FRENCH ADMIRATION—Two natives of France and instructors of French at KU admire an exhibit at the opening of KU's Art Museum. They are (left to right) Miss Lillian Meisner and Miss Solange Bondy, both graduate students. (See story on page 8.)
Faith Still Placed In Reserved Seats
University officials generally favor the reserved football seating plan while student opinion of it varies.
Arthur C. (Dutch) Lonborg, director of athletics and associate professor of physical education said:
"I HAVEN't heard any complaints from students. I think that once the imperfections are worked out of the plan the students will like it better than lining up at the gates at 8 a.m."
Chancellor W, Clarke Wescoe said today he had heard no word of complaint from faculty and administration members about the plan. Chancellor Wescoe said he believed this plan was better than the one previously in operation.
Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the ASC student athletic seating board said: "I have heard no complaints. All those I have spoken to since Saturday seem quite pleased. I thing that there are still a few bugs in the system but the over-all approach of the thing is good. Prior to the game I was told of a husband and wife being separated by several sections. This, of course, will be rectified.
Student opinion, however, was not always in favor of the plan.
"I didn't like my seat." was the general concensus of those not in favor of it.
"I SAT in section 29, row 9, so my reaction is not too favorable," one student said.
Paul Hensleigh, Lawrence graduate, said:
"It's ridiculous. I never did find my seat. My seat was in the middle of a whole row of people. There wasn't any room left so I sat on the end. I like the old way better. When we wanted a good seat we could go early. Now, if we have bad seats, we'll be stuck with them."
Nancy Niemeth, Oberlin sophomore said the seating arrangement is good for those who have good seats.
Judy Walker, Mankato freshman, said she used a senior's ticket but she did not sit in the seat.
"NO ONE SAT in the right seat," she said. "People just went in and sat anywhere so we did too."
Don Vaughan, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, was satisfied with the seats.
"I got in and found my seat without waiting." he said.
Con Poierik, Topeka senior, favors the system because one can come at the last minute without waiting
in line and still have a guaranteed seat.
"I'm glad to see the long line eliminated," John Maxwell, Columbus junior said.
"THEER MAY still be room for improvement," he added. "There is still a problem of seating guests and parents on Parents' Day.
Daily hansan
Kathy Coutts, Washington D.C.
soohomore:
"For me there weren't any problems at all, but then this was only one game."
"I don't think it will work because once people get in the stadium, they will sit anywhere. There is no authority there to check."
Janice Pauls. Hesston junior:
Johannah Belfont, Oxford senior:
"It worked better than I thought it would. There seemed to be few problems."
Jonnalou Heitman, Oxford senior:
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year, No.12
Monday, October 2, 1961
Bircher Sparks Much Reaction at Forum
A roomful of KU students took on a member of the John Birch Society in a verbal battle punctuated with hisses and groans Friday in the first meeting of the Minority Opinion Forum.
Robert D. Love, Wichita businessman and a leading member of the John Birch Society, faced a barrage of questions after a talk outlining the purpose of the Society.
HE STRUCK BACK at criticism directed at the Society, the group's leader, Robert Welch, and the alleged methods and tactics of the organization.
"We are not a threat to this country,but we are a threat to those who would change the governmental system of the United States so that it could be comfortably merged with the Communists.
HE SAID the Birch Society battled Communism because totalitarian government controls individual freedom.
"The purpose of the John Birch Society is to bring about less government, more individual responsibility and a better world," Mr. Love told the group.
"The Communists are atheists," he continued. "They intend to take over the world, by external force if necessary, but by internal subversion if
possible. Government controls and planning are the essence of communism."
"To call anyone a Communist is stupid," he said. "In the first place, you can't prove it, and in the second place it's libelous."
HE DENIED that the Society irresponsibly uses the label "Communist."
While Mr. Love found his audience generally quiet and receptive during his speech, he ran into hostility during the question and answer session.
IN THE PROBLEM of identification of a Communist, Mr.
Love said, "If a man walks like a duck, talks like a duck, and has feathers, I'm satisfied as to what he is. You satisfy yourself."
Using the same type of logic, a member of the audience asked Mr. Love if a man acts, talks or associates with doctors, would he (Mr. Love) allow the man to operate on him?
Another person asked:
"Earlier in your speech, Mr. Love, you equated government planning and individual control. Is this necessarily so?"
Mr. Love answered:
"GIVE ME A CASE where government planning does not control the individual." (The student than replied that the state builds colleges, but does not control the individuals in the college.) "The state does control colleges," Mr. Love said, "through buildings, courses, and several other factors."
After Mr. Love said he was against social security, a woman in the audience asked if he would prefer to let people starve. Love said the individual, not the government, should take care of such problems.
"Do you know anyone who has ever starved to death," he asked?
"Yes!" one person answered.
P. J. C.
Robert D. Love
"Well, what have you done about it?" Mr. Love shot back.
A man in the audience shouted:
"WE VOTED for social security — that's what we did about it."
Someone asked if, since the Minority Opinion Forum was designed to allow all minorities to speak, the Society thought that the Russian students and the member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee that visited the campus last year should be allowed to speak?
"Absolutely," he answered.
(Continued on page 8)
KU May Cancel NSA Affiliation
Rumors that the All Student Council may withdraw KU from the National Student Association came out in the open today.
Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and chairman of the ASC, said the question of dropping out of the NSA comes down to cost vs. benefit received, and whether what he termed "conservative" KU students are being truly represented by the liberal NSA.
"ALL OF THE COUNCIL members who have talked to me are against staying in the NSA, but this was not nearly half the members," Palmer said.
The NSA is an organization made up of about 400 colleges. The NSA Congress held each summer passes resolutions in favor or against national or international happenings which they consider to affect the nation's students, the purpose being to present a unified front on issues by college students.
At KU, the NSA has had opposition in the past. Last October, the ASC appointed a committee to look into the value of NSA. Opinions pro and con flew freely throughout the year until last March when the ASC by a 12-2 vote decided to continue its affiliation with the NSA.
IN THE INTERVIEW, Palmer said: "People who thought we were spending too much money for what we were getting from the NSA
brought up the question of dropping out.
"We wonder how much money we have spent in relation to what we are getting from the NSA. We had Operation Abolition (a film about the San Francisco demonstrations against the House Un-American Activities Committee) last year, but the Young Republicans would have done it had the NSA not sponsored it," he said.
Palmer said the cost to the ASC for belonging to the NSA is about $500. This figure includes dues and costs of regional and the national conventions and the travel expenses of the delegates.
"WE ALSO SPENT $500 on the NSA-sponsored Foreign Student Leadership Project. I don't know anyone who can conceive of this money as being well-spent," Palmer said.
(The Foreign Student Leadership Project is a program sponsored by the Ford Foundation which provides grants to foreign students who are leaders in student government.)
"I want to make clear that all this talk about dropping out of the NSA is just what I've been hearing," Palmer said, "and I've been hearing mostly from people who are opposed to the NSA.
"I've heard from only three or four people who are in favor of staving in the NSA."
(He listed Charles Menghini. Pittsburg senior, and member of
the NSA as one of those in favor of the NSA).
WHEN TOLD OF PALMER'S report in an interview later, Menghini said;
"This deal to drop out of the NSA has come up for the last three years. The NSA committee has had to spend approximately one-half of its time trying to justify its existence on the campus.
"KU cannot expect to receive the full benefit of the NSA when the NSA has to spend so much of its time answering charges from people who are generally opposed to the viewpoint taken by the NSA at its summer Congress," Menghini added.
AS TO THE COST of the NSA vs. the benefits received, Menghni said he would have to agree with some of the opponents of the NSA on campus that the costs have exceeded the benefits.
"What we look forward to is what the NSA can do for us on campus if the KU NSA committee does not have to spend a large amount of its time to keep its position on campus," Meghnih said.
ASC chairman Palmer had note earlier that there was a question of whether KU students are being properly represented by the NSA.
PALMER SAID: "People wonder if KU students aren't more conservative in thought than the NSA resolutions indicate." He listed as examples the NSA condemnation of
the Cuban invasion, and the NSA favoring abolishing the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Menghini had this to say about the statement:
"I'm not sure you can say whether KU students are liberal or conservative, except that Kansas is generally known to be a conservative state and thus a conclusion may be justified on that basis.
"However, anyone who attended the Minority Opinion Forum last Friday and heard a member of the John Birch Society state the views of the Society, and at the same time heard the audience reaction, would not be able to justify the conclusion that KU students represent the John Birch Society brand of conservatism," Menghini said.
"The driving impetus for withdrawal from the NSA seems to be coming from students who favor the ideas or are members of the Young Americans for Freedom, which takes stands that are usually similar to those taken by the John Birch Society," he said.
MENGHIINI THEN WENT on to explain where he thought NSA opposition was coming from.
"The major complaint of most opponents of the NSA is that the college students who decided upon the resolutions passed by the NSA Congress were liberal. To me, this does not merit KU's withdrawal from the NSA."
(Continued on page 8)
15
II WORD
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 2, 1961
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Love and the Birchers
They probably didn't know it at the time, but the 300 persons who crowded into the Forum Room Friday to hear Robert D. Love, a leader of the John Birch Society in Wichita, were entering a world of the unreal.
In the hour and one-half that followed, they listened with growing frustration as the speaker flouted reason and reality to explain the workings of the world in terms of his fantastically distorted outlook. Many asked questions, hoping to introduce a rationale into the discussion. But their attempts were futile. Reason usually gets trounced in a fight with the half-truth, the smear, the guilt-by-association, and the hazy proof—all used so glibly by those of the far right.
He made the familiar equation of liberalism with communism, or at least with "Communist sympathy." He made the usual reference to "authorities" whose validity is doubtful, if not non-existent. And there was the old standy-by, the ridiculous insination that those who oppose the John Birch Society (or McCarthy, or the House Committee on Un-American Activities, or the film "Operation Abolition," or the "muzzling" of the military) are probably Communists, or at least Communist "dupes."
MR. LOVE RELIED on the standard tactics of the rabid anti-Communist, many of them inherited from The Great God McCarthy. He waved an unidentified paper in the air, asserting that it proved someone's Communist affiliation. But he understandably overlooked the student in front who called out, "What is that paper?"
But in spite of the bluster about such things as internal subversion and the need to impeach Chief Justice Earl Warren, Mr. Love's basic motivation seems clear: He doesn't want to pay taxes. This explains his outspoken opposition to
social security, medical care for the aged, foreign aid—all elements of what he calls "the welfare state."
AN OVERWHELMING ANTIRATHY against taxes is probably the raison d'etre, in fact, of the Birch Society, which is led largely by wealthy men. Robert Welch, the Society's founder, is a retired candy millionaire. Fred C. Koch, another Wichita Bircher, made his money in oil.
Only a group of rich men would so strongly push the inane motto, "This is a republic, not a democracy—let's keep it that way!" Fearful of losing their millions, the Birchers inveigh against rule by majority, against "the welfare state," against "creeping socialism." But it is unfortunate that they have wandered into a half-baked fight against a harmless foe: the "Communist sympathizer.
Strange as it seems, these men are influential in some quarters. (Not at KU, hopefully.) They write pamphlets. They give speeches. And they lug that abominable film around, showing it at the flick of a light switch. Their appeal is great to housewives, businessmen, and the headline-readers who cannot grasp the complexity of today's issues.
THIS IS DEPLORABLE, because the attitude of the Birchers and their ilk causes dissension at home and distrust of the United States abroad.
Of all the students who tried to batter the wall of unreason with their questions Friday, perhaps the most challenging was the intense young man from India, who asked what may be the most important question of all: Why do you preach hatred of the Communists?
But this sounds dangerously like appeasement.
—Fred Zimmerman
Reflections on English
A recent announcement from an Eastern university that it intends to drop its remedial courses in English and throw the burden of preparing students for college level work in English back on the high schools led me to consider the general condition of English at KU.
THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT is undoubtedly one of the most underrated departments at KU. Most students I have come into contact with either dislike English or are indifferent toward it. Considering this attitude, the English department does a surprisingly good job. This is especially true when one considers that some of
the students coming into the university are practically illiterate. I know some graduates of the technical departments of the University who went through their entire careers at KU in that condition.
I sometimes think the English instructors must occasionally have fits of depression and bang their heads against the wall I knew one instructor who was positively bitter over the state of English among students. This is understandable. Frankly, after about a semester of reading freshman English themes, I suspect I would be a raving section eight case.
Bill Mullins
A Raise for Mitchell?
Editor:
Three cheers for Coach Mitchell and the football team. They have done more to drive students back to their studies and serious pursuits than the senior key system did to set the blood a-racing in my roommate's sluggish circulatory system.
I say our coach deserves another good raise. A man who can accomplish what he and his boys have done rates twice as much as any academic dean.
Ralph Marston Colby freshman
This campus needs more organizations, especially of the "with it" and "far out' kind, so I am proud to announce the formation of the greatest: SIC, a club for "Students Interested in Culture!" Get it?
For Cool Culturist
To make it a success, we'll need 700 of the solidest listeners to crowd Fraser Theater (which has sometimes been called a barn of a place) on Tuesday evenings to hear Humanities lectures. If we get more SIC cats than said barn will hold, we'll try to supply sit-ups (chairwise, that is) for extras.
We cannot promise to bring any fabulous new group from North-Central Kansas, but we have booked seven renowned scholars in literature, philosophy, and history
... Letters ...
this year. All SIC cats will have an opportunity to meet the scholars after each of our conventions...and no dues will be charged.
SIC is not just coming! SIC is here!
Where's The Left?
**
All right, I've heard the John Birch man speak and aside from making himself and his society more absurd than I had thought, the Forum was a 90-minute waste. He shone no lights in the dark corners and he stimulated most of us only to a cavernous yawn.
Elmer F. Beth
Professor of Journalism,
SIC president (by my
unanimous vote).
P.S.-Just call us "the SIC
follows!"
Next I'd like to hear someone from the left, the real left, someone who will criticize the wellmeaning but juvenile administration for its insane Cuban policy, its inflexible Berlin policy, its inept domestic policy. I want a man here who can speak for the dynamic political left, a Norman Thomas, Murray Kempton, Milton Mayer, Sidney Lens, Wright Mills. If they cost too much, I'll lend my hat for a public collection in the union. Anyone else tired of the bromides of the right and the quibblers of the center?
Wichita graduate
Frank Morrow
Against Housing Policy Editor:
Fred Zimmerman's leading article on the Housing Policy in UDK dated Sept. 27,1961 is very timely and merits an immediate and deep consideration.
On the basis of my experience of four years' residence here, I have developed a great deal of admiration for the nice and hospitable people of Lawrence. Such a favorable image is bound to be damaged in the face of recent humiliation suffered by a KU student from Sudan. It is agonizing and it may take a considerable time for him to forget the punishment for which he had committed no crime. To his folks back home it does not leave much choice but to suffer a silent torture and frustration.
A good citizenship, no doubt, demands a legitimate respect for the legal rights of others. Yet if you can get over the legal quibblings marshaled in for evasion and escapism, the issue is clearly a moral one and the moral leadership does not lie with the few landlords, who so undermine the laudable work being done by some campus agencies, i.e. CRC and nascent but vitally important and dynamic People-to-People Program, but with the University of Kansas.
Raia Mohammed Naib
Pakistan graduate student
SAT. MEETING &
CHOWDER DINNER
> BIRCH LOCAL
NO. 1
EATON
"It might help if we'd buy a straighter telescope and get out of this fog, Mr. Welch!"
Guest Editorial
Kansas Outlaws Sex
It is hard to take seriously the literary judgment of a judge who splits infinitives right in the courtroom.
It is even harder to take seriously a law that outlaws a basic human motivation.
WHEN THE SOPHISTICATED PRECINCTS of this nation plumb the full implication of Chapter 186 of the Session Laws of the State of Kansas, 1961, we once again will be the laughing stock of Broadway, ranking ahead of Brooklyn for guffaws. Even the Arkansawers may make fun of us.
Be all this as it may, Judge Fletcher of Junction City in his recent decision implementing this statute tackled in a forthright manner the grievous problem of plugging the flow of filth found in paperback pornography. He ruled the books should be burned. You and I who object to obscenity agree with him.
The rub comes in the test for obscenity. Following the second section of the statute, Judge Fletcher held: "If the books in question show to this court that their dominant purpose was calculated to effectually incite sexual desire . . ." then they should be destroyed.
YOU KNOW WHY the peacock preens his plumage, why the bee buzzes and why the young steno next door twitches down Santa Fe Avenue. You have seen the perfume ads. And you may have studied biology, psychology and Freud.
Uh huh!
Then note the emphasis supplied by the split infinitive, "to effectually incite." If this test were generally applied, all women, whether in fiction or for real, would have to be abolished unless, perhaps, they were scrawny, spavined, cross-eyed and obliterated by a Mother Hubbard.
This well-meant law provides its own reducto ad absurdum, as the supreme court inevitably must find. After all, the species must be preserved.
The battle against filth should be waged, but Kansas must find better grounds for censoring obscenity than the last session of the Legislature provided.
—From the Salina Journal
Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY
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Telephone VIking 3-2700
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
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Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
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Shack Will Go By End of Year
Page 3
LAWTON SAID the anatomy building will be removed before the end of the present calendar year. Final plans for the library additions will be announced about the same time.
"It's just like a game of musical chairs," said Keith Lawton, director of the physical plant.
By Clayton Keller
He was referring to the moves necessary in the next few months so construction can begin on the additions to Watson Library. Here is what will be involved:
The anatomy department will move into the quonset hut presently used as the radioactive isotope laboratory.
THE EAST addition to the library will extend over the site now occupied by the anatomy building or "shack," making necessary the razing of the building.
The radioactive isotope laboratory will move into the nuclear reactor building.
The library project involves two additions with a total cost of $1.8 million. The east addition will contain four stories and will measure approximately 100 feet square. It will house special collections, will provide additional work and administrative space, and will contain a new reading room.
THE SECOND addition will provide additional stack area. This eight-level addition will be located at the southwest corner of the present building.
Lawton said the project also includes extensive remodeling of the existing library because of numerous relocations of areas. The entire library, including the present structure, will be air-conditioned.
A thankful heart is not only the greatest virtue, but the parent of all the other virtues.—Cicero
Four Japanese journalism students Thursday compared notes with their KU counterparts as part of their 75-day tour of the United States.
Japanese Students Compare Schools
The four students, Yusuke Ishizu Kensuke Inukai, Kiyoshi Miyoshi and Hajime Hasegawa are all students at Sophia University, Tokyo. All are members of the Sophia Journalism Department Student Society. Before leaving the US in mid-November, they plan to visit a total of 21 universities and colleges and to tour the journalism school or department of each.
"We came to the United States to observe the activities and problems of schools and departments of journalism and to study the real value of local newspapers, which are not popular in Japan," said Hasegawa.
The US tour began as an idea two years ago. Three Tokyo business firms are providing two cars and the gasoline necessary for the trip. Since arriving in Los Angeles Sept. 1, the four students have visited UCLA, the University of Utah, the University of Colorado, the University of Nebraska and KU.
Seek Applications For Rock Chalk
Applications for the business and production staff of The Rock Chalk Revue will be due at 5 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 4. The applications may be obtained at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union.
Interviews will be Oct. 5-6 for the positions of assistant producer, house manager, technical adviser, stage manager, assistant stage manager, music director, assistant business manager, program editor, program committee, publicity chairman, publicity committee, sales manager, assistant sales manager, sales committee and business secretary.
This year's producer is Jim Scholten, Salina senior, and the business manager is Don Hunter, Oak Park, Ill., senior. Further information may be obtained at the KU-Y office.
Monday, October 2,1961 University Daily Kansan
Construction on KU's new women's dormitory is approximately 40 per cent complete and on schedule, according to J. J. Wilson, dormitory director.
New Dorm Will Help Meet Housing Crisis
He said the residence hall will probably be ready for occupancy by next fall.
"A LOT DEPENDS on how much work can be completed before bad weather sets in," he said. "If the concrete frame can be completed and closed in, weather won't be a factor this winter."
The new dormitory, the third of six eventually planned for the area along Iowa Street south of 15th, will house 444 residents and will have
the same room plan as Lewis and Templin.
Mr. Wilson said the dormitory will probably bring the University's housing capacity to the level needed for the expected enrollment.
"WE CAN ONLY make an educated guess on next fall's enrollment," he said, "but we believe University housing will be adequate."
He said it may be necessary to house three women in several rooms next fall, but not to the extent necessary this fall.
There was a 15 per cent overload on women's housing at the beginning of the semester, he said.
A SPECIAL FEATURE of the
dormitory will be its design for possible future mixed occupancy.
Two stairways and two elevators are being constructed, he said, and a removable partition can be placed across the center of the lounge on each floor.
Construction cost of the residence hall will be $1.5 million, and total costs will be above $1.9 million.
MR. WILSON SAID the Board of Regents has approved KU's plan to secure a loan for the fourth dormitory in the area. It will be financed by the "quarter-mill dorm levy" passed by the 1955 state legislature.
Construction should begin next spring, Mr. Wilson said, with occupancy planned for Fall, 1963.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, October 2, 1961
[ ]
Cowboy Coach Admits Mistake
An admitted mistake by Wyoming Head Coach Bob Devaney cost the hard-fighting Cowboys the opportunity to kick their one extra point attempt, which, as it turned out, would have been the winning margin against the Jayhawkers Saturday.
AFTER THE GAME a Wyoming reserve said Devaney sent in the wrong kicker to attempt the boot. Quarterback Chuck Lamson is the regular point after man for the Pokes but he had hurt his leg.
In the excitement of the score Devanyan grabbed for Bud Spicer and sent him in to kick. Spicer punted five times during the game and since it was a kicking situation, so reports the reserve who asked that his name not be mentioned, Devanyan must have reached for
Spicer automatically without second thought.
AFTER THE KICK HAD been missed and the game tied at the final tally of 6-6. Devaney knew immediately of his mistake.
The reserve said co-captain Bob Bisacre came rushing off the field and harangued the coach, asking him why Spicer had kicked instead of Joe Vitale. Vitale did the Wyoming kicking off and was well capable of booting extra points.
DEVANEY WAS VERY humble and apologetic to the team after the game about the mistake which he had made.
He said he realized the costiness of the oversight and was sorry. The report was that many of the players were unhappy, not only about failing to win, but also the situation on the extra point play.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Bill Sheldon
Touted as one of the biggest, fastest and best in the nation at the start of the season, the Jayhawker backfield has proven to be the main headache for Coach Jack Mitchell.
The one thing which the worried KU mentor stressed in his comments after the tie with Wyoming was the problem he was having with the offense in general, and the backfield specifically.
KU HAS MADE A CHANGE IN ITS basic offensive formation. The Hawks pleased many a fan last season with adequate execution of their thrilling double wing offense. Thus far the Hawkers have limited themselves to a comparatively staid variety of the slot-T which has been greatly unproductive.
Of course there are, to quote Coach Mitchell, "a few people missing in the backfield." But even the loss of Bert Coan and Doyle Schick shouldn't make such a complete difference in the ability of the Jays to move the ball.
Actually the entire problem in the backfield has centered around the dilemma at left halfback.
THE TOP HAND AT THIS SPOT in the Wyoming game was junior Hugh Smith. His performances in the opening two games are certainly no proof of this much consideration.
Smith had almost a "don't hit me" attitude in his futile efforts against the Cowboys. There certainly must be a player somewhere on the KU team who can display better attitude and desire, and ability than the lackadaisical Smith.
Both Texas Christian and Wyoming defensed Curtis McClinton very well, leaving KU with only one other offensive threat—John Hadl.
HADL, TO BE SURE, IS ONE of the fine football players in the nation. But, he has not shown the effectiveness necessary to throw well enough to keep the defense honest. One reason may be that he has some trouble seeing his receivers. An example of this is the poorly thrown pass which fell 10 yards short of Mike Deer who was open in the endzone against Wyoming. Chuck Lamson intercepted the obviously underthrown ball.
Even if Hadl cannot throw well enough to be a constant threat, he is still a very dangerous runner. Therefore he should be played at the position where he would be most effective as a runner. This would be left halfback.
Coach Mitchell said the coaches have suggested Hadl wear contact lens but there has been no trial made.
A SHIFT BACK TO THE RUNNING SPOT, where Hadl first earned recognition, would give Coach Mitchell the finest left half in the conference and an able reserve (but not a starter) in Smith.
Even without Hadl under center the total offensive picture would not be dimmed. Rodger McFarland has proven he is as good as almost any signal-caller in the league. He does not have great passing ability but with him and Hadl in the same backfield, the KU running attack would become doubly effective and lessen the glaring weakness which the Hawks have when attempting to pass.
To strengthen this possibility is the presence of Lee Flachsbarth. As a sophomore, before injuring his knee, he was the top KU quarterback and ranked fifth in the conference passing.
Cowboys Depressed with Deadlock
a
FLACHSBARTH HAS SHOWN THIS SEASON in his brief appearances at halfback that he is a more than capable runner and could even be counted upon as an additional threat in that department.
A quiet air of fatigue prevailed in the Wyoming Cowboys' dressing room after their 6-6 tie game here Saturday.
One might expect the Wyoming dressing room to be bubbling with enthusiasm because the Cowboys had just tied a team with a high national pre-season ranking. While Wyoming was supposedly a strong team it wasn't given much of a chance to cope with the Jayhawkers.
chance to win the game but we were still able to tie."
ECHOES OF "We should have won" resounded as the players showered, dressed, and gathered their equipment together. A team that should have been elated to tie a supposedly national power like Kansas was instead depressed.
"WE THINK WE ARE as good a team as Kansas on any day of the year," commented Wyoming Coach Bob Devaney
"The Kansas squad was dragging all day," ventured Dan Greg, the Cowboys' starting right tackle. "It was especially noticeable in the second half. We made a lot of mistakes and gave Kansas every
"It was a tough game but our
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"Nevertheless we should have won!"
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STATE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
diebolt's 843 Mass.
Monday, October 2, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Along the Kansas Sideline
A WEED FOR YOUR THOUGHTS — Head Coach Jack Mitchell ponders a decision while toying with a weed. Kent Converse is in the background.
SENIOR YOUNG MAN
DISAPPOINTMENT HURTS, RIGHT THERE-Elvin Basham grimaces as KU team physician Dr. Rensselear McClure probes for a bruise.
COLLECTIVE EDITIONS
THE BASEBALL TEAM IS IN THE FIELD.
THAT WEED AGAIN—Coach Bernie Taylor, with the phone, discusses strategy with Coach Mitchell in an attempt to stop the game-tying Wyoming comeback in the third quarter.
35 32
WHO WON—Wyoming's Dick Behmins and Curtis McClinton shake hands disconsolately after fighting to a 6-6 tie.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 2,1961
SNEA Membership Drive Now Underway
The Mt. Oread chapter of the Student National Education Association began its 1931-1932 campaign for new members with a Membership Social in Bailey Lounge Wednesday afternoon. Memberships for this school year are open through October 31 to any student interested in education. Affiliation with SNEA entitles the student to the privileges and publications of the National Education Association and the Kansas State Teachers' Association. SNEA members may attend meetings of the section of the Annual Kansas State Teachers' Association which is to be held at KU November 2 and 3. University of Kansas members will also act as ushers at these meetings of teachers of Eastern Kansas schools.
Monthly SNEA meetings are planned to acquaint the prospective teacher with the type of organization available to those in his profession. The student will also find that SNEA simulates the faculty and departmental representation found in the school by encouraging membership of all educational students, regardless of the fields in which they plan to teach.
Faculty advisers for the KU branch of SNEA are Herold Regier, instructor of education. Karl r-wards, prof. of education, and William York, astt. prof. of education.
Featured for the first SNEA meeting, 4 p.m., Wednesday, October 11, in Bailey auditorium, will be a speaker and film about Russian education.
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Admittedly, our standards are high at Western Electric. But engineering graduates who can meet them, and who decide to join us, will begin their careers at one of the best times in the history of the company. For plentiful opportunities await them in both engineering and management.
Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianaapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laurelde, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. N.; North Andover, M; Omaha, N. Ebax; Kansas City, M.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla.
Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Tetraple Corporation, Skokie, Ill., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distribution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.
As we enter a new era of communications, Western Electric engineers are carrying forward assignments that affect the whole art of telephony from electronic devices to high-speed sound transmission. And, in the management category alone, several thousand supervisory jobs will be available to W.E. people within the next 10 years. Many of these new managers will come from the class of'62.
Now's the time for you to start thinking seriously about the general work area that interests you at Western Electric, the manufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Telephone System. Then when our representative comes to your campus, you'll be prepared to discuss career directions that will help make the interview profitable.
Challenging opportunities exist now at Western Electric for electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemical engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business majors. All qualified applicants will receive careful consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For more information about Western Electric, write College Relations, Western Electric Company, Room 6106, 222 Broadway, New York 38, New York. And be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when our college representatives visit your campus.
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Monday. October 2. 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $0.3; two days, $1.0; 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 25e for billing.
All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
MAN'S GOLD WATCH: Longine self-
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LOST: THE WILL TO LIVE unless you buy a 1962 Jayhawker, chock full of articles, striking photographs and ho-ho-ha. We could not bear to see these books go to waste. S.O.S. the JAYHAWKER staff. 10-2
LOST—POST VERSALOG slide rule in
Flint Hall or call VI 3-7922 10-6
FOR RENT
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FOR RENT: 2-bdmr. duplex unfurnished.
good location, 432 Missouri. 10-4
NICE SINGLE ROOM only ½ block from campus. Telephone and private parking lot. Reasonable rate. For appt. call VI 3-6696. 10-2
For Rent: 2 bedroom furnished house,
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NEW MODERN 2 bdm. apt. Furn. on unfurn. (New Danish Modern avail.) Wood paneling in living rm. Wall to wall cpting. Disposal, air cond. shower. Separate off street parking—Bee 400 or see at 831 W 24th. Ant. 9 or 11
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1626 W. 21st. 10-4
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For Sale: 1930 Model "A" coupe, Black.
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3-2464
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 2,1961
Crises Confront Iran
Iran, its historical and contemporary crises and the reasons for them, were discussed yesterday at the Faculty Club by Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism.
Dean Marvin reported that shortly before he and his family arrived in Iran in 1960, the Shah (king) of Iran declared an election of the Iranian parliament null and void because of corruption. The prime minister of Iran resigned.
FOUR MONTHS AFTER the Marvins arrived, students at the University of Teheran (the capitol of Iran) struck against the University, finally forcing it to close for two months. Dean Marvin said he felt this was a result of frustration on the students' part.
"They feel they are being cheated out of an education. We Fulbrighters were sort of subversives. We used techniques quite common in American colleges, and the students had a chance to see what education was like in other parts of the world. This added to their feeling of being cheated."
He noted that during the strike, police manned trucks and firehoses outside the campus gates to control the students. This, he declared, was a dilemma for the United States. He explained that in addition to all the other forms of aid the United States is giving to Iran, it is providing up-to-date police training.
DEAN MARVIN SAID that during the second month of the strike, he was able to teach his class of adult journalists. At one point, however, his students suggested he stop classes for his own protection.
Dean Marvin commented on newspapers in Iran, all of which are licensed.
"Information in Iran is turned on and off, like a water faucet," he said. He related that one of his students asked him how the U.S. government goes about suppressing a newspaper.
"THEY (IRANIANS) have no conception of how the American press operates. They cannot realize we
have a bill of rights protecting our newspapers."
Dean Marvin reported that informed people are watching for new action in Iran in November, when the students will return to the University of Teheran.
"The students are basically politically naive. They do not know as much as our students, and usually protest for other reasons. But there are other political interests in Iran who encourage them to strike. November may well bring new crises to Iran."
NSA— (Continued from page 1)
"TO DRAW A PARALLEL," he continued, "this reason is about as foolish as saying that the state of Kansas should withdraw from the U.S. Senate because the Senate has been liberal for the first term of the 87th Congress."
The guiding principle of a democracy is that the majority of the legislators make the laws without infringing on the Constitutional rights of the minority, Menghini said.
At the same time, he added, the minority is always attempting through the power of argument to become the majority.
"THE MINORITIES' RIGHTS were not infringed at this year's NSA Congress, and the will of the majority did prevail at a session that was nation-wide," he said.
As to when formal action to drop from the NSA might occur, Palmer said:
"I personally feel that nothing will happen for a month or so. I don't think anybody will jump until they have watched the KU NSA committee in action for about a month."
The procedure for dropping from the NSA would be to bring the bill up for a re-vote by ASC members, unless someone voted it for a referendum. Re-vote is the normal route, however, Palmer said.
450 Attend Art Museum Open House
The University of Kansas Art Museum marked its official opening of the season yesterday afternoon with an open house attended by more than 450 persons.
Museum officials called the function "one of the most successful we have had in recent years."
CROWDS FILLED THE galleries of the museum during most of the two-hour affair. A new gift and new acquisition were the center of attraction in the main first floor gallery.
The new acquisition is a late Gothic period Reliquary of the 15th century. The piece originated in Barcelona, where silversmithing reached a high development.
FACING THE NEW acquisition in the main gallery is a series of three preparatory drawings by Kenyon Cox (1856-1919), for a mural in the courthouse at Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The drawings were a gift of the National Academy of Design.
Featured in the lower galleries was an exhibit of Persian and Indian miniature paintings from the Leland C. Wyman collection, assembled at the Philbrook Art Museum at Tulsa, Okla.
A COLLECTION of English, American and Oriental ceramics, and an American Art collection, both re-established during the summer, also drew considerable attention.
Marilyn Stokstad, acting director of the museum and acting chairman of the department of Art History, said she was gratified by the public interest shown at the open house.
Members of the Mortar Board Society served as hostesses.
The true civilization is where every man gives to every other every right that he claims for himself.—Robert G. Ingersoll
The image provided is extremely blurry and lacks any discernible content. It appears to be a grayscale representation of a star field with numerous faint stars. Due to the low resolution, no specific details can be extracted from this image.
"But you better know what in the world you stand for before getting yourself mixed up in a bunch of ideologies you don't understand."
The SUA Carnival Cometh
Mr. Love was asked:
Bircher-
(Continued from page 1)
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Asked how people could know or believe that the John Birch Society is not a Communist-front, Mr. Love answered that they could not.
"DEMOCRACY INEVITABLY results in the rule of the majority. Now, the majority was in absolute control of Germany when they (the Germans) killed five million Jews."
"I might be a Communist," he said. "You'll never know until you get involved with the organization. Then you'll find out shortly."
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F
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year. No. 13
Tuesday, October 3, 1961
Students Vaque on NSA
KU students have only a hazy knowledge of the National Student Association. This was the indication in recent UDK interviews.
Of 37 students asked if they feel that the All Student Council should withdraw KU from the NSA, 22 said that they knew little about the NSA. Five students favored KU's withdrawal and 10 were opposed.
"IVE NEVER HEARD of the NSA," said Elizabeth Stoddard, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman. "Why doesn't the ASC inform us?"
ONE STUDENT preferred to leave the withdrawal question up to the ASC.
Janet White, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, agreed with Miss Stoddard.
"If I knew how the withdrawal would affect me, I'd be more concerned," she said.
"I haven't read enough to express an opinion," said Joyce Leasure, LaCyge freshman.
"The ASC represents us," said Horton Wicket, Kansas City, Mo., senior. "If they choose to drop the NSA, OK. The whole issue is in their hands."
The most enthusiastic support for KU's withdrawal from NSA came from Joan Brunton, Perry senior.
"I'm for independence" she said.
"WE SHOULD disaffiliate if we're not getting
Bly
"Yeah, I know all about NSA."
enough benefits from the NSA," said Chuck Fisher, Prairie Village senior. "We can use the (dues and membership) funds for something else."
Opposing disaffiliation was Otis Mitchell, Parsons graduate student.
"The Mid-West has a historic tradition of isolationism," he said. "Separation from the NSA would only serve to further this tendency."
"I THINK the NSA is good because it widens the range of activities and gives the University more voice," said Sharon Ray, Joplin, Mo., freshman. "For this reason, I'm against disaffiliation."
Party Promises Indicate NSA to Survive at KU
Dorothy Hartbauer, Overland, Mo., senior said that she thinks the ASC should pay more attention to the possible benefits to be gained from NSA membership.
Two students favored remaining within NSA and criticized the ASC.
"The ASC should not use the NSA as a scapegoat for it's budget problems," she said.
"I feel that NSA's main function is that of an informative body," said Barbara Smith, Wichita freshman. "Why doesn't the ASC give NSA a chance to function as such, with full approbation and adequate funds?"
By Scott Payne
If the majority party in the All Student Council (ASC) carries out its campaign promises there should be no question as to the survival of NSA at KU.
So said Charles Menghi, Pittsburgh senior, at an impromptu press conference last night in which several NSA Committee members rapped the move in ASC to disaffiliate KU from NSA.
Menghini pointed out that Section Four of the Vox Populi platform last fall supported University of Kansas affiliation with NSA; it invited NSA to have its annual national congress at KU, and it proposed making KU a leader among midwestern schools in NSA policy formation.
"It SHOULD BE NOTED that the University Party also strongly endorsed NSA." Menghini said.
"If both parties carry out their obligations to their constituents," he added, "then KU will continue to affiliate with NSA."
Judi Jamison, Ottawa junior, said she felt that the concern of those favoring withdrawal from NSA is genuine.
"One of the charges being directed at NSA is that few benefits have been received for the money invested. The benefits the opponents in NSA are looking for, they say, most come from local NSA activities."
"However", she said, "in their zeal to save money, they are setting out to abolish many benefits derived from NSA, the most paramount being the arousing of interest at KU in national and international affairs.
"If it weren't for NSA there would be no campus body to fulfill this function," she added.
ARTHUR C. MILLER, Pittsburg junior, said;
Miller pointed out that the Committee has no budget and receives no appropriations and therefore cannot sponsor many local activities.
"For example," he said, "last spring we could have brought Fulton Lewis III, a conservative speaker, to the campus. But we didn't
have the money to pay his travel expenses and so he couldn't come.
Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior and chairman of the Committee, said that one of the important functions of NSA is that of creating campus awareness of current national and international issues.
"For example," she said, "last spring when the committee sponsored the showing of 'Operation Abolition' it made the campus aware of an issue debated all over the country. Up to this time, few KU students had heard of the movie, the House Un-American Activities Committee or the issues involved.
"IN YESTERDAY'S KANSAN Jerry Parmel (EI) Dorado senior and
KU-Y to Sponsor Freshman Retreat
The retreat will be held at Tonganoxie Lake Saturday. Freshmen attending will hear speakers discuss such topics as campus politics, rush activities, scholarship programs and general activities at KU. Freshman activities in the KU-Y for the coming year will also be discussed.
A "Freshman Planning Retreat" has been scheduled by the KU-Y organization.
Any interested freshman who has not filled out an application form for the event is invited to contact the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union building by tomorrow.
Weather
The charge for the affair will be $1. Included in this fee is transportation to and from the lake and a lunch, to be served at the Retreat. Cars will leave the Union at 12 noon Saturday, returning to Lawrence at 4:30 p.m.
Indian Summer continued over Kansas today and the weather bureau saw little change through tomorrow.
The outlook for tomorrow was for more fair and mild conditions with temperatures again in the 70s.
committee member) was quoted as saying that the Young Republicans would have shown the movie if the committee had not.
"But that isn't the issue," she said. "Charles McIlwaine, (Wichita senior) said when the showing of the movie was brought up in Committee that his group would show the film and that was all."
"Not only did the Committee show the film but it provided background material of opposing viewpoints concerning the film. The Committee also sponsored a debate following the showing," Miss McMillen said.
Chuck Patterson, Rockford, Ill., junior, said.
"THE ASC, IN MY OPINION, due to other campus responsibilities, hasn't the time to deliberate upon issues of this import. I think that NSA can inform the KU student of such issues and also of the feelings of students on other campuses in this regard.
"In view of rising national and international interest here it is my opinion that the position of NSA deserves reconsideration.
"Since I am a moderate I am in a position to observe objectively the issues discussed in Committee. It is my own feeling that both sides of the issues are ably and fairly represented," Patterson said.
Judy Gail Harman, Kansas City senior and secretary of the NSA Committee; Sandra Moore, Sasketchewan, Canada sophomore; Mike Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. senior and Robert Sherwood, Kansas City sophomore, concurred with these statements.
Alterations Made In Seating Program
The All Student Council student athletic seating board decided yesterday to make the following changes and additions in its reserved football seating plan.
- Married couples whose seats are separated may apply for ticket exchange Thursday and Friday at the South ticket window in Allen Field House.
- Starting tomorrow, new graduate students, and pep club members not sitting in the pep club section, may exchange tickets bought prior to the Wyoming game for tickets still available.
- All unclaimed student season tickets will be sold Monday through Wednesday of next week to any student who has not purchased a ticket. ID cards are necessary.
- Five hundred single game reserve tickets will be available for student sections for each of the remaining games. These tickets will be sold Monday through Wednesday of each week at Allen Field House, except for the Iowa State game. For this game tickets can be purchased Oct. 12-13.
- Student reserved seat tickets ordered last spring or this fall may be picked up at Allen Field House until 5 p.m. Friday.
Military Calls for 716 Doctors
Military Leaders
Sudy Berlin Crisis
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy met with the nation's top military leaders today for an intensive review of U.S. and NATO defense capabilities in the face of the Berlin crisis.
He first conferred with Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, chairmor of the joint chiefs of staff.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Defense Department asked Selective Service today to call up 716 physicians, dentists and veterinarians for service in America's expanded military forces.
The call was for 495 physicians, 154 dentists and 67 veterinarians. They will be given 15 days to volunteer for officers' commissions instead of being subjected to actual draft.
Prior to June, no physicians had been drafted since 1957, no dentists since 1955 and no veterinarians since 1952.
Of the physicians, 275 were tagged for the Army, 150 for the Air Force and 70 for the Navy. Spurred by the Berlin situation, U.S. military forces are being increased from 2,500,000 to 2,743,227 men.
'Idiot's Delight Throws Light on World Tensions
Americans are trapped before the complex international situation confronting them.
This was the consensus of discussions by students and faculty regarding Robert E. Sherwood's play, "Idiot's Delight," which opens tomorrow at 8 p.m. and runs through Saturday.
The discussions were held because of the play's relevancy to today's cold war situation. Audiences who saw the play this past summer were amazed at the similarity of Sherwood's action to the drama taking place over Berlin.
"Idiot's Delight," set in an Italian ski resort prior to the outbreak of World War II, deals with contrasting characters resigning themselves to the inevitability of war.
MEETING AS A PANEL, Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science, Charles Sidman, instructor of history, and Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech, agreed that Sherwood's theme of mankind's helplessness before the events leading to war is similar to the small man's position in America today.
THE STUDENTS who are in the play were contacted by phone. The faculty met as a panel.
"He is unable to prevent what he doesn't want to happen," Mr. Sidman said.
"It's like a modern tragedy of mankind." Prof. Laird added.
SIDNEY BERGER, Brooklyn, N.Y. graduate student, compared his part to the shopkeeper around the corner.
"Harry has guts but he is powerless to do anything about the tragic situation," Berger said.
Bruce Thompson, Alliance, Ohio graduate student, who plays Donald Navadel, rates his part as a prissy athletic type who resents being thrust into the tensions of world crisis.
"Navadel is the type who builds himself up 3 or 4 feet higher than he is but runs when things get a little rough for him," Thompson said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 3. 1961
Neutrality and the Reds
The neutralist nations in the underdeveloped areas of the world have a basic desire to be left alone to work out their own ways of doing things, their own economies and institutions. It is for this reason that they side with neither the Western world nor the Communist bloc.
But it is interesting to note their basic attitudes toward the representative forms of government to be found in the two different blocs. It is obvious that politically these neutralist nations are oriented toward the West. The form of government they favor is parliamentary democracy. All of them may not practice it, but the majority are committed, at least formally, to its concepts.
are committed to assist the. The opposite is true of the Communist form of government. This is evident in two nations that are leaders in their respective areas, Egypt and India. When the Communist party's candidates gained control of an Indian state and began setting up a Communist oriented educational system and system of government several years ago, the Indian national government intervened and removed the recently elected Communist officials.
Egypt has long had a number of its Communist party leaders in jail, even though it accepts aid from the Soviet Union.
These two nations are, as was mentioned above, strong leaders in their respective areas. Why have they taken such measures against the Communists in their countries? The answer is simple. The Communists do not respect either the political beliefs of these countries or their desire to be left alone to work out their own destinies. Faced with this attitude by the Communists, and by the drive of their domestic Communist parties for control of their governments, these two nations have had to take stern counter measures.
If the democracies of the underdeveloped areas of the world can realize their drive for industrialization and a decent standard of living for their people, they will soon find themselves in the Western camp. Stable, industrialized democracies with decent living standards are the natural enemies of Communism.
William H. Mullins
Seating Plan-The First Test
Last Saturday, for the first time, KU students had an opportunity to test a football seating plan that has been enshrouded in controversy since it was first conceived last Spring.
Judging from student reaction and comments, it might be concluded that the plan worked much better than many people thought it would last Spring. The passage of the All Student Council bill on the seating plan aroused a storm of protest which almost ended in a referendum vote to overrule the ASC action. But seats went on sale despite 2,500 protests and living groups began trying to figure out how to beat the system.
There is no doubt that there are still many bugs in the seating plan as it was organized last Saturday. But for the first trial, there were amazingly few complaints. Several students did not like their seats. But this is only to be expected since it is impossible for everyone to crowd into the most desirable seats in Memorial Stadium. Those who were not favored with the best seats this year will have an opportunity for the best seats as their classification improves.
The new plan eliminated the main disadvantage of the old system—the necessity to go to games long before game time. Now the student
can arrive at the stadium just a few minutes before the kickoff and secure either his reserved seat or a seat in the section he has arranged to sit in. Last Saturday, for the first time in many years, there were no unruly student lines banging at the doors to the student section. In contrast to the chaos of recent years, the student section filled in an orderly manner without the traditional struggle which had characterized the manner in which the student section filled in recent years.
But there was still some confusion. A few students complained that when they arrived at their seats they were buried somewhere under a mass of people. If the seating plan is to be a success the University must provide the extra ushers and supervision that is necessary. Under the terms of the plan the student paid $1.50 for a guaranteed seat. This guarantee must be honored.
The co-operation of each KU student is also necessary to make this a successful plan. Students should sit in their own seats or blocs and in general observe the rights of their fellow students.
—Ron Gallagher
Sound and Fury
On Great Universities
In an editorial in the September issue of Harper's Magazine Editor John Fischer asks the question, "How could anybody create either a great university or an enticing (intellectual) environment in Kansas or North Dakota?" Mr. Fischer states, however, that North Carolina, for example, "could — if it made a determined effort — build up a truly great intellectual center." He has similar hopes for Puerto Rico.
Needless to say, many Kansasans are dismayed to find that our state is so hopelessly behind North Carolina in the field of higher education. Without listing such accomplishments as the large number of Woodrow Wilson Fellowships awarded to KU students in recent years or the improved varieties of weed sorray developed at our sister agricultural university, I should like to suggest that perhaps Kansas has more academic potential than Mr. Fischer would lead us to believe.
True, Kansas cannot boast of any accomplishment so impressive as, for example, the production of a Nobel Prize winner. But such an accomplishment could hardly be expected from an agricultural state less than 100 years removed from the frontier.
If the progress made in higher education by Kansas in the last 15 years may be extrapolated into the future, an impressive picture is obtained. Although we may never realize the goal of a "Harvard on
The Kaw," it seems likely that our state will become a leader in providing the highest quality education to the largest possible number of students. And, who knows, Kansas might eventually offer an intellectual climate acceptable even to Mr. Fischer.
Gene Manahan
* * *
Two faculty members and one student have in the columns of the Daily Kansan expressed opposition to the University's housing policy.
On Housing Policy Editor:
ONE MAN'S OPINION
SOAP STAN
Is this the full dimension of the
opposition, the sum total of this University community's conscience? Are there no others who agree with the student's statement that this is indeed a moral issue in which the University must show leadership?
principles? What about the religious groups whose injunction to look on all as brothers is so cheapened by this policy? What about the faculty members whose classroom oratory abounds with morality?
If two faculty members and one student constitute the cry of dissent here, then the policy should not be changed. My congratulations to the concerned three. My condolences to the rest of you.
What about the students whose organizations are founded on moral
GS
Congratulations to the KU students who were wise enough to join SIP and avoid the President's Forum. It is a well-known maxim (or if it isn't, it ought to be), that pleasure lies in crowds, truth within the individual. (No, editors, with ten people you don't have ten times as much truth; not even in a Democracy.)
Liberal Know-It-Alls
Editor:
International Jayhawker
Witness that famous individual John Ise. (Who was a bit precocious himself, in fact, still is.) He knows where truth lies, in John Ise. Right Prof. E. Meritus? After that, of course, truth lies in the Liberal party, where all educated men go. I always wondered he they went. I'm glad he includes himself, though. Let's see. If men are "educated," they must know it all, so that would mean that the men in the Liberal party are all know-it-alls. The Omniscient Liberals. Comforting, isn't it?
Bruce D. Beard Kansas City senior
U.S. Impressions
... And now here I am, in my second year. Things seem to be different! Oh! I'm not going to tell memories! I just feel like saying what I did try to keep hidden last year.
By Safynaz Kazem
Oread street is crowded. Everyone looks especially neat and brushed! All on their way "out" or "in" the University Union.
SPECIAL MEETING FOR FOREIGN students. Orientation Forum Room. Which way? Don't know! Just go. This is it. All are foreigners. What country? That...? that? that? May be from my own country. Can't tell. Everyone seems to dislike the others. No attempt even to halfway smile. Here is the smile. Big, big one. But ...?!
"Excuse me, do you get what he is talking about?"
"Still trying to figure it out." I like American accent; hope to understand it as well!
Here is another one. He is laughing. There was a joke. I want to laugh too. His voice sounds like a typewriter. How many speakers left? Just five more! Don't mind, if I just understand their nice speeches. Why don't they slow down?
NOW, WATERMELON NEAR THE LAKE. Don't know anybody. Should go anyway. How does it look, the American watermelon? Does it taste the same as ours? Should go and try... Cannot do it . . . feel shy. Come on, you used to be sociable. Yes, but I feel awkward, don't know what to do . . . what to say, and this speedy accent. Still cannot figure it out. Better go back!
Should look for a job. Where to go? I've heard it is easy to get a job in American Universities, but how?
Library?
"Sorry, you're late!"
Bookstore?
"Will call you."
"Want my name?"
"No, thank you!"
"Yes, need cashier!"
Cafeteria?
"I don't know the money."
"This is dollar bill, this is half, dime, nickel, cent. Now! how much is the nickel?"
"Will try you!"
"Two dimes?" He is laughing, means what?
LATER: KNOW ALL THE MONEY NOW. It is very simple, need just to concentrate. Forget everything else, but keep eyes on money.
"Napkins!"
That is not my name!
Napkins, tortis, spoons, sauces
Not me! I have to keep concentrating on money. I have this 5 dollar bill; give him this change, give one, two, three, four dollars!
Right! Doing wonderful job!
"Napkins, I said, napkins, forks, spoons, straws. . !!" Ooowh! Should look and see these shouts!
"Napkins, forks, spoons, straws!"
Should look and see these shouts!
What?
"Yes?"
Christmas time. Americans like greetings. I've read that before coming here. I know Americans very well. Everybody likes to send cards and to receive cards. This would break ice. Should send greetings to all teachers, boss, classmates. I think this is a very good idea. I like these little American touches!
Have to put napkins? Must call for silver? And who will take care of the money if I do these? Should take care of everything? Wow!
Second semester. Still the only foreign student in my classes. Understand the language better, much better, but still don't understand why I don't have friends? They smile. But it means nothing. Aren't they even interested to come and ask me where am I from? What is going on? Anything? I think I'll walk up to the board and write, "Help wanted . . . some friends."
SENT ALL CARDS! Received none! Oh! here is one, from my old professor. This is plenty. One of 30! This coming Christmas, I'll send one card and stop reading romances about Americans!
write. Help wanted...someone to help me with this project.
Silly. I do have friends. A whole full International Club.
They are all foreigners!
That is O.K.
I'll try, this starting year, the American accent again!
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Page 3
"Nobody Will Appear on Cover Of National Theater Magazine
"Nobody," an old English character from a 17th century play, graces the cover of "Player's Magazine," a national theater magazine operated by members of the department of speech and drama.
The National Collegiate Players, sponsors of the magazine, named Gordon Beck, instructor of speech, editor and William Kuhlkle, instructor of speech, business manager.
"This is the first time in the department's history we have run a national theater magazine," Mr. Beck said yesterday.
The October issue, first under his leadership, was released yesterday.
Mr. Beck applied for the position because he believes there is great opportunity for a live theater magazine in this country.
"I mean a magazine not centered
wholly on the Broadway scene," Mr. Beck said.
"Theatre Arts Monthly," a theater magazine published since 1916, is the standard magazine for the theater.
"Since 1947 'Theatre Arts Monthly' has not done much to support quality theater outside of Broadway," Mr. Beck said. "Our aim is to promote quality theater across America."
Besides Mr. Beck and Mr. Kuhkle, three graduate students work on the magazine.
Sylvia Groth, Mayville. So. Dak,
is the book review editor, Steve Calahan,
Independence, works on research projects and Lorence Simon-
sen. Sidney, Montana, is the news editor.
Mr. Beck hopes the magazine, printed from Oct. through May, will stimulate international interest in KU's University Theatre.
SWISH
"Gas is so cheap I can't afford to junk the heap."
KU Motorists Make Savings In Service Station Gas War
The so-called war has just ended its first week.
To the delight of KU motorists, local service stations are fighting a "gas war."
Prices of regular gasoline range from 22.9 to 24.9 cents per gallon.
The current price-cutting is the result of a decrease three weeks ago, according to one operator. He said the going price then 29.9, dropped to 27.9 cents and remained steady for two weeks.
Reasons given for the latest drop vary. Some service station attendants say it happens every year at this time, others claim it is due to the going price in Kansas City and Topeka.
One filling station attendant said the war started "supposedly" when
Across the state line, in Kansas City, Mo., the current market is the same as in Lawrence. Two weeks ago in Liberty, Mo., gas was retailing at 20 cents per gallon. This weekend is sold for 18 cents.
a North Lawrence outlet chopped the rate.
In surrounding cities prices per gallon are higher. In Topeka the range is 27.9 and 29.9 cents.
how long will the war last? "You can't tell," one attendant answered. "Prices could go back up again tomorrow."
English Department Increases Faculty with 6 New Members
One thing is certain, the price will go no lower. One source said it is lower now than he expected.
John R. Willingham, who began his services as editor of correspondence study with the Extension division during the summer, is a new assistant professor. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Oklahoma and has taught at East Texas State, Sam Houston State, Southeastern Oklahoma State, and Centenary College.
The Department of English has added six new members to its staff this fall.
Floyd Horowitz, with a Ph.D. from the State University of Iowa, who has taught at Iowa and Southern Oregon Colleges.
Five new instructors in the department include:
There is a gas war on here about three times a year, according to one source. So, fill-er-up, and wait for the next battle.
Work from KU representatives has appeared in the magazine and more will appear later.
Melvin Landsberg, a specialist in American literature, who holds the Ph.D. from Columbia University and has taught at City College of New York, Alabama, Hunter, Long Island University, and the University of Washington.
This month's full-length play, "Hey You Light Man!" by Richard Hailey won the Drama Symposium award last year.
Myra Olstead, with a Ph.D. from the University of Florida, who has taught at Florida and Memphis State Universities, and whose professional interests include medieval and Renaissance literature, folklore, and children's literature.
George Goodin, a specialist in literature of the Romantic period, who has recently finished all requirements for the Ph.D. at the University of Illinois, where he has also taught.
Howard Norland, a candidate for the Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin, who is writing his dissertation on the Renaissance drama.
A translation of "The Condemned Squad" by Alfonso Sastre made by Cyrus DeCoster, professor of Romance Languages, will appear next month.
There are now 106 members on the English department faculty. They include eight professors, eight associate professors, twelve assistant professors, eleven instructors and sixty-seven assistant instructors.
Tuesday, October 3, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Besides the addition of a full-length play, Mr. Beck has made other changes.
The magazine is 16 pages longer and uses a two column spread instead of a three.
"There is a revolution in theater," Mr. Beck said. "Theater is decentralized from New York. Top caliber theater is performed on the community and university level in such places as Detroit, San Francisco and Des Moines," he added.
The magazine will print news of any community, college or professional theater in North America Mr. Beck said.
"It deserves to be covered," he said.
Copies will be available to students at the Kansas Union Bookstore and Allen News Depot downtown in a few days, Mr. Beck said.
Memphis Begins First Steps Of Integration
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) Thirteen Negro children will attend first grade classes at four previously all-White schools here today in a cautious first step into school integration for this deep south center of commerce and cotton.
The city Board of Education announced five negro boys and eight girls—including twin sisters—would be permitted to transfer to four White elementary schools from Negro schools where they were assigned at the start of the fall term.
CITY OFFICIALS said they would tolerate no violence and school board attorney Jack Petree said police would be "all over everywhere" to guard against possible incidents. He said swarms of officers, many in disguise, would be stationed near each school to look out for trouble-makers.
Memphis, sprawled high on the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River, is surrounded by deep-seated racial convictions, with Arkansas to the west and Mississippi to the south.
POLICE COMMISSIONER Claude Armour indicated nearly 200 policemen would be on duty, with about 50 at each school. They were expected to stay as long as necessary.
The Negro children will be picked up at their homes by private automobiles and driven to the main entrance of the schools. With them will be their parents and a local representative of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Many of the city's 500,000 citizens—of whom about 37 per cent are Negro—moved to Memphis from farms and small rural towns long known as strongholds of die-hard segregationists. How they will accept school integration is a matter of guesswork.
The KU Amateur Radio Club, will have a membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the electrical engineering lab. The topic for discussion will be "Project Oscar," which is the orbital satellite carrying amateur radio. This program was developed to let amateur radio operators help track satellites.
Amateur Radio Club to Meet
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Around the Campus University Fund International Club To Meet Saturday Will Meet Friday
The appointment of five members of the Greater University Fund Advisory Board to the executive committee was announced today by Dr. Robert M. Carr, Junction City, chairman of the board.
The Greater University Fund is the annual giving program of the University, through which contributions of all amounts are sought to help meet needs which must be met by other than state funds.
Members who will serve on the executive committee, in addition to Dr. Carr, are Mrs. R. Charles Clevenger, Topeka, vice chairman of the board; H. Bernard Fink, Topeka; Dolph C. Simons Jr., Lawrence; Paul J. Parker, Bartlesville, Okla.; A. H. Cromb, Shawne Mission, and Dale W. McNeal, Leawood.
Also serving as alumni representatives on the executive committee are Maurice L. Breidenthal, Kansas City president of the KU Endowment Association and Wendell S. Holmes Hutchinson, president of the Alumni Association.
The group will meet with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and staff members of the Alumni and Endowment Association and the Greater University Fund Saturday morning. Plans and programs for the 1961-62 year of the Fund will be formulated.
Student Body Office Petitions Available
Petitions for freshman class offices and All Student Council living district representatives will be available at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Dean of Student's office.
The petitions may be picked up anytime before the due date, Oct. 24. Class office petitions require 50 signatures.
Primaries will be held Nov. 7, and the general elections, Nov. 14-15.
On Oct.17, there will be a meeting of all candidates for freshman offices. The time and place will be announced later.
SUA Carnival Plans Are Well Underway
Chairmen, sub-chairmen, sub-sub-
chairmen and various committee members are busy this week getting ready for the S.U.A. Carnival to be held Oct. 14, in the Kansas Union.
Carnival attractions will include skits, booths, a Carnival Queen, and, no doubt, some improptuum entertainment. Judging of the skits and booths will be during the evening, with awards being made at the conclusion of the carnival. Trophies will be given to first and second place winners in each category, men's and women's divisions. The Carnival Queen and her two attendants will receive silver bowls.
Parkinson KU's Royal Queen Entry
Carolyn Parkinson, Scott City senior, has been selected as KU's entry to the American Royal Queen Contest. The judging and interviews for the contest will be Thursday and Friday and the winner will be announced Saturday evening at the American Royal Coronation Ball.
Miss Parkinson has formerly been Miss Lawrence, Miss Kansas and was a candidate at the Miss America pageant.
Some troubles, like a protested note of a solvent debtor, bear interest.—Honore de Balzac
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Lawrence Mayor, Dr. T. A. Kennedy, and the Swedish Ambassador, Gunnar Jarring, will speak at the International Club at 8 p.m. Friday.
Mayor Kennedy's address will pay tribute to the late Dag Hammarskjold. Hashmi added.
Shafiq Hashmi, Hyderabad, India, graduate student and president of the International Club, said that the Swedish Ambassador will talk on "Sweden's Foreign Policy."
The meeting Friday night is under the combined sponsorship of the International Club, the department of political science and the Watson Library.
Tau Sigma to Pledge 19 Members Tonight
The formal pledging of 19 new members into Tau Sigma, honorary fraternal modern dance organization, will be held at 7 p.m. today in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
The pledge class represents the hardy efforts of Tau Sigma's members. Every freshman girl and many boys were sent personal invitations. After 32 tried out, the final 13 girls and six boys were selected.
They are Lynn Biomendahl, Goodland freshman; Elizabeth Cress, Independence, Mo., freshman; Peggy Dewey, Kansas City freshman; Jean Gilmour, Kansas City senior; Karen Gosney, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Karen Hall, Tucson, Ariz.; freshman; Kathy Hibbard, Ann Arbor, Mich. freshman; Judy Koeppe, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Janie Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Sheril Murrow, Topeka sophomore; Norma Purvis, Topeka sophomore; Sandra Shrout, Leawood junior; Dee Wooldridge, Des Moyes, Iowa, junior; Alex Brown, Lawrence resident; Jay Crotchett, Louisburg senior; Danny Fisk, Salina freshman; Tom Heitz, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Ron Seney, Kansas City freshman, and Gary VonDemfange, Kansas City, Mo., freshman.
Doing easily what others find difficult is talent; doing what is impossible for talent is genius.—Henri-Frederic Amiel
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 3,196
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Delta Tau Delta Beats D-Chi,31-0
The intramural football season started yesterday as Delta Tau Delta gave warning of possessing a well enough balanced team to challenge the four year dominance of Beta Theta Pi in the Fraternity A division as Steve Lunsford led them to an easy 31-0 romp over Delta Chi.
LUNSFORD, PRAIRIE VILLAGE sophomore, was responsible for all of the Delt's points. He caught two touchdown tosses, threw three himself and passed the lone extra point.
Jim Christian, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, tossed twice to Lunsford; the combination was reversed for another score.
Jim Head, Brentwood. Mo., sophomore, and Dave Culp, Mission sophomore, were the other receivers for Lunsford. Byron Loudon, Kansas City, Kan, freshman, added the extra point.
THE DELT DEFENSE was equally effective, holding the hapless losers to no first downs and only a few total vards.
In the other division A battle, Kappa Sigma and Sigma Alpha Epsilon struggled to a tie but the former was awarded the win for the most vardage.
In Independent A competition, Quickie downed Red Shirts, 6-0, and Jim Beam won by forfeit over Newman.
Fraternity B action saw Pi Kappa Alpha smother Triangle, 28-12 and Phi Gamma Delta #2 defeat Theta Chi, 20-13.
Referees Needed
Students interested in officiating at intramural football games should contact Mr. Walter Mikols in the intramural office, Robinson Gymnasium. The pay is one dollar per game.
Iowa, Mississippi Take Lead In First UPI Football Ratings
By United Press Internationa$^{1}$
Iowa, which finished second to Minnesota in the final 1960 United Press International ratings, moved up to the No.1 spot as the nation's top college football team today in the first weekly ratings for the 1961 season.
The Hawkeyes, who whipped California, 28-7, Saturday in their opening game of the season under new Head Coach Jerry Burns, were the No.1 pick of 10 of the 35 coaches, five each from the seven geographical sections of the country, who comprise the UPI rating board.
IOWA, WHICH LOST ONLY one game a year ago, received a total of 290 points, collecting enough second and third place votes to shade Mississippi by 27 points for the top spot. Ole Miss, third in the final 1960 ratings, also received 10 first-place votes to finish the first week with 263 points, which are awarded on a basis of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 for votes from first through 10th.
Mississippi, which was unbeaten but tied once in 1960 and went on to beat Rice in the Sugar Bowl game, already has scored two victories this season — over Arkansas and Kentucky — and appears to be the strongest team in the South, although it may be pressed for regional honors by Georgia Tech.
The Ramblin' Wreck, on the basis of victories over Southern California and Rice, was the No. 1 pick of six coaches. That support enabled Georgia Tech to get the No. 3 spot this week with 225 points. There was a close battle for fourth place between Michigan State, which received four first-place votes, and Texas. The Spartans edged the Longhorns by two points, 172-170.
THE REST OF THE TOP TEN was made up of Missouri, Alabama, Michigan, Syracuse and Baylor. Texas received two first-place votes and Missouri, the Orange Bowl champion, Alabama and Notre Dame, which beat Oklahoma in last Saturday's nationally televised game, got one each. Notre Dame, however, was ranked 12th, behind Ohio State.
Other teams in the second 10 were Texas Christian, Auburn, Colorado. Miami (Fla.), Purdue, Duke, Wyoming and Utah State in that order from 13th through 20th.
Maryland, Louisiana State, Northwestern, Stanford, Army, Penn State and Minnesota, upset by Missouri last Saturday in its season-opener, were the only other teams receiving votes.
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General Assembly Meeting
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Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Union Building
ALL MEMBERS INVITED
Colorado Passing Big Threat to KU
82 82 10 88
KEY MEN IN COLORADO AIR ATTACK— Quarterback Gale Weidner (10), the Big Eight Conference's leading passer for the past two
seasons, is shown with his favorite targets, ends Jerry Hillebrand (82), Colorado's top receiver last year and Chuck McBride (88).
With the obvious weakness thus far in the Kansas defensive backfield, the highly-regarded and very effective Colorado passing attack should be the main Jayhawker worry at Boulder Saturday.
The Buffaloes, coached by another former Michigan State assistant, Sonny Grandelius (the other is Wyoming mentor Bob Devaney), return Gale Weidner, the area's top thrower over the past two campaigns.
ALTHOUGH HIS ACCURACY slipped a bit last fall, Weidner was still one of the Big Eight's top aerial threats as he connected 45 times in 111 throws for 732 yards and three touchdowns. The year before he went 100 for 207 to pile up 1200 yards and seven tallies.
In addition to the fine throwing ability of the Buff signal-callers,
Behind the 6-1, 185 pound star, for the third straight season, will be Frank Montera who is just a shade behind Weidner in all departments except defense.
there is an all-veteran quartet to handle the end duties on Colorado's first two units.
JERRY HILLEBRAND (6-4, 241) and Ken Blair (6-1, 190) are one-two at right end with Chuck McBride (6-1, 203) and Bob Bell (6-1, 191) as the top two on the left side.
Hillebrand caught 11 passes last year for 218 yards and he had three receptions in one game for 75 yards and a score, the opening win for the Buffers, 24-0 over Oklahoma State. This ranks the burly senior second in the league. He also added
If I had to do it over again, I'd major in medieval history and drown myself in the past; the present is too uncertain.-Boris Shlaft
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a 54-yard field goal last Saturday to help defeat the Cowpokes.
McBride was the Buff's leading receiver two years ago when he speared 16 passes for 189 yards. Neck and knee injuries have hampered him the last two years and he was used almost exclusively as a punting specialist last fall, averaging 35 yards a boot.
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Page 5
KANSAS
OFF SQUAD—Hugh Smith, junior letterman from Guymon, Okla., has dropped from the KU football team. The 6-4, 200 pound left halfback was the team's leading ground gainer thus far, averaging 5.7 yards per carry. Smith failed to appear at practice yesterday and may not return to a Jayhawker uniform.
"We won't know definitely for a day or two, but it looks like Smith will have to drop out of school for personal reasons," said Coach Jack Mitchell.
Cincy Infield All Misfits
NEW YORK — (UPI) The Cincinnati Reds will take on the mighty New York Yankees in the first game of the World Series tomorrow with an infield of misfits.
"Let's face it," second baseman Don Blasingame admitted today, "We're all rejects. We weren't wanted but we all came together and we scrambled to get into this thing. God knows how we did it, but now we're ready to face the Yankees."
BLASINGAME NEVER will go down in history as a Charley Gehringer or Nap Lajoie around second base, but his frankness must be admired.
The Reds acquired Blasingame from the San Francisco Giants earlier this season and the 29-year-old proved to be an important cog in the Cincinnati pennant drive, although he batted only .222 and knocked in but 21 runs in 126 games.
The other members of the Reds' infield are indeed rejects.
FIRST BASEMAN Gordy Coleman was picked up from the Cleveland Indians in 1959, split the 1960 season between Cincinnati and Seattle, and finally made the grade with the Reds this season, batting .287 and hitting 26 home runs.
Shortstop Eddie Kasko came to the Reds from the St. Louis Cardinals three years ago. The bespectacled right-hander batted a respectable 271 this year.
Third baseman Gene Freese broke in with the Pirates in 1955 and later played with the Cardinals, Phillies and White Sox before moving to the Reds in a trade last December. He gave the Reds the long ball they were looking for with 26 homers and batted 277.
McClinton Nets 861 Yards
Curtis McClinton, Kansas' two time all-Big Eight Right Half, will open his senior campaign just 139 yards short of the coveted 1000 yard career circle. In two seasons, the brawny Wichitan has netted 861 in 177 carries for a 4.8 average.
U. OF KANSAS STUDENT WINS PRAISE IN THIS WEEK'S POST
KU junior Bill Dawson is the subject of an enthusiastic editorial in this week's Saturday Evening Post. Dawson is the author of the People-to-People Council, a plan that helps foreign students fit into the fabric of American life. Says the Post editorial writer: "Our whole nation would benefit if the example set at KU were followed."
Read how "This One Man Peace Corps Made Friends for the U.S.A." It's in this week's Saturday Evening Post where suddenly reading becomes a new adventure.
The Lawrence Cricket team, composed of 10 KU players and playercoach Guy Dalby, closed out its abbreviated season Sunday with a 79-56 victory over Kansas City.
THE SATURDAY EVENING
POST
A CURTIS MAGAZINE
KU Cricket Team Posts Victory
LAWRENCE. TWICE DEFEATED by KANSAS City, was led by Ramesh Gandhi who scored 34 points and Robert Cobb with 19 tallies.
Tuesdav. October 3. 1961 University Daily Kansan
"KU COULD TURN OUT a very good, balanced side (team) which would be hard to beat. Time and practice are the big factors," said Dalby.
Dalby chipped in with 13 scores while Ken Rothwell added eight more for the bulk of the scoring. Dalby called the victory an "encouraging performance."
The local team has been invited to St. Louis and Montreal for matches next spring. Dalby also said Missouri is supposedly starting a team and there may be some competition on the intercollegiate level.
There will be inter-squad games east of Memorial Stadium Saturday and Sunday.
Backfield Changes Made by Mitchell
Football Coach Jack Mitchell made several changes in his first two units during a brief practice yesterday.
The Jayhawkers, preparing for their Big Eight opener with Colorado in Boulder Saturday, went through a light drill and broke off practice early to view the movies of the 6-6 tie with Wyoming.
THE CHANGES ALL involved the backfield, the place where Coach Mitchell said his squad showed the greatest weakness in its first two games.
Lee Flachsbarth moved to the number one left halfback position with the absence of Hugh Smith.
John Hadl was alternated between quarterback and halfback with Rodger McFarlane slated for more offensive duty at quarterback
Colorado's Romig to Play For First Time Against Kansas
against the Buffaloes than he saw in the first two games.
By United Press International
Oklahoma's first four teams scrimmaged for an hour and three personnel switches were made as the Sooners started work for the home opener against Iowa State.
Another soph, Willis Brooks, was moved to the second string right half position behind Curtis McClinton.
SOPHOMORE TONY LEIKER was advanced from the red shirt fourth unit to the third team to support Hadl and Flachsbarth at left half.
Romig, nursing a bad leg since preseason practice, ran with the first team yesterday, but there was no contact practice. Coach Sonny Grandelius said he would keep his star guard from contact all week.
Coach Mitchell said McClinton will be counted upon for more defensive duty.
Jimmy Gilstrap was elevated to first team left guard, replacing Claude Hammon. Bill Van Burkle, slowed by an injury, moved into the No. 2 quarterback post, replacing Bob Page.
Unless he's shaken up during drills this week, Colorado's All America guard Joe Romig will see action for the first time this season when the Buffs meet Kansas at Boulder.
Richard Beattie, who missed the Notre Dame game with an injury, returned to drills and went in at third unit fullback.
Another major shake-up in the backfield was the advancement of senior letterman Jim Jarrett to the starting fullback spot and the demotion of sophomore Ken Coleman.
COACH MITCHELL EXPLAINED that Jarrett's work shows he deserves a chance to start.
In making the many changes, Coach Mitchell said:
"Apparently we are not strong enough to platoon as we had hoped to do with some of our backs."
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This Kansas University Campus Unit is established to serve our many Policyholders and friends on the campus and the business and professional men and women of the Lawrence area.
Fort A. Zackary, C. L. U. & Associates are proud to announce the appointment of MACK V. COLT and DON B. PFUTZENREUTER as Sales and Training Supervisors of a new office opened for The Mutual Benefit life in Lawrence, Kansas.
MR. COLT and MR. PFUTZENREUTER are well qualified by training and experience to offer Life Insurance Service and especially to make available to clubs, fraternities, sororities, professional groups and other organizations The Mutual Benefit Life "TRUE SECURITY" programs. These award-winning specially prepared 16mm film presentations include "THE TIME IS NOW," "MAKING MONEY WORK," "ACCORDING TO PLAN," THE WAITING GAME" and others. Please call our office to arrange a scheduled showing.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 3. 1992
Ancient Art Makes Display in Museum
By Elaine Blaylock
Beautiful, miniature paintings from Persia and India, actually illustrations from books of past centuries, make up the special collection now on display at the KU Art Museum.
Exceptionally bright and dynamic use of color is characteristic of these paintings from the collection of Dr. Leland C. Wyman, according to Gerald S. Bernstein, Art Museum curator. They can be seen at the museum throughout October, he said.
"THE EXHIBITION is worked out in a chronological development starting with the Persian contributions and working up to the high point of Rajput painting (of India) in the 19th century," Mr. Bernstein said.
Persian paintings in the collection were done in the 14th-17th centuries, while the Indian art represents the 16th-19th centuries.
Since books were treasures which only a few royal or wealthy Persians could afford at that time, they were cherished and survived while many larger works of art were lost.
In India illustrations of books were preserved and carried on the native tradition of painting. From the late 10th to early 17th centuries, except for occasional murals, Indian art was limited to illustrations for Jain, Budchist, and Hindu books. Probably the necessity for preserving scriptures of these religions in the face of ever-increasing Moslem domination saved the art of painting
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Typical of night scenes done by certain Indian artists is a painting entitled "The Errant Lover Who Returns at Dawn." While the sky is black, the remainder of the painting appears as if it were daylight for the convenience of the viewer.
from being lost there, it was noted in a catalog for this collection prepared by Dr. Wyman.
ONE STYLE OF PAINTING in the collection which came from the hills of northwestern India shows great emotional intensity, fierce color, and fresh vitality. Flat figures have savage profiles and great staring eyes.
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In contrast, from another area come paintings with exquisite naturalism, delicate coloring, and graceful drawing.
Indian tapestry and metalwork, Persian rugs and ceramics from the KU museum have been displayed with the collection to add a flavor of those countries, Mr. Bernstein said.
Short Ones
The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world. William Ross Wallace
Divine love always has met and always will meet every human need. Mary Baker Eddy
Man is a pliable animal, a being who gets accustomed to everything! —Fyodor Dostoevski
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
Officers of Organizations: Should be reported at once to the Office of Dean of Students, 228 Strong for listing in the Student Directory.
Foreign Students: Neosho County Council for UNESCO will hold its annual meeting at Chanute, Kansas, Friday, October 27. If any KU foreign students are interested in attending they should fly by 228 S-101 for a reservation form. Deadline: October 13.
El Atencio (Spanish Club): 4 p.m. 1 Fraser. Students from the Summer Institute in Spain will speak and show slides. Refreshments will be served.
TOMORROW
KU Amateur Radio Club: 7:30 p.m.
201. E. E. Labs. Discussion topic: "Project
OCAR" Everyone interested in amateur
radio is invited to attend.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
More than 100 friends and former classmates of Jack C. Allison, Lawrence freshman who died here Sept. 24 in an automobile accident, have initiated a memorial fund in his honor.
Friends of Jack Allison Initiate Memorial Fund
Contributions to the fund have come from a variety of sources. The Rainmakers, a band composed of KU students, contributed $140, the proceeds from a dance held last
The world's longest automobile tunnel, soon to be completed, will connect France and Italy. Passing under Mont Blanc, the 7.2-mile-long passage will pierce a formidable barrier—the Alps.
The Jack Allison Fund now contains more than $500, said Mrs. Lucille Allison, Jack's mother. It will be used for loans to deserving KU freshmen who have graduated from Lawrence High School.
"I think that what these people are doing is a wonderful thing. The fund will be available to any deserving freshman student from Lawrence High." Mrs. Allison said.
Longest Tunnel to Pierce Alps
The half fare is available for youth from 12 through 21 upon presentation of a special courtesy card requiring no deposit. The card is available to all registered college students and is honored on any Braniff flight within the United States.
Saturday at the TeePee. And band member Charles Allphin, Lawrence sophomore, a close friend of Allison, said that TeePee employees have also added $55 to the fund.
Airline Cuts Fares
Travel for half-fare on Braniff Airways and charge it! This double inducement for college students was announced here by Howard Davidson, the airline's district manager.
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JUR NAME___
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Tuesday, October 3, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $0.6; 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 of Kansas Business Center on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
Girls High School Ring, initials J O A E
Girls High School Away H.S. Call V 1- 3- 10-
Girls Anderson,
FOR SALE
LOST—POST VERSALOG slide rule in
Flight Stmt or call I 3-7922 10-6
Flint Halt or call I 3-7922 10-6
CALCULATING MACHINES for rent at $20.00 per month. Two or more can share the cost. Send a card to T. E. England. 1201 Huntoon, Topeka, Kansas. 10-10
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second running condition $150. Call VI-4 3213. tf
Car For Sale: '52 Buick. $50.00. Dynafw.
Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. fm
YOU CAN BUY a 1959 Skyline 50x10 trailer for $4,500. 2 bdrms., washer & dryer, gas heated. Bob's Trailer Court, 6th & Arkansas VI. 21-898. 10-6
1960 IMPALA 2-door hard top. Light blue, R., H. Automatic, low mileage. Call VI 2-3780. 10-6
STEVENS 22 Automatic Rife, $24. Like
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61 FORD Starliner. Fowler Blue, Cruise-O-Matic, power steering, 300 plus I.P.H.
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FOR SALE—Couch in good shape, $15.00.
2 radios at $3.00 ea. Window fan, $7.00.
Man's & woman's winter cools, $6.00 ca.
1626 W. 21st. 10-4
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Trade 1960 Vauxhall for older auto. Tape recorder; 35 MM camera. VI 2-0560 before 9 am. or after 7 p.m. 10-4
FURNITURE FOR SALE: Dining set, dineette set, vanity, matching chair and divan, stove and refrigerator. 1116. T 2-2556. Ask for Clark - 7 p.m. to 10-5
THREE BEDROOM HOME, corner lot. Utility room, bath, car port, easily heated, gas furnace, 220 wiring. See after 3 p.m. 1635 Lindenwood. 10-9
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NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up Service on all makes typewriters and adding machine graphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf
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For Sale: 1930 Model "A" coupe. Black.
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SALESWOMAN WANTED — Retail show experience helpful but not necessary. Apply in person Wednesday, 9 a.m., till noon Harvey's Discount Shoes, 1602 W. 23rd
BUSINESS SERVICES
SENIORS — Need photos for employment
Larry Margulis
VI 2-3474 after 5 p.m.
NOW IS THE TIME to get your car ready for Winter. Specializing in engine tune-up, Gunn's Tune-up & Speed Shop offers the best of Sunset Drive-In. Phone 3-927-8211. 10-6
TOM'S 14th St. Barber Shop. *g* block off Mass. Parking next to shop. All styles of haircuts $12.5. *z* full-time barbers. Open 8-5:30. Mon.-Sat. 10-6
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
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Complete
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TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
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Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
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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.
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FURNISHED apartments, east side. Utilities paid. Two bedroom, first floor—$60. One bedroom, second floor — $50. Call VI 3-6292. 10-9
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Rental Purchase Plan on 35 ft. long, 10 ft wide one or two bedroom Mobile Home, Furniture, 2 more tree parking, Todd Mobile Homes, 78-10 N 2nd, Lawrence. 103-8
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 3, 1961
Page 8
Cold Thieves At Work Here
Preparations for the impending cold weather are apparently foremost in the minds of pilferers at work on the KU campus. Campus police received reports over the weekend of three coats taken from two buildings.
Jim E. Keever, Ness City freshman, reported a trench coat valued at $18 missing from Kansas Union lobby coat rack. Don Teeple, Salina freshman, also reported his coat missing from that location. W. John Weaver, Emporia sophomore, valued his jacket, taken from the cafeteria cloak room of Carruth-O'Leary Hall, at $25.
L. W. Seagondollar, professor of physics, told police an electric motor worth $20 was taken from the back of his truck parked behind Snow Hall.
Albee's Play Has Tryouts
Trvouts for Edward Albee's "The Sandbox," will be held at 7:30 tonight at Westminster Center. The play is part of a seminar program to be presented the latter part of November at the Presbyterian center. All students are invited to try out.
German Club To Meet Today
"We don't want to put the International Club out of business, but we do hope a lot of foreign students will come too."
Thus Ruth Poe, Edgerton senior, described the hopes of the German Club, which will hold its first meeting this afternoon at 5 in 102 Fraser.
"Although one should have had at least one semester of German," she continued, "the club is not especially for German students."
This afternoon the four students who traveled to Bavaria this summer under the KU Summer Language Institute will tell of their impressions of the trip.
Oldest Republic Wants Space Talks
WASHINGTON — (UPI) A spokesman for the oldest and smallest republic in the world stood up to the mammoth nations of East and west today and demanded that they ban weapons of mass destruction from space.
The demand was voiced at the International Astronautical Congress here by Franco E. Fiorio, consulate general in Washington of the republic of San Marino.
He told delegates of the United States, Soviet Russia and 29 other countries that "no nation on earth is large enough or old enough or powerful enough to claim exclusive rights on space matters."
He chided both East and West for failure to resolve their purely terrestrial differences. In East-West conferences, Fiorio said, "there is always an area of agreement which is usually lost because of the stubbornness of both sides in seeking a 'package deal' or nothing."
San Marino is small, about 42 square miles, and has only 15,000 inhabitants. But seniority resulting from "16 centuries of democratic freedom" give it a right to speak up on what use man shall make of space, Fiorio said.
Space exploration, he said, will affect "the normal life of all people on earth." Space is so vast, he continued, that the relative size of nations on earth becomes meaningless.
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DETROIT—(UPI)—Ford Motor Co. employees began walking off their jobs today when the company and the United Auto Workers Union had not reached a contract settlement with only an hour remaining before the union's 10 a.m. strike deadline.
Around the World
TOKYO—(UPI)—Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos left Peiping today with a pledge of "all-out" Communist Chinese support in the event of "another armed aggression" against Cuba, the Communist radio reported.
BERLIN-(UPI)-A Young East German construction worker rammed his crane truck through the Communists' wall in a hail of vopo bullets today and safely reached West Berlin.
The vehicle had been used near a border-crossing point to build the Red wall higher. The driver slipped behind the wheel in the predawn darkness, raced the motor and smashed through the concrete barrier
TUNIS, Tunisia—(UPI)—French troops today left Bizerte following a weekend agreement between France and Tunisia which temporarily settled the question of French rights to the massive atomproof military base near the city.
SUEZ, Egypt—(UPI)—A Turkish tanker was denied tankering facilities here yesterday, apparently in retaliation for Turkey's recognition of the Syrian revolutionary regime.
CAIRO—(UPI)—Tunisia has formally requested a special meeting of the Arab League Political Committee to consider "events in Syria," Arab League Secretary General Abdel Khalek Hassouna said today.
Hassouna said the request will be forwarded to league member states for their views.
DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)
BUENOS AIRES—(UPI)Cuban refugees told Foreign Minister Miguel A. Carcano that papers purporting to prove a vast Castroite plot against the Argentine government will be delivered to him "in a short time."
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Yankees Take Series Opener 2-0 Behind Ford
NEW YORK —(UPI) — Whitey Ford pitched a two-hitter and Elston Howard and Bill Skowron hit home runs today to give the New York Yankees a 2-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in the first game of the World Series.
First Inning
Reds: Blasinggame struck out on a 2-2 pitch. Kaska lined a 2-2 pitch into left field for a single. Pinson flied to Maris about 400 feet from the plate in dead center. Robinson went down swinging on his ball. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
Yankees: Richardson lined a 2 and 1 pitch into center field for a single. Kubek walked on four pitches. Hutchinson went to the mound when O'Toole's first pitch was struck. Kusko went into short left field to take Maris' looping飞. Howard flied to Pinson in left center. Skowron walked on five pitches, filling the bases. Berra made 3 and 2 and then popped to Blasigame. No runs, one hit, no errors, three left.
Second Inning
Reds: The lights were turned on at 11:28 Lawrence time as the Reds went to bat in the second inning. Post bounced out to Boyer on Ford's first pitch Boyer made a brilliant back-hand grab of Freeze and sent him off the field. Boyer him out at first. Coleman bounced to Ford. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Yankees: Lopez filed to Post, who backed against the right field fence to make the catch. Boyer popped to Freese who made the catch on the pitcher's mouth. Lord rolled out, Blasigame to manman. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Third Inning
Reds: Boyer tossed out Johnson.
O'Toole was called out on strikes.
Bashinggame wont down swinging for the
tie, No runs, no hits, no errors,
none left.
Fourth Inning
Yankees: Richardson's high hopper went over Freese's head and was taken on the edge of the outfield grass by Kasko, but the Yankee second baseman beat it for a single. Kubek popped to Kasko in short left. Maris went down swinging on a and ran, ardsoned on with the pitch, was out to return to first base, Johnson to Kasko to Coleman. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left.
**Reeds:** Kasko rolled to Kubek. Pinson bounced out to Richardson. Robinson went down swinging on a pitch that was too high for Noisers. No runs, no huts, no errors, none left.
Yankees: Howard lined a 1 and 1 pitch into the lower right field stands for a home run to put the Yankees ahead, 1-0. Kasko threw out Skowron from four pitches. Lopez was called out on strikes. Boyer hit O'Toole's first pitch between Coleman and Blasingame into right field for a single. Berra advancing to second, McClain advancing to third, and Ford's bid for a hit to left. One run two hits, no errors, two outs.
Fifth Inning
Yankees: Richardson was out for leaving the baseline when he attempted to avoid Coleman's tag after the Red first baseman fielded his bunts. Kubek filed to the plate, and Richardson made the putout unassisted. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
**reeds:** Post lined a 1 and 2 pitch into left field for a single. Freese lifted a ball, hitting Coleman's slow hopper and tossed him out, with Post taking second. Johnson rounded in, and he bounced home. The Red outfielder crashed heavily into Boyer and the crowd booed him as he went to his position in right field. No runs, one hit, no errors, one
Sixth Inning
Reds: Mars drifted into right center to take O'Tole's short fly. Blassingame ran to Riholardson. Kasko bounced outRichie didn't run. No runs, no hits, no errors; none left.
Yankees: Pinson made a running, one-handed grab of Howard's long liner. Skowron sent a towering fly into the left field stands for a homer, putting the Yankees in front. 2-0 Berra picked to five on five pitches. Boyer sent a 425-foot drive to Pinson in left center. One run, one hit, no errors, one left.
Seventh Inning
Reds: Pinson popped to Skowron on the edge of the outfield grass. Robinson held up his swing just in time on a low pitch. Pinson pitched to Boyen who threw to Richardson, forcing Robinson at second. Boyer's throw pulled Richardson off the bag but he tagged Robinson going into the base. Frees popper back. No runs, no poppers one left.
Yankees: Ford rolled to Blasigh game.
Richardson slashed his third hit into left field or center field. He scored on a 2 pitch. Maris fouled to Johnson. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
Eighth Inning
Reds: Kubek scooped up Coleman's bounder on second base and threw him into the air. He struck out. Dick Gernert batted for O'Toole and was out when Boyer made a brilliant diving stop of his grounder. He scored, but no runs. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
(Continued on page 10)
59th Year. No.14
Daily hansan
In-Fighting on NSA Committee As It Struggles for Survival
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Bv Scott Payne
A tense National Student Assn. Committee began its fight for survival yesterday in a verbal battle with a committee member and the Chairman of the All Student Council.
Wednesday, October 4, 1961
Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and ASC chairman, attacked the NSA on the grounds that the Committee does nothing here that a committee not nationally aligned could not do.
HE WARNED that the ASC will attack the Committee unless it can justify NSA affiliation.
and past chairman of KU Young Republicans, who is a member of the committee, opposes NSA because it is "nonrepresentative of the American student."
Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior
Palmer asked, "Why is it worth $500 a year to send delegates to the NSA Congress? What benefits has KU received? What benefits can it receive? What benefits can KU derive from NSA? None, I think."
Charles Menzhini Defends
CAROL McMILLEN. Coldwater senior and Committee co-ordinator pointed out that NSA has provided benefits in the area of student travel.
"NSA has made it possible for American students to travel in Europe, for instance, for low rates," she said.
"All of this is interesting and fine for the campus," said Palmer, "however, this could be done by a group here without NSA affiliation."
She cited the Committee's informational role at KU. She said that the Committee provides an opportunity to air controversial views.
McLwillane said, "I agree. However, my objections to NSA aren't in this area. I object to NSA saying it represents all American students when
"I object to NSA discussing national and international issues rather than issues which affect students in their role as students," he added.
less than 20 per cent of U.S. colleges and universities are NSA members
"I ALSO THINK that the opinions NSA expresses on such issues conflict with those of the American student.
"I object to the fact that two thirds of NSA's resolutions aren't handled by the Congress itself but by NSA's National Executive Council.
"I also feel that the KU student was not accurately represented at the NSA Congress," he said.
"I believe that NSA's misrepresentation and partisanship misinforms the public of the American student's views.
Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior, pointed out that McWainae had had a chance to go to this summer's Congress—a chance he had not taken.
At this point, Robert Thomas. Marysville senior and Committee chairman, interposed.
McILWAINE SAID he had been unable to attend.
"We must make some concerted effort to justify our existence here," he said. "I think our showing of 'Operation Abolition' last semester is an example of what we need more of at KU."
Palmer replied, "Now, if showing movies is the sort of thing the Committee is going to do, why belong to NSA?
USSR Fires 17th Nuclear Device
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Soviet Union early today fired the 17th nuclear blast of its current test series—an atmospheric explosion equal to several million tons of TNT.
It was one of the most powerful devices set off by the Russians since they resumed testing Sept. 1, breaking a three-year-old moratorium. Like the earlier Soviet shots, it produced radioactive fallout.
The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), which announced the test, said it was held in the arctic region near Novaya Zemlya where most of the Soviet explosions have occurred.
The AEC announcement means the Russians now have exceeded the number of nuclear shots fired in 1958.
"You've had the summer Congress and regional meetings at the expense of the KU students," he said. "But what has KU gotten from all of this?
"TD BUILD MY CASE quickly if I were you," he said. "You're going to have to iustify NSA affiliation."
Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, said, "Since we've only had two meetings what do you expect us to have done? We haven't been able to do a thing."
"There's one thing I'd like to ask you, Jerry," he added. "Does this ASC move for disaffiliation possibly come from an outside group?"
"YAF (Young Americans for Freedom) is not backing this at all."
Palmer said. "It's simply that . . ."
TRENDING
Jerry Palmer Attacks
"I didn't say anything about YAF,
Jerry," replied Menghini.
"Yes, but you implied it," answered Palmer.
Thomas interposed again, asking that the Committee offer suggestions for projects to "justify the Committee."
Judi Jamison, Ottawa junior, and Miller pointed out that KU students know little about NSA and that the campus has not been well enough informed about the recent NSA Congress.
THE COMMITTEE unanimously passed a motion to the effect that Committee members will begin speaking to KU living groups in explanation of NSA.
Other motions passed included:
our motions passed included:
● NSA Congress report for the ASC.
- The showing of the film "Harvest of Shame"—McIlwaine dissenting.
- Another debate to be held on "Operation Abolition."
- Committee approval of NSA affiliation-McIwraine dissenting and
(Continued on page 3)
Value of Exam Is Questioned
By Karl Koch
A Daily Kansan poll indicates that members of the English department differ as to the necessity of the English Proficiency Examination.
SIX ENGLISH PROFESSORS were contacted last night to see how they felt about the proficiency exam.
"I have my doubts whether the English proficiency is worth keeping. I don't know that students in any other field are required to show their proficiency in a subject twice before graduation."
Two were in favor of it, one was against, two had reservations, and one didn't wish to comment.
ARVID SHULENBERGER, associate professor of English, had this to say:
W. P. ALBRECHT, professor of English. said:
"Yes, I'm in favor of it. And I think the way it's being administered now is very good."
When told of Prof. Shulenberger's "double jeopardy" theory, Prof. Albrecht said: "Throughout his life one is in jeopardy. He should be able to recall what he has learned."
"I think the English proficiency exam is a good thing. Everyone on the faculty would be for such a program, I would think."
GEORGE WORTH, assistant professor of English, said:
STUART LEVINE, assistant professor of English. said:
"There has to be something like the proficiency exam, but many people feel differently now that there is a common final in English. Writing has also improved very much in English 1, 2, 3, and 4. It might be that the English proficiency could be abolished over the years."
DENNIS QUINN, assistant professor of English, said:
"I have no objection to the proficiency exam itself, except I do feel that it is very difficult to set up in a manner where the judgment can be fair and consistent and where it can be handled administratively by the University staff. I don't think the exam unfair at all, but I do feel that it is very difficult to get any consistency, especially as the University gets bigger and bigger.
WHEN TOLD OF the rumor that the exam may be dropped, one professor suggested the story had "probably originated in the basement of Strong Hall."
"If the University feels that it can work out these administrative problems, it seems to be a worthwhile exam, but the problems are pretty formidable."
James Seaver, associate professor of history and director of the English proficiency exam, said the rumor was a surprise to him. Dropping the exam had never been discussed at an English proficiency committee meeting, he said.
JFK and Soviet Foreign Minister To Talk on Berlin
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Kennedy and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko will meet here late Friday afternoon for a crucial talk that may determine whether negotiations over Berlin are possible.
The talk was set up as a result of encouraging progress made in three earlier discussions between Gromyko and Secretary of State Dean Rusk in New York last week.
ALTHOUGH WHITE HOUSE Press Secretary Pierre Salinger refused to discuss the subject matter of the Friday conference, it obviously concerned the Berlin negotiations, and the next steps to be taken by both sides.
Gromyko and Rusk had planned to meet a fourth time—in Washington—but Salinger said he did not know whether this would occur before the conference with Kennedy.
Salinger would not say whether the Soviet or American side initiated the White House meeting.
IT WAS UNDETERMINED whether Rusk would sit in on the meeting. Llewellyn Thompson, U.S. ambassador to Russia, has been ordered back to Washington for consultations and may be on hand for the session.
U. S. officials regard the meeting as crucial—but not in terms of whether concrete decisions will be reached. These are not expected.
MEANWHILE, Communist diplomats in London hinted today that Russia might postpone the signing of its threatened separate peace with East Germany if the West agreed to negotiate a speedy Berlin settlement.
Russia still intends to sign such a peace treaty but the move could be deferred if negotiations for a Berlin accord were held soon and not dragged out indefinitely.
OR, THEY SAID, Moscow might sign the treaty this year as threatened, with the understanding that it would be amended to include agreement on Berlin.
Integration Calm In Tennessee
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—(UPI)— Thirteen Negro first graders reported for their second day of class at four previously all-white schools today in this Deep South city. There were no crowds and no incidents.
The World Series was the main topic today among school officials, elated over the initial peacefulness of integration in Memphis. Authorities were keeping a wary eye for signs of a possible student boycott—but all appeared normal as classes resumed.
"IF WE CAN GET by today, maybe we can begin to relax," said city School Board President William Galbreath, who was more concerned about possible "wholesale withdrawals" of students than the "slim chance" of violence.
At least 17 white students were withdrawn from the four schools by their parents after news of the integration spread yesterday.
"I think if all of the parents would keep their children away from school, I don't believe the niggers (sic) would go," said Mrs. Herman McGregor, who took her son out of one of the schools.
SCHOOL AND CITY officials were elated that integration here initially had met with the same success experienced at Atlanta and Dallas during similar desegregation maneuvers earlier this fall.
Weather
Fair and mild today and Thursday. Not quite so cool tonight.
Highs today and Thursday middle 70s. Lows tonight 40s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. October 4,1961
YAF Criticized
Conservatives are discontent with present world conditions, a discontent shared by others, but for different reasons. The conservative looks at the world and is appalled because he sees changes made or attempted which violate what he considers to be sacred and eternal truths. These "truths" form the basis of the conservative principles currently being advocated by the Young Americans for Freedom.
CONSERVATIVES USUALLY SEEK a political, economic, and social order based on these principles:
- A central government with limited authority, with primacy given to state and local governments.
- A maximum of individual freedom with an absolute minimum of hindrance from government or social institutions.
- A completely unregulated economy, relying not on government regulation, but on free play of economic forces (supply and demand).
- Belief in and reliance on natural rather than man-made law for guidance.
- Individual self-interest and antipathy to any collective whole that subordinates individual preregative to a common good.
THESE PRINCIPLES are used by conservatives as a measuring stick to determine how far away the world is from their idealized state of being. Any movement away from conservatism is viewed with mistrust because the conservative equates his philosophy with freedom; therefore, anything anti-conservative is anti-freedom.
YAF believes that economic rights should be placed above human rights, that the federal government's role is to help individuals achieve greater economic power and that Americans are supposed to be concerned only with their own well-being, not with the welfare of people in other countries.
ONE FACT YAF NEVER ADMITS is its undemocratic structure that lifts the mask from its pretended belief in freedom. Its by-laws give almost total power to the board of directors. Nowhere do the rules or organization make the board accountable to the entire membership. The closest thing to this is the procedure of electing board members (Article 5) which provides for one delegate and two alternates from each chapter to attend YAF's annual meeting in New York when half the board members are elected.
ONLY THE DELEGATES, not the alternates. cast a vote for board members. This means that a delegate from a chapter of five (the minimum number per chapter) has the same voting power as a delegate from a chapter of 75. This practice, however, is small compared to what happens once the board members are elected.
Section one of Article VI states, "All powers of the corporation shall be exercised by the board of directors who may delegate to officers and to committees of their own number such powers as they may see fit in addition to such powers as are specified in these by-laws."
SECTION 7 of the same article states that at all meetings of the board of directors, one-third of the members shall constitute a quorum. Any action of the board of directors at a duly constituted meeting shall be binding on the membership.
What all this means is that a handful of people can run the organization as they see fit without ever being bothered by such a nuisance as having to account to the membership. Seven people, the prescribed one-third quorum of the board, can make any decision that is binding on the entire membership.
IT MEANS THAT an even smaller number, three (a policy committee quorum), can make decisions. "that are subject to change only by the board of directors." This is hardly likely since the policy committee is composed of the highest officers in the organization who are members of the board.
Finally, it means the power of the organization can be delegated to a few trusted souls since one member can hold an unlimited number of offices. The national chairman appoints members of temporary committees and the two standing committees, advisory and publications. He also appoints all chairmen and his decisions are subject only to the approval of the board.
IT IS EASY to see how a small clique can run an organization governed by such rules. This is the same organization that proclaims in the "Sharon Statement" (YAF's constitution) what a wonderful document the Constitution of the United States is because it prevents "the concentration and abuse of power" by government.
Arthur Miller
Editor:
letters to the editor
More On SIC
Because of widespread interest in SIC (Students Interested in Culture), I thought your readers would like to know that our SIC executive committee has adopted a slogan — SIC SEMPER! Note the classical tone.
Elmer F. Beth
Professor of Journalism
Fears Liberal Regression
Editor:
Good God! Mr. Zimmerman. Are you trying to set liberalism back 50 years?
Though your statement that communist sympathizers are harmless is in full accord with liberal doctrine, YOU JUST DON'T SAY THINGS LIKE THAT OUT LOUD! These backward Kansas conservatives won't understand at all, particularly since many of their sons and lovers have been called to active duty in the Guard and Reserve because of that silly ol" Berlin crisis."
Be patient, Mr. Zimmerman. Be patient, for if we harmless community sympathizers have our harmless way, and by hook or by
crook, we will, you'll soon be able to lift your head and voice and shout proudly: "You see. I told you they weren't so bad. The old lady and I got almost enough for two meals a day this month. So, Ya-ya-yaa."
Marick Payton Lawrence subv
P. S. to Carol McMillen: It's awfully embarrassing when my Bircher friends (I'm inexcusably broad-minded) cuff me gently on the Adam's apple and ask taintingly: "Why doesn't the NSA permit popular election of its delegates?" I really don't know what to say . . . it's such a democratic-minded organization and all and . . . Please?
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 376, business office
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22,
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $3 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University
holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence,
Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
**Tom Turner** ... Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bili Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
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Editor
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown... Business Manager
Editor:
Tom Brown
I feel that KU has a great deal to offer the National Student Association. This is not a question of debt, but rather a question of duty. Why should we cheat the NSA from hearing the opinions of KU? Why should we deny KU the right to vote in the NSA when the NSA offers us the opportunity of agreeing or disagreeing with its actions and political stands.
I wish the people who want to withdraw from NSA would please reconsider.
Barry Meader Anthony sophomore
Short Ones
The newly created SIP sounds like the KU version of the Gandy Dancers' Ball—Bill Mullins
the took world
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
Books of World War II date fast. Each great man writes his memoirs, and then the revisionists take over. A Lord Alanbrocke, a Field Marshal Montgomery gives his interpretation of the war, and of how things should have been done. "Crusade in Europe" appeared earlier than most other volumes of the war, but it still holds up.
CRUSADE IN EUROPE, by Dwight D. Eisenhower. Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45.
The Eisenhower story is one of dignity and of understanding. Think what you may of Eisenhower as president, as supreme commander he made monumental decisions. Where his decisions were bad, he makes rapid admissions of blunder. His modesty is extraordinary. It may be, in fact, a deficiency (at least in an American president).
This is the story of a Kansas soldier who moved from comparative obscurity as an aide to Douglas MacArthur to celebrated greatness as commander of the Allied forces in Europe. It is the story of the creation of a mighty fighting force, of unprecedented cooperation among nations, of the centralization of Washington as a world capital.
Eisenhower describes in great detail the invasion of Africa that was called Operation Torch, the African campaign itself, the attempt to provide a modus vivendi with the Free French and with Vichy France, the invasion of Sicily and Italy, and then the invasion of Europe that was called Operation Overlord.
The stage and the actors are mighty — Eisenhower himself, Churchill, Montgomery, Marshall, Bradley and Patton.
Where "Crusade in Europe" has particular interest is in its depiction of the man Eisenhower. He was a man with a mission, as the title of this book reveals, and as his great Guilddhall speech shows us. One can see foreshadowings of the president, and of the latent conservatism that eventually proved dominant in his approach to the presidency.
From its brilliant opening when a helicopter swoops over the rooftops of Rome with the snow white figure of Christ to its chaotic ending when the now thoroughly corrupted Marcello stares drunkenly at the monstrous white fish brought ashore, this film is a relentless indictment of a civilization bent on its destruction. The prostitution is not confined to the women who sell themselves. Everyone is for sale, and everything has its price.
LA DOLCE VITA, by Frederico Fellini, Ballantine Books. 75 cents.
This paperback with the full screenplay and many stills from the film is no substitute for the motion picture. But for those fortunate to have seen the uncut version, this book is a fine thing to have around to examine when returning from the movie house after viewing the latest Hollywood concoction.-NR
This collection of short stories manages to run the gamut of emotions from A to B. Several stories printed from the New Yorker jostle uncomfortably against some sentimental pieces, but if you like your bedtime reading fare varied you can find everything here, from the soft-centered gooey pieces to the brittle confections of city love life.—NR
LOVE AND MARRIAGE, by Margaret Cousins, Doubleday & Co. Inc. $3.95.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
10-5
-
"I SEE IVE LECTURED INTO YOUR'LUNCH HOUR'AGAIN."
Wednesday, October 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Even the Chorus Girls Are Socialists in Cuba
Bv Milton Carr
By Milton Carr United Press International
There is no toothpaste in socialist Cuba and the American cola drinks taste like prune juice.
Food is so scarse that waiters no longer bother with menus; it is simpler to tell the customers what is available — usually fish. Fried foods are out because of the lack of lard.
THERE IS NOT ALWAYS hot water in the luxury hotels, which now belong to the people, but there is still gambling at night in the hotel casinos, where the new crop of players grind out their cigarettes in the thick, imported carpets. In the Havana Libre Hotel, formerly the Hilton, play was interrupted briefly one night recently when a militiaman accidentally shot himself in the stomach with his submachine gun.
The Eden Roc Restaurant, which once served tourists steaks flown in from Kansas City, is now the Bala-laika and the specialty of the house is Bortsch. The "Sputnik" has replaced the martini. When the water does not run in the rest rooms, an attendant with a supply in a large tin can pours for those wishing to wash their hands.
Homes and apartment buildings in the better residential sections, confiscated by the government from owners who have left the country or who owned more than one house, are occupied by country girls learning to sew, art students and other groups brought to Havana for technical and political instruction.
THE ONCE-EXCLUSIVE yacht and country clubs in the Havana suburbs are now open to the public for a 20-cent admission charge.
Cuba's nationalized movie houses will show 150 Russian films this year—with but few exceptions, to unenhusiastic audiences. Some audiences have shown their displeasure by quietly cutting up the theatre seats.
At the Fox Theatre a few nights ago a sigh of appreciation rippled through the middle-class audience when a character in a French movie demanded a particular brand of American cigarettes. The viewers appeared at the point of applauding, then apparently thought better of it.
In-Fighting-
(Continued from page 1) Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, abstaining.
Following this, Palmer said, "NSA has many fields of interest. I think Miller and Menghini favor it because of the influence in national and international issues.
"AND HERE'S A POINT," he said. "I think NSA's Cuban resolution is the most irresponsible thing I've ever read. Members of the right and left I've talked with feel the same way.
"Is this of real importance to the campus?" he asked. "By the same token, is NSA? I say, no!"
When Menghini began to argue this, Robert Sherwood interjected, "It's not our job to convince Jerry of the propriety of NSA. It's our job to convince seven to ten thousand other students."
"That's right," said Palmer. "I will add that if ASC does decide to disaffiliate it might not dissolve this Committee. My gripe is not with the Committee. I think it can serve usefully here.
"I simply don't see affiliation to the tune of $500 a year," he reiterated.
Minnesota Biologists 'Bug'a Bunny
MINNEAPOLIS- (UPI)-University of Minnesota biologists are experimenting with radio-equipped rabbits.
A cottontail rabbit has been equipped with a tiny transmitter, weighing less than an ounce and enclosed in a plastic collar. Signals from the transmitter will enable scientists to follow the bunny's movements. Eventually, a research team hopes to develop a transmitter to relay information on the animal's reactions to changes in environment. Success would mean that wildlife could be studied without the disturbing presence of a human being.
American cigarettes bring $2.50 and more a package on the Cuban black market.
EVEN HAVANA'S TROPICANA night club, long known throughout the continent for its dazzling girls and spectacular shows, has gone political.
Here, where American tourists used to outnumber the Cubans, a recent stage presentation included a torch singer's interpretation of the "Gagarin" bolero, in honor of the Russian cosmonaut, followed by a skit concerning four American would-be space travelers who couldn't get their battered missile off the ground. Finally, in disgust, they kicked it over to reveal, painted on the side, a caricature of President Kennedy resembling Bugs Bunny.
In the finale, 20 or more chorus girls in G-strings sang a song which began with the words, "We are Socialists," and ended with "Cuba, Si; Yankee, No!"
There is no meat and little poultry in the butcher shops. Grocers' shelves are more empty than filled, but prominently displayed canned goods from Russia, Bulgaria, Poland and China are not selling. Razor blades, thread and other essential items are hard to find.
WHEN AMERICAN SOFT DRINK manufacturers stopped shipping cola syrup to Cuba, local bottlers put up a poor imitation under the
same label. Complaints about the taste are answered; "I don't know." ...
Yes, but it's Cuban. At the Havana Airport in elaborately adorned letters hangs this sign:
"Yes, but it's Cuban!"
"THESE WHO ARE NOT willing to be soldiers of their country in this exceptional moment of our history, let them go!—Fidel."
For more than 100,000 Cubans who openly are trying desperately to leave and for other uncounted thousands who would like to go, this declaration is bitter mockery.
The government has placed every conceivable obstacle in their path short of a blanket edict against all travel from Cuba.
THE TRAVELER KNOWS that everything he leaves — his business, house, furniture, clothing, car and other possessions — will be confiscated.
He is allowed to carry a moderate supply of clothing and no money, jewelry or other valuables. Each person is limited to a watch and a wedding ring. Gold religious medals which most Cubans wear around their necks are stripped from them at the airport or docks. Often, passengers are forced to shed their clothing to prove that they have nothing hidden.
The Cuban is not permitted to buy his passage with Cuban currency. Tickets must be paid for in U.S. dollars and since dollars cannot be obtained legally in Cuba, money orders must come from friends or relatives, if any, outside the country.
RECENTLY THE GOVERNMENT took steps to halt the flight abroad by issuing new travel regulations and canceling tens of thousands of pending reservations. It ruled exit permits must come from police stations, that they must be used within 7 to 10 days, and that those wishing to leave must also get a permit from the national bank.
Air travelers from Cuba spend an average of a day and a half at the airport being checked. The last four hours are spent locked in a room while four Cuban officials scrutinize documents.
Relatives and friends stand outside, faces against the plate glass
wall, watching. They are not there just to bid their loved ones goodbye. Their primary mission is to see that they get on the plane, and do not disappear to prison.
THE SCENE IS CHARGED with emotion; a mother pleading with an official to let her daughter keep a religious medal; and when he refuses, asking a guard to pass it out the door to friendly hands... passengers being led off, perhaps not to return . . . women weeping . . . crying babies, restless children, and nervous adults. . . an official banging on a desk with a ruler, threatening to cancel the flight unless he gets silence . . . rumors that the plane will not arrive. . . a cheer when it does . . . the slap of the ruler on the desk.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. October 4, 1961
COLOR PRINT SALE
In conjunction with the Lost-Lease Book Sale sponsored by Watson Library
New Custom Craft-Finish Brush-Stroke Prints Mounted on Heavy Cardboard, Ready to Frame
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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
French Scholar To Lecture Here
During his two-day visit to KU, he will lecture in French to several French literature classes, will speak on "The Problem of Literary Sincerity" at a dinner arranged by Pi Delta Fhi, will have lunch with French and philosophy faculty members, and will confer with graduate students.
A French scholar described by Howard Mumford Jones as "an author who has read everybody and everything" will kick off the 15th year of the Humanities Lecture Series at the University of Kansas with a lecture Oct. 10.
He is Dr. Henri Peyre, chairman of the department of Romance languages at Yale University. Dr. Peyre will speak on "Andre Malraux and the Arts" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. The Faculty Club will give an informal reception for him after his lecture.
HE WILL GIVE another public lecture at 4 p.m. the same day at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Speaking in his native French, he will talk about "The New Novel in France"
In his Humanities lecture on Andre Malraux, he will be talking about the vigorous and active French novelist and statesman who was born the same year as himself-1901. In January, 1959, Malraux was made Minister of State in the French government and has been called "DeGaulle's one-man brain trust."
AMONG HIS NOVELS are "The Conquerors," Man's Fate, and "Voices of Silence." His "Psychology of Art" has been termed a "monumental study."
Dr. Peyre is the author of "The Contemporary French novel" and of a dozen other books and many learned and critical articles. He was elected to the Philosophical Society in 1953 and he has been president of the Modern Language Association. In recognition of his distinguished career, the French government in 1955 conferred on him the rank of Officer in the French Legion of Honor.
YAF to Organize Here Next Week
Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior, says there will be "an organizational and general information meeting" of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11 in the Kansas Union.
YAF has over 30,000 members in chapters throughout the country, Mellwaine said. They support the conservative political stand of such men as Senator Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz. he added.
McIlwaine, a member of the national board of directors of YAF, said membership applications will be available for those interested in joining.
The organization is non-partisan but will endorse any candidate in either major political party whom it believes is a true conservative.
People-To-People Sponsors Forum
People-to-People activities for the coming week will include a forum on "The Value of American Diplomacy" and a picnic for the Brother-Sister phase of the program.
The Lawrence International Fellowship Enterprise (LIFE) will hold a picnic for the American and foreign participants in the People-to-People Brother-Sister program Sunday.
Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history, and Gen. Harold K. Johnson, commandant of Ft. Leavenworth military school, will speak Sunday.
All committees of People-to-People will meet in the Kansas Union at 7 tonight.
Berlin Crisis Subject of Forum Raymond G. O'Connor, Assistant Professor of History, will speak on the Berlin Crisis at the KU-Y Current Events discussion at noon tomorrow in the Cottonwood room of the Kansas Union.
Discussion will follow Prof. O'Connor's talk.
A day crammed with instruction and discussion is planned for about 350 Kansas high school students who are expected to be on the campus tomorrow for the 43rd annual High School Journalism Conference.
350 High School Journalists Here
Hans Rosenhaupt, national director of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, will be the principal speaker at a conference of liberal arts and graduate study to be held here Friday and Saturday.
