at the exhaustion of social democracy, sitting with a traffic light in either hand, contemplating its navel? Let's face it, dynamism is accepted only in very tame form by Americans today, for we have lost the old nerve of the social Darwinists. John Sommerville Lawrence graduate student KU BARBER SHOP One Block Down the Hill 411 $ _{1/2} $ W. 14th FINEST BARBERS Clearance Our Entire Stock of Spring & Summer Shoes Delmanette & Mademoiselle 1090 1190 1290 Entire Stock Formerly priced to $19.95 Old Maine Trotters 590 690 All Discontinued Patterns Formerly priced to $10.95 Town & Country-Fiancees 790 890 990 High and Medium Heels Formerly priced to $14.95 Dress Flats 390 490 Broken Sizes All Colors Formerly priced to $10.95 Men's Shoes Freeman — Nunn - Bush from 790 Selected Patterns No Calls - Exchanges - Refunds, Please Entire Stock Not Included ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837 Mass. N Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 7. 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock The BIG GAME is still four and a half months away, but fans, you'd better buy those tickets now because tomorrow may be too late. In case anybody needs to be reminded, said game will feature the Kansas and Missouri football teams. Date for this spectacular, which may make World War II seem peaceful by comparison, is Nov. 25. probably be among the finest in the country IN THE LIGHT OF RECENT EVENTS, the game will be bigger, noisier, more publicized, harder fought, and emotionally charged than any KU-MU clash in history. Why? For these reasons friends: 2. The conference championship and the Orange Bowl bid will probably rest on the outcome. 3. And speaking of championships, both teams will be fighting for one with no-strings-attached. As everybody knows, KU whipped the Tigers 23-7 last year, only to have the resultant title snatched away by the Big Eight fathers in college football's answer to the Munich Pact. The championship, therefore, was officially awarded to Missouri, but Tiger fans heard many a taunt during the long winter months about their team's technical crown, their smoke-filled-back-room crown, etc. 4. THE BASKETBALL RIOT which highlighted the latest KU-MU basketball game will have fans on both sides itching for combat, unless preventive measures can be taken in advance. 5. If things do get out of control, and let's hope they don't, the game might be the last in this long and colorful series, at least for a while. Thus, it should be fairly obvious by now why the game is getting such a buildup. Both schools have more important things to worry about, but you can't change human nature and human emotions overnight, especially when those humans live in Kansas and Missouri. KU IT WOULD BE A SHAME if the series did have to be temporarily halted. For one thing, this would mean that both schools would have to play an incomplete conference schedule, which in turn would complicate the crowning of the loop champion at season's end. For another and more important reason, this would mean that both schools would have created a Frankenstein-type monster which neither could destroy. In other words, the problem, how to cope with mass hysteria, would have gotten so complicated that it simply couldn't be solved. KU KU and Kansas State used to have trouble confining the action to the playing field. But officials from both schools put their heads together, cracked down on violence, and presto; peace. There's no reason why KU and Missouri can't do the same. Dressen's Job In Danger Now NEW YORK — (UPI) — They're betting in baseball that Charley Dressen's scalp will be the next one hanging in the Milwaukee wigwam. The American League, in the time-honored tradition of firing the manager of a loser to appease the fans, already has dispensed with a pair. Joe Gordon got the axe at Kansas City and Cookie Lavagetto was given the heave-ho by the Minnesota Twins. Nobody really believes that canning Dressen will make National League champions out of the Braves overnight. It is merely a front-office formula for giving a hypo to the lagging box office when the home forces are drawing customer ire and, even worse, indifference. It is no secret in the baseball business that nary a manager ever won a race without the horses. Back a few years, a fellow named Casey Stengel was in such managerial ill repute in Brooklyn that he was paid not to manage for a year. That's the same gent who of late won the American League flag 10 times in a 12-year span and tossed in seven world championships for good measure. After which he was fired, too, just to prove that even success isn't necessarily a saving factor. KU Players Off on Tour Two KU quarterbacks, Lee Flachsbarth of Atchison and Roger McFarland of Ft. Worth, Tex., are serving as roving ambassadors of football good will this summer. Flachsbarth and McFarland have been speaking to civic and fraternal groups, alumni, and football fans throughout the state answering questions on KU's prospects for 1931, what it's like to play for Jack Mitchell, the upcoming Missouri game, etc. Last year John Hadl and Fred Hageman hit the gridiron trail with notable results; KU set an all time home season's attendance record. The boys this year will hit every section of the state, visiting big towns as well as villages. They'll also stray across the border into Missouri. St. Joseph, for example, has always been a good Jayhawker center. I think you're right, I think you're right. NEW YORK—(UPI)The secret of the modern home run hitters is out at last—it's the bat and not the ball that's responsible for the ever-increasing productivity of major league sluggers. Lightweight Bats the Answer To the Home Run Question another journey on their state-wide tour. Both are quarterbacks. KU's roving football ambassadors. Lee Flachsbarth (left) and Roger McFarland mount up for The authority for this news is no less an expert than Stan Musial the National League's greatest hitter since Rogers Hornsby and a seven-time batting champion. Now 40 and nearing the end of his record-filled career, Musial gave his views on the evolution in the art of hitting during the last 20 years and in customary Musial fashion his opinions made sense. "OF COURSE THE BALL IS LIVELY," said Musial. "But the big change in the game during my career has been in the bats, not the ball." According to Musial, a whole new concept of long-ball hitting is behind the change—a change which has produced a new crop of .250 and .260 home run hitters. Foremost among these this season is the Yankee's Roger Maris, who is hitting home runs at the record Ruthian pace despite an average in the .250's. Other examples of high homer-hitting but low average wallopers are Rocky Colavito of the Detroit Tigers, Bob Allison of the Minnesota Twins, Willie McCovey of the San Francisco Giants, and numerous others. "When I broke in it was fashionable for the home run hitters to swing thick, heavy bats weighing 38 to 40 ounces and in some instances all the way up to 44 or even 48 ounces," explained Musial. "Then Former FB Aide Dies in Columbus Paul Schofer, former KU assistant football coach during the Chuck Mather era, died at the Ohio State Medical Center in Columbus, Ohio, last Friday. Schofer, who served here from 1954 to 1957, entered the Center for leg surgery on June 20, later developed pneumonia, and then suffered two heart attacks before passing away. He had been assistant Dean of Men at Ohio University. He is survived by his wife Laura, two sons, and a married daughter. One of his sons, Jerry, was a football star at Lawrence High School. the idea developed that the speed of the bat at the moment of contact with the ball was the key to long distance hitting and the result was the production of the new light, tapered bats with skinny handles and most of the wood at the upper end. "Thus," concluded Musial, "You have hitters who hit terrific drives when they connect solidly but don't have enough wood all along the bat to punch out shorter hits when they don't connect with the thickest part of the bat." "THESE BATS HAVE TERRIFIC DRIVING POWER." Musial continued, "A ball that is hit with the thick upper end takes off like a skyrocket. On the other hand, the modern hitter who hits a ball down near the end of the handle can't hope to get enough wood on it to push it over or past an infielder. 6-Hour Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) 搬货 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Birds on a branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 MORRIS CAMPUS BARBER SHOP - Open All Summer - WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union Summer Session Kansan Page 5 mitters or the speed f con- key to re neew new skinny good at RIFIC con- tith the like a d, the down can't it to older. "You drive it don't ring the tins when thick- ss. Goff Meets Russians Eyes Exchange Plans Friday, July 7, 1961 A "reunion in Vienna" with Russians, the thrill of speaking to an audience in four languages, a look at 12 plays in 10 days, and planning for possible future KU-European exchanges. These were the experiences of Dr. Lewin A. Goff, director of the University of Kansas theater, who was one of five U.S. delegates to the International Theater Institute Congress in June. The KU speech and drama professor reports that an informal session with the Russian delegates was one of the most important of the Vienna gathering. He was host to the Soviets at a luncheon during which the theater artists had no difficulty discussing "ways and means of arriving at a peaceful coexistence in the use of 'the Stanislaysky system' and 'the Method.'" Delegates from West Germany, France and the United Kingdom responded with what Dr. Goff called "impassioned speeches" before the discussion turned to theater subjects. In contrast, theater talk at the congress itself was slow in getting started, Dr. Goff said. The satellite delegates, who could not forget their national roles, surrounded the Russian representatives as though they were seeking advice. As a result of being named "rapporteur" for a conference committee Tiny Kuwait Oil Soaked BEIRUT, Lebanon—(UFI)—Take 6,000 square miles of barren sand and rock, spread it under a summer sun that sends temperatures to about 110 degrees and give it some 150,000 people, nearly all illiterate and poverty-streiken. Then strike oil—lots of it. Suddenly, there is money enough for everything. It sounds like fiction. It is Kuwait. Before World War II Kuwait's only known natural resource was the steaming Persian Gulf where Kuwaiti divers risked their lives to recover some of the Middle East's best pearls. At night Kuwaitis retired behind five miles of 14-foot high mud walls. Oil was discovered in 1936. The war and the ignorance of the fabulous nature of the strike caused the world to turn its attention elsewhere. But 10 years later the first Kuwaiti oil was on its way to western markets and today Kuwait is a difference place. The tiny sheikhdom boasts more than 20 per cent of the entire world's known oil reserves and it has been estimated that at present production rates its 60 million barrels would last more than a century. Its income this year will run about 425 million dollars. The old mud walls have been torn down to yield to the Middle East's only pure example of modern city planning. The pearl divers drive taxis now. There are ultamodern buildings, super highways, schools and hospitals. But there also was wealth enough to corrupt men and tempt nations, and today tiny Kuwait is the center of a power struggle to determine who will control its mineral riches. On June 19 Britain pledged full independence for the sheikdom in an agreement that Foreign Secretary Lord Home later declared implied Britain's full support and protection. Premier Karim Kassem of Iraq quickly followed up by claiming the oil-rich sheikdom as part of his own country. A British spokesman said in London that Britain was consulting with the United States on the Iraqi assertion. The United States and Britain are Kuwait's two biggest consumers of oil. Westminster Center Issues Invitation All students are invited to attend Sunday evening fellowship services at the Westminister Center, 1200 Oread. The services are held from 5 to 7:30 p.m. each Sunday and include a dinner and discussion group periods. Larry Rusco, Great Bend senior, is in charge. on training for the professional stage, the KU professor had another interesting experience, that of being translated into three other languages while addressing the congress of 35 nations. Traveling a tight schedule to and from Vienna, Dr. Goff nevertheless managed to see 12 plays in that city and London, Berlin, Munich and Paris. He observed that the Viennese theater, even with its lavish productions, was "a bit static—certainly compared with the French." During his European visit, Dr. Goff also established a contact at the University of Vienna that may lead to KU student study at Strobli, the summer campus of the university in 1962. This will involve preparation in the language and in the theater during the 1961-62 school year, he said. Try the Kansan Want Ads TOPEKA — (UPI) — "It almost makes you want to call off the next holiday," the superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol remarked as he examined traffic records on two long holidays which claimed a total of 21 lives. Holiday Driving Claims 21 The superintendent, Col. Larry Hughes, said he and his staff had thought about the problem of heading off traffic fatalities all day and reached the conclusion that the patrol simply needs more troopers. "What we really need are more troopers so that we don't have to take men away from the main arteries to patrol some of these bad county roads," the Colonel said. The patrol is examining records of state accidents and will soon begin a program of selective enforcement, that is placing the most emphasis on areas where accidents are most likely to occur. Hughes pointed out that most of the ten fatalities during the past July 4th weekend occurred on county roads. He said one thing the patrol plans for the upcoming Labor Day holiday is taping messages to be played over radio stations, pointing to each station's particular area. The messages will point out specific accidents which have occurred in a station's area and places where extra precautions should be taken. Wheat Harvest Just About Over GREAT BEND — (UPI) The Kansas wheat harvest moved into its last days yesterday as Sherman, Thomas, Cheyenne, and Rollins counties in the northwest corner of the state became the last to be harvested. The Center said the Kansas harvest should be completed in the next few days. Temporary labor control offices in the northwest corner of the state will remain open until the harvest is complete, but others closed yesterday. The Harvest Control Center said that other counties in that area are past their peak operations or are finishing up their harvest. No shortage of men or machines is reported in that area. Chance is a nickname of Providence.—Louis Sebastien Mercier GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. © I'm Fussy About My Shirts, So I Use LAWRENCE LAUNDERERS Custom Shirt Service They Pamper My Shirts by... - Controlling the starch - (from none to heavy) - Keeping my shirts soft (even with starch) - Brightening the colors - Hand finishing, when needed - Replacing buttons and mending (at no extra charge) - Finishing collars and cuffs smoothly - Careful folding and packaging in crush - proof box, or on hangers - Complete finishing in 1 day, when needed Put your shirts in expert hands with VI 3-3711 LAWRENCE 10th & N. H. launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" OPEN THURS. TILL 8:30 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 7. 1961 10 Chemistry Teachers Doing Research Here Ten college teachers of chemistry from throughout the country are participating in a National Science Foundation-sponsored research program here this summer. Dr. Calvin A. VanderWerf, professor of chemistry and department chairman beginning this fall, is director of the program which will be in session until Aug. 19. The 1961 program recently received a supplemental grant of $4,230 from the NSF, bringing the total foundation support to $24,270. Each teacher receives a $1,500 fellowship. The participants, most of them holders of the doctorate degree, were selected from 60 applicants representing almost 60 institutions, to attend the program designed to further research in colleges. They are taking part in research programs being conducted by senior members of the KU faculty, in the laboratories and libraries of the chemistry department. They also are attending lectures and seminars that provide them with an intensive background in the organization of research. After they conclude their KU work, they will return to their colleges and introduce research to their students. Eight of the 10 participants in last year's program now are engaged in projects at their campuses as a result of their KU summer. The 1561 program participants are: Donald J. Bettinger, Denison University, Granville, Ohio; David Yuan-Fin Chou, Lenoir-Rhyne College, Hickory, N. C.; William Homer Coppock, Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa; Sister Agnes Marie Horner, St. Mary College, Xavier (Kans.); John Webster Johnson Jr., University of Wichita, Wichita. Solomon Marmor, Utica College, Syracuse University, Utica, N. Y.; The Rev. Conrad James Pillar, St. Benedict's College, Atchison; Harold Schimke, Pacific University, Forest Grove, Ore.; Sister Miriam Michael Stimson, Siena Heights College, Adrian, Mich., and Dale Leroy Wilhelm, West Virginia University, Morgantown, W. Va. Matzke Takes Off For Philippines U. Howard A. Matzke, professor of anatomy, his wife and son left Lawrence for Manila Sunday where Mr. Matzke will teach in the Philippines University for a four-month period. He is the first KU professor to take part in a medical exchange program between the schools. Mr. Matzke will teach in the Anatomy Department of the University's Medical College and conduct research on monkey brains. The Matzkes will return to Lawrence early in November. Who can refute a sneer?—William Paley LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! “On the Beach” “First Man Into Space” Starts Sunday “Psycho” Shown Once Only at 9:25 LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! “On the Beach” “First Man Into Space” Starts Sunday “Psycho” Shown Once Only at 9:25 SUNSET NOW SHOWING! “Look in Any Window” “Macumbo Love” Plus 2 Bonus Features Starts Sunday “Please Don't Eat the Daisies” “Hannibal” SUNSET NOW SHOWING! "Look in Any Window" "Macumbo Love" Plus 2 Bonus Features Starts Sunday "Please Don't Eat the Daisies" "Hannibal" Gilbert to Speak On Nature of Man Dr. William Gilbert, associate professor of history, will speak to the combined Methodist and Lutheran student groups on "Conceptions of the Nature of Man Since the Reformation" at the Wesley Foundation Sunday. Worship services begin at 5:30 p.m. followed by supper and the program. The Foundation, located at 1314 Oread, will be open tonight for informal recreational activities. Speech Arts Night Slated for Murphy Selected scenes and readings from the world's great plays will highlight a Speech Arts Evening from 7 to 8:15 p.m. tonight in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. Students in the Music and Art Camp will give the presentations and will be directed by KU students. Admission is free. GRANADA NOW.SHOWING! Social Welfare Ruling Made TOPEKA —(UPI)— Employes of county departments of social welfare may be brought under the public employees retirement act without being subject to the referendum provisions of the new law, Atty. Gen. William M. Ferguson has held. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! “Homicidal” Also “Portrait of a Mobster” Starts Sunday “The Last Sunset” Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Have Your Summer Clothes Cleaned and Refinished Let our experienced expert workmen clean and refinish your slacks and summer dresses. They will be restored to like-new condition for your summer pleasure 1-HOUR JE1 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE ACME 1111 Mass. BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-5155 Friday, July 7. 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 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. LOST Lost: Lady's watch — Bulova. 3rd floor, rest room. Bailey 7:50 am. Thursday, 6:15 pm. call 812-325-376 or in at Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hill. 7-11 WANTED WANTED: Female to share nice large cool room. Adjacent to KU. Private bath. Single beds, linens furnished. Either student or working woman. Call VI 3-81-4500. "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, accurately. Standard rates. Call Patty Coester, VI 3-8679." "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." VI 3-5920, typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI 3-5920 — VI 2-0111. TYPING 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. 19th. VI 2t-17 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss tr EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term paper theses, dissertations, reports, manuscript applications, and research work. Reasonable rate Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485 FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Cain, VI 3-0524. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Rarenable. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8686. Mts. ff "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates. Call Miss Louise pope, PEI 3-1097." HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- lish teacher, Gareth Thomas, these & reports accurately. Standard tests. Ms Crompton, 139 Vt, apt. 3, Staff FROM TERM TO TERM. a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service Services. S917 B Woodland Mission, HE 2-7713. Evers. or St. II 2-2186. Typing. Will type reports, thesis, etc. Type Ctrl H, shift L, right Arrow. sel1 1531 W 21 St. CI Call VI 3-6440. sel2 1531 W 21 St. CI Call VI 3-6440. Experienced Typtist; Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. tf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th, 4th & Vermont. Phone VI G350. I WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1960 Dodge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen. Or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 5- 7903. Kansan Want Ads Get Results IMMEDIATE OPENING for married student to do route work in Lawrence. $ ^{ \circ} $CLEAN, RESPECTABLE WORK *NEW TRUCK - LIBERAL COMMISSION SET-UP Will plan work to fit school schedule, summer school and all year round. SUMMER KANSAN Flint Hall Write to FOR SALE Auto Wrecking & Junk FOR SALE: APARTMENT FURNITURE, double hide-a-bed. 2 chairs, breakfast set with 4 chairs, green 8x12 rug, pair of floor lamps, 3 tables, small bookcase and walnut breakfront. All for $125. Phone VI 3-5985. 7-11 WANT A REAL BIKE? Like new Schwinn "Cadillac" model — 40% off. Call VI 3-7828 after 7. tt 1958 Hillman Station Wagon. Good mechanical condition. Good tires. See or call owner after 1:30 Mon., Tues., Wed. Thurs., VI 3-4571. 7-11 1955 Plymouth. Plaza. 4 door. Good condition. Standard Transmission. Overdrive, Standard tires. 2 snow tires. 1-owner. Country Club. Country Terrace. VI 3-2240. 7-11 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & its several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIAL TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter and mounting machines. Offset printing and minima- tizing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3015 1051 days 1956 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD "60 Special," the commander of the fleet. Full power, factory air conditioning. You'll think it's new. Call John Hackworth: VI 3-9635 between 5-7 p.m. or drop by 2006 Mitchell Rd. 7-11 Good Underwood Portable. Reasonable price.Call Mrs.Virginia Wright, 813 Garfield, VI 3-4947. 7-7 FOR RENT 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 For Rent: 5 large rooms--2 bedrooms- attractively furnished apartment for fall semester. Water paid. No children, 901 Kentucky. Call VI 3-4491. 7-21 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unburn. Air con- dition. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. 7291% Mass. VI 2-0099. tf 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT JIM'S CAFE ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 43 St. JE 1-1121. Evenings and Sun. SK1-2634. ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new linens available. Reasonable availability, linens furnished. Reasonable rates. 1221 Oread, VI 3-6798. ff For Rent: Apartment, furnished. Utilities paid, $58 per month. Couple preferred. Close to KU and downtown . . . cf call VI 3-7257. For Rent to students. Completely furnished. B rented room house next to KU. paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf GERMAN TUTORING, beginning, intermediate or for Ph.D. exam by German Graduate Student. Call Jennifer Liebmitz, Ph. VI 3-7610. 7-7 BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI 3-4656. tt MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Lectures on dogs and plants & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything in the shop, including projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome. If Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers PASS THE ENGLISH PRO. EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810. Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Sale Downtown Only Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER YOUR Jay SHOPPE - Sportswear - Skirts - Dresses 835 Mass. Summer Sale - Blouses REDUCED 40% ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI S-7551, or 921 Miss. tt - Sleepwear 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939 $^{1/2}$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tt New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Record Clearance Sale Bell's 925 Mass. Continues Hot Weather Specials at VI3-2644 Lawrence Surplus One Large Group Reg. to $4.95 Ivy and Continental Wash Slacks $2.59 2 Pr. for $5.00 Reg. $9.95 Tubular Aluminum Folding Cots $6.88 They're $4.95 Elsewhere! Men's White Tennis Oxford $3.98 Sizes 6½ to 13 Very Special! Reg. $4.00 and $5.00 Knit Polo Shirts $1.99 These are First Quality Not Irregulars! Short Sleeve Short Sleeve White Dress Shirts $2.00 Men's Sizes 141/2 to 17 Reg. 49c Nylon Stretch Anklets 4 pr. for $1.00 Many Other Outstanding Values Not Mentioned in This Ad Lawrence Surplus 740 Massachusetts St. Phone VI 3-3933 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 7, 1961 Sunday Concert PROGRAM Orchestra-Chorus Sunday Afternoon, July 9, 1961 Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Lucien Cailliet and David Lawson, Guest Conductors 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Song of Democracy ... Hanson Requiem ... Mozart Tuba Mirum Rex Tremendae Recordare Confutatis Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Part II Hungarian March ... Berlioz Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Prelude and Fugue in D ... Handel-Kindler David Lawson, Conductor Moment Musical ... Schubert-Cailliet One Fine Day, from “Madame Butterfly” ... Puccini-Cailliet Humoresque ... Dvorak-Cailliet Musetta’s Waltz, from “La Boheme” ... Puccini-Cailliet Carmen, Suite No. 1 ... Bizet Prelude and Aragonaise Intermezzo Les Toreadors Italian Caprice ... Tschaikowsky Italian Caprice ... Tschaikowsky Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Band-Chorus Sunday Evening, July 9, 1961 Russell L. Wiley and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors David Lawson and Lucien Cailliet, Guest Conductors 8:00 p.m. K.U. Outdoor Theatre Part I Band The Standard of St. George ... Kenneth Alford Toccata ... Girolamo Frescobaldi Russell L. Wiley, Conductor His Honor ... Henry Fillmore Manx Overture ... Haydn-Wood David Lawson, Conductor Part II **Chorus** The Mystic Trumpeter ... Dello Joio Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Kyrie Eleison ... Dieterich Oh Lemuel ... arr. Wagner David Lawson, Conductor David Lawson, Conductor Part III Band Band Overture to "Italian in Algiers" ... Rossini-Cailliet Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring ... Bach-Cailliet March and Scherzo from "Love for Three Oranges" ... Prokofieff-Cailliet Marianna ... Singer-Cailliet The Red Sombrero ... Binge-Cailliet Overture to "Die Fledermaus" ... Strauss-Cailliet Lucien Cailliet, Conductor Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Annual Welfare Workshop To Be Held Here Next Week The sixth annual Social Welfare Workshop at KU will be held Wednesday through Friday, July 12-14, in the Kansas Union. About 125 social welfare directors and case workers, representing most of the counties in Kansas, are expected to attend the meeting which will emphasize the administrative role in the public welfare agency. Key speakers will be John F. Pletz, chief of the bureau of standards and procedures in the Missouri Department of Public Health and Welfare; James H. Morrison, director of employee training, Western Auto, Kansas City, Mo.; Marvin Larson, Kansas director of social welfare, and Mrs. Pauline Flynn, child welfare consultant from Chanute. Answer to Crossword Puzzle The orchestra portion of the concert will include three selections from the ever popular "Carmen." Many of the numbers for both the afternoon and evening concerts were arranged by guest conductor, Lucien Cailliet, Mr. Cailliet was formerly with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. B A G A S S E P P A C K M E N O P E R A T E E V O L U T E R O T A T O R D E L A N O S E S T I R I S R U N I N S Y A N K E E I S M S C A S S R A N I N V V A E O R B I T S S T O I C I S M S T U D I O S O N S H O R E T E R E N C E S S T O L E N A L G D I N E R R R E D D HE A D P I E C E S I T G I R L S A V A C A Y C O A L B IN T E N D E R S E P I D O T E A N D A N T E R E L A X E D S T O U T E R The Chorus will open the Sunday afternoon concert in Murphy Hall Theatre at 3:30 with the second portion of Mozart's "Requiem." Solists will be Doris Peterson, soprano; Feather Dworkin, alto; Douglas Susu-Mago, tenor; and Paul Geiger, bass. The second number on the program, "Mystic Trumpet," is by an American composer. It was written in 1943. Soloists for this will be Carla Beardmore, soprano; Larry Johnson, tenor; Harold King, bass; and Bill Lane, French horn. TECO Chorus to Sing Mozart Three Films Tonight Three outdoor movies will be shown in the area east of Robinson Gym beginning at about 8 p.m. tonight. Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI3-9897 They are "Forbidden Islands," "Polynesian Culture," and "New Zealand-Land and People." The orchestra will play two other selections from operas, both by Puccini. They will end with Tchaikovsky's impressions of Italy in "Cappriccio Italien." Strange as it may seem, this opera by Bizet was pronounced a failure by first night critics. KU's bronze-casting facilities are among the best at educational institutions and Prof. Tefft has been asked to advise on the setting up of equipment at many other schools. The first conference in this highly technical sculpture - medium attracted artists from over the nation in 1960. Dates for the second national conference on bronze casting to be held at KU are tentatively April 12-14, 1962, according to Prof. Elden C. Tefft. The band will cover periods from Frescobaldi, seventeenth century, to twentieth century Prokofieff's "March" and "Scherzo" from "Love of Three Oranges." Casting Conference Slated Next April Jennings H. Flathers of Amarillo, Tex., field representative of the National Education Assn., visited here yesterday and spoke to several education classes. He discussed "The Teacher and Professional Organizations" before the 11:30-12:20 class in Bailey auditorium. The visit was sponsored by the School of Education and the local teachers association, of which Herold G. Regier is president. Try the Kansan Want Ads Education Majors Hear NEA Man He also spoke to classes of graduate students taught by Profs. John Nicholson and William J. York. Diffused knowledge immortalizes itself.—Sir James Mackintosh STUDENTS Grease Job ___ $1 Brake Adj. ___ 98c Mufflers and Talliphs Installed Free. Mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd. VI 3-9694 SUMMER CAMPERS MR. PIZZA MR. PIZZA Order a PIZZA tonight from the CAMPUS VI 3-9111 Fast Delivery HIDEAWAY EVERYTHING IS ON THE BACK KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 49th Year, No.8 KU Tuesday, July 11, 1961 LAWRENCE, KANSAS PENN STATE UNIVERSITY CAMP INSTRUCTIONS—Nevin Wasson, Junior High Band Camp supervisor, is shown giving instructions to the Junior High Campers on the use of their meal tickets at a meeting Sunday. Uncle Tom's Cabin' to Have Two-Night Run This Week The theater division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, in conjunction with the K.U. Theater, will present "Uncle Tom's Cabin" Thursday and Friday in Murphy Hall. Curtain time for both performances is 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the theater box office (VIking 3-2700, extension 591), from 1:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." by George L. Aiken from the book by Harrie Beecher Stowe, will be directed by James Hawes, K.U. graduate student, and will feature high school campers from as far west as Idaho and as far south as Texas. Included in the cast are: Eliza Harris — Jacqueline Palmer, junior, Fredonia; George Harris — David Haverty, junior, Ottawa; Aunt Chloe — Judy Rosenberg, junior, Leavenworth; Uncle Tom — Steve Biddle, senior, Balwin; Marks — Michael Lollis, junior, Kansas City, Mo.; Marie St. Clare — Martha Groening, sophomore, Kansas City, Mo.; Eva St. Clare — Carol Walker, junior, Eskridge; St. Clare — Larry Ketcham, sophomore, Nampa, Idaho; Ophelia — Jacque Scheideman, junior, Scott City; Topsy — Theresa Lochart, junior, Leavenworth; Simon Legree — Steve Dunlop, junior, St. Louis, Mo., and Deacon Perry — Charles Kocher, sophomore, Topeka. Others in the cast are: Tom Clarkson, junior, Larned; Spencer Manuel, senior, Hoisington; Dee Anna Kowalski, sophomore, Wichita; Larry Siekes, junior, Great Bend; Jim Stephens, sophomore, Emporia; Pat Munoz, junior, Leawood; Jeff Angwint, junior, Pittsburg; Sheryl Jones, junior, Wellington; Gary Chandler, junior, Nampa, Idaho, and Debbie Morast, junior, Kansas City, Kans. Sally Durkee, senior, Mullinville; Ann Ferrell, junior, Beaumont; Vicky Hauser, senior, Salina; Kittie Williams, sophomore, Blackwell, Okla.; Charlotte Ann Gaston, senior, Bucyrus; Lou Brown, junior, Atchison; Rosemary Fleming, sophomore, Larned; Nancy Stone, junior, Beloit; Jill Ronai, freshman, Kansas City, Mo; Joy Taylor, sophomore, Hebron, Nebr.; Penny Boltres, Woodward, Okla.; Sheri Haynes, sophomore, Manhattan; Mary Godfrey, junior, Lawrence, and Ellen Deacon, junior, Grapevine, Tex. There had been speculation that Blake would not be torn down, just remodeled. But Wescoe said it would be more efficient to demolish the building. Plans for a new building will be drawn up this year. The administration hopes that bids can be taken in 1962 and the building ready for occupation by the fall semester of 1963. It will contain both classrooms and faculty rooms. Old Blake Hall To Be Razed Blake Hall will be torn down and replaced by a modern $750,000 building in the near future according to an announcement made by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. The 66-year-old building, used only for storage since Malott Hall opened in 1954, formerly housed the KU chemistry and physics departments. In other campus construction, the state will open bids Aug. 3 on construction of the $2 million Engineering School building to be located on the northwest corner of 15th and Naismith Road. The legislature in its latest session appropriated the necessary funds. The structure, which will house the electrical, aeronautical, civil, and mechanical engineering departments, will be ready for use by September 1963. Wescoe Leaves For Costa Rica Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, left Lawrence yesterday morning for Costa Rica, where they will review the student-faculty exchange program with Costa Rica University. The men, accompanied by their wives, will take a train from Kansas City to New Orleans and will proceed from there by ship on Wednesday. They will return to Lawrence Aug. 14. The schools inaugurated the exchange program in 1959 to give students and faculty members from both countries an opportunity to observe the cultural, intellectual, economic, and political institutions of the other. West Stays Calm Over Berlin Crisis By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst The Western World led by the United States has reacted calmly to Nikita Khrushchev's latest display of brinkmanship over Berlin and responded with some positive moves of its own. The Soviet Premier announced an increase in military spending Saturday. Russia followed up Sunday with a flashy show of new military airpower. Both acts were timed to reinforce Khrushchev's demands against West Berlin. Yesterday the United States released hitherto secret testimony by Gen. Lauris Norstad before the House Foreign Affairs Committee last month. Norstad, supreme allied commander in Europe, said that any serious Soviet move against Berlin would face the might of the entire Western World. In Paris, NATO officials disclosed "virtual agreement" on a plan to increase from 22 to 30 the number of NATO's front-line divisions in Western Europe if Russia elects to touch off a full-scale Berlin crisis. Khrushchev had called a halt to troop reductions and he announced an increase of three billion rubles (nominally about $3.5 billion) in the Soviet defense budget. He said he was "compelled" to make these moves in the face of Western countermoves over the impending Berlin crisis. He also warned that any forceful actions by the West against an independent Communist East Germany automatically would mean a reply in kind from the Soviets. NATO forces today are composed largely of U.S. and West German divisions facing 22 Soviet divisions equipped with the most modern weapons on the other side of the iron curtain. American "shield" forces are equipped with both conventional arms and a variety of nuclear weapons. They comprise five full divisions and three armored brigades. West German forces now number seven divisions, with an ultimate target of 12. Others are Britain, three divisions; France, two; Belgium, two; Holland, two; and Canada the equivalent of one-third of a division. NATO's tactical air force in Central Europe has some 3,000 aircraft, including 250 long-range American fighter bombers with nuclear capacity. The Western reaction to Khrushchev was one of calm determination. At his weekend retreat at Hyannis Port, Mass., President Kennedy met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, the President's military representative. Rusk described the meeting ranging over the problems of Germany and Berlin as a "very relaxed but profitable talk." In West Berlin, Mayor Willy Brandt used the identical word in telling West Berliners not to take Russia's "war of nerves" too seriously. "We must face the future relaxed," he said. "This will make the Communists nervous." Western observers noted a number of possibilities in Khru-shchey's latest outbursts. Band, Orchestra, Chorus Sparkle In Music Camp Concerts Sunday David Lawson of College of the Pacific, Stockton, Calif., did triple duty as a guest conductor for the Midwestern Music Camp concerts Sunday. He conducted the orchestra in Handel's "Prelude and Fugue in D" Much of the music of this period was written "for the glory of God alone" and reveals the power and simplicity in such a philosophy. Mr. Lawson and the orchestra played this popular work with the firm full resonance that such a piece would require. He conducted the band and chorus in two works each. "His Honor" march showed off the concert band in true form. Dieterich's "Kyrie Eleison" and "Oh Lemuel" were received enthusiastically and Mr. Lawson was brought back by both the audience and the chorus. KU can be proud of the fact that it can and does perform contemporary music. The chorus sang two numbers Sunday which fall into this category, Howard Hanson's "Song of Democracy" and the "Mystic Trumpeter" by Dello Joio. The "Song of Democracy" was done here at the American Music Symposium several years ago and is very interesting. To those who sat back as far as I did and missed parts of it because of the general outdoor confusion: Please don't sell it sort. The orchestra opened with Berlioz' popular and rousing "Hungarian March." The orchestra is developing a good technique. The almost abrupt change of pace between the Mozart and Dello Joio was a good contrast. This week's portion of the "Requiem" was one of the most beautiful. It had the clearly and beautifully blended character of Mr. Krehbicke conducting. Like many contemporary works the changes and effects in the Dello Joio called for a group that was on their toes and this group was. its toes and this group was. Throughout the afternoon many harmonies, melodies, and devices appeared which are often considered minor and left muddy. These, of course, are the things that count. With small children in the afternoon audience several unanticipated events occurred, but the orchestra played with professional compose. It was caught slightly off guard only once—by the spontaneously enthusiastic applause from the audience after the Intermezzo before the last movement from the "Carmen" suite. Lucien Cailliet conducted both the band and orchestra in many of his own arrangements. The major work in the third portion of the evening concert was Mr. Cailliet's arrangement of the overture to "Italian in Algiers" by Rossint. The evening provided an interesting variety of styles. The concert band not only played well, but with precision and musicianship.-E.W. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 11, 1961 Take a Bow, Kids If you haven't heard them before, plan to do so next Sunday. . . The high school students currently enrolled here for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are really a remarkable group of youngsters, with talent to burn. I went to the band, chorus, and orchestra concerts Sunday and heard some music which was of professional caliber. In fact, if you had shut your eyes from time to time, and pretended you were relaxing on the couch following a big Sunday dinner and listening to good music, you would have sworn you were hearing the Philadelphia Orchestra or the Boston Pops. They were that good. THE KU CAMP is the second largest of its kind in the nation, surpassed only by the Interlochen group in Michigan. The camp here was started back in the 1930s with literally a handful of high school musicians but now it has mushroomed into a "going concern" with a national reputation. As I said before, you've really missed something if you haven't heard these kids perform... ** ** NEXT TO THE PRESIDENCY, about the toughest job I can think of is being a university chancellor. My chances of landing these jobs aren't exactly bright, and I'm glad. The latter task is complete with thousands of headaches the general public probably never is even aware of. For instance, a chancellor not only has to coordinate all classroom and research activities, he must interview job applicants, keep the state legislature happy and hope that august body comes through with the appropriation dollars; speak at a hundred and one high school and college commencements, alumni get-togethers, and professional meetings; support the football coach when public pressure is mounting for his sacking; and maintain the university image through adept public relations. This is just the beginning; the list goes on, and on, and on. You sometimes wonder why anybody would want the job in the first place. Fortunately, here at KU we've had some good men in the past, and we've got a good one right now... *** CONCERNING THE PRESIDENCY, I've never forgotten a remark made by Harry Truman. Harry once stated that his sympathy went out to any President, regardless of party. Although the mere mention of this gentleman's name usually stirs up a verbal hornet's nest, especially around here, you can't deny the wisdom of the above remark. No matter what a President says or does, no matter how sincere he is in proposing new legislation, he is bound to irritate thousands of citizens from coast to coast. It has often been said that the Presidency is the loneliest job in the world, and I believe it. I'm sure all of our living ex-presidents would second that too. THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE faces more pressure in one day than most men face in a lifetime. How would you, for example, like to polish off breakfast, walk to the White House, then sit down for ten or more hours and solve the Berlin crisis, the unemployment problem, the labor problem, and other problems? Don't forget, you would also have to keep your party united and the opposition off balance, and maintain a bipartisan spirit on the big issues at the same time. This is quite a trick if you can do it. And I sometimes think I have problems. . . . Daily Crossword Puzzle - Chuck Morelock ACROSS ACROSS 1. Herring's relative. 2. Capt. Standish. 3. And others: Abbr. 4. Gate receipts. 5. Hacienda material. 6. Nobel prize physicist. 7. Modern household accessory: 2 words. 8. Children's game. 9. Armadas. 10. Handle. 11. Hit show: Slang. 12. Cachalot. 13. Boring person: Slang: 2 words. 14. Growing-up years. 15. Playground treat. 16. Weight. 17. Severe. 18. Suppose. 19. Buttonlike device. 20. Salutation. 21. Brief flash. 22. Game of skill. 23. Warning sign: 2 words. 24. County. 41 Fruit. 42 Exchange: Collog. 43 Jungle journey. 44 Undamaged. 45 Payroll-saving plans 4 words. 51 enough. 52 Nautical action. 53 King of the Huns. 54 Editorial instruction. 55 Jewish feast. 56 Judgment. **DOWN** 1 Pace. 2 Robust. 3 African tree. 4 Roustabout. 5 Decorative stone. 6 Simple Simon. 7 Poisonous wced. 8 Decline. 9 Successful by one's own efforts. 10 Wilde hero. 11 Non-swinging batter; 2 words. 12 Sanction. 13 Wagons French sleeping cars. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 18 One side of a coin. 19 Having wings. 20 Move like a panther. 21 Cloth pattern. 22 Formerly. 23 Hard stone. 24 Agitate. 25 Football linemen. 26 Sign of spring. 27 Thorn. 28 Actor Laurence and family. 29 Cargo. 30 TV puppet-man. 31 Trinket. 32 Earth, for instance. 33 One who influences. 34 Tennis action. 34 Pert talk. 34 Border on. 35 Eat. 36 Inner: Comb, form. 37 French town. 38 Wedge-shaped piece for leveling in masonry. 39 Letter. (Answer on page 5) Sparks Fly Over Reds 1. WASHINGTON —(UPI)— There are two subjects of diplomacy whose mere mention starts political sparks flying. One is the question of Red China or "Two Chinas" in the United Nations; the other is communist Outer Mongolia. —An administration study of how to deal with the China-U.N. problem and a possible plan to favor two Chinas in the U.N. —a plan officials hoped Red China would reject. For the past few weeks sparks were sizzling at home and abroad on both subjects. They raised hackles in Congress and debate in the State Department. They produced bitter resentment against the United States in the Nationalist Chinese stronghold on Formosa. And they brought U.S. Ambassador Everett F. Drumright flying home from Formosa for consultation. A series of U.S. talks in Moscow with Outer Mongolia about possible U.N. membership and U.S. recognition. THE CAUSES OF THE FIREworks were: In each case, the administration was reacting to a changed world scene which threatens to outmode the old policies. For years the Soviet Union has tried to gain U.N. membership for some of its less popular satellites by packaging one of them in a resolution with a country the West wanted admitted. ON THE QUESTION OF RED China in the U.N., one veteran Washington diplomat complained, "It's gotten so you can't even consider China. We are now being clobbered just for trying to think ahead." SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT Chuck Morelock and Ron Gallagher ... Co-Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinache ... Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism COMMUNIST CHINA AND ASIA, by A. Doak Barnett. Vintage Books (Random House), $1.65. Though American foreign policy in recent months has been focused on Latin America and Southeast Asia, the constant danger of Communist China has not been dissipated. This we should all keep in mind, and this is what A. Doak Barnett stresses in this thorough and scholarly examination of China in the world today. Barnett will be remembered by many on this campus as one of the best representatives of the American Universities Field Staff to appear here. The perception which he demonstrated in his lectures a few years ago is evident in this volume. He examines the many facets of the problem, providing not just a current events approach but historical perspective as well. Communist China did not suddenly arise as a threat in late 1949. What China is today had been building in Chinese revolutions for a century. Mao Tse-tung had been a powerful Chinese leader throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and Chinese Nationalists and Chinese Communists had been at war for many years before the eruption of their conflict at the end of World War II. Doak Barnett offers suggestions throughout as to what the United States should do about China. One suggestion would anger many, for Barnett believes that recognition of Communist China is necessary. He also believes that, when possible, China should be seated in the United Nations. He scoffs at the notion that Chiang Kai-shek's troops can retake the mainland, and that there are many on the mainland who would revolt immediately should Chiang return. China is no longer the decentralized country that it was in the days of Kuomintang power. It is, relatively speaking, an economic giant. It is a great power as it never was in the Chiang era. It is a threat to Southeast Asia, and its existence is very good reason for such nations as Burma and Indonesia refusing to line up with the West. It could be said that, even though American policy planners have worried most about Cuba and Laos in recent days, the problems of these countries cannot be dissociated from problems connected with China. For it is the Communist Pathet Lao that has brought Laos to its present state, and it is communism that has made Cuba a problem. These matters, and many more, constitute this illuminating volume, and Doak Barnett's knowledge and experience make this a book that Americans should be aware of. It is interesting to note that this brilliant writer, composing his tales and novels in a time of national and international ferment, restricted himself to psychological excursions, to slow developments of human enigmas. These people of James, like those in his novels, are not people of action but of leisure, working at self-fulfillment and the pursuit of meaning. Dencome of "The Middle Years" is the artist, wondering about the meaning of life. Marcher of "The Beast in the Jungle" is the man coming to a realization that "the beast" is within himself. Here is a collection from our greatest craftsman, representing a spread of stories that begin with the early James, writing in simple, direct style, and end with the later James, complex and direct. Included are such famous stories as "The Middle Years" and "The Beast in the Jungle." T So Maggie dies, like Daisy Miller before her, sacrificed to society. The book is a curiosity, for we have become hardened, somewhat, by Dreiser and Farrell. In the terms of her society, Maggie couldn't be allowed to survive. A vivid story, it moves one but never quite makes one believe all that happens. This "shocking" landmark in literary naturalism seems tame to a reader of 1961. But it was real pioneering for Stephen Crane in the 1890s. Maggie comes from the humblest of backgrounds. She has hard-drinking parents and a brother who is a street tough but who is conventionally shocked by Maggie's association with another street tough. FIFTEEN SHORT STORIES, by Henry James. Bantam, 75 cents. MAGGIE: A GIRL OF THE STREETS, by Stephen Crane. Fawcett, 50 cents. IF THE SOUTH HAD WON THE CIVIL WAR, by MacKinlay Kantor. Bantam, 35 cents. This is utter nonsense, and not delightful nonsense. It is timewasting and not in the least provocative. Kantor does not try, in the fashion of Robert Penn Warren, to show what the South might be like today had the war taken different turns. He merely does such foolish things as have Grant killed when thrown by his horse, Lee triumph at Gettysburg, the war end in 1863, Lee become president of the Confederacy, Wilson another southern president, and so on. THREE PLAYS. by Thornton Wilder. Bantam Classics, 60 cents. Though superficially these plays seem to have little in common, actually they have much. Each has Thornton Wilder's sweeping look at history, his ability to relate contemporary happenings to other developments of civilization. Theatrically, each represents a departure from 20th century forms. The Stage Manager of "Our Town" steps forth and talks to the audience; so several of the characters in "The Matchmaker." "The Skin of Our Teeth" does outrageous things to the conventional theater. All three are among the genuinely memorable works of the last quarter century. Tuesday, July 11, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Magazine Rack Tanganyika, the 25th African state created since World War II, stands on the threshold of independence. Tanganyika's Independence The East African territory stretches north to south from the shining white dome of Mount Kilimanjaro to the deep valley of its river border with Mozambique, and eastward from the continent's great central lakes to the Indian Ocean. In Olduval Gorge, a part of the Great Rift Valley, British anthropologist L. S. B. Leakey has found world's earliest man, 600,000-year-old Zinjanthropus boisei. Recently Dr. Leakey discovered the remains of a child and adult, whose bones he has not yet dated but which he believes are considerably older. His work is sponsored by the National Geographic Society. Unusual harmony among its varied peoples has marked Tanganyika's rapid strides toward self-government. Administered by Britain first as a League of Nations mandate and since 1946 as a United Nations trust territory, Tanganyika won internal self-rule on May 1. It will become fully free December 28. All told, this land of safaris and big game, of roving dark tribesmen and wide harsh plains, of deep-blue lakes and volcanic peaks, is almost the size of France, Belgium, and Germany combined. The population numbers some 23,000 Europeans, 200,000 Asians and Arabs, and 9,000,000 Africans. Tanganyika is a very old country. Over the ages erosion has peeled off much of the topsoil, leaving for grazing and cultivation only weak subsoil and scattered lush pockets of volcanic origin. It is extraordinarily rich in prehistoric fossils. Tanganyika's 450-mile coast probably was occupied by Arabs and Indians before the Christian era, for prevailing winds made it easy to cross the Indian Ocean. Arab colonization apparently began in the 8th century A.D. Portuguese mariners explored the coast as early as 1500. One described the age-old settlement of Kilwa as a "Moorish town with many fair houses." The 19th century was a period of intense exploration of the mysterious, hostile interior, first by Arab traders, then by Westerners. It was under a mango tree at Ujiji on the shore of Lake Tanganyika that Henry M. Stanley found David Livingstone November 10, 1871. The Portuguese held loose control over the area until the 17th century when they were supplanted by the Arab sultans of Oman. A brisk trade developed in slaves and ivory. German merchants had earlier set up local businesses, and their homeland eventually stretched out the strong arm of colonization. In 1885 Germany established German East Africa, of which Tanganyika was the bulk, held it with some difficulty and lost it to the British in World War I. Former German sisal plantations spread inland from the coast. Rope fiber remains the chief cash crop, and Tanganyika is the largest producer. Other exports are cotton, coffee, and diamonds. Mwadui, in Tanganyika back country, is one of the world's richest diamond mines. But wild animals and the Masai people give Tanganyika its own intensely African personality. Serengeti National Park offers a haven to Africa's most spectacular display of wildlife — hippo, elephant, giraffe, zebra, wildebeest, lion, gazelle, and ostrich. Herds dot the immense brown-gold plains like pepper scattered lavishly from a giant shaker. The Masai aren't the largest of Tanganyika's 120 tribes, but they form the aristocracy. Tall, tough and proud, Masai warriors live on the blood and milk of their beloved cattle and bow to no man. Though Tanganyika has moved toward independence under a popular and brilliant leader, Julius K. Nyerere, it faces many bleak problems. The country has limited resources, lags in the development of them. Vast areas are plagued by drought and tsetse fly. But it hopefully has scheduled a three-year, 60-million-dollar program to improve agriculture, education, and communications. National Geographic News Bulletin This specialized intellectual efficiency, unfortunately, is picked up by graduate students, a notably timid group. Because of the recent wealth of fellowships and grants, careerism gets off to an early start among graduate students, who are inclined anyway to be opportunists at best and sycophants at worst... Worth Repeating It is well to remember that the graduate student, often subsidized by the university, desperately needs his department's recommendation. This, more than anything else, will determine where he is placed, and his initial placement may well set the tone of his career. Graduate professors, on the other hand, have the assurance of a captive and submissive audience.David Boroff HAS HE "POPPED THE QUESTION?" Wonderful! Stop in today for a gift certificate which will entitle you to an announcement portrait. V13- 935 0511 Mass. Hiqley's NOTICE NOTICE JAYHAWK Cleaners and Laundry Is Now Owned and Operated by ACME Cleaners and Laundry Owen Edgar — Supervising the Routes and Pick-up The same three partners to give you personalized service with your complete satisfaction guaranteed. Truman C. Harding - Supervising All Three Plants Gertrude Beaty - Supervising All Offices Happy to Be of Service to You at All Three Places ACME-JAYHAWK Cleaners and Laundry Hillcrest VI 3-0928 ACME-JAYHAWK Cleaners and Laundry Malls VI 3-0895 ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 7 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 11, 1 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock I've got a free pass for the entire season but I don't think I'll use it much. ... It's getting harder and harder to write about our fighting A's without going off on a wild optimistic tangent. Nothing seems to be going right for the team that showed some signs of life at the start of the season. THE 1960 CLUB WAS A SORRY ONE indeed, but most baseball observers figured the A's would at least finish higher than the two new clubs, Washington and Los Angeles, in 1961. Right now these new clubs, comprised mainly of castoffs, rookies, and other bits of flotsam and jetsam from the diamond world, are embarrassing KC more and more each day. Why? Because they're giving the other teams a run for their money. The Athletics, alas, are not. The Angels don't have much pitching or infield strength, but they've got power to burn. The Senators, on the other hand, don't have much hitting but their pitching staff has been the surprise of the league. WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE KANSAS CITY? Mired in the quagmire, that's where, for the A's don't have anything period. At least for the moment-perhaps things will change. Like the A's, the Minnesota Twins are floundering badly. From all indications, the two clubs will battle it out for the American League cellar, and on the basis of their previous meetings this year, the Twins will probably win. It's too bad the Kansas City story has proved to be such a frustrating one these past six years. The A's have a beautiful park, the finest in the major leagues and thousands of loyal fans who don't expect a pennant, just a respectable team. IF YOU COULD ROUND UP all the players the front office has traded since 1955 you'd come up with a solid combination. For instance, you could have an outfield comprised of Roger Maris in right field, Bob Cerv in left, and Bill Tuttle in center. In the infield you'd have Clete Boyer at third, Vic Power at first, Woodie Held at short, and—well, I can't think of a second baseman. But I think I've made my point. KU Although I consider Wayne Hightower to be a great basketball player, I'm not especially broken-hearted to see him go. True, he'll be missed but I don't think KU will suddenly fall apart at the seams next year, contrary to popular belief. CALL IT TRADITION, fine coaching, pride, or what have you. Kansas usually manages to put a worthy team on the court year in and year out. This brings me to one of my favorite subjects,the 1953 squad. That year found the Jayhawkers stripped of all but one starter from the great '52 team which won the national championship. But what a comeback story! Coach Phog Allen parlayed a fast break and a murderous half court pressing defense into the Big Eight title, the Western regional NCAA title, and missed by just one point of taking national again. WHAT MADE THE STORY EVEN MORE ASTONISHING was the fact that KU had the smallest team in the conference and one of the smallest teams in the nation. At guards, Phog had Dean Kelley (5-11) and Gil Reich (6); at forwards he had Al Kelley (5-11) and Hal Patterson (6-2) and at center he had his one big boy, B. H. Born (6-9). Furthermore, one of his top substitutes, Dean Smith, now assistant coach at North Carolina, stood—you guessed it—5-11. Indiana spoiled the story a little by edging this fireball crew 69-68 in the national championship game, but nobody was ready to hang Phog in effligy. All-Star Lineup Starting Lineup for All-Star Game Today at San Francisco Starting Lineup for All-Star American League Norm Cash, Detroit John Temple, Cleveland Brooks Robinson, Baltimore Tony Kubek, New York Rocky Colavito, Detroit Roger Maris, New York Mickey Mantle, New York John Romano, Cleveland Whitey Ford, New York National League National League 1b Bill White, St. Louis 2b Frank Bolling, Milwaukee 3b Ed Matthews, Milwaukee ss Maury Wills, Los Angeles lf Orlando Cepeda, San Francisco rf Roberto Clemente, Pittsburgh cf Wilkie Mays, San Francisco c Smoky Burgess, Pittsburgh p Warren Spahn, Milwaukee New Hope to Asia - This month marks the 10th anniversary of a scheme, grand in concept and novel in design, which has profoundly affected the well-being of a quarter of the world's population. Colombo Plan Has Birthday In this short space of time it has brought new hope to many of the countries of South and South-East Asia: hope in the knowledge that they have friends prepared to help them to help themselves, and increased self-respect growing out of their widening efforts to help each other. The Colombo Plan, as this farreaching bi-lateral aid program has come to be known, was first outlined by Percy Spender, then Australian minister of external affairs, in January 1950 at a meeting in Colombo, Ceylon, of the Commonwealth foreign ministers. Spender's scheme—that the Commonwealth countries should take the initiative in launching a program of technical assistance, the area's first and biggest lack — coincided with an Asian proposal. J. R. Jayawardene, minister of finance for Ceylon, produced a resolution calling for a Commonwealth committee to prepare a 10-year plan of development for countries in the region. He and his colleagues from the seven other Commonwealth countries — Ernest Bevin of Britain, Doidge of New Zealand, Pandit Nehru from India, Pierson of Canada, Senanayeke of Ceylon, Mohammad of Pakistan, and Sauer of South Africa — had been gloomily contemplating the situation in South and South-East Asia where a quarter of the earth's people are crammed into barely 6 per cent of the land surface. In Sydney, the foreign ministers called on the Asian countries to prepare six-year development programs, beginning from July 1951, to provide a framework within which capital and technical assistance could be offered. They were quick to respond. With Mr. Bevin's support, the two ideas were set aside for detailed discussion in a second foreign ministers' meeting which would be held in Sydney in May. This area, torn and devastated by war, its industry in ruin, its population increasing like shoots in spring, could, the ministers agreed, be saved only by some great effort. This endeavor would have to come from within as well as from without. Four months later the "Colombo Plan for Co-operative Economic Development in South and South-East Asia”—a report produced by the seven founder members and presented “for the world's consideration”—was able to analyze the six-year programs prepared by India, Pakistan, Ceylon, the Federation of Malaya, Singapore, North Borneo and Sarawak. Golf Tough? Nuts, Anybody Can Play DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI)— Barney Pfaff had never played golf before, so he could not have known better. When three friends asked him to join them in a game at Cedar Crest Country Club, he agreed. Barney did not have any clubs, so he rented a set—two woods, four irons and a putter. When the foursome got around to the 172-yard 17th hole. Barney picked up a no. 2 wood. Normally, the shot would require a five or six iron. But nobody can argue that Barney used the wrong club. The ball he smacked dropped in for an ace—a hole in one. LONDON — (UPI) — Cpl. Albert Wilkinson coupled his selection as the British Army's cook of the year with a complaint: Who says golf is a difficult game? Ya Can't Knock Success "All the men like is eggs and chips. When I try something fancy they shake their heads." Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Total cost of these plans amounted to over 5 billion dollars — despite the fact each country had included only projects it felt reasonably sure of completing within the period. As it turned out, this was an underestimation. Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. From the first, the principle of self-help was laid down. The Asian countries must raise as much capital as they were able before calling on the donor countries of Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand to fill the financial gaps and supply technical assistance. Financial and technical aid were, however, to be given without any strings attached. And each country must work out its own needs and targets and make its own bi-lateral arrangements with another member country for specialized help. Although originally a Commonwealth scheme, other nations were quick to appreciate its aims and possibilities and were welcomed into the Colombo Plan as members. The United States and Japan joined the donor countries, Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Nepal. GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam augmented the ranks of the receivers. More and more, however, as their own programs develop, the needy countries are evidencing a willingness and ability to help each other, just as the founders hoped. In its 10 years of operation, the Plan has required $26.5 billion worth of capital. Roughly a fourth of this has come from the donor members. Thus, the Philippines and India have joined the U.S., Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan in helping to plot the great Mekong river project (affecting Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam) and even little Sarawak (where radio techniques are remarkably well-developed) has found itself able to train Laotian broadcasters. While the U.S. has been the biggest single contributor, the British contribution also has been impressive. IMMEDIATE OPENING for married student to do route work in Lawrence. *NEW TRUCK *CLEAN, RESPECTABLE WORK - LIBERAL COMMISSION SET-UP Will plan work to fit school schedule, summer school and all year round. Write to SUMMER KANSAN Flint Hall SALE Our Summer Clearance Continues More shoes have been added to our tables at the same low prices Women's .. $1.99 - $5.99 Men's ... $3.99-$9.99 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Page 5 their needyillingother, India Cand and great eecting (nam) ree well- ble to a, the worth of this members. b, the big British pres- Tuesday, July 11, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Rockefeller Has Strategy for 1964 But He Must Stop 2 Tough Foes 871 WASHINGTON -(UFI) - Among the three front runners for the next Republican presidential nomination, the man with the plan is Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. The governor's political plan is as neat as a bride's hope chest. His strategy is fixed for 1961, 1962 and 1964. Not as much nor even close can be said for the political strategies of former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon and Arizona's Sen. Barry Goldwater. This situation favors Rockefeller with considerable advantage as of now in the race for the 1964 presidential nomination. Rockefeller's advantage, however, lies more at home than abroad; at home being New York City and state, abroad being most of the other states of the union. The governor's 1961 program is to do what he can to foster the troubles now afflicting the Democratic Party in New York City. Democratic Mayor Robert F. Wagner will seek reelection this autumn. His administration has been marred by numerous scandals of varying degree. The mayor and Tammany Boss Carmine G. De Sapio is feuding. Their feud is one among many within the city's Democratic organization. Wagner's re-election effort evidently will be challenged in the Democratic primary. All of this adds up to serious trouble for the ruling party in New York City. It adds also to a promising situation for Rockefeller, whose plan for 1962 is to be re-elected governor of the state of New York. Among the governor's recent contributions to the troubles of New York City Democrats was a report by the State Investigation Commission on the city's school building program. The commission said June 30 that there had been "incalculable waste of the taxpayers' funds." More specifically, the commission alleged corruption, inefficiency and incompetence against the Wagner administration's school building operatives. On the plus side for Wagner, the splinter group Liberal party has endorsed his re-election candidacy. And there always is a chance, of course, that he will escape a primary challenge. The situation favors Rockefeller, however, with the possibility that a Republican might be mayor of New York City in 1964 when phase three of the Rockefeller strategy takes over. Phase three is to obtain Rockefeller's nomination for president. To bring that off, Rockefeller must get some breaks abroad. That is where Nixon or, perhaps, Goldwater must and may stop him. They could stop him in combination more readily than singly and in opposition to each other. It might work out that way. A Nixon-Goldwater combination would be formidable. Meantime, both Nixon and Goldwater seem to be playing it by ear. Goldwater is the flashiest, most sought-after performer on the Republican roster. Many persons regard him as the most exciting personality in U.S. politics. But, where does he go from there? Nixon is better known and also considerably sought. But he lacks a forum. He might get a good one by defeating California's Democratic Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown for governor. The election is next year. New Skirts Wider at Hemline According to Latest NY Report NEW YORK—(UPI)—Watch the shape of skirts when you do your fall and winter clothes buying. They are wider at the hemline than they've been in several seasons. They also are just as short as they have been all spring and summer; kneecaps are barely covered. That width comes mostly from new flared shapes, which are New York designer versions of a silhouette the House of Dior featured in its spring and summer 1961 collection. The flare begins low, starting either from a lowslung waistline or at mid-thigh in daytime clothes. In long formals, the flare begins at the knee. DISAPPEARING IS THE OVAL-shaped skirt. The new clothes include slender-looking skirts spread into an easy-to-walk width by deep, unpressed panel folds at the front or sides. In party clothes, the skirts themselves hang straight to the hem, then finish off in a flurry of ruffles, tucks, or bands of fur. But designers also featured many pleated skirts beneath hip-length jackets or long overblouses. Designers have not deserted the classic straight skirt which is a favorite with Mrs. John F. Kennedy. It shows beneath a dozen jacket variations. Favorite: the semi-fitted jacket, with sleeves ending just below the elbow, collar set far from the neck to leave space for chunky costume jewelry. ACTUALLY, THE WAISTLINE wanders all over the mid-section or is missing altogether. In some dresses, a wide panel defines the natural waist. In others, there is a fit through the midriff, but only a seam, no belt. What designers have done to the waistline rates next in importance in the new fashions. In still others, the waist is dropped three or four inches below normal, especially in the highly-popular overlouse silhouette for fall. In some instances, the dress is fitted to the front of the bodice only; the back swings free and flares out away from the figure. Soviet Troop Move Means 44% Increase Over U.S. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The U.S. armed forces will be outnumbered almost 50 per cent by the Russians because of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's cancellation of troop reductions. The Soviet decision apparently means that Russia's armed forces may maintain a strength of 3,623,000 men, compared with 2,517,000 men planned for U.S. forces by next July. The difference of 1,106,000 men would leave the Russian military machine 44 per cent larger even if Congress approved the 25,000-man U.S. increase requested by President Kennedy. Khrushchev's decision, announced in a speech last weekend, came at a time when top Pentagon leaders were beginning to feel the United States and Russia had approached a 9 Kansans Join Council Nine Kansans have accepted appointment to the new advisory council of the School of Pharmacy. Members are: Robert Allen, Bucklin; Roy Cheek, Belle Plaine; Roy Hawk and Norton K. Turner, Wichita; Roy W. Jaquith, Topea; Paul D. Linn, Overland Park; Richard M. Raney, Lawrence; Laurel Rickard, Medicine Lodge and Elmer Slaybaugh, Parsons. The council will advise the School on undergraduate and graduate training and assist in formulating post graduate programs that are being taken through the state on the circuit course plan. The council will also promote pharmaceutical education through the solicitation of aids and awards for promising students. Woodrow Anderson, Dodge City, president of the Kansas State Pharmaceutical Association; Forrest C. Bradley, Pittsburg, president of the State Board of Pharmacy; Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Dean J. Allen Reese and Prof. Duane G. Wenzel of the faculty. Ex officio members are: Hong Kong Student Gets Travel Grant stage of "parity" in military manpower. The Soviet Premier did not make entirely clear what strength the Russian forces would retain. Yi-No Tang, a graduate student from Hong Kong, has received a travel grant from the Asia fund of the American Chemical Society. Tang is a graduate of Chung Chi College in Hong Kong and has attended KU for two years. He is now conducting research on tritium reactions in alkylhalydes under the direction of Dr. Frank S. Rowland, who recently was appointed a Guggenheim Fellow. The grant will defray transportation costs for the recent Society meeting in St. Louis, Mo., which Tang attended. In January, 1960, he said these forces would be reduced from 3,623,000 to 2,433,000 over a period of "a year or two." Last weekend he said "the Soviet government was compelled to instruct the Defense Ministry to suspend, temporarily, pending special orders, the reduction in the armed forces planned for 1961." This left unclear whether any reductions already had taken place. Pentagon leaders, who said American plans will be reviewed on the basis of Khrushchev's announcement, may feel that secret U.S. intelligence reports provide a better estimate on the size of Russia's forces. Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell Gilpatric told a news conference recently that "if you compare all the forces with the military units we think the Soviets have, we are not in terms of military manpower alone very far behind the Soviets." Gilpatric added: "Then if you add in the satellites and other bloc countries and you take our allies, the military equation—in terms of manpower is not very lopsided." Strode Gets Office In Education Group Khrushchev also disclosed an increase amounting to $3.5 billion at the official rate of exchange in Russian's military budget for this year. Prof. Willard D. Strode has been elected vice chairman of the architectural engineering division of the American Society for Engineering Education. The honor came at the annual meeting last week of the society in Lexington, Ky. The most wasted day of all is that on which we have not laughed. — Sebastien Camfort Chairman of the division is Prof. Gifford H. Albright of Pennsylvania State University. Professor Strode has taught at KU since 1955. Answer to Crossword Puzzle S H A D M I L E S E T A L T A K E A D O B E R A B I E L E C T R I C B L A N K E T P E E K A B O O F E L E T S E H I L T S M A S H W H A L E F L A T T I R E T E E N S S L I D E T O N H A R D O P I N E S T U D A V E B L I N K C H E S E S W E T P A I N T S H I R E O L I V E S W A P S A F A R I F E A R L E S S A B O N D E V E R Y M O N T H S U R E I R E E V E A T L I S T E T I S E D E R D O O M Have Your Sport Shirts Hand Finished Remember also that 1 - day service is always available, on request, for your laundry or dry cleaning. Now you won't have to worry about factory folding wrinkles. You can have your sport shirts hand finished on hangers ready for your summer wear. E VI 3-3711 QUALITY GUARANTEED LAWRENCE 10t N 10th & N. H. launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 11, 1961 National Defense Act Loans Help 484 Students to Continue Studies The training of 484 students with vast potentials of service to the state and nation in critical specialities continued without interruption this year because the University of Kansas was able to make $200,600 in National Defense Education Act student loans. Philanthropy working through the KU Endowment Assn. made available $32,222 so the University could qualify for the $257,378 from the Federal government on $1 for each $8 formula during the past 12 months. "This is investment, not charity," explained Bob Billings, director of KU's aids and awards office. Repayment may extend through 10 years at 3 per cent interest after the student leaves school. Elementary and secondary school teachers may earn up to 50 per cent "forgiveness" on the principal by five years of full-time teaching. "Most of these students could not get significant financial assistance from any other source." Billings said. "Without the National Defense loan they would have to abandon or indefinitely delay their training." Eighty-five per cent of the loam are to students in the preferred—as specified by law—categories: prospective teachers, science and medicine, mathematics, engineering, and modern foreign language. One-fourth of the total, $73,200, went in 101 loans to medical students while 152 prospective teachers borrowed $86,100. Engineering students received $53,925. The six-member NDEA loan committee, headed by Herold G. Regier of the School of Education, and Billings first scrutinize all applications to determine need. Then they demand proof that the applicant can make satisfactory progress toward graduation. If an applicant has need and is a satisfactory student in one of the preferred categories, he or she gets the loan. "This is the strong investment feature of the program," Billings explained, "There are scholarships for the most brilliant students but neither KU nor any other school has the resources to assist the large numbers who will make solid contributions to society in the future. "And while we still know little about how to predict creativity, I'm Fine Arts Recital Scheduled Tonight A recital by faculty members of the School of Fine Arts will be given for the public at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Performers will be Mrs. Miriam Stewart Hamilton, soprano; Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone; Joseph and Marie Wilkins, tenor and soprano; Raymond Stuhl, cellist; and the Apollo Trio, comprised of Karel Blaas, violinist, Margaret Ling, harpist, and Max Walts, flutist. Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment confident that among these borrowers are some who will make great contributions." The ceiling on loans is $1,000 in one year and total of $5,000 to an individual. Last year 74 students borrowed $1,000. There were 159 loans in the $400-590 bracket. Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 At KU 3.8 times as many men as women were borrowers, although the men-women ratio is only 2 to 1. The average loan to men of $611 was $50 higher than the women's average. Nearly three-fourths of the money was lent to seniors, graduate students and those in post-graduate professional schools. "The older students have demonstrated their academic soundness, they are apt to have greater need and when within sight of their educational goals, they are willing to go into debt to speed attainment of those goals." Billings explained. However 50 freshmen — 32 men and 18 women, borrowed $24,800 in the year. Without a continuance of an extensive aid program like that of the National Defense loans, Billings for- "Some people have criticized the program because borrowers are studying music or art and many other subjects the critics consider to be unimportant," Billings continued. "A student takes one-third or less of his academic work in his major department. He is encouraged, even required, to diversify his electives so that he will be more than a limited specialist." "A few years ago men could get summer jobs from which they could save enough to pay for a half year of college. Try and do that now. During the school year the working student — and we've got lots of them at KU — finds that with today's high academic standards he can't earn more than a minor part of his expenses without curtailing his course load. Billings is equally convinced there must be continued financial assistance to help those willing to help themselves. Caroline's Experience at Pool May Change Parents' Views TEXICO WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President and Mrs. Kennedy may have a somewhat changed attitude toward the proximity of Secret Service agents to their daughter, Caroline as a result of the little girl's recent experience in a Washington swimming pool. The three-year-old slipped from a paddle board in the pool of some friends and a pregnant mother leaped fully clothed into the pool to rescue Caroline. The secret service agent who usually accompanies Caroline was, at the time, some distance away watching the entrance to the yard. Caroline's nurse also was busy, getting into her own bathing suit. Mrs. Kennedy since the inauguration has not wanted Caroline shadowed constantly by federal agents and they have maintained a discreet distance in deference to her wishes. The incident was the sort that occurs many times every summer around every pool and beach, a small child getting in over her head and having to be fished out by a grownup. Sometimes, however, these incidents end tragically if a grownup is not close by. The past weekend, however, an agent was included in the group when Caroline went sailing with her aunt, Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy. Ethel Kennedy had 10 relatively small children, including Caroline, with her in the sloop Victura. The boat remained in relatively calm waters behind a breakwater in front of the Kennedy house, but the first lady consented to having an agent go along. Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI 3-9897 sees an immediate and significant drop in the number of persons preparing for careers in the critical categories. Whether by design or by miscalculation, the sleop wag around in shallow water not far from the compound of homes that house a horse of Kennedy's during the summer. The water was less than two feet deep and the children were wild with joy, boiling over the side of the sleo and splashing in the surf. Ethel Kennedy and the accompanying agent finally got their brood back together in the boat which was pushed into deeper water. The Vicura promptly sped back to her home mooring in front of the house of the President's father, former ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Rock Hudson Kirk Douglas "The Last Sunset" Starts Thursday Haley Mills in Walt Disney's "Parent Trap" ...Letters... I would like you to publish my letter about the arbitrary traffic regulations used at KU. I live in GSP and they told me I can park my car there. Thursday, I bought a car and I parked it in front of the dormitory. On Friday, I got two papers on my front window and I went to the traffic office to find out why. They told me I had to pay $4 for parking in front of my dormitory and anywhere on the campus. This is the fare for one year and I will be here only until the last of July. I complained about this but I paid the $4. Dear Sir: But I believe I should be able to park near Bailey where I have a class once a day. It seems this is not possible either. If I want to go to the class with my car, I need to pay $4 more for three weeks. The persons in charge of the traffic One can acquire everything in solitude except character. — Henri Beyle regulations should go to the Law School and take some class in making better rules or they should go to some department and take classes where they teach common sense. I think either of these moves would be feasible because under the present setup, KU students are going to be forced to pay and pay. Martha Alfonso Romance Languages Dept. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER CAMPUS BARBER SHOP Open All Summer WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Doris Day David Niven "Please Don't Eat the Daisies" Plus Victor Mature "Hannibal" ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" Shown Once Only at 9:25 Starts Wednesday Debbie Reynolds Tony Randall in "Mating Game" ★★★★★ Tuesday, July 11, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 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 in front Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors and omissions. FOR SALE FOR SALE: APARTMENT FURNITURE double hide-a-bed, 2 chairs, breakfast set with 4 chairs, green x812 rug, pair of floor lamps, 3 tables, small bookcase and walnut breakfront. All for $125. Phone VI 3-5985. 7-11 WANT A REAL, BIKE? Like new model - 40% off Call VI 3-7828 after 1958 Hillman Station Wagon. Good mechanical condition. Good tires. See or call owner after 1:30 Mon., Tues., Wed. Thurs., VI 3-4571. 7-11 1956 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD "60 Special," the commander of the fleet. Full power, factory air conditioning. You'll think it's new. Call John Hackworth; VI 3-9635 between 5-7 p.m. or drop by 2006 Mitchell Rd. 7-11 1955 Flymouth, Plaza. 4 door. Good condition. Standard Transmission, Overhead. 2 snow tires. I-owned to settle estate. Charlton, Country G Terrace. VI 3-2240. 7-11 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron's & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and portable typewriters. Minimographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI-30151 today. tt LOST Lost: Lady's watch — Bulova, 3rd floor rest room. Bailey, 7:50 am. Thursday 7:26 or turn in at Kansan Business 111 Flint Court MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th, 4th & Vermont. Phone VI, ff $350. I WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1930 Dodge Dart for good $59 or $60 Volkswagen, or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 3- 7903. tf WANTED WANTED: Female to share nice large cool room. Adjacent to KU. Private bath. Single beds, linens furnished. Either student or working woman. Call VI 3-2239. SALEMEN OR SALES-TRAINEES: Sell $150, item. pays you $40 in commissions. Buy a $250 or more train. Train or full part time. Write Mr. Sulivan, Box 8129, Kansas City 12. M-7-25 HELP WANTED Male or Female: Excellent income for tailing on Christian people. Full or part meals, own oceans. Own hours. Widening. AmBroadway. 3706 Broadway, Suite 314, K.C. 11, Mo. 7-25 For Rent: 5 large rooms-2 bedrooms- attractively furnished apartment for fall semester. Water paid. No children, 901 Kentucky. Call VI 3-4491. 7-21 FOR RENT 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfurn. Air cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. 7291% Mass., VI 2-0099. tf ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 43 St. JE 1-1121. Evenings & Sun. SK1-2634. ROOMS FOR MEN: 1/2 block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new Lounge available, linens furnished. Reasonable rates. 1221 Oread. V 3-6789. tt For Rent: Apartment, furnished. Utilities paid. $58 per month. Couple preferred. Close to KU and downtown . . . call VI 3-7257. tt For Rent to students. Completely furnished. 2 bedroom house next to KU. paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf Three Bedroom Nicely Furnished Apartment. Private entrance and bath. air conditioned, steam heat. Boys preferred. Reasonably priced. Also efficiency apartment. $25 each. Private entrance and bath. Near KU. Call VI 3-7830. 7-25 BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI 3-4656. tf MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Stores with Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything needs to be on display. Projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome. Tf PASS THE ENGLISH PRO, EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810. Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 5-7551, or 921 Miss. 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. V. 3-1267. tjct DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $939_{1/2}$ Mass. Call VI 5-5263. TYPING "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, materials, and carbons neatly and accurately. Standard rates. Call Patt Coester, VI 3-8679." "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." V 3-5820, typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI 3-5920 – I 2-0111. If Typist with secretarial experience. Accurate, reliable. Good educational background. Special attention to term papers and reports. VI 3-4822. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type thoses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Cain. VI 3-0524. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application letters. Prompt service. Mail resume to Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI, VI 3-7855 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mary Barlow, 408 W. 12th, VI 12 of 1648. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, press letters, and reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mcc. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8686. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, Bordor, these papers, & reports accurately. Bandard docs. See Mrs. Compton, 131 Vt. apt. 3. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression for instructors." For excellent baking at stumptie rates, call Ms Loussit Pope, PI 3-1907. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Service. 5917 B Woodson, Mission, HE-7718. Evs. or Sat. RA 2-2186. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc., on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russ- sell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tt Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers STUDENTS Grease Job ___ $1 Brake Adi. ___ 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free. Open 7-10 with mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd. VI 1-0994 Portraits of Distinction 摄影 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 1234567890 P PAPERBACK ICK C UP A PAPERBACK PAPE RBACK Mary Jane Fitzgerald Choose some paperbacks from our huge selection... they're so handy and inexpensive... Ideal reading for spare moments... or for an evening's relaxation. We carry all sorts of books, so you're sure to find one to suit your mood. Biographies Mysteries Philosophy Historical Novels Westerns Educational Types Best Sellers Classics K Come, Browse Through Our Paperback Department Kansas Kansas Union Book Store U Union on Book S Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 11, 1961 MR. MERCHANT: Even if you could shout your sales story from the rooftops of Lawrence for 24 hours... A man in a suit holding his head in his hands, screaming loudly. In the background are buildings and a tall tower with a clock face. ...You couldn't reach nearly as many college students as the SUMMER SESSION KANSAN does in one hour Every Tuesday and Friday morning beginning about 8 a.m., students pick up their copies of the Summer Session 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 SUMMER SESSION 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 Summer Session Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, University of Kansas. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Business Office "The surest way to reach the campus market." SCHAFFMAN AND BALMORE DEAN RETURNS—Burton W. Marvin, left, dean of the School of Journalism, shows a paper he brought back from his Iranian visit to Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism. Prof. Pickett was acting dean during Dean Marvin's absence. Marvin Reports Exciting Year for Dean "It all certainly made enough excitement for the year," Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, says in recounting the experiences of a year in the strategically important Middle East. Dean Marvin recently returned from a year's leave of absence which took him to Iran on a Fulbright grant. He spent most of the nine months teaching at Tehran University in the Iranian capital city. It was a year of student strikes, teacher's strikes, royal births and visits. Dean Marvin, his wife and three children lived just a few blocks from the Iranian Parliament, which was the scene of a demonstration which toppled one cabinet of the shaky Iranian government and forced the installation of another. The demonstration was part of an elementary and high school teachers' strike in May. "Several thousand of them (the teachers) assembled in the square outside of Parliament," Dean Marvin said. "Firemen sprayed the crowd in an effort to disperse them. The crowd became more unruly, the police shot into it, and a man was killed. "This started a series of events which caused one cabinet to tumble and forced the appointment of another premier." A students' strike last winter caused two classes Dean Marvin was teaching to be suspended for about a month. Dean Marvin reported that excitement also reached a high point last fall at the birth of a male heir to the Iranian throne. The Shah of Iran has married four times, seeking a male heir. The visit of Queen Elizabeth II in March also was cause for much excitement and celebration in Tehran. There has been much political turbulence in Iran in the past several years. "There has been a rather rapid development in literacy in Iran," Dean Marvin said. He reported that since the end of World War II the rate of literacy has risen from 5 to 15 per cent. "There are a great number of children in school, which means that in a few years the percentage will rise even more. "When these people become literate they are going to become aware of the world around them and the wretched conditions in which they live. This could mean considerable political danger for the present government if it does not change social and economic conditions." Dean Marvin said the basic problem that faces Iran is the proper utilization of its resources. "Compared with other nations in the Middle East, Iran is quite wealthy." Iran is a country of about 20 million people living within an area of about the size of the United States east of the Mississippi River. Its topography and climate are similar to the Southwestern states of Arizona and New Mexico. Iranians generally were very friendly, Dean Marvin said. "We never saw anything that would indicate animosity toward Americans." KU He said Iranians look up to the United States. "The Cuban incident definitely tarnished the image of the United States. These people do not expect this kind of thing from us." "During the year we got eight or ten free taxi rides because we were Americans," Dean Marvin said. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 49th Year, No. 9 Moe to Conduct Chorus Sunday The band also is performing several contemporary works. When the first number on its program, taken from Coates "London Suite," was premiered in 1933, its immediate success made it one of the most frequently played marches in England and elsewhere. Daniel Moe, formerly of the University of Denver, will conduct the chorus in the music camp's concerts Sunday. The first orchestra number is the overture to one of Weber's most important operas which was based on a fairy tale taken from a book of German ghost stories. This opera laid the foundation for German romantic opera. Mr. Moe studied at Concordia College, University of Washington, where he received his master's degree, at the State University of Iowa, where he did his doctoral work in composition, and in Germany. Next year he will be director of choral activities at Iowa. Thomas Gorton will direct the orchestra in Hanson's Symphony No. II, romantic. All of the choral numbers this Sunday, except the Mozart, will be contemporary. Bender, a German recently migrated to this country and is now at Concordia College at Nebraska. "That's the Idea of Freedom" is from Copland's opera "The Second Hurricane." "Love Somebody" is an American folk song. La Montaine is an up and coming American composer who has recently received several important awards. Both the band and orchestra will be conducted by Donald Johanos, resident conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Johanos, a graduate of Eastman, studied with Eugene Ormandy in Philadelphia for a year, then received a three-year grant from the Rockefeller Foundation to study abroad under the major conductors in Europe including Szell, Klemperer, and von Beisum. Moussorgsky's tone poem, "A Night on Bald Mountain," is an old favorite. LAWRENCE, KANSAS The other contemporary composers on the orchestra program are Wallingford Riegger and Howard Hanson, both Americans. Friday, July 14, 1961 KU University Officials See No Shortage In Housing from Enrollment in Fall The expected increase in enrollment this fall won't cause any severe housing shortage, according to University officials. KU will probably have approximately 10,000 students on its Lawrence campus and 10,700 total. Housing of freshman women appears to be the only problem this fall. The coeds will live in existing University dormitories, which means that some two-girl rooms will be converted into three-girl rooms. KU has purchased 372 new beds but J. J. Wilson, dormitories director, said he does not know how many coeds will have to triple-up. A 2 million dollar dorm now under construction will be ready by September 1962, and will accommodate the additional students. A photograph by a KU student has been selected as the cover picture of this year's "The National Photo Journalism," official publication of Kappa Alpha Mu Honorary Photo Journalism fraternity. Perry C. Riddle, Minneapolis senior, took the picture of an Army rifleman in action at an Army reserve training camp last year. It won two first place awards and was rated best print at this year's 16th annual college photo competition sponsored by Kappa Alpha Mu, the National Press Photographers Assn., and the Encyclopaedia Brittanica, in addition to being the cover picture. Wilson also said Lawrence residents will continue to house the majority of the student body. He added, "There are no plans for the University to become self-sufficient in housing." KU Student's Pix Gets Top Award Ice Cream Social Tonight The Wesleyan-Lutheran student group is having an ice cream social at 7:00 this evening at the Wesleyan Student Center. At 5:30 p.m. Sunday E. E. Bayles, professor of education, will speak to the group on "pragmatism and the nature of man." Four more dormitories will be built on the campus during the next four years in the Iowa Street area. These dorms will provide housing for hundreds of additional students, according to Wilson, but the percentage now provided for by the University will not change greatly. KU's 1970 enrollment is forecast to hit 17,000. KU will not construct additional housing for married students after the final five buildings are completed at Stouffer Place. These are slated to be ready by September 1962. Local builders will handle further units, Wilson said. In general, Wilson added, KU hopes to keep the percentage between University, Greek, and community housing the same as it is today, during the next 10 years. APRA DELPOVMAR WHAT'S NEW—Benjamin Morris of Quinter and Sarah Walker of New Smyra Beach, Fla., students in the KU "Junior Year in Costa Rica" program, catch up on the latest local political news. The two have been attending the Institute for Political Education to supplement their work at the University of Costa Rica. Behind them is a bulletin board listing names of former Institute students. The organization trains young people for leadership in liberal anti-communist parties in Latin America. (Related story on page 5.) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 14. 1961 For Nuclear Testing With the nuclear test talks entangled by Russia's demands for administering an inspection system the question of resumption of nuclear testing again has received much attention in Washington. ALMOST ALL MILITARY AND ATOMIC Energy Commission officials have urged the Kennedy administration to end the moratorium that was declared by the United States to create a more friendly atmosphere for these talks. Most of these officials argue that a resumption of testing would push the United States over the brink of a scientific breakthrough which would result in the development of a far more effective nuclear armaments system. The small battlefield weapon is the nuclear device experts are most anxious to test. The United States apparently has a good supply of the larger, more devastating weapons. But there has also recently been talk of an entirely different type of nuclear bomb — the N-bomb. According to Sen. Thomas E. Dodd, D-Conn., this would be a clean bomb which would wipe out human populations without the destruction of property or the lingering radiation that accompanies the normal nuclear blast. THE QUESTION THAT MUST BE Resolved is whether the testing of these weapons and the probable results of these tests would be worth risking a disturbance of the relative stalemate that now exists in world-wide nuclear armament development. Although it is certain that France and Red China are presently working on atomic bombs and there is much speculation on what Russia is doing, there are many nations that have suspended nuclear development plans to await the outcome of the Geneva conference on testing. Nations like Sweden, Israel, Germany, India and Canada could develop a bomb. The real danger of the nuclear race is in the number of nations possessing nuclear weapons, not the development of gigantic bombs by a few countries. The larger the number of atomic-proficient nations the greater the possibility of some irresponsible country igniting a nuclear conflict. So the conducting of the test talks itself has prevented some nations from hopping into the nuclear swim. If the United States should resume testing, some of these nations, no doubt, would seriously consider initiating a program of their own. We also could expect Russia to start conducting tests, if they have not already been doing so. THE RESUMPTION OF NUCLEAR TESTS could affect the Geneva talks either positively or negatively. The Soviets might become anxious to sign an agreement if they suspect that further testing would give the United States a greater advantage in nuclear technology. Or, preoccupation with tests might create an atmosphere in which the Geneva talks could not possibly be successful. The possible value of the weapons the United States wants to test is the factor on which a decision to test or not to test will be made. If a great break-through could be achieved nuclear tests probably should be resumed. Ron Gallagher Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Bag. 5 Latin friends. 10 Move, as air. 14 Ear: Comb. form. 15 Work having two parapets. 16 Arouse one's dander. 17 ___ end: 2 words. 18 Chosen. 19 Frigge's husband. 20 Famous play-wright: full name. 23 Pronoun: Poet. 24 Cupid. 25 Greek island. 27 Malicious. 29 Political groups. 32 Salons. 33 Literary collection. 34 The makings of a cabin. 35 Bretons and Britons. 36 Publius Naso. 37 Shrub. 38 Dwellers in Toyland. 39 Detects. 40 George Eliot and George Sand: 2 words. 42 Mimicery. 43 City between Moscow and Kharkov. 44 Part of Arabia. 45 Noted playwright. 46 Extent. 47 City on the Meuse. 48 Soft mud. 49 Numerous. 50 Among: Prefix. 57 Abbess. 58 Herdsman of Tekoa. 59 Seaweed substances. 60 Esteemed. DOWN 1 River into the Moselle. 2 Roadster. 3 Sour-tempered one. 4 Science of motion. 5 Rugged crests. 6 Free-for-all. 7 Roman date. 8 Ornamental casings for flower containers: 2 words. 9 Periods between. 10 Graze. 11 Island near Venice. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 25 26 27 28 29 30* 17 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30* 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 12 Miscellaneous collection. 13 Proceed on. 21 Greek letters. 22 Spoils. 25 Pungent spice. 26 Champion golfer. 27 Under surfaces of feet. 28 Gencrous act. 29 Concord. 29 Young 'uns. 31 Radar screen signal. 32 Opposing any control. 35 Corsage favorite. 36 Vagabond's delight: 2 words. 38 Empty. 39 Count von ___ 41 Not at all: Colloq. 42 Milk snakes. 44 Choler. 45 TV role. 46 "My Name is ___" by Saroyan. 47 Stranger: Comb form. 48 Dwarf of the Philippines. 49 More or less. 50 Frank L. Baum character. 