German Author to Speak Here
The conference, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism in cooperation with University Extension and the Kansas State High School Activities Association, will open at 8:15 a.m. with registration in the lobby of the Kansas Union.
Speakers will include Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school of journalism; Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism; Bill Mayer, managing editor of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World; Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, and Clarke Keys, instructor of journalism.
A series of tightly-scheduled panels and workshop discussions has been set up for the two sections of high school journalism, school newspapers and yearbooks.
Prof. Rosenhaupt will also address a dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Father of U2 Pilot May Visit His Son
RICHMOND, Va. — (UPI) — The father of U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers said after meeting with Russian officials yesterday he was confident he would be allowed to visit his son in a Soviet prison.
Oliver Powers said the Russian embassy in Washington advised him his application for a visa had been forwarded to Moscow for action.
Powers, a Norton, Va., shoe repairman, was interviewed here by newsmen on his return from Washington.
Wednesday, October 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Peace Corp Test Dates Set
The testing dates for the Peace Corps have been established for the coming academic year.
Clark Conn, Asst. Dean of Men,
Foreign Student Advisor and also
the Peace Corps Coordinator,
announced the dates as October 7.
November 30, and December 1, 1961,
and February 17, and April 21, 1962.
The tests will be given at the local post office.
Page 5
He that does good for good's sake, seeks neither praise nor reward, but he is sure of both in the end—William Penn
Migration Tickets on Sale
Students planning to attend the Oklahoma-KU football migration, Oct. 21, may purchase tickets today through Friday at the Information Booth.
Sally Sponable, Paola senior and president of the Jay James, announced that game tickets for four dollars would be on sale each day. She added that a Santa Fe agent would be selling train tickets costing $13.48.
When you fall into a man's conversation, the first thing you should consider is, whether he has a greater inclination to hear you, or that you should hear him.—Sir Richard Steele
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 4, 1961
KUW
Around the BIG 8
OKLAHOMA STATE — Coach Cliff Speegle commenting upon the OSU-Colorado game said, "They killed us with the long play, everyone knows that. We were proud of the way our kids fought back but we have problems for sure, and we must get them straightened out this week if we expect to win. The Colorado-Kansas game this week should be a dandy."
Speeagle declined to comment, but among the Cowpokes were several who expressed the belief that Colorado's personnel this autumn is the finest in the Big Eight since Oklahoma's 1956 team. The Buffalooes have size, speed and experience (25 lettermen).
IOWA STATE — Dave Hoppman, Cyclone tailback, was awarded the ISU Pep Council's "Athlete of the Week" citation for the second straight week.
Hoppman, in leading the Cyclones to a 14-7 victory over Oklahoma State, collected 134 yards from scrimmage, passed for 45 yards, and picked up valuable yardage on punt returns. About the only thing he didn't do was center the ball.
Bob Ward, Oklahoma scout, who watched the ISU-OSC contest was not impressed with the Cyclones.
M.D.
J.P.
"Iowa State will have to improve a lot to upset us again. We are a far better team than in 1960."
Iowa State and Oklahoma clash Saturday in Norman for the Sooners' home opener.
Coach Dan Devine lost his top field general for the year when sophomore Keith Weber injured his ankle in the Washington State game.
MISSOURI — Ron Taylor, a 5-8 senior, who could pass for the team's student manager, is now handling the Tigers' quarterbacking chores.
The Tigers' expected dearth of speedy halfbacks is proving true. Missouri's passing yardage exceeded their net rushing 165 to 164 in their season opener. The maximum single gainer by a Mizzou ball carrier was eight yards.
NEBRASKA — The Cornhuskers will field a heavy team this year. The starting unit against Arizona last Saturday averaged 206 pounds, the second unit averaged 201 pounds. Broken down, the first string line tips the scale at 214 per man while the backs average 193 pounds. Figures for the second unit included 211 pounds in the line, 184 in the backfield.
KANSAS STATE — The Wildcats are flying high over their two consecutive victories over Indiana and Air Force.
After the Indiana opener a Mardi Gras atmosphere prevailed in the Wildcat camp. On Monday it was all over.
"We are realistic," explained Coach Doug Weaver. "We know we have to play a super game every game to be in contention and that we have to continue to improve.
"Monday, we came down to earth, but on Sunday I wanted the players and coaches to stay in the clouds enjoying the congratulations. It has been a long dry spell."
The Wildcats are one of the nation's smallest major college football teams. The starting unit averages but 182 pounds; the backfield is a meager 173 pounds per man.
OKLAHOMA — Coach Bud Wilkinson could have almost taken all his sound backs to Notre Dame Saturday in a Beechcraft Bonanza.
Eight are out for the season, Johnny Smith, John Garrett, Billy Meacham, Don Dickey, Billy Stone, Bill
O.U.
P.C.
quarterback, three of the four alternate team backs, and the top defensive back.
Gidden, Jim Mckay, and Paul Vaughan. Melvin Sanserfeld, Charlie Mayhue, Dick Beattie, and Bill Van Burklew were out for the Notre Dame game.
Van Burkleo is the sensational Sooner sophomore quarterback who was counted on to lead the Sooners out of their victory drouth.
The Sooners have lost 12 backs since Aug. 15, including the starting
Kansas' All America Quarterback, John Hadl, is cover boy for the current issue of "Future" magazine. He also is a selection on that publication's pre-season All America lineup, along with another established Big Eight hand, Colorado Guard Joe Romig.
Southern Illinois looms as a powerful foe for Coach Bill Easton's cross-country team in the season opener to be run over the Lawrence Country Club course at 10:30 Saturday morning.
KU Cross-Country Squad Opens with Tough SIU
The Salukis last year went undefeated in 10 cross-country outings and were the NAIA cross-country champions.
champions
Returning from last year's championship squad are four men who placed in the NAIA meet.
JOE THOMAS IS THE SALUKIS top runner. Last year as a freshman Thomas became the first yearling to ever win a NAIA individual cross-country championship.
Combating Thomas for the Javahawkers will be senior captain Bill Dotson. Last year Dotson placed fifth in the Big Eight. He has been easily outdistancing his teammates in time trials this fall.
Backing up Thomas, Southern Illinois will have the third,eighth,and fourteenth place finishers in the NAIA.
JOHN FLAMER PLACED THIRD for the Salukis. He is a three-year letterman and was SIU's chief runner until Thomas enrolled.
Alan Gelso's eight place NAIA finish aided the Salukis to their title. Much of SIU's 1960 success goes to this 5-9, 137 pound junior. Gelso held the team's third position and ran the last four meets on an injured leg.
Don Trowbridge placed fourteenth.
Trowbridge, another junior, was probably the most improved runner on the squad last year according to Coach Lew Hartzog.
ALSO RUNNING FOR SOUTHERN Illinois Saturday will be Lee King, Mike Brazier, and John Saunders.
King, the team captain, missed the entire 1960 season due to illness. Hartzog reports that the 6-1, 155 pound senior may push Thomas for the top spot.
Also running Saturday, but not figuring in the point totals, will be Paul Acevedo. Acevedo has been improving rapidly over the past several weeks. Last Saturday the sophomore finished sixth in time trials.
"This may be the toughest of the tough," quipped Easton. "We may lose this meet but perhaps it would be good for us. Southern Illinois has a real strong team."
Four Top Rushers Back
Brazier is a senior and a two-year letterman. Last year he ran seventh and eighth positions. Saunders is a newcomer to the squad.
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EASTON ANNOUNCED HIS runners for Saturday's meet. They are Dotson, Charlie Hayward, Dan Ralston, Tonni Coane, George Cabrera, Mike Fulghum, and Bill Thornton.
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Page 7
Buff Line Big, Experienced
One of the big reasons why Colorado has such a fine passing attack, and the constant threat of the breakaway run, is the fine front line which protects and blocks with authority.
Colorado's tackle corps is the biggest and brawniest group ever to assemble in the Buffalo camp. There is a good amount of experience and this could be the finest tackle delegation ever at Boulder.
upon to be one of the bulwarks of the CU forward wall this season. The big senior has come along steadily for the past two years although he has been a reserve most of the time. Last spring he was very impressive and could be one of the finest in the Big Eight.
At right tackle, Perkins is rebounding from an injury-plagued 1960 season. He and McClough were
His running mate at left guard will be converted center Ralph Heck.
HECK ISN'T A NEWCOMER TO guard. He stepped into the breach late last season when injuries wiped out both starting guards. He is big (6-1, 201) and is strong and an excellent linebacker.
The big news at right guard is that, for the first time in three years, Romig may get some relief.
77 79 67 74 72
ALL AMERICA DWARFED—Colorado's captain and All America guard Joe Romig (67) looks tiny compared to the top four Buffalo
tackles who are, left to right. Dan Grimm, Bill Frank, Jim Perkins and John Denvir.
THE FOUR-DEEP LEFT SIDE shows John Donvir (6-2, 238), Dan Grimm (6-3, 233), Jerry McClurg 6-4, 227), and Bob McCllough (6-2, 221).
On the right side in Colorado's balanced line formation are Jim Perkins (6-5, 230); Bill Frank (6-4, 232), Bill Bearse, (6-2, 211), and Mike Cohn (6-4, 222).
Denvir, Grimm, McClough and Perkins are previous lettermen.
DENVIR IS BEING COUNTED
the starting tackles for most of the 1959 campaign. Perkins was felled early last fall by a knee injury which failed to heal properly and kept him benched all but a few moments of the first game. He had no trouble with his game in spring drills.
Wednesday, October 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan
The presence of All America Joe Romig headlines a solid set of guards for the Buffs. Romig, who will captain Colorado, is one of the top linemen in the nation.
He averaged more than 45 minutes per game last season.
The big reason for no apparent problem at center for the Buffs is the return to sophomore form by Walt Klinker (5-0, 200). Klinker was one of the finest sophomores in the conference two years ago but a shoulder injury the following spring necessated summer surgery and he was far below strength last fall, seeing only occasional duty as a thirdstringer.
A slight upset marked the second day of intramural football play as Phi Kappa Psi turned back Delta Upsilon, 13-0 in the fraternity A division.
Phi Kappa Psi Downs DU
In Independent A action the Hawks tripped Templin, 20-0 and ASCE stopped Oread, 21-7.
In other action, in the fraternity B division, two one-sided games took place. The Beta Theta Pi #2 shut out Alpha KappaLambda, 20-0. Phi Gamma Delta was an easy winner over Kappa Sigma, 25-0.
Walter Mikols, director of the intramural program, has announced eight openings for freshman intramural managers. Applications will be accepted in 107 Robinson.
Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether it is worth living is whether you have enough of it.-Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
All women are mothers of great men—it isn't their fault if life dis- appoints them later.—Boris Pasternak
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. October 4,1961
Reds Make Play for Iran
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — U.S. officials are keeping a close watch on a massive Communist radio campaign in Iran, which may surpass Red propaganda efforts in any other country.
Almost daily a clandestine station just across the border in Russia, and another in East Berlin, call upon the people of Iran to revolt and give unabashed instructions to local Communist parties to stir up trouble.
DURING 1960 Communist Radio broadcasts to Iran from all sources expanded from 76 hours a week to 96 hours, one of the sharpest increases anywhere in the world.
MEANWHILE, THE main propaganda networks of Russia and Red China stand back and take a broader swing. They denounce Shah Reza Fahlavi as an agent of the United States, demand Iran's withdrawal from the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) and warn that Iran would vanish in nuclear holocaust if the Berlin crisis erupted in war.
The campaign has been going on, in ups and downs, since 1959, and apparently has had little effect on Iran except to heighten local political conflict. But it is seen as a softening-up operation for possible Red moves in that country if the opportunity ever presents itself.
The campaign operates through three main channels which perform different roles:
- Soviet journals and Radio Moscow which speak in global terms.
- The National Voice of Iran, a secret station which pretends to broadcast from Iran itself, but which officials say obviously is in nearby Russia. It concentrates on rousing discontent among farmers and tribesmen.
- Peyk-e Iran (Messenger of Iran), a radio operated in East Berlin by exiled members of Iran's Communist Party. It speaks mainly to the Communists in Iran.
A RECENT PEYK-E broadcast
Watson Book Sale Tomorrow
The new Kansas laws on censorship will not affect the annual Watson Library book sale to be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow in front of the library.
Carl Deal, head of acquisitions,
said Watson Library's book sale of
4,000 items will not suffer from any
ban on obscene content.
The books are surplus duplicates, donation and exchange items—things the library can no longer use.
BUT EVEN IF K.U. students do not find any inticing numbers in the selection, they will still have a variety of books to choose from.
"Some of these things are real bargains," Mr. Deal said, "The prices are much better than what a book store would ask for them."
A NUMBER OF the books will make fine additions to student libraries. Hulme's "Middle Ages," Greene's "History of England" and Mark Twain's "Autobiography" are priced at $4 and $3. A large number of scholarly journals will sell for 2c and some paperbacks are going for 25c.
The Kansas Union is running a print sale in conjunction with the book sale. The Union will occupy 30 tables in front of the library as well as run a concession stand.
The sale will be controlled so that all interested people on the campus will have an opportunity to buy books." These books are up for grabs on a first-come, first-served basis," Mr. Deal said.
Generosity has never impoverished the giver; it has enriched the lives of those who have practiced it.—Dwight D. Eisenhower
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
began, "The regime's crisis, which has already begun, should be intensified from all directions . . . initially one must direct one's attention toward villages.
"The town's masses must be directed toward a more serious struggle. The participation of the farmers and the people of the provinces in the struggle will expand."
THE BROADCAST gave a fivepoint program for local propaganda work to win over farmers, army officers and other groups and ended with this advice:
"In this battle one must be completely accurate and alert. Avoid emotional attitudes and hasty conclusions. The events must not be over simplified and the struggle must not be taken lightly."
"YOU ARE POOR and hungry. You make the landlords rich with your toil and get nothing for it . . . you should take your revenge on these feudal lords."
Programs of the National Voice of Iran aimed at farmers and tribesmen sound like this:
Earlier this year Moscow propaganda organs claimed to have uncovered secret CENTO battle plans
Peyk-e elaborated on this for weeks afterward in messages to the Kurdish people in this area.
calling for a nuclear attack to create a buffer zone of devastated waste-land in Northern Iran.
"DEAR KURDS: As you are aware, CENTO's secret military document calls for atomic bombardment of the northern part of Iran if war breaks out. . .."
Experts differ on the meaning of the campaign. Some see it as preparation for a Soviet "second front" in Iran after Berlin. But the State Department has seen little evidence of explicit Russian plans for this.
The broadcasts contain bitter personal denunciations of the Shah. They charge for example that "His majesty has thousands of fiances all over the world."
THE U.S. INFORMATION Agency also is active in Iran, but instead of broadcasting directly from outside it distributes taped radio programs to Iranian stations. For this reason, officials say, it is impossible to compare the number of broadcasting hours of U.S.I.A. and the Communists in Iran.
Emery M. Bontrager, who graduated from K.U. last year, is one of a group of 128 men and women selected to go to the Philippines as a teachers' aide under the Peace Corps program.
KU Graduate To Peace Corps
Bontrager received a B.S. in education here in July. He will leave for the Philippines from San Francisco on Oct. 10. He trained for the program from July 29 to Sept. 14 at Pennsylvania State University.
Bontrager is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emery Bontrager of Scott City. His major field was social studies education.
Announce Civil Service Exams
Kansas civil service examinations for Accountant I and II and Post Auditor I will be given during the early part of November, the State Personnel Division announced today.
There are approximately 100 Accountant I and II positions and 10 Post Auditor I positions in state agencies. There are a number of vacancies every year.
Examinations also will be given in October or November for Cottage Parent I and II, Dormitory Director I and II, and Home Supervisor I and II.
KU Wants Soviet Exchange
Dr. Oswald P. Backus, professor of history at the University of Kansas, will be in Washington, D.C., Thursday and Friday to discuss possibilities of a K.U. exchange of lecturers and researchers with similar personnel from the Soviet Union.
Dr. Backus will negotiate with members of the State Department, the Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants (composed of about 25 U.S. universities) and the American Council of Learned Societies.
Women, who are, beyond all doubt,
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SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, SENIORS: DON'T TREAD ON FRESHMEN! They have been known to become employers. A freshman wants, above all, to be inaugurated into your world. Walk him to class, teach him longhand, explain how the Ph.D. wears his tassel, introduce him to Luckies (and tell him how college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular). You'll be a bigger man, and you'll be able to borrow Luckies from him any time.
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Wednesday. October 4, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Phi Kappa Sigma
The pledge class of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity recently elected the following officers. They are: president, Mike Peolquo, Long Island, N.Y.; vice president, Steve Hagen, Great Bend; secretary, Mike Fisher, Wichita; treasurer, Dick King, Shawnee Mission; house manager, Steve Warner, Osawatomic; social chairman, Brad Tyrrell, Prairie Village; scholarship chairman, Larry Leighton, and I.F.P.C. representatives, Ray Gard, Independence, Mo., and Jim Maturus, Kansas City, Mo. All are freshmen except Hagen and maturo who are sophomores.
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity recently initiated the following members. They are: Richard Higgins, Kansas City, Mo.; Allan George, St. Louis, Mo.; and Mont O'Leary, Baxter Springs. All are sophomores.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority recently initiated the following women: Shirley Anderson, Topeka, Jacqueline Baker, Alexandria, Va.; Betty Catlin, Olathe; Patricia Deam, Shawnee Mission; Lindsey Easton, Lawrence; Ellen Hassler, Chapman; Carolyn Huntoon, Ellicott City, Md.; Marilyn Manville, Wathena; Sandra McHardy, Independence, Mo.; Nancy Niestrom, Mission; Carole Novak, Minneapolis, Minn.; Carolyn Peters, Kansas City; Carol Peterson, Bethel; Mary Nell Reavley, Lamar, Mo.; Sherryl Strunk, Abilene; Dana Sulivan, Ulysses, outstanding pledge; Susan Tillotson, Topeka; Julia Varner, Kansas City, Honor initiate; and Carolyn Shepherd, Lawrence. All are sophomores except Miss Shepherd who is a junior.
Alpha Omicron Pi
* *
Kappa Sigma
***
Pi Kanna Alpha
**
The 1961 pledge class of Kappa Sigma, social fraternity, recently elected the following fall officers. They are: president, Jim Hall, Norton; vice president, Ron Best, Leawood; secretary, Ed Bachiller, Salina; and social chairman, Tom Woods, Arkansas City.
Louise Huntoon, Ellicott City, Md., junior, Alpha Omicron Fi, to Hans Heynau, Fort Collins, Colo., junior, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Four Pinnings Announced
***
Carolyn Huntoon, Ellicott City, Md., sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi, to Richard Durett, Prairie Village senior, Lambda Chi Alpha.
...
Julie Russell, Lawrence junior. Alpha Phi, to John Eagle, Atchison senior. Alpha Kappa Lambda.
*
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Triangle
The Triangle fraternity pledge class recently elected the following officers. They are; president, Victor Vermillion, Salina; vice president, Bob French, Merriam; secretary-treasurer, Dick White, Prairie Village; L.F.P.C. representatives; Tom Maynard, Overland Park, and Jack Riedel, Kansas City; social chairman, Paul Arnold, Kansas City, Mo.; rush chairman, Bill Ross, St. Joseph, Mo., and athletic chairman, Dick Kerr, Kansas City. All are freshmen.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 4,1961
Ike and Truman To Meet in KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — Former presidents Eisenhower and Truman will participate in a Veterans Day celebration in Kansas City next month.
Joyce C. Hall, president of Hallmark Cards, Inc., and general chairman of the three-day celebration, said today both men consented to come and both will speak.
Truman often has expressed his scorn about Eisenhower's political views. Eisenhower did not invite Truman to the White House during his eight years there.
Another former president, Herbert Hoover, will also attend, Hall said, if his health permits.
The 1953 inauguration of Eisenhower was the last time Eisenhower and Truman met other than by chance.
The exact nature of the program was not released.
Faculty Members Attend Meetings
Hall said the two were scheduled to speak on different days. Both were expected to meet face-to-face and shake hands at the event, however.
Traveling faculty members from the School of Journalism and the department of English have returned to the University after attending meetings out of state last week.
Robert P. Cobb, assistant professor of English, was elected president of the Mid-Continent American Studies Association for 1961-62 at a conference at Park College, Parkville, Mo., on Sept. 23.
Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English, is editor of the "journal" of the MASA, which is published at KU. Edward F. Grier, associate professor of English, is chairman of the editorial board of the association.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, spoke in Chicago to the annual meeting of the Methodist Commission of Information and Public Relations on Iran, where he spent a year teaching on a Fulbright professorship.
A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor.-Alexander Smith.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky
Officers of Organizations: Should be reported at once to the Office of Dean of Students, 228 Strong for listing in the Student Directory.
**Foreign Students:** Neosho County Council for UESSD "dinner" program and program at Chanute, Kansas, Friday, October 27. If any KU foreign students are interested in attending they should drop by 228 for a reservation preservation form. Deadline, October 13.
TODAY
Al Etenzo (Spanish Club): 4 p.m., 11 Fraser. Students from the Summer Institute in Spain will speak and show slides. Refreshments will be served.
KU Amateur Radio Club: 7:30 p.m.
201. E. Labs. Discussion topic: "Project OSCAR." Everyone interested in amateur radio is invited to attend.
Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast. 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
TOMORROW
Deutsche Verein trift sich am
Dach 10.30 Uhr.
In 502 Fehrer Heuer Doktor Burzle spricht
ueber Studium im Ausland und-Stipen-
dauer daffen.
Esseeing KRIEFER, 8:30 p.m.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
anforth Chapel.
OCTOBER
Student National Education Association:
4 p.m. Bailey Auditorium. Film and speaker concerning Russian education.
OCTOBER 11
Rhodes Scholar Joins KU Faculty
Aldon Duane Ball, a specialist in English history, has joined the K.U. faculty as instructor in history. He fills a position left vacant by the death of Prof. Charles B. Realey a year ago.
In addition to three years at Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar, Mr. Bell completed his course work for a doctorate there.
He served as an assistant to the American secretary of the Rhodes Trust, spent two years in the army, taught in an Oklahoma high school, and did graduate work at the University of California.
Yankees Win-
(Continued from page 1)
Yankees: Jim Brosnan pitched and Jerry Zimmerman caught for the Reds. Howard grounded out to Kasko. Skowron struck out. Berrie walked. Johnny Roberson struck. No runs, not hits, no errors, one left.
Ninth Inning
CRC to Amend Its Purpose
Reds: Jack Reed went to center field and Maris moved to right field for the Yankees. Jerry Lynch batted for Blasingame and popped to Boyer-Kuhn tossed out Kasko. Pinson popped to Kuhn. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
The Civil Rights Council will discuss proposed amendments to its official statement of purpose at its meeting tonight, Chuck Menghini, Pittsburg senior and co-chairman said.
Menghini said the proposals are a result of the CRC's widening interests.
THE STATEMENT OF purpose
now reads:
"The purpose of the Civil Rights Council is to work for equal rights for all persons, regardless of race, creed or national origin, through legal and non-violent procedures. In order to achieve its purpose, the Council recognizes two of these procedures to be the acquisition and dispersal of information and the judicious use of publicity. Furthermore, the Council considers to be within the scope of its activities such areas as housing, public accommodations, public education, employment and all other areas which deal with the rights of man."
Menghini said proposed amendments would include civil liberties and academic freedom.
THE COUNCIL will also appoint members to five committees. The committees are housing, barbershop, watchdog, public information and civil liberties.
Menghini said the Council will also probably discuss present University housing procedures.
Of all those arts in which the wise excel, Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well. —John Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire
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Wednesday, October 4. 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR
One day, $0; 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 25e for billing.
All ads must be called or brought to the University Data Managemen on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
IOST—WATCH. Friday in Fraser or
on Swiss watch Reward — ext
410, 410
10-6
BUSINESS SERVICES
LOST--POST VERSALOG slide rule in
Flint Hint or call V 3-7922 10-6
ENIORIS — Need jobs for employment
Larry Mury
VI 2-344 after 5 p.m.
10-9
Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance
NOW IS THE TIME to get your car ready for Winter. Specializing in engine tune-up, Tunup-ut & Speed Drive-W. Gth West of Sunset Drive-In. Phone 1-32371. 10-6
TOWS 14th St. Barber Shop. 1/2 block off Mass. Parking next to shop. All styles of haircuts $1.25, 3 full-time barbers. Copen 8-5:30. Mon.-Sat. 10-6
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
comprehensive information on infections, and line saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
easy to use free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7583,
3-5778.
Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall 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. V 3-1267, tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
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WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tt
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
wards. Call VI 3-5263. Ola Smith
1923] $99; Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a baby boy and 2-year-old girl. I have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8140.
FOR SALE
OONE-OWNER '35 Plymouth 4 door, good
one. clean, stand shift, overdrive, good
tires and two snow tires, 5.15. Call VI 2-1
8:20 8:30 to 5. Later call VI 3-2240 10-6
VARIABLE REVERBERATION UNIT.
Self-contained, self-powered. Plug between amp. & pre-amp. of any amplification system. Easily interchangeable between Hi-Fi, tape recorder, guitar Amp. etc. $75. VI 2-3625. 10-10
1960 PONTIAC VENTURA Bonneville interior,
348 HP, tri-power, posttraction,
4 speed and alloy wheels. 1955 MGTF 1500-
Red with red leather JAGUAR XK500,
SE Roadster, blue, chrome wire wreels.
1956 BUICK CENTURY 4-door, deluxe
Riviera, blue. See at British Motors, 204
Vermont or call VI 3-8367. 10-6
SACRIFICE Student must sell secrea
running card $150 Call V3-4291. iff
Car For Call: 52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna
flow. Call V1 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m.
960 IMPALA 2-door hard top, Light
800 IMPALA Automatic, 1.50 mm
400 2-3780, 1.50 mm
(OU CAN BUY a 1959 Skyline 50x10
railer for $4,500. 2 bdrs., washer &
liver, gas heated. Bob's Trailer Court,
iith & Arkansas VI. 2-18 10-6
STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-296on 6 p.m. tt
61 FORD Starliner. Powder Blue, Cruise-
O-Matic, power steering, 200 plus H.P.
,7,800 miles. See to appreciate. Call John
Davis at VI 2-2923. 10-6
FOR SALE - Couch in good shape, $15.00.
2 radios at $3.00 ea. Window fan, $7.00.
Man's & woman's winter coats, $5.00 ea.
1626 W. 21st. 10-4
Will finance—45' 2-bdrm. mobile home.
Trade 1960 Vauxhall for older auto. Tape recorder; 35 MM camera. VI 2-0660 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. 10-4
FURNITURE FOR SALE: Dining set; dinette set, vanity, matching chair and divan. store and refrigerator. 1116 fb-2356. Ask for Skk — 7 p.m. 10:55 to 10:59.
THREE BEDROOM HOME. corner lot.
Utility room, bath, car port, easily
heated, gas furnace, 220 wiring. See after
1 p.m. 1603 Lindenwood. 10-9
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & 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 adding an additional graphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today.
FOR RENT
1 BEDROOM duplex furn. apt. for boys.
Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-6641. 10-10
LARGE NEWLY decorated 4 room apt.
phone: 212-780-6395
phone: boys. Phone VI 3-181 or VI 3-661-100
phone: ladies. Phone VI 3-181 or VI 3-661-100
1 BEDROOM, furn. house close to hospital. Phone VI 3-1191 or VI 8562. 10-10
CALCULATING MACHINES for rent at $20.00 per month. Two or more can share the cost. Send a card to T. E. England. 120 Hunton, Topeka, Kansas. 10-10
GARAGE FOR RENT -Vicinity of 14th and Ohli Phone VI 3-7655 at 5 p.m. 10-9
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412 W. 9th
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rURNISHED apartments, east side. Utilities paid. Two bedroom, first floor-$60.
One bedroom, second floor — $30. Call VI 3-6294. 10-9
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer. air cond.
air conditioning. 30-room suite. 310-
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FOR REENT: 2-bdrm. duplex unfurnished.
good location, 432 Missouri. 10-4
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Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, and accurately. Standard rates. Call Patty Coester VI 3-8679.
TYPING
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See at 432 Missouri. 10-6
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name call VI 3-9136. Ms. Ler-
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FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Missionary Service. 3917 B Wood Mission, HE 2-7718 Eves or Su t拉 2-2186
Experienced Ttypist; Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequilst, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 t
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." 1020, Now at two
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term paners, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and coursework. Neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI. 3-7485.
Typing: Will type reports, theses, etc.
Testing: 1511 W, 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 t
1511 W, 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 t
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers and manuscripts. Residence rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568.
GOOD TYFING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-
tion. Typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. t/
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, Eddie Spangler reports accurately. Sundard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf
HELP WANTED
PERMANENT POSITIONS
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
For Married Students
Selling To Students and Lawrence Residents
LIBERAL COMMISSION
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Write, Giving Age, Work History,
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ADVERTISING YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
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DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer
HIXON STUDIO
摄影师
721 Mass VI 3-0330
U. OF KANSAS STUDENT WINS PRAISE IN THIS WEEK'S POST
KU junior Bill Dawson is the subject of an enthusiastic editorial in this week's Saturday Evening Post. Dawson is the author of the People-to-People Council, a plan that helps foreign students fit into the fabric of American life. Says the Post editorial writer: "Our whole nation would benefit if the example set at KU were followed."
Read how "This One Man Peace Corps Made Friends for the U.S.A." It's in this week's Saturday Evening Post where suddenly reading becomes a new adventure.
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST A CURTIS MAGAZINE
(cellar of the Pizza Hut)
TGIF, 2-6 Fri., at The Catacombs
... All you can drink - men, $1.00; women, $.50
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The Tornados, Saturday 9-12
Catacombs available for parties throughout the week
Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest
OPEN- 4-11 Sunday-Thursday
646 Mass.
4-1 Friday & Saturday
PIZZA
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VI 3-9760
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 4, 1961
FOOTBALL CONTEST
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST
TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU
Downtown 835 Mass.
On Campus
12th
and
Oread
Jay SHOPPE
CAMPUS FASHIONS For EVERY OCCASION
Visit our stores each week and register for drawing on Saturday. (No purchase necessary to register.)
This Week's Gift
A BOBBIE BROOKS
BLOUSE
Of Your Choice
Purdue vs Notre Dame ———
Lawrence Tire & Oil Co.
1000 Mass. VI2-0247
HEADQUARTERS FOR:
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Alignment - Wheel Balance
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Complete Mechanical Service
OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 1 am
Missouri vs California
Francis Sporting Goods
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- Used Intramural Football Shoes . . . $350
- Close-out on New $500 U.S. Intramural Football Shoes . . .
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Everything for the Outdoorsman
Team Price
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VI 3-3711 10th & N.H.
For the Finest in Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Northwestern vs Illinois
- Iowa State vs Oklahoma -
see "Quality Guaranteed"
Lawrence Laundry
the 'flying wedge'? the 'single wing'?
regardless, you will be 'suited' to a 'T' at diebolt's
diebolt's
men's wear
843 massachusetts Tulsa vs Oklahoma State
For Women
American Girl-Risque Summerettes-Glov-etts Smart-Aire-Red Ball Fabric
Crosby Square — Randcraft Red Wing Work Shoes ACME BOOTS
For Men
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Nebraska vs Kansas State
AUTHORITATIVE LISTING
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says
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TCU vs Arkansas
--advertisement on this page.
WIN $10.00 CASH
Closest prediction of the combined total points scored in the games listed in the advertisements on this page will receive a cash prize of $10.00 donated by these Merchants.
1. Check the games listed in each
2. Fill out & clip coupon.
3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv.
Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 10-6.
In case of ties the $10 will be split.
Name ___
Address ___ Ph. ___
My prediction is ___ points.
One entry per person.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS:
Rozanne Rimmer 147 pts.
Liz. NuDelman 147 pts.
WEVE GOTTA BONE UP ON OUR FOOTBALL THIS SEASON!
WE'VE GOTTA
BONE UP ON
OUR FOOTBALL
THIS SEASON!
IN MERRIE ENGLAND IN THE
11TH CENTURY FOOTBALL
WAS PLAYED USING A
DANISH SKULL FOR A BALL
The
Southern Pit
1834 Mass.
Jaw To Ow
NF cinnam Yank 1961 apied
Yap pitch force Chac Coler wher baser cause Berr one
Rec left. and 2 ardsch hits.
Kansas vs Colorado
Re
then
Cole
then
fleet
but
Skot
street
dow
foul
or
Ya then to I wall
wall Kasl and no
Jay Pitches Reds To 6-2 Decision Over Yankees
First Inning
NEW YORK — (UPI) — The Cincinnati Reds defeated the New York Yankees today, 6-2, and evened the 1961 World Series at one game apiece.
Reds: Chacon flied to Berder in deep left. Kasko went down swinging on a, and 2 pike. The bounced out to Rahimi. Terry's not hurt. No runs, hits no, errors, none left.
Yankees: Richardson lined a 1 and 1 pitch into left field for a single. Kube forced Richardson to kick Kube to Coleman at Kasko but was safe at first when Kasko's throw past the first baseman. There was no turn. Kube caused a bounce out to Chacon. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
Second Inning
Reds: Robinson took two strikes and then popped to Kubek in short center. Coleman worked the count to 2 and 2 and then bounced out to Kubek. Boyer deflected Post's liner to shortstop Kubek but Post beat it out for a three. Then Skowron pulled off the base stretching the infield. Freese went hitting after hitting two sharp fouls along the third base line. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
Yankees: Blanchard took a ball and then popped to Kasko. Howard, wearing the No. 2 jersey, Showron walked when Jay's 3 and 2 pitch was high. Boyer forced Skowron at second. Kasko making a nice play to his right, missed the ball. No runs. No hits no errors, one left.
Third Innin
Reds: Terry scooped up Edwards' topped ball in front of the plate and threw him out. Jay filed to Berna close to the left field foul me. One on five played well, no down swing, in four pitches. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left.
Fourth Inning
Yankees: Terry popped to Chacon.
Richardson picked to Chacon, who made the catch about 30 feet behind second base. Kubek went down swinging on a 2 and 2 pitch. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Reds: Pinson flied to Berra in medium left. Robinson was safe at first when Boyer fumbled his easy bounder. Cole-man hit an 0 and 1 pitch about five rows deep into the right field with the Reds ahead, 2-0. Perepwent down swinging on four pitches Freese grounded out to Rubek. Two runs, one hit, one error, none left.
Yankees: Maris walked on five pitches. Berra took a ball and then hit a home run deep into the strike zone. He played 2-2. Blanchard bounced to Coleman who tossed to Jay, covering first, for the putout. Howard walked when Jays' 3 and 2 pitch was outside. He struck. Two plays, one hit, no errors, none left.
Fifth Inning
Reds: Edwards lined to Richardson. Jay went down swinging on three pitches. Chacon for looping drilled the ball to Chacon, for looping drilled the ball to Chacon, for looping drilled the ball to Chacon, in a daring sprint for the plate, just scored ahead of the Yankee catcher's tag as Kasto went to second. Chacon scored as a passed ball. Pinson struck out one run, two hits, no errors, one left.
Yankees: Boyer walked when Jay's 3 and 2 pitch was low. Terry failed to bounce on the first pitch and hit Richardson hit to Kasko but all runners were safe when Boyer, going on the hit and run, beat the throw to second. Richardson also reached first when the throw was wide to Coleman. Kubek went down swinging. Maris struck out on a 3 and 2 pitch. No runs, no hits, no errors, two left.
Sixth Inning
Reds: Boyer made a diving back-handed catch of Robinson's one-hop bid for the eighth, but threw him out at first. Coleman struck out Post hit Terry's first pitch along the left side, and impossibly walked. Edwards grounded a two-strike pitch into right field for a single. Post scoring and Freese going to one run, two hits, no errors, two left.
Yankees: Berra dropped a single into short center. Blanchard potted to Kasko in short center on Jav's first pitch. Howard hit into a double play. Chacon to Kasko to Coleman. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left.
Seventh Inning
Reds: Chacon fled to Maris in deep left. Kasko fled to Maris. Pinson lined to Skowron. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Yankees: Skowron went down swinging on three pitches. Boyer took a ball in the first inning and drove to Lopez batted for Terry and drew a walk. Chacon snared Richardson's sharp drive on one bounce and forced Lopez out. Lopez drove for No runs. No hits, no errors, one left.
(Continued on page 12)
Bulletin
DALLAS, Tex.—(UPI) —House Speaker Sam Rayburn has an incurable cancer, his doctor revealed today.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No.15
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
UN Still Seeks Dag Successor
UNITED NATIONS—(UPI)—At least eight non-committed nations sought final agreement today on a plan to appoint an acting secretary general and five assistants approved in advance by the Soviet Union and the United States.
The group hoped to have the plan ready for President Kennedy and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko when they meet tomorrow in Washington.
BUT IT WAS not certain that either the Soviet Union or the United States would accept the proposal. It is based on an outline published last summer by the late Dag Hammsarkskjold, calling for appointment of five assistant secretaries general on a geographical basis.
Under Hammskjold's plan, the assistants would represent the United States, Russia and three non-aligned countries — probably from Asia, Africa and Latin America.
However, the United States has opposed this plan on the ground that it robbed the secretary general, or his interim replacement, of the right to select his own assistants.
RUSSIA HAS AGREED to no departure from its original "troika" plan for three permanent secretaries general, except the temporary appointment of three deputies to assist an acting UN chief until April, 1963, when Hammarskjold's term would have expired.
Under the plan said to be favored by the non-committed countries, the United States and Russia would
Thursday, October 5, 1961
Weather
Weekend plans won't be hindered by the weather if the Topka Weather Eureau is reading the signs correctly. The bureau has predicted the current pleasant weather will continue for several more days. Today's high is expected to reach into the 80s with overnight lows between 40 and 50.
agree upon a man to fill the vacancy in the secretary general's office. That nominee would be obliged to give assurance that he would appoint five deputies acceptable to both the United States and the Soviet Union.
Edwin H. Wilson, executive director of the American Humanist Association, will discuss "Rights of the Non-Conformist" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union for the Minority Opinion Forum.
Wilson to Discuss The 'Non-Conformist'
The American Humanist Association favors disarmament and international conciliation through the United Nations. It opposes religious education in the schools and defends civil liberties and the rights of minority groups.
Mr. Wilson has been an officer and a director of the association for 20 years. He was a Uitarian Universalist minister for 23 years and is a former president of the Uitarian Fellowship for Social Justice and chairman of the Salt Lake City Council for Civil Unity.
- News Briefs-
WASHINGTON — (UPI) - President Kennedy and neutralist President Ibrahim Abboud of Sudan were to meet here today to discuss mideastern affairs including the Syrian situation.
Abboud was on the White House calling list for 8 a.m. CST.
The African leader said at a White House dinner last night that Kennedy has "opened a new frontier in foreign policy" by encouraging self-help among other nations.
DALLAS, Tex.—(UPI)—A surgeon at Baylor University Medical Center announced today that he will take a tissue sample from ailing House Speaker Sam Rayburn for a diagnosis.
\* \* \*
***
The surgeon referred to it as a "diagnostic biopsy." A spokesman for the hospital said that a biopsy is frequently but not always a test for cancer.
BERLIN—(UPI)—Communist police fired gunshots into West Berlin in two separate incidents today, West Berlin police reported. No casualties were reported in either incident and West Berlin police withheld return fire.
***
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Jack Greenberg, a white attorney, last night was named legal counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Greenberg, 36, will succeed Thurgood Marshall as General Counsel of its legal, defense and education fund, the NAACP said.
Peace Walkers' Intentions Foiled By Kindness
The "San Francisco to Moscow" peace marchers, who passed through Lawrence last Spring, reached their destination Tuesday.
The 6,000 mile march was in protest to the use of nuclear arms. Demonstrators called for unilateral disarmament to be started by the U.S., Britain and Russia, and other nuclear countries.
As the march came to an end, the marchers said they had more freedom to protest nuclear arms in the U.S. than in Russia.
"The Russians are killing us—and our campaign—with kindness," one marcher said. "They keep us so busy with tours and cultural trips that we don't have time to pass out our leaflets...
"We had more freedom of movement and freedom to demonstrate outside military bases in the U.S. than we have here. Even if we had the same freedom, the Russians wouldn't tell us where their bases are."
They complained also that Soviet authorities have ignored their requests for a meeting with Premier Nikita Khrushchev and permission to demonstrate in front of the Russian Defense Ministry.
The official Soviet press has reported that the marchers were mistreated in Western countries. This was in reference to the French action not allowing the marchers to disembark at Le Harve early in August.
Senior Key Time Filled with Joy
Senior women will receive their senior keys today and with them the privilege of not having to observe regular closing hours.
The use of keys to their residences was the privilege chosen last year by senior women and this privilege was unanimously chosen again this year. Each woman must get parental permission before she receives the key privilege.
The main change from last year's key plan is the time in which a senior woman can check out a key. She must now check it out between 5 and 11 p.m. on weeknights and Sundays and between 5 and 9 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays
High School Journalists Visit for Ideas
By Richard Bonett
Today was "idea" day for about 370 student journalists from high schools in the northeast part of Kansas.
The students were participants in the 43rd Annual High School Journalism Conference at the University of Kansas.
Arriving this morning for a one-day quick course in high school newspapers and yearbooks, the students were divided into small groups for various workshop and discussion sessions.
JIM TRIGG, sports editor of the Ottawa High School Record, summed up the feelings of the conferees:
"This has been very helpful. I've picked up a few ideas I hope to carry out." Trigg said.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism, said the key to a successful newspaper is the setting of specific goals and programs at the beginning of the school year.
IN REMARKS to one of several sessions opening the day-long series of workshops, Deen Marvin said:
"Decide what problems the school is facing, whether it's the lack of spirit or juvenile delinquency, and the story ideas will fall into place almost automatically."
In another opening session, Calder M. Pickett, associate professor of journalism, stressed the development of a program on the editorial page.
Professor Pickett told the students the editorial program should promote something of value, and need not necessarily be confined within the walls of the school building.
Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, spoke on imaginative editing and makeup.
"THE HEART of a newspaper is still the accurate, well-written news story that reflects the community's activities.
"However," he said, "in order to have that news read it must be displayed attractively because, unfortunately, too many readers can not tear themselves away from seductions such as TV, night athletic events, picture magazines, and other diversions."
(Continued on page 12)
158
HELPFUL HINTS-Burton W. Marvin, Dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism, shows examples of stories from high school newspaper campaigns to Linda Gentzler and Mike Doherty of the Wyandotte High School Pantograph. The students were among 370 who attended a high school journalism conference at KU today.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5, 1961
Disillusioned Neighbors
The firing squads of Fidel Castro have resumed their work and they have been accompanied by a growing volume of protest from Latin American countries. There is rapidly becoming apparent a disillusionment with the Communist tinted regime of Castro among Latin American leaders.
It has not been merely the executions that have caused this rising dislike for the Cuban regime, however. Several Latin American nations have broken relations with the Castro regime because of its propaganda and espionage efforts on behalf of the Communist bloc.
The disillusionment of the Latin American nations is understandable. They are all underdeveloped and have strong elements that are either socialist or sympathetic to socialism. Castro's regime seemed to be socialistic at its beginning and announced many needed reforms to improve Cuba's economy and the lot of the peasants. Unfortunately, Communist elements, spearheaded in all probability by Che Guevera, channeled the revolutionary government towards Communism.
As the abuses of the Cuban government
against its Latin American neighbors continues, the number that have broken relations with it will undoubtedly grow. This is especially true when we consider that Castro's regime can be expected to continue its propaganda efforts for Communism and its attempts to foment rebellion that the Communist movement can take advantage of. The Cuban government's call for the Brazilians to revolt during the recent crisis over the resignation of President Quadros and the succession of leftist Vice President Goulart is a good example.
If the grip of Castro's Communistic regime is not broken by internal opposition or by action on the part of the Organization of American States, the depressed conditions within Cuba will grow worse. But regardless of whether the Communist hold on Cuba is broken or not, it should serve as a permanent example for all Latin American states. The same sullen fury that is convulsing Cuba can strike their countries and peoples if the operations of the Communist party in their area are not closely watched and contained.
—William H. Mullins
Worth Repeating
We have a free society, and there are worse things than strikes as bad as they are—and I'm quoting President Eisenhower. When he said it he was absolutely right. There are worse things than strikes and one of the things is loss of freedom. I agree with that. Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg
If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is that, if it is comfort or money that it values more, it will lose that too—W. Somerset Maugham
I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it away from them, but to inform their discretion by education—Thomas Jefferson
To be shaken out of the ruts of ordinary perception, to be shown for a few timeless hours the outer and inner world, not as they appear to an animal obsessed with survival or to a human being obsessed with words and notions, but as they are apprehended, directly and unconditionally by Mind-at-Large—this is an experience of inestimable value to everyone and especially to the intellectual.—Aldous Huxley
Freedom of the press, essential as it is in a democracy, offers no guarantee in and of itself that truth will triumph in the free-for-all of journalistic competition—especially, as in this country, when that competition is almost entirely economic rather than ideological. —Robert Bingham
ONE MAN'S OPINION
ROAP SENIOR
Against Dropping NSA
Editor:
We are very disturbed to hear the reports that some influential elements on the campus are proposing to recommend the disaffiliation of this University from NSA. Our feeling is not based on any regard for the political attitudes of NSA, which have dubious value, nor on any belief as to its efficiency or inefficiency. But we feel there are some facts which the students of KU should know and should not lightly disregard.
Through the affiliation of NSA to COSEC (the Coordinating Secretariat of the International Student Conference) and through the affiliation of KU to NSA, Kansas students form an integral part of the great body of students in the free world, who stand for and campaign for the principles of academic freedom where these are denied. By disaffiliating Kansas will be publicly renouncing its faith in the ability of COSEC to campaign for these principles and cutting off its association with students in all parts of the free world.
IN ADDITION, many other benefits of belonging to an international student organization will be denied to KU students e.g. the International Student Identity Card which is invaluable to all students who plan to travel to Europe and haven't got money to throw away, the services of student travel departments throughout the world in arranging charter flights and party tickets on railroads.
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
Telephone XMing. 3:2700
Letters to the Editor...
Extension 376, business office
Association. Associated College Rep.
Represented by National Advertising Service,
18 East St. Fl. New York 22. N.Y.
New York. Certified Mail subscription rates: $3 a
semester or $5 a year. Published in
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Telephone 1-800-749-2366
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown Business Manager
We feel that the proper course for those to pursue who are disillusioned by NSA is to revitalize it, steer it away from its preoccupation with political affairs if these are felt to be anasthematic, and to propagandize in this University the connection it gives students in this country with students fighting for the freedom to study in other parts of the world (which is taken for granted here and in Western Europe).
WE WOULD ALSO LIKE to make it clear that whereas the Communist - controlled International Union of Students (IUS) is seeking converts in the newly developing countries of Asia and Africa, NSA through its support of COSEC is championing the democratic freedoms in these areas.
In conclusion, the signers of this letter will be only too willing to give further information on COSEC, of which there seems to be complete ignorance on this campus.
Sincerelv.
Claus-peter Buechmann
Graduate student from Germany
Brian E. Cleave, LLB.
Graduate Student from England
Wolfgang E. Keim
Graduate Student from Germany
Orientate, What Does It Mean?
Editor:
An article in Thursday's Daily Kansas dealt with the opening of the first meeting of the All Women Students by Dean Emily Taylor who invited freshmen and transfer women to "share the satisfaction that the AWS offers." This front page article was entitled: "AWS Orientates New Students." Finding the heading somewhat unusual, I decided to look up the word orientate. Webster's New School and Office Dictionary defines "orientate" as "to turn toward the east."
All I can say is that I hope (for the sake of Dean Taylor, the AWS, and the Daily Kansan) that the John Birchers never hear about this.
Harry Shaffer
Assistant Professor
of Economics
(Editor's note: Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary. A Merriam-Webster, based on Webster's New International Dictionary, second edition, page 552: orientate. v.t. To orient—v.i. To face east; to have orientation.)
Fair Test For NSA
Editor:
While I am sure that Mr. Palmer, quoted in Oct. 2 UDK, has compared and conceived opinions with conscientious conservatives. I am curious as to what effort, if any, he has made to converse with informed moderate and liberal students. As in NSA, both locally and nationally, I feel that all views should be represented. I do not doubt that the motivation and concern of those who oppose the NSA committee are genuine, however, I feel that in their zeal to save money (the funds which the ASC appears to lavish everywhere but on NSA) they are setting out to abolish the many benefits which can be derived from an active and effective committee.
Certainly, many students on KU's campus are apathetic. If a justification is needed for the committee, it exists in the informative function on campus, national and international affairs for these students. It would seem that a more beneficial procedure for the ASC to initiate would be: first, an informative program on the NSA committee itself, perhaps using committee members as resource personnel. Secondly, if the committee were provided a budget, it could secure speakers on all sides of controversial questions and thus be allowed to fulfill its role as an informative body. Then, after a fair trial, an adequately informed student body could decide on the worth of NSA.
I would submit to Mr. Palmer and the other members of the ASC that continued participation or withdrawal from NSA should be based on a program similar to the one outlined here, rather than on personal grudges or ill-considered conjectures.
Judi Jamison
Ottawa junior
* * *
Pace Marchers Praised Editor;
Many students may remember when the marchers on the San Francisco to Moscow March for Peace came through Lawrence last spring. This week they arrived in Moscow where they will be carrying on demonstrations until Oct. 8. As they have marched across America, many European countries and Russia, they have called for unilateral disarmament by each country. In each country they have asked people not to support their country's part in the arms race if they believed it to be wrong.
of this courageous group of people certainly deserves serious consideration in these dark times.
The group now includes marchers from Europe as well as the original American marchers. For a story of their progress in the Soviet Union, see page 41 of the Oct. 2 Newsweek. The program
Sincerely,
Dwight Platt
Newton graduate student
Birchers And The Republic Editor;
Either Mr. Love was misquoted in the October 2 Kansan, or he and the Birchers have their dogmatic signals crossed. Since he states that the U.S. is a republic and not a democracy, it would be interesting to know how the Birchers define a republic. I can supply two contrasting definitions, neither of which seems to correspond to Mr. Love's position.
1. According to Raney (The Governing of Men, Holt, N.Y., 1958, p. 58) a republic is any form of government in which the formal chief of state "is selected by any means other than heredity". This includes a broad range of governmental structure, including the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the People's Republic of China.
2. According to Webster (Webster's Approved Dictionary, World, N.Y., 1951), a republic is "a state
STEELE
or country in which the supreme power is vested in representatives elected by popular vote." This certainly entails a considerable measure of democracy and majority rule.
Mr. Love would also appear to want to have his cake and eat it, too. He asserts that the Birchers are opposed to a democracy, but are in favor of less government in order to lessen the control over the individual. Either the individual controls the government or the government controls the individual. Since the former is democracy and the latter is distasteful to Mr. Love and his associates, what do they want.
John Swanson Baldwin senior
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Page 3
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
AMERICAN HERITAGE, August 1961. $3.95.
Here is a particularly abundant issue of American Heritage. An essay by Bruce Catton on Civil War centennial celebrations, a scandalous story out of early Virginia history, a grim description of the volcano that destroyed St. Pierre in Martinique, an essay on American taste in art, and an excerpt from the new biography of William Randolph Hearst are among the articles.
Catton says something that George Anderson, KU professor of history, said eloquently a year ago at KU Editor's Day. Like Anderson, who spoke of the Kansas centennial, Catton notes that the meaning of the Civil War is being obscured in reenactments of battles, beard-growing contests, old-time music and borrowed costumes. He calls the centennial "a musical comedy which implies that the 600,000 deaths caused by the Civil War had no real meaning."
"It created one nation, destined for world leadership, . . . The War brought Negro slavery to an end. In its blind, brutal and all but unendurable expensive way, the War left us with no alternative to the task of creating, perfecting, and defending a one-class American citizenship."
"SHOULD WE RE-ENACT THE STARVING of the first prisoner of war, or New York's Draft riots, or Sherman's march to the sea? Obviously not. Rather the Centennial should remind us that the Civil War started a process which is still incomplete.
"Scandal At Bizarre" is an article by Francis Biddle that tells of Nancy Randolph, cousin of John Randolph of Roanoke. She was mixed up in a triangle that involved aristocracy and even brought testimony from the daughter of Jefferson. It is a nasty story and an engrossing one.
THE STORY OF THE ST. PIERRE DESTRUCTION is a novel one for American Heritage, for properly speaking it is not a story of the people of the United States. But it is graphic and horrifying, with a frightening photograph of St. Pierre that makes one recall newspaper photographs of Hiroshima.
How Americans have given their love and admiration to four paintings is the subject of another article. Not one of the paintings stands today as a work of significance, but each shows what people liked. They are Willard's "Spirit of '76," done for the Philadelphia centennial exposition in 1876; Millet's "Man with the Hoe," which inspired Markham's famous poem; Hovenden's "Breaking Home Ties," a tear-jerker still beloved of many Americans, and Chabas' "September Morn," which scandalized so many persons almost 50 years ago. The publication refers to the nude girl "as being just about the most modest young lady who ever hung her clothes on a hickory limb."
THE EXCERPT FROM THE HEARST BIOGRAPHY chiefly describes the publisher's liaison with Marion Davies, who died in September. Other articles of interest describe Tecumseh and his efforts to turn back white settlers, the comic opera raid by Confederates on St. Albans, Vt., Mark Twain's Whittier dinner speech of 1877, Catharine Beecher and her efforts to make housekeeping a science, the fabled evangelist Billy Sunday, steamboats of America's past, and a tour of Siberia by George Kennan in the 1880s.
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The Rough Edge By Bill Mullins
NSA does not need to serve as an information agency on controversial subjects. Their own meetings will do fine.
We are wondering what the freshman who thinks the John Birch Society is a Communist organization would consider a conservative group.
****
One of the most lucrative professions in the world right now should be that of tranquilizer salesman on the diplomatic route.
****
---
Have you ever noticed what a damping effect their first exams have on the enthusiasm of the freshmen?
Former Presidents Eisenhower and Truman will meet next month in Kansas City. We will be waiting to hear what cute comments Harry has to make.
---
French politics are a lot like a game of Russian roulette.
---
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5, 1961
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Bill Sheldon
Long before this football season got under way, many people felt the Big Eight conference title would be decided this Saturday when the Jayhawkers and Colorado clash in the shadow of the Rockies.
This possibility is still in the offing despite the disappointing showing thus far by Coach Jack Mitchell's squad.
"Kansas looked real good but they kept hurting themselves with little mistakes, just as they did against TCU. Kansas is an extremely hard-hitting team, one which chases you and smashes you when they're on defense. Their offense sputtered much of the time but when Curtis McClinton and John Had get going, someone is going to suffer. I look for a real rugged battle and if that Kansas offense settles down it could be a wide-open game. I know that we're going to have to fight for our lives and we'll have to do some settling down ourselves."
IF THE HAWKERS were to suddenly find themselves and show that they have the material, etc., necessary to make a solid run for the Oranges, this is still very definitely, the game to watch in the conference's first few weeks of play.
Colorado, even in view of the shaky KU start, is not taking this battle too lightly. End Coach Bob Ghillotti, who watched Kansas last week, had this to say in his scouting report:
AS FOR THE COMMENTS of Head Coach Sonny Grandelius, he was pleased with the blocking on punt returns and with the over-all play of the Buffers in the first quarter against Oklahoma State, which they beat, 24-0.
He continued:
"We weren't happy with our play in the second half; it was too ragged. Maybe we were spoiled by the impressive start," said Grandelius.
He continued:
“Our mistakes were typical first game ones, though we hope to correct them before next Saturday. We drew too many penalties (13 for 115 yards) and will have to stop that. But, I liked our secondary defense (four interceptions)”
MEANWHILE, BACK HERE in the Hawker camp, Coach Tom Triplett, who saw the Buff's opener, said:
"Colorado is so big and agile it's hard to find a place to run. They are huge in that line and those ends and tackles play good defense. The boy who took Joe Romig's place, Cliff Houk, did a fine job of linebacking. And Gale Weidner looked sharper than any time I saw him last year."
The last time the Jayhawkers went to Boulder they limped back with a 27-14 defeat and their Orange Bowl hopes were shattered. Although when the season commenced there didn't seem to be a real good chance of the Crimson and the Blue spending the holidays under the warm Florida sun two years ago, there still could be a fine opportunity for such a trip this year.
BUT. THE UPSET WHICH the Hawkers suffered two years ago is only typical of the competition which has taken place between the Buffs and KU.
The Hawks and Colorado have met 20 times on the gridiron, starting their battles in 1993 when KU slipped to a 12-11 victory.
The series has always been a close one, and as it now stands, each side owns nine wins and there have been two ties.
THE LAST TIME KU was faced with a situation in which a series was deadlocked was last fall with Missouri. The Jayhawkers defeated the Tigers and went ahead in the series and now have the same opportunity Saturday with the Golden Buffaloes.
Also:
Kansas goes into its Big Eight opener carrying a modest streak of 27 scoring games. Jack Mitchell's
Also:
editions, haven't been shut out since Oklahoma scored a 43-0 win in the fifth game of the 1958 campaign, Mitchell's first here. By scoring in the remaining eight games this season, KU can move within four lengths of the all-time school record of 39, fashioned under George Sauer and J. V. Sikes, 1947-53.
Netting 31 yards in the Wyoming game, McClinton vaulted past Frank Pattee and John Francisco to eight place among Jayhawker all-time rushing leaders at 958 total yards. He needs only 42 yards against Colorado to join eight other Kansas ball carriers who have 1,000 or more career yards.
KU Quarterback Club To Show Game Films
The SUA Quarterback Club will show films of the past weekend's football games (both home and away) every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Bowling Team Down to 16
Baseom Fearing, varsity bowling coach, will conduct the fourth tryout session of the season Monday at 5 p.m. in the Jay Bowl.
Fearing reported that the squad has been narrowed down to 16 hopefuls.
"Everything is going pretty good," Coach Fearing said.
The sixteen Jayhawk keegglers are:
The sixteen Jayhawk kegglers are:
John Member, Kansas City junior;
Dave Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore;
Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior;
Bill Miller, Mission freshman;
Larry Siefkes, Formoso freshman;
Rick Hettinger, Great Bend freshman; Ron Bruce, Kansas City freshman; Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior; Dick Miller, Kansas City junior;
Bob Hicks, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Dick Goner, Overland Park freshman; Vic Holloway, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Bob Bowersock, Kansas City freshman; Tom Salvino, Overland Park junior;
Chuck Stoffer, Overland Park freshman; Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior.
Cross-Country and Track Coach Bill Easton has announced that student managers are needed. Any person interested should contact him at Allen Field House.
Track Manager Needed
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U. OF KANSAS STUDENT WINS PRAISE IN THIS WEEK'S POST
KU junior Bill Dawson is the subject of an enthusiastic editorial in this week's Saturday Evening Post. Dawson is the author of the People-to-People Council, a plan that helps foreign students fit into the fabric of American life. Says the Post editorial writer: "Our whole nation would benefit if the example set at KU were followed."
Read how "This One Man Peace Corps Made Friends for the U.S.A." It's in this week's Saturday Evening Post where suddenly reading becomes a new adventure.
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Fencing Squad Has Experience
Coach John H. Giele, instructor of sociology, reports that KU will sport the most experienced fencing team in four years.
Besides six returning lettermen, there are three additional prospects, forming the first team. Coach Giele hopes to form two other squads and possibly a women's team.
Page 5
The leading returnee and captain of the team is Meridith Willson. Willson is the defending state sabre champion.
OF THE SIX lettermen, there are two for each weapon. The different pieces used in meets are foils, sabres, and epes.
"We had a real promising team last year," Giele said, "but we lost our three top men through ineligibility."
The NCAA meet will be held the last week of March at Ohio State University.
Illinois is a state champion and the Academy is the Western Intercollegiate title holder.
The first competition for the fencing team, sponsored by the KU Sports Club, will be Novi 19. The debut will be in the state championships at Wichita.
ENTRANTS AT THE STATE meet will be from colleges, YMCA's, and military posts in Kansas and Kansas City, Mo.
GIELE RATES THE Air Force Academy and the University of Illinois as the toughest competition the Hawker squad will face in a dual meet.
Before coming to KU, Giele was fencing coach for four years at the University of Nebraska and four years at the University of Colorado.
Phi Delts Ramble Over TKE, 59-0
Nine different players scored as the Phi Delts ceded to an uncontested victory in fraternity A division play.
in the only other game in that division. Sigma Chi downed Sigma Nu. 19-6, coming through with two touchdowns in the second half as the first round of play drew to a close.
in independent A action, Stephenson showed balance in posting a 27-0 win over Foster while Battenfeld took a 2-0 decision from Jolliffe.
In fraternity B play, Phi Kappa Psi beat Acacia on a forfeit and Delta Upsilon edged Delta Tau Delta, 13-0.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5, 1961
Around the Campus
Early Dorm Opening For KU-MU Crowd
All KU residence and scholarship halls will re-open during Thanksgiving recess at 6 p.m., Nov. 24, to accommodate students returning for the KU-MU football game.
Fraternities and sororites are also being asked to re-open on that date, said Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, and Emily Taylor, dean of women.
This action will be taken, they said, to discourage high-speed driving by students on Nov. 25, the day of the game, and also to accommodate the many parents and alumni who will be on the campus that day.
Harriet Rigas Is a Bio-Medical Fellow
A KU graduate student has been named a Fier Bio-Medical Fellow for the 1961-1962 year.
Mrs. Harriet B. Rigas of Lawrence, who is doing research toward a doctorate on "Adaptive Control Systems," is one of 12 recipients of Fier fellowships for the coming year.
The fellowship give students tuition expenses plus $1,500 annually
Mrs. Rigas plans to finish her work here by the spring of 1963.
New History Prof. Impressed by KU
Dr. Aldon Duane Bell, a former Rhodes scholar from Oklahoma, is assuming the position of specialist in English history on the University of Kansas faculty. This position has been vacant since the death of Prof. Charles B. Realey a year ago.
After receiving an A.B. degree from the University of Oklahoma in 1951, Dr. Bell began a three-year tenure as Rhodes scholar to Hartford College of Oxford University.
Dr. Bell decided to come to the University due to the favorable impressions he received in October, 1959 when he visited here to interview prospective Rhodes Scholars. At that time, he was working for Swarthmore College, the American office for Rhodes.
During an interview, Dr. Bell commented, "I am quite impressed by the library facilities, but I think more money should be spent on books. I am also quite impressed by the caliber of undergraduate students. If there are any students interested in the universities of England or Rhodes, I will be glad to answer any questions."
Nehru's KU Visit Off; No Reason Is Given
India's Prime Minister Nehru wil, not visit the KU campus as was previously hoped.
Baldve Mitter, technical associate of chemistry, said today that tentative plans for Nehru to visit KU during his trip to Kansas City were off. Nehru was to attend the rededication ceremonies of the World War I Memorial in Kansas City, November 4, but his plans have been canceled.
In an interview with the Lawrence Daily Journal-World Monday, Mitter suggested the possibility of the visit.
Conference to Explain Graduate Study
a conference to familiarize liberal arts students with graduate study will be held tomorrow and Saturday.
Hans Rosenhaupt of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation will speak at a dinner at 5:45 p.m. tomorrow, and conference participants will attend "Idiot's Delight" as guests of the University Theatre.
The conference is sponsored by University Extension, the Graduate School, and the College.
---
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Young Life Meets Tonight
Young Life Fellowship's second meeting will be at 7 p.m. today in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union.
Young Life, the newest campus organization, is a non-denominational religious group.
Norm Robbins heads the group. Howard Parker is University representative.
Every man is the center of a circle, whose fatal circumference he can not pass.-John James Ingalls
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Page 7
Mechanical Typist Helps Out at KU
By Elaine Blaylock
A "typist" who turns out some 9,000 lines per hour helped process the record enrollment at KU this fall. This speedy worker was the accounting machine of the IBM system in KU's statistical services department.
Despite a 35 per cent increase in enrollment since the IBM equipment was installed in 1955, enrollment can now be completed in two days whereas it has taken three days in the past according to James K. Hitt, registrar.
BY 1955; he said, the Registrar's
Official Bulletin
All students planning to apply for Fulbright or foreign government awards for 1962-63 should make an appointment for a medical examination. Medical examinations must be taken at the academic institution at which the students are enrolled.
Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St.
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Officers of Organizations: Should be reported at once to the Office of Dean of Students, 228 Strong for listing in the Student Directory.
TODAY
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag; den 5 Oktober um fuern ihr Geburtstag zu stellen. Sie ueber Studium im Ausland und Stipendien dafür. Es gibt auch Erfrischungen.
Hillel Friday Night Services: 7:30 p.m.
Highland Community Center. 317 Highland Drive
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast: 7 a.m., Carterter House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship:
7.30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Second in a series of discussions of the life, of Christ.
International Club Reception: Union lounge, honoring Gunnar Jarring. Swedish Ambassador to the UM., directly obliged his speech on Sweden's foreign Policy.
SATURDAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth, Chapel.
Ph.D. Reading Exam in German: 9 am., 426 Lindley.
SUNDAY
Hillel Caravan: 5 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Free food, Faculty Forum, based on the censorship of pornography.
section had reached the point where clerical workers were barely able to keep up with the booming student population. With the addition of IBM, they accomplish even more tasks with only a slight increase in personnel.
The familiar permit cards and class cards of each student are sent to the statistical services section in the basement of Bailey Hall following enrollment.
"Each student's card and class cards are run through a machine which transfers information identifying the student to his class cards." Jerry D. Davis, director of statistical services explained. "With these class cards, rosters for each class at the University can be run off in about 15 hours."
THESE CARDS are used many times throughout the semester to gain various information, and are finally punched with the student's grades.
In the business office IBM also simplifies and speeds up fee payment, gids in collection of dormitory rent, and enables that office to furnish the KU budget to the Kansas legislature within two and a half months after the end of the fiscal year.
Rent for the IBM equipment now being used here is about $1,900 per month. But Mr. Hitt pointed out that it is well worth the cost. He particularly cited the machine's uncanny ability to spot errors.
"YOU KNOW if the machine doesn't report any mistakes, there aren't any," he explained.
With enrollment expected to grow even more in the next few years, newer and faster IBM equipment is slated for installation at KU next summer. This equipment will include a printer and computer capable of printing 36,000 lines per hour, with each line having a maximum of 132 characters.
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Page 8
JACKSONville, IL 61803
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5, 1961
Candidates for SUA Carnival Queen Chosen
In anticipation of the SUA Carnival, Oct. 14, the women's living groups have selected their candidates for Carnival queen.
Several events are planned in the girls' honor. Today at 8:30 p.m. the 26 nominees will attend a coffee in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union. There they will be informally interviewed by members of the queen committee.
At 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 14, a parade of jesters, dragons and fair damsels — "Medieval Madness" — will proceed down Massachusetts Street. Each of the queen candidates will ride in a convertible provided by the SUA. At the football game that afternoon, the girls will again be displayed in cars, which will be driven around the track in the stadium.
Representing each sorority, women's scholarship hall and women's residence hall on the campus, the candidates and their respective living groups are: Karen Vice, St. John sophomore, Alba Chi Omega; Kathie Riedel, WaKeeney junior; Alpha Delta Pi; Sharon Buckner, Kansas City junior, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Sandy McHardy, Independence, Mo., sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi; Carol Strickland, Kansas City sophomore, Alpha Phi; Gloria Mays, Lyons junior; Chi Omega.
Betty Dwyer, Wichita sophomore,
Delta Delta Delta; June Owens,
Altamont junior, Delta Gamma;
Sherril Murrow, Topeka sophomore,
Gamma Phi Beta; Martha Parmley,
Wichita sophomore, Kappa Alpha
Theta; Merikay Boucher, Kansas
City, Mo., senior, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Kay Cash, Fairview Park
Chio, sophomore, Pi Beta Phi; Cynthia Ann Childers, Merriam sophomore,
Sigma Kappa.
Margaret Eckler, Atchison sophmore, Douthart; Janet Woody, Springfield, Mo., senior, Miller; Julie Winkler, Caney freshman, Sellards; Susan Shotliff, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Watkins; Dottie Kicker, Mission junior, Bobbie Evertros, Melvern freshman, and Sherrie Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Lewis.
Teaching-Research For English Profs.
Seven members of the English department faculty were engaged in teaching and research in the East or abroad during the summer.
Frances Ingemann, associate professor, studied acoustic properties of nasal consonants at the Speech Transmission Laboratory, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, and presented a paper at the fourth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences in Helsinki.
John Meixner, assistant professor, visited England and Ireland, where he talked to novelist Elizabeth Bowen and relatives and friends of writer Ford Madox Ford. Prof. Meixner became the only American contributor to the "Oxford English Dictionary" supplement to be published in 1967.
Remaining in the United States for professional activities were Charlton Hinman and W. P. Albrecht, professors; Edward F. Grier and David M. Vieth, associate professors; and Edward L. Ruhe, assistant professor.
Two tape recorders and a stop watch, valued at more than $800, are reported missing from the radio and TV department of the University.
Radio-TV Reports Equipment Missing
Bruce A. Linton, professor of speech and journalism and chairman of the radio and TV committee, made the report in a letter to the campus security department. The units were kept in the basement of Hoch Auditorium.
Prof. Linton reported the items have been missing since the end of last semester. He said the report was delayed because of the possibility students might have taken the equipment with the intention of returning it in the fall. ___
Smoke, No Damage From Trash Blaze
Three Lawrence Fire Department trucks were called to put out a large trash fire behind an unoccupied building at 1539 Tennessee at 6:35 p.m. yesterday.
Firemen reported that no damage was done to surrounding buildings, but billows of smoke filled the area before the blaze was extinguished. large trash fire behind an upoc-
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Place Your Order Now and Receive Prompt Service
Leagues are in full swing, however open bowling is available at all times except: Tues., Wed. and Thurs., 6:30-9:00
Break time is bowling time at the
Jay Bowl
Daily 8 A.M.-11:30 P.M.
Sun. 1-P.M.-11:30 P.M.
SPORTS FANS,
The KU QUARTERBACK CLUB
IS HERE AGAIN!
See Exciting Films of Each Saturday's Game Narrated by Top Players
UNION FORUM RGOM
7 P.M. EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT FREE ADMISSION and REFRESHMENTS
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
h.i.s.
SPORTSWEAR
Don't envy H.I.S. wear them
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I will not disclose any personal information about the individuals depicted in the image. It is important to respect their privacy and avoid any disclosing of sensitive details without consent.
This new 3-piece outfit will carry you through the school year in high style! Natural-shouldered jacket lined with Londontown print has narrow lapels, hook vent, lap seams, scored buttons. Vest reverses to velvety imported Cotton HIS-Suede. Post-Grad slacks are trim, tapered. $29.95 in new colors—at stores that are “with it”! Post-Grad Slacks alone. $6.95
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Cast Named for 'Auntie Mame'
A graduate student makes his debut as a major theater director next month.
William Kuhlk, instructor of speech, will direct "Auntie Mame" by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee in University Theatre's second major production of the season.
you
style!
with
eels,
but
I'm-
Grad.
5 in
with
6.95
The play will run here Nov, 6, 7,
8, 9 and 11.
A comedy, the play deals with free-spending, free-wheeling dilettante, Mame Dennis. Her eccentricities include wild Bohemian parties, trips to the top of the Matterhorn and disruption of a staid Connecticuticut.
Rosalind Russell starred in the Broadway production 5 years ago. Later Miss Russell made a motion picture of the irrepressible Miss Dennis.
10.3.11
. The cast includes:
Page 9
Shirley Rea, Lawrence, graduate student, as Mame; Jeanne Rustemeyer, Leavenworth, graduate student, as Nora Muldoon; Hoite Caston, Independence, sophomore, as Ito; Tommy Baumgartel, 2138 Mitchell Rd., as Patrick Dennis (the boy); Bob Smykle, Souix Falls, South Dakota, sophomore, as Patrick Dennis (the young man); Steve Callahan, Independence, graduate student, as M. Lindsey Woolsey; Vicki Loebsack, Topeka, sophomore, as Vera Charles; Moses Gunn, St. Louis, Mo, graduate student, as Ralph Devine; Clayton Crenshaw, Scott City, junior, as Babcock; Ken Baker. Topeka, graduate student, as the Stage Manager.
Glenn Bickle, Kansas City, Mo,
graduate student, as the Asst. Stage
Manager; Jacque Volkland, Bushton,
sophomore, as the Maid; Mike
Jackson, Prairie Village, senior;
as the Butler; Dan Kocher, Topeka,
juniar, as Loomis; Philip Harris,
Columbus, senior, as Beau Burnsides;
Sylvia Groth, Mayville, South
Dakota, graduate student, as the
Shopper; Marilyn Speer, Merrian,
freshman, as Cousin Fan; Julie
Green, Topeka, sophomore, as Sally
Cato; Sara Maxwell, Columbus,
senior, as Mother Burnsides.
Sylvia Anderson, Chicago, sophomore, as Agnes Gooch; Pat Prosser, Leavenworth, senior, as Brian O'Bannon; Keith Jochim, Lawrence, junior, as Mr. Upson; Kay Carrol, El Dorado, junior, as Mrs. Upson; Judy Gail Harman, Kansas City, Kan, senior, as Gloria Upson, Virginia Hill, Lyons, junior, as Pegeen; Randy Laushman, 3057 West 8th St., as Shopper's son; and David Baumgartner, Leavenworth, freshman, as the Leading Man.
Tickets for the show will go on sale Nov. 1.
New Latin Program Set
A list of potential participants in the 1962-63 phase of the KU-University of Costa Rica faculty exchange program is being compiled, says John P. Augelli, chairman of the Latin America Area Committee.
Prof. Augelli said that interested faculty members should send him their name, field of specialization, campus address and telephone extension number.
"This information is necessary," he said, "because selection of participants will be guided, in part, by the types of faculty members desired by the University of Costa Rica."
The purpose of the program, Prof. Augelli said, is to develop a pool of KU faculty members who will become competent in Spanish, and who will gain insight into cultural political histories and political life of Costa Rica and Latin America
Under the 1962-63 program, KU faculty members and their families will attend orientation sessions and then spend one 1962 summer month in Costa Rica. Upon their return to Lawrence for the academic year of 1962-63, they will continue their study of Spanish and attend seminars focusing on Costa Rica. The program will close with three additional summer months spent in Costa Rica during 1963.
The program is financed by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation, Prof. Augelli said. Faculty members and their wives will receive round-trip transportation for both visits to Costa Rica, and each couple will receive $20 a day for the time spent there.
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STREET___
NAME.
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This Offer Expires December 31, 1961
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
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NOT JUST DREAMS
but well laid plans come true. Are you planning for the future? Investigate New York Life Planned Security.
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London
Phone: 31-84544 pr VI-3-2150
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Thursday, October 5, 1961 University Daily Kansan
KU Campus Lawrence
Blue Ridge K.C.
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THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SUCCESS AND FAILURE is often the difference between doing something almost right and doing it exactly right.
This quality of success can be recognized at once in some men...simply by noting the care given to every meticulous detail of appearance, from the head right down to the shoes!
ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5,1961
New Syrian Rulers Promise Freer Life
By David Dugas United Press International
DAMASCUS, Syria — (UPI) — Ancient and storied Syria began returning to normal today just a week after dissident army officers overthrew Egyptian rule and established an independent nation once again.
Still flushed with their almost bloodless victory, the new rulers of this oft-conquered land came up with one promise after another of a better, freer life for its people.
The night time curfew has been lifted.
The Revolutionary Council promised discharged soldiers they would get their old jobs back.
Interior Minister Adnan Al-Kuwatil last night advanced the time of general elections. He said they would be held in two or three months instead of four months as previously announced.
Al-Kuwatli, speaking over Damascus radio, also promised unions a 25 per cent profit-sharing plan.
He said a government "of the people for the people" would "erase all traces of tyrannical terroristic regime" of United Arab Republic President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Only five nations have extended formal recognition to the new regime so far — Jordan, Turkey, Iran, Nationalist China and Guatemala—but the diplomatic lines are out for more support. (In London, the British Foreign Office said it is awaiting
Experimental Theatre To Give First Play
"Between Two Thieves" will be presented Oct. 12, 13 and 14 by the University Experimental Theatre group. The two-act drama is the group's first production this year.
Written by Warner LeRoy and directed by George Bradley, the play will be held in Swarthout Recei-
tal Hall at 8:15 pm.
The drama is based on a re-trial of Jesus of Nazareth. Attempts are made to find out who was responsible for the death of Christ.
Following the trial, the audience may participate in discussion on the arguments brought up in the trial.
Tickets are now on sale at the box office in Murphy Hall.
Arensberg's
819 Mass.
FLORSHEIM SHOES start at $1995
A
Black or Brown Calf
satisfactory evidence that the new regime is in full control and likely to remain so.)
Built better to wear longer—and cost less by the month or by the mile. This is Value!
The Revolutionary Council announced that the military officers who led the revolt would return to their normal posts "within a couple of weeks . . . to prove to the world the military is not after personal gains."
Charge Account Invited
Syria has been an object of foreign conquest from the dawn of history. It has been conquered and held at various times by the Hittites, Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Alexander the Great, the Seleucidae, Armenians, Parthians, Romans, Mongols, Turks and French.
The French proclaimed Syria independent in 1941 but all foreign troops were not withdrawn from its soil until after World War II. Then independent Syria joined the United Nations and the Arab League.
When the merger with Egypt was accomplished three and a half years ago. Syria lost its separate identity. Both the Egyptian and Syrian memberships in the United Nations were represented by the single seat for the United Arab Republic.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
At 7:00 & 9:30
Cantinflas
In
"Pepe"
With a Host of
Guest Stars
Rates
There is one certain means by which I can be sure never to see my country's ruin: I will die in the last ditch—William III, Prince of Orange
Display Classified
The beginning is the most important part of work. -Plato
1 inch one time ___$1.00
1 inch five times ___$4.50
1 inch every day
for 21 insertions __ $15.00
1 inch every day --- $12.00
(two months minimum)
Monthly Rate
No art work or engraving allowed
Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
GRANADA
HOW SHOWING!
At 7:00 & 9:00
The Inspiring True
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Color
STARTS SATURDAY!
"THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR!"
"A terrific show! Director Preminger is at the top of this form. The script seems an amazing achievements clear, intelligent, subtle, witty, swift, strong, eloquent. EXODUS turns out to be a serious, expert, frightening and inspiring thriller!" -Time Magazine
"A stirring film dramal" Kate Cameron, Daily News
HUMAN RIGHTS
EXODUS
ADMISSION $1.00
OTTO PREMINGER PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN · EVA MARIE SAINT
RALPH RICHARDSON · PETER LAWFORD
LEE J.COBB · SAL MINEO · JOHN DEREK
HUGH GRIFFITH · DAVID OPATOSHU
ONE PERFORMANCE NIGHTLY AT 7:15 MATINEES SAT. & SUN. AT 2 P.M.
BORRENPLAY BY DALTON TRUMBO • BASED ON THE BEST SELLING NOVEL BY LEON MUSIC • BUILDER GOLD • PHOTOGRAPHED IN SUPER PANMISSION 7, TECHNOLOGY® BY SAM LEANITT • A UNIRED ARTISTS RELEASE • PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY QTOF PREMIUNGER
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JILL HAWORTH IN "EXODUS"
GRANADA
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A Real Bargain for KU Students —
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for only $950
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Circulation Dept.,
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Kansan Want Ads Get Results
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Thursday, October 5, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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 Fint hat by 8 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST--WATCH. Friday in Fraser or
in Swiss watch. Reward
£410
nt 410
10-6
FOR SALE
LHOST=POST VERSALOG slide rate in
RIM=Post VERSALOG slide rate in
Flint Hall or Flint VIS-35-7282 10-6
JUNTEED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
1858 PONTIAC CHEFTAIN 2-dr. or 1958 Chew. Impalte Convertible. Both with R. of H₂, automatic trans. Both in excellent condition. See at 1705 Ky. 10-11
COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM: Madison
Fencing 40 watt amplifier, Garrard
TV, Cable TV, Carrier TV,
CARTRIDGE, 2 matched Calrad 12" speakers
mounted separately; cabinet (unfinished),
$80. Special price (slightly value);
Call Dave Gray, VI 3-5721. $10-30
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30%
discount! Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes.
Zerex only 88c per gal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's 329 Mass. St. 10-18
ONE-OWNER 55 Plymouth. 4 door, good cord, clean, stand, shift, overdrive, good tires and two snow tires. $515. Call VI 2-1528 8:29 to L. Later call VI 3-2240. 16
VARIABLE REVERBERATION UNIT
Self-contained, self-powered. Plug between amp, & pre-amp, of any amplification system. Essily interchangeable between Hi-Fi, tape recorder, guitar Amp; etc. ST5, VI 2-5625. 10-10
1960 PONTIAC VENTURA Bonneville interior, 348 HP, tri-power, postposition, 4 crewed and alloy wheels. 1955 MGTF 1500-R red with red leather upholstery. New factory engine. 1959 ACUGR SE RB 700R, aguayo rear wire wreels. BUCKET CENTURY 4-door, deluxe Biwior, blue. See at Biwior Motors, 204 Vermont or call VI 3-8367. 10-6
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
running condition.
Si50 Cc1 Call VI 4-5241.
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENE-
FRAL ELECTRIC at discount prices as-
sociated with Motorola.
Motorola Store = $23 Mass. St Used AM'
and comb. rp's as low as $5.00 each.
Car For Sale: 52 Buck, $50.00. Dyna-
call. Call IV 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m.
YOU CAN BUY a 1959 Skyline 50x10
trailer for $4,500. 2 briggs, washer &
driver, gas heated. Bob's Trailer Court,
6th & Arkansas. VI 2-189-1. 10-6
1960 IMPALA 2-door hard top. Light
CAVI VI 2-3780. Automatic, low noise.
FURNITURE FOR SALE: Dining set, dinette set, vanity, matching chair and given stove and refrigerator 116 M. Toilet. 256. Ask for Clark - 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
THREE BEDROOM HOME, corner lot.
Utility room, bath, car port, easily
heated, gas furnace, 220 wiring. See after
3 p.m. 1603 Lindenwood. 10-9
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4217, tf
NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Business Machines at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf
FOR RENT
1 BEDROOM duplex funn. arm. for boys.
Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-6611. 10-10
LARGE NEWLY decorated 4 room apt.
phone. Phone VI-5-181 or VI-3-6611. 10-9
1 BEDROOM, furn. house close to hospital. Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-8562 10-10
CALCULATING MACHINES for rent at $20.60 per month. Two or more can share the cost. Send a card to T. E. England. 130 Hunton, Topeka, Kansas. 10-10
GARAGE FOR RENT= Vicinity of 14th and Chio: PHI VI 3-7655 after 5 p.m. 10-9
FURNISHED apartments, east side. Utilities paid. Two bedroom, first floor—$50.
One bedroom, second floor — $50. Call VI 3-6294. 10-9
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto, washer-dryer, air cond.
room, carpet, wardrobe. Drice
$190 month. 221 Mountview Dr. Fence
V I-35828 after 5 for appt.
2 BEDROOM duplex unfurn. Good location.
See at 432 Missouri. 10-6
MISCELLANEOUS
HI-FI Speaker Cabinets and Bookcases-
County Wood Products Co. VI 2-3204
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center—most complete shop in mi-
c. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern
self-service — open weeks 8 to 6:20
p.m.
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks.
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Fliptic, party supplies
6th, 4th & Vermont. Phone: **tu**
0350.
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, wet clothes, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn., Shop sectionalized — save time and money! tt
HELP WANTED
PERMANENT POSITIONS
For Married Students
Selling To Students and Lawrence Residents
LIBERAL COMMISSION AND GUARANTEE
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS
SELLING 12 MONTHS
PER YEAR
Write, Giving Age, Work History,
and Phone No. To:
Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall
Personal Interviews will Be Arranged
WANTED: MAN to do doff jobs around
anyone. Anyway. Anyway. Anyway.
convenient, Call VI 3-6500. 10-11
NEED RIDE from K.C. Kans. Monday.
to be on camp
10 Call CY 9-4037
10-11
TRANSPORTATION
SENIORS — Need jobs for employment
Larry Margolis
V 2-1474 after 5 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Save Money
RALPH FREED
Income Insurance
NOW IS THE TIME to get your car ready for Winter. Specializing in engine tune-up, Tune-up & Speed drive, 6th.位 of Satellite Drive-In, Phone I-3-52711. 10-6
TOM'S 14th St. BARber Shop. ½ block off Mass. Padding next to shop. All styles of haircuts $12.5. 3 full-time barbers. Open 8-5:30. Mon.-Sat. 10-6
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
1-5778.
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TRAVEL SERVICE
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746 Mass. --- VI 3-0152
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES; All new and revised, 100 pages, minographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tt
DRESS MAKING AND alterations. For-
cation. Mail: CVI 3-5265. Ola Smith
3399 j Mass. Call VI 3-5265.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, SI per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. tt
American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE
Morris Kay VI 3-7114
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644.
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a baby boy and a play-year-old girl. We work in a playroom. We have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8140.
Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance
TYPING
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, papers, theses and dissertations. Reasonable. Mt. Marilyn liay, VI 3-2318. Mr.
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. If
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, textures and carbons neatly and accurately. Standrd rates. Call Patty Coester, VI 2-5879-.
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable salary. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI, 1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
- caH VI 8-1236, Mrs. L.
Gehibien
Experienced Typist: 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 needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Secretarial Service. 3917 B Wocah, HE 2-7718, Eat or Sat, RA 2-2186
MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.'. — Now at two
4747 of 1029.
Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis etc.
Tp3. 1521 Wt 21 St. Call VI 3*e440*. tr
selk. 1511 Wt 21 St. Call VI 3*e440*. tr
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, discertations, reports, manuscripts, photographs, and post accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI 3-7481.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, and presentations. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING.
punctuation & grammar? Former. Eng.
forrm. Forrm accurately. & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. iff
GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-
typing rate. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louf
POE, VI 3-1097.
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Sure I know what I am doing – when I get that carburetor back on – I'll start on the radiator."
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UNIVERSITY YORDS SALES
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 5, 1961
Flu Shot Call Gets Response
Response has been good the past several days to a plea for KU students and staff members to obtain influenza vaccinations as a precaution against a possible severe outbreak on the campus.
Roughly 1,000 of the campus population has received the shots since the opening week of school, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, administrator of the Watkins Memorial hospital, said today.
"The response hasn't been as massive as we would hope. But it has been good," he said.
About 100 persons received the vaccination in the hospital yesterday. Since last Thursday, 353 persons have been immunized.
Out of an enrollment of approximately 9,600, about 3,200 have received a flu shot, according to official calculations.
"We are treating a large number of cases of respiratory trouble in the clinic. However, these are more aggravating than of a serious nature." Dr. Canuteson said.
Out of 23 persons in the hospital Tuesday night, the administrator said, only three were attributed to colds. Another four were termed penumonia cases resulting from colds complications.
Try the Kansan Want Ads
6-2 Victory-
(Continued from page 1)
Eighth Inning
Reds: Luis Arroyo replaced Terry or the mound for the Yankees. Robinson walked. Coleman dribbed a ball in front of the plate, but Arroyo's throw to first made it 2-1. Coleman put the Reds ahead, 5-2. Coleman win out trying for third base, Blanchard to Boyer. It was scored as a hit and an error for Arroyo. Berra completely missed Post's long liner that was hit right at his feet. Berra went up one step away to third on the error. Freese was purposely walked. Edwards broke his bat when he connected with the ball but looped a double into short left field. Post scoring to make it 6-2, and Freese going out to Richardson. Two runs, two hits, two errors, two left.
Yankees: Kubek sent a hard grounder through Jay's legs into center field for a single. Blanchard fouled to Freeze. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
**Reds:** Kasko popped to Richardson. He got up and grabbed field. Robinson fouled to Boyer. Coleman bounced to Skowron who tossed to Arrow and brought out. No runs one hit, no errors, go left.
Ninth Inning
Human life is a constant want and ought to be a constant prayer. Samuel Osgood
Yankees: Howard topped the ball in front of the plate and was easily tossed out by Edwards. The Yankees claimed, after a bobble-wow, the errant struck out. Boyer walked. Billy Gardner lined to Kasko. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left.
Home is where the heart is.
Pliny the Elder
(Continued from page 1)
Journalists-
Keynoting discussion on yearbook preparation and production, Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education, said there are three main functions of the high school yearbook. He listed these as being the educational function, the public relations function, and the historical function.
In addition, Prof. Haugh said the yearbook provides a particular opportunity for business training.
"A GOOD YEARBOOK pays its own way," he told the students.
Speaking on the topic of Yearbook Themes, Thomas Yoe, KU director of public relations and adviser to the Javhawker, said:
"Anything you choose, providing it's well executed and in good taste, generally will make a good theme. A yearbook should have dignity so that a student may look at it with pride in his adult years."
The event is sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information in conjunction with University Extension and the State High School Activities Association.
Anybody Own a Frod
AUSTIN, Tex. — (UPI) — If you believe the chrome lettering on the back of M/Sgt. Harry G. Barker's automobile, he owns a "Biuck." Everywhere else on his 1961 auto, the factory name is spelled correctly. Barker is undecided whether he wants to change the rarity.
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A Foreign Service Officer Examination will be given on Dec. 9. In announcing the examination, the State Department said it was interested in young men and women who
Candidates for the December examination must be at least 21 and under 31 years of age as of Oct. 23. Persons 20 years old may apply if college graduates or seniors in college. They must have been U.S. citizens for at least 9 years.
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Al Hack
Ken Whitenight
Berliners Want Show of Power
BERLIN—(UPI)—West Berlin officials today called for a show of strength by the Western Allies in this divided city where a series of shooting and grenade incidents has heightened tension on the border.
U. S. troops were on the alert for any new Communist moves and an army spokesman said American troops were ready for anything. But he refused to say exactly what their orders are because of security regulations.
CIRCLES CLOSE TO WEST German police said the feeling was growing that the Allies should put on a greater show of strength along the Berlin sector borders.
Allied border patrols recently have been largely on foot. At the height of the crisis following the Aug. 13 sealing off of East Berlin, U.S. tanks crouched with their treads virtually touching the border line.
But since the tanks have left the border area, the Communists have been getting more aggressive. Three gunfire and six Communist gas and smoke grenade incidents flared on the East-West sector border yesterday.
NO CASALTIES WERE REPORTED. In one incident, an East German policeman fired a shot above the heads of a fleeing man and woman. The border guard turned up a few minutes later and asked West
Register Now
For English Pro
Students have until Tuesday to register at the office of the Registrar for the English Proficiency Examination. The examinations will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at several locations on the campus.
To Start Soon On New Building
Construction of the new $1.9 million engineering building will begin within a month, and it is expected to be ready for occupancy by Sept. 1963.
"The contracts were finalized last week," said Keith Lawton, director of physical plant, "and the contractors will be moving on the job in the next few weeks."
THE STRUCTURE, TO BE located northeast of the nuclear reactor building, will relieve crowded conditions in Marvin Hall and the engineering shops.
Mr. Lawton said the departments of civil engineering,engineering mechanics, electrical engineering,and aeronautical engineering will be housed in the new building.
The space vacated will be absorbed by the departments of architecture, mechanical engineering, and engineering drawing. Mr. Lawton said.
THE BUILDING WILL be "T' shaped, with the laboratory area in the west wing and classrooms and offices in the wing extending to the east. The laboratory wing will be one story high and the east wing two stories.
Mr. Lawton said the structure will harmonize with Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall, and the nuclear reactor building, all located in the area. The exterior will be of light colored brick, with the trim in Crab Orchard (Tennessee) limestone.
THE GENERAL CONTRACT is held by Martin K. Eby Construction of Wichita, the electrical contract by Huxtable Electric Co. of Lawrence, the plumbing contract by Carey Flumberg of Ottawa, and the heating, ventilating, and air conditioning contract by Keener Air, Inc., of Wichita.
Mr. Lawton said a third building will eventually be constructed in the area. It will be located at the corner of 15th and Naismith Drive, southeast of the new engineering building and directly east of the nuclear reactor building.
Berlin police for political asylum. The guard was granted asylum.
French officials indicated they would ignore an East German Communist protest to France's Berlin commandant against a shooting incident Wednesday night in which an East German Communist policeman fell wounded in a gun battle between East and West Berlin police.
One of two refugees who were trying to escape was captured by Communist police and the other was killed when he jumped from a four-story East sector building bordering West Berlin and missed a West Berlin firemen's safety net.
WESTERN ALLIED COMMANDants were reliably reported studying their own protests against the Communists for the first officially admitted East-West gunfire exchange in the present Berlin crisis.
West Berlin police officials feel that their patrols, armed only with pistols, cannot match the fire power of Communist policemen who carry machine pistols and sometimes ride in armored cars.
JFK Declares No Surrender
WASHINGTON — (UPI) – President Kennedy will tell Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko today that the United States and its allies cannot surrender the freedom of West Berlin to the Reds.
The President's intention was disclosed in New York by Roger Tubby, assistant secretary of state for public affairs.
Kennedy and Gromyko arranged to meet at the White House to discuss the possibility of submitting the Berlin crisis to negotiations before it sparks a nuclear war. Gromyko was scheduled to arrive here from New York a few hours before going to the White House.
Tubby forecast Kennedy's position in a speech prepared for delivery at a New York ceremony honoring West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt.
He recalled the President's statement to the United Nations last week that "we cannot surrender the freedom of these people for whom we are responsible."
"This afternoon in Washington, he will make this clear once again to the Russians in his meeting with Mr. Gromyko," Tubby said.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No.16
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Vox Populi Party President Accuses UP of 'Unfair Play'
Friday, October 6, 1961
By Karl Koch
It started with Ted Childers, Wamego senior, and president of Vox, saying in an interview before the meeting last night:
Vox Populi climbed into the political ring last night, took on the University Party with soft body punches, and then decided to call the match.
Childers said a statement to the
"I DON'T WANT to drag politics down to what it was five years ago, but I don't think the UP is playing fair — promising two students from the same house they could both run for the party."
press had been planned about this and other incidents, but party leaders decided to kill it.
The meeting, in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union, started with routine business. Then a party member stood up:
"THERE'S A RUMOR THAT the UP told Miller Hall their party started People-to-People. Neither party can take credit," he said.
Shortly after, another party member said;
CHEAP BOOKS—Students crowd book-laden tables at the fifth annual Watson Library book sale. Carl Dean, head of acquisitions, said about 300 books had been sold by 3:30 p.m., but did not know how much money the library had made.
IFC Forms Judicial Council To Punish Frat Violations
"There are some bad rumors going around about Vox — that we're all Greek, that the UP started People-to-People."
Paul Ingemanson, Topeka senior and president of the Interfraternity Council, said last night that the IFC has formed its first judicial council.
As set up in an amendment of the IFC constitution, Ingemanson will be the only member of the IFC to serve on the council. The council is composed of five men, the president of the IFC as chairman, and four past or present presidents of fraternities.
"The purpose of the judicial council," Ingemanson said in an interview, "is to effectively punish any fraternities that violate the IFC constitution."
In the past, such cases have gone to the dean of men, from there to the executive council of the IFC and were finally taken to the floor of the IFC.
"NO PUBLIC STATEMENTS will be issued," he said. "The decisions of the judicial council will only be reported to the dean of men and the fraternity involved."
serving on this year's council with Ingemanson are: Bill Gissendanner, Kirkwood, Mo., senior, president of Phi Delta Theta; Fred Perry, Junction City junior, president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; John Erickson, Clay
Book Buyers Buoyant
WARREN GARDNER
Center senior, president of Phi Gamma Delta, and John Shenk, Lawrence senior, president of Delta Upsilon.
"I THINK THIS IS GOING to work out real well," Ingemanson said. He added that now all cases will be directed to one specific committee and the fraternities know what to expect.
He said that if any house feels "unjustly punished," it has three methods of appeal to be used in the following order:
- To the executive committee of the IFC.
- To the floor of the IFC.
- To the University disciplinary committee.
Rayburn Rests Looks Better
DALLAS, Tex. —(UPI) —House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, who is dying of cancer, looked a little better today than he did yesterday and his doctor said he was not under sedation.
"There is very little change in his general condition," a bulletin issued at Baylor University Medical Center said.
"HE IS STILL serious, but not critical. He is resting comfortably."
The hospital announced yesterday that he had cancer and there was no hope. President Kennedy urged the nation to offer its prayers for him. Hundreds of letters and telegrams poured into the hospital.
One telegram said: "My love. I'm a Republican but I've always admired you. You are a great American."
FORREST SORRELS, head of the Secret Service in Dallas, inspected the hospital, giving rise to speculation that President Kennedy may visit Rayburn. There was, however, no indication in Washington that Kennedy is coming to Dallas.
Sorrels would say only that he was checking "in case something comes up."
John Holton, Rayburn's administrative assistant, acted as spokesman for the Rayburn family.
HOLTON SIDESTEPED other questions about Rayburn's condition and none of Rayburn's doctors appeared with Holton.
Rayburn's nephew, Tom Rayburn, is scheduled for a colon resection at Baylor University Medical Center. The operating surgeon is Dr. Robert F. Short, who also is the Speaker's physician.
Physicians declined to operate on "Mr. Sam." They said all they can do is make his last days "as comfortable as possible."
Childers mentioned the rumors.
"WHEN YOU HEAR these rumors, use a personal crusade to set the record straight," he said.
"The UP claimed Stop Day last year. They weren't even in existence when Stop Day started," he said.
"We now have a clean election. This is something that Vox did.
"The Blue Cross-Blue Shield program was started on campus by Vox.
"We established a cabinet to work under the student body president.
"We're working to give the student body president a veto power over the council.
"WE'RE TRYING TO GET a program to work with outside sources affecting students, such as the Board of Regents, the state legislators..." he continued.
"When you hear something that doesn't ring true, stand up and straighten it out." Childers said.
Another party member stood up and said emphatically:
In an interview requested by Childers after the meeting, Childs said the press statement had been killed because Vox didn't want to degenerate campus politics back to its old level.
"VOX WILL NEVER STAND for dirty politics. We don't disclaim what the UP did. We've built a reputation we're for clean, honest politics, so let's don't throw mud."
"We're sure the facts are accurate, but we don't want to start slinging mud." Childers said.
Roger Wilson, Wichita junior and Greek vice president of Vox, broke in, saying in regard to the rumors about Vox:
"We're pretty sure the UP is behind some of this."
Later, in the Hawk's Nest, where what loomed to be a muddy political campaign this fall, took on a differ ent aspect.
"I THINK A LOT OF misinformation is coming from both sides because of people being poorly informed." Childers said.
Referring to his earlier statement that the UP isn't "playing fair — promising two students from the same house they could both run," he said:
"Promises of this nature come from people who don't know what's coming off — one party freshman comes over to a house and somebody asks him, 'What'll the party give us?' and he replies, 'a candidate.' Then another freshman from the same party comes over to the house and gives them another candidate."
CHILDERS THEN WENT on to give both campus political parties a clean bill of health.
"I think both parties have respect for student government here," he said. "I think the UP is as concerned as we are in keeping politics up to the present high. But I think there's room for improvement yet."
Weather
Fair this afternoon, tonight and Saturday with south to south-west winds 20 to 30 miles per hour this afternoon and Saturday. More humid Saturday. Low tonight near 50 Northwest to near 60 Southeast. High Saturday 85 to 90.
People-to-People To Sponsor Picnic
All international students and their American brothers and sisters are invited to a picnic Sunday, October 8, at 4:30 at Potter Lake. Entertainment will be provided.
The outing is being sponsored by People-to-People, Lawrence Life, Weaver's and Rotary Club.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 6, 1961
The NSA Controversy
Controversy has raged about the National Student Association since its inception at KU. KU students are now about the perennial business of assessing the NSA to determine if KU should continue its affiliation with the national student group.
This question must be answered by the All Student Council. ASC members, no doubt, are impressed with the scanty knowledge the average KU student has of the purposes and goals of NSA. Perhaps some ASC members are even considering withdrawal from the NSA because their constituents do not seem to be informed or concerned about the national student group.
THERE ARE VALID REASONS why the ASC should investigate the role of the NSA on the campus but lack of student concern or knowledge about the organization is not one of them. Regardless of the state of student awareness about NSA, the primary consideration of the ASC in its dealings with NSA should be the possible function that this committee could fulfill.
If the ASC comes to grips with this issue again this fall its decision should be made on the same basis it has been made on in the past. In dealing with this problem the ASC should remember that one of its main objectives is to better the academic and scholastic atmosphere at the University.
The ASC is on the verge of challenging the need of KU's membership in NSA for the third time in as many years. On the last two occasions the council decided that KU should remain in the NSA because of the possible benefit that could be realized from NSA membership.
THE COUNCIL SHOULD ASSUME the leadership in providing an agency which can provide information about national and international issues for the KU student. There should be an attempt to bring controversial issues to the campus for the enlightenment of the entire campus community. It is not necessary and probably would not be practical for the ASC to entertain debate on some of the prominent issues of the day. But this could easily be done by a student committee which would assume responsibility for the task of informing the student on issues that should be of interest to all.
For the past two years it has been hoped that the National Students Association Committee at KU would be able to fulfill this informational
function. The NSA committee has been criticized for failing in these duties.
WHEN THE ASC WAS DEBATING the question of continued NSA membership last fall Ron Dalby, who was then the student body president, said that KU should remain in NSA only if KU could assume a leadership role in the national organization. Last May KU was successful in its bid for the regional NSA conference. But a split between liberals and conservatives in the local delegation prevented the election of two KU candidates for state and regional offices.
The most publicized and possibly the most controversial project undertaken by the NSA committee last year was its sponsorship of the film "Operation Abolition." However, an officer in the Young Republicans said that his organization would have brought "Operation Abolition" to KU if the NSA had not already planned the project.
SO THE LIST of NSA accomplishments is not a long one. But the committee itself should not be required to bear all the blame for its unhealthy record. An unfortunate liberal-conservative split, which bisected the committee into almost equal halves, is partly responsible for the inactivity of the committee. This split reduced the NSA almost to the level of a debating society in which conservative was weekly pitted against liberal.
Lack of funds and an adequate budget also hampered the committee. On one occasion plans to bring a nationally prominent speaker to KU had to be scuttled because the ASC did not approve the speaker's traveling expenses.
THE COMPOSITION OF the NSA committee is different than it was last Spring. The liberal element seems to have bridged the liberal-conservative split and now controls the committee. It is possible that action will now be able to replace the endless and sometimes senseless debate that characterized NSA meetings last spring. It is too early to tell exactly what direction this new majority in the NSA will take. It might be best to wait until it can be determined if this year's NSA will be able to toss off the short-comings of last year's group and assume the responsibilities long intended for it. But if the committee continues along traditional paths the ASC should act to sever the ties that have yet to produce any appreciable benefit for the KU student.
Ron Gallagher
NSA Defended
FIRST OF ALL, most of the
This is an answer to Marick Payton's plea in Wednesday's UDK (Oct. 4) concerning the reasons why NSA doesn't "permit popular election of its delegates." First of all, NSA does not prohibit member schools from electing their delegates. A constitutional amendment, requiring member schools to elect their delegates, was presented at last summer's Congress. This amendment was defeated, for a number of reasons.
... Letters ...
member schools who do not elect their delegates (and some do) have their delegates selected by student government officials who, in turn, have been elected by their student bodies. For example, our Student Body President and the members of the All Student Council at KU are chosen, or elected, by the student body to represent their best interests. The Student Body President then appoints the delegates to the NSA Congress, and these delegates must then receive a 2/3 vote of approval by the ASC. In effect, then, we have the directly-chosen representatives of the student body selecting these delegates. There are many parallels to this situation in our own government, for example, the supreme court, presidential appointments, etc.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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Telephone VIking 3-2700
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during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University
holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence,
Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Lim Turner Managing Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
Ron Gallagher Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
ONE OF THE OBJECTIONS to the amendment requiring direct election of the delegates was that too often election campaigns become popularity contests. If a person were to run for the position of "NSA Delegates" he might be elected because his living group "really got out the votes," or because he was good-looking, or because he had "contacts," and not because he felt that Cuba should be condemned or that the Freedom Riders should be commended. I'm not saying that all campus campaigns are like this, but a good many are, especially at a large university where no one really gets to meet the candidate and find out what his views pertaining to NSA issues are. But the elected representative of the students (i.e., the Body Student) does get to know these would-be delegates (through interviews, personal contact, etc.) well enough to ascertain their interests and capabilities.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
um Brown ... Business Manager
Tom Brown
However, since NSA is a confederation of colleges and universities, KU has the right to decide for itself whether its delegates are to be appointed, directly elected, or what-have-you. And so far the decision has been that of selection by the Student Body President and the All Student Council.
Carol McMillen
Coldwater senior and NSA Coordinator
P. S. Does that answer your question?
WENGHIN!
NSA
PALMER
EATON
"To be or not to be?"
—The Tragedy of Hamlet,
The Prince of Denmark
It Looks This Way...
Testing time is upon us. Many, if not all professors, have announced the schedule of tests for their classes. Although nothing like the West Point cribbing scandal has shocked the nation for many years, most students and professors know that cribbing has not gone the way of the dodo. Ever more sophisticated versions of cheating as well as bumbling awkward ones are likely to appear.
Periodic lectures, editorials and campus pronouncements and disciplinary actions attempt to cope with the problems of student morality. It isn't often that a discussion of teacher responsibility becomes loud enough to reach the public ear.
IF TODAY'S STUDENTS are more serious and conscientious then they have been for several years, they are certainly more interested in current practices that promote wholesome learning and testing situations. May we list a few "interesting" professorial practices, making no encompassing charges other than to say that they do exist in "other" colleges and universities (their deans will please clip and post this when it comes in the exchange).
Chronologically, the first practice is that of giving a test fairly early in the year and grading very severely—in fact insisting that not one is worthy of a passing grade. The professor wants to establish an image as "hard" and "tough" or exacting. The students must have a rude awakening.
RESULT: SOME STUDENTS drop the course forthwith, others run scared—college becomes a terrifying experience and the student must try to acclimatize. Still other students shrug off this as one of the evils of teaching in a reaction of "Well, I love you too, buster," or "This guy barks, I wonder if I can be friends with him."
RESULT: STUDENTS MUST FIRST decide whether any type of detective operation or cultivation of an "informer" is possible. The new student and the student who lives off campus must quickly search out "friends" who have had the course before. A good student file built up by forebears is worth pure gold. New professors escape this problem only for one semester. Students with or without photographic minds can soon piece an old test together. Some professors recognize this but consider it merely as one of the facts of life.
Assembly line testing with last year's tools is a rather common practice. The professor has his series of tests made out beforehand—no doubt constructed while he was a graduate student making out tests at another university. The tests are conveniently stored in a file cabinet and the secretary is instructed to mimeograph and refurbish the supply of each test before the semester starts. Some professors are comforted by the lock on the file cabinet and they religiously cremate all test copies that have performed the "life" function.
THE PROFESSOR EXPRESSES HIMSELF—sadistically. He actually enjoys talking about his tests. He dwells at length on the conditions for testing, the type of questions, the complexity and range and encourages the students to try to find out what the test will be like and what it will contain. Great fun—this trying to find out what he is going to ask.
These and many other practices have to do with morality. Teaching practices can damage student morality as well as morale. The teacher may disclaim responsibility for teaching social and moral values but his professional actions may cause the "hot bearing." The good learning situation requires not merely student morality but a high level of student and faculty morality.
—Ervin H. Schmidt, Greensburg Graduate Student
University Daily Kansan
Religion Review
CANTEBURY ASSOC. will meet at 5 p.m. Sunday at Canterbury House for prayer, fellowship supper and program. The program will continue the study of worship, society and history begun last Sunday.
THE LUTHERAN STUDENT Assoc. will meet at 5:15 Sunday evening in Danforth Chapel for Vesper services. Students will then go to the Kansas Union for supper.
WESLEY speakers Sunday Rev. Phil Bosserr political science a city; and the Rev. representative and Topeka Methodist
Page 3
FOUNDATION'S evening are the man, instructor of at Baker Univer- Bob Harder, state pastor of the East Church.
Friday, October 6, 1961
The Rev. Mr.
speak to the Coll
Pressure group on
lute or Relative?"
Harder will speak
Bosserman will
life-Edge-Under-
"Morals: Abso-
The Rev. Mr.
to the Is-America-Christian group on "Pursuit of Pleasure."
Wesley will begin at 5 p.m. with
sumper.
THE FAITH AND LIFE SEMINAR. Presbyterian Bible-study group, will meet at 8:45 a.m. Sunday at Westminster Center. The group will meet for breakfast and follow with discussion and Bible study.
BNAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION will hold a faculty forum Sunday. Joseph Rubinstein, assistant professor of bibliography; Charles Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy; and Floyd Horowitz, instructor of English, will discuss censorship of pornography.
Sunday morning worship will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday at Westminster Center for church services, William J. Moore, Dean of the School of Religion, will deliver the sermon this Sunday on "The Tax Collector's Prayer."
Baby, when something's dead, you know, it's dead.-Jules Feiffer
A Real Bargain for KU Students —
Subscribe to
for the 1961-62 school year
Send orders to:
Circulation Dept.
The Hutchinson News,
Hutchinson, Kansas
THE HUTCHINSON NEWS
for only $g50
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
1. 已知 $a, b, c$ 是实数,且 $a + b > 0, a - b < 0$, 则 $a, b, c$ 的符号分别为 ( )
A. 正、正、负
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C. 负、正、负
D. 负、负、正
2. 已知 $x, y, z$ 为实数,且 $|x| < 1, |y| < 1, |z| < 1$, 则 $x, y, z$ 的符号分别为 ( )
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B. 正、负、负
C. 负、正、负
D. 负、负、正
3. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a + b > 0, a - b < 0$, 则 $a, b, c$ 的符号分别为 ( )
A. 正、负、正
B. 正、负、负
C. 负、正、负
D. 负、负、正
4. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a + b > 0, a - b < 0$, 则 $a, b, c$ 的符号分别为 ( )
A. 正、负、正
B. 正、负、负
C. 负、正、负
D. 负、负、正
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 6, 1961
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination:
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
bv Oct. 11.
Official Bulletin
All students planning to apply for Fulbright or foreign government awards for 1962-63 should make an appointment for a medical examination. Medical examinations must be taken at the academic institution at which the students are enrolled.
Officers of Organizations: Should be reported at once to the Office of Dean of Students, 228 Strong for listing in the Student Directory.
Neosoh County Council for UNESCO will hold its annual "Around the World" dinner and program at Chanute, Kansas, Friday, October 27. If any KU foreign
students are interested in attending they
observation form. Deadline, October 13.
Hillel Friday Night Services: 7:30 p.m.
Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland
International Club Meeting: 8 p.m.
Ballroom, Kansas Union. Swedish Ambassador Gumar Jarring will speak on Sweden's policy. Reception immediately following.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship:
7.30 p.m., Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union.
Second in a series of discussions of the life of Christ.
TOMORROW
Ph.D. Reading Exam in German: 1 a.m., 426 Lindley.
Peace Corps Examination: 8 a.m. Law-
rence Post Office, 7th & New Hampshire
SUNDAY
Lutheran Services; 8:30, 11 a.m. and
7:30 p.m., Immunael Lutheran Church,
17th & Vermont, 5 p.m., Wednesdays,
Dunfort Church.
Lutheran Services; 9:15 and 11 a.m.
Tampa Bay Church, 13th & New
Hamshire Hill
Lutheran Student Association Evening
Vestry. Attendance may not
me will follow in the Cottonwood Room,
Kansas Union. Following dinner, Marcus
Hahn, Assoc. Prof. of Music Ed., will
Hillel Caravant: 5 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Free food, Faculty Forum, based on the censorship of pornography.
Oread Friends Worship Meeting; 10:30
to 11:30 welcome to this silent Quaker meeting.
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K-10 KARTS Race Way
RENT A RIDE
Large Asphalt Track-Speedy Carts
Open Sat. & Sun. — 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Week days 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
Weather permitting
East 23rd Avenue driving range
VI 2-2512
YELLOW CAB CO.
Phone
VI 3-6333
24 Hour Service
Fan
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf",“The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)
I suppose October 12 is just another day to you. You get up in the ordinary way and do all the ordinary things you ordinarily do. You have your breakfast, you walk your ocelot, you go to classes, you write home for money, you burn the dean in effigy, you watch Howdy-Doody, and you go to bed. And do you give one little thought to the fact that October 12 is Columbus Day? No, you do not.
SAIL ON, SAIL ON!
Nobody thinks about Columbus these days. Let us, therefore, pause for a moment and retell his ever-glorious, endlessly stirring saga.
Wa Ap
Ap the comi sumi carr
Columbus never wanted to clap eyes on a horse again.
Th
unde
Asso
com
estat
Dr
zool
said
age
you
Christopher Columbus was born in Genoa on August 25, 1451. His father, Ralph T. Columbus, was in the three-minute auto wash game. His mother, Eleanor (Swifty) Columbus, was a spinner. Christopher was an only child, except for his four brothers and eight sisters. With his father busy all day at the auto wash and his mother constantly away at track meets, young Columbus was left pretty much to his own devices. However, the lad did not sulk or brook. He was an avid reader and spent all his waking hours immersed in a book. Unfortunately, there was only one book in Genoa at the time—Care of the Horse by Aristotle—and after several years of reading Care of the Horse, Columbus grew restless. So when rumor reached him that there was another book in Barcelona, off he ran as fast as his fat little legs would carry him.
Bitterly disappointed, Columbus began to dream of going to India where, according to legend, there were thousands of books. But the only way to go to India was on horseback, and after so many years of reading Care of the Horse, Columbus never wanted to clap eyes on a horse again. Then a new thought struck him: perhaps it was possible to get to India by sea!
The rumor, alas, proved false. The only book in Barcelona was Cuidar un Caballo by Aristotle, which proved to be nothing more than a Spanish translation of Care of the Horse.
On October 12, 1492, Columbus set foot on the New World. The following year he returned to Spain with a cargo of wonders never before seen in Europe—spices and metals and plants and flowers and—most wondrous of all—tobacco! Oh, what a sensation tobacco caused in Europe! The filter had long since been invented (by Aristotle, curiously enough) but nobody knew what to do with it. Now Columbus, the Great Discoverer, made still another great discovery: he took a filter, put tobacco in front of it, and invented the world's first filter cigarette!
Through the centuries filters have been steadily improved and so has tobacco, until today we have achieved the ultimate in the filter cigarette-Marlboro, of course! Oh, what a piece of work is Marlboro! Great tobacco, great filter, great smoke! And so, good friends, when next you enjoy a fine Marlboro Cigarette, give a thought to the plucky Genoese, Christopher Columbus, whose vision and perseverance made the whole lovely thing possible. © 1961 Max Shulman
Fired with his revolutionary new idea, Columbus raced to the court of Ferdinand and Isabella on his little fat legs (Columbus, though six feet tall, was plagued with little fat legs all his life) and pleaded his case with such fervor that the rulers were persuaded.
. . .
And thank Columbus too for the king-size Philip Morris Commander. If unfiltered cigarettes are your choice, you'll find Commander the choice of the unfiltered. Welcome aboard.
University Daily Kansan
Watkins Scholarship Applications Available
Applications are being sought by the Watkins Faculty Scholarship committee from aspirants for the summer of 1962. The scholarships carry a tax free stipend of $900.
Page 5
Friday, October 6, 1961
The scholarships, usually six, are underwritten by the KU Endowment Association from unrestricted income from the Elizabeth M. Watkins estate.
Dr. A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology and committee chairman, said the scholarships are to encourage scholarly research by vigorous young staff members.
CAMPUS SALES AGENT
CAMPUS ILLUSTRATED, new national magazine for college students, needs a subscription agent on this campus either an individual or organization. Commission: $1 for each $3 subscription sold. No investment necessary.Write immediately: CAMPUS ILLUSTRATED, 805-15th Street,N.W., Washington 5,D.C.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
M
TGIF, 2-6 Fri., at The Catacombs (cellar of the Pizza Hut)
... All you can drink - men, $1.00; women, $.50
is featuring
THE CATACOMBS
The Hi-Phi's, Friday 9-12
The Tornados, Saturday 9-12
Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest
Catacombs available for parties throughout the week
OPEN 4-11 Sunday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday
646 Mass.
PIZZA HUT
VI 3-9760
Is this the only reason for using Mennen Skin Bracer?
Skin Bracer's rugged, long-lasting aroma is an obvious attribute. But is it everything?
After all, Menthol-iced Skin Bracer is the after-shave lotion that cools rather than burns. It helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Helps prevent blemishes Conditions your skin.
M
TRADE MARK
Aren't these sound, scientific virtues more important than the purely emotional effect Skin Bracer has on women? In that case, buy a bottle. And—have fun.
M
TRADE MASK
MENNEN
skin bracer.
ARTIFICIAL SHAVE
IN THE NEW NON-SLIP FLASK
MENNEN
skin bracer.
ATTOUCHABLE
THE NEW HOLDSLIP FLASK
100
ONE-STOP SERVICE
24 Hour Wrecker and Tow-In Service
Phone VI 3-5307 or VI 3-6997
- Wheel Balancing
- Brake Service
- Tune Up
- Wash
- Lubrication
Free Pickup and Delivery for any car serviced
Elms Sinclair
521 W. 23rd
VI 3-5307
by the Malls
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
---
CLIP THIS COUPON
Sale Ends
Oct.
7th
SWEATERS
DELIUX CLEANED
HAND FINISHED
NOTE: No Limit--But you
must bring this coupon in
WITH your order.
OR
PLAIN
SKIRTS
39c
ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies'
Man's-Child's-Ladies' COAT
FUR-TRIMMED ZIP-IN LININGS 50c MORE
Beautifully Dry Cleaned, Hand Finished. No Limit,
59c
Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25e
SHIRTS
NOW ONLY
Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like!
19c.
Dress Shirts
DeLuxe
LAUNDRY AND BODY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST
SAME DAY
SERVICE
Fri. & Sat.
In by 9 a.m.
Out by 5 p.m.
Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200
---
---
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 6. 1961
NOW! thru SUNDAY! ADM. ONLY 75c ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!
Movie-wise*... there has never been anything like
"THE APARTMENT"
A MIRICH COMPANY PRESENTATION STARRING
JACK LEMMON
SHIRLEY MacLAINE
FRED MacMURRAY
*or otherwise-wise!
BILLY WIEDER
Released since UNITED ARTISTS
the.
BILLY
WILDER
Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
- AND -
I
FILMED ON LOCATION IN THE HAYSTACK!
M G M presents DEBBIE REYNOLDS ♥ TONY RANDALL
PAUL DOUGLAS
On Massing FRED CLARK
In CinemaScope
And METROCOLOR
The
Mating Game"
The Mating Game
Note: The Sunset Will Be Closed Mon. Thru Thurs.
SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE --- West on Highway 40
STARTS SATURDAY!
"THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR!" Crowther, N. Y. Times
"A terrific show! Director Preminger is at the top of this form. The script seems an amazing achievement: clear, intelligent, subtle, witty, swift, strong, eloquent. EXODUS turns out to be a serious, expert, frightening and inspiring thriller!" -Time Magazine
"A stirring film dramal" —Kate Cameron, Daily News
EXODUS
OTTO PREMINGER PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN · EVA MARIE SAINT
RALPH RICHARDSON · PETER LAWFORD
LEE J.COBB · SALMINEO · JOHN DEREK
HUGH GRIFITH · DAVID OPATOSHU
JILL HAWORTH IN "EXODUS"
GREENPLAY BY DALTON TRUMBO • PASED ON THE BEST SELLING BOOK! BY LEON JUNE • BUSINESS
GOLD • PHOTOGRAPHED IN BUMA PARAVANIA 70 TECHNOLOGY BY SAM LEAVITT •
UNIVERSITY ARTS RELEASE • PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY OTTO FREIMANNER
ONE PERFORMANCE NIGHTLY AT 7:15 MATINEES SAT. & SUN. AT 2 P.M.
ADMISSION $1.00
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
GRANADA
THEATRE - - - - Telephone VIKING 3-5788
MEMBERSHIP NOW OPEN FOR 30 DAYS Adult members only
at
Lawrence's Newest & Most Fashionable SUPPER CLUB
The Flamingo 9th & Walnut
DINE and DANCE
ENJOY THE FINEST OF FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT IN A PLEASANT SURROUNDING
Open 5 p.m. — 2 a.m., Closed Sundays
Write or Phone for Application Now
Phone VI 3-9800 after 5 p.m.
Flamingos
N
ELM ST.
600 ST.
KAW RIVER BRIDGE
North Across Kaw River to the first street (Elm Street) Turn Right on Elm follow Elm to end of road (Ninth St.) Turn Right 1 Block.
STARTING SUNDAY!
CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30
ANOTHER Great Plains Premiere! THE PICTURE YOU HAVE BEEN HEARING ABOUT ON RADIO & TV
CAN YOU FACE WHAT A DOCTOR MUST FACE EVERY DAY? What they know about life...sets them apart from all others!
Starring
Starring BEN GAZZARA INA BALIN
He knew the taste of death,
that's why he needed the
taste of a woman much!
A nurse learns many things about doctors that aren't in the book!
BEN GAZZARA
(2)
INA BALIN
A nurse learns many things about doctors that aren't in the book.
ITS TRUTHS WILL STAGGER YOU!
1
The Exciting World Of
DICK CLARK
He broke all the rules
for one woman!
Co-starring
FREDRIC MARCH
EDDIE ALBERT
THE YOUNG DOCTORS
Released thru UNITED LA ARTISTS
SCENES NEVER BEFORE SHOWN WILL SHOCK YOU!
Tonight and Saturday! "PEPE"
I
If you faint easily we advise you to please see it with a friend
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telepbaeve VIKING 3-1065
Fridav. October 6, 1961 University Daily 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 University of Kansas Business Office in Kansas on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST- WATCH. Friday in Fraser or
in Swiss watch. Reward —
ext 410
10-6
LOST--POST VERSALOG rule in
FLint Flint or call V 3-7922
Flint Flint or call V 10-6
FOR SALE
POWER MOWER 3, HP Clinton engine,
10-12 blower tweaked, $75 Cash VI 3-9003. 10-12
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60
pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta
Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery.
$4.50.
1958 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 2-dr. or 1958 Chev. Impala Convertible. Both with R. & Hc, automatic trans. Both in excellent condition. See at 1705 Kys. 10-11
COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM: Madison
FIELDing 40 watt amplifier; Carrara
FIELDing 35 watt amplifier; CARRERA
TRIDGE; 2 mattened Calrad 12" speakers
mounted separately; cabinet (unfinished)
value $820. Special price (slightly used) value
$820. Call Dave Gray, VI 3-5721. 10-9
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30%
discount! Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes.
Zerex only 88c per gal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's -929 Mass. St. 10-18
ONE-OWNER '55 Plymouth 4 door, good cond., clean, stand, shift, overdrive, good tires and two snow tires $515. Call VI 2-1528 8:30 to 5. Later call VI 3-2240 10.
VARIABLE REVERBERATION UNIT.
Self-contained, self-powered. Plug between amp. & pre-amp. of any amplification system. Easily interchangeable between Hi-Fi, tape recorder, guitar Ampet. eS75. VI 2-3625. 10-10
1660 PONTIAC VENTURA Bonneville interior, 248 HP, tri-power, postraction, 4 speed and alloy wheels. 1955 MGTF 1500 Red with red leather upholstery. New factory engine. 85 HP. Chrome blue chrome wire weels. 1955 BUCK CENTURY 4-door, deluxe Riviera. blue. See at British Motors. 204 Vermont or call VI 3-837. 10-6
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
condition. $150 Call S1-3 4291.
if no response, call
FM RADIOS1 MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices as:
Motorola Store - 929 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $5.00 each.
Car For Sale; '52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-5480 after 12:30 p.m. fm.
YOU CAN BUY a 1959 Skyline 50x10 trailer for $4,500. 2 bdrms, washer & dryer, gas heated. Bob's Trailer Court, 6th & Arkansas VI 2-1089. 10-6
1960 IMPALA 2-door hard top. Light
Cabit VI 2-3780. Automatic, low mounted.
10-6
STEVENS 22 Automatic Ride. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. .tf
'61 FORD Starliner, Powder Blue, Cruise-O-Matic, power steering, 300 plus H.P., 7,900 miles. See to appreciate. Call John Davis at VI 2-2923. 10-6
THREE BEDROOM HOME, corner lot.
Utility room, bath, car port, easily
heated, gas furnace, 220 wiring. See after
3 p.m. 163 Lindenwood. 10-9
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, V 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding new machines by graphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tt
TRANSPORTATION
NEED RIDE from K.C. Kans, Monday
to be on camp on
10 Call CY 9-4057
10-18
MISCELLANEOUS
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center - most complete shop in mid-
morning. Phone VI 3-2921 - More
self-service - open weeks 8 to 6:30
pm.
HI-FI Speaker Cabinets and Bookcases-
custom built. Free estimates. Douglas
County Wood Products Co. VI 2-3204.
10-9
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Fleece, party supplies.
6th, 4th & Vermont. Phone VI
0350.
FOR RENT
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies beds — harness — sweaters, sweater, everything in pet field plus Turtles. Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
APT. STYLED ROOM for two senior or grad. women students. Mahogany paneling, built-in TV, priv. entr. & linen furn. Kitchen priv. avail. Within walking dist. from KU. Must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-8147 at 6 p.m. 10-12
INDIVIDUAL ROOMS. Complete kitchen facilities, linens furnished, access to a excellent location, access to study conditions. Drop by 1222 Miss. 10-10 call VI 3-0418.
ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR furnished apt.
Private entr. private bath, well located
in 900 block of Indiana. Phone VI 3-8316
days or VI 3-9029 after 5. 10-12
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room,
kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, unfurnished, newly decorated. 439 Elm. Call VI 3-3602. 10-12
1 BEDROOM duplex furn. apt. for boys.
Phone VI 3-1181 V 3-6614 10-10
LARGE NEWLY decorated 4 room ant.
Tub and shower = 1½ bath. Suitable for 3
phones. Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-6661. 10-10
1 BEDROOM, furn. house close to hospital. Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-5862 to怀
CALCULATING MACHINES for rent at $20.00 per month. Two or more can share the cost. Send a card to T. E. England.
1301 Huntoon, Topeka, Kansas. 10-10
FURNISHED apartments, east side, Utilities paid. Two bedroom, first floor-$60.
One bedroom, second floor -> $50. Call VI 3-6294. 10-9
2 bedroom home, att, garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
locked. Washers. Fence. Fence.
$100 mount. 221 Mountview Dr. Phon.
VI 3-5882 after 5 for appt.
GARAGE FOR RENT -Vichitch of 14th
& Ohio. Phone VI 3-7655 at 5 p.m. 10-9
2 BEDROOM duplex unfurn. Good location.
See at 432 Missouri. 10-6
HELP WANTED
Selling To Students and Lawrence Residents
PERMANENT POSITIONS
LIBERAL COMMISSION AND GUARANTEE
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS
SELLING 12 MONTHS
PER YEAR
For Married Students
Write, Giving Age, Work Histor and Phone No. To: Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall Personal Interviews will Be Arranged
EVERYONE READS
AND USES
WANT ADS
WANTED: MAN to do odd jobs around
the house.
convenient. Call VI 3-6850. 10-11
Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, materials for your carbon neatly and accurately. Standard rates. Call Pat Coester, VI 3-8679.
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, typeseters, these dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318.
TYPING
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, Bariow. 408 W. 13th, VI 21-1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss. tf
Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-3136 Mrs. Loo-
gbach.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service. Services. 5317 B Woo Mission, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or St. 2-2186.
MILLIKEN'S 'S O S.' . Now at two
1029, 1029. 1040, 1078.
Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
call 1511. W 21. St. Call VI 3-6440.
call 1511. W 21. St. Call VI 3-6440.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application orders. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. ITC. Accurate writer. Reasonable writer. CIc. Newletter. Mrs. Mt. Edlowney. Ph. VI. 31 82756.
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng theses & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression. For excellence typing at standard rates, call Miss Louff Pope, PE 3-1997.
BUSINESS SERVICES
SENIORS — Need photos for employment
Larry Marry VI 2-3374 after 5 p.m. 10-9
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf
NOW IS THE TIME to get your car ready for Winter. Specializing in engine tune-up, Sunny's Tune-up & Speed Shop, Sunny's Sunset of Sunset Drive-In. Phone VI 3-9271. 10-6
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644. tt
TON'S 14th St. Barber Shop. ½ block off Mass. Parking next to shop. All styles of haircuts $1.25. 3 full-time barbers. Open 8-5:30. Mon.-Sat. 10-6
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.
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778.
tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ward to Carson C., Ola Smith
39319 $^2$ 39319. Mail VI 3-5264.
Try the Kansan Want Ads
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a newborn baby and enjoy having playmates. We have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8140.
Blue Hills Drive-In
1601 E. 23rd Open 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Fri. & Sat.
You Never Ate A Better Burger
TRY OUR JUMBO DELUXE
1/4 lb. of ground beef with all the trimmings WE HAVE DELICIOUS ONION RINGS, TOO!
Diamond Phonograph NEEDLES
2 for the price of 1 Saturday Only
BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass.
TOWN CITY STREET GARDEN WATER FLOWING ROAD RAILWAY BASED ON THE EGYPTIAN SCENERY
4
Your Professional Travel Agency
For
TRAVEL PLANNING,RESERVATIONS,TICKETS
U. S.A. and WORLD-WIDE
AIRLINES - SHIP
TRAIN EXCURSIONS CHARTER BUS TOURS - CRUISES RESORTS-HOTELS
Phone VIking 3-1211
MAUPINTOUR Travel Service
Now At
THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 West 23rd Street
"Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 6, 1961
More Than 30 Years Your Favorite Book Store The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
Why do they keep reissuing Beethoven's Fifth? It's waste maker stuff.—Hans Vandergrift. Civilization is a movement and not a condition, a voyage and not a harbor.—Arnold Toynbee Civilization consists in teaching men to govern themselves.—Benjamin Tucker
We Are Now Offering a complete new service. 365 excuses to have your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Missouri Day
TRY SOME TONIGHT
DONUTS
HOT DONUTS 8 TO 12 Delicious bakery treats
JOE'S BAKERY
VI 3-4720 for delivery
412 W. 9th
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Come in and Get Acquainted
For the Latest in FALL HAIR STYLINGS
You will be welcomed by a staff of friendly, experienced beauticians who will help you to select the hair style that will flatter you most. We specialize in
---
- PERMANENTS
- RESTYLING
- HAIR COLORING
Our shop is only a few minutes walk from the heart of the campus
FOR APPOINTMENTS call VI 3-3034
1144 Indiana一1 block north of Student Union
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Page - Creighton
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-7694
Motor Tune-ups
Lubrication $1.00
All Major Brands
of Oil
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass VI 3-0330
Classified Display Rates
Rates
1 inch one time ___$1.00
1 inch five times ___$4.50
1 inch every day
for 21 insertions ___$15.00
Monthly Rate
1 inch every day --- $12.00
(two monthus minimum)
or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
No art work or engraving allowed
Call KU-376
For a Real Change of Pace
Spaghetti-a la Paradiso
... Superbly baked to seal in the pungent spices of real Italian sauce
MR PIZZA
Served in the Paradiso Room . . . capturing the romantic mood of old European sidewalk cafes
LES GERIG'S
CAMPUS
CAMPUS HIDEAWAY
VI 3-9111
SPAGHETTI and PIZZA SPECIALISTS
106 N. Park
Sweden Is an 'Active Neutral'
Sweden's ambassador to the United States, Gunnar Jarring, said Friday the cornerstone of his country's foreign policy is a neutrality which accents the responsibilities of participation in world affairs.
Mr. Jarring spoke to more than 350 persons at a meeting of the International Club in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
THE AMBASSADOR, who as Sweden's chief delegate to the U.N. in 1958 served as president of the Security Council, said neutrality as defined by his government means "freedom from alliances."
In terms of the cold war, the policy of neutrality becomes a policy of not allowing the country to be driven into either of the big power blocs, the tall, veteran diplomat said.
Sweden's present neutrality, he said "grows out of the experiences of two World Wars" and a deep national desire to perpetuate 145 years of uninterrupted peace in the country.
However, Sweden accepted a restriction on its declared neutrality, when in October 1945 it accepted U.N. membership with all the implications of collective security, he continued.
Nor is the country's neutrality meant as a negation of traditional ties, he added.
"WE ARE A PART of the western world and will always be so. Our whole way of life is directed to Western life, our history, emotions, and social reasoning."
Ambassador Jarring, who was an associate professor teaching Turkish affairs at the Swedish University at Lund before joining his countries diplomatic service, said Sweden's foreign policy was also based on "the strongest defenses we can afford.
"Sweden must not become an empty space, a military vacuum, to be filled by some other power," he said. But neither will the country
accept outside assistance, military or otherwise, he continued.
Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, who canceled a trip to Washington, D.C., to be present at the meeting, welcomed Ambassador Jarring to the campus and presented the diplomat with a momento of the university.
AS A POSITIVE FORCE in foreign relations, he said, "we have stressed trying legal solutions for international justice." It is his nation's belief that the International Court at the Hague could be used more than it is for this purpose, he added.
Asked if this was because he would like to see another Swedish citizen like the late Dag Hammarskjold take the job, he gave a categorical no for an answer.
It was a miniature metal Jay-hawk, which the chancellor remarked might come in handy as a paperweight.
A reception was held for the ambassador following the program. Shafiq Hashmi, Hyderabad, India, graduate student and president of the club, presided.
During a question period following the main lecture, Ambassador Jarring said Sweden "has not been in favor of the Russian-sponsored Troika plan for the U.N. secretariat."
HE SAID GROWTH in the U.N membership since 1953 has come largely from the addition of new Asian and African countries. For that reason, he said, he would favor a representative from one of these countries as U.N. secretary general.
Diplomacy, P-T-P Topic
Gen. Johnson disagreed saying that the NATO is really the basic foundation for present day foreign diplomacy.
DEAN HELLER started the Forum discussion by giving historical back- ground to modern American diplomacy.
"The Greek and Turkish Aid doctrine initiated our present day form of foreign policy followed by the Marshall Plan and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization," he said.
Prof. Mudroch added a third possibility as to the origin of modern American diplomacy.
The end success or failure of American diplomacy is measured by whether or not you have more successes than failures, three speakers concluded at the first People-to-People forum last night.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history, and Gen. Harold K. Johnson, commandant of Ft. Leavenworth military school, spoke to an audience of approximately 60 people in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Monday, October 9, 1961
"1947 is the wrong date. I think it started in 1943. Tehran and Yalta are where the big deals were made. For example, in May, 1945, the Americans were 50 miles from Prague and the Russians were 90 miles away. When an uprising started in that city the American army didn't help; the Russians did and thus the propaganda triumph was theirs."
After the short discussion as to the beginning of present-day policy the panel was open to questions.
Weather
He said:
Cloudy and cooler with occasional light rain today and tonight. Cloudy and colder tomorrow. High this afternoon in the 50s. Low tonight 35 to 40.
ONE STUDENT asked how Kennedy's announcement that the West German government should try to resolve the German problem by dealing with East Germany's government should be understood.
"Sometimes things are said only to see how people will react," Dean Heller added.
Gen. Johnson replied that the statement was made by General Clay in Berlin, not Kennedv.
This was the first in a series of People-to-People forums to be held at KU-this year.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 17
TEN MINUTES LATER, a 1959 Triumph sports car driven by Douglas B. Gillespie, 5300 W 69th, Prairie Village, Kans., jumped the center island at 1930 Naismith and struck a northbound car driven by Gary F. Conklin, Hutchinson second year law student. Joseph M. O'Brien, of Kansas City, Mo., a rider in the Gillespie car, was thrown out during the impact. He was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was reported in critical condition.
At 12:25 a.m. Sunday, a car driven by Michael F. McFadden, Long Beach, Calif., freshman, collided at the intersection of Ninth and Michigan St. with a vehicle driven by Charles Manney, Arkansas City senior. Manney was sent to Watkins Memorial Hospital with minor facial injuries. He was charged with running a stop sign, DWI, and possession of an open bottle.
ASC Meeting Reset
The All Student Council meeting originally scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday will now be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The meeting was rescheduled because it conflicted with a regional Peace Corps meeting being held Tuesday night in Kansas City.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Traffic Mishaps Injure Four Saturday Night
Three injury accidents occurred this weekend within a 15 minute period.
McFadden was heading west on Ninth when Manney drove in front of him. Damage was extensive to both cars. There were three riders in each vehicle.
Gillespie, who was headed south, stated that an unidentified ve-
Yankees Lead 11-3 At End of 4 Innings
(Continued on page 12)
CINCINNATI — (UPI) — The powerful New York Yankees, led by John Blanchard, Hector Lopez and Bill Skowron, scored five runs in both the first and fourth innings today and gained an 11-3 lead over the Cincinnati Reds in the fifth game of the World Series. (See page 12 for play by play.)
Progress Needs Non-Conformists
Non-conformists are necessary if society is to progress, Edwin Wilson, executive director of the American Humanist Association, said Friday.
Mr. Wilson, speaking at the Minority Opinion Forum, said the non-conformist through history has been the heretic "who listened to strange voices which said things opposing the existing creed."
BUT, HE REMINDED the audience, yesterday's heresy becomes today's orthodoxy.
"As long as we have conservatives, we have to depend on the nonconformist," Mr. Wilson said. "We have to have someone suffering to get progress."
He said it is not easy to go against the mores of society.
"The non-conformist sees what's right, he speaks up for it, and often he has to take the consequences," he said.
Mr. Wilson said the American Humanist Association is especially interested in protecting the rights of the religious non-conformist. These rights are being threatened, he said, when religion is taught in the public schools.
"If I were an orthodox Christian," he said, "I would want to keep state and church separate to be sure they (the government) wouldn't do anything to my church. It works both ways."
"WE OPPOSE any dominant religious group using the facilities of the public schools to teach religion to children." he said.
He reminded the audience that the Bill of Rights guarantees freedom from religion as well as freedom of religion and guarantees the separation of church and state.
Mr. Wilson said the association was trying to help men who opposed military service on grounds other than religion.
"THE LAW SAYS you have no rights as a conscientious objector if you don't believe in God," he said. "We believe a non-theist can also have a conscience."
In the question period following the talk, Mr. Wilson was asked whether he objected to the recitation of the pledge of allegiance, containing the words "under God" in the school.
"Any effort to make patriotism
rationalistic makes it hollow," he said.
"I would object on these grounds."
IN AN INTERVIEW before the talk, Mr. Wilson said the AHA has approximately 4,500 members in 80 chapters. It has been growing steadily for the past 15 years, he said.
Although there are student chapters at several colleges, the association prefers to have students in the regular chapters.
"Most people do their best thinking while in college," he said. "Why not integrate the students with the older members for the benefit of all?"
Kansas Gets Hanging OK
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Supreme Court today denied a hearing to Lowell Lee Andrews, a one-time Kansas University student facing hanging for the 1958 murder of his parents and sister at their farm home near Kansas City.
The brief order leaves Kansas free to carry out the execution.
The appeal said the trial judge omitted necessary instructions to the jury, including those on lesser degrees of homicide.
Referring to Andrews as a "mentally disturbed boy of 18," the appeal said the death penalty was improper in his case.
The appeal said the youth was denied a fair trial because of the introduction of a confession made to police after a private conference with Rev. Virto C. Dameron, minister of Grandview Baptist Church, Kansas City, attended by the Andrews family.
The appeal said that under Dameron's influence Andrews confessed the crime to police even though they told him he was not compelled to make a statement.
Andres himself called police to the scene of the crime where the bodies of his parents and sister, Jennie Lee, were found in the house at 6040 Wolcott Drive in Wyandotte County on Nov. 29. 1958.
The Supreme Court of Kansas affirmed the conviction on Dec. 10, 1960. Gov. John Anderson of Kansas denied a clemency plea.
Area's First Fallout Shelter Nearing Completion
By Dennis Farney
A fallout shelter is an "inexpensive luxury" for Larry McGrath, a civil defense-minded first year law student.
McGrath, a former Marine jet pilot from Ottawa, is the first KU student to build a fallout shelter. He summed up his outlook while standing beside the ten-foot-deep hole which houses his partially completed shelter.
"HAVE YOU ever spent $200 for something that wasn't absolutely necessary?" he asked. "Well, it's that way with this shelter. My family and I may never use it, but for the security it provides, at the small cost, it's worth it."
McGrath and his wife, Cynthia, have three children: Melissa, 4; Lucinda, 2; and Shawn, 1.
"Anyway," he continued. "I think the fatalistic attitude of so many college students—We'll all be killed if a nuclear war comes, so why worry about it?"—is not realistic at all.
(2) 60 cm.
"The United States government spends billions of dollars for national defense and hundreds of millions have been spent on radar warning systems. But what good is all this money if there's no place to go when the bombers get here? If we feel that it's foolish to build a shelter, why let the government spend all that money just to warn us?"
BUILDS FALLOUT SHELTER—Larry McGrath, a first year law student, works on the bomb shelter he is building for his family's use in the event of a nuclear attack. He expects to complete it in three or four weeks.
McGRATH'S SHELTER, based on plans approved by Civil Defense authorities, will be an 8 by 13 by 10 foot structure, built of concrete blocks. When completed, it will be covered by three feet of dirt and eventually, he hopes—a lawn.
"When we get the grass started," he said, "you won't even know the shelter is here."
While primarily designed for protection against fallout—which, experts believe, will cause more fatalities than the actual nuclear blast which precedes it—McGrath believes that the shelter is deep enough to afford protection against a distant blast.
IN BUILDING the shelter, McGrath has been hampered by both inexperience and rainy weather.
"I've poured concrete before," he said, "but I've never worked with concrete blocks. But my main problem has been the rains. They keep washing dirt into the hole."
McGrath, who had been working on the shelter an hour a day for five weeks, speeded up progress Saturday when he sponsored a "beer blast" to induce friends to aid in the construction. Nine responded, and one wall of the shelter was heightened by five feet during the afternoon.
He hopes to complete the shelter within the next few weeks.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 9. 1961
The Population Problem
One of the basic, long-range problems facing the world today is overpopulation. Many countries are already overpopulated, some dangerously so. India and China are both grappling with this problem and both are experiencing great difficulties in their attempts to solve it. The overpopulation problem in both countries will become far worse in the next few decades. But these two nations are not the only ones faced with an overpopulation problem. Many other underdeveloped countries in Asia, Africa, parts of Latin America and the Middle East are suffering from the same problem.
The overpopulation problem in these countries has been created in large part by the increased efforts at sanitation and medical care that have reduced the mortality rate, the agricultural outlook that regards large families as an asset and the surge in population growth that always comes with the drive for industrialization. The problem created by overpopulation is a basic one in the countries suffering from it. They cannot provide enough jobs or enough food, clothing and shelter for all the people.
THE POPULATION EXPLOSION IN SOME of these underdeveloped nations is so great that it has begun to severely limit or even cancel the benefits of their efforts at economic improvement. India is a good example of this. China is undoubtedly experiencing the same difficulty. Many other underdeveloped nations either already have the same problem or are rapidly approaching it.
The question that needs to be considered in the light of these basic facts is this: Can the world's population continue to increase indefinitely? No sane, reasonable man can answer yes to that question. Therefore, another question quite logically presents itself: How is the world's population to be controlled? It is a question that needs to be answered now, not later, when the overpopulation problem has become even more acute and dangerous.
Many ideas and methods have been advanced for the solution of the problem. Medical research laboratories have been trying to develop a cheap chemical contraceptive that can be taken orally in pill form. This method would limit the world's population effectively if it was widely available. Scientists in other fields have developed new methods of food production and found new food sources to feed the expanding population. Wellmeaning idealists have suggested that the problem lies in the fact that the world's resources are unevenly distributed and that the answer
lies in convincing the wealthy nations to share their plenty with the poor and underdeveloped nations.
THE ONLY WORKABLE SOLUTION among those listed and among the many other proposals that have been advanced on the problem is the chemical contraceptive in pill form. The other proposals all have one thing in common: either they seek to ignore the basic fact that the world's population cannot continue to increase indefinitely or they are unworkable in practical terms. They are only delaying actions to avoid facing the problem for awhile.
Considering the overpopulation problem on a long term basis then, it would seem a wise and humane action on the part of the United States to aid in developing, or to develop by itself, such a contraceptive. It has the research facilities and the scientists to develop and perfect such a contraceptive quicker than any other nation. It is true that a great deal of work has already been done in this area and that chemical contraceptives are available. However, they are not available cheaply and in pill form to the extent that they would be feasible for use in the underdeveloped areas where they are needed.
ONCE THE UNITED STATES AND OTHER interested nations had developed a cheap and effective contraceptive, the formula and production method or the actual pills could then be made available to any nation requesting them through UNESCO. That distinction is deliberately made. The program is a service that would be invaluable to many countries, but it should be carefully noted that it would be offered on a voluntary basis.
Yet despite the delicate problems that would be involved in creating any such contraceptive for export to countries desiring it, the program is necessary. To continue ignoring the problem of overpopulation will only make it more difficult to solve when it is finally faced. And the rapidly developing drive for industrialization among underdeveloped nations is going to create tremendous population problems for them in the near future.
THE TRUTH OF THE PROBLEM MAY NOT be palatable or welcome to many people, but they cannot change the problem by ignoring it or refusing to deal with it. There is only one humane and workable solution. Work on it should be begun at once.
William H. Mullins
Syrian Revolt Blow to Nasser
By Phil Newsom
PARIS—(UPI)—The Syrian revolt dealt a severe blow to the prestige of U.A.R. President Gamel Abdul Nasser, but the new Syrian regime is not yet out of the woods and Nasser probably has not made his last move.
American correspondents permitted for the first time into Damascus after the Sept. 29 overthrow of the Nasser regime in Syria reported an apparent broad base of support for the new government of Premier Mamoun Al-Kuzbari.
THE QUESTIONS now are the steps to be taken toward recognition of the new regime by the big Western powers and the Soviet Union, Nasser's next move and the success of efforts by the Kuzbari government to solidify its support among the working people, peasants and students.
Nasser's next step especially must be awaited because the Egyptian leader has been on the ropes before, notably during the Anglo-French invasion of Suez, but has emerged successfully and still in control.
UPI correspondents in Beirut, Syria's next door neighbor in Lebanon, report that a further necessity for the success of the new government will be quick massive doses of foreign aid to finance the large scale construction and development projects started under Nasser.
THE FIRST JARRING effects of Syrian revolt on the Middle East as a whole appear to have been largely absorbed.
Israel, bordering Syria and a favorite target of Nasser propaganda attacks, naturally was pleased.
Jordan's young King Hussein, also from time to time a Nasser target, was pleased and promptly recognized the new regime, as did Turkey which also borders Syria.
BUT IT WAS NOTABLE that beyond Nasser's brief and abortive paratroop attack on the Syrian
Focus on Syria
IF THE NEW REGIME is successful and if there is no outside interference, such as from the Communists, it is possible a new mideast alignment will develop.
rebels, mideast boundaries remained quiet and nowhere did troops go lunging toward a border.
French Foreign Office observers who traditionally keep a close eye on mideast events, now believe any threat of military action largely has disappeared.
Such action, they believe, would have to have taken place within the first few days.
But these are "ifs" dependent upon a still unsettled situation.
If the coup proved anything, it proved that there still is no such thing as Arab unity and that events in the mideast revolve around a few outstanding individuals and ancient hatreds.
IRAQ HAS REMAINED silent but Premier Gen. Abdul Kassim undoubtedly be willing to strengthen his hand in the struggle for Arab leadership against Nasser.
Saudi Arabia has mended its fences in its frequently strained relations with Nasser but there is no love lost between the Egyptian ruler and the ruling family composed of the sons of old Ibn Saud.
Turkey, a non-Arab country, also has had frequent troubles with Nasser under the former U.A.R., but in the present circumstances has worries of its own.
TURKEY IS SCHEDULED to hold national elections next week in the beginning of a transfer from military rule back to civilian.
The Sept. 17th hanging of former Premier Adnan Menderes by the Committee of National Unity has left deep scars on a country noted for its vendettas and may be expected to keep that country preoccupied with its own affairs.
Militarily, there is little real change.
THE SINGLE UNIFYING factor in the mideast has been the Arab hatred of Israel.
Within a few hours of the outset of any military action, Israel could muster 200,000 well-trained and equipped men in the field and remains the strongest military power able to hold its own against any proven Arab combination.
Focus on Syria
By Safynaz Kazem
News from home about the situation and the trouble in the U.A.R. was a shock and a great disappointment to every individual Arab in the Arab World—and here I mean to indicate the individual who composes the general public opinion of the Arab people.
I am not going to take sides and try to justify its action or attitude; in the Arab's case there is just one side—the Arabs themselves! Up to this point everyone can imagine how difficult and bitter is the situation.
One may ask:
1. Are the Arabs going to run over themselves and leave their dangerous enemy aside—very pleased with their disagreements?
2. If the masses of the 85 million Arabs believe and dream about the "One Arab Nation," what is the problem then?
3 — Does Nasser force himself to be the leader of the Arab?
The first answer is almost a basic fact about one nature of the Arabs.
1. The Arabs are one of the most emotional and enthusiastic people. Used to being proud of their great civilization and heritage, they became very sensitive concerning their countries and problems. This sensitivity usually causes some interior troubles. There is an Arab proverb which says that "My brother and I go into an alliance together against my cousin, but my cousin and I go into alliance against the outsiders!" The Arabs may have real internal crises, but they would never forget that above all they are brothers in one big family and there is a certain enemy who would be very pleased to see them destroying each other!
"The theme and the urge of Arab unity, of an "Arabism," has obtruded through much of the history related in earlier chapters. It was noted how the permanent legacy of a common Arabization—in language, culture, and customs—fused in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries with the Western idea of nationhood in the nation-state.
2. To answer the second question I quote Erskine B. Childers, the author of "Common Sense About the Arab World"—in his chapter about the Arab Union:
"Even in the 1850s, a few Arab intellectuals conceived of an Arab nation embracing all peoples who spoke Arabic, irrespective of creed. But the general early response to Western ideas was haphazard, and the fusion with the Arab legacy did not in fact mature until (roughly) the 1930s...
"But beneath these events, and despite their impact, there persisted and grew a sense of "Arabism." In Egypt, and in all other parts of the Arab world, Arabic increasingly became the medium used for rapidly developing press, publishing and educational facilities. In the twentieth century, intercommunications of every kind within this world grew very quickly. The latent impulse towards an Arab nationalism, below what the outside world tended to see as 'Syrian' or 'Egyptian' nationalism, was quickened after World War I both by political events and by ideological influence. The struggle against the Western Powers across the whole region, from Morocco to Iraq, and the common anger and fear over Palestine...
$$
\* \* \*
$$
"By the advent of World War II, however, it was clear that the general impulse towards unity within nationalism, and the strong appeal exercised by the Axis Powers, required some adjustment of attitudes. During the war, Britain twice issued declarations favouring the goal of Arab unity, and accordingly welcomed the formation of the Arab League. Many Arabists in official British circles genuinely favoured such unity, and saw no clash with British interests, provided the leadership of the movement remained favourable to Britain. When, however, the leadership was assumed by an attractably independent Egyptian Government, active support was given to those 'friends' — notably Nuri es-Said and King Hussein — who might be able to lead a counter-movement of unity, closely associated with Britain, in the Arab East. The collapse in 1958 of this policy—with which the United States had also by then become wholly identified—has not yet led to any clear further readjustment, either by Britain or the United States... The policies of the Soviet Union have followed a similar pattern. During the 1950s, while the Young Arab movement was actively in conflict with the Western Powers, Russia strongly supported the ideal of unity. The short-term hope was that such support would increase Soviet prestige. The long-term objective was that Arab Communist Parties might then capitalize this prestige and secure increasing actual power from within the nationalist movement. Between 1957 and 1959, however, it evidently became apparent to the Soviet Union, and the Arab Communists that President Nasser's neutralism would not admit of local Communist activity. Towards the end of 1958, it was decided that the overall nationalist movement as led by Nasser must be broken up—above all by preventing any union between revolutionally Iraq and the United Arab Republic.
☆ ☆ ★
"Finally, it must be noted that the Arab-Israeli conflict intrudes most profoundly into the evolution of Arab unity. It tends to hasten, perhaps too rapidly, the demand for union. Israel fears strong, militarily co-ordinated encirclement, her policy to date has been to threaten war if neighboring Jordan merges with any other Arab country."
These are some of the points that could throw light on the problem.
3. Coming to the third question, one can be directed to it as the ordinary Arab man. He will find it pretty awkward. He won't think of King Hussein to be his leader anyway!
Book Reviews
Monday, October 9, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Art, College Humor and Science Fiction
By Marilyn Stokstad
GODS AND GODDESES IN ART AND LEGEND, by Herman J. Wechsler, Washington Square Press, New York, 1961. 60 cents.
I find it difficult to understand the excuse for publishing a book like "Gods and Goddesses in Art and Legend." On the cover we are told that it is "a spirited retelling of the best-known classic myths."
"Spirited retelling" indeed! How could anyone turn these really spirited stories into such tedious tales? May I remind all new SIC members of Edith Hamilton's "Mythology" (in its eleventh printing as a Mentor Book and only 50c)? Compare, for example, the two authors treatment of the tale of Atalanta, a story singularly appropriate for the University of Kansas.
IN DESCRIBING the conditions for this famous track event, Wechsler writes, "she (Atalanta) announced that only he who could outrun her in a footrace would.win her as a bride. The prize, therefore, was a beautiful virgin, but the penalty for being beaten in the contest was death!"
Such a situation has its interesting aspects, to be sure, and in her edition Edith Hamilton adds, "It seems odd that a number of men wanted to marry her."
TO MAKE MATTERS worse for any SIConian, Mr. Wechsler's book is "illustrated by the paintings of the world's great masters." I am afraid that the so-called color reproductions on the cover and the "sixty-four illustrations in gravure" in the text are enough to turn anyone against painting.
I thought that sepia prints were a passion of my great aunts and had passed away with these dear ladies; unfortunately, bleary sepia ghosts of paintings still haunt us in this little volume—a good reminder of what mythology, painting, and art history are not.
Worth Repeating
It is simply not possible for small oases of prosperity in the world to continue to exist amidst vast deserts of poverty without engendering storms that might engulf those oases.—B. K. Nehru
Drink is worse than war, for drink is continuous, war but periodic.-Graccio Houlder
COLLEGE PARODIES, edited by Will and Martin Lieberson, Ballantine Books. 75 cents.
Call this generation what you will—beat, hip or silent—its most obvious characteristic is the face it turns to the world it surveys, a bland, unsmiling, poker face. Apparently the collegiate have swallowed copious portions of the bologna being served by their elders—especially in the groves of academe—that the times are too serious for the good belly laugh and the risque joke.
Having been conned into taking themselves seriously, these post-pubescents are duly shuffling over the campus green instead of gamboling.
ONE MARK OF this new seriousness is the decline and fall of the college humor magazine. Gone from most campuses are the Squat, the Bladder, the Pipsqueak, the Fowl and the Squirt.
Worse, the collegiates are purling with pleasure because their academic elders have been patting them for showing maturity by dumping these magazines. Apparently, Falstaff and Juliet's lickernurse are as lifeless and sterile as a slide of strentococcus culture.
Well, those who can do, and those who can't read about those who do. This collection of parodies by such talented staffs as the Harvard Lampoon, the Columbia Jester, and the Stanford Chaparral includes takeoffs on Life, Holiday, Playboy, the Saturday Evening Post and others.
THE BEST, AND they are very good, go back to the late 40's and early 50's.
As Orpheum Annie says in the Yale Record's takeoff on the New York Daily News, "If the meatball who writes this script don't let me grow to puberty soon, I'm gonna take some fierce hormone injections." Testosterone anyone?—N.R.
letters to the editor
Your sympathies with the foreigners who are the victims of discriminatory practices are perhaps well taken. There is a human side to the story which touches every person who sees in his fellow man an equal in the image of God.
But, there is also the person whose home is, in the tradition of a free peoples, her castle to dispose with at will. Already, the personal sanctity of her anonymity and a peaceful state of mind have been done violently. The moral arguments against compulsion, of constraints, are just as forceful as those advanced to straightjacket our freedom of choice. And, what is imminently hazardous is to state that KU must be motivated to a certain type of action in this instance. This is nothing more than a devious attempt, seen from many persons' vantage point, to circum-scribe the potential for independent action which the landlady now has. Liberties have a habit of eventually succumbing to erosion when a dictum is enforced, regardless of how benign its intent.
KU, and its administration, reflects the desires, aspirations and structures of the people of the State who engendered this institution. If these people are to be intimidated into thought paralysis by
Editor Criticized
a charlatan who in his emoting invokes the support of naive doogoders, as well as intelligent persons, then it seems like the people of Kansas and this basic sense of values are being done violence through a default of silence.
Let us review the inception of the incident. Two persons, both originating in countries whose social structures violate the basic traditions of a democracy, are now clamoring for a status that they would not demand under similar conditions in their own countries. Parenthetically, the look of astonishment on the Greek colony in the Delta would be amusing to contemplate if, under similar circumstances, they were chastised for refusing to rent to individuals amongst their national hosts!
The leader of one of their nations, in particular, has vowed to do away with another neighboring nation which is regarded in our circles as a flourishing democratic state encircled by a chaotic miasma. How much more one could reform the judicial, social and charitable attitudes in that part of the world?
A certain editor affiliated with your columns reminds one of the coeds who greeted the President in Vienna with an "Ooh, la, la, Jacquelyn!" Their obsession with the foreign—one might speculate a consequence of a revolt against provincialism or an ignorance of domestic worth — lead them to emote over what they considered "chic," even though the object of their attentions was not present on the occasion, which parallels your espousals of vaccous causes.
What then might constitute a constructive and sane attitude? First, let us not resort to the constant trauma of event-responding, but rather let's take the initiative and become purveyors of event-creating leadership. Yes, I mean right here—of the people-to-people variety! Secondly, in finishing the unfinished business of democracy, let's remember that we are a "nation-of-nations," to quote Walt Whitman. This means that our actions should reflect a blueprint for world-living based on a carefully thought out formula; motivated by the Golden Rule and its concomitant ingredients, virtue and talent. Permissiveness on a date is no more respected than kindred laxity amongst varying cultures,
Editor:
One of the most significant changes in American Culture has been the shift from participation by the individual in face-to-face, primary groups to participation in great mass secondary organizations, largely on an anonymous basis. The Roman Catholic Bishops decried this trend in a momentous document reminiscent to the Protestant tenet of the priesthood of believers. In effect, last year they illustrated how this transfer of responsibility and allegiance was detrimental to the cause of personal moral excellence. This, in the final analysis, degrades corporate excellence. In the same vein, if we as individuals restrict from participation in the economic and intellectual development of our nation other individuals due to the by-product of the social evil of discrimination, we might be sealing our doom. There are no talents to be wasted, nor any contributions to be rejected, in this an intellectual struggle to win others to our system.
By James E. Gunn
and steadfast moral conduct may always serve to enhance the vanquished or victor.
Yours truly,
H. Schick
Baldwin graduate student
Finally, I would like to add a little footnote, for those whose prime motivation is a paranoic fear of the domestic communist bogey — a la John Birch Society. It is this.
NEW MAPS OF HELL, by Kingsley Amis. LEFT TURN AT THURSDAY, by Frederick Pohl. STRANGERS FROM EARTH, by Poul Anderson. A CUPFUL OF SPACE, by Mildred Clingerman. All Ballantine Books, All 35 cents.
Short Ones
I should fancy that the real tragedy of the poor is that they can afford nothing but self-denial. —Oscar Wilde.
In 1958 Princeton's Seminar Committee invited Britain's Kingsley Amis to give a series of lectures in the Christian Gauss Seminars in Criticism. Amis shocked them by choosing science fiction as his topic.
Self-denial is practical, and is not only polite to all but is pleasant to those who practice it.— Mary Baker Eddy.
Two Amis judgments are worth repeating: "... what attracts people to science fiction is not in the first place literary quality in the accustomed sense of that term. But ... they may well come to find such quality there, perhaps in an unaccustomed form, if they ever take the trouble to look for it."
None, also, have revealed such personal judgments, and with these the "angry young" author of "Lucky Jim," "That Uncertain Feeling," and other works of current British social criticism succeeded for awhile in making angry young men out of some of this country's science-fiction authors.
NOW THESE LECTURES ARE AVAILABLE in paperback form, and it is clear that the blind trust of the Seminar Committee was well-founded. There have been other critiques of science fiction, but none have been so literate, so revealing, nor written out of so long and enduring a love.
"SCIENCE FICTION IS NOT TOMFOOL SENSATIONALISM, but neither is it a massive body of serious art destined any moment to engulf the whole of Anglo-American writing."
Addicts of science fiction will find new insights in "New Maps of Hell." Non-readers may be persuaded by Amis to try. In fact, the author adds a final footnote for the latter: "In the event that any non-addicted reader of these pages feels he can face the idea of actually trying some science fiction, his best plan would be, rather than plunging with set teeth into the welter of the magazines, to get hold of a volume of short stories by any of the practitioners mentioned earlier in tones of respect."
One of those writers—called by Amis "the most consistently able writer science fiction has yet produced"—is Frederik Pohl, once my agent. And a book such as he describes is available in "Left Turn at Thursday." But the stories are minor Pohl, though competent enough and enjoyable, and not really in the satiric tradition which Amis so admires.
It is these two aspects of the book—his placing Pohl atop his list of science fiction writers and his conviction that satire is the touchstone for good science fiction—that drew down the wrath of this country's science fiction authors and readers. Those and his assumption that the contribution of Pohl's frequent collaborator, the late Cyril Kornbluth, "was roughly to provide the more violent action while Pohl filled in the social background and the satire."
I have heard the Pohl-Kornbluth collaboration described as a game in which, after they agreed upon a general theme, one would start writing as fast as he could and continue as long as he could and then wander off to nap while the other sat down at the typewriter. The game was to leave the collaborator in the worst possible predicament.
Poul Anderson, who is referred to three times in the Amis critique but without comment, would be ranked by many authorities as at least Pohl's equal, although perhaps somewhat uneven in his prolificity. He is represented by a recent paperback, "Strangers From Earth," which is illustrative of his minor works—the sort of stories which may be most typically science fiction in their concern for the conflict of ideas rather than the conflict of individuals, excent as they represent or espouse ideas.
In contrast is Mildred Clingerman, who exemplifies not only that rarity, the female science fiction author (there have been perhaps no more than a dozen) but also the part-time author, a breed who may have done more for science fiction than those who labor full-time in the vineyards. The feminine touch is obvious in these stories—sometimes delicate, occasionally macabre, always concerned with the small, personal situation rather than the big idea.
Amis has provided a personalized map to the kingdom. Collections of stories such as these—although, except for the Clingerman volume, they may be routine competence—are the kingdom itself.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 376. business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown ... Business Manager
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 9, 1961
Prof. Wessling Says:
Berliners Puzzled Over Negotiations
Americans do not realize what it means to live under the fear of Communist domination, Eckhart Wessling, Fulbright exchange professor, stressed continually, tapping his desk with a pencil to emphasize each word.
Prof. Wessling was born in Berlin and has lived half his life behind the Iron Curtain.
"I HAVE FOUND many Americans deploring Russian space accomplishments. This surprises me," he said.
He explained that the people of Berlin were more impressed by the gigantic air lift of June 1948 than by technological advances. "The air lift was a deed of humanity, not technology," he said.
Berlin, he said, owes its life and democracy to the United States. If the U.S. leaves Berlin, the "lights go out."
PROF. WESSLING IS teaching in the German department at KU this year, but in Berlin he teaches English and French.
"It is quite different here," he commented, "because in Germany, history, literature, civilization and language are included in one course."
Of University of Kansas students he says:
Life here is not different from that in Berlin, Wessling stated, because the middle and lower classes of Germany imitate almost perfectly the American way of life. Music, films, television and even the "concept of the dollar" are imitations of the west, he explained.
WHEN ASKED about G.I. Elvis Presley's impact on Germany, he raised one eyebrow and said, "Well, there are crazy teenagers everywhere; the adults just ignored him."
Wessling estimated that before Berlin's border was completely sealed, about 2,000 refugees a day were crowding into West Berlin.
He pointed out that East German fear that Western propaganda was
Kennedy Flies To See Rayburn
DALLAS, Tex. —(UPI)—President Kennedy flew to Dallas today to see House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, who has incurable and far-advanced cancer.
It may be the last time Kennedy will see Rayburn — both a friend and political adviser — alive. Yet there was no sign that Kennedy's decision to visit Rayburn today means that Rayburn's death is expected in a day or two.
KENNEDY TOOK OFF from Quoset Naval Air Station at Newport, R. I., and his jet landed at Love (air) Field. Dallas.
The President, after a 30-45 minute visit with Rayburn, was scheduled to return at once to Love Field and take off again, landing about 9:15 p.m., EDT, at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington.
four doctors are giving Rayburn a new and experimental cancer-slowing drug, and so far he has withstood the drug well, without side effects.
Other medication, principally cortisone, has improved Rayburn's short-range condition so greatly that he sat up-in bed today and ate a breakfast of scrambled eggs, cereal and toast.
DR. RALPII TOMPSETT, director of internal medicine at Baylor and spokesman for Rayburn's physicians, said Rayburn did not get out of bed and is not likely to get out.
Rayburn's life may be prolonged weeks or months by "5 fluoro-uracil" if he can stand its side effects. The drug destroys both good cells and cancer cells, but cancer cells at a more rapid rate.
taking too many skilled workers and the wish to undermine United States prestige in Western Europe led to the closing of the sector boundries in Berlin.
ACCORDING TO the professor, confidence in the United States has possibly decreased, because the Berliners wonder why it is necessary to negotiate over treaties which have clearly been violated.
The general attitude of the West Berliners, however, remains friendly toward the United States. "We are," he said, "culturally, politically and economically dependent on the U.S."
WHEN THE school year is completed, Prof. Wessling plans to travel in this country for about two months. He has already been to Washington and was "deeply impressed" by a meeting with President Kennedy.
Sarah Coventry, jewelry designer, suggests you tuck a clip, brooch or earring in your party hairdo. But do it quickly, casually — for a rakish, gala look. It's a conversation piece, an ice breaker — and pretty, too.
Costume jewelry's settling down on hair, adding to the elegance of the latest hair arrangements. Unusual treatments involve the use of clips holding jeweled hairbands. But brooches and pins also are used to add to the chic elegance.
Paris designers favor new color combinations in suits and gloves. They show ginger gloves with a pale blue suit, taupe with bright blue, maroon and beige, orange with blue-gray, orange with peach, and almond with green.
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Page 5
Kansas Editors To Meet Here
Burton W, Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will describe the impact of American journalism upon journalism and public affairs of the Middle East for the annual University of Kansas Editor's Day Oct. 23.
Dean Marvin has just returned from a year in the Middle East where he was a Fulbright lecturer in journalism at the University of Tehran, Iran.
ABOUT 150 Kansas newspaper editors and their wives are expected to attend the Editors' Day Events, which will begin in the morning in Flint Hall and conclude with the Kansas-Oklahoma State football game.
In addition to the talk by Dean Marvin, the program will include an announcement of the name of the 45th Kansas editor elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame and the annual "wrangle session."
Annually editors who have been active in Kansas newspaper affairs for at least 25 years elect to the Hall of Fame an editor who has been deceased for at least three years. The vote is conducted by mail ballot.
THE "WRANGLE SESSION" is held each year to discuss newspaper problems. The "wrangle session" will be led by Stewart Newlin, editor of the Wellington Daily News and president of the Kansas Press Association.
Upon arrival, the editors will be greeted with coffee and doughnuts furnished by the University Daily Kansas. They will be guests of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at a buffet luncheon in the Kansas Union building, and A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics, will host the editors at the football game.
University Daily Kansan
A special feature of the day will be displays in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room in Flint Hall.
Medieval Air To Fill Union
"Medieval Madness," complete with handsome knights, fine ladies, underprivileged serfs and maladjusted jesters, will dominate the Student Union Activities Carnival, Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
the organizations presenting skits are:
Sigma Chi, "The War of the Four Roses"; Alpha Chi Omega, "Nights at the Round Stables"; Phi Kappa Psi, "McHeath Bar"; Alpha Kappa Lamba, "Scorcerer's Worksnop"; Alpha Delta Fti, "Tonite the Knight"; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, "Sir Wesco and the Rebelling Dragon"; Kappa Kappa Gamma, "St. George and the Dragon" or "The Knight Mayeth Slayet But the Malady Lingerer On"; Sigma Nu, "Shamalot," and Gamma Phi Beta. "A Friend in Need Is a Dragon Indeed."
The groups presenting booths are:
Delta Chi, "Knight on a Cube";
Kappa Alpha Theta, "Theta Joust House";
Delta Upsilon, "D.U. Dungeon";
Lewis Hall, "Serfside Twist";
Sigma Chi, "Little Knight on Campus";
Chi Omega, "Ring a Damsel—Win a Dragon"; Triangle, "Rountree Roulette"; Phi Delta Theta, "Knights of the Round Table"; Sigma Phi Epsilon, "Burn the Bard"; Phi Gamma Delta, "Death's Door"; Phi Kappa Tau, "The Dragon-Slay-Booth"; Tau Kappa Epsilon, "Tar and Feather the HERETEKE"; Acacia, "Be a Knight for a Night"; Lambda Chi Alpha, "Jayhawk Joust"; Alpha Phi, "Scaldin Cauldron"; G.S.P., "Gertrude's Sorcery Palace", and Pi Kappa Alpha, "Knight's Club".
NORMAN, Okla. — (UPI) — A three-year program of night courses leading to a master's degree in business administration will be offered by the University of Oklahoma College of Business Administration beginning this fall.
Night Courses
The program has been instituted in response to many requests from business establishments and the services for a course study which could be undertaken without interruption of full-time jobs.
Official Bulletin
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., every Wednesday, Room 306, Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodie.
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
All students planning to apply for Fulbright or foreign government awards for 1962-63 should make an appointment at Hospital this week. Medical examinations must be taken at the academic institution at which the students are enrolled.
Ph.D. French Reading Examinations:
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
bv Oct. 11.
Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast; 7 a.m., Canterbury House.
TOMORROW
Foreign Service Meeting: 4 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Mr. Howard J.
La reunion du Cercle Francais annonce pour mercredi, le 11 octobre, sa remplieuse par la conference en francais de M. Henri Peyre mardi le 10 octobre, la conference aura lieu, a quatre heures dans la saite de recital de Murphy Hall.
Hilton, a Career Foreign Service Officer,
Program of the Department of State.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
WEDNESDAY
Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Film and speaker concerning Russian education.
Increased means and increased leisure are the two civilizers of man.—Benjamin Disraeli
Monday, October 9, 1961
Carilloneur Barnes to Be Guest Performer
Ronald Barnes, KU carilloneur, will play a carillon recital Oct. 21 at the Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind., for the 10th anniversary of the dedication of the Culver Memorial Chapel.
Mr. Barnes will give the recital on a 51-bell carillon in the Culver Chapel. Parts of his program were arranged by Robert B. Grogan, Parsons graduate student.
A man should always consider how much he has more than he wants, and how much more unhappy he might be than he really is.—Joseph Addison
Mr. Barnes played a recital last month on the 48-bell carillon of the First Plymouth Congregational Church in Lincoln, Neb., and has been invited to return.
Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely opened a tavern for his friends.
—Norman Douglas
To you self-denial may only mean weariness, restraint, ennui; but it means, also, love, perfection, sanctification—R. D. Hitchcock
Common sense is not so common. Voltaire
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Every 24 hours, the world's largest distillation unit separates crude oil into ten different categories which end up as six million gallons of finished products.
This involves continual monitoring of 250 instruments, followed by precise balancing of controls. To operate at peak efficiency, control directions are changed many times daily to compensate for a multitude of variables.
The IBM computer that took over this job now reads the instruments, makes the calculations, and issues the orders for the control changes. It is guided in its work by over 75,000 instructions stored in its electronic memory.
Just a few years ago electronic control of such a complex industrial process would have been impossible. But such is
the progress in computer systems that in the sixties it will become commonplace.
This dramatic progress means exciting and important jobs at IBM for the college graduate, whether in research development, manufacturing, or programming.
If you want to find out about opportunities in any one of these areas, you are invited to talk with the IBM representative. He will be interviewing on your campus this year. Your placement office can make an appointment. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. Write, outlining your background and interests, to: Mgr. of Technical Employment, Dept. 898, IBM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, N.Y. 22, N.Y.
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IBM will interview Nov. 8, Nov. 9.
---
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 9.1961
Buff Passing Deals Kansas 20-19 Loss
By Bill Sheldon
As Head Coach Jack Mitchell said after the game, there was actually only one thing which his Kansas Jayhawkers couldn't do against Colorado Saturday — defend against the pass, the draw and the screen.
the pass, the draw and
In almost all other departments of
play, the Jayhawkers were as good or
better than the Buffalooes. But, all the Buffers needed to come from behind in the final 13 minutes to defeat the Jays, 20-19, was the pass, the draw and the screen.
This sequence was most obvious on the winning touchdown drive for Colorado in which CU marched 63 vards in eight plays.
Loren Schweninger, Buff fullback
Cagers Report To Coach Owen
Twenty-five freshman basketball candidates have reported to Coach Ted Owen. Included are eight all-state prep choices.
The frosh roundballers will clash with the varsity November 10 to open the 1961-62 campaign.
The all-state prospects include Kerry Bolton, 6-2, Overland Park; David Brill, 6-5, Lewis; Jim Gough, 6-7, Chanute; Frank Harwi, 6-2, Albuquerque, N. M.; Wayne Loving, 5-11, Kansas City; Richard Ruggles, 5-10, LaGrange, Ill.; David Schichtle, 6-1, Coffeyville, and George Unseld, 6-7, Louisville, Ky.
Other candidates are:
John Atkinson, 6-2, Topcake; Ricky Brown, 6-2, Ellis; Gary Cassidy, 6-0, Scammon; Jack Connell, 6-0, Fall River; Fred Litoo, 6-5, Hutchinson; Phil Lujan, 6-0, Lawrence; John McClain, 6-0, Des Moines, Iowa; Steve Mitchell, 6-5, Bellevue, Nebr.; Bob Norman, 6-2, Chilcoithe, Mo.; Mike O'Brien, 6-5, Liberal; Tom Reed (sophomore transfer) 6-0, Des Moines, Iowa; Bill Royer, 6-2, Lawrence; Ron Shanks 6-3, Kansas City; Mike Shinn, 6-5, Topeka; John Suhler, 6-2, Cross River, N.Y.; Pete Townsend, 6-5 Topeka; and Tom Trotter, 6-1 Aurora, Ill.
Loving, O'Brien, and Shinn are members of the frosh football team and will not report until the end of the grid season.
Kansas Streak
Kansas goes into the Iowa State game Saturday carrying a modest streak of 28 scoring games. Jack Mitchell's editions haven't been shut out since Oklahoma scored a 43-0 win the fifth game of General Jack's first season, 1958. By scoring in the remaining seven games this season, Mitchell's club can move within four lengths of the all-time school record of 39, fashioned under George Sauer and J. V. Sikes, '47-53.
One great reason why clergymen's households are generally unhappy is because the clergyman is so much at home and close about the house. —Samuel Butler
MISCHER & CO.
eased through ample holes in the surprised Kansas line three times during the march on draw plays, netting 27 yards and setting up the tying tally.
The screen pass was used once by quarterback Gale Weidner to jostle the Hawker defense, as he threw to halfback Ed Coleman for 10 yards to the KU 21.
Weidner tossed a short aerial to hefty right end Jerry Hillebrand who caught the oval near the five yard stripe and outran linebacker Jim Jarrett into the corner of the endzone.
But, it was the most potent weapon, the pass, which finally threw the game to the Buffs.
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The effectiveness and quickness with which the Buffers penetrated the KU defense on the final drive was typical of each of the other scoring situations, and the CU offense on the whole.
But, it was only in the fourth period that the winners were able to dent what had been a tough Hawk defense with the regularity necessary to score.
The first three quarters were all Kansas, led by the hard running of Curtis McClinton and the spirited leadership of Rodger McFarland.
At halftime Colorado had only 88 total yards and it finished with 351 net yards.
McClinton led all rushers with 96 yards on 17 carries, caught two passes for 29 yards, scored two touchdowns and was outstanding on defense.
Showing the power, agility, speed and ability to react quickly which has made him an All America candidate, McClinton was nearly impossible to hold for less than five yards per try.
McClinton's two scoring plays exemplify the type of game he played. The first was a pass from John Hadi which McClinton picked out of the hands of Colorado defenders on the goal line and stepped across for KU's second touchdown.
His other score was a 19-yard gallop around left end in which he outran two defenders, ran over another, treaded a path down the west sideline and dove past the last tackler for the score.
McFarland's performance at quarterback may have won him that spot for the remaining seven games.
His mere presence seemed to be an inspiration for the Crimson and Blue. Not only did he lead the team offensively, but was a frequent tackler on defense where he also intercepted one pass and nearly got another — a Weidner to Ken Blain touchdown toss.
McFarland was the second best runner of the game, totaling 69 yards on 16 carries, several of which were on a very effective keeper-reverse which the Hawkers utilized for considerable vardage.
But, the outstanding performance by these two, plus Hadl's steady play, was a direct result of the best line play Kansas has had all season.
The pass protection was adequate, the blocking was quick and solid on the interior plays and consistently good on the wider plays.
As Mitchell said:
"There was no question about who whipped who out there today, we just gave the game away."
Little Scoring in Intramural Play
Low scoring games characterized last Friday's intramural football action.
Delta Upsilon downed a highly touted and publicized Delta Tau Delta 7-6 in Fraternity A league competition.
The Quickies eked out a 6-0 win over Templin in Independent A league action.
In Fraternity B games Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Delta Sigma Phi 7-6 and Phi Kappa Tau beat Tau Kappa Epsilon 9-0.
The Alpha Tau Omegas square off against the Phi Delta Thetas and the Sigma Nus meet the Tau Kappa Epsilon in Fraternity A league play today.
ASCE vs. Foster is the only action in Independent A competition. In the Independent B league Joseph R. Pearson #1 meets Navy, and Ace Pearson plays Baptist.
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Page 7
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Steve Clark Football is a funny game.
A month ago the Kansas Jayhawkers were riding high on preseason national predictions ranking them everywhere from first to 18th. Big Eight sportswriters unanimously picked them to win the league crown.
Today this same Kansas team has a 0-2-1 overall record and is 0-1 in conference play. Lost are hopes of a high national ranking and fading quickly are Orange Bowl aspirations.
For the first three quarters Kansas is a national champion. In each game the Jayhawkers have bounced to an early lead. At halftime Jack Mitchell's crew have retired to the dressing room with the scoreboard reading in their favor.
What stands between the Kansas football team of today and the same team a month ago? The answer is, a quarter of football.
In the second half, particularly the fourth quarter, the Jayhawkers not so much lose momentum as the opposition gains it. With a few key plays the opponent pushes across a winning touchdown in the waning moments of the game.
Against Texas Christian the Jayhawkers led all the way until five minutes to go. Against Wyoming, it was a fourth quarter TD that gave the Cowboys a tie. And Colorado—nary a KU fan expected three touchdown passes in 13 minutes.
Strike off that fourth quarter and what do you have? Kansas with a 3-0 record and a probable ranking in the top five nationally.
Football games are not played in only three quarters however. KU players and fans are getting a memorable lesson that "the game isn't over 'til the last man's out." Parodizing a popular song of several years ago, KU football fans are singing "What a Difference a Quarter Makes."
The Kansas football players have given a gallant effort in their first three games. Many have played their hearts out only to lose in that disastrous fourth quarter.
These are the losses that hurt. Any player would rather lose a game 34-0 than to lead up until the last quarter and then get beat.
A football player feels miserable after a contest similar to the KU-CU game. You don't have to ask a KU footballer how it feels. Ask any of approximately 1,000 KU men who played football in high school. They will relate probably at least one experience similar to Saturday's game and tell how badly they felt.
There is one thing to remember, however. No football team, no player, no coach steps onto the football field to lose a game. No matter how good or poor a team is, it still goes onto the field with the idea it can win the game.
This is not a "rah-rah support the team article." Each KU student had high expectations of the Jayhawkers this year and these expectations have been let down. The KU student has a right to be disappointed.
Jack Mitchell's Kansas Jayhawkers are no exception. Each Saturday they have gone out to win a football game. They have played winning football for three quarters and they have lost.
Football is a funny game.
Colorado Leads
Colorado gained its first all-time lead in its football series with Kansas Saturday when they downed the Hawks. The series stands at 10-9-2. The Jayhawkers saw their 34-6 victory of last season adjusted to a 1-0 forfeit to fall into a 9-9-2 deadlock. The Jayhawkers never have been worse than even in this series, since opening with a 12-11 victory in 1903.
Harriers Post First Victory
The Kansas cross country squad served warning to their Big Eight competitors Saturday by downing defending NAIA champion Southern Illinois and rival Missouri 25-31-79 over a windy Lawrence Country Club course.
The Jayhawkers whipped Missouri in dual competition 15-48.
KU's senior captain Bill Dotson outdistanced NAIA individual champion Joe Thomas and Jim Dupree both from Southern Illinois and teammate Charlie Hayward. Dotson's winning time was 15:07.3. Hayward finished fifteen yards back for second place; Dupree was third and Thomas fourth.
Tragedy struck senior Dan Ralston who had been running behind Dotson for the Jayhawkers. Ralston ran into the sprinkler system on the golf course, knocking a hose up that struck his leg momentarily paralyzing it. Ralston fell but recovered quickly enough to stay in the race. Nevertheless, he finished far back. Ralston's injury is not serious and the senior is expected to run next meet.
Nebraska's Ray Stevens was individual winner, but Colorado runners, mostly sophomores, copped the next five places to win handily.
KU sophomore Tonni Coane placed fifth; Bill Thornton and Mike Fulghum took eighth and ninth respectively behind two Southern Illinois runners.
In other Big Eight cross country action Colorado easily won its triangular meet with Kansas State and Nebraska.
Hadi Sixth
Producing 82 run-pass yards in the season's opener against Texas Christian. All America quarterback, John Hadl, moved past Ralph Miller into sixth place on Kansas' all-time Total Offense tables at 1,519 yards.
La Vita Dolce couldn't be shown uncut in the United States. Too many people might get the wrong ideas.-Commissioner Francis Birkhead
Monday, October 9, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Your Professional Travel Agency
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Mitchell Praises Team's Hard Play
Fighting his way through a crowd at the door of the Colorado locker room, Kansas' Jack Mitchell said. "I'm the other coach, won't you please let me through."
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Mitchell, after saying a few words to the Colorado team, had little to say to his own squad but made these comments to the press.
In the other locker room Head Coach Sonny Grandelius said, "This is the greatest comeback I've ever seen anywhere, anytime during my association with football.
AIRLINES - SHIP
"I didn't think we played badly for the first three quarters but our mistakes kept us in trouble."
"Our offense was real good, the best this season. McClinton was great and the entire line did a tremendous job. The loss of Hugh Smith didn't hurt us."
"Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence"
"I would never run a running play against us if I were the other coach. I would just send a man straight down the field and throw him the ball. We would probably have been beaten 40-0 if Colorado had done what they did in the fourth period sooner.
"It was the hardest I have ever seen a team play and whip somebody only to give the game away on easy touchdowns. It is the same old story which we were faced with in the TCU and Wyoming games. I just don't know what we can do. One thing, we are going to have Hadl playing more on defense.
Left end Ken Blair, who made an alert catch for CU's second score, had this explanation of the play, "I thought McFarland had the ball for sure. He came right across in front of me and had it timed perfectly. I was getting ready to tackle him but the ball slipped through his hands and dropped right into mine."
KU Barber Shop
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"The pattern of that last touchdown was almost the same as we were working at the end of the first half," said Jerry Hillebrand, who caught the game-winning pass. "I just ran at the halfback, faked in and cut to the outside. I was surprised I was open because they had two men on me."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 9, 1967
KU Arab Students Object to Revolt
Four KU graduate students spoke out recently against Syria's break from the United Arab Republic.
The students, members of the Arab Club, were M. Shana'a Lebanon; Fuad Mulla, Iraq; and Safinaaz Kazem, Cairo, Egypt. The fourth member did not want his name revealed.
Speaking at the informal press conference, Mulla, president of the club, said, "American Arab students want a setup like the United States' for the Arab States. We were very disappointed with the Syrian revolution."
Shana'aa said, "Our goal is to promote unity in order to make our countries stronger and to raise the standard of living."
He said that people should be identified as from the UAR, not as from Syria or Egypt.
A major step towards unity was made when Syria and Egypt joined together, the quartet said. "When the nucleus was broken, that we thought was strong, we are naturally against the revolt," Shan'a said.
Mulla said American Arab students admit that the UAR made some mistakes. He added, "But we don't want them (the Syrians) to break up the UAR. They used the revolution as a 'trick.'"
The unidentified student explained that the nationalization of the Arab states is based on three factors: unity, independence, and the establishment of a modern society.
"Unity is important for political stability," the student said. "This situation will create much more instability."
Washington Critic Praises Pianist
Roy Hamlin Johnson, assistant professor of piano, received lavish praise for his recital at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
His performance was lauded by Donald Mintz of the Washington Evening Star.
Mr. Mintz said Prof. Johnson had a fantastic technique.
"This means that he is capable not only of prodigious dexterity and accuracy but also of the most precise control of dynamics and phrasing," Mr. Mintz said.
Prof. Johnson was invited to open the Gallery's season by Richard Bales, director of the series. Mr. Bales had heard of Prof. Johnson's performances at New York's Carnegie Hall in 1959 and with the Dallas Symphony in 1960.
Prof. Johnson played J. S. Bach's English Suite No. 2 in a minor, which Mr. Mintz called "superb" and Mozart's Adagio in B minor, Chopin's Twelve Etudes Op. 10 and Samuel Barber's Sonata, Op. 26.
A packed house saw Prof. Johnson play.
"The audience was very enthusiastic," he said.
Free Plane Rides Aid Florida Shoppers
CAPE CORAL, Fla. — (UPI)—This new community on the Calcosahatchee River operates what is probably the biggest free plane ride business in the world.
Checking his flight log recently, Pilot Joe Gibson found he had made 2,966 flights in four months, each time with three passengers and each time without punching a ticket or collecting a fare.
The 10-minute flights are designed to give prospective purchasers of lots in a 16,000-acre waterfront development here a bird's eye view of the area.
Gibson and four fellow pilots estimate they will give rides to 108,000 persons here this year.
Frats Abound
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.—(UPI) The Pennsylvania State University boasts one of the largest fraternity populations in the country. More than 2,000 students are affiliated with 53 national fraternities. The University also accommodates 25 national sororites.
Difficulties are the things that show what men are.—Epicetus
Future uprisings were predicted for the ancient Syrian state. The Syrians have been plagued with revolts since Bible times.
Miss Kazem felt no formal government action would be taken to continue the Syrian-Egypt union. "The re-unification will have to come from the people themselves," she commented.
"One day the 5,000 Arab students now studying in the U.S. will get together with their dreams of unity and their ideas (from the U.S.) and there will be unity." Shana'a said.
The national organization of Arab students, in a newsletter, said the revolt represented "reactionary principles and selfish opportunism."
The KU members backed up this opinion by claiming that the break was caused by bankers and feudalists. They said the disposing of agrarian reforms is a reactionary idea.
There are 30 members in the Arab club at KU.
A non-credit course in "Fortran Programming for Digital Computers" will be offered for interested students beginning Oct. 17.
Computer Course Opening Announced
The course will meet from 4 to 5:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays for a total of six sessions. The aim of the course is to present basic Fortran programming which may be used on both IBM 650 and 1620 computers. Previous programming experience is not necessary, but a knowledge of algebra is required.
Charles Walker, instructor of electrical engineering, will conduct the course.
Those interested should register with the computation center, 112 Summerfield Hall.
The Luce people been going on too long picking on people too poor to sue them, but now they're going to get it in the neck.—Earl Long
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Presidents of all KU organizations should submit their name, address, phone number and the name of their organization to the Student Directory staff by Thursday, Oct. 12, said Jack Duncan, Raytown, Mo. sophomore and assistant editor.
Directory Listings Due This Thursday
The information should be printed on a postcard addressed to Student Directory, 1245 West Campus, Lav rence.
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Our job is providing communications of all kinds, wherever needed—whether in the northern snows to flash word of possible enemy missile attack, or in your home or college, or in serving the nation's business.
When we can't fill a need off the shelf, then we start fresh and create the answer to the problem. We've done that hundreds of times.
We began transatlantic radiotelephone service in 1927. Then we developed the
world's first undersea telephone cables to speed calls between continents.
We handled the world's first telephone conversation via satellite. And we have started development of an important world-wide communications system employing satellites.
When industry and government needed a way of gathering huge amounts of coded information from distant points, we were ready with our vast telephone network and Data-Phone, which can
transmit mountains of data at extremely high speeds.
And so it goes—Long Distance service, Direct Distance Dialing, the Transistor, the Solar Battery—a succession of firsts which goes back to the invention of the telephone itself.
Universal communications—the finest, most dependable anywhere—are what we deliver. Inside: for home, office, or plant. Outside: on land, under the sea, through the air.
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University-Daily-Kansan
Page 9
Craftsmen Exhibit To Show Originals
Around the Campus
The eighth annual Designer Craftsmen Show will be held Oct. 29 through Nov. 26 in the Kansas Union. Original works of art from all over Kansas will be on exhibit.
The first show at KU was held in 1954. It was sponsored by the School of Fine Arts to give Kansas artists a chance to exhibit their works.
This year Thomas Tibbs, director of the Des Moines, Iowa. Art Museum, will judge the exhibition. Mr. Tibbs is an authority on crafts, ceramics and sculpture. He is a former director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
Over $1,000 in prizes will be given.
Kansas and Greater Kansas City,
Mo., residents are eligible for entry
in the show.
Producers of the art show from the School of Fine Arts are Marjorie Whitney, professor of design; Carlyle H. Smith, producer of design, jewelry and silversmithing; J Sheldon Carey, professor of design; Eldon Tefft, associate professor of sculpture; Evelyn DCrew, professor of weaving and design; and Robert Montgomery, instructor of design, jewelry and silversmithing.
KU Researchers To Offer Findings
Two KU students are proof that undergraduate research is not for play.
Don E. Detmer, Great Bend first year medical student and Julie Dennis, Lawrence senior, will offer their research findings at the American society of Cell Biology meeting Nov. 2-4 in Chicago.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that such undergraduate presentations before scientific gatherings were most unusual.
Detmer will present a paper which describes their work last year on "Fluorescing Subcellular Particles of Brain During Maturation." The two will take part in a five minute question-and-answer period following the paper's presentation.
Miss Dennis is holding a National Science Foundation fellowship for the second year as a member of KU's undergraduate research program. Both Miss Dennis and Detmer are conducting the research project under the direction of William M. Balfour, research associate in physiology.
The Chancery Club was first organized at Kansas State University in 1950. Its main objective is to acquaint college students with the law school curriculum and the field of law.
Organization Starts For Chancery Club
A Chancery Club is being organized for students considering enrollment in law school here or at other universities.
The organizational meeting is to be held at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in the court room of Green Hall. The national President of Chancery Clubs, Mike Heatherman of Kansas State University, and the faculty sponsor will speak on the activities and goals of the Chancery Club.
An instructor and two graduate assistants have been added to the radio-television department staff.
Radio-TV Faculty Makes Increase of 3
Donald W. Hansen will replace Kenneth Kiley as student adviser to KUOK. Mr. Hansen is a graduate of the University of Arizona and a former speech teacher at Emporia State Teachers College.
Peter Haggart, graduate of the State University of South Dakota, and Phil Lane, graduate of the University of Portland, are graduate assistants to Bruce A. Linton, chairman of the radio-television department. Both are working towards their master's degrees.
Psychology Positions Open
Applications for positions as psychometrist, psychologist and clinical psychologist will be accepted until Oct. 27, according to the State Personnel Division.
Starting salaries range from $280 to $309 for psychometrist to $647 to $714 for clinical psychologist III. No written tests will be required.
Information and application forms are available from the State Personnel Division, 801 Harrison, Topeka.
Research Article Published
Paul C. Bruns and Vernon E. Troxel, assistant professors of education, have published an article on research in language arts instruction in the October issue of "Elementary English."
The article describes research work done in language arts in 1660.
Law Review Editors Named
Two third-year KU law students will be note editors on the "Kansas Law Review" quarterly publication of the School of Law, for 1961-62.
Monday, October 9, 1961
James L. Rose, Topeka, and Dwight A. Frame, Lawrence, are the men appointed.
Popularity is a crime from the moment it is sought; it is only a virtue where men have it whether they will or no.—George Savile, Marquis of Hallifax
Members of the Board of Governors for the Student Bar Association have been named for the coming year. They are James B. Lowe, third year law student, Winfield president; vice president, J. Richard Smith, third year, Arkansas City; secretary, David M. Mills, second year, Arkansas City; treasurer, James A. Pusiteri, second year, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard E. Oxandale, third year, Topeka; Kenneth J. Brown, first year, Herington; John D. Husser, first year, Merriam.
Governing Board Of SBA Named
The Student Bar Association represents all law students in affairs with the University and with the faculty. The SBA publishes a newspaper, "The K.U. Laws" which is distributed to students and all K.U. law alumni.
KU Grad Shows Air Force How
Second Lieut. Terry-Beucher, a KU and Air Force ROTC grad of 1960, is still competing in the javelin events which brought him some rekknown here, and also last year earned him a trip to the Rome Olympics.
At the 1961 U.S.A.F. Track and Field Championship held recently at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas, Becher, in flight training at the time, took a break to show Air Force entries in the javelin throw just how a long heave is made.
His mark of 212 ft. $ 4 \frac{1}{2} $ in. was not quite up to his best distance while at K.U. (255 ft. 11 in.) but was tops this year for the All-Air Force competition.
Beucher has completed flight training and is en route to McGuire A.F.B., N.J., where he will fly Atlantic schedules to Paris and Frankfurt on a Military Air Transport Service DC-6.
True prosperity is the result of well placed confidence in ourselves and our fellow man. - Maxwell Struthers Burt
K-10 KARTS Race Way
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Open Sat. and Sun. — 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Week days 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
Weather permitting
East 23rd avenue driving range
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Quarterback Club Meeting
—Narrated by a top player.
-Exciting films of the Wyoming and Colorado games.
Forum Room Student Union
Tuesday, Oct. 10
7 p.m.
Free Admission & Cokes
many a knight was spent in rusty armor
In days of yore, men feared not only their mortal enemies, but the elements too. It was the medieval armorer's task to protect his chief against foemen, but weather-protection was a more difficult matter. Thus many a knight was spent in rusty armor.
Engineers and scientists at Ford Motor Company, engaged in both pure and applied research, are coping even today with the problem of body protection (car bodies, that is). Through greater understanding of the chemistry of surfaces, they have developed new paint primers and undercoatings, new rustproofing methods, and special sealers that guard entire car bodies against nature's corrosive forces—all of which add armor-like protection to Ford-built cars.
From other scientific inquiries will undoubtedly come new materials with protective properties vastly superior to those of today. This is another example of Ford's leadership through scientific research and engineering.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 9, 1961
Foundation Head Says Separating Intellect from World Is Dangerous
"Separation of the intellectual from the world around him is a very serious problem and one of the most dangerous threats to the continuation of our civilized society."
Hans Rosenhaupt, head of the Woodrow Wilson National Scholarship Foundation, made this statement as he addressed students at the Summerfield-Watkins Banquet in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Mr. Rosenhaupt used examples from 20th century German literature and his own life to illustrate the importance of the individual in taking part in the world around him.
Mr. Rosenhaupt said that thirty
"I, myself, was a victim of isolation in pre-war Germany, and I did not learn to overcome this problem until I left Germany and joined the American cause during World War II." he said.
years ago writers in Germany were suffering this symptom of being set apart from their society. These men were melancholy and sad. However, Mr. Rosenhaupt continued, one of these authors, Thomas Mann, succeeded in overcoming his isolation from the common people "by justifying his love for these happy people" in one of his novels.
Chemist Predicts Great Progress
learned that an officer has to give a command even though he has nothing to base the command upon. For the first time I learned that an intellectual has to act upon nonexistent material, that in all situations he is not going to have the scholar's facts to depend upon."
Scientific progress will make the next fifty years the "most thrilling period in the history of mankind," Calvin VanderWerf, chairman of the department of chemistry, said Friday.
Speaking before a group of KU chemistry students, Prof. VanderWerf emphasized that the scientific developments of the past century are only a prelude of what is to come. He predicted four scientific developments which will revolutionize life in the next fifty years:
Plans for the annual between- semesters ski trip will be discussed at the Ski Club meeting at 8 p.m. Oct.19 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Annual Ski Trip Meeting Set
Mr. Rosenhaupt explained:
Al Feinstein, Long Beach, N.Y. senior and club president, said a ski movie would be shown at the meeting.
- MAN WILL LIVE an "unbelievably longer, healthier life" through the discovery of new drugs and improved methods of treatment.
- Science will shrink the world and the universe.
- Man will be released of toil and his leisure time will increase tremendously.
- Science will develop "every conceivable comfort" for man.
"In Officer Training School
"Cancer and tuberculosis will soon be relegated to the limbo of cholera. Next to fall will be the degenerative diseases. Finally, even the secret of life itself—the secret of what separates the dead from the living—will fall before the assault of science," he said.
"IF WE COULD efficiently trap all of the solar energy which now falls upon the United States, we would have 1000 times as much energy as we have now. This would, in effect, mean a standard of living 1000 times as high as today," he said.
"A cynic might say that science can't give man happiness. But science can make certain that man will pursue happiness in much more comfortable surroundings.
"In the future, automation will become so advanced that machines will detect their own wear and will repair themselves," Prof. Vander-Werf said.
"FOR EXAMPLE, tremendous large scale modifications of climate will have far reaching effects on man's comfort, and fresh water purified from the sea will some day make the deserts bloom," he said. Finally, VanderWerf said, new developments in transportation within the next fifty years will make all points in the world within a few hours traveling time of each other and will open the way for mass interplanetary travel.
Love is God's essence; Power but his attribute; therefore is his love greater than his power.—Richard Garnett
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Various Activities Planned for Parent's Day
Parents of KU students will tour the campus, meet faculty members and see the KU-Iowa State football game Saturday on Parent's Day.
Registration for the event will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. A buffet luncheon will be served in the Kansas Union Ballroom at 11 a.m.
tion adjoining the student section at the game. Tickets may be purchased at the registration desks Saturday for $2.50 each.
Parents will sit in a reserved sec-
Little minds are tamed and subdued by misfortune, but great minds rise above it.—Washington Irving
BULLFISH
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
THE TRUE AND
HARROWING FACTS ABOUT RUSHING
It is well enough to sit in one's Morris chair and theorize about sorority rushing, but if one really wishes to know the facts, one must leave one's Morris chair and go out into the field. (My Morris chair, incidentally, was given to me by the Philip Morris Company, makers of Marlboro Cigarettes. They are great-hearted folk, the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, as millions of you know who have enjoyed their excellent cigarettes. Only from bountiful souls could come such mildness, such flavor, such filters, such pleasure, as you will find in Marlboros! For those who prefer crushproof boxes, Marlboro is available in crushproof boxes. For those who prefer soft packs, Marlboro is available in soft packs. For those who prefer to buy their cigarettes in bulk, please contact Emmett R. Sigafoos, friendly manager of our factory in Richmond, Virginia.)
But I digress. I was saying that in order to know the true facts about sorority rushing, one must go into the field and investigate. Consequently, I went last week to the Indiana College of Spot Welding and Belles Lettres and interviewed several million coeds, among them a lovely lass named Gerund McKeever. (It is, incidentally, quite an interesting little story about how she came to be named Gerund. It seems that her father, Ralph T. McKeever, loved grammar better than anything in the world, and so he named all his children after parts of speech. In addition to Gerund, there were three girls named Preposition, Adverb, and Pronoun, and one boy named Dative Case. The girls seemed not to be unduly depressed by their names, but Dative Case, alas, grew steadily more morose and was finally found one night dangling from a participle. After this tragic event, the father abandoned his practice of grammatical nomenclature, and whatever children were subsequently born to him—eight in all—were named Everett.)
They pledged more girls than they had room for...
But I digress. I was interviewing a lovely coed named Gerund McKeever. "Gerund," I said, "were you rushed by a sorority?"
"Yes, mister," she said, "I was rushed by a sorority."
"Did they give you a high-pressure pitch?" I asked. "Did they use the hard sell?"
"No, mister," she replied. "It was all done with quiet dignity. They simply talked to me about the chapter and the girls for about three minutes and then I pledged."
"My goodness!" I said. "Three minutes is not very long for a sales talk!"
"It is when they are holding you under water, mister," said Gerund.
"Well, Gerund," I said, "how do you like the house?"
"I like the house fine, mister," she replied. "But I don't live there. Unfortunately, they pledged more girls than they have room for, so they are sleeping some of us in the bell tower." ("Is it that rotten news?"). I said
"Isn't that rather noisy?" I
"Only on the quarter-hour." said Gerund.
"Well, Gerund," I said, "it has certainly been a pleasure talking to you," I said.
"Likewise, mister," she said, and with many a laugh and cheer we went our separate ways—she to the campanile. I to the Morris chair. © 1961 Max Shulman
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Monday, October 9, 1961 University Daily Kansa
Page 11
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 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.
FOR SALE
Dog House, medium size; Apartment-
size washer; youth-bed mattress. Call
VI 3-7568 or see at 208 Ark. after 5 p.m.
10
FOWER MOWER, 3. HP Clinton engine oil
brown tweed, $75. Cash M-3-0003. 10-12
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call Vi 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
1558 PONTIAC CHEFTAIN 2-dr. or 1958 Chev. Impala Compact Both with R & H. automatic trans. Both in excellent condition. See at 1705 Ky. 10-11
COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM: Madison
Fencing 40 watt amplifier; Garrard C8"-
TRIDGE; 2 matched Calrad 12" speakers
mounted separately; cabinet (unfinished)
value $200. Special price (slightly used);
Call Dave Gray, III v-37521; $10-9
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30% discount! Slightly bimised first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes. Zerex only 89 cal per gal. Limit 1 gal. per each snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's — 929 Mass. St. 10-18
VARIABLE REVERBERATION UNIT.
Self-contained. self-powered. Plug between amp. & pre-amp. of any amplification system. Easily interchangeable between Hi-Fi, tape recorder, guitar Amp. etc. $75. VI 2-3625. 10-10
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
running condition. $150. Call S1 V-32419.
FM RADIOSI MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices—as shown in the table. Motorola Store — 929 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $5.00 each.
Car For Sale: 52 Buick, $50.00 Dyna-
car. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. tf
STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
call. NEW VI. 3-2906 on 6 p.m. tt
THREE BEDROOM HOME, corner lot
Utility room, bath, car port, easily
heated, gas furnace, 220 wiring. See after
3 p.m. 1603 Lindenwood. 10-9
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Coltus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4201 or IV 3-4201. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
$225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up.
Service on all makes typewriters and
mimegraphing machines printing and
mimegraphing reasonable business
Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-
0151 today. tf
HELP WANTED
SENIOR STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING
New firm. Call I1 2-0289 after 8 p.m.
10-11
Wanted: Baby sitter for three smash children in our home. Four hours daily Monday through Friday. Call VI 3-3117, 6-8 p.m.
WANTED: MAN to do odd jobs around
WANTED: MAN to do odd jobs around
Any convenient: CALL VI 3-6850. 10-13
TRANSPORTATION
NEED RIDE from K.C. Kans. Monday.
To be on camp at
10 Call CY 9-4037
10-11
MISCELLANEOUS
HI-FI Speaker Cabinets and Bookcases-
custom built. Free estimates. Douglas
County Wood Products Co. VI 2-3204
10-9
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-
Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern self-service — open weeks 7 to 6:30
tpm
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies
lant. 6th & Vermont Phone VI
0350
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies beds — harness — sweaters, pet collars, shoes, gloves, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center 1218 The Ship sectionalized save time and money.
FOR RENT
APTS. FOR MEN. Off street parking
2675. bio. pass. Phi. PN 3-3752 or
10-353
2675.
APT. STYLED ROOM for two senior or
middle school students, built-in TV, priv. entr. & linens
furn. Kitchen priv. avail. Within walk-
ing distance to campus. Cail V 3-1847 after 6 p.m. 10-12
INDIVIDUAL ROOMS. Complete kitchen facilities, linens furnished, access to excellent laboratory study conditions. Drop by 1222 Missus on call VI 3-0418. 10-10
ENTRIE SECOND FLOOR furnished apt.
Private entr. private bath. well located
in 960 block of Indiana. Phone VI 3-836
days or VI 3-9027 after 5. 10-12
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room,
kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, un-
furnished, newly decorated. 439 Elm. Call
VI 3-3602. 10-12
1 BEDROOM duplex furn. arm for boys.
Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-6611 10-10
LARGE NEWLY decorated 4 room apt. Tub and shower—1½ bath. Suitable for 3 boys. Phone VI 3-1181 or VI 3-6661. 10-10
CALCULATING MACHINES for rent at $20.00 per month. Two or more can share the cost. Send a card to T. E. England. 1301 Hunton, Topeka, Kansas. 10-10
GARAGE FOR RENT—Vicinity of 14th
Ohio. Phone VI 3-7655 after 5 p.m. 10-9
1. BEDROOM. furn. house close to hospital. Phone VI 5-1181 or VI 3-8662. 10-10
FURNISHED apartments, east side. Utilities paid. Two bedroom, first floor—$60.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 9, 1961
'Idiot's Delight' Closes
And the Sets Came Tumbling Down
By Richard Currie
The players of "Idiot's Delight" trouped to the dressing room. The four day run of University Theatre's production of Robert Sherwood's play was over.
But the cast could not disband They had to help take the set down It was time to strike.
MEN IN T-SHIRTS and overalls appeared with hammers. They approached the set and began to destroy it
"Look out man, here comes a mountain!" said a stage hand. A painted piece of cardboard floated to the floor.
"I'm up here with my trusty 8-inch Crescent wrench," she said.
One of the actors came up from the dressing room.
Jed Davis, in charge of lighting and assistant professor of speech, smiled. He motioned to an upright stand of spotlights. She began to disassemble it.
GLENN BICKLE, head of the stage crew, led a group of stage hands in knocking down the basic profile of the set
"Oh no, not the beautiful window," an actor said. The big bay
First Inning
Series in Detail
Yankees—Richardson took a called strike and then singled to left center. Kubek flied deep to Pinson. Richardson holding first. Maris filed to Robinson. Jay scored in the right field ball got by Coleman and Richardson went to second. Coleman was charged with an error. Blanchard, on a 3-1 count, hit a home run into the right field bleachers, scoring Richardson ahead of it. Cox scored in the right field. Doubled off the scoreboard in left center field. Maloney began warming up for the Reds. Skowron on a 3-2 pitch lined a single off the center field wall, scoring Richardson ahead of it. Bell down after rounding first base. Jay was taken out and Maloney went in to pitch for the Reds. Lopez tripled down the right field foul line, scoring Skowron. Boyer doubled down the left field scoreboard. Lopez scoring the first five runs, six hits, one error. Jack
**steeds** - Blasingame bunted toward the mound and Terry threw him out. Kasko lined Terry's first pitch to left for a single, nippon popper. Robinson filed the pitcher's mound. Robinson filed to Lopez. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.
Yankees - Richardson fled to Robinson. Kubek singled to left. Ken Johnson warmed up in the Reds bullpen. Maris doubled down the left field foul line, scoring Kubek and putting the Yankees ahead 6-0. Blanchard walked on a 3-2 pitch. Maloney was taken. The Lakers moved toward lined to Freeze, who made a leaping one handed catch. Skowron flied deep to Pinson. One run, two hits, no errors, two left.
Second Inning
**Reds—Coleman grounded out. Skowron to Terry who covered first. Post singled to left on Terry's first pitch. Freese lied to Maris in shore center. Maris put being going to third. Bell batted for Johnson and fouled to Howard No runs, two hits, no errors, two left.
Third Inning
Yankees—Bill Henry went in to pitch for the Reds, Lopez hit a bobble-hockey ball and sacrificed, he blasted. Blaiseingam, who covered first. Richardson ground out. No hits. No errors, one left.
**Reds--Blasingame singled to center.**
Kasiko singled to left when Lopez misjudge the back in but not in time.
Blasingame stopped at second. Bud Daley and Hal Renifl warmed up in the Yankee bulpen. Pinson flied to Blanchard in deep center catch. Robinson hit a home run into the centerfield bleachers, scoring Blasingame and Kasiko ahead of him and making the score Yankees. Kasiko played for the Yankees. Coleman beat out a bunt hit. Post filled to Lopez in short free. Freese doubled off the scoreboard in left center. Coleman stopped in left Edwards on a fouled to Boyer. Three runs, five hits, no errors, two left.
Fourth Inning
Yankees—Kubek singled to center. Maris lined to Post. Blanchard doubled down the right field line. Kubek stopping at third. Howard was purposefully passed, filled the bases. Bowen hit Blanchard and Howard stopping at second. Lopez hit a home run to the right of the left center field scoreboard, scoring Howard and Skowron ahead of him and putting the Yankees ahead 11-3. Henry was taken out and replied with a Boyes-Jones' first pitch to Edwards. Daley grounded out, Blasame to Coleman. Five runs, four hits, no errors, none left.
Reds-Gernert batted for Jones and was called out on strikes. Blasingame was struck by a ground ball. Bowers threw out Kasko. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
window which in the play had looked out over 4 countries crashed to the floor.
A girl walked rapidly around the striking scene.
"I'm not going to stay around for this," she said.
Jack Brooking, director of the play and associate professor of speech, came in with shirtsleeves dangling.
"IT'S DONE," he said, looking around him.
He picked up a long screwdriver and began to work on some boards. Also working with a screwdriver was Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate student, who played the male lead.
Prof. Brooking and Roger Brown, graduate student, sang "Loch Lomond" while they dismantled tall slats. Berger worked quietly on his.
Near the dressing room, visitors and well-wishers waited. Inside a voice said:
"Don't forget to put the make-up away."
"I won't," another replied.
BACK ON THE STAGE, Prof. Brooking looked at what remained of the set.
"It takes months to build and half an hour to take it down," he said.
Accidents-
Out past the stage the empty seats of the theater stared at him. He turned and walked away.
(Continued from page 1) hicle cut into his lane, forcing him to lose control and jump the island. He was charged with failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident. Conklin stated that he could not do anything to avoid the collision.
THE THIRD ACCIDENT investigated by the highway patrol involved the injury of two KU students in front of Corbin Hall at about 12:30 a.m. Sunday. No information was available at the Highway Patrol office.
One of the students, Anne Huston,
a resident of Gertrude Sellards Pear-
son, was treated today at Watkins
Memorial Hospital and is resting.
She suffered minor bruises, it was
reported. ___
There can be no freedom or beauty about a home life that depends on borrowing and debt—Henrik Ibsen
Every bird likes its own nest best.-Randle Cotgrave
Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind.-William Shakespeare
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U.S. Recognizes Syrian Regime
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The United States today officially recognized the new rebel government of Syria.
It acted three days after the Soviet Union extended recognition to the Syrian regime, which two weeks ago broke away from the United Arab Republic.
The State Department said Syria was notified today that the U.S. Consulate-General in Damascus was being designated an embassy and that Consul-General Ridgway B. Knight, now in charge there, will act as Charge D'Affaires.
An ambassador will be appointed later.
An ambassador will be appointed State Department press officer Joseph Reap said the U.S. action took note of Syrian Premier Mamoun Al-Kuzbari's promise that his government would adhere to all international obligations.
About a dozen other countries have already recognized the new regime. They include Jordan, Turkey, Iran, Nationalist China, Guatemala, Russia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Iraq.
The United Arab Republic, which was split by the Syrian revolt, has been notified of the U.S. decision.
U. A.R. President Gamel Abdel Nasser acknowledged the break-up of the union between Egypt and Syria last week. His statement ended the threat of diplomatic reprisals by Cairo against countries which recognized the break-away Syrian regime.
After Nasser's statement cleared the way, Russia and Bulgaria recognized the Damascus rebellion last week.
Syria yesterday asked the United Nations to reestablish its membership, surrendered when it merged with Egypt in 1958. U.S. officials said the United States would support action in the U.N. General Assembly to cut through the legal complications and seat the already-appointed Syrian delegation.
'Right' Law Stands
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A Kansas ruling that the state's right-to-work provision outlawns agency shop contracts was allowed to stand yesterday when the Supreme Court refused to accept a Teamsters Union appeal.
The Court did not issue an opinion on the merits of the case, but the action in effect ended an action brought by employees of Cardinal Manufacturing Co., Kansas City, Kan., which no longer exists, against the teamsters.
The Kansas Supreme Court had held that the state's right-to-work amendment to its constitution barred the agency shop, under which employees who are not union members must pay amounts equal to union dues in order to hold their jobs. Wyandotte County district court
Weather
Harvest operations were halted across Kansas today after heavy rains swept a broad belt of the central plains.
High temperatures today were forecast from 55 to 60 in the northwest and around 75 in the east. Overnight lows were expected to range from 40 in the west to 60 in the east.
held the agency shop contract valid.
held the agency shop contract valid.
The executive director of Kansans for the Right-to-Work, Rex Harlow of Wichita, greeted the Supreme Court action as a "victory" for his organization. He said right-to-work forces would "oppose in every way" any further attempts of labor to reverse the Kansas Supreme Court ruling.
Further steps, however, already were being studied.
Attorney Jack Manning of Kansas City, Mo., a union counsel in the Cardinal case, said the Federal Tribunals action "is certainly not the end of this." He said he would confer with officials of Local 498 of the General Drivers Allied Automotive Union and "very likely we'll be going back to the Supreme Court."
But Manning and James Barnes of Kansas City, Kan., another union lawyer, said the Supreme Court's refusal apparently "spelled the end of the Cardinal case." They said, however, the issue could be taken to the high court through their cases.
The executive-secretary of the Kansas Federation of Labor, AFLCIO, Floyd E. Black of Topeka, said the issue likely would be explored at the state federation's convention in Topeka Oct. 25.
59th Year, No.18
Daily hansan
Tuesday, October 10, 1961
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Housing Discussed-
Wescoe Reiterates Policy-'Moral Suasion,' Not Edict
The statement said, in part:
"In non-University housing . . the University will not condone discriminatory practices, but it will not interfere in the rights of the private citizen to choose the person to whom he wishes to rent his property."
By Fred Zimmerman
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has turned down — for the time being, at least — a request of seven KU students that he instruct the housing office to stop listing Lawrence renters who discriminate.
"I am going to stand with that statement for now," Dr. Wescoe said. "And I emphasize the word, 'now.'
CURTIS D. KELLER, Chase senior and a member of the Westminster Center, acted as the group's spokesman. He began the discussion by saying:
The students made the request yesterday in an hour and one-half meeting with the Chancellor and four members of the administration. The students represented the Civil Rights Council, People-to-People, the International Club, the KU-Y, the Wesley Foundation and the Westminster Center.
"BUT WE ARE NOT committed to it unalterably. This is a matter where the University must make a continuing effort, primarily using moral suasion. We will continue to counsel with these townspeople."
"Chancellor Wescoe, we feel the time has come for a specific change of policy. It is our request that the housing office stop listing persons who discriminate."
In reply, Dr. Wesco reaffirmed a statement he made last year to a group of Civil Rights Council members who had gone to him seeking the same action.
Richard Smith, Great Bend sophomore and a member of the Wesley Foundation, said the students wanted Chancellor Wescoe to realize there was a widespread campus concern over housing discrimination.
"We are not a bunch of radicals,"
he told Chancellor Wescoe. "We represent several student groups. We have come to ask for a positive action, and we are suggesting that action."
"ARE YOU IMPLYING," Dr. Wescoe asked, "that the University hasn't taken any positive action?"
Smith answered slowly. "There may have been some things done by the University that I don't know about. But we want something more specific. We want you to do something that will let us know where you stand, what your philosophy is."
The other students at the meeting were David R. Barrier, Wichita sophomore, People-to-People; Denis Kennedy, Lawrence graduate student, International Club;
1960
Chancellor Wescoe
Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, and George Buford, Kansas City, senior, Civil Rights Council; Jane Dunlap, Lawrence senior, KU-Y.
BESIDES CHANCELLOR WEScoe, University officials present were James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor for University relations; Donald K. Alderson, dean of men; Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, and J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories.
Dr. Wescoe made the following assertions:
- "One gains more from moral suasion than from edict."
- There has been a great improvement in the racial situation in Lawrence in the last year.
- The Chancellor alone is responsible for the "long-range view of what is best for the University." The students countered with these statements:
- "We are not here because we are concerned with the progress you say has been made. We are requesting a specific action." (Smith and Keller.)
- There has been no noticeable improvement in the racial situation here in the last year. (Buford.)
- "MORAL SUASION" works too slowly, considering that students are experiencing discrimination in housing. (Kennedy.)
The idea of going to the Chancellor about the housing situation originated in a CRC meeting nearly two weeks ago, after members became concerned over the case of an Egyptian student who recently said that his landlady had told him she did not want his Sudanese friend to visit him. At that meeting it was decided to seek the cooperation of several campus groups.
The students who planned to go to the Chancellor had a meeting last week in the Union. For an hour they discussed the request they intended to make, who should serve as spokesman, and what the Chancellor's reaction would probably be.
WHEN THEY WALKED into the Chancellor's office yesterday a secretary directed them to a conference room across the hall and asked them to wait a few minutes for the Chancellor, who had a long distance telephone call.
In the conference room, the students said little as they waited
(Continued to page 8)
Car-Crazed Campus Crowd Clutters Curbs
By Richard Bonett
This probably comes as no big surprise to most students, but there are a lot of wheels on the KU campus.
Just how many and how much weight they carry is almost impossible to determine.
But two things are certain. The number has increased drastically during the past decade, and they out number feet by a considerable margin.
Most of them are partially hidden under massive chassis. These are characterized as American-type wheels, as opposed to foreign wheels, whose chassis are not so massive.
YOU WANT PROOF? OK. Stand at any busy campus intersection at noon and count them, four at a time—the wheels, that is.
Stand at the intersection of Jaya-
hawk Bwd. and Sunflower Ave. like
one student did recently. In less
time than it takes to organize a
beer party, he counted 160 wheels
under 40 chassis.
The experience was illuminating. Only four sets of wheels were under alien chassis, usually identifiable by a petite figure. Also, they have distinct foreign accent which
take the form of a whine or low pitched grumble.
All ranged in age from 13 years to brand spankin' new. Some mathematical gyrations produced an average age of 5.091 years.
ANOTHER THREE sets of wheels were of the abbreviated American kind. The rest carried big, fearsome, and lumbering bodies.
The species known as Ford, Chevrolet and Buick seemed to predominate. Two of the aliens were from Germany by Volkswagen. About
six of the American jobs had received extensive face liftings.
Only one Cadillac and one Lincoln muscled through the crowd, both of 1960 vintage. Their drivers didn't look like they were associated with a college.
OUR OBSERVER got curious. After all, he reasoned, the officially estimated campus enrollment nestles somewhere around 9.700. Add another 1,500 or so staff members and you have a lot of feet.
If you figure two feet, two arms
If you figure two feet per (average) student and staff member, it comes to about 22.400 feet, in fact.
At the campus security and traffic office, records show 6.818 various and sundry sets of wheels have been registered since last July, the date from which the year's registration began.
Not counting spares and steering wheels, the registration figure translates into 27,272 wheels. And before the school year is out, another estimated 3,000 chassis will
20 MPH
"Heh, heh, heh. Wheels are power, POWER."
be added, mostly from spring enrollment.
JOE G. SKILLMAN, chief of the traffic and security department, explains however, that there is about a 10 per cent duplication in registration from resale of wheels among students and students who bring more than one set of wheels on the campus from home. Then too, some registered during the summer have departed.
So what's the trend? Until this year it has been up. The total registration for all of last year was 10,580, the year before that 9,748, and the preceding year 9,462. Ten years ago the figure was about 5,000.
CHIEF SKILLMAN isn't ready to concede victory to the wheels solely on numerical strength.
"KU will always be a pedestrian campus," he says. "Our main job is how to best keep it that way with the maximum of safety."
The University administration is also taking a hand in support of the forces of feet. They entered the undeclared war recently with a request to the state for permission and funds to install five traffic control stations at principle entrances, a tactical
(Continued on page 8)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 10, 1961
Politics and NSA
The underlying reason in the National Student Association's fight for survival is not the $500 cost to the ASC, the failure to inform the student of NSA activities or the nonrepresentation of majority views on the KU campus.
Thirteen students on NSA, each set in his own political dogma and unwilling to compromise because a compromise might mean accepting a political deal, cannot meet in center ground to establish a path for the committee to follow.
Last year, a stormy one for NSA, ended in an atmosphere of sweetness and light. Attitudes of let's do better next year, we won't hate each other during the meetings, and we'll put away political prejudices and personal dislikes for one hour and get some good work done were expressed.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL DIFFERENCES make it impossible for this group to function smoothly with its present membership.
Several of the "liberal camp" members attended the national convention and returned to KU fanning the flame for NSA. This is fine and their spirit is to be admired, but they forgot one thing.
But that was last year.
These students forgot last year's promises to be good workers, to inform the students, and to quibbling and internal fighting.
But perhaps in NSA are the real campus politicians—no other members of any other organization have so effectively forgotten previously made "campaign promises."
MEMBERS FALL INTO PLACE AND BACK
Backers of Charles Menghini, a so-called liberal, follow his line, applaud his lengthy harangues on such topics as migrant farm workers and their importance to the KU student, second his motions, and, of course, vote with Mr. Menghini.
views of two diametrically opposed, but equally vocal, fellow members.
On the right, Charles McIlwaine, a junior edition of a crusading savior for conservatism, gathers his group, calls moves and pulls strings.
Except for political theory and one other item, the two groups could be identical — but Mr. Menghini never dissents. His followers are loyal and go with him to the final vote.
Mr. Mellwaine has been known to be a loner, the only dissenting voice on the committee, the man, for a moment, without a follower.
Why can't NSA work here,work now,work like Carol McMillen proclaims loud and long in her many letters to the editor?
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
The answer is simple.
NSA IS PRESENTLY COMPOSED OF STUDENTS too proud to admit they may be wrong, then try to do something about it, too stubborn to try to see the other side of the story and too ingrained and inflamed with their own particular brand of philosophy and patriotism.
It is a bit amazing that these students managed to get "Operation Abolition" here at all and that they also planned a relatively successful convention last spring.
But even more amazing is the NSA meeting itself.
For a real three-ring circus, attend one or two.
—Carrie Merryfield
—Carrie Merryfield
One Man Censorship
Kansas recently made its first test of an antipornography law passed by the 1961 session of the State Legislature. Several books—"Love Addict," "Born for Sin," "The Wife Swappers," etc.—were seized in a raid engineered by the Attorney General's office.
During the hearing, three witnesses for the bookstore testified that the books seized were not as "sexy" as 29 volumes that had been brought from the shelves of the Junction City library to the courtroom.
Despite this testimony, the Kansas District Court upheld the seizure of the books.
"The test . . . shall not be whether sexual desires or sexually improper thoughts would be aroused in those comprising a particular segment of the community, the young, the immature or the highly prudish, or would leave another segment, the scientific, or highly educated or the so-called worldly wise and sophisticated indifferent and unmoved. But such test shall be the effect of the book, picture, or other subject . . . upon all those whom it is likely to reach, that is its impact on the average person in the community. The book . . . must be judged as a whole in its entire context, and by the standards of common conscience of the community of the contemporary period of the violation charged."
THE TEST TO BE APPLIED TO OBSCENE literature cases under the new Kansas statute is:
THE THEORY OF JUDGING THE "OBscenity" of literature on the contemporary
standards of the community is generally accepted by courts. The ability of a court to judge what the contemporary standards are has been questioned, however.
"I think it important to emphasize that decision of this case calls, not for the individual judge's personal opinion, but, for a gauging of the present community sentiment. It seems obvious to me that a court should rarely attempt that task as a matter of law."
Frederick M. Vinson, former Chief Justice of the United States, said in a dissenting vote in a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals case in 1940:
The Kansas statute in effect gives a judge, one individual, the power to rule on "obscene" literature by what he, one individual, judges to be the present community standard.
THE JUNCTION CITY NEWSSTAND missed the point by it's "me-tooism"—if the library does it, so can we. The point is, should anyone be given the power to determine the obscenity of literature on the shaky basis of what he believes the community standard is, or what effect the literature will have on the average person of the community?
Sure, a lot of "obscenity" might slip into Kansas if it weren't for the law, but a lot comes in anyway. Wouldn't it be better to take a chance that the "average person" is able to decide for himself what's good for him, and keep such arbitrary power out of the hands of a man trained in law, not the judging of community standards?
-Karl Koch
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
Daily Hansan
Extension 10.5
Memorial Daily Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press, Represen-
ted by National Advertising Service,
18 East 50 St., New York 22.5.
News letter subscription rates: $3 a
semester or $5 a year. Published in
Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during
the University year exp after commence-
ing and examination periods. Second class
postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Extension 711, news rooms Extension 376, business office
Telephone VIking 3-2700
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner Managing Editor
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Bon Gullagher ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown ... Business Manager
NSA Supported
letters to the editor
Editor:
NSA is the only national organization of students and the prospects that the University of Kansas, in case of withdrawal, will lose its representation, do not seem to be promising.
For my fellow students at this campus, who might not have heard much about the utility of such an organization, may I suggest that this organization is doing a very useful job in foreign countries with regard to the promotion of democratic ideas.
NSA may not be doing any sensational or well-publicized things, and keeping in view the long range purposes we should try to strengthen it from within and should not try to wreck the only organization which expresses the voice of the student community.
In many Asian countries there are two rival student organizations; one dominated by the Communists and the other is National Student Association which is serving the cause of democracy.
Sincerely,
Sincerely,
Raja Mohammed Naib
Pakistan graduate student*
0-36
"WORTHAL'S PARTICULAR—HE WON'T BE SEEN WITH JUST ANYTHING."
College Preparation in Small Schools Called Inadequate
By Karen Marie Jennison
(Editor's note: This is one of the English proficiency examinations from the summer session test that was rated excellent by the English Proficiency Committee. This fall's examination will be given this Thursday.)
I attended a high school with twenty-five students, which is probably one of the smallest in the state of Kansas. In this high school, the training was not aimed at preparation for college, so naturally it fell far short of the preparation for college given in many high schools. If one did not study on his own, without help or encouragement from the teachers, he would indeed be poorly prepared to enter a state university. The reasons for this poor college preparation that I received are many, and they are almost all inherent in the operation of such a small high school.
OF COURSE, NO SCHOOL can attain excellence without the help of interested and properly qualified teachers. A small high school in a relatively isolated area, near no large cities, has a great deal of trouble attracting good teachers. Most teachers prefer to teach where they can obtain a reasonably large salary, and where they can find some place to spend it. Then too, people who have been reared in a city find it very hard to adjust to small town life, where every move they make is noticed (especially if they are teachers). So, to the relatively few teachers competing for many positions, cities or larger towns look more attractive from the viewpoint of living conditions as well as money. The teachers my high school did manage to attract are probably similar to those most small high schools get. The reasons they came were many and varied, but rarely was their primary reason an interest in good teaching. For instance, one woman came there to teach because she had been disagreeing with her husband and was trying out a temporary separation. She had not taught for twenty years, so it took her almost all year to get back into the "swing of things," and when the year was up, she left. Another teacher was coerced to leave his carpentry job and teach on the day before school was to start. He could not have had much interest in teaching if he had to be begged to leave his job just before school started. He did continue teaching there for three years, but his interest didn't seem to rise as the years passed. You can see that when school is to open the next day, the situation is desperate and anyone willing to take the job will be hired.