51 Close. (Answer on page 5) Fire-Fighting Aids Called Low in Denver WASHINGTON—(UPI)A Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) expert says Denver's Stapleton Field and other major airports are "deficient" in crash fire-fighting equipment. John W. Bridges, FAA airport safety specialist, gave this assessent following the crash landing Tuesday of a United Air Lines DC8 jet as Stapleton. The airliner veered off the runway, collided with a truck and burst into flames. Sixteen of the 122 passengers and the truck driver died in the flames at the airport's three crash fire trucks raced to the wreckage from their standby position on the loading ramp. Bridges did not criticize the way airline or airport authorities responded to the emergency. But he told United Press International he rated Stapleton Field's crash firefighting capability as deficient after a visit there last December. He said the airport's two water-fog and water-foam trucks together could discharge 180 gallons a minute of water and foam. A third vehicle, a tanker, could supply the other two trucks with 500 gallons a minute, Bridges said. The 180 gallons, he said, falls far below the 1,500 gallons per minute recommended for jet fields by the National Fire Protection Assn. and endorsed by the FAA. Bridges said Stapleton enjoyed "good back-up support" from the Denver Fire Department and nearby Lowry Air Force Base. However, he said, their fire-fighting equipment would not be available quickly enough in case of a crash without advance warning. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Chuck Morelock and Ron Gallagher ... Co-Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinache . Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism **BUDDENBROOKS**, by Thomas Mann. Vintage (Random House), $1.85. An extraordinary facet of "Buddenbrooks," an admitted classic of the 20th century, is that Thomas Mann wrote it in his early twenties. We think of Mann as the mature and philosophical refugee from Nazism, and fail to realize that this monumental work appeared when he was so young. Other similar sagas are published when their authors are mature men. "Buddenbrooks" should be read in juxtaposition to the glut of novels of business appearing in American book stores. It really stands out in such company, but it stands out alongside a "War and Peace" or "Brothers Karamazov" as well. The book is of heroic size. Buddenbrook is the name of a northern German family of business, middle class but nearly aristocratic. Mann traces their story through 50 years of gradual decline. Others have told similar stories (Booth Tarkington did it affectingly in "The Magnificent Ambersons"), but few such writers have had both the breadth and depth of Mann. Three heads of the house of Buddenbrooks are here portrayed. As the novel ends, the business is gone, the only male heir has fallen to typhoid fever, and the women prepare to dissolve the households. Antonie Buddenbrooks has gone through two incredibly unsuccessful marriages, her daughter through another. Christian Buddenbrooks had fallen to a life of dissolution and dilettantism. This is a great novel, in which all characters are completely developed. It has tender moments—the young Antonie falling in love on a seashore vacation, the family dinners, little Hanno being enraptured by music. Best of all the characterizations is that of Antonie—Tony—emotional, sentimental, impractical, a Buddenbrook to the very core. THE CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR, edited by Kenneth M. Stampp, Spectrum (Prentice-Hall), $1.75. In this centennial-happy year, a book of penetrating essays on why there was a Civil War should be welcomed even by those who confine their Civil War enthusiiasms to the blunders of Burnside at Fredericksburg and Hooker at Chancellorsville. Already a standard work, "The Causes of the Civil War" contains statements, apologia and rationale both from the 19th century and from recent revisionists. Stampp's sections include "the slave power" and the "black Republicans," state rights and nationalism, economic sectionalism, blundering politicians and irresponsible agitators, the right and wrong of slavery, majority rule and minority rights, and the conflict of cultures. These are common groupings for the many explanations of what caused the war. There is no consensus, and Stampp feels that this is good, because it will always leave open the avenues of historical discussion on why North and South fought. Historians, editorial writers, orators—all sound off in these pages. Frank L. Owsley blames the war on "egoctric sectionalism," particularly of the northern variety. Henry Wilson sees a great conspiracy he calls the "slave power." Alexander Stephens defends secession on constitutional grounds. Arthur Schlesinger scorns the "state rights fetish." The Beards see a clash in rival economies, and Algie M. Simons sees the war in Marxist terms. A variety of southerners blame the economically repressive North. James Randall says the politicians blundered their way into war. Charles Sumner views a holy battle against slavery, and George Fitzhugh sees slavery as a positive good. Calhoun talks about a concurrent majority, and Lowell says the majority must rule. Edward Pollard describes Puritans and Cavaliers and contrasts them, and the Chicago Tribune points to a South envious of the North. But without slavery could there have been a war? THE SEARCH FOR AMERICA, edited by Huston Smith and Richard Heffron. Spectrum (Prentice-Hall) $1.50. Here is a series of penetrating essays that set out to provide insight into contemporary American civilization. They are written by some of the better thinkers in America today, almost all of the leftward persuasion—Eleanor Roosevelt, Harold Stassen, Paul Hoffman, Harry Ashmore, J. K. Galbraith, Mark Van Doren, Margaret Mead, Erich Fromm, Reinhold Niebuhr and Paul Tillich, plus a few others. The paperback was assembled following an educational television series that bears the same title. There are obviously many social and moral crisis that confront Americans in 1961, and several of these are analyzed. There is no solution. The editors wisely recognize that no Billy Graham-Norman Vincent Peale approach can solve our problems. Among the discussions are Stassen's analysis of our relations with Russia, Hoffman's discussion of underdeveloped areas and the U. S., Harry Ashmore's discussion of racial problems from a moderate standpoint. The Negro question, it should be observed, receives three chapters in the book, one of them an archaic defense of white supremacy by William Simmons. Galbraith contributes an essay in his amusing style, observing that there have been many memorable speeches in recent years but few memorable actions. Bertram Beck discusses crime and delinquency, and does it well. Margaret Mead dwells on the American family, and Fromm on the love cult of Americans. There finally are challenging and not particularly optimistic analyses of American philosophy by Niebuhr, Tillich and W. E. Hocking. Magazine Rack Page 3 A Guide to the Novel It is high time a wide-awake social psychiatrist (if there is such a thing) published "A Standard Guide to the Modern American Novel." Surely a foundation could be found to finance him. In a special chapter devoted to alphabetical-numerical symbols, the scientist could establish ten categories under which novels currently being published in America could be classified. At a cost of one million dollars annually, a Federal Bureau of Novel Classifications, or FBNC, could require that all novels shipped over state lines bear an FBNC classification tag. The benefit to readers and book reviewers alike would be immense. The tag, with its pity little alphabetical-numerical symbol, would be a down-to-earth guide which no dust jacket could overcome, over-ride, or obscure. A key to symbols, by means of which reviewers, censors, women's clubs, police organizations, librarians, pedestrians, motorists and conductors, could find out what the book was without having to read the thing, might go as follows: KEY CODE TO SYMBOLS (FORM 90-XK-20, U.S.-FBNC, GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE) TYPE A-1: Beautifully written, superb characterization, extremely sensitive, each sentence a perfect jewel, entire work deeply moving and highly symbolic, but essentially dull as hell. Contains few verbs, only a sprinkling of dialogue, but a great wealth of description in passages out of which the cliches have been laboriously and conscienciously removed, much after the manner and method of an old yard man weeding out crab grass. Type B-2: Every character wants more and lives in or near New York City and drinks too much. (Not recommended for AA members, but endorsed by American Beverages Group, International Association of Beverage Importers, Manufacturers and Marketers.) The boss is a louse (metaphorical), the firm's clients are also lice (metaphorical), it's a lousy [sie] world in which everybody earns high in the five figures, including the protagonist who is thirty-four-year-old louse (metaphorical) scheming to get the vice-presidency. Author is or was in public relations and/or advertising. (Protest from K-90-XK filed with FBNC by American Association of Advertisers and/or Public Relations Executives.) In 600 pages the protagonist re-lives the lousy (metaphorical) entirety of his life and somehow commits all seven of the seven deadly sins and violates all Ten Commandments one by one and in order, only to throw away all of this careful preparation for big business success and become, on page 600, a martyred Madison Avenue Saint pickled in a great big dry metaphorical martini. The writing is like ad copy, persuasive, exotic, erotic, occasionally scatological or flamboyant by turns. The Author's Agent sold this novel's outline six months before the author began dictating the actual manuscript, to seven different people for $85,000 (total). Before leaving for European vacation, Agent struck out all dull passages, re-wrote the ending, had mss. mimeographed and delivered to buvers. TYPE C-3: A tour of bedrooms, bathrooms, brothels, alley-ways, insane asylums, rest homes, army barracks, cheap hotels, tenement hallways, barns, attics, haystacks, hedges, ditches, thickets, fantastically crowded subways and elevators, basements, coal bins, motels, tourist homes, rooming houses and occasionally, even five thousand feet up in a flying airplane. (Association of Amalgamated Censors notified on form 2K-S4, waivers, protests, 290 forms and Permission to Publicly Burn Forms must be filed ten days in advance with FBNC District Offices.) Swell reading. Type D-4: Same as C-3, but set one, two, or three hundred years ago. Type E-5: And then suddenly everything went black. Friday. July 14, 1961 Type F-6: "This great big land is mine. Get down off that horse, Jasper Cain!" Type G-7: Inspector Horatio Griffin decided to take a v Type G-7: Inspector Horatio Griffin decided to take a vacation. Type H-8: "You play ball with us Murphy. We'll make you governor of this state." TYPE 1-9: English is this author's adopted tongue. Publishers who adopted him in turn write: "We must candidly admit that this author writes better in his adopted tongue of English than any native American which we know of now to be in existence or even dead, for that matter, or any Englishman either." Type J-10: Art born out of pain, stark denial, painful reading, a pain in the somewhere of cruel nothingness rising out of a gigantic void of splintery crucibles, like somewhere stars, he thought once, while looking at his mother, type of thing. (I Don't Understand It Form 22-K filed and approved.) A typical example of J-10 will identify this category once, but perhaps, not for all. Example: "Swan's Exodus," Arty Book Co., 1959. The young author, Saxton K. Huppleman, Jr. (B. A. Horstwurst College, '33) is forty-eight-years-old. Following graduation in 1933 he was a 1934 Tackerman Fellow and the following year won a Kampmeyer Grant. In 1936 he got a Hutson Award, which was renewed twice for 1937-38. He wangled a Fulbright in 1939 and on the basis of his record got an Albright in 1940. The Army interrupted his productive years in 1941 but in 1945 he was again a Tackerman Fellow. In 1946 the "Tarrytown Review" accepted but did not publish the only story Huppleman had written so far and sent him to Italy on a Tarrytown Fellowship which carried him through 1948. He was out of work for three months in 1949 before the Steegle Foundation discovered him and gave him a seven-year endowment during which young, gifted Huppleman hurriedly produced the slim (less than 100 pages) volume, "Swan's Exodus," his first novel. It is the tenderly confusing account of a gifted young artist trying to keep body and soul together in a cruel, unfriendly world. (Excerpted from "A Modest Proposal" by Jesse Hill Ford in the Georgia Review) Pakistani Has Awed Crowd In Congress WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The tall, stern soldier towering over the speaker's rostrum was winding up a lesson in history and civics before a joint session of Congress. Speeches by foreign dignitaries are old hat to Washington lawmakers, but this was something different. The ramrod - straight man with the dark moustache had gone half an hour without a prepared speech. Now he was warming up to foreign aid—something his country wants plenty of. He was speaking in British-accented English but used sharp American idioms, just as a congressman would. "It's not a vote-getter," he told the Congressmen. "And we are a long way from you. We need this and we need that. You are getting a bit tired of this story." The audience laughed. Indeed, many were getting tired of it. But the speaker's eyes flashed and his finger waved at the laughing congressmen. "I suggest to you that you had better not get tired of it." he snapped. No foreigner had ever dared talk that way to Congress, but Mohammad Ayub Khan, President of Pakistan, did and he got away with it. The chamber burst into thunderous applause. The laughter stopped, a congressman gasped, and the whir of newsreel cameras suddenly seemed deafening. "I felt like I ought to be offended," said one congressman, "but I wasn't." "You have great world obligations," Ayub told the engrossed lawmakers. "You cannot hide from them no matter what you do." "In the event of real trouble there's no other country in Asia you'll even be able to put your foot in." Ayub said. "The only people who will stand by you are the people of Pakistan. "Provided you are also prepared to stand by them." Avub's speech had been scheduled for 20 minutes, but it stretched out to 50 before he finished, after numerous interruptions for applause. Enaptured congressmen compared Aubud's speech with one by Winston Churchill. They called his blunt, off-the-cuff talk "magnificent," "incredible," "terrific," and "great." Ayub told the legislators that "we are pressing against you today as friends . . . but if we don't make the grade and, heaven forbid, we fall under communism, then we will be pressing against you again—but not as friends." One lawmaker gave it the ultimate praise: "I couldnt have said it better myself." He warned that if the Pakistani public isn't assured a decent living for its people "in, say, 15 or 20 years, we shall be overtaken by communism." Normally taciturn, Speaker Sam Rayburn assured Ayub later that "no country in the world" deserves U.S. aid more, and told him that he was a "man with iron in his backbone and brains in his head." Ayub, who took control of his government by force, has never been elected to anything. But his oratory amazed Congress. House GOP leader Charles A. Halleck said he "wouldn't want him (Ayub) to run against me in Indiana." Rep. John W. McCormack, House Democratic leader, called it "the most unusual speech I have ever heard delivered in my 33 years here." Short Ones When a man is dead, they put money in his coffin, erect monuments to his memory, and celebrate the anniversary of his birthday in sst speeches. Would they take any notice of him if he were living? No!—William Hazlitt If good men were only better, Would the wicked be so bad?— John White Chadwick ... Books in Review . . . By Harold Orel Associate Professor of English KANSAS RENAISSANCE, edited by Warren Kliewer and Stanley J. Solomon, (Lindsborg, Kansas: Coronado Publications, 173 + xiv pp., $4.00) This handsomely printed volume includes a witty introduction by Allen Crafton. It traces the four phases of the social history of Kansas, and the corresponding kinds of writing that grew out of them: "the period of exploration and of the migrations across the territory of the lands farther west," "the migrants from the East, the vanguards of civilization" "the homestanding era," and "the period of the vanishing frontier, the years of social and economic transition." But no grand claims are made for Kansas regional writing; the best of it has been done by out-of-staters; and what we should look for here is evidence of imaginative power, the "authentic creative impulse" that is more surely pointed to in the subtitle, "An Anthology of Contemporary Kansas Writing," than in the title itself. THE POEMS ARE, I THINK, THE WEAKEST SECTION OF the anthology, partly because they contain echoes of work that is not necessarily first-rate, and partly because technique occasionally calls attention to itself and distracts us from subject-matter. But the anthology contains much of genuine literary merit, and the University of Kansas, which has enjoyed close relationships with more of these writers than any other single place, may well be proud. Edgar Wolfe's Trial by Ice, a novelette that deals with the daily rounds of a social worker in an economically depressed community, achieves its effects by honest observation and a compassion for people who can never articulate their deepest feelings. The final confrontation between an embittered, drunken, unemployed truck-driver and the frightened social worker is well prepared for. The shorter stories — "Old Galloway Laughed," by Nelson Antrim Crawford, "The Prince of Egypt," by Warren Kliewer, and "O'Shaughnessy's Revenge," by Kirke Mechem — deal with widely differing subjects. Crawford's study of a printer who has no patience for cowl youth hits directly at the kind of meanness and cruelty that a certain kind of middle age can develop into, and Kliewer's story of children frightened by a gypsy boy is well told by "the innocent eye" and becomes an achievement of point of view. Mechem's story, called "a Kansas Fairy Tale" by the author, will remind many readers of the kind of Irish legend that Lady Gregory and Yeats were so fond of translating into contemporary lines. "Kansas Renaissance" contains three one-act plays, two of them by well-established writers (Langston Hughes and William Inge). The third, by Stanley J. Solomon, is by far the best: "Eurydice Abandoned" converts to the jargon of jazz a myth that has always, up to now, been taken dead seriously. The characterization is clean-cut, the dialogue always funny, and I suspect that it will play wonderfully well in any theatre that takes a chance. Hughes's play, "Soul Gone Home," is dryly unsentimental, but fairly slight even for a curtain-raiser. Inge's oddly titled piece, "To Bobolink, for Her Spirit," transfixes forever the kind of creature that haunts celebrities for autographs; but the subject seems hardly worth the skill that Inge lavished upon it. THE BOOK, IN BRIEF, IS A MISCELLANY WITHOUT A unifying theme, but it proves its intended point, that people who grow up in Kansas or who like Kansas well enough to come here for their education have important things to say, developing talent, and the enthusiasm to carry through the hard work that all good writing requires. It will please many readers. CHAPTERS OF ERIE, by Charles Francis Adams Jr. and Henry Adams. Great Seal (Cornell Press), $1.45. "These modern potentates have declared war, negotiated peace, reduced courts, legislatures, and sovereign States to an unqualified obedience to their will, disturbed trade, agitated the currency, imposed taxes, and, boldly setting both law and public opinion at defiance, have freely exercised many other attributes of sovereignty." Thus speaks the younger Charles Francis Adams in this important document of the Gilded Age, a volume that students of the era certainly should be acquainted with. These "Chapters of Erie" are articles written for publications of the day by Adams and his brother Henry. They are brilliant descriptions of an America subverted to the whims of the spoilsms. The spoilsmen, in particular, are Daniel Drew, Jay Gould and Jim Fisk, who, in their railroad battle with Vanderbilt and their efforts to control the Erie Railroad, run roughshod over anyone in their path. One of the chapters describes the cornering of the gold market, a little crisis perpetrated by Gould and Fisk. Only Fisk, of these three, is a charming scoundrel. Gould was as cold as they come, and Drew as piously evil. What these men were able to do to acquire wealth and power is a sad commentary on America of almost 100 years ago. WATER, THE MIRROR OF SCIENCE, by Kenneth S. Davis and John Arthur Day. Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents. Here is an exceptionally well-done paperback original that deals with water on both the scientific and philosophical levels. Davis is the Kansan who wrote the exceptionally good "River on the Rampage" of eight or so years ago. Readers of that book will recall how well he treats the problem of water, and they will find a similar treatment here. Davis and Day start by showing us what an unusual substance water is. They deal with its peculiarities, its discovery, its uses, its relation to other materials, theories concerning it, and its meaning to all of life. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Fridav. July 14, 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock Little frustrations can sometimes drive a fellow nuts. This applies to football as well as life in general. Back in 1950, for example, Kansas fielded one of its better team but could only post a modest 6-4 record. That year featured the great running of sophomore halfback Charley Hoag and senior halfback Wade Stinson. Together, they helped Kansas finish fourth nationally in rushing offense but unfortunately Kansas could finish no higher than fourth in league play. The losses came at the hands of TCU, 14-7; Oklahoma 33-13, Missouri 20-6, and Nebraska, 33-26. In the TCU game, Hoag broke a 7-7 tie late in the fourth quarter with a dazzling 93 yard burst up the middle but alas, the play was called back by a holding penalty. The Frogs then took advantage of an intercepted pass and threw one of their own for the winning TD. FORTY THOUSAND FANS were on hand for the OU clash and for three quarters, KU seemed to have the upset of the year in the making. The Hawks scored first near the end of the half on a long pass play, upped the margin to 13-0 with Stinson's 71-yard TD run on the first play from scrimmage in the third quarter, and were headed for a third score when the big break occurred. Hoag was knocked out of action thereby throwing all the load onto Stinson. From that point on, KU wilted and OU rolled, thanks to quarterback Claude Arnold's passing. Had Hoag stayed in the game, the final outcome might have been different. ANOTHER CHAPTER IN THE FRUSTRATION BOOK was written at homecoming in a wide open offensive battle with Nebraska. Both teams had superb backfields, but a second string Cornhusker guard, Rex Hoy, won the game for the Huskers with a freak 73-yard interception. The mishap resulted when KU quarterback Chet Strehlow faded back to pass then was hit by onrushing NU linemen. The ball squirted up in the air where Hoy grabbed it and raced untouched for the score. In the Missouri game, Kansas fumbled the ball all over the place to suffer its fourth setback. Conditions were so bad that day that only a handful of fans were left in the stadium as the final quarter got underway with the temperature reading a numbing 17 degrees. As a result, Hoag, Stinson and Co. rambled at will all day but couldn't hold onto the ball whenever the Hawkers threatened. All in all, KU could have had an undefeated season with a few more breaks. But that's the way the ball bounces sometimes. KU WHILE WE'RE ON THE SUBJECT, the latest Football Guide which hit the newsstands this week, has some optimistic words for KU fans. According to writer Maury White of the Des Moine Register-Tribune, "Coach Jack Mitchell's Jayhawkers meet TCU Wyoming, Colorado, Iowa State and Oklahoma while Coan is ineligible, but they have almost everyone back who really counted. plus good freshman help. Returning are All America John Hadi and all-conference halfback Curtis McClinton. Hugh Smith will be given a trial at left half. If Hadl is needed at halfback, Roger McFarland is a proven quarterback. The rushing should be terrific, the passing better." "Ends Larry Allen and Mike Deer, tackles Larry Lousch and Stan Kirshman, guards Benny Boydston (since shifted to end) and Elvin Basham and center Kent Staab head up a veteran line." White also points out that the 1960 season was the greatest ever for the Big Eight, mainly because Oklahoma's long-time empire finally crumbled, and that the picture is bright for '61. "Kansas," says White, "should be stronger with or without Coan; Missouri will be good again, despite losing seven starters, and Oklahoma will be better." YOU'VE ALSO GOT TO CONSIDER COLORADO AND IOWA State. The Buffs, with quarterback Gail Weidner back in the saddle for the third time, will be tough and so will I-State. Once a football patsy, the Cyclones have turned over a new leaf of late. For the past two years, they've had a terrific rushing attack and foes will be in for more punishment this year. Iowa State will meet Kansas in Lawrence this year in what should be an interesting game. Although KU's 1961 home schedule isn't as tough as last year, none of the invaders will be pushovers, with the possible exception of Kansas State. And the Cats will be improved. Wyoming can't be lightly regarded, even though it plays in a weaker league. Oklahoma State could be troublesome too, if the Cowpokes can find an offense to match their stubborn defense. AS FOR MISSOURI—well, no comment is needed. Still, Kansas has the horses to go all the way barring bad breaks and the NCAA. Toughest game on the schedule, outside of the Missouri affair, will be with Oklahoma at Norman. The Sooners held the Jayhawkers to a 13-13 tie last fall, in a game that was eitherOU's best or KU's worst, depending on your point of view. The Sooners ripped through the Kansas line like the Sooners of old that day, although KU should have won by a couple of touchdowns with a little more luck. NSF Math Teachers Institute Attracts 80 from 27 States Eighty persons from 27 states are participating in the 1961 Summer Institute for High School and College Teachers of Mathematics at KU. The eight-week session which began June 12 and will end Aug. 5 is supported by a $100,800 grant from the National Science Foundation. Nearly all the 43 high school and 37 college teachers are receiving $600 stipends plus allowances for dependents. Dr. Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics, is director of the institute, now in its fifth year. Special features are 25-member freshman and senior demonstration classes. The freshman class is composed of Lawrence ninth graders and the senior class students of superior ability from throughout the nation. Curtis Ash, Atlanta, Ga.; Jackie Lee Beal, Overland Park; Larry Lee Blevins, Fontana, Calif.; Richard Leon Cannon, Winfield; Norrane E. Cox, Independence, WI; Norman E. Cox, Independence, Joseph S. Flipper, Phoenix, Aziz; Mrs. Bernice M. Gardner, Highland Park; Kenneth M. Graham, West Junior High School, Lawrence; W. J. Green, Ola, Ark; Mrs. Hazel Hawks, Kansas City; Shigeo Hayashi, Gering, Neb.; Clarence Heinckels, Charter Oak, Iowa; George W. Harry, Houlley, Miss; Mrs Daisy Hillborough, Bullesville, Miss The teachers attending are: High School: John W. Hurst, Wyndotte; Royce Duane Hutton, Le Grand, Iowa; Dallas E. Johnson, Orleans, Neb.; Howard M. Delson, Lawrence High School; Mrs. Donna Krebs, Central Junior High School, Lawrence; Leeds R. Lacy Jr., Castle Rock, Colo.; Sister M. Teresemarie McCloskey, Ellyria, Ohio; Willard G. McDaniel, Texmoi, Okla; Mrs. Esther M. McEntire, Porkea, Omaha; Mrs. EdsA. S. Mckeehan, Cheney, Wash. Kenneth A. Mike, Grand Rapids, Minn.; Gerald A. Miller, Topeka; David Paul Nasby, Rockwell City, Iowa; Clarence R. Nelson, Topeka; Michael Peter Noreika, Wauapac, Wis.; Sister Mary M. Petrask, S.N.D., Warren, Ohio; Robert A. Prall, Harvard, Neb.; Royce Dean Roberts, Overland Park; Jerry F. Rogers, Lawrence High School; James H. Sampson, Independence, Mo.; Leon Paul Schimbenco, Worthington, Minn., and Charles J. Searcy, Holyoke, Colo. William J. Sellers, Bethel; Gerald W. Urich, Kansas City; Paul Gene Vandana, Houston ex.; Hubert G. Waugh Kansas Cars, back William Wilkinson, Mt. Ayr, Iowa. College: Lewis E. Berg, Kansas City Junior College; Charles O. Blackstad, Worthington Junior College; Minn.; William John Bonini; Idaho State College; George Lenard Chaney, Coffeville College; Mrs. James Dulany, Coffeville College; Melbourne Dulan Clegg, Odessa College; Tex. The Rev. Raymond J. Collins, Loras College, Iowa; Wilton Roy Cooper, Knoxville College, Jenn.; Mrs. Sherralin Craven, Central Missouri State College; and Richard F. Fort Hays State College; and Richard W. Forman, Augusta College, S. Dak James R. Fulmer, Little Rock University; John H. Garner, Tyler Jr. College; Tex. E. V. Gray, Arkansas A&M College; State Elmo, Savannah State College, Ga.; Kahrhut Ouachita Baptist College, Ark.; Alvin Edgar Kinney, SUNY Maritime College, N. Y.; Jesse D. Kherbiel, University of New York, Long Island Minot State Teachers College, N. D.; Louner, University of Wisconsin Center, Green Bay; James E. McKeanheim, Eastern Washington College of Education; Lyle Edgar Mauldand, University of North Dakota; Iowa, Western College, Iowa, and Rose Marie Milkovitch, Eastern Montana College. Richard H. Miller, Wisconsin State College; Duane M. Norman, Northeast Missouri School Teachers College; Alfred Daniel H. Reeferford College, Tex.; Daniel H. Reeferford Jr., Sam Houston State Teachers College, Tex.; Leroy C. Roquemore, Southern University and A&M College, La.; Paul Wayne Saltzman, Anderson College, Ind.; Ted Joe Tucker, Michigan State College, William M. Swyter, Montgomery Junior College, Md.; Mrs. Wilma M. Thompson, Arizona State University; Milton M. Underkoffer, Winona State College, Washington State College, Wash.; Edwin R. Williamson, North State Teachers College, S. Dak, and John Evans Yost, Junior College of Broward County, Fla. Clergy Education Conference Slated Approximately 35 clergymen are expected to participate in the first Kansas Clergy Economic Education Conference at KU July 16-21. The conference, designed to give clergymen the opportunity to improve their understanding of the American economy, will be led by three nationally-known economists: Father William Hogan, Director of the Industrial Economic Program, Fordham University; John Hicks, professor of economics and assistant to the President, Purdue University; and William Haber, professor of economics at the University of Michigan and labor dispute arbitrator. Fifteen representatives of business, labor, and agriculture will also participate in the conference as consultants, taking part in the discussion periods following each lecture. The emphasis in the conference will be on learning through these discussions. Others scheduled to give talks are Wilbur T. Billington, Federal Reserve Bank, Kansas City; National Goldfinger, AFL-CIO economist; Lynn Whiteside, Director of Personal Training, Boeing Airplane Co., Wichita; Stanley Lind, executive secretary of the Kansas Consumer Finance Co., Kansas City; and Raymond Doll, agriculture economist, Federal Reserve Bank, Kansas City. The Clergy Economic Education Foundation is sponsoring the conference, in cooperation with KU Extension. Three Outdoor Movies Tonight Three outdoor movies will be shown in the area east of Robinson Gym at approximately 8 p.m. tonight. They are, "Auto biography," "River of Ice," and "Highway North." Insurance Men Here for Meeting From 80 to 125 life insurance salesmen are expected to attend the fifteenth annual Life Insurance Marketing Institute here July 17 to 21. The institute will be divided into two courses. The basic course will deal with insurance and personal problems and the advanced course with business insurance. Participants will attend study sessions all day Monday through Thursday and on Friday morning, and conferees in each class will be assigned special projects coordinated with the day's discussion on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday evenings. A banquet is scheduled for Thursday evening. The staff of the Life Insurance Marketing Institute at Purdue University Hal L. Nutt. Charles E. Black, and William T. Fitzgerald will moderate the institute. The most useless dav of all is that in which we have not laughed.—Sebastien R. N. Chamfort East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI 3-9897 TEXICO Birds on a Branch VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service arranged by Canteloube "Songs of the Auvergne" Sung by Netania Davrath on Vanguard Records Stereo & Mono "A great performance" 925 Mass. St. BELL'S VI3-2644 --- Friday, July 14, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 KU Students Graduate from Costa Rica School By Melvin Mencher Assistant Professor of Journalism SAN JOSE, Costa Rica—Two students from the University of Kansas have graduated from the Institute of Political Education after an intensive 10-week course in contemporary Latin American affairs. Sarah Walker, 20, of Leavenworth, and Benjamin Morris, 21, of Quinter, are among the nine KU students who are spending their junior year at the University of Costa Rica. They attended the institute in addition to taking courses at the University. The KU-Costa Rican program, which involves both exchange of students and faculty, is in its second year. It is subsidized by the Carnegie Corp. and the U.S.State Department. Hard as this workload was, the young Kansans found it rewarding — despite the problems they encountered at the institute, where anti-U.S. sentiment was strong and vicious. The institute serves as a training ground for young men and women who return to their countries to work for liberal, anti-Communist parties. The institute is supported by these parties. The idea of the founders is that only a united, democratic liberal movement in Latin America can keep the Latin countries from falling under the repressive right or the tyranny of communism. Morris and Miss Walker are interested in Latin American political and social movements and decided to attend the institute to further their knowledge. At first, the two young North Americans had trouble. Anti-U.S. sentiment is strong in Latin America, especially among the young intellectuals and among liberals. The spirit of anti-Yankeeism is most powerful in dictatorships and where there are non-representative governments of the far right. Some of the students at the institute were exiles from Trujillo's dictatorship in the Dominican Republic, Miss Walker said. Others were from Nicaragua, where the Somoza government permits no free elections. France, Algeria May Get Together PARIS—(UPI)—Political sources believe France and the Algerian Moslem rebels probably will resume talks next Thursday that definitely will determine Algeria's future. The French press concluded that President Charles De Galle is determined to stop the Algerian drain on the French economy and manpower one way or another by the end of the year. In a radio and television address to the nation, De Gaulle restated the French position on Algeria without referring to the negotiations with the Algerian rebels, now in recess. Answer to Crossword Puzzle S A C K A M I C I B L O W A U R I R E D A N R I L I E A T A N E L E C T O D I N R O B E R T E I S H E R I W O O D T H E E E R O S C H I O T S S P I T E F U L B L O G S O D O M S AN A L O G S C L E L T S O V I D I L V A B A B E S S P O T S P E N N A M E S A P E R Y O R E L A D E N M A X W L E L L A N D E R S O N A R E A L I E G E O O Z E M A N Y I N T E R A M M A M A O S A G A R S D E A R GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES To Latin Americans, politics is not simply a matter of the ins fighting the outs. In addition to the vast ideological differences that separate the parties, politics in some of the countries is a matter of life and death. One of last year's graduates who returned to Nicaragua, Morris said, was jailed on his return and nobody has heard about him since. "The United States has a bad history in Latin America," he continued. "Latin Americans remember that we gave dictators arms and money. We even gave three dictators decorations. The Latin Americans don't forget this." Into this atmosphere walked the two young Kansans. The institute is some 10 miles outside San Jose. The men live at the institute and the women live in the nearby town of San Ysidro. In this tight atmosphere, intimate contact was a daily matter. LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 "I would go into breakfast and it would start." Miss Walker said. "They would begin to talk about the United States and how we supported dictators. "The Nicaraguans were the hardest to get along with. Some of them had been put in jail by Somoza, and they had little sympathy with our friendship for Somoza." The cold, critical reception they got was not unexpected. The director of the institute had warned them. Although he was anxious to have them attend — in order, he said, to show the other students that "all gringos don't have horns" — it was up to Morris and Miss Walker to decide. They were eager to go. Morris agreed that U.S. foreign policy and the tactics of businessmen in Latin America often deserve criticism. The criticism, he said, was all the more telling because it came from people who are passionately anti-Communist and were not "The United States has made mistakes in Latin America," Miss Walker said. The remarks, criticisms and questions went on for a while. But slowly, the Kansans broke some barriers and were able to reach their classmates. They did it, they said, by admitting the truth. mouthing the usual Communist slogans about "Yankee-imperialism." "These students spoke for the people of their country," Morris said. And the Kansans tried to do the same thing. They pointed out that few North Americans are capitalists, that there are problems in the U.S. with which the government is coping through social and economic reforms — the same kind of reforms the U.S. government hopes to see carried out in Latin America. "Some of the students had never seen an American," said Miss Walker. "After they got to know us, several became more friendly." "They began to realize that all Americans aren't rich and that we don't come to Latin America to exploit the people." A mark of the KU students' success was demonstrated at graduation. Of the 45 students, Miss Walker and Morris received the loudest applause. There are seven other KU students in the exchange program here, and all are involved in projects which put them into direct contact with the people of Costa Rica. In addition to their school work, Linda Viola of Abilene and Patricia Manuel of Kansas City, Mo., are assisting in an experimental teaching program by the University of Costa Rica at a public school. The young women teach Costa Rican second and third graders English. Carolyn Hunnicutt, whose family has dairy cattle in Sabetha, is doing a paper on the Costa Rican cattle industry. Cleve Howard, a pre-med student, Wichita, is interested in the practice of medicine here. Heather MacAlpine of Stillwater, Okla., is studying the cultural life in this small Central American republic. The Revolution of 1948 has interested Lawrence M. Wright of Ottawa, and Danny White of Fredonia is studying conservation among farmers. All the students live with Costa Rican families, and for the nine months they are here the students all have Costa Rican mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, and occasional aunts, uncles and grand-fathers. diebolt's 843 Mass. Thursday, July 13, at 9:30 a.m. Is the Beginning of Our- Summer Clearance Sale! Savings Are Big! Selections Are Good! Come Early! SUITS Were $29.95 NOW $19.97 Were $32.50 NOW $21.67 Were $35.00 NOW $23.33 Were $45.00 NOW $29.97 Were $50.00 NOW $33.33 Were $55.00 NOW $36.67 SPORT COATS Were $22.95 NOW $15.30 Were $25.00 NOW $17.30 Were $29.95 NOW $19.97 Were $35.00 NOW $23.33 Were $39.95 NOW $26.63 DRESS SLACKS Were $8.95 to $16.95 1/3 off SPORT SHIRTS Were $4 NOW $2.67 Were $5 NOW $3.33 CREW SOX Were $1 NOW 69c USE OUR 6 MO. CREDIT PLAN diebolt's 843 Mass. --- Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 14, 1961 TAMARA MONTEGRAF THE EVIL SIMON—Simon Legree dominates over Eliza and Uncle Tom in a scene from last night's production of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Shown in the photo are Uncle Tom—Steve Biddle, Baldwin senior; Simon Legree—Steve Dunlop, St. Louis, Mo., junior; Eliza Harris—Jacqueline Palmer, Fredonia junior. 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' Is Play of Stormy History "Uncle Tom's Cabin" opened without a hitch in the University Theatre last night. Back in 1852, however, the play caused all kinds of turmoil because at that time it was politically dangerous to present drama sympathetic to Negroes. Charles W. Taylor adapted the story from Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel — and without permission. Miss Stowe thought the stage was "evil." "Uncle Tom's Cabin" ran for only 11 nights in New York before public sentiment forced its closing. The play later was revised by George L Alken and through the years other versions have been written, and thousands of performances have been held. The play here is being presented by the Theatre Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp in association with the KU Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m. As the story opens, George and Eliza Harris are fleeing to Canada because their son and Uncle Tom have been sold from the Shelby plantation. Uncle Tom has been bought by a Mr. St. Clare, a decent man who treats him kindly. Later, however, St. Clare is killed, and Uncle Tom is sold to the hated Simon Legree. Thirty-seven high school students are included in the cast. The director is James Hawes, KU graduate student. Carol Burnett Is Star of Show The Starlight Theatre moves into its mid-season stride Monday night, July 17, when Carol Burnett opens in a two-week engagement in "Calamity Jane." Despite an unprecedented box office advance sale, the theater officials have announced that tickets are still available for every night, including 1,000 general admission seats that are placed on sale each night at 6:30. Starlight officials say the best reserved seats may be obtained for the second week of the performance, which begins Monday, July 24. Featured with Miss Burnett, who was adjudged best female performer in the 1961 TV Guide awards, will be Norwood Smith, Beryl Towbin, Art Matthews, Richard France, Patti Karr, the resident corps de ballet and singing chorus. "Calamity Jane," originally produced as a film musical, is the story of a rough, tough wild western gal who shoots like a man and who becomes smitten with Wild Bill Hickock. While in Deadwood City regaling Wild Bill and others with tales of Indian battles, she learns of a mix-up in the performers at the Golden Garter saloon, and in effort to please the patrons, Calamity Jane rides off to Chicago to bring back the beautiful Adelaide Adams, who originally was scheduled to appear in Deadwood City. Mistaking Adelaide's stagesstruck maid, Katie Brown for the star, Calamity Jane persuades her to return with her to Deadwood. As a result, Katie becomes a big hit and in return she helps transform Calamity Jane into a beautiful young woman. There is the usual love conflict but in the end Calamity discovers she loves Wild Bill Hickock and they sing the beautiful "Secret Love" which was selected as the Academy Award song the year in which the movie was released. Other songs in the script include "Higher Than a Hawk," "Just Blew In from the Windy City," and "Deadwood Stage." Miss Burnett became an "overnight sensation when, after knocking around in the theater for a few years, she scored in the Broadway show "Once Upon a Mattress," and the Garry Moore television program. The latter has made her familiar to millions of Americans. The Starlight is her first full-length role in a musical although she has her eye on a Broadway show for this fall. Other upcoming Starlight shows are July 31-Aug. 6, "Can Can," with Genevieve; Aug. 7-13, "Damn Yankees," with Gale Gordon; Aug. 14-20, "Take Me Along," with Dan Dalley and Gloria Hamilton, and Aug. 21-Sept. 3, "Flower Drum Song," with Fran Warren. The Future is something which everyone reaches at the rate of sixty minutes an hour, whatever he does, whoever he is.—Clive Staples Lewis Smoking Termed 'Form of Suicide' HUNTSVILLE Ala., — (UPI) — Cigarette smoking is a "form of suicide," a well-known doctor savs. "The only difference is, when you put a bullet in your head it is cheap, quick and comparatively painless," Dr. Alton Ochsner, head of the Ochsner Clinic of New Orleans, said in a Civic Club speech. Ochsner said lung cancer was rare 30 years ago and argued that all evidence points toward smoking as a contributing factor in lung cancer. "If there were one-tenth the evidence that Brooklyn Bridge was unsafe," he said "it would be closed immediately until a complete check could be made." Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue BARNSELE, England — (UPI) — Five-foot-two Wendy Roberts won out over parental objections and got court permission to marry Martin McGowan. Wendy's parents objected to the match on the grounds that standing an even five feet, McCowan was "too tiny" for their daughter. 14 LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Debbie Reynolds Tony Randall in “Mating Game” Plus “Tom Thumb” Starts Sunday Elvis Presley “G.I. Blues” ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ With the frequent changes in the weather, KU coeds have had to keep a variety of dresses and casual clothing ready for instant use. Coed Attire Should Vary During the hot days, spaghetti strap dresses are the favorite attire for classroom wear. These dresses have chord straps and belts which IBM representatives will conduct a 30-hour course on the IBM 1620 electronic computer from July 24-28. Computer Course Slated July 24-28 Morning sessions will be held in 122 Malott from 9 a.m. till noon and afternoon sessions will be held in 206 Summerfield, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. These interested in attending should leave their name, address and phone number with Mrs. Carol Coe at the Computation Center, 112 Summerfield, or call extension 548. The only thing we have to fear is 'car itself—Franklin D. Roosevelt are small and round in shape. Sandles are often worn with these cool outfits.Many types of spaghetti dresses are fancy enough to be worn to a dance or party. Crop tops, short, sleeveless boleros worn with white Arnel skirts, are also very popular on blistering days. Since the temperature is never the same for two days in a row in Kansas, most coats must also have a supply of shirtwaist dresses for cool days. Many of these dresses have matching sweaters which can be worn if the air conditioning in the classroom gets too cold. Another summer item which lends itself to the ever changing weather is the wind hat. This type of hat is simply a small net bonnet which ties under the chin with a ribbon. These light-weight hats protect the coed's hair from the undependable wind and yet don't mash her new "puffy" hairdo. For casual wear around the dorm, most coeds wear taper-legs or bermuda shorts. This again depends on the temperature. Sneakers or flats are the most popular types of shoes. CAMPUS BARBER SHOP Open All Summer WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union GRANADA NOW.SHOWING! Hayley Mills in Walt Disney's "Parent Trap" Continuous Shows Sat. & Sun. Matinee 2 p.m. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! "The Greatest Show on Earth" "Gold of the Seven Saints' Plus 2 Bonus Features Saturday Starts Sunday William Inge's "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" Clark Gable "It Started in Naples" Friday, July 14, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 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. TYPING "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, designs and master carbons neatly and accurately with measured rates. Call Porco Coster, I 3-8679." "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." VI 3-5209, typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI 3-5209 — VI 2-0111. tt EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Cain. VI 3-0524. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application letters. Prompt service. Mail resume to Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. HAVE 'YROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- lish teacher of the University, these & reports accurately Standard tables. Stu- srs. Compton, 131 Vt. apt. 3. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th, VI 1648. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter, Responsible Electric typewriter, Mrs. M. Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typeing rate. Call Miss Louise typing at standard rates, for Miss Louise POpe, VI 3-1097. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Service. S917 B Woodson, Missouri, HE 2-7718. Evers. or SIR A 2-2186. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Type: will type reports, thesis, etc. Sell, 1511 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6490. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. FOR RENT Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tt For Rent: 5 large rooms=2 bedrooms—attractively furnished apartment for fall semester. Water paid. No children. 901 Kentucky. Call III 3-4911. 7-21 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfurn. Air cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. 7291% Mass., VI 2-0099. tt ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm. air-cond. disposal. FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 43 St. JE 1-1121. Evenings & Sun. SKI-2634. ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union. Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new furnishings available, linens furnished. Reasonable rates. 1221 Oread. VI 3-6798. For Rent to students. Completely furnished, 2 bedroom house next to KU, paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf FOUR ROOM HOUSE. Two bedrooms, living room and dining combined, kitchen, basement. Gas furnace, screen porch. Available Aug. 4th. Can be seen after 6:30 p.m. Call Marion Novovaty at 1717 La. tf Three Bedroom Nicely Furnished Apartment. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned, steam heat. Boys preferred. Reasonably priced. Also efficiency apartment. $25 each. Private entrance and bathroom. Near KU. Call VI 3-7830. 7-25 BUSINESS SERVICES MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 5 to 8 p.m. or 6:30 p.m. Wine & Beer. A large a.m. picture with & Plants. Stainless steel window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything is there. All you need is phone, projects or department needs. Phone VI 3- 2921 or better still, come. Welcome. tt WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI 3-4656. tf Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers PASS THE ENGLISH PRO. EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810, Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tt MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. toilet, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 912 0350 I WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1960 Dodge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen. Or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 3-7903. tf HELP WANTED SALEMEN OR SALES-TRAINEES. Sell $150, item, pays you $40 in commissions. Mail to Sales, 231-682-7950, brain or part time. Write Mr. Sulivan, Box 8129, Kansas City 12, Mo. 7-25 Male or Female: Excellent income for calling on Christian people. Full or part time with job. With NIU, Nientu, AmBiCo, ICE. 3706 Broadway, Suite 314, K.C. I. Mo. 7-25 WANTED HILL CO-OP student house is re-opening in the fall for male graduates; approximate cost per month. $50; completely self-managing; no discrimination on grounds of race or religion. For further details call VI 3-5552, 6-7 p.m. tt FOR SALE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable machines, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and mirroring at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 8 E. 8th. Phone VI-1051 today. JIM'S CAFE HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron's & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-1207 or VI 3-4201. 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 378. tf Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. STUDENTS Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj. ... 