MOST OF THESE UNINTERESTED teachers are rather lazy and do not want to grade homework; consequently, no homework is assigned. It is not at all unusual to graduate from this high school having written one or two themes and having read "Buck Jones" and the "Space Rangers" for book reports. In a small school, one is supposed to have the advantage of individual attention from the teachers. However, when the teachers are so uninterested in teaching, you receive neither individual attention nor the better teaching supplied in larger schools. I can honestly say that I have received more useful individual attention from teachers at Kansas University than I ever did in my high school of twenty-five. This then, is the teaching situation in my high school, and as can be seen, it is not at all conducive to good college preparation.
ANOTHER LESS IMPORTANT reason why my high school does not provide adequate college preparation is a lack of equipment. For example, the science laboratory equipment was purchased during the 1930s and occupies a small cupboard in the corner of the science room. Much of the equipment is outdated and rusty from disuse. After the teachers are paid, there doesn't seem to be enough money left for laboratory equipment. Consequently, although a laboratory science is a state requirement for graduation, for all practical purposes no laboratory science is offered. Physics and biology are taught, but without laboratory participation by the students. The situation is much the same in the home economics department. While there is a fully equipped kitchen, the year I took home economics there was no money to buy food to use in the kitchen. It is obvious that teachers, poor as they may be, cannot teach to the students' best advantage when necessary equipment and supplies are lacking.
A THIRD REASON the high school provides inadequate academic training is the undue emphasis on sports, partly due to community pressure. Not only is great emphasis placed on excellence in sports, especially basketball, but academic excellence is considered unnecessary and sometimes even undesirable. Since the high school contains only twenty-five students, everyone must participate if the school is to excel in sports. Girls as well as boys com-
(Continued on page 3)
Page 3
New York Crowd Applauds Bircher
GARDEN CITY, N. Y. — (UPI) — Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch Society, told an overflow crowd of 1,400 last night that Communism is not a movement of the poor and needy.
Welch won several bursts of applause — and never a boo — in a packed banquet room of the fashionable Garden City Hotel as he talked for one hour and 40 minutes on the dangers of Communist infiltration.
"I can find you a lot more Harvard accents in Communist circles today than you can find me overalls," he said.
IN A QUESTION and answer period afterwards, Welch drew resounding applause for his opinion of urban renewal. "It's a left wing design for many purposes—to break down lines, moral, geographical and political and all other boundaries as well, and it is all part of an extreme socialist pattern of life," he said.
Welch said he does not believe Russia is willing to get into a shooting war with the United States. A war, he said, would trigger revolution in countries the Kremlin now controls.
Welch described the "principle of reversal" which he said the Communists use to infiltrate American life.
College-
(Continued from page 2)
pete; thus, when there are basketball games twice a week and practice several times a week after supper in addition to Sunday afternoon, little time is left for serious study, even if assignments were given. In larger schools, only a few are affected by competitive athletics; thus, it is not stressed for the entire student body. Almost everyone in my community comes to the basketball games and expects to see evidence of a good school on the basketball floor. A winning coach has a chance of remaining longer than any other teacher, and four years is indeed a lengthy stay for any teacher. Here again, the attitude of the community enters in, for usually teachers are driven from town by censure and gossip, and sometimes by direct pressure on the school board.
NEEDLESS TO SAY. such a high school cannot provide a very rich curriculum with so much trouble getting teachers. There is seldom a choice of subjects for the student to make, and I ended up taking such things as agriculture and business arithmetic which could hardly be considered adequate as college preparation.
I have tried to point out some of the reasons why I think my high school does not provide adequate college preparation. In conclusion, I do not believe high schools as small as the one I attended have a very long future, for they are expensive and inefficient to operate and they do not seem to prepare students adequately for either college or a job. I think that the consolidation which has already begun in my high school league will continue until the extremely small school with its obvious inferiority no longer exists.
Learn to
Play or Improve your Bridge
He said the Communists back the U.S. foreign aid program to weaken the country internally.
Lessons by the Best on the Hill
He said the Reds foster the idea that their movement flourishes in poverty yet "Communism has always been imposed from the top down by the very rich, the highly educated and the politically powerful, on the suffering masses whose conditions have always been made worse..."
WELCH REPEATED his charge that "the largest single body of Communists in America is in our Protestant clergy," but he said this body was less than 4 per cent of the clergy.
Every Wednesday
7:00 p.m. --- 306 Union
The crowd was mostly quiet, showing rapt attention. Its heaviest applause was for Mr. Welch's defense of the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R.-Wis., "basically, and with minor exceptions, there was nothing wrong with McCarthy's methods from the point of view of a patriotic American," he said.
Pie Champ a Non-Pie Eater
VENTURA, Calif. — (UPI) — Mrs.
Peter Vandweihe who won first prize
for pie baking at the Ventura
County Fair revealed her secret.
She said the lemon-pie was the first she ever baked — because her husband and three children hate pie.
Seniors interested in job placement after graduation are to meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 102 Strong
Tuesday, October 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Senior Placements To Be Discussed
Carolyn Parkinson, Scott City junior, has been crowned queen of the 1961 American Royal in Kansas City. Representatives from land-grant colleges and schools in the Big Eight Conference were among the 10 queen candidates.
Parkinson to Reign At American Royal
Miss Parkinson will promote the Royal in Kansas City this week and will preside at American Royal activities next week. A member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, she also holds the titles of Miss Lawrence and Miss Kansas. She was a participant in the 1961 Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J.
Sea Power Is Topic Of Military Meeting
Quarterback Club Meeting
"Aspects of Sea Power" will be discussed by Capt. Richard Gruber, professor of naval science, at the naval research reserve unit meeting at 7:30 tonight in the military science building.
The meeting is open to the public. The unit consists of about 25 faculty members and students, and all naval officers.
Covering iniquity will prevent prosperity and the ultimate triumph of any cause. Mary Baker Eddy
Four Kansas editors and publishers have filed a brief asking the United States Supreme Court to declare unconstitutional the apportionment of the Kansas Legislature.
Exciting films of the Wyoming and Colorado games.
The brief was filed by J. P. Harris, Peter MacDonald and John McCormally of Hutchinson and Ernest W. Johnson of Olathe. Mr. Johnson is editor and publisher of the Olathe News. Mr. Harris is editor and publisher. Mr. MacDonald is associate publisher and Mr. McCormally is the associate editor of the Hutchinson News.
The brief contends the legislature in Kansas is as badly apportioned as that of Tennessee. A test case is to be argued before the Su-
The group said the apportionment is a violation of the 14th amendment.
DIRECTORY LISTINGS DUE THIS THURSDAY
Narrated by a top player.
Editors Hit Apportionment
Presidents of all KU organizations must submit their name, address, phone number and the name of their organization to the Student Directory staff by Thursday, Oct. 12.
The information should be printed on a post card addressed to Student Directory, 1245 West Campus, Lawrence.
Forum Room Student Union Tuesday, Oct. 10 7 p.m. Free Admission & Cokes
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 10. 1961
250 Strays
Missing Books Cause Dismay
Lost, strayed or stolen: more than 250 books.
That's the problem facing the Watson Library staff, Stuart Forth, head of the undergraduate library said yesterday.
Quoting figures from an inventory taken last summer by the undergraduate library staff, Mr. Forth said that more than 350 books turned up missing during the two-year period since 1959.
About 100 books have been returned since the inventory was taken, he said, leaving more than 250 books still missing.
"THIS LOSS IS greatly to be regretted," he said, "because it indicates a lack of student responsibility for a basic University resource.
"Fortunately, a significant portion of the books can still be replaced, but the money spent replacing these books may prevent the library from acquiring vital new research material."
The cost of replacing a book includes much more than the actual price of the book itself, Mr. Forth said. Included in the replacement expense is the money spent locating the replacement copy and the cost of re-cataloguing the new copy.
The total cost of replacing a $4 book is often $25 or more, he said.
WITH THE HIGH COST of replacing a book in mind, Watson Library recently initiated a new policy regarding lost books. Formerly a student who lost a book was charged only the actual cost of the book itself. Under the new policy, the student is required to pay the total cost involved in replacing the book.
Loses from the library closed stacks are not as large as from the open shelves in the undergraduate
Admission Tests Set for Law School
Students seeking admission to the KU School of Law next year will have an opportunity Nov. 13 to take the Law School Admission Test, a prerequisite for entrance.
The test, which will be offered again in February and April of 1962, features objective questions measuring verbal aptitudes and reasoning ability. It will be given at more than 100 centers in the United States.
Those wishing to take the test should obtain applications from the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N.J. Completed applications must be returned to this address by Nov. 4 to allow the ETS time to complete the necessary testing arrangements for each candidate.
Last year over 20,000 applicants took the test, the results of which were sent to more than 100 law schools. ___
When men are employed, they are best contented; for on the days they worked they were good-natured and cheerful, and, with the consciousness of having done a good day's work, they spent the evening jollily; but on our idle days they were mutinous and quarrelsome.
—Benjamin Franklin
Married Student
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library, he said, but he added that tighter stack controls will soon be imposed.
Additional library staff members will soon be assigned to the stacks to insure against theft by checking the bookcases for missing volumes he said.
"Up until now," he said, "it's been fairly easy for almost anyone to get in and out of the stacks without a stack permit card. But that's all going to change."
- Clean, interesting work
- Clean, interesting work
- Hours worked out to fit college student's schedule
ALL FACULTY members and graduate students are now allowed full access to the stacks, he said, but only selected undergraduate
Gorton to Attend Conference
Write giving name, age,
work history & phone to
111 Flint, Daily Kansan
Thomas Corton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will attend a conference for teacher education Oct. 20 and 21 in Washington, D.C. Sponsored by the American Council of Education, the theme of the conference will be "Implications of Structure Matter for Educated Teachers."
students have this privilege.
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Mr. Forth added that there are no plans to ever open the stacks to everyone on campus.
365 Excuses
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"However, the undergraduate collection (which contains more than 15,000 volumes) will always be available for the student who does not have access to the closed stacks."
365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the
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Today's excuse: Anniv. of the opening of the U.S. Naval Academy.
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Tuesday, October 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Jays' Colo. Disappointment Acute
Photos by Ron Gallagher
Text by Bill Sheldon
6F
21 7
Another story of disappointment—KU's Jayhawkers played what was their best game of the season Saturday at Boulder, but were defeated in the final two minutes by the passing of Colorado's Gale Weidner. These pictures depict some of the action and emotions which reflect the story of the opening Big Eight game, and the second loss in three games for Coach Jack Mitchell.
Above, sophomore Ken Coleman is shown trying to dent the Buffalo defense in the first quarter of play, but he was stopped less than a yard short of the goal line. Although the Hawkers were held in this series, they came back quickly on their next possession to score the opening touchdown.
Below Curtis McClinton is about to be wrestled to the turf by Ed Coleman (46) and Ted Sommerville (41) with Joe Romig (67) and John Denvir (72) coming up to help. But the Wichita senior saw Coleman, not shown, coming up behind and flipped the pigskin to him just before being hauled to the ground. This play carried the ball to the Colorado 7-yard line with 5:11 left to play in the opening quarter. Coleman's touchdown attempt shown above came just three plays later.
21
21
At the lower left is a picture of Coach Mitchell and John Hadl as they unhappily watch the Buffaloes rally in the fourth period to wipe out the 19 point KU margin to come from behind and win.
At the left is a shot of the Kansas bench during the second half. Assistant Coach Bernie Taylor is on the phone. From left to right are: Kent Staab, Larry Allen (partly hidden), Elvin Basham, Benny Boydston, Ken Tiger, Bill Mills, Stan Kirshman, and Willis Brooks (wearing the helmet).
32 97 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 10, 1961
Page 6
Catholic Group Gets New Center
More than 1.100 KU Catholic students will soon have a new center.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center recently purchased a 70 foot ranch-type house which will be converted into a chapel and a meeting place for Catholic students, said Rev. Brenden Downey, KU Catholic student chaplain.
The house is located at 1910 Stratford Road, across the street from the present center.
The house and the lot which it occupies was purchased through a gift from the Most Rev. Edward J. Hunkeler, Archbishop of Kansas City.
The St. Lawrence center will take possession of the house Nov. 1, Father Downey said. The house should be ready for daily Mass and Newman Club meetings by Christmas.
Until now, daily Mass for Catholic students has been held in St. John's Church, in downtown Lawrence. Newman Club meetings have been held in the Kansas Union.
Since the chapel will have a capacity of only about 130, Sunday Mass will continue to be held in Fraser Theater, Father Downey said.
Father Downey emphasized that purchasing the house is only a temporary measure until a permanent center can be constructed on a four-acre plot of ground purchased for this purpose two years ago.
Humanities Series Opens with Peyre
Henri Peyre, first Humanities Lecture speaker of the year, will speak on "Andre Malraux and the Arts" at 8 o'clock tonight in Fraser Theater.
Prof. Peyre is chairman of the department of French at Yale University. He is one of the few Humanities Lecturers to return to KU for a second visit. He was here in 1950 in the third year of the series.
At 4 p.m. today, Prof. Peyre will give a lecture in French on "The New Novel in France" in the Murphy Recital Hall.
phy Rector Haile in 1938, he taught at Byrn Mawr College, 1925-28; Yale, 1928-33 and the University of Cairo, 1933-36 He became chairman of the department in 1939.
Andre Malraux is a French novelist who was active with the Spanish Republicians in the Spanish Civil War, and he fought in the French tank corps during World War II.
His books include: "The Human Condition," "Man's Fate," and "The Conquerors."
Andrews' Lawyer Will Try Again
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Lowell Lee Andrews' chief defense attorney said today every effort will be made to save the youth's life despite a Supreme Court refusal to review his case.
case.
Professor Richard C. Allen, Wash-
burn University, said he would
likely take it either to a state court
on a habeas corpus or back to fed-
eral district court.
Andrews is sentenced to hang in Kansas for slaying his parents and sister while home from Kansas University for the 1958 Thanksgiving holidays.
YAF Will Begin Organizing
The Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) will hold an organizational and general information meeting at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
I lay it down as a fact that, if all men knew what others say of them, there would not be four friends in the world.-Blaise Pascal
ORDER IT!
At The
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.
Special Attention to Special Orders
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. French Reading Examination:
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
by Oct. 11.
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., every week
at Kansas University Union.
Instructor, Larry Bodie.
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
**Foreign Students:** If you wish to take a foreign student, attend the NeoHo County UNESCO dinner and program, you should complete the reservation form in 228 Strong Hall by May 15.
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships:
Fraser. Reminder: appointment, for
The botany laboratory isn't the only place on the campus overrun with hothouse fungi. - Bertram Bratz
The words of some men are thrown forcibly against you and adhere like burs.—Henry David Thoreau
La reunion du Cercle Francais annonce per mercredi, le 11 octobre, sera remplace par la conference en francais de M. Henri Peyre mardi le 10 octobre, conference aura laudi de quatre heures dans la salle de recital de Murphy Hall.
medical examinations to be made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Film and speaker concerning Russian education.
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
Nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won—Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
The finest words in the world are only vain sounds if you cannot understand them—Anatole France
Every man of courage is a man of his word.—Fierre Corneille
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Tuesday, October 10. 1961 University Daily 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 University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
1 OST: Believed lost in Malot area;
2 lost in reversible jacket. Rescued.
CALL VL 518-3070. Rescue Dept. 10-12
FOR SALE
Brown Billfield; Probably host near zone 10. Billfield; Probably host near zone 10. Ward. Call Daniel A, Notland. V I-3-844
For Sale: Floor lamp, oak arm chair, oak swivel chair, apartment size washing machine. Call VI 2-0429. 10-12
Registered Siamese Kittens, 1045
monts 10-16
Dog House, medium size; Apartment-
size washer; youth-bed mattress. Call
VL 3-7568 or see at 203 Ark. after 5 p.m.
10-11
POWER MOWER, 3 HP Clinton engine
brown tweed, $75. CCA VI-3 0003. 10-12
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
1958 PONTIAC CHIEFTA 2-dr. or 1958 Chev. Impala Convertible. Both with R. & H., automatic trans. Both in excellent condition. See at 1705 Ky. 10-11
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30% discount! Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes. Zerex only 89c per cal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's - 929 Mass. St. 10-18
VARIABLE REVERBERATION UNIT.
Self-contained, self-powered. Plug between amp. & pre-amp. of any amplification system. Easily interchangeable between Hi-Fi, tape recorder, guitar Amp. etc. $75. VI 2-3625. 10-10
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
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FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC LED discounsher - $29.95 for the Motorola Store — $99 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb rp's as low as $50 each.
STEVEN5 22 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like
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Car For Sale: '52 Butick. $50.00. Dyna-flow. Call 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Welcome to reasonable rates. Business Machines Co. 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-6151 today.
HELP WANTED
SENIOR STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING
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New firm. Clu V1 2-0268 after 8 p.m.
Wanted: Baby sitter for three small children in our home. Four hours daily Monday through Friday. Call VI 3-3117 6-8 p.m. 10-13
10-11
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 10, 1961
Wescoe Reiterates Policy-
(Continued from page 1)
with the four University officials. Dean Woodruff partially eased the tension by launching a discussion of the derivation of a word, "foolscap." He finally got a dictionary from an office down the hall and read the word's definition aloud.
THERE WAS SOME TALK about how the World Series game was going — the latest score anyone had heard was 11-3, Yankees.
Dean Woodruff and Mr. Wilson kidded each other about a bet they had on what the exact enrollment figure would be. The students smiled. One shifted nervously in his chair. Two lit cigarettes.
After a 10-minute wait, the Chancellor entered. He shook hands with each of the students and sat down at the head of the table.
DURING THE DISCUSSION,
Dr. Wescoe repeatedly stressed
that the racial situation has
improved in the last year.
"There have been a good many significant developments," he said. "One thing is the Human Relations Commission in Lawrence. I am
AN UNPAID TESTIMONIAL
N
Napoleon Bonaparte says:
I'd never have lost to Wellington*
...if I'd been wearing a
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POWER-KNIT
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"I do not believe in segregation," the Chancellor said quietly. "I object to those who practice it. Those of you who have read what I have said, know how I feel about this."
proud of the fact that I was a member of the committee that recommended the establishment of the commission.
"Another thing is the LIFE program. Shortly before I came in here I finished signing about 150 letters to citizens of Lawrence who have made life happier for international students this fall," Chancellor Wescoe continued.
A: Oui! I spent so much time tugging at my baggy, saggy T-shirt . I couldn't concentrate on the battle.
AS HE SPOKE, he leaned forward on the table. His eyes moved from one student to another.
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Q: You mean...?
*napoleon's final defeat came at the
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He paused, then said:
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A: NOW he tells me!
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"As I have been speaking just now, some of you have looked at me. Others have studiously avoided my gaze. I hope this does not mean you resent what I am saying.
"I am grateful to you for reminding me of this problem." There was a long pause.
"I CAN TELL YOU that I am delighted you have come to discuss this with me. I hope this won't be a one-shot affair. I hope I can sit down again with you.
"I will take this matter under advisement. Whatever seems proper, and in the light of what you have told me today, we will do," Dr. Wescoe said.
BEFORE THE MEETING ENDED, Chancellor Wescoe once more told the students he was glad they had come to see him.
"Now, is there anything more that need be said?" he asked. The students looked at each other, then slowly left.
Campus parking is not a problem There is adequate space on campus for autos eligible for permits, Chief Skillman points out. But parking does enter into the problem of coexistence between the forces of wheels and feet.
Car-Crazed Campus-
(Continued from page 1) move to limit access of wheels to the campus during class periods.
"The parking committee attempts to assign zones so that cars are centrally located between buildings where most of the classes are held," said Chief Skillman.
ty problem would be greatly re- duced," the chief concluded.
AT LEAST part of the explanation for so many wheels, particularly between class periods, is that students use them "unnecessarily" to go from one class to another.
"If the cars were brought on the campus, parked in proper zones, and left there until driven off the campus, the congestion and traffic safe-
So all in all, things don't look too black. The wheels seem to have it their way at the moment, but indications are that the tide is beginning to turn in favor of feet.
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Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 19
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
NSA Backs Seven Who Saw Wescoe
The KU National Student Association Committee yesterday supported the civil rights stand of seven students who met Monday with Chancellor W. Clarke Wesoee.
By Scott Payne
The motion to send a resolution to the All Student Council in "hearty endorsement" of a student demand to stop discriminatory housing listing passed six to two.
housing listing possession. Judi Jamison, Ottawa junior, and Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior, dissented. Jerry Dickson, Newton sophomore, and Charles Patterson; Joplin, Mo., sophomore, abstained.
PRIOR TO THE VOTE Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior, who was a Civil Rights Council representative at the Chancellor's meeting. said:
"Our stand was a blunt request for the Housing Office to drop the names of discriminatory renters.
"We discussed it for an hour and a half," he said. "This is what we want and will work for. I think that here lies a chance for KU to take a role of leadership in civil rights."
"The Chancellor just didn't feel this way," he added.
Wednesday, October 11, 1961
DICKSON MOVED that the proposed resolution be amended to support the Chancellor's decision. The motion was defeated.
Then McIlwaine said, "I would like to amend the resolution to read:
'Be it further resolved that this resolution is in direct conflict with the position taken by the University as expressed by the Chancellor.'
This proposal was also defeated.
FOR 20 MINUTES following passage of the main motion, Dickson, McIlwaine, and Patterson explained their votes did not mean they were against integration.
were against integration. "My vote against the resolution puts me in a position of non-support of civil rights," said Dickson. "This is not the case," he added. "I voted against the motion because I don't think NSA should be the right arm of the CRC."
the right arm of the City.
McIlwaine said his vote was "not to be construed as opposition to civil rights. Such a position of support is an indirect slap at University policy," he said.
For the text of the NSA resolution, see page 8.
AT THIS POINT, Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior, who proposed the original resolution, asked the chairman, Robert Thomas. Marysville senior, to enforce the outside speaker ruling, "so we can get something done today."
(The outside speaker ruling requires permission of a Committee majority for a non-Committee member to speak.)
This action confined Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior, ASC chairman, observer and last week's outspoken critic of NSA affiliation, to
(Continued on page 3)
Disagree with Wescoe's Discrimination Stand
Two Negroes and a foreign student disagreed today with the Chancellor's statement concerning the listing by the Housing Office of renters who discriminate.
"I always thought the University should have a profound influence on the views of the local townpeople." Sandra Moore, Saskatchewan, Canada, sophomore, said. "Lawrence has remained immune to the advances made by the University in the area of civil rights." (The Chancellor said Monday there has been a great improvement in the racial situation in Lawrence in the last year.)
"FOREIGN STUDENTS should not be forced to undergo the frustrations of having no bounds on their civil liberties while on campus and then be thrown into the role of an inferior semi-citizen. I am continually irritated by conservative reactionary attitudes in Lawrence."
Nolen Ellison, Kansas City, Kan.
junior, said, "I definitely feel that the Negro students here are quite concerned. I hope the University and the students can come to some sort of agreement.
"I CAN UNDERSTAND how the Chancellor took the stand he did. However, considering that he is the Chancellor I feel that he should have made a more positive stand in regard to listing of discriminatory housing. His stand in itself leans toward "no, we will not" in the near future.
"THE LEADERS of the organizations at the meeting with the Chancellor were not a group of radical kids. They were a group of serious-minded people representing important community-minded religious and service organizations."
Elmer Jackson, Kansas City, Kan. senior, said, "I read the article several times, trying to be objective by taking into view the Chancellor's viewpoint as head of KU and my standpoint as a student and also as a Negro.
"I do agree with the point that no individual legally may tell another to whom he may or may not rent his house. But, I feel that the University should prevent discriminators from being listed," Jackson said.
Wilson Explains KU Housing Policy
J. J. Wilson, housing director at KU, said today that the housing office does not ask renters if they discriminate.
"We are simply running a listing service," he said. ___
Mr. Wilson explained if people call up and tell the Housing Office that they discriminate the office listens, but it does not list this information.
"Actually, there is no reason for us to get involved in this (the discrimination problem)," he said. "We are only interested in listing the physical facilities of the room for rent. We have no team of inspectors to check on the rooms."
Faculty Reaction Seems Divided
The Office does have classifications of listings, however. For example, people who will take children are separated from those who will not. If the renter does not allow pets, this is also listed.
Mr. Wilson explained that the housing office does not approve or disapprove of off-campus housing. He said that only the dean of women's office issues such an approved list for undergraduate women who do not live in sororities or University dormitories.
KU faculty members appear to be split in their reaction to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's decision to continue listing Lawrence renters who discriminate.
In interviews last night with seven faculty members, two opposed the action, one supported it, one declined to comment and three felt that they lacked sufficient information to comment.
REFERRING TO THE Chancellor's statement, Harry G. Shaffer, assistant professor of economics, said he found the policy contradictory and confusing.
"To me," he said, "this statement seems contradictory to the practices followed at the moment. If the University does not condone discriminatory practices, how is it that the University abets discrimination by listing discriminatory housing?"
To my knowledge, nobody has proposed that either the Chancellor or the University should in any way interfere with the rights of a private citizen to rent his property to whonever he wants to.
"PEOPLE WHO DO wish to discriminate, of course, are free to rent their rooms by using commercial agencies such as real estate companies. But the facilities of the University, a state institution supported by all the taxpayers of the state, certainly should not be made available to them."
"Listing is a service freely offered by the University, and I should think we could afford to insist that certain moral and not merely sanitary conditions should be met by people who avail-themselves of this service.
Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy, felt that the University would be justified in refusing to list discriminatory renters. "I'm not sure," he said, "that refusal to list discriminatory housing interferes with the rights of private itineraries."
"THE CHANCELLOR is undoubtedly right, however, in saying that the responsibility for such a policy is ultimately his. It (Chancellor Wescoe's reaffirmation of policy) cannot have been an easy decision."
Supporting the Chancellor's policy was James E. Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program.
"I think the chancellor is very justified in what he did, and I would back him 100 per cent," he said. "I think the Chancellor's policy at the present time is quite acceptable."
Moral Suasion Stand Rejected
By Zeke Wigglesworth
Five of the seven students who met with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe Monday to discuss the administration's housing policy said last night they are opposed to his decision to continue listing discriminatory renters.
One student favored the Chancellor's stand; one said he was not clear about the issue.
ALEXANDRA DAYELE
George Buford
THE STUDENTS asked the Chancellor to change his policy of listing discriminatory renters on housing office lists. The Chancellor said the policy would continue.
The most outspoken of the five opposing the Chancellor is Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council.
should in no way — directly or indirectly — sanction any form of racial discrimination."
"The students and the faculty should take action to persuade Chancellor Wescoe that the University should stop listing renters who discriminate," he said. "I think the University should take the leadership in Lawrence. It
IN FULL ACCORD with the Chancellor is People-to-People representative David R. Barrier, Wichita sophomore.
"I agree with Dr. Wescoe's stand," he said. "To use other actions not of the "moral suasive" type would bring pressure on the housing office and make it hard to find places for students to stay.
DENIS KENNEDY, Lawrence graduate student representing the International Club, was confused by the meeting.
"The University's housing policy is not clear. Until that policy is clear, I cannot make a definite evaluation of the meeting. It is true, of course, that some good always comes out of a meeting like this. I think it was a service to the
A. H.
school because it showed Chancellor Wescoe that there is student interest in the problem."
Denis Kennedy
Another student was also confused. Richard Smith, Great Bend sophomore and a member of the Wesley Foundation said:
"I CAME OUT of the meeting with a feeling of confusion. I didn't know exactly what the Chancellor was doing. The Chancellor said
C. R. S.
Jane Dunlap
we must not make the situation worse, and that 'moral suasion' was the best policy. I don't agree.
"There have been leaders throughout history who have stood up and said 'That is my signature.' The Chancellor thinks he is leading the battle against housing discrimination by the use of moral suasion. But moral suasion is person to person. He wants us to settle the problem quietly, objectively and with no trouble. I do not think this will be effective. The Chancellor must lead the battle."
JANE DUNLAP, Lawrence
senior and KU-Y member, felt that little was accomplished at the meeting. She said that in view of what the Chancellor said, the group felt he was definitely against discrimination.
"The meeting was not a waste of time. It let us get to know the Chancellor better," she said. "What was lacking were definite answers and definite questions. I think the issue of discrimination can be solved only by more contact between students. Moral suasion is not the final answer."
Curtis D. Keller, Chase senior and a member of the Westminster Center, was more blunt.
"TO MY WAY of thinking, if the Chancellor lists renters who will (Continued on page 3)
(Continued on page 3)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11, 1961
Guest Editorial
Dawson Praised
Approximately 60,000 foreign students attend universities in this country every year, and according to a recent article in "The Wall Street Journal," "more than half will go home mad at the United States." Mostly these potentially influential friends for America return disillusioned and disenchanted with us because few people show personal interest in them.
LAST MARCH William F. Dawson, twenty-two-year-old engineering junior at the University of Kansas, discovered that of the 260 students from sixty different nations attending school there, few had any American friends, most had never set foot in an American home, none had ever seen for themselves how American free enterprise works, and many would have to drop out of school if they couldn't find summer jobs to take care of next year's tuition.
Deciding that something had to be done to change this situation, Dawson arranged for a number of the foreign students to meet with campus leaders so they could air their gripes. As a result of this meeting, a People-to-People Council was set up on campus to help foreign students become better integrated into American life and to help them in every way possible—a sort of stay-at-home Peace Corps operation.
DURING THE REMAINING months of the school year big changes took place. The People-to-People Council was given official recognition and office space in the Student Union. Committees were set up to arrange forums and social gatherings, home hospitality and tours to farms and businesses, job replacement and a brother-sister program to help orient new students arriving in the fall.
With the co-operation of the university and the local press, foreign students previously ignored suddenly found themselves the center of attention. Townspeople began inviting them to
their homes for dinner. Farmers had them out for weekends. Students were getting together over coffee to discuss world problems and exchange information concerning their respective cultures Everything was going along fine until school was about to close and fifty-six students showed up at the council's office seeking summer jobs.
FINDING FIFTY-SIX JOBS in a city the size of Lawrence, Kansas (pop. 32,858), presented an impossible task, but Dawson and Rick Barnes, chairman of the Job Placement Committee, went to work. They called upon a prominent businessman in nearby Kansas City and told him their problem. He promptly wrote thirty-seven leading firms there, urging that they try to provide jobs for these students. Only one came through, hiring two students.
When Dawson and Barnes learned what had happened in Kansas City, they should have been discouraged. But, instead of giving up, they hopped into a sports car and barnstormed the state of Kansas, calling on businessmen, newspaper editors, radio stations, chambers of commerce and anyone else who would listen to their story. When they returned to the university they had lined up the remaining fifty-four jobs.
IF THERE HAD BEEN MORE Bill Dawsons around when Kwame Nkrumah, the president of Ghana, was a university student in Pennsylvania a number of years ago, perhaps he would not be the leading pro-leftist in Africa today.
Next year the students at the University of Kansas are planning a bigger and better program to make real friends of students from abroad. Our whole nation would benefit if the example set at KU were followed and People-to-People Councils were established on campuses all over America.
ca.
—From the Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 7.
Letter Writer Criticized
Editor;
Being members of a race of people which has suffered much abuse, mentally as well as physically, in this country simply because our skin is dark, we feel for the sake of decency as well as for the sake of good moral principles the necessity to comment on a portion of Mr. Schick's long vituperative letter of illogical reasoning which appeared in the October 9 issue of the UDK, and to ask an open question: "AND ARE WE YET ALIVE?"
Mr. Schick states that the "person's home is, in the tradition of a free people, his castle to dispose of at will," which is a good point, and this statement actually conflicts with the statements which follow in which he attempts to show an invasion of the landlady's peace of mind and freedom of choice. Now when this individual placed this room, or apartment as the case may be, up for rent did she not of her own volition choose to dispose of
... Letters ...
her castle as she saw fit?... And once the place was rented was it not only an invasion of her tenants privacy, but also an abuse of his freedom of association for her to attempt to dictate what guests he should have? Or doesn't Mr. Schick feel that this student had any rights that the landlady should have respected?
The action taken by the landlady was purely prejudicial and unmoral and cannot be justified by pointing to conditions in the countries of the individuals involved. After all, does not this country consider itself the world's leading democracy? How then can we send ambassadors of good will around the world preaching brotherhood, love and fellowship when such a cancerous growth as this exists here in the heart of America. It is quite apparent that Mr. Schick has attempted to cover a sore of large dimensions with a band-aid.
Then too, Mr. Schick not being black, can never understand the
Daily Hansam
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$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
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Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
Managing Editor
We must say emphatically and with much disappointment that the position that the Chancellor of this University takes on segregated housing does not give NONWHITE students any peace of mind either.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
turomil, the mental anguish that goes on in the mind of the black man in this country from day to day: the refusal of landlords and landlades to rent rooms or apartments to you simply because you are black, the refusal of service in restaurants and barber shops, the inability to acquire decent jobs, all because of the color of skin. Reiteration: "AND ARE WE YET ALIVE?" And he has the audacity to state that the peace of mind of the landlady has been done harm. What about the peace of mind of the STUDENT involved?
Tom Brown Business Manager Don Gergieck, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Weins, National Advertising Manager; Charles Martinache, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager.
When we look back over the years and think of the blood, sweat and tears that were put out by such black men as Crispus Attucks, Peter Salem, Benjamin Bennaekar, George W. Carver, Dorie Miller, and numerous others in helping to make this country great and safe for such persons as this landlady to live and carry on such unmoral and ungodly discriminatory practices we cannot help but wonder why after all these years the black man cannot make his white brothers understand the basic thing that he desires in this country that he helped build, and that above all else is human dignity. Once again we ask, "AND ARE WE YET ALIVE?"
When Mr. Schick and all persons adhering to the ideas set forth in his letter become truly magnanimous enough to really grasp this problem, then we feel that we can truly move ahead. But right now, to adequately describe them, we must borrow a line from the book of Job: "YE ARE PHYSICIANS OF NO MORAL VALUE."
letters to the editor
A. W. Smalley Ivory V. Nelson Shreveport, La., graduate students
Angry Words
What is America to me?
Editor:
How do I respond to such a question—how should I?
America says to me that I should say she is the greatest country in the world—she says to me that I should be patriotic, and should state her cause without hesitation.
How very much I should like to do so, how proud I should like to be, feeling her soil beneath my feet, and not being a bumbling, hesitant Negro when someone asks the inevitable question: How do you feel as an American?
I can point to her material wealth, her material gain—I can point to her skyscrapers, her many automobiles, her wealth; but I do not answer the question. And even when I am unable to answer the question I also realize that skyscrapers and wealth are not the sum total of a country's greatness —I realize all too often that I have not an answer and cannot offer much of an argument in defense of the America for which we endlessly fight to belong.
It could very well be that the University of Kansas might help me to find an answer—for the University of Kansas shares a unique position among American colleges today. Thanks to the People-to-People organization and the responsible work of Bill Dawson, KU is in the national spotlight as a friend to the foreigners.
Having met Mr. Dawson, the program which he is behind is not merely a patronage organization. Nevertheless, the work of such an organization is being threatened by the ugly vein of prejudice. Prejudice which manifested itself when a landlord in Lawrence stated she wanted no Africans or Negroes in her house. No one denies this lady her views or says that she should be forced to do the opposite. On the other hand, the embarrassing incident need not have happened—it need not have been a threat endangering the work of well-meaning organizations or even the good thinking of those few Lawrencians who do rent to Negro students.
It would honestly seem that since the University approves housing in which students must live—it would seem that one of the requirements would be that landlords rent to persons regardless of race, color or creed, and that if such landlords feel differently, then they may rent to whomever they may desire, but would not be on a list APPROVED for housing by the University. This is all one asks. Is it too much?
Yet the Negroes at KU are not asking that the lady be denounced. They are only asking that the administration take upon itself as its responsibility NOT TO HONOR ON ITS APPROVED HOUSING LIST those persons who will not rent to people because of race, creed of color—whether such person engaged in such a practice be BLACK or WHITE.
Clearly the case was that a foreign student asked another foreign student to the apartment but the invited student was not the acceptable, the desirable — he was BLACK!
Just what would have been the situation if the invited foreigner had been WHITE. Being a Negro myself I know the answer, and so do you as well as I know the answer if a white foreigner had been involved instead of a black man. The administration would have been up in arms in denunciation!
Can it be that the administration (which is not here accused of prejudice) is afraid of losing housing in the wake of mounting student enrollment? But in the wake of such, more BLACK AMERICANS and Africans will be coming to KU in the future, and will be denied housing because of discriminating practices on the part of people who feel that one race is more undesirable than another.
What then is the answer when I, as a Negro, am asked to state my views about America? What in all honesty am I expected to say? Of course the truth is that I can only speak the truth—it hurts because I would want to tell another truth
that could be, but which in too many ways does not exist. And yet, strangely enough, America expects me to be a GOOD NIGGER, the laughing Uncle Tom who knows his place and with a smile on his face and his white teeth gleaming—LIES. But, thank God, the dav of the so-called GOOD NIGGER HAS PASSED.
Moses Gunn,
St. Louis
graduate student
Logical Reasoning
A
Not being a native Kansan, perhaps I just do not understand Kansas Logic. If that is the case, please excuse this attempt to reason logically.
I am full aware of the fact that our Cancellor inherited a lot of the problems that he is confronted with now (as the Democratic Administration claims every time they get into office). But it would seem to me that some positive action is needed to help clear up a very serious problem that we share with the rest of our country.
Of course I am referring to Chancellor Wescool's comments on segregation in yesterday's UDK. I live in private housing and the other day as I entered the apartment house I saw a big notice framed in glass. I will not bore you with all of the little do's and don'ts that were expressed, except one that I think is quite relevant to the problem at hand. It said that drinking or possession of alcohol on these premises is forbidden by the University of Kansas. Then at the bottom it said in compliance with the above regulations, the landlord is allowed to have his house registered with the University of Kansas Housing Bureau.
a f me
Undoubtedly this law is left from the age when the WCTU ran Kansas, many hundred of years ago. I propose that if the University of Kansas can make one regulation (where in fact they have made many), then why do they not make another regulation that might have world wide implications?
NS
Here is an area for the NSA and the ASC to really go to town.
Matt Cabot Jr.
Honolulu Hawaii, senior
SIP #2
Editor:
Editor:
The John Birch Society, like Communist party leaders, is using dramatic means to attain an end. Even though we may not agree with their way of thinking we must admire them for their willingness to fight for their idealisms.
The J.B.'s, like Russia, have definite beliefs and goals. They are quite willing to work to accomplish them. Russia's master plan is moving along steadily and at this present rate it will, no doubt, accomplish its end soon: world domination. The U.S. master plan seems to be "keep up with Russia." We will never be able to score if we don't start playing offensively.
America — its people — have reached an era of complacency. We have the idea that the uppermost peak has been reached and now we are content to sit and enjoy the view. Meanwhile someone else is climbing that same mountain to take over this lofty perch. "Somebody's gada go."
Instead of ducking the blows and rolling with the punches we've got to strike back, with force if need be.
The organizers of SIP have certainly proved to the KU campus what can be done when a little effort is put forth. Perhaps a similar effort would be as successful in organizing SIP #2 only instead of SIP representing a swinging, twisting group of future leaders of America known as "Students Interested in Fleasure," it could be called "Students Interested in Self-Preservation."
Leo C. Bouchard K.S.T.C. graduate
Short Ones
Home is the dearest spot on earth, and it should be the center, though not the boundary, of the affections—Mary Baker Eddy
1
Wednesday, October 11, 1961 University Daily Kansan
NSA Backs—
Page 3
(Continued from page 1)
a few minor remarks and the aiding of Thomas twice in parliamentary procedure.
MILLER INFORMED the Committee that letters had been sent requesting the film "Harvest of Shame" for KU but that as yet there was no reply.
THE CHAIRMAN then asked Menghini about the progress of the NSA Congress delegates' report.
Menghini read a draft of the report to the committee, saying that it would be completed for presentation to the ASC tonight. He added that copies of the report will be sent to living groups, campus organizations and the faculty.
MENGHINI REPORTED on a meeting he had Sunday night with Mike Neff, west coast program vice president for NSA.
"Due to a mistake in schedule, Mike won't be able to be at KU until February," said Menghini.
"However," he continued, "he and I had a four-hour meeting in which Mike suggested a good five-point plan which this Committee can use."
Menghini said he would present the plan to the ASC at the same time he does the delegates' Congress report.
"ONE THNG we can do," said Menghini, "is set up TV centers when David Brinkley's new show "Journal" gives its film report of the NSA Congress last Aug. 20-30.
After the show, we could hold debates and discussions. I think it would be interesting and it would maintain interest in KU NSA."
Menghini then read a news report published by NSA's national office concerning civil rights struggles in Mississippi.
The report said at least 114 Negro high school students were arrested Oct. 4 when beginning a seven-mile march to Magnolia, Miss.. Pike county seat.
THE MARCH was arranged by leaders of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee — a group recognized by NSA.
When police apprehended the students they arrested all but 36 of 150 marchers. Police reportedly beat three of the group's leaders before jailing them.
After considerable delay the charge was announced as "breach of peace."
SNCC is now trying to raise $63,000 for bond for the 19 still in jail.
Jan. In Jackson, Miss., the state capital, the president of Jackson State college officially abolished the student government on Oct. 6 for its participation in freedom rides.
400 students walked out of school in protest.
400 students walked out of school in protest. Menghini finished his reading by saying that there is apparently a "press blackout" in this area.
Palmer suggested writing to the Greenville, Miss., Delta Democrat-Times for information. (The editor of the Greenville paper was last year's recipient of the Annual National Award for Journalistic Merit of the William Allen White Foundation.)
Mellwaine suggested contacting Jim Robertson at the University of Mississippi.
After a brief discussion concerning budget applications for the Committee, the meeting was adjourned.
'Moral Suasion'—
(Continued from page 1)
discriminate, he is for it. If he takes them off, he is against it. He says he does not wish to interfere with the private rights of renters.
"I have the feeling that suasion won't work. Also, by telling the renters he can't offer them the "services" of the housing office, he would not mean they couldn't rent. This is no edict."
Another student who disagreed with the moral suasion policy of the Chancellor was George Buford, Kansas City senior and cochairman of the Civil Rights Council.
"USING SUASION, it would take at least another two generations to get rid of the problem. Suasion will not work against the prejudiced person. It would take a long, long time.
Most of the students opposed to the Chancellor's policy felt that he was not adamant in his determination to continue listing discriminatory renters.
"I think that the Chancellor will eventually go along with another policy."
Richard Smith said he thinks the Chancellor will change if he finds a better plan.
"I think that we and the Chancellor are headed the same direction. He is just taking the more conservative route."
CURTIS KELLER said:
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11, 1961
Turkey to Hold General Elections Sunday
ISTANBUL — (UPI)—Four weeks after the execution of former Prime Minister Adnan Menderes, post-revolutionary Turkey is scheduled to vote on Sunday in the first general elections since the military coup in May last year.
There are reasons the ruling military junta has set general elections now. It is four years since the last elections and traditionally general elections are held every four years. Also, the military government promised elections as soon as possible and has been under pressure to make good on the pledge.
VOTERS FROM 67 provinces will elect 450 deputies to the lower house and somewhat less than half of the 150 senators in the newly-created upper house. Most of the senate will consist of nominated members of the revolutionary junta, former chiefs of staff, former presidents, high-ranking judges and others appointed by General Cemal Gursel, the present head of state.
Gursel created the senate under the newly-drafted constitution because he believed the "dictatorship
Four Thefts Reported
The theft of a rifle telescope, valued at $115, and a $65 amplifier have been reported to campus police.
Sgt. John E. Mix, assistant instrutor of military science, told police the telescope was missed Thursday.
The amplifier was taken from the Memorial Stadium press box, apparently sometime Saturday, according to a report from the building and grounds department.
Police yesterday received reports of the theft of two bicycles from the campus area.
of deputies," as the revolutionaries called the Menderes regime, was made possible by the single house system.
Gursel has promised that the elections will be "fair and free," but the voters' choices are somewhat restricted. The policies of the four political parties contesting the election differ little.
The party leaders, with one exception, signed a declaration at a roundtable conference with the National Union Committee—the ruling junta—agreeing to accept the junta's internal and external policies.
THE DECLARATION, signed before Menderes' execution on Sept. 17, is regarded by armed forces representatives who support the junta as an oath of allegiance binding the parties to the principles of these policies.
As there are also no great economic or social differences between parties, observers here see the general election campaign as one between leaders, rather than party programs.
The People's Republican Party (CHP) is prominent in the campaign. The CHP was founded by Kemal Ataturk, who built the modern republic out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I.
The CHP's present leader is Ismet Inoun, who was Attaturk's close associate, and a former president, premier and general. While Inoun has had great political experience, he is now past 70. Rustuk Aksal, a party secretariat member, already has been chosen as Inoun's heir.
INONUS' PAST foreign policy has followed a largely neutralist line
which tends to be pro-Western. His election pledges now take him on a road parallel to Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) conceptions.
The Justice Party (AP) is headed by ex-army General Rigip Gumuspala, whose slow participation in the May 27, 1960, military uprising against Menderes caused some speculation here as to where his sympathies lay. The revolutionary junta first made him chief of the general staff, and then withdrew him from active service.
He gathered support from Menderes and signed the junta's policy declaration. Then the junta hanged Menderes, the idol of Gumuspala's followers. Observers think his party will still attract the majority of former Democratic voters.
THE NEW TURKISH PARTY (YTP) is led by Ekrem Alican, former finance minister in the revolutionary cabinet. His past but close affiliation with the junta causes him to be viewed with suspicion by some ex-Democrats. Alican's deputies are considered more moderate than those of Gumuspala's, but his chances do not appear as high as those of the AP leader.
Osman Bolukbasi, Republican Peasant's National Party (CKMP) leader, is the only man who abstained from signing the round-table
conference's declaration. He is also the only political leader to have spoken publicly against Menderes' execution.
Many have described Bolukbasi as a man with "backward" ideas.
WHICHEVER PARTY wins the most votes, the new election system based on proportional representation is bound to create a strong opposition in both houses, according to observers who fear that Turkey may become a country torn by coalition governments.
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Granted the elections do take place as scheduled, representatives of the armed forces who support today's ruling military junta make no bones about their intention to intervene if "events" take a "wrong turn."
In that event, Turkey could well experience yet another revolution.
LAFAYETTE, Ind—(UPI)—Purdue University's four-ton locomotive tender "Boilermaker special" was hauled from a gravel pit yesterday where it had been dumped by "unknown pranksters" Saturday.
The interpretation of "right" or "wrong" will naturally be up to the supporters of the junta, which could, for example, regard any resurgence of pro-Menderes factions as against the vital interests of the nation.
Boilermaker Revived
The Boilermaker football team lost to Notre Dame Saturday, but nobody blamed the Irish-officially.
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Record Collecting Is KU Fad
Pick out an average student's room or your favorite restaurant and you'll almost always find a record player or a juke box. Record collections are a fad for teenagers and adults alike. Like most fads, record collecting changes from month to month.
Currently around the country the Twist and jazz have taken over. Some of the most popular jass albums include "The Truth" by Les McCann, "Time Out" by Dave Brueckel, "Original Sin" by John Lewis and any LP by the Ramsey Lewis Trio.
Page 5
The volume movers in rhythm and blues are Jimmy Reed and Lightning Slim. Slim's current album is called the "Rooster Blues" and is breaking record sales for the set that likes to do the Twist.
For classical music lovers, Edith Fiaf is rising fast. On a recent TV show, her rendition of "MLlord" caused a musical stir and she has since put out an album featuring this song.
Ever since Pete Seeger appeared at KU two years ago, the record shops have been swamped with requests for his folk music. Another folk singer is Joan Beaz, whose album by the same name was popularized by her rendition of "Silver Dagger."
Broadway show LPs are steady sellers. Among the most popular now are "West Side Story," "Camelot" and the sound track from "Parrish." Record stores are expecting a rush on the "Exodus" album with the showing of the movie next week in Lawrence.
When you don the furry look, avoid friction — and wear spots — by not carrying your handbag under your arm, over your shoulder or dangling over your sleeve. Such abuse will result in wearing down the fur.
Paris is playing with doll hats again. These mite-sized chapeaux—perched forward at the eyebrow level or sitting atop the head—are among toppings brought back by retailers in their import collections.
... On the Hill...
Joseph R. Pearson
The following men were elected officers of Joseph R Pearson men's residence hall; president, Don Eversmeyer, Wright City, Mo. sophomore; vice president, Terry Harris, Shawnee senior; secretary, Darrell Nelson, Clifton sophomore; treasurer, Art Ogilvie, Kansas City, Mo., senior.
---
Faculty Club
The Faculty Club held its annual reception Sunday to honor new faculty members, Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe and Professor and Mrs. Kenneth Deemer received the guests.
Fashion Notes
Newest version of the jump suit is an after-ski leotard of elasticized silk shantung. The socks of the leotard fit into matching shoes, Women's Wear Daily reported.
---
In the London Couture collection, the flared line is prominent. Typical: a low waisted flared line in a red broadcloth coat with side fullness. The small high collar and cuffs are of black persian.
***
The newest Hair Fashion Council style starts with the bias-cut of the hair. The locks then are swirled to frame the face in smooth contour. The featured edges of brushed bangs are brushed smooth or scissored to have strands for placement of greatest becomingness. The swirls are shorter and freer, making the shape adaptable for day or evening wear.
---
One of the most copied Paris fashions is the toboggan hat. The ribbed, knit pull-on which many of us remember from our own schools days shown repeatedly as the elegant topper for suits at the house of Christian Dior. Now, variations of it in the whole range of bright shades and white populate hat bars from coast to coast.
KU Dames
The KU Dames held its annual get-acquainted tea Monday.
Recently elected officers for the following year are: president, Mrs. John Mitchell; vice president, Mrs. Roger Geery; recording secretary, Mrs. Otto Beck; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Mary Gulitan; treasurer, Mrs. Herbert Lazarus and club hostess, Mrs. Charles Timberlake.
Mrs. Dwight J. Mulford is the present sponsor of the KU Dames. She is aided by Mrs. Richard Garrett.
---
Acacia
The 1961 pledge class of Acacia fraternity recently elected the following officers. They are: president, Joe Clerico, Osatowamine; vice president, Curtis Harris, Anthony; secretary, Bob Warren, Wellington; treasurer, Don Smyth, Sharon Springs; social chairman, Ralph Walden, Osatowamine; rush chairman, Ken Wilke, Topeka; I.P.F.C. representatives, Ron Seney, Kansas City and Ron Peden, Harper and publicity chairman, Harold Baker, Osborne. Smyth and Baker are sophomores, the rest are freshmen.
Kappa Sigma
Kappa Sigma fraternity pledge class recently elected officers for the following year. They are; president, Jim Hall, Norton; vice president, Ron Best, Mission; secretary-treasurer, Ed Bockover, Salina; social chairman, Tom Woods, Arkansas City, and I.F.P.C. representatives, Steve Haggart, Salina and John Lanning, Bartlesville, Okla. All are freshmen.
Campus Pinnings
Anne Larigan, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Alpha Delta Pi, to David Larson, Salina junior, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Jane Harber, Kansas City sophome,
Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Ward Lawrence, Wichita sophome,
Phi Delta Theta. ___
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Slim Pants, Mixed Colors in Men's Wear
Men's fashions for this fall have taken a turn toward mixed colors and the "heavy look" in fabrics, according to the manager of a local men's store.
"Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence"
Short raincoats with the Sherpa lining, which looks like sheepskin, and suburban-length coats are very popular among the college set. These coats give the appearance of being heavy but are really lightweight.
Soft sweaters in argyle patterns are beginning to catch on. Another modern innovation is the Continental or Piper Pant, slim trousers in plaid and check patterns.
In dresswear, college men are buying the blue blazer, either single or double-breasted. Traditional or natural shoulders are still in vogue. Colorwise, suit and sport coats are in compound colors of olive and gold, brown, or blue.
Inconsistency is shown by words without deeds, which are like clouds without rain.-Mary Baker Eddy
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11, 196
KU Officials Ponder Fate of Robinson Gym
By Clayton Keller
KU's gymnasium problem apparently is no closer to being solved than it was last spring.
There is general agreement that Robinson Gymnasium must be replaced. University officials feel that it is outdated and inadequate for KU's intramural and physical education needs, and that it stands on a site needed for a new classroom building.
BUT THERE IS ONE PROBLEM:
how to pay for a new gymnastium.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of KU, said there are four possible methods to finance a new gymnasium. They are:
- A gift from an outside donor.
- A bond issue, to be repaid by fees.
- An appropriation from the state legislature.
- A combination of the above three methods.
Mr. Nichols said it is unlikely a new gymnasium can be constructed with state funds in the near future. Funds are appropriated according to a long-range plan approved by the Board of Regents and the gymnasium is not on the "priority list," he said.
"THERE ARE A NUMBER of new buildings KU needs, and the problem is which should come first," Mr. Nichols said. "Most people would say it is unrealistic to put the gymnasium ahead of some of our other needs."
As "other needs," he mentioned the replacement of frame buildings
behind Strong Hall, originally constructed in 1946 for a three-year period.
"WE ALSO NEED ADDITIONS to Lindley Hall, Watkins Hospital, and the power plant, and we need to remodel or replace Fraser Hall, just to name a few," Mr. Nichols said. "The fact is they are all needed, but we can't have them all at once."
A gift, Mr. Nichols said, might pay part of the cost of a new gymnasium.
The possibility of having students pay for the building was discussed last spring, but one plan—paying for the gymnasium with money collected by the reserved seating plan—was vetoed by the All Student Council.
It was also suggested that student activity fees could be increased to raise money, which would pay off a bond issue. The Kansas Union was constructed on such a plan.
MR. NICHOLS said the law at present does not allow the sale of bonds to construct gymnasiums. The state legislature would change the law only upon the recommendation of the Board of Regents, Mr. Nichols said, and the Regents would make the recommendation only if KU requests it.
"This has not been done yet," Mr. Nichols stated.
Mr. Nichols said the location for a possible new gymnasium has been "informally discussed," but no definite plans have been made. He said the logical location would be near the intramural fields and Allen Field House.
Youth Dies of Crash Injuries
Joseph M. O'Brien of Kansas City, Mo, died at 12:35 a.m. today at Lawrence Memorial Hospital from injuries received in a two-car smashup early Sunday morning.
O'Brien, 19, was riding in a car driven by Douglas B. Gillespie of Prairie Village when it jumped the center island at 1930 Naismith Drive and struck a northbound car driven by Gary F. Conklim, Hutchinson second year law student.
Gillespie was charged with failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident. He stated that an unidentified vehicle cut into his lane, forcing him to lose control and jump the island. ___
Rayburn in Coma; End Appears Near
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — Cancer-stricken House Speaker Sam Rayburn developed pneumonia today and swiftly fell into a coma. The end appeared near.
"Mr. Sam Rayburn's immediate condition has grown more serious during the night." a noon bulletin said. He is in Baylor University Medical Center.
"He has developed left lobar pneumonia with pleural effusion," his physicians reported. "This diagnosis was made from X-ray examinations completed at 9:30 a.m. (CST). Because of this condition, he is now considered critical.
His lung was filled with fluid and draining.
Rayburn is 79. Tests completed at Baylor Thursday showed cancer through half his body, spreading from the pancreas gland.
Civil Rights Council to Meet
The Civil Rights Council will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in the Kansas Union building. The meeting is open to the public.
Those who want much are always much in need.—Horace
* * *
Man's conceit is boundless.—Alfred Graham
For Best Results Use Kansan Classifieds
Let's Dance!
Learn the Twist and the West Coast Swing
5 Weekly lessons will be offered beginning on
O
Oct. 20, 7-9 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom
Instruction given by Warren Oaklen professional dance teacher
YAF Meeting Here Tonight
A test of the numerical strength of politically conservative students at KU may come tonight at a meeting to organize a campus chapter of Young Americans for Freedom.
The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
WHILE SEVERAL INFORMAL meetings have been held in the last year by students interested in starting a YAF group, the meeting tonight marks the first real attempt to organize.
Allen added that the job of electing officers for the new organization would probably take place at the second or third meeting.
McIlwaine, who is state chairman of YAF and state and regional chairman of Young Republicans, said earlier that 30 or 40 students he has approached are interested in the organization.
The meeting's primary purpose will be to secure names for a charter, Patrick H. Allen, Lawrence law student said last night, Allen, along with Charles B. Mcwaina, Wichita senior, and two or three other students have been active in trying to establish a campus YAF chapter.
ALLEN SAID a minimum of five names are needed to apply for chapter recognition in the national YAF. Persons who join the local chapter will also be members of the national organization.
Allen said he could not estimate the number of students who would show up tonight.
"I expect a good turnout," he said.
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Wednesday, October 11, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
WeaverS
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11. 1961
Experimental Drama Has Religious Theme
Controversy—a KU Experimental Theatre tradition—will be continued here this week.
"Between Two Thieves" by Warner Leroy will be presented by the Experimental Theatre in Swarthout Recital Hall tomorrow through Saturday.
The drama is concerned with a theme of equal controversy and explosiveness.
BASED ON THE RETRIAL OF Jesus of Nazareth by a traveling troupe of Jewish actors, it condemns modern viewpoints of religion.
Audiences have reacted violently to the play during past performances. In its New York run, several fist-fights occurred outside the theater after the play had ended.
In Cleveland, a man rushed to the stage and disrupted the production by disputing the actors' words. He was escorted from the theater by police.
THE CONFLICT of attitudes toward religion caused the violent reactions, George Bradley, Pittsburg graduate student and director of the play, says.
"The playwright shows up religion as it is viewed today," Bradley said. "Religion takes quite a beating."
The Experimental Theatre's tradi
tion of controversy goes back several years.
SINCE 1958, plays with such themes as the Apocryphal story of Judith, modern religion in the medieval context of a devout priest and the morality of suicide have been presented in the Experimental Theatre.
T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral," a play dealing with separation of church and state in the 12th century was presented last year.
The theatre also did Robert Anderson's "Tea and Sympathy," which contains a frank treatment of premarital sexual intercourse.
Students may obtain tickets to "Between Two Thieves" for fifty cents.
Movie With a Message
CORNELIA, Ga. — (UPI) — The City Commission yesterday re-enacted a Blue Law banning Sunday movies when it learned that theater operator Bob Bell stationed a "hula girl" outside his theater to lure patrons to a film with a Hawaiian theme.
Who Lost Their Leg?
Police reported today their lost property office contained a wooden leg.
NSA Resolution
(See story on page 1)
Realizing; that moral suasion has not in the past successfully resolved the problem of housing discrimination in Lawrence.
Realizing: the dissatisfaction in the Negro community.
Realizing: that unrest in those discriminated against has reached a degree that mandates immediate action, therefore.
Be It Resolved: that the University of Kansas National Student Association Committee heartily endorses the stand taken by the Civil Rights Council, the People-to-People program, the KU-Y, the Westminster Center, the Wesley Foundation and the International Club, calling for the dropping of names of private renters from the University housing list who discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin or creed per se.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, Ithaca & Kentucky.
John B. Brigidt Foreign Study Scholarships:
1982-83. Applications due Oct. 20, 506
Fraser. Reminder: appointments for
immediate, in Waitkins Hospital.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination:
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
bv. Oct. 11.
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., every
week. SUA School: Kansas Union In-
struction, Larry Bodie.
TODAY
THURSDAY
Episcopal Holy Communion and lunch; 12 poon, Canterbury House.
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerslag, den 12 Oktober, um fuemb übr in 502 Fraser. Herr Liljelebhd aus Schweden spricht. Auch gibt es Erfrischungen.
Woman Reports Attack Here
A KU sophomore woman has told campus police she was molested Monday night by an unidentified man in the zone N parking lot.
The woman, whose identity was not released, told police she was walking from Lewis Hall to Murphy Hall about 7 p.m. when the incident occurred.
She told police the assailant came up from behind her and grabbed her neck with one hand.
"Don't holler and you won't get hurt," were the man's only words, she reported.
The girl said she stood still and the man released her and walked off toward Allen Field House.
She described her assailant as being about 5-6, "about college age," and wearing a light trench coat.
Joe G. Skillman, chief of campus police said there probably were still many cars in the well-lighted lot at that hour but that apparently no other persons were around. He said it was the first such reported incident in more than a year.
Semantics in recent years has become as much of a science as alchemy used to be.-Net Hentoff
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Are You In On The BONUS BOOK PLAN at THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
365 Excuses
365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the first ascension of the Graf Zeppelin
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Wednesday, October 11, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
COLOR PRINT SALE
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converting the specified image displays only a portion of it.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11, 1961
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Bill Sheldon
KU's performance Saturday was by far the best of the season and, hopefully, it was a sign of things to come.
There was no doubt that the Jayhawker offense was as good as it was many times last season. The defense, except for the fateful pass coverage, was also quite solid.
THE MOVE OF JOHN HADL to left halfback proved to be the thing which makes KU look like the type of team which is a constant threat with the ball. Although the basic strategy was the same as for the first two games, maintaining possession as long as possible and attempting to wear down the opposition, it was much more effective with Hadl having more running room from his old halfback post. This factor and the tremendous leadership and running technique of Rodger McFarland were a big difference.
For the first time this season the Hawkers looked somewhat like the team which was conference champions on the field last fall. There was a great deal more life and desire shown by the entire squad.
IT WAS ONLY BECAUSE the Buffaloes were able to spark themselves to such a pitch late in the game that they were able to defeat KU and come out of the game as the likely choice for Orange Bowl honors.
Just before the close of the first half, with KU holding a 13-0 advantage. Gale Weidner threw twice successfully to Jerry Hillebrand before McFarland intercepted. This
show was a preview of what was to come and what had been forseen as inevitable throughout the week of practice for the game and as the game broke for a colorful halftime performance.
When the Buffaloes did decide to open up their attack there was little the Hawkers could do.
With the 58-yard Weidner to Ken Blair pass coming on the first play from scrimmage after Kansas' final score, there was little doubt but that KU was going to have a tough time controlling the Bucks.
EVEN KU'S 19-0 MARGIN didn't appear safe with the threat of Weidner's throwing ability present.
HADL WAS MOVED to quarterback, resting McFarland who had put out tremendous effort for the entire game, but couldn't make the Jays respond and when Weidner threw there was no hope of KU getting their first win.
There was only one hope for KU, to maintain possession and use up as much time as possible.
Saturday the Jayhawkers meet a scrapy Iowa State team here in what should be another very close game. If the reaction of the Iowa State scout in the press box when he heard of the Cyclone win over Oklahoma is any indication, KU may be in for trouble once more.
After being handed the strip of ticker tape with the score, the Iowa State coach yelled, leaped up and threw a fist into the air, a very happy and encouraged man.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWINGI
At 7:15 Only
Otto Preminger's
"Exodus"
Adm. $1.00
GRANADA NOW SHOWING!
At 7:15 Only
Otto Preminger's "Exodus"
Adm. $1.00
Games This Week
Iowa State at Kansas
Missouri at Oklahoma State
Syracuse at Nebraska
Oklahoma at Texas
Kansas State at Kentucky
STARTS TOMORROW! ADULTS ONLY!
THE HAPPY STREET-WALKER OF PIRAEUS...
The ribald, impudent,
but always moving
account of the encounter
between a girl-of-
the-streets in a Grecian
seaport town...
and the American
who wants to rescue
her from her desperate
(or is it?) situation...
MELINA MERCOURI
Lapart Pictures presents
Never On Sunday
Written and Directed by
JULES DASSIN
WITH THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNING SONG!
ENDS TONIGHT
"The Young Doctors"
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telephone VILLAGE 3-NUMS
Undefeated Iowa State faces its toughest football test so far this season when it meets Kansas, pre-season favorite for the Big Eight title here Saturday.
The ribald, impudent,
but always moving
account of the encounter
between a girl-of-
the-streets in a Grecian
seaport town...
and the American
who wants to rescue
her from her desperate
(or is it?) situation...
starring
MELINA MERCOURI
Lapert Pictures presents
Never On Sunday
Written and Directed by
JULES DASSIN
Z
A crowd of better than 30,000 is expected to see the Jayhawkers meet the Cyclones in the 41st clash between the two schools.
KU holds a 22-13-5 advantage in this interesting series.
IOWA STATE COMES HERE carrying the longest current winning streak among conference eleven. The Cyclones mowed down Drake, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma this season to stretch this mark to seven games. Last season I-State won its final four, over Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Kansas State and College of Pacific.
The Cyclones also won their first three games last season, with KU breaking the string with a 28-14 win in Ames.
Iowa State Brings Clean Slate Here
FOR ONCE THE CYCLONES will not be greatly outweighed — in the line, that is. The two teams are about even on the scales up front but the real problem comes in trying to stop the KU backfield — a quartet that averages 202 pounds per man.
Iowa State must concede a lot of size, speed, power and finesse to the Jayhawks. But they will not concede the game. Desire has pulled the Cyclones through three bitterly fought contests so far this year.
VARSITY
THEATRE...telefonos VIVORES 3-1065
"We can concede personnel and size." Coach Clay Stapleton admits,
SURE! PEOPLE WILL TALK ABOUT THIS ONE!
“but we are never going to concede being outhit. We know we are in for a bruising fight in every game and at Kansas it will be even tougher. Jack Mitchell has a team that has been rated among the nation's best—and deserved the rating. So far it has been a disappointing season for Kansas which makes Saturday's game all the tougher. The ability of the Kansas team must come to the top soon and Saturday will be listed as a must by Coach Mitchell.”
IT WILL HAVE TO BE listed as a must by the Cyclones, too. They are tied for the Big Eight lead with Colorado and Nebraska right now. Unaccustomed as they might be to this lofty positioning, the Cyclones find it a most enjoyable spot. They can be counted upon to fight — as Stapleton's teams always do — to stay there.
Some will be shocked--but many will find it a powerful and haunting motion picture,
it is an adult story about
an important subject.
Producer Ellie Kazen and
playwrite Willem Inga...the two
who gave you
"Picnic" and "Bus Stop..."now bring
you this disturbing and
self-revealing film...set in Kansas
during the fissur-tronic twentieth
Here is a motion picture
produced with sincerity and
intelligence. You'll find it bothright
and frank...and thoroughly entertaining!
The Management.
The early report on the only serious injury from the Oklahoma game is that reserve sophomore tailback Ozzie Clay has a sore knee. No official word is reported but it appears he'll have a chance to play some against Kansas.
Marv Clothier, second unit guard, is the only Kansas player expected to be out of action Saturday. He twisted a knee at Colorado which is the first important injury for the Jayhawkers since the start of the season.
NATALIE WOOD - WARREN BEATTY
ELIA KAZANS production of
SPLENDOR
in the GRASS
TECHNICOLOR
STARTS SATURDAY!
GRANADA
CASTLE Telegram VOLUME 3-570
Bowlers Practice
Varsity bowling Coach Bascom Fearing held the fifth varsity bowling tryouts yesterday in the Jay Bowl. He said that the squad would probably be narrowed to 12 at the session.
The leading contenders so far, on the basis of their averages, are John Hember, Dave Rybolt, and Paul Hammar. Hammar and Rybolt are returning lettermen.
The first scheduled meet will be here with Kansas State Nov. 11.
I could've been a Hemingway if I hadn't been trapped into writing blurbs for the two bit mystery paperbacks.-Al Wetzel.
Learn to
Play or Improve
Bridge
Lessons by the Best on the Hill
Every Wednesday
7:00 p.m. — 306 Union
Visit
Dixie
Dixie Carmel Shop
For the tastiest
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LOST: Believed lost in Malet area.
Reversible jacket
CVI Call V1 5-8126
10-12
FOR RENT
Brown Billfold; Probably lost near zone "A." Keep money, return billfold. Reward. Call Daniel A. Noland. VI 3-3844. 10-16
SINGLE ROOM FOR MAN STUDENT:
large rm., walk-in closet, private bath,
good heat, priv. garage, linens furn.
house prlv. room, private bathroom,
week. Only student in house.
Location 2 mi. north of Kaw Bridge. Call
Mrs. Lewis, VI 3-094 immediately. 10-13
FURNISHED APT., east side, utilities
pd. $50. Also single room close to
campus, for boys. $27.50. Call VI 3-6294.
10-17
For Rent: Private comfortable basement room. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus, for rent to mature male student. Phone VI 3-3077. 10-16
For Rent: TRAILER, 45', 2 bedrooms.
Inquire at the office, Bingham Trailer
Court. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or after 6. Call
V.3-9304. Prefer couple. 10-16
ROOMS FOR BOYS, clean, comfortable & quiet. Phone VI 3-7199. 10-12
APTS, FOR MEN. Off street parking.
bath, birth. Ph. VI 3-7592 or 10-13
2975.
APT. STYLED ROOM for two senior or grad. women students. Mahogany paneling, built-in TV, priv. entr. & linenis furn. Kitchen priv. avail. Within walking dist. from KU. Must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-8147 at 6 p.m. 10-12
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room,
kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, un-
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3-582-1 for 5 appt. tf
TRANSPORTATION
LOOKING FOR SOMEONE to help me drive to St. Louis Thursday or Friday.
Call VI 2-5205. 10-13
RIDE wanted to Topeka Monday and
tuesday mornings. Call Jerry.
4594. 10-12
NEED RIDE from K.C. Kans. Monday.
Call Clyde 9-4037 to be on campus.
10 Call Clyde 9-4037 to be on campus.
10-11
MISCELLANEOUS
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-
west. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern
self-service — open weeks 5 to 3:30
p.m.
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed plant bags. Picnic. party supplies.
plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI.
0350.
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc., aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 Conn., Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
HELP WANTED
REGISTERED NURSE. Full time, night,
for intensive care unit. Call director of
nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
VI 3-3680. 10-17
SENIOR STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING student for designing small structure New firm. Call VI 2-0296 after 8 p.m.
Wanted: Baby sitter for three small children in our home. Four hours daily Monday through Friday. Call VI 3-3117, 6-8 p.m. 10-13
FOR SALE
STANDARD SIZE CRIB and mattress for sale. $10.00. CALL VI 3-2729. 10-13
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE ~1956 Chevrolet
4, dr. 2d power, Power Glide, r. & f.
1956 Corvette, only $79.
EXCELLENT COND, only $79. See at
DX station across from the Big Buy
10' x 50' TRAILER for sale. Colonial style with washer & garb. disp. 2 bdrm. Decide your own down payment. Call VI 2-1425. 10-17
955 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 d. Power str. & brakes. excellent cond. Must sell now. Ask for David. VI 2-2356.
[116] McKenna. 10-17
Page 11
For Sale: Floor lamp oak arm chair, oak
arm chair size washroom chine. Call VI 2-0429. 10-12
Registered Siamese Kittens. 1045 Ver-
mont. 10-16
Dog House, medium size; Apartment-size washer; yoy-bed mattress. Call VI 3-7568 or see at 203 Ark. after 5 p.m. 10:41
POWER MOWER. 3 HP Clinton engine.
POWER MOWER. 3 HP Clinton engine.
Brown tweed, $75. Cargos I-3-0003. 10-12
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
1958 PONTIAC CHEFTAIN 2-dr, or 1958
Shev. Impala Convertible. Both with R.
& H., automatic trans. Both in excellent
condition. See at 1705 Ks. 10-11
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices.
Motorola Store - $29 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $3.00 each.
Car For Sale: '52 Buck. $50.00. Dyna-
call. Call V 2-1484 after 12:30 p.m. tf
STEVEN 32 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new, Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m.
Like
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
carrying uninsured running condition.
$10. Call VC i-4291. cf
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Regonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4201 or IV 3-4201. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
$225. Portable typewriter. $49.50 and up.
Service on all makes typewriters and
adding machines. Free monthly reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-9151 today. tf
- ADVERTISERS
PATRONIZE YOUR
BUSINESS SERVICES
SHOES COVERED TO MATCH your fa-
tures. Call Ms. Eroughthey.
10-13
SENIORS — Need photos for employment applications? Phone Larry Margolis. VI 2-3474 after 3 p.m. 10-17
Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance
Would like Ironing to do in my home. 15c a piece; also want child to care for in my home. 3 to 4 years old. 340 Indiana or call VI 2-3473. 10-16
I would like to do ironing in my home.
Reasonable rates. Bring to 811 E.12th.
650-334-7292
Tremendous home furnishings savings.
Now shop Kansas City's furniture for the dealers do.
All you need is a free admittance card.
For further information, call VI 3-5010.
Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER
Income Insurance
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-5778. tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1501 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
Wednesday. October 11, 1961 University Daily Kansan
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more details, call Cia. Gla Smith
1-923-9125 Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
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. tjftc.com
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-754,
or 921 Miss.
Liberal Commission
Married Student To Work Part Time in Selling
$1.25 per hour guarantee
Regular hours
- Clean, interesting work
- Hours worked out to fit college student's schedule
Write giving name, age,
work history & phone to
111 Flint, Daily Kansan
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 755 Mass., VI
3-3644. tf
ADVERTISE YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
tive of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 11, 1961
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German Newsman Snatched by Reds
BERLIN—(UPI)—A West German newspaper said today one of its reporters was shot and kidnapped by Communist police on the East-West German border.
THE NEWSPAPER Dortmund Westfaelische Rundschau said its chief reporter, Kurt Lichtenstein, was shot in the stomach and dragged across the border near the town of Gifhorn.
The incident was reported shortly after 10 Communist policemen crossed into West Berlin early today while searching for a defector. West Berlin police chased the East Germans back across the border
Kennedy Speaks Firmly on Berlin
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. — (UPI) President Kennedy, sounding a Berlin crisis keynote of both firmness and flexibility, said today the United States does not "intend to let the free world be blown to pieces."
In a speech at the University of North Carolina, the President told the American people they could be assured of being "neither Red nor dead," if the country faces its risks "undeterred by fanatics at home or abroad."
IN THE NUCLEAR AGE, he said, it would be a dangerous illusion to think that American problems could be encompassed in a single slogan such as "total victory."
Now for the first time in history, he added, two powers have the capacity to destroy each other. And while seeking peace, he said, this country does not intend to let the free world be blown apart.
Kennedy's off-the-cuff speech to an audience of 35,000 in the university stadium was in effect a follow-up to his sombre press conference statement yesterday that "we happen to live in the most dangerous time in the history of the human race."
TODAY, HE SAID, it is time for the American people to face the issues of the world "as they are, not as we would like them to be."
The occasion for the speech was a convocation where Kennedy received his first honorary degree since becoming chief executive.
Kennedy told his audience that the United States today has problems "we never dreamed of 20 years ago." He added, however, that the nation was not going to be swayed from its course.
without gunfire.
The West German newspaper said its reporter was visiting a border point to gather news and was talking to East German farm laborers when an East German policeman shot him from a distance of 70 yards. The newspaper said another East German policeman then crossed the road into West German territory, grabbed the fallen reporter and dragged him into East Germany.
THE BERLIN border incident occurred early this morning.
West Berlin officials said four Red guards had' defected during the night.
Last night West German youths hurled stones and drove off a Communist firebate trying to douse a flaming cross put up at the spot where two East Germans died trying to swim to freedom
The Communist boat chugged to within a few yards of the embankment and turned a powerful stream of water on the cross, set up by West Berlin youths.
THE YOUNG WEST Perliners guarding the cross showered the fireboat with stones and it finally veered off into the middle of the river.
A sign by the cross says: "Here two men were hunted to death by Communist concentration camp guards."
Last Friday two East Germans dived into the stream and tried to swim the 150 yards to West Berlin. Communist police set out after them in a patrol boat. They shot one and he sank. The other swam a few more yards and then sank, apparently from panic or a heart attack.
West Berlin youths set up a round-the-clock volunteer watch at the cross.
Weather
Hot weather will return to Kansas tomorrow, with temperatures generally near 80. It will be humid tonight, with the low in the 60's.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No.20
Thursday, October 12, 1961
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Miss McMillen included People-to-People as one of the groups whose stand the ASC should endorse. The People-to-People representative who went to the Chancellor to ask him to stop listing renters who discriminate, David Barrier, Wichita sophomore, said yesterday he agreed with Chancellor Wescoe's stand to keep the housing list as it is.
The students who talked to the Chancellor Monday represented the Civil Rights Council, People-to-People, the International Club, the KU-Y, the Wesley Foundation and the Westminster Center.
Wescoe Not Given Support On Housing Stand by ASC
A motion supporting Chancellor Wescoe's "moral suasion" stand on housing was defeated 11-10 by the All Student Council last night.
RICHARD HARPER, Prairie Village senior, quickly brought up this point. "Are we to endorse two positions?" he asked.
An earlier resolution to endorse the stand of the six groups who asked the Chancellor to stop the University from listing renters who discriminate was tabled until next meeting. Oct. 25.
Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior, made the resolution to endorse the groups who opposed the Chancellor's stand. The resolution asked for the dropping of names of private renters who discriminate on the basis of race, color, or national origin from the University housing list
Miss McMillen replied that People-to-People had not taken this stand when her resolution against
"Moral suasion has not successfully resolved the problem of housing discrimination in the past," her motion stated.
After heated discussion over Miss McMillen's resolution, a substitute motion to support the Chancellor's stand was introduced by John Erickson, Clay Center senior. More debate followed, and the motion was defeated. Attention then turned to Miss McMillen's resolution to support the students who want the Chancellor to stop listing renters who discriminate.
the listing was made. She then agreed to strike this group from her motion.
Verne Gauby, Grand Island, Neb., third year law student, asked Miss McMillen "How many spaces would be dropped from the University housing list if renters who discriminate were eliminated?"
"You'd never deprive the student of any spaces, only the renters who discriminate from free advertising. These discriminators have no right to be listed on the University housing list," she replied.
"How many renters are discriminating?" Gauby asked.
"I don't know, but you can cheek this easily," replied Miss McMillen
"THEN THIS GROUP sponsoring the resolution has never made a study of how many renters are discriminating." Gauby emphasized again.
Arthur Miller, Pittsburg junior,
(not an ASC member) defended
Miss McMillen's position. "We know of, one for sure," he said.
Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, spoke against the resolution to step listing renters who discriminate:
"We'd just make it more difficult for students to find apartments," he said. "I don't think we'd be solving the problem, if it exists."
Then Erickson stood up and carefully phrased his substitute motion:
"I move the ASC accept the stand by the Chancellor of the University concerning the problem of off campus housing," he said.
"If the people know they will be dropped from the housing list, they will know the University does not condone discrimination. I urge a stand to get rid of having these houses on the list."
"I WOULD URGE defeat of this motion." Miss McMillen said. "By accepting this motion, you will be backing the Chancellor's position on this. I think the Chancellor's stand is wrong.
Another ASC member broke in, arguing that the University stand does not condone discrimination.
"THE CHANSELLER'S policy is such that it does not condone discrimination," Miss McMillen said. "But I would like to see some positive action taken."
Erickson, the sponsor of the substitute motion to back Chancellor Wescoe, carried on with the counter argument to Miss McMillen's motion:
"I think the University has had enough experience in housing to know what they are doing," he said.
Michael Thomas, Kansas City, Mo., junior, took issue with this point. "Then we should accept everything the University does," he said.
He continued:
"I think the University is condoning discrimination by helping people who discriminate get renters. I urge defeat of the substitute motion."
Palmer asked for a vote on the substitute motion to back the Chancellor's stand to keep listing the Lawrence renters who discriminate.
"Could we have a roll call vote on this?" Miss McMillen broke in.
AN INTERRUPTION forestalled a decision on her request. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, and president of the student body, asked to swair in three new ASC members before the vote was taken to avoid "irregularities."
The three were sworn in.
The ASC then took a voice vote on the resolution to back the Chancellor. The vote was about evenly split.
Miss McMillen: "I call for a roll call vote."
ter request was granted. The mo-
(Continued on page 12)
Bulletin
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is ready to meet Western leaders to settle the "present difficult situation," the official Soviet Tass news agency said today.
Tass said Khrushchev stated his willingness to attend such a meeting in a letter to Kaoru Yasui, chairman of the Japanese council against nuclear weapons.
Conservatives Organize KU Chapter of YAF
By Jerry Musil
The basis for a KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) was established last night in the Kansas Union.
Charles McIlwaine. Wichita senior and a national director of YAF, explained YAF and conservatism to about 30 students. Members were signed after the meeting.
The meeting climaxed planning which began last spring for the organization of a chapter.
YAF is a national conservative organization for college students and young people which claims 30,000 members on more than 125 campuses.
"YAF AND CONSERVATISM are synonymous." McIlwaine said. "The YAF was founded in Sharon, Conn., in 1960. The Sharon Statement sets down a positive plan for YAF and states our goals and principles."
He said the goals of YAF can be found in the past and future activities of the organization
THE COMMITTEES IN OPERATION NOW. McLwaine said, are a student committee for Congressional autonomy, which supports HUAC; a Committee for a Free Cuba, and one supporting the Committee of One Million, which wants Red China kept out of the UN.
"In the past, YAF went to Washington, D.C. and out-picketed the pickets for abolition of the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Last March, we filled Manhattan Center for an awards rally citing outstanding Americans," he said.
I am not a doctor. I am not a lawyer. I am not a historian. I am not a philosopher. I am not a scientist. I am not a politician. I am not a lawyer. I am not a historian. I am not a philosopher. I am not a scientist. I am not a politician.
ON THE LINE—Students sign up for new YAF chapter.
"The future is up to us. There will be a continuation of the fight for HUAC and Red China," he said.
Citing the opposition the Young Americans for Freedom will face, he continued, "We will be bucking a well-organized, well-financed liberal machine which has a big hold on the campuses."
"Being a conservative isn't in vogue today," he added. "We'll be bucking trouble."
CAUTIONING THE AUDIENCE on one point, McIlwaine said YAF is not now, never has been, or never will be, an arm of the John Birch Society. He added that the KU chapter will not be affiliated with the Society.
In a short question-answer session which followed McIlwaine's talk, students asked:
What is the Committee for a Free Cuba?
The Committee for a Free Cuba is a revolutionary council of students in Cuba whose goal is the overthrow of Castro, McIlwaine said.
ANOTHER STUDENT ASKED how many college chapters of YAF there were in the U?
McIlwaine said there were 180 college conservative clubs in the U.S. He added that some could not affiliate because of school rules prohibiting affiliation with a national organization.
Asked whether dues paid all the expenses or if the YAF was backed by an adult organization, McIlwaine said that the mailed material each member receives is much more than his $1 a year membership dues. He said the organization is
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 12, 1961
KU Students and Politics
Recent deliberation over continued affiliation with the National Student Association has uncovered the question of what is the political viewpoint of the average KU student. Is he liberal or conservative?
MANY PEOPLE ASSUME that KU, nestled in the heart of reactionary Kansas, could be nothing but conservative.
But the truth is that there seems to be considerable activity on both the right and left sides of the fence and a great deal of inactivity in the middle of the road. The average student certainly seems to be unconcerned about the issues that normally divide political thinkers into liberal and conservative groups.
IF ANYTHING THE LIBERALS seem to be the more active in campus organizations. Certainly most of the members of the Civil Rights Council could be considered liberals. There is also a liberal majority on the National Student Association committee.
But the conservatives cannot be counted out. About 30 campus conservatives met last night to organize a KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF). There are also conservatives in other campus groups such as NSA and, of course,the Young Republicans.
BUT THE TASK OF categorizing KU students into liberal or conservative is complicated by the large uninterested group that remains undaunted in the middle. This is the group that more truly represents KU's political viewpoint. Most KU students seem to actually be immune to the occasional bursts of political controversy that enshrouds certain campus issues.
This middle of the road group goes without a spokesman. It is characterized by unconcern and inactivity.
THESE ARE THE PEOPLE who do not come to Current Events Forums, who are not interested in the Presidential Forum, who do not take part in People-to-People, who could not care less about the University's housing policy and who are not sure where they stand on disaffiliation with NSA.
So the average KU student is not actively concerned with civil rights, nor is he violently opposed to Social Security or medical aid to the aged. It is more likely that he has not crystalized an opinion supporting either the right or the left.
—Ron Gallagher
Red Chinese Expansion
An increasing number of factors indicate that the Southeast Asia area is going to be an even hotter trouble spot for the United States than it is now.
THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT has reported that large numbers of reinforcements are joining the Communist guerillas already operating in that country. Because of the confusion in adjoining Laos, Communist guerillas are able to slip into South Viet Nam through that country. This has aided the Communists greatly in their stepped up activities and they can be expected to take full advantage of the situation.
This increased guerilla activity is due partly to the basic Communist policy of expansion and partly to the internal difficulties of Red China. Communist China has experienced bad crop failures for several years. This has led to widespread malnutrition among her nearly 700 million people. The commune system proved faulty and had to be modified. There are also signs that the enforced drive for industrialization has begun to wear down the people's nerves and endurance.
The Communist Chinese leaders want to
distract the attention of their people from these domestic problems and focus them elsewhere. A conflict in Southeast Asia is one way of doing that. And a basic long-range reason for the Communist offensive in South Viet Nam may lay in the fact that Southeast Asia is a food surplus area. It could help alleviate the food shortages China suffers from.
THE UNITED STATES HAS COMMITTED itself to the defense of South Viet Nam and is engaged in a program of military and economic assistance to that country. American military missions are training the South Vietnamese troops in the use of the American weapons they have received and in jungle warfare.
If the Communist guerillas continue to infiltrate across South Vietnamese borders, they might become too strong for the South Vietnamese forces to hold them back. The United States is working hard to avert such a situation. If it cannot, it faces the unpleasant choice of backing down or aiding the South Vietnamese forces and probably contending with Communist Chinese forces as well as the Red guerillas.
—William H. Mullins
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
A. Harnis
P-38
"YOU CAN KEEP THE 'A'—BECAUSE YOU WERE SO CLEVER THAT NO TIME DURING TH' EXAM WAS I ABLE TO DETECT HOW YOU WERE CHEATING."
Letters
To comment on the letter of John Ise concerning his ridicule of conservatives who are concerned that only one point of view is being taught, it must be pointed out that the refuge of the left wing liberals is always ridicule. When facts will not stand up and support their case, they must resort to ridicule and completely confuse the issue so that no one can understand it.
Love on Liberalism Editor
CONSERVATIVES ARE sometimes considered "stuffy." Perhaps this is because sticking to the facts is not always as funny as Dr. Ise would like to be as a way out liberal.
He has had his way for the last thirty some years in the welfare state, and still President Kennedy is talking about the millions of people who are going to bed hungry every night. Talking about the precariousness of old age and the need for more Social Security, when, as a matter of fact, the whole problem was supposed to be solved when we passed it back in the Thirties, seems somewhat inconsistent to me. They say we must have more of the entire liberal program. The only thing we are not getting more of these days is people who want to work hard enough to pay for all the liberal programs. Why work, if you can get something for nothing. Political Science, as a college subject, is a
(Continued on page 3)
the took world
THE UN-AMERICANS, by Frank J. Donner, Ballantine Books. 60 cents.
This is the paperback condemned so heartily by an official of the John Birch Society who spoke at KU recently. It's easy to see why. The book, a documentation of the "notorious House un-American Activities Committee," would make anyone who believes in those present day saints, J. Edgar Hoover, Martin Dies, Joe McCarthy, J. B. Matthews, and Francis E. Walter spit blood.
The book begins with the story by a New York Post correspondent, Mel Wax, who describes the San Francisco City Hall riots when students protested the HUAC's hearing there:
"I SAW IT HAPPEN. Never, in 20 years as a reporter, have I seen such brutality. San Francisco police hurled women down staircases, spines bumping on each marble stair. I saw one woman dragged through glass from a broken front-door pane.
"Two big cops seized a thin, gray-suited student from the University of California. One held him while the other hit him, again and again, in the stomach."
But wait. This Mr. Wax once went to Harvard, and Harvard, as everyone knows is the place where they preach and teach socialism. That fellow Frankfurter once taught there, too. Now, I'm not saying Mr. Wax is a communist. But if he congregates with ducks, talks to ducks and has his stuff printed in the Daily Duck's Advocate, well he must be a . . .
Sound familiar? We went through this about 10 years ago with a fellow named Joe McCarthy. In those days it was, "Kremlin dupe," and "fellow traveler." Now it's ducks.
Duck, non-duck or anti-duck, "The Un-Americans" might interest you.-NR
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
INTO THE FOREST, by Roderick Thorp. Random House, $4.95.
This is trash. It reads like a book that someone has paid to get published. These are harsh words, but I feel they are true ones. Roderick Thorp gives us only a book full of sex and sensation and confusion. I don't grasp what he is trying to say, so I can't comment on whether he succeeds in saying it or whether it was worth saying.
He has a fixation on college fraternities, but he obviously paints only the grimier side. His story possibly is a personal one; Thorp himself may be the hero, Charlie Cumberland (I suppose Charlie could be called the hero).
We have become accustomed to descriptions of sex, thanks to O'Hara, Cozzens and others. But Thorp gives us sex that has the impact of messages written on lavatory walls. Why a reputable publisher sent out this junk is the literary (I hesitate to use the word) mystery of the year.
A Friday meeting of the Kansas governor's committee on economic development brought to Lawrence a number of topflight state leaders, among them President James McCain of Kansas State University.
President McCain recently turned down an offer to take a high educational position for the state of Oregon in favor of remaining at KSU. KU was ever so fortunate to have Dr. Wescoe, then head of the Medical School, to elevate into the chancellor's office when Franklin Murphy went to UCLA.
One needn't be around men like McCain and Kansas University chancellor Clarke Wescoe for very long without realizing how fortunate this state is to have such men at the head of its two largest schools.
McCain's visit here Friday again reminded many of the excellent leadership KU and KSU are blessed with.—From Sept. 30 Lawrence Journal-World
LO
Guest Editorial
Wescoe and McCain
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown Business Manager
Don Gergick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Weins, National Advertising Manager; Charles Martinache, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager.
Page 3
Love -
(Continued from page 2) fraud in my opinion. Those who teach it are usually so biased in one direction that they can hardly express themselves except in their own limited opinions. Political Science, in most universities today, is merely an indoctrination of the left wing into the students. To show politics as a science gives an indication of how far we have drifted off the track. Dr. Ise also advocates hurrying to total socialism so we can avoid communism. The only difference in the systems, according to George Bernard Shaw, is that you will be liquidated peacefully under socialism, but under communism it will be rather violent. In any case, you will be liquidated, if you are not considered worthy of the trouble it takes to make you a model citizen.
THERE ARE MORE PEOPLE with Harvard accents who are taking to communism than those who wear overalls. The poor have never taken to communism except with reluctance. It is not in the city slums, but it is on university campuses that socialism and communism have been received most cordially. The average working man understands the leveling down process and he is not willing to work for the same wage as someone else. According to the theory, from each as he is able—to each as he has need, socialism appeals to the intellectually lost. It appeals, not where poverty is in material things, but where poverty is intellectual. The institutions of higher learning are actually halls of cultivated skepticism. Many of our youth lose the simple faith of their childhood, because of the browsing through the contradictory philosophies of confused intellectual giants. In their search for the truth, they merely establish their own confusion. Having lost their philosophical anchorage and their theological orientation, because doubts are continually thrown at them in terms of cultivated skepticism, they are ripe to conversion to socialism or communism. The scientifically proved dogma of dialectic materialism, supposedly proves everything, and they think they have a cause to live for—that is, the conquest of the world. Are we going to eliminate poverty in the Congo over night? Will these social planners not wait? Are they going to be able to explain that it was not the Belgians in the Congo who made the sun so hot, the rain so wet and the jungle so dense? What will be their excuse as they fail completely and as the people in Africa find out that socialism and communism are devoid of all humanitarian thoughts and that, in these two systems, man exists only for the state?
IT MAY BE, in our system, that some screens need fixing and the faucets may leak. But, if the roof is on fire, where should our attention be focused? And I ask, are those who insist on distracting us with leaky faucets really performing a great service?
None of us have the privilege, no matter how good we believe we live our life, to tolerate the injustices being inflicted on the world by the Communist-Socialist planners, who intend to rule everyone by force.
Robert D. Love Wichita
(Editor's note: Mr. Love is a member of the hierarchy of the John Birch Society. He spoke on the Birch Society at a recent Minority Opinion Forum.)
On Housing
Editor:
The weak housing policy of the University gets weaker and weaker. What is happening? Has the great University lost its courage of conviction? You say that you do not condone segregation, you say that you abhor the practice of it, but yet every instrument of the institution bans out a louder noise in advertising segregated housing. Why is this? You cannot say one thing and mean another. Are these frivolities and technicalities that must be overlooked? Is this the price that must be paid to satisfy our good neighbors? No!!
Let's get out and clean our house, and do some leading and maybe our neighbors will be shamed into doing a little cleaning of their own.
Farewell to Hemingway
There was no eulogy at the graveside for Ernest Hemingway. There was no need for one.
Ivory V. Nelson Shreveport, La. graduate student
There are two things in "A Farewell to Arms," and they are the same two things that are in everything Hemingway writes—love and war. We must admit that the affair with Catherine Barkley didn't do the same thing to us this time that it did when we were much younger. There is a reason. Let's face it, Hemingway's women are projections of the erotic imagination. Catherine Barkley says as much. "I want what you want. There isn't any of me any more. Just what you want." Young men, like older men too long at the front or too long in a hospital from wounds, all dream of having a Catherine Barkley some day. Most of them don't, at least not for long, and eventually they learn to accept real women, and even to enjoy having them around. Hemingway appears never to have given up that dream. Under it all, the tough guy is an incurable romantic. Let those who have never known that dream call it a fault in his writing.
Thursday, October 12, 1961 University Daily Kansan
HEMINGWAY IS A romantic about war, too, and no other living writer has been able to remember and to write about the terrible beauty of the old-fashioned kind of war that was still human so well as he. At one point in his magnificent description of the retreat from Caporetto he tells how he does it: "I was always embarrassed by the words sacred, glorious, and sacrifice and the expression in vain. We had heard them, sometimes standing in the rain almost out of earshot, so that only the shouted words came through, and had read them, on proclamations that were slapped up by billposters over other proclamations, now for a long time, and I had seen nothing sacred, and the things that were glorious had no glory and the sacrifices were like the stockyards at Chicago if nothing was done with the meat except to bury it. There were many words that you could not stand to hear and finally only the names of places had dignity. Certain numbers were the same way and certain dates and these with the names of the places were all you could say and have them mean anything. Abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were obscene beside the concrete names of villages . . . the names of rivers, the numbers of regiments and the dates."
Simplicity, economy, and precision enable Hemingway to control actions and emotions that tend otherwise to become chaotic. This is both his style of writing and what he is writing about. If Hemingway may be said to have a message, it is surely that in a world of uncertain values a man must have at least some kind of discipline for himself, one small piece of order amid the general chaos. It may be fighting bulls, it may be catching a big fish, it may be whatever the man himself chooses. And if a man has that discipline, as Hemingway has to a degree that approaches perfection in his writing, if he is serious about even one thing that is important to him, then it doesn't matter if he is foolish about other things. (Reprinted from The Reporter, July 20, 1961)
Draftees Wanted by Defense Dept.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)The Defense Department asked the selective service system yesterday to provide 20,000 draftees for the Army in November.
The same quota previously was set for October. The September draft totalled 25,000 inductees.
touthern 125000 in draft quotas set since the start of the Berlin crisis—the four months beginning in August—
now stands at 78,000.
Before the crisis, the draft was calling up men at a rate of 6,000 a month.
The department said the Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps will continue to rely on volunteers through November.
The November quota brought the total Army draft since September, 1950, to 2,680,950 men.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 12, 1961
CommunistBattleFlares In Laos, South Viet Nam
BANGKOK, Thailand — (UPI) — Western military sources said today the Communists may try to rekindle the flames of battle on two Southeast Asian fronts with the approaching end of the Monsoon season.
In Laos, the Communist-fed Pathet Kao rebels are reported stockpiling arms and food in their northern "capital" at Xieng Kuong.
THERE ARE FURTHER reports, not officially confirmed, that the Communist Chinese are building up their ground and air power in provinces just to the north.
In South Viet Nam, Communist guerillas have maintained harassing attacks against the forces of President Ngo Dinh Diem despite several major victories by the government in recent months.
Cuba, U.S. Cannot Coexist Says Rusk
MIAMI BEACH — (UPI) — The United States will never accept peaceful coexistence with Fidel Castro's Cuban government, Secretary of State Dean Rusk said yesterday.
"There is no prospect whatever, Rusk told newsmen.
The Secretary said U.S. officials are in "close consultation" with member Latin American nations of the Organization of American States (OAS), and hope for concerted action against Castro by the OAS.
Rusk would not say what this country would do if the OAS fails to act. But he said President Kennedy's statement that the United States would act alone against Cuba "if necessary" still stands.
"Cuba has made its commitment to forces outside this hemisphere and, as President Kennedy has indicated, this is not negotiable," Rusk said.
Queen Likes to Cook Out
LONDON - (UPI) - Queen Elizabeth has adopted an American custom-the cookout.
The Queen has taken to serving guests at Balmoral Castle steaks and chops cooked by Her Majesty over an outdoor grill, British newspapers reported today.
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IT WAS FOR these reasons, apparently, that President Kennedy announced in Washington yesterday he is sending Sen. Maxwell D. Taylor to South Viet Nam this week.
The Communists have been laying the propaganda groundwork for renewed fighting. Peiping radio and North Viet Nam's broadcasting station have been pouring out over the airwaves charges that the United States is preparing to stir up warfare in the two countries once the monsoons end.
Plaza KU Campus Blue Ridge
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THIS IS a familiar Communist tactic for blaming the other side in advance for something the Reds plan to do themselves.
A Communist victory in either Laos or South Viet Nam would almost surely result in the Red engulfment of the other and put another 16 million persons behind the Bamboo Curtain.
This would place the Communists on the borders of Thailand — now a strongly pro-Western nation — and neutral Cambodia and threaten the fall of all Southeast Asia to Communist domination.
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Doubt Still Exists About Spaceman
WASHINGTON - (UPI) - Discrepancies in reports from Russia still leave room for doubt that Yuri Gagarin was the first man in space, according to Col. John G. Powers, public information officer for the Mercury Astronaut Program.
He emphasized that he was not claiming Gagarin did not make the flight. But he said some degree of doubt still exists among U.S. scientists.
But there are no doubts, he said, about Soviet Cosmonaut Gherman Titov's repeated flights about the earth. Detailed Soviet information on that project jibed with what the United States learned about it, he said.
LONDON—(UPI)—The Western Allies have agreed to put off plans for a Western Big Four foreign ministers meeting, it was officially disclosed today.
Big Four Conference Off
The Foreign Office spokesman said such a meeting "is not planned at the moment."
INSTEAD, THE UNITED STATES,
Britain, France and West Germany will consult in their ambassadorial group in Washington, headed by U.S. Undersecretary of State Foy Kohler.
The other western powers are represented by their ambassadors in Washington.
The spokesman said there would be a "pause" in major decisions until after the Moscow Communist Party Congress opening Oct. 17.
The Allies were awaiting Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's speech at the party congress which they expected would deal with Berlin and any possible East-West negotiations for the settlement of the conflict.
EARLIER IT HAD BEEN expected the Western Big Four foreign ministers would meet in a fresh effort to align their policy and strategy for dealing with Russia in the Berlin crisis.
It was now anticipated a new round of East-West consultations will begin in Moscow immediately after the party congress, probably before the end of this month.
British officials indicated U.S. Ambassador to Moscow Llewellyn Thompson will do the "probing" of Soviet intentions for the West.
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Around the Campus Museum Addition Plans Nearly Done
Plans are nearing completion for the addition to the Museum of Natural History.
Keith Lawton, director of the physical plant, said working drawings are now in the final stages. Bids will be taken within 60 days after plans have been approved by the state architect's office he said.
The addition, which will extend north of the present structure toward the Kansas Union, will contain offices, classrooms, and research facilities for the zoological and biological sciences.
Mr. Lawton said the exterior of the 4-story addition will be of limestone and the architecture will harmonize with the existing building. Construction will begin within a year.
Discussion of UN Problem at Forum
The death of Dag Hammarskjold and its effect on the United Nations will be discussed by Roy Laird, assistant professor, and Klaus Pringhein, instructor, both of the political science department at the Current Events Forum. Friday at 4 p.m. in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
Upperclassmen Must Keep Parents Home Saturday
Saturday will be Parent's Day at KU, but the festivities are intended only for parents of new students, Prof. Paul E. Wilson, chairman of the event explained that if parents of all 10,000 students showed up "we'd be embarrassed for the lack of accommodations."
Business? It's quite simple. It's other people's money.—Alexandre Dumas The Younger
Algerians Seek Action For Sahara, Bizerte
TUNIS, Tunisia — (UPI) — Algerian Rebel Information Minister Mohamed Yazid today called for resumption of negotiations with France on the future of Algeria, but demanded that the French first recognize the Sahara as part of Algeria. In an exclusive statement to United Press International, Yazid said:
"Obviously no accord is conceivable unless France recognizes the integrity of the Algerian territory, with our Sahara included in it."
"WE CANNOT conceive of serious negotiations that are likely to reach a fruitful end unless from the start there is agreement on the territorial definition of Algeria.
Meanwhile, Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba announced he had sent a note to the French government calling for negotiations on French withdrawal from the huge naval base at Bizerte.
BOURGUIBA TOLD the Tunisian National Assembly, "The free world does not need Bizerte for its collective defense."
He said President Charles de Gaulle himself "recognizes that it is not part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization."
"That is why I think the best defense of Bizerte is the withdrawal of the French troops," Bourguiba said. "Russia would not launch any attack against this base if it were not occupied by foreign forces. Therefore, this base must be evacuated so that Tunisia is not compelled to fight a new bloody battle and to modify its policy."
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Vox Populi, a campus political party, will start work soon on a married student directory for residents of Stouffer Place.
Vox Populi to Publish Stouffer Directory
The directory will have a cross-reference system, using an alphabetical listing of names, and a consecutive listing of apartment numbers. Each listing will also include unit numbers, and telephone numbers.
The directory should be out by Oct. 21, Thomas Bornholdt, Topeka sophomore and chairman of the directory committee, said recently.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 12, 0961
University Daily Kansan SPORTS DUs Lose to Betas; Delts Triumph,13-0
The interesting and close struggle for dominance in the fraternity A division of intramural football play continued yesterday as two undefeated teams dropped their first games.
genius.
Delta Tau Delta rebounded from its lone defeat last Friday to dump Kappa Sigma, 10-3, and defending champion Beta Theta Pi downed Delta Upsilon, 7-0.
THE DELTS TREW UP a tight defense against which only one score has been made all season to stop the losers with little yardage.
Gymkhana Will Be Held Sunday
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club is holding a Gymkhana this Sunday at 1 p.m. in Zone O, opposite Allen Field House.
Registration time will be from 12:30 to 2 p.m. on Sunday with the first car running at 1 p.m. Entry fees will be $1.50 for members and $2.50 for non-members.
The Gymkhana is an event in which each car races individually against time. This event is being held to promote interest among students. The majority of the club members are students.
There will be three divisions of racing cars and a co-driver is required to ride with each one.
Trophies will be awarded to the winner of each division. The three divisions are: (1) Cars under 1700 cubic centimeters, (2) cars over 1700 cubic centimeters, and (3) economy compact cars.
In case of rain causing the surface of Zone O to become wet and muddy prior to the race, the event will be postponed until the following Sunday, Oct. 22.
Steve Lunsford, Prairie Village sophomore, opened the scoring for the Delts and Bob Moutrie, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, raced over with the clincher which put the Delts in a second place tie in the closely contested Division I with Delta Upsilon and Kappa Sigma.
The Betas slipped across a score in the fourth period to beat the hard-fighting DU's who had managed to hold the champions on an even basis throughout most of the game.
THE DECIDING SCORE was put across by Warren Leitch, Leavenworth senior.
In the only other A game Newman won by forfeit from the Hawks, in the Independent League.
In fraternity B play, Alpha Kappa
Lambda shut out Kappa Sigma, 26;
Phi Gamma Delta No. 2 slipped
ast Triangle, 12-0; Phi Delta Theta
beat Beta Theta P No. 2, 19-9.
Hutchinson Is Given Honor
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Fred Hutchinson, who led the Cincinnati Reds to their first pennant since 1940, was named the National League's Manager of the Year today by the United Press International's board of baseball experts.
Hutchinson, who took a team that had finished sixth in 1960 to an amazing triumph before losing in five games to the New York Yankees in the World Series, was the choice of all 36 experts. He succeeds Danny Murtaugh of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who won the honor in 1960.
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Thursday, October 12. 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
French Interpretation Given by Peyre
In a world where absolutes have been destroyed, mankind may still be able to find salvation from chaos and death in a universal language of art.
This is the interpretation given the life and works of Andre Malraux Tuesday night by Henri Peyre, professor of French literature at Yale University, at the first of the current series of Humanities Lectures in Fraser Theater.
The absolutes that have been destroyed for Western man and which have sent him searching desperately for new universal values are rationalism, progress, success and even Christianity, Prof. Peyre said.
THE YALE PROFESSOR, described in an introduction by Reinhard Kuhn, associate professor of Romance languages, as "a man who has read everything," lectured on his subject for one hour and 20 minutes at a rapid-fire pace and without reference to notes.
"Malaux," Prof. Peyre said, "has tried to find the common bond between East and West and the Northern and Southern hemispheres, to tie up the Humanities in one great universal entity." The universal language for this bundle of humanities is art.
"To Malraux," Dr. Peyre said, "the duty of a modern man, to become an intellectual, is to pass from the realm of thinking to the realm of action."
MALRAUX'S ENERGIES NOW Prof. Peyre, are directed to "finding a new language, to effect a breakthrough in the humanities the same as that which has taken place in the sciences."
Malraux's thesis is:
What is tragic is not that the
world may be destroyed. What is tragic is the most lamentable and regrettable display of inhumanity exhibited by man to man.
Continuing his interpretation
Dr. Feyre spoke in French on "The New Novel in France" Tuesday afternoon at Swarthout Recital Hall.
HE EXPLAINED HOW THIS new novel was a reaction against the traditional psychological novel of Proust, Gide, and other turn-of-the-century writers.
Praises Novel
After a word about the young novelists, such as Michel Butor, Nathalie Sarrute, Marguerite Duras, and Claude Simon, he said their most important idea is that they want to observe reality, objects, and extricate themselves from the states of mind of each writer.
Dr. Fevre felt the new literary force opposes the intellectual novel of writers who want only to express themselves with no interest in communication with the public; they want to write for the public. Their aim is creation of a novel which can be understood by everyone. These modern novelists wish to give the public something stable and comprehensible. For these reasons their novels seem impersonal and systematic, only because they want to maintain an objective point of view.
DR, PEYRE CONCLUDED, saying that the modern French novel has a universal mode of expression, joining closely abstract painting and motion pictures. He said that, in spite of publicity given this new novel, he was confident of its future because it had come at a time when the novel had to be renewed.
the French scholar, author and critic,
the humanities lecturer said.
"We can only succeed in saving ourselves by bringing to bear all forces of the past ...the very best in our past and not just our race ...and find there the means to leap forward.
"A GREAT MAN is he who leans far back into the past to spring far ahead into the future."
Prof. Peyre said the absolute which was the Christian civilization has now disappeared, for better or for worse. In the 18th and early 19th century, man began to doubt the absolutes. The product was the Age of Relativism.
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But Malraux is not a pessimist.
There is more than death. Mal-
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 12. 0961
Page 8
McCormack Is Top Contender For Speaker
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WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Rep. John W. McCormack was ruled the top-heavy favorite today to succeed Sam Rayburn as the Democrat and Speaker.
Comedy told a news yesterday that it would be unwise for him or anyone else outside the house to "attempt to indicate a preference" among potential candidates.
HOUSE DEMOCRATS PROBably will have to choose a new leader when Congress reconvenes in January. Rayburn, 79, hospitalized in Dallas, is suffering from incurable cancer complicated by pneumonia.
McCormack's foes generally conceded that strict White House neutrality would just about assure him the top party post, but some of them insisted that the fight was far from over.
McCormack has ranked second to Rayburn in the party hierarchy for 21 years, serving as majority floor leader in Democratic Congresses and as Democratic whip in Republican-controlled Congresses.
Some Kennedy advisers and northern Democratic liberals contend that the 69-year-old McCormack would not provide the leadership Kennedy needs to get a reasonable facsimile of his program through the House.
Should McCormack move up to the No. 1 post, there undoubtedly would be a battle for the job of floor leader which he now holds. Probable contenders in such a scrap would include Rep. Carl Albert. Okla., who now holds the No. 3 post as party whip, and Rep. Richard Eolling, D-Mo., who has served as Rayburn's chief lieutenant in the powerful House Rules Committee.
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Page 9
Rebellion in Colombia
BOTOGA — (UPI) — President Alberto Lleras Camargo clamped martial law on Colombia last night in hopes of putting a stop to attempts at subversion such as yesterdays' short-lived "Lieutenants' Revolt."
to
volt. Lleras announced his proclamation of a "state of siege" — equivalent to what other countries call martial law — in a nationwide broadcast.
THE DECREE ESTABLISHING the national emergency said recent disorders at various points in Colombia had in some cases amounted to virtual "open rebellion" against the government.
the government "Although all of them have been
CRC Challenges Wescoe's Policy
The Civil Rights Council last night instructed its barbershop committee, headed by Robert Bosseau. Pittsburgh junior, to visit the Chancellor to ask him to use moral sasion on the Campus Barbershop. 1237 Oread Ave., one-half block north of the Kansas Union.
An off-campus barbershop may give Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe an opportunity to test his policy of "moral suasion."
George Buford, Kansas City senior and co-chairman of the CRC, told the Council last night that he had been refused service at the barbershop.
He said that on Oct. 2, he and Thomas Moore, secretary of the KU-Y, had gone into the shop and Buford was told he could not be served. He said the barbers said they did not have the proper equipment to cut Negro hair.
"AFTER WE TALKED TO THE harbers for awhile, they all shut up and wouldn't talk to us." Buford said.
sair.
"The claim that special equipment is necessary to cut Negro hair is not true," he said.
However, a barber at the Campus Barbershop said this morning the shop could not cut Negro's hair.
"WE JUST CAN'T DO IT. It takes someone who has done it before. We have tried to cut their hair before. You can't even get a comb through their hair."
Steve Baratz, Lawrence graduate student and former chairman of the CRC, said at the meeting last night that barbershops are one area where the CRC has been ineffective.
the CRC has been made a fine place for the Chancellor to use moral suasion," he said.
Denis Kennedy, Lawrence graduate student and CRC member, said it was deplorable for "a business which has 90 per cent student clientele to discriminate against Negro students."
Gov. Anderson May Come Here
Jerry Dickson, Newton sophomore, and chairman of the Young Republicans at KU, says Governor John Anderson may visit the campus in November or December.
Dickson, who is going to Topeka to speak to Gov. Andersen, said he will invite him to a "recognition dinner" to be held on the campus in November or December.
"We are hoping for the first week in December," he said.
In December, he said that the dinner date will be set at the Governor's convenience.
brought quickly under control, there is always the danger of continued attacks on the nation's democratic institutions," the decree said.
Lleras promised that he would use his emergency powers only to restore order.
THE PRESIDENT BLAMED his troubles on a "black international" grouping including extremists of both left and right — Communists and ex-dictators or "retired or in exile."
Lleras's reference to ex-dictators appeared to be directed at ex-President Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, who has been campaigning vigorously in the provinces despite an order forbidding him to engage in political activity.
Auto Wrecking & Junk
New & Used Parts and Tires
East End of 9th Street
VL 3-0956
It might also include ex-President Laureano Gomez, who has lived in Spain most of the time since he was overthrown by Rojas.
PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Robert Welch, founder of the Birch Birch Society, said last night the late Sen. Joseph M. McCarthy was a victim of a "Communist smear."
Bircher Leader Says 'No Attack'
"No patriotic American could object to McCarthy's methods, but no dedicated Communist could support them." Welch told about 400 persons at Carnegie Institute.
The retired manufacturer said Communist Russia will never attack the United States because it would start a revolt in the satellite nations and other countries dominated by Communists.
He said the Reds plan to wreck democracy by forcing it to adopt policies that would make America "indistinguishable from any other socialist country." ___
Thursday, October 12, 1961 University Daily Kansan
They that die by famine die by inches-Mathew Henry
NSAMembers Seek Protection
WASHINGTON—(UPI)Two students who were beaten up in McComb, Miss., yesterday asked the Justice Department today to help protect their colleagues engaged in a voter registration campaign in McComb.
Carl Potter of Philadelphia and Tom Hayden of Atlanta reported to Justice Department civil rights officials today on circumstances of yesterday's beating.
CARL HAYES, a plumber, has been charged with assault and battery in the case. Police in McComb said that Hayes, a white man, had admitted the attack on the two but claimed their car almost ran him down.
Potter and Hayden flew to Washington today. Both are connected with the National Student Association voter registration drive in McComb.
Edward R. Garvey, president of NSA, arranged their meeting with Burke Marshall, chief of the justice Department's civil rights division. Garvey said there were indications police had "conspired" to permit the beating of Potter and Hayden. "They surrounded the car but did nothing," he said.
HOMOGENIZE THOSE CYCLONES, JAYHAWKS!
ATTEND
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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14
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VI 3-5511
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 12, 1961
Still No Hope for Rayburn Despite Gain
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, dying of cancer, was making a "miraculous" recovery today from pneumonia which put him in a coma only 24 hours ago.
John Holton, Rayburn's administrative assistant, jubilantly described Rayburn's improvement as miraculous. A bulletin issued by Rayburn's doctors before noon, said:
"Mr. Rayburn is out of coma. He is definitely improved and the major change occurred this morning. He looks and appears stronger this morning and recognizes his family and associates. His temperature is normal. His pulse, blood pressure and respiration have remained unchanged since the change for the better."
Jack Paar to Leave Nightly TV Show
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Jack Paar will leave the nightly Jack Paar show next March but will return with a weekly show in color the following fall, National Broadcasting Corporation announced today.
TV Executive Vice President Walter D. Scott said the Monday-to-Friday late night show will continue without Paar. Another master of ceremonies will be announced later.
"NBC is delighted that television's most talked-about personality . . . will be back for the 1962-63 season, and for seasons to come." Scott said.
He said the new weekly program will have comparable format to the nightly show, will be live and in color, and will continue big-name guest attractions.
RAYBURN'S BASIC AILMENT—the cancer which has spread through at least half his body—remains the same. There is no hope.
Doctors hoped that by giving Rayburn an experimental cancer-remission drug they might slow the progress of the malignancy enough to allow him to return to his Bonham, Tex., home to spend his last days.
They had given him three doses of the special drug when the pneumonia struck yesterday. They had to stop the drug and fight the pneumonia.
HIS TEMPERATURE went up to
103 degrees. He was in coma. But with the help of a breathing machine, oxygen and antibiotic drugs,
"Mr. Sam" began to recover.
Dr. Robert F. Short, Jr., a personal friend of Rayburn, is in charge of his case. Rayburn is in Baylor University Medical Center.
"He is wide awake," Holton said today after Dr. Short issued the 11 am. bulletin.
Rayburn had taken three one-day doses of the experimental drug "5 Fluoro-Uracil" when the pneumonia developed and the drug had to be discontinued. With it, doctors hoped to arrest the cancer enough in
U.S. Has No Crime Network
"There is a syndicate in operation, or call it whatever you want, but every city has its own criminal operation." Kennedy said. "On occasion they meet and discuss overall problems."
He said the crime problem in Kansas City is acute, but not any more dangerous than in other cities throughout the nation. He refused to comment on a question whether Kansas City is a "criminal playground." The Attorney General replied, "that would be a matter I wouldn't want to discuss."
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — Attorney General Robert Kennedy said here yesterday there is no nationwide crime network in the United States, but that various local criminal efforts get together occasionally for summit conferences.
Kennedy said the Department of Justice is continuing its crime investigation here, including the bombing last spring of Battalion Fire Chief Stanton Gladden.
He said Rayburn began responding to questions last night and that his temperature began dropping—approaching normal. It was the pneumonia, he said, that caused "Mr. Sam's" condition to be changed from serious to critical.
10 to 14 treatments and build up the Speaker's strength sufficiently to let him leave the hospital and spend his remaining days at home.
SHORT SAID Rayburn has not been told he has cancer.
He said the Department of Justice is attempting to coordinate crime-fighting efforts and that his meetings with department officials from Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska, were to discuss recently-passed federal legislation.
Short said the pneumonia was considered a "major" setback.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination:
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
by Oct. 11.
Official Bulletin
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships:
1962-63. Applications due Oct. 20, 306
for medical examinations to be made
immediately at Watkins Hospital.
TODAY
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 12 Oktober, um fuern ihr in 502 Fraser. Herr Liljebladh aus Schweden spricht. Auch gibt es Erfrischung spricht.
Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast. 7 a.m., Carterbury House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
7:30 p.m., Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union.
Third in a series of studies on the life of Christ.
He and other physicians had hoped that the "5 Fluoro-Uracil" would prolong his life weeks or perhaps months. Rayburn had been anxious to leave the hospital. His family would like to take him back to Bonham to spend his last days in his white colonial home and watch the white-faced cattle on his ranch that he loves.
episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
SHORT SAID the pneumonia had no relation to the "chemotherapy"—the treatment with the cancer remission drug. He said he had called four or five experts across the country and "they all agreed this was the drug of choice (to use)."
President Kennedy made a 3,100-mile round trip Monday to visit Rayburn. Short said former President Truman had called and said he wanted to come to see Rayburn.
THE CATACOMBS
BUT HE SAID that even if Truman came now, he would not be able to talk to the Speaker.
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A nurse found Rayburn in a coma yesterday morning. When it was discovered he had developed pneumonia, the hospital announced his condition was critical.
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His sisters, Mrs. W. A. Thomas of Dallas and Mrs. Robert Bartley of Bonham, rushed to his bedside.
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Here is a fine movie-set in Kansas during the flapper-frantic twenties with a human and personal story that presents a timeless, uplifting theme.
No matter how you feel about it, you will be thoroughly entertained by what may become the most talked about picture of the year!
This movie is strictly for adults.
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Page 11
Lost: A Brent (trade name) size 40, tan with brown lining raincoat was taken from the Hawklet coat race and field between 10:40 a.m. and 10:40 a.m. Leonard Nelson is printed inside the collar. Please contact or return VI 3-8113. 10-16
LOST: WITTNAUR works works between Pearson Sch. Hall and Snose. Lost 1:00 Tuesday. Call Dave Brack. 1428 Alumni Place, VI 3-8153. 10-16
LOST: Believed lost in Malot area;
dark green reversible jacket. Reward.
Call VI 3-8126. 10-12
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versl略 slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Feward tr
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water for
closed paper bags. Picnic supplies.
plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3-
0500
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center--most complete shop
west. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern-
service -- open weeks days 8 to 6:30
p.m.
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc. — aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 Conn., Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
HELP WANTED
REGISTERED NURSE. Full time, night,
for intensive care unit. Call director of
nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
VI 3-3680. 10-17
Wanted: Baby sitter for three small children in our home. Four hours daily Monday through Friday. Call VI 3-3117. 6-8 p.m. 10-13
FOR SALE
45' 2 bedroom Mobil Home loaded with extras: 1960 Voxhall transistor tape, corder; 1970 Voxhall wired tape & Herms II - 2-0560, or 7th & Arkansas — Green Mobil Home. 10-18
HI FI FANS: Dayin Teppads. Model T 257-6, $7.50 each. P. C. Patton, 7332 Nall, Overland Park, Kansas. 10-16
STANDARD SIZE CRIB and mattress for sale $10.00. Call VI 3-2729. 10-13
Cams: Robert Redding Firearms, new & used guns and ammo. Special this week gmm German Luger. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 10-18
University Daily Kansan
1855 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 dr. Power str. & brakes. Clean, excellent cond. Must sell now. Ask for David. VI 2-2356. 1116 Miss. 10-17
10' x 50" TRALER for sale. Colonial style with washer & garb. disp. 2 hdrm. Decide your own down payment. Call VI 2-
1425.
For Sale: Floor lamp, oak arm chair, oak
swivel chair, spartum size washing
machine. Call VI 2-0429.
10-12
Registered Siamese Kittens, 1045 Vermont.
10-16
POWER MOWER. 3 HP Clinton engine,
24" blade, $40. Rug with pad, 12x17
brown tweed, $75. Call VI 3-0003. 10-12
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tt
1958 PONTIC ACHIEFT 2-dr. or 1958 Chev. Impala Convertible. Both with R. & H. automatic trans. Both in excellent condition. See at 1705 Ky. 10-11
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30% Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes. Zerex only 88c per cal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's - 929 Mass. St. 10-18
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount
the back of the back 'Backer's Motorola Store' - 929 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb rp's as low as $50 each.
STEVEN 22 Automatic Ritef. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m.
Car For Sale: 52 *Buck*. $50.00. Dynafish.
Call V1 2-5480 after 12:30 p.m. tf
10-18
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second car. Old Dodge in good running condition. $150. Call VI 3-4291. tt
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collars, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tf
FOR RENT
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. $94.00 and up.
Service on all make typesetter. adding more printing and printing and
graphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co. 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-
0151 today. tf
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1097. 10-28
SINGLE ROOM FOR MAN STUDENT:
large rm., walk-in closet, private bath,
good heat, priv. garage,意念,
house priv. kitchen, one cell of food.
house priv. week. Only student in house.
Location 2 mi north of Kaw Bridge. Call
Mrs. Lewis, VI 3-0944 immediately. 10-13
FURNISHED APT., east side, utilities
pd. $50. Also single room close to
campus, for boys. $27.50. Call VI 3-6934.
10-17
For Rent: Private comfortable basement room. 1/2 block from campus, for rent to mature male student. Phone VI 3-3077. 10-16
For Rent: TRAILER, 45; 2 bedrooms.
Inquire at the office, Bingham Trailer Court, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or after 6. Call IV 3-9304. Prefer couple. 10-16
APT STYLED ROOM for two senior or grad. women students. Mahogany paneling, built-in TV, priv. entr. & liness furn. Kitchen priv. avail. Within walking dist. from KU. Must see to appreciate. Call VI 3-8147 after 6 p.m. 10-12
ROOMS FOR BOYS, clean, comfortable & quiet. PHI V 1-3719. 10-12
ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR furnished apt.
Private entr. private bath. well located
in 900 block of Indiana. Phone VI 3-8361
days or VI 3-9027 after 5. 10-12
BEDROOMS, living room, dining room,
kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, un-
furnished, newly decorated. 439 Elm. Call
VI 3-3602. 10-12
APTS. FOR MEN. Off street parking.
Priv, bath, entr. Ph. VI 3-9792 or VI 3-
2979.
10-13
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air con-
man. Gas stove. Fence. Fence.
30 month. 221 Moundview Dr. Phone
i 3-5882 after 5 for appl. tr
LOOKING. FOR SOMEONE to help me
say hi, Louis Thursday or
Call VI 3-5205
10-13
TRANSPORTATION
Need ride to Kansas City week days.
Working hours 8-5. Call 2-3672. 10-18
RIDE wanted to Topeka. Monday and Wednesday mornings. Call Jerry, VI 3-4594. 10-12
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Volpi, VI 3-8571
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to choreograph her dissertations, these and demonstrations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marlhay, HI. V. 3-218. tf
TYPING
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, letters, stencils and carbons rather than plain text. Standar rates. Call Patty Coester, VI 3-8679. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type lesse term papers, terms and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. trs
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric cop writer, fast accurate word processing. Mgr. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI2-1648. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI2-1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-8136. MS. Lloyd
dehbach.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuals and artworks; provide service. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485.
TYPING; Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term paper reports, publications. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. tt
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students, Executive Secretarial Service, 557 Eve, Washington, HE 2-7175. Evens or Sat R-2-2186
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng major, Bach or doctoral degrees accurately. Standard rates. See Mr. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3.
MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' Now at two
10:22 AM 10:22 PM 10:22 PM 10:22 PM
Lawrence Ave. &. 10202 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICES
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression with clients." For example, when using standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Rus-
sell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 **
SHOES COVERED TO MATCH your favorite dress. Call Mrs. Broughton, VI 3-2729.
10-13
SENIORS - Need photos for employment applications? Phone Larry Margolis. VI 2-3474 after 3 p.m. 10-17
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Save Money
RALPH FREED
Would like Ironing to do in my home. 15c a piece; also want child to care for in my home. 3 to 4 years old. 340 Indiana or call VI 2-3473. 10-16
Income Insurance
I would like to do ironing in my home.
Reasonable rates. Bring to 811 E12
10-16
Thursday. October 12, 1961
Tremendous home furnishings savings.
Now shop Kansai City's where the
best deals are dealer do.
All you need is a free admittance card.
For further information, call VT 324-1060.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-644. tf
Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete two diagrams, comprehensive charts,
and time saving charts.
flandy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553. vi
1-5778.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call I-2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
Complete
TRAVEL SERVICE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. - VI 3-0152
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. $393% Mass, Call VI 3-5263. tt
SENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 8-1267.
Try the Kansan Want Ads
ALTERATIONS -- Call Gall Reed, VI 3-
751. or 921 Miss. ___ tf
American United Life offers exclusive
STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE
Morris Kay VI 3-7114
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your child. I would be glad to play with your girl who would love having playmates. We have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island VI 3-8140.
NEED HELP?
+
Outline your requirements, and let us display it on type and style similar to this and other display ads on this page. Display ads stand out and are more easily read than those in body type. Send your ad to the University Daffy Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, or call it in. KU 376.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 12, 1961
Conservatives Organize-
(Continued from page 1)
financed from voluntary contributions from throughout the country.
ARE THERE ANY OTHER chapters in Kansas?
There are chapters in Hays, Pittsburg, Emporia, Manhattan and one chapter forming in Wichita.
When asked to define a conservative and a liberal, McIlwaine said a conservative is a man who likes to determine how his money is spent and a liberal is somebody who likes to determine how somebody elses money is spent.
Patrick H. Allen, Lawrence law student, was appointed temporary chairman of the organization until permanent officers can be elected.
Dizzy Gillespie Protests KC Bias
(Continued from page 1)
KANSAS CITY — (UPI) — Jazzroan Dizzy Gillespie, his short-cropped goatee fairly bristling with indignation, said today he is planning court action against a downtown Kansas City hotel which barred him from a swimming pool because he is a Negro.
"I'm sick and tired of this discrimination bit," the 43-year-old trumpeter steamed at a 20-minute news conference he called to "get some publicity" for charges that the Continental Hotel allowed him to register as a guest but refused to let him take a swim.
The pool is owned and operated by the Kansas City Athletic Club
Wescoe-
CHARLES MENGHINI, Pittsburgh senior, and co-chairman of the CRC, was recognized by the chair.
tion failed, 11-10, and the ASC went back to Miss McMillen's bill to stop listing renters who discriminate.
"In this finding out who is discriminating. . . Last spring we (CRC) took a poll of 100 renters. Sixty per cent of them were discriminating. The CRC will make arrangements tonight to take another poll. There is a problem here. If any student thinks there isn't, he should talk to a few Negroes on campus," Mengzhilin said.
(According to a Daily Kansan report of the CRC poll last spring, 43 per cent of Lawrence landlords listing on the University housing list will not rent to Negroes. This figure is based on the CRC query of 100 landlords selected at random from the University housing list. Fifty-eight per cent of the landlords interviewed by white students, said they would not rent to Negroes. Thirteen per cent told Negro interviewers they would not rent to Negroes.)
Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior, moved to table Miss McMillen's bill to stop listing discriminators. "This situation has been overplayed, and the Chancellor has probably been backed into a corner. I move we table this bill for the time being," Gallagher said.
The motion passed.
In later action, the ASC voted that the housing committee and the human rights committee make a study of off campus housing and discrimination. The committees' report will be given at the next ASC meeting.
Frank C. Kiehne, field representative of the Peace Corps, will be at KU Monday and Tuesday to confer with students, faculty and townspeople interested in the Corps.
Peace Corps Official To Be Here Monday
Students may make appointments for personal conferences with Mr. Kiehne by contacting the office of the Dean of Students, 228 Strong Hall. The conferences will be in the Pan-American Room of the Kansas Union.
Mr. Kiehne will hold a group meeting with students at 4 p.m. Monday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. He will meet with faculty and staff members at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 210 Strong Hall.
Page-Creighton
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-7694
Motor Tune-ups
Lubrication $1.00
All Major Brands
of Oil
which has a rule banning membership and use of the tank to Negroes.
Gillespie has been a hotel guest for the past 10 days while his jazz combo has been playing at the Mardi Gras nightclub in the heart of Kansas City's negro district at 19th and Vine.
English Pro Tonight
M. BARRY SMITH
Students enrolled to take the English Proficiency examinations should report to the rooms assigned on their IBM cards at 7:30 tonight.
Tell the truth of trump—but get the trick—Mark Twain
NOT JUST DREAMS
but well laid plans come true. Are you planning for the future? Investigate New York Life Planned Security.
See
DWIGHT L. SICKLES
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Insurance Building (opposite Post Office)
Lawrenceville
Phone: 314-567-8454 OR 314-2150
Life Insurance • Group Insurance • Annuities • Health Insurance • Pension Plans
Seniors to 'Stomp' Saturday Night
Seniors of 1862 will launch togetherness festivities Saturday night with a "stomp" following the SUA Carnival at the Big Barn west of Lawrence.
The rock and roll, come as you are affair will feature Jack and His Missiles, an Oklahoma City combo that beat Kansas' own Rodney and
the Blazers in recent rock and roll competition in St. Louis, Mo.
Those who have paid their $10
senior fee are asked to present their
optional ID card at the door. All
others will be charged one dollar.
The noblest motive is the public good-Virgil
TRY SOME TONIGHT
HOT DONUTS 8 TO 12
Delicious bakery treats
412 W. 9th
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VI 3-4720 for delivery
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Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, October 13, 1961
59th Year, No.21
Negroes March in Protest
WHERE CAN
WE LIVE?
CLAIRE RUSSON
MOTIVES CHILDREN
NORTH SHORE
MOTIVES CHILDREN
Seventy-six Negro students march down Jayhawk Blvd.
Seventy-six Negro students marched through the heart of the campus at 12:45 this afternoon, protesting the housing policy of the University administration.
Most other students, hurrying back to classes after lunch, took only passing notice of the marchers.
The Negroes carried signs reading,
"Where will we live?" "There is a
housing shortage," "We, too, are
students," and "What about our rights."
Hit Housing Policy
WHEN THE GROUP reached Strong Hall, Elmer Jackson, Kansas City senior, and Bob Turner, Rochester, N. Y., graduate, took the declaration upstairs, headed first for the dean of students office, turned, walked to the chancellor's office and presented the declaration to the chancellor's secretary.
They then returned to the group which was waiting quietly in front of Strong.
(The full text of the declaration appears on page 3.)
tears on page 12
The protest centers on a contro-
Around the World
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - The Atomic Energy Commission is getting ready to resume nuclear tests in the atmosphere in case President Kennedy rules that national security demands it, informed sources said today.
They also reported that this country has set off considerably more underground explosions than the three which have been publicly announced since resumption of U. S. tests in Nevada last month. None has loosed radioactive fallout as the Soviet tests have.
***
BERLIN — Communist police firing at nine refugees who rammed their truck to freedom through a barbed wire barricade pinned down five U. S. army MP's and 14 West German police today with a barrage of machinegun and rifle bullets.
No one was hit in the incident but the pre-dawn shooting by about ten Communist police (Vopos) was considered one of the most serious since the Aug. 13 border closing because U.S. troops were involved.
***
ORAN, Algeria—French soldiers fired on a Moslem mob today to quell bitter new rioting between Moslems and European settlers in this west Algerian port city.
Five Moslems—one of them a little girl—were reported killed in the clash. Many other demonstrators were wounded.
tors were wounded Police arrested about 400 rioters and took them to headquarters for an identity check.
***
WASHINGTON—President Kennedy met for 90 minutes today with his top policy advisers to discuss the Berlin crisis and presumably the question of whether U. S. troops should be rushed to South Viet Nam.
The President's session with his National Security Council came amid reports that he was "far from convinced" that American troops should be sent into South Viet Nam's mounting battle with Communist guerrillas.
Confused Reaction to Marchers
By Scott Payne and Clayton Keller
It was quiet at 12:45 today in the main lobby of Strong Hall. Students were bent over books at the tables and talking quietly.
Three girls were talking on the front steps just inside the door.
"WHO DID YOU CALL, Judy?
Who did you call?"
Just then the marchers came into view.
"Come on, Judy . . . look, look!
What's happening?"
"Golly!" Judy said.
One man said, "Oh, No! Freedom riders!"
A FEW PEOPLE stood up and looked out the door. Many paid no attention. Two men went outside and joined in conversation with demonstrators.
SOMEONE HEARD A disturbance. Everyone stood up—some on the rails—looking down the street.
"Let's go down there," one suggested.
"No, here they come," came the reply.
TWO WHITES CAME down the street. A group of their friends cheered.
As the Negroes came into sight, the crowd quieted. Someone muttered, upon seeing the placard at the front of the march.
"Here come the leaders," someone laughed.
"One guy has his sign turned around. What's the deal?"
The spectators paused for a minute, as if expecting something else to happen. Then they too began to disperse.
The spokesmen for the marchers came out of Strong. The Negroes dispersed.
ONE BOY ASKED, to nobody in particular;
"Gee whiz!" he said, reading the sign. "Where can we live?"
"Well, if they can't say anything—" a girl said disgustedly.
"I'm late for class," a boy said.
"See you later, Sue." said a girl.
--the marchers lined up in front of the entrance, facing the door.
By Arthur Miller
These observations were made inside and in front of the Kansas Union before the marchers arrived and as they passed:
12:15—Two students overheard
inside the Union made these comments to each other:
"Have you heard about the marchers?"
"Yeah, personally I would like to see them march right down the campus and into the river."
12:27—Two other students commented on the march. One said he heard the march was to start at the Theta House.
The other's reply: "Can't you imagine the Thetas helping them?"
12:35- The traffic flow began to pick up on Jayhaw Boulevard as
12:23—(outside the Union)—Everything was quiet, as usual. A campus police car with two officers, was parked nearby.
students and staff began to arrive for classes and office hours.
12:38- The Marchers were first visible coming north on Oread Ave, about a block and a half away.
12:40- Several students gathered on the sidewalks as the solemn marchers approached. The observers were silent. Most pedestrians looked casually at the demonstrators and continued on their way.
AT THE INFORMATION BOOTH, down the street, the music began and a student on top held up a sign advertising the Student Union Activities carnival. "Hear ye, hear ye—" came from the loudspeaker in the information booth.
★ ★ ★
Marcher Feels Justified
By Richard Currie
"We are a corporate body of people disagreeing with the Chancellor's stand on housing. We feel that as a state institution the University should not condone racial discriminatory practices," the Negro student said quietly.
He walked slowly, grimly. His face bore a look of resoluteness, of purpose. Dressed in a brown jacket and orange shirt, the Negro, Delbert Glover, Savannah, Ga., graduate, appeared at ease when he left the Kappa Alpha Psi house.
He joked with a marcher next to him, who carried a sign saying, "What about our rights?" His fists were clenched.
UP THE HILL he went toward the Rock Chalk Cafe, his gaze fixed on the ground. When he rounded the corner of 12th and Oread he glanced towards Westminster Center. Then he began staring at the ground again.
Calmly, carefully he walked, side by side with the other 75 marchers. Near the Union he brushed a fly from his face.
Past the Art Museum, he responded calmly to the applause his group received from six faculty members.
Confidence was in his face—unshakable confidence in his eyes, his gait and in the swinging of his hands as he walked down the sidewalk on Jayhawk Boulevard.
Dr. Wescoe answered that for the time beng, at least, the policy would not be changed.
versial policy of the University housing office which lists all rentals in Lawrence, including those landlords who may refuse to rent to Negro or foreign students.
The group approached Strong Hall. His eyes became misty. He looked at the people lined against the railings of Jayhawk Boulevard. They stared at him.
Monday, seven students asked Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to instruct the housing office to stop listing the rooms of landlords who discriminate
He walked across the lawn. Just where the lawn ends, he looked up at the top of Strong Hall.
In front of the steps he took a position in the last row of students. He put his hand in his pocket and waited.
He made way for a passageway to be formed so other students might pass through the group. Then he put his hand to his chin and gazed at the heavy doors of Strong.
sued at the heavy doors of Strong. After the students dispersed, he turned and walked away. "I feel justified," he said firmly.
nor be changed. Dr. Wescoe told the students that
James Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, said today in answer to a reporter's question:
"I really can't answer any questions about the march or the declaration because I haven't seen either. I just learned of it a moment ago when my secretary told me about it."
Chancellor Wescoe was in Boston today.
'one gains more from moral suasion han from edict.'
THE MARCHERS gathered at 12:30 in front of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity house. Moses Gunn, St. Louis graduate student, addressed the group.
The marchers carried a sign with the words "Moral suasion" crossed out. Underneath were the words, "More shelter."
Most of the marchers wore suits and ties.
"When we get on the campus," he said, "we do not talk, we do not smile. This is a silent march."
and uses.
The group was almost silent as it waited in the living room of the Kappa Alpha Psi house. Most of the girls studied, some talked among themselves. One girl read her weekly Western Civilization assignment. A fraternity member concentrated on a set of notes marked "Beware! Test Wednesday."
As the group moved out of the fraternity house, there was no laughter. Eyes were straight ahead. Some non-students were in the group. They were men in their 30's and 40's.
A spokesman for the group said 12:30 had been chosen as the best time to start the march because more students than usual would be on the sidewalks, going to classes after lunch.
THE NEGROES had two meetings to plan the march. Ten students, representing all the large Negro living groups, met Saturday.
More than one hundred Negroes were reported to have met Wednesday night for two hours, where they decided on the wording of the declaration to be given the Chancellor. They also voted to have the march.
"WE EXPLAINED that anyone at the meeting who did not want to march would not be considered an outcast, or anything like that," explained a spokesman, Moses Gunn, St. Louis graduate student.
"But no one disapproved the idea. We voted unanimously to march," Gunn said.
Besides Gunn, those students who spearheaded the march are Turner, Nolen Ellison, Kansas City, Kan., junior; A. W. Smalley and Ivory V. Nelson, Shreveport, La., graduate students.
TURNER WENT to see the Chancellor Saturday night. Turner told the Chancellor he represented no group, but had come to learn for himself how the Chancellor felt about the housing situation.
Turner indicated last night that the conversation he and Chancellor Wescoe had was inconclusive.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
The U.S. and Cuba
Secretary of State Dean Rusk made a very interesting statement on Cuba last Wednesday. He said the United States would never accept peaceful coexistence with Fidel Castro's Cuban regime.
THE UNITED STATES, he said, is negotiating with the member nations of the Organization of American States (OAS) and hopes for concerted OAS action against Castro. But he added that President Kennedy's statement that the United States would act alone against Castro if necessary, still stands. This stand has been taken, Secretary Rusk explained, because Cuba had made its commitment to forces outside the hemisphere, an action that is not negotiable.
This statement of policy is important because it indicates the basic United States attitude toward Communist intrusions into the Western hemisphere. Castro must fall because he has committed himself to the Communist bloc. And, by logical extension of this statement, no nation in the Western hemisphere would be allowed to attach itself to the Communist bloc or cause as long as the United States can prevent it.
The United States will proceed cautiously, as
Secretary. Rusk's statement about negotiations with OAS members shows. President Kennedy does not want another failure like the April invasion and he would prefer that whatever action is taken against Castro has the approval and active participation of the OAS. But in the final analysis, the United States will act alone if it has to.
If unilateral action were taken, it would probably come in the form of a new invasion of Cuba by another force composed of Cuban refugees from Castro's regime, supported by whatever U.S. forces are necessary for success.
THIS MAY SEEM LIKE a hard position to many of the Latin American countries in particular and to many other nations not directly concerned. But Fidel Castro and his advisers are in large part responsible for that position. They deliberately confiscated American property without compensation, harrassed American officials and newsmen and moved Cuba toward the Communist bloc in international affairs. These actions and many others like them made the United States opposition to their regime inevitable.
-William H. Mullins
The Need for Physical Fitness
KU seems to be faced with a dilemma of physical fitness and physical education.
New programs for physical fitness are being started in grade schools and physical education course requirements are being stiffened in high schools in an effort to "keep up with the Russians."
ON THE COLLEGE LEVEL, Bud Wilkinson football coach at Oklahoma University, was named special adviser on physical fitness to President Kennedy. Other college officials around the country have expressed their concern for student health.
At one college in Kansas, freshman men attend physical education classes at 6:30 a.m.
Everyone recognizes the problem. Chancellor Wescoe offered a suggestion for the KU student in his convocation address—let the student walk more; he will be more healthy in the long run if he does.
AT KU, HOWEVER, the facilities for physical education and a fitness program are out-dated and inadequate. And little can be done about improving plant facilities for some time.
A lack of funds make constructing a new gymnasium almost impossible; a new/building was not on the "priority list" sent to the legislature.
There are other ways to get funds, but state funds seem the most logical.
NO MATTER HOW IMPORTANT proper gymnasium facilities are to the student and administration, there is little that can be done. Other buildings, such as replacements for Strong Annex, come first.
To put a new gym ahead of these would be "unrealistic."
But the physical fitness of American college students today is also "unrealistic."
The University must serve not only the minds, but also the body.
A University whose classroom facilities are outmoded cannot fully serve the student and his intellectual pursuits. Nor can a University whose physical education facilities are outmoded serve the student.
—Carrie Merryfield
letters to the editor
Creeks and Discrimination Editor:
There is an invisible muzzle over the majority of the KU undergraduates which binds their individualistic feelings and actions. This muzzle or inhibitory force
Dailu hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
truweekly 1985, daily Jan. 16, 1912
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the week. Sunday's, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
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is the specter of social ostracism exerted by their Greek groups which insist on certain set policies, some dictated by their national charter.
Members of these groups are inhibited from active participation in social issues, such as discrimination per force of social pressure within these groups. Members who might be concerned are afraid to act because they themselves will have to face the questions of their tellow memoirs. They themselves are living in groups that practice discrimination.
What is the use of starting anything around here if the majority of people are bound to principles which support the continuance of discriminatory practices? To whom is one responsible—oneself or one's group?
Eugene Gold
Chicago Graduate
Student
* * *
Call For Action
A friend told me that the University's housing policy could well make us enemies in the future. Here was her point:
"Suppose we get a student from one of the new African countries and he is turned away by a Lawrence landlord who refuses to rent to Negroes. Just think what happens 10 years from now when that
MY FRIEND IS A WELL-meaning person, but she misses the point completely. The policy is morally wrong, not politically dangerous. It erodes a little of you and me when our fellow man is turned away because he is black, because he subscribes to minority doctrines. The Negro in Mississippi who may not sit anywhere in a bus, the black child in Alabama who cannot attend a white school, the child who is forced to sit through a religious service of another faith . . . these are our responsibilities.
WHEN DO WE ACT? WHEN we can persuade the white supremacist that the black man deserves a chance? When the Klansman puts down his sheet and when the bigot admits his bias? Those who wish to wait may be deaf to their conscience. Or they may be trading their conscience for an admission card into the business community whose song is: Wait, wait, wait. You cannot legislate.
student is premier of his country. What's he going to think of the great freedoms we constantly talk about?"
On Other Campuses
Wait for what? Use persuasion on whom? Some people have been waiting *a* long time to be able to walk unafraid with head up.
NORTHFIELD, Minn.—Carleton College will begin a new three-course, three-term program this fall, which is designed to give greater freedom and flexibility to the students now seeking admission to the college. Under the three-three system, students will take three courses during three ten-week terms, rather than the heretofore two semesters, which averaged five courses of from 12 to 18 credit-hours per semester.
Instructional hours could be reduced to 15 or 16 per week, assuming at least two hours of assigned work done by students. This work would not be reviewed during instructional hours but would be properly covered by examinations. Actual student work would thereby be effectively increased, an honest 45- or 48-hour week.
CLEVELAND, Ohio - Every student should be exposed to learning from the minds of the best qualified members of the faculty, according to President G. Brooks Earnest of Fenn College. Taking as his subject "The Professor During the Coming Decade" . . . he points out that at the same time, a decent regard for the quality of the faculty and of advanced instruction suggests that all members, including the best qualified, should do the bulk of their teaching in classes of 15 or less.
Robert French Independence freshman
BETHLEHEM, Pa.—"A Christian college may be sponsored by a particular church or denomination, but its first obligation is not to the sponsoring body but to its own work as a college," according to Dr. James Heller, Moravian College dean-designate. "If by restriction or restraint the church stifles free inquiry in the college or in any way does violence to the necessary conditions of truly liberal education, that church forfeits its moral right to participate in high education," he said.
In bringing about this situation it is plain that something has to give. We cannot increase faculty teaching loads, but we can reduce student loads. These loads in many colleges are now approaching 20 to 25 clock hours. If the students actually prepared two hours for each clock hour of instruction, they would be working 60 to 75 hours a week. This means a ten or more hour day, six to seven days a week.
Students in the lower division (freshmen and sophomores) will be expected to devote themselves almost entirely to satisfying the requirements in general education. At the same time, provision is made for students to take at least one full year course in departments in which they may later major. One problem which prompted the consideration of the new system was the wide-spread tendency of students to postpone many general education requirements so that, during the junior and senior years when they should be concentrating on the mastery of a major field, many are still taking freshman and sophomore level courses.
Another major change resulting from the new program will be a shift in the basic unit of college work from credit hours to term courses. Instead of the 120 hours previously required for graduation, students will meet college requirements with a total of 35 term courses.
ALFRED, N. Y.—The College of Liberal Arts at Alfred University will be divided into upper and lower divisions, beginning this fall. The plan was unanimously adopted by the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts upon recommendation of the Curriculum Committee which had been studying the matter all last year. The change was announced by Dr. John W. Gustad, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts.
EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON
OXY
EATON
"Let's go down to the corner and whistle at girls."
Page 3
Castro Plotting Fake Invasion, Refugees Warn
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Diplomatic dispatches from Cuba said today Premier Fidel Castro may be plotting a fake invasion to "liquidate" imprisoned leaders of the unsuccessful April Pig's Bay attack.
The warning coincided with reports of a huge buildup of Castro armed strength, Havana radio warnings that invasion is "imminent" and an official alert of Cuba's 300,000-man Army.
ONE SUCH MESSAGE quoted Castro as having told its author there would be an "invasion" within 10 days and from three directions.
Cuban exiles revealed they have been warned of the possibility of such an intrigue in messages from Havana from friendly Latin American diplomats.
IN WASHINGTON, however, informed sources said a phony action more likely would be almed at "backing up" Cuba's recent United Nations charges of "aggression" against the United States and to divert national attention from the failing economy which is due to worsen because of drought.
Cuban Revolutionary Council President Jose Miro Cardona said he fears a "fake" invasion to give Castro a pretext to execute the men whose lives he now is obliged to respect under international law.
Miro said it is "obvious" no invasion of Cuba is in the offing. He recalled the April attack was "forecast" by U.S. news media weeks in advance. It is well known exiles are not in position for an "immediate" armed attack against Castro, he said.
Earlier this week, spokesmen for six governments accused by Castro of training invasion troops flatly denied the allegations.
SOURCES IN WASHINGTON confirmed Gander, Nfld., reports that Soviet Russia is daily moving "large numbers" of military and technical personnel by air between Prague, Czechoslovakia, and Havana.
Passengers on Cubana (official)
airlines manifests were identified by the
the Canadian Royal Mounted Police
as Russians, Poles, Czechs, and
communist Chinese as well as Cuban Air
Force personnel. ___
We glean spiritual harvests from our own material losses.—Mary Baker Eddy
Wise men ne'er sit and wail their loss but cheerily seek how to redress them.—Shakespeare
Friday. October 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Inasmuch as we too are members of the university family as well as citizens of the United States of America:
Following is the declaration the Negro students presented to the administration at the end of today's protest march:
Negro Declaration
And inasmuch as our ancestry in these United States dates back some 300-odd years;
And as it is our strong feeling that under a segregated system (or any system in which a certain group is oppressed) the individuals of the oppressed group cannot attain their potential;
And inasmuch as we feel a moral responsibility to our associates at the university in particular and to the world at large not to deny nor equivocate their rights.
And inasmuch as we too are capable of contributing to the overall culture;
We strongly urge that the university administration take immediate haste in recognizing its moral responsibility to all students of the university.
- The failure of the administration to take the necessary steps that would bring about the elimination of discriminatory practices used by local landlords when renting to members of the university family.
- The failure of the administration to take the necessary steps that would bring about the elimination of discriminatory practices used by local real estate agencies when selling property to members of the university family.
We state specifically the following grievances:
This is the opinion of Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism at the University of Kansas, in a series of articles he wrote for the Christian Science Monitor, Denver Post and the McClatchy Newspapers of California. He gathered material for the articles on his return trip from Costa Rica where he was a member of the K.U. faculty exchange group.
"CHANGE IS COMING to Central America." Mencher wrote, "abrupt and vast change. Central America seethes with excitement, for everyone knows the status quo is doomed, that far-reaching social, economic and political reforms are around the corner."
The key question, he writes, is how Central America will turn that corner, "by revolution, violent and bloody, or by evolution, slow and tentative?"
The United States is supporting conservative and rightist forces in Central America in the hope these regimes can bring about reforms without revolution.
US Hopes for Central American Reform
THE UNITED STATES is supporting the forces for slow change. "This has led the State Department to work with President Somoza
All have questionable backgrounds, but the United States is acting in the belief that these ruling groups "sincerely want social, economic and political reform in their countries."
in Nicaragua, the three-man Directorio in El Salvador and President Ydigoras Fuentes in Guatemala," the K.U. professor writes.
IN MANAGUA, where Prof. Mencher interviewed U. S. Ambassador Aaron S. Brown, the embassy is convinced that "Somoza is no dictator, that Nicaragua is not a dictatorship."
There is some degree of press freedom and political opposition in Nicaragua, Mencher found. But here, as in El Salvador and Guatemala, the basic freedoms can be denied with the scrawl of a signature under a document declaring a state of emergency.
Stay of Execution Sought for Andrews
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Atty. Gen.
William M. Ferguson today prepared to file in federal district court a motion asking that the stay of execution for triple-killer Lowell Lee Andrews be dissolved.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. French Reading Examination:
Saturday, Oct. 14, to 8, i.t. 11, Fraser 11.
Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m. Fraser 11,
Fraser 12, 10 a.m. Fraser 13, 10 a.m.
1982-63 Applications due Oct. 20, 306
Fraser. Reminder: appointments for
workshops made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
**Foreign Students:** If you wish to take courses in English, attend the Neoosh County UNESCO dinner and program, you should complete the 228 Strong Hall by Friday at 5 p.m.
TODAY
Foreign Students: Who are ILE-related are to meet in a group with Mr. Roe and Dr. Roberts at 10am Monday. Oct. 16 in the Forum Room, Kansas Union. Refreshments.
International Club Meeting: 7:30 p.m.
Community Building, 11th & Vermont
Slides, dancing, and refreshments:
Services: 7:30 p.m.
917 Highland, Dr. Price
TOMORROW
Soccer Game, KU vs Park College: Intram
Players meet at 9:30 a.m. at the field.
SUNDAY
Lutheran Services; 8:30 & 11:00 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m. Immmanuel Lutheran
Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m.
Wednesdays, Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Mass; 9 & 11 a.m., Fraser Hall.
(Newman Club)
Lutheran Services: 9:15 and 11 a.m.
Trinity Lutheran Church, 13th & New
**Oread Friends Meeting:** 10:30 a.m.
We are welcome to this silent Qunker meeting
Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Program to follow at 6 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church. KU Lutheran faculty members will preside. Prof. Charles Harkness, and Prof. Walter Sandelius will discuss:"The Characters in History . . Great Men or Pawns?"
MONDAY
Episcopal Holy Communion and lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House.
12 noon. Camberly High.
KuKu Pep Tide 6:30 p.m., Oread
Union
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Blake Razing Begins Soon
Blake Hall, born in controversy 66 years ago, will soon make way for a more modern and less-controversial structure.
Keith Lawton, director of physical plant, said plans are now being made for the razing of Blake and construction of a new building on the site. Removal of Blake will begin before next summer, he said.
BLAKE HALL WAS CON-structed in 1895, and its Chateau Renaissance architecture caused a furor at the time. Original plans called for a building which resembled Green Hall, constructed a decade later.
The plans, submitted by Lucien Blake, professor of physics, and an architect named Wells, were changed by the state architect because of "professional jealousy," according to a Daily Kansas article in 1919.
The building housed the physics department until the completion of Malott Hall in 1952. Since then, it has been used for storage.
AT ONE TIME it was planned that Blake Hall would be remodeled into a modern structure, but bids taken in 1955 were nearly twice as high as expected and it was decided to construct a new building.
AWS Freshman Elections Scheduled
The Associated Women Students will hold freshman elections Oct. 26 to fill four positions in the AWS governing bodies.
Two freshmen are elected to the AWS Senate and two are elected to the AWS House of Representatives.
The Senate representatives will be elected from all freshman women while representatives to the House will be elected from Corbin and GSP only.
The schedule for election is:
intensive. Petitions are due Oct. 16 for those interested in applying. A qualifying test will be given at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
There will be interviews in the Dean of Women's office for those persons whose names appear on the bulletin board outside that office. Interviews will continue until Oct. 18th.
Polling places will be set up in Miller Hall, Corbin Hall, and GSP Hall.
Students Manage Westminster Alone
Presbyterian students, left without a University pastor when the Rev. John H. Patton retired last July, are managing the KU Westminster Foundation with an experimental student-run program.
At Westminster Center, the students have taken over the responsibilities of a pastor except for delivering the Sunday morning sermon. They have arranged for guest ministers to appear at Sunday morning worship in a University pastor's place.
MELTON DENLINGER, Lawrence junior, said this student-run program is an experiment in worship and that it would test Westminster's status quo. The observations of the experimental program, he said, would be assimilated, evaluated and changed if necessary to work in with a new pastor's views of the program.
Denlinger said a new pastor has been selected for Westminster Center, but Denlinger declined giving the minister's name until the resignation from his church has been approved. The new minister will be at KU next semester.
The Rev. Mr. Patton retired July 30 after 15 years at KU as the Presbyterian University pastor. Rev. Patton received last year a study-leave-grant for special study of religious and cultural life in the Middle East.
THE CENTER IS operating at the same extent as if a minister
were present." A student is assistant minister for Sunday's church service. Another student is responsible for obtaining ushers and another for obtaining elders. Robert Phillips, Chanute senior, conducts a 25-voice student choir.
Denlinger explained that Westminster Center is able to function without a pastor because of its governmental system. The Westminster council, he said, made up of committee chairmen and presidents of worship groups, can operate whether a minister is present or not.
He said this council is the real governing body, the minister acting as an ex officio member. The minister in the past, he said, has acted as an adviser and as a balance between the larger and smaller worship groups.
BUT, THOUGH THE STUDENTS have taken over the minister's duties, they agree they need a pastor. Kent McCoin, Dallas, Tex., sophomore, said the students miss the personal relations with a minister and his religious guidance.
"He has training that we lack." McCoin said. "There are many things that we don't know as far as Bible study. If we didn't have the students studying for the ministry, we'd be lost.
The Center had to hire a cook," McCoin said. "The Pattons were in charge of the meals before and did all of our cooking. And now when we leave a room, we have to remember to put the furniture back
in place. It's straightened up by us now."
LARRY ELACKMAN. Leavenworth junior, said the officers of the worship groups in the Foundation were elected last year when it was learned the Pattons would not be back.
"We saw what was ahead of us," he said, "and we prepared ourselves. It (student-run program) has been going as smoothly as we expected, but it's not the same as having someone there all the time. There is a tremendous responsibility on the students. Every manager has to carry out his responsibility. When a student didn't do this before, the pastor stepped in."
Asked what the students had learned from the student-run program, McCoin answered:
"Leadership and knowledge as laymen in church. In part, we consider Westminster Center as a training ground for laymen. We try to experiment and find out what is most meaningful."
International Club
The meeting place for the International Club meeting tonight has been changed. The club will meet at the Lawrence Community Center at 11th and Vermont Streets.
Activities for the evening will include the showing of two films—one on Russia and the other on Western Europe. Both films are documentaries. A dance will follow the showing of the films and refreshments will be served.
Like hungry guests, a sitting audience looks.—George Farquhar
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A Time to Study; A Time to Relax
Season Kansan Page 5
Friday. October 13, 1961
Freshmen Say KU Not Too Difficult
MANY STUDENTS found the academics to be what they had expected or easier than they were "scared" into believing. Everyone agreed that most of their courses were challenging, although some of the students said that a few courses were taught on a high school level.
Daily Kansan interviews with 22 KU freshmen revealed they are satisfied with college life after one month, despite the extra work required in their courses.
Freshman English was a common subject for discussion. George Benson, El Dorado, said that a good background is essential in courses such as math, history, and English. Jeannie Head, Neodesha, said "English will be the hardest because I didn't do the same things in high school that we are doing in college."
Don- Magdanz, Omaha, Neb., said,
"It's not so much harder, but it takes
longer to study—four to five hours a
night."
Benson commented, "Up here you aren't wasting your time in classes all day. You can budget your time and get a lot more studying done during the day than you could in high school."
MARY FOARD, Prairie Village.
said, "Altogether I study about five hours each day. During the day I study in the library."
JOHN PAT ATKINSON, Topeka, said, "We don't have frequent tests like we did in high school. Now we have more emphasis on review, which consequently takes more study time."
Kelly Anderson, Riverside, Calif. said, "At KU one has to study, but in high school one could get by without studying. I spend about two hours of concentrated study each day. One has to do more than what's required."
Judy Sarazan, Kansas City, Mo. said, "Some classes are too big. It seems teachers hardly have time to come around and give individual attention to each student."
John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., added that "there is less chance for reliance on the teacher. There's more emphasis on individual research," he said, "your success depends on how you schedule your own time."
ALL OF THE STUDENT conceptions of the university were enthusiastic. Pam Stark, Salina, said, "I find KU is very relaxing and people are willing to help. I love it."
Marty Mitchell, Lake Forest, Ill. added, "It lives up to my conception of a university, but it is very conservative."
Lyn Rambo, Kansas City, Mo. said, "I really like it, the atmosphere is so friendly."
Kelly Anderson said, "I think that KU students are a little bit narrow-minded as far as their conception of moral behavior is concerned. They talk about what they do too much. Residence halls are underestimating the maturity of the individual."
Lois Borland, Altoona, closed with,
"KU seems awfully big."
PARENT'S DAY DINNER
SUNDAY, OCT. 15
Hotel Eldridge
All You Can Eat—Roast Beef, Baked Ham, Fried Chicken, Ribs with many taste tempting side dishes.
Noon — 3:00
Served by Candlelight in the Beautiful Crystal Ballroom — $2.25
Also Post Game Buffet Saturday — After Game — 8:00 p.m.
VI 3-0281
7th & Mass.
The image provided is too blurry and low resolution to accurately recognize any text. Therefore, I cannot generate a text from this image. If you have a clearer or more detailed image, please upload it so that I can better analyze and transcribe the content.
Joust into Medieval Madness!
Oct. 14, 6:30
Tickets ... 85 centeth
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
Married Life Changes 'Good Time' Charlie
By Bob Brooks
Where's Charlie? He used to be the life of all the parties.
There was a time when Charlie never missed a party and seldom ever cracked a book.
HE WAS A "GOOD TIME" Charlie.
Like so many other guys and gals his age, he had come to college mainly for the purpose of having a real good time while enjoying the freedoms that accompany being away from home.
When Charlie arrived at KU, he really didn't have much of an idea concerning what he wanted to make of himself. He just felt that a college degree was a necessity, and that once he had that degree his worries would be over.
CHARLIE JOINED A FRATERNITY. He had two or three dates every week, always with different girls. He spent money as if it were going out of style. He drank too much beer too often. He cut too many
classes, and when he did attend class he was usually unprepared.
But, he was a "good time" Charlie —the life of all the parties. Where's Charlie?
He's still here, and he's still having a good time.
Charlie has now become accustomed to the freedoms that accompany being away from home, and now his main purpose for being at KU is to get a good solid education while soaking up all the knowledge possible.
HE HAS CHOSEN a special field in which to major after carefully observing his aptitudes and the progressive fields in today's business world. Charlie still wants that degree, but he also wants to graduate with top grades to back it up.
Charlie now lives in an apartment. He is seen every so often at a weekend party, and always with the same girl. His money, what little he has, is spent wisely. He drinks beers occasionally, but never cuts a class and is always prepared.
Charlie has realized a position of
responsibility in this world. He has found himself. He has grown up.
Where's Charlie?
IS CHARLIE TYPICAL of any of today's students at KU?
Charlie is married.
What are some of the changes, if any, that occur when a student steps across the line and marries while in school?
Kip Robinson, Lawrence junior,
said, "Being settled down, I find I
am able to devote more time to
studies. Prior to marriage life I would
frequently find myself at the local
pub rather than home studying.
"On weekends we have been getting together with small groups of married couples for cards, charades or pizza parties, rather than attending the large social events," he said.
BILL GEIST, Lawrence sophomore, said, "Now that I am married, I definitely study more. My spare time is spent over the books. Before. I was busy with a fraternity and outside activities. The responsibility of a wife and child has tended to settle me down."
Tom Herlocker, Lawrence law student, said, "Married life hasn't affected my goals too much because I had my goals made up before I married. It has not affected my study habits adversely, because being in the law school I have to study at the law library.
"Married life has taught me one thing," he said, "How to fold diapers."
JIM TALLEY, LAWRENCE SENIOR, said, "I feel since I am married that I have fewer social obligations. I take my studies more seriously because I have more responsibilities and am closer to my goal."
Howard Parker, Lawrence senior,
said, "There is added responsibility
because you have to look after two
people instead of one. It is easier to
study because there is not as much
to do."
What is a frappé?
It is a French imported cigarette made for you, the imaginative student. This cool mint green menthol filter cigarette is for you if you want a new fresh taste in your smoking. Take the humdrum out of your smoking by buying and trying Frappe! They are sold at normal cigarette prices.
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GEORGE'S PIPE SHOP VI 3-7164 727 Mass.
Young Republicans Meeting Don Schnacke Senior State Republican Party Chairman
Will Speak in the
Jayhawk Room
8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17
All active and prospective members are invited to attend
Come in Before or After the Game and Try Our Delicious
Steaks
Barbecue
You will enjoy the informal western atmosphere and the friendly courteous service.
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Page 7
Queens, Skits Are Highlights Of SUA Carnival Activities
The crowning of a queen chosen from among 26 contestants will highlight the annual Student Union Activities carnival tomorrow.
The carnival, with the theme "Medieval Madness," will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The queen will be crowned at 10 p.m. during the "Queen's Finale."
Admission to the carnival is 85 cents, and tickets for the individual skis and booths will be 10 cents.
Queen candidates, representing soronities, dormitories, and scholarship halls, will take part in a parade down Massachusetts St. at 10 a.m. and will be driven around the track at half time of the KU-Iowa State football game.
the candidates, nominated by sororities, scholarship halls, and dormitories, will be elected at the carnival by popular vote.
The candidates are:
Donna Miller, Wichita freshman, G.S.P.; Carol Strickland, Kansas City, sophomore, Alpha Phi; Karen Lou Vice, St. John sophomore; Gloria Mays, Lyons junior,
Chi Omega; Sandy McHardy, Independence, Mo., sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi; Sherrill Murrow, Topeka sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta.
Kathy Reidel, WaKeeny junior,
Alpha Delta Pi; Julie Winkler, Caney freshman, Sellards Hall; Gayie Shilling, Salina freshman, Corbin;
Bobbie Evertson, Melvern sophomore, Lewis; Judy Clifford, Shawnee-Mission freshman; June Owens,
Altamont junior.
Sharrie Farrar, Kansas City, Mo.
junior; Martha Parmley, Wichita
sophomore, Kappa Alpha Theta;
Georgia Lonnecker, Kansas City,
Mo. freshman, Corbin; Kay Cash,
Cleveland, Ohio, Pi Beta Phi;
Mrikey Boucher, Kansas City, Mo.
senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Betty Ellen Dwyer, Wichita sophomore, Delta Delta Delta; Cynthia Ann Childers, Merriam sophomore, Sigma Kappa; Dorothy Kicker, Fairway junior, Lewis; Majel Eujen, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, G.S.P.; Mary Louise St. Clair, Independence freshman, G.S.P.; Susan Shottilff, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Watkins
One section of the History of Art course will be given in Spanish next semester, the first time in KU history a regular class has been conducted in a foreign language.
Art History Course Lectures in Spanish
Friday, October 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Miss Marta de Castro, visiting assistant professor from the University of Havana, Cuba, will teach the class.
The section conducted in Spanish is one of five sections of the course. Credit will be given in History of Art, not in Spanish. Students interested in enrolling may obtain information at the Museum of Art office.
There will be no specific language requirement, and students may preenroll in the class at any time. About 20 students are needed.
20 students in the school Lectures will be conducted in Spanish, and class discussion will be held in Spanish or English.
Hall; Sharon W. Euckner, Kansas City; junior, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Janet Woody, Springfield, Mo., senior, Miller Hall; and Margaret Eckler, Atchison sophomore, Douthart Hall.
AIRLINE DANCERS
All experience is an arch, to build upon—Henry Brooks Adams
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Coke, Coffee, Orange, Milk -- 10c
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Tickets
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FASHION SHOW
Tuesday Oct.17
Student Union
Ballroom
7:30 p.m.
Sponsored By American Business Women's Association
Proceeds Will Be Used For Scholarship Fund
Garland
Makes these mix or match combinations. See them Tuesday, along with the latest in campus, lounge, evening and bridal wear.
From
Hialey's
of Course
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
Once Victorious KU Cross Country Squad Faces Chicago Track Club
The Jayhawk cross country team, victors Saturday against NAIA champion Southern Illinois and Big Eight rival Missouri, tangle with the Chicago Track Club in the "Windy City" tomorrow morning. In the two club's last Chicago meeting the CTC ended a Kansas consecutive victory string of 21 straight.
LAST YEAR the Jayhawkers gained revenge by downing the Chicagoans 22-35. Pacing Kansas were Billy Mills, Bill Dotson and Charlie Hayward. Dotson and Hayward return this year.
Chicago has fielded the individual winner the past two times the clubs have met. He is Gar Williams who will be leading his club again Saturday. Behind Williams are Hal Higdon, veteran 10,000 meter man, and Deacon Jones, two-time Olympic steeplechaser from Iowa.
Ceach Bill. Easton's crew will carry another string of victories, nine, into the meet Saturday.
IN CHICAGO'S OPENER they defeated Nqtre Dame capturing 2-3-4-6-7 behind the Irish's individual winner Frank Carver.
THERE WILL BE ONE change for the Jayhawkers this meet. Sophomore Paul Acevedo will replace fellow rookie George Cabrera who is out because of a wisdom tooth extraction. Acevedo has been improving rapidly and deserves the promotion according to Easton.
"Acevedo made the team last Saturday," Easton said. The sophomore, running "white shirt" and not being counted in the final score, finished fifth among Kansas runners. Earlier last week Acevedo also placed fifth in time trials. Easton said it was these two factors that led to Acevedo's promotion.
Discussing last week's impressive victory the track mentor said it was "one of the best openers Kansas has had." Running against a strong opponent like Southern Illinois "taught us something about ourselves. The boys now know their possibilities."
THE CATACOMBS
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Phi Delta Theta whipped Sigma Phi Epsilon, 19-0, in the only fraternity A intramural game yesterday.
Phi Delts Shutout Sig Eps, 19-0
In independent A play, Stephenson downed Jollife. 21-0, JRP beat Templin, 28-6, and Jim Beam got past Quickicks. 12-5.
In fraternity B action, Delta Tau Delta edged Acacia, 1-0, and Delta Upsilon trounced Alpha Tau Omega, 25-6.
You're returning my Henry Millers . . . what does this mean, Huey? —Jules Feiffer.
New Ticket Record
For the second straight year, Kansas has reached a new high in football season ticket sales.
Final figures released by Athletic Business Manager Earl Falkenstien disclosed the Jayhawker front office sold 12,611 ducats for the 1961 home slate.
This is a jump of 948 over last year's record of 11.663.
JIM'S CAFE
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Up to shown want to come J given and the ball in toromorc Mitchel and give Cyclone KU on
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Along the JAYHAWKER Trail
By Bill Sheldon
Up to now the Jayhawkers have shown only meager signs that they want to play in the Orange Bowl come Jan. 1. Some evidence was given out at Colorado last week and there were flashes of good football in the first two games. But, tomorrow, look for Coach Jack Mitchell's squad to really open up and give the high-flying Iowa State Cyclones a lashing which may send KU on the path to Miami.
IOWA STATE COMES here with a solid, well drilled squad which is capable of playing with the best. The Cyclones have a devastating ground attack, a staunch defense and are tough in almost every phase of the game.
But, there could be one weak spot in the visitor's game. That is the passing game. Although there is no proof either way of Iowa State's passing ability, it shouldn't be as good as that of any teams faced thus far by Kansas.
Not that a win tomorrow would guarantee the Hawkers anything more than their initial win of the season, but it certainly would be a factor in giving KU some sort of momentum and spirit to carry to Oklahoma and through the rest of the season.
IOWA STATE IS UNDEFEATED.
scrapy, the probable underdog and possibly a little too eager for its own good. Any team which hasn't lost a game is always ripe for defeat.
Page 9
Defense will be KU's problem since the offense is good enough to run over most any team in the nation. Iowa State's single wing will be somewhat of a problem, but with the experience which KU has in its front line, the problem should be alleviated early in the game. Pass defense will continue to hamper KU but the Jay offense could compensate for that. A possession game wouldn't allow Iowa State the passing situation which might change the complexion of the game.
So, for some unknown reason, it looks like the Iowa State migration will be spoiled and thousands of Kansas parents will be treated to a thrilling win which will make other Big Eight teams finally realize the full potency of the Jayhawkers.
BUT, ALSO BE WATCHFUL for a KU collapse in the fourth quarter
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because Mitchell is planning to work his starting backfield both ways and they may be tired late in the game.
Tourism
All things considered, Kansas should swarm over the upstart Cyclones, 20-7.
University Daily Kansan
KU Sports Network Director Tom Hedrick and basketball Coach Dick Harp will go on the air at 1:15 p.m. tomorrow on the 35 network stations with the broadcast of the Kansas-Iowa State battle in Memorial Stadium.
Hawker-Cyclone Battle on Radio
Among the stations carrying the play-by-play account which is followed up by the interesting "Jack Mitchell Show," are these in the Lawrence area: KANU, Lawrence; KTOP FM, Topeka; KLWN, Lawrence; KMBC, Kansas City; KCKN, Kansas City; KJAY, Topeka
H
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Friday. October 13, 1961
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KU's soccer team opens its fall home season tomorrow at 10 a.m. on the field south of Summerfield Hall.
Soccer Match Here
365 Excuses
Park College, winner over KU in the season opener last week, will oppose KU again.
365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the meeting of the Town and Country Equestrians
TRY SOME TONIGHT
HOT DONUTS 8 TO 12
Delicious bakery treats
JOE'S BAKERY
412 W. 9th
VI 3-4720 for delivery
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
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University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
Queen Candidates to Be Submitted Today
Today is the deadline for submitting names for senior queen candidates.
Guy James Tice of the Alumni Office said that names for the candidates must be turned in to the Office.by 5.p.m. today.
The 1961 senior queen will be elected at a Senior Coffee, Oct. 18, and will be presented at half-time ceremonies during the Oklahoma State-KU football game Oct. 28.
Mr. Tice said that the only qualification necessary is that the candidate be a senior.
Theoloav Interviews Monday
Howard Hunter, director of admissions of the Boston University School of Theology, will be at KU Monday to interview pre-theological students. Students desiring an appointment are asked to contact Don Hull, director of Wesley Foundation.
New KU Handbook Planned
Plans for a new student handbook were released last week by Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, Winfield junior, and member of the ASC publications committee.
The handbook would replace the present "K Book" and sundry publications of various groups, Jarvis said.
THE PURPOSE OF the new handbook is to pull together all the small publications, condensing them into one book.
Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, originated the idea last August.
Dean Woodruff remarked, "The K Book we now have is a disgrace. What I would like to see is a hand-book that students would want to keep on their desk.
"BOTH THE ASC AND FACILITY Publications Committees are in
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ing was on leave of absence and visited Spain, Italy, Austria, Germany and France.
The Hilarious Characters of Dog Patch
"LIL ABNER"
Technicolor — From the Stage Play
— AND —
POSSE FROM HELL
AUDIE MURPHY IN EASTMAN COLOR JOHN SAXON
CO-STARRING
Augelli to Speak at Meeting
The ribald, impudent,
but always moving
account of the encounter
between a girl-of-
the-streets in a Grecian
seaport town...
and the American
who wants to rescue
her from her desperate
(or is it?) situation...
starring
MELINA MERCOURI
Laport Pictures presents
Never On Sunday
Written and Directed by
JULES DASSIN
POSSE FROM HELL
AUDIE MURPHY IN EASTMAN COLOR JOHN SAXON
CO-STARRING ZOHRA LAMPERT • WARD RAMSEY • VIC MORROW • ROBERT KEITH with ROYAL DANO
A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
THE HAPPY STREET-WALKER OF PIRAEUS...
The ribald, impudent,
but always moving
account of the encounter
between a girl-of-
the-streets in a Grecian
seaport town...
and the American
who wants to rescue
her from her desperate
(or is it?) situation...
MELINA MERCOURI
Lepert Pictures presents
Never On Sunday
Written and Directed by
JULES DASSIN
With the Academy Award Winning Song!
NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00
Cont. Sun.
VARSITY
MILTON COOPER
situation...
staring
MELINA MERCOURI
Lewist Pictures presents
Never On
Sunday
Written and Directed by
JULES DASSIN
John Augelli, professor of geography and director of the Latin American area studies program, will be a speaker at the Midwest Council of the Association for Latin American Studies meeting at the University of Illinois, Urbana, this weekend. Seymour Menton, associate professor of Romance languages, also will attend.
NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 Cont. Sun. VARSITY
VARSITY
Brooking to Discuss European Theater
Dean Woodruff explained that the handbook could be published for approximately 50 cents, but hopes that it can be distributed free to all new students.
charge of making arrangements for the new handbook," Dean Woodruff added.
Prof. Brooking will speak at 2:30 p.m. in the Green Room of Murphy Hall on "The Young Actor Learn His Trade in Five European Countries."
A preliminary index for the handbook is divided into two sections: "The University and "The Student."
The talk is based on Prof. Brooking's study of European theater schools during 1959-60. Prof. Brook-
Theater, as taught in Europe, will be discussed Sunday by Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech, at the University Players' October meeting.
When Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war.-Nathaniel Lee
HERE'S A POWERFUL MOTION PICTURE...
It may create controversy because it deals with a forbidden subject ...but "Splendor In The Grass" has been produced with Elia Kazan's usual skill: with great care... compassion... and magnificent cinematic flair.
Here is a fine movie-set in Kansas during the flapper-frantic twenties... with a human and personal story that presents a timeless, uplifting theme.
No matter how you feel about it, you will be thoroughly entertained by what may become the most talked about picture of the year!
This movie is strictly for adults.
The Management
10
1965
The Management
A. R.
1945
NATALIE WOOD·WARREN BEATTY
ELIA KAZAN'S production of
SPLENDOR in the GRASS
TECHNICOLOR
STORY BY WILLIAM INGE — FORMER KU GRADUATE
STARTS TOMORROW!
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7:00 & 9:15
Adm. 85c
LAST TIME TONITE
At 7:15 Only
Adm. $1.00
"EXODUS"
★★★★★★★★★★★★★.★
One day Al
KAPPA near Ma Theta h
Brown
in Malo
fold. Re
GRANADA
Lost: A with b from th field be Tues., C inside turn, V
LOST:
tween
1:00 T
Alumni
WILL 7 Versalp please between
For. Sa condi tti radio. Mech a tate. H VI 3-6
Winch shotgu VI 2-2
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5789
"PROI Model nois S
HI FI
257-6.
Overla
45' 2
extras
corder
Call 1
Green
Guns:
used
9mm
VI 8-
STAN sale. $
FOR let, 4 lots of EXCF DX s
Friday, October 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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.
LOST
Brown wallet type Billfold: Believed lost in Mallow area, keep money, return billfold. Reward, call Calvin Huff, VI 3-8021. 10/19
KAPPA ALPHA THETA sorority pln
alpha college alpha college and please use
Theta house. Reward 10-19
Lost: A Brent (trade name) size 40. ten with brown bining raincoat was taken from the Hawklet coat rack in Summerfield between 10:00 and 11:00. Lloyd Bernard Nelson is printed inside the collar. Please contact or return VI 3-8153. 10-16
LOST: WITTNAUR watch works between Pearson Sch. Hall and Snow. Lost 100 Tuesday. Call Dave Brack, 1426 Alumni Place, VI 3-8153. 10-16
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward: tf
For Sale: 1955 Pontiac Conv. — Good
condition, fair tires, good top, inferior
radio, heater, automatic transmission.
Mechanically excellent. See to appreciate.
Henry White Jr., 1145 Louisiana.
VI 3-6700. 10-19
FOR SALE
Winchester Model - 91 - 12 gauge pump
Wilson's condition - $40.
VI J-2533 after S-500. 10-19
*PROFESSIONAL* Geiger Counter
See at 153厅 10-19
pols St — Price $100.00 10-19
45' 2 bedroom Mobil Home loaded with extras; 1960 Voxhall transistor tape recorder VI-2-650, or 7th & Arkansas Green Mobil Home. 10-18
HI FI FANS: Davin T-pads, Model T
FANS: Davin T-pads, Tatson, 732. 10-16
Overland Park, Kansas.
Guns: Robert Redding Firearms, new & used guns and ammo. Special this week 9mm German Luger. See at 1304 Tenn.
VI 3-7001. 10-18
STANDARD SIZE CRIB and mattress for sale. $10.00. Call VI 3-2729. 10-13
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE--1956 Chevrolet,
4 dr. pedan, Power Glide, r. & h.
EXCELLENT COND., only $795. See at
DX station across from the Big Buy.
DX station across from the Big Buy. 10-13
10' x 50" TRAILER for sale. Colonial style with washer & garb. disp. 2 bdm. Decide your own down payment. Call VI 2-1425. 10-17
1855 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 d. Power str. & brakes. Clean, excellent cond.
Must sell now. Ask for David. VI 2-2356.
1116 Miss. 10-17
registered Siamese Kittens, 1045 Vermont. 10-16
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2908 at 6 p.m. tt
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30%
discount! Slightly b垦ished first quality
tires in regulation and compact sizes.
Zerex only 88 ccal per gal. Limit 1 gal. per
each new snow tire purchased. At Ray
Stoneback's — 929 Mass. St. 10-18
M RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices as low as $99.00 at Motorola Store - 929 Mass, St. Used AM's and comb rp$ - as low as $5.00 each
Car For Sale: '52 Buick. $50.00. Dyna-flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. tfm.
SACRIFICE – Student must sell second
sacrifice forunning condition.
$10. Call SV I-42491.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonia, Collius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & 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 adding machines. Printing at reasonable business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone I3-3015 today. tf
FOR RENT
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1097. 10-25
Vacancy available for 2 men in com-
munity care clinic (Bachelil Rd. Ct.
V-3-9635 for appointment).
SINGLE ROOM FOR MAN STUDENT:
large rm, walk-in closet, private bath,
good heat, priv. garage, linen furnis
house priv. bicycle, private kitchen,
week. Only student in house.
Location 2 mi north of Kaw Bridge. Call
Mrs. Lewis, V I-3 0949 immediately. 10-13
FURNISHED APT., east side, utilities
pd. $50. Also single room close to
campus, for boys. $27.50. Call VI 3-6294.
10.17
For Rent: Private comfortable basement room. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus, for rent to mature male student. Phone VI 3-3077. 10-1f
For Rent; TRAILER, 45'; 2 bedrooms Inquire at the office, Bingham Trailer Court, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or after 6. Call VI 3-9304. Prefer couple. 10-16
APTS, FOR MEN. Off street parking.
bath, bath. enr Ph. PI 3-9752 or 10-
2979.
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
dryer, walk-in ward. Vard.
80 month. 221 Moundview Dr. Phone
1-3-9882 after 5 for appt. TF
HELP WANTED
WANTED: Driving instructor with car
Sall Mary C. Wilson, VI 2-3784, 10-19
REGISTERED NURSE Full time, night, for intensive care unit. Call director of nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital VI 3-3680 10-17
Wanted: Baby sitter for three small children in our home. Four hours daily Monday through Friday. Call VI 3-3117.
6-8 p.m.
10-13
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete shop in mid-Phone VI 3-2921 Modem self-service — open weeks day 8 to 6:30 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed lee in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies.
6th, 8th & Vermont. Phone VI. tf
0350
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc., aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 Conn., Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor for Freshman English. Graduate student — with public school and college teaching experience. Call VI 2-2479. 10-19
SHOES COVERED TO MATCH your fa-
ture dress. Call Mrs. Broughton.
2723 10-13
Would like Ironing to do in my home.
15a piece; also went child to care for
in my home, 3 to 4 years old. 340 Indiana
or call VI 2-3473. 10-16
SENIORS — Need photos for employment applications? Phone Larry Margolis, VI 2-3474 after 3 p.m. 10-17
I would like to do Ironing in my home.
Reasonable rates. Bring to 811 E.
10-16
Tremendous home furnishings savings.
Now shop Kansas City and see the dealers do.
All you need is a free admittance card.
For further information, call VI 324-6000.
10-16
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
:3644. tf
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$2.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553. VI 3-7578.
tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation by C. Ola Smith.
939'993; Mass. Call VI 5-3263.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss.
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a baby boy and 2-year-old girl. We have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8401.
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE For the Latest in FALL HAIR STYLINGS
You will be welcomed by a staff of friendly, experienced beauticians who will help you to select the hair style that will flatter you most. We specialize in
- PERMANENTS
Come in and Get Acquainted
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
TYPING
TRANSPORTATION
LOOKING, FOR SOMEONE to help me
Galli V53-5206. Suis Thursday or
Friday. Call Gali 53-5206.
10-13
Need ride to Kansas City week days
Working hours 8-5. Call VI 2-3672. 10-18
- HAIR COLORING
- RESTYLING
FOR APPOINTMENTS call VI 3-3034
Our shop is only a few minutes walk from the heart of the campus
1144 Indiana - 1 block north of Student Union
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, writes dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI. 3-213. tt
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression. Typing at standard rates, for Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1997.
Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, documents. Standard carbon rates are accurately. Standard calls. Call Patty Coester, VI 3-8873. *tt*
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
home -- call VI 3-9126. Mrs Loe
Ghilabz
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss.
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typeswriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs Barlow, 40 W. 18th, VI 2-1ff. Mrs Murray, 40 W. 18th, VI 2-1ff.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application papers work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI.3-7435.
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-5947. 1051 Lawrence Ave. & 1021½ Mass. tf
Experienced Typist: 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 needs typing. Special rates to students. Execxon Services. General Service. Carson, Mission. HE 2-7178. Eves or Sat. RA 2-2186.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary with type these, term paners, reports, reports. Electric typewriter. Rasonable Electric typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Mts.
Typing: Will type reports, thesls, etc.
Installation: W11. W12. W13.
Installation: 1531 W14. St. C4. Call VI 3-6440
or W15.
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING,
punctuation & grammar? Former Eng.
copier to help take the time &
reports accurately. Standard rates.
Ms. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. See
tt
NEED HELP?
Outline your requirements, and let us display it in type and style that we want on this page. Display ads stand out and are more easily read than those in body fonts and ad to the Hall, or call it in. KU 376.
FOOTBALL SPECIAL — TASTY DRIVE-IN
69c BOX LUNCH
Ham or Ham Salad, Potato Chips,
Salad, and Baked Beans
All for 69c — Ready to Go!
TASTY DRIVE - IN
914 W.23rd.
VI 3-9291
Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly...
34750
... CESSNA 150
Inquire how you can earn academic credit through AE45 and AE47
INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW!
K
Krhart Flying Service
INCORPORATED
1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal Airport VI 3-2167
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, October 13, 1961
Let's Knock the Wind Out of the Cyclones Kansas vs. Iowa State-Sat., Oct. 14,1961,1:30 p.m.
PROBABLE KANSAS STARTING LINE-UP:
LE ___ Larry Allen (190)
LT ___ Dick Davis (225)
LG ___ Elvin Basham (180)
C ___ Kent Staab (188)
RG ___ Jim Mills (180)
RT ---- Stan Kirshman (210)
RE ___ Benny Boydston (183)
QB ___ John Hadl (205)
LH ___ Lee Flachsbarth (200)
RH --- Curtis McClinton (212)
FB ___ Jim Jarrett (190)
21
PROBABLE I-STATE STARTING LINE-UP:
LE ___ Larry Montre (212)
LT ___ Tom Graham (214)
LG ___ Carl Proto (190)
C ___ Jon Spelman (192)
RG ___ Dan Celoni (203)
RE ___ Steve Sturek (156)
RT ___ Dick Walton (219)
QB ___ Paul Sullivan (172)
LH ___ Dave Hoppman (176)
RH ___ J. W. Burden (161)
FB ___ Dave Hoover (172)
Harrell's Texaco 9th & Miss.
A & W Root Beer
1415 W. 6th
Winter Oldsmobile-Rambler 800 New Hampshire
Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners Hillcrest — 1111 Mass. — Malls
Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Always A Jayhawk Booster
Lawrence National Bank Where Your Savings Are Safe
Rankin Drug 1101 Mass.
Weaver's 901 Mass.
John's Novelty
Next To Granada Theatre
Douglas County State Bank The Bank of Friendly Service
Jay Shoppe
835 Mass. — 12th & Oread
U erig M th U fr e st a c at i n t w U c t h e e w n U cr I r t s t o H A b i c i O i n i t H V o l t :
Daily Hansan
59th Year, No.22
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday, October 16, 1961
Letter Causes Peace Corps Riff
LAGOS, Nigeria — (UPI) — The United States and Nigerian Governments will decide whether resignation of Peace Corps member Margery Michelmore would be "in the best interests" of the corps, the U.S. Embassy said today.
MISS MICHELMORE, a teacher from Foxboro, Mass., offered her resignation from the corps after students at University College, Ibadan, (UCI) rioted against "derogatory" remarks she made about living conditions in Nigeria. She made the remarks on a postcard home.
Miss Michelmore, whose postcard went astray and was found near the University, wrote that the living conditions were primitive and that there was poverty and squaler everywhere in the city of 600.000.
The 23-year-old teacher was taken to Lagos yesterday to await a Washington decision on her resignation offer.
She wrote a letter of apology to University officials after the postcard was found. She also offered her resignation from the Peace Corps.
Meanwhile, observers said the Ibadan student body already had rioted twice this year in other protests. They said they would not be surprised if certain elements among the students were waiting for an opportunity to attack the 40-strong Peace Corps contingent at UCI.
Demonstrators asked that the Americans, "agents of imperialism," be deported, but R. Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps, said this incident would not interrupt the Corp's mission.
SHORTLY AFTER the group arrived Sept. 25, there was an incident in which the only Negro in the contingent was quoted by the local press as saying race discrimination was practiced in the corps.
The Peace Corps members at UC were to spend three months at the college before fanning out over Nigeria to teach at secondary schools
Weather
The weather bureau has announced that high pressure in Kansas is well established and the wind flow is predominantly from the west—which all add up to clear skies and moderate temperatures.
Northeast Kansas will have continued fair weather today, tonight, and tomorrow with slightly higher temperatures tomorrow.
Wescoe Asks for Housing Study
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe made the following statement today in regard to the listing of discriminatory renters by the University housing office:
"I DID NOT appoint a committee. I requested that all of the personnel deans—Dean Taylor, Dean Alderson, Dean Woodruff and also Mr. Wilson, the director of University housing—study the off-campus housing problem in all its facets and then submit a recommendation to me.
"This is the same statement that I made at the meeting last Monday."
THE CHANCELLOR was referring to a meeting Monday with students representing several campus organizations. The students requested that the University stop listing discriminatory renters.
Dr. Wescos has declined to comment on the letter of grievances of Negro students that was given to his secretary at the end of a protest march Friday.
The Chancellor was in Boston when seventy-six Negroes marched through the campus, carrying signs in protest of the housing policy of the administration.
Faculty Forum
Reuben Frodin, American University Field Service authority on Nigeria and West Africa, will speak at the Faculty Forum at noon tomorrow in the English Room of the Kansas Union on "Pan-Africanism."
Homecoming Ball Plans Announced
All SIPpers' and dance fans get ready.
The 1961 Homecoming Dance will feature two bands this year instead of one. This promise of a "cool evening" was made by the SUA Dance Committee.
Ralph Marterie's band, rated the top college band by Cashbox and Downbeat magazines, will bring a 15 piece group here. George Wynn brings his "highly regarded" Kansas City band to the dance held Nov. 11.
THE COMMITTEE secured two bands this year to provide more room to dance and give extra musical variety to the dance.
The committee also named its sub-committee chairmen.
Admission is $2.50 and closing hours for women have been extended to 1:30 a.m.
Must Prove Readiness For War, Backus Says
By Richard Currie
The United States should begin construction of atomic fallout shelters to convince Russia we will not yield over Berlin, Oswald P. Backus, professor of history, said at the Faculty Club last night.
"The construction of shelters would be an aggressive step, demonstrating that we are willing to submit our country to nuclear war," he said.
Prof. Backus said the step was necessary because of powerful forces
M. S. L. MORRIS
Oswald P. Backus
within the Soviet Union causing a shift in Soviet foreign policy.
These forces have forced Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to abandon peaceful co-existence as a means to furthering Communism, in favor of "developing a policy of overt hostility towards the West," he said.
"They think they have more to gain by being tough and their thinking must be changed," Prof. Backus said.
"Unless we take a strong stand on Berlin we may have to ask ourselves if we are willing to fight a nuclear war or if we are to back down over Berlin." Prof. Backus said.
Prof. Backus said that, in a sense, the United States has already yielded in Berlin.
"When we didn't knock down the fences and allowed the Soviet restriction on travel of East and West Berliners to stand, we may have reinforced the Soviet desire to continue its policy of overt hostility," he explained.
For the last three months Khrushchev has not been pushing peaceful co-existence policies in Communist circles, Prof. Backus said. He has bowed to pressure which says peaceful co-existence is neither good nor useful for the Soviet Union.
These forces were at work when President Kennedy met Khrushchev in June, he continued.
"In that meeting Khrushchev appeared not to worry about the United States and was disaffained with Kennedy." Prof. Backus said.
The forces causing the shift in Soviet foreign policy have been at work since the U-2 incident in May 1960, Prof. Backus said.
"Prior to the incident Khrushchev's policy of peaceful co-existence was at its peak," he said. "The U-2 forced an evaluation of Soviet policy."
Khrushchev had to change his direction and bow to pressure from the Red Chinese, neo-Stalinists and political opportunists, Prof. Backus said. His behavior at the Paris summit proved this.
"In the telecast of his news conference from Paris he continually watched Marshal Malinovsky as if he wanted approbation," he explained. "He was scared."
Recently, a 1.2 million reduction in the armed forces was canceled. Prof. Backus said Khrushchev has also stopped criticizing Mao Tse-Tung and the Red Chinese for their hostile attitudes towards the West, he continued. This, plus constant pressure from those opposing peaceful co-existence, indicates maintenance of the Soviet tough line, Prof. Backus said.
dislike this shift, he said. "He fears the destruction nuclear war would bring.
Premier Khrushchev has reason to
But he has taken this line to placate the Red Chinese and others who disapprove of peaceful co-existence.
"It is Kennedy's job to make him think we will fight if we have to," he said.
The United States must continue to talk, but the building of the shelterers will show Khrushchev it means business, Prof. Backus said.
Seniors Excused For Class Tea
Prof. Backus said it was too early to tell whether the talks between Andre Gromyko, Soviet foreign minister, and President Kennedy have convinced the Soviet Union of the United States' willingness to fight.
Seniors will be excused from 10 and 11 o'clock classes Wednesday to attend the fall Senior Coffee. This however does not excuse students from the work which may be missed in classes, said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University.
Coffee and doughnuts will be served in the Union Ballroom. Seniors must present Class of '62 identification cards at this and other senior activities during the year.
Those who have paid senior fees will receive class sweatshirts and pins at the coffee. Seniors who have not paid senior fees may do so at the coffee or at the Alumni Association or the Business Office.
The class Calendar Queen will be elected during the meeting and seniors will receive information about Senior Day, Saturday, Oct. 28, and the party scheduled for 9 a.m. that day at the Big Barn.
Icy Coffin for Tribesmen
Dekeres, the President General of the Balubakat youth movement, showed me the bodies. He said they were being preserved as "proof" the natives were killed by U.N. soldiers.
EDITOR'S NOTE: UPI correspondent Peter Lynch paid another visit today to the camp outside Elisabethville where some 35,000 Baluba tribesmen live in fear and squalor. Here is his account.
BALUBA LEADER BAUZE Dekerers charged the nine tribe members-eight men and a woman were killed by United Nations Swedish troops who opened fire on the camp with automatic weapons 11 days ago in retaliation for an attack on a Swedish sergeant.
ELISABETHVILLE. The Congo — (UPI) — A Baluba tribal leader and a gang of young toughs escorted me past a sea of black faces shouting "death to the white man." They showed me the bodies of nine Balubas preserved in ice in a shallow trench.
The "ice box" is located inside the sprawling Baluba refugee camp near Elisabethville where thousands of tribesmen hostile to Katanga President Moise Tshombe have taken refuge.
The bodies, swathed mummy-style in blankets, lay in the trench and were covered with huge ice blocks. Fresh ice is brought in every day.
Surly, tough-looking tribal officials—dressed in a uniform of Khaki shirts and pants, black boots and black berets—stood by as we inspected the trench.
Prints by two drawing and painting department faculty members and a painting by a KU student are included in the Kansas Artists' Centennial Exhibition in Wichita.
It was a mile-long walk through the center of the refugee camp crowded with shanties made of grass sod, pieces of cardboard and sacks and bags. The walk seemed much longer.
Women grabbed their children as we passed and hustled them into their shanties.
"If you didn't have the youth (guards) with you, you would be dead long ago, white man," shouted a native.
SURROUNDED BY A protective squad of youth movement guards, we marched past a sea of hostile faces. The anti-white feelings bore into your back.
KU Artists' Work in Wichita Show
Near Baluba Youth Headquarters, a gang of some 70 toughs began screaming for an attack on "the white man who has killed Balubas."
(Continued on page 10)
"A Hand for H.W." a woodcut by John Tallere, assistant professor of drawing and painting; "Bird," an intaglio by Thomas Coleman, instructor of drawing and painting, and "Landscape," an oil painting by John Brewer, Wichita junior, are among the 55 paintings, prints,
drawings and pieces of sculpture on exhibit through Oct. 25 at the Wichita Art Museum.
THE EXHIBITION OF WORK by Kansas artists is part of the state centennial observances. Judge for the show was Dean Allen S. Weller of the University of Illinois.
Prof. Talleur also has two intaglio prints in the 14th annual Boston Printmakers Exhibition at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
THE 1960S WOMEN'S MUSEUM
"GEE, ME!"—Kay Cash, Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore, shows her appreciation with a smile after being named SUA Queen Saturday. (Story on page 10)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 16, 1961
On Tito's Planes
A recent announcement from Washington says the United States has agreed to sell 130 F86D jet fighters to Yugoslavia and train Yugoslav pilots to fly them.
This agreement was approved first by the Eisenhower administration, then re-approved by the Kennedy administration.
It is part of a long-standing policy to aid Yugoslavia, a Communist led, but not a Communist Bloc, country.
ALSO INCLUDED in the aid policy is $600 million in military aid awarded since 1952. Almost the entire Yugoslav air force consists of American made planes.
They have not received grant aid from the United States since 1957, but they have been eligible to make purchases, such as the jets, under a military sales program of the Mutual Security pact.
Yugoslavia split with the Kremlin in 1948, and a spokesman for the State Department said it has remained independent and has not participated in policies or programs to bring about the overthrow or subversion of legitimate governments by world Communism.
IF THIS IS THE CASE, then it is not as advisable, or perhaps even more so, to train the four men in question as it is to train Nationalist-Chinese or West German pilots?
To stop training now or to refuse the sale would give Russia a propaganda victory, especially since other Yugoslavs have received radar and flight training here in the past.
THE AID PLAN, which includes the sale and training, seems to be a means of luring Yugoslavia to the Western political philosophy, or at least insuring an "independent" stand.
But it has two other possibilities.
Propaganda is used by the United States to
certain advantage. The plan could be another facet of the cold war. When the smoke clears from the present fire, it may not be an effective propaganda weapon, however.
The plan could also be a return or semireturn to the nationalism of the 19th century when each country had its own goals, but also realized other countries had their aims and would aid them, realizing the goals were in conflict.
THIS CONCEPT IS OPPOSED to the nationalistic universalism of the mid-20th Century in which each nation appears to strive for world dominion.
If the aid plan is followed through, it could conceivably be viewed as an attempt for world peace, not world dominion, by the United States.
If the plan is abandoned, Communist leaders will have an opportunity to step in with Russian dollars, finish the aid project, and give the Kremlin undue credit.
THE MISTAKE WAS MADE in 1952 when the military aid plan was initiated. Now the administration must follow it without making another.
Congress evidently has not been too concerned over the situation—there has been only unofficial talk to "look into military aid to some neutrals," but nothing official has been done to remove Yugoslavia from its eligibility to buy military equipment. Only a definite "No" has been issued in answer to whether or not any more Yugoslavs will be trained.
Whatever happens to the jets and the trainees, no one knows just yet. But almost everyone agrees it isn't likely the issue will turn into a political football—Eisenhower started it and Kennedy approved it.
Carrie Merryfield
Book Criticized
... Letters ..
In reply to the review by NR (who-for reasons best known to himself, does not choose to reveal his name) perhaps the following information concerning Frank J. Donner and the book "The Un-Americans" should be made public.
TO QUOTE FROM THE CONGRESSIONAL Record of Monday, July 31, 1961, extension of remarks of Hon. Frank W. Boykin of Alabama: "This book, which has been in preparation for some time, was written by Frank J. Donner, an attorney, who has been identified as
a member of the Communist Party by three witnesses who have testified before the committee, and who invoked the fifth amendment when he himself appeared before the committee June 1953 and was questioned about his membership in the conspiracy. In a subsequent appearance before the committee in March 1959, he denied that he had been a member of the party since the time of the 1956 appearance, but refused to say whether or not he had resigned technical membership in the party.
"In giving the sources of the numerous lies about the committee contained in his book and in acknowledging assistance received in
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
ENTRANCE EXAMS TODAY / 5-1
SOMETIMES I THINK THE MATH SECTION OF THIS TEST IS A LITTLE TOO ROUGH.
writing it. Donner states that he is 'under heavy obligation' to one Bertram Edises. Edises is another attorney who has been identified as a member of the Communist Party, was a witness in the San Francisco hearings and had to be forcibly ejected from the hearing room because of his disruptive behavior."
IN VIEW OF THE PHILOSOPHIC views of the author, the book should indeed be an interesting, though inaccurate, picture of HUAC.
Temporary Chairman
Kansas University Chapter
Young Americans for Freedom
* * *
National Board of Directors Young Americans for Freedom
Charles McIlwaine
Patrick Allen
Kansan Coverage Criticized Editor:
It seems to me that a university newspaper could do without the type of journalistic drivel that appeared on the front page of Friday's Daily Kansan. The articles entitled "Marcher Feels Justified" and "Confused Reaction to Marchers"-including the minute-by-minute running commentary of inane observations—were of poor taste and served little purpose. On an issue as serious as a demonstration march regarding racial discrimination, descriptions of clothes color or the over-dramatic portrayal of the participants' feelings, call the ability-or the intent-of those responsible into question.
Secondly, the placement of such a loaded selection of quotes and depiction on the front page is something that a high school journalist would know better than. If such trash must appear, the editorial page (or the fashion column) would be a far more appropriate place. The Daily Kansas ought to display a bit more responsibility to its readers, and to the people who made Friday's headlines.
Stephen Goldfarb
California Graduate
Student
From the Newsstand
Frankfurter's Majority
The Supreme Court ended its 1960-61 term with a decision once again revealing the disheartening ineffectuality to which the five-member majority led by Justice Frankfurter has limited certain immunities to injustice, presumptively guaranteed citizens through constitutional safeguards. It is a matter President Kennedy, who in the fullness of time is likely to make several Supreme Court appointments, should think upon.
In the name of "security" the Frankfurter majority again turned down a citizen seeking protection from arbitrary government action. In this case, it was a colored woman employed by a cafeteria operator providing service at a Navy installation. The commandant barred her on security grounds, giving no specifications or listing of charges, and allowing her no opportunity to present a defense. The court majority said it was perfectly all right for the commandant to do this.
THE SAME FIVE-MEMBER majority including Justices Frankfurter, Clark, Harlan, Whitaker and Stewart earlier in the session upheld contempt convictions and jail terms for perhaps misguided but certainly harmless, decent citizens who pointblank declined to answer all the questions hurled by legislative professional subversion chasers, who wanted them to "name names" of associates in various wholly legal enterprises of which the subversion chasers disapproved.
The four-member minority of which Chief Justice Warren is an ornament—a minority including those veteran Franklin D. Recevelt appointees, Justices Black and Douglas, and Justice Brennan—protested the decision in the case of the cafeteria cook as vigorously as it had previously dissented from the decisions upholding the contempt convictions. It seems perfectly clear, however, that the current line of decisions in civil liberties cases is not going to be upset with the court's present membership. . .
The late Justice Jackson wrote, before he himself was named to the court, that by the nature of our judicial system the Supreme Court was inevitably a brake applied by the last generation to the present and the oncoming. It is also common observation that almost any man who grows older on the court may tend to become conservative with the passage of years.
IN FACT, HOWEVER, Justices Black and Douglas have not done so in all their two decades. In fact, Justice Frankfurter with an original reputation from his part in the ancient Sacco-Vanzetti case, has shown an almost unvaried disinterest in protecting individual liberties. Long ago he wrote the majority decision in a Jehovah's Witnesses case—a decision saying that despite the religious scruples of their parents, little children could be barred from school if they obeyed their parents and declined the ritual of a flag salute. The then Chief Justice, Harlan Stone, was so shocked that he wrote a fiery one-member dissent sufficiently compelling to produce within a few years a direct and stated reversal.
The problem is not so much to make the high court liberal as to keep it so. One of the highest duties of a President is his selection of justices, for the court is the last bastion of freedom, and the protection of citizens from political coercion by authority without due process is as precious as protection of the traditional rights of the possible murderer from indelicate attentions of the police.
Some Presidents have been thoughtless or otherwise careless in court appointments—as evidenced by the distance between the present court and Chief Justice Stone's, which both could and would correct its own errors. In this area, as in many others, President Kennedy faces great opportunities.
(Excerpted from an article by Willard Shelton in the June 23 Guild Reporter)
The Poetry Corner COSMONAUT
COSMONAUT
After all the darks and dawns of time,
Among void drawn tides of quiet,
I whirled in one sweet birth upon a fletched
Earth scattering bones upon stones,
Flesh grey gratings rubbing
Primal tides of soft ash,
And did not ask
And could not ask
And had no will past being,
And in a temple far off, a
Prayer wheel
Fluttered vainly.
His time was the wetshine furrow,
Turning the length of a field
Upon itself,
And he spoke, in this his second harvest,
To say of plowing these twenty years undone,
And the share, wrought by strengthfull blow,
Hammered to shape and promise with giant pride
In the heat of forge and sun.
Of the cradlescythe, flinting with dew and sweat
In shard-sharp stubble,
Of the Whip-poor-will, the crow,
Of the orchard plot where graves are,
Where briars over limestone grow.
—H. M. Hershberger, From "The Landsmith"
Monday. October 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
ONE
MAN'S
OPINION
SOAP SAW
Letters to the Editor...
P-T-P and Foreign Students
Editor:
I have read your guest editor of October 11, "Dawson Praised," and I am wondering whether this article is the result of misinformation or American journalistic sensationalism. It is possible that the "People-to-People" people do a lot of good work for the foreign students, but to state that the foreign students at KU were previously neglected does a great injustice to other campus organizations, the dean of foreign students and the individual Americans of this area that organized or offered us hospitality in the past. From my observations during the past three years, the majority of foreign students could not handle all the invitations they had to dinner or for whole weekend stays, and if any of them did not visit with American families, it was entirely their own choice. It appears that Mr. Dawson is receiving credit for many programs that have been in operation here at KU long before he came.
C. T. Constantinides
Cyprus graduate student
* * *
Defends Greeks
Editor:
In answer to Mr. Eugene Gold's comments on "Greeks and Discrimination" which appeared in the Kansan on Friday, Oct. 13, we three Greeks (obviously muzzled) would like to speak out.
Mr. Gold assumes that "members of these groups are inhibited from active participation in social issues..." and uses as an example discrimination. In the past year, a Greek was one of the most active men in the organization and activities of the Civil Rights Council. Nationally, "muzzled" Greeks have taken the lead in civil rights and continue to do so, while at the same time their opponents have also been Greeks. Where, Mr. Gold, is your "specter of social ostracism" in these men's lives? Where is this overwhelming fear which you so gleefully say renders us unable to act?
Kansas. Greeks, moreover, have repeatedly taken the lead in liberalizing national policies on discriminatory membership restrictions at their respective national conventions and conferences. Mr. Gold speaks of "certain set policies" some of which, he asserts, are dictated to us by our national organizations. How can these "set" policies be "dictated" to us when each of us participates in forming these policies?
We are proud of our own fraternity and are proud of the other fraternities in KU's Greek system. Nowhere does there exist a Greek system of such strength and caliber than at KU; a system in which each of us finds room
for our own individualistic feelings and actions." We do not yet feel the grip of Mr. Gold's "invisible muzzle."
Bruce Bee, Kansas City
Senior
Dick Harper, Kansas
City Senior
Byron Lollon, Kansas
City Freshman
Moral Suasion Supported Editor:
Camus Described as Modern Hero
By Stewart E. Nowlin
CAMUS ADOPTED THE "ABSURD" in order to bring meaning into the world of man. The absurd presented man with the idea that nothing was true (presumably excepting this statement) or ultimately justified in his life. The gods did not reply to the rebels of antiquity any more than they (or He, depending on one's personal convictions on the matter) do at present. "The heavens are empty," explains one of Camus' characters in "The Stranger." The rebel is the man that confronts the absurd and wrestles for an answer to the problems of evil and death. Lucretius, Epicurius and Prometheus all faced the same problems, and ended by concluding that the gods either did not enter into the affairs of men or were responsible for all the misfortunes on earth. The Christ did not even answer the rebel's questions satisfactorily. Dying on the cross, he forever separated man from the heavens by affirming rather than denying, in a spectacular manner, the existence of an evil and death that had no answers on earth. Marquis de Sade later accused God of being the "supreme outrage." Milton, Vigny, Byron and other of the romantics glorified Satan as the real savior of man, or at least as a wronged angel who defended the rights of man. All of these "rebels" were faced with the idea that life might have no meaning. Then where was meaning to be found? Kiekegaard posits a leap into faith. Unfortunately, there have been people who scoffed at such an idea for fear that when they landed they may
(Editor's note: This is one of the English proficiency examinations from a session test that was rated excellent by the English Proficiency Committee.)
Perhaps more than any other person of our time, Albert Camus has devoted his life and art to civilization. His untimely death has transformed his life into a destiny which can now be judged as a completed effort devoted to man and his relationship to the world. Camus' contribution to civilization was, very generally, dichotomous. First, he presented us with an intellectual outlook on the world in toto; i.e., he attempted to bring order out of chaos. Secondly, Camus contributed to the cultural advance of mankind through his art. Both contributions were positive. That is to say, Camus elevated man from a being of sin or crime (the view of traditional religion on one hand and Marquis de Sade, Ernst Junger, or Celine on the other), and yet kept him below the height of the gods (those who deified man such as Rousseau). Camus placed man on earth where he belonged, but sometimes forgot. Man was placed in the tension of limits between the absolutes of "heaven" and "hell."
Chancellor Wescoe's "moral suasion" is the only sensible policy for the administration of the University. The housing list is not an approval list. It merely seeks to help students who are looking for housing facilities. To bring pressure on the housing office would make it hard to find places for students to stay. Why burn down the barn to get rid of the rats? I hope Chancellor Wescoe will continue to lead the University and the city of Lawrence toward complete integration, using methods which will alleviate, not intensify, the problem.
well be "impaled upon their own dignity." Nietzsche gave the world the ubermench. Hitler used this concept, exactly in the opposite sense of what Nietzsche intended, to justify his wars, blond stormtroopers and his campaign against the Jews. Through Hitler, the twentieth century became aware of itself. If no one in the past could justify what is done, then everything is permitted—to the strong. As a corollary to this truth, it was necessary to accept the fact that nothing was true, a somewhat confusing position.
CAMUS ANALYZED THESE rebels historically and intellectually in "The Rebel." His plays, essays and novels were constructed around these same ideas that were developed in this philosophic work. Through these books he presented the world with a new meaning. First, one must not only accept the absurd, but live it. Then, and only then, can life be "revealed" for what it is. One recognizes limits to action and ceases to fight, or die, for nothing. One becomes a Staurogin without the privilege of committing suicide. (To give assent to suicide is simultaneously to justify murder.) There is some type of a wedding feast with the world. Camus' hero, the absurd man, is the "common" man who gives himself to life and this world. He denies all other worlds, of necessity.
If this hero accepted any other world, he would transfer his responsibilities in life to some deity or idea (such as communism). If one cannot accept the responsibility for his intercourse with men, one will affirm penceilence, war, crime, murder, etc., to be the "natural" way of the world, shrug his shoulders, and disappear into the night.
CAMUS PRESENTS ALTERNATIVES; terror and death, or the limits. Camus was no savior of mankind: he had seen enough saviors. He only wanted to prevent civilization from going rampant and tearing itself apart. He did not ultimately solve the "big questions" of evil and death. He merely showed how evil could be reduced and death accepted — on human terms. Camus contributed much to civilization and to humanistic thought in particular. He wrote for the here and now while never forgetting the future. He transcended the absurd and gave meaning to life. He sang the lyrics of nature for the benefit of man. Civilization can either accept conditioned limits or absolutes. Camus was convinced, from both historical and intellectual standpoints, that the Greek "ideal" of limits was not only correct but the only possibility left for mankind. Camus was, in a word, human.
From the Magazine Rack
From the Magazine Rack The Control of War
By Stephen King-Hall
The sole purpose of nuclear forces is deterrence; if this fails, all is lost. Nuclear energy has thus turned the traditional policy of keeping one's advanced weapons secret upside down. If we want our deterrent to have its full effect we must make sure our enemy knows exactly how awful our weapons are. He must also be convinced of our willingness, in certain circumstances, to press the button.
But there is bound to be an element of doubt in the West's deterrent, since we have not decided and cannot decide where the button should be and who should press it in exactly what circumstances. Mr. Lester Pearson, former Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs, is on record as saying that even to hold a conference among the Western powers to decide these questions would break up the NATO alliance. It is fantastic to suppose that the democratic states would or should agree to such decisions. Our potential enemy is, therefore, forced to guess what we would do. If he guesses wrong, all is lost.
Even if we presented the Soviet Union with an ultimatum: accept our terms on a specific situation (such as the perennial Berlin problem) or full-scale nuclear war will ensue, how could they be sure we were not bluffing? Is it likely that all fifteen NATO countries would agree to carry out the threat? Russia might argue with much plausibility that it was most unlikely. And yet a deterrent that is not credible is not a deterrent.
Bob Strevey
Norcatur sophomore
Faculty Criticized Editor:
"In interviews with seven faculty members, two opposed the action, one supported it, one declined to comment and three felt they lacked sufficient information to comment." Daily Kansan, Oct. 11, 1961.
TO THE THREE WHO LACKED sufficient information: Gentlemen, from here on out I want no lectures from you about lackadaisical students. I want no more superior attitudes toward freshmen, no more patronizing of sorority girls. In other words, you and the other faculty members who lack sufficient information — don't you know what's going in the world?
But hold, men. Maybe I'm being unfair. Maybe some of you out there in faculty land really do know but don't want to say anything about the situation. You know, big brother and all that stuff.
LOOK, GENTLEMEN OF THE learned profession. I think you ought to go easy on us in the future. Some of us know what the score is, and some of us have the courage to be fighting your battles.
Sincerely yours,
Arnold Barton
Wichita sophomore
- * *
NSA Test Run Called For Editor:
At a recent ASC meeting (Wed, Oct. 11), an amendment to a bill was presented which, if passed, will disaffiliate KU from the United States National Student Association. As NSA Coordinator, I am, naturally, most concerned about this, but not for the obvious reasons. There is more to this issue than meets the eye.
AT LAST SUMMER'S NSA Congress, the Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative group, announced their intentions to start a movement this fall to get as many schools out of NSA as possible, because NSA is "too liberal." There is a new YAF group on the KU campus, and I wonder if they haven't been doing some of the pressuring to get KU to withdraw from NSA.
Last spring I submitted a new bill to the ASC which, when passed, would have continued our affiliation with NSA. At that time there were rumors that the bill would be defeated, automatically bringing about our withdrawal. But the bill was passed by an overwhelming majority of 12-2, and this made me feel that the ASC was definitely FOR the NSA. But over the summer something strange has happenend, because suddenly this fall there is a movement to disaffiliate, without giving the new NSA Committee a chance to show what it can do.
IT HAS BEEN SAID that the NSA Committee did not do a thing last year, and I would disagree. I would also point out that, although KU has been a member of NSA
STEELLE
since 1955, last year was the first year there was an organized committee that met regularly, and it was also the first time KU ever held a Regional Convention or sent its full quota of delegates to the NSA Congress. However, the NSA Committee was hindered by the fact that there was a 50-50 split of liberals and conservatives (also a 50-50 Vox-UP split), and the group was not given any funds with which to operate.
The new NSA Committee this year has realized that there have been some mistakes made in the past, and it wants to correct them, if given the chance. It has lined up an extensive program, and intends, first of all, to inform the students about NSA by giving talks at organized houses, debates on the merits of NSA, and by sending out literature.
AS A MEMBER of the All Student Council, I have, on occasion, seen the ASC act upon matters without sufficient deliberation. If the ASC votes at its next meeting to disaffiliate KU from NSA, I feel that it would not be acting in the best interests of its constituents, the students on campus. There is more involved in this issue than $500 dues. This issue has become an issue of personalities and of outside, conflicting political interests. I do not feel that the ASC could act wisely or objectively on the matter at this time.
I WOULD THEREFORE PROpose that NSA be given one year's probation by the ASC. The NSA Committee itself should be given sufficient funds and support to promote a truly worthwhile program on campus, and it should then begin by informing the students of its background, aims, and purpose.
THEN, AT THE END of this year,
the issue should be brought up
again for reconsideration, but only
after the students have been suf-
siciently informed about NSA and
seen it in action. At that time, I'd
like to see a Student Referendum
vote on the issue, and let the
students themselves decide whether
they want to remain in NSA. I feel
that this is the ONLY fair way to
deal with the issue of NSA disa-
ffiliation. What do the rest of you
think about this idea?
Carol McMillen Coldwater. Okla.. senior
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
Telephone VIkling 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th Street, Yersey, United States. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year exp. Expenses include University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
NEWS DEPT.
Tom Turner, Managing Editor
Don Gergick, Advertising Manager;
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman,
Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly
Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon,
Sparke Editor; Barbara Howell,
Scooter
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield,
Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown Business Manager
Bonnie McCullough, Circumcision
Wein, Weins, National Advertising Manager; Charles Martineau,
Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager.
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 16, 1961
Page 4
ASC Considers NSA's Position
An All Student Council committee is considering a bill which would disaffiliate KU from the National Student Association.
The bill was automatically sent to a committee on committees, in accordance with legislative procedure for possible corrections after it was introduced at the ASC meeting Wednesday.
It will be brought up again at the next meeting Oct. 25. It could possibly be brought up at a special meeting this week dealing with appropriations, Janice Wise, Kansas City, Mo., junior and ASC secretary said.
The bill, introduced by Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, proposed that in place of the NSA, the ASC establish a local campus organization, the Current Events Committee, and make Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior and NSA co-ordinator, chairman of the new committee.
In other action, three new members were sworn into the ASC. They are: Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior representing large men's dormitories; Robert Bosseau, Pittsburgh junior, also from large men's dorms; and Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student, representing the graduate school.
Pickett Selected On Awards
Calder M. Pickett, professor o journalism, has been selected a member of the steering committee for the 1961-62 William Randolph Hearst Foundation journalism awards program.
Members of the steering committee were selected by the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism.
The William Allen White School of Journalism at KU won first place in the Hearst contest last year.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships.
1962-63: Applications due Oct. 20, 306
participants to take job place in medical examinations to be made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
TODAY
U. S. Peace Corps Representative: will visit with interested students, 4 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union. He will be available Tuesday for personal appointments. Appointments should be made in 228 Strong Hall.
Kuku Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union.
Foreign Students: Who are ILE-related are to meet in a group with Mr. Robert L. Blair of Denver at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union.
TONIGHT — Quill Club, 8:30 p.m.
Kansas, Irapón.
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast, 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
Field Representative of the U.S. Peace Corps: Mr. Frank C. Kiehne, will address interested faculty members, 4 p.m., 210, Strong Hall.
WEDNESDAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m.
103 Strong, Professor Samuel Ellenberg,
Columbia University, visiting lecturer,
the Department of Mathematics
Coffee Hour, 3:59 p.m., 119 Strong
AIEE-I Dinner Meeting: 7 p.m. Big
8 Room, Kansas Union, Panel Discussion.
Trail Room Dance for Study Break: 9
Train Room Dance to a Rock 'n' Roll Band.
Dancing to a Rock 'n' Roll Band.
Sorel Starts on Tour
Claudette Sorel, visiting lecturer of piano, will begin a two-week concert tour Wednesday in Milwaukee. Wis.
Miss Sorel will feature the music of Edward MacDowell and will play MacDowell's Piano Concerto with the Milwaukee Symphony in commemoration of the composer's 100th birthday.
Later on the tour Miss Sorel will play MacDowell's Piano Sonata. The tour covers 5 states with the last performance in Cheyenne, Wyo.
365 Excuses
365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the
Jayhawk Cafe - 1340 Ohio
Two KU faculty members have been asked to speak at the First National Shallow Water Research Conference this month.
Today's excuse: Mother's Day at the Brookfield Zoo.
KU Geologists to Conference
Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology, and Jack W. Pierce, technical assistant in geology, will attend the conference which is co-sponsored by the U.S. Navy and the National Scientific Foundation Oct. 20-21 in Baltimore, Md.
Prof. Benson will present the findings of a research program he has been conducting for the last three summers near Cape Hatteras, N.C.
Chess Club to Meet
The SUA Chess Club will meet tomorrow night at 7 o'clock in the Javahawk Room of the Kansas Union.
At that time, an all-school tournament will begin. Anyone interested should either go to the meeting or contact Jim Dakelow.
Prof. Benson explained that the program's purpose was to find out the type of fossils being formed off the Cape and to study effects of hurricanes on sedimentation and sea shore erosion.
He said he has found deposits near El Dorado, Ottawa, Iola, and Chanute similar to those off Cape Hatteras.
He said the Kansas deposits are well over 200 million years old.
The place of charity, like that of God, is everywhere.—Francis Quarles
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KU
Sebastian says: "Look for me on your Senior Sweatshirt and Pin"
- Pressures got you down?
- Wondering what to do?
Then head for the . . .
SENIOR COFFEE
Wednesday, October 18 Student Union Ballroom
10 a.m. - 12 noon
Senior ID's or 25c
Learn about Senior Day (Oct.28) Pay senior fees (if you haven't already Learn senior yells Pick up Sweatshirt and Pin
VOTE FOR CALENDAR QUEEN
Monday, October 16, 1961 Session Konson Page 5
Space Research Aids Medicine
LOS ANGELES — (UPI)—A new age of down-on-earth medicine is coming into being with the miniaturization and telemetry developed for space exploration.
"Iinvisible" hearing aids and tiny devices to duplicate the work of missing vocal chords already are in being. Much of the medically useful research in progress is still under secrecy wraps. But what can be told is impressive.
The cumbersome electronic devices of an entire medical clinic may soon be reduced to the carrying size of the doctor's bag, experts told a recent meeting of California industrialists here.
A Beckman Instruments Co. gadget called an "Ultra-Micro Analytical System" is now able to make a complete blood analysis from a drop just big enough to fill the eve of a needle.
At least 50 of the nation's leading industrial firms, they were told, are engaged in research with medical promise.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. has adapted from a light-weight satellite transmitter a "heart listener" the size of a package of cigarettes which can broadcast directly or through a telephone to an electrocardiograph in the doctor's office.
"Someday we won't have to wonder how we are," said a Lockehead official. "We can call up our doctor and say, 'Doctor, how am I?', and the doctor will take a look at the information we are broadcasting to him and say, 'I don't like the way your heart looks. Better chase yourself down to the hospital and go to bed.'"
Remote electronic aids for checking body temperature, pulse rates, blood pressure and other vital functions—similar to the medical hook-ups which relay the condition of astronauts to earth-bound physicians—are already in civilian medical use. A 17-bed installation at New York's Roosevelt Hospital permits one or a few nurses to keep an eye on critically ill patients. The device is credited with saving the life of one the first day it went into operation by relaying immediate word that the accident victim had gone into shock.
A watchdog committee of the Civil Rights Council is planning a spot check of the Lawrence Roller Rink, two miles east of Lawrence.
Non-miniature computers are also taking their place among medical tools. A system similar to the Sage system of the Strategic Air Command is being developed by System Development Corp. of Santa Monica as a medical diagnostic device—to spot the abnormal in information about a patient and help the doctor pinpoint what's wrong.
CRC Plans Check On Roller Rink
The committee, under the direction of Ruth Lewis, Kansas City, Mo. senior, is going to test the rink to see if violations of the Kansas Accommodations Act are taking place.
The act states that anyone operating a business which provides transportation, public entertainment or has a restaurant license must serve people regardless of race, color or creed.
County Attorney Wesley M. Norwood said recently that the Lawrence Roller Rink "probably comes under the act."
Enrollment Increase In Art Department
He said that violations of the act constitute a misdemeanor and are subject to fines up to $1,000.
Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, said there has been a 40 per cent increase of art majors this year.
"We've probably doubled the number of art majors in the last ten years." Prof. Eastwood said.
A number of students are majoring in art education and many are taking art just for enjoyment, he said. Either way, the enrollment is large, he added.
The public doesn't require any new ideas. The public is best served by the good, old-fashioned ideas it already has. — Henrik Ibsen
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And Corvair's found new ways to please you this year. A forced-air heater and defroster are standard equipment on all coupes, sedans and both Monza and 700 Station Wagons. So are dual sunshades and front-door armrests and some other goodies. You'll note some new styling, inside and out. Nice. And safety-belt installation is easier, too, and cheaper. Another extra-cost option well worth considering is the heavy-duty front and rear suspension; it turns a Corvair into a real tiger.
So you can see we haven't really done much to Corvair this year. Why on earth should we? If this car, just as she is, can't make a driving enthusiast out of you, better take a cab.
Until you've driven one, you really can't say for sure, because Corvair's kind of driving is like no other in the land. The amazing air-cooled rear engine sees to that. You swing around curves flat as you please, in complete control. You whip through the sticky spots other cars should keep out of in the first place. (Especially this year, now that you can get Positraction as an extra-cost option.) You stop smoothly, levelly with Corvair's beautifully balanced, bigger brakes.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 16, 1961
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Thrilling Catch Sparks Hawks
Breaking a tie game midway in the final quarter, senior end Benny Boydston made the first catch of his college career and provided the necessary spark to help the Jayhawkers to their first win of the season, 21-7, over Iowa State Saturday.
Boydston, a stubby 185-pound convert to the flank from guard made one of the outstanding plays of the afternoon as he outdistanced a Cyclone defender to haul in a perfect pass from quarterback John Hadl and then was brought down on the loser's six yard stripe.
THIS ONE PLAY was typical of the Jayhawker play as they brought their season mark to 1-2-1 going in-to a game at Oklahoma which could be the keynote to the conference campaign.
The Sooners, losers to Texas Saturday, 28-7, have yet to post a win, having lost to Notre Dame and Iowa State prior to the defeat at the hands of the powerful Longhorns.
Deadlocked since the end of the second quarter at 7-7, it took only something like the Hadl to Boydston
season with 12 rushes for 47 yards, scored a touchdown, completing three of five passes for all of KU's 66 air yards and punted five times for 45.2 yards per effort.
Billed at the start of the season as one of the few triple-threat All Americas left in college football. Had showed all his capabilities for the first time.
BUT, ALTHOUGH KANSAS dominated almost every phase of the game, the play of I-State tailback Dave Hoppmann cannot be overlooked.
The 176-pound junior played for the first time against Kansas, being out with an injury last season when the Hawkers downed the Cyclones 28-14 at Ames.
Showing tremendous ability to stop, change direction, pass on the run and fake plus good speed, Hoppmann continually befuddled the Crimson defense and was the only threat the losers possessed.
OF THE 58 TOTAL PLAYS Iowa State ran, Hoppmann carried the ball
6J 5
AND HERE COMES ANOTHER GUY — Iowa State's Steve Sturek bangs John Hadl to the turf in this first quarter action as Rodger McFarland (15) keeps Cyclone J. W. Burden out of the play while standout I-State guard Dan Celoni (61) readies himself for applying finishing touches.
aerial to set the Hawkers on fire and into a lead which they protected for the first time this season.
PLUNGES INTO THE TIRING Cyclone front wall by Curtis McClinton and Hadl produced the tiebreaking tally after Boydston had brought the crowd of 33,500, a record for the series, to its feet.
Stifling the I-State offense following the kick-off, Kansas took possession on its own 45 and drove to the clinching touchdown in 12 plays with Lee Flachsbarth sliding around right end for six points.
Another surprise, in addition to the outstanding and game saving fourth quarter effort by KU was the successful point after touchdown kicks by Wallace Barnes. It has been points after which have cost the Jays wins in their first three outings.
"THE BIG FACTOR OF THE game was Hadl; we just couldn't handle him," said Iowa State Coach Clay Stapleton after his team's first loss in four games. "He is the greatest back in the conference. If KU hadn't had Hadl, I think we could have handled them. Our boys played the best game that they could and I am not disappointed in them."
Hadi1 was outstanding as he led the most varied KU offense of the
Hoppmann's touchdown pass to Larry Montre came with three seconds remaining in the first half and only three plays after Hadl had had a pass intercepted by Cyclone Captain John Cooper.
33 (there were only six other rushes), making 123 yards and passed nine times, completing five, for 68 yards and a score.
Montre out-maneuvered KU's Willis Brooks in the end zone to grab the Hopmann toss.
W L T
Colorado 2 0 0
Nebraska 1 0 0
Missouri 1 0 0
Iowa State 2 1 0
Kansas 1 1 0
Kansas State 0 1 0
Oklahoma 0 1 0
Oklahoma State 0 3 0
Big Eight Standings
Last week's results:
Colorado 9, Miami (Fla.) 7; Kansas 21, Iowa State 7; Texas 28, Oklahoma 7; Missouri 10, Oklahoma State 0; Kentucky 21, Kansas State 8; Syracuse 21, Nebraska 6.