98c Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free. Open 7-10 with mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W. 23d; VI 3-9694 Expose HEAR DR. PETE RIGGS "The Worst Crook In Lawrence" SUNDAY, JULY 16 7:30 p.m. Varsity Theater Tell the story of his life "Night Club Entertainer to Gambler to Preacher" FRIDAY, JULY 14 7:30 p.m. Other services 7:30 Sat, 2:30 Sun, special music—Jantz Family BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 MERCURY Don't be without a good Typewriter... A good typewriter helps you do your work better . . . in less time. Stop in soon and see our fine selection of typewriters. College is a big investment and typewritten work plays an important role in college. SPECIAL New Smith-Corona "Coronet" Portable Electric Now Only Beige $15950 Blue Pica-Elite Kansas Kansas Union Book Store Union Book Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 14, 1961 Sunday Concerts Orchestra-Chorus Sunday Afternoon, July 16 Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Thomas Gorton, Donald Johanos and Daniel Moe, Guest Conductors 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Glory to God in the Highest ... Thompson Quam Pulchri Super Montes ... Berger Rainsong ... Bright Requiem ... Mozart Lacrymosa Domine Jesu Soloists Jerry Curry, Tenor Pat Wise, Soprano Richard Reitzel, Bass Jonnie Tolle, Alto Daniel Moe, Conductor Part II Orchestra Der Freischutz, overture ... Weber Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Symphony No. II, Romantic ... Hanson First movement Thomas Gorton, Conductor Toccata ... Frescobaldi-Kindler Iphigenia in Aulis ... Gluck A Night on Bald Mountain ... Moussorgsky Dance Rhythms ... Riegger Donald Johanos, Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Band-Chorus Sunday Evening, July 16 8 p.m. KU Outdoor Theater Russell L. Wiley and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Daniel Moe and Donald Johanos, Guest Conductors KU Outdoor Theater Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Part I Band Band Knightsbridge March from "London Suite" ... Eric Coates Overture to "Candide" ... Leonard Bernstein Entry of the Gods into Valhalla ... Richard Wagner from the opera "The Rhinegold" Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Part II Chorus Psalm 150 ... Bender Brass Ensemble Horn Trumpet Trombone Bill Lane Dave Clark Larry Salmon Roger Rundle Richard Grady Roy Guenther Jane Sexton Alan Hitt Mike Roper Janie Thompson Richard Danielson That's the Idea of Freedom ... Copland Love Somebody ... Bacon Soloist, Dorothy Maye Warner Merry Let us Part and Merry Meet Again ... La Montaine Daniel Moe, Conductor Part III Band Overture, from the Royal Fireworks Music ... Handel-Sartorius Finale, from the New World Symphony ... Dvorak-Leidzen Porgy and Bess Suite ... Gershwin-Bennett Stars and Stripes Forever ... Sousa Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry Latta, Engdahl Essays Are Best Allan Latta, Wichita junior, and David Engdahl, Mission senior, have been awarded $150 prizes in the Hattie Elizabeth Lewis contest for essays in Applied Christianity. The contest was established in 1911 by Prof. George Patrick in memory of his wife. Prof. Patrick was a KU faculty member from 1874 to 1883. General theme of the essays is "The Application of the Teachings of Jesus to the Practical Affairs and Relations of Life." Fraternity Jewelry Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER 6-Hour Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) The sermon is a continuance of the summer theme of "The Gospel According to John." Dr. Patton to Give Sermon Sunday Dr. John H. Patton, Presbyterian University Pastor, will give a sermon on "Demands of the Word" at 11 a.m. Sunday in the Westminster Center Chapel. Dr. Patton has been with Westminster for 15 years and has also been a professor in the School of Religion for 14 years. At the close of the summer session, Dr. Patton, his wife, and Carolyn Reed, Summerfield sophomore, will leave for Beirut, Lebanon. Dr. Patton will do post doctorate study in the American University there and will also lecture in the Near East School of Theology. A Participants will be housed in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Seminar sessions will be held in the Kansas Union. Miss Reed has enrolled in Beirut College for Women for the 1961-62 school year. HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. YL 3-0330 Certificates will be presented at the closing luncheon for successful completion of the course. There is always someone worse off than yourself—Aesop VI 3-0330 100 Expected For Seminar An enrollment of 100 is expected for the Medical Assistants' Seminar to be held here August 4-6. The seminar, designed to help medical assistants keep abreast of rapid changes in the field of medicine, will be conducted by leaders from the profession. Faculty members and speakers include: C. O. Wright, executive secretary of the Kansas State Teachers Association; Dr. Victor B. Buhler, instructor in pathology at the KU Medical Center and clinical professor of pathology at the University of Kansas City School of Dentistry; T. H. Popplewell, staff supervisor for Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. Topeka; Joseph Caldwell, chapain for the Boys Industrial School and supervisor of clinical pastoral training, Topeka; Zula Bennington Greene, author of "Peggy of the Flint Hills"; Dr. Richard L. Hermes of Lawrence; and members of the KU faculty. Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Like to Lounge in the Sun? Take a Hideaway Pizza with you Sun Pick up a Pizza to take with you Or, the Campus Hideaway is the coolest inside. CAMPUS CAMPUS VI 3-9111 Instant Delivery HIDEAWAY KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Tuesday, July 18, 1961 49th Year. No.10 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU JULIANNE MURRAY Miss Claudette Sorel Pianist Miss Claudette Sorel To Give Concert Tonight Tickets are available at the School of Fine Arts and the Union Ticket Center. Students will be admitted on I.D. cards. Pianist Claudette Sorel will give a concert at 8 p.m. today in the University Theatre. Miss Sorel, who will be guest lecturer in piano at KU this coming year, will play "Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90" by Beethoven, "Four Impromptus"—A flat major Op. 29, F sharp major Op. 36, G flat major, Op. 51, and Fantaisie-Impromptu (Posthumous) — by Chopin and "Souvenir De Paganiini" and "Fantaisie, Op. 49," also by Chopin. Following the intermission, Miss Sorel will play "Papillons, Op. 2" by Schumann, "Nocturne for the Left Hand Only, Op. 9, No. 2" by Scriabin, "Sonnetto Del Petracaro No. 123" by Liszt, and "Etude No. 6" by Pagani尼丁. Finnish Theater Honors KU Alum The 28-year old artist has made 55 appearances with such major symphony orchestras as the Detroit, Philadelphia, New York Philharmonic, and the NBC Symphony. She A KU alumnus has become the second American ever to receive the gold medal of honor given by the Finnish National Theater of Helsinki. Finland. He is Prof. Robert E. Gard, '34, a member of the University of Wisconsin faculty since 1954, director of the Wisconsin Idea Theater, and professor of speech at the university's Extension Center. For his pioneering work there, he was given the KU speech and drama department's merit award. The first recipient was actress Helen Haves. The gold medal was given in recognition of Professor Gard's contribution to the National Theater last year while in residence in Helsinki on a Fulbright grant. He is now back in Finland as a U.S. State Department representative to help establish theater education at the University of Helsinki. has performed in Europe four times and in 150 cities in the United States. Miss Sorel appeared with the New York Philharmonic when she was only 12 years old, following her debut with the New York Town Hall. She is a 1948 graduate of the Juilliard School of Music and has also studied at the Curtis Institute of Music. She received a bachelor of science degree, magna cum laude, from the Columbia University School of General Studies in 1954. Wescoe Asks More Housing Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has asked Lawrence citizens to continue to enrich an already good record as international hosts to foreign students attending KU. In a statement made before his departure for Costa Rica the Chancellor said that both Lawrence citizens and foreign students would benefit culturally by continuing the practice of housing many foreign students in Lawrence homes. Last year 280 foreign students from 58 countries attended KU. A similar number is expected to attend KU in the coming year. "By opening their homes to foreign students Lawrence residents can give these visitors an acquaintance with our way of life that the students can get by no other means." WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy returned to the White House yesterday from a weekend of rest with key decisions facing him on shoring up U.S. defenses to counter Soviet threats. Kennedy Returns From Hyannis Port Dr. Wescoe said: NASA Ready for Second Man-in-Space Shot Today The President flew here by jet from Cape Cod. After landing at nearby Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, he took a helicopter to the White House lawn. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—(UPI) —Everything is "a-ok" for America's second man-in-space venture this morning. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) confirmed that 35-year-old Air Force Capt. Virgil I. Grissom will be the pilot aboard "Liberty Bell 7," the Mercury man-in-space capsule for the shot. Marine Lt. Col. John H. Glenn Jr., who is 40 years old today, will be backup man for Grissom as he was for Navy Cmdr. Alan B. Shepard Jr. who made America's first space hop May 5 aboard the capsule Freedom 7. Lt. Col. John A. Powers of NASA told reporters at a news conference that everything, including the weather, appears to be all set for Grissom's trip, scheduled to start around 8 a.m. EDT. Band's 'Porgy and Bess Called Pure Gershwin "All elements," he said, "are 'a-ok' for the MR-4 mission." Have you ever heard a 230-piece band swinging? Well, I have. Sunday night at the Midwestern Music Camp concert the band played a suite from "Porgy and Bess" that was pure Gershwin. The band has grown proficient at changing styles from number to number, e.g., it opened with an old favorite English concert march with its long and conservative melodic line. This was followed by Leonard Bernstein's overture to "Candide," which is too light and almost too bizarre to be called conservative. Wagner's "Entry of the Gods into Valhalla" from "The Rhinegold" with its deep rich harmonies and majestic trumpet calls, made the next contrast. Handel, the old-timer on the band's Sunday program, opened Part III of the concert. Then the band skipped 150 years in history to do the finale from Dvorak's "New World Symphony" and a sultry and cool "Porgy and Bess" preceded Sousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever." Audience enthusiasm grew steadily during the evening and they found it hard to hold their applause at times. Sousa's march was well done. It had the spirit of football rallies, bands marching, and jets flying. With a march as familiar as this one, this is quite a trick; it brought murmurs from the audience during its performance and shouts afterwards. A word stressed today is "to- getherness," and the chorus has it, especially by sections. Each section Recipients of grants from the national honorary research society are Dr. Ryuchi Matsuda research associate in entomology from Japan; Larry G. Mason, graduate student in entomology from Wyandotte, Mich., and Vernon L. Harms, graduate student in botany from Whitewater. Research Grants Awarded to Three A KU research associate and two students have been awarded Sigma Xi-Resa grants-in-aid for their research projects. Mason's award will finance travel in southern Kansas and southeast Iowa where he will collect plant-feeding beetles as part of his doctoral research. Harms will use his grant to support doctoral work in botany. He received a masters degree in 1959 from Emporia State Teachers College. Dr. Matsuda will use his grant to travel to Brazil, where he will collect water bugs in the Amazon area and southern Brazil. A 1950 graduate of Kyushu University in Japan, Dr. Matsuda holds the Ph.D. degree in biology from Stanford University. is beginning to sound and act as a single unit; this is hard to do with many people. The beauty lies in the combination of many different quality timbres and vibratos and the strength of these acting as one unit. All of the chorus concert was conducted by Daniel Moe; under his direction parts were distinct and interesting and always balanced each other perfectly. The music-producing medium of an orchestra and that of a band is just enough different that a conductor who is really effective with both is a rarity. Mr. Johanos is such a conductor. Dean Thomas Gorton conducted the first movement of Hanson's "Symphony No. II." This beautiful work showed off the orchestra also as a single working unit. This ensemble carried through the rest of the afternoon. The program ended with Rieger's "Dance Rhythms," which had a very American here-and-now sound. The high point of the afternoon for most of the audience was when Moussorgsky's "A Night on Bald Mountain," an over-played old favorite, took on new life.-E.W. MR-4 stands for Mercury-Red-stone no. 4. Shepard's trip was MR-3. Powers said it is possible Grissom's may be the last sub-orbital hop by an astronaut before the Space Agency attempts to put a man in orbit around the earth. If the flight is as successful as Shepard's, he said, further trips like it may be dispensed with. NASA had planned at least four sub-orbital launchings. The first man-in-orbit flight could come late this year but appears more likely to be attented in 1962. Powers said every precaution will be taken to make certain that nothing goes wrong. He said "the risk element" is still involved in sending a highly-complicated instrument into the "strange and hostile environment" of space. "This does not mean we are pacing the floor worrying." Powers said, but we are concerned that there might be something less than the perfect performance of the first Mercury flight." Although Grissom's flight in major respects will be similar to Shepard's, the no. 2 spaceman will have fewer tasks to perform and more opportunity to observe the heavens and the earth curving beneath him. Powers said that about 15 seconds after the booster rocket separates, Grissom "will be strictly observing," whereas Shepard had myriad tasks to perform. Grissom and Glenn have both undergone "rather extensive" physical examinations. Grissom, at 150 pounds, is the smallest of the seven Mercury astronauts. The Redstone rocket now poised on pad no. 5 will hurl him about 115 miles into space and 300 miles out to sea on a path roughly paralleling Shepard's flight. The final 12-hour final countdown, in preparation for Grissom's hop started at 8 p.m. EDT Monday. The weather, which had delayed Shepard's flight, looked just right for Grissom's. Theta Sigma Phis to Hold National Convention at KU The national convention of Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism will be held Aug. 16-19 on the KU campus. More than 200 women journalists, many of them members of undergraduate chapters, will attend. Most sessions will be held at the Kansas Union. Chairman of the convention is Mrs. Vaughn Williams of Kansas City, Mo., who as Jessie Lea Messick, a journalism student at KU in 1918, was grand marshal of the very first convention of Theta Sigma Phi. It was held on this campus, and its anniversary is one of several the present convention will celebrate. The others are: 52nd year of the founding of the fraternity, 50th year of the teaching of journalism at KU and 100th year of Kansas statehood. Dean Burton W. Marvin will address the Centennial dinner Aug. 17 on "How Journalism Looks 7,000 Miles From Home." Dean Marvin, 1960-61 Fulbright lecturer to Iran, has recently returned with his family from that country. Assisting Mrs. Williams in convention arrangements have been Mrs. Margaret Sally Keach of Mission, national convention coordinator, and Prof. Frances Grinstead of KU's school of journalism, on-the-spot coordinator of this convention. Miss Grinstead is to be luncheon speaker Aug. 17 on "The Threat to the Written Word." Speaker at the Matrix Table Aug. 19 which will climax the four-day convention, will be Nina Pulliam of Indianapolis, Ind., wife of Eugene C. Pulliam, president of General Newspapers, Inc. Mrs. Pulliam is herself a widely known journalist. Lawrence alumnae are to be hostesses at a supper the first evening in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union, at which time Prof. Helen Hostetter of Kansas State University, adviser to Mu chapter, will give the welcome. This will be followed by a showing of "Six Gun to '61," a film directed and produced by radio-television students, with Dr. Allen Crafton as narrator. Delegates and alumnae will then be entertained at a reception and tea at the home of Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe. Hostess chapters to the convention include the alumnae chapters of Greater Kansas City and Topeka, the undergraduate chapters at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University. Miss Grinstead is the adviser of Epsilon chapter here. Delegate of the local chapter to the convention is Miss Susanne Ellermeir of Norton, Kan. Epsilon's president, Miss Karen Kirk of Hutchinson, and other members of the student group also plan to attend, as well as a few of those graduated in June who are employed on newspapers in the state. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 18.1961 Enrollment Forecast There probably will be more than 10,000 students on the Lawrence campus this fall, and nearly 11,000 total, counting the Medical School. Just a few years ago, KU almost had the atmosphere of a "small" college, considering that there were barely 6,000 here. Quite a change, eh what? AND IT WON'T BE TOO LONG before that 11,000 figure jumps to 12,13,15,and. by 1970, 17,000, which by contemporary statistics would make KU one of the biggest schools in the country. Only trouble with this is that other schools will grow at a proportionate rate. Big Ten institutions such as Ohio State, Minnesota, and Illinois, for example, will undoubtedly crowd the 35,000 or 40,000 mark nine years from now. Nevertheless, a prospective 17,000 student body is something to think about, especially if you're a businessman or contractor. Why? For several obvious reasons. For one thing, this means you are living in an area with a guaranteed population growth. This means, in turn, that all sorts of juicy construction jobs will be available; more and bigger dorms will have to rise on the campus skyline. If you are a clothing merchant, to name just one occupation, your chances of expanding your trade are bright indeed. Seven thousand additional students can buy a lot of sport coats and slacks. THERE IS NOTHING MERCENARY ABOUT this, because Lawrence has always had many fine stores and owners who have treated KU students fairly and squarely for years. But you can see the economic possibilities. Academically, the University will have to hire several hundred more instructors to accommodate the increased load. On the surface, this doesn't appear to be too big a problem. But other schools will be competing for their services, probably even more so than today. KU has always had an excellent faculty, even though salaries have been low compared with Big Ten rates for example. Many have turned down higher paying jobs elsewhere out of pure loyalty, because there's some intangible quality about Mt. Oread which just doesn't exist in most schools. MAYBE IT'S THE SCENERY, the people, the location, or the reputation—whatever it is, KU has it. However, if an all-out salary war begins, loyalty might not count for much. This is one reason why the administration is so eager to push the wage scale up now, before possible stagnation sets in. In other words, KU officials want salaries hiked immediately, to avoid losing faculty members en masse a few years from now. Students in 1970 will probably be about the same, and that's something to cheer about, for most Jayhawker men and women today are much more serious minded and intellectually inquisitive than their counterparts of 25 years ago. We should have a pretty good football team by then too... - Chuck Morelock Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1. Exploits, 6. Chief, 10. Kiln. 14. Emblem of New Hampshire. 15. Vault. 16. Isinglass. 17. Home strategist: 2. words. 20. TV offering. 21. Altar boy. 22. First word of "Home, Sweet Home." 23. ___ qua non. 24. Impetuous people. 25. Thespians. 26. Slip. 27. Baldwin or Jonathan. 28. "Sketch Book" character. 29. What Rome wasn't built in: 2. words. 30. Castor and Pollux. 31. Hard green stone. 32. Sea. 34. Glove material. 35. Ballroom dance. 36. Quivering motion. 45 Older. 47 Greek god. 49 Aurora. Repeating. 53 Girl's name. 58 Unwelcome touring companies; 2 words. 60 Concerning; Lat. 61 Pintail duck. 62 Floor coverings; Brit. colloq. 63 Distasteful. 64 Yard. 65 Outcome. DOWN 1 Crack. 2 Ireland. 3 Charitable gift. 3 Savoir-faire. 4 Crafty one. 4 Beginning of many a romance; 2 words. 5 Poet's contraction. 6 Stories. 6 Certain policemen. 7 Menu item. 11 Light-hearted. 12 Shoof! 13 Falschool. 13 Albanse song. 19 Present occasion. 24 Vital part. 25 Command. 26 Exchange. 27 Hog caller's word. 28 World War I planes. 30 Zoo attraction. 31 Range of hills. 32 Fishing imple- ment 34 Claimant to a throne. 38 Reliability. 39 Man's name. 41 Rail birds. 42 Former kingdom of Spain. 44 License plate. 46 Bellow. 48 Postage — 48 Bird. 51 Pueblo Indian. 52 Beige. 54 Tel — 56 Anspirate, as a consonant. 58 Household appliance. 59 Assistant: Abbr. 69 Hysson or gunpowder. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | | | | 21 | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | | 22 | | | 23 | | | | | | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | | | 28 | | 29 | | | 30 | 31 | 32 | | 33 | | | | | 34 | | 35 | | | | 36 | | | | 37 | | | | 38 | | | | | | 39 | | | | 40 | | | 41 | | | | | 42 | | | | | | 43 | | | 44 | | | 45 | | 46 | | | | | | | | 47 | | 48 | 49 | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 50 | 51 | 52 | | | | 53 | | | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | | 58 | | | | | | 59 | | | | | | | | 60 | | | | 61 | | | | 62 | | | | | | 63 | | | | 64 | | | | 65 | | | | | | (Answer on page 4) Agent's Life A Tough One KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — There you are with a few hours notice when the President of the United States lands where you didn't figure he would, and comes to town in a borrowed 1954 civilian car. That was one of the harassing moments in the life of Howard R. Haas, special agent in charge of the Kansas City office of the secret service. He is retiring July 31 after 30 years service. The 50-year-old Haas is quitting early as most retirements go. He says he wants to get into something else while he still has plenty of vigor. Not that Haas doesn't like secret service work. He does very much, especially the tracking down of counterfeiters. There was the time last year that President Eisenhower was visiting his boyhood home of Abilene. Haas and cooperating law enforcement agencies had set up tight security plans for the Chief Executive's split-second schedule. The President was to inspect progress of construction at the Eisenhower Library. Haas has been protecting presidents and doing other secret service work since he began in his native Cleveland in 1931. He has been in charge of the service's Kansas City office since 1954 and before that was head of the unit at Toledo, Ohio. That meant a wholesale change of security plans, including a quick call to the Los Angeles office of the Secret Service. With about 15 minutes notice that office was well on its way to having protection measures set up. Mr. Eisenhower was scheduled to go to Denver from Abilene. But the weather was miserable at the Colorado city and the President's plane wouldn't have been able to land. So the Chief Executive said: "Well, we'll go to Palm Springs." SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT NEW DEARFIGENT Chuck Morelock and Ron Gallagher ... Co-Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinache ... Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism MOUNTAIN MEDICINE, by A. B. Guthrie Jr., Cardinal, 35 cents. These stories of the West which Guthrie first called "The Big It and Other Stories" have qualities lacking in much writing of the plains and mountains. There is style, first of all. "The Big Sky" and "The Way West" proved Guthrie, and even a weak novel like "These Thousand Hills" still had qualities that placed it above the ordinary. The style that marks Guthrie in his novels is found in these short stories. Another quality is believability; another is a basic lack of romantic outlook. Every story here can be believed, and the one that seems least credible, that which gives the title to this paperback volume, is itself based upon a true experience of a trapper who went west with Lewis and Clark. THESE ARE SIMPLE TALES for the most part, tales in which right and wrong are clearly separated. "The Therefore Hog" tells how one range rider got the best of a bed hog and wound up with the bed all for himself. "The Big It" tells how a mountain howitzer fails to impress Indians. "Independence Day" is about a classic fist fight in Moon Dance, Mont. "The Wreck" is a modern tragedy of how a small town photographer is unjustly convicted of drunken driving. "Old Mother Hubbard" tells about a foreman—in bib overalls—who wins the grudging respect of cowboys who hate sodbusters. "Ebbie" is about a one-eyed hunting dog that loses the other eye in a fight, and about the boy who feels his life has shattered when his father feels called upon to kill the dog. "BARGAIN" TELLS HOW a store proprietor gets the best of a freighter who not only won't pay his bills but is a bully. "First Principal" describes a male school teacher's attempt to win the respect of townsmen used to women teachers. "Last Snake" (a tale that recalls the Missouri boatmen of "The Big Sky") is about a Missouri boy who tries to flee the tough, brutal foreman of a boat going up the Big Muddy in trapper days. "The Moon Dance Skunk" is a tall tale about how a bartender succeeds in driving out a man who has taken over the saloon with his pet skunk. "Mountain Medicine" describes a trapper's harrowing escape from Blackfeet. "The Keeper of the Key" is about a judge's vacation and the troubles of a town with the temporary "judge." And "The Fourth at Getup" shows how Kentucky tenderfeel fail to mix with the casual, whiskey-drinking Montana folks bent on a happy Fourth of July. HENRY ESMOND, by William Makepeace Thackeray. Bantam Classics, 50 cents. Thackeray's design in writing this supposed memoir of an Englishman in the days of Queen Anne was to duplicate the style and mood of that era. In this respect he is extraordinarily successful. "Henry Esmond" has touches of Fielding, and contains the amusing conceit of an essay supposedly taken from Addison and Steele's Spectator. The book is not for the 20th century reader accustomed to the sub-literary style of a "Peyton Place." It is slow and it meanders—as it was meant to do. It is almost entirely in third person; Thackeray allows his hero, who is telling the story in third person, to forget momentarily, and an "I" takes the place of a "Mr. Esmond." Most interesting, perhaps, are the portraits of real men—Swift, Addison, Steele, and Bolingbroke. Henry Esmond himself is a hero who deserves all the trouble he got, but the lovely Beatrix is one of the most believable heroines in fiction. THE OX-BOW INCIDENT, by Walter Van Tilburg Clark. Modern Library Paperbacks, 95 cents. In the history of literature of the West, this novel occupies an honored place. It is scarcely a horse opera, being, instead, the story of a lynching and the retribution that follows. It is a story of how the people of a little Nevada town become swept up in mob fever. Clark describes how two cowboys come into town and become part of an expedition designed to find cattle rustlers, and string them up. The mob contains an interesting group, including a vicious father who is determined his son shall share the experience of a lynching. THE TOWN HOUSE, by Norah Lofts. Cardinal Giants, 75 cents. Here is a historical novel, set in the 14th and 15th centuries. An English serf rebels, escapes, and goes through many trials and tribulations before he becomes a wealthy wool merchant. Needless to say, he never finds true happiness. Not nearly as busty as the cover might indicate. "The Town House" is an interesting piece of writing, with good background on cities and towns, castles and hovels. NEVER DIES THE DREAM, by Margaret Landon. Pocket Books, 35 cents. The author of "Anna and the King of Siam" here gives us a compassionate story about a woman missionary in Siam. She refuses to play politics in the mission hierarchy, loses her school but knows she has done things of value for the Siamese people. The novel recalls "The Keys of the Kingdom" and "The Small Woman." Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Summer Session Kansan From the Newsstand Page 3 College Conservatism In a New England city, a college president, a newspaper editor, and I were recently talking about the growth of conservative clubs in some of our colleges. It is by no means spectacular, but it is an interesting phenomenon because it is unprecedented. While political clubs in colleges are an old story, more or less permanent conservative clubs are new. Even in the depression years they were never considered necessary, so rooted were the great majority of students in acceptance of the status quo. The very existence of the clubs argue that doubt is stirring. They belong or confidently expect to belong to the middle, probably the upper-middle class. They are not alarmed at being "organization men"—so long as they are in the service of private rather than public bureaucracies. They expect the privileges of their class, and are sure that they, like their prosperous fathers, have earned all they may acquire by inheritance, luck, successful speculation or real work; the government is robbing their fathers and will rob them by high income taxes. IT IS FOR THEM a somewhat unexpected pleasure to find their self-interest endowed with a conscience by Barry Goldwater and armed with some sort of social philosophy. A little sense of moral indignation is always a satisfactory asset and this is provided by contemplation of the sins of labor unions, always so much better publicized than those of corporation executives whose costly vacations bear no resemblance to featherbedding by certain railroad workers. There is, I admit, a type of young conservative in our colleges to which this is scarcely fair. They are the exceptions. WE CAME AT least tentatively to the conclusion that there was nothing in the conservative movement in colleges to differentiate it from a conservative movement outside colleges. Our college student body is made up largely of the sons and daughters of men and women to whom Barry Goldwater offers his impossible utopia. (Excerpted from an article "Conservatives" by Norman Thomas in the April 21, 1961, New America.) Washington has become a town where Yale locks are good but only Harvard keys will open them.—Kenneth B. Keating Worth Repeating Our drive for outward techniques is not enough to save us . . . We are paving our road to hell with good inventions.—Peter R. Viereck Mexicans Have Own Revolution Unimpressed With Fidel Castro By Jerry Knudson (Editor's Note: A former instructor in journalism here, Jerry Knudson has toured Mexico and Guatemala this summer. This is the first of a (two-part series.) The most important concrete result of the revolution, which came to a close in the war years of the early forties, was the change in land ownership. By 1940, about 1,750,000 peons had become members of ejidos, communal lands farmed on a commercial basis, and there were also about 900,000 small independent farmers—a class virtually nonexistent before the revolution. Elsewhere, agrarian reform was quite slow. By 1933, only 19 million acres had been distributed to 750,000 families in 4,000 villages. Then President Lazaro Cardenas announced his Six-Year Plan in 1934, and by 1940 he had parceled out 45 million acres of badly needed land. All of the Zapatistas with whom I spoke, men and women in their late seventies, now own land. Division and apportionment of the great haciendas was most complete in Zapata's home state of Morelos. There it was done by decree, in accordance with the leader's pronouncement that "The land belongs to those who work it with their own hands." MEXICO CITY — Most Mexicans are unimpressed with their blustering neighbor Fidel Castro of Cuba, for Mexico itself has staged a revolution which in many respects has redeemed its 1910 slogans. A project for a Latin American history class at the University of Virginia took me to the small Mexican town of Cuautla to interview descendants and acquaintances of Emiliano Zapata, revered agrarian reform leader of the turbulent days of the revolution. Still, one sees revolutionary slogans mouthed during each electoral contest. State elections were held July 2, and in villages throughout the country one could see walls We're Selling OUR plastered with signs proclaiming "Land, water and peace." Bamford Parkes points out in his "History of Mexico" the meaning of the revolution was that "Mexico was primarily an Indian nation and that only on the basis of her Indianism could she create a civilization of her own." Entire Stock of Spring & Summer Shoes Women's & Men's Shoes Drastically Reduced This attitude was apparent in the recent Mexican film, "The Roots," which bitterly complained about the degradation suffered by the Indians, who make up 15 per cent of Mexico's population in 56 different language and culture groups. Sentiment toward Fidel Castro seemed evenly divided in public posters. For every "Cuba si, Yanqui no" sign, there were also such moderate opinions as "The attitude toward Cuba should be peace." Entire Stock Not Included Tourist business has fallen off sharply this summer, perhaps because of unsettled conditions throughout Latin America. Hotels were only 20 per cent full, despite the benevolent prices and many attractions of this beautiful country. huge Aztec calendar stone and rich artifacts. No Calls, Exchanges, Refunds Please ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837 Mass. In my opinion, the destiny of Latin America will be controlled by its Indian elements. If this is so, the drama of the New World has only begun. The most encouraging sign in Mexico today is a renewed awareness of its Indian past. As Henry Yessir! THE BEST CARE FOR YOUR WASH 'N' WEAR IS OUR SANITONE SERVICE Manufacturers, you know, recommend that Wash 'N' Wear be dry cleaned at least every third refurbishing—but once you've tried our Sanitone Service, we'll guarantee you'll not be satisfied with any home laundering. Sanitone imparts a like-new finish to the fabric . . restores drape SANITONI and fit. Just see and feel the difference that professional care makes! "Best friend my clothes ever had" "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N. H. VI 3-3711 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock The story on the other side of this page has an obvious conclusion: it takes a heap of loot to get a successful athletic program off the ground. Check this item for instance. KU will have to shell out $11,000 to fly the Jayhawker football team to California this fall. And unless gridiron fans there turn out en masse, the trip may end up being highly entertaining for the players, but highly unprofitable cash-wise. Californians know from experience what a long trip combined with a sparse crowd can do to the old pocketbook. In 1954, UCLA came here for a game that drew barely 20,000. I imagine the Bruins were lucky to break even. MINOR SPORTS ANYWHERE NEVER PAY FOR THEM-selves — that's why football receipts are so important. Obviously, 40,000 fans aren't going to turn out for a golf or tennis match. Schools such as Ohio State and Michigan of the Big Ten net huge profits year after year for two reasons: both have gigantic football stadiums, and both have tradition behind them. That's one reason why KU needs to get a few more winning seasons under its belt. Up until last year, local fans were apathetic. But the 1960 season featured two 40,000 plus sellouts, and turnouts of 32,000 for TCU, 34,000 for Colorado, and 28,000 for Nebraska. This brightened the picture considerably. If ever a man dominated the game not only on the court but off as well, that man was Wilt Chamberlain. Since Wilt's departure, the KU basketball program has floundered badly, financially speaking, even though the Jayhawkers tied for the Big Eight crown in 1960 and finished second in '61. With the Stilt around, Allen Field House was filled to its 17,000 capacity for every game. Since then, crowds have dipped as low as 5,000. And that ain't good. KU SOME WISE OBSERVER IN THE LEGISLATURE commented awhile back that KU and K-State should avoid duplicating services in the athletic world as well as the academic world. He probably had a point too — It looks as if KU will dominate the state football picture for years to come. But K-State seems to have the horses in basketball. This fact was pointed out last fall when Wildcat officials announced that the number of scholarships awarded to freshman players had been cut drastically. Why? Because the Cats had so many talented red shirts and sophomores. In other words, K-State felt it had so much depth that it would be better to hang onto the scholarship money and use it for a rainy day. SPEAKING OF BASKETBALL. I've heard via the grapevine that Wildcat recruiters have told promising Kansas high school players that KU prefers to land eastern talent. The line seems to be this: "Go there (KU) and you'll sit on the bench while some boy from Pennsylvania gets all the headlines." Wayne Hightower's recent decision to drop out of school may have changed this somewhat. But I can see how the argument could be effective. KU Nobody's taking Dan Devine very seriously when he declares that Missouri will end up in the Big Eight's second division this fall. Devine has the personnel for another outstanding club, although I never wish the Tigers good luck in anything. Devine faces a kingsized challenge right off the bat when his club meets last year's national champion, Minnesota. A Mizzou victory would not only boost that club's standing, it would also be a tremendous shot in the arm for the conference as well. THE OLD EMBARRASSING SAYING that the Big Eight is comprised of Oklahoma and the seven dwarfs went right out the window in 1960 as the league enjoyed its greatest year ever. The Sooners, if you recall, couldn't even finish in the first division losing to Missouri, 41-19; Iowa State, 10-6; Colorado, 7-0, and Nebraska, 17-14, and tieing Kansas 13-13. I saw Minnesota play Nebraska last fall, but after seeing KU play the same club later, I was convinced the Jayhawkers were better. This sounds like a rash statement, but in my inexpert and arm chair opinion, the fast, quick-hitting Jayhawkers would have run their bigger, but slower colleagues from Minnesota out of the stadium. If the Tigers can turn the trick a few months from now, everybody in this area will be happy. Even KU fans. Vandals Hit 6 Cars In Wee Hour Raid Six cars were damaged by vandals here early Friday morning. A car owned by Claude Brann, Jr., Salina senior, got the roughest going over. Vandals broke the radio aerial, horn ring, wiper arms, and blades. The car was parked in Zone A. Smith's Reading Text To Be Published A college text on "Psychology in Teaching of Reading" by Dr. Henry P. Smith of the School of Education will be published Aug. 18 by Prentice-Hall, Inc. Aerials were also broken off cars belonging to KU police Sgt. Charles Hanna and patrolman Orville Robinson. Other aerials were broken off three cars parked on Stratford Road near West Campus Road. Co-author is Dr. Emerald V. Dechant of Fort Hays State College. The latter studied with Dr. Smith while earning the Ph.D. degree at KU in 1958. Dr. Smith also is the author of "Psychology in Teaching," one of the two most widely used college texts in that field. It may come as a surprise to some, but the KU athletic department is not "loaded," financially speaking. Deficit Seen for KU Athletic Budget It's true of course, that a college sports program is "big business" in every sense of the word. For example, a crowd of 40,000 may result in a gross take of more than $100,-000 at the box office. Next year's budget loss is pegged at $7,000, the following year at $110,000. In both cases, the figures are based on net income and expenses for previous years. KU's fine football team last fall helped the school's Physical Education Corporation to show a profit of about $60,000 for 1960-61, after a deficit of $42,795 had been budgeted. Detailed figures won't be known until an audit, now underway, is finished. However, the projected KU athletic budget for 1961-62 and 1962-63 forecasts a $117,000 deficit for the two-year period. KU officials hope increased promotional activity can cut the figure somewhat. An all-time season's home attendance record plus road crowds of 43,000 and 47,000 at Missouri and Iowa helped swell the till considerably. Football was the only sport that On the home front, season ticket buying has been on a big upsurge, thanks to a hard-sell promotional campaign. Last year, 11,847 tickets were sold, compared with around 6,000 in the early 1950s. made money, however. Basketball revenue sagged to minus $4,000, mainly due to poor attendance. During the Wilt Chamberlain era, KU usually showed a profit of around $40,000. Figures for other sports aren't available at the moment, but examples can be taken from the 1959-60 year. Track that year lost $33,811.08, baseball $8,-599.17, tennis $230.18, golf $914.49, and swimming $4,388.99. Another move which may some-day boost the kitty would be to enlarge Memorial Stadium, which now seats approximately 41,000. However, this will probably not be done for at least three years. spend $1,600 to send its team to Nebraska this fall. $4,000 to send it to Oklahoma, and $11,000 to send it to California. The big difference in the deficit predicted for 1961-62 and '62-'63 stems from the fact that the football team, which carries most of the financial load, will probably draw big crowds in its road games with Colorado, Oklahoma, and Nebraska this fall. In 1962, the Jayhawkers meet Boston, Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Kansas State, and Missouri away. The I-State and K-State stadiums seat only about 20-000 and attendance at Boston probably won't top that by much. Such items as general inflation, travel, equipment, and higher salaries help to cut into any net profit. For example, KU will have to He is never less at leisure than when at leisure.—Marcus Tullius Cicero Answer to Crossword Puzzle FEATS BOSS OAST LILAC LEAP MICA ARMCHAIRGENERAL WESTERN ACOLYTE MID SINE HOTHEAD ACTORS ERROR APPLE RIP AOAY STARS JADE REED DEDE COOGA TREMOR STRANGER AREES EOS ITERANT NATALIA BACKSEATDRIVERS INRE SMEE LINOS SOUR SPAR EVENT USE ACME Professional Care For Your Wash 'N' Wear feel good. look good... in Dry Cleaned Wash'N'Wear ACME-JAYHAWK CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY HILLCREST VI 3-0928 ON THE MALL VI 3-0895 ACME 1111 Mass. CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY Downtown VI 3-5155 Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 STEAK DAY Wednesday, July 19 is Steak Day at The Prairie Room Charcoal Sirloin Steak Baked Potato Tossed Green Salad Hard Roll-Butter Cake Iced Tea $125 11 a.m. till 9 p.m. The Kansas Union Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Rough, Tough Defense Chief May Fill Adenauer's Shoes By United Press International Franz Josef Strauss, the architect of West Germany's dynamic, modern armed forces, is the most talked-about politician in the Bonn Republic. Many consider him the most likely victor in the struggle for succession when Chancellor Konrad Adenauer passes from the scene. The bull-necked Strauss, only son of a Munich butcher, has a strong will, a razor-sharp mind and seemingly inexhaustible vitality. He speaks bluntly and to the point, and has a passion for getting things done quickly. In his postwar surge to power, he has won many admirers, but has also made enemies. Opinions on the 45-year-old Defense Minister are varied but never neutral. His supporters feel his energy and devotion to the national welfare have brought order to a vital and confused field. His opponents consider him ruthless and motivated by a desire for personal power. He is vehement in his dislike for the Soviet Union and Communists. This accounts for his being the frequent target of frenetic attacks by the East German Reds. Once an opponent of German rearmament and European unity, Strauss now is one of the strongest advocates of these goals. His visit to the United States last week was his fourth as Defense Minister. His previous trips were in 1956, 1958 and 1959. He speaks fluent English and possesses a remarkable memory. An excellent student, Strauss planned a teaching career, but his plans were disrupted by the war, in which he served with distinction. He was not a Nazi. After the war, Strauss was elected to the Bundestag (Parliament) in 1949 as a representative of Bavara's Christian Social Union, a branch of Adenauer's Christian Democratic Union. He soon made a reputation as an effective and flamboyant speaker, and attracted Adenauer's attention. He served as Minister without Portfolio and Minister of Atomic Affairs before being appointed Defense Minister in 1956. As armed forces chief, Strauss cut red tape and forged a tight, unobstructed chain of command in the ministry. He made it clear he wanted quality, not quantity, in the armed forces. He also started a campaign to equip his troops with nuclear arms, a goal he has not yet achieved. Strauss regularly works a 12-hour day. He has an insatiable curiosity, and often travels to inspect factories and the army's operations. He was a bachelor until 1957 when he married a woman 13 years his junior. 25 Attending Special Class Twenty-five students of superior ability are participating in a senior high school demonstration mathematics class at KU this summer. The class is meeting in connection with the Summer Institute for High School and College Teachers of Mathematics. Members, who were selected on the basis of their promise as creative scientists, are taking courses in probability and elementary topology. A freshman demonstration class composed of 25 Lawrence ninth graders is being taught a special course in ninth grade algebra. Senior class members: Carl R. Anderson, Fontana, Calif.; Amm Jennine Berry, Topkea; Sharon Burton, Washington; David Cassey, Wichita; Mary Currier, Wichita; Susan Casst, Susan City, Mo.; James V. Forss, South Sioux City, Neb.; Jon Edward Gillman, Topkea; James R. Goodman, Topkea; Charles Keefer, Topkea; Daniel Hodge, Northeast, Kansas City, Mo., and Daniel Householder, Wichita East. Harriett Calisa Hunker, Falls City, Neb.; Fred McClellan King, Shawnee Mission North; Roy King, Lawrence; Edward John McBride, Lawrence; Patrick M. McKeenah, Cheney, Wash.; David Murray, Topeka, Raph J, Mintel, Quhey, B. Brice J, Aurora, Jenery L, Paretsky, Lawrence; Mary Alice Pettit, Northeast, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Shair, Quincy, Ill.; LaDean L. Stahl, Washington; Peter H Wagschal, Denver, Col., and Henry W Wilkins, Hampshire, Ill. His one drawback seems to be his relative youth and newness on the political scene. For this reason, some observers think he may not be Adenauer's successor, but "Chancellor-after-next." KU Coed Scores As Pinch-Hitter A KU coed pinch-hitting for a laryngitis-stirken mezzo soprano stepped up to the plate in Santa Fe, N.M., recently and got a home run. Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo. senior, got that hit a few hours after being notified that Mary McMurray, the star, could not sing in a Santa Fie Opera production of "The Ballad of Baby Doe." And according to newspaper reports, Sharon performed "creditably." Sharon, who sang the role in a KU production last year, is one of three persons with Jayhawker connections performing major duties with the company. Others are conductor and musical director Robert Baustian associate professor of orchestra here, and stage director Bill Butler. Butler, a New Yorker, was guest conductor for the KU show. The Santa Fe company is one of the largest of its kind and attracts top notch talent from all over the country. LONDON — (UPI) — Foreign ministers of the United States, Britain and France may meet early next month in Paris to coordinate Allied policy on Berlin. Paris Meeting Looms on Berlin The reports of an impending meeting came as the United States, Britain and France sent to Moscow their latest notes on Berlin rebutting firmly the Soviet Union's demands on the divided city. The sources said such a Western meeting is currently under consideration but no final agreement has been reached. But these sources added that such a meeting was very likely and would probably be held in the French capital in the first days of August. The meeting would be the first major Western get-together to plan and coordinate Allied strategy on Berlin since the Soviet Union revived its threat to that divided city. The U.S., British and French notes, approved by the NATO council Saturday, were sent to the Allied embassies for imminent delivery to the Kremlin. The notes reaffirm strongly Allied rights in Berlin. They are the first move in Western strategy for dealing with the Berlin crisis. The notes rebut firmly Russia's Berlin policy and threatened Soviet unilateral action on a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany. Murray to Leave For Texas Position Harold D. Murray instructor in zoology, has been named assistant professor of biology at Trinity University. San Antonio, Tex., for the 1961-62 school year. Murray received his bachelor's degree from Ottawa University, his master's from Pittsburg State and his doctorate from KU. Arensberg's Shoe Sale Save up to 70% Women's Dress Shoes $390----$590----$690 Values to $14.95 Men's Shoes Florsheim-Just 13 pairs $1498 Values to $23.95 Winthrop Shoes Values to $15.95 $390----$690 Arensberg's VI 3-3470 819 Mass. The Western step left the door open to future Allied moves in the heightening East-West conflict over the divided city and the German problem. No new proposals were advanced immediately on how to tackle the issue. The notes do not propose fresh East-West negotiations, nor do they exclude such course of action in the future. The notes make these major points, according to diplomatic sources: —Allied rights in Berlin stand and cannot be unilaterally narrowed or abolished by Russia; The Soviet view is erroneous that a separate peace treaty with East Germany can shift responsibility for Berlin to East German authorities. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" plus "It Started in Naples" Starts Thursday "Five Branded Women" plus "Jack the Ripper" GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Walt Disney's "Parent Trap" Starts Thursday David Ladd "MISTY" plus "FRECKLES" Starts Thursday LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Ends tonight Elvis Presley "G.I. Blues" Starts Wednesday "North by Northwest" plus bonus features Friday and Saturday Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 points, s: and d or SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS cous with bili man One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $125. 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 U.S. Post Office by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. BUSINESS SERVICES MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Com- Open week days 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Modernized. Help-Your-Self. Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything in the pet field for your hobbies — projects or department needs. Phone VI 3- 2921 or better still, come. Welcome, tr WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI. 3-4656. tt PASS THE ENGLISH PRO. EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810, Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. 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. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. 3f FOR RENT For Rent: 5 large rooms—2 bedrooms—attractively furnished apartment for fall semester. Water paid. No children. 901 Kentucky. Call VI 3-4491. 7-21 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfur. Air cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. 729%; Mass., VI 2-0099. tf ATT. MED. STUDENTS; New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 43 St. JE 1-1121. Evenings & Sun. SKI-2634. ROOMS FOR MEN: 1/2 block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new chair. Lounge available, linens furnished. Lodge rates. 1221 Oread. VI 3-6798. tt For Rent to students. Completely furnished. 2 bedroom house next to KU. paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf Three Bedroom Nicely Furnished Apartment. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned, steam heat. Boys preferred. Reasonably priced. Also efficiency apartment. $25 cach. Private entrance and bath. Near KU. Call 3-7830. 7-25 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plain, party supplies. 