This week's games:
Kansas at Oklahoma, Missouri at Iowa State, Colorado at Kansas State, Nebraska at Oklahoma State.
18 61 42 2
THREE FOR THREE—KU's Wallace Barnes (to the left of the official in the background) is shown booting the first of three successful extra point kicks. Iowa State players leaping to try and block the kick are, left to right, Dan Celoni
(61) , Paul Sullivan (42) and Dick Walton (72). Standing at the left is Cyclone captain, John Cooper. Identifiable Kansas blockers are Mickie Walker, in front of Barnes, Larry Allen (80) and Rodger McFarland, at the far right.
US Davis Cuppers Near Defeat
Pietrangeli and Sirola, one of the
ROME—(UPI)—Jon Douglas and Whitney Reed were faced with the almost hopeless task of winning their singles matches against Italy today to keep the United States alive in 1961 Davis Cup tennis competition.
SHOULD THE ITALIANS win one of today's singles, it would mark the second straight year they had eliminated the United States in the inter-zone finals.
Italy took a 2-1 edge on the Yanks yesterday in their inter-zone final when Nicola Pietrangelli and Orlando Sirola defeated Reed and Donald Dell in the doubles, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. The Italians thus needed one more singles triumph in the best-of-five series to earn the right to meet Australia for the second straight year in the challenge round.
DOUGLAS, OF Santa Monica Calif., had much the tougher task today when he went up against Pietrangeli, Italy's top player and an overwhelming favorite to win on his home court in the day's first match. However, Douglas rallied from two sets down on Friday to best Fausto Gardini for the Yanks' only point thus far and a continued sharp showing could result in an upset.
Reed faced Gardini in the other singles and the Alameda, Calif, youngster was given a good chance to win this match. Reed displayed some of the best form of his career Friday when he won two sets against Pietrangeli. But the third set was interrupted by darkness and the Italian veteran rallied to win the match from Reed when play was continued Saturday.
world's leading doubles combination, showed early they were at their best yesterday when they won the first set in 28 minutes. They also took the first two games of the second set before Reed and Dell showed some signs of life.
Dell was the first to recover as he easily held his service and then
Reed and Dell both produced fine ground strokes to break Sirola's service and even the set at two games.
THE AMERICANS broke service again in the eighth game and went on to win the set when Reed held his service.
Forth Quarter Performance Pleases Worried Mitchell
Signing what he said were his first autographs of the season, Coach Jack Mitchell had happy but not overjoyed comments after the Javhawker win Saturday.
"It was wonderful to be able to do something in the fourth quarter. This has been a problem all along and it was mental because we are in top physical shape. We have just been letting down before," said Mitchell about the resurgence of the Crimson and Blue in the final period to even their Big Eight mark at 1-1.
"THE DIFFERENCE WAS OUR STRENGTH. We out-manned them, there was no doubt about that. Iowa State is a well-coached team but is limited on personnel," continued the KU mentor.
"Their offense didn't bother us because it is hard for a team to line up and try to whip us. They didn't have the pro type offense like we faced before."
"OKLAHOMA WILL BE READY AND WILL PROBABLY play the best game of its life against us," said Mitchell worriedly.
"We have had a tough time because of a lack of versatility on offense. We must pass better and we lack speed and depth at left halfback. Lee Flachsbarth looked better today, as did Ken Coleman and Jim Jarrett at fullback.
"It was a good defensive job, although the problem still exists in the secondary; but our pass defense looked better today also."
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Monday, October 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
IOWA STATE. A TEAM which obviously didn't have the manpower or overall ability to stay with the Jays, beat the Sooners, 21-15, two weeks ago. If this means anything, and it probably doesn't, KU should have no problem.
GRANTED, OKLAHOMA has a winless team. But, so did KU before stunning Iowa State. The performance seen here Saturday could well be repeated in Norman, for Bud Wilkinson is far too shrewd a coach to let his team lose because they would be beaten psychologically. Although OU probably was very "high" for their traditional game with Texas, a chance of a let down against the Hawkers is not too probable.
By Bill Sheldon
KU's win Saturday puts the Jayhawkers in a very interesting position. It may yet be too early to start making any long range speculations, but the possibilities are far from dim as far as the Kansas hopes for a league title are concerned.
One more note—this time in KU's favor—after hosting Kansas, Oklahoma must rebound for an invasion of the Buffalooes from Colorado who have a breather against Kansas State this week.
KU is still trying to beat Oklahoma, something which hasn't been done since 1945 when the Hawkers downed the Sooners, 16-13, here. The last time KU posted a win in Soonerland was 1937.
Now, how do the KU chances shape up at this point for not only a win over the Sooners, but serious contention for the crown?
But, as it wasn't Saturday, a main factor will be the thrown ball. Oklahoma has a better passing attack and a better passing formation—split-T-than Iowa State.
The one thing which Coach Jack Mitchell stressed after Saturday's welcome win was that the Cyclone's did not possess the "pro type offense" which had been so effective for TCU and Colorado against Kansas. Mitchell wasn't very complete in his comments, but seemed to imply Oklahoma would provide a more wide-open attack and could be a greater defensive challenge.
KU'S LINE, ALTHOUGH not outstanding as individuals, showed the power and coordination which will be necessary to handle the Sooner forwards. But, no team in the past two seasons has been able to beat the KU line with the possible exception of Iowa and then only in the first half.
In the backfield, of Saturday's play, things looked better than they had thus far. Ken Coleman was very good defensively and both his Jim Jarrett's line plunging were up to the standard set the previous three campaigns by Doyle Schick.
Defensively there remains only the problem of defending against the pass. Dave Hoppmann threw a comparatively slow and soft pass for Iowa State and was still able to complete five of nine passes. If passes like Hoppmann's can find their way through the leaky KU defense, it is no wonder Gale Weidner and Sonny Gibbs made the Jayhawkers look like bush leaguers.
SO THE SCENE AT NORMAN Saturday afternoon will be little different than it was at Colorado or here against Iowa State except there is less time to recover from mistakes and with each week the opportunity of having someone else win for you—such as K-State beating Colorado and evening the standings—grows less and less likely.
Although there is a lot more between Kansas and Miami than the crossing of five states, a win for Coach Jack Mitchell over his alma mater would be a perfect way to begin the celebration of the lifting of the NCAA probation, which expires one week from Wednesday, and the making of a serious championship bid.
Truth is on the march and nothing can stop it.-Emile Zola
21 70 61
WHAT'S GOING ON THERE—Who did what to whom and what happened? Is John Hadl (21, at the left) helping an Iowa State player into a handstand with Larry Allen (80, in the center) waiting to make sure nothing goes wrong? Is
Steve Sturek (84, in the foreground) picking Kent Staab's (50, at the right) pocket? Did the other Cyclone player between Hadl and Allen (on the ground) lose a contact lens or is he looking flies for "Bugs and Boys?"
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
KU Barber Shop
1 Block Downhill
Clarence & Lee
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass VI 3-0330
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE CARL HORN
How many more people will need telephone service in Illinois by 1970? How many more telephone buildings should be built, how much more equipment ordered? Helping to find the right answers (because the wrong ones could be very expensive) is the job of Carl Horn, a telephone company economist who graduated from college just last year. His studies and estimates help management
make important forecasting decisions. Decisions that will bring advanced communications to the nation.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 16, 1961
Germans Ready For Possible War
MUNICH, West Germany—(UPI) The West German government is preparing along with its NATO partners for possible war with Russia. But the West German people neither want war nor at the moment are prepared for it mentally.
These are among the conclusions that must be drawn at the end of three intensive weeks in Germany, during which almost the entire perimeter of West Germany was covered, from Bonn through Hamburg, by train through East Germany to Berlin, thence through Hanover along the Bavarian border with East German and Czechoslovakia, and finally to Munich.
Fall is festival time in Munich.
IT IS THE CITY where the then Prime Minister of Britain, Neville Chamberlain, believed that in his meetings with Hitler he successfully had preserved "peace in our time."
Hotels are jammed and the thoughts and strains of war are far away.
But aside from these unhappy memories, Munich is a center of culture and the city to which thousands of Germans flock at the time of celebration for the harvest to drink Bavarian beer, and generally let themselves go.
IN THE BAVARIAN ALPS the cows are being brought down from the summer pastures, their necks garlanded with green boughs and flowers, to be welcomed by the peasants for whom this is festival time, too.
But underlying the gaiety are grim portents which the people would prefer to ignore.
Foreign Minister Heinrich Von Brentano has just gone on the air to remind the German people that they lost totally a "total war," and that a price still must be paid.
THERE ARE OTHER portents as West Germany and the NATO Allies approach what may be a showdown over Berlin and the future of German reunification.
One is the gradual realization by the German people that the split in their nation may last through their lifetime. In this, the people may have been ahead of their government. Immediate reunification is not discussed very seriously by many Germans now.
THE AIR FORCE is growing rapidly.
These are things the German people would rather not think about.
But for those who do think about it, the thought was best expressed perhaps by Alfred Thoma, a businessman, one night at dinner in Selb only a few kilometers from the barbed wire border with Communist Czechoslovakia.
The Western Allies must draw a line somewhere, he said. The test might come in Berlin but it could come anywhere else just as well.
KU Seniors Try For Rhodes Grant
Three KU seniors have applied for Rhodes Scholarships, one of the highest academic honors in the English-speaking world.
They are: Jerry D. Gardner and Alan D. Latta, Wichita seniors, and Fredric H. Jones, Merriam senior.
A Rhodes Scholarship provides for two to three years of study at Oxford University, England. Its financial value is about $2,000.
Three KU students have been chosen for the award within the last three years, a record for state schools.
Fifteen KU students have been chosen for the honor since the Rhodes program was initiated in 1904.
Last year's winner was Fred Morrison of Colby.
Truth often suffers more by the heat of its defenders, than from the arguments of its opposers.—William Penn
Sinatra Is Mellowing From Ruthless Ways
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Frank Sinatra is mellowing.
By Vernon Scott
Known as a hard-nosed, ruthless individual who makes his own rules, the thin singer's reputation as a driving, cynical hipster leaves no room for sentiment.
But Sinatra's detractors generally underestimate the man.
His newest record album, "I remember Tommy," is a sentimental swing back to his days as a singer with Tommy Dorsey's band — some 20 years ago.
"I SING THIS ONE straight, word for word and note for note." Frank said. "Ive always been an admirer of Tommy's musical skill and ability. I compared him with a pitcher who could throw five different kinds of pitches. He was always doing something different."
Rohinderbat he and the late brat leader had indulged in a famous farkalrack (a trunk) "We had our troubles when I quit the band," he said. "But we became great friends again and remained friends until he died."
THEN, SURPRISINGLY, Frank raised his own iron curtain an iota, just enough to let his visitor see that the millionaire businessman, producer and star is mellowing.
The self-revelation came when
Frank was asked why he continues to record now that other enterprises pay off so handsomely.
"Because I want to leave a contribution behind." he said.
"Pictures and 'television die. They're not lasting. On the other hand if a person writes a book it still can be read 50 years later — or 200 years later."
"Recordings are the same way. Records leave a legacy. It's a shame Caruso and other great musicians didn't have modern equipment to leave behind a true record of their accomplishments."
IF RECORDINGS LEAVE a legacy, Frank Sinatra may be the most remembered man who ever lived.
In the past 21 years he has cut some 900 records, by his own count. He accounted for 20 albums — all of which sold at least a half-million copies — since 1955.
"This new one is something special," he said. "All 12 songs that I did with the band originally have been arranged by Cy Oliver, the same fella who arranged them for Tommy.
"Of course my albums make money, but that's not important. It sure isn't the real reason I recorded I remember Tommy."
No man ever became extremely wicked all at once.-Juvenal
Beauty and wisdom are rarely conjoined.—Petronius
Let's Dance! Learn the Twist and the West Coast Swing
5 Weekly lessons will be offered beginning on
Oct. 20, 7-9 p.m.
in the Student Union Ballroom Lessons $2.50 per Person Instruction given by Warren Oaklen, professional dance teacher
We all make mistakes...
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Page 9
UN Not Changed By Dag's Death
By Martha Moser
Two political science faculty members agreed Friday that the death of Dag Hammarskjold, the late Secretary General of the United Nations, would not change the operation of the U.N.
Prof. Laird and Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science, discussed the effect of Dag Hammarskjold's death on the U.N. at this fall's first Current Events Forum. About 50 persons attended.
Discussing the effect of Hammarskjold's death on the U.N., Mr. Pringshein said that while the U.N. lost its most valuable member, his death would not alter the U.N. The U.N. could find a new man, he said.
"IHIS DEATH," MR. PRINGSHEIM said, "has started Russia on a new campaign of the Troika system to make the U.N. powerless. But their efforts have found no success. However, his death does not help the Soviet Union — it has merely removed one of their targets. They will have to find a new one."
Prof. Laird agreed later that no man was indispensable. He said that the U.U. would not be changed by Hammarskjold's death because the smaller nations would not allow Russia to get away with the Troika system.
The Troika system is a device to reduce the power of the secretary general by replacing the office with a three-man committee.
Prof. Laird said he did not think the person replacing Hammarskjold necessarily needed to be of more stature than Hammarskjold but should be one who was respected throughout the world and who could mediate in the East-West struggle. He said Prime Minister Nehru of India, was this person.
Mr. Pringsheim suggested that because of the Secretary General's immense responsibilities, a person of even greater stature than Hammarskjold should become the next Secretary General. He did not mention a particular person for this position.
NEHRU HAS PRESTIGE all over the world," Prof. Laird said. "He is loved in Washington and hated in Russia one day and hated in Washington while loved in Russia the next."
Prof. Laird disagreed pointing out that smaller nations have held increasingly important voices in the U.N. General Assembly.
THE TWO MEN DISAGREED on what constituted the U.N.'s power. Mr. Pringsheim maintained that the U.N. is only as effective a weapon for world peace as the two major powers, Russia and the U.S., would let it be.
"President Kennedy has said that the Secretary General is a servant of the General Assembly. This I suggest, Mr. Pringsheim, is why the General Assembly is becoming an important voice and representing smaller nations," Prof. Laird said.
MR. PRINGSHEIM countered later:
"Does this mean these countries can tell the U.N. or Russia or the U.S. what to do, that we (the U.S.) will let the good sense as expressed by the majority in the U.N. guide us?"
Mr. Pringsheim said he did not think either major power would heed a U.N. appeal for peace if a smaller nation were to antagonize it. Although, he said, the U.S. might be slightly more inclined not to ignore the U.N.
"I believe." Mr. Pringsheim said, "we are faced by two super powers and actions are hinged largely on what they do and not on what the Secretary General says. Big decisions are made outside the U.N. The fate of the world is being decided outside."
KU Traffic Record Still Intact After Near-Miss
The death of Joseph M. O'Brien of Kansas City, Mo., who died Wednesday after a car collision on Oct. 8, came close to ruining one of KU's most cherished records.
O'Brien was riding in a small European car that careened over the center strip at 1930 Naismith Dr., smashing into a second car headed north in the other lane.
The accident missed occurring within the boundaries of the University by one block. Had the accident occurred one block further north, a fatality free traffic accident record going back at least to 1948 would have been ruined.
Considering the way a very small minority abuse the privilege of driving on campus streets, he said, the no-fatality record is always hanging by a thin thread.
The man who is perhaps most concerned about the campus traffic safety record, Joe G. Skillman, chief of campus police, made the observation about the recent fatal accident.
Four other accidents involving lesser injuries took place within an hour of the one which ended in death for O'Brien. All were within a short distance of the campus and involved college students.
Probably one reason the present record exists is that about 90 per
An undetermined amount of damage was done early Sunday morning to about nine cars parked in the Alpha Tau Omega lot at 1425 Tennessee St.
Nine Cars Damaged in ATO Parking Lot
"The maximum speed limits do not necessarily mean they can be carried out over the campus. They must be adjusted to the particular situation," he said.
Robert Gollier, Ottawa senior, noticed the damaged oars and made a report to campus police about 2 a.m.
Chief Skillman noted that night drivers in particular have a tendency to push the speed limits above the maximum because of the assumption that the dangers are less.
cent of the traffic on major campus streets is held below the maximum speed limit, the chief commented.
Republicans to Meet
The crash that claimed O'Brien's life came shortly after midnight.
The surest way to prevent war is not to fear it.—John Randolph
Lawrence police said air was let out of tires, at least two headlights were smashed, license tags were bent, radio aerials and side view mirrors were broken.
The Republican party state chairman will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Monday, October 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Donald Schnacke, state party chairman, will speak on the effect of the Young Republicans at KU on state politics.
Jerry Dickson, chairman of the Young Republicans at KU, said that Mr. Schnecke speaks to many campus groups.
To rejoice in the prosperity of another is to partake of it.—William Austin
He who is plenteously provided for from within, needs but little from without.—Goethe
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 16, 1961
ALEXANDRA LENNINGTON
SENIOR QUEEN CANDIDATES — Eighteen campus beauties are this year's candidates for Senior Queen. Kneeling in the front row, left to right: Sarah Farmer, Pratt, Kappa Alpha Theta; Harriet Kagay, Larned, Douthart Hall; Sandra Ziller, Kansas City, Mo., Sigma Kappa; Pat Hollingworth, Shawnee Mission, Alpha Chi Omega; and Carolyn Brown, Pittsburg, Alpha Delta Pi. Standing in the center row: Martha Moser, Lyndon, Sellards Halls; Sharon Tebenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., Miller Hall; Toni Barricklow,
Birmingham, Ala., Alpha Omicron Pi; Linda Selfs, Shawnee Mission, Lewis Hall; Catherine Ryan, Kansas City, Mo., Gamma Phi Beta; and Lois Ann Kagsdale, Kansas City, Kan., Kappa Kappa Gamma. Top row, left to right: Jane Dunlap, Lawrence, Pi Beta Phi; Betsy O'Hara, Salina, Chi Omega; Elaine Haines, Kansas City, Delta Delta Delta; Margaret Pettit, Mission, Alpha Phi; Sarah Haines, Coffeyville, Holder Hall; Sherrie Scogin, Prairie Village, Delta Gamma; and Peggy Shank, Hiwatah, Watkins
SUA Carnival Host to 5,000
Over 5,000 persons, 800 more than last year, attended the Student Union Activities Carnival Saturday night in the Kansas Union.
Kay Cash, Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore, Pi Beta Phi, was crowned SUA Queen at the Queen's Finale. Attendants were Judy Clifford, Shawnee Mission freshman, Corbin, and June Owens, Altamont junior, Delta Gamma.
Booth and Skit winners were:
WOMEN'S SKITS: Delta Gamma,
"Peace Crusade Brigade," first place;
Alpha Delta Pi, "Tonight's the Knight",
"second place and Alpha Chi Omega,
"Nights at the Round Stables," honorable mention.
Men's skits: Sigma Chi, "War of the Four Roses," first place; Sigma Nu, "Shamalot," second place, and Phi Kappa Psi, "Muckbath," honorable mention.
WOMEN'S BOOTH: Sigma Kappa, "Little Knight on Campus," first place; Pi Beta Phi, "Damsel Drop"; second place and Gertrude Sellards Pearson, "Gertrude's Sorcery Palace," honorable mention.
Men's booths: Theta Chi, "The Ox-Men's Rock," first place; Lambda Chi Alpha, "Jayhawk Joust," second place and Phi Gamma Delta, "Death's Door," honorable mention.
It is motive alone that gives character to the actions of men—Bruyere
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
GOOD FOOD
DAY and NIGHT
To Debate KU Affiliation with NSA
The question of KU's affiliation with the National Student Association will be debated at 6:45 p.m. tomorrow in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union.
The debaters, sponsored by the KU-Y, will be Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior.
KU-Y representatives said though the debate is primarily for freshmen, the public is welcome.
The more a man denies himself, the more he shall obtain from God. —Horace
GRANADA
NOW SHOWINGI
At 7:00 & 9:15
Elia Kazan's
"Splendor In
The Grass"
Story By
William Inge
VARSITY
NOW SHOWINGI
At 7:00 & 9:00
Melina Mercouri
In
"Never On
Sunday"
Icy Coffin for Tribesmen -
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
YOUTH ARMY CHIEF Monga Dhyldebert detached himself from the group. Swinging his baton hewn from a tree branch, he shouted back to the menacing crowd that I was an American journalist—not a Belgian, not from the United Nations.
The procession halted at the trench, where Dekeres removed some branches to reveal the bodies.
Through an interpreter translating from Swahil into English. Dekeres read a manifesto scribbled on a writing pad. It said the Baluba would not leave the camp until President Tshombe was deposed by the Congolese Central Government.
"It will be certain death for us to return to the communes," Dekeres said. He charged that Tshombe has armed other tribes with rifles so they
"THE BALUBAS ARE not a tru-culent people," he said. "We only attack when we are attacked but everyone, including the United Nations, is against us," he said.
can shoot all Baluza as soon as they return to their home areas.
Dekeres said the youth movement, which claims 40,000 members in south Katanga, has weapons and is ready to fight if the United Nations tries to clear out the camp. He said his group does not recognize the peace treaty signed Friday between Tshombe and the United Nations.
After we had looked at the bodies, the youth squad escorted us from the camp. Again came shouts of "death to the white man." A Swedish U.N. truck roared up. A Swedish officer with a submachine gun leaped out and hurried us aboard.
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WHITE
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$2.95
Also Men's US Keds Canvas Oxfords
$4.95
813
Mass.
McCoy's
Phone
VI 3-2091
OUR PROUD GUARANTEE of Quality!
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POSITIVELY NO FILLER OR
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IN PRINCIPAL CITIES OF
KANSAS — MISSOURI — TEXAS
OKLAHOMA — LOUISIANA
AND SOON IN SEVERAL MORE STATES
THROUGHOUT THE U.A.
1618 West 23rd Street
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR RENT
SLEEPING ROOM with private kitchen
SLEEPING ROOM woman Vacant Oct. 20
VI 5-1588.
10-20
Vacancy available for 2 men in comm-
mission position with Michael Rd. Cf.
II 3-9655 for appointment.
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1097. 10-25
For Rent: Private comfortable basement room. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus, for rent to mature male student. Phone VI 3-3077. 10-15
For Rent: TRAILER, 45', 2 bedrooms.
Inquire at the office, Bingham Trailer Court. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or after 6. Call IV 3-5304. Prefer couple. 10-16
FURNISHED APT., east side, utilities pd. $50. Also single room close to campus, for boys. $27.50. Call VI 3-6294. 10-17
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
room. Washer-Dryer, cord Drone.
$100 month. 221 Mountview Dr. Phone.
3-5882 for 5 appt. TF
LOST
Brown wallet type Billfold: Believed lost in Maiotte area, keep money, return billfold. Reward, call Calvin Huff, VI 3-8021.
10/19
KAPPA ALPHA THETA sorority pin
alabama alphia undo please use
Theta house. Reward 10-19
Lost: A Brent (trade name) size 40, tan with brown bline raincoat was taken from the Hawklet coat rack in Summer. Tuesday. Oct 10. Leonard Nelson is printed inside the collar. Please contact or return. VI 3-8153. 10-16
LOST: WITTNAUR watch works between Pearson Sch. Hall and Snow. Lost 1:00 Tuesday. Call Dave Brack. 1426 Alumni Place, VI 3-8133. 10-16
WILL-THE PERSON who found the Post Versaig slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward. tf
FOR SALE
POST VERSALOG slide rule Instruction
Instructions used. Used.
Beastley, 805 Ohio U.S. S-75334 10-18
Beastley, 805 Ohio U.S. S-75334 10-18
For Sale: 1955 Pontiac Conv. — Good condition, fair tires, good top, inferior radio, heater, automatic transmission.
Mechanically excellent. See to appreciate Henry White Jr., 1145 Louisiana.
VI 3-6700. 10-19
Winchester Model - 97 12 gauge pump
VL 2.500, siper 5.000 10-19
VI L2.500, sipar 5.000 10-19
*PROFESSIONAL* Gelger Counter
*SEACAT US 1323*
nois St—Price $100.00
10-19
45' 2 bedroom Mobil Home loaded with extras; 1960 Voxhall translator tape reel; camera — will trade. Call VI - 2-0560, 7th & Arkansas Green Mobil Home. 10-18
HI FI FANS: Davin T-pads, Model T-
Tatton, 733-306, 733-106
Overland Park, Kansas, 103-16
Guns: Robert Redding Firearms, new & used guns and ammo. Special this week 9mm German Luger. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 10-18
10' x 50' TRAILER for sale. Colonial style with washer & garb. disp. 2 bdrm. Decide your own down payment. Call VI 2-
1425. 10-17
1955 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 dr. Power str. & brakes. Clean, excellent cond. Must sell now. Ask for Skid VI 2-2356.
1116 Miss. 10-17
Registered Sianese Kittens, 1045 Ver-
mont. 10-16
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-8742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
STEVENS 2 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tt
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30%
discount! Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes.
Zerex only 88 cal per limit. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's - 929 Mass. St. 10-18
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices—as shown in the attached list. Motorola Store - 929 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $50.00 each.
Car For Sale: '52 Buck. $50.00. Dyna-flow. Call VI 2-1480 after 13:20 p.m. tf
10-18
Page 11
SACRIPICH - Student must sell second
solar panel in fast running. 4219.
$150; Call SI 3-4219. if
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4201 or VI 3-4201. tf
NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and mimeographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center - most complete shop in mid-
night. Phone VI 3-2921 - Modern.
self-service — open weeks 8 to 3:30
p.m.
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies.
6th, 8th & Vermont. Phone VI
0359
U. AUTO C.-Our complete lines of Pet Supplies - beds - harness - sweaters, catnip, scented pillow, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn., In-Pet Center, Conn., Shop sectionalized - save time and money. tf
SENIORS Need photos for employ-
ment. Need Larry Mathews VI 2-3474 at 3 p.m.
10-17
Tutor for Freshman English, Graduate
teaching experience. Call VI 2-2479.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Would like Ironing to do in my home.
Isc a piece; also want child to care for
in my home, 3 to 4 years old. 340 Indiana
or call VI 2-3473. 10-16
University Daily Kansan
I would like to do ironing in my home.
Reasonable rates. Bring to 811 E. 121-106.
Tremendous home furnishings savings-
tow hop furniture just as the desiers do.
All you need is a free admittance card.
For further information, call V1-35010.
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-5778.
tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ward 932% Mass. MAIL VI 3-2563.
Mass. Call VI 3-2563.
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. tf
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a dog and I enjoy playing. I enjoy having playmates. We have lots of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8140.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tt
MILLIKEN "S.O.S." - Now at two
100 Lawrence Ave. & 1021 Mass. IH
Lawrence Ave. & 1021 Mass. IH
Help Wanted—11 men; Waiter, no training necessary. 1 a.m. to 5 p.m., 5-6 days a week. Apply in person. Griff's Burger Bar, 1618 W. 23rd. 10-20
HELP WANTED
REGISTERED NURSE. Full time, night for intensive care unit. Call director of nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital VI 3-3680. 10-17
WANTED: Driving instructor with car.
Call Mary C. Wilson. I 2-3784. 10-19
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kanson Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
MEN'S
JEWELRY
SALE
20%
off
Cuff Links
Tie Tacs
Tie Pins
Novelty Gifts
Monday, October 16. 1961
Formal Wear
SIR KNIGHT
RENTALS and SALES
1342 Ohio . . . VI 2-3466
Also Agency for Fast 1-Hour Cleaners
Need ride to Kansas City week days
Working hours 8-5. Call III 2-3672, 10-3124
TRANSPORTATION
TYPING
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Vatti, VI 3-8379.
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, these dissertations. Reason is that rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. GOOD TYPEING ENHANCES A GOOD POEM. GOOD TYPEING AVAILABLE impression with instructors." For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097.
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mair, Barlow, 408 W. 19th, V11 *test* 1648. Mair.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. $917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7713. Or either S or Twr 2-2186.
Experienced and competent typist will type your thesis, term papers, themes, and master carbons neatly and accurately rated. Call Pat Cooper, VIII 3-8679.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts. Prepare and conduct neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI.3-7485.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Lorl Gebihleb
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, research reports. Reasonable Electric typewriter. Mc. Mckeldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Experienced Typtist: Electric typewriter.
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc.
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker.
Call VI 3-2001.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
Paper no. 1311. W 1. St. Cl. ViT 3-6440. it
sel 1311. W 1. St. Cl. ViT 3-6440. it
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING,
punctuation & grammar? Former Eng.
teacher, Erica Fischer. Reports
& reports accurately. Standard rates. See
Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
A MAN HUGGING A BIG BOX OF Gifts.
Overloaded With Unwantables?
Try Kansan Want Ads— Get Results
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SHULTON
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 16, 1961
FOR MORE LOW PRICES ON MORE ITEMS -
always SHOP at Dillons
in LAWRENCE, at - 1740 MASSACHUSETTS,
Dallons
ENJOY
Serving You!
LOW PRICES, SATISFACTION AND A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE!
Dillons through quantity buying power, enable you to buy more for your food dollar. It has always been our policy to sell as low or lower than any merchant. We have always prided ourselves in the quality and freshness of our produce, meats, bakery products, as well as that of our grocery products. That, we feel, is one reason why there is an ever increasing number of people who shop regularly at Dillons.
Of course, everything purchased at Dillons carries our personal guarantee. Your money will be gladly refunded if for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase.
CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVE 60c AT DILLON'S SUPER MARKET
THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons!
in LAWRENCE.
ON ANY LOAF OF
DILLON'S BREAD!
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dellons!
in LAWRENCE.
ON A DOZEN OF ANY GRADE
FRESH EGGS
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons!
in LAWRENCE.
ON A FRESH, SOLID
HEAD of LETTUCE
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons!
in LAWRENCE.
ON ANY SIZE FRESH BAKED
DILLON'S CAKE
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
ON A POUND CAN OF DILLON'S COFFEE
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
THIS COUPON WORTH (10c) at Dillons! in LAWRENCE.
THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons!
in LAWRENCE.
ON A POUND OF DILLON'S
LUNCHEON MEAT
(LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER)
SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
YOU CAN ALWAYS DO BETTER AT Willons
Dillons
Nikita May Lift Peace Deadline
MOSCOW—(UPI)—Premier Nikita Khrushchev offered today to withdraw his year-end deadline for signing an East German peace treaty if the Western Allies "show readiness to negotiate" on Berlin.
In a marathon speech to the opening session of the 22nd Congress of the Soviet Communist Party, he also announced that Russia will end its current nuclear test series by the end of this month after setting off a 50 megaton nuclear explosion, the biggest bomb ever exploded by man.
HE TOLD the more than 5,000 delegates, Communist visitors from abroad and a handful of Western newsmen gathered in the glittering new, glass-walled house of congresses inside the Kremlin walls that the West appeared ready to settle the Berlin and German problems on "a mutally acceptable basis."
Khrushchev previously has hinted that he might not carry out his threat to sign a separate treaty with Communist East Germany by Dec. 31 if negotiations could be started. But his statement today was his first firm offer.
In announcing that the current nuclear test series would wind up this month with the massive explosion, he said that Russia already has a 100-megaton bomb.
"May God grant that we never have to explode it," he added, "because we might then blow in our windows."
KHRUSHCHEV SAID the Soviet war arsenal now includes intercontinental ballistic missiles and antiaircraft rockets for land, sea and air forces.
He said the Soviet Union also is building up its nuclear-powered submarine fleet with ballistic and homing rockets.
In offering to hold off on a separate German peace treaty this year, Khrushchev relieved the pressure of a time limit but did not change his proposals for a settlement.
"The Soviet Government as before insists on the speediest solution of the German problem," he said. "It is against putting it off to infinity.
"IF THE WESTERN POWERS display readiness to settle the German problem, the question of the time limit for the signing of a German peace treaty will not be so material; we shall not insist then that the peace treaty be signed by all means before Dec. 31, 1961."
Referring to the recent series of talks Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko had in Washington with President Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk and in London with British Prime Minister Harold Maemillan. Khrushchev said:
"We had the impression that the Western powers were displaying a certain understanding of the situation and that they were inclined to seek a solution for the German problem and for the West Berlin issue on a mutually acceptable basis."
KHRUSHCHEV'S OFFER to relax the Berlin deadline came after he warned the United States and its Western Allies that war would mean the "annihilation" of the capitalist system.
He told his audience that West Berlin must be made a "free, demilitarized city" through the signing of a peace treaty with East Germany.
The Soviet Premier spoke for three hours and 50 minutes at the morning session, which was broken up by a short recess.
In the morning session Khrushchev also:
- Said the United Nations machinery has "grown rusty in the cold war," again called for his system of a "Troika" plan to run it, and demanded once more that Communist China be admitted to membership.
- Claimed that Communism is becoming the decisive factor in world development, and expressed confidence of Communism's victory over capitalism through "peaceful competition."
- INDICATED THAT it might be feasible to banish world wars and followed through on his familiar theme of co-existence by conceding that capitalism could survive alongside Communism in part of the world.
(Continued on page 8)
59th Year, No. 23
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, October 17, 1961
Post Card Furor:
Nigerians Are Urged Against Condemning Peace Corps
A GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN said that while it was "perfectly right that the students . . . should be incensed and indignant, the views expressed are not shared by other members of the Peace Corps.
Reports from Ibadan today said the students who circulated the copies will be "disciplined." There was no elaboration.
The University's Student Christian Movement also urged the student body "not to be hostile" to Peace Corps members who are studying for volunteer services throughout Nigeria.
"The friendly and cordial relations between Nigeria and the U.S.A.," he said, "must not be jeopardized or affected by the foolish writings of one irresponsible student."
"Miss Michelmore must not be taken as the voice of America," the Movement said. "It is the sin of an individual person, and is a symptom of racial sin which dictates the attitude of the white races of the world toward the black races."
Miss Michelmore's postcard was intercepted, reproduced and distributed among Nigerian students at the University College in Ibadan where she was in training for service as a school teacher here.
LAGOS, Nigeria — (UPI) — The government, newspapers and a student organization today urged Nigerians not to condemn the U.S. Peace Corps because of one "irresponsible" act.
The students demonstrated and demanded the expulsion of the entire 40-member Peace Corps contingent.
The reaction was the result of the furor touched off by a Peace Corps volunteer, Margery Michelmore, 23, who referred to the "primitive living conditions" in this Negro republic on a postcard to a friend back home.
MISS MICHELMORE of Foxboro, Mass., has apologized and offered to resign. But officials involved adopted a "go slow" policy on the question of her resignation and return to the United States.
Fair and warm with increasing southerly winds today. Mostly fair tonight becoming partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs today 80 to 85. Lows tonight near 50. Highs Wednesday 70s.
Newspapers also called for calm and restraint.
Weather
The West African Pilot said;
"It seems hasty to judge the whole program by the indiscretions of one, a brash little girl. The Michelmore affair is best forgotten."
The Morning Post, which supports the government, said the Nigerian students "must be advised not to take too exaggerated or emotional a view of the American administration in their fight against the rather
substantial residue of color and racial prejudice . . ."
Many responsible Nigerians were reported to feel that Miss Michelmore should remain here, but indications were that she would be sent home. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said she would be kept here at least temporarily to "avoid any precipitous action."
Ike Denies Support Of Yugoslav Jet Sale
NEWARK, N.J. — (UPI) — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower categorically denied today that he had told President Kennedy of plans to sell obsolete jet planes to Yugoslavia.
The sale of the aircraft to Communist Yugoslavia has recently been under fire in Washington.
"I did not brief President Kennedy" on the sale of the planes, Eisenhower told a news conference here during his day-long tour of campaigning in New Jersey on behalf of former Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell, the Republican candidate for governor.
Eisenhower said that the matter of selling surplus jets to Yugoslavia first arose in 1958. The question was how to dispose of obsolete aircraft, he said.
"The Military wanted to sell some of this stuff" and won the approval
Deadline Is Friday On Ticket Changes
The deadline for exchanging unlawfully held season football tickets is 5 p.m. Friday.
Roy Deem, Joplin, Mo., senior and chairman of the athletic seating board, said that pep club members who have reserved seat tickets should exchange them for special tickets admitting them to the pep club section.
He also requested that students who bought student-spouse season tickets and who are not now registered as married turn in their tickets.
Students returning the student-spouse ticket books will receive a $6.50 refund. The tickets can be exchanged at the ticket office in Allen Field House.
of the State Department on Jan. 10, 1961, the former Chief Executive said.
But the actual decision to go ahead with the sale was made in March, after he had left the White House and President Kennedy had taken office. Eisenhower said.
The New York Times yesterday quoted administration sources as saying Eisenhower gave Kennedy a "specific explanation" on the sale of the jet fighters to Yugoslavia.
$5,000 Endowed To KU Extension
The first endowment at KU for the sole benefit of Extension instruction was received today.
A $5,000 endowment has been created by the Wunch Foundation, Inc., of Brooklyn, New York, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said.
Dr. J. W. Wunch, president of the Foundation, made the grant to the Kansas University Endowment Association to establish the Silent Hoist and Crane Company Materials Handling Instruction Fund.
Income from the endowment will be used to encourage the study of materials, handling principles and procedures and for supporting instructional programs in the field.
The materials handling courses are offered by KU Extension at the Kansas City Extension Center. N. Webster Rickhoff, Center Manager, organized the first offering, a one-day conference on materials handling and packaging in 1946.
The program consists of two phases: a materials handling analysis school, scheduled for March 5-9, 1962; and an evening class on Materials Handling methods, beginning March 26.
Class Day Will Run One Hour Longer Next Year
Class periods next year will begin one half-hour earlier in the morning and run twenty minutes longer in the afternoon, giving KUs crowded class schedule an extra hour.
This will be accomplished by beginning all classes on the half hour rather than the hour. In other words, the first morning class will begin at 7:30 a.m. and run to 8:20 a.m. By running the last period of the school day to 5:20, the extra hour is added.
CHANCELLOR W. CLARKE WESCOE announced the change this morning following a meeting of university deans last night. Dr. Wescoe referred to the change as 'sort of an academic daylight savings time."
"The reason that we're implementing this program is to try and accommodate the 10,700 students expected here next year," said Dr. Wescoe.
Asked if there was any relief in sight regarding new classrooms, the Chancellor said, "The earliest date we can expect more new classrooms is 1963 when Blake Hall is replaced."
A man in a suit walks across the street. Another man stands behind him, looking at him with a surprised expression.
"Heard of KU's daylight savings time?"
"WHAT'S MORE, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, added, "if we get the 41 new structures that we're due, there will be a great lack of office space. Some of that office space is going to have to come from remodeled classrooms."
Mr. Nichols pointed out that the University now has only 138 class lecture rooms with no immediate relief in sight.
Dr. Wescoe commented further:
"Each KU classroom is presently being used 35 hours plus a week. The national optimum is only 25 hours a week which puts this University about 35 per cent over the optimum."
Mr. Nichols emphasized that credits and credit hours will not be altered nor will the actual amount of time students spend in the classroom be changed. According to him, the new schedule will not affect evening classes.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 17. 1961
On Fallout Shelters
Nuclear fallout shelter have been much in the news lately. A Los Angeles firm specializes in building them, and many other building companies across the nation have advertised their fallout shelters. Just how effective are they?
THE ANSWER IS THAT THEY ARE worthless in any urban area suffering from a direct hit by a nuclear missile. The parts of a city like Kansas City that were not immediately pulverized by a nuclear blast would be destroyed by the city wide fire that follows a nuclear blast. That fire would, because of its magnitude, suck all the oxygen in the striken area and suffocate most of the people who had sought refuge in fallout or blast shelters and survived the initial blast. This is not merely some scientist's theory on what might happen. A good example of what a city wide inferno does was furnished by World War II. When the city of Hamburg was subjected to a saturation bombing with incendiary bombs, a city wide blaze resulted, with precisely the result that is described above.
Fallout and blast shelters are feasible for outlying suburban areas and small towns. But a
factor that should be considered here is whether or not the nicely planned recommendations on food and other materials for the shelters will work. The unconscious assumption that underlies the recommended program is that the enemy would not stagger its nuclear rocket attacks. But if it did, say in two week periods, the existing plan for survival in fallout shelters would not work.
WHAT WILL WORK, THEN? THE ANSWER is that no system of survival will work in a large urban area and the systems proposed for suburban and small town areas have serious flaws. And even if these measures for dealing with the initial blow were successful in the areas where they are feasible, there is no assurance the population would survive the intense radioactivity and destruction of industry and agriculture on a long term basis.
These are sobering thoughts, but they are not presented to frighten the reader. They are simply the unpleasant truths that we need to recall to deal intelligently with the situation.
—William H. Mullins
Khrushchev's Speech
The immediate results of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's speech before the 22nd Communist Party Congress would seem to be a considerable lessening of tensions over Berlin.
HOWEVER, WESTERN LEADERS have received word of the postponement of the Berlin deadline with little more than quiet reserve. They welcome his move as a step in the right direction but note that the power drunk Russian leader has seldom paced far in the same direction.
There is considerable significance in Russia's backdown from its 1961 German settlement deadline. It indicates that Western firmness and defensive maneuvers eventually proved the resolve of the United States and its allies not to back down over Berlin.
Khrushchev appears ready to negotiate the terms of a settlement over Berlin. But as always, the terms he is anxious to negotiate on are his own.
Khrushchev's announcement does not bring the world much closer to a settlement on the question of Berlin. The West has found the So-
viet's terms unacceptable in the past and no doubt still does.
THE RUSSIAN LEADER IS ACTUALLY using Berlin as a handle with which he can gain enough leverage to force allied forces completely out of Germany and most of the rest of Europe. Thus far, the determination of the Western powers has contained the Russians by allowing no concessions in the cold war situation.
Other than the lifting of the Berlin deadline, Khrushchev's speech was little more than a warmed over version of what he has said and worked for in the past. He still works under the assumption that Soviet action is justifiable in itself. He announced that the Russians would be ready to resume negotiations toward "general and complete disarmament" as soon as they end their current series of nuclear tests.
He also restated his definition of just and unjust wars. An unjust war is any action taken by the free world to prevent the spread of Communism.
Ron Gallagher
On People-to-People Editor:
Your guest Editorial "Dawson Praised" is neither the result of misinformation nor a symbol of sensationalism of American journalism. It is, on the other hand, positive recognition of a job well-done. It is a tribute to the University, the town of Lawrence, and the student body. It manifests the potentialities of initiative, hard work and leadership.
NOT MANY, among the foreign students, would deny so important a role played by the Dean of foreign students and with such tremendous tact, sincerity, and effectiveness, that it is laudable. It would also be difficult to forget the hospitality—extended so generously and lovingly—by the individuals, church groups and other organizations in the area. These impressions, based on personal experiences extending over four years, are sweet and pleasant and therefore imperishable.
Yet all this does not and can
... Letters ...
not deny Bill Dawson and his teammates a well deserved national recognition which is also a standing tribute to this great University in Lawrence.
IT IS AN OPEN INVITATION to any "sensitive soul" around campus to attend People-to-People meetings and see for himself the persistence, dedication, and hard work being put into the People-to-People Program. For these young PIONEERS OF PEACE, it involves a great amount of sacrifice in terms of time, energy and finance. It means WORK often stretching into the silent hours of the next morning. It does not promise any tangible and immediate rewards. It is not sensational.
But it has a much deeper and fundamental significance in terms of international understanding, based on personal contacts and friendships, indispensable pre-requisites for a sane and peaceful human society. A well-trained citizenry thrives more on its own initiative, confidence and enterprise than governmental spoonefeding. And here lies, in essence, the true spirit of the People-to-People Program.
Raja Mohammed Naib Pakistan graduate student
Liberalism and Mr. Love Editor:
We have been hearing and reading many foolish arguments against liberalism these days, the peak of which were Mr. Love's statements in his letter to the UDK of October 12. Such narrow-mindedness and anti-intellectualism does not deserve anything but ridicule, a job beautifully done by Dr. Ise.
Political Science is a fraud in Mr. Love's opinion, a very "limited" opinion, indeed. In Political Science we are trying to find the answers to certain problems, just as in other fields, surely, but nobody proclaims any absolute truths. Mr. Love is doing that; it seems to me he KNOWS the truth. Of course, it is because he is completely unbiased.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Telephone VIKING Extension 711 news room
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
What is a liberal, anyway? It says in a standard definition that he is tolerant and open-minded, favoring reform and progress. Anyone opposed to this gives clear judgment of himself, namely, of being intolerant, narrow-minded, and opposed to reform and progress. There is nothing to be objected against opposing socialism and communism, but I think it is a grave mistake to identify them with liberalism.
Manfred Grote Sulingen, Germany graduate student
letters to the editor
Editor:
More On Housin Editi
Two of Earl Long's expatriates, now turned Kansas marchers, exhibit some of the erstwhile politico's characteristics. In effect, they quote scriptures to suit their cause, at times they are colorful in context, and oftimes they are incoherent.
There is really not too much to quibble about concerning the content of their letter which appeared in your columns, supposedly in answer to a prior one I had submitted. When one gets as subjective as Messrs. Smalley and Nelson, then there is only the course of attentive listener as they expound on their God-given right to express their innermost sentiments. It is only when an attempt is made to deliver objective "statements of fact" that one may refute their departure from reason.
THEY STATE THAT a declaration I made about the landlady's rights is at loggerheads with something further on. On further on to them is like "Shangri-La," never to be concretely experienced, since by then personalized versions of "ungodly and un-moral" have taken over.
I repeat, the landlady's home is, in the tradition of a free-people, hers to dispose of at will. Not all topics can be covered beforehand in a rental agreement. My own experience testifies to this when my room rent was increased in New York, during undergraduate days, because of excessive burning of the midnight oil. A friend of mine was evicted from a room because of his insistence on company of the opposite sex. None of these topics, as in the case which sparked the current controversy, were covered during the time the transaction was being completed. Divorces and employment terminations are eloquent testimony to the fluidity of human relationships.
THEIR TOPICS which show the injustices of discrimination are well taken, when their content does not encompass unessential items to a person's welfare. For instance, should I advocate free Federal, or state-sponsored, barber shops, because my impeccableness causes the barber shops to discriminate against me? However, in the large I agree wholeheartedly, and they even have me resentful of my role as family barber.
Now I ask you to consider with me the achievements of this state in the field you champion. There does not here exist a large block of minority voters; nor a core of influential intelligentsia; neither is there a proportional per capita contribution to the availability of jobs or wealth to engender same. The history of the state does not record any significant participation in the intellectual life nor in the formative development of its institutions. And yet, the State as a whole, and KU in particular, are anxious to see justice prevail in the field of minority relations. This,
despite the inertia of many to see their moral obligations towards the disenfranchised.
THE GAME MESSRS. Smallley and Nelson played of citing meritorious service on the part of individuals of an ethnic group is, to my way of thinking a two-edged sword, and irrelevant to the topic at hand. For one thing, none of the individuals cited, with a notable exception, were of sufficient stature to alter the course of history to where they "contributed to the landlady's welfare." They may have reached relative success and merit, as historians record it, in spite of the stigmas attached to their race, but on a relative plane, they enjoy popularity in posterity because of the handicaps imparted at birth. To be quite frank, the names they mentioned rate in the same category with the conventional selections to be found describing success stories in any alumni news. The former are chosen by encyclopedia salesmen to strike a sentimental chord, while the latter serve to enhance alumni contributions. The one exception is the extremely meritorious George Carver, who enjoined people to attain personal excellence to elevate one's status.
If per capita merit were the sole criteria of a group's participation in the more coveted fruits of man's world, then I am afraid that no matter what the basis for evaluation rests upon, we would all ultimately suffer. As an illustration, consider for instance that a Sino-American could elect to impart to us as charity the left-overs, for coupled to their unique and original record of intellectual achievement on a pro-rated and group basis, they have the ability to generate wealth while maintaining an unusually low crime rate. All these attributes have been acquired after a start in bondage, amidst ghetto-like environments, at the turn of the century.
THE PROBLEM THEN IS, as stated by several of your correspondents and the Chancellor, a moral one. And morals are tools that society uses to protect itself and maintain its standards. Therefore if the majority group has set up obvious ideas of what constitutes an elite, moral suasion will eradicate the evil.
The use of personal precept and example advocated by Messrs. Smallley and Nelson is something I would like to discuss personally with them, since there we are in perfect agreement. Maybe in good faith we can iron out our other points of conflict.
When a well organized minority secures a benign dictum to improve its status, too often encroaching statism follows in its wake. There's too much of this philosophy of transferring services and responsibilities to an impersonal entity of higher order. This was not the intent of the founding fathers.
Harold Schick
Baldwin graduate student
the took world
What can be said about the Civil War that hasn't been said before, and endlessly, in this first year of the centennial? That which is said here is said by an Englishman, and the book consists mainly of lectures he has delivered on the war.
THE CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA, by Alan Barker. Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents.
Alan Barker provides us here with acute perceptions. He leans heavily on Allan Nevins and Bruce Catton, and does not venture into untreated waters of Civil War historiography. But most of the standard interpretations are present.
Barker, like some other historians, is swinging back to the simple approach to the war, that slavery was the basic cause. He treats, of course, the sectional and state rights arguments, and he is fully aware of such matters as the devil theory of why the war came about. But he shows us that slavery was the No.1 issue.
He goes beyond the mere war itself, to offer an illuminating chapter on Reconstruction. Though, once again, there is nothing new, there is the whole story, compressed, of necessity, into a few pages. And as a conclusion he presents a good, though scarcely thorough bibliography.-Calder M. Pickett, Prof. of Journalism.
Page 3
Anthropologist Says Secrets Of Pacific Island Revealed
New techniques have helped to reveal the mysteries surrounding the people who carved the famous stone statues of Easter Island in the South Pacific, a KU professor says.
By Walt Blackledge
Carlyle S. Smith, professor of anthrology and curator of the division of anthropology of the Museum of Natural History, states that a 1955 expedition to the island has opened new fields of Polynesian studies.
AFTER FIVE YEARS of sifting information, writing and editing,the members of the expedition are ready to publish the first volume of their reports.
Prof. Smith was a member of the scientific team led by Thor Heyerdahl, author of "Kon-Tiki" and "Aku-Aku."
The editing problem was complicated, he said, by the fact that the authors are scattered from Norway to Chile.
"This expedition opens up all of Polynesia for archaeology by demonstrating that it's possible to work out a good time perspective...that everything didn't happen in the last hundred years," he said.
The main contribution of the expedition, Prof. Smith says, was the establishment of identifiable periods in the development of Easter Island culture.
Prof. Smith's major article in the first volume of reports is about the stone platforms where the islanders erected their statues.
THE HUGE FIGURES, weighing
as much as 179,000 lb., were carved to represent important ancestors," he said.
It was probably done immediately on the death of an important chief or family head." he said.
Carlyle S. Smith
ooggi8erlt ev
ni las 00.1
during the middle period of Easter Island culture, 1100-1680 A.D. At the end of that time rival groups sprang up and the islanders started pushing over the statues belonging to rival factions.
Most of the statues were carved
Cleveland Touring Co. Will Perform Monday
The culture of the island deteriorated after that, Prof. Smith says. When Europeans discovered the island in 1722, about all they found of interest were great stone faces. The faces were the tops of statues left near quarries.
The Playhouse is the second attraction of the KU concert season this year.
The touring company of the Cleveland Playhouse will present "Arms and the Man," by George Bernard Shaw Monday.
Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech, and Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama, said they have not seen the touring company but anticipate its performance.
Jeanne Howell, Tulsa, Okla., senior and information officer of Angel Flight, said last night rush letters will be sent to all sororities and women's residence and scholarship halls this week.
Angel Flight is a women's honorary organization. Upperclass women who have compiled a 1.5 grade average the semester prior to pledging are eligible, she said.
Angel Flight Rush Plans Underway
THE PURPOSE of Angel Flight is to promote interest in the Air Force. "We are hostesses for all Arnold Air Society events and AFROTC functions." Miss Howell said.
The women will also usher at concerts and act as hostesses for different campus activities, she said. The group is planning a tour of Forbes Air Base in November.
Miss Howell said there are openings for 20 new members. All applicants will be interviewed by officers of Angel Flight and the Arnold Air Society Oct. 29 at the Kansas Union.
MOSCOW, Tex.—(UPI)—Disgruntled by recent world developments, the 200 residents of this Texas town have announced plans to petition the Soviet Union through the United Nations to change the name of Russia's capital City.
ALL WOMEN interested in Angel Flight should fill out an application, she said, and turn it in at the AFROTC office in the military science building as soon as possible.
Welcome Change
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
"Ive heard they have a fresh, vigorous type of acting style with a lot of enthusiasm," Dean Gorton said.
PROF. BROOKING SAID the resident company in Cleveland was excellent.
The Playhouse, in its 46th season, operates three theaters in Cleveland. The Touring company was established last year. It is in its second season on a Ford Foundation grant. The grant was awarded to the Playhouse in 1957. From it the Playhouse built a touring company with auditions across the country.
"They have a reputation for quality but I don't know about the touring company. I've heard a great deal of comments about them," Prof. Goff said.
"THEY got some of the best talent they could find," he said. "This should be some of the best theater fare you can find any place." he said.
Two hundred dollars in prizes has been awarded to University undergraduates for research projects constructed for the KU Science and Mathematics Day.
The expedition's reports will fill three volumes. The first, to be published before the end of the year, will contain seven articles by Prof. Smith.
Students Win Prizes For Research Work
The selection of "Arms and the Man" by the touring company is representative of its work. It has performed 19 of Shaw's plays, more than any other professional theater. ID cards will admit students.
Second prize of $25 went to Janice Hoke, Salina senior, for her project "Delayed Hypersensitivity of the Contact Type Using p-Aminobenzoic Acid as the Sensitizing Agent."
First prize of $50 was given to Robert K. Remple, Lawrence senior, for a project entitled "Polygons Inscribed in Simple Closed Curves."
PROF. SMITH read reports on the expedition's findings to the 10th Pacific Science Congress in Honolulu last month. He attended the meeting under a grant from the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C.
The $15 third prize was won by John Platt, Topeka sophomore, for his project "Effects on Reinforcement Schedules on Secondary Reinforcement."
In addition to the three top awards, 11 other KU undergraduates won $10 each for their reports.
Tuesday, October 17, 1961 University Daily Kansan
All 14 students are doing research supported by the Kansas Heart Association, the National Science Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation.
Prof. Smith said the members of the Heyerdahl expedition have also been consulted by the National Geographic staff. The society's magazine will carry an article about Easter Island in January.
Paintings Displayed In Ford Exhibition
A Ford Times art exhibit of watercolor paintings by 30 artists is on display in the Architecture Library in Marvin Hall, until Oct. 31.
The traveling exhibition called "Variety Show," is one of 29 displayed throughout the country this month. It is from a collection of 6,500 American paintings collected by the editors of Ford Times magazine.
Subjects include landscape, wildlife outdoor sports, regional architecture and regional Americans.
NEW YORK — (UPI)—Are there any more at home like Van Cliburn? Reservations are being accepted now for contestants in the Second International Tschaikowsky Piano Competition in Moscow next April.
Calling All Pianists
Cliburn won the first competition in 1958. The 1962 contest, to run from April 2 to May 7 offers large cash prizes for the top winners as well as concert tours and recording engagements.
Mississippi First
NEW YORK—(UPI)—The United Press International major college football ratings (with first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses);
Team Points
1. Mississippi (17) (4-0) 308
2. Michigan State (14) (3-0) 303
3. Texas (2) (4-0) 256
4. Alabama (1) (4-0) 225
5. Notre Dame (1) (3-0) 213
6. Iowa (3-0) 183
7. Ohio State (2-0-1) 165
8. Georgia Tech (3-1) 62
9. Colorado (3-0) 48
10. Louisiana State (3-1) 36
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1
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 17, 1961
Page 4
Diplomats to Meet For P-T-P Kickoff
Three former presidents, the prime minister of India and other national and international leaders will meet Nov.11 for the national kickoff of People-to-People.
William Dawson, Kansas City senior and chairman of People-to-People, said that former presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, Harry S. Truman, and Herbert Hoover will attend the re-dedication of the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City. At this time, he added, the National People-to-People program will be launched.
OTHER PROMINENT GUESTS at the re-dedication will be Prime Minister Nehru of India, Edward R. Murrow, head of the U.S. Information Service, and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The governors of every state and all ambassadors to the United States have also invited, Dawson said.
In preparation for the national event, representatives from the "Big Eight" schools will meet here Oct. 29.
THE UNITED STATES INFORMATION Agency (USIA) sent telegrams to the "Big Eight" schools calling for the meeting.
Dawson explained that since the USIA has an active role in the area of foreign student exchange, they have been working in cooperation with the People-to-People program.
Chancellor W, Clarke Wescoe will address the "Big Eight" conference following a breakfast meeting of the representatives.
Following the Chancellor's talk
Africa Is Topic Of AUFS Visit
Reuben Frodin, American Universities Field Staff representative, began a 10-day KU lecture series on Nigeria and West Africa yesterday.
Prof. Frodin, just back from an extended stay in Africa, recently completed a series of AUFS Reports examining Nigeria and its relationship to other African nations.
Before becoming a member of the AUFS in 1961, he was a member of an international commission invited by the Nigerian government to study the development of educational policy for the country. While there, he studied many of Nigeria's problems.
Prof. Fredin will speak to 19 classes in government, economics, education, political science, sociology history, geography, and journalism He will also speak Friday at the Current Events Forum.
The three AUFS speakers who will follow Prof. Frodin are E. A. Bayne, speaking on Iran, Israel, and Italy, Nov. 8-17; Charles R. Gallagher, speaking on North Africa and the Middle East, March 19-28, and Frank Bonilla, speaking on Brazil, April 30 to May 9.
Members of the AUFS live and study in potential world trouble spots. They send reports to the United States analyzing important developments in their area of study. Every 18 months they return to the United States to report to the member universities.
Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children.—William Penn
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each committee of the pilot People-to-People project at KU will present a report on its phase of the program, Dawson said.
AFTER THE MORNING session the representatives will go to Kansas City for a conference with the National People-to-People Committee.
PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP
"It is hoped that ex-presidents Eisenhower and Truman will also be able to attend this meeting." Dawson said.
229 Elm VI 3-2250
At the November meeting the representatives of the eight universities will report on the progress they have made in setting up programs on their own campuses.
Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships, 1962-63; Applications due Oct. 20, 306 for medical examinations to be made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
TODAY
Freshman Class Officer Candidates Meeting: 7:30 p.m. Activities Lounge on cafeteria floor of the Kansas Union. With outline rules and duties for the election campaign.
WEDNESDAY
Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m.
103 Strong, Professor Samuel Eilenberg,
Mary K. Reis and James M. Brown
the Mathematical Association of America.
Coffee Hour: 3:50 p.m. 119 Strong.
AIEE-I Dinner Meeting: 7 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union, Panel Discussion.
Trail Room Dance for Study Break: 9 to 10 p.m.
Dancing to a Rock 'n' Roll Band.
EL ATENEO se reune el miercoles dia 15 a la 4 de la tarde en la sala 12 La Feria. Le convierte con hablaria del "Arte Mexicano Pre-colombino", ilustrando su charla con proyecciones. Todos los amigos de lo que llegan dulamente invitados. Se servirán refrescos.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Imagination is the ruler of our dreams. . . Let reason be the ruler of our waking thoughts. — William B. Clulow
Practice is the best of all Instructors.—Pubillius Syrus
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Tuesday, October 17, 1961 Summer Session Kansas
Page 5
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
SAN DIEGO CITY UNIVERSITY CENTRAL SCHOOL
Disputed Decision Holds KU to 3-3 Tie
KU SOCCER TEAM—Members of the KU Soccer team are, left to right: Crawford Lee Benedict, Horst Haselmann, Hans Krause, Peter Stork, Jannit Lindbaek, Al Feinstein, Robert Leemann, Luiz Umerez, Siman Kuraner, Jost Wehrli, Toman Palmitesta, all standing and, left to right in the front, John Bodouroglow, Chu Kwok Lo, Leo Brito, Thomas Hansen, Bgoya Walter Scott, Pepe Marquez, and Peter Ling.
A defensive error plus a doubtful decision on the part of the referee enabled Park College to hold the KU soccer team to a 3-3 draw in the Jayhawker's first home game of the fall season Saturday.
The defensive error came in the first half after KU had established a 1-0 lead. Thomas Hansen, the KU goalkeeper, failed to hold a ground shot and Paul Thackaberry, the Park inside right, was alert and scored.
In the second half, with the score tied, 2-2, the referee called one of the KU players for an infraction about 20 yards from the KU goal. Some of the KU players, however, continued to play and the ball was pushed into the KU goal. To the consternation of the Jayhawkers the referee recognized the goal.
line full scoring went as follows: Peter Ling scored from a penalty after one of the Park players had handled the ball, 1-0.
Thackaberry opened the scoring for Park, 1-1.
Roger Streeter, the Park left
One-Grand Club numbers only eight members, Charlie Hoag, 1914; Homer Floyd, 1534; Ray Evans, 1431; Forrest Griffith, 1379; Bud French, 1320; Bud Laughlin, 1276; Wade Stinson, 1351; and Bob Brandeberry, 1118.
wing, put the visitors ahead with a strong shot from 10 yards out. 1-2. Siman Kuraner, equalized the score when his shot went in off the crossbar. 2-2.
Park scored its controversial goal, 2-3.
Jannit Linbaek tied the game with the final tally.
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KU Varsity Bowling Team Down to 13
- Creative
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John Member, Dave Rybolt, and Bill Miller are the top three KU varsity bowlers after four tryout sessions.
Before last night's fifth practice, the Jayhawk squad included 13 members. According to Coach Bascom Fearing, the crew's size will not drop below twelve.
Member, Kansas City junior, has compiled a 191 average. Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore, has a 181 average, and Miller, Mission freshman, boasts a 180 mark.
Other surviving contenders are:
Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior; Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior; Rich Hettlinger, Great Bend freshman; Ron Bruce, Kansas City freshman; Larry Siefkes, Formosco freshman; Dick Groner, Overland Park freshman; Bob Bowersock, Kansas City freshman; Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior; Tony Salvino, Overland Park junior; and Vic Holloway, Kansas City, Mo. freshman.
Hammar recorded the season's top scores in intramural bowling last week.
Runner up in the top game race is Jerry Campbell, Livonia, Mich., junior, who had a 243. Campbell bowls for Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Hammar fired a 247 en route to a 630 series. Hammar is captain of his own team in the All-Star League.
Not by years but by disposition is wisdom acquired.-Plautus
Other high scores were posted by Salvino, 235; Frank DeBeers, senior, 233; and Tom Garner, Topeka senior, 221 (628 series).
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Tuesday, Oct. 17
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French Fries ___ 10c
Milk Shakes ___ 20c
Coke, Coffee, Orange ___ 10c
Milk, Root Beer ___ 10c
Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef
1c SALE
Tues. - Sat.
Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR
ONE HOUR AGENCY
pick-up station only
1342 Ohio
1st Suit ... $1.20
2nd Suit ... 1c
1st Trous. ... $ .60
2nd Trous. ... 1c
1st Skirt ... $ .60
2nd Skirt ... 1c
Top coats, plain dresses & all other items included in this offer
Don't forget the special offer on water proofing at the downtown plant 842 Mass.
$2.60 value this week only for $1.99
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 17, 1961
Exposure Concept Dominates Exhibits
The concept of exposure dominates the thinking behind the various art exhibits on campus.
Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting and chairman of the department of art since 1922, says this is the way to have midwestern art students' work seen.
"DR. MURPHY thought we ought
Doctor Gives Survival Tips
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. — (UPI) — "Nuclear fallout, with all its dangers, is no reason for the people of America to resign from the human race."
With those words, Dr. John H. Heller, director of the New England Institute of Medical Research, offered a revised set of "commandments" on how to survive in case of all-out thermonuclear war.
"TODAY," SAID the physician-scientist, "we face an adversary who is talking about a 100-megaton bomb. We have no reason to think he will not develop such a bomb. He certainly has the rocketry to deliver it."
Dr. Heller, a former project director of the Atomic Energy Commission, rejected suggestions that a basement fallout shelter would be the answer for all. Instead, he explained, in case of a 100-megaton bomb blast, any area within a radius of 40 to 50 miles would be in the "ignition range — that is the area in which fires would be started from the heat of the explosion."
Residents of suburban areas who scurried to their basement fallout shelters might be trapped inside, beneath a blazing building.
"I WOULD advise building shelters outside the house because radioactive particles will fall on the roof of the house, and radiation, going out in all directions, would go right through the wood of the house into the basement."
In building shelters, he said, "the main thing to remember is that the more mass between you and the radioactive material — the safer you are."
Dr. Heller said: "You can build a shelter of cream puffs if it is thick enough."
CONCRETE, he said, is the most practical material for a home shelter, and such a shelter covered with dirt would be even better.
Dr. Heller said that a 100 megaton bomb, dropped on such a target as New York City, probably would be exploded at a height of 10 to 15 miles so as to achieve maximum effect. Thus, you would have about seven seconds before the second, and really hot flash came. This might give you time to seek shelter.
"If not, get in the shadow of something. The second flash will be hot enough to cause things in the ignition area to smoulder or burn," he said.
DR. HELLER said a 100-megaton bomb probably would cause second degree skin burns up to 60 miles away.
"Nighttime would be the most advantageous to Russia," he said. "This would mean it would be daylight over there and they would have better conditions under which to make a defensive stand against the retaliation they know would be coming."
GRANADA NOW SHOWING!
At 7:00 & 9:15
Eilia Kazan's
"Splendor In The Grass"
Story By
William Inge
to have the same relationship in the arts as in sports," Professor Eastwood said. "So we began a kind of Big Eight Conference exhibition for art." (Franklin D. Murphy was Chancellor of KU until June 1960.)
The design, theater design and other departments are represented. Each Big Eight school is invited to send representative work. Response has been good in the past.
ALL EXHIBITS ARE JUDGED Each exhibition runs about a month Prof. Eastwood said.
A. Dwight Burnham, associate professor of drawing and painting, is chairman of the committee which selects KU student work for display. Exhibits are selected by the faculty of the various departments.
The representation of sculpture is rather small because not all schools teach sculpture, Prof. Eastwood said. Print making isn't widely represented either. Missouri has a small art department offering only painting. Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma have departments similar to KU's.
WHAT BECOMES of the pictures after they are exhibited? The out-of-town items are returned, but some of the KU items are bought by interested individuals. Last year two paintings and a number of prints were sold.
Lest they be overlooked, there are exhibitions of paintings constantly occurring in the Union. These are guest exhibits arranged by the Student Union.
Prof. Eastwood says paintings should be where people are and not in galleries.
"IT'S KIND OF A painless way of introducing the general student to art," he said. "Many people don't even notice that the paintings are there until they are gone, and then they miss them."
Schmidt to Present Recital Tomorrow
The Faculty Recital Series of the KU School of Fine Arts opens tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Hall with a recital by Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone. Assisting Prof. Schmidt at the piano will be Marian Jersild, associate professor of piano. The concert is open to the public without charge.
During 1960 Prof. Schmidt toured West Germany presenting an extensive series of Lecture Recitals on American Art Song Literature.
For his program he has selected groups of songs by Vaughan Williams and Moeran. Closing the program will be Mahler's Kindertotenlieder (Songs on the Death of Children).
Studying Hotel Administration
The 20 are graduates of the Indonesian Government Hotel School in Bandung. They are living in the St. George Hotel in Brooklyn and taking special evening courses at the Community College of Brooklyn.
NEW YORK — (UPI)—Twenty young Indonesians are studying hotel administration in on-the-iob training programs in New York hotels.
During the day, they work in some of New York's best-known hotels, including the Astor, Commodore, St. Moritz, Pierre, Bilmore, Barclay and Hampshire House.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
Old men are only walking hospitals.—Horace
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING
At 7:00 & 9:00
Melina Mercouri
In
"Never On
Sunday"
"Musical Comedies" has been selected as the theme for the 1961 Homecoming house decorations.
'Musical Comedies' Selected As Theme
Kenneth S. Rothwell, assistant professor of English and chairman of the house decorations committee, said houses should submit entries and sketches to the Alumni Office, 127 Strong, before 5 p.m. Thursday;
Decorations will be judged on Homecoming day, Nov., 11.
God only waits for man's worthiness to enhance the means and measure of His grace—Mary Baker Eddy
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts,Mugs,Paddles Cups,Trophies,Medals
Fraternity Jewelry
TWIST?
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
Try the TRAIL ROOM!
DANCING — WED. NITE
AT THE UNION: 9:00-10:00
"LIVE" MUSIC — FREE
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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Why fight the long lines Come in and relax while we do all the work
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FOR FAST DELIVERY CALL
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Exclusive Engagement!
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KIRK DOUGLAS • LAURENCE OLIVIER
JEAN SIMMONS • CHARLES LAUGHTON
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MATINEES DAILY 2 P.M.; ADM. $1.00
EVENINGS 7:30; ADM. $1.25
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telephone VKJMG 3-1065
Tuesday, October 17. 1961 University Daily 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 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.
LOST
Brown wallet type Billfold: Believed lost in Malott area, keep money, return billfold. Reward, call Calvin Huff, VI 3-8021.
10-19
KAPPA ALPHA THETA sorority pln
tablesale alpha dot please use
Theta house. Reward 10-19
FOR SALE
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalgo slide rule in 563 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward. tf
NEW $200 Guild Western Guitar, 25
New $149 Guild and 4811 any evening
George Johnson 10-23
For Sale: One year old Madison Field-
dens $55, Fettingt-Davies, 723 Mass. 10-23
POST VERSALOG slide rule. Instruction book included. Only slightly used. Jaces Beasley, 805 Ohio VI 3-7533 10-18
Winchester Model -97 12 gauge pump
Winchester Model -$40 16 gauge pump
VI 2-2553 at 5.000 10-19
*PROFESSIONAL*" Geiger Counter
*PROFESSIONAL*" See at 163 I1-10
nof# St—Price $100.00
I1-10
45' 2 bedroom Mobil Home loaded with
phone, camera, printer, corder; 30 mm, camera, will trade,
camera, printer.
Call VI 2-0560, or 7th and Arkansas —
Green Mobil Home. 10-18
Guns: Robert Redding Firearms, new & used guns and ammo. Special this week 9mm German Luger. See at 1304 Tenn.
VI 3-7001. 10-18
10' x 50' TRAILER for sale. Colonial style with washer & garb. disp. 2 bdrm. Decide your own down payment. Call VI 2-1425. 10-17
1955 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 d. Power str. & brakes. Clean, excellent cond.
Must sell now. Ask for David, VI 2-2356,
1116 Miss. 10-17
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
Try the Kansan Want Ads
STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2906 at 6 p.m. tf
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30% discount! Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes. Zerex only 88c per gal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's — 929 Mass. St. 10-18
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices as well as all local AM's forora Store - $29 Mass. St. Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $5.00 each.
Car For Sale: '52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m.
SACRIFICE — Student must sell secre-
tain information running condition
$150. Call $911 3-4291.
NEED HELP?
Outline your requirements, and let us display it in type and style similar to the image above. Create a page. Display ads stand out and are more easily read than those in body class. Send your ad to the University Daily Enron 111 Flint Hall, or call it in KU, 376.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Colllus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and printers. Mimeographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies.
6th and 4th Vernon. Phone VI
0350.
BUSINESS SERVICES
SENIORS — Need photos for employ-
ment. Send Nancy Larry Margo
1-5 2-347 after 3 p.m.
10-17
Tutor for Freshman English. Graduate
teaching experience. Call VI 2-2479.
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center - most complete shop in mid-
west. Phone VI 3-2921 - Modern
service - open weeks 8 to 6; 3:00
p.m.
Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3.
7551, or 921 Miss. tt
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
With diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and sidebars, ensures.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
Free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, M.
3-5778
U. AUTO C.—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc., aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center . . . 1218 Conn. Shop sectionalized - save time and money. tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All books on western civilization are graphed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call 1-800-1431 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 9391' Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
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.
WIVES AND MOTHERS — while you work or attend classes, I would be glad to baby-sit with your children. I have a baby boy and 2-year-old girl who would play in my back yard, all of play equipment and fenced-in back yard. 2010 Rhode Island. VI 3-8140.
MILIKENIK "S.O.S." - Now at two
quarters. MILIKENIK
Lawrence Ave. & 10215 Ma., UF
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat. accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles VI, TI 3-8379.
TYPING
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, paper, theses and dissertations. Reason is rates. Msr Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting rate. For exceler- tying at standard rates, call Miss Loui Pope, PEI 3-1907.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Loe
Gehibach.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles and neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Bariow. 408 W. 13th. VI 21-1648.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service Services 5917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Saira R-2186
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING
punctuation & grammar? Former Eng
these these these reports accurately. Standard rules,
& reports accurately. Standard rules.
See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3.
Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc.
Student dates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker,
Call VT S-2001.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers,
diaries, reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
Calls: 1311 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440 t
sell 1311 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440 t
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, V 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf
TRANSPORTATION
树上的两只小鸟
NEED RIDE from K.C., Kans,
thr frl. Classes Mon.-Wed. Fri-
9-4; Tues.-Thurs. 8-2. Call KU ext. 376,
for classified. 10-23
seed ride to Kansas City week days.
Working hours 8-5. Call II 3-2672, 10-31.
11am-5pm
HELP WANTED
908 Mass.
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1097. 10-25
FOR RENT
Vacancy available for 2 men in com-
munity carehcell Rd Ca-
lifornia 3-9635 for appointment; if
VI 3-8855
- Guaranteed
BIRD TV - RADIO
SLEEPING ROOM with private kitchen to graduate woman. Vacant Oct. 20. Call VI 3-1585. 10-20
FURNISHED APT., east side, utilities
pd. $50. Also single room close to
campus, for boys. $27.50. Call VI 3-6294.
10-17
- Expert Service
For Rent: Room to graduate student or employed woman. Private entrance, very quiet and dignified home $12 bloom on University Drive. Call VI 30-3077.
Furnished 2-bedroom home in Lawrence.
HEDRICK 2-9579. Kansas City. 10-23
Help Wanted—Man; Walter, no training necessary. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., 5-6 days a week. Apply in person. Griff's Burger Bar, 1618 W. 23rd. 10-20
- Quality Parts
WANTED: Driving instructor with car.
Call Mary C. Wilson, I 2-3784. 10-19
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
REGISTERED NURSE. Full time, night,
for intensive care unit. Call director of
nursing at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
VI 3-3680. 10-17
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond-
warded. Kitchen. bath. yard. Fence.
100 month. 224 Mounted Dr. Phon.
VI 3-5882 for 5 appt.
ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
cation OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN.
STEREO
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
I
A
A
had a one-man conference about your future lately?
You:
Why the gold bars?
Future You:
You:
All right. But what can I do for the Air Force?
Future You:
You're needed... just as your father and grandfather were. It's an obligation that a lot of qualified college men have to meet. If we don't...
The Air Force needs college trained men and women as officers. This is caused by the rapidly advancing technology that goes with hypersonic air and space flight. Your four years of college have equipped you to handle complex jobs.
You:
Say I was interested...how can I get to be an officer?
Future You
You know about Air Force ROTC and the Air Force Academy. Then there's the navigator training program. You've probably heard about Officer Training School...where the Air Force takes certain college graduates, both men and women, and commissions them after three months of training.
You:
Starting salary is important. What about that? Future You:
Add it up. Base pay, tax-free allowances, free medical and dental care, retirement provision, perhaps flight pay. You don't have to be an eco major to see it adds up to an attractive package.
You:
I've been thinking about getting my Master's.
**Future You:**
As an officer you can apply for the Air Force Institute of Technology. At no cost, and while on active duty some officers may even win their Ph.D. degrees.
Tell me more.
That's the job of your local Air Force Recruiter. Or write to Officer Career Information, Dept. SC110, Box 7608, Washington 4, D.C., if you want further information about the navigator training or Officer Training School programs.
There's a place for
professional achievement in the
U. S.Air Force
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 17, 1961
Nikita May Ask -
(Continued from page 1)
- Repeated his offer to discuss with the Western powers his aim of seeking a "mutually acceptable and agreed settlement" of general and complete disarmament.
- Said he felt that Communist armed forces were stronger than those of the West, which he referred to as "the aggressive imperialist forces."
- Pointed out that the United States—the "chief capitalist country"—has suffered two critical recessions in the past five years, and claimed that it has "lost its absolute supremacy in world Capitalist production and commerce."
- Said colonialism is "doomed" and that "a stake will be driven into its grave."
- Accused the United States of being "the chief aggressive force . . . the center of world reaction," causing it to act in alliance with West German "militarists and revenge-seekers" to threaten the "peace and security of the world's peoples."
900 Students Take English Proficiency
More than 900 students braved the rigors of the English Proficiency Examination last Thursday, James E. Seaver, associate professor of history and director of the program said yesterday.
Approximately 950 signed up for the examination, Prof. Seaver said. About 911 actually took the examination.
Results of the examination will probably be ready by Nov. 13th, he explained.
The examinations are graded by 90 faculty members scattered throughout the university's schools. Papers are read once. The failures and doubtfuls are read a second time, Prof. Seaver said.
Please Touch Exhibit
NEW YORK — (UPI)—A unique "Please Touch" exhibit recreates the interior of a Dutch home in New Amsterdam is on display at the Museum of the City of New York. The exhibit was planned for children aged 6 to 13 years, and they are invited to handle objects in the exhibit as much as they please.
It is not from nature, but from education and habits, that our wants are chiefly derived.—Henry Fielding
Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are more deadly in the long run.—Mark Twain
Worth begets in base minds, envy; in great souls, emulation.—Henry Fielding
The life which is unexamined is not worth living—Socrates
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
Page-Creighton
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-7694
Claudette Sorel, visiting lecturer in piano, left yesterday for a two-week concert tour through the Midwest.
Motor Tune-ups
Lubrication $1.00
All Major Brands
of Oil
Miss Sorel Leaves For Concert Tour
She will appear with symphony orchestras in Milwaukee and Beloit, Wis., and Cheyenne, Wyo. She will give solo recitals in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio.
Model United Nations
Miss Sorel has made 55 appearances with 32 symphony orchestras, has played in more than 150 American cities and has made four concert tours of Europe.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
Steering Committee Interviews
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
Thursday, Oct. 19 — 7:30-10
Model U.N. Experience Required
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Contact KU-Y Office, Ext. 227 Kansas Union
THE CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) is featuring
Friday 9-12:30 - The Hi-Phi's Saturday 9-12:30 - The Tornados
Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday
Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest
Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday
646 Mass.
PIZZA HUT
VI 3-9760
The University Shop Proudly Introduces
Cole-Haan Shoes
Cole Haan
The University Shop has obtained an exclusive franchise on Cole-Haan footwear for men. These shoes are of the highest quality, designed for the discriminating man who desires luxurious comfort in his footwear. See them today.
oes
Windsor Last — $28.95
STYLE 7111—Burgundy shell Cordovan with a black Cordovan saddle. All leather lining, double sole. Custom detailed with a rounded sole and rounded leather heel.
STYLE 7112—Same as 7111, except in black on black Cordovan.
1420 Crescent Rd.
University Shop
ON THE HILL
Al Hack
Editorial
October ...
October is almost a forgotten month.
There are songs that praise other months, but whoever heard of "October Song"? And did any poet write an "Ode to October"?
We think October needs recognition.
It is the month when leaves begin to turn glorious red, yellow and bronze tones. It is the month when Fall begins to show itself, enthusiasm for summer activities wane and people look forward to cool autumn days.
But have we become so materialistic in our hustle-bustle world of books, and classes that we fail to see the beauties surrounding us on the campus?
Majestic oaks and maples, reigning around Potter Lake in raiments of royal color that no dye nor artificial coloring agent could ever hope to duplicate, present a spectacular show of beauty for those who care to look.
Smaller, but no less regal in demeanor, plants and shrubs dominate other areas on the Hill, and as playful October winds tease girl's skirts and whip these gay leaves from their thrones, students shuffle through piles of gold, bronze and copper without realizing the treasure at their feet.
Red brick or drab gray walls are beginning to show through the thinning ivy leaves on buildings around the University. A sign of October and her selfishness—she gives beauty, but takes it away, too, making us aware of the coming winter.
October is a month for romance, for parties and songs. It is a month for a full moon and hay-rack rides or long drives in the country. October is a month for gaiety, for forgetting cares and worries.
But beware October!
She can suddenly fill the night with ghosts, witches and goblins, horrible beyond belief, frightening innocent passersby or begging and pleading for the shiny red apple bobbing in a tub of water.
October tries to please everyone, transcending most laws of nature, which really don't care if their climate pleases or not.
October is the month when smoke from indoor fireplaces can be seen spiraling upwards and its pungent odors greet those persons outside, proving October and her advantages are here.
October is also a month of surprises. One day is cool and crisp, the night almost cold. The next day is warm and lazy, a return to spring. This is October showing her independence and indecision.
She is also an ominous month, not by her actions, but by her suggestion of what follows her. She is the last to bring capricious days, days to be outside to enjoy the beauties of fall before the cold reality of winter makes its entrance upon the stage.
As October recites her final lines and takes her final bows, lines of age begin to show, she leaves with the assistance of winter, making her entrance upon the stage.
As October departs, she promises the song of the North wind, wailing around buildings, creeping into corners.
She also promises the trees will be stripped of their leaves, with only a stark silhouette remaining against the white swirling snow of winter.
The Editors
Anderson at Royal Champion on Block
KANSAS CITY, MO. — (UPI) — Kansas Gov. John Anderson today told a meeting of the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce that the United States must keep a free enterprise type of business if it wants to survive.
The Governor, in Kansas City for "Kansas Day" at the American Royal, added that a relationship must continue between business and government that will sustain the free enterprise system.
"IN ADDITION, we must retain under state and local control these areas of government which are not by necessity interstate in nature," the governor said.
Anderson added, "When the people lose their part in government, they lose interest in it. And when it is removed to a central government surely they lose much of the right to exercise control of their government.
"Surely we can have a liberal government in the sense of meeting the needs and demands of the people, and have a conservative government in the sense of retaining the fundamental principles established by our founding fathers—that the government should be by the people and for the people." Anderson closed.
MANY KANSAS STATE officials are attending today's performance at the Royal at which the grand champion of the American Royal Livestock Show will go on the auction block. The prize Black Angus steer will be sold in the climax of a family enterprise shared by twin sisters Judy and Joyce Vining of Osage, Iowa.
When Maybe II, was picked by the
judges yesterday as the best in a field of five champions in individual classes, 17-year-old Judy called it a "wonderful surprise." Her sister stood beside her as they acknowledged victory.
K. U. is expanding relations with the University of Costa Rica through a complete exchange of publications. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said today.
KU Broadens Exchange Program
The agreement is the first of several new plans in K.U.'s exchange program with the University of Costa Rica.
Chancellor Wescoe and Rogelio Sotela, vice rector of the University of Costa Rica, formally agreed to "initiate gestures" leading to aid for Costa Rican students wishing to study here. In the two-year-old program K.U. students have studied in Costa Rica, but Costa Rican students have been unable to attend K.U. because of expenses.
The Chancellor hopes arrangements will be made in time for Costa Rican students to arrive next semester, or by the start of the 1962-63 year. Fifteen K.U. students have been chosen to begin study in Costa Rica this February.
K. U. is considering fellowships for training Costa Rican specialists in medicine. The possibilities of an exchange program in agronomy between Kansas State University and the University of Costa Rica are being viewed.
Daily hansan
Wednesday, October 18, 1961
59th Year, No. 24
History Club
"Morality Versus Force in American History" will be the topic discussed at 7:30 tonight by Clifford S. Griffin and Raymond G. O'Connor, assistant professors of history, at the History Club meeting in the Cottonwood Room of the Union.
Three to Receive Medical Awards
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
NEW YORK—(UPI)The American Heart Association announced today the selection of two doctors and an attorney to receive its 1961 Gold Heart Awards.
Selected to receive the 1961 awards were: Tinsley R. Harrison, professor of medicine, Medical College or Alabama, Birmingham, Ala.; Dr. Louis N. Katz, director of the department of cardiovascular research at Reese Medical Hospital, Chicago, and Frank L. Mechem, a Seattle lawyer.
The awards are given annually for significant medical research pertaining to heart disease and to individuals who contribute to the advancement of the association's overall program.
The awards will be presented next Sunday at the association's annual meeting in Bal Harbour, Fla.
The outlook for the next five days is for temperatures 2 to 4 degrees below the normal 70 and little precipitation. It will be generally fair tonight and tomorrow.
Weather
Peace Plans Drag For KU-MU Game
By Karl Koch
The All Student Council's efforts to prevent violence at the KU-MU game Nov. 25 are meeting with little success because MU "is lackadaisical about the whole affair."
This is the opinion of the KU student body president, Max Eberhart. Great Bend senior.
VOWS OF SEVERAL KU students to get even after the KU-MU altercations of last year's football and basketball games prompted a resolution last year to look into the possibility of a meeting with MU leaders.
A committee of seven KU students was appointed this September to plan a dinner here or at Kansas City to discuss a halt to KU-MU warfare.
"WEVE OFFERED to pay their expenses except transportation to Lawrence or Kansas City." Eberhart said.
"They have a lot of conflicting affairs, but they act like it's our responsibility," he said.
The Missouri student body leaders, specifically Roger Bridges, MU student body president, seem to feel it is KU's responsibility this year to prevent violence since the game is to be played here, Eberhart said in an interview last night.
Eberhart has made several phone calls to Bridges to try to set up plans for a conference.
He added that people would blame KU for any violence this year because "it's our buildings, our stadium, and our grounds."
Any violence would give KU a bad name, Eberhart said.
"We want to prevent this," he added.
EBERHART SAID the ASC wasn't trying to stop the rivalry between KU and MU.
"The rivalry is healthy," he said. "It's a good thing."
GOING ON TO whether there was any possibility of the "KU Peace Corps" (as Eberhart called the seven member committee) setting up a meeting with MU, Eberhart said the committee hadn't given up hope.
"We're still trying. We may get together yet," he said.
Nikita Predicts Downfall of U.S.
MOSCOW —(UPI)— Premier Nikita Khrushchev said today that American-style capitalism is on its way out and the world of 1980 will be dominated by Communism.
In a second appearance in two days before the 22nd Soviet Communist Congress; Khrushchev spoke for six hours sketching in the outlines of a party program for the establishment of a Communist society in the next 20 years.
He termed the Communist plan a blueprint "for the creation of a so-
(Continued on page 9)
The Queen of All the Cows
By Martha Moser
Obviously it was a job for specialists, those who study women with the interest of perhaps the men.
And these specialists never studied harder than this morning when they judged the senior queen candidates. Eighteen senior women, myself included, were vying for the title of senior queen. Our judges were the 1,746 other members of our class.
PICTURE THE SCENE: Senior Coffee, Ballroom of the Kansas Union. Hundreds of students cluster in little groups, coffee cups in hand, talking, laughing, looking at the stage. On stage, we 18 women sit empty handed, smiling, looking at the little groups.
"Isn't being a queen candidate exciting!" someone exclaims.
Ah, observe our classmates observing. Someone asks how it feels to be a queen candidate. Indeed! How does one answer such a penetrating psychological question?
Our judges, pencils poised, subtly glance at the entrants in the judges circle . er, on the stage. You can define the thinking as they begin to score.
I MIGHT GUESS, though, it is not unlike the feeling a champion steer must have as he steps into the show ring.
"Height from shoulder to hock . . .
condition of coat, hide . . stance
. width of body . evenness of
back . straightness of sides. "
The judges tally their figures. The votes are ready to be counted, and finally, the winner is about to be announced. You wonder whom they picked for grand champion.
YOU CATCH a woman student looking at you, and you can tell that in one glance she has graded you as only U.S. Choice. She smiles at the candidate from her house—U.S. Prime.
It is not you, of course. No. You didn't think it would be, so you're not disappointed. You didn't have a chance. You had decided before you came that you didn't have a chance.
SO YOU'RE not disappointed. Not much. But isn't being a queen candidate exciting?
M
Guess who the guy in the middle voted for!
Page 2
University Daily Kansas Wednesday, October 18, 1961
The Peace Corps Snafu
A postcard written by an American Peace Corps member stationed in Nigeria for final training before assuming her duties there created quite an uproar a few days ago. The postcard described the "primitive living conditions" in Nigeria. It somehow strayed and ended up being reproduced and distributed by a group of Nigerian students. The result was student demonstrations and an offer by the Peace Corps member to resign.
THAT POSTCARD CAN CERTAINLY be called inconsiderate and rash. It hit a very sensitive nerve in the Nigerian students and they were irritated and resentful.
But the postcard contained statements that were accurate from the Peace Corps member's point of view. To an American the living conditions in the new African republics are primitive. And it is highly doubtful that the postcard was written with a desire to insult Nigeria or its inhabitants.
On a long term basis the incident was a minor one. Nevertheless, because of the sensitive nationalists in the areas where the Peace Corps will be operating, great care should be exercised
by U.S. officials to be sure this type of incident is not repeated.
THE NIGERIAN DEMONSTRATORS, however, showed as little discretion in the matter as the Peace Corps member did. To call the Peace Corps members "agents of imperialism" is only evidence of an irrational attitude. The Peace Corps is in Nigeria to help that country improve those "primitive living conditions" that the Peace Corps member commented on in her postcard. And that postcard is a poor basis for such name calling. Nigerian officials' decision to discipline the students who circulated copies of the postcard was therefore entirely justified. If they considered the postcard derogatory to Nigeria, it should have been turned over to Nigerian or American officials, not used as an excuse for a demonstration.
THE NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT and several Nigerian newspapers took the logical and responsible action needed in this situation when they pointed out that the postcard represented the action of one person and should not be allowed to jeopardize U.S.-Nigerian relations or the remaining Peace Corps members.
—William H. Mullins
Republic or Democracy
In these days of Johnny Birchers, superpatriots by other names, world crises and the confusion over the Peace Corps in Nigeria, individuals in America are evading national and international issues and debating whether we are governed by a democracy or a republic.
And many men-on-the-street are taken in with the idea of controversy over our government and begin screaming about the terms without any knowledge of them.
A DEMOCRACY IS GOVERNMENT by majority vote, it is the rule of men, by tradition or precedent. A republic is rule subject to laws, tradition and precedent, changed by due process, some groups tell us.
THOSE WHO ADVOCATE the republic say forces have been at work for decades to speed up a degeneration of the republic, to change the
We are also told the constitution guarantees a republican form of government, but does not mention a democracy at all. We are informed of Madison's Federalist Paper No.10, which shows the disadvantages of a democracy, we are told about many other facts, dating back to Greek city states.
economic and political structure of the United States so it can be comfortably merged with Russia.
Who are the "tremendous forces?" What have they been doing to change our economic and political structure?
If there is this force, the accusers should name those individuals involved, those organizations, state facts and figures, prove what is said or what has happened in the past.
The man-in-the-street is often uninformed, but he is not ignorant. He expects facts. He does not want to be confused by glowing generalities and political euphemisms.
THIS IS NOT MEANT to say one side or another has the better case. It is not meant that one side or another is wrong or right.
It is merely meant to say that both sides are glossing over their arguments, spending too much time on an issue that may not be as important as the preachers state it is.
But if it is so important, let us be told facts, the truth on both sides, the hard, cold facts, if you will.
Carrie Merryfield
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
COACH
R.46
"THREE TIMES NOW YOUVEE SEEN TH' ACTIVITIES OF TH' CHEER LEADERS — NOW, NEXT GAME KEEP YOUR EYES ON TH' DALL!"
Editor's note: The Daily Kansan strives to print all letters that are in good taste and of reasonable length. Attacks on personalities, as distinguished from issues, will not be printed. All letters must be signed. The writer's name will be withheld if he gives good reason for such action, but we cannot accept a letter that is not signed.
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From the Magazine Rack
The Control of War
By Oliver D., Knauth
The reason it was possible to "limit" the Korean War was because small tactical nuclear weapons had not been developed. Since Korea, the family of nuclear weapons has grown so rapidly it is difficult to distinguish between a large conventional weapon and a small nuclear one. As armed forces come to be equipped with a variety of small tactical nuclear weapons, the temptation for each belligerent to use a slightly larger weapon will be hard to resist...
Among nuclear powers, limited war has its weakness even as an instrument of policy because, to quote Paul Keckemeti ("Strategic Surrender, 1958"), "In dealing with the political problem of securing a settlement on the basis of partial nuclear operations, the winner must take into account the loser's ability to unleash a last orgy of destruction... When it comes to setting terms, the possibility of a last explosion of despair must be counted as part of the loser's bargaining strength... This implies that in nontotal war, the final political payoffs must be moderate."
By Charles J. Hitch and Roland M. McKean
The emphasis of the advocates of limitation has been on the high rather than on the low end of the spectrum of weapons. They have talked in particular of nuclear limited wars on the assumption that nuclear weapons will favor the defender rather than the aggressor and that the West can depend on these to compensate for men and conventional arms...
The argument runs that the offense requires concentration and so the aggressor necessarily provides the defender with a lucrative atomic target. This ignores the fact, in a delivered nuclear weapon itself, the offense has an enormous concentration of force. The use of nuclear weapons in limited wars might make it possible for the aggressor to eliminate the existing forces of the defender and to get the war over, reaching his limited objective before the defender or his allies can mobilize new forces. Like all-out nuclear war, it puts a premium on surprise and forces in being rather than on mobilization potential, which is the area in which the West has an advantage...
We are inclined to believe that most of those who rely on tactical nuclear weapons as a substitute for disparities in conventional forces have in general presupposed a cooperative Soviet attacker, one who did not use atomic weapons himself. Here again is an instance of Western-preferred Soviet strategies, this time applied to limited war. Ironically, according to reports of Soviet tactical exercises, described in the last few years in the military newspaper "The Red Star," atomic weapons are in general employed only by the Russians, the West apparently employing Soviet-preferred Western strategies. The symmetry of the optimism of East and West here could be quite deadly.
By Raymond Aron
The strategy of deterrence is essentially psychological. It aims at preventing an enemy state from taking the initiative of aggression. We try to predict an enemy's decision under given circumstances, and we are compelled to accept the hypothesis that he will act rationally. (But) can we determine with certainty what a rational behavior would be? Would it be rational, for instance, for the leaders of the Soviet Union to accept twenty million casualties in order to eliminate the military power of the United States? Would it be rational for the United States to accept fifty million casualties in order to save West Berlin? Can we be sure that our opponent will adopt the pattern of behavior that seems rational to us?
This double uncertainty inevitably affects the conclusions of all so-called "scientific" studies of the strategy of deterrence.
By Harrison Brown and James Real
If the arms race continues, as it probably will, its future pattern seems clear in broad outline. As a result of the emergence of the current tremendous capabilities for killing and destroying, programs will be started aimed at the evacuation of cities, the construction of fallout shelters in regions outside the major metropolitan areas, and the construction of limited underground shelters. Increased offensive capabilities will then emerge which will to some extent neutralize these efforts...
The new developments will cause people to burrow more deeply into the ground. Factories will be built in caves, as will apartment houses and stores. Eventually most human life will be underground, confronted by arsenals capable of destroying all life over the land areas of the earth. Deep under the ground people will be relatively safe—at least until such time as we learn to make explosives capable of pulverizing the earth to great depths...
The Soviet Union has apparently, in the last few years, instituted a civilian defense program of substantial magnitude. It is probable that within the next two or three years the United States will embark on a crash shelter program for a large proportion of its citizens and some of its industry. Once the shelter program is under way, it will constitute a significant retreat from the idea of the obsolescence of war.
Once the people are convinced that they can survive the present state of the art of killing, a broad and significant new habit pattern will have been introduced and accepted, one grotesquely different from any we have known for thousands of years—that of adjusting ourselves to the idea of living in holes. From that time onward it will be simple to adjust ourselves to living in "deeper" holes.
Wednesday, October 18, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Jazz Concert
Page 3
the took world
By Walter M. Hull
MY LIFE AND HARD TIMES, by James Thurber. Bantam 50 cen
The world of James Thurber is a world of oddballs. It is a world of ghosts in the night, of false alarms, of continual bumbling and ineptness. It is a world with which few of us have any experience, and yet with which we are all painfully familiar. It is none the less a very real world, the world of the little man.
IN THE BOUDOIR OR THE DRUGSTORE, on campus and in big business we find Thurber's little man, stumbling through his existence from day to day, somehow always surviving to come back for more. He "knows vaguely that the nation is not much good any more; he had read that the crust of the Earth is shrinking alarmingly, and that the universe is growing steadily colder, but he does not believe that any of the three is in half as bad shape as he is." And with this little man we are all bound to sympathize. While the world is struggling to see whether this nation or that will be the first to blow us all to bits, I am struggling with a cantankerous typewriter ribbon and you are wondering how to get by that unusually large dog and into your nine o'clock class. It is you and me that Thurber is writing to and about, and we are a bit flattered to think that perhaps he considers us more important than World War Three.
TO THE MONUMENTAL TASK OF WRITING the chronicle of the little man, Thurber brings a gentle but penetrating wit and a despairingly hopeful style that are by now familiar to nearly every reader. If they are not, they should be. This volume contains several of the author's older pieces, carefully slung together in an altogether delightful anthology, and affords to any who have not yet made his acquaintance the chance to do so.
THURBER HAS MADE HIMSELF A PART of American humor, but he has done something more. He has become one of the few men who have told their part of America's story with a really deep understanding. Perhaps he has succeeded so well because he knows his limitations and has not extended the scope of his work beyond his own confused little world, but he has chosen well the source for his writing, for his microcosm contains something that is truly universal. This is the sort of book that one should read once a year, at least, along with perhaps "Alice in Wonderland" to keep perspective from slipping away, and to remind one that none of us are alone in our aloneness. It is a book to change the cry of "Stop the world, I want off," to "Here goes nothing, again." It is, I think, a more hopeful cry; Thurber's little man is always undaunted, if only because he has no time to be daunted. It is a book which tells us that there, the grace of God notwithstanding, go you.
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
THE SHELTERED LIFE, by Ellen Glasgow. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents.
Ellen Glasgow's South is somewhat different from William Faulkner's or Erskine Caldwell's. On the surface, that is, for fundamentally Miss Glasgow wrote of the same South as Faulkner's—the South in transition, the South shifting from agrarianism to industrialism, the defeated South of the turn of the century, the South slowly yielding to the Snopeses.
Her Queenborough is a city of somewhat more refinement than Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County. Queenborough is Richmond, and Miss Glasgow shows us what was happening to the society of that city, and to the city itself.
Her people are people who cannot accommodate themselves to a new civilization, people unprepared for a new way of life. The life of Jenny Blair Archbald and her grandfather is a sheltered life, but every so often a bad smell—a smell of a factory—assaults their nostrils. It is a symbolic as well as real odor, for Richmond, like other southern cities, was making an effort to become part of Henry Grady's "New South."
Jenny Blair is a lovely child growing up, and then a lovely girl who finds herself completely unequipped for the shocking tragedy of a secret love affair. All of these characters in "The Sheltered Life" are similarly unequipped. The aristocratic class of the South was living in another world, civilized people who were almost anachronisms in the bustling of the new century.
Worth Repeating
When a Wet starts to quote Bibical authority, it's usually with bibulous intention—Craccio Houlder
The major problem on campuses is that the faculties are not sufficiently interested in students. The reason they are not interested is that they don't know enough about students. If that sounds paradoxical, I am nonetheless quite sure that it is true. They don't see students in a framework of a developmental psychology which would make each student fascinating to observe, with attention to where he is in respect to certain kinds of developmental goals. Actually, as we learn something about students, there is nothing more striking to behold than the struggles that develop, the regressions that occur, and so on. If we could show the faculty that this is really the most fascinating business in the world, watching and participating in the development of young people, we would really have done something.—Nevitt Sanford
On Bomb Shelters Editor:
I suspect I don't understand this business of the atomic fallout shelters as Professor Backus puts it. He said the U.S. government should begin construction of atomic fallout shelters but according to the Civil Defense program that is not the case.
THE PREMISE of the private shelters program, as begun under Eisenhower and taken over by President Kennedy is that in event of thermonuclear war each citizen must provide his own protection and be his own secretary of defense. The Defense Department, so called, as I. F. Stone puts it, turns out to be for offense only.
This approach is favored by the generals, who fear diversion of appropriations to Civil Defense, and the higher bracket tax payer, who can afford to build his own shelter and does not see why he should be taxed to provide them for those who can't.
MANY ANTI-NEFARISM elements like the Birchers, the Goldwaters, the YAF, etc., etc. might think that the United States would be better off if the unfit die.
How about those who can't afford bomb shells. Do they deserve to die? In a recent statement President Kennedy said, that "no less than 70 million Americans will die in case of war." To defend freedom or Communism with self-destruction is a fallacy. If Berlin is worth a thermonuclear war as Soviets and Americans see it, many of us, there and here, instead of shelters must start digging our own graves.
PERHAPS THE PEOPLE-TO-People program can make arrangements to provide shelters at KU, don't you think?
Luis Mayor
Placetas, Cuba, junior
P. S. To those students interested in shelters they the I. F. Stone Weekly in the Undergraduate Library. Also read in the same issue the full text of the Air Force Association 1961 Policy Statement. American people must be mobilized for complete eradication of Soviets. "Community of Fear" published by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions might be a good light in this insanity of nuclear war.
Explains Sunday Talk
Editor;
My talk Sunday at the Faculty Club had one major underlying theme, namely that we must conduct our foreign policy in such a way as to convince Khrushchev to abandon a policy of overt hostility into which I felt he had been pushed by some aggressive members of the Soviet oligarchy and to revert to his policy of peaceful coexistence. I suggested means by which this end might be accomplished, (1) by showing the Russians we really mean business by adopting a firm line with them over Berlin, and (2) by proving to them that we have the will to resist. Furthermore, I urged the desirability of keeping Russian diplomats talking with our diplomats.
I SPENT ABOUT half my time arguing why I believe Khrushchev to be the powerful chief oligarch of an oligarchy, and why, therefore, a major issue for us to consider is how to affect what I believe to be a struggle within that oligarchy over, among other things, the best foreign policy for the Soviet Union to pursue.
The headline in yesterday's Daily Kansas emphasized only the second of the means I stressed, i.e., the need of proving to the Russians our will to resist That headline emphasis, and the structure of the article tend to obscure my main point. Moreover, there is not one word of mention of my analysis of the essentially oligarchic nature of the present government of the Soviet Union. Furthermore, my view that the risk of nuclear war is infinitesimal, provided we take a strong stand, is not mentioned. I am sure the average reader of the article would think that I believed war to be around the corner. Such an implication would be inaccurate.
... Letters ..
IF ANYONE is interested he can see the text of my talk, which I had written out in advance.
Oswald P. Backus
Professor of History
Book Review Defended
Editor:
Your (YAF letter printed in the Oct. 16 UDK) smear attack on Frank Donner's "The Unamericans" is apparently typical of your attitude Instead of criticizing what a person writes, you just attempt to discredit his name. However, your adulation of the House Un-American Activities Committee is a little too obvious. According to the Congressional Record of July 31, 1961, the "extension of remarks of Hon. Frank W. Boykin of Alabama" is actually a speech by
Francis E. Walter to the Alabama American Legion State Convention of July 22, 1961. We know who Rep. Walter is—the chairman of the Un-American Activities Committee. Were you afraid to explain your real source? This speech by Walter is then quoted by you to support your claim that Frank Donner's book is an "inaccurate" picture of HUAC. Obviously the chairman would feel that such a book attacking his committee is inaccurate.
Apparently you were unable to find a less prejudiced source, so you attempted to disguise this one. For a fairly new ultra-right organization, you are learning fast. McCarthy would be proud of you.
Charles Nicol
Charles Nicol Blue Springs, Mo., senior
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 18, 1961
'Davy Crockett' to Help U.S. in Europe
NUERNBERG, Germany — (UPI)—Davy Crockett, a front-line nuclear weapon small enough to be carried by a man or mounted on a jeep will be in the hands of U.S. Army troops in Central Europe by late December.
Known variously as an atomic bazooka or mortar, this smallest of tactical nuclear weapons is in a number of ways the most spectacular of a wide range of new weapons and equipment being supplied to American forces along the Iron Curtain.
AFTER YEARS of development, testing and sometimes sluggish progress, the equipment for modernizing America's North Atlantic Treaty troops is being delivered in the nick of time for the military build-up brought on by the Berlin crisis. It has been coming in at an increasing rate over the past two months, even if not as rapidly as commanders might like.
Hand-in-hand with the weapons modernization is the troop build-up ordered by the Kennedy Administration as a prime means of showing American determination in the current crisis. The U.S. Army in Europe, which now numbers about 233,000 men, will receive an additional 40,000 men by Nov. 1.
Gen. Bruce C. Clarke, Army commander in Europe, said in a talk with newsmen at headquarters of the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment here that his forces are as well equipped as the Russians—and, in some cases, better.
CLARKE'S TOP aides said arrival of the Davy Crockett will be a great boon to front-line troops. It will also be a further demonstration that the basic strategy of using nuclear weapons, if necessary, has not been overturned by the current heavy emphasis on building up conventional forces.
The Davy Crockett is a long, tubular device with a solid fuel which hurls a bulbous atomic warhead about two miles. The warhead is believed to have an explosive force equal to several hundred tons of TNT, which is very small for a nuclear weapon but still enormous in comparison with high explosives dropped by fleets of bombers in World War II.
No other nuclear weapon is designed for firing at such close range or for such rapid overland mobility. It will give army divisions an ideal weapon for breaking up large assaults and supporting counterattacks.
Big Changes In Spain Associate Prof. Says
By Ben Marshall
The Spain of today is much different from the Spain of 25 years ago, according to Domingo Rieart, associate professor of Romance languages.
Prof. Ricart has recently returned from Europe, where he was on sabbatical leave, collecting data and studying manuscripts of Juan de Valdes in the libraries of England France, Austria, Germany and Spain.
Prof. Ricart said that he had little trouble understanding the people and problems of modern Spain.
THE DATA AND PHOTOSTATS of the manuscripts will be used for a book discussing the effects of Valdes' writing on 16th Century European Civilization, he said.
"Being originally from Spain and having lots of contacts, I could enter immediately into things," he said. "But," he added, "living in America for 25 years made me react in a typical American way. My brother referred to me as 'el Americano.'"
Migration Plans Are Scrapped
The KU migration to Oklahoma has been derailed.
Ronald D. Halbgewachs, Glen Elder senior and president of KuKu, men's pep club, said 500 tickets were necessary before the Santa Fe could run the special migration train. Only 125 students bought tickets.
A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, director of athletics, said he hoped that the students who had planned to go on the train would still try to and some kind of transportation to Oklahoma. He said if they cannot go, the students who have purchased game tickets should come to the athletic office.
Since the cancellation, several living groups have chartered buses or organized car caravans.
Students who have purchased tickets for the train will receive a refund if they go to the Santa Fe depot.
"I GOT THE IMPRESSION that the regime is old and tired. It must have very few partisans; I didn't meet any," he said.
"In general, even among the military people there was no enthusiasm for the Franco regime," he added.
However, he said that during his stay in Spain, he lived with his brother and other relatives in Catalonia, a province which particularly resents the Franco regime.
Speaking again of Franco's government, Prof Ricart said: "There is very much concern for what is coming next. Franco has made no provisions for succession. Monarchy could be accepted as a lesser evil, but no one is enthusiastic," he added.
TODAY, FRANCO IS kept in power by American money, he said. American investment is the primary reason for the upward shift in the Spanish economy since the end of World War II, he said.
"But," he added, "we are supporting a system in Spain that shows no sympathy or assistance to the U.S."
America is continually insulted especially in the Spanish newspapers, he said.
However, Prof. Ricart saw some positive characteristics of Franco's socialistic government. Social security, a developing system of socialized medicine, and two-week holidays with pay, are several of the improvements the regime has made for the lower classes, he said.
English Lawyer to Discuss Baghot, Victorian Economi
Norman St. John-Stevas, English lawyer and author, will speak on Walter Bagehot, Victorian economist and man of letters, at a public lecture sponsored by the departments of English and political science at 4 p.m., Oct. 30 in Bailey Auditorium.
Dr. St. John-Stevas, staff member of "The Economist," has written a book on Walter Bagehot and is currently writing a nine-volume work on the Victorian economist.
It is not enough to do good; one must do it in the right way. John Morley
STUDENT DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT
SUA
Sunday, Oct. 22
SUA Public Relations Chairman
Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union 2:00-6:00 p.m.
By Stuart Barger
With delivery of the Davy Crockett, the Army in Europe will have missiles able to deliver nuclear explosives over ranges from two miles up to the 200 miles of a Redstone. Current short-range delivery means are the eight-inch howitzer with a reach of 10 to 11 miles and the Honest John with about 15 miles range.
Union Is Center Of University Life
Master Points, Prizes, Refreshments
The Kansas Union is the community center of the university, for all members of the university family—students, faculty, administration, alumni, and guests. It is not just a building; it is also an organization and a program. Together they represent a well-considered plan for the community life of the university.
As the "living room" of the university, the union provides for the services, conveniences, and amenities the members of the university family need in their daily life on the campus and for getting to know and understand one another through informal association outside the classroom.
The union is part of the educational program of the university. As the center of university community life, it serves as a laboratory of citizenship, training students in social responsibility and for leadership in our democracy. Through its various boards, committees, and staffs, it provides cultural, social, and recreational programs, aiming to make free-time activity a cooperative factor with study in education.
In all its processes it encourages self-directed activity, giving maximum opportunity for self-realization and for growth in individual social competency and group effectiveness. Its goal is the development of persons as well as intellects.
We hope that in your development of a well-rounded campus life you will take advantage of the various activities in which the SUA engages to serve you.
Medical Test Saturday
The test will be given at the testing centers listed in the 1961 Announcement of Medical College Admission Tests.
The annual test for admission to medical colleges will be given on Saturday. The test is for those students who will be applying for admission to medical colleges in the fall of 1962.
IN THE CONVENTIONAL weapons field, the Army has equipped its Berlin command and a large portion of its forces in West Germany with the new and long-delayed M-14 rifle and M-60 machine gun. These rapid-firing, lighter-weight weapons both use the standard 7.62 mm. Nato cartridge, simplifying supply problems.
The results of the tests are reported directly to the medical colleges.
Those who have applied for the tests should see the Guidance Bureau, 116 Bailey, for further information.
The M-14 rifle replaces three old weapons—the World War II M-1 rifle, the Browning automatic rifle and the carbine. The M-60 machine gun replaces three old types.
Armored units in West Germany are receiving the new M-60 main battle tank, which has a lethal 120 mm. British-designed gun and far greater cruising range than the M-48 it replaces.
INFANTRY UNITS in West Germany are being mechanized with the new M-113 armored personnel carrier, and border patrols and other troops have a new jeep, the M-151.
Relatively new missiles are the mobile Lacrosse which has a range of about 20 miles and can carry an atomic warhead, and the Hawk, which is designed to knock down low-flying planes with conventional explosive.
Of the 40,000 troop reinforcements being sent the Army in Europe, 3,000 will be assigned to the five divisions in West Germany, 17,000 will be used as fillers for various units and 20,000 will be in non-divisional units.
JACK ZINN
for
Scholarship Hall System Explained
Freshman President
A booklet explaining the unique KU scholarship hall system will soon be published by the Men's Scholarship Hall Council.
The five halls accommodate about 250 men yearly. Scholarship hall awards, which determine hall memberships are granted annually to outstanding high school seniors.
The booklet describes the KU system in detail, including descriptions of the five men's scholarship halls: Battenfeld, Pearson, Stephenson, Jolliffe and Foster.
Residents reduce expenses nearly $300 a year by doing their own cooking and cleaning.
The booklet's purpose, said Gary Dilley. Emporia senior, and council member, is to encourage outstanding high school seniors to apply for KU scholarship hall awards.
"We don't intend to initiate a rush system for men's scholarship halls," he said. "We do hope, however, to reach promising high school seniors who might not know about the system."
To retain their scholarship, students within the system must maintain a 1.5 yearly grade point average.
Chemistry Lecture Today
V. S. Vaidhyanathan, research associate of the chemistry department and post-doctoral fellow working under Dr. Richard J. Bearman, will speak at the analytical-inorganic-physical colloquium at 4 p.m. today in 122 Malott.
His topic will be the "Statistical Mechanical Theory of Transport in Electrolytes." Dr. Vaidhyanathan earned his Ph.D. at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago.
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Kansas Harriers Defeat Chicago Track Club,25-31
Cress Country Coach Bill Easton has made a multi-colored poster for his runners with the slogan "Run Scared, but Don't Panic!" Apparently this is exactly what the Jayhawker harriers did Saturday when they defeated a strong Chicago Track Club team, 25-31.
Running over a wet Washington Park course on a windy, overcast day with a temperature of 46 degrees, Bill Dotson and Charlie Hayward outran Chicago's ace Gar Williams to place 1-2 individually. Williams was the individual winner in last year's meet.
Dotson's winning time was a fast 14:34.4 over a flat, three mile course. Hayward's runner-up clocking was 14:37 while Williams ran 14:42.
WILLIAMS SET THE PACE during the race and led up until the last quarter mile when Dotson and Hayward passed him to coast to victory.
KU sophomore Tonni Coane and senior Dan Ralston battled it out for sixth place behind H. Harris and Hal Higdon of Chicago. Coane led most of the way, but nevertheless only finished one second ahead of Ralston 15:19-15:20.
Another battle of teammates occurred for ninth place between Bill Thornton and Paul Acevedo. Thornton defeated Acevedo, who was making his first start for the varsity.
Mike Fulghum, troubled by a bad hip, finished 12th.
"WE ARE MOVING ALONG pretty well," commented Easton. "We should get better all the way." The mentor was proud of his crew and hinted his boys are anxious to regain the Big Eight cross country crown they lost last year to Oklahoma State. The meet will be run here on Nov. 11 as a part of homecoming activities.
The Jayhawkers' next meet will be Friday afternoon at 4:30 against Southwest Conference member Arkansas on the Lawrence Country Club course.
Last year Kansas defeated Arkansas 23-32 at Fayetteville. Jack Nelson of Arkansas and Bill Mills of Kansas battled it out with Nelson winning. Nelson went on to capture 20th in the NCAA cross-country meet. Both used up their eligibility last fall.
Running for Arkansas will be John Deardorf, Phillip Kolb, Hayden Hicks, Lynn James, Glen Bobb, and Martin Shemek.
To Plan Ski Trip*at Meeting
A discussion of plans for the annual between-semesters ski trip and a movie, "Little Skiers Big Day," will be principal items on the agenda at the KU Ski Club meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Union.
47
Wednesday. October 18, 1961 Summer Session Harman
TO LEAD JAYHAWKS—Jerry Gardner, Wichita senior, is one of four returning lettermen on Coach Dick Harp's basketball squad which officially started practice yesterday in Allen Field House. The season opener is against the Razorbacks of Arkansas here Dec. 1.
The KU freshman harriers are starting their college careers on the right track. The cross-country squad defeated Missouri 20-35 and Iowa State 15-43 to boast a 2-0 postal meet record.
Freshman Runners Win Two
Kansans Bill Cottle and Harold Hadley placed 1-2 in both meets with only one-tenth of a second separating them. Cottle's winning time was 9:35.5.
In the Missouri dual, Ray of the Tigers took third with a 9:52.6 clocking. Behind him were KU's Gary Janzen and Jack Connell who placed fourth and fifth. As with Cottle and Hadley, only one-tenth of a second separated the pair. Janzen's time was 9:57.2.
Missouri captured sixth and seventh place while Gavr Ace placed eighth for the Jayhawkers. Ace's time was 10:07.
Against Iowa State, Kansas took all first five places.
Assistant Coach Bob Lawson reports that the fresh goal is to have five men running under 9:40 this year. Three of last year's national championship squad accomplished this.
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Already Cottle and Hadley are below this mark with Janzen, Connell and Ace having an excellent chance to make it.
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Deadline Postponed
The deadline for submission of manuscripts for publication in Quill Magazine has been postponed from Oct. 14 to Nov. 15.
Special consideration will be given to humorous short stories not exceeding 10 pages. Any number of poems may be submitted, but each poem should be titled and its author identified.
Manuscripts should be typewritten. They usually cannot be returned. They may be submitted to the English office, 203 Fraser, or to Kent DeVore, 1334 Ohio.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 18, 1961
Pan-Africanism Called A 'Rhetorical Device'
By Richard Bonett
Pan-Africanism as an idea embracing hopes for unity succeeds more as a "rhetorical device" than it does in solving current economic and social problems.
This observation was made yesterday by Dr. Reuben Frodin, a member of the American Universities Field Staff, at the year's first meeting of the Faculty Forum.
THE PAN-AFRICAN movement, as formulated by such African leaders as President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, is something the United States and other Western countries must recognize as having "strong attractions for the new nations seeking to demonstrate their independence from the former colonial powers." Dr. Frodin said.
The speaker added that to some leaders, Pan-Africanism means working toward a unified continental government.
These leaders are scornful of the concept of the federal form of government in which power or sovereignty is shared, he said.
STILL OTHER AFRICAN leaders regard Pan-Africanism as a rallying
Study of Hypnosis To Bring Award
M. Erik Wright, professor of psychology, will receive an award for meritorious scientific writing on hypnosis from the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis later this month.
A letter from the editor of the journal, the official publication of the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis, informed Prof. Wright of the award.
The article which won the recognition dealt with the use of hypnosis to aid treatment of dental, medical and psychological problems in children.
Prof. Wright stressed that hypnosis is not limited to use in psychiatric treatment. He described it as an "adjunct in a variety of therapies where a person's interpretation of the world can be influenced."
As an example, he said that in dental work intensity of pain is often the result of anxiety and fear on the part of the patient. Hypnosis can help dispel this fear and reduce the pain, making treatment easier, he said.
Prof. Wright said hypnosis is also an aid in burn and oper-operative cases, in which the child often has a loss of appetite. The therapist's "suggestion of appetite and well-being which will be present in the post-hypnotic situation" will help speed recovery, he added.
The award will be presented to Prof. Wright at the Fourth Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis Oct. 27-29.
Regional Convention Of Fraternity to Be Here
The University of Kansas chapter of Alpha Epsilon Rho, national Radio-Television honorary fraternity, will be host to the regional convention of Alpha Epsilon Rho, Dec. 2.
point for consultation among Africans seeking their own solutions to their problems.
Trash Fire in Lewis
The Lawrence Fire Department sent two fire trucks to Lewis Hall at 7:10 last night when accumulated trash in an incinerator chute was discovered to be on fire.
The hall, which houses 432 women, was evacuated and the fire quickly extinguished. Firemen then used exhaust fans to clear smoke from the seventh floor.
Local officers of Alpha Epsilon Rho are: President, Mark Knapp, Prairie Village senior; vice president, Jean Gilmour, Kansas City, senior; secretary, Tandy Craig, Joplin, Mo., senior, and treasurer, John Richeson, Leawood junior.
The AUFS scholar, scheduled to be here for 10 days of lecturing and discussions with students and staff, pointed out that most of the leaders of the new African states were so busy with their own specific problems of nation-building that they ignore the more grandiose schemes for African unity.
The cause of the fire is unknown No damage resulted.
Dr. Frodin quoted Sir Abubakar Tatawa Balewa, the Prime Minister of Nigeria, as saying: "Whatever the Ghana-Guinea-Mali Union is, we are not joining it."
"It IS ALSO WISE to remember," the speaker said, "that most of the people at the village and town levels do not have much, if any, awareness of political and economic matters on a national or international level.
When we are planning for posterior, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary.—Thomas Paine
Sorrows remembered sweeten present joy.—Robert Pollock
"They are primarily concerned with crops, water supplies, roads, and perhaps schools and medical services."
Nevertheless, he said, "one must not underestimate the 'pied piper' aspects of the call for African solidarity through various pan-African manifestoes and conferences."
Yugoslav Speaks Tonight
The KU-Y "Foreign Student Speaks" discussion group will meet at 7 p.m. today in Alceve C of the Kansas Union. The guest speaker will be Akos Kovacs, a student from Yugoslavia.
U Thant of Burma is a diplomat who believes that Buddhist philosophy points the way to successful diplomacy.
Bv United Press International
"The teachings of Buddhism are focused primarily on the need to maintain a mental and emotional equilibrium," he says.
"Buddhism calls for mediation and concentration. It purges passion and evil thoughts. It is essentially a religion of peace and love. It teaches that one will be more highly esteemed and respected if one keeps calm and has emotional equilibrium."
Calm U Thant Is UN Hopeful
THANT IS AN outstanding example of the placid, self-controlled diplomat. He has been Burma's ambassador to the United Nations a little more than four years.
If not well known to the world, he is a familiar figure at the United Nations and at international conferences, where he quickly won a reputation as a patient, skillful go-between in negotiations.
Within a few hours after Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold died in a plane crash on Sept. 17, Thant's name was suggested as a possible successor.
He had mixed feelings about his "candidacy," according to associates. He had not sought the post and he was not sure he wanted it, but a keen sense of duty would not permit him to bow out if he could be useful in a cause in which he so ardently believed.
"HIS ONE BIG HOPE for the future is for the peaceful co-existence of all peoples," a friend said. Thant will be 53 years old next Jan. 22.
He is slight of build—5 feet-71 inches tall, 154 pounds. His hair is
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thinning but still covers the top of his head. He is slightly moon-faced and wears glasses.
If he has a trademark, it's his black Burma-made cigars.
"I smoke too many," he confessed.
"Maybe 10 a day. I trying to cut down. I used to smoke 14 to 15 a day. My dentist advised me not to smoke so many."
HE IS MODERATE in other things.
He never drank alcoholic beverages in Burma, he said. He has a "social" drink here once in a while and likes French wines with dinner.
His sports as a young man were tennis and swimming. He gave up tennis because he has no time for it.
"I can't swim very often," he says
sadly. "In fact, I haven't been swimming at all in the last three weeks."
Long walks are about his only exercise these days. Sometimes he dismisses his chauffeur and walks 20 to 25 blocks home.
He sometimes watches television and favors news and current events programs, but a friend disclosed that Thant's "secret vice" is watching boxing and wrestling.
He rarely goes to the theater, and prefers classical paintings. "I'm not able to appreciate modern art," he explained. "It's so difficult to understand."
THANT, AN AVID READER, subscribes to about 20 newspapers and periodicals and belongs to several book clubs.
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Page 7
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 18, 1961
Spanish Speaker Teaches French
A Guatemalan who was reared speaking Spanish is now teaching French at KU. She formerly taught German, also at KU.
Mrs. Ana Breedleove, from Guatemala City, Guatemala, has a graduate teaching assistantship in Romance languages this year. Mrs. Breedleove graduated from KU in 1958 with a double major in French and German. She has lived in Lawrence since 1956.
THE SOFT-SPOKEN woman says the assistantship program is a boon. "It continues the wonderful opportunity for contact with teachers and students," she says.
From a practical standpoint, Mrs. Breedlove is able to continue work towards her masters degree.
"You can't get a job without one," she said. "At least one not requiring manual labor."
LOCATED AT ONE of the many desks in Fraser Hall's larger offices. Mrs. Breedlove spends her spare moments reading. She has a stack of French and German books perched above her desk.
The dark-haired, brown-eyed instructor said the experience she is acquiring in teaching is extremely valuable.
"It gives me security in case the unforeseen happens," she said.
Mrs. Breedlove is married to Harold Breedlove, Lawrence graduate student. They met at Park College, Parkville, Mo., in 1954. A year later they were married.
Engineers Meet Tomorrow
The American Society of Tool & Manufacturing Engineers will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 300, Fowler Shops. H. M. Ritter, general manager of Marshall Steel Co., La Grange, Ill. will speak.
Gratitude is not only the greatest virtue, but even the mother of all the rest.—Ciero
Imitation is the sincerest of flattery.—Charles Caleb Colton
Co-existence May Be New Marx-Lenin Tenet
The 22nd Congress of the Soviet Communist Party in Moscow may claim peaceful co-existence as a principle of Marxist-Leninist dogma, a Russian expert in the political science department said yesterday.
Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, said the major task of party people in preparation for the Congress has been that of incorporating peaceful co-existence into the Marxist-Leninist dogma. He added that peaceful co-existence is not a Marxist-Leninist principle.
"It will be very interesting to see if external pressure from China, internal pressure from factions opposed to Khrushechev and heat of Berlin will cause some retraction of peaceful co-existence at the Congress," he said.
"Some of my colleagues think they have seen important evidence that peaceful co-existence is being retracted. I don't think so. The big test will be the treatment of peaceful co-existence at the Congress."
Prof. Laird said his interpretation of the Berlin crisis could be explained by two points:
Students to Walk Over Ancestors
More than 350 students will leave KU by bus in the next week to no trumping around on dead animals and plants.
But the dead debris will be hard as rock.
Seventeen lab sections of Geology I classes will take separate field trips starting October 18. They will visit and study sedimentary rock deposits in a highway excavation south of Baldwin.
"Dead plants and animals" form the deposits, which are shale and limestone and are found in pennsylvanian rocks. Wakefield Dort, associate professor of geology, said
He said the deposits are about 300 million years old.
- The Russians are using a long standing practice; tough today, conciliatory tomorrow. They are now in the tough stage.
- In part, the height of the Berlin crisis may be attributable to smoke-screen tactics to hide advances and activities elsewhere, particularly in Southeast Asia, but also in Latin America, Africa and the Middle East.
Swimming Club Has 23 Pledges
Quack Club, a swimming club for girls, announces 23 pledges for 1961- 1962.
They are:
Kathy Bergstrom and Carolyn Power, both of Kansas City, Mo, freshmen; Sheila Brown, Leavenworth freshman; Judy Fessler, Lee's Summit, Mo., freshman; Kathy Gittleson and Sandra Jenkins both from Lincoln, Neb., freshmen; Ann and Sarah Graber, both Hutchinson juniors.
Lynn Greever, Leavenworth sophomore; Andrea Gresser, Topeka freshman; Mary Hughes, Beth Muell and LuRaye Shreve all Des Moines, Ia., freshmen; Claire McEliroy, Marilyn McPherson, Donna Miller and Midg Walters all Wichita freshmen; Mary Meisel, University City, Mo., sophomore.
Dianne and Trish Mullane, both Oklahoma City, Okla., junts; Penny Paris, Atchison freshman; Betty Wienecke, Tulsa, Okla., freshman, and Judy Wilcox, Kirkwood, Mo., junior.
The pledges were tested on different strokes, rhythmical swimming and synchronized swimming.
They will spend the first semester working on synchronized swimming and stunts. Second semester they will produce a show, according to the club's sponsor, Ruth E. Hoover, associate professor of physical education.
Good Highways For KU-OU Fans
University of Kansas football fans who drive to Norman, Okla., Saturday to watch the Jayhawks and the Oklahoma Sooners in their annual grid battle, will be able to travel 4-lane highways most of the way.
From Lawrence, Kansas City and Topeka to Norman, only a 50-mile gap in Oklahoma breaks the 4-lane highway that leads almost to the Sooner stadium on Norman's south side, via Turnpike and Oklahoma Expressway.
From the Turnpike's West Lawrence Interchange to Norman, driving distance is 330 miles, giving drivers the advantage of 280 miles of fast travel highway on the Turnpike and Interstate 35. The latter route runs within a mile of the stadium.
Speech Contest Nov.9
The department of speech will hold a campus public speaking contest at 8 p.m., Nov. 9, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Tryouts will be held at 4-6 p.m.
Nov. 7, in Strong Hall. Room 114
These tryout speeches are limited to six minutes. Speeches for the contest may be 8-10 minutes. Six speakers will be selected for the final contest, which is open to all undergraduates.
Anyone interested in further information can contact E. C. Buchler, professor of speech, 116 Strong, or Floyd Merritt, graduate assistant, 204 Hoch.
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Wednesday, October 18, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
NSAApprovesKeeping Red China Out of U.N.
By Scott Payne
The KU National Student Association Committee yesterday upheld the U.S. position toward Red Chinese membership in the United Nations.
Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior, introduced the resolution and requested the NSA committee to send copies of the resolution to Kansas representatives in Congress and to the Committee of One Million.
The resolution passed seven to three with Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, Arthur Miller, Pittsburg junior, and Sandra Moore, Saskatchewan, Canada, sophomore, dissenting.
"The committee is a non-partisan organization," said Mellwaine. "They exist for the sole purpose of keeping Red China out of the United Nations."
THE ACTION FOLLOWED McIlwaine's discussion of the Committee of One Million.
Turning to other matters, McIlwaine said he would be able to obtain the movie "Red China—Outlaw" if the committee would agree to have it shown. The committee approved.
Also speaking about program matters, Menghini said that Edward R Murrow, director of the United States Information Agency, will be in Kansas City on Nov. 11.
HE SUGGESTED THE committee invite Mr. Murrow to speak on the movie, "Harvest of Shame" which he directed.
"We haven't received any answers to our letters asking for the film," said Miller.
"Harvest of Shame" centers on the privations of five million migrant farm workers in this country.
Menchini continued, telling the committee that Michael Harrington, editor of "New American," an American Socialist Party publication, is presently on a speaking tour and may be able to speak here about the movie "Operation Abolition."
THE COMMITTEE THEN turned to general discussion in the area of NSA campus benefits.
Moore, Miller, and Menghini pointed out that the committee could "combat campus ignorance of NSA" if the committee were to utilize the informational function of NSA's national office.
Miller moved that the committee set up a sub-committee to collect and disseminate information from
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships, 1862-63: Applications due Oct. 20, 306 medical examinations for medical examinations to be made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
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Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m.
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Coffee Hour: 3:30 p.m., 119 Strong.
AIEE-I Dinner Meeting? 7 p.m., Big
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McIlwaine said, "Here is the chance we have been waiting for. There's no reason we couldn't use people who are not NSA Committee members but who are interested in this sort of thing.
Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior, introduced a substitute motion to the effect that sub-committee members be approved by the NSA committee.
"A SUB-COMMITTEE WITH a NSA Committeeman as chairman and several interested students would be just the thing," he added.
Following the passage of the two motions, the meeting was adjourned.
Nikita Predicts Downfall of U.S.-long break in the late afternoon. When he resumed, he repeated his now-familiar offer of total and general disarmament.
(Continued from page 1) ciety where man will be a genuine master of nature and of social relations."
(Continued from page 1)
THE SOVIET UNION, he said has reached the stage where it now can build a "classless Communist society."
But American capitalism, he said, already is past its prime and is on the way down. He said the United States is the "epicenter of capitalism's economic difficulties."
His address followed yesterday's opening day speech to the party congress in which he lifted his year-end deadline for a German Peace Treaty if the West showed readiness to negotiate and announced plans to wind up Russia's current nuclear test series by exploding a 50-megaton bomb on Oct. 30 or 31.
He spoke for several hours, then he and the Congress took an hour-
"THE SOVIET UNION is ready to disband our army and sink our atomic bombs and missiles in the ocean," he said. "But, of course, only given general and complete disarmament under strict international control."
"Until the imperialist powers agree to (disarmament) we shall see to it that our armed forces possess
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 18, 1961
Visitor Here Sees Little Peace Corps Interest
Rv Dennis Farnev
A Peace Corps representative who was here Monday and Tuesday encountered little interest for the program among KU students.
Only eight students inquired about the Peace Corps while field representative Frank Kiehn was at the Kansas Union yesterday.
Mr. Kiehne addressed 12 more, all leaders of KU student organizations at a luncheon Monday.
He is currently explaining the Peace Corps program on a tour of Midwest colleges and universities.
"A lot of enthusiasm and motivation was shown by those students who came to see me," said Mr. Kiehne. "But frankly, the overall performance was disappointing."
He said the KU turnout compared unfavorably with that of other schools on the tour.
"About 400 students showed up at St. Louis University, a school of about 8,000," he said. "And 90 per cent of the graduating dentistry class at the University of Kansas City attended a speech I presented there."
Both schools gave his visit more advance publicity than did KU, he said.
AT A MEETING with faculty and staff members yesterday, Mr. Kiehne outlined the five steps taken by all
Heider Gets Three Psychology Grants
Fritz Heider, authority in the psychology of interpersonal relations, has received a one-year grant of $9.271 from the United States Public Health Service for his studies here on "general and individual schemes in social perception."
The professor of psychology also has been granted $9,271 for each of two additional years of study, bringing total Public Health Service support to $27,813. Dr. Grace M. Heider, wife of Professor Heider, will be co-investigator on the project.
"The study has to do with the way we judge the actions of other persons," Dr. Heider said. Through a series of experiments, he hopes to find general principles of the reaction of persons to certain situations on interpersonal relations.
He is the 1951 recipient of the Kurt Kewin Memorial Award for his work in the development and integration of psychological research and social action.
Delay is ever fatal to those who are prepared.—Lucan
Peace Corps volunteers. Only eight attended the meeting
- Application for entrance tests.
- The five steps are:
- Taking and passing the tests.
- An & week training course at
- An 8-week training course at a United States college or university.
- Further training in the host country, if necessary.
- Student groups represented at Monday's luncheon included the All Student Council, the Associated Women Students and Vox Populi.
- Actual field work within the host country.
The ASC Peace Corps committee, which did not know about Mr. Kiehne's visit until Monday, will meet Thursday to consider means of explaining the program to the student body, said Nancy Lane, Hoisington sophomore and member of the committee.
Alpha Kappa Psi Professional Business Fraternity will hold a rush dinner for all prospective business school and economic students at the Dine-A-Mite at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Alpha Kappa Psi To Hold Dinner
Alpha Kappa Psi was founded at New York University in 1904. The Psi Chapter at the University of Kansas was installed in 1920 and its membership includes students and faculty of the School of Business and Economics. The organization is designed to teach young men the principles and techniques of business and economics.
Last year, Alpha Kappa Psi selected Gov. John Anderson as its Honorary Initiate.
Wiley Mitchell, associate dean of the Business School, will be the guest speaker tomorrow.
Any prospective business and economic students interested in joining Alpha Kappa Psi are invited to attend the dinner.
The most important thing in any relationship is not what you get but what you give.—Eleanor Roosevelt
Little, Brown and
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Conboy to Be Speaker
Dr. William Conboy, professor of speech, will be a principal speaker at the second annual Kansas Recreation Conference to be held here Monday, Nov. 20.
LITTLE, BROWN
Exclusive Engagement!
KIRK DOUGLAS * LAURENCE OLIVIER
JEAN SIMMONS * CHARLES LAUGHTON
PETER USTINOV * JOHN GAVIN
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STARTS THURSDAY!
MATINEES DAILY 2 P.M.; ADM. $1.00
EVENINGS 7:30; ADM. $1.25
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---
Physics Picnic Saturday
The fall picnic of Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honorary society, will be held at 4 p.m. Saturday at Potter Lake.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
At 7:00 & 9:00
Melina Mercouri
In
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CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST
LOST. BROWN EYEGLASSES some-
turn to 11 Flint Hall, Kansan. 10-24
Page 11
TRI DELT Sorority pin, near or in
Strong. Hsin Ginger Welsch engraved on it.
It found, call Tri Delt house, VI 3-
4610. 10-20
Brown wallet type Billfold; Believed lost in Maiott area, keep money, return billfold. Reward, call Calvin Huff, VI 3-8021.
10-19
KAPPA ALPHA THETA socrinity pln
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Theta House. Roward 10-19
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Verslog slide rule in 563 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward. tf
FOR RENT
ANYONE CONMUTING or getting mar-
ri- VI 2..0067
FOR RENT. DUPLX apartment; 4 rooms
VI 3-1364 any afternoon. 10-24
2. BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, freeplex, air conditioner, wall to wall carpeting, drapes, kitchen with electric disposal, dishwasher, range and refrigerator. Large storage areas, garage. S.W. edge of campground. Grand view. Call VI 3-3897 at p.m. 10-24
For Rent: Room to graduate student or employed woman. Private entrance, very campus and dignified home ½ block on University Drive. Call IW 3-5077. 10-19
Furnished 3-bedroom home in Lawrence
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SLEEPING ROOM with private kitchen
woman Vacant Oct. 20.
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Vi 3-6635 for appointment.
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1697. 10-25
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.,
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$100 month. 221 Mountview Dr. Phone
V 3-5882 after 5 for appt.
TRANSPORTATION
NEED RIDE from K.C., Kans, Mon-
tru Fri. Classes Mon-Wed-Fri-94;
Tues-Thurs. 8-2. Call KU ext. 376. ask
for classified. 10-23
Need ride to Kansas City week days.
Working hours 8-5. Call 2-3672. 10-18
FOR SALE
1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door sedan. P.G., r. & h. Forced to sell because of loss of driver's license - $695. Call VI 3-2293 after 6 p.m.. 10-2^
NEW $200 Guild Western guitar 25% off
offering German Luger, 8 inch barrel
and bass.
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NEW $200 Guild Western Guitar, 25%
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For Sale: One year old Madison Field-
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45' 2 bedroom Mobil Home loaded with extras: 1960 Voxhall transistor tape reel, 22" digital camera - with Call VI-2 0580, or 7th & Arkansas Green Mobil Home. 10-18
Winchester Model-97 12 gauge pump
400cc condition-5.00
VI 2-253 after 5 hrs
10-19
*PROFESSIONALAL* Geiger Counter
"NOIS STL $- Price $100.00"
See at 16:37 10-15
POST VERALOG slide rule. Instruction
Beasley, 805 Ohio VI 2-7553. 10-18
Beasley, 805 Ohio VI 2-7553. 10-18
Guns: Robert Redding Firearms, new & used guns and ammo. Special this week 9mm German Luger. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 10-18
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2906 on 6 p.m. like
NEW TUBELESS SNOW TIRES at 30% discount Slightly blemished first quality tires in regulation and compact sizes. Zerex only 88c per gal. Limit 1 gal. per each new snow tire purchased. At Ray Stoneback's — 929 Mass. St. 10-18
FM RADIOS! MOTOROLA AND GENERAL ELECTRIC at discount prices—as well as new features. Motorola Store – 929 Mass St., Used AM's and comb. rp's as low as $5.00 each
Car For Sale: 52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. tl
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
running card. $150; Call SV I-4241; if
10-18
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Coltus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4217. tf
NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, 85.00 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and printers. Printing at reasonable nagegraphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co. 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-151 today.
HELP WANTED
Help Wanted—Men; Walter, no training
help necessary. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., 5-6 days a
week. Apply in person. Griff's Burger
Bar, 1618 W. 23rd. 10-20
Part Time Employment
**IF**—you need to earn
$40 a week or more
and are able to work
15 hours or more per week.
**IF**—you enjoy public contact
work and have your own car,
THEN--Call VI 2-1655
Between 5:45 and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Thursday or Friday
WANTED: Driving instructor with car.
Salt Mary C. Wilson. VI 2-3784. 10-19
TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-1409. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles PV, VI 3-8739
TYPING
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, papers, theses and dissertations. Reason is rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hai, VI 3-2181.
Dixie Carmel Shop
Experienced Typtist: Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-8136. Mrs. L.
Gehibach
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
For the Tops in
Wednesday. October 18, 1961 University Daily Kansan
TAFFY APPLES — POPCORN ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
CARMEL CORN — MIXED NUTS
also STUFFED TOYS
VI 3-6311
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
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on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
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Typing. Will type reports, theses, etc.
2014, 1131 W. 21 St. CVI 1-63440;
1981, 1211 W. 21 St. CVI 1-63440;
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ment for the faculties." For excellent typing at standard rates, call MA Lousse Pope, VI 3-1097.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, most accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI S-7485.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI-2i et
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu-
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, research articles. Reasonable rebates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
10-19
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher of English these, these, these & reports accurately. Standard tests. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3.
MISCELLANEOUS
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
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Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
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BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor for Freshman English. Graduate
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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 3-1287. tft
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DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
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TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 18, 1961
FOOTBALL CONTEST
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST
TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU
Downtown 835 Mass.
On Campus
12th
and
Oread
Jay
SHOPPE
CAMPUS FASHIONS For EVERY OCCASION
Visit our stores each week and register for drawing on Saturday. (No purchase necessary to register.)
This Week's Gift
A BOBIE BROOKS
BLOUSE
Of Your Choice
Of Your Choice
Missouri vs Iowa State
--see
WIN
$10.00 CASH
Closest prediction of the combined total points scored in the games listed in the advertisements on this page will receive a cash prize of $10.00 donated by these Merchants.
1. Check the games listed in each advertisement on this page
2. Fill out & clip coupon.
3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv.
Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 10-20.
In case of ties the $10 will be split.
Address ___ Ph. _
Name
My prediction is ___ points.
One entry per student.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS:
Phil Ballard 234 pts.
Carl Kimball 234 pts.
--see
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Mississippi vs. Tulane
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- Oklahoma State vs Nebraska -
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843 massachusetts Colorado vs Kansas State
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For Women
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Kansas vs. Oklahoma
RITCHIE BROWN
"Brilliant" says Marilyn King of the King Sisters The New Roberts "990" 4-Track Stereo Tape Recorder is your best buy
On the Mall
Kief's Record & HiFi
Open Evenings Till 8
— Michigan State vs Notre Dame —
---
WIN
$10.00 CASH
Closest prediction of the combined total points scored in the games listed in the advertisements on this page will receive a cash prize of $10.00 donated by these Merchants.
1. Check the games listed in each advertisement on this page.
2. Fill out & clip coupon.
3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv. Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 10-20.
In case of ties the $10 will be split.
Name ___
Address ___ Ph. ___
My prediction is ___ points.
One entry per student.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS.
Phil Ballard 234 pts.
Carl Kimball 234 pts.
---
NICE TRY KID!
IN 1916 GEORGIA TECH.
DEFEATED CUMBERLAND
COLLEGE 220-0 ...
The Southern Pit 1834 Mass.
Texas vs Arkansas
Daily hansan
59th Year, No.25
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Events of Note
Thursday, October 19, 1961
***
Campus Elections
Campus elections will be held Nov. 14-15. The primaries are Nov. 7-8.
Petitions for All Student Council living district representatives and freshman class officers are due midnight, Oct. 24. After 5 p.m. on the 24th, petitions should be returned to Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the ASC elections committee.
Petitions for political party nominations for the living district representative to the ASC are available from VOX or UP party representatives only. Parties cannot endorse candidates for freshman class officers.
Inquiries about the elections should be directed to Harper, not the Dean of Students. Copies of the election bill explaining the election process are also available from Harper.
**
The House un-American Activities Committee will be picked apart tonight at the KU Presidential Forum in an effort to determine if the controversial committee should be altered, abolished or strengthened.
Presidential Forum
The new campus student forum, designed for the expression of dissenting opinion on national and international issues, will meet at 6:45 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Charles McIwaine, Wichita senior, will make the initial arguments in favor of encouraging the House un-American Committee's work. Jim Lawing, Okmulgee, Okla., graduate, will recommend altering the present function of the group, and Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, will argue for the committee's abolishment.
Each student will be allowed 10 minutes for an opening statement before the question is thrown open to debate from the floor. O. P. Backus, professor of history, will moderate.
- * *
Events Forum
Reuben Frodin, American Universities Field Staff authority on West Africa and Nigeria, will speak at Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Africa—Evolution or Revolution?"
\* \* \*
Observatory
N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, has announced that the KU observatory will be open to visitors from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Friday.
He said that if the weather is clear, visitors will have the opportunity to see the planet Saturn in the early part of the evening.
Access to the observatory is made by going through 500 Lindley.
Weather
TOPEKA — (UPI) — A large high pressure cell with cool air of Canadian origin is centered over the plains today. Temperatures should take an upward jump, ranging 60 to 65 under sunny skies over most of the state, and will reach around 70 tomorrow. Lows tonight will be near 40.
OU Referendum Blackballs NSA
By Scott Payne
In a referendum vote of three to one, University of Oklahoma students yesterday favored rejecting affiliation with the National Student Association.
(The following information was obtained in Daily Kansan telephone interviews.)
Jerry Gamble, OU student body president, said that this vote does not decide the issue.
"The matter will be decided finally by the student senate here," he said. "The referendum was merely to determine student opinion of the matter."
ACCORDING TO Jody Smith, OU dean of men, the issue "Shall the University of Oklahoma Remain a Member of NSA" brought more students to the polls (2,233 of 11,700) than ever before, Dean Smith said the final vote was 1,760-563.
Asked his feelings of the vote, Gamble replied, "I cannot agree that disaffiliation is desired by the whole student body since only about 20 per cent of the students here voted on the matter."
"I PERSONALLY am very much in favor of affiliation," he said. "I am vice chairman of this NSA region (the Great Southwest region) and a member of NSA's National Executive Committee."
Gamble explained that the main opposition to NSA on the OU campus is centered on three issues:
- Opposition to the amount of money spent by the NSA Committee.
- NSA is not representative of national student opinion.
- NSA is called communistic by some elements of the OU student body.
"in my opinion none of these views are valid." Gamble said.
NSA is not communistic," he said. "I have been called an 'ultra-liberal' here and elsewhere. This is not true.
"I took a conservative stand at the NSA Congress in Wisconsin this summer when I voted against abolition of the House Committee on Un-American Activities," he added.
"FURTHERMORE," he said, "our NSA committee appropriating about two cents of each student's fees is not spending too much money," Gamble said.
UN Debate Block On Uses of Space
UNITED NATIONS — (UPI) Britain accused Russia today of seeking to block United Nations debate on peaceful uses of outer space and suggested it wanted to "make the moon a Soviet satellite."
Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin made objection to a high position on the agenda for the space question in a procedural debate which delayed the start of the General Assembly's political committee's discussion of nuclear weapons tests.
U. S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson was prepared to deliver a major speech demanding resumption of Soviet-British-American negotiations on an iron clad treaty outlawing nuclear weapons tests under international inspection and control.
The United States and Russia meanwhile remained deadlocked on procedure for naming an acting Secretary-General.
Prof. Smith said a memorial service would probably be held on Sunday. He said arrangements were being sought to hold the funeral in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Prof. Scheerer was a world authority on the psychological effects of brain damage, thinking and problem solving. He developed with Kurt Goldstein, the Goldstein-Scheerer test used to measure brain damage. Prof. Scheerer also specialized in clinical psychology.
Prof. Scheerer came to KU in 1943 as professor of psychology. Previously, he had been an associate professor at the New School for Social Research. He taught at
KU Psychologist M. Scheerer Dies
Prof. Scheerer is survived by his wife, Constance, and father, Herman Scheerer. He was 61.
A beloved KU psychologist died early this morning in Lawrence Memorial Hospital following a heart attack.
Martin Scheerer, professor of psychology, described by students and associates as "a brilliant and considerate教师," was rushed to the hospital after suffering a stroke. He died at 1:15 a.m.
"A tremendous loss to the department," Anthony Smith, chairman of the department of psychology said. "There's no possibility of our replacing him with a man of equal stature.
"He was one of the outstanding psychologists in the country," Prof. Smith said.
Columbia University, Wells College and the College of the City of New York.
He received his Ph.D. from the University of Hamburg, Germany in 1927.
Prof. Scheerer wrote two books dealing with brain psychology: "Theory of Gestalt Psychology" and "Memory and Hypnotic Age
SINCE 1950
Regression" in collaboration with Robert Reiff.
Martin Scheerer
Prof. Scheerer had been serving as president of the Kansas Psychological Association. He was a diplomat in clinical psychology, an associate in the Society for Psychological Study of Social Issues and a fellow in the division of clinical psychology of the American Psychology Association.
MISS OCTOBER—Janice Sappenfield, Coffeyville junior, enjoys the balmy October weather—and the leaves.
Nationalist China Favored:
Kennedy Opposes Red China in UN
WASHINGTON — (UPI) —President Kennedy today reaffirmed strong U.S. opposition to admitting Red China to the United Nations or any U.N. components.
Kennedy in an unusual statement, also emphasized the American position that the Chinese Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek rightfully represents China in the United Nations.
Kennedy's statement was unusual in that he had it prepared for his news conference last week in the expectation he would be asked about this country's current position on Red China. The subject was not raised by reporters and Kennedy decided to say nothing for the moment.
SINCE THE NEWS conference, however, there have been reports and interpretations indicating a possible shift, however slight, in the American position, partly because of this government's exploration of the idea of recognizing Outer Mongolia with a view to ultimate U.N. admission.
In the light of these unofficial commentaries, Press Secretary Pierre Salinger was asked today whether there had been any policy change.
He started to answer the question himself, but instead related the circumstances of the prepared but undelivered Kennedy statement. He had a secretary get the statement from the files and read it to reporters as a current statement by the Chief Executive.
"The United States has always considered the government of the Republic of China the only rightful government representing China and has always given full support to the position and to all the rights of that government in the United Nations," the statement said.
"THEREFORE, THE United States firmly opposes the entry of the Chinese Communists into, the United Nations or into any of the components of the United Nations," it said.
Government sources pointed out that Kennedy's statement was a re-
iteration and did not represent any change in policy.
In the current meeting of the General Assembly, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and U. S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson supported the idea of a full debate on Chinese representation in the United Nations. The United States, however, did not go beyond supporting debate, the idea being to postpone a vote at least until next year.
Salinger declined to discuss the side issues of Chinese representation. But he said the U.S. position on debating the question had not changed.
The United States still regards any question involving change of U.N. representation as a matter of major importance which, if presented formally, would require a two-thirds vote of the General Assembly.
Speling Neaded By Englich Profs
Faces are red among those responsible for the English Proficiency Examination.
Correct spelling is one of the points stressed in the examination. The instruction sheet to graders states that because students are allowed to take a dictionary into the examination room, there should be no excuse for incorrect spelling.
Today, it was discovered that a form given to graders to report on unsatisfactory papers has, as a category to be discussed, syntax and "grammer."
"I don't know how it happened." said James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the examination. "On the original form, the word 'grammar' was spelled correctly."
The form with the misspelling was a "ditto" form, probably run off to meet extra needs. The mimeographed form is correct, indicating an error in copying by a secretary or student assistant.
In any case, steps are being taken quickly- to correct the error.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday; October 19. 1964
Peace Corps and KU
This week KU was once again accused of apathy on a subject which has drawn much reaction and interest at other colleges and universities around the nation.
Last Monday Frank Kiehne, field representative for the Peace Corps, made the following statement to a Daily Kansan reporter:
"A lot of enthusiasm and motivation was shown by those students who came to see me. But frankly the overall performance was disappointing."
Mr. Kiehne was at the Kansas Union Monday to answer questions on the Peace Corps.
It was disgraceful that this man should have felt it necessary to comment on the turnout. There certainly should be more interest in the Peace Corps at KU than Mr. Kiehne indicated.
This is an organization that has touched the fancy of students and at almost every other institution of higher education it has been received with a great deal of enthusiasm.
Mr. Kiehne said that KU is not giving the program nearly the reception it is receiving elsewhere. He said that when he appeared at St. Louis University about 400 students were on hand to hear him talk about the Peace Corps. He reported that about 90 per cent of the graduating dentistry class at the University of Kansas City attended a speech he gave there.
But where was KU? There are many reasons Mr. Kiehne did not meet with the interest he had expected on his visit here Monday, Planning, no doubt, had something to do with this. No plans had been made to help provide Mr. Kiehne with
But still there must be a sizeable amount of student apathy, in conjunction with these reasons, to produce the results that embarrassed the University Monday.
the audience he had received elsewhere. Perhaps the Kansan is also at fault for not printing more about Mr. Kiehne's visit to the campus.
The Peace Corps is an idea that belongs to this generation of college students. Thus its success or failure will reflect on the ability of today's young men and women to take over the affairs of tomorrow's world.
It seems that the prestige of Peace Corps membership would also transfer to the University. It might be that someday the comparison of the number of Peace Corps members from various universities will be much like today's comparison of Woodrow Wilson fellowships.
If the Peace Corps is successful, there will be considerable prestige attached to membership in the Corps in future years. Even today only a small percentage of the best qualified people are being taken for Peace Corps training.
KU faculty members have already realized the possible future benefits of KU's active participation in the Peace Corps. Some members of the administration are attempting to have KU designated as one of the official universities at which Peace Corps members will be trained.
However, any efforts of the faculty or administration to increase KU's participation in the corps will be without avail if the KU student does not also become interested in making this University an active one in Peace Corps affairs.
Ron Gallagher
letters to the editor
Small Schools and Teachers Editor:
With regard to Miss Karen Jennison's English proficiency paper printed in the October 10 issue, treating the inadequate college preparation given students of small high schools, I wish to dispute certain statements concerning teachers in smaller secondary schools. She says, "The reasons they came were many and varied, but rarely was their primary reason an interest in good teaching. . . Most of these uninterested teachers are rather lazy and do not want to grade homework; consequently, no homework is assigned. . . you receive neither individual attention nor the better teaching supplied in larger schools."
I ATTENDED A HIGH SCHOOL
of 52 students in the same league of which Miss Jennison speaks. In four years at this small school, I encountered several teachers whose primary objective was good teaching, who were dedicated to teaching students to think, and who were far from being lazy. Not only in assigning homework, but in helpfully criticizing and suggesting improvements in compositions for the school paper and yearbook, did they show their willingness to work. For instance, one lady spent most of her free evenings helping us to organize our yearbook. Before long, we could see the correct pattern of organization ourselves, thanks to her patient guidance while working overtime. Another lady spent hour after hour working to improve the students'
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
speaking and dramatic abilities, and this was worth the effort in most cases. I could give several other examples from this one small school, but these should suffice to clarify my point: Although small high schools do not attract all the better teachers, they do obtain many of the more dedicated ones, as these people realize the dire need the small schools have of teachers such as themselves.
PICO NEWLAND
Q-19
K.O. 044, EIHART HANKS
I DO NOT DEFEND THE quality of the small high school. Certainly, the fewer there are, the better American education will be. I agree with the greater part of Miss Jennison's essay. I do not submit that such a school gives adequate preparation for college, for this would be a ludicrous untruth. I say simply that there are many fine people, devoted to their profession of teaching, in our smaller high schools.
Jerry Buxton.
Ransom sophomore
"— AND, I NEVER LOWER MYSELF TO AGUMENT WITH A STUDENT
— I FLUNK HIM."
Short Ones
Optimism, said Candide, is a mania for maintaining that all is well when things are going badly. — Voltaire
Absurity: A statement or opinion manifestly inconsistent with your own-Ambrose Bierce
Richard Nixon voices some conscientious objections to running for the presidency, but the Republican national chairman classifies him 1-A for a draft.-Bill Vaughan
A filing cabinet is a device for losing things alphabetically.—Bill Vaughan
The worst cliques are those which consist of one man.-George B. Shaw
Saint: a dead sinner revised and edited—Ambrore Bierce
Cultural exchange is a useful contribution to world peace, as long as it does not descend to the level of a race in which we and Russia try to out-culture each other—Bill Vaughan
The secret of being a bore is to tell everything.-Voltaine
The Soviet Position
In the conversations with me, President Kennedy, and as a matter of fact other Western representatives, too, referred to the fact that the Western powers bear some sort of obligations to the residents of West Berlin and that these obligations cannot be affected even by the conclusion of a German peace treaty.
It is natural to ask, however, what obligations they feel must be maintained if all of them follow from the surrender of Hitler Germany and from the provisional Allied agreements and, consequently, can be valid only until the peace treaty is signed. What is more, there are in general no special Allied commitments with regard to West Berlin.
THE ALLIED OBLIGATIONS applied to the entire territory of Germany, and it was precisely these agreements that were grossly violated by the Western powers. They turned West Germany into a militarist state, founded a military blee directed against us, and in this bloc Federal Germany plays a primary part...
When we suggest signing a peace treaty with Germany and turning West Berlin into a free city we are accused of wanting to deprive the Western powers of access to this city. But that is a wrong and unworthy argument. The granting to West Berlin of the status of a free city would mean that all countries of the world wishing to maintain economic and cultural ties with this city would have the right and possibilities freely to exercise these ties.
The governments of the Western powers claim that they have pledged to defend the freedom and well-being of the population of West Berlin. In the four-power agreements on Berlin, however, nothing is said of these obligations of the United States, Britain and France. The idea of insuring freedom for the population of West Berlin can in itself arouse no objections from anybody. None other than the Soviet Union suggests that the political and social regime in West Berlin should be the ones which its population wants.
OF COURSE, AGREEMENT would have to be reached with the country across whose territory pass the communications that link West Berlin with the outside world. This is normal. Otherwise the sovereignty of the state inside which West Berlin is situated would be jeopardized.
THE SOVIET UNION and our friends do not want war and we will not start it. But we will defend our sovereignty, will fulfill our sacred duty to defend our freedom and independence. If any country violates peace and crosses the borders—ground, air or water—of another it will assume full responsibility for the consequences of the aggression and will receive a proper rebuff.
We have no reason to quarrel with any people, we want to live in friendship and concord with all peoples. To that end the Soviet Union is proposing to sign a peace treaty with Germany jointly with other countries.
We ask everyone to understand us correctly: The conclusion of a peace treaty with Germany cannot be postponed any longer. A peaceful settlement in Europe must be attained this year.
AND THIS PEACEFUL STEP IS called a threat or even an act of aggression! Such talk can come only from those who seek to slander or distort our intentions, to poison the minds of the peoples with lies.
(Excerpts from Premier Nikita Khrushchev's June 15 address to the Soviet people.)
the took world
The cover, in fact, is Sargent's 1882 portrait of young Americans abroad. The Luxembourg Gardens, London's Garden on the Thames, the controversial portrait of Madame X, Robert Louis Stevenson, and the lovely Egyptian Girl are among the Sargent paintings. A page of quotations from James underlines his perceptiveness about the differences between America and Europe.
Whistler's work includes his Nocturne in Black and Gold, which Ruskin called a "pot of paint flung in the public's face," his Old Battersea Bridge: Nocturne in Blue and Gold, the Artist in the Studio, Little White Girl, and his portraits of his mother (Arrangement in Grey and Black) and Carlyle (Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 2.)
The latter part of the 19th century, like the latter part of the 18th, sent numerous Americans abroad. Where the earlier travelers had gone to escape republican thought and revolutionary oppression, the later ones went to escape their age, which was one of crassness, coarseness, and materialism.
AMERICAN HERITAGE. October 1961. $3.95.
American Heritage highlights, in a beautiful pictorial essay, three of these exiles—Henry James, John Singer Sargent and James McNeill Whistler. Telling the story of this artistic retreat are a perceptive article and several beautiful color pictures.
This is a rich edition of American Heritage, but which one hasn't been? Hugh MacLennan tells the exciting story of voyagers who opened up Canada. An excerpt from Mark Schorer's "Sinclair Lewis" describes the reception accorded "Main Street." The acting Booth brothers are the "Faces from the Past."
There is a retelling of a New England murder scandal, "The Minister and the Mill Girl." M. R. Werner describes La Guardia's unsuccessful—though highly laudable—attempt to unseat Jimmy Walker in 1929. Ben M. Hall presents a sketch of the garish motion picture palaces of the 1920s, like the Roxy, where Gloria Swanson posed as the theater was being consigned to rubble in 1960.
It also is a pleasure to report that the current issue gives us a story about sports, a highly absorbing description of how Walter Camp made football a fabulous sport back in the 1880s. And the windup article is a vivid story about the battle of Yorktown, the decisive battle of the Revolution.—Calder M. Pickett
Page 3
It Looks This Way...
The Kansas school consolidation problem came back into the news last week when Ness County District Judge Lorin T. Peters ruled the 1961 unification law unconstitutional.
THIS RULING IS A BLOW to those who favor school consolidation but it could work to their advantage if it stimulates discussion of the problem and hastens passage of a consolidation law with teeth.
The law ruled unconstitutional was a watered-down compromise measure. Originally, Gov. John Anderson proposed the withholding of state aid if schools did not consolidate at least to the extent that elementary schools would enroll 20 students and high schools 50.
This amounts to economic pressure, which is not the fairest way to get something accomplished. However, better education affects the entire state, not just one locality, and the attitude of many people makes this type of law necessary.
IT IS UNDERSTANDABLE that people in small communities oppose school consolidation. There are sentimental attachments. Parents graduated from the school, or one like it, and want their children or grandchildren to do the same. In addition, the school is often the center of the town's social life.
But these reasons must be overlooked when they harm the education of the community's children. College students often can see vividly how they were handicapped by their high school. This handicap may result from a lack of courses offered, poor instruction, or outdated, insufficient, or nonexistent equipment. Nobody will claim all small schools have these faults and all large schools do not, but it is obvious most small schools could be improved by consolidation.
ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF CONSOLIDATION include these:
There are also civic and economic reasons. In many cases, the loss of the school would be a severe blow to the town's economy. Many communities have been declining, and the school is often the only institution that keeps a community on the map.
- First, consolidation would mean a greater economy of operation. Two hundred students in one building can be educated more economically than fifty students in four buildings. Costly equipment will be used by more students, reducing the cost per student. Costs are reduced by centralizing administrative functions and maintaining only one building. One cafeteria, one gymnasium, one library, one science laboratory, or one industrial arts shop can be maintained less expensive than four.
- Second, consolidation would mean better teachers. The unified school district would be able to offer better pay and working conditions to attract the better instructors. In addition, the teachers could do a better job because they would probably teach only one or two subjects instead of three or four.
- Third, consolidation would mean that a larger variety of courses could be offered. A larger school can offer certain courses because enough students will take them, but a small school cannot offer courses which would be taken by only one or two students.
These advantages often are not seen by the people who vote on school consolidation. More often, however, the sentimental, civic, and economic reasons outweigh the advantages.
FOR THIS REASON, WE HOPE THE STATE LEGISLATURE will pass a stricter consolidation law, whether or not Judge Peters' declaration is overruled. The legislators won't pass such a law, however, until it has the backing of the majority of the people of the state.
This is where college students may be able to help. They are aware, from their own experiences or from the experiences of their friends from small schools, of the advantages of school consolidation. They can discuss the problem in their home town and perhaps change the attitude of many people. The "boy next door" is often listened to where the professional educator is not.
Clayton Keller
Daily Hansan
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Tom Turner
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
Thursday, October 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Editorial Editor
Bon Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown
Don Gergick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Weins, National Advertising Manager; Charles Martinache, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager.
Business Manager
Letters Editorial Criticized
Once again we are told that there is only one solution to the world's population problem. Not only is birth control itself proposed as the answer to all the world's ills, but **one specific method** of birth control is presented as the cure—the **only cure!**
SURELY SUCH AN APPROACH to a problem as vast and as controversial as "population explosion" is a gross oversimplification. An oral contraceptive would present several serious problems, both in distribution and in cost. Who, for example, is going to undertake the tremendous task of distributing the pills and instructing the recipients in their use? Who is going to pay the bills generated by this distribution and instruction? Will the people who are to use the pills be able to afford them, or will they be distributed free of charge? If they will not or cannot pay for them, who will?
Editor:
If the governments involved are to pay the expenses, the cost could well negate any benefits which could conceivably result from the program. If the United States, on the other hand, is to pay the entire cost of development and distribution, the bill could be staggering. Yet if the pills are too expensive for the people to use, the whole program is virtually useless and we end where we began.
NONETHELESS, ARE THERE not other approaches to the problem? The editorial mentions research on the food supply, but then seems to cast this suggestion aside in its conclusion that an oral contraceptive is the only answer. There are several other techniques of birth control which could be perfected, including the rhythm method. A bit of research in these areas could result in approaches which would be at least as inexpensive, if not cheaper, and equally as effective. If the problem is so great, why sidestep all other possibilities in favor of one?
The question is further complicated as a moral issue. I will not belabor the question with moral arguments. Let it suffice to say that there are very strongly held moral views against artificial birth control in any form. Whether or not one regards artificial birth control as sinful, it must nonetheless be recognized that a large block of the American people, notably Catholics, do oppose it. To force birth control on these people, through the back door, by using their taxes to pay for such a program is directly contradictory to justice and to our traditional approach to religious matters.
THEE IS A CONSISTENT and loud outcry against proposals such as federal aid to parochial schools, sending an ambassador to the Vatican, and others, which are viewed as aiding Catholicism. That those who oppose such proposals as unjust are sincere I neither doubt nor contest. Yet in the reverse situation, the imposition of programs which are morally unacceptable to Catholics, there is barely a murmur of protest. On the contrary, they are regarded as not only just but as vitally necessary! Why the difference?
If those who advocate a program of research and distribution of birth control materials and information are sincere in their belief that such a program is the only answer or that they will even partially solve the problem, let them use private agencies and private funds to carry out their program. There are many such agencies which can adequately do this.
There are many areas which are better left out of the hands of the government. Morals compose one such area. To give governmental sanction to a moral viewpoint which is objectionable to as large a segment of the population as is the question of birth control is to undercut the very religious freedom which the adherents of the program wish to protect. Our forefathers drew a line between Church and State. Attempts to erase this line can come from more than one direction.
John R. Swanson Baldwin senior
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 19, 1961
European Unity Based on Germany
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
PARIS—The French Foreign Office lies along the tree-lined Quai D'Orsay on the Left Bank of the Seine.
The old stone building, with its majestic staircases and huge, high-ceilinged rooms, still bears bullet scars inflicted by the Germans in World War II.
But it is a measure of a changing world, that in the office presided over by Foreign Minister Maurice Couve De Murville one thought takes precedence over all others in any consideration of the Moscow-generated Berlin crisis.
That is that come what may, the West Germans must remain allied with the West.
This single dominating thought was the basic factor behind formation of NATO and the common market.
It has been a keystone of President Charles de Gaulle's foreign policy.
And it was in these same interests that West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer placed European unity even ahead of German reunification.
And it is that unity which Khrushchev now, using Berlin as a symbol, is determined to destroy.
THESE ARE more than mere ideals. For the French take the practical view that a prosperous West Germany, confident of its allies, is one thing. A West Germany without faith in its allies and its economic structure threatened by a creeping totalitarianism would be another.
In the latter case, the West Germans might very well make their own adjustment to Communism and Khrushchev's battle would have been won.
This was the thinking that dominated the decision to send U.S. Vice President Lyndon Johnson hurrying to West Berlin after the Communists threw their wall across the divided city.
IT ALSO was the factor which made the Western Allies risk possible dangerous incidents to send 1,400 U.S. troop reinforcements plunging across Communist East Germany along the autobahn to West Berlin.
But these were temporary steps which in no way eliminated the
basic weakness of Berlin's military and economic position.
They cannot be constantly repeated for the sake of German morale.
Therefore, in the eyes of the French, whatever negotiations are held with the Russians, the basic consideration must be stability for West Berlin and West Germany without damaging concessions.
BACK OF THIS lay the French distrust of the Gromyko talks in Washington and New York.
Back of this also lies De Guelle's demand that final NATO decisions rest with the Big Three, The United States, Britain and France, for without these three there is no alliance.
And that is why we may see more U.S. troops living under tents along the Bavarian forward wall this winter in what the Germans call the "Siberia of Germany."
"Bad for business," a hotel man said.
"The fault of Roosevelt and Stalin" said another.
Three weeks of travel in West Germany, including nearly a week in Bonn and another in West Berlin, convinced this correspondent that the German people outside Berlin were sleep-walking, in fact hoped that this talk of crisis was all a bad dream which eventually would go away.
Now a week in Paris which has included talks with high government and NATO officials leads to much the same conclusion but reached by a different avenue.
In Germany, the feeling is of a country still numbed by defeat in two world wars, a divided nation in which West Germans feel that they have not been wholly accepted back into the family of nations.
To Discuss Chemistry
Charles Kulier, graduate student in chemistry, will discuss the "Chemistry of Dilimide" at the organic chemistry colloquium at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 233 Malott.
No action has been taken yet against the KU students who vandalized Lawrence property Saturday night at the Senior Stomp, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men said last night.
Action Still Pending In Weekend Prank
"It's too early to tell what will be done." Dean Alderson said.
Several KU students tore down "no parking signs" at the Big Barn, Route 1. The Sheriff's office had installed the signs earlier in the day to make sure no one parked there.
"Apparently, that did not make any difference," Sheriff Fred Broeker said.
Sheriff Broeker had the cars which were parked in the spaces, hauled-away.
You cannot escape necessities;
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Stop codding young punks; build bigger bombs; remember the Maine. William Randolph
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Heard at Young GOP Meeting
Speaker Hits 'Fishy' Democrats
By Zeke Wigglesworth
The Republican state chairman knocked over a Democratic fishbowl Tuesday night as he spoke to 50 Young Republicans in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Donald P. Schnacke, the state chairman, addressed the group about politics on the national and local levels.
"The Democrats introduced a bill into Congress calling for $20 million to be spent on a fish aquarium in Washington, D.C." he said.
AS HE attacked national Democratic spending, Mr. Schnacke cited an example of what he called "foolish and unnecessary spending."
The five Republican congressmen from Kansas voted against the bill he said.
"THEY BELIEVE, as I do, that with our concern over Laos, Berlin and the Communist threat, we should not be spending money on frilly things like an aquarium."
After the meeting, Mr. Snackne could not recall who introduced the bill into Congress or what bill number it was, saving that:
"It was a Democratic-introduced bill for the construction of a $20 million aquarium."
Mr. Schnacke also attacked Postmaster-General J. Edward Day for charging that Republicans are "a group of non-conforming obstructionists."
HE SAID that the Republican party has a duty to the United States.
"Can you imagine a mess we would have without a two-party system? Our job is to offer constructive criticism to the New Frontier administration of the Democrats."
Speaking about future Republican prospects, Mr. Schnacke reported that on the national level, the Party looks good. There is trouble at the local level, he said.
"Since 1953, the Republican party has dropped many seats at the county level. For example, we have lost 10 county clerks, 11 treasurers, and seven registrars of vital statistics and county attorney."
MR. SCHNACKE said that in his role as state chairman, he urges workers to concentrate on seeking better and more popular candidates.
"We need candidates who will support party platforms and party principles. Too often in elections at the county level, the elections
are based on personalities of the candidates."
He praised Gov. John Anderson, saying:
THE GOVERNOR is a very pleasant man. He has brought honor to the Party. The former governor of Kansas failed to do this. You can see where the Democratic party is as a result."
He said that Gov. Anderson has been able to pass about 95 per cent of the legislation he wanted, a thing "unmatched in the history of Kansas."
Mr. Schnacke closed with praise for student Republican organizations such as the one at KU. He told the members they should always make themselves available for work in elections.
"Very soon, you yourselves may be running for precinct committeemen or women. Young Republicans always do a good job in state elections," he said.
Bolin Receives Cash Award
Bryan Dan Bolin, Springfield, Mo. junior, is the recipient of a $150 scholarship given by the Kansas Savings and Loan League.
It was presented in Lawrence at the 13th annual Savings and Loan Institute for Junior Executives.
Kuhn Discusses France
"A tremendous success," Reinhard Kuhn, assistant professor of French said of the language institute held in France last summer.
Page 5
Twenty-five students participated in the French phase of the Foreign Language Institute. Prof. Kuhn directed the program in France.
"We had a first rate group of students," Prof. Kuhn said. "That's why it was so successful."
the Sorbonne, Paris. The institute itself was located in Paris.
The institute ran for nine weeks, eight of them organized study, 25 hours a week. The last week was left to the students for independent travel.
Besides study, the group made nine cultural trips to historic places in France. They visited such places as Mont St. Michel, Reims Cathedral, Chartres and Versailles.
During the eight weeks the students did work equivalent to second year French at KU, Prof. Kuhn said. Instruction was provided by
"We tried to stress all aspects of French civilization with these trips," Prof. Kuhn said.
In addition to the trips, the group went to the theater nine times.
We saw everything from the classics, like *Mowgli* and *Garanga*. Gardisg of *Sawaii*, Prof. Khuin, said
Prof. Kuhn said the program would be continued next year, although he would not be in it. He will speak about the program Oct. 25 in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
The award has been given annually since 1955 by the League to a KU student majoring in business who shows superiority in scholarship and leadership. Bolin was chosen by a faculty committee in the School of Business.
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Presidential Forum: 6:45 p.m.
Jayalalitha House
Unamet Activities Committees
American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers Meeting: 7:00 p.m. p.m.
(Mitter, M. Ritter,
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TOMORROW
Hillet Friday Evening Services: 6:45 p.m., Hillet Community Center, 917
Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House.
Highland Drive. Services will end at 7:10 in time for the movie.
Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m.
State Street Building, 1212 Oread, "The Role of the Christian in Politics," Rev. Earl McElk-
Annual K.U. Dames Initiation of Members 8 p.m., Watkins Room, Kansas Union
Home Economists Meer
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
The meeting will be held in the dining room in the basement of Fraser Hall.
"Misleading Terms in Fashion" will be the topic for discussion at the meeting of the Home Economics Club at 4 p.m. Friday.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 19. 1961
Lewisians Tell of Space Necessity
A group of coeds living at Lewis Hall is following construction of the new women's dormitory next door with more than passing interest.
They are the women who were selected this fall to live three in a room. The situation was made necessary by an overload in the number of women wanting rooms in the dormitories.
WHEN ASKED if they were crowded, many of the residents answered with a laugh, followed by "you don't know the half of it."
"Unless you could see our room, you wouldn't know just how crowded we are," laughed Gretchen Van Dyne, Prairie Village junior. "It's unbelievable."
She explained the University converted the rooms to three-resident status by providing bunk beds, a chest of drawers, and a large steel closet. A third desk, originally placed in the room, was removed to the lounge on the seventh floor, which was made into a studv area.
In addition, Miss Van Dyne said, one of her roommates brought a record player which also takes up floor space.
"OUR FLOOR space is almost void," she said.
Ann Stoner, Oskaloosa sophomore, said the biggest disadvantage is lack of storage space.
"My two roommates are from out of state, and they brought all their winter clothes with them this fall," she said. "We had to take a lot of the clothes to my parents' home."
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Several residents said the mirror caused trouble.
"THEERE'S JUST one mirror — and a small one at that—high up on the wall," one woman said. "You can imagine what it's like on Friday night with three of us trying to get in front of it."
Another resident mentioned the confusion caused by the extra roommate.
"It's just like Grand Central Station," she said. "There always seems to be someone in to see one of us."
MOST OF the residents seem to be taking their crowded conditions without complaints, a student assistant said.
"There were a few complaints at first, but lately they've been taking it in stride," said Lin Shultz, St. Louis, Mo., junior. "Most of them realize they're lucky to have a room here at all."
She said the most frequent complaint she has heard is lack of storage space.
J. J. Wilson, dormitory director, recently said the shortage of rooms would be almost eliminated when the new women's dormitory opens next fall.
KU may become a training ground for Peace Corps delegates to Costa Rica if plans now under construction by faculty members materialize.
KU May Train Peace Corps Troops
While the plans are "simply in the exploratory stage" now, the University should know within two weeks if it has the go-ahead from Peace Corps officials, said John P. Augell, chairman of the Latin American area studies program.
Experience gained in the KU Junior Year in Costa Rica program would be utilized in the Peace Corps training program, he added.
It is hoped that KU would be selected for a training ground if Costa Rica requests Peace Corps delegates from the United States, he said.
Adkins to Present Paper
A KU professor is among the speakers scheduled to present featured papers at the 37th annual convention of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters which meets in Washington, D.C. next week.
Gale R. Adkins, assistant professor of speech and journalism, will report on a research study of the literature relating to radio-television-film. Prof. Adkins has collected faculty evaluations of the literature of broadcasting from 57 colleges and universities. A report of the study results has been accepted for publication in a national journal later this year.
Imagination is more important than knowledge.—Albert Einstein
Three bacteriologists at the University of Kansas are conducting research that may help to answer poignant questions concerning antibiotics.
Antibiotic Study Launched
Dr. Delbert M. Shankel, assistant professor, is the principal investigator in a study on rickettsial genetics which has received a new National Science Foundation grant of $12,200 for a two-year period. Co-investigators are Prof. David Paretsky, department chairman, and Prof. Cora M. Downs.
His group will inoculate eggs and tissue cultures with rickettsiae and then with antibiotics, in an effort
The three hope to get some indication of the pattern of antibiotic resistance in rickettsie. "Rickettisial diseases treated with antibiotics eventually become resistant," Dr. Shankel said. "We want to know what the mechanism is that causes this."
to get "marked strains" or mutations showing resistance to antibiotics and virulence properties.
Genius, in truth, means little more than the faculty of perceiving in an unhabitual way.-William James
It is only one step from toleration to forgiveness—Walter Hines Page
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Criticizes Lack of Aid to Missionaries
By Louis Cassels United Press International
"One Sunday in the Near East I attended a mission church. The building was small, one-room, dilapidated. There was no regular minister or missionary. During the service, chickens kept putting their heads up through holes in the floor and curious children looked in through the broken windows.
"I was ashamed. I thought how many American churches spend more on music alone than it would cost to provide a full-time missionary. For the first time I realized that a Christian church, like an individual, can be self-centered."
Those words were written by a Presbyterian minister, the Rev. Donald H. Douds of Erie, Pa., in a recent issue of Presbyterian Life Magazine.
THE REV. MR. DOUDS has no monopoly on the sore conscience he brought home from the Near East. Clergymen and laymen in many denominations are concerned about the contrast between the vast sums of money which America's churches spend on themselves, and the relatively insignificant sums which they contribute to the world missions of Christianity.
There are notable exceptions. Some local churches give half or more of their total income to the work of Christ beyond their own parish boundaries. But this kind of sharing is by no means typical.
Statistics compiled by the Year-
book of American Churches show
that the average U.S. Protestant
congregation uses 82 cents of every
dollar it takes in for its own local
expenses.
THE REMAINING 18 cents is parcelled out among a variety of "benevolences." The vast majority of this goes into home missions or other national programs of the parent denominations.
Only about 3 per cent of the contributor's dollar goes outside of the United States to help the struggling Christian churches of Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Comparable figures are not available for Roman Catholic churches. But Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Director of the Catholic Mission Secretariat for the United States, said recently American Catholics have not done as well as Protestants in supporting missions.
A liberal estimate of Catholic giving, added to the published Protestant figures, yields a grand total of about $250 million a year contributed by all of the churches of America to the worldwide Christian mission.
THEIS I is one-fourth of the annual amount that U.S. churches are currently spending on handsome new buildings for their own use.
It was not to the man in the pew, but to the people who make up church budgets, locally and nationally, that the Rev. Mr. Douds was speaking when he said:
"How we use our money is the acid test of our faith and our love; and this is true for churches as well as individuals. As we compose our budgets in our local churches, Christ is watching us. Are we obeying his command to love others as we love ourselves?"
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Page 7
Fulbright Deadline
Officials of the Fulbright program today issued a reminder to interested students that the deadline for the submission of applications for Fulbright and Foreign Study awards is tomorrow, Oct. 20, for the academic year 1962-63. Applications must be returned to 306 Fraser on or before that date.
No man can climb out beyond the limitations of his own character.—John Viscount Morley
Florida is a great state if you are an orange.—Fred Allen
Church Collects Old IOU From Navy
GAINESVILLE, Ga. — (UPI)— The Mill Methodist Church has won a victory over the Navy.
The church agreed in 1944 to remove its steeple as a flying hazard for a base constructed nearby for World War II training. It was agreed the Navy would replace the steeple after the war.
Thursday, October 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan
But the Navy moved out without carrying out the agreement and no copy of the pact could be found. Church officials recently uncovered the record and the Navy sent a check for $3,500.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 19. 1961
The Big Bomb
By Sam S. Roberts United Press International
Fifty million tons of TNT—2,500 times more powerful than the bombs that decimated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Twice as powerful as any weapon in the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
Some time during the next two weeks Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has promised the Soviet Union will detonate such a nuclear weapon—the most powerful man-made explosion in history.
Experts discount the military value of the high yield weapons, both the 50 megaton device Khrushchev plans to explode and the 100 megaton weapon he claims the Russians have built. But whatever their military value, the destructive capabilities of these bombs are nearly beyond imagination.
Dr. Ralph E. Lapp, an authority on atomic weapons, says a 50 megaton weapon would dig a hole 400 feet deep and a mile and one-half wide. The loss in human lives would be impossible to estimate.
New York Would be Rubble
If New York City were its target, Manhattan Island would be split in half with the Hudson and the East Rivers pouring into the divide, flooding the rubble that had been the mid-town area.
If a 50-megaton bomb fell on the White House in Washington, the hole would swallow most of the federal buildings, the capitol, and the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials and the Washington Monument.
Dropped on the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, it would destroy all those and the Pentagon too, under Lapp's formula.
Chicago residents, from Oak Park to Evanston would probably be wiped out by such a bomb dropped on the Loop. Much of the southside would be destroyed and tidal waves in Lake Michigan caused by the blast could hit nearby steel-producing Gary, Ind.
Most of San Francisco would be destroyed in a holocaust rivaling the 1906 earthquake and fire. If the explosion occurred over Union Square, it would level Nob Hill, fisherman's wharf, the plush apartments of Russian hill and skid row in the lower mission district.
Disaster for Downtown Dallas
An impact at the Southland Building, the tallest building west of the Mississippi, would wipe out downtown Dallas. A heavily populated residential area, Southern Methodist University, and the Cotton Bowl would be gone. If the blast occurred farther to the northwest, the Dallas aircraft industry would be destroyed.
Fifty megatons on the heart of Atlanta would decimate most of the city, including the historic residential districts. Business and industrial areas would be destroyed.
The Truman Library in Independence, Mo., would be destroyed by a 50 megaton weapon dropped just east of Kansas City. Downtown Kansas City including the Liberty Memorial, dedicated after World War I, the Municipal Airport and Union Station would be demolished.
P.GKER
The Latest in Fallout Shelters
The fellow that owns his home is always just coming out of a hardware store—Kin Hubbard
G. E. Kidder Smith, New York architect, will lecture Nov. 6 and 7 at the University of Kansas on the new churches of Europe.
He will speak at 4 p.m. Nov. 6 and at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 in 303 Bailey. The lectures are open to the public.
NY Architect to Speak on Churches
Smith has written on the contemporary architecture of 23 countries. He is the author of "The New Architecture of Europe," his most recent book, and is the co-author of "Italy Builds," "Sweden Builds," and "Brazil Builds."
An authority on religious architecture, he wrote the section on that subject in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. He is a member of the Commission on Architecture and the General Commission of the National Council of Churches.
A recipient of undergraduate and master's degrees from Princeton, he has taught at Yale and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and
has lectured throughout the United States and West Europe. He has held American-Scandinavian Foundation, Guggenheim, Brown University, Fulbright Research and A.W. Erunner fellowships.
His visit to KU is being sponsored by the department of architecture and architectural engineering in the School of Engineering.
Internationals to View Film
The International Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium for the showing of "Hiroshima, Mon Amour." Following the film refreshments will be served in the Kansas Union.
All students interested in the International Club trip to Mexico during Christmas vacation should contact Peter Ling, vice president of the club.
He dwells nowhere who dwells everywhere.—Martial
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Thursday, October 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Injuries Hamper Sooner Hopes
15
Hurt by a discouraging blend of injuries that first attacked the backfield and lately has lamed the line, Oklahoma hosts Kansas in the 59th annual game of the series which started in 1903.
Starting left guard for Coach Bud Wilkinson's squad, Jimmy Giltrap, is not expected to see action while right tackle Tom Cox (left calf)
SOONER PASSER — Sophomore quarterback Bill Van Burkleo, the probable starter, is the top Oklahoma passer and ranks eighth in the conference, just 10 yards behind KU's John Hall.
muscle pulled) and right end Dale Perini (knee) are listed as doubtful performers.
OF LEFT END John Porterfield, bothered with a hamstring, and left guard Claude Harmon, having knee problems, Sooner Trainer Ken Rawlinson said, "I think they'll make it but it'll go right down to the wire."
Right end Richard Inman, bad
Phi Gam 'Bs' Post Two IM Victories
Phi Gamma Delta posted two wins yesterday in intramural football play as both of its B teams rolled to easy wins.
The Phi Gam #2 squad lashed Pi Kappa Alpha, 39-6. while the #1 unit pounded Alpha Kappa Lambda, 30-6.
In the other fraternity B game, Beta Theta Pi breezed past hapless Triangle. 20-0.
In independent A division action,
ASCE shut out Battenfield, 13-0.
Foster downed Jolliffe, 12-2, and
Stephenson beat Oread, 14-0.
Hadl Sixth Best Passer
By flipping 66 air yards in the 21-7 victory over Iowa State, John Hadl vaulted past Chet Strehlow into sixth place on the Jayhawkers' all-time career passing list. Hadl goes into the Oklahoma game showing 757 total passing yards.
Auto Wrecking & Junk
shoulder, and left halfback Jimmy Carpenter, low back sprain, will probably play, Rawlinson said.
New & Used Parts and Tires
On the brighter side, left guard Karl Milstead, center Johnny Tatum and right halfback Mel Sandersfeld are expected to play.
East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
FOR KANSAS, only second team right halfback Willis Brooks should miss the Sooner game. He has broken some bones in his right foot and will be out about three weeks. Marvin Clothier, second unit guard who missed the Iowa State win, is expected to play.
The Oklahomans hold a decisive 33-19-6 margin in the series which is unbroken since it started. Wilkinson's mark is 12-0-2 while Jack Mitchell, in three efforts, has yet to beat his alma mater although he missed by only one point two seasons ago and tied last year.
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LINE STALWARTS—Two of the top lineemen for Oklahoma, seniors Tom Cox and Karl Milstead, huddle with line coach Gomer Jones. Both players have been injured but are expected to see plenty of action against the Jayhawkers.
Model United Nations
Steering Committee Interviews
Thursday, Oct. 19----7:30-10
Model U.N. Experience Required
Contact KU-Y Office, Ext. 227 Kansas Union
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 19, 1961
- News Briefs -
By United Press International
BOSTON — (UPI) — Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch Society, says the infiltration of "Comsymps" (Communist sympathizers) into the Catholic clergy has been extremely less than in the Protestant clergy."
Welch's remarks were contained in a letter published today in the Pilot, official organ of the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston. The Pilot previously had challenged Welch to name 50 priests he believes are Comsymps.
* * *
MOSCOW — Three Americans are among the 80 foreign delegations attending the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress.
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, national chairman of the American Communist Party, heads the delegation. The other delegation members are Henry Winston, vice chairman, and James Jackson, a member of the American party's executive committee.
$$
** **
$$
NEW YORK - Hungarian-born ear expert Dr. Georg Von Bekesy was overwhelmed today when he was told he won the 1961 Nobel Prize in Medicine.
"Alone?" he asked. He was told "yes," the prize was his alone.
$$
**
$$
Revolution threatened three Latin American nations today. Two of them proclaimed states of emergency.
Bolivia broke up a plot to overthrow the government and captured at least 12 conspirators. One of them committed suicide after his arrest. Modified martial law went into effect.
Ecuador turned out troops to take over the city of Cuenca, one of three major cities in which saber-swinging police clashed with revolutionary-minded university students. Virtual martial law was imposed.
New Mexican Censorship
Albuquerque, N.M. — The New Mexico Board of Regents has officially condemned "Mirage," the yearbook of the University of New Mexico.
At a recent meeting, the Regents condemned "Mirage" and demanded that action be taken to insure that such objectionable features would not reappear in future issues of the yearbook.
The controversy over "Mirage," which began when it was issued last spring, centers on the emphasis on such extracurricular activities as parties, drinking bouts and generally "rowdy" events, and on the "racy" captions under some of the photographs.
The Regents claimed the yearbook is "not a credit to the university," and that the last issue was one-
Homecoming Queen Judges Selected
Five KU faculty members and five Lawrence business and professional men have been chosen to judge the 1961 Homecoming queen candidates.
The KU judges are Lt. Col. R. P. Ash, professor of air science; Vernon E. Alley, instructor of mechanical engineering; John Augelli, professor of geography; Robert P. Cobb, assistant professor of English; and Robert C. Casad, assistant professor of law.
Lawrence judges are Rusty Springer, Rusty's IGA Food Market; Richard Raney Jr., Raney Drugs; Robert Payne, Hallmark Cards; A. G. Sabol Jr., Reuter Organ Co.; and Dr. George Brahler, dentist.
Preliminary judging will take place Oct. 29 and final judging Nov. 2
sided, slighting scholastic activities in favor of special events. They directed the university administration to evaluate its publications procedures to preclude the possibility of similar occurrences in the future.
The UNM Board of Student Publications, made up of five students and fofr faculty members, will determine what action should be taken. The Board determines policies for the three university publications.
Edwards Attending Jr. High Meeting
Dr. Karl D. Edwards, assistant to the dean of the School of Education, will attend the ninth National Core Conference to be held October 20-22 in Buffalo, New York.
Core is a program of general education for junior high school teachers involving the integration of social studies and language arts. Dr. Edwards will be attending the conference through teacher education. He is a member of the executive committee of the National Conference of Core teachers.
The theme of this year's conventions will be "New Prospectives on Core." Through the conference, Dr. Edwards said, the members hope to improve teaching in the core classes.
365 Excuses
Today's excuse: Anniv. of the meeting of the Barbers Assoc. of America
365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio
At 7:00 & 9:15
TONITE & FRIDAY GRANADA
William Inge's
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STARTS SATURDAY!
Metro • Goldwym • Mayer
An Avon Production
The HONEYMOON MACHINE
CinemaScope
MetroColor
STEVE BRIGID JIM PAULA DEAN
MQUEEN BAZLEN HUTTON PRENTISS JAGGER
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eves. 7 & 9
Good will is the mightiest practical force in the universe.—Charles Fletcher Dole
Religion is no opiate; it's the haven for other-directed people.—G. Herbertson.
A FREE LECTURE
You are cordially invited to
on Christian Science entitled
"HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CAN HELP YOU"
by ARNOLD H. EXO, C.S.B., of Evanston, Illinois Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 22,1961 at 3:00 P.M. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL — 19th and Louisiana Streets
Auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Lawrence, Kansas
Magnificent Human Drama of a Love so Strong it Sparked the Revolt that Shook the World!
The General
desired her... even
more than he wanted
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Spartacus loved her!
The General desired her... even more than he wanted to possess Rome!
The Senator stole her... and used her for a cunning revenge!
Spartacus loved her!
The Rebel worshipped her... as fiercely as his dream of freedom!
Caesar used her... in his power drive to become ruler of Rome!
The Slaver sold her... for a handful of gold and betrayed an Empire!
NINA MARIA BACCHINI
PETER MURRAY
The Senator stole her...and used her for a cunning revenge!
esar used her...
his power drive
become ruler
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and betrayed
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SPARTACUS
KIRK DOUGLAS • LAURENCE OLIVIER • JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON • PETER USTINOV • JOHN GAVIN SPARTACUS and TONY CURTIS as Antoninus
WINNER OF
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Directed by STANLEY KUBRICK •Cropped by DALTON TRUMBO •Based on a novel by HONORAD FAST
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Thursday, October 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
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 bullying
All ads must be called or brought to the University office on the day before publication is desired.
Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
LOST
LOST—Lady's trench coat. Size 12 or 14.
Lost at football game. Sec. 38. Has small
tear below right pocket. Call Sally
Sponable. VI 3-8022. 10-23
LOST. BROWN EYEGLASSES some-
where on campus so his under-
wear is torn up 0-24
TRI DELT. Sorority pin, near or in *strong* Has Ginger Weiss engraved on it. If found, call Tri Delt house. VI 3-4610.
10-20
Brown wallet type Billfold: Believed lost in Mollett area, keep money, return billfold: Reward, call Calvin Huff, VI 3-8021. 10-19
KAPPA ALPHA THETA sorority pin near Malott Hall. If found please call the Theta house. Reward. 10-19
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward. `t`
TRANSPORTATION
KU MALE student with late model car will take 3 girls to Oklahoma game. Must have own tickets and share expenses. Call VI 3-4858 - 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. 10-20
NEED RIDE from K.C. Kans, Mon-
thr Fri. Classes Mon-Wed-Fri. 9-4;
Tues.-Thurs. 8-2. Call KU ext. 376, ask
for classified. 10-25
FOR SALE
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS
New and Used Guns, and ammo.
Discounts for cash. 1204 Tenn. VI 3-7001
BICYCLES, TYPEWRITERS, transistors,
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THE ONLY registered Seal Point kittens in Lawrence for sale. 10 weeks old, house jumping, just the right age to start training. See at 221 Moundview Dr. Janp. m.p.
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10-22
WEIMARANER PUPS. The most noble of all dogs. 8 weeks old. Excellent watchdogs, with children — also point and retrieve. Preference given to hunters. Call Dr. Hudson, KU extension 349, Friday 1 to 5. 10-19
GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES.
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Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
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NEW $200 Guild Western guitar, 25% off - Call any evening, VI 3-4811. Also offering German Luger, 8 inch barrel.
George Johnson. 10-24
1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door sedan. P.G., r. & h. Forced to sell because of loss of driver's license—$695. Call VI 3-2293 after 6 p.m.
10-20
AS A LIVING TEXTBOOK, as an aid to educators and students. The Christian curriculum and students this international daily newspaper is offered at half price. 1 yr—$24; $22, 9 mos. —$25, 6 mrs. $50. To place your subscription call VI 3-4206. 10-24
All new and revised. 100 pages,
mimeographed and bound.
Extremely comprehensive and anal-
ytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901
after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
Western Civilization Notes
For Sale: One year old Madison Field-
field-$55, Pettigrew-Davis 723 Mass. 10-23
Winchester Model-79 12 gauge pump
condition, 500
VI 2.253 after 5:00 10-19
*PROFESSIONAL* Getter Counter
*PROFESSIONAL* See at 163 II-10
Nils St — Price $100.00
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $19.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and printers. Mimeographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone TI 3-0151 today.
STEVEN5 22 Automatic Ride. $24. Like new.
Call VI 3-2906 on 6 p.m. tt
Car For Sale: '52 Buick. $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. fm.
SACRIFICE -- Student must sell second
conditioner. $150. Vol VI 3-629-1.
conditioner. $150. Vol VI 3-629-1.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tf
HELP WANTED
1 OR 2 GIRLS to help with housework
laundry privileges. Call VI 3-7855. 0-2
Help Wanted—Men; Waiter, no training necessary. 1 a.m. to 5 p.m., 5-6 days a week. Apply in person. Griff's Burger Bar, 1618 W. 23rd. 10-20
Part Time Employment
IF—you need to earn $40 a week or more and are able to work 15 hours or more per week.
IF—you enjoy public contact work and have your own car.
THEN—Call VI 2-1685 Between 5:15 and 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday or Friday
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: Driving instructor with car.
Cail Mary C. Wilson, VI 2-7848. 10-19
EVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks
ce cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
paper bags. Picnic, party supplies
& Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
1350.
BUSINESS SERVICES
BABYSITTING any time at 23! Mounds!
Experienced. Experienced. for reference.
10-25
Tutor for Freshman English. Graduate student — with public school and college teaching experience. Call VI 2-2479.
Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance
U. AUTO C.—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc, aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleon, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 Comm. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-
south. Phone VI — 3-2921 Modem
self-service — open weeks during 6:30
a.m.
TYEPRYETERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644. tf
Complete
TRAVEL SERVICE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. — VI 3-0152
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Income Insurance
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-754,
or 921 Miss. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation. Ola Smil. 931%; Mass. Cali VI 3-2683.
American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE
Morris Kay VI 3-7114
FOR RENT
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.
ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
cation OF THE UNIVERSITY DAHLIY
KANSAN.
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after 6 p.m. 10-25
COLLEGE BOYS or couples, child welcome — utilities paid, convenient location — Call VI 3-9776 or VI 3-9824 for appt. 10-25
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom 35' x 10' trailer.
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ANYONE COMMUTING or getting mar-
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BUSINESS LUNCH BAR furnished 45% EIH.
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2 BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, fireplace,
air conditioner, wall to wall carpeting,
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garage with storage area, storage areas,
storage areas, garage. S.W. edge of campus.
Grand view. Call VI 3-3887 after 7 p.m.
10-24
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
For Rent: Room to graduate student or employed woman. Private entrance, very quiet and dignified home $2½ bloom taxa on University Drive. Call VI 30-3707.
Furnished 3-bedroom home in Lawrence.
For rent to 3 or 4 male students. Call HEDrick 2-9579, Kansas City 10-23
Vacancy available for 2 men in comm-
mission (Junction Rail. Cd. Cali.
3-9635 for appointment). if
SLEEPING ROOM with private kitchen
seating woman. Vacant Oct. 20
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1-3-5882 after 5 for appt.
TYPING
TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patty. VI 3-8754
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, papers, chesses and dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mts. Marilyn Hai. VI 3-2318.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing home — call VI 3-0216. Mrs Lt. Geibach
Experienced Typsist; Electric typewriter.
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc.
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1035 Barker,
Cauli VI 3-2001.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1631 Miss. tf
GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting style for rates. For excelle- tying at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, POI 3-1097.
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Bartow, 408 W. 19th, VI 2-1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research papers, and neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excursion Service. 5917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Evers or Sat. 2-2186.
T typing. Will type reports, thesis, etc.
Leblanc, 1511. W 21. St. CV1 VI 3-6440. ftt
sell, 1511. W 21. St. CV1 VI 3-6440. ftt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, job descriptions, Rasonable rates, Electric typewriter, Mc. MccEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568.
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING,
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teacher and author of these cases,
reports accurately. Standard tests.
Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. See
tf
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
"We don't have that exact part in stock - but with a few minor adjustments we can fit our Super-B plug in there."
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FORD SALES
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 19. 1961
30 Students to U. Senate Posts
Thirty students have been appointed to University Senate committees for the 1961-62 school year.
The University Senate, a regulatory body consisting of administrators, professors and associate professors, rules on matters concerning the University as a whole, such as questions of scholarship pertaining to more than one school, rules of eligibility for participation in campus activities and questions related to advanced standing and transfer of students.
The students and committees on which they are serving:
Calendar: Sarah J. Byram, Lenexa senior; Stephen T. Stazel, Fredonia junior; Marilyn J. Zumwalt, Rock Hill, Mo. junior
Commencement: Homer R. Williams Blackwell, Okla., sophomore; Jerry Ulrich, Iola sophomore; Sara Lucinda Eggleson, Mason, Mo. senior.
Convocations and Lectures; Michael B Mead, Kansas City, Mo., junior; William B R Patterson, Wichita junior; F. Alan Stamper, Plainville sophomore.
Eligibility to Student Activities: Sheron L. Brown, Bettel junior, David E. Moore, Bettel junior, Nancy Lintecum, Prairie Village junior Stephen G. Powell, Joplin M., mo. junior
Film Series; Donna B. Burgess, Newport News, Va.; junior; Ann C. Holmes Prairie Village junior; Carl C. Peck Concordia sophomore.
Orientation Week: Hubert R. Granger,
Marcus R. Marcich, S.
Zodileman, Norwich sophomore
Disciplinary Committee: Jack Lee Roberts, Kansas City senior; Paul P. Caconpo, Overland Park graduate student; John French, topeka senior; John M. Foeltje, topeka senior; Mel Iwalae, Wichita senior; Carolyn L Krantzler, Brookings, S.D., senior.
Traffic and Safety: Phillip C. Brooks.
Boston, MA
K Flynn, Bethel senior; J Richard Smith, Arkansas City third-year law student;
Robert J. Gump, Wichita sophomore.
Schedule of Film Series
Athletic Board: Max E. Eberhart,
Gregory D. Wilson, D. Wilson
Leewood graduate student.
Some of the finest motion pictures from around the world highlight the University of Kansas Film Series for the 1961-1962 season.
In addition to one American film, "Treasure of the Sierra Madre," there are films from nine other nations. They are:
OCT. 20 "Hiroshima, Mon Amour," a French-language film directed by Alain Resnais and starring Emmanuele Riva and Eili Okada.
NOV. 3 "Room at the Top," an English film, featuring Laurence Harvey, Simone Signoret, and Heather Sears in starring roles.
DEC. 18 "El Ultimo Cuple," a Spanish-language film directed by Juan de Orduna and featuring Sarita Montiel Armando Calvo.
NOV. 17 "The Three Penny Opera," a film adaptation of the famous opera by Kurt Weill. In starring roles are Lotte Lenya (Kurt Weill's wife), Rudolph Forster and Carola Neher. The film is in German.
JAN. 12 "Ikiru," a Japanese-language film starring Takashi Shimura directed by Akira Kurosawa.
Feb. 16 "General Della Rovere," a film from Italy, directed by noted director Roberto Rosselini. Another winner at Cannes, the film stars Vittorio De Sica.
Feb. 2 "Ballad of a Soldier," a Russian-language film. Directed by Grigori Chukhral, "Ballad" was a double prize winner at the Cannes Film Festival.
March 9 "Treasure of the Sierra Madre," an American film, starring Humphrey Bogart and Walter Huston. The film was directed by John Huston.
March 16 "Wild Strawberries," a Swedish-language movie, directed by Ingmar Bergman. The film stars Bibi Anderson and Victor Sioström.
March 23 "World of Apu," an Indian-language film. "Apu" is the final chapter in a three-part story of life in India.
All the films except the Spanish-language "El Ultimo Couple" have English-subtitles. The movies will be shown on the dates listed at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. public is invited.
Recital Contests Begin Today
Competition for honors in the School of Fine Arts begins today at 5 p.m.
The first weekly student recitals will be held in Swarthout Recital Hall. From these recitals the music faculty will pick the best performers for an Honors Recital in April.
The program, which is in its fourth year, is held to encourage and inspire music students in their work. The students have a chance to perform under recital pressure
Man wants but little here below,
Nor wants that little long.—Oliver
Goldsmith
Ann Kretzmeier, Librarian, junior who will sing "Una voce poce va" from Rossini's, The Barber of Seville; Rebecca Shier, St. Joseph Mo.; senior, who will sing "Allerseden" and "Zueignung," songs by Richard Strauss; Edward Sooter, Wichita, graduate, who will sing "Un di
William J. Moore, dean of the school of religion, will speak at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 306 of the Kansas Union. His topic will be the Islam religion.
The students and programs are:
Rab Malik, Pakistan graduate student, and the president of the Moslem Students committee at KU, will introduce Dean Moore.
all' azzuro spasio" from Andrea Chenier by Giordano; Otis Simmons, Kansas City, graduate, who will sing "Il Lacerato Spirito," from Verdi's Simon Boccanega, and Walter Hawkey, who will play the Saint Saens Cello Concerto No. 1, opus 33.
Moore to Speak
He who has imagination without learning, has wings and no feet. — Joseph Joubert
Prosperity is only an instrument to be used, not a deity to be worshipped.-Calvin Coolidge
Leonard's Standard Service
9th and Indiana
No evil can happen to a good man, either in life or after death.—Socrates
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
by
Photography
Studio de Porta
912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan.
VI 2-2300
Sororities & Fraternities
Contact us for your House Photography
- Portraits
- Application
- Creative
Color or Black & White
LUCKY STRIKE presents:
LUCKY PUFFERS
"THE FOOTBALL TEAM"
"There seems to be some dissension on the squad."
COACH
"OOOPH!"
"Do you think the coach would get mad if we punted on first down?"
LUCKY STRIKE
19% JAR LIQUID
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
"So that's why they call him Crazy Legs!"
WHY ONLY 11 MEN ON A FOOTBALL TEAM? Because all the other students are just too busy. Yes, busy doing research, studying, smoking Luckies, playing bongos, smoking Luckies, dating, partying, praising professors and smoking Luckies—much too busy for football. Why so many "smoking Luckies"? Simply this: We try to give an honest representation of college life; and college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular cigarette so smoke Luckies.
CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!
A. T. CO
Product of The American Tobacco-Company - "Tobacco is our middle name"
/
Faculty Opinion on New Schedule Split
By Dennis Farney
KU faculty members are sharply split on the merits of the proposed "davight savings plan" for scheduling next year's classes.
Some faculty members generally oppose the plan, in contrast to KU administrative officials, who support it as the only practical method of dealing with KU's increasing enrollment and lack of classroom space.
Under the plan, discussed and approved by the Dean's Council and announced Tuesday by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, next year's classes will be scheduled from 7:30 a.m. to 5:20 p.m., thus lengthening the KU class day one hour.
Faculty members opposing the plan list the following reasons:
- The plan will "erode away" research time by requiring members to spend more time in their offices.
- Scheduling classes on the half hour will "double the work for faculty wives," who will now be required to cook two noon meals, one for the faculty member and one for school age children in the family.
Friday, October 20, 1961
Supporters of the plan say it will not cut into research time or impose a heavier course load on faculty members. It will, they say, "simply spread the faculty teaching load over a greater amount of time."
- The increasing KU enrollment could be compensated for in other wavs.
- Many committee meetings now held during the noon hour would be disrupted by the new schedule.
Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, strongly disagrees.
I view the plan to establish a 7:30 to 5:30 class day as a 14% increase in my "official" work week. I assume that currently professors are required to be available to their students and for other University work approximately 44 hours a week.
Adding six hours to the work week carries with it the implication that the professors will correspondingly be available at the new times. I realize that there are no intentions to increase the number of assigned courses per professor, but to imply that this means, therefore, no increase in time is to display an ignorance concerning the realities of the situation as it pertains to teaching, research, and other University activities.
The following is Prof. Leone's statement:
Professors will be expected to be available from 7:30 in the morning until 5:30 in the evening. For any of my colleagues to believe otherwise will be to take an unrealistic view of the situation. If the students are expected to be here, so are the professors. It is a myth to assume that the additional hour will provide more "free" time for the professor during the day.
The implications that may be drawn from this new time plan
Berlin War Games Earn Clay's Praise
BERLIN — (UPI) — The U.S. Army wound up a three-day war game today in which it flexed its muscles for the defense of Berlin in the face of Communist military maneuvers in nearby East Germany and Poland.
The American field exercise in the Grunewald Forest by 3,000 soldiers of the Berlin command underlined Western determination to stand up for its rights in this isolated city 110 miles inside Red-held territory.
GEN. LUCIUS D. CLAY, President Kennedy's personal representative here, saw the wind-up of the
BONN, Germany—(UPI)—Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Free Democratic Party leader Erich Mende reached agreement on the formation of a coalition government today.
Spokesmen for Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party and the Free Democrats said agreement has been reached on a "coalition contract" and the line-up of a coalition cabinet.
Agree On Coalition
maneuver today, in which U.S. troops playing the part of Communist aggressors made a deep armored penetration into the lines of defending troops. The "Red" penetration of the "Blue" force's lines merely gave each side a chance to play the role of aggressor.
"It was a well laid-out maneuver." Clay said. "It demonstrated the soundness of the training of the troops. It was evident every soldier took it seriously."
Most of the training here normally is in riot control and "combat in cities" type of warfare. In the field exercise just ended, they manned positions they might actually occupy in defending Berlin.
Meanwhile, the Communist East German Defense Ministry newspaper Volksarmee reported that the Warsaw Pact maneuvers are in full swing in Poland and East Germany.
The four flown out today raised to 24 the number of refugees taken out of Steinstuecken into Berlin by helicopter.
It was the first time that Polish and Czech troops have taken part in a war game in East Germany since World War II, and it was the first time East German troops have gone to Poland for maneuvers.
IT SAID THAT SOVIET, Polish and East German troops are taking part in Poland. In East Germany, 28 Russian, East German, Polish and Czech divisions are said to be involved. They are reported to be equipped with the most modern weapons, including atomic-capable missiles.
In another development, A U.S. Army helicopter flew four more East German refugees from the American sector enclave of Steinstuecken to West Berlin proper today.
THE EAST GERMANS had fed through barbed wire to the tiny hamlet which is separated from the rest of the city by a mile of Communist-held East German territory. to 24 the number of refugees taken
West Berlin police reported that two youths fled to the Western sector during the night. One 21-year-old was injured so badly crawling through barbed wire to the Ameri-
(Continued on page 12)
Daily hansan
59th Year, No.26
Weather
MOSCOW — (UPI) — East German communist chief Walter Ulbricht and Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan today demanded a peace treaty for Germany—either through East-West talks or unilaterally with the Kremlin.
NORTHEAST AND NORTH-CENTRAL - Mostly fair today through Saturday. A little warmer with increasing southerly winds today and tonight. High today 65 to 70. Low tonight 35 to 45
And Ulbricht said a treaty would build a "strong barrier" against the danger of war from West Germany
Reds Demand German Treaty
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev opened the congress Tuesday by tentatively lifting his year-end deadline on the signing of such a treaty. But he left little doubt that he eventually plans to sign the treaty.
Ulbricht told the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress that such a treaty was "most urgent" because the Berlin situation could become "a second Sarajevo." Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary was shot at Sarajevo and the incident was used as the excuse to start World War I.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MIKOYAN SAID A TREATY would turn West Berlin into a free demilitarized city.
MIKOYAN SAID THE Kremlin preferred to negotiate a peace treaty with all Germany through talks with the West...
Ulbricht and Mikoyan did not mention a deadline today. But they both expressed the need for a treaty in the strongest terms.
"There is no force." Mikoyan said, "that could prevent us from realizing this vitally necessary, peaceful settlement."
Mikoyan also echoed Khrushchev with denunciations of the Albanian communists and of the "anti-party group," whom he described as communist reactionaries.
But he said that if the West balked at such negotiations, it would go ahead on its own and sign a treaty with East Germany alone.
The mustachioed first vice premier's attack on the Albanians came one day after Red Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai criticized a similar condemnation by Khrushchev as "Unmarxist."
Indian Says 'Stop Tests'
UNITED NATIONS — (UPI) Indian Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon urged the United Nations today to approve an appeal for renewal of a moratorium on nuclear weapons tests.
Taking cognizance of announced U.S. refusal to again enter "the trap" of a moratorium which enabled Russia secretly to prepare the series of atmospheric tests it started Sept. 1, Krishna Menon revised an Indian resolution to include a statement that such explosions "should stand totally prohibited."
UNITED NATIONS - (IPU)
Six countries lying directly in Russia's fallout path circulated a resolution asking the assembly to appeal to the Soviet Union to cancel the 50-megaton explosion.
The Department of Psychology will hold a memorial service for the late Martin Scheerer, KU psychologist, at 3 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Rites to Be Sunday
The body is to be cremated and no funeral will be held, as was previously reported.
Police Arrest Rioting Women
PARIS — (UPI) — French police in bullet-proof vests arrested hundreds of Moslem Algerian women and children today to block a huge demonstration in which Moslem men planned to use them as living shields.
Police mobilized 11,000 men to guard Paris against the threatened demonstrations. It was the biggest turnout since Moslem Algerians living in the Paris area began a series of after dark riots and demonstrations Tuesday.
POLICE SAID THAT by late today they had detained 513 women and 118 children and prevented their massing in the heart of the capital. They were taken to social centers and other reception halls and cared for by the Red Cross.
Paris Police Prefect Maurice Paupon said he had received word the Moslems planned to turn out in force tonight behind a protective wall of women and children—a favorite tactic of the rebel National Liberation Front (FLN) in Algeria.
On top of the Algerian demonstrations, police faced a new outbreak of night bomb attacks by right-wing supporters of the "French Algeria" cause. Three plastic charges exploded in the early hours, damaging the home of a lawyer and two shoe stores.
DIPLOMATIC QUARTERS feared the bitterness caused by Algerian-police clashes in Paris had shoved the prospect of renewed peace talks with the rebels farther into the background.
Demonstrations by Moslem women also were reported from the eastern towns of Thionville, Longwy and
Mets. Fifty Moslem women parading with children in their arms in Thionville were taken to police stations for identity checks. About 60 women were involved in Longwy.
In Paris, police placed heavy cordons around subway line terminals on the city's outskirts and arrested all Moslem women as they entered the station. A few hundred reached the busy Chatelet Square near Notre Dame Cathedral and police arrested them as fast as they showed up.
IN SUBURBAN NANTERRE. where thousands of Algerian workers live in a shanty town slum, Moslems prevented Algerian children from attending school. Several hundred women with children marched through the main street chanting "Algeres is ours" and "Free Ben Bella." Mohammed Ben Bella is a rebel leader held by the French.
Police said there are about 10,000 Moslem women among the 150,000 Algerians living in the Paris area.
(The Algerian rebel government-in-exile charged in Tunis today that more than 50 Algerians were killed and hundreds injured in Paris rioting this week. An official communique said several of the dead were women. French police put the death toll at five Algerians and one French onlooker.)
(The FLN also said "several hundred have disappeared" and said police suppressed the Paris demonstrations with "savage brutality." The communique ended by appealing for the resumption of peace negotiations between France and the Algerian rebels.)
Candidates Picked For AWS Offices
THE CHURCH OF THE NORTH
AWS CANDIDATES—Back row, left to right: Joan Felt, Mary Hughes, Nancy Kellogg, and Ka Estes. Middle row: Nancy Egy, Janice Moore, Joyce Voth, Cindy Snyder, and Carolyn Kunz. Front row: Judy Gottberg, Sharon Menasco, Judy Watson, and Carolyn Hall.
The Associated Women Students Senate has chosen 13 candidates for four freshman positions in the AWS House of Representatives and Senate-
The candidates were chosen from 41 freshmen who applied last week through written statements and interviews.
FRESHMAN ELECTIONS NEXT week will place a nominee from Corbin Hall and Gertrude Sellards in the House of Representatives. In the Senate election, candidates from all freshman women living areas will vie for two positions.
Polling places have been set up in Miller Hall, Corbin Hall and GSP for the voting Thursday.
Those running for the Senate are
Carolyn Hall, Norton; Joan Felt, Prairie Village; Janice Moore, Kansas City; Cindy Snyder, Bethesda, Md.; Nancy Egy, Topeka; and Ka Estes, Lubbock, Texas.
IN THE HOUSE RACE, Sharon Menasco, Wichita; Nancy Kellogg, Wichita; Joyce Polek, Kansas City; and Mary Hughes, Des Moneis, Iowa, are contenders from GSP. Carolyn Kunz, Greenville, S.D.; Judy Watson, Wichita; and Judy Gottberg, Hoisington, represent Corbin Hall.
The candidates for the Senate will be taken to the Scholarship Halls Tuesday at 5 p.m. by CWENS, sophomore honorary society, for introduction to the residents.
On Wednesday, the candidates will visit Cobin and GSP.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Fridav. October 29, 1961
The Disarmament Myth
The Berlin crisis, the meeting of the Communist Party Congress and events in other troubled parts of the world have led to an increase in the discussion of disarmament. The discussion takes many forms. Khrushchev says he wants complete and general disarmament. Poland has advanced the idea of disengagement in Central Europe. The United States wants a nuclear weapons ban. None of the governments involved considers any proposals on these issues acceptable but its own. A thoughtful look at the hard facts of the world situation quickly shows that there are serious flaws in all these proposals.
Khruschev's call for complete and general disarmament is hypocritical. Expansion of the Soviet Empire has always depended, and still does depend to a great extent, on the use of arms. But even if we could believe that Khrushchev really wanted peaceful competition between communism and capitalism, there is one stark reality that would prevent Soviet disarmament: the Soviet Union cannot maintain its empire without troops. If it really underwent complete disarmament, many of its satellites would quickly break away and their peoples would throw out the communist regimes they are suffering under. We need only look at the 1953 East German uprising and the 1956 Hungarian Revolution for proof of this. In both cases Russian troops had to be called in to handle situations that Soviet puppet governments had not been able to deal with.
If we turn to the disengagement proposal for Central Europe, many of the same reasons apply. The Soviets would have to withdraw an estimated force of 20 divisions from East Germany to comply with a disengagement agreement. Those troops are the only thing that keeps the East German puppet regime in power. An explosion would be almost certain if they were withdrawn.
The nuclear disarmament proposal of the United States, unless it has decided to revise its
entire military establishment, must also be labeled as hypocritical. If the NATO alliance was stripped of its nuclear weapons, the Soviet conventional forces would then be so overwhelmingly superior that they could overrun Western Europe with ease. The reason they have not done so is the firm commitment of the United States to use nuclear weapons in the defense of the NATO countries.
There is also the question of whether the great powers can be persuaded to disarm in any degree in view of the increasing number of nations that are developing nuclear weapons. Israel is probably engaged in developing nuclear weapons, which would be the long term protection it would need against the Arab powers. Red China is working on nuclear weapons and is expected to have them in a few years. Other nations are probably at work on nuclear weapons also. Added to this increasing ownership of nuclear weapons is the rapidly developing national power of many former colonies and underdeveloped nations. Red China has become a belligerent major power, and barring some great catastrophe, will become a great power. Brazil is developing rapidly and will soon take its place among the major powers. Other nations will follow these two. Thus the problem of disarmament is one that involves many nations with diverse purposes.
The chances for any kind of disarmament are therefore very dim. Disarmament is an action that can only be dictated by cold, hard realities. The condition of a turbulent world bars significant disarmament. Possibly disarmament could be carried out to a limited degree, but even that is unlikely. For at present the key reality that governs any effort toward disarmament is the Soviet Union's determination to maintain its empire and continue its expansion. The West and the NATO countries are heavily armed basically as a reaction to that imperial attitude of the Kremlin. And that attitude shows no signs of changing.
-William H. Mullins
Lawrence's UN Day
Saturday has been proclaimed United Nations Day in Lawrence by Mayor Ted Kennedy. It has been set aside as a day for "community programs which will demonstrate the faith in the UN and contribute to a better understanding of its aims, problems and accomplishments."
Since 1953 Lawrence, in cooperation with the Foreign Student Hospitality Committee of Douglas County UNESCO, has welcomed foreign students during this celebration with a large dinner, usually held at the Kansas Union.
For the past two years, however, the students have been invited into private homes, establishing closer contact and better understanding between the host and guest.
True enough, the conversation does not often deal with the United Nations Charter or its problems, but it does deal with students and their problems in America.
This student found one evening talking with people interested in him provided him with an experience that lasted over a year. It is an experience he will take home with him to share with his friends.
One student who participated last year said he found a Lawrence family who helped him adjust to "strange American customs" and was willing to spend time with him listening to his troubles.
These Lawrence residents volunteer to act as hosts; they are not asked by anyone nor solicited
by any group. They are not specified as official good-will ambassadors by the University, but they are unofficial good-will promoters to the student.
These residents receive no recognition, only personal satisfaction, knowing they are helping a student new to our way of life.
Ambassadors, CARE packages, tools, books and papers sent by the United Nations can do only a small part of a big job to help the peoples of the world in a fight for peace.
Personal contact, understanding and a knowledge of the problems that exist in all parts of the world are necessary also in this effort to maintain and further peaceful conditions.
So many times a citizen of a community asks,
"What can I do to help?"
Lawrence residents have a ready answer. But more than that, they have proof that by working together with students through personal contact, not just once, but several times a year, each side benefits and shares these benefits.
The foreign student last year found friends to aid him.
His new friends saw his country in a different light, became interested in it, studied it and now can see more clearly the problems facing the small country.
Carrie Merryfield
This is part of a job being done in Lawrence by citizens who think they are just "ordinary." But they are big people, helping do a big job.
My congratulations to Moses Gumf for his excellent and pointed letter of Oct. 11 which referred to the University housing list and discrimination.
On Housing Policy
Editor:
IT SEEMS TO ME that there has been a great deal of discussion and debate on a basically simple matter that could be cleared up by one stroke of the administration's pen. Chancellor Wescoe disapproves of the University telling the landlord to stop discriminating. But by eliminating a landlord's name from the approved housing list would only mean that KU does not condone discrimination.
... Letters . . .
Moses stated it very clearly in his letter when he said, "It would honestly seem that since the University approves housing in which students must live, it would seem that one of the requirements would be that landlords rent to persons regardless of race, color, or creed, and that if such landlords feel differently, then they may rent to whoever they de-
sire, but would not be on a list approved for housing by the University."
IF KU DOES NOT take the initiative of setting a precedent in this case, who will? Surely not the Lawrence landlords! It is KU's obligation to speak out, leaving the landlord to get along without the approved University Housing list if he believes as strongly in discrimination as KU should believe against it!
Jim McMullan
Class of '61
Ex-member of CRC
Sound and Fury
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his need"—this is the socialist ideal; is it the prospect for the future? There are many indications that it is. Indeed, the United States took a big step towards the realization of the first part of this ideal with the advent of the progressive income tax and is moving rapidly toward accomplishment of the second through federal housing, aid-to-depressed-areas, etc. Consequently, it behooves all concerned with the future to familiarize themselves with the practices, promises and history of socialism.
There is a fact of historical importance, the significance of which has been too much ignored or overlooked: Where socialism has been tried on a small, private level it has usually had short life. It has succeeded only when implemented on a national scale through the instrument of government, an institution of legal compulsion, the final authority of which is the gun!
The significance of this fact, then, is the implication that socialism, to succeed, requires the use of force.
This use of force, would, of course, be controlled by the majority in a democratic socialist state, as it is controlled by the majority in a market-economy democracy such as ours. However, while the guns of our government are used primarily to restrain, i.e., prevent and punish crime, in a socialist state the punitive potential of government would be the motivating force in every facet of the citizen's productive life.
It is unlikely that productive genius could survive under this latter condition; and it would be of small consequence if it did, for economic decisions would be made not by the business genius but by the bureaucrat, a breed of particularly little creative ability. The inevitable result would be a material and moral regression probably ending in chaos and finally in totalitarianism. This situation is graphically described in the novel "Anthem" by Ayn Rand.
If there is no natural law justifying the right of the majority to dispose of the lives of the minority as they wish—at the point of the gun—and I know of none, there is no reason why the minority should recognize such a right. Nor is there any reason to believe that such a right exists except in the minds of greedy men.
However, the crux of the issue is not whether socialism will work or not but whether there is any moral or ethical justification for the pervasive use of force which is implicit in national socialism.
Marick Payton Lawrence junior
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vlking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 276, business office
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22,
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $3 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
Ron Gallagher Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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Tom Brown ... Business Manager
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
OFFICE
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Page 3
1
Harvard Scientist Wins Nobel Prize
NEW YORK — (UPI) The small, baldish man with a tiny white mustache walked into the lobby of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel and looked hesitantly around. He obviously was embarrassed already.
And he didn't know the half of it.
DR. GEORG VON BEKESY, 62-year-old Hungarian-born scientist who now carries on his research at Harvard University, was on his way to a lunch where he was going to feel a little uncomfortable. The Deafness Research Institute was going to give him an award, a gold medallion, for his research on the workings of the ear, and the attention would embarrass him.
"There he is," said an official of the Deafness Foundation.
Some other people had just announced that they, too, were going to give him an award—the 1961 Nobel Prize for medicine. But Von Bekesy didn't know it.
THE OFFICIAL AND THREE newsmen hurried down a short flight of stairs from the hotel's plush Empire Room and surrounded the scientist.
"Congratulations," the official said. Von Bekesy smiled and shook his head. "I am no good for that," he said with a slight Hungarian accent.
"When were you told about the prize?" a newsman asked.
"Oh, three or four months ago," Von Bekesy said.
"YOU WERE TOLD ABOUT the Nobel Prize three or four months ago?" another newsman asked disbelievingly.
Von Bekesy didn't say a word
"You've just won the Nobel Prize for medicine," the newsman said.
University Daily Kansan
Another moment passed. Finally,
Von Beksey said, "I didn't know
about the Nobel." He was silent again. "It's very fine," he said.
And then he asked, "Alone?"
"Yes, alone," he was told. "The prize was not shared."
ANOTHER NEWSMAN ASKED;
"How do you feel about it?"
"What can I say?" Von Bekesy said. "I know people in Stockholm who I like very much for research and I am very happy."
Later, surrounded by newsmen and photographers before the lunch even started, Von Bekesy was happy enough to ioke.
"FIRST I WANT to get it. I have been 10 years in the United States so I became practical."
When asked what he would do with the $48,300 tax-free prize, he said:
And when asked if he expected the Nobel award, he said:
"If you stay long enough alive, you'll get the prize." But he also said, "My winning was a matter of chance."
Von Bekesy lives alone near Harvard, where he came as a research fellow in 1947 after spending a year at research in Stockholm, Sweden. Until 1946, he had worked in Budapest.
Pretzels and 'The Twist'
READING, Pa. — (UPI) The week beginning Oct. 24 will be marked as National Pretzel Week, Alex (Salty) Tisdale, executive secretary of the National Pretzel Bakers Institute announced today.
Tisdale also noted in his release, with no announced motive, the increasing popularity of a dance called "The Twist," which is featured at a New York Nightclub attended by cafe society, beatniks and others.
Poet Jonathan Williams Says: 'Ein Vogal Singt im Baum—Ja'
The man in the yellow shirt and tricolor tie thumped the lecturn with his index finger.
"turn on the Bird, the Bird turns me on; even the early Bird turns worms"
The audience laughed. He raised his eyes to the ceiling, then spoke again.
"Ein Vogel singt im Baum—Ja . . .
Ja . . . a
bud said,
swelling"
Jonathan Williams, poet-publisher, was speaking at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. yesterday in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
He was quoting his own poetry and that of Canadian poet Irving Leyton. He picked up another book called "A Red Carpet for the Sun" by Mr. Leyton, and read a selection called "The Improved Binoculars."
"Below me the city was in flames:
"Below me the city was in flames: the firemen were the first to save themselves. I saw steeples fall on their knees.
I saw an agent kick the charred bodies from an orphanage to one side, marking the site carefully for future speculation.
He read again from a selection called "On Being Bitten by a Dog":
For more than an hour, Mr. Williams delighted and shocked the 50 students who sat before him on chairs, couches and the floor in the Music Room.
"And the humans who would like to kill me are legion Only once have I been bitten by a dog."
At several points, laughter broke out as he read a particularly daring piece of his work. He called his risque poetry "country" poetry..
The slightly balding Mr. Williams, in his mid 30's, is the publisher of Jargon Books of Highlands, N.C., and is the author of several books of poetry. Among these are "Amen Huzza Selah" and "Jammin the Greek Scene." The latter is mythological tales retold in "hip" English.
Mr. Williams described Mr. Leyton as "the best to come from Canada ever," and "the most popular poet in Canada today."
Mr. Leyton has said: "So what I've written—besides my joy in being alive to write them—has been about this singular business of human evil."
The meeting was the first in a series of weekly Poetry Hours. All will be held at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Union, with the public invited.
German Department Film. "Wozk." (Correction: Tuesday, Oct. 24 instead of Sunday, Oct. 23). 3 shows* 4, 6 and 8. 3 Bailey. Open to the public. English subtitles.
Fulbright Foreign Study Scholarships, 1962-1963: Applications due Oct. 4. Reqs: Master's degree or four additional medical examinations to be made immediately at Watkins Hospital.
Official Bulletin
Hillel Friday Evening Services; 6:45 p.m. Hillel Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Services will end at 7:10 p.m. in time for the movie.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. Will have no meeting this evening.
TODAY
Baptist Student Union; 7:30 p.m.
Building, 1221 Oread. The Role of the Christian in Politics', Earl, Earl McElc
Pastor of East Heights Baptist Church
Annual K.U. Dames Initiation of Members
b.p.m., Watkins Room, Kansas
Union
International Club: Will meet in Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, for dancing and refreshments directly following the movie in Hoch.
Lutheran Services; 8:30 & 11:00 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m. Immunael Church,
17th, and Vermont. 5 p.m.
Wednesdays, Danforth Chapel.
Lutheran Services: 9:15 and 11 a.m.
Temple Lutheran Church, 13th and New
Hampshire
Faith and Life Seminars: 8:45-10:30
1204 Oread
Breakfast, and Bible Seminars: 1204
Morning Worship: 11 a.m. Westminster Center, 204 Oread, Speaker, Rev Dan
Catholic Club; 9 & 11 a.m., Fraser Hall,
Newman Club.
Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30
we will welcome you to our
o this silent Quaker meeting.
Intramural Soccer Team: Vs Wichita
2 p.m., Intramural Fields.
Sunday Evening Fellowship: 5:15-7:30 p.m., Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Dr. Harry Schafer speaking on "Race Relations."
Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Dinner will follow in the Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union.
Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch:
12 noon, Canterbury House.
MONDAY
Kuku Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union
Epicaprio Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Tammany Hall ChangesName
NEW YORK—(UPI)—The Tammy Hall tiger has changed his stripes.
The famed Democratic political organization of Tammany Hall officially changed its name to Chatham Hall yesterday in its first meeting since reform elements led an election revolt that threw the old regular leaders out of office.