6th & 8th Vermont. Phone VI 0250. FOR SALE WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1980 Dodge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen. Or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 3- 7903. HELP WANTED NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and adding machines at reasonable rates. Buses Machines Co., 18 E. 3rd. Phone VI 3-0151 today. Male or Female: Excellent income for calling on Christian people. Full or part time, meet at our courses. Near New York, AmBiCO, Inc., 3706 Broadway, Suite 314, K.C. 11, Me. 7-25 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begoniais, Collius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron® & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. 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. tf SALEMEN OR SALES-TRAINEES: Sell $150, item, pays you $40, in commissions. Rent classroom, train, train. Full or part time. Write Mr. Sulli- van, Box 8129, Kansas City 12, M-7-25 TYPING Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, themes, and carbon neatly and accurately. Standard rates. Call Patty joester, VI 3-8679. "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." VI 3-5920, typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI 3-5920 — VI 2-0111. tf EXPERIENCED TYPEST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf GOING ON A PICNIC ? FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter Call Nancy Cain. VI 3-0524. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable salary. Barlow, 408 W. 15th. V11 to 1648. Mair. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. CAMPUS BARBER SHOP WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union - Open All Summer - BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application letters. Prompt service. Reqs. Master's or Ph.D. in Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI. 3-7485 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 PRINTING by offset. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, or electric curate work. Reliable. Electric curate work. Mrs. Mt. Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-868. REXONNER "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing rate. Call Miss Louse POpe, VI 3-1097." Mimeographing and Ditto work. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. major at NYU. theses, these reports accurately Handardiana. See Mrs. Compton, 131D, Vt. apt. 3. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution of Initial Services. 3917 B Woeson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Or, sat. RI 2-2186. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Susan, S. W. Will type reports, thesis, etc. s WANTED AMBITIOUS SALESLADIES: build your own business in Lawrence. No expense required. Call Car necessary. Write Box 122, Wellington Road, Lawrence, Kansas. tt HILL CO-OP student house is reopening in the fall for male graduates; approximate cost per month. $50; completely self-mnaging; no discrimination on grounds of race or religion. For further details call VI 3-5552, 6-7 p.m. tf Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals TEXCO Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI 3-9897 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI3-4416 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT JIM'S CAFE STUDENTS Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W, 23rd. VI 3-9604 Grease Job ... $1 Brake Adj. ... 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free. Open 7-10 with mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 HIXON STUDIO Portraits of Distinction MARTIAL ARTS Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Semi-Annual Shoe Sale REDMAN'S Regrouped and Added to Shoes on Tables for Your Convenience Women's Dress Flats $199 to $399 Women's All Colors Dress Heels $399 to $599 Children's STRAPS and TIES $299 to $399 Women's Casuals $299 to $499 Men's Casual & Dress $399 to $999 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 18, 1961 All-University Grade Averages Remain Same; Women Still Lead The 1960-61 KU scholarship report released last week by James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, shows that the all-university average of 1.41 is exactly the same as that for the previous two years, and the all-men's average of 1.32 identical for the last three years. But as usual, the women made better grades — the all-women's average was 1.56. Douthart Hall led all organized living groups with a 2.14 average, the highest for any group in four years. Pearson Hall led in its category with 2.05 and Kappa Alpha Theta repeated as sorority leader with 2.02. These were the only groups besting the B level. The fraternity leader again was Beta Theta Pi with 1.87. High among the women's residence halls was Lewis with 1.38 while J. R. Pearson Hall headed the men's dormitories with 1.17. The all-sorority average of 1.75 was well above the all-women's average of 1.56, while the all-women's residence hall average. highly loaded with freshmen, was 1.30 The all-fraternity average of 1.43 was well above the all-men's figure of 1.32. The all-men's residence hall figure was 1.06. The scholarship halls had the highest averages: four women's halls earned 1.96 while the five men's halls had 1.86, up from 1.74 the year before. the five best academic averages among the 13 sororites were Kappa Alpha Theta, 2.02; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 1.96; Pi Beta Phi, 1.90; Chi Omega, 1.85; and Gamma Phi Beta, 1.83. High five among 28 fraternities were Beta Theta Pi, 1.87; Phi Delta Theta, 1.69; Alpha Tau Omega and Delta Upsilon, 1.68; Sigma Chi and Acacia, 1.60. The complete report: Kappa Alpha Theta, 2.02 Kappa Kappa Gamma, 1.96 Psi Beta, 1.90 Chi Omega, 1.85 Gamma Phi Beta, 1.83 All Sorority, 1.75 Alpha Phi Omega, 1.72 Alpha Phi, 1.71 Delta Delta Delta, 1.69 Delta Gamma, 1.64 Alpha Omicron Pi, 1.60 Alpha Delta Pi, 1.59 All Women, 1.56 Sigma Kappa, 1.49 All University, Sororities 1.41, and Alpha Kappa Alpha, 1.17. Women's, Scholarships, Halls. Women's Schoolship 1632 Douthitt, 12.84 All Women's Schoolship Hall, 196, Miller 1.55, Sellards, 1.87 Watkins, 187, All Women, 1.56, And All University, 1.41. Fraternities Women's Residence Halls All Women, 1.56. All University, 1.41 Lewis, 1.38. All Women Residence Hall. 1.30, Corbin, 1.26, and GSP, 1.26. Beta Theta Pi, 187. Phi Delta Theta, 169. Alpha Tau Omega, 168. Delta Upsilon, 168. Sigma Chi, 160. Acacia, 160. Delta Tau Delta, 153. Sigma Nu, 152. Delta Tau Delta, 149. Sigma Alpha, 147. Phi Gamma Delta, 147. Kappa Alpha, 145. Thai Tau, 144. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 144. All Fraternity, All Society, All Triangle, 135. Sigmapha Epsilon, 135. Pki Kappa Alpha, 128. Tau Kappa Epsilon, 128. Phi Kappa Tau, 127. Theta Chi, 124. Phi Kappa Psi, 123. Delta Chi, 121. Phi Kappa I10. Delta Sigma Phi, 106. Phi Kappa I10. Phi Kappa Phi, 102. Phil Kappa Signa, .95. and Kappa Alpha PSi, 75. Men's Scholarship Halls Student Life Pearson, 2.05, All Men's Leadership Hall, 1.86, Stephenson, 1.85, Batterfield, 1.84, Jolliffe, 1.81, Foster, 1.73, All University, 1.41, and All Men, 1.32. Men's Residence Halls MEN'S Residence Hall 1.32, JR. All University 1.32, JR. P. Pearson 1.17, All Men's Residence Hall, 1.06, Templin, 1.03, Carruth, 1.01, Grace Pearson, 84, and Oread, 74. Twenty high school science teachers are participating in the 1961 Summer Institute on Radiation Biology here. East, West, South Teachers Study in Radiation Institute The eight-week session which began June 12 emphasizes radiation biology for high school teachers of biology chemistry, physics and general science. Director is Dr. Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics. Members attend lectures and related laboratory exercises. Upon completion of the course, they will receive credit in the KU Graduate School. The institute is financed by grants from the National Science Foundation and the Atomic Energy Commission. The NSF support includes stipends of $75 per week for each participant, plus travel and dependents' allowances. In addition to Dr. Shaw, the staff includes assistant director Dr. Benjamin S. Friesen, assistant professor of radiation biophysics at KU, and four laboratory assistants: Dennis Johnson, McPherson graduate student, Elvin R. Brickley, Russell, Thomas R. Hendrickson, Coalinga. Calif., and Paul McInerney, Union City, Pa. Institute participants: Brickley, Hendrickson and McInerney are high school teachers and former participants in the summer institutes. Mrs. Ruth Jones, Lafayette, La.; Charles Goddard, Chaffee, Mo.; James Campbell, Hooker, Okla.; Sister Mary Katcatha, Barne Wilmington, Mo.; Paul Barnie, Wilmington, Dal; Paul Matthews, Santa Ynez, Cal.; George Triplett, St. Louis, Mo.; R. David Glover, Omaha, Neb.; Marvin Sioux City, Mo.; John Flora, Gurkish, Neb.; Mitchell Patterson, Laurens, S.C.; John Goodwin, West Plains, Mo.; Freeman Gruber, Carroll, Iowa; Lewis Macy, Gate, Okaia; Hillborough, Ohio; Hillsboro, Sister Eileen Marie Bast, New Orleans, La.; DeLosz Miller, Greensburg, and Dwight Morrison, Columbia, Mo. Camels Will Walk For You ALICANTE, Spain — (UPI) — Local camels now will walk a mile or more—for you. It's all part of a new taxi service inaugurated with two camels supplementing motorized cabs. The beasts will be used only on the long stretches of sandy beaches to transport one passenger at a time. A Problem in Coffee- By Charles Staley Costa Rica: One-Crop Nation (Staley, an assistant professor of economics, is a member of the faculty exchange group at the University of Costa Rica. He is making a study of the Costa Rican economy.) Tiny Costa Rica is struggling with the problems that sooner or later beset all one-crop countries. Fifteen per cent of all the income earned in this Central American republic comes from coffee. Coffee provides more than half the foreign exchange necessary to buy imports without which this undiversified country could not survive In four years, the price of coffee has tumbled from $75 a hundred pounds to $40. To worsen the economic situation, the price of bananas—which accounts for another 30 per cent of this country's exports—also has been falling. What this means to Costa Rica is unemployment and economic stagnation. But Costa Rica is not the only Latin American country now undergoing economic woes. To date, Costa Rica has continued to import goods. It has chosen to use up its foreign exchange reserves. But now that these reserves have fallen to 12 million dollars some form of import restriction has become vital. The difficulties facing the government include more than the foreign exchange problem. Because of the fall in coffee prices, income is down and the tax revenues consequently are lowered. Tax income has not kept pace with the rise in government spending made necessary by the development program, which aims to diversify industry. For the last several years, the government budget has had a deficit of just under 10 per cent. Buyers of government bonds are so few that the 1,000 colon bond ($865) brings only 820 colones ($8545) on the market. Finally, to help counteract unemployment caused by the low income of coffee producers, the Central Bank has allowed an enormous expansion of bank loans to agriculture and industry. New sources of taxation must be found or government spending will have to be cut at the expense of the development program. A program to stabilize the economy must involve a measure of credit restriction if it is to succeed. Last month, the government took action. It announced a plan that World Shrinks, Rates Don't NEW YORK — (UPI) — The New York Daily News published a letter signed by Gordon Anderson of Hartford. Conn., complaining: "I would like to know why, if the world is getting smaller, postal rates keep getting higher." includes restricting the increase in bank loans to 5 per cent over this year. To cover the governmental deficit, already-high tariffs will be boosted, ranging up to an increase of 30 per cent for luxury items, such as automobiles, which now are 37 Executives Begin Session Thirty-seven executives of telephone companies throughout the nation began an intensive 4-week executive development program here this week. The program is conducted by the School of Business for the United States Independent Telephone Assm. The participants each of whom was nominated and is sponsored by his company are living in Grace Pearson and Douthart Halls while their classes and meals will be in the Kansas Union. Dean James R. Surface is director of the program assisted by Roger L. Singleton. The faculty includes Prof. A. J. G. Priest of the University of Virginia and Profs. Phillip B. Hartley, Thomas E. Miller, Ronald R. Olsen and Bertram L. Trillich Jr. of the KU staff. subjected to a tax about equal to their cost. The plan to balance import and exports involves a change from the present dual exchange rate to a unified, single rate. As a result coffee producers will have their income increased and the cost of imports would go up. In essence the new rate is designed to reduce import purchases to the level of export income. The plan has not met with universal approval. Labor unions fear the cost of living will increase. Importers do not like to see import prices rise. The small class of industrialists fear that rising raw material prices will halt the recent growth of industrial production of some 6 per cent a year. A group of faculty members at the University of Costa Rica has countered with a plan to set quotas on imports and to place high consumption taxes on such items as gasoline and cigarettes. Also coffee growers would be given a guaranteed price for their product. This plan has been endorsed by the Partido Liberacion Nacional 图 It is safe to predict that the government plan will not emerge uncathed in the Legislative Assembly. But it is definite that some sort of action cannot be delayed for long. HAS HE "POPPED THE QUESTION?" Wonderful! Stop in today for a gift certificate which will entitle you to an announcement portrait. V13-0511 Hiqley's 935 Mass. Wait and watch Friday's Kansan for SUMMER SALE bargains WATCH and WAIT at THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Summer Clearance SALE Continues Big Savings - Good Selections SUITS Were Now $29.95 $19.97 $32.50 $21.67 $35.00 $23.33 $45.00 $29.97 $50.00 $33.33 $55.00 $36.67 SPORT COATS Were Now $22.95 $15.30 $25.00 $17.30 $29.95 $19.97 $35.00 $23.33 $39.95 $26.63 DRESS SLACKS 1 3 off MANY OTHER SAVINGS diebolt's 843 Mass. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Friday, July 21, 1961 49th Year. No. 11 KU LAWRENCE, KANSAS The image shows a large construction crane in the middle of an open space, likely underway for a building or bridge construction. The crane is angled upwards and extends its boom across the site, with a hook visible at the end. In the background, there are two buildings partially visible. One building appears to be a high-rise structure with a flat roof, while the other looks like a multi-story residential or commercial building. The ground is covered with a layer of earth or sand, indicating that the site is being excavated or prepared for construction. GOING UP—The new dormitory, located near Templin and Lewis Halls east of Iowa Street, is beginning to take shape with the addition of the first floor above ground level. The photo shows the north end of the new housing facility with the south end of Lewis Hall in the background. KU Scientists Take Pictures of Twisters The birth and death of a tornado were for the first time observed and photographed from the air Saturday afternoon by a team of University of Kansas scientists. The tornado, which touched down briefly in fields northwest of Otis in Rush County (west central Kansas) without significant damage, came from an intense squall-line lying southwestward across Kansas. The National Science Foundation is financing Dr. Bates' study of the dynamics of Great Plains thunderstorms through a grant to KU's Center for Research in Engineering Science. The "flying laboratory" gets heavy use in this project. The KU team, led by Dr. Fred C Bates, associate professor of aeronautical engineering, viewed the storm and its cloud structure in depth from an altitude of about 4,000 feet for approximately 20 minutes, about 6 p.m. They had been patrolling the trailing edge of the squall-line in KU's "flying laboratory" C-45 plane. The first clue to the tornado was the low-hanging "pedestal cloud," Dr. Bates said. "We skirted the edge of this cloud and watched for evidence of rotation in pendant cloud streamers." As soon as the group was sure of detecting the rotation, radio notification was given the Russell FAA Flight Service Station of the existence of the funnel aloft. "The funnel then developed toward the ground and the dust whirl indicated a touchdown," Dr. Bates continued. "Fortunately the storm was short-lived. We saw it dissipate before the surface swirl affected any farm The storm confirmed Dr. Bates' belief that tornadoes occur frequently near the trailing edge of squalllines and may be safely approached by research aircraft. It also under-scored the significance of the low-hanging, flat-based "bedestal cloud." Dr. Bates believes "the most important scientific finding may lie in observation in depth of the cloud structure above the storm. We may have observed the pattern of clouds that gives rise to the 'hook' echo on the radar screen. buildings or dwellings. Mother Nature was mighty obliging to provide us with this opportunity without hurting anyone!" With Dr. Bates in the K.U. airplane were Norman Hoecker, the pilot; James A. Franklin, Kansas City graduate student in aeronautical engineering, and Wayne L. Pratt, Topeka junior. Photography was done with a K-24 aerial camera and a Bolex 16 mm. time-lapse camera. "But right now we are sweating out the development and printing of our photographs." Proficiency Exam Passed by 142, Seaver Reports The occurrence of the tornado was confirmed by FAA personnel who observed the storm from the Russell FAA Flight Service Station. Seventy-nine per cent of the 180 students who took the summer English Proficiency examination passed, according to James E. Seaver, associate professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program. Prof. Seaver said the percentage of failure on the June test was about the same as was recorded on the test last spring. The 142 who passed are: William Newton Allen, Patricia K. Anderson, Joan Beth Arkle, John Emery Arnold, Grover James Askins, Judith Newel Bernard, Emery M. Bontrager, Constance Jean Brenda Booth, Larry Beerdling, Nancy Jane Bram- Ruth Mille Brinkman, Walter Broughton, Carolyn Ann Budd, Virginia Lynne Butts. Marjorie B. Candlin, Irving G. Carlson, Ramona C. Carrier, Carolyn S. Carroll, Jillian E. Cornell, Cogswell, Charles T. Cruthird, Raymond L. Dabney, Judith D. Daugherty, Barbara Joaan David, Carol Marie Davis, Jonathan F. Ferrara, Hazel L. Detrott, Sheryl S. Dickworth Dixie A. Dunnaway, Floyd R. Elliott, Sara JO Essex, Silfa Fulker III, Ger-ger, Jeremy H., Stephen Francis Jr., Susan C. Frantz, Ronald D Gallagher, Karl A. Garrett, Judith A Gentry, Morad Ghodooshim, David E.ikon, Phyllis Guthrie, Mary Eller Hardwick Charlene Harrington, Philip B. Harris, Sara Lee Hartley, Kim F. Heller, Janice Jones, Caroline Kopp, Elena Hewins, Barbara Herrim, Eda Ann Hewins, Maye R. Heywood, John Peter Blavkj, Helen Sandra Hopkins, Gary Gene Huff- man, Eric M. Reid, Elaine Huntley, Margaret E. Innes Janice Kay Jenista, Carole Ann Pnw Johnson, Jo Ann Johnson, Richard Lee Johnson, Jo Ann Johnson, Richard Lee Jolliff, Firetrist Leed Jumod, Johannes V, Kapter, Anna M, Keeler, Patsy G, Kapter, Can I Kill Roberta P Kirk, Dinah, Kilewey, Rickard Lee Kline, Dorothy Jane Komarek Alice Noland Land, Jerry Kent Levy, Alice Lewis, Daw Laws, Daw Lewis, Carol A. Lowe, William Lewis, Carol A. Lyster, Edythe I. Marshall, Carole J. Mfcadden, Patricia S. McGinnis, Gerald Lee McKay, Marcia Ann Mericle, Jean- lene McKay, Lynne A. Meyer, Norma Evans Miller, Charles R. Moore, Joan Hamilton Myers, Lois C. Notsinger, Jeanne A. Nothall, Jeffrey K. Woodman, Barbara Jean Ossian, Patricia J Phillips, Constance K. Plummer, Horace Roger Raine, A Rate, Amelia Ayoen R. Rainbow, Theodore M. Maurine Roach, Edward A. Roberts Marjorie L. Roberts, Richard W. Rodewold, James Bean Rose, James Simons, Clayton Bickerton, Chlozman, Shclozman, Anita Louise Schrag, D Jenean Sears, William G. Sheldon, Don Jenkins, Joel Shultz, Arlie Sieber Jr, Suzanne Sim, Lenora D Skinner, Cynthia Lou Smith Maurizio E. Spechel, John F. Stallare, Stazel, Robert Henry Strack, Karen Lee Stuart, Therrissa E. Taylor, Sylvia D. Kent N. Tigges, William Tortilliere. Sara F. Tubbs, Roseanna L. Tweedy, Mary D. Rasmussen, H. Washburn, John Rachael Havelyn, Lyrin H. Washburn, John J. Williams, Donald D. Wilson, Janis C. Woodburn, D. Woodburn, Timothy M. Woodburn. KU Reactor Tests Progressing Well 180 took exam, 142 passed, 38 failed. The testing procedure on KU's new nuclear reactor has been progressing satisfactorily according to Harold F. Rosson, assistant professor of chemical engineering. The reactor began operations June 24. It is housed in the new environmental health building recently constructed on the north side of Fifteenth Street west of Naismith Drive. Prof. Rosson said there have been a few minor problems but nothing to hamper the testing program to a great extent. The $146,000 reactor was built with a $100,000 Atomic Energy Commission grant. The building and the remainder of the reactor costs were furnished by the University. KU Football Team Picked as No.2 Smith and Street, a national football magazine, has picked KU as the No. 2 team in the nation this fall, outranked only by Ohio State. In its national preview page, the magazine lists the Buckeyes and Jayhawkers 1-2, followed by Alabama, Texas, Iowa, UCLA. North Carolina State, Penn State, Rice, Auburn, Houston, and Notre Dame. Smith and Street also predicts Kansas not only will win the Big Eight but will be favored in all ten of its games. Bob Hurt, sports editor of the Topeka Capital-Journal, covers the magazine's Big Eight and Missouri Valley section and states: "The Big Eight was only the Big Six in 1947 when Oklahoma, quarterbacked by Jack Mitchell, tied Kansas for the conference football championship. This year Kansas, coached by Mitchell, is expected to win again. Last year the Jayhawks won the title but abdicated after a short reign when the conference ruled it had used an ineligible player in two games. "Missouri, Oklahoma, and Colorado all will field lines the equal, or nearly the equal, of the swift, skinny Jayhawk forwards. None, however, can match Kansas' all-purpose backfield. It has size, experience and passing potential. It wouldn't embarrass a pro squad." "Vengeance may be a favor for Kansas this fall. More of a factor is the fact that the 1960 Kansas team, which was the league's best on the field if not in the conference room, is back almost intact. After hearing the news, football coach Jack Mitchell commented, "It's a fine compliment, but it would be much greater after the season. We have too many problems at present to even approach such an aspiration." Mitchell and five other college coaches have been chosen to participate in a national pre-season television program organized by Sports Illustrated magazine. Mitchell and his wife will leave Lawrence by train for New York July 31 where he will make recordings for the film. Athletic Director Dutch Lonborg said: "It's good to be recognized. I imagine the rating was based in large measure on the team's showing at the tail end of the 1960 season. It's been quite some time since KU has been ranked this high (the 1952 team was picked as one of the nation's finest before the season) and this should help our ticket sales a lot." Four KU players who are in town this summer had mixed emotions. All America quarterback John Hadl said, "It's nice to be thought of that way, but with Coan out of action, I can't see it. I think maybe we belong in the top ten, but we lack depth in certain spots. This is certainly a nice honor and I'd sure like to end up that way, but I actually don't see how we can." Halfback Bert Coan: "I don't put much confidence in pre-season predictions, but if we can keep the spirit we had last year, it's possible we could move up. We'll just have to wait and see." End Andy Graham, "I'm pleased, but I don't see how they could pick KU to be that good. Our football picture is a little hazy right now because of injuries. I feel we're overrated and it's going to be tough to live up to the prediction. But we'll try." All-conference guard Elvin Basham: "I don't know if we have the size or the horses to be No. 2, but we'll sure work at it. A lot depends on the mental attitude. We'll have a senior team and seniors sometimes can be complacent. If we want to win all our games we probably can. It's hard to predict right now, but we should have a better team this year than last if everybody will work and report to the opening practice session in shape." SALVATORE Mitchell . . . dubious Dyche Shows Ancient Life An archeological exhibit of the Central Plains from 1000 to 1400 A.D. has been attracting many visitors to the Natural History Museum. The project was built by Jon Muller, Salina junior, Walter Birkby, Lawrence graduate student, and David Ross of Wilmette, Ill., a June graduate. The collection, which consists of artifacts dug from an earthen ledge, was gathered in Kansas from 1920 to 1950 by the late Floyd Schultz of Clay Center. The display is the fifth in a series of six and was set up by Carlyle Smith, professor of anthropology and curator of the anthropology museum. The exhibit is located in the south wing of the second floor. Dr. Smith said the purpose of the series "is to give people a synopsis of Kansas archaeology. The important thing is to counteract the public's Hollywood conception of the Plains and its inhabitants." A sixth display will be added sometime next year and will deal with the arrival of Francisco Coronado, the Spanish explorer, into Kansas. Other displays which can be seen now concern the early American nomads, who lived between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago, the first pottery making Indians who migrated to Kansas before the time of Christ, and Kansas burial mounds. JFK, MacArthur Discuss Problems WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Five-star Gen. Douglas MacArthur and President Kennedy discussed Berlin and other world problems Thursday. The 81-year-old general was Kennedy's guest at a White House lunch honoring him for his services as U.S. representative at the 15th anniversary celebration of Philippine independence in Manila July 4. MacArthur said he reported on his trip. He said he and Kennedy "discussed a number of world problems, of which I, of course, cannot reveal the details." The general said he told the president that the Philippine people are "allies we can trust and count upon—a bright light in a somewhat clouded world." 10.2.3 --- Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 21, 1961 Moral Obligation Thousands of letter-writing Americans are on the verge of vetting a government program that has been largely responsible for the preservation of what shaky peace we have had since World War II. Our massive foreign aid program has never earned congressmen much more than an occasional thanks from foreign leaders but has often meant defeat when the people back home learned that their representatives voted for one of the gigantic aid programs. Foreign aid programs have been particularly hard to sell during periods of domestic financial difficulty such as periods of recession or high unemployment. In a statement adopted unanimously last year by representatives of its 34 constituent denominations, the National Council of Churches said: But even with her constantly mounting farm surpluses and the economic ups and downs the United States remains the mightiest and most prosperous nation in the world. Not only does the foreign aid given less fortune help entrench our position against communism but it also helps fulfill a moral obligation as defined recently by various religious leaders. "Impovements of the standards of life of our fellow men is a privilege which the United States shares, not a benefit it confers. Moral principles even more than concern for our own national welfare impel an abiding interest in our neighbors on this crowded planet." The National Lutheran Council has urged Lutheran churches across the nation to "point out to church members that economic and technical aid to less-developed countries is essentially a demand of justice, and in harmony with the Christian faith." Pope John XXIII gave his views on the subject in an important new Encyclical issued by the Vatican last week. He called attention to the sharp contrast between the high living standards of "economically" advanced nations and the "extreme poverty" which exists in underdeveloped countries. Because all human beings are "members of the same family," the Pope said, nations "enjoying abundance of material goods" have a plain moral duty to aid countries "whose citizens suffer from want, misery and hunger, and who lack even the elementary rights of the human person." But selfish Americans, many of them church members, continue to burden their congressmen with thousands of pounds of mail demanding reduction and often curtailment of foreign aid pay to countries that do not show immediate gain in their economic position. Many Americans also seem to believe that our aid program should result in recasting the world in the image of the United States. It is odd that the moral lessons learned by millions of Americans on Sunday are so soon forgotten when they sit down to write their congressman. — Ron Gallagher Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Play tricks. 5 Tilt, as knights. 10 Containers for liquids. 14 Greek hero. 15 Unit of "prevention." 16 Executive; Abbr. 17 Controlling groups in democracies. 19 High church tribunal. 20 U.S. Statesman. 21 Explosive. 22 Formerly; Poet. 23 Mire. 24 Discarded things. 26 Le Gallienne and Gabor. 28 Shocks. 29 Ransack. 30 Projecting part. 34 "So cares and __ abound . . ." 35 Laughed heartily 36 Click beetles. 38 Bantering. 39 Civility. 40 Color. 41 Summer; Fr. 42 Scene of famous Council, 1545-63. Rifles. Ballplayer Slaughter. Whirl. Days of yore. McCrea of the films. Entire. Dress fabric. Italian town. Mistrustful feelings. Jowl area. "—— Laurie." Put in the mail. King. Pluto's place. Gulf of the Ionian Sea. **DOWN** 1 Part of a door frame. 2 Out of harmony. 3 Broadway musical and movie. 4 Book of the Bible 5 Combine. 6 Aloud. 7 Joiners. 8 Odors. 9 Trials. 10 Book of the Bible. 11 Wife: Latin. 12 Arrives. 13 Go away! 14 Crimson. 14 Crows' relatives. 14 Originated. 14 Oust. 15 Gallantry. 16 Actor Victor. 16 More favorable. 16 Slows Music. 16 Rims. 17 Landing pier. 18 Curtain supports. 18 Prickly feeing. 18 Actress Russell. 18 Peninsula of Northern Europe. 18 Lead ore. 18 A name for Dido. 18 Indian prince. 18 __ de Cologne. 18 Actor Webb. 18 Holy Roman Emperor, 962-973. 18 Hibernia. 18 Antagonists. 18 Forty weekdays. 18 This thing: Sp. 18 Lodge. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 Letters Women Really Better? (Answer on page 8) Well it's that time of the year again. The grade averages are out and to quote the Tuesday, July 18, 1961 issue of the Summer Session Kansan "the women as usual made the better grades—the all-women's average was 1.56." Incidentally, the all-men's average slid in with a weak 1.32. This hurts the male ego where it really counts—intellectual superiority. Now who can deny facts? Like all good pragmatic Americans quantitative data does not lie. It's right in front of you, read it—all women's average 1.56; all-men's average 1.32. I have only one question to raise. How does music, art, home economics, fine arts, and education (predominated by women) stack up with physics, chemistry, mathematics, and engineering (predominated by men). If we're going to draw the battle line between the sexes on academic ability lets don't make it inequitable. Lets at least put the averages in their proper perspective. To avoid further tensions (and inferiorities) why not just come out with the school average. Certain individuals and publications continually play up those disturbances (race against race; nation against nation; men vs. women) all in the interest of news. Why not come out with more of the harmonies of life? It could be that better relations all around will be effected. Now I do not wish to imply that home economics, music, or art are pat courses. Certainly this is not the case as those majors have to take the same required courses at the University as the rest of us. But is there a real comparison of academic achievement when one major field requires that its students whittle figurines out of soap for some kiddie class and another to conduct an experiment in nuclear radiation? James Galvin, Senior School of Business University of Kansas SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS DEPARTMENT Chuck Morelock and Ron Gallagher ... Co-Editors 1. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinache ... Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE UNITED STATES IN 1800, by Henry Adams. Great Seal (Cornell Press). $1.25. From the "History of the United States of America" in the administrations of Jefferson and Madison these six superlative chapters have been extracted. They constitute a matchless essay on American life in the year Henry Adams' great-grandfather was about to leave the White House. The chapters stand up particularly well when viewed alongside other histories of the United States. Adams was extraordinarily perceptive about civilizations, as his "Mont-St. Michel and Chartres" and the "Education" demonstrate. From the vantage point of 75 years he saw what the thinly populated states of 1800—and their people—were like. He has somewhat of a bias toward Jefferson, as the later chapters from the History would continue to reveal, and as one might expect of the increasingly cynical Adams. There is doubt about the great democratic experiment, but on the other hand Adams is no staunch admirer of the anti-democrats of 1800—Hamilton, Fisher Ames, and Burke. The world could expect little of the America of 1800, but then Europe itself still had far to go. Transportation and communications were tiny. The America that later would venerate its inventors had scorned John Fitch, and was not making life simple for Fulton. There were three pronounced societies, if one ignores the growing West, as Adams tends to do. These were New England, the Middle Atlantic states, and the South. These had widely different cultures, though Adams points out how Charleston, in the deep South, had characteristics of Puritan New England. There was no literature to speak of (save Brown, Brackenridge and Freneau, scarcely major figures). There was little cosmopolitanism, save for Philadelphia. Jeffersonian democracy lay ahead, and the fight over the Alien and Sedition Acts had just passed. In 1800, the prospects were not great, one is forced to admit. IMMIGRATION AS A FACTOR IN AMERICAN HISTORY, edited by Oscar Handlin. Prentice-Hall. $1.95. It seems to me that the Spectrum series of Prentice-Hall, if it continues in its recent vein, may surpass the much-touted Amherst series. Prentice-Hall provides in such volumes as this one by the reputable Oscar Handlin numerous significant primary documents, and through these tells the story of the immigrant in this country. The university student should welcome such a volume. Most of the accounts are not those of famous persons. Immigrants, political leaders, labor leaders, persons who made the crossing in steerage, students of noted immigrants—these are the writers of the sections, all of which have been tightly edited. The aspects of immigration which Handlin, through his sources, presents are many. He deals with the problem of immigration and its tremendous scope, with the factors that drove persons out of the old world, with the adjustment to American life that became necessary — economically, organizationally, politically, and culturally. He provides an excellent section that treats three theories of Americanization—the melting pot idea, cultural pluralism, and assimilation. Then he deals with restriction, with the special problem of the oriental, with racism, with the literacy test and with the quota system. All add up to an amazing and important part of our history. EYELESS IN GAZA, by Aldous Huxley. Bantam Classics, 75 cents. Huxley wrote this frequently puzzling novel in the mid-thirties, when communism, fascism, pacifism and the New Deal were kicking up intellectual currents. One may assume that the title refers to man himself, a blind giant, a Samson stumbling about in an increasingly complex civilization. The author ranges back and forth in time, much as Faulkner does in "The Sound and the Fury," with the chief focal points being the years 1902, 1914, 1928, 1933 and 1934. These are the times of crisis for the hero, Anthony Beavis—the death of his mother, his school years, his affair with an older woman and the death of a boyhood friend, and the confused years of adulthood when he and others are seeking the meanings of life. A revolver in the hand of a drunken Mexican, an accident on a South American trail, a shattered body on the beach, a schoolboy caught in an excessively private moment, a dead dog hurtling from a plane onto two persons making love—these are some of the violent and memorable images created by Huxley. As memorable is the running philosophy, for almost every sentence in this amazing work is an epigram from one of the superior novelists of our time. THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO AND OTHER STORIES, by Ernest Hemingway. Scribner Library, $1.25. Scribner's may be the best of all paperback lines. The covers are strong, the paper is good, the printing is clear. And the books, of course, are the best Scribner's has published in hardback form. In this volume are several of Hemingway's greatest short stories. The cover story, its hero being eaten up by gangrene at the foot of Mt. Kilimanjaro, is deservedly famous. Some tastes run to "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber," that grim story of an African safari, and others to "The Killers." still one of our finest short stories. The university student who is just discovering Hemingway would do well to acquire this fine new paperback. ***** Page 3 Sunday Schedule Senior High Division Orchestra-Chorus Sunday Afternoon, July 23, 1961 Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Guy Fraser Harrison, Russell L. Wiley, Guest Conductors 3:00 p.m. University Theatre Tuesday, July 18, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Part I Chorus Requiem ... Moza Soloists Doris Peterson, Soprano Douglas Susu-Mago, Tenor Feather Dworkin, Alto Paul Geiger, Bass Orchestra University Students and Faculty Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Part II Orchestra **Orchestra** Prelude to Act I, "Lohengrin" ... Richard Wagner Russian Easter, overture ... Rimski-Korsakov Russell L. Wiley, Conductor “Samson,” overture ... Handel Vocalise ... Rachmaninoff Lincoln Portrait ... Copland Larry Ketchum, Narrator Larry Ketchum, Narrator Guy Fraser Harrison, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger PROGRAM Band-Chorus Band-Chorus Sunday Evening, July 23, 1961 Russell L. Wiley and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Guy Fraser Harrison, Guest Conductor 8:00 p.m. K.U. Outdoor Theatre Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Band Part I Coat of Arms, March ... Kenny La Gazza Ladra, overture ... Rossini Chorale and Alleluia ... Hanson Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Part II **Chorus** Brazilian Psalm ... Berger Jerry Curry, Soloist The Sounding of the Seven Trumpets ... Kelly Narrator Larry Ketchum Soloists Tenor: Robert Smith Bass: Loren Pinkerman Trumpet: Dave Clark Ensemble Steve Brown Jim Trigg Dave Bennett Arny Young Joe Dewey John Rodman The Wonder of the Starry Night ... Weed Part III The Wonder of the Starry Night ... Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Band Fantasia in G Major ... J. S. Bach Second Suite for Military Band ... Gustav Holst A. March B. Song Without Words "I'll love my Love" C. Fantasia on the "Dargason" Two Gymnopedies (for solo Flute Section) ... Erik Satie People of the South Wind ... Benjamin Dunford Trek Conflict Renaissance 1961 (Specially commissioned for the Kansas Centennial by the Topeka High School Band) Guy Fraser Harrison, Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Measures Taken By West Berlin To Aid Refugees By Joseph P. Fleming By Joseph P. Fleming BERLIN — (UPI) — West Berlin authorities have cut red tape to speed the processing of thousands of East German refugees streaming in this isolated Western outpost. As hundreds pour in daily, authorities are chartering commercial planes to augment regularly scheduled flights for getting the refugees across the 110-mile strip of Communist East German territory to West Germany. West Berlin officials considered cutting from four days to two the time it normally takes to process the refugees. Officials said they had a "battle" on their hands handling the throngs in West Berlin's Marienfelde Refugee Center. Refugees, fearful that conclusion of a Soviet-proposed peace treaty will slam shut the "emergency exit" to the West, are pouring into West Berlin at near-record numbers. More than 18,000 East Germans have fled their homeland this month alone. More than 20,000 Germans mixed politics and prayers at the Protestant rally. The meeting originally was planned for both East and West Berlin, but it was confined to the Western sector when the Communists outlawed the assembly on the ground that it supported "militarism." A large number of refugees in recent days slipped across the border to attend a huge Protestant religious rally in West Berlin. The U.S. Army announced Wednesday it was reorganizing its troop command in West Berlin, giving more emphasis to training its combat-ready 5,000-man garrison. Western allied forces in the divided city are vastly outnumbered by the Communists who have 22 crack Soviet armored divisions in East Germany, bolstered by seven divisions kept under arms by the Communist East German regime. The exodus of refugees from East Germany forced officials in Stuttgart to reopen five old refugee camps in the state of Baden-Wuerttemburg. Six other camps in West Berlin were being utilized as initial refugee living quarters. Refugees undergo stringent debriefing by separate teams of Americans, British, French and West German officials in West Berlin. Then they are flown to other more permanent camps in the German Federal Republic. While at Marienfelde, the refugees — many of whom left their homes and jobs to escape to freedom — are huddled five and six in a room and they sleep in double-decker bunks. Their food is prepared in a central kitchen and they eat breakfast and dinner in their rooms, lunch is served in a huge dining hall. "Though the camp is filled," and conditions are not always ideal, said August Koehler, a camp official, "we never get any complaints. They are satisfied with everything we do for them. They are quiet and orderly and, above all, thankful. "Now that children are on vacation, we are prepared to use school buildings if the flow of refugees continues as it has in the past ten days." U.S. Accused Of Contest Fix BERLIN — (UPI) — East German Communists yesterday accused the United States of rigging the Miss Universe Contest to spur the flight of East German refugees to the West. The official communist youth newspaper "Young World" said Marlene Schmidt, 24-year-old German electronics engineer, was chosen Miss Universe at Miami Beach Saturday only because she fled to West Germany from the Soviet Zone a year ago. It said the United States hoped that other East German girls would flee to the West in imitation of Miss Universe. ... Books in Review ... By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism VIRGO DESCENDING, by Thomas Duncan. Doubleday, $3.95. Solveig Skovgard enters Pete McCabe's life in 1935 when she comes to Santa Fe as the winner of a writing contest. She is beautiful and dynamic, and Pete instantly falls in love with her and becomes absorbed in the fascination of her Virgin Islands background. Being in love with Solveig involves not only a good deal of love-making but also a bit of ghost-writing, for Solveig is a four-square, 99.9 per cent fraud. She can't write her own name, but only Pete and a few other people learn this as she soars upward to fame and fortune. "Virgo Descending" has some of the feel of "What Makes Sammy Run?"" Pete McCabe is no Al Mannheim, but he gets used as badly. He's a jerk who knows he's a jerk all the time. He writes the most banal of western novels, always thinking that underneath it all there beats the heart of a Hemingway. Pete caters to the least common denominator in American readers, but one wonders as he reads this novel if maybe Thomas Duncan doesn't do almost the same thing. All that Pete has is his integrity (admittedly, that's quite a bit to have). He has no real ability. Does Duncan? He tells an absorbing story and some of his comments on the American scene are wry and telling. But this book fails to hold the reader as it should. Could it be that we have heard the story of Sammy Glick too many times, and I'amour in the bedroom gets a bit dull to read about so often? THE GREAT DEPRESSION, edited by David Shannon, Spectrum (Prentice-Hall), $1.95. Not the least of the novelties of this worthwhile collection of documents on the depression is the fact that practically everything here is the story of the person who was being called, in 1933, "the forgotton man." David Shannon has assembled case histories that present a vivid picture of the days when not only the economy but the human soul was in a depressed state. He tells the story through governmental reports, newspaper articles, interviews by social workers, and personalized reminiscences. First comes "Crash!," the events of black Thursday and tragic Tuesday 1929. Hoover spoke of prosperity being around the corner, men began to sell apples, there was a brisk trade in shoe-shining, some people tried to get jobs in Russia, and women slept in the parks of Chicago. The lot of the farmer in the depression follows, and the story of relief, which many were too proud to take. The depression produced wanderers, and these occupy a section, ending with a chapter from Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath." Shannon then describes how the depression hit the middle class, what it did to education, how it stirred talk—and action—concerning revolution. He concludes with a set of case histories—ex-businessmen, urban Irish, urban Jewish, and a totally deaf couple. What a contrast to the 1920s, which helped to produce this sorry decade! There is little pretty to recall from the 1930s, and this book, dark and grim as it should be, might be good reading for the young people today who think being followers of Goldwater is the real way to be a revolutionary. THE HAMLET, by William Faulkner. Modern Library Paperbacks, $1.25. In this 1940 novel—which is in a way a loosely connected series of short stories—Faulkner gave to American literature the Snopeses—the thin, washed-out, evasive, crafty, immoral, barn-burning Flem Snopes. Faulkner had been telling us previously, in "The Sound and the Fury," about the decline of the old South and the rise of a new South in which a Jason Compson accommodates himself to the standards of the backwoods. That decline is described further in "The Hamlet." There are near-classic episodes and characters in this novel. First there is Flem, and second there is Eula, lush and lovely and lazy, almost symbolizing southern decadence, the Eula who is lusted after by all the neighborhood lads and finds herself with child—almost as though it were all an accident. Eula is from the Varner clan, the Varners who slowly give way to the Snopeses. Then there are the spotted ponies that Flem brings in from Texas and that cause such excitement in Frenchman's Bend. And there is the inarticulate Ike Snopes, who spends a long hot summer chasing a cow, for which he has a deep and abiding affection—which is one way to put it. Here is a novel only occasionally bogged down by Faulknerese, one that is likely to become a modern American classic. PILGRIMS IN PARADISE, by Frank G. Slaughter. Permabooks, 50 cents. Lusty, busty and gusty, here is what readers have come to expect from Frank Slaughter. It's the story of how a doctor shepherds Cromwell era pilgrims to the islands of the Bahaman group. There is a wild plan to attack Cuba and the Spanish stronghold, and the doctor is contrasted with his fanatical brother. There is also, of course, sex. BANDOLEER CROSSING, by Frank O'Rourke. Ballantine, 35 cents. Not a bad western novel, this a "High Noon" in reverse, the story of a law man who gives up the Texas Rangers to become a rancher but first has to clean up the country. The climax involves his failure to take a man alive. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 21. 1961 Girl Scouts to End Tours With Week Study at KU KU will be the last stop in a six-week tour of the United States by 72 young women,15 to 19 years old,from 27 states and 12 foreign countries. They will assemble at KU August 8 for a week-long study session after touring the four quarters of the United States. The American girls, all senior Girl Scouts, and the foreign girls, Girl Guide Rangers, began the project June 28. Two busloads left Palo Alto, Calif., for separate tours of the Northwest and Southwest, and two groups left New York City the more groups left New York City the same day to travel to Lawrence through the Northeast and the Southeast. While at KU, the scouts will hold group meetings and small discussion sessions to compare notes on the trip and to evaluate the program. Special events, including field trips to points of interest in the area and a picnic at Potter Lake on the campus, have been planned. Girl Scouts from Lawrence have been invited to attend one of the sessions. On the road, the scouts will stay in private homes along their routes. At KU they will live in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, and have meals in the Kansas Union. By the time the four contingents meet at KU, the girls will have covered a total of more than 16,000 miles, traveled through 40 states and the District of Columbia, stopped at more than 52 towns and cities, and spent a night or two in approximately 1,000 American homes. They will have seen such sights as California's redwood forests, a glacier in Washington, a cattle ranch in Montana, historic Williamsburg, Va., Oak Ridge Laboratory, and New Orleans' French Quarter. They will have ridden a float in Salt Lake City's "Days of '47" parade and will have toured the White House and visited with women Senators. The foreign girls' trip was financed Ex-KU Concertmaster Earns Master of Music Marlan G. Carlson, former concertmaster of the University of Kansas symphony orchestra, has received the degree master of music in music literature from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester. N.Y. Carlson, an honor student from Wayne, Neb., earned the bachelor of music education degree from Kansas in 1959 and the bachelor of music in 1960. He held scholarships throughout his years at K.U. and on the basis of work here won a Danforth Fellowship, which will provide up to three more years of graduate study beyond the year just ended. by the Juliette Low World Friendship Fund, established in honor of the founding of Girl Scouting in this country and supported by contributions from Girl Scouts. American girls paid a $200 fee raised either by their local scout councils or by the girls themselves. Film Classic To Be Shown "The Big Parade," one of Hollywood's all-time film classics, will be shown at 8 p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre. John Gilbert and Renee Adoree star in this saga of World War I. The picture, directed by King Vidor and released in 1925, concerns the forces that drove people into the war. Much of the action revolves around the American doughboys and the girls they left behind. There are also plenty of combat scenes. "The Big Parade" has a musical sound track, although the dialogue is silent. Through the years, the film has been considered to be one of the finest of its kind, and rates favorably with such productions as "What Price Glory?", "All Quiet on the Western Front," and "Wings." Gilbert, one of the screen's most famous leading men, was at the peak of his popularity at the time the movie was released. His reign ended with the introduction of talkies however, because of his poor speaking voice. By Jerry Knudson (Editor's Note: A former instructor of journalism here, Jerry Knudson has toured Mexico and Guatemala this summer. This is the second of a two-part series.) The only stretch of the Pan American Highway not paved in Central America is found in Guatemala, perhaps because the small republic does not want to furnish easy access for Mexican troops. TEXACO A flurry of excitement swept this capital city early this summer when Guatemala charged that invasion troops were being trained on the estate of ex-President Lazaro Cardenas in southern Mexico. The charge was denied, but Guatemalans are still jumpy. Troops with machine guns can be seen on the streets of the city. The United States does not figure large in the foreign policy of Guatemala, for here the "Colossus of the North" is not the land of the United Fruit Co., but Mexico itself. Anyone who can survive the bus ride from Cuauhtemoc on the Mexican frontier will find a ruggedly beautiful country here. The road is a single-track version of the celebrated Burma Road of World War II, and occasional landslides are merely incorporated into the road itself, providing some ups and downs to match the sinuous curves. U.S. Doesn't Worry Guatemala This is an Indian country, with about 53 per cent of its population of Maya-Quiche descent, 38 per cent ladino or of mixed Spanish and Indian ancestry, and 9 per cent of Spanish origin. GUATEMALA CITY — Sensitive Americans, always concerned over the opinions of others, do not get a tumble from the Guatemalans, who are busy disliking their relatively affluent neighbor to the north, Mexico. Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI 3-9897 By Jerry Knudson Nowhere are Indian traditions more alive than in the village of Chichicastenango, which has become a tourist attraction with its Thursday and Sunday markets. At all Kansan Want Ads Get Results 6-Hour Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) Holding Hands HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 DO YOU HAVE CAR, WILL TRAVEL? If you have a car and want riders, or if you're looking for a ride, put an ad in the Kansan classifieds, and get fast results! 1 Time 50c 2 Times 75c 4 Times $1 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN VI 3-2700—Ext. 376 times, Indians may be seen on the steps of the Church of Santo Tomas swinging incense censors to speed their prayers to heaven. Religion here is a strange mixture of Christian and pagan cults. The Mayan calendar contains good and evil days. On good days the Indians flock to the church to pray for good crops, long life, and the like. But on evil days. On good days the Indians le value, and they repair to nearby hilltops where ancient Mayan idols still serve a superstitious people. Chickens may be offered as sacrifices, with the practical result that the medicine men enjoy fried chicken lunches. Liquor is also part of the ritual, and if one wants a haircut in Chichicastenango, it is best to go early in the morning while the barber may still be sober. Another tourist attraction is the colonial town of Antigua, first capital of the Spanish province. More than 40 churches — most in ruins after the earthquake of 1773 — dot the quiet town. Guatemala City itself is a smaller and less exciting version of Mexico City. One sees more Indians here, some in traditional dress, and on almost every street corner you can hear the slurred sounds of the Quiche language. The future of Guatemala is not promising, despite anything that President Kennedy's "Alliance for Progress" might accomplish. The country is too small, and those who hope to restore the Central American Confederation which lasted briefly from 1824 to 1838 are destined for disappointment. These people are intensely individualistic and suspicious of each other. One drawback has been Costa Rica, which has not wanted to combine with the other Central American republics because it is more advanced and more democratic. Typewriters But people here — as throughout Latin America — are extremely optimistic. A shoeshine boy offered to shine my shoes at the very moment when I was running down the street to catch a bus. I missed the bus, and he shined my shoes. Two kinds of gratitude: The sudden kind we feel for what we take; the larger kind we feel for what we give.—E. A. Robinson Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 GOING ON A PICNIC ? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 THE WORLD'S LARGEST TYPEWRITER JOAN SUTHERLAND (KU Concert Course 1961-62) "Operatic Arias" Mono—$3.32 Stereo—$3.98 "Art of the Prima Donna" Mono—$6.64 Stereo—$7.98 On London Records BELL'S 925 Mass. Friday, July 21, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock Ty Cobb never won any popularity contests, but as a player, he was in a class by himself. During his brilliant 28-year major league career, the Georgia Peach set 90 baseball records, many of which still stand. The first player to be elected to Baseball's Hall of Fame, Cobb performed the following feats: Had a lifetime batting average of .367. Hit .400 three times. Amassed 4191 hits, the only player ever to do this. Won 12 American League batting championships, including nine in a row during one stretch. Stole 96 bases in one season. COBB PLAYED THE ONLY WAY HE KNEW HOW—HARD. His fierce competitive nature made him the most hated player in the game, and, at the same time, the most respected. He wasn't a home run hitter but he knew how to get a base hit when it counted. He ended his career at the age of 42, and still managed to hit .323 for the old Philadelphia A's. A player with Cobb's ability today would draw a salary ranging from $100,000 on up. Ty never came close to that figure because in his era ball players had to scratch for a living. Now, even a run-of-the-mill utility man can nail down $10,000 per season. His death this week marked the passing of one of sport's all-time greats. It's doubtful if there will ever be another like him. Hell hath no fury like a golfer scorned. I've played the game a lot myself, and have felt the pangs of frustration many, many times. However, I've never gone as far as one gentleman did a few years ago on a course in Nebraska. ACCORDING TO LEGEND, this duffer, after slicing four consecutive balls into a creek, grabbed his brand new set of Wilsons, dumped them into said creek, took off his new golf shoes, dumped them too, and to complete the act, took off his new golf hat and tossed that in for good measure. He then walked off the links and announced he was switching to tennis. Then there's the story about the two Chicago golfers at the 19th hole. After a few rounds at the clubhouse bar, one turned to the other and said he could hit a tee shot 1000 yards, on level ground. The other bet him he couldn't. THE LATTER LOST THE BET THOUGH. Golfer no. 1 waited a few months, walked out on frozen Lake Michigan, where the wind always blows in gale proportions, took a swing, hit about a 100 yard drive, and saw the ball roll the other 900 yards. This story is supposed to be true, although somebody might have stretched the point somewhere along the way. Public relations wise, nothing boosts a football team's prestige like a good showing in a nationally televised game. Friends of mine in Michigan and California, for example, wrote last fall to say they had viewed the KU-Syracuse battle and enjoyed every minute of it. THE JAYHAWKERS LOST 14-7 after a penalty canceled a late quarter TD. Syracuse, before the game, was well known to TV audiences whereas Kansas was not. Two and a half hours later, however, football fans from coast to coast knew Jack Mitchell's boys really had something. My Michigan friend, a former Notre Dame freshman player now in the investment business in Detroit, said he didn't know John Hadl from Nikita Khrushchev when he turned on his set. But afterwards: "That Hadl's a terrific boy isn't he?" The Californian, a Sacramento radio announcer, also praised Hadl, plus Bert Coan, Curtis McClinton, and the entire Kansas line. The week-long course will be taught by three experts in the field of cosmetics, and the daily schedule will include class lectures, demonstrations, and practical work sessions in hair styling, comb-out, and makeup. A special class in advanced hair styling will also be offered. Cosmetologists Expected Here Approximately 150 persons are expected to attend the Kansas Advanced Cosmetology Institute Aug.7 to 11 at the University of Kansas. There will be competitive hair styling, Aug. 10, and trophies will be awarded at the banquet that evening. Participants will be housed in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall and will have their meals at the Kansas Union. Paul Wilson, associate professor of law, is serving as a temporary member of Second District Congressman Robert Ellsworth's Washington staff this week. Wilson Aiding Ellsworth A novel co-authored by Mrs. Mildred Gordon, a former student in 1923-24, has been sold to Columbia Studios for $112,500, reportedly the highest price Hollywood has ever paid for a straight suspense story. Wilson is advising Ellsworth on Constitutional policy and other aspects of legislation. Ex-Student Earns $112,500 for Book The other author is Mrs. Gordon's husband, Gordon, a former advertising executive. Together, the two have written ten books, five for the movies. In 1557, they sold their novel, "Captive," to Fox Studios for $100,000. The novel is entitled, "Operation Terror," and concerns the FBI. Columbia will begin filming the story in San Francisco Aug. 7 with Glenn Ford and Lee Remick playing the lead roles. Mrs. Gordon, the former Mildred Nixon, was born in Eureka, graduated from Burlington High School, and later the University of Arizona. B'nai B'rith to Hold Picnic The B'nai B'rith Hillel Councilorship will have its midsummer picnic at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Potter Lake. In case of rain, the group will meet at the Jewish Community Center. THE Town Shop SUMMER SALE Northcool, Worsted Tex, Linett, Ltd. Dacron & Wool Suits Dacron & Cotton $2995 $3375 $3995 $4395 Nationally Advertised at $39.95 $42.95 $55.00 $59.50 Goldsmith, S. Blacker, H. I. S. Sportcoats $2795 $3375 $22.95 $2795 $3375 Nationally Advertised at $37.50 $42.50 Slacks for Men Dacron & Wool Wash 'N' Wear $849 $1149 $1349 Formerly Priced From $10.95 to $16.95 Manhattan, Eagle, & Gant Sportshirts Short Sleeve Long Sleeve $295 $395 $595 Nationally Advertised at $4.00 $5.50 $7.95 Swimwear & Bermudas $375 $450 $675 Formerly Priced $5.00 $5.95 $8.95 Resistol Straw & Felt Hats $395 $495 $895 Formerly Priced $5.95 to $11.95 THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan 21. Wednesday, July 1961 Busty English Girl Isn't 'Comfy' in American Styles NEW YORK—(UPI)—A busty British beauty queen with none of the demureness of Miss America and Miss Universe contestants said today that girls like Jacqueline Kennedy are unfair to girls like her by promoting high-necked fashions. Caron Gardner, who sports the title of "Miss London By Night," has a 42-23-36 figure that just doesn't fit into a Jacqueline-type sheath that reveals only the collarbone. She's tried them and found them definitely "uncomfy." "American women certainly aren't built like us English girls or else they're trying to flatten their figures," said blonde, 20-year-old Caron. "It's hard for a topheavy girl $ \textcircled{2} $ to get readymade clothes in this "Miss" at the "These sheath dresses are too restrictive. I feel like a bag of potatoes about to burst in most of them. That's why I wear sleeveless, low-cut gowns. I even feel more comfy if they are backless." Caron said she has become used to being stared at since she came here nearly six months ago to promote tourism in England, especially tours of London's nightspots. She got her title in a beauty contest at London's Latin Quarter "because I had been abroad a lot and speak French." "Most American men do a double take when I tell them I am, "Miss London By Night," she said. "They think I'm a shady lady or something like that." Caron said she has met very few American women but has made a wide acquaintance among the opposite sex in New York, Chicago and Miami Beach. She said her "many many dates" have led her to several conclusions about the American male: - They're better looking and more muscular than Englishmen, "probably from all the sports you go in for." - They're more generous than Englishmen and think nothing of taking a girl to cocktails, dinner, a play, and two or three nightclubs "all in one evening." - They're friendlier than English- men, who may still be calling a girl —They're the frankest ever. A girl knows "just where she stands" because American men "lay their cards on the table in the first five minutes." Caron thinks her biggest mistake was bringing a zebra-striped Bikini to America. "The first time I put in on at a Florida hotel, all the men started to take pictures, then all their wives started to pose with me—just as though I were a freak," she said. "Well, I'm really interested in nudism, I guess," she said. "I've spent one weekend in an English nudist camp and found it quite jolly." Boy Scouts To Tour KU While on Stop A busload of approximately 40 Explorer Scouts and leaders from Geneva, N.Y., will visit the University of Kansas enroute home from a two-week camping trip to Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico. Following their arrival Aug. 1, the Scouts will be taken on a tour of the KU campus, and they will have a swimming party at Robinson Gymnasium that evening. The visitors will have their evening meal at the Kansas Union and will spend the night in Joseph R Pearson Hall. They will leave early Aug. 2. Silks, Chiffons Take Spotlight Balestra plans to keep the "as-ceding V-line" he originated last winter, marked by waistlines cut low at the front and sweeping up above the natural waistline at the back. ROME—(UPI)—Balestra of Rome is presenting winter styles in light silks and chiffons, designed with an eye to America's well-heated homes and offices. The new fashion season has begun with a new concept in shoes, a crisscross style which can be worn interchangeably on right or left feet. This casual shoe is designed with a strap across the top of the foot to hold it in place. The front section is round and roomy so the big toe will fit into whichever shoe you happen to pick up first. The style promises relief for women who have suffered cramped toes from the extremely pointed styles of recent years. Sportswear includes many sweaters trimmed with fringes or tassles. One white after-ski outfit is decorated with many-colored tassles of plaited leather. Leather also is being used for jump suits (one-piece skinny pants and fitted top), for sheath dresses, coats and for a playsuit made with Jamaica-length shorts and a scoop-neck bodice. One all-white knitted outfit features fitted slacks and long-sleeved pullover, trimmed with a Like Man, I Dig That Jail DESIO, Italy — (UPI) — Mario Teruzzi, 35, is a real cool smuggler, and he likes it that way. Teruzzi turned up at the local police station and said a court in nearby Como had sentenced him to 25 days for smuggling. He made note of the local heat wave and asked if he could serve his time in Desio Prison, which has a reputation for being cool. Police obliged. Movies To Be Shown Tonight The first act features four brilliant ballet numbers, "Amazon and Milquetoast," "Turkish Lady and Prospector," "Bird Girl and He Man," and "Statue and Gambler." In addition to the singing and dancing, Carol draws plenty of laughs with her hell-for-leather, straight-shootin', no-nonsense philosophy of life. Later, of course, she changes from a ragged, overall-clad female cowpoke into a charming and delicate young lady who realizes that the good life consists of feeding the "The Voyage of Discovery" and "Through a Rear Window" will be shown tonight at the open-air theater at Robinson Gymnasium. Carol Burnett Shines Brightly In Starlight's Calamity Jane' The show opened before a packed house and will run through July 30. The show will start shortly after 8 p.m. Carol Burnett, currently starring in the Starlight Theatre production of "Calamity Jane," showed Kansas City audiences Monday night why she's one of the top singer-comediennes in the business. The energetic Miss Burnett has an excellent supporting cast, including a talented ballet corps, but "Calamity Jane" is essentially a one-gal affair. I would not go so far as to say that the show would fall apart without her, but it's obvious that much of the color and "life" would be missing. As far as the songs are concerned, there are plenty, all of them good. Perhaps the best are "Men," in which Miss Burnett ridicules males in general, and the beautiful "Secret Love" in which she displays a different attitude. Other above average tunes are "Carless With the Truth," featuring Carol, Wild Bill Hickok (played by Norwood Smith) and the chorus: "I Can Do Without You," with Carol and Smith, and "The Black Hills of Dakota," sung by the entire ensemble. Smith's voice is plenty to write home about, although he seems a bit overshadowed by Miss Burnett. Beryl Towbin, who plays Katie Brown, a young would-be singer-dancer from Chicago, turns in a fine performance as does Art Matthews, the dashing and handsome young army lieutenant. husband and nursing the kids, not camping out under the chuck wagon somewhere on the prairie. Miss Burnett is probably the most publicized of all the Starlight performers this summer, but I feel she richly deserves all this attention. She's got talent to burn, and anybody who hasn't seen her is in for a treat. -Chuck Morelock Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Ice Cream NEW! 900 calorie diet controcal Delicious flavors Ready-to-eat frozen formula - Vanilla - Lemon DELIGHTFUL FLAVORS NOW IN ICE CREAM CABINETS AT YOUR FAVORITE ICE CREAM DEALER! Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIR Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIR single red punctuation mark extending from the top to the bottom of the sweater, ending in a black pompom. Capes, flared skirts, longer suit jackets and tunic lines are also standout styles. Improvements Set For Zone A Lot Kansas Construction Co. of Lawrence was apparent low bidder Tuesday on a job to grade, curb, and pave an entrance to Zone A, located east of Carruth-0'Leary and J. R. Pearson hall. The firm will also grade the lot, which now has an un-oiled rock surface. If weather permits, the improvements will be completed by Sept. 1. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! "Five Branded Women" plus "Jack the Ripper" plus two bonus features Saturday Starts Sunday Robert Mitchum "Home from the Hill" Plus "Fever in the Blood" ✩ ★★★★★ LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! "North by Northwest" plus "Green Mansions" Cary Grant Tony Curtis "Operation Petticoat" Starts Sunday GRANADA NOW SHOWING! "Misty" plus "Freckles" Starts Sunday Jerry Lewis "The Ladies Man" Friday, July 21, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing All ads must be called or brought to the University only Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. TYPING "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, and carbons neatly and accurately. Standard rates. Patty Coester, VI 3-8679." "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." VI 3-5920, typing is a speciality — not a side note. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI 3-5920 I 2-0111. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Cain, VI 3-524. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI - 2164. M8. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application letters. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 RI, VI. 3-7485. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric newworker. Reasonable Electric newworker. Mrs. Mt Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Mt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- lish teacher, also these & reports accurately. Standard tests. See Mrs. Crompton, 1313 Vt., apt. 3. * "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louff Pope. VI 3-1097 FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excuseus, Mission, Service 9197 B. Woodson, Mission, HEE-72718. Evers, or SIR RA 2-2186. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. ftf Experienced Ttypid! Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf HELP WANTED SALEMEN OR SALES-TRAINEES: Sell $150. item, pays you $40 in commissions. Buy $350. item, pays you $20 in commissions. train, fill or part time. Write Mr. Sullian. Box 8129, Kansas City 12, Mo. 7-25 Male or Female: Excellent income for calling on Christian people. Full or part hour. One-on-one jobs. 3706 Broadway, Suite 314, K.C. 11, Mo. 7-25 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th & 8th & Vermont. Phone VI 0530. I WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1960 Dogge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen. Or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 3-7803. MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m.-6 p.300 pm. Room for dogs and cats. & Plants. Stainless steel picture window quariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything you want from pets to projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome. tt BUSINESS SERVICES WESTERN CIVILIZATION: Graduate Student experienced in Western Civilization program. Will tutor for summer exams. Call VI 3-3237. 7-28 WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI 3-4656. tf PASS THE ENGLISH PRO. EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810, Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. 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. V 3-1267. tjttt DRESS. MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939 $^{1/2}$ Mass. Call VI 5-2526. For Rent: 5 large rooms—2 bedrooms—attractively furnished apartment for fall semester. Water paid. No children. 901 Kentucky. Call VI 3-4491. 7-21 FOR RENT 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfurn. Air cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. $7291% . Mass, VI 2-0099. tf ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2029-31 St. JE. 1-1121. Evenings & Sun. SKI-2634 ROOMS FOR MEN: 1/2 block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new Lounge available, linens furnished. Reasonable rates. 1221 Oread. V 3-6798. tt For Rent to students. Completely furnished. 2 bedroom house next to KU. paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf Three Bedroom Nicely Furnished Apartment. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned, steam heat. Boys preferred. Reasonably priced. Also efficiency apartment. $25 each. Private entrance and bath. Near KU. Call VI 3-7830. 7-25 OUTSTANDING -- New Rentals Park Plaza South Apartments. Occupancy August 15th. For appointment call VI 3-8253 or write box 123. Furnished apartment for men students, completely furnished. 1st. floor apart- ment, electric kitchen. Private bath with private and private entrance. VI 3-6640 8-1 White House for rent. A well built attractive roomy, desirable, 3 bedroom home. 631 La., full basement, shower, large bath on second floor. Beautiful fireplace. 2 porches, 2 car garage. Available on or before 1st of August. Call Wilbur Pine, 1023 Highland Drive VI 3-4448 for details. 7-28 JIM'S CAFE ROOMS FOR FALL: Graduate students welcome. Modern 2 rm. basement apartment for 2 KU men. Outside entr. Utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 8-4 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Nice Clean Furnished Apartment for rent. Good neighborhood. In private home, private bath. $60. Utilities paid plus washing machine privileges. Will hold for fall. Call VI 3-6281 or VI 3-1337, 808 Moe. 8-1 Vacancies in contemporary home with large swimming pool, for young men. Home cooked meals if desired, phone VI 3-9635. 8-1 WANTED AMBITIOUS SALESLADIES; build your own business in Lawrence. No expense firms. Car necessary. Write Box 025. Wellington Road, Lawrence. Kansas. tt HILL CO-OP student house is re-opening in the fall for male graduates; approximate cost per month, $50; completely self-managing; no discrimination on grounds of race or religion. For further details call VI 3-5552, 6-7 p.m. tt french 2 Correspondence student wants Tutor, 1 or 2 hours weekly, call mylanc swim Club, VI 2-0006 for Gary Williams or leave message. 7-28 salesman for work after the end of summer school and before fall semester. Car necessary, travel expenses, commission salary. Call Friday. NMel. VI 3-1000. T-721 FOR SALE 'S5 Chev, Balaire, 4 door, V-8, Power Gilden, woman owner, 55.000 actual miles. Careful maintenance. Phone VI 3-3286 or VI 3-7151. contine Station, Wagon — 1954, Radio, water, trailer hitch. Good condition. Cali Mare Murtock in Kansas City at HIland -1-2514. 7-28 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and all models. Mimemap graphic at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Colllus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron's & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. 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. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS STUDENTS Grease Job $1 Brake Adi. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free. Open 7-10 with mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W, 23rd. VI 3-9594 Birds on a Branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. STEREO - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service P P Pens, Pens, Pens, Pens, P Pens We've Got Them! Women love the sheer beauty and writing ease of the Lady Sheaffer. And the Sheaffer PFM (Pens for Men) has plenty of masculine appeal. Snorkel pens are favorites of many people . . both men and women . . for easy filling and dependable writing. The Parker 51 and the Parker 61 are two more of the quality pens found in our selection. Whether choosing a pen for yourself or as a gift, look over our wide assortment. These pens start at $10.00 and come in assorted points and colors. We also have many less expensive pens, such as the Esterbrook ($2.95 to $3.95), which are ideal for campus use. K Kansas Kansas Union Book Store Union Book Store Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 21, 1961 Saturday Schedule Jr. High Division Band-Orchestra-Chorus Saturday Afternoon, July 22, 1961 Conductors: Conductors: Band, William Beck; Orch., Mearle Watters; Chorus, James Hardy. Special Instructors: Woodwinds, Donald Linde; Brasses, Richard Brummett. 3:00 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Come Unto Him ... Maschof Sing Praises ... Glarum James Hardy, Conductor Gloria Patri ... Palestrina Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Salvation is Created ... Tschesnokoff The Lord is My Shepherd ... Matthews James Hardy, Conductor Old Abram Brown ... Britten Sleep Baby, Sleep ... Bell-Shaw Comin' Through the Rye ... Simeone Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence ... Holst James Hardy, Conductor Dianna Perry, Accompanist Part II Orchestra Now Thank We All Our God ... Johann Cruger (1508-1602) arr. Lucien Cailliet French Baroque Suite from "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" ... Jean B. Lully Gavotte Canarie Air March Symphony in F Major Symphony in F Major ... Carl von Dittersdorf ... Adolph Schubert Allegro Moderato Rondo Minuetto Finale Mearle Watters, Conductor Mearle Watters, Conductor Suite on Fiddler's Tune ... George Frederick McKay Smoky Mountain Sail Away Lady Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Czech Rhapsody ... Jaromir Weinberger Mearle Watters, Conductor Part III Band Band The Pearl Fishers Overture ... Bizet-Cailliet Conversation for Cornet ... Clare Grundman Dwight E. Wages, Soloist La Mascarado ... Harold Walters William H. Beck, Conductor Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral from "Lohengrin" ... Richard Wagner Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Punch and Judy Overture ... John Morrissey Vista Caribbean ... James Ployhor The Golden Eagle ... Harold Walters William H. Beck, Conductor William H. Beck, Conductor J A P E J O U S T J U G S A J I X O U N C E E X E C M A J O R I T I E S R O T A B R A D E N T N T E R S T M U D J E T S A M E V A S J A R S R I F L E J A G J O Y S R O A R E D E L A T E R S J O S H I N G C O M I T Y J A D E E T E T R E N T G U N S E N O S G Y R A T E E L D J O E L A L L F A I L L E A T R I T J E A L O U S I E S C H I N A N N I E S E N T K O N G H A D E S A R T A Answer to Crossword Puzzle GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 CAMPUS BARBER SHOP Open All Summer WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union Fourth Polaris Submarine Out to Sea WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Navy's fourth Polaris submarine headed for patrol duty Thursday on the first anniversary of the initial sub-surface firing of a Polaris missile off Cape Canaveral, Fla. Twelve hours after the Theodore Roosevelt had left Charleston, S. C., the Navy said it was on its way to take up a secret patrol station similar to those already assigned to the submarines George Washington, Patrick Henry, and Robert E. Lee. Like the other three, the Theodore Roosevelt carried 16 28-foot-long missiles. Like the others also, it is to use two alternating crews and be on patrol two-thirds of the time. One more Polaris sub, the American Lincoln, is to be deployed before the end of this year. The total on stations is to increase to nine by the end of 1962, to 13 by the end of 1963, and to 25 by the end of 1964. Beginning with the sixth submarine, the maximum range of the missiles is to be increased from 1,380 to 1,725 statute miles. A year ago today, over a range of more than 1,000 miles, the George Washington conducted the first Polaris firing from an underwater test station 30 miles off Cape Canaveral. Capt. James B. Osborn of Stockton, Mo., skipper of the George Washington, sent a message to the White House reading "Polaris from out of the deep to target perfect." Since then, 18 underwater Polaris firings have been conducted, with all of them pronounced fully successful. There were 57 firings from the surface, of which 34 were declared completely successful. Appropriations for the Polaris program so far totaled just over 4 billion dollars, with another 2 billion sought in the budget now before Congress. The total of $6,160,000,000 in appropriations is scheduled to pay for the first 29 Polaris submarines and all related development programs. These programs include work on a Polaris missile which the Navy hopes eventually will fly 2,500 nautical or 2,880 statute miles. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Don't just think about it! DO IT! MR. PIZZA Order a PIZZA now from the CAMPUS VI 3-9111 Instant Delivery HIDEAWAY SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU Tuesday, July 25, 1961 49th Year, No.12 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU VOLUME ONE LOOKING FOR RADICALS—Peter Ludwig, research associate professor of chemistry, checks the magnet of a $30,000 machine designed to aid in research in organic free radical chemistry. The control board of the machine can be seen in the background. Radicals' to Be Studied By $30,000 Machine Research in organic free radical chemistry soon will be stimulated through use of a $30,000 electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometer just delivered to the department of chemistry. A "free radical" is a molecule that has one or more unpaired electrons. The life of these radicals is usually very short, because their structure permits them to react with other molecules very readily, producing different molecules. This short life span and high reactivity requires the use of elaborate and complex instruments. Prof. Adams is one of the early workers in the field of electrochemical generation of free radicals, a field only about two years old. Lack A KU group, directed by Ralph N. Adams, associate professor of chemistry, will study the electrochemical generation of free radicals and organic electrode reactions to determine whether or not such reactions have free radical intermediates. Draft Calls No Threat The recent increase in draft calls and speculation that some National Guard and reserve units might be activated hasn't produced much of a reaction on the KU campus. Registrar James Hitt said he has seen no evidence yet of "panic" or any notable increase in requests for Form 109's. This is a form KU sends to local draft boards which indicates the student's academic achievement for the past year. Hitt added that no student has been pulled out of school and doubted that the selective service system or the Guard and reserve units could swing into action fast enough to affect fall enrollment. Any calls to military service would have to take place between now and September, he said, because a student who enrolls for the fall term is normally allowed to continue through the year. He also stated that any student who plans to be here this fall and who wants to get his registration officially confirmed should stop by the registrar's office. of proper instrumentation has been a serious handicap but the new spectrometer will relieve the problem. "We are working at this for the sheer fun of it," Prof. Adams said. "We will pursue whatever lines become most interesting as we go along." He said that there are several electron paramagnetic resonance research teams presently working in KU's physics department. "But they are working on entirely different areas than ours on their own home built machines," Prof. Adams said. Further, implications of free radical research in the space-age are many, with solutions to numerous problems of rocket fuels and their combustion processes perhaps being subject to this approach. An Atomic Energy Commission contract provided $20,000 toward purchase of the unusual instrument while the University financed the remaining one-third. And since free radicals are formed by the action of an ionizing radiation on aqueous solutions, the Atomic Energy Commission is interested in this research. Another instrument, a $7.790 liquid scintillation counter, will be delivered soon. The Petroleum Research Foundation is providing $4.000 toward this purchase and the University the balance This is the third large instrument obtained by the KU chemistry department in recent months for which the major expense was borne by non-state sources. The Atomic Energy Commission provided $79,000 to Prof. Paul W. Gilles for the purchase of a high temperature mass spectrometer and the Petroleum Research Foundation of the American Chemical Society gave $8,000 toward an $18,350 recording ultraviolet and visible spectrophotometer, to be used in studies supervised by Prof. C. A. Reynolds. Prof. Adams recently spent four months at the Varian Associates Laboratories in Palo Alto, Calif. pursuing research on electron paramagnetic resonance apparatus. With him part of the time was Dr. Peter Ludwig of the University of Bonn, a member of Dr. Adams' KU research team. Kennedy Returns to Capital Prepares Message on Berlin WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy returned to the White House Monday and plunged into the task of finishing his message to the nation on how he plans to meet Communist threats in Berlin and around the globe. Kennedy still has "quite a way to go" on the radio-TV address scheduled for delivery today from his office, a spokesman said. "I would say it's got to go through several more drafts," said Pierre Salinger, the President's press secretary. He estimated the speech would run 4,000 words and take 30 minutes to deliver. After his talk, Kennedy will send legislative proposals to Congress Wednesday to carry out the defense build-up he has decided to order. Kennedy will not hold a news conference this week. Salinger said. The President arrived at Otis Air Force Base by marine helicopter after the 22-mile ride from his Hy-annis Port summer home. He was greeted by the base commander, Col. Ernest J. White. Kennedy shook hands with some of the 200 to 300 spectators who gathered to watch his departure. As Kennedy was returning to the capital, his Defense secretary, Robert S. McNamara, was off to Paris to explain to the NATO allies Kennedy's measures to toughen American military might in the face of Soviet demands on Berlin. McNamara, accompanied by Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, also planned to urge other members of the Atlantic alliance to speed their build-up of conventional forces to parallel the U.S. program. The goal is a stronger, better balanced and more efficient Western defense shield in Europe in case Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Petitions Out For City Pool A committee of 10 Lawrence citizens is circulating a petition to see if there is enough interest to warrant a special bond election for a municipal swimming pool. Lawrence does not have a public pool. In a special bond election in 1956 a proposal to build a municipal pool was defeated 2 to 1. Spokesmen for the committee told the City Commission early last week that they believe that public sentiment now strongly favors a public swimming pool. Commissioners requested that the petition be circulated to prove that there is enough support to warrant the special election. Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. has donated the results of an extensive research study on electrical well logging to 11 universities and colleges in the United States offering petroleum courses, including KU. The Rev. Paul Davis said the committee hopes to have the way cleared for a bond election by mid-September. Well Logging Study Donated to KU The study, which fills 17 volumes, was conducted by Hubert Guyod, Houston logging consultant, and is the product of a research effort sponsored by Socony Mobil and several other companies. Well logging is a technique that involves sending electrical impulses from an instrument lowered into a well to determine types of earth formations at different depths. Geologists and engineers use this information during oil well drilling to help them determine the probability of finding oil in commercial quantities. forces a military showdown on Ber- * lin. There were some hints in Communist propaganda broadcasts that the Russians, startled by the stiffening U.S. attitude, were beginning to put out feelers for negotiations. But Undersecretary of State Chester Bowles said he thought the crisis would get worse before it was over. He said in a radio interview that the Russians "appear to be in a belligerent mood. We're going to be living through a gradually accelerating crisis, I'm afraid, during these coming months." Bowles said Khrushchev may have "miscalculated U.S. reaction to his new Berlin demands." He said the United States must show Khrushchev it will not be "jarred out, frightened or pushed out" of the former German capital. The Soviet leader has demanded that the Allies pull out of Red-encircled West Berlin by the end of the year and permit it to become a demilitarized "free city." Otherwise, he has warned, he will make a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany, whose territory surrounds West Berlin. This, in Khrushchev's view, would force the Allies to deal with the local Reds for access, which they flatly refuse to do. The United States meanwhile was moving slowly but steadily forward on three fronts—military, diplomatic, and economic—to prepare for any eventuality in Western Europe. Heeb Receives Post On State Board Larry Heeb, professor of physical education and state recreation consultant, has been named chairman of the committee on recreation of the Kansas Council for Children and Youth. Mr. Heeb will also serve on the Council's board of directors. The recreation committee will make long-range recommendations on development of public recreational facilities in Kansas and will encourage community action in operating recreational programs. [Image of a man in a suit and tie] Richard Sundbye Gunshot Wound Fatal to Student Richard Sundbye, Olathe graduate student, died of a gunshot wound in the head at his parents' home in Olathe Thursday afternoon. Officials there said he apparently committed suicide. He was found lying on a bed holding a pistol. Sundbye, 26, was a 1956 graduate and a lieutenant junior grade in the Navy from 1956 to 1960. He returned to KU last year. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta and Alpha Kappa Psi fraternities. Born Nov. 3, 1934, he was a graduate of Olathe High School. He had maintained a room at 1308 Vermont St. in Lawrence this summer. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Sundbye, a sister, Mrs Jean Marie Hines of Lawrence, and a brother, the Rev. Ronald Sundbye of Topeka. Funeral services were held yesterday at the First Methodist Church in Olathe. 'Idiot's Delight' Scheduled For Two Night Performance An Italian resort hotel provides the setting for "Idiot's Delight," the third University of Kansas Theatre production of the summer season. The play will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday at the K.U. theater in Murphy Hall. Tickets may be obtained at the University Theatre box office from 1:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or by calling VIking 3,2700, extension 591. "Idiot's Delight" takes place during World War II and shows a number of guests at a hotel attempting to escape the war by crossing the border into Switzerland. The story revolves around an American who is touring Europe with an act involving six dancing girls, and a woman who is posing as a Russian countess. Dr. Jack Brooking, assistant professor of speech and assistant director of the University Theatre, is directing the play. Assistant director is Roxanne Behl, graduate student from St. Paul, Minn. The cast: Harry Van; Sidney Berger, graduate student, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Dumptys; Steve Booser, senior, Kansas City, Mo.; Captain Locicero; Robert Strack, graduate student, Lawrence; Mr. Cherry; Roger Brown, graduate student, Topeka; Mrs. Cherry; Janice Gibson, freshman, Independence; Dr. Waldersee: Darryl Patten, graduate student, Winner, S.D.; Irene; Karin Gold, sophomore, Overland Park; Achille Weber; Millard Denny, graduate student, Lawrence; Quillery; Ted E. Lawson, junior, Medford, Ore.; Donald Navadel; Bruce E. Thompson, sophomore, Leavenworth, and Pitt- luga; John R. Dickson, graduate student, Atchison Shirley; Kay Carroll, junior, El Dorado; Beulah; Sharon Scoville, junior, Kansas City; Bebe: Sylvia Anderson, sophomore, Wilmette, Ill.; Edna: Jerilyn McGee, graduate student, Butte, Mont.; Elaine: Lois Criss, freshman, Eudora; Francine: Katherine Barker, freshman, Oswego; Signora Rossi: Judy Mayhan, junior, Emporia; Signor Rossi: Robert L. Kazmayer, graduate student, Rochester, N.Y.; The Major: Charles Nicol, senior, Blue Springs, Mo.; Officers: Carl Bentz, sophomore, Peabody; Russell McNaughton, sophomore, Tula, Okla.; Cliff Hamill, junior, Lawrence; John Randall, senior, Aberdeen, S.D., and The maid: Jacqueline Volkland, sophomore, Bushton. The show will also include a live dance band consisting of Kent Riley, freshman, Columbus; Bob Johnson, senior, Kansas City; John Taddikin, sophomore, Independence; and Ron Thatcher, graduate student, West Orange, N.J. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Kennedy's Wealth I'm getting rather tired of the childish taunt that President Kennedy owes all his success to "papa Joe's money." Critics who pursue this line of reasoning conclude that JFK knows nothing about the common man's problems. This is absurd. Sure, our President is a wealthy man, but so what? Franklin Roosevelt was a wealthy man too, but few Presidents have exceeded his zeal in improving the lot of the unemployed, the wandering farm worker, the crippled veteran, and the small businessman forced to operate on the slimmest of margins. PRESIDENT KENNEDY, LIKEWISE, has introduced measure after measure to extend unemployment benefits, to give the elderly increased medical protection, and to provide decent housing for thousands of slum dwellers in our major cities. If he isn't hep to the common man's problems, then I don't know who is. Kennedy might have had some financial help in the last election, but what politician hasn't? If you care to look it up, you'll find in nine cases out of ten that the GOP has spent much more trying to get its man into the White House than has the Democratic Party. One obvious reason is that the Republicans normally have the support of big business, a mighty potent ally. FURTHERMORE. IF YOU TALK TO ANY POLITICAL SCIENTIST or to any office holder who's played the rough and tumble game of politics, you'll be told that the log cabin bit just don't hold true anymore. In other words, a poor man, or even just an average middle class man, doesn't have much of a chance to become President, because the latter must have a certain amount of financial security before he can campaign in the first place. SUPPORTERS OF RICHARD NIXON liked to brag about his alleged humble station in life. I doubt very much if Tricky Dick was as destitute as he was cracked up to be. That's one reason why his now-famous "Checkers" speech, in which he told TV audiences back in 1952 that he couldn't afford to buy Mrs. Nixon anything better than a cloth coat, proved to be such a tribute to political corn. While we're on the subject, it might be interesting to point out that several recent GOP presidents and would-be presidents were not exactly down-and-out. Herbert Hoover, for instance, was a millionaire several times over. Wendell Willkie and Thomas E. Dewey had more modest means, but both were in the upper brackets. Then what about Nelson Rockefeller. GETTING BACK TO PRESIDENT KENNEDY, he may have made some mistakes along the way, but that is inevitable. During his six months in office, he has tackled a bewildering variety of problems with intellectual—and physical—vigor. That's the kind of man the American people wanted, and that's what they got. Period. —Chuck Morelock Washington Crime Rate Up Peace Corps WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. Karl E. Mundt, R-S.D., said the other day that Congress should look into the national crime situation with special attention to conditions in the capital of the United States. Something special will have to happen to alert the citizens in other parts of the United States to crime in the capital of their country. Maybe something such as the incident during prohibition when a United States Senator was shot down on Pennsylvania Avenue in a cross fire between cops and bootleggers. That was a shocker. IT SHOULD NOT BE MORE SHOCKING, however, than the simple statistical story of crime in Washington, D.C., as it is compiled by local and federal officials. The police reported this month that in the capital city of your nation, serious crime had increased by 8.8 per cent in the 12 months ended June 30. Federal Bureau of Investigation records project a more startling crime rate comparison for the calendar years 1950, 1960. This was a period in which the population of the District of Columbia decreased by 4.8 per cent. COMPARING THE 1950-1960 CRIME RATES, the FBI found increases in serious offenses per 100,000 population, as follows: Murder ... 29 per cent Robbery ... 58 per cent Larcenies (more than $50) ... 38 per cent Auto Theft ... 61 per cent There was in this period a 2 per cent decline in forcible rape. Another FBI tabulation reflects (A) the average number of serious crimes reported in Washington during the 1957-59 calendar years, (B) the number of same reported in the 1960 calendar year, and (C) the percentage change. Type of Offense Average No. No. in Change 1957-59 1960 Murder 75 81 8 per cent increase Auto Theft 1,813 2,003 11 per cent increase Aggravated Assault 2,631 2,966 13 per cent increase Burglary 3,521 4,587 30 per cent increase Larceny over $50 1,776 2,314 30 per cent increase Forcible Rape 75 111 48 per cent increase Robbery 683 1,072 57 per cent increase Total 10,574 13,134 From 1957 to 1960, the population of Washington decreased less than 2 per cent. The overall increase in the rate of serious crime per 100,000 of population in that period appears to have increased more than 28 per cent. THE AMERICAN PEOPLE might be expected to be alarmed and ashamed of the condition represented by these statistics. There is no evidence of alarm, shame or, even, interest. The citizens like to vacation here, visit the White House, look at Congress. That is all.Mere curiosity. Volunteers, who will receive allowances for food and clothing and get free medical care, will be paid $75 a month in a lump sum after they complete their service overseas. Short Ones What is a kiss? Why this, as some approve: The sure sweet cement, glue, and lime of love.—Robert Herrick The agency plans to ask Congress for the money as part of legislation establishing the controversial program to send young Americans abroad to help raise living standards in have-not nations. The Peace Corps already has spent nearly $2 million even though not one volunteer has left U.S. soil. Scores are in training, however, and the first group of 70 is scheduled to depart for Ghana early in September. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Peace Corps figures it will cost $40 million for this country to have 3,000 volunteers overseas or ready for assignment by next July. --- War is transfer of property from nation to nation—Leon Samson It estimates that an average of $9,180 will be needed to train and maintain a volunteer abroad for one year. The vagabond, when rich, is called a tourist—Paul Richard Peace Corps officials say they are prepared for a "hard look" from a skeptical Congress at their fund requests. There is nothing new except what is forgotten—Mademoiselle Bertin. The agency, which is authorized to accept contributions from public spirited citizens, may face some very real money problems if Congress decides to be stingy. For so far, only $34 has been donated. It came from a group in El Paso, Texas. --- --- SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Music NEWS DEPARTMENT Chuck Morelock and Ron Gallagher ... Co-Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Chuck Martinache ... Business Mgr. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE NEW MEN, by C. P. Snow. Scribner, $1.45. It seems significant that no American novel has treated with such scope the moral implications of atomic power. Perhaps this is because our novelists have busied themselves with sex and immorality in the deep South and New England. "The New Men" is an impressive piece of work, right down the line. It appeared seven years ago, and already has achieved a strong position in English literature. It is almost dispassionate in its dissection of men and their motives. One can recall on reading this novel the late months of 1945 and early months of 1946 when a new kind of debate was beginning, the debate over the wisdom and the decency of Hiroshima. (It is of interest that a concurrent debate concerned our right to try the German leaders at Nuremberg.) C. P. Snow's scientists debate atomic power in "The New Men." From the very beginning of their experimentation they ask the question, "Will we use such a bomb?" And then America drops first a bomb on Hiroshima, then another on Nagasaki. It is the second bombing that shocks Snow's scientists most. Their conclusion is that it must have been a different kind of bomb, else why drop it? One of the most telling paragraphs in the novel is a statement not by a scientist but by a journalist who otherwise seems little concerned with the morality of things: "The chief virtue of this promising new age, and perhaps the only one so far as I can tell, is that from here on we needn't pretend to be any better than anyone else. For hundreds of years we've told ourselves in the west, with that particular brand of severity which ends up in paying yourself a handsome compliment, that of course we cannot live up to our moral pretensions, that of course we've established ethical standards which are too high for men. "We've always assumed, all the people of whom you...and I are the ragtag and bobtail, all the camp followers of Western civilization, we have taken it for granted that, even if we did not live up to those exalted ethical standards, we did a great deal better than anyone else. Well, anyone who says that today isn't a fool, because no one could be so foolish. He isn't a liar, because no one could tell such lies. He's just a singer of comic songs." Central to the theme of "The New Men" is the moral question of Martin Eliot, a scientist who is willing to climb to power by wrecking the careers of others. His moral recovery, his decision not to accept the position he has been struggling for, provides a moving climax to an engrossing story. ***** SENATOR JOE McCARTHY, by Richard H. Rovere. Meridian Books. 81.25. Here is perhaps the best-rounded writing yet on the late senator from Wisconsin. Rovere is unable to answer all the questions about McCarthy, but he does present conclusions and insights not found elsewhere. His tone is sane and reasonable, and understanding. As a Washington reporter for Harper's and the New Yorker he had frequent opportunities to observe McCarthy in action. He himself succumbed to a familiar McCarthy trick, early in the game, when McCarthy was more concerned with the Malmedy Massacre incident than with Communists in the State Department. Rovere reveals in McCarthy one of the more accomplished of 20th century American demagogues, and one of only two achieved power on the national scene, the other being Huey Long. To Rovere, McCarthy was a nihilist, a man who, contrary to obituaries written in 1957, did not believe in what he was doing. Morality was foreign to McCarthy, says Rovere. The senator might have made a cause out of another issue after the 1954 condemnation hearings—out of the farm issue, for example. He might have bounced back, but he didn't. His followers awaited his return to power, but they were disappointed. This is a typical western thriller from the Kansas novelist, the story of three Texas Rangers and their search for 1,000 Comanches and the wild Indians of the plains known as the Comancheiros. The hero is a playboy gambler from New Orleans; the thrills are conventional and all very movie-bound. Was McCarthyism an isolated American phenomenon? No, not really. There were the Alien and Sedition Acts, the Know-Nothing movement, and the Civil War congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War. McCarthy proved more adept than J. Parnell Thomas and Martin Dies, and he added refinements to their techniques. And did McCarthyism die in 1954? Once again, no. This paperback, first published in hardback in 1959, will not appeal to the current collegiate pack following Buckley and Goldwater. This is too bad. In a few years it will become necessary to identify McCarthy in class, and students will conclude that he got a bad press and a bad deal and suggest that we need a guy like McCarthy to keep us on the ball. ** ***** THE COMANCHEROS, by Paul I. Wellman. Permabooks, 35 cents. THE YOUNG TITAN, by F. van Wyck Mason. Cardinal Giants, 75 cents. Here is a blockbuster, a long, wild adventure yarn set in the mid-18th century. It's about a man who loses his family holdings, goes to the Penobscot area to set up a ship-building firm, refuses to accept the Indians and is defeated. The French and Indian Wars enter the story, and much of it concerns the long siege of Louisburg. Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 ... Books in Review ... By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism CONTEMPORARY AFRICA, CONTINENT IN TRANSITION, by T. Walter Wallbank. Anvil Books, $1.25. THE ERA OF REFORM, by Henry Steele Commager. Anvil Books, $1.25. SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY, 1917-1941, by George F. Kennan. Anvil Books, $1.25. T. Walker Wallbank places his emphasis upon the English areas When his volume was written Ghana was still the Gold Coast. Nigeria was a few years away from Independence. There was no chance in the world that revolution could come in the Belgian Congo, and the natives of Angola were so subjugated that Portuguese colony also seemed safe for the colonial power occupying it. Here are three recent volumes in the fine Anvil series, volumes that should provide valuable adjunct reading in many courses. Of the three, the one most wanting is the one that should be best—the volume on contemporary Africa. Its failing is the same failing of John Gunther's "Inside Africa": events in Africa move too rapidly for the author, the reader, the scholar, the statesman to keep up with. Things change fast. Africa has leaped from the Stone age to the 20th century. Less than 100 years ago Henry M. Stanley was finding Livingstone. Leopold had not yet begun to move in the Congo, nor Rhodes south of there. Key documents, from the Stanley story to the Portuguese policy of assimilation, are found in this volume, which, despite its already dated touch, is worth owning. The Kennan volume is clearly dated "1917-1941." This removes the problem of contemporaneity for Kennan, and he is able to proceed with foreign policy developments in the Soviet Union from the time of Lenin to the invasion of Russia by Germany in 1941. Kennan, of course, is the preeminent man to provide this data. He tells the story in a style that leaves something to be desired (especially when one recalls other of his writings). But there is much to be told Included in the document are speeches by Lenin, notes to major powers, policy statements, the resolution that created the Comintern. Gorky's appeal for famine relief in 1921, Asian policies, statements by Stalin, a Pravda editorial of 1939, the Molotov-Ribbentrop treaty, and many others. Commager's volume on the era of reform has the charm of the editor and the charm of the materials. Commager sees the middle years of the 19th century as being years caught up in the individualism of Transcendentalism, when any man could do anything through the precious power of intuition, when all the world needed reforming. So reform began. Commager begins, as he should, with Emerson, who stimulated so much of this (though he himself frequently scuffed at reformers). "Man the Reformer" is here, and so are Robert Owen's call for a world convention, Greeley's statement from his "Recollections" on reform, and Theodore Parker's history of reform in New England. The ladies of Seneca Falls once again paraphrase the Declaration of Independence. Wendell Phillips assists them in their plea for suffrage. William Leggett gets fiery-eyed about the rich and poor, as he did in Bryant's Evening Post. Homestead agitators vote themselves a farm, Horace Mann fights for better schools, Thaddeus Stevens pleads for better education, and so does Whitman. Dorothea Dix presents her memorial on the condition of the insane, Garrison and Elihu Burritt plead for peace, and Sumner angers the military in his Fourth of July address. It is quite a panorama of reform that Commager unfolds in this little paperback. Frances Wright, who stirred up quite a storm herself, writes of reform, and so does the dream-world Alcott and Hawthorne's sister Elizabeth Peabody, who tells of Brook Farm. John Humphrey Noyes tells about the Oneida community and its attitude toward the sacrament of marriage. Bancroft is here, and Jackson on rotation in office, Catherine Beecher on education for women. ***** HAWTHORNE. by Henry James. Great Seal (Cornell Press). $1.45. BORNE. by Henry James. Great Seal (Cornell Press), $1.45. This paperback was published several years ago, but because of the continuing interest in both its author and its subject it deserves reexamination "Hawthorne" had peculiar interest when it first appeared, for Henry James was being allowed to honor an American author in an English series, and that was a fabulous honor in the late 19th century. He was writing of Hawthorne as the first great American writer, and the distinction still stands—Cooper and Irving notwithstanding. Hawthorne's novels and short stories occupy a strange position between romanticism and realism, and they are tinged with a pessimism quite foreign to reform-happy mid-century America. It was late in life before the great novels of Hawthorne began to appear, and he presented the manuscript of "The Scarlet Letter" to his publisher as fearfully and as tentatively as though he were a schoolboy with a bad piece of poetry. That novel and the other three—"The House of the Seven Gables," "The Blithedale Romance," and "The Marble Faun," which James chooses to call by its European title, "Transformation"—still stand up among our great works of literature. "The Blithedale Romance" was built on a strange experience, Hawthorne's brief stay at Brook Farm. He went to that gaily optimistic colony—a mixture of Transcendentalism and Fourierism—with some degree of optimism himself, but he never succeeded in uniting in the happy pursuits, if that's what they were, of the people of the farm. One of the Transcendentalists, the cosmos-accepting Margaret Fuller, became his heroine Zenobia. Hawthorne's life was short, and not particularly happy. He received minor governmental assignments, chiefly because of his faithfulness toward Franklin Pierce, his Bowdoin College friend for whom he wrote a campaign biography in 1852. As an official in the Custom-house at Salem, his home town, he wrote "The Scarlet Letter," and an essay called "The Custom-House" begins that novel. Fall Fashions to Change; Curves Making Comeback FARIS — (UPI) — The word out of Paris as the leading fashion houses opened their fall showings was: Milady, get ready for the shapely look. After the loose clothes women have worn now for several seasons, more curves are emerging from the haute couture salons. Skirt hems, slightly dropped, no longer reveal the kneecaps. Two women designers, Gres and Maggy Rouff, are first to raise their silk curtains on the Paris fashion stage. Next in line was Jean Patou who dresses many smart French society women. His star model, Carole, made a sensation because of her resemblance to America's first lady, Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy. Pierre Cardin, the most talented young Paris designer in the Avant- Like hungry guests, a sitting audience looks.—George Farquhar Fate makes our relatives, choice makes our friends.—Jacques Delille Garde class, climaxes this first day of the Paris fashion showings. His models have a new evening hairdead, called "First Lady," created by hairdresser Carita. For this sophisticated new style the hair is brushed flat back over the temples with a tuft of locks on the top of the head to look like a soaring, fountain-like pony-tail falling back on itself. GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 COMPUTER For the Finest in Shirt Laundering SPORT SHIRTS Hand Finished and on hangars Ask for Sport Shirt On Hangar Service Same Day Service Any Day SVC VI 3-3711 QUALITY GUARANTEED LAWRENCE 10th & N. H. launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" Bring your laundry in on your way to the Sidewalk Bazaar. Page A Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock The immediate reaction to last week's announcement that a national magazine has selected KU as the nation's No.2 football team this fall was one of skepticism. Everybody seemed pleased but a trifle leery. There isn't much doubt that the Jayhawkers belong in the top twenty, or even the top ten, but No.2. . . Apparently the editors of Smith and Street, the publication which put the Hawks on such a lofty pedestal, based their prediction on KU's splendid showing at the close of the 1960 season, plus the fact that most of the men from that team are returning. ONE MAN WON'T BE RETURNING HOWEVER, at least for the first five games, and it's doubtful he will see any service at all. That's Bert Coan, of course. With Coan in the lineup, Kansas would have one of the greatest backfields in modern college history. Without him, it's still a potent force, but men like Bullet Bert aren't replaced overnight. Consider his 1960 record for instance. Among other things, he was named back of the week for his showing against Missouri. In the Colorado game, he drove local fans out of their minds with a 72 yard touchdown burst in a play which was about as complicated, at least from the stands, as a grade school quarterback's offensive book. BERT SIMPLY GRABBED THE HANDOFF, put his head down, and ran right up the middle. Nobody could stop him. A TCU player told this story after Kansas had whipped the Frogs 21-7 in the season's opener. This player, incidentally, was a teammate of Coan's on the TCU freshman team. "I saw him coming through the line and I told myself, here's where I make 'ole Bert respect me. And then he ran right over me." ON THE BRIGHT SIDE OF THE LEDGER, KU still has two pretty fair country ballplayers in quarterback John Hadl and half-back Curtis McClinton. Hadl, one of the most versatile men in college football, can always return to left half, where he received all-conference honors as a sophomore, if the attack bogs down. McClinton, a hard-nosed bruiser who likes to run over people instead of around them, will probably be used more often this fall. In addition to his running ability, he's also a fine pass receiver. Hugh Smith came into his own last year with some dazzling cutback runs and will be a valuable cog in the machine. Still, you can't forget Coan. MOST SPORTS WRITERS OVERLOOKED THE KU LINE LAST YEAR, feeling it was good, but not great. This always puzzled me because Iowa was the only team to score more than two touchdowns against the Jayhawks, and IU had one of the greatest offensive attacks in the country. The Hawkeyes beat Kansas 21-7, hardly a runaway score. Syracuse also defeated us 14-7, but the New Yorkers' line outweighed KU's 25 pounds to the man. In the Missouri game, the lightweight Jayhawk forwards weren't supposed to be in the same class with their Tiger counterparts, but you know what happened. Most of the Kansas linemen are back this year, and that's something to cheer about. Biggest loss is all-conference center Fred Hageman, who graduated. BUT LET'S GET BACK TO THAT NO. 2 PREDICTION. To finish this high, KU will just about have to win every game, something that's possible although mighty difficult. Two of the toughest games, with Colorado and Oklahoma, will be played on the road. The Buffs are always rugged at Boulder as are the Sooners at Norman. Things have been strangely quiet in the OU camp this summer but don't let that fool you. Bud Wilkinson's crew, which wasn't as bad as its 3-6-1 record indicated last year, is loaded with vets, especially in the line. The Sooners may have proved they're merely human, but they're still a long way from being dead. ALL POINTS CONSIDERED, the 1961 campaign should be an interesting one indeed. Whether or not Kansas can live up to its rating remains to be seen. The mere fact that we have received this honor is striking tribute to the tremendous rebuilding job coach Jack Mitchell has performed during his four-year stint here. By the way, in case you're still wondering, Ohio State is rated No. 1... French 1870s. HAS HE "POPPED THE QUESTION?" Wonderful! Stop in today for a gift certificate which will entitle you to an announcement portrait. V13-0511 Hiqley's 935 Mass. Carey, Hamilton Enter Baseball Hall of Fame COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — (UPI)—This picturesque New York State village welcomed many familiar baseball dignitaries yesterday for the enshrining of Max Carey and the late Billy Hamilton, two stars of a bygone era, into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Hall of Fame games at nearby Doubleday Field in the afternoon. This year, the Baltimore Orioles played the Los Angeles Dodgers for the Hall of Fame cup. A crowd of more than 10,000 was expected for the morning installation services at the museum in downtown Cooperstown and the annual Carey was on hand for the ceremonies, along with his wife and son, while Hamilton, who died in 1940, was represented by his daughter, Mrs. Howard Prior of Belmont. Mass. Carey and Hamilton were elected to the Hall of Fame last January by the 12 members comprising the committee of veterans, which considers only men who have been inactive as players for 30 years. Their election increased the members in the Hall of Fame to 86 players, 25 of whom are living. His wife not only edited his works but edited him.—Van Wyck Brooks. Custom reconciles us to everything —Edmund Burke Graduates - Are You Being Hired by a Firm That Pays All Your Moving Expenses? No matter if this be the case, or if the charge for the move will be assumed by yourself, we can assure you of the Finest Service available at a cost you can easily afford. Call us for a FREE estimate at no obligation. VI 3-0380 Larry Smith Ethan Smith Ethan Smith Moving & Storage NA NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES WORLD WIDE MOVERS NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINE Sidewalk Bazaar SPECIAL Men's, Women's & Children's $1.99 - $2.99 Canvas Shoes REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 GOING MY WAY—Rosslyn Stewart, Hutchinson senior, poses at the Statewide Activities travel board which assists KU students in arranging rides to almost any point in the United States. Those students needing a ride fill out a card telling where they are going and when they want to leave. Anyone who wants to assist one of their fellow students can then check the board to see who is going their way. MAGAZINE Campus West 1424 Crescent Road Final Clearance SALE REDUCTIONS 1/3 to 1/2 Private Parking on Naismith Drive All Sales Final K controcal NEW! 900 calorie diet Delicious flavors Ready-to-eat frozen formula - Lemon DELIGHTFUL FLAVORS - Vanilla NOW IN ICE CREAM CABINETS AT YOUR FAVORITE ICE CREAM DEALER! Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIRY East Gripped by Heat, But Midwest Is Cool By United Press International Thundershowers in the offing from Texas to New England offered little relief for Eastern states gripped in a sultry midsummer heat spell. The U.S. Weather Bureau at week's beginning said the East was "in for another scorcher." New York City's Jones Beach, one of the nation's largest, closed its gates at mid-afternoon Sunday with a capacity crowd. Other New Yorkers swarmed by the thousands to beaches on Long Island and New Jersey. temperature since July 13 was a humid 87. Metropolitan New York chalked up a high of 93 degrees Sunday following Saturday's high of 97, a four-year top for the day. The weather picture was the same in Washington as capital forecasters announced "above normal" temperatures since July 13. The capital's lowest high About 75 persons were treated for heat exhaustion in a crowd of 40,000 at a Civil War battle re-enactment at nearby Manassas, Va. Unofficial reports put the temperature at 102. Washington's temperature dipped to 79 degrees around midnight. By contrast, the Great Plains experienced record-breaking chill over the weekend. Thunderstorms and heavy winds raked Missouri and Indiana. Lightning injured a man in a Loansport, Ind., kitchen. The mercury dipped to 49 degrees, 15 degrees below normal at Valentine, Neb. Kansas City's high of 73 Saturday was a record for the date. Severe rains and lightning hit the Kansas City area and residents reported funnel clouds in Clay and Platte counties of Missouri. Storms severed utility lines and felled trees north of St. Joseph, Mo., and more than an inch of rain fell in brief periods at Concordia and Waterloo, Iowa. TEXICO TEXACO Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI 3-9897 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Personalized Service For Your Shirts I am a great supporter of the People's Republic of China. I will always be grateful to them for their support and help. Starched as You Desire - No Starch - Light Starch - Medium Starch - Heavy Starch Your shirts will be returned on hangars at your request. ACME LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Now Serving You at 3 Locations Hillcrest VI 3-0928 On the Mall VI 3-0895 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Around the World Launching of Ranger May Be Space Stride CAPE CANAVERAL—(UPI) The United States will open a new era in its exploration of the moon within a few days by attempting to put a launching platform into orbit and then use it to hurl a probe more than 500,000 miles into space. The shot, dubbed "Ranger I," ranks as probably the most complex ever tried by the United States. It probably won't come closer than 35,000 miles to the moon with its 675-pound space probe, but scientists hope it will pave the way for future shots that will land instruments on the moon's surface. The shot will involve putting a satellite into a "parking orbit" 115 miles up, then triggering the main space probe from the launching platform at just the right time for a flight deep into space. The Soviet Union achieved a space spectacular by using a similar "parking orbit" technique last Feb. 12. A Russian rocket sent Sputnik VIII into a path around Earth, and triggered a 1,418-pound probe from it. SAN FRANCISCO —(UPI)— A stubborn forest fire in the Mt. Umunhum and Loma Prieta Peak area continued burning out of control Monday despite the efforts of 800 firefighters and their aerial support. Fire Out of Control The fire, which already had destroyed 7,000 acres of brush, was bombed by borate tankers Sunday and Monday. The Hidden Falls Girl Scout camp northeast of Santa Cruz was evacuated Saturday as a precautionary measure. Bowles Off on Trip WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Undersecretary of State Chester Bowles left Monday for an 18-day trip to confer with U.S. ambassadors in Africa and Asia. Care Hearings Start WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The House Ways and Means Committee Monday began two weeks of hearings on President Kennedy's controversial plan to provide hospitalization and nursing benefits for about 14 million persons 65 or older. Abraham A. Ribicoff, secretary of health, education and welfare, was the lead-off witness as the administration opened its drive for a congressional showdown next year on the medical care legislation. Beasley Assumes Penn State Duties Kenneth E. Beasley, assistant director of the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas and widely known for his organization of in-service training schools for local government personnel, has accepted appointment as associate professor of political science and public administration at Pennsylvania State University. Prof. Beasley has organized annual schools for city managers, city clerks, county clerks and peace officers. He also has served as consultant in state government. He holds three degrees from K.U. He has taught here since 1849. His duties at Pennsylvania will be similar to those here, teaching and consulting with state and local government units. The Beasleys and three sons, Kenneth E. Jr., Russell and Ronald, left Lawrence Saturday. Fraternity Jewelry Battle Fatal to 1.000 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals BIZERTE, Tunisia — (UPI) — Almost 1,000 Tunisians were killed in the battle of Bizerte, a Tunisian government official reports. Health and Sanitation Director Monicef Garfi said many of the wounded were dying in Bizertale's Regional Hospital. The official toll announced by Tunisia is 670 dead and some 1,500 injured. Balfour Works on Aid Bill 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Buying Spree in Britain LONDON — (UPI) — Prospects of higher taxes caused a buying spree in Britain Monday and brought criticism of the Queen's vachting trips. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Senate Foreign Relations Committee called a "mopping up" session Monday to stamp final approval on its 4.3 billion dollar version of President Kennedy's foreign aid request. Barring last-minute hitches, the group was expected to approve the bill and send it to the Senate, where debate may begin later this week. In anticipation of increased taxes on consumer goods, Britons flocked to stores selling television sets, washing machines, refrigerators and second hand cars. Laborate Member of Parliament Norman Dodds said Queen Elizabeth's trips aboard the 4,000-ton Royal Yacht Britannia in a time of economic crisis were "disgraceful and unnecessary." Shrine Studied For Hemingway HAVANA — (UPI) — Ernest Hemingway's widow, Mary, "came home" Sunday night to explore the possibility of turning the writer's Cuban farm into a memorial. She came here at the invitation of Premier Fidel Castro's government and was met at the airport by Castro's personal envoy, Minister Ramon Aja. "I came home to discuss with the government the possibility of making our farm, La Vigia, a sort of museum in his (Hemingway's) name." Mrs. Hemingway said. The Hemingways spent much of their time in recent years at La Vigia before the writer died earlier this month at another home in Idaho. It was learned that Premier Castro has ordered that nothing be touched at the farm, and everything there is exactly as it was when Hemingway left for the last time a few months ago. Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 GRANADA NOW.SHOWING! Jerry Lewis as "The Ladies Man" Starts Friday 'Master of the World' 'Steel Claw' Starts Sunday Troy Donahue in 'Parrish' SUNSET NOW SHOWING! SUNSET NOW SHOWING! “Home from the Hill” “Fever in the Blood” Starts Thursday ‘Platinum High School’ ‘Girls Town’ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! “Operation Petticoat” Starts Tuesday Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward ‘From the Terrace’ ★ ★ Patronize Kansan Advertisers-They Are Loyal Supporters. Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. The New York Daily News HERE IT IS AGAIN $1.00 Down Skirt & Sweater LAYAWAY SALE! Famous brands to select from - - Bobbie Brooks - Campus Casuals - Century - Colebrook - Douglas Marc All in beautiful new bright colors. $1.00 down will hold the garmet of your choice till Sept. 10th. --- 14 Tuesday, July 25, 1961 6072 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 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 carried or brought to the柜台 on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic. party supplies. plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone V1. 0520. HELP WANTED I WOLLD LIKE to trade my 1980 Dodge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen. Or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI 5- 7903. SALEMEN OR SALES-TRAINEES: Sell $150, item. pays you $45 in commissions. Sell $150, item. pays you $45 in commissions. train. Full or part time. Writes Mr. Sullian, Box 8129, Kansas City 12, M-7-25 Male or Female: Excellent income for calling on Christian people. Full or part time. Working hours: Warehouses, Nugent, AmBiCO, Ire. 3706 Broadway, Suite 314, AMC C.11, Mo. 7-25 BUSINESS SERVICES MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week days 8 a.m., to 6:30 p.m. (Mon-Fri) at 7 a.m., to 9 a.m. & Plants. Stainless steel picture window *quaranties* and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything on display. Projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2921 or better still, come. Welcome, tt WESTERN CIVILIZATION: Graduate Student experienced in Western Civilization program. Will tutor for summer exams. Call VI 3-3237. 7-28 WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. VI 3-4656. tt PASS THE ENGLISH PRO. EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810. Mrs. Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 7- 7551, or 921 Miss. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery is rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267 tt DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass. Call VI 8-263. TYPING Wanted typing in my home. Standard home VI 3-9549, Mrs. Morris, $05 Maine. "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, accurately. Standard rates. Call Coester, VI 3-8679.**If** "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." **VI 3-5290** typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified office personnel available. Call VI **3-5290** — VI **2-0111**. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Cain. VI 3-0524. tt Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W, 19th, V11 1648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, journals, and neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, articles. Electric typewriter. Required rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. mgr. for schools; forms & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1313 Vt. apt. 3. **tf** "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression of instructors." For excellent typing at stand-alone rates, call Miss Lowell Pope, PI 3-1097. Experienced Typlist: Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper paper typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Service. 6317 B Worsson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves. or SR- a 2-2186. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Computer: Aims Russ,usch 1511 W 21 St. Call VI 7689 WANTED AMBITIOUS SALESLADIES: build your own business in Lawrence. No expense firms. Car necessary. Write Box 1022, Wellington Road, Lawrence, Kansas. tfr HILL CO-OP student house is re-opening in the fall for male graduates; approximate cost per month. $50; completely self-managing; no discrimination on grounds of race or religion. For further details call VI 3-5552, 6-7 p.m. tt French 2 Correspondence student wants Tutor, 1 or 2 hours weekly, call Olympic Swim Club, VI 2-0006 for Gary Williams or leave message. 7-28 Salesman for work after the end of summer school and before fall semester. Car necessary, travel expenses, commission salary. Call Friday. Apel, VI 3-1000. 7-21 FOR SALE '55 Chev. Belaire, 4 door, V-8, Power Glide, woman owner. 55,000 actual miles. Careful maintenance. Phone VI 3-3286 or VI 3-7151. 8-1 Pontiac Station Wagon — 1954, Radio, heater, trailer hitch. Good condition. Call Marc Murdock in Kansas City at HIand 4-2514. 7-28 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and bilingual printing. Prices based on Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0515 to tf HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Colllus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron's & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tt 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 TYPEWRITER for sale. $75.00, 14 inch typewriter, good condition. V-13-5235, 9 am to 4 pm, Chicago. FOR RENT 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfurn. All cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co $729½ Mass., VI 2-0099 t ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 4. St. JE 1-1121. Evenings & Sun. SKI-2634 ROOMS FOR MEN: 1/2 block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new storage. Room available, linens furnished. Reasonable rates. 1221 Oread, VI 3-6798. tt For Rent to students. Completely furnished. 2 bedroom house next to KU, paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. tf OUTSTANDING — New Rentals Park Plaza South Apartments. Occupancy August 15th. For appointment call VI 3-8253 or write box 123. 8-1 Three Bedroom Nicely Furnished Apartment. Private entrance and bath, air conditioned, steam heat. Boys preferred. Reasonably priced. Also efficiency apartment. $25 each. Private entrance and bathroom. Near KU. Call VI 3-7830. 7-25 Furnished apartment for men students, completely furnished. 1st floor apartment, electric kitchen. Private bathroom and shower and private entrance. Phone VI 3-6640. 8-1 White House for rent. A well built attractive roomy, desirable. 3 bedroom home. 631 La., full basement, shower, large bath on second floor. Beautiful fireplace. 2 porches, 2 car garage. Available on or before 1st of August. Call Wilbur Pine, 1023 Highland Drive VI 3-4448 for details. 7-28 Lovely 3 room furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath. Air conditioned Redecoor with two bedrooms each. Also 3 bedroom房. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830. S-1 New 2-bedroom duplex. Close to K.U. and shopping center. Completely air-conditioned, be rented partially furnished. Contact George Neahuisir, V.I. 2-1200. 8-13 ROOMS FOR FALL: Graduate students welcome. Modern 2 rm. basement apartment for 2 KU men. Outside entr. Utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 8-4 Vacancies in contemporary home with large swimming pool, for young men. Home cooked meals if desired, phone VI 3-9635. 8-1 Nice Clean Furnished Apartment for rent. Good neighborhood. In private home, private bath. $80. Utilities paid plus washing machine privileges. Will hold for fall. Call VI 3-6281 or VI 3-1337. 808 M. 8-1 STUDENTS Grease Job ___ $1 Brake Adj. ___ 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free. Mechanic mechanic on duty. Brakes Relieved. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W. 23d. VI 3-9649 CAMPUS BARBER SHOP - Open All Summer - WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Just North of Student Union COOL OFF With a Summer Salad! For real hot-weather eating enjoyment, choose one of the crisp salads offered in the Hawk's Nest and Cafeteria. Eat in air-conditioned comfort. What a delicious way to cool off! KANSAS UNION Hawk's Nest & Cafeteria Summer Session Kansan Page 8 Tuesday. July 25.1961 Peace Officers Holding School From 125 to 150 Kansas law enforcement officers are attending the 15th annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School which opened Monday and will run through July 29. Designed to enhance the proficiency of Kansas peace officers, the school was provided with a $5,250 appropriation by the 1961 Kansas Legislature. Five courses will be offered: a basic course, a course in police science, a basic course in traffic, a special course for correctional officers, and a special course for sheriffs. The basic course for peace officers will include instruction in the law of evidence and arrest, investigation of crimes, firearms, the criminal mind, problem inmates, accident investigation, self defense, and interrogation of suspects. Scientific aids for criminal investigation, such as fingerprinting, photography, and medical examinations and autopsies, will be discussed in the police science course. Also included will be instruction in the collection and preservation of evidence, firearms, document and handwriting identification, and the preparation of criminal cases for trial. The traffic course will be primarily concerned with the investigation of accidents. Firearms, traffic control, legal proof for traffic violations, teaching traffic safety, and accident report writing will also be discussed. The courses for correctional officers and for sheriffs will run only for half of the week. The special course for correctional officers will provide instruction in the Kansas penal system, parole, security, the problem inmate, and the criminal mind. The sheriffs' course will include material on the handling and care of prisoners and on general problems of the sheriff department. Zeller Gets $11,239 Grant Dr. Edward J. Zeller, associate professor of geology, has received a National Science Foundation continuation grant of $11,239 to aid in his research on thermoluminescence. The grant will support research related to his three Antarctic expeditions, each financed by the NSF. The trips were made to collect rock specimens for his pioneering research in the use of thermoluminescence to determine the age of rocks and paleotemperatures. Dr. Zeller left earlier this month for the Physikalisches Institute at Bern, Switzerland, where he will use the thermoluminescence phenomenon in calculating the geologic age of limestone taken from strata of various altitudes in the Alps. The limestone studies are supported for the most part by an Atomic Energy Commission contract. In early September, Luciano B. Ronca, graduate student and research assistant from Trieste, Italy, will join Dr. Zeller in Switzerland. During Dr. Zeller's absence, his research here will be directed by Dr. Ernest Angino, research associate who received the doctorate degree from K.U. in June. Dr. Angino will be assisted by Dr. Frederie Siegel, research associate who also received his Ph.D. degree from K.U. in June, and by William C. Pearn, research assistant. Army ROTC Major To Leave KU Maj. B. J. Pinkerton, assistant professor of military science, will leave KU Thursday to attend the Command and General Staff College at Ft. Leavenworth. Maj. Pinkerton, who was promoted last week, has been here three years. Replacing him in the Army ROTC unit is Capt. Paul Reed, who has been attending the Infantry Officer Career Course at Ft. Benning, Ga. Capt. Rolla Lush, who is completing a three-year tour of duty in Germany, will join the staff in August. KU Group Busy in Germany Twenty-five KU students enrolled in the German Summer Institute have been having a ball, according to two reports sent by Dr. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department and director of the Institute The students are part of a total contingent of 67 which left New York by plane last month for the University's first summer language institute. Others are studying French in Paris and Spanish in Barcelona, Spain. According to Dr. Burzle, the total group met in the Pan-American Building at New York's Idlewild Airport June 7 and left aboard the "Jayhawk Clipper" that afternoon. After landing at Paris-Orly airport the next morning, the students split up. The German group took a chartered bus to Frankfurt/Main, where it's currently "working hard." The transplanted Jayhawkers have done a lot and seen a lot so far. Among other things, they have visited the 9th century cathedral at Aachen, a castle in Heidelberg, the ancient towns of Dinkelsbuhl and Nordlingen, several light operas and ballets in Munich, castles in Bavaria, the city of Vienna, Austria, and other cities and towns in Germany. In addition, the group has been entertained by government and university officials in Bonn and they've taken an all day trip down the Space Agency Believes U.S. May Beat Russians to Mars WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Congressional space experts say that despite delays there still is a chance the United States may learn the truth about those canals on Mars before Russia. They said the National Space Agency has launched a study which could advance by two years an exploratory flight near Mars now scheduled for 1964. The trip would take 232 days. Scientists hope the shot will provide an electronic close-up look at the Planet's unexplained canals, polar white caps, and possible vegetation. It originally had been planned for 1962, along with two similar space probes of Venus. The Mars target date later was delayed for 25 months—the next feasible period for such a shot-on grounds that space exploration techniques were not far enough along to accomplish the project on schedule. Rhine River on the Steamer, "M. S. Deutschland." The House Space Committee has been advised that the shot actually was postponed because budget restrictions then in effect would not allow all three shots in one year. Those budget curbs now have been lifted and Space Agency experts are determining now whether it is too late to reschedule the Mars probe for late 1962. The committee, headed by Rep. Overton Brooks, D-La., considers this a chance to reclaim from Russia some of the prestige lost when the Soviets put the first man into orbit. If it proves impossible to put the Mars shot back on the original timetable, committee sources said, there is every prospect that Russia will chalk up another first in firing her own rocket to Mars. Dr. Burzle added that he and his students have had several KU visitors, among them Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols, and son Raymond. Jr. Russia already is ahead in the race to Venus, having fired a "piggy back" probe toward that planet early this year. As far as the academic life is concerned, Dr. Burzle said that "the work is demanding; we require the high standards maintained by our department at KU, and I am happy to say that the students are very willing to work hard. But despite our intensive academic program of 4-5 classes a day, we are seeing and experiencing a great many things. The students have agreed that they want to work hard for 5 days a week so that the weekends and some evenings can be used for cultural and extra-curricular activities." ?$ ?$ WONDERING WHERE YOUR MONEY WENT? Better keep a record of your payments with a low-cost personal checking account. Your checkbook acts as bookkeeper — your cancelled checks prove payment. Any amount will open your ThriftCheck account. Start enjoying the convenience of checkbook money soon. ThriftiCheck DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 MASS. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Try the Kansan Want Ads 6-Hour Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) Camera 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street V1 3-4416 Terrill's 803 Mass. part of the art of eve West Wind- California Batik cotton print with brass button trim. 13.95 Vind- ornia cotton th brass trim. 95 Catalina® Catalina KU Students Back Kennedy's Stand on Berlin By Ron Gallagher Reaction to President Kennedy's proposals on the Berlin issue were remarkably similar among six participants in a survey conducted yesterday by the Kansas. PETER H. KNAPPER JOHN BROWN "I don't think there will be a war." Five of the six agreed that an increase in military strength is necessary to convince the Russians of Western intentions concerning Berlin. Only Don Carlson, Fort Scott, junior, disagreed with President Kennedy's plan to increase military spending by almost 3.5 billion dollars. "I think Kennedy is being shortsighted in this," he said. "This money could be better spent in federal aid to education." He also commented that waste could be cut out and the military compressed into a more efficient organization. The other five expressed varying degrees of approval of the Kennedy plan. The comment of Woodson Roddy, Iola graduate student, was typical: John Brown, Lawrence senior, and Jay Moore, Nickerson junior attending previews for transfer students, both said they do not think the Berlin crisis will erupt into war. Moore said: "I am not too worried about a war. However, it sounds like we are about as close to war as we have been for a long time. J. S. R. K. "I think the only way we can lay it on the line to the Communists is to do something materially to let them know what we mean," he ROBERT SIMMERMAN '.. I'm not too crazy about going' added. Three of the six mentioned that they do not think the increase in draft rate will affect college students. Robert Simmerman, Kansas City junior, said: "I am in the reserves myself. I am not very crazy about going. But if President Kennedy thinks it is necessary I'll go along with him. However, I do not think they will pull anyone out of school." Moore also said he feels he will not be drafted as long as he stays in school. Brown said he thinks more people will enlist, thus minimizing the effect on those who want to attend college. The other 3 did not comment on the draft problem. United Press International reports that Americans are flocking to enlistment centers to ask what they could do for their country and are flooding Civil Defense switchboards to ask what they could do for themselves in an outpouring of response to President Kennedy's call for an arms buildup. A survey of man-in-the-street reaction to the President's firm stand on Berlin indicated awareness by far more Americans than actually heard or read Kennedy's Tuesday night message. Enlistment centers reported more inquiries than at any time since the Korean conflict. Draft boards geared for a 5,000-man boost above an earlier August draft call of 8,000. In Boston, M.Sgt. Frank J. Carr said enlistment inquiries were up 500 per cent over a normal day. San Francisco Army recruiters said the "phone hasn't stopped ringing all day." Similar reports came from Birmingham, Atlanta, Des Moines, San Diego and perhaps the nation's best known recruiting center in New 10 JAY MOORE "... we are close to war." KU York's Times Square. A St. Louis Air Force recruiter said there generally is a few days' delay between inquiries and enlistments. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 49th Year, No.13 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, July 28, 1961 Military Boost Unlikely To Affect Collegians WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Stepped-up draft calls to bolster America's muscle in the Berlin situation probably will not disrupt the college plans of many young men, a Selective Service official said yesterday. "We feel that going to college is very important to the nation's future," the official said. "Those who want to go to college probably will be permitted to do so. Selective Service does not now plan to put any great pressure on college- bound youngsters." There are about 70,000 men classified as I-A who have been examined and are in the draft-ready pool ready for induction. These can be used to meet immediate Defense Department draft needs. There are about 1.5 million who have been classified but have not yet been examined. Selective Service normally gets a rejection rate of 50 per cent, which means that about 750,000 men would be available for induction as soon as they are examined. The Selective Service official said that as draft calls are issued, the rate of volunteers for the armed services goes up. He said it was possible that some youths would quit school to volunteer, but he did not believe many would do so. The draft official said there may be some college students in the group that has not been examined. But he said that if they want to start or continue their college education, they probably will be permitted to do so. Many of the volunteers are youths just out of high school who want to get their military service out of the way before going to college. Selective Service has no statistics on men who go to college after serving their military tours, but thousands of World War II and Korean War veterans used the GI bill of rights to complete their education after military service. The average draft age now is 23 years. By that time most college students have graduated. The draft age ranges from $18^{1}_{2}$ to 26. Those who were deferred before they were 26 can be drafted up to age 35. The draft call for August, originally set at 8,000, was increased late Wednesday by the Defense Department to 13,000. There has been no official call yet for September draft- ces, but Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said the need would be at least 20,000 for that month. The Selective Service official said that if the average induction age of 23 is forced down by demand for more men, "we will look at the situation sympathetically but realistically." Area Draft Calls Hiked More young men in Missouri and Kansas will be drafted next month under President Kennedy's plan to build up the armed forces, but National Guardsmen and Army Reservists from the two states are unaffected at present. By United Press International Kennedy, in his speech to the nation Tuesday night, said he plans to "double and triple the draft" and proposed to call to active duty several reserve units. The increase in military strength is necessary, he said, because of the situation in Berlin and Communist threats to the free world. The Selective Service office in Jefferson City was less conclusive about the Missouri draft call because Draft Chief Col. L. B. Adams is attending a conference in Denver. The Selective Service office in Topeka said that Kansas' draft call for August will be from 105-110, compared with 71 men drafted this month. At Camp Ripley, Minnesota, the commander of the 35th Division of National Guardsmen from Missouri and Kansas said Kennedy's plans apparently do not change the unit's status. Limited Military Powers Are Likely, McNamara Testifies WASHINGTON—(UPI)Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said yesterday that President Kennedy would use sparingly the new powers he has asked to call up reservists and lengthen military service periods. McNamara told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he and the President "are well aware of the disruptive effects and the hardships that such recalls to active duty have on the individuals involved." McNamara told the Senate group: "We plan to use the authority to extend the terms of service of military personnel to the minimum extent necessary. We hope to restrict its use to only those personnel whose skills and experience are essential during the build-up phase—and for as short a period as possible. McNamara testified on two bills which are part of the President's military build-up plans to deal with the Berlin crisis. One would empower Kennedy to call to duty as many as 250,000 ready reservists and keep in service military personnel who ordinarily would end their tour of duties. The other bill would authorize the Army, Navy and Air Force to spend an additional $958,570,000 for planes, ships and missiles. Republican congressional leaders pledged support of President Kennedy's Berlin program but demanded that the administration make belt-tightening cutbacks on domestic spending. "We also expect to make limited use of the authority to extend the training periods of certain selected reserve units." They said Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev could make no greater error than to believe the United States would "point a weapon but not be willing to fire it." But House GOP Leader Charles A. Halleck, Indiana, told a news conference that in the 54 days since Krushchev put Kennedy "on notice" regarding Berlin, the administration has not lifted one finger to halt the vastly increased spending program of the new frontier." Sen. Everett Dirksen, Illinois, Republican leader, echoed Halleck's statement and in a prepared statement of his own pledged GOP support of the President's firm Berlin stand. "Let it be clearly understood that President Kennedy has the complete support of the Republican leadership in Congress in the Berlin crisis," he said. "If differences should appear, they would be on how to uphold our Berlin commitments, not whether to uphold them. We are all aware that the issue is not a city named Berlin, but free world unity." In Berlin, Western intelligence experts said they believed the Soviet Union is worried about how much loyalty they would get from the 110,000-man East German army in a fight over Berlin. They caution, however, that any underestimation of the East Germans could prove embarrassing for the West. At a glance, East Germany's armed forces appear well-equipped with modern Soviet weapons to meet combat conditions of the atomic battlefield. They are composed of a seven-division army, a small air force and a small navy. On June 17, 1953, when East German workers revolted against the Communist regime, the "Barracks People's Police"—forerunner of the "People's Army"—refused to crack down on them. Russian troops, part of the 400,- 000 men the Kremlin has stationed in East Germany crushed the rebellion. In London, British leaders were reviewing mobilization plans and contingency arrangements for any possible Berlin emergency. But a decision on concrete steps was put off until after the meeting of the U.S., British, French and West German foreign ministers in Paris next week. Government sources hold that no emergency has as yet arisen which would justify the immediate callup of reservists. Berlin, they said, is still primarily a political—not a military—problem and must be tackled first by diplomatic action. An American "task force" planned to leave for Paris to begin coordinating Allied political, military and diplomatic strategy against Soviet efforts to force the West out of Berlin. Officials described this as a significant move in President Kennedy's plan to seize the diplomatic initiative from Khrushchev while also strengthening the Allied military front. In addition, the "task force" expected to explore with the major U.S. allies the possibility of economic reprisals against the Soviet bloc if the Russians further tighten the screws on Berlin. In Los Angeles, former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon urged all Americans, regardless of party, to back President Kennedy in his warning to the Soviet Union. Nixon, now an attorney in Los Angeles, fully endorsed Kennedy's emergency program to meet Khrushchev's challenge. Overflow Audience Sees 'Calamity Jane' KANSAS CITY, Mo.-(UPI)—The largest Starlight Theatre crowd in about five year's 7,946, saw Carol Burnett Wednesday night in "Calamity Jane." Officials said there was an overflow of 346 persons. Of the total 255 sat on benches hauled into the theater several days ago to meet the demand for tickets. The others stood. The all-time attendance record for the theater is 10,251, recorded for a performance in 1956 of "Annie Get Your Gun," starring Gisèle MacKenzie. Western Civ. Exam Tomorrow The Western Civilization exam will be given from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday in various rooms throughout the campus. Approximately 300 have enrolled for the exam. Results should be out in about a week. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 28.1961 JFK Asks Sacrifice President Kennedy's military build-up plan inspired by the current Berlin crisis probably will affect the college age group more than any other age group. His plan to increase the draft, call ready reserves back to active duty and extend enlistments up to 12 months is bound to change the plans of many young men and women. Plans to call 30,000 in the September draft call proves that Kennedy means what he said. This is almost triple the July draft call of 8,000. This rapid acceleration means, of course, that many young men will be called sooner than expected. Many others, who now are on reserve status, will be called back to active duty. Some who are nearing the end of their enlistment will be required to stay up to 12 months longer. Families will be separated and many incomes will drop when young men are taken from their regular jobs. This is the price we must pay to show the Soviets that we will not be pushed on the Berlin issue. But the average American on the street probably was more impressed with the President's intentions than were the Russians. The seriousness which President Kennedy attached to the Berlin crisis no doubt surprised many Americans who viewed recent developments over the German issue as just another of the many crises we have been managing to survive for the last 15 years. The course of action outlined by President Kennedy should erase all doubt about the United States position on the defense of West Berlin. For the first time in several years we have backed words with actions. Americans have shown that they are willing to sacrifice to insure continued existence of the ideology that inspired their revolution. Now it becomes the responsibility of a new generation to answer the call of freedom and individual dignity. Americans have always answered this call. Others in history have fought that their heritage might be passed on. Now the burden of the protection of our ideals has come to rest on a new generation. They will be expected to make the same sacrifices that their parents and grandparents made in World War I and World War II. —Ron Gallagher Editor Shadow-Boxing Dear Editor: To paraphrase your introductory statement in Tuesday's "Summer Session Kansan": "I'm getting tired of childish editorials." Furthermore, you persist in shadow boxing ... Letters ... with bogey issues and creating very localized tempests in a teapot. No one, Mr. Morelock, who regards issues with a critical, constructive and unbiased eye, objects to Mr. Kennedy's wealth. What one objects to is the fact that he, Mr. U.S. China Policy By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst For more than 10 years the United States has followed a policy toward Nationalist China branded even by its friends as unrealistic. And it is illustrative of the unrelenting pressures of world complexities that at this particular time the United States must divert a part of its attention from threatening crises in Berlin and Tunisia to consider a change in its China policy. U. S. POLICY IN THE UNITED NATIONS IN THE PAST involved refusal even to debate the possibility of a U.N. seat for Red China. And such was the U.S. influence in the U.N. that for 10 years it successfully barred the question from the U.N. agenda. But the winds of change which have swept the world, also have swept the United Nations. The United States no longer is assured a majority vote, and the possibilities of a two-China U.N. policy are being increasingly discussed. ON THE ISLAND OF FORMOSA. THE CHAING KAL-SHEK government is angered and dismayed. Nationalist newspapers help fan the flames and the American community of 10,000 persons in Taipei feels increasingly the resentment against a reported softening of the U.S. position toward Red China. There are unpleasant memories of an anti-American demonstration in 1957 in which nine Americans were injured. There is no more anti-Communist leader in Asia than Chiang Kai-shek and it would be pleasant indeed if he were able to pass his declining years undisturbed in his dream of a reconquest of the mainland. BUT THAT SEEMS NOT TO BE. FOR IN CHIANG'S ONE-track determination lies the hard decision facing the United States. Published in New York is a small, new publication called "WarPeace Report." It is oriented toward support of the United Nations and in its July issue carries what purports to be a survey of 96 of the 99 members of the United Nations. It reports that more than three quarters of the U.N. members believe Communist China should be seated as the representative of China both in the Security Council and in the United Nations. IT SAYS MORE THAN TWO-THIRDS OF THE MEMBERS believe Nationalist China should remain in the General Assembly. It adds that in case of a showdown between the two Chinas, a majority believes the decision should go to Red China. The figures seem not to be out of line with the United States' own soundings. These were some of the facts behind the U.S. decision to negotiate recognition of Outer Mongolia and to permit Outer Mongolia's entrance to the United Nations in exchange for similar action on the new African republic of Mauritania. IT IS A VOTE-GETTING GESTURE TO OTHER FRENCH-speaking republics of Africa. It is a play for time only. But inherent in it is the two-China theory. The school of thought which promotes it believes it better for Chiang Kai-shek to accept half a loaf than have nothing at all. And there is always the possibility that Red China will reject it, making the strategy successful. President, does not seem to possess the attributes of a statesman, and that he does not observe sound fiscal policies, which are prerequisites to discharge adequately the position he occupies. Inasmuch as the New Deal, Mr. Harold Lasky, and the means by which that wealth was acquired, might have molded his outlook on government intervention in the national economy, these antecedents have a direct relevance to the points of criticism. In the pre-convention days, when the moralists and the informed observers were weighing the possibilities of drafting Stevenson, one heard Carl Sandburg sound the alarm as to the negative attributes of our current leader. This bard publicly declared the way in which the elder's wealth was acquired, and the sordid roles played by the Fitzgeralds and the Kennedyys on the political scene in a bankrupt city, which is now captive to the dictates of an unscrupulous political element bent on exploiting religious prejudices, ignorances and narrow provincialism. During the very first election-enering rounds after World War II, Mr. President went about assuring the Back Bay elements that he was one of them, despite his veneer of Yankee erudition. This trend saw fruition on a national level when he issued the 1956 manifesto at the Democratic Convention, which contained the blatant effrontery that he could capture monolithic religious votes for a national slate. Capture these votes he did, as well as those of the shiftless mass which populates the innards of the eastern seaboard cities. They also consume the alcohol which engendered the Kennedy millions, and they were manna for those first obsessed yearnings for power. But, the same climate prevails as when Miguel de Unamuno admonished Franco to the effect that: "You will rule, but you will never convince the knowing." When you acquaint yourself with big city politics, you will recognize that we are letting a clique, whose motto is "increasing vulgarity and lack of purpose," select our national leaders. The American people, Mr. Editor, then does not include the Yankees or the people in the Midwest, by an extension of an inference drawn from your writings. Yankee intellect, know-how, and common sense forbade granting sanction to one with so few qualifications, at the time a critical choice was made. None-the-less, our chief executive has the interim assurance of complete dedication from his charges. However, I do hope that someone worthy will come along to give us a new rebirth in this wonderful experiment dedicated to tolerance and world living. Harold Schick Baldwin, graduate student the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism MR. LINCOLN'S ARMY, by Bruce Catton. Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45. GLORY ROAD, by Bruce Catton. Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45. For some of us who have suffered from the Civil War fever of the last few years, Bruce Catton does least to dispel that fever. His beautiful prose, his emotional incidents, his feeling for the drama and tragedy of the war all capture and hold us. "A Stillness at Appomattox," which won the Pulitzer Prize, is perhaps his best known history of the war. But there is little to distinguished this fine book from its predecessors. "Stillness" was the concluding volume in Catton's history of the Army of the Potomac. "Mr. Lincoln's Army" and "Glory Road" preceded that book, and either of these could have won similar literary recognition as easily. The first of these is mainly the story of McClellan, and it takes us from the start of the war down to the dismissal of that pompous general who was tagged the "Little Napoleon." "Mr. Lincoln's Army" details the string of failures of the Army of the Potomac, the chessboard campaigns plotted by McClellan, who was a brilliant strategist but who shook—or so it would seem—at the sight of blood. McClellan was an unlikely choice at the same time that he was the logical man for the job. He was believed to have southern sympathies, he was a Democrat, and he was not beloved by the Radicals. But he had enjoyed a minor victory in the western theater at the start of the war, and when McDowell seemed unable to get going, McClellan was brought in to head the Army of the Potomac. His campaigns were grandly designed, and they played into the hands of the Confederates. He relied on poor intelligence from Pinkerton, and he refused to pursue the enemy when he could do so. That was the tragedy of Antietam, after which McClellan was dismissed. If ever a general had an opportunity for greatness it was at Antietam, and McClellan muffed that opportunity, right down the line. Catton's description of the horrible battle of Antietam, that which raged around a sunken road, a bridge, a cornfield and a Dunker church, is worth noting. "In a square of ground measuring very little more than one thousand yards on a side—cornfield, barnyard, orchard, East and West Woods, and the fields by the turnpike—nearly twelve thousand men were lying on the ground, dead or wounded." Catton writes. Some soldiers recalled it as the heaviest fighting of the entire war. "Glory Road" continues the story of Lincoln's efforts to find a general who would fight. Here we read particularly about the terrible battle of Fredericksburg, where the nept Burnside sent wave after wave of Union troops against Marye's Heights on a wet and cold December day. His determination was pitiful; he just didn't know how to go about winning a battle. Fredericksburg added to the toll of North and South, though especially North. And Burnside, who is best known perhaps for giving his name to male facial adornment, was dismissed. His successor was the dashing Joe Hooker, and Hooker lost still more men in the horror of Chancecellorsville, a battle fought around a Virginia mansion in the area soon to be known to history as the Wilderness. Once again there was evidence of Union ineptness, and Hooker was dismissed. His successor—George Meade. So Catton brings us to Gettysburg, which was a Union victory but another victory marked by indecision. Meade let Lee escape; Lincoln told him the retreat reminded him of an old woman shooing geese across a creek. And after Gettysburg, the North finally got a general. But that is the story in "A Stillness at Appomattox." "Glory Road," like the other books, is filled with passages of vivid language. Here is one that follows the battle of Gettysburg: "One day they would make a park there, with neat lawns and smooth black roadways, and there would be marble statues and bronze plaques to tell the story in bloodless prose. Silent cannon would rest behind grassy embankments, their wheels bolted down to concrete foundations, their malevolence wholly gone, and here and there birds would nest in the muzzles. "In the museums and tourist-bait trinket shops old bullets and broken buckles and twisted bayonets would repose under glass, with a rusty musket or so on the wall and little illustrated booklets lying on top of the counter. There would be neat brick and timber cabins on the hillsides, and people would sleep soundly in houses built where the armies had stormed and cried at each other, as if to prove that men killed in battle send forth no restless ghosts to plague comfortable civilians at night." ★★★ FIVE PLAYS, by Gerhart Hauptmann. Bantam Classics, 60 cents. Gerhart Hauptmann belongs in the naturalistic tradition of Zola and Dreiser. His plays are more than realistic; they are pessimistic depictions of man's fate; they are deterministic in the mood of Marx and Darwin. His striking "Weavers," his doomed "Rose Bernd," his "Drayman Henschel" are victims of circumstances. Rose seems old-fashioned, as Sister Carrie and Crane's Maggie and even James' Daisy Miller are old-fashioned. Henschel is a forerunner of Miller's Willy Loman. All five plays in this volume demonstrate the singular power of the great German dramatist. Friday, July 28, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Sunday Schedule Orchestra - Chorus Sunday, July 30, 1961 3 p.m. University Theatre Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Victor Alessandro and Lloyd Pfautsch, Guest Conductors Part I Chorus Cantique de Jean Racine ... Faure Behold God the Lord, from "Elijah" ... Mendelssohn Bridal Chorus, from "Lohengrin" ... Wagner Opening Chorus, from "Bartered Bride" ... Smetana Magnificat ... Pachelbel Fred Wiemer, Harpsichord All Pleasant Things Must End ... Pozdro Clayton Krehbiel, Conductor Part II Orchestra Orchestra Symphony No. 5 ... Beethoven Fourth movement: allegro The Firebird Suite ... Stravinsky Berceuse and Finale Caucasian Sketches ... Ippolitow-Iwanow Procession of the Sardar Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Royal Fireworks Music ... Handel Overture Alla Siciliana Bouree Menuetto Fantastic Symphony ... Berlioz March to the Gallows A Witches' Sabbath Victor Alessandro, Conductor Theme Song Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Band - Chorus Sunday Evening, July 30, 1961 8 p.m. K.U. Outdoor Theatre Russell L. Wiley and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors Victor Alessandro and Lloyd Pfautsch, Guest Conductors Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainge Part I Band William Tell Overture ... G. Rossini Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Part II Chorus Chorus The Stars are with the Voyager ... Bright Two Folk Hymns I Will Arise ... arr. Shaw-Parker Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing ... arr. Pfautsch Hozanna Me Build a House, Oh ... arr. Taylor To St. Cecelia ... Dello Jo Brass Ensemble Trumpets French Horns Dave Clark Bill Lane Richard Grady Roger Rundle Alan Hitt Jane Sexton Trombones Tuba Larry Salmon Bob Jones Roy Guenther Mike Roper Clayton Krebbiel Conductor Part III Band Overture to “Rienzi” ... Richard Wagner Invitation to the Dance ... von Weber Finlandia ... Jean Sibelius Band Victor Alessandro, Conductor 1812 Overture ... Peter Tschaikowsky ... Russell L. Wilson Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Man Hits Dummy, Lands in Jailhouse LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Ben Labre, 22, had an "urge to kill." He did commit murder—on a dress shop mannequin. Police arrested the Salinas, Calif., man after he smashed a glass showcase containing the dummy and ripped its arm off. They quoted Labre as saying he planned to kidnap the mannequin and "kill" it. Recently Labre turned himself in to authorities, saying he was overcome by an "urge to kill." He was sent to General Hospital for psychiatric observation, but later released. This time he was booked on suspicion of burglary. . . . Books in Review . . By Calder M. Pickett Associate Professor of Journalism JUDE THE OBSCURE, by Thomas Hardy. St. Martin's Library, four shillings. TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES, by Thomas Hardy. St. Martin's Library, four shillings. THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE, by Thomas Hardy. St. Martin's Library, four shillings. A Thomas Hardy jag is not for the person low in spirits. It is not what one might call typical summer reading, but I have just read these three adventures in gloom, summer or not. Hardy belongs to the realistic-naturalistic tradition, but his books have qualities deeper than those of Zola, Norris or Dreiser. His troubled people deserve—and receive—more compassion. His characters clearly are victims of circumstance, of environment, of heritage. This latter fact makes Hardy a writer of naturalism. But he isn't striking out at society as such; you do not get the feeling that you are reading a polemic. "Jude the Obscure" draws great sympathy for the reader, sympathy for Jude and the other confused and forlorn people of the story. One finds himself saying, "Oh, you poor sap," or terms slightly stronger. Jude picks the worst of all possible brides, is estranged from her, and then picks the worst of all possible mistresses. Jude is a man of deep sensibilities, and one is sad, with Jude, that he is unable to achieve what he wants from life. The reader's heart goes out in much the same way to poor unhappy "Tess of the D'Urbervilles." In this novel, Hardy puts irony into the title, for the d'Urbervilles are just the Durbeyfields, a down-and-out family that can claim aristocratic lineage. Tess gets herself into a mess and becomes an outate. She weds an idealistic young man named Angel (ah, these names), but he learns of her past. The novel ends grimly and symbolically, after Tess, who has slain the man who did her wrong, and Angel hold a final tryst in the Stonehenge. Of the three novels, "The Mayor of Casterbridge" is weakest. It is absorbing but it is incredibly contrived. The characters themselves are believable, except for a two-sweet ingenuue. But Hardy manipulates them like puppets, or chessmen. One finds it difficult to dislike Henchard, the mayor, even though he does start off the story by selling his wife. It is easier to dislike Farfrae, the too-heroic Scotsman who proves Henchard's undoing. But no matter what one's reaction may be, he will be carried along in this novel, as in the others. THE MATING CALL, by Fred Bodsworth. Pocket Books, 35 cents. Originally titled "The Strange One," this is a good book that uses nature to provide a parallel with the lives of its central characters. Birds are compared and contrasted with man as a young biologist falls in love with an Indian girl. He meanwhile is studying geese for the Canadian government, and runs across a Scottish goose lost in a hurricane. He watches its mating with a Canadian goose, and notes the difficulty of mixing different breeds—a difficulty which the author suggests also may be encountered among people themselves. KU Senior Wins Trip to Italy Virginia McCready, Topeka senior, has been awarded a trip to Italy as first prize in an essay contest on "Italy Today: From the Ruins of World War II to Her Accomplishments in the Various Fields of Human Endeavour." The contest was sponsored by the government of Italy in recognition of the fact that this year is the centennial of the admission of Kansas to the union and of the unification of Italy. Each college and university in the state was invited to enter two essays on the subject, and the "Istituto Italiano di Cultura" in New York selected two winners from the essays submitted. The trip will be made early in October. The students will visit Rome and other cities, including Turin, center of Italy's centennial celebration. Thief Travels First Class TOKYO — (UPI) — Snobbish thief Fusaichi Chikauchi, who confessed to stealing 8 million yen ($22,000) in 85 burglaries, told police he did not bother with ordinary people but only burglarized homes of "distinguished men." Kansan Want Ads Get Results Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. TEXICO 11 ESTADOS UNIDOS Marfak Lubrication BOB HARRELL Texaco Service 9th & Miss. — VI13-9897 Graduates - Are You Being Hired by a Firm That Pays All Your Moving Expenses? No matter if this be the case, or if the charge for the move will be assumed by yourself, we can assure you of the Finest Service available at a cost you can easily afford. Call us for a FREE estimate at no obligation. VI 3-0380 Larry Smith Ethan Smith Ethan Smith Moving & Storage NA NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES WORLD WIDE MOVERS NORTH AMERICA'S VAN LINE Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 28, 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Chuck Morelock At the rate he's going, Roger Maris may break Babe Ruth's home run record—but there's a catch to it. Maris will play in 162 games this year, eight more than the usual 154. The addition of the new Los Angeles and Washington franchises is the reason. BASEBALL MEN WISELY RULED a while back that the Babe's long-standing record (he hit 60 in 1927) could only be shattered if a player hit his 61st homer in his 154th game, if not sooner. If Maris, for instance, reaches that figure or surpasses it after his 154th game, he will be recognized in the statistical book, but at the same time he'll be placed in a special category. In other words, Maris will be crowned as a home run champion, but not as the champ of all time. Local baseball fans have bemoaned the fact for some time that Maris, a former member of the Kansas City A's, was traded to New York. But how do you think Frank Lane must feel? Lane was general manager of the Cleveland Indians when Maris, then an unknown quality, was playing for the Ohio club. Around the middle of the '58 season, Lane traded Maris to KC, who subsequently traded him to the Yankees a year later. ROGER HAD A GOOD TOUR OF DUTY WITH THE A'S before illness forced him out of the lineup. It certainly would be nice to have him in that lineup right now for the Athletics sorely need a power hitter. Maris hit four homers in a doubleheader with Chicago Tuesday night. That's more than the entire Kansas City team usually hits in a week. KU This really isn't important, but fun to recall department. . . Few teams in recent college football history have surpassed the 1957 KU team's ability to pull 'em out of the fire at the last minute. The Jayhawkers that year nipped K-State 13-7, Colorado 35-34, Nebraska 14-12, Oklahoma State 13-7, Missouri 9-7 and tied TCU 13-13. HOMER FLOYD, ONE OF THE GREATEST PLAYERS, pound-for-pound, to ever wear a KU uniform, was instrumental in three of those victories. In the K-State game, for instance, he grabbed a pass from quarterback Duane Morris in the final 18 seconds to give Kansas the go-ahead TD. In the Colorado game, he caught another pass, made a long run, and set up the winning marker with about two minutes left. His 73-yard touchdown run gave the Hawkers an early 6-0 lead over Missouri, but it took a field goal with 48 seconds to go to put the icing on the cake. Ray Barnes, a 27-year-old sophomore, kicked that three pointer and thereby won himself a niche in KU's hall of fame. The victory over Nebraska resulted when the Cornhuskers missed a short field goal with about two minutes left. EVEN THE TIE GAME WAS A THRILLER. Trailing 13-7, end Jim Letcavits grabbed a pass then bulled his way into the TCU end zone as time ran out. You can't put things off any later than that. When the Jayhawkers did lose, they really went all out. Oklahoma, for example, clobbered us 47-0, as did Miami, 48-6, Oregon State, 34-6, and Iowa State, 21-6. Few events known to man are as thrilling as a last ditch football rally, but at the same time, it's certainly comforting to see the home team enjoying a 30 point lead in the fourth quarter. Richards Adds Punch to Lineup BOSTON—(UPI)—Two long-ball hitting first basemen and an outfielder have been added to the American League All Stars by Manager Paul Richards, who has also juggled his pitching staff. This does wonders to one's peace of mind. Newcomers include infielders Roy Sievers of Chicago and Bill Skowron of New York and outfielder Tito Francina of Cleveland. Sievers currently is tied for ninth in the AL batting race with a .312 average. He has hit 22 home runs. Skowron has socked 19 homers and owns a .278 average. Francona, though not a power hitter, is batting .296. In addition, Richards added Yankee relief ace Luis Arroyo (7-3), and Don Schwall (10-2) of the Red Sox, Cleveland's Barry Latman (9-1) and Camilo Pascual (7-12) of the Minnesota Twins to the AL's pitching staff. All but Arroyo are righthanders. To make room for his four new pitchers, Richards dropped Boston's Mike Fornieles, Los Angeles fireballer Ryne Duren, Frank Lary of Detroit and Cleveland's Jim Perry from the roster. All had been selected for the first All Star classic three weeks ago. Schwall is the lone rookie among the pitchers chosen. He was called up from the Seattle farm of the Red Sox May 21. The American and National Leagues square off Monday in the 31st All-Star game at Fenway Park. The National League defeated the AL, 5-4, in this year's first All Star classic at San Francisco July 11. By rules of the All Star game, Richards could add three players to his original 25-man roster. And he was allowed to change some or all of his pitchers. Duren, however, did not appear for the first All Star classic because of the death of his infant son. Right-hander Ken McBride, Duren's pitching mate on the Angels, was named as his replacement in both games. Math Colloquium Today S. A. Householder, from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, will speak at the University of Kansas Mathematics Colloquium today at 4 p.m. in 119强 Hall. Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 2 Seniors Win Reuter Award Two seniors in the School of Fine Arts have been awarded Reuter Organ Co, Scholarships in music for 1961-62. Miss Tebbenkamp, a voice major, is an active participant in the University Theatre. She has been on the dean's honor roll in the School of Fine Arts. The recipients are Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., and Fred Wiemer. Drumright, Okla. Recently she "pinch-hitted" in a Santa Fe, N.M., opera production of "The Ballad of Baby Doe," when the star could not sing because of laryngitis. Miss Tebbenkamp sang the role in a KU production last year. Wiemer is an honor student majoring in piano. He is active in the University Symphony Orchestra and was a member of the orchestra for the Contemporary American Music Symposium held here in the spring. Both students were given a tour of the organ factory by John Selig, executive vice president, in connection with the awarding of the scholarships. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment PRINTING by offset. Mimeographing and Ditto work. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 THOMAS COBURN CAMPUS BARBER SHOP - Open All Summer - WELCOMES KU STUDENTS AND VISITING STUDENTS, BAND BOYS, ETC. Hero Today, Bum Tomorrow That’s tho Life of a Manager By Milton Richman Just North of Student Union Baseball fans not only are fickle, they're flakey. Flakey is a word commonly used by ball players someone peculiar. Like all those who roasted Freddie Hutchinson of Cincinnati last season and now are booming him for manager of the year. Or like the fans in Pittsburgh, who keep booing Danny Murtaugh now less than 12 months after hailing him as the greatest manager to come along since John McGraw. Let's take Hutchinson's case first because somehow or other he manages to keep his Reds from folding and still has them on top in the National League. Exactly a year ago, the Reds, under this same Hutchinson, were floundering around in sixth place going nowhere. Some Cincinnati fans felt the club never would go anywhere until it got another manager. But Hutch stayed on, and as he himself kiddingly says, look how "brilliant" he became in just one year. Wednesday night, for example, he employed Ken Johnson, fresh up from Toronto, against the Milwaukee Braves and the Reds won. 3-2 to preserve their one game lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers, who defeated the Philadelphia Phillies, 6-1. Johnson, 0-4 with Kansas City An Organization Woman PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — An unidentified Latrobe, Pa., housewife returned her income tax questionnaire to the Internal Revenue Service with "Home Executive" neatly written across the top. earlier this season, held the Braves to six hits during the seven innings he worked to gain his first victory. Jim Brosnan blanked Milwaukee on one hit over the last two frames. As for Murtaugh, he was booed lustily in Pittsburgh the other night even though his fifth-place Pirates ended a five-game losing streak with an 8-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants. They got on Murtaugh for permitting pitcher Bob Friend to bat with men on first and third with one out in the fifth and the Giants ahead, 3-1. That booing, however, was mild to the one he received when he again sent Friend up to hit with the bases full and two out in the sixth. But Friend came through with a two-run single off loser Dick Lemay that broke a 3-all tie. And Friend was the winning pitcher. GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 See us for LUGGAGE! Footlockers - Trunks - Car Bags - B-4 Bags - Carry-all Bags - Men's 2-Suiters - Overnite Cases - Duffel Bags - Suit Cases-All Kinds Free Delivery—Just Phone Us LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-3933 Friday, July 28, 1961 Summer Session Kansar Page 5 Karin Gold, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, N. Y., graduate student, clown it up in a scene from "Idiot's Delight." The play opened in Murphy last night and will be performed again this evening. STANLEY ROMANI Springer to Conduct Brazilian Institute George Springer, professor of mathematics, will leave Lawrence today for a two month stay in Brazil, where he will conduct a two month institute for high school and college math teachers in Sao Paulo. Prof. Springer has received a National Science Foundation grant to support the institute. He will go to Wurzburg University in Germany later where he will spend a year studying and conducting research on a Fulbright scholarship. Prof. Springer will be accompanied by his wife and three children. Mathias P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, has been awarded a National Science Foundation scholarship to attend the Fisk University Infrared Spectroscopy Institute in Nashville, Tenn., August 28-September 1. Mertes To Attend Nashville Meeting The institute is planned to help chemists, biochemists, biologists, physicists and engineers make effective use of infrared spectroscopy as a tool and technique in attacking the problems they meet in the course of their research. Prof. Mertes now has several sponsored research projects underway. To Stop East Berliners In March to Freedom BERLIN —(UPI)—The Communists have disclosed East German Chief of State Walter Ulbricht has demanded "all means" be used to stop the record flow of refugees who President Kennedy said are "voting with their feet" against Communism. Kennedy used the phrase in his nationwide radio-television address on the Communist-provoked Berlin crisis Tuesday. More than 25,500 East Germans have sought asylum in West Berlin since July 1 following Soviet threats to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany. Ulbricht, in a speech bristling with charges that the West was "recruiting" East Germans, said, "the enemy must not be given an "recruiting" East Germans, said, inch." Ulbricht spoke Sunday at Marleeberg to 1,500 municipal officials but his speech was not reported until Wednesday. The report, published in the official communist party newspaper Neues Deutschland, gave no clues to the measures Ulbricht wants to stem the exodus from the Communist-dominated zone of Germany. But an authoritative Western source Tuesday said the Communists are studying a plan to create a 31-mile-wide circular "forbidden zone" around Berlin. He said all East Germans would be barred from the area without special authorization. The Communists have imposed tighter controls on East German traffic to Berlin and on the Berlin inter-city elevated and subway systems. They have taken other reprisals also, such as evicting from their homes East Berliners who refused to give un jobs in West Berlin. But nearly 1,000 East Germans reached West Berlin Tuesday in a continuation of the biggest exodus since the 1953 Worker's Revolt. Among the latest refugees were Dr. Herwig Plachetsky, chief physician at the hospital in Eberswalde; Walter Harte, an editor of the procommunist East Berlin newspaper National Zeitung, and Helmut Sack, production manager of the Dresden margarine factory. It brought to more than 3,000,000 the total of East Germans who have sought asylum in the West since 1949. In his speech, Ulbricht said "enemy efforts to recruit" East Germans had been stepped up. "Enemy attacks must be met with all means," he said, "and we must develop life in the German (Communist) Democratic Republic to make East Germans feel at home, to make everybody realize that there is no reason for a citizen of the first workers and farmers state to desert his own camp for that of the enemy." Ulbright accused local officials of being neutral toward the refugees. Try the Kansan Want Ads Session Planned in Jewelry Skills Beginning students will receive instruction and experience in designing and making silver jewelry, including soldering processes, raising techniques, stone setting and casting. Approximately 20 teachers, recreation supervisors, and hobbyists will improve their skill in jewelry and silversmithing at a two-week Jewelry and Silversmithing Workshop August 7 to 18. Advanced students will study handwrought holloware and advanced sand and centrifugal casting. Robert Montgomery, instructor of design in the KU School of Fine Arts, will be instructor for the workshop, which is sponsored by the Department of Design, School of Fine Arts, and KU Extension. Two outdoor movies will be shown tonight in the area east of Robinson Gym. They are "Swedish Way to Sunshine" and "Tournament of Roses, 1961." Two Movies Tonight Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO FIGURE SHOWS A WOMAN AND A MAN KNOCKING AT EACH OTHER. Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street V! 3-4416 Birds on a branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Don’t Forget . . . You’ll want a subscription to next semester’s UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER ... $3.00 FULL YEAR ... $5.00 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building Your Daily Kansan will be mailed to you. X Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 28, 1961 Cole Porter Musical Starts at Starlight Genevieve, effervescent television star, will be seen for the first time at Starlight Theatre in the Cole Porter hit, "Can-Can" which starts a week's run Monday at 8:15 p.m. Fifteen hit tunes from the pen of Cole Porter sparkle in the "Can-Can" score, and the seasoned wit of humorist Abe Burrows is apparent in the libretto. The musical ran for two years and seven weeks on Broadway to establish the eighth longest run in its classification. tion as the juanty proprietur upon to prove in court and by other means that the can-can is a proper dance. Genevieve, a native of Paris, will appear in the Starlight production as the juanty proprietress of a dance-hall in Paris, who is called upon to prove in court and by other* Broadway star, Larry Douglas, will portray a puritanical judge who insists the dance should not be permitted, and gets himself disbarred and even jailed while trying to get enough evidence to have the dance-hall proprietress restrained. The plot also relates the story of an art critic who falls in love with a dancer attached to a conceited but untended sculptor, and of the hilarious duel they fight on a Paris rooftop. Other highlights of "Can-Can" are actual demonstrations of the dance in court-rooms and in cabarets, and a vigorous travesty of an Apache dance which stopped the show night after night during its Broadway run. Cole Porter, who has written many unceasingly whistled and hummed perennials contributed some of his most rhythmic and melodious songs to "Can-Can." Of the fifteen tunes in the show eleven have become popular favorites, including "It's All Right With Korean War End Recalled SEOUL, Korea — (UPI) — The Korean War ended eight years ago yesterday. South Koreans treated the anniversary like any other day. There were no parades or speeches. No flags were unfurled. The military regime which took over the Republic of Korea government last May 16 made no pertinent announcements. The armistice ending the conflict was signed July 27, 1953, in Pamunjom. The signers were the Communist North Koreans and the United Nations command, representing soldiers from 16 countries who fought the Reds for 37 months after the North Korean invasion of South Korea. Within 12 hours after the truce was signed, troops began setting up a neutral buffer zone. An exchange of prisoners was completed the following September. The shooting has long since stopped, but the cold war goes on. To this day, both sides have maintained military stature astride the demarcation line at the 38th parallel. Some 50,000 American GI's still are stationed in South Korea. To the South Koreans, the Communist threat is ever-present. The truce is supervised by the joint UNC-Communist Military Armistice Commission, which has met 235 times in the past eight years. The latest commission meeting was held Wednesday when the UNC charged that the Reds had violated the armistice agreement 207 times since the end of the war. Shenk To Serve On Award Committee Henry A. Shenk, professor of physical education at KU, has been appointed to serve on the Gulick Award Committee of the American Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation, a department of the National Education Association. The committee will select the recipient for the Gulick Award, the highest honor that can be given to an individual in the physical education profession. Shenk is in Malaya for the summer serving for the second year on a State Department assignment. His work involves training physical education teachers at three Malayan universities. Me," C"Est Magnifique," and "I Love Paris." Also featured in the show will be Gabriel Dell, Patti Karr, Ferdinand Hilt, Joe Ross, and Joseph Macaulay. USIA to Get KU Book Soon A booklet that receives wide circulation at KU will be circulated abroad soon by the United States Information Agency. "Students and Libraries at the University of Kansas" will be sent by the government agency to 300 United States Information Service posts, along with materials from other American university libraries. The materials will be used by the U.S. librarian or cultural officer in work with university administrators and librarians. Winning Books On Display At Library Twenty-seven books selected as winners in the fifth annual Midwestern Books Competition are on display through July on the second floor of Watson Library. The books, from twenty Midwestern publishers and private presses, were selected as outstanding examples of design and typography. They will be displayed at over forty public and academic libraries during the year. Cubans in N.Y. Cheer Castro NEW YORK—(UPI)—The catchy Latin rhythms blared forth from the Siboney restaurant where an intense group of young Cubans and their comrades were whooping it up in the heart of Manhattan's Spanish-speaking neighborhood. It was the eighth anniversary of Fidel Castro's 26th of July revolutionary movement and the celebrators, being avid fans of Fidel, were toasting the new Cuba. And then there were the police men. About 300 of them. Patrolling the nearly deserted streets, grouped in small huddles of consultation or simply lurking in the shadows of a nearby park, their presence belied what appeared to be a peaceful summer night. The police had swarmed in on the neighborhood to prevent a "scheduled riot," and the mighty show of strength clearly discouraged all threats of violence. The undercurrent of tension that pulsated through the dark streets came at the end of a day in which pro-Castro and anti-Castro demonstrations were staged throughout the city. There was one mild flurry at the United Nations Plaza, where police scuffled briefly with five men. The demonstrators tried to impede the arrest of a woman who had disobeyed a police order to move on. The five also were arrested. Otherwise the demonstrations, while vigorous, occurred without serious incident as there was little direct contact between anti-Castro groups and pro-Castroites. Wandering Bunny Spoils Act HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Mark Wilson, a TV magician, cannot pull a rabbit out of a hat. He misplaced the rabbit. Wilson said "Basil the baffling Bunny" got lost somewhere en route by jet to Atlantic City, N. J., where he was to be the mascot for the International Brotherhood of Magicians convention. The Finest in Evening Entertainment Good Food—Good Music All Your Favorite Beverages THE SOUTHERN PIT 1834 Mass. On Mono and Stereo LP's "The Guns of Navarone" New Sound Track BELL'S Zone A Parking Lot Closed Until Fall S VI 3-2644 Zone A parking lot, which is currently being resurfaced, will be closed until September. Students and faculty with Zone A permits may park in any other zone on the campus and along Jayhawk Boulevard. They cannot, however, park in zones H and J. STUDENTS Outside show is a poor substitute for inner worth—Aesop Brake Adj. ___ 98c Grease Job ___ $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free. Open 7-10 with mechanic on duty. Brakes Relined. Page-Creighton Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd. VI 3-9694 Try the Kansan Want Ads SUNSET NOW SHOWING! 'Platinum High School' Plus 'Girls Town' 2 bonus features Saturday Starts Sunday 'Elephant Walk' Plus 'Naked Jungle' Watch for "Buck Night" Wed. LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! LAWRENCE NOW SHOWING! Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward 'From the Terrace' plus 'Seven Ways from Sundown' Starts Sunday John Wayne 'North to Alaska' Watch for "Buck Night" Wed. GRANADA NOW.SHOWING! 'Master of the World' 'Steel Claw' Starts Sunday Troy Donahue in 'Parrish' --- Friday, July 28. 1961 - - - - - Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR 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 Dairy Kansan Business Office in int'l Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not required for publication. BUSINESS SERVICES MOST INTERESTING SHOP in Lawrence Grant's Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Open week day and Saturday. Help-Your-Self. Exotic Fish & Plants. Stainless steel picture window aquariums and all accessories, daily carnival of birds and cages. Everything from fish to animal projects or department needs. Phone VI 3-2521 or better still, come. Welcome. tt WESTERN CIVILIZATION: Graduate Student experienced in Western Civilization program. Will tutor for summer exams. Call VI 3-3237. 7-28 WASHING & HAND IRONING, skirts, blouses, dresses & undies. Reasonable rates. Vivian Hunter — 2106 Barker Ave. V1 3-4656. tf PASS THE ENGLISH PRO, EXAM or English courses. Call VI 3-8810, Mrs Bernstein, for individual tutoring. Reasonable rates. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations for men and women. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. WANTED AMBITIOUS SALESLADIES: build your own business in Lawrence. No expense required, you can design and furnish it. Car necessary. Write Box 101 Wellington Road, Lawrence, Kansas, tt HILL CO-OP student house is re-opening in the fall for male graduates; approximate cost per month. $50; completely self-managing; no discrimination on grounds of race or religion. For further details call VI 3-5552, 6-7 p.m. tf French 2 Correspondence student wants Tutor. 1 or 2 hours weekly, call Olympic Swim Club, VI 2-0006 for Gary Williams or leave message. 7-28 TRANSPORTATION Wanted—Riders to New York City. Leaving sometime between Aug. 2-6. Share expenses. Call Martin Tessler, VI 3-2700 Ext. 508. 8- FOR SALE '55 Chev. Belaire, 4 door, V-8, Power Glide, woman owner, 55,000 actual miles. Careful maintenance. Phone VI 3-3286 or VI 3-7151. 8-1 Pontiac Station Wagon — 1954. Radio, heater, trailer hitch. Good condition. Call Marc Murdock in Kansas City at Hilland 4-2514. 7-28 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Printing and printing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3- 0151 today. HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron's & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf TYPEWRITER for sale. $75.00. 14 inch carriage. Smith Corona, good condition. VI 3-1533. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 8-1 Slimsees Kittens for sale. White, Black Hand-painted - adorable. VI Phone 3-2488 1 800-652-4944 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 378. tf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th, 6& Vermont. Phone VI . v 0350. I WOULD LIKE TO trade my 1960 Dodge Dart for good '59 or '60 Volkswagen, or sell for $1800.00. Bruce Wallace, VI -3- 7903. TYPING "Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, and accurately. Standard rates. Call Petit cooster, VI 3-8679." Wanted typing in my home. Standard home VI 3-9549, Mrs. Morris, 505 Maine, Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Borrowing: Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3748 Possible Library: "CALL MILLIKEN'S S.O.S." VI 3-5920, typing is a speciality — not a side line. We have qualified personnel available. Call VI 3-5920 — VI 2-0111. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY & experienced typist will do term papers, theses, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Nancy Caim VI 3-0524. tt Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th. V11 1648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, Prompt service, neat accurate work Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter. Reasonable salary. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Edlowenny. Ph. VI 3-8568. . tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. major & sports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1313 Vt. apt. 3. tt "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression to instructors." For excellent typing at standard rates, call MISS POKE, PEI, 3-1907. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Secretarial Service. 9197 B Woodson, Missouri, HE 2-7718. Evers. or St. RA 2-2186. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter; Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf For Rent to students. Completely furnished, 2 bedroom house next to KU paneled basement with recreation room. 1802 Ark. if 2 BDRM. APTS. Furn. & unfurn. Air cond. Summer rentals avail. New apts. avail. for Sept. Builders Investment Co. $7291% . Mass., VI 2-0099. tt FOR RENT ATT. MED. STUDENTS: New deluxe duplex for rent in KC near KU Med. Center. 2 bdrm, air-cond, disposal, FM music. Basement garage, downtown bus. Stove & refrig. optional. 2929-31 W. 43 St. JE 1-1211. Evenings & Sun. SKI-234. ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union, Quiet, well ventilated, clean, new kitchen. Lounge available, linens furnished. Requires rates. 1221 Oread. VI 3-6798. Furnished apartment for men students, completely furnished. 1st. floor apartment. electric kitchen. Private bath alive and private entrance. PRI 3-6640 I 8-1 White House for rent. A well built attractive roomy, desirable. 3 bedroom home. 631 La., full basement, shower, large bath on second floor. Beautiful fireplace. 2 porches, 2 car garage. Available on or before first of August. Call Wilbur Pine, 1023 Highland Drive VI 3-4448 for details. 7-28 OUTSTANDING — New Rentals Park Plaza South Apartments. Occupancy August 15th for appointment call VI 3-8283 or write box 123. Lovely 3 room furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath. Air condition- ment. Close to K.U. Also 3 bedroom apartment. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-7830. 8-1 New 2-bedroom duplex. Close to K U. & shopping center. Completely air-conditioned. The rented partially furnished flat furnished. Contact George Neal hiser, I 2-1200. ROOMS FOR FALL: Graduate students welcome. Modern 2 rm. basement apartment for 2 KU men. Outside entr. Utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Indiana. 8-4 Nice Clean Furnished Apartment for rent. Good neighborhood. In private home, private bath. $60. Utilities paid plus washing machine privileges. Will hold for fall. Call VI 3-6281 or VI 3-1337. $88 Mo. 8-1 Vacancies in contemporary home with large swimming pool, for young men. Home cooked meals if desired, phone VI 3-9635. 8-1 FALL ROOMS FOR MEN: Singles and doubles available, ½ block from Union, private entrance. See at 1301 La., after 5:30 p.m. or call VI 3-4092. 8-1 GRADUATES OR UPPER CLASSMEN. Clean, completely redecorated, comfort- able apt. Quit. furn.. 1 block from Fras- er. Priv. parking, ideal study conds. Best of neighbors, bills paid. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-854 for appt. 8-1 LOOKING FOR a nice place to live? Nearly new 2 bdmr. apt. Kitchen furn. with new refrig., range & automatic washer. Priv. parking, 4 minute walk to Law school. Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8534 for appt. 8-1 Well Furnished 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments. 2 blocks from campus, to nice students for fall. Reasonable rent. $55 or $65. Call SVI 3-6966. 8-1 LOST LOST: Lady's watch, Bulova yellow gold, round, black cord band. Lost Tuesday. July 25 between noon and 2 p.m. in Bailey or between Bailey and Faculty Club or on east side of Louisiana between Faculty Club & Corbin Hall. Leave information in Graduate School Office or contact Ruth Potts, Corbin Hall, V-3-71 LOST: A Black Parasol in a monogrammed case. Initials S.L.F. in white. Believed to have been lost in Watson Library. Call Sara Farmer. VI 3-7711. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophics, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER 1976 1983 As Much Fun As A Circus! Come on over to the BOOK STORE and pick out a stuffed animal to take home with you. They're wonderful gifts, and we've got a lot for you to choose from . . . including that old favorite, the KU Jayhawk! K Union Book Store U Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 28, 1961 Saturday Ballet Program Choreography by Robert Bell Assistant, Gizella Denes Accompanist, Marilyn Curt Costume Design, Genevieve Bell Overture ... Handel-Brahms Ballet Orchestra Zampa Overture ... Herold Pizzicato from "Sylvia" ... Delibes Lorem Ipsum Bourree ... Bourree ... Bach Kathy Birmingham Evan Taunsing. Cello Meditation of Thais ... Massenet Susie Fischer, Mimi Frink, Sara Hardiman, Jane Lindley, Lois Lynne Markley, Sue Scott Marnie Hall, Violin Small Choir **Small Choir** Six Chansons ... Hindemith Six Chansons ... Hindemith The Doe Springtime The Swan Winter Since All is Passing The Orchard Conducted by Clayton Krehbiel Theme from "The Apartment" ... Williams Ivett McEerland Romany Life Herbert Joan Baur, Laura Brown, Joanna MacWilliams, Jane Perkins, Mary Dale Province, Mary Louise Todd Prelude No. 3 ... Gershwin Iane Lindley, Nancy Pasch Chinese Fantasy ... Kelley Kathy Birmingham, Gizella Denes, Mary Ellen McClure Mirror Dance ... Gounod Ballet Orchestra Scenes Pittoresques ... Massenet Angelus Fete Boheme Ballet Orchestra Conducted by Gerald M. Carney Gay Nineties ... Excerpt from "Faust" ... Gounod Sue Scott Waltz in D Major ... Gounod Aragonaise ... Massenet Introduction and Rondo Capricioso ... Saint-Savens Giacella Dances Mimi Frink After a Dream ... Acceleration Waltz ... Strauss Geraldine Crittenden, Sue Scott, Sandra Yeager Tarentella Rossin Mary Ruth Andes, Susan Brown, Jackie Ove, Ann Russell, Annice Schaper, Pamela Wilson, and Alex Brown Small Choir I Beheld Her Beautiful as a Dove Arise My Love, My Fair One ... Willan Las Agachadas ... Carland Las Agachadas Copland Invitation to the Dance ... Von Weber Gizella Denes, Mimi Frink Kathy Birmingham, Geraldine Crittenden. Sara Hardiman Mary Ellen McClure, Sandra Yeager Laura Brown, Suzy Doty, Nancy Johnson, Sue Scott Susie Fischer, Janet McFarland, Jane Lindley, Nancy Rusk Mary Ruth Andes, Joan Baur, Susan Brown, Joanna MacWilliams, Lois Lynne Markley, Jackie Ove, Jane Perkins, Mary Dale Province Ann Russell, Annice Schaper, Mary Louise Todd, Pamela Wilson Gator Trouble Disrupts Swim MIAMI SPRINGS, Fla. —(UPI)— An eight-foot alligator ended the summer fun in a canal swimming hole when he snapped a boy's dog in half and charged up the bank after a policeman who shot him in the eve. "I've seen a lot of 'gators, but he was sure the biggest. Eight feet is a conservative estimate," said policeman Dan Clark. “There was just this big splash and Brownie yelped once,” said young Becker. “I looked and the alligator had most of Brownie in his mouth. He seemed to be trying to swallow him whole.” The Davey youth, who had been taking care of the dog, scrambled out of the canal with Becker right behind him. Clark ran to the scene when he heard the cries of Becker's sisters who were watching from the canal bank. The alligator surfaced Tuesday about 15 feet from where Butch Davey, 13, and Paul Becker, 12, were swimming with their dog, a neighborhood mongrel named Brownie. "The gator was trying to swim with the dog," Clark said. "When he was near the bank and I could take a shot safely, I fired straight down at him. I'm sure I hit him in the eve. "He rolled over and disappeared under the water. A minute later, he surfaced and came right up the bank, charging me and snapping his jaws. Believe me, those were big jaws. "I saw the hole and the blood where I shot him, but I was afraid to fire again because of the kids. But that charge must have been the 'gator's last effort. He flopped over and slid back in the water." Police said they would try to keep youngsters from using the swimming hole, long a favorite one. Paris Unveils 'Knee-Cap' Look for Fall PARIS — (UPI) The house of Christian Dior yesterday unveiled a shapely, sexy "new look" for autumn and winter fashions that featured short hemlines giving a glimpse of the knee-cap. The subtle, sinuous look was baptized the "charm 62 line" and was shown before an enthusiastic audience that included Princess Lee Radziwill, sister of Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy. The President's sister-in-law seemed to enjoy the new line. The 35-year-old designer, Marc Bohan, who succeeded Yves St Laurent last January, showed he was out to lure women into showing shapely legs under short-skirted clothes. Promising to renew the success of his first collection in January, Bohan received an ecstatic welcome from his audience. Repeated applause greeted the deadpan models in Dior's perfumed, silky salons in an exciting and fast-paced show. Some of the new late-day dresses were extremely low cut. The new charm line breaks down to suit and dress styles more figure-molding and sexy-looking than for a long time. Dior showed wide belts to circle the naturally high waist. The eyecatchers of Dior's charm look were the hoods shown for all hours of the day. The short and full, leg-revealing skirts and the wide belts made the figure look even slimmer. The suits had short, snug jackets with set-in sleeves and an attached hood as the newest detail. One black wool dress had such a widespread V-neckline that she first blushed violently, then tried to cover up her neckline while the audience gasped and the men applauded. The overtone of frivolity to all this elegance and sophistication was provided by some decolletes which take nerve to wear. Even the shapey Dior model showing them was rather embarrassed. Contrary to the other Paris fashion houses where bias cuts and oblique lines set the trend, the Dior styles had horizontal seams and the stiffly-flaring skirts were not cut on the bias. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY INSTANT DELIVERY Pizza MR. PIZZA VI 3-9111 106 N. Park 'Bye... but only for now.Many of you will return in the Fall. We'll be here to serve you the finest quality PIZZA and give you the best in delivery service. We will also be open all of August for those of you that are staying. Thank you for an excellent and enjoyable summer. Mr.Pizza ---