Tammany Hall, often pictured in editorial cartoons as a tiger, traces its name back to pre-revolutionary days when the Sons of St. Tammany was formed to oppose British rule. Tammanend was the name of an Indian chief who was famous for his wisdom and love of liberty.
The change was voted by the New York County (Manhattan) Democratic Committee which is controlled by Mayor Robert F. Wagner following his primary victory over the forces of Carmine G. De Sapio.
The new name of Chatham Hall is taken from the Chatham Building where the county Democratic headquarters have been shifted.
But a Republican wag suggested that the old Tammany tiger may now be called the "Tammany Chat."
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The Supreme Court has taken under advisement three cases involving the rights of lunch counter sit-in demonstrators.
Sit-in Cases Are In Supreme Court
Yesterday the justices put a stream of questions to attorneys arguing the first such cases to reach the high court. At issue were three separate appeals filed by 16 Southern University students, all Negroes, convicted of disturbing the peace of Baton Rouge, La.
The students "sat in" at white lunch counters in Kress's Variety Store, Sitman's Drug Store and the Greyhound Bus Station. As a result they were arrested by police Capt. Robert Weiner.
Many of the justices' questions dealt with whether the students actually "disturbed the peace."
Justice Charles E. Whittaker said
Justice Charles E. Whitman said: "You've invited me in and never ordered you with your invitation because the invitation. If I were contesting with your right to order me out, that might be disturbing the peace."
New York attorney Jack Greenberg, who represented the Negroes, said not only were none of the students ordered out but in the Sitman case the police were not even asked to come in. The officer on the beat reported what was going on. he said.
Greenberg said if the Negroes were not ordered out, their mere presence at the counter had been deemed a "disturbance." He said a state cannot thus use its power to enforce segregation.
Assistant District Attorney John F. Ward, Jr., insisted that if the students had not been told to leave the store at least they had been told to move from the particular area where they were.
He said a man in business has a right to decide whom he is to serve and the police have a duty to protect that right.
The question was not easily settled in the Justice's minds, however.
"Suppose a Negro walked into a church," Chief Justice Earl Warren suggested, "and the minister said, 'It is our practice not to have Negroes here.' But neither the minister nor the congregation made any move against the man. Could a policeman arrest him for being in there praying?"
Ward said an officer probably would not make an arrest under such circumstances, but he should have discretion whether to do so. He insisted that the Negroes were at the white counters for "an unlawful act"—demonstrating against segregation. The police must take care that such activities do not lead to violence, he declared.
"Having police there to prevent violence is one thing," Justice Potter Stewart said at one point, "but to go in and arrest someone is quite a different thing."
Justice Felix Frankfurter wanted to know why the students' actions would necessarily result in violence.
Forum on Shaw's Play to Be Sunday
A background forum of George Bernard Shaw's "The Arms and the Man" will be held at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Shaw's play will be presented Monday evening in Hoch Auditorium. The background forum Sunday will be led by A. Carroll Edwards, professor of English. Free coffee will be served.
This forum is the first of a series to be sponsored by the Classical Music Forum, a new committee of Student Union Activities. This committee will conduct receptions for visiting concert artists, and will sponsor forums for supplying background information prior to each presentation on the concert series.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 20.1961
Leadership, Money, Unity Lacking in UN
UNITED NATIONS — (UPI) — The United Nations is plagued by twin ailments—a lack of funds and the absence of clear-cut leadership.
A month after the death of Dag Hammarskjold the world organization is still without a Secretary General and badly split over how to replace him.
US AMBASSADOR ADLAI E. STEVENSON warned this week that the wrong move in settling the dispute over a Secretary General "will be the first step on the slippery downhill path to a debating society without operating responsibilities or competence."
The financial prospects are that the United Nations will be millions in the red by the end of the year. Earlier this week it was disclosed that the United Nations has only enough money for two more weeks of operation In The Congo.
The disunity is mirrored in big power dispute over how to choose Hammarskjold's successor.
On Sept. 18, the day after a plane carried Hammarskjold to his death in distant Rhodesia, an unemotional diplomat observed, "We are left without a helmsman."
ALTHOUGH CERTAINLY NOT admired by 100 per cent of the membership, and reviled by the Soviets, Hammarskjold was recognized as occupying his top-floor suite ready to step into any international embroglio the Security Council or the Assembly might give to him.
With Hammarskiold gone, bickering started at once on his replacement. The United States and its Western partners publicly, at least, left it to a group of small powers to work out the procedure for agreement on a new top man and his administration.
There were many diplomats who expressed belief that if the United States had gone immediately to the General Assembly, it could have had Mongi Slim of Tunisia, whom it favored for the job, elected as interim Secretary General within a few days of Hammarskjold's death.
BUT THE WHEELS of consulta-
dion take time to turn and India was the first of the "neutral" powers to insist that the Assembly could not act without prior recommendation from the Security Council, as, indeed, is prescribed by the UN charter for selection of a permanent secretary general.
The Russians were privately delighted with developments. Although, admittedly, they were as unprepared for the death of Hammarskjold—whom they were boycotting as secretary general—as the Western powers, the situation suited them.
Their campaign to substitute a "troika" of three veto-wielding secretaries general was prepared to be pushed hard in 1963, when Hammarskjold's term would have expired.
BUT WHILE GIVING what the United States regarded as misleading agreement to a single interim Secretary General, the Russians sought to inject their troika principle at the undersecretary level in various guises.
The result was bewilderment, especially for many of the newer delegations.
The United Nations carries on with 29 officials of undersecretary rank directing its affairs. There is no provision for any one of them to take over automatically.
THE FEAR OF DEDICATED UN diplomats is that "another Congo" may erupt, anywhere in the world. In such event, the United Nations, they believe, would be all but powerless to act without a strong Secretary General who, under Soviet-opposed US proposals, would be free to act without any political strings.
If there should be "another Congo," it is probable that the United Nations, now near bankruptcy, would not be able to raise the money to take care of it.
UN controller Bruce Turner told the budgetary committee recently that, on the basis of anticipated expenses and income, the United Nations could expect a cash deficit of about $30 million by the end of 1961.
the financial system, Turner said, the deficit will grow to $50 to $60 million by next March 31 and will reach $90 million by June, 1962.
IF NO CHANGES are made in
Turner announced this week that unless $20 million is appropriated by the end of October, the UN Congo operation will collapse.
A financial report dated Sept. 30 showed arrearages of $118,108,287 in assessments upon the member countries.
Fiscal experts said that figure was somewhat exaggerated, however. Of the total, $22 million still was due on the regular 1961 budget and, on past experience, it was anticipated that most of it—including $3 million still due from the United States—would be paid.
THE UNITED STATES OWES $0 million for its share of this year's operational costs of the UN Emergency Force (UNEF) on duty in the Middle East and there is $2 million due from Britain for the Congo operation. There is confidence these will be paid.
But Russia owes $20 million for the Congo operation and $12.7 million for UNEF—which will not be paid. The Soviet Union has insisted it will contribute "not a kopeck" to such operations, arguing that they should be paid for by countries responsible for causing the crises.
France owes $9.4 million for the Congo operation and has served notice it will not pay. Recently, South Africa told the Assembly it would renge on its $825,000 share for The Congo, an operation for which some 70 countries are understood to be in arrears.
IN THE FACE OF THIS, new African countries—Nigeria was one—are demanding that money be added to funds such as the UN technical assistance program, for which the basic appropriation is only $1 million.
There is no way of judging what operations such as the Congo will cost. Its expenses were expected to have dropped drastically by the time the Assembly's emergency appropriation of $100 million expires at the end of October. The military flare-up in Katanga, which eventually led to Hammarskjold's death, ruined their prospects.
Programs like the special fund for economic development will have no money for loans next year unless a bonanza is found.
FINANCIAL EXPERTS agree that unless the organization's 101 members can be persuaded to pay their assessed shares of U.N. costs—regular operating and emergency budgets—the world organization will have no alternative except to go into the commercial market for loans.
They calculate that in the present unsettled state of world affairs, hard-nosed bankers might find the United Nations a poor risk.
United action has been the goal of the world organization since its charter conference at San Francisco in 1945.
Originally 51 members, the United Nations has grown into an outsize international body of 101 countries in 16 years.
EACH NEW MEMBER BRINGS its national prides and problems into the organization with it, making the concept of unity more difficult to achieve.
There are now a half-dozen or more systems of law, culture and even morality represented in the organization.
A WESTERN EUROPEAN diplomat who came from a career in international law pointed out that Liberia and Ethiopia, two of the leaders in the move against Louw.
are plaintiffs against South Africa in a case pending before the International Court of Justice.
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Several diplomats observed privately that what they regarded as infringement of freedom of speech in the Assembly could have been headed off by a well-timed admonition of caution from the United States, Britain or France.
He said it is elementary international law that the case—involving race policies in South West Africa—should not be prejudged while it is before the court.
For
The problem, as veteran diplomats see it, is to find a formula to combine any two of the lacking elements—leadership, money and unity—if the United Nations is not to follow into oblivion the League of Nations, wrecked 30 years ago by largely the same difficulties.
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GOP Senate Leader Says New Frontier 'Floundering'
Page 5
WASHINGTON — (UPD)—Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen said yesterday "The New Frontier is still floundering" after nine months in office.
He also said it is "outlandish hearssay" for the Kennedy administration to "style itself as the party of hope when the smothering of freedom can only be the ultimate results of its program."
THE NEW FRONTIER, he said,
"seeks firmly to face up to the
Communist menace abroad by toy-
ing with the collectivist view at
home, but the choice will have to
be made. We cannot have it both
ways."
The Illinois senator's views were contained in a statement reviewing the past Congressional session. It was printed yesterday in the final issue of the Congressional Record.
The GOP leader gave Congress a big share of credit for paring down many administration legislative proposals. He took the government to
task for many of its claims about Congressional accomplishments.
DIRKSEN SAID THE "New Frontier" platform and policies "clearly disclose that it follows a purported line of growth through spending, through enhancement of executive power, through more and more regulation, through deeper intrusion into the affairs of the states, through use of federal funds to handeuf the state and local communities and through the achievement of a kind of collectivism by small doses."
Among other criticisms, he labelled the recently enacted housing bill as the "new most expensive omnibus housing bill in history."
He said many of the things the Kennedy administration is claiming as legislative victories had been proposed by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and could have been enacted earlier if Congress had gone along with them.
DIRKSEN ALSO TOOK light-hearted potshots at some other 'im-
perishable moments of greatness" in the "New Frontier's early months.
"The first sacrifice," he said, "was Kennedy's request that tickets to inaugural entertainment functions be exempt from federal tax—a loss of $30,000 in federal revenue."
Also, he said, "a White House order banning White House cooks, maids, valets and other household help from writing articles meant that many potential literary careers were nipped in the bud."
Pictures Can Be Rented
Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" is one of 50 framed prints that will be available to KU students when the picture lending library re-opens for one day. Oct. 26.
Pictures may be rented from the library for 50 cents a semester.
Art connoisseurs can select from works by van Gogh, Cezanne, Picasso, Degas, Toulouse-Lactree, Valmineck and Utrillo.
A little thing in hand is worth more than a great prospect.—Aesop
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Friday, October 20, 1961 Summer Session Kansan
Lutheran Student Group to Meet
Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Religious organization, is holding its regional convention at KU this weekend.
The convention is held at a different school in the Rocky MountainGreat Plains region each year. The purpose is to decide chapter policy and select new regional officers for the following year.
The Gamma Delta chapters will discuss dividing the present region into two.
The present region includes schools from Kansas, Wyoming, Colorado, Oklahoma, Missouri and Nebraska.
"We feel it's too big now." Kathy Schwartzkopf, Launed sophomore and secretary of the KU Gamma Delta chapter, said. "It's hard to administrate such a large area and it's difficult for students in other states to travel so far."
Registration for the convention will begin at 7 p.m. today.
The sun has a right to "set" where it wants to, and so, I may add, has a hen. Charles Farrar Browne
What is now proved was once only imagined—William Blake
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. October 20,1961
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Bill Sheldon
Although Kansas posted its first win of the season last week against the Iowa State Cyclones and re-affirmed the feelings of many experts that the Jayhawkers are among the elite in the Big Eight, the entire title hopes of the Crimson and the Blue can be determined tomorrow against Oklahoma.
Last Saturday's victory will mean virtually nothing to the Hawkers as far as any championship hopes are concerned if the Sooners pull an upset and come through with their initial triumph of the campaign.
Colorado has the inside track on the crown at the moment, and figures to get past Kansas State tomorrow, but the possibility is not unlikely that the Buffs can be caught. But, in order for KU to stay in contention for a possible trip to the Orange Bowl, it seems highly unlikely that it can afford to lose another game in conference play.
In light of the pressure which faces Coach Jack Mitchell and his team, there should be somewhat more desire evident in the play of the Hawkers.
Therefore, the "chips are down." Not only will this be the case tomorrow, but throughout the season until, and if the day comes, that the Jayhawkers are eliminated from title contention.
Mitchell has said KU is going to have to open up its offense more if it is going to be effective enough to win games and this was evidenced against Iowa State. But Oklahoma is also going to have to show some explosive ability if it is to defeat the Hawkers. With the stout defensive line of KU facing them, the Sooners have only one recourse, to pass. Thus, the game could turn out to be one of the wildest of the season.
With so many intangible things involved in this game, predicting the outcome is a very arduous task. But, in light of the success of last Friday's effort (the prediction was 20-7 and the final tally was 21-7), another calculated guess is offered.
Giving Wallace Barnes his due credit as an extra point booster and allowing for a few leaks in the flimsy KU pass defense, the final score may show the Jayhawkers posting their second consecutive win. 21-13.
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KU Harriers Face Arkansas
The Jayhawk cross country squad, shooting for its fourth victory of the season squares off against the Arkansas Razorbacks at the Lawrence Country Club this afternoon at 4:30.
The Jayhawkers have posted victories over Southern Illinois, Missouri and the Chicago Track Club. The Razorbacks are 0-1-1 this season. They finished second behind Oklahoma and ahead of Pittsburg
The broadcast of the KU-Okla-homa game will be carried on the KU Sports Network at 1:45 p.m. tomorrow with Tom Hedrick doing the play-by-play.
KU-OU On Radio
Stations in the Lawrence area are: KLWN, KANU, both Lawrence, KTOP, KTOP-FM, KJAY, all Topeka, and KMBC, Kansas City.
Ku Ku Election Monday
The election of KuKu (men's honorary pep club) vice president will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
The election will be held at the regular meeting and is for active members only.
Petitions for this office should be turned in to Ron Halbgewachs, Glen Elder senior, before noon Saturday.
Sig Eps Win in IMs
Last year the Jayhawkers defeated the Razorbacks 23-32 over a four mile course, despite a winning individual performance by Arkansan Jack Nelson. Nelson, now departed, finished 20th in the NCAA meet.
In fraternity A intramural play yesterday, Sigma Phi Epsilon defeated Sigma Nu, 9-7; Phi Gamma Delta downed Alpha Tau Omega, 20-12; Sigma Chi beat Tau Kappa Epsilon, 27-2.
Senior captain Bill Dotson and Junior Charlie Hayward will lead Coach Bill Easton's crew this afternoon. The pair has finished 1-2 in the meets thus far. Behind this "deadly" duo are seniors Dan Ralston and Bill Thornton, junior Mike Fulghum and sophomores Tonni Coane and Paul Acevedo.
State in a triangular. Last week Coach Ab Bidwell's crew ran a 28-28 tie with the University of Wichita.
In B division play, Delta Tau Delta beat Phi Kappa Psi, 12-6; Alpha Tau Omega downed Acacia, 45-2; Phi Delta Theta No. 1, won by forfeit over Kappa Sigma.
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Page 7
Union Will Return 7 Per Cent Refund
Patronage refunds at the Kansas Union Book Store will likely remain at seven per cent next semester, Frank R. Burge, director of the Kansas Union said yesterday.
Last year the Executive Committee voted to drop patronage refunds or rebates from 10 per cent to seven per cent. Greatly expanded facilities and extra services caused the drop.
WHEN TEXT BOOKS run out at enrollment, the bookstore sends telegrams to the publishers for air mail deliveries, Mr. Burge continued.
"We try to give the students the best possible service," he said.
"At this moment I expect a recommendation of seven per cent for patronage refunds to be made to the Executive Committee," Mr. Burge said.
THE UNION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, the operating board of the Union, will meet in December to decide what per cent will be offered as refunds to students. The Union operates on a six month fiscal year
"This costs money," he continued. "But we feel it is necessary if we are to serve the student adequately."
Specifically, such things as elevators, air conditioning and rising freight rates necessitated the drop, Mr. Burge said.
Also, operating costs are rising constantly, Mr. Burge said. He made a comparison of food costs in 1951 and 1961.
"In 1951 we paid 47 cents a pound for ground beef," Mr. Burge said. "Now we pay 89 cents, an 85 per cent increase."
he said the same was true with the bookstore.
"I DONT KNOW what this pen cost in 1951," he said picking up a ball point, "but I bet it costs me more now than it would have then."
The Union is a self-supporting operation and must remain so, Mr. Burge said.
"The bookstore is expected, in the total concept of the plant, to make a contribution in direct proportion to the services and expenses incurred," he explained.
the consensus of the Executive Committee in January was that the total concept of the plant should prevail.
"BECAUSE OF THE Union's high operating costs a 10 per cent rebate was not possible at that time." Mr. Burge said. "In fact, it was doubtful that a seven per cent patronage refund could be approved."
A strict analysis of statistics made it possible, Mr. Burge said. A similar opinion was reached in June when the committee again met.
The bookstore's budget provides for these rebates. It pays 72.60 per cent on the dollar to suppliers. Direct operating expenses are about 17 per cent. This leaves 10 per cent, three per cent of which is used for general Union operating expenses. These are the higher costs the Union must pay. Thus seven per cent is left for rebates.
THE BOOKSTORE FIRST gave rebates in September 1946, the initial year of its independent operation. L. E. Woolley, manager of the bookstore, said that rebates from 10-15 per cent would be offered to
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students. The 15 per cent rebate was established in January 1947 and lasted until January 1957 when the rebate was dropped to 10 per cent.
The Mid-America State Universities Association sponsors the event with the State University of Iowa and Colorado State University attending as guests.
Mr. Burge said the Executive Committee saw an excellent way to reduce the cost of education to the student.
"A clear analysis showed there was a surplus available." he said. The Executive Committee decided to offer the excess funds to the student in the form of rebates on his bookstore purchases.
Improvement of the college theater will be discussed by Big-Eight theater directors here Oct. 27.
"We do the same thing directly in line with our ability to pay," Mr. Burge said.
Theater Directors To Confer Here
The directors are meeting to improve the quality and the number of cooperative theater programs. Some of the points they will cover include mutual exchange of faculty, productions, establishing a touring circuit for all schools to use, and regional playwriting contests .
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, had another comfortable night but his doctors said there has been no change in his general condition.
Rayburn Resting Comfortably
Rayburn has a cancer and doctors at Baylor University Medical Center are trying to build up his strength so they can continue treatment to prolong his life.
The latest hospital bulletin said Rayburn felt well enough yesterday to sit up in bed for a time.
phase of treatment with cancer- remission drugs. The treatment will be resumed as soon as he is stronger.
It was the fifth straight day doctors reported he has "rested comfortably" since he completed the first
What's UD Chief?
FAIRCHILD, Wis. — (UPI) — Winnebago Indians will stage corn dances, grass dances, and war dances at the wedding Saturday of young Stand on Cloud, Chief Frank Thunder announced.
Why a war dance? "The war dance is very symbolic of marriage," Thunder explained.
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Substitute to Play Carillon Sunday
University Carillonneur Ronald Barnes will be a guest carillonneur this weekend at Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind.
Zimmerman was assistant carilonneur at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., where he did his undergraduate work.
Carl S. Zimmerman, mathematics graduate student and student carilonnueur, will play the regular concert at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon on the KU Memorial Carillon.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 20, 1961
New Japanese Course Taken By 14 Students
Japanese I is being taught here this year for the first time.
Fourteen students enrolled in the new course, taught by Leon Zolbred, instructor of Japanese, because they wanted to take something besides the usual foreign language, or have an interest in Oriental culture.
PROFESSORS IN THE Oriental Language Department agree that if America wants to keep Japan as its strong ally in the free world it is important for the American people to understand the problems, opinions and prejudices of the Japanese people. This can best be done by an understanding of the language itself.
Student views on the language varied.
"I'm an art major, and I'm interested in Oriental Art," Carla Maness, Independence, Mo., sophomore, said.
"JAPANESE IS A HARD language to learn because there are no similar words in English," she added, "but it's fun because it's something you've never come up against."
Basic sentence patterns are learned first, Dale Hamilton, Lawrence senior, said. He is taking the course because of his interest in the East Asian field as a second major. "For example, 'He is my friend,' is literally translated into Japanese as 'He my friend is.'" he explained.
We haven't studied symbols vet, Arlene Carvill, McPherson sophomore said, since right now we're concerned with learning sentence patterns and memorizing vocabulary words. The more we speak, the
(Continued on page 12)
Duplicate Bridge Tourney Sunday
There will be a Duplicate Bridge Tournament Sunday, Oct. 22, at 2 p.m. in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union.
Duplicate bridge is very similar to contract bridge, especially Goren's contract bridge with which most people are familiar. The only difference is that each table plays the same bridge hands. At once it is clear that this system pits one pair of players with its corresponding players at the other tables. The winners are the players who can make the most of the hand.
"Don't be afraid that you might be out-classed or that your duplicate bridge is below par," Arnold Strassenburg, assistant professor of physics stated. There will be a 15 minute lecture to familiarize everyone with the rules.
KU Professor Discusses Survival in Atomic Age
Radiation can be a silent, invisible killer—but only when citizens lack knowledge of protective defenses against it, a KU radiation biophysics professor said last night.
Speaking before a group of Lawrence citizens in the Lawrence High School auditorium, Professor Frank Heecker explained basic atomic age survival techniques and the nature of radiation and radioactive fallout itself.
"IF YOU ARE FAR ENOUGH away from the (nuclear) blast that you are not subject to the instantaneous gamma and thermal (heat) radiation," he said, "you will usually have plenty of time to find shelter
Rock Chalk Staff Picked
The 1961-62 Rock Chalk Revue staff was chosen recently. The staff was organized through personal interviews with students interested in participating.
Members of the production staff for Rock Chalk Revue consist of Jim Scholten, Salina junior; assistant producer, Sharon Dobbins, Lawrence junior; house manager, John Neal, Hutchinson junior; stage manager, Glenn Bickle, Independence, Mo.; assistant stage manager, Mike Milroy, Lawrence freshman; and technical advisers, Carol Strickland, Kansas City sophomore, and Michaele Kyle, Leavenworth junior.
Business staff members are business manager, Don Hunter, Oak Park, Ill., senior; assistant business manager, John Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore; program editor, Charles Waiker, Lawrence graduate
student; publicity chairman, Gerald Kepner, Wichita junior; sales manager, Bill Hyson, Ottawa senior; assistant sales manager, Cloy Robertson, Independence junior; business secretary, Ruth Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; publicity committee members, Patty Zoggleman, Norwich sophomore; Rosemary Webster, Belleville, Ill., sophomore; David White, Prairie Village sophomore, and Larry Gamble, Pittsburgh sophomore; program committee members, Randy Williams, Blackwell, Okla. sophomore; Carol Eklund, Summit, N. J., sophomore; Susan Smith, Webster Groves, Mo., junior, and Scott Linseatt, Topeka freshman; sales committee members, Carol Drever, Marysville senior; Franice Thompson, Evansston, Ill., junior; Cynthia Lackie, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; and Charlotte Persinger, Hugoton junior.
Lively HUAC Discussion by McIlwaine, Lawing, Menghini
About 20 persons showed up at the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union to see the new forum for the expression of dissent through its second session.
The KU Presidential Forum was saved from immediate extinction last night by a handful of students who locked ideological horns over the history, aims and future status of the House Un-American Activities Committee.
THE MEETING PRODUCED a lively exchange between three student panelists who took varying stands on the committee and about half a dozen participants from the floor.
After about an hour and a half in which some hard verbal body punches were thrown, primarily at Charles McIwaine, Wichita senior and principal defender of the committee, HUAC emerged battered but still intact.
HUAC may have a valid function as a legislative investigating committee but its findings should be kept secret unless turned over to the proper government agency for prosecution, was the position taken by James Lawing, Okmulgee, Okla, graduate, and one of the panelists.
"No one should be condemned 'or a poor TV image." Lawing said.
Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, the third panelist, stood on the contention HUAC was guilty of civil injustices that warranted its abolition.
"I DON'T THINK YOU can separate the methods from the institution," he said.
Due process of law and the concept of innocence until proven guilty have to be weighed against the right of Congress to investigate, he said.
MENGHINI NOTED THAT THE committee was organized to investigate "un-American propaganda."
"What is it?" Menghi asked.
"I'm not qualified to define it. Apparently it (HUAC) knows what un-American is."
Concluding that the committee has overstepped its bounds, he said, "the committee has encroached on the administrative branch by making arrests and on the judiciary by holding ad-hoc trials."
McIlwaine charged a communist conspiracy was behind the efforts to destroy HUAC, and the conspiracy was being abetted by Americans.
"IN OUR SOCIETY TODAY there are a number of Americans who have developed a psychological color blindness — they cannot distinguish red from white and will not, or cannot, distinguish deceit from arguments for civil liberty.
"It is untrue, despite strenuous efforts to prove otherwise, that HUAC operates like a Star Chamber, plucking witnesses out of "a hat," he said.
Later, during a general discussion, a student asked why, in defining un-American, the Congressional committee didn't direct its investigations toward forms other than communism. He suggested that the John Birch Society, which contends the United States was never intended to be a democracy but rather is a republic, was also un-American.
"I THINK YOU CAN HARDLY object to the Birch Society as a Communist front," Mcllwaine answered.
"Then un-American is only communism?" the student queried. Mcllwaine answered that communist subversion was the immediate danger to the country.
ANOTHER STUDENT went back to an opening statement by McIlwaine that the attacks on HUAC stemmed from a 1859 American Communist Party declaration of aims.
"They also came out at that meeting in favor of desegregation. Is it also subversive to support desegregation?" the student asked.
"No more so than those who are in favor of peace (which was another avowed aim of the 1959 meeting)" Meilwaine commented.
from the second phase of an atomic attack—radioactive fallout."
To protect himself from radioactive fallout a citizen should get the thickest protective covering possible between himself and the falling radioactive particles, Prof. Hoeecker said.
One of the best shields against radiation -outside of lead-is concrete, he said. Earth, while less efficient than concrete, also makes a good shield.
Prof. Hoecker explained that every nuclear blast produces two kinds of radiation-gamma and beta—and that the protective methods are not identical for both.
"EVERY NUCLEAR BLAST poses an individual situation," he said. "For this reason, there is no single type of shelter which is best for all situations."
"Beta particles are something like bullets," he said, "in that a certain thickness of material will stop them.
"HOWEVER, THERE IS NO thickness of material that will stop all the gamma rays from getting through. For every beam of gamma rays, there is a thickness that will stop one-half of the rays.
"Each succeeding thickness that we pile on the original thickness will then stop one-half of the amount of gamma radiation remaining."
(In other words, if a two-feet-thick layer of concrete will stop one-half of a given quantity of gamma rays from penetrating it, then a four-feet-thick slab will stop three-fourths of the gamma rays from getting through.)
FOR HOW LONG WOULD a citizen be forced to remain in his shelter after a nuclear attack? Prof Heecker explained that this depends on another complicated atomic age term, "radioactive half-life."
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"A nuclear weapon manufactures radioactive substances when it explodes," he explained. "Radiation then is emitted from these radioactive substances."
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The half-life of a radioactive substance is important to the citizen in a fallout shelter, Prof. Hoecker said, because it determines how long he must wait before the radioactive fallout materials around him lose their deadly potency.
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Friday, October 20.1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Faculty Opinion-
(Continued from page 1)
are numerous and none of them, in my estimation, will improve our chances of becoming a great University. The increased enrollments have made it increasingly difficult to find time to pursue my researches.
"I think this plan has some merit," he said. "By following it, we'll pick up an hour of class time a day that won't be too objectional to anyone."
The last stronghold of free time for reflected contemplation has been early morning before classes begin and in the evening after classes are over. Now this is being eroded away by the elongation of the official day. I regard the increase of one hour in the work day as merely the first step in this direction. Once the success of the new plan has been proven, we can expect that there will be suggestions concerning the scheduling of classes between 7:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. as the increased enrollments outstrip the physical facilities, which they surely will.
Three years ago, for example, my course in Animal Biology required as a minimum two hours of lecture and the running of seven laboratory sections. It has grown since then to have nine laboratory sections and has developed, as an outgrowth, the honors animal biology course, which requires two hours of lecture and the running of two laboratory sections. The honors course and the added laboratories have been at the expense of time that was formerly used to do research and to direct the researches of graduate students. The Talented Student Program has resulted in more and more undergraduates getting research-level training on an individual basis from professors who are interested in developing the latent talent of our best undergraduates. As yet, there has been no official cognizance of this added demand on the professors' time. Research training, after all, is an individualized thing. One student working for you 10 to 12 hours a week requires your personal attention for a considerable portion of that time. When the number of such students rises to five or six, the added teaching load is considerable.
"THE PLAN WILL simply spread our teaching load over a greater amount of time. We'll just have to adjust our research to the time we have left." Prof. Robinson said.
The culmination of all of these teaching activities has been that I spend less and less time "at the bench" doing research and more and more time trying to guide and stimulate students toward research careers in experimental biology.
The last stronghold of free time.
In contrast to Prof. Leone, W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, supported the plan.
James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, agreed that the class scheduling change "may involve problems for some faculty members.
He added, however, that the plan "seems to be the only practical solution to the problem of a rapidly increasing enrollment and no additional classroom space in view until 1963 at the earliest."
He said Blake Hall should be replaced by then.
Seymour Menton, associate professor of Romance Languages, opposed plans to schedule classes on the half-hour next year.
"I WOULD RATHER schedule classes on the hour basis," he said, "even if this means having 7 o'clock and 5 o'clock classes next year. Scheduling classes on the half hour will double the work of the faculty housewife during the noon meal. She'll have to cook one meal for you (the faculty member) and one for her school-age children."
"Also," he continued, "I'm against this plan because I'm not sure this is the only solution to the problem."
Some opponents of the plan listed the following alternative solutions:
Referring to the last alternative, Prof Leone said:
Divide the KU class schedule into three blocks: morning, afternoon and evening. Each faculty member would then be required to conduct classes in two of the blocks. The third block could be used by the faculty member for research or other activities.
- Reduce the number of classes offered by combining certain two and three-hour classes into five hour classes.
- Start limiting the annual number of incoming students.
"I THINK IT IS perhaps time for the administration to face up to the realities of the situation and start saying 'no' to Kansas youth. This would stimulate an increase in the building program faster than anything else."
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday. October 20,1961
KU Coeds Engaged
THE WINNER
Linda Galliart
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Galliart of Larned announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Gayle, to Kent Duane Converse, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Converse, also of Larned.
Miss Galliart, a sophomore, is a member of Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sorority. Converse is a junior in the School of Education and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
... On the Hill...
Joyce Campbell
Medical Dames
The KU Medical Dames recently elected the following officers; president, Mrs. George Blackburn; vice president, Mrs. Frederick Elledge; secretary - treasurer, Mrs. Mark Johnston; publicity committee, Mrs. Gary Kulak; hospitality committee, Mrs. Elbert Smith and bridge committee, Mrs. Jan Collins.
MARY B. LEE
Delta Tau Delta
Kappa Alpha Theta
The pledge class of Delta Tau Delta fraternity announces the election of the following officers; president, Byron Loudon, Kansas City; vice president, John McArtor, St. Louis, Mo.; secretary, Tom Schantz, Wichita; treasurer, Chuck Hiller, Humboldt and sergeant at arms, Doug Boyd, Kansas City, Mo. All are freshmen except Hiller who is a sophomore.
Miss Campbell is majoring in secondary education and is a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Waid is majoring in psychology and is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. They are both seniors.
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority recently initiated the following pledges; honor initiate, Sally Foote, Paola; Nancy Bena, Pittsburgh; Judy Boyer, Wichita; Helen Bretz, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Carey, Hutchinson; Kay Consolver, Wichita; Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village; Sherry Garrell, Wichita; Carol Keiser, Webster Groves, Mo.; Joann Marshall, Topeka; Jeanne Maxwell, Mission; Mary Meisel, University City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Campbell. Abilene, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joyce, to Bob Waid, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Waid, Shawnee Mission.
Gretchen Miller, Mission; Martha Parmley, Wichita; Carol Schaum. Kirkwood, Mo.; Dianne Turner, Kansas City, Mo.; Wendy Wilkerson, Wichita; Marcie Wilson, Denver, Colo.; and Molly Ziegelmeyer, Shawnee Mission. The new initiates are all sophomores.
Sigma Chi
The pledge class of Sigma Chi fraternity announces the following officers: president, Jim Ellis, Hutchinson; vice president, Jeff Parsonage, Kirkwood, Mo.; secretary-treasurer, John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y.; IFPC representatives, Bob Wilhelm, Kansas City; and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla.; social chairman, Clark Mandigo, Kansas City; and song leader, John Dalke, McPherson. All are freshmen except Ellis who is a junior.
***
Phi Kappa Theta
Phi Kappa Theta fraternity pledge class recently elected the following officers: president, Lawrence Toombs, Kansas City sophomore; vice president, Pat Chaney, Leavenworth freshman; secretary, Bob Vesel, Kansas City junior; treasurer, James White, Kansas City sophomore; IFPC representatives, Sal Alesandro, Valley Stream, N.Y., freshman, and Ed White, Wakefield, Mass., freshman.
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
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Equipped with only a travel guide and an adventuresome spirit, two KU women traveled through Europe for two months last summer by themselves.
KU Women Travel Europe
Judy Gail Harman and Cynthia Vaughan, both Kansas City seniors, had decided previous to their leaving that they wanted to choose their own itinerary, so they did not take a sponsored tour. "We didn't make any reservations," Miss Harman commented. "We bought a travel guide before we left, so whenever we got tired of one place, we found a bus or second class train and traveled on."
Diane Thompson, Hutchinson senior, Delta Delta, Delta, to Kirk Brewer, La Grange, Ill., senior, Kappa Sigma.
Since they were traveling alone, the two women had to depend on the kind hearts of the people. "We feel that we had an advantage over the students on tours," Miss Vaughan
Pinnings
- * *
LeAnn Buller, Lyons junior, Delta Delta Delta, to John Heisey, Oak Park, Ill., Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Sally Colladay, Hutchinson senior,
Delta Delta Delta, to Buzz Ashcraft,
Wichita, Medical School sophomore,
Sigma Chi.
***
**
Mittie Beth Williams, Albuquerque, N.M., sophomore, Sigma Kappa, to Richard Quinn, Baxter Springs freshman, Sigma Phi Epsilon.
As slim and trim as a sapling, the new slacks are tapered for a more slender look and are topped with a classic longsleeved shirt tailored in one of the many cotton-satin prints for a softly feminine mood.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
said. "By mingling with the people we got an insight into them and into the things that the countries had to offer. Although we went to most of the tourist attractions, we tried to avoid the places that are Americanized."
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
The highlight of their trip was a week that they spent in Pamplona, Spain, at the Festival of the Bulls. This is the festival that was made famous by Ernest Hemingway in "The Sun Also Rises." The bulls run loose in the streets and boys prove their manhood by displaying a scar where they have been gored by a bull.
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The hotels and rooming houses had been filled up for weeks, but a young messenger boy at the travel agency asked them to his home. "The people were wonderful to us." Miss Harman said. "They made us feel as if we really belonged."
SUNSET
LOVE IN THE AWAY . . . West on Michigan
overcharged them on the goods they purchased. "Although the trip was exciting, we were quite relieved to get back to Spain," the women said.
The only unfortunate experience they had was on a short trip to Tangiers, Morocco. The man whom they hired as a guide turned out to be working on the Black Market and
Another exciting event occurred when the women went to a bullfight and met a retired matador who introduced them to Ordonez, Spain's leading bullfighter. "Ordonez looked like the classic picture one always sees of Spanish bullfighters," Miss Harman said.
"If one goes to Europe with an open mind and does not judge cultures by American standards, there is much that is unique and that can be shared. We found the feeling for the most part toward America to be one of respect and understanding," Miss Harman concluded.
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Friday, October 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
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All ads must be allowed or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Instant Mail p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST-Lady's trench coat. Size 12 or 14.
Lost at football game, Sec. 38. Has small tear below right pocket. Call Sally Sponable, VI 3-8022. 10-23
LOST. BROWN EYEGLASSES some-
women to the Hall. Kansan 10-24
TRI DELT Sorority pin, near or in Strong, Has Ginger Welsch engraved on it. It found, call Tri Delt house, VI. 3-4610.
10-20
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward: tf
FOR SALE
FOLLOW YOUR FOOTBALL team by
listening in with a Magnavox transistor
and earphone, only $19.95, 8 transistor,
$29.95, Pettick-Dilliams, 723 Mass, 10-26.
GELDING QUARTERHORSE. Is an all purpose pony. Have used him for pole bending, barrel racing, cutting and sailing. Bob Schneider at 10-3244, Della Chi. 10-24
CONSOLE MAGNAVOX mahogany ster-
e reduced to 133. Slight damage on
cabinet. See at Pettingill-Davis, 723 Mass.
10-26
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS.
grants for cast, 1954, TN. VI; 7-200.
grants for cast, 1964, TN. VI; 7-200.
BICYCLES, TYPEWRITERS, transistors
$10 Mass. Stanley Hardware Auto.
$10 Mass.
THE ONLY registered Seal Point kittens in Lawrence for sale, 10 weeks old, house broken, just the right age to start train Sue at 221 Moundview Dr. Ames, IA 50736 10-25
**60 THIUERDBNER hardtpd, stick shift**
**60 THIUERDBNER hardtpd, maculate condition — phone VI 2-2923,**
**phone VI 2-2923,**
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-7788. tf
NEW $200 Guild Western guitar, 25% off -- Call any evening VI 3-4811. Also offering German Luger, 8 inch barrel. George Johnson. 10-24
1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door sedan. P.G.
r & h. Forced to sell because of loss
of driver's license—S695. Call VI 3-2939 after
6 p.m. 10-20
AS A LIVING TEXTBOOK, as an aid to
educators and students. The Christian
Science Monitor is unsurpassed. To faculty
and students this international daily
newspaper is offered at half price 1 yr.
$11. (reg. $22). 9 mos. - $8.25. 6 mos.
$5.50. To place your subscription call
VI 3-4206. 10-24
Western Civilization Notes
All new and revised, 100 pages,
mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and
analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901
after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
For Sale: One year old Madison Field-
$55. Pettinell-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-23
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60
prescriptive diagrams and definitions; new
edition; formerly known as the Theta
library. I 2-0742 anytime Free deci
bility. $4.50.
STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2966 after 6 p.m.
tt
Car For Sale : '52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. tl
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
running condition $159. Call SI 4241-89.
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $45.00 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and radding machines. Offset printing and business at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co. 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-6151 today.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tf
TRANSPORTATION
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks.
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Plicnic. party supply.
6th & Vermont. phone VI
0350.
MALE student with with late model car
will take 3 girls to Oklahoma game. Must
have own tickets and share expenses.
Call VI 3-4858 - 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. 10-20
HELP WANTED
1. OR 2. GIRLS to help with housework
3. DO NOT wash laundry privileges. Call VI 3-7865. 0-25
Part Time Employment
IF—you need to car.
$40 a week or more
and are able to work
15 hours or more per week.
IF—you enjoy public contact
work and have your own car,
MOVING 1-1 VI 2-1685
Between 5:15 and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Thursday or Friday
or Before 8:50 a.m. Saturday
FOR RENT
COLLEGE BOYS or couples, child welcome — utilities paid, convenient location — Call VI 3-9776 or VI 3-9824 for appt. 10-25
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, partly furnished, newly decorated. 439 Elm. Call VI 3-3602. 10-25
ROOM FOR TWO women. Priv. bath and
priv. entr. Only two blocks from Union.
Call Vi 2-0655 or inquire at 1240 Ohio
after 6 p.m.
10-25
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
turn. Auto. washer-dryer. air cond.
air. Washer/dryer. Vent. $100
moundview 221 Moundview Dr. Phone
91-3582 for 5 appt.
ANYONE COMMUTING or getting matr-
xed in Stouffer Place
VI 2-0067 10-20
FOR RENT. DUPLEX apartment; 4 rooms
VI 3-134d any afternoon.
EMI 10-24
VI 3-134d any afternoon.
2 BEDROOM. LIVING ROOM. fireplace,
air conditioner, wall to wall carpeting,
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storage areas. garage. S.W. edge of cume.
Grand view. Call VI 3-5887 am
p.m. 10-24
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom 35' x 10' trailer.
CALL VI 3-5193. 10-23
SLEEPING ROOM with private kitchen
of the woman Vacent Oct. 20.
VI 5-1585 10-20
Furnished 3-bedroom home in Lawrences
Hedrick 2-0579, Kansas City. 10-23
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rode Island island. Ph. VI 3-1097. 10-25
Vacancy available for 2 men in comm-
mission baggage at ch-1l Rd Cavi-
3-9655 for appointment. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
BABYSITTING any time at 221 Mound-
stones Experienced. Save the
reference. 10-25
R WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In
Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-
morning. Phone VI 3-2921. Mode:
self-service — open weeks day 8 to 6:30
pm.
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, wet wipes, bandana and everything in pet field plus Turtles, chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Live-In Pet Center 1218 Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tt
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
1-3644. tf
MILLIKEN'S 'S. O.' S. Now at two
1020 1020 1020 1040 10f
Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass.
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type Electric typewriter form papers, these, and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. tt
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 35-
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. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ture of the call card. Oia Snuff.
3931; Mass. Call VI 3-5264.
TYPING
TYFIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-449. tf
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to thesis, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. **tf**
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to team papers, reports, theses, etc. Naunt, accurate service at reasonable rates. Cull Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379.
Experienced Typtist; Electric typewriter.
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc.
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker.
Call VI T-2001. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0588 1031 Miss. tf
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-
typing rate. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise
POVI, III 3-1097.
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable prices. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648.
tf
EXFERIENCIED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, and application letters. Prompt service. Mrs Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution, Mission, Industrial Service, 9317 B Mosher, Mission, E-2-7718. Evers or Satf. RA 2-2186.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc., on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. College VI 3-6440 tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, or books for work. Reliable writer. Electric power worker. Mrs. Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568.
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING,
punctuation & grammar? Former Eng.
teacher, who worked with news
& reports securitely. Standard rates. See
Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. ff
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name call VI 3-9126. Mrs. Lloyd
Gebhlich
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University Daily Kansan Friday, October 20,1961
Berlin War Games-
(Continued from page 1)
can sector of the city that he was taken to a hospital.
The Communists extended their "zone of death" along the 25-mile East-West Berlin border. They evicted more families from apartment houses fronting on the American sector.
THEY RESUMED disinterring bodies from graves in the Rosenthal South Cemetery on the border of the East Berlin district of Pankow and the French sector district of Reinickendorf.
Graves were leveled and tombstones removed to wipe out possible hideouts for fleeing refugees and to give police a clear field of fire.
West Berlin officials forecast fresh Communist moves to interrupt Berlin's air corridors to West Germany.
They said that despite Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's easing of his year-end ultimatum for signing a separate East German peace treaty, there was evidence that the Russians were increasing their pressure on West Berlin.
WEST BERLIN officials welcomed the United States' prompt rejection of Russia's latest note challenging allied rights to fly commercial passengers unhindered into and out of Berlin.
For weeks, Western officials have feared that the Soviets might start harassing allied air traffic to Berlin by announcing air maneuvers in the three 20-mile-wide air corridors linking West Berlin to West Germany.
They said intelligence reports from the East indicated such a move was discussed by the Communists. It would be designed to frighten commercial airliners into canceling their fights to Berlin. Although such a move would be limited, it would serve to show the West that commercial air traffic could be interrupted at will, the Communists were reported to have said.
ALLIED OBSERVORS in Berlin pointed out that any such interference with Berlin air access routes would have extremely serious results on the morale of West Berliners.
Japanese Study-
As far as Germans were concerned, air travel has been the only means for West Berliners to travel in or out of Berlin uncontrolled by Communist Secret Police for the past 16 years.
Although the East German Communists challenged all travel rights in Berlin, they backed down twice when Americans stationed in Berlin defied them and drove their cars into the Communist sector.
(Continued from page 8)
better it is for us. With characters and symbols we will be slowed down considerably.
There can be prayers without words just as well as songs, I suppose.—George Louis Palmella Busson Du Maurier
"YOU HAVE TO KNOW the word first before you can write it in symbols," said Miss Maness, "because there is a symbol used for each syllable."
English was a foreign language to Raymand Lee, Hong Kong sophomore, whose native tongue is Chinese.
"Japanese and Chinese are similar in writing," he said, "but they are different in pronunciation." Raymand is studying Japanese because he someday hopes to go to Japan.
ALTHOUGH JANE YAMAMOTO, Hawaii junior, is of Japanese descent, she does not speak the language. However, she said her study of Japanese has been made easier because she has heard it spoken all her life. Jane's father was reared in Japan and speaks the language fluently.
Expansion of the Oriental language program is now under consideration and textbooks have already been ordered for the new courses to be offered.
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1618 West 23rd Street
The Southern Baptist Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. today at the Baptist Activities Bldg., 1221 Oread.
The Rev. Earl McElwee, pastor of the East Heights Baptist Church, will lead discussion of the role of the Christian in politics. The Baptist Student Union invites all interested persons to attend.
AUFS Speaker to Talk On Africa Today
YELLOW CAB CO.
Phone
"Africa: Evolution or Revolution?" will be the discussion topic of Reuben Frodin of the American Universities Field Staff at the Currents Events Forum 4 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
Wright Brothers' Ghosts
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Sign on the message blackboard at the Air Line Pilots Association's Safety Forum here yesterday: "Orville. Please call Wilbur at the bicycle shop immediately."
VI 3-6333
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Daily Hansan
59th Year, No. 27
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday, October 23, 1961
Promised Bomb Possibly Exploded by Russians
By United Press International
Russia today detonated a giant nuclear device in the Arctic which European detection stations said may have been Nikita Khrushchev's promised 50-megaton bomb.
But the White House was described as "highly skeptical" that the explosion involved the big bomb, labelled by this country as a terror weapon.
A SPOKESMAN for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission said indications were that the Soviet test was not in the 50-megalon range. But he ruled out any official statement pending a study.
European detection networks agreed that if it wasn't the 50-megaton weapon, it was the biggest detonated by the Russians so far in this series.
The commission's world-wide detection stations have recorded all of the explosions in the current Soviet series.
Both the French Atomic Energy Commission and Sweden's Uppsala University Seismological Institution said the new Soviet explosion probably was in the 50 megaton range.
PRESIDENT KENNEDY received intelligence reports on the explosion as he prepared to return to Washington from his weekend retreat at Newport, R. I.
Twice during the morning White House sources said that on the basis of information available, American experts were "highly skeptical" that this was the 50-megaton weapon.
The Uppsala institution recorded the explosion at 2:35 a.m. CST. It was set off in the Russian's Arctic testing Zone at Novava Zemlya.
Markus Booth, a spokesman for the institution, said "it seems probable that this explosion was caused by the 50 megaton bomb which Khrushchev reported would be detonated toward the end of this month."
SEVERAL HOURS LATER the French Atomic Energy Commission said it had detected a "very powerful" explosion which was "probably of the 50-megaton size."
30 or 31, after which the Soviet Union would conclude its current series of nuclear tests.
widespread protests, including a U.N. resolution presented last Friday by five nations in the path of Soviet fallout appealing to Russia not to set off the big bomb
The explosion reported today was the 22nd in the current nuclear series which began Sept. 1. The 21st test was held last Friday.
Khrushchev's announcement drew
Debate on the resolution was to have continued in the U.N.'s main political committee this afternoon. The special political committee voted 75 to 0 Friday to express "deep concern" over fallout caused by the Soviet tests.
After Khrushchev announced his plan to set off the 50-megaton blast it was noted in Washington that the largest nuclear weapon that had been exploded so far was an H-bomb in the 15-megaton range. It was set off by the United States on March 1, 1954.
A 50-megaton bomb would have 2,500 times the power of the blast that leveled Hiroshima.
IF TODAY'S EXPLOSION was the big blast announced by Khrushchev before the Soviet Communist Party Congress, it came earlier than expected. Khrushchev had indicated the test would be held Oct.
Soviets Have Missile Killer
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Defense Minster Rodion Malinovsky suggested today the Soviet Union has developed a successful anti-missile missile and said that "imperialist" powers are preparing to launch a surprise attack on Russia.
Malinovsky made what was believed to be the first Soviet claim to having conquered the danger of a rocket attack.
DURING A SPEECH to the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress, he boasted that his armed forces have "successfully coped with the task of destroying missiles in flight," "a statement interpreted as indication of a major military breakthrough.
Malinovsky said a war inevitably would mean the use of rockets and nuclear weapons and would turn whole nations into deserts.
Malinovsky said the danger of surprise attack compels the Soviet Union to remain in a state of constant readiness.
THE SOVIET UNION is less vulnerable to nuclear attack than other countries but its wartime losses would be exceptionally heavy, he said. But a new war would spell doom for capitalism, he added.
(Observers noted that this was the lame line that Premier Nikita
Khrushchev had used in
Khrushchev had used in the past) Malinovsky cited figures from what he said was a U.S. Congressional report saying that West Germany, for example, could be devastated by eight hydrogen bombs. He said that densely-populated countries should especially remember the nuclear facts of life.
NSA Issues Discussed On Editorial Page
Is the University of Kausa going to disaffiliate from the National Student Association? This is the fourth time in the last two years the issue has come before the All Student Council.
The issues involved are:
- NSA is not beneficial to the KU campus.
- NSA is too liberal in its policies
- NSA is not representative of American student opinion.
The controversy will reach its climax tomorrow night when the ASC votes on KU's membership in NSA.
On pages two and three there are personality interviews, pictures, editorsials, and special articles dealing with the issue.
- News Briefs -
By United Press International
DALLAS—Doctors said House Speaker Sam Rayburn appeared "weaker and less alert" yesterday but it was not a major or critical change in his battle with cancer.
It was the first setback for the 79-year-old speaker since he had a siege of pneumonia more than a week ago and then made what doctors said was a "remarkable" recovery.
The staff at Baylor University Medical Center has been trying to build up Rayburn's strength so treatments can be resumed to slow the progress of his cancer and prolong his life.
CIUDAD TRUJILLO—President Joaquin Balaguer announced today in a nation-wide radio and television speech that "several members" of the Trujillo family have decided to leave the country.
Balaguer did not name the Trujillos who will leave but he said they were among several of the 12 military men who opposition leaders have demanded leave the country as a preliminary to political peace talks.
However, Balaguer emphasized that army chief Gen. Rafael L. Trujillo, Jr., son of the late dictator, will not leave the country. Young Trujillo was one of those on the opposition list.
The president's announcement coincided with a report in the official newspaper El Caribe that Lt. Gen. Jose Arismendi Trujillo, brother of the late dictator, left the country "for health reasons" during the week-end.
CAPE CANAVERAL—The Federal Space Agency today once again delayed plans to launch a Ranger II satellite, forerunner of U.S. moon probes, on a tricky, 685,000-mile flight into space.
The shot is running out of time because it must be fired during an eight-day period when the sun, moon and earth are in the right positions.
Four days of the eight-day "window" have expired. If it is not fired within the next few days, the shot will have to be put off for at least seven weeks.
CAIRO—The government jailed 3 Egyptian aristocrats over the weekend to "safeguard the gains made by the revolution," and confiscated the property of 167 "reactionary capitalists," including a number of Syrians.
Vice President Zakaria Mohieddin said the arrests were intended to prevent a coup d'etat like the one which recently pulled Syria out of its United Arab Republic alignment with Egypt.
KIEL, GERMANY—The U1, first submarine built in West Germany since World War II, will be launched today by an undersea warfare expert who sank 42 allied ships during the war.
Naval experts say the 350-ton submarine is a "technical sensation" because of its high speed and its heavy armament.
The submarine, first of 12 of its type ordered by the West German navy, mounts eight torpedo tubes and an imposing array of electronic detection equipment.
Although it is powered by conventional rather than nuclear engines, it is said to be capable of remaining underwater for weeks presumably by using some variation of the schnorkel breathing apparatus.
NEW YORK—About 150 Hungarian refugees demonstrated outside the Soviet U.N. delegation headquarters on Park Avenue last night to protest Soviet nuclear testing and to commemorate the 5th anniversary of the Hungarian revolt.
P-T-P; Campus Apathy to National Concern
By Arthur Miller
(Editor's note: This is the first of a three part series on the People-to-People program at KU.)
The apathy on the KU campus was unbelievable in the eaves of a California student.
As he looked around he saw students seemingly unconcerned with fellow students from other lands. He saw foreign students gathering in small groups with other foreign students. Most of them lacked American student friendship.
He attended several International Club meetings, once again finding foreign students generally without American counterparts.
The student from California saw this situation as a challenge and he responded to it. He and other interested students investigated the foreign student problem, seeking advice from university and civic leaders who had worked with foreign students in the past.
He talked with such men as Joyce C. Hall, president of the Hallmark Foundation which has been active in promoting better understanding among students, and he received Mr. Hall's warm endorsement for an idea.
A plan was formulated and approved with the support of the student body president and university officials.
A program called People-to-People was to be initiated.
This was the beginning eight months ago. And now one can ask, has the situation changed?
According to Shafik H. Hashmi, Hyderabad, India, graduate and International Club president: "People-to-people has truly created a new spirit and new atmosphere as far as the relations between the American and international students are concerned. I would even say that the formation of this organization will be a landmark in the annals of American-foreign student relations on campus."
Hashmi added, "Last year, when I first came to the University, there were very few American students in the International Club. Now we have many more American members actively participating in the club's activities."
Apparently there has been a great change in the attitude of KU students, for there are approximately 500 students in the People-to-People program.
But what is the nature of this program that has won the approval of so many American and foreign students?
It is a plan which creates a closer relation between students of all nations. It is a plan that has taken the shape of hospitality committees, industrial tours, farm tours, and student housing location.
The program also includes forums featuring speakers on topics common to all student's interests, a brother-sister organization to plan group activities, and job placement for students.
By the end of August this year, a great amount of work had been done, but with the first international students due to arrive in three weeks, there was still a great shortage of housing for them.
A crash program went into effect. A meeting of civic, business and university leaders was called. From the meeting emerged the community organization known as LIFE—Lawrence International Fellowship Enterprise.
The immediate problem was to find housing for the new students. Lawrence residents, through coupons in the local newspaper, were asked if they would be interested in participating in the plan by providing rooms for the foreign students.
Everyone helped. Most of the Lawrence churches sent information about the plan through church mailings. Maupintour Travel Agency of Lawrence prepared posters and literature for the program called LIFE.
The response was overwhelming. Residents from all walks of life said they wanted to take part. From farmhouse to fraternity house, requests came for foreign students to live as part of the family.
Although the California student organized the KU program, the job was too much for the one person to handle alone. It took the combined efforts of several hundred students to make the program a success.
William Dawson, now a Kansas City senior, is the student from California. But his idea could not have become reality without the work of Richart Barnes, Lawrence first year law student, who coordinated People-to-People and LIFE activities.
Without the enthusiastic support of men like Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Joyce Hall of Hallmark, and Hashmi of the International Club, the program could not have reached the scope it has. And not to be forgotten are the hundreds of KU students who have dedicated themselves to better relations with students of other nations.
(Wednesday's article will cover specific People-toPeople activities and a visit to the home of a Lawrence family shared by foreign students.)
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 22, 1961
Page 2
The Kansan on NSA
For the last three years the KU National Student Association has been involved in an almost constant battle for survival. Tomorrow the All Student Council will consider a proposal to disaffiliate KU from the national organization.
The question of KU's continued affiliation with NSA is a complicated one. It is also an important one because KU must decide if a relationship of some eight years standing is to be continued.
NSA's present situation is not without national or local precedent. Several other colleges and universities are considering the question of continued NSA membership. This is the third time in as many years that KU has considered dropping NSA. In past years KU's NSA membership has been continued with the hope that KU would become more active in NSA and thus justify its attachment.
NSA drew more publicity last year than at any time since NSA was started at KU. However, examination of this publicity reveals very few accomplishments for the committee in the last year.
Basically the question of KU's continued affiliation seems to be of financial origin. NSA has always been one of the most expensive activities of the ASC. Last year the total tab for NSA activities, including the Foreign Student Leadership Program, ran to something over $1,200. Only Associated Women Students (AWS) received a larger appropriation. This year, since the foreign leadership program has been dropped, NSA has requested about $850 to cover this year's expenses. This money will go mainly for national dues and delegates' expenses to the national congress next summer.
If the ASC had access to an abundance of money the stand for continued affiliation would be considerably strengthened. However, the council operates on a budget that is becoming more limited each year. The $1,300 that People-to-People has requested for this year makes the budgeting problem more acute than ever. This is the first year of People-to-People's existence and thus the first year this organization has requested an appropriation.
NSA national dues provide privileges and services which each member college and university is eligible to receive. NSA headquarters can provide, upon request, information and material on almost any national or international question of current importance. NSA also organizes various types of tours for American students traveling abroad. But the primary purpose of NSA is to represent and express the opinions of the American student. These opinions might be expressed in dealings with student organizations
of other lands or in resolutions addressed to the Congress of the United States.
The question then, reduced to its lowest terms, becomes one of cost versus benefits. Are the benefits of representation in a national student organization worth the expenses of membership? But this, perhaps, is an oversimplification of the problem. For there is also a great deal of discussion about the way in which the opinions of KU students are represented by NSA.
The resolutions passed by the NSA Congress last summer are considerably more liberal than one would expect the opinions of the average KU student to be. NSA has officially endorsed the freedom rides and has asked that the House un-American Activities Committee be abolished. So the question of the type of representation afforded by NSA is also very much at issue.
It has been hoped that the KU NSA committee could serve as a forum in educating KU students on issues of importance. The NSA committee has performed this function to an extent. Last spring the committee sponsored a showing of the controversial film "Operation Abolition." The committee has also discussed the possibility of bringing the film "Harvest of Shame" to KU this fall. If KU severs its relationship with US-NSA and thus does away with the present NSA committee it will be necessary to provide for a way in which KU students can receive information on national and international issues.
The ASC motion that will be voted on tomorrow night provides for a Current Events committee to replace the present NSA committee. The people who are now on the NSA committee would be asked to continue to serve on the Current Events committee. But there are also several other groups that are set up to furnish information for the KU student. Many of these, such as the present Current Events Forum and Minority Opinion Forum have operated with more efficiency than has the NSA committee.
Because of the excessive cost of representing KU's moderate political views, The Kansan urges the All Student Council to adopt the motion for disaffiliation from USNSA. The slight vacuum that would be left could easily be filled by existing informational groups.
This recommendation involves a change from the previous editorial policy of the Kansan. However, previous editorship have not endorsed USNSA, they have only asked that NSA be allowed an opportunity to prove itself. It is the conviction of the Kansan editorial staff that the NSA committee has failed to establish a program which would merit continued existence for NSA at KU. —Ron Gallagher
Foreign Students for NSA
Recent Daily Kansan interviews at the International Club and during the weekend indicate general foreign student approval of the National Student Association.
Of 26 students interviewed 21 favored KU affiliation, one favored affiliation but was critical of the KU NSA committee and four declined comment.
TYPICAL OF THE students' remarks was this by Gerhard Bassler, Stuttgart, Germany, graduate, who said, "Foreign countries look very much to your young people to see what you are really like and
Michael Colson, Great Britain graduate student, said, "It is about time the local representatives of NSA stopped this political foolishness and used the national organization for the benefit of students. I do, however, favor the workings of the national organization," he said.
what your future policies will be like.
graduate student said, "there is a very definite importance for the United States to have a student voice in the international community."
"Leaving the association would leave you no chance of representing your own views in such international exchange."
Worth Repeating
Raja Mohammed Naib, Pakistan graduate student said, "For my fellow students at this campus who might not have heard much about the utility of such an organization, may I suggest that NSA is doing a very useful job in foreign countries with regard to the promotion of democratic ideas."
Jannik Lindbaek, Norway
Daily Hansan
The threes of the contemporary world are those of a birth. And what is being born with such great pain is a universal human society . . . What characterizes the events we witness, what distinguishes them from all preceding events back to the origins of history is . . . their global character, or, to say it perhaps more exactly, their planetary character. The unity of the planet is already accomplished. For reasons economic, industrial, and technical, reasons all linked to the practical applications of science, such a solidarity is established among the peoples of the earth that their vicissitudes are integrated in a universal history of which they are particular moments . . . These peoples are in fact parts of a Humanity . . . something of which they must now become conscious, in order to will it instead of being subject to it, in order to think it with a view to organizing it.—Etienne Gilson
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield,
Assistant Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
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Focus on NSA
By Scott Payne and Arthur Miller
In 1960 several anti-NSA pamphlets were distributed attacking NSA's workers and its integration policies.
For the past two years the KU National Student Association (NSA) has been embroiled in bi-annual disputes over its survival.
In response to these attacks Frank Naylor, a Kansas City graduate of KU, then a member of the All Student Council (ASC), said NSA offered many potential advantages.
"But KU doesn't take an active part in NSA legislation," he said. "KU students' opinions are not presented."
"Helpful aids and publications are offered by NSA to student councils," he added, "but KU doesn't take advantage of this opportunity either."
In order to find out more about NSA, the ASC assigned Tonya Kurt, Pratt senior, then NSA coordinator, to prepare an analysis of NSA.
"KU student leaders had no conception of NSA's purpose," said Miss Kurt in a recent Daily Kansan interview. "Previous NSA coordinators here unfortunately had considered this position as another shingle to list in their senior profiles.
"No record of NSA purposes, programs or meetings had been kept by the previous coordinators," she added.
Miss Kurt said that at the end of that year she was to present her analysis of NSA to the ASC and to recommend a course of action in regard to it.
"On the basis of the analysis, I recommended highly that KU continue affiliation with NSA," she said. "I looked forward to next year when the committee would have time to concentrate on special student projects instead of having to fight for its existence."
Following a three week controversy, the ASC decided to retain affiliation, mandating the NSA committee "to discern which issues are pertinent and should be presented to the All Student Council."
"Further, it (the committee) is to reduce issues to their respective principles and major relevant arguments on both sides and to form opinions and present them to the ASC," the mandate continued.
Following last year's spring ASC elections, the ASC gave the NSA committee two specified areas of study:
★Student apathy at KU is such that the NSA foreign travel is not used.
Prior to the election, both campus political parties supported continuation of NSA affiliation.
★The KU ASC has not been pleased with the committee's foreign student exchange program.
The platform of Vox Populi party, then and now in power in the ASC, proposed utilization of the committee in the area of national NSA resolutions and stands.
University Party had argued that since the number of resolutions the ASC would have to consider would be small, there was no need for the special committee work. This platform held that NSA could better serve as an information agency.
New charges were leveled against NSA the following autumn.
Ronald Dalby, Joplin, Mo., KU graduate, then student body president asked: "Why disaffiliate when affiliation can do no harm and can do a great deal of good, if and when we want to use it.
"KU is wasting time, money and effort as a member of NSA unless it can assume a role of leadership for minority schools opposing demonstration sit-ins and other actions advocated by NSA."
The ASC voted 12-2 to continue affiliation with NSA.
The affiliation issue will be before the ASC again tomorrow eve-
(Continued on page 12)
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
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5-8
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Monday. October 23,1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Kansan Focus on Central NSA Figures
M. H. A.
THE WEEKLY PRESS
Jerry Palmer
Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and chairman of the All Student Council, favors disaffiliation with the National Student Association. He advocates the formation of a campus current events committee instead.
Palmer feels NSA is not representative of student opinion and that KU does not receive benefits from it equal to the $500 annual national dues. He feels a current events committee could serve the same function as NSA while not being nationally associated.
"The current events committee would still definitely have an important function in discussing national and international issues. Discussions of problems such as the migrant farm workers can be carried on with or without national affiliation.
"The liberal point of view is dominant in NSA. It is made up largely of the liberal Eastern and Northeastern schools that have a strong voice in NSA. Kansas is not liberal. I would say Kansas is moderately conservative.
"I don't think KU gets benefits from NSA to the tune of $500." Palmer continued. "We could use that money elsewhere in the budget. We have a responsibility to give the students something worth their money."
The NSA committee has asked for an $800 appropriation this year.
"Our budget gets tighter each year as more organizations are formed," Palmer says. "We can use the money we would give to NSA elsewhere."
"The ASC will allocate People-to-People money for the first time this fall," Palmer says. (People-to-People
Palmer attended the national NSA Congress in Minneapolis, Minn., in the summer of 1960. He has attended three regional conferences. He is also one of the six organizers of the conservative Young Americans for Freedom, which began functioning at KU two weeks ago.
When asked to comment on the charge that YAF was behind his wanting to disaffiliate with NSA, Palmer refused to comment. The charge came from Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior and coordinator of the NSA committee. She said that YAF opposes NSA and wants to weaken it by getting schools to drop out.
Palmer says NSA is not representative of all schools. He points out that only 400 of the 1200 U.S.colleges are in NSA.
Palmer asked if she really made the charge. He said he would not comment on it and that Miss McMillen could have her own views on his opposing NSA.
"The South is not represented at all and the Western schools are dropping out of NSA. Kansas and Missouri are the only big schools in NSA in the Missouri-Kansas region."
(Continued on page 5)
Palmer says NSA is more beneficial to smaller schools. "They can benefit from what NSA offers. But with a large school like KU, NSA's advantages are met by other campus organizations such as the Current Events Forum. KU-Y and People-to-People.
Carol McMillen
Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior and NSA coordinator, is probably the staunchest defender of the NSA at KU.
She is friendly and easy going, but quickly and fervently stands ready to defend the NSA against all comers. She is dedicated to keeping KU in NSA.
Her campus activities include Mortar Board, Presidential Forum, All Student Council and the College Intermediary Board, in addition to the NSA. She has a grade point average of 2.66.
At an interview at her sorority house yesterday, she said that opposition to the NSA is coming from the YAF (Young Americans for Freedom), an organization which promotes conservatism. The NSA at present is liberal.
Miss McMillen had this to say about the YAF
"They tried to take over the national NSA Congress at Madison, Wis., last spring. They failed and their attitude was 'If I can't be captain, I'm taking my football and going home.'
"They got their conservative little toes stomped on, then they wanted to stomp back. They said at the Congress that they would get as many schools out of NSA this year as they could. They want to weaken it and make it ineffective. This just isn't good sportsmanship."
Miss McMillen went on to give a behind-the-scenes picture of why the NSA is meeting opposition at KU.
She said that Scott Stanley, a first year law student at KU last year, was one of the YAF members at the NSA convention in Madison who opposed NSA's liberalism.
Stanley is presently traveling around the country as YAF liaison man.
"Scott was an alternate who was supposed to work with the NSA. We never saw Scott. He was too busy working with the YAF to know what was going on at the Convention," she said.
"I heard that he wrote to a political leader at KU and said he didn't like the NSA's liberalism."
This is where the opposition at KU to NSA started, she said.
Despite YAF's opposition to the NSA, Miss McMillen said she thought the "existence of the organization is fine because you should have representatives of the whole political spectrum.
"Their methods are lousy. This is my main objection," she emphasized.
Miss McMillen is the College representative to the All Student Council as well as the NSA coordinator. Asked whether her primary interest is the ASC or the NSA, she replied:
"Let's put it this way. The NSA is my primary concern right now until we get this settled. If we stay in the NSA, I'll concentrate on the NSA less," she said.
How would she react if the ASC decided to withdraw KU from the NSA?
"I would feel the ASC had not acted on its own, but
(Continued on page 5)
1958.
Charles Menghini
One year ago Charles Menghini was appointed to the KU National Student Association committee. At that time his interest in NSA was "curiosity to find out what it was."
Today Menghini is one of NSA's most avid supporters at KU and is leading the fight against disaffiliation of KU with NSA.
Menghini, an international relations and history major, is known as an outspoken liberal. In addition to his position on the NSA committee, he is co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council and last year was co-chairman of the University Party.
During the past year, he attended the regional NSA international relations seminar, was chairman of a committee on Cuba at the spring regional NSA conference, attended the Foreign Student Leadership Project evaluation convention and was a delegate to the NSA Congress at Madison, Wis.
His support of NSA is based in part on the many benefits which KU could receive from its affiliation, but which it has not received in the past due to "ignorance of the benefits or due to the complacency which frowns on the idea of a national organization."
"These benefits can range in scope from information on campus problems to activities on the national and international level," he said. "The information is there; all we have to do is ask for it."
Benefits which KU can receive from NSA, said Menghini, included the following:
Educational Travel, Inc., which provides low-cost student tours of Latin America and Europe.
Student Government Information Service, which lists movies and speakers available for programs.
Foreign Student Leadership Project, which brings student leaders from other countries to various United States campuses to study.
He specifically mentioned the International Student Conference, which he said NSA helped to organize and to a large extent still leads.
"Our contacts with other students and with future leaders of other countries through the Conference are of such vital importance to this country that its overall effect can't be minimized," he said.
"KU has been acclaimed nationally for its athletic and scholastic activities," he said, "and NSA offers us the opportunity to take a leadership position in educational, political, and social activities as well."
Menghini stressed KU's role in NSA.
He said he did not believe disaffiliation is justified on the grounds that NSA does not represent the views of KU students.
"NSA is a confederation of student governments, and no student government is mandated to abide by the decisions made at the National Congress," he said.
"If KU disagrees with the majority opinion of the college students, as vocalized at the conference, we have
(Continued on page 5)
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 23.1961 Serve Yourself
Artificial State In Germany For Refugees
HANOVER, West Germany Erhard Herzig's identification card reads. "Expellee."
This is not exceptional in the West German Federal Republic's state of Lower Saxony, which borders the Communist East Zone and which was a creation of the Western powers in a dismembered Germany.
Herzig is a neat, grey-haired man, with the comfortable well-fed and well-dressed look that today is common to West Germany.
HALF OF LOWER Saxony's six million population is made up of "expellees," refugees from Czechoslovakia, the territories beyond the Oder-Neisse line now occupied by Poland, and from Communist East Germany.
But he remembers his return from the United States where he spent time as a prisoner of war, and his return to his family in Prague, Czechoslovakia.
His sole possession was the castoff British army uniform he wore.
AS THE COMMUNISTS moved on Czechoslovakia, Herzig, his wife and their small daughter fled ahead of them to Hanover where, once more penniless, they begged two iron cots to sleep on.
Those things have changed for Erhard Herzig, Today, he is a successful newsman and press chief to Lower Saxony's prime minister.
Herzig has resigned himself that he will not return to Czechoslovakia.
THE WISH TO return is not as strong in him as it is in his father. But there is a sadness in him that exists scarcely at all in his children. His daughter does not remember Prague, and his son, born in Hanover, has no interest in it at all. His son does not understand why his identification card also should be stamped "expellee," for he is a native of Hanover.
The three generations of Herzigs are illustrative of a sentiment gradually taking over most of the refugees who sought refuge in West Germany from the Communists to the East.
THE BOOMING West German economy has absorbed them, and could use more. Many are more comfortable now than in their former homes. The desire to return is gradually fading away.
As for Hanover itself, it also is illustrative of the new life. Allied bombs destroyed more than 80 per cent of Hanover, and the city was forced to rebuild.
Today, the sears of war have all but disappeared and a city has appeared that is among the most modern in the world. Schools and universities occupy one sector of the city, government buildings another, banks and insurance still another, and so on through all phases of education, commerce and government.
Island People Wary of Dentist
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Two men who recently completed a dental-medical mission to the Indians of the San Blas Islands report most of the people they approached were unwilling patients.
Dr. John Miller, a Camden, Ark., physician, and Dr. James Sawyer, a Benton, Ark., dentist, spent two weeks on the islands off the eastern end of the Panama Canal under sponsorship of the Brotherhood Commission and the Home Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention.
They administered 1,000 shots of penicillin and extracted several hundred teeth but said the San Blas natives still preferred the medicine man and his chants, dolls and incense pots.
Tell the truth of trump—but get the trick—Mark Twain
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — (UPI) — The modern cafeteria is believed to have originated during the California Gold Rush of 1849, according to University of Michigan diet historians. Men were in a hurry and there weren't any women to wait on them.
Building Not Wasted
THE HAGUE, The Netherlands (UPI) — The Protestant Pavilion constructed for the 1958 Brussels World Fair has been moved to the Hague by barge and is being converted into a Protestant church for Americans living in the Dutch capital.
The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world. William Ross Wallace
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Meanwhile, back on this planet, men and ideas are in constant motion at Aeronutronic planning scientific break-throughs which will effectively transform new concepts into practical products for industry and defense.
Aeronutronic has been awarded prime contracts for the Air Force "Blue Scout" rocket-space program; the development of DECOYS in the Air Force ICBM program; SHILLELAGH surface-to-surface guided missiles for the Army.
Ford Motor Company recognizes the vital relationship of science to national security. Through our Aeronutronic Division supplemented by our scientific research and engineering facilities at Dearborn, Michigan, we actively support long-range basic research as an indispensable source of today's security and tomorrow's products. This is another example of Ford's leadership through scientific research and engineering.
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Perfect Record Ends, Five Killed
STUTTGART, Ark. — (UPI) — A Cotton Belt freight train killed five persons in two separate accidents 18 miles apart yesterday.
Engineer J. U. Rector, 61, had been railroading more than 36 years without being involved in a fatal accident. Then in the space of two hours that perfect record was wiped out twice.
RECTOR WAS TAKING the "No.
1 Motor Special" between Jonesboro and Pine Bluff when the train smashed into a pickup truck at a flasher crossing and killed three of the truck's four occupants.
A few minutes after the wreckage was cleared, the train killed a mother and child who stumbled onto the tracks into the path of the "fast freight" just 18 miles from the scene of the first accident.
Rector was anxious to get home. His wife is in the hospital recovering from minor surgery. His mother and father-in-law had come from Rison, Ark., to help take care of his 12-year-old son Gary.
"Good grief," he yelled. He clawed at the emergency brake, but he knew there was nothing he could do.
AS HE NEARED THE crossing at Stuttgart, his hand rested on the whistle cord. He tugged gently and escaping steam shrieked its warning, once, twice. Then he yanked the cord frantically.
The train plowed broadside into the pickup truck, trapped the twisted wreckage underneath and carried it nearly three-quarters of a mile down the tracks before grinding to a halt
KILLED WERE Elizie Smith, Flavelia Ransom and Mrs. Willie B. Smith, all of nearby Almyra Mrs. Smith's husband, Cleo, the driver, was critically injured.
"It looked like the truck was trying to run a race to the crossing." Rector told state trooper Charles Oliphant. There was a flashing red light at the crossing.
The small town of Altheimer is about 18 miles down the track from Stuttgart. Charles Farrer was working at a service station a short distance across the tracks from his home.
DEPUTY SHERIFF Tom Smithie said FARRER saw his 24-year-old wife and three children coming to visit him. Then he heard his wife scream.
Page 5
Charles Stevens Farrer, 3. jerked loose from his mother's hand and ran toward the tracks as Rector's train rounded a curve — its shrill whistle screeching.
"Charles, come back," Mrs. Farrer called. She told Wanda Jo, 5, to stay back and then ran to catch Charles. In her arms was two-year-old Charlotte Lee.
CHARLES DASHED across the tracks safely in front of the train. But Mrs. Farrar stumbled and fell on the tracks. She and her youngest daughter were killed.
"She was in front of the train so fast . . . didn't know she was there until it was too late." Rector said.
J. R. Holden, general superintendent for Cotton Belt at Pine Bluff, said the accidents were unprecedented.
"In my 35 years of railreading, this is the first time I ever remember one of our trains hitting and killing people at two different locations," he said.
Rayburn's Health Still Losing Ground
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI)— House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, lost more ground today in his fight against cancer.
He failed to rally from a weakness which developed in his condition yesterday and has lost alertness.
"He has no particular discomfort but remains weak," a hospital bulletin said. "His condition continues to be serious."
The graduate students of the Department of Psychology wish to express their deep sorrow on the passing of a close friend, a brilliant scholar, and a warm human being. Dr. Martin Scheerer.
Jerry Palmer -
was originated last year after appropriations.) There is no question in my mind which organization is more important."
(Continued from page 3)
Attacking the NSA national congress Palmer saves:
"I would say that 40 per cent of the delegates there don't know what they're voting for. And what benefit is to send delegates to congress when they don't report on what happened there. NSA passed 11 resolutions at the last congress. One of them was to abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee. The other opposes limitation of academic freedom in Cuba. Is this the issue about Cuba that really concerns students? And who knows what the other nine resolutions are?"
PALMER SAYS IF KU REMAINS affiliated with NSA, he would like to see KU views presented in the national conference.
"If our views are heard," he says, "and we could get a chance to show what KU thinks, it would be fine. "I think," Palmer emphasized, "that KU should get some good resolutions and take them back to the national conference. But KU has presented issues to the conference before and they were not recognized."
Carol McMillen -
(Continued from page 3)
had been used as a political tool by people outside the Council.
"I would have less faith and less respect for the ASC because the members would have let themselves be used," she said.
Charles Menghini—
he right to submit a minority report to the national organization," he added.
(Continued from page 3)
HE SAID THE SUGGESTED local current affairs committee would not be a substitute for the NSA committee.
"The committee will not continue with the same personnel if we are disaffiliated with NSA," he stated flatly. "And what's more, the local committee wouldn't have the benefits which I mentioned."
Asked about the recent student vote at the University of Oklahoma
to disaffiliate from NSA, Menghini said:
Monday. October 23, 1961 University Daily Kansam
Career Cues
"To me, the OU vote shows the apathy and unawareness of NSA by the students. It's obvious OU didn't conduct an orientation program such as we are planning. If they had, the vote would have been much larger.
"THE MOVEMENT TO DISAFFiliate at OU and many colleges receives its impetus from ultra-conservative organizations such as YAF (Young Americans for Freedom)," Menghini added.
"I don't blame them for being opposed to the liberalism of the American college student, but I do blame
them for trying to stifle the NSA instead of trying to persuade the majority of the students to their views."
He said he believed the local YAF chapter was involved in the controversy at KU.
"YAF is not involved on the surface, other than the fact that Jerry Palmer was one of the six organizers of the KU chapter of YAF," he said. "YAF, however, is definitely leading the battle behind the scenes. The cost versus benefits argument is merely an attempt to hide the real reason these people want to disaffiliate."
THINK INTERNATIONAL
"Hitch your wagon to a 'growth' industry and grow with it!"
Douglas Leigh, President Douglas Leigh, Inc.
"A growth industry is a new industry that is on the way up - moving quickly, expanding fast. When you join a company in one of the growth fields you have something extra working for you . . . you grow up with it. To find out which industry is right for you, try this: Ask someone in a good investment office to give you a list of the industries he considers 'growth industries'. Data
Processing, plastics, and electronics are a few examples. Then pick the one you have a leaning toward, and get the names of the most progressive companies in that field.
One thing I'd like to point out from my own career is . . a growth industry may also be an old business that's on the verge of new development. Shortly after leaving college I found this situation in the Outdoor Advertising field. What my associates and I did was to employ color, action and motion to dramatically personify the product, brand or services being advertised. In doing so, we developed the modern type 'Spectaculars' that talked, blew smoke rings, soap bubbles, etc. . . signs that changed the face of Broadway and the famous Times Square area.
This is just one example. The really important thing to remember is this: When you set your sights on a career, aim for an industry that is going to grow, so you can grow with it. It's the difference between a rocket that blasts off, and one that just sits there. Good luck!"
Douglas Leigh, a Camel smoker for more than seventeen years, started his career at the University of Florida by selling space in the yearbook. Today, Doug is building the biggest spectaculars of his career in the Times Square area, and is a director of the New York World's Fair of '64-'65.
Plan your pleasure ahead, too.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 23, 1961
University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Pass Defense, Offense Improving
By Bill Sheldon
The Kansas Jayhawkers stumbled their way through four somewhat disappointing games before they finally showed evidence of beginning to solve their most pressing problem—the forward pass. Saturday, in their first win over Oklahoma in 15 years and the first victory in Norman since 1937, the Hawkers not only began to show some effectiveness throwing the ball but they were able to almost completely stop the opposition from punishing them through the air.
Although the most significant phase of the 10-0 win over the Sooners did not involve the passing situation in itself, what did happen in this area was a welcome addition to the Kansas football situation for the remainder of the season.
First, John Hadl's use of contact lenses allowed him greater vision and the obvious result was much sharper and more accurate passing. Second, the Kansas pass receivers showed a greater ability to hang on to passes. Third, using a somewhat different formation, the Jays' secondary defense and hard-charging front line held Sooner throwing attempts to only three completions in 11 tries and a 24-yard total.
Coach Jack Mitchell added some new pass patterns to the KU offense and they worked with varying success. Kansas had more receivers in the clear than ever before and the combination of wonderful pass protection and pin-point passing accounted for eight completions in 15 tries for 108 yards and the only touchdown—a 30-yard thriller from Hadl to Larry Allen.
Defensively, the Jayhawkers went to what they call a "pro" formation in the second half to thwart the Sooner aerials. This defense had the Kansas defenders playing man-to-man on the opposition players rather than the traditional zone technique used by most college teams. The one fault of this strategy was its weakness against the short pass and the run. But the fierce play of the Hawker forwards took up the slack-and made the move pan out in KU's favor.
Another interesting maneuver by Mitchell was the constant switching of Hadl and Roger McFarland between left halfback and quarterback. Taking such a risk can be dangerous, but the outstanding ability of both backs made the Kansas offense more effective than at any other point in the season.
The one big complaint which Mitchell had after the game was that his team was unable to break loose for the long, quick-hitting gain which the happy coach said will be a big factor in the success of the Jayhawkers as they move into the second half of the season against Oklahoma State here Saturday.
Perennial Sooner Dominance Comes to Slow, Painful End
By Steve Clark
Oklahoma Coach Bud Wilkinson is a man who is used to winning. The Sooner mentor has built up a coaching record at the University of Oklahoma that is envised by every coach in the country.
His Sooners were Big Eight champions for 14 years. Thrice were his teams voted National Collegiate Champions.
Last year Wilkinson's situation became worse. His squad was able to muster only a 3-6-1 season record and a sixth-plate conference finish.
IN 1953 THE SOONERS fortune began to turn. In that season Northwestern humiliated them in the opener 45-13, arch-rival Texas edged them 19-12 and an upstart Nebraska squad coached by a former Wilkinson player, Bill Jennings, became the first Big Eight team to peg a loss on OU in 13 years.
This season Oklahoma has apparently hit rock bottom. The Sooners, after Saturday's game, possessed a winless 0-4 record.
IN THE DRESSING ROOM after the KU game there was a downhearted, gray-haired Bud Wilkinson. If only his squad could have defeated the Jayhawkers, they would have saved some "face" after their dismal opening.
"how did the Kansas team look to you?" the question was asked
Succinctly the OU coach replied
"They looked very good today."
"THAT IS VERY HARD to answer. It's always difficult to compare two teams. I would have to say that I can't answer that question."
"How did Kansas compare with the other teams you have played thus far?"
- Bill Van Burkleo, Oklahoma's heralded sophomore quarterback, demonstrated supurb faking ability during second quarter play. The Sooner signal caller rolled to his right on a bootleg. He was grabbed by a Kansas lineman, who not seeing the ball, let him loose.
- Kansas, in its first four games, had vet to lose the ball on a fumble. Against OU in the first quarter, the string was broken. End Ray Roberts hauled in a John Hadi pass on the Oklahoma five yard line only to fumble, giving the Sooners possession and ending in a KU touchdown drive. Rodger McFarland also fumbled, harmlessly, in the final minutes.
"We made many mistakes this afternoon." Wilkinson replied. "We have a lot of room for improvement. Our play was just average today."
"How did your team look?"
● Jay Roberts, sophomore third string end who is best remembered for his Varsity-Alumni game play last spring, again demonstrated his pass-catching ability by spearing three aerials for much-needed yardage.
Hawk Harriers Beat Arkansas In Perfect Race
The Kansas Jayhawk cross country squad boosted their season record to 4-0 by scoring a "grand slam" against the Arkansas Razorbacks 15-50 Friday afternoon at the Lawrence Country Club.
A "grand slam" in cross country is when one team places the top seven finishers. The "grand slam." according to Coach Bill Easton, was KU's first in many years.
SENIOR CAPTAIN Bill Dotson was individual winner, picking up his fourth win of the season. His winning time was a fast 14:36.7 over a good course on a perfect day. Charlie Hayward, who has thrice finished second to Dotson, did so again Friday, crossing the finish stripe 10 yards back of the winner.
Completing the grand slam for Kansas were: Dan Ralston, third; Tonni Coane, fourth; George Cabrera, fifth; Bill Thornton, sixth;
Mike Fulghum, seventh.
0
Bill Dotson
Ralston set the pace for the first mile, leading the pack by 15 yards. But he was unable to keep his lead and fell behind Dotson and Hayward. The threesome ran even until the last three-fourths of a mile when Dotson unleashed his usual strong finish.
FIFTH - PLACE FINISHER Cabrera was originally scheduled to run "white shirt" in the meet. When Paul Acevedo could not run due to an injury, Cabrera was given his chance. He finished 10 yards ahead of Thornton.
"This meet showed the full strength of our team," commented Easton. "We scored as a full team instead of individuals. I was very pleased with the boys' performance. The day was perfect and I thought we had an enthusiastic crowd."
Arkansas Coach Wendell Goodwin had nothing but praise for the Jayhawker squad. He said that he expected to lose, but not by such a large margin. "Several of our boys did not run as well as I expected," he said.
Quarterback Club Meeting
-Exciting films of the K. U.-Oklahoma game
Forum Room Student Union
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No man can climb out beyond the limitations of his own character. John, Viscount Morley
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
The tree of liberty only grows when watered by the blood of tyrants.—Bertrand Barere
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Monday, October 23, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Oklahoma's Once Mighty Sooners Humbled by KU
32
STORY OF A WIN — The good and the bad of the 10-0 KU win Saturday over Oklahoma are shown in these action photographs.
AT THE RIGHT is Kansas halfback Curtis McClinton plowing upfield on an end-sweep in the first quarter of play as two unidentified Sooner defenders close in for the stopping tackles.
AT THE LEFT, KU's Lee Flachsbarth stretches, but not quite enough, as OU receiver Jack Cowan snares a pass as the losers try to penetrate the formerly weak Jayhawker pass defense which came to life to throttle Oklahoma passing.
DIRECTLY BELOW. reserve tackle Fred Eiseman, who replaced injured Dick Davis, drags down the pesky Cowan after the latter had grabbed an aerial from Sooner halfback Monte Deere late in the third period, Kent Converse (64) is at the left.
AT THE BOTTOM OF THE page, Hawker sophomore fullback Ken Coleman is caught careening back to the turf after being upended by the unidentified Sooner at the left. The KU player (61) peeking back at Coleman is senior guard Jim Mills.
5
27
M. M. HOLLIS
BUT COACH, WE WON — Head Jayhawker Coach Jack Mitchell scrutinizes the action in his first coaching win over his alma mater and former coach.
61
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 23, 1961
JFK's Weekends Cause Comment
By Merriman Smith
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Backstairs at the White House;
Any weekend now, perhaps next,
President Kennedy and his wife will shift recreational headquarters from Cape Cod to Middleburg, Va., and their rented country place, Glen Ora.
Preparations for the return of the first family have been underway in the Virginia hunt country for some time, at least, since early September.
With riding to hounds resuming in the autumn, the First Lady will put aside her water skis and return to the sport she likes best—taking her big hunter over the jumps of a brush course.
Kennedy's recurrent or at least, chronic back trouble manifests itself less in warmth than in cold conditions. Swimming in naturally warm or artificially heated water is ideal for the President's back, strengthening muscles and making them less susceptible to strain.
THE PRESIDENT, for a few weekends, will be a helicopter commuter between the White House and Middleburg, but there may be a change in his weekend pattern when cold weather comes to the hunt country.
Consequently, he may shift his weekend base to the Palm Beach, Fla., home of his father, former Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy. After a few weekends in Middleburg and/or spent in filling speaking dates in the West and Southwest, the Chief Executive is expected to start flying down to Palm Beach for Saturdays and Sundays.
THE PRESIDENT and his family are currently expected to spend Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's at Palm Beach.
In writing about future Kennedy family plans, however, one must keep in mind the fact that they're exceedingly flexible in their planning, probably more like non-Presi-
dental families in this respect than any relatively recent occupants of the White House.
Kennedy, himself, will follow a pre-fixed schedule to the letter when it involves official business. But when it comes to family life, he feels completely within his prerogatives to change his mind, to alter plans at the last minute as best fits the wishes of his wife and their children, to say nothing of himself.
This still shocks some of the veteran White House retainers after their eight years of rather precisionary movement and planning of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and his wife, Mamie.
THEER IS, however, an area of distinct similarity between Eisenhower and Kennedy—their rebellion against spending weekends in the White House, or for that matter, Washington. Kennedy is so opposed to being tied to Washington on weekends that he is seriously considering not attending several important functions next year, functions normally held on Saturday nights.
Sometimes to the mild consternation of more ardent, but less understanding fellow Democrats, Kennedy determinedly gets away from his desk on an average of about two days a week—much the same thing for which some Democrats belabored Eisenhower when he was in office.
KENNEDY THINKS, and his staff joins him in this, that a President's time is more valuable than helicopter fuel, and that he's actually less subject to danger in a whirly-bird than in auto traffic between short points of his itinerary.
All of which must frustrate the Republicans like the devil. How can they attack Kennedy for using helicopters when D.D.E. wrote the book? Is Palm Beach worse than Palm Springs, Middleburg worse than Gettysburg?
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Stand Up and Be Counted
Why do we feel this way? The American people show very little interest or spirit in expressing their patriotism. Why must America invariably be threatened
We as students and citizens are aware of and concerned with the future of America. Since the end of World War II the rise of Russian military, economic, and political power has come to pose a major and dangerous threat to the future peaceful development of the United States and the institution of western culture. We feel that we must overcome the complacency and apathy of Americans so that we can become concerned with the present chaotic world conditions and be committed to building a strong and vital society to meet the threat of Soviet imperialism.
with ultimate disaster before we rise from the depths of lethargy? The potential for the active participation that is needed so desperately in this country is here, but it lies stagnant, covered by the fungus of excessive personal interest and the pursuit of personal pleasure. Why are the American people unable to see past the television set and recognize the threats facing this country and the entire world? The responsibility for the future of America lies not entirely in the hands of the elected government officials, but also in the hands of each and every citizen in the nation.
One of our basic rights is freedom of speech. Let's use it. Let's stand up and be counted!!
DINGWALL C. FLEARY - St. Louis - Senior
PATSY COUTTS - El Dorado - Junior
BUDDY ADEL - Kansas City, Mo. - Senior
TONYA KURT - Pratt - Senior
TIM WOODBURY - Kirkwood, Mo. - Senior
KATHY CLINTON - Dodge City - Junior
JIM ARMENTROUT - Mission - Senior
GUINN ANSPAUGH – Wichita – Junior
JOHN E. ARNOLD – Atchison – Senior
BEVERLY BENNETT – Lawrence – Senior
MARILYN BURDORFF – Augusta – Senior
TERRY LEE BLOSKEY—Kansas City—Sophomore
DONALD BUTTRON — Nortonville — Junior
KARL W. BEUSCHEL — New York City — Senior
BARRY WILSON — Larchmont, N. Y. — Senior
MIKE DEBUSK — Mackville — Senior
JAMES R. DECKERT — Larned — Senior
JOYCE HEDRICK — Lawrence — Junior
JOANN McALPIN — Lawrence — Freshman
BOB WILLIAMS — Wichita — Senior
Emerging African Nations Described
A pattern of seeming paradox surrounds some of the actions of the emerging African nations as they attempt to make the difficult transition to modern technological societies in one giant step.
BUT THE UNITED STATES must exercise patience and tolerance as these countries try to work out ways to achieve their goals, Reuben Frodin, American Universities Field Staff member said.
The AUFS scholar said Africans are a sensitive people with an intense pride concerning their newlywon independence.
Prof. Frodin, a specialist in West African affairs, is at KU as part of a tour of the 11 AUFS campuses. He spoke Friday to about 100 students and faculty members at the Current Events Forum in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
"They want to be considered independent and free, and define this as neutrality." But, he added, if they find themselves agreeing too much within their own government, particularly on a policy which might favor the West, they find themselves open to the charge of being stooges of former colonial powers.
THE CONFIDENCE THE AFRICANS have gained from the very impetus of being released from colonial rule makes them believe they can solve the world's problems, Prof. Frodin said.
In their attempt to rocket into the 20th century the African rejects any suggestion of "gradualism" as an effort to keep them subject to foreign interests.
with the same time accept from us," the tall, greying specialist said.
He continued, "They believe Czech arms are as good as those of the U.S., and ask why shouldn't they train their military leaders in Russia and their students in Prague.
"They are confident they can handle the Russians because they have achieved independence."
Prof. Frodin, whose appearance is more like that of a dapper business executive or retired pro football player than a scholar, said Africans are impatient to achieve material wealth.
"WE HAVE NO WAY OF TELLING them that we have worked hard to develop this country and its resources. They just don't understand that." he said.
While he was optimistic about the future of the new African nations, particularly Nigeria, where he has concentrated his recent studies, Prof. Frodin said splintering of government factions must be expected.
Prof. Frodin said the United States would also have to exercise tolerance in the attempts of African nations to work out their own forms of government.
These splinterings may even reach violent proportions at times until an attitude of respect for opposition views is reached, he said.
WITH REGARD TO THE ROLE of the new African nations in the international sphere, Dr. Frodin said
PENSACOLA, Fla. — (UPI) — A radio station secretary emerged from her family fallout shelter last night after nearly 18 days underground and announced:
Woman Emerges Wanting Space
"I'm going to head for the biggest, widest open space I can find, and walk and walk and walk as far as I can see."
Her 12-year-old daughter entered the shelter with her Oct. 5, but had to leave after five days because she was "upset."
Doctors ordered Mrs. Cottrell out of the shelter yesterday after noticing her reaction time had slowed considerably in the last three days. They said she was suffering from a mild lack of oxygen.
Monday, October 23, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9
"We must help them understand that the rights of participation are subject to responsibilities too," he said.
they must be encouraged to participate in the United Nations and similar bodies "as painful as their actions might be to us."
Some of the African paradox shows up in their belief that the United States could exert more power, if it desired, to force the remaining colonial powers out of Africa.
Missending a man's time is a kind of self-homicide. — George Savile, Marquess of Halifax
"Whether this is true or not is unimportant. That's what they believe," he continued.
During a question period near the end of the program, Prof. Frodin was asked by an African student what the new African nations could do to advance.
Prof. Frodin suggested a strong emphasis on education and a cut back in government spending in some areas. Government funds could be concentrated more on what he called "the dry essentials," like roads housing and sanitation.
Prof. Frodin was also asked if he thought these new nations would achieve maturity faster by copying a blueprint of American democracy.
"I don't think forms of governments are exportable," he answered, adding that the developments would have to come from within the individual countries.
German Department Film, "Wozkj" (Correction: Tuesday, Oct. 24 instead of Monday, Oct. 23) 23 showings: 4, 6 and 8; 5 Bailey, Open to the public. English subtitles.
Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 18th & Kentucky.
Official Bulletin
Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast:
7 a.m. Canterbury House.
TUESDAY
United Preshyterian Men: 7 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Goad. "God in
College Classroom." Rev Don Hulh,
guest speaker, followed by discussion peri-
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
WEDNESDAY
Anthropology Club: 12 noon, 12 Strong E. Election of Officers
Westminster Center Council; 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1904 Oread
wisdom cité leur journée.
La reunion du Cercle Fouleurs aua
mercreed le 25 Octobre à quatre
heures dans le salie de Forum de l'union. M. Kuhn fera un compte-rendu de l'institut d'étudants de l'universite de Danssan a Paris.
The new KU student handbook publication, announced last week by the ASC publications committee, is awaiting suggestions from students and campus organizations before publication.
Suggestions Wanted For New Handbook
Student and organizations should bring their suggestions to be included in the Student Handbook to the Dean of Students office in Strong Hall as soon as possible.
The handbook will bring together all the small publications, condensing them into one book.
The man who lets himself be bored is even more contemptible than the bore.—Samuel Butler
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University Daily Kansan Monday, October 23, 1961
Page 10
Bloody Hungarian Uprising Began 5 Years Ago Today
VIENNA—(UPI)Five years ago today a protest march by 12,000 students through the streets of Budapest started the bloody and abortive Hungarian uprising against Communist rule.
By evening that day the student demonstration—specifically protesting Red suppression of free speech—had become a citywide demonstration.
AT 7 P.M. TELEPHONE connections with the free world were severed, and an hour later Radio Budapest announced an emergency session of the Communist Central Committee had been called for midnight.
Ernoe Geroe, hated chief of the Hungarian Communist party, addressed a broadcast to the nation in an effort to stem the tide.
"Any attempt to upset the regime," he announced, "will be met with the full strength of the government."
ALL THE NEXT DAY Radio Budapest broadcast appeals to the freedom fighters, as they had termed themselves, to "lay down your arms." The appeal was made at intervals of two to three minutes.
Early next morning came a report from Prague that "in Budapest 30 youths have been killed in demonstrations with the police."
United Press correspondent Kurt Neubauer phoned on the first eye-witness account two days later from Monsonmagyarov. He was witness to the arrest of an AVO (secret police) officer who had given orders to fire on the anti-Communist demonstrators.
The man was later thrown out of his third floor hospital room and trampled to death by a crowd.
FOR 13 DAYS THE hopeless battle raged, until Soviet tanks moved in and broke the back of the resistance.
On Nov. 4, at 6 p.m., Premier Imre Nagy announced that "Soviet troops have attacked the Hungarian capital. The Hungarian troops are in combat."
Eight hours later, Radio Moscow declared that "the forces of reactionary conspiracy in Hungary have been crushed."
Intramural Results
In intramural football play Friday, the Hawks downed the Quickies in the independent A division, 13-6, and Jim Beam won by forfeit over the Red Shirts.
In fraternity B action, Phi Delta Theta #2 whipped Phi Kappa Sigma, 7-6, and Sigma Nu beat Sigma Phi Epsilon on the most yardage in an overtime period.
For Budapest it was over. In the provinces, scattered remnants fought for a few weeks — but cold and hunger and lack of arms were against them.
BEFORE THE IRON Curtain clanged down again on the Austro-Hungarian border more than 180,000 Hungarians — 2 per cent of the country's population — had escaped
into Austrian territory. They carried what they could on their backs — often only their children.
The last brief message received in the United Press Vienna office from the Hungarian news agency operated by the freedom fighters, told the tragedy which had taken place.
"Goodbyv. We don't forget you. The Russians are too near. We shall leave our post, we shall leave our post," the message said. "Goodbyy friends, goodbyy friends, SOS."
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Monday, October 23, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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 University Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST—Lady's trench coat. Size 12 or 14.
Lost at football game, Sec. 38. Has small tear below right pocket. Call Sally Spionable, VI 3-8022. 10-23
LOST BROWN EYEGLASSES some-
more to 11 Flint Halt, Kensan 20-24
turn to 11 Flint Halt, Kensan 20-24
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 563 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward **tf**
FOR SALE
1956 FORD 6. Excellent mechanical compo-
lition V 3-1737 or see BOB 1424 Tenn.
10-27
TYPEWRITER WITH GERMAN CHAR-
ACTERS and accents, used heavy duty
temperable in top condition, gus-
anteed. Lawrence Typewriter, 753
VI-3-3644
10-27
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter, sales, service, rentals, Lance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-1t: 3:44.
1961 WHITE FORD FALCON, Yordor,
r & h, excellent shape, good gas mileage
—$1.550, call Dave Phillips — VI 3-4711.
10-27
5 WEEK OLD portable tape recorder. 7 pounds with accessories. Tape your lectures. Call Buddy Spaeth, VI 3-5460. 10.22
FOLLOW YOUR FOOTBALL team by listening in with a Magnavox transistor to detect high voltage and carbine, only $19.95, 8 transistor, $29.95, Pettick-Dennis, 733 Mass, 10-26
GELDING QUARTERHORSE. Is an all purpose pony. Have used him for pole racing, cutting roundups, Call Bob Schneider at vi 3-6244. Delta Chi. 10-24
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS.
counts for枪 1504 Tenn. VI 3-7001.
counts for枪 1504 Tenn. VI 3-7001.
CONSOLE MAGNAVOX mahogany ster-
e reduced to $139. Slight damage on
cabinet. See at Pettingill-Davis, 723 Mass.
10-26
BICYCLES, TYPEWRITERS, translators.
810 Mass. Stanley Western 10-25
810 Mass. Stanley Western 10-25
THE ONLY registered Seal Point kittens in Lawrence for sale, 10 weeks old, house broken, just the right age to start train at See 221 Moundview Dr. for p.m. 10-25
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent used paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 170350.
'60 THUNDERBIRD hardtop, stick shift,
radio, heater, no power equipment, immaculate condition — phone VI 2-2923.
10-23
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES,
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-5778. tf
NEW $200 Guild Western guitar, 25% off
— Call any evening VI 3-4811. Also
offering German Luger, 8 inch barrel.
George Johnson. 10-24
AS A LIVING TEXTBOOK, as an aid to educators and students. The Christian, the human and the city and students this international daily newspaper is offered at half price 1 yr.__
$25.00 | $22) 9 mos. — $28.56 6 mos.
$5.50 To place your subscription
V 3-4206 10-24
Western Civilization Notes
All new and revised, 100 pages,
mimeographed and bound.
Extremely comprehensive and anal-
ytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901
after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and machines at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18. e. 9th. PHONE VI-6151 today.
For Sale. One year old Madison Field-
dale 15'x30' x25' Steel Floor $55, Pettiggin-Davis. 723 Mass. 10-25
SACRIFICE — Student must sell second condition $159. Call SI V- 4251.
ADVERTISY YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
DADVERTISY OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN.
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tt
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, tt VI 3-4201 or IV 3-4201
STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tt
Car For Sale: '52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-
flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. fm.
BUSINESS SERVICES
OIL FORTRAITS painted. Lasting gift to
him, he had to go up and up. CV1 VI-8207, ask for Robert.
BABYSITTING any time at 221 Mound
Experienced. Save the time for reference.
10-25
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, chairs, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Home and in Pet Center Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
3-3644. tf
Kansan Want Ads Get Results
MILLIKEN'S 'S. O'S.' at now at two
1020 1020 1020 4010
Lawrence Ave. &. 1021% Mass.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. u
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation by Ola Smith. Ola Smith
939% Mull's. Call VI 3-5263.
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-Phone VI 3-2821 — Mobilien self-service — open weeks 8 to 6:30 p.m.
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.
TYPING
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8759.
TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, boss dissertations. Boss rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hail. VI 3-2318.
Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc.
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker,
Cell VI 3-2001. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Lou Pope, PI 3-1997.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable price. Mrs Barlow. 408 W. 13th. WI 1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers.
Experienced in application and application letters. Prompt service neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu-
sional Service. 6917 B Woodson,
Mission, Mission 2-7715 E or Escape
RA 2-2186.
FOR RENT
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter, Reasonable Electric typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
seli, 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI 3-6440.
seli, 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI 3-6440.
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher sets these & reports accurately. Standard rates. See it. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3.
HELP WANTED
EXPERIENCED TYP1ST will do typing
name - call VI 3-8136;Ms. Lo
Gebhach.
COLLEGE BOYS or couples, child wel come — utilities paid, convenient location — Call VI 3-9776 or VI 3-9824 fo appt. 10-2
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard, partly furnished, newly decorated. 439 Elm. Call VI 3-3602. 10-25
ROOM FOR TWO men. Priv. bath and
priv. entr. Only two blocks from Union.
Call VI 2-0685 or inquire at 1240 Ohio
after 6 p.m. 10-25
2 bedroom home. att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
ward. garden. yard. Fence.
$100 monthly. 221 boundview Dr. Phone
VI 3-5882 after 5 for appt.
FOR RENT; 2 bedroom $35' x 10' trailer.
Call VI R-3-5193. 10-23
FOR RENT. DUPLEX apartment; 4 rooms
1369-1384 and 458i. EMI
VI 5-1364 any airtight bedroom. 16-24
2 BEDRGOM, LIVING ROOM, flameplace, air conditioner, wall to wall carpeting, drapes, kitchen with electric disposal, dishwasher, range and refrigerator. Large range areas, garage. SW. edge of room. Grand view. Call VI 3-5871 after 7 p.m. 10-24
Vacancy available for 2 men in consult-
ing room at Rohan Col Rd Ca-
tul V-03-655 for appointment.
Nice 3 Room Apartment. Newly decorated, for couple, will accept small baby, all utilities paid. Private entrance. 1244 Rhode Island. Ph. VI 3-1057. 10-25
Furnished 3-bedroom home in Lawrence
HBrickr 2-9579, Kansas City 10-23
OR 2 GIRLS to help with housework
OR 3 COOKS to cook in cooking and
aunty privileges, cook VI TERMS
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
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University Daily Kansan Monday. October 23, 1961
Repetition Is Emphasis
By Richard Currie
"The Ph.D. is my goal," Robert Bernard, assistant instructor of French says.
How come French?
Bernard is a graduate student from St. Paul, Minnesota, working towards his M.A. in French. But the summit is his desire.
Bernard did his undergraduate work at the University of Minnesota, taking an A.B. in English.
"I had almost as many hours in French as in English and language was an open field at the time," Bernard says. "I saw a chance of capitalizing on the assistantship and took it." Bernard graduated from Minnesota in 1959.
He came to KU in 1959-60. Last year he was in France on a Fulbright traveling grant and taught English in Paris.
Speaking firmly and evenly, Bernard said a foreign language teacher had to study in the country of whose language he taught. "It's indispensable," he said.
He plans to return to France as soon as possible. Finances must first be available.
He sat at a typewriter when he was interviewed and answered the questions forthrightly and with a desire to impart some of himself to the reporter. His voice remained smooth, even when a colleague used his phone to carry on a vociferous conversation in French.
The well-groomed instructor said language students today have a greater chance to do better in their
Dag, South African Given Nobel Prize
OSLO — (UFI) — In two unprecedented moves, Nobel Peace Prizes were awarded today to the late Dag Hammarskjold and to an African native chief who battled South Africa's white supremacy policies.
The Nobel Prize Committee of the Norwegian Parliament named Hammarskjold for the 1961 peace award It was the first time the coveted prize has been given posthumously.
FOR THE PREVOUSLY-VACANT 1960 prize, the committee chose Albert Luthuli, a Zulu chieftain who is president of the African National Congress and chief foe of apartheid (white supremacy) in the Republic of South Africa.
The prize money for Hammarskjold's award is equivalent to $50,-
045, and for Luthul's to $45,190.
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studies because of improved facili ties.
"We use sound rooms, and in many cases native instructors," he said. "The native instructors increase the student's chance of mastering the language."
Bernard says he drills students constantly, both orally and written, to get the material to them.
Weather
"Language is a matter of repetition," he says.
The Lawrence area will be partly cloudy and much colder today. Temperature will not rise much today with the high in 50s. Fair weather predicted tonight with freezing temperatures by morning and lows 28 to 32. Tuesday will be fair, with a high in the 50s.
The Weather Bureau said the predominant weather pattern of last week—fine brisk fall temperatures—will continue this week. There will be some warming about mid-week, and little or no precipitation is expected.
In light of the present controversy, Miss Kurt said, "A complete lack of appropriations for campus activities has hampered the committee and so the committee is being crucified again this year.
ning for the fourth time in the last two years.
"I can see a tremendous potential in NSA at KU. It is the only organization which represents students nationally," she said. "Yet the committee here has been forced to spend its time fighting for its survival."
"Why doesn't the ASC give the committee an opportunity to serve the KU student?" she asked.
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass V1 3-0330
NSA Focus-
(Continued from page 2)
Page-Creighton
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As the West's leader in advanced electronics, Hughes is engaged in some of the most dramatic and critical projects ever envisioned. Challenges for your imagination and development are to be found in such diversified programs as:
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These are among the more than 500 outstanding programs now in progress at Hughes. These programs require the talents of E.E!s and Physicists who desire to work with professional scientists in research, development and manufacture.
In addition, Hughes sponsors advanced degree programs for academic growth. These programs provide for advanced degree study at many leading universities.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS and PHYSICISTS B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. Candidates Members of our staff will conduct CAMPUS INTERVIEWS October 31, 1961
Find out more about the wide range of activities, educational programs, relocation allowances and progressive benefit plans offered by Hughes. For interview appointment or informational literature consult your College Placement Director. Or write: College Placement Office, Hughes, Culver City, California.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
59th Year, No. 28
Tuesday, October 24, 1961
STEVE AND MARY
WHO WILL IT BE?—Elaine Haines, Kansas City, Jane Dunlap, Lawrence, and Lois Ann Ragsdale, Kansas City, are finalists for Senior
Queen. The winner will be announced at the KU-OSU football game Saturday. Seniors voted at the senior coffee last week.
Somebody Goofed?
WASHINGTON — (UPI)
Enough_is_ enough!
Democratic National Committee headquarters sent to the UPI office here last night 44 copies of the same press release.
KU to Observe Picasso's Birth
Tomorrow marks the 80th birthday of a man always considered to be a revealing new artist: Pablo Picasso.
All over the world, people who love Picasso and his work will be celebrating his birthday. Prof. Klaus Berger of the Museum of Art and the art history department has announced a three-part celebration of Picasso's birthday to be called "Picasso Day" at the University.
PROF. BERGER will give a lecture at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Museum of Art lecture room. He will speak on Picasso and his art.
The second part of the birthday celebration will be an exhibition of seven of Picasso's prints. The prints cover the last 20 years in the life of Picasso, and are all original prints by the artist himself.
AT 7:30 and 9 p.m. tomorrow, a film on Picasso will be shown in the museum lecture room. The film, in color, will run about 50 minutes. The public is invited.
(See page three for an interpretive article on Picasso's life)
A Rich One
CICERO, II—(UFI)—Army bomb disposal experts gingerly removed the fuse from a souvenir World War II Japanese motor shell yesterday.
They then cautiously pulled loose a small plate attached to its base—out rolled a quantity of foreign bills and coins.
Weather
Partly cloudy today and tonight,
A few showers likely tonight.
Wednesday fair. Highs today around 70. Lows tonight 35 to 40.
High Wednesdays 65 to 70.
Registrar Explains Class Alterations
The causes for the change to a 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. day next year are:
- Increased student enrollment.
- Increase in faculty (the increase will mean more offices are needed)
- **Fewer** classrooms (classrooms are converted into offices).
James K. Hitt, registrar, said yesterday the University has 138 general purpose classrooms which are used on an average of 35 hours a week.
Several faculty members have disagreed with the change because of increased work load on them and their wives, elimination of research time and the canceling of committee meetings usually held during the noon hour which will have to be held at other times. (See UDK Oct. 20 for faculty reaction.)
- Finding a classroom in which to conduct the class.
"This fall we had to turn to the noon hour and to classes at 4 and 5 p.m..." he said.
"CLASSES scheduled for 8-9-10- 11 a.m. and 1-2-3 p.m. are at the saturation point," Mr. Hitt said. "There are some openings, but not many."
The national average for classroom use is only 25 hours per week. Each classroom has a potential of 49 hours use, including noon classes, he said, but that leaves no time for building and grounds to sweep the rooms out.
There are 690 hours of potential classroom use for noon and the University is presently using a third or 226 hours of the total.
KU has scheduled 226 hours of classes at the noon hour and 53 hours after 5 p.m. this semester because of the classroom shortage.
Mr. Hitt said three things must be considered when scheduling classes:
MR. HITT SAID three alternative solutions were considered. First,
- Finding a faculty member to teach.
- Finding students to attend.
more students could be assigned to a class. But faculty members say they get better results with smaller classes, he added.
Second, combining some of the two and three hour courses into five hour courses and changing some of the three hour courses into two hour courses to better utilize Tuesday- Thursday class times. This idea was not popular with the faculty, he said.
Mr. Hitt said the classes that have been scheduled at odd times and places were not designed to solve the classroom problem.
Third, change the class schedule as proposed.
He was referring to the scheduling of some English classes in the scholarship halls late in the afternoon.
Soviet Explosion Upsets World
By United Press International
Most of the world today condemned in strongest terms the Soviet Union's detonation of history's biggest nuclear explosion yesterday.
India's Prime Minister Jawahar Nehru condemned it as a "horrible thing."
Australian Prime Minister Robert G. Menzies said the blast was "clearly designed to terrorize the people of the non-Communist world . . . whether it was done in a fashion which might injure the health of many thousands of people was apparently of no consequence."
In Tokyo, Japan's three major parties—the governing Liberal Democrats and two opposition Socialist factions—agreed on a joint resolution for submission to parliament expressing "deep regret" over Russia's nuclear testing.
The major Japanese newspaper Asahi said in Tokyo it was a "crime against mankind."
PARIS JOUR demanded that Russia "stop this diabolical game that risks the destruction of the planet."
The Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter said the big blast may produce "fatalism and an indignation that will make the world immune to further nuclear blackmail."
The premiers of Sweden and Denmark deplored the explosion, and the Norwegian parliament adopted a strong protest resolution.
The London Daily Telegraph accused Khrushchev of using "plain, crude terror" against "the world at large." Copenhagen's Berlingske Tidende predicted, however, the "big bomb certainly will not reduce aversion to aggressive Soviet policy."
BRITISH DEFENSE Minister Harold Watkinson told parliament the government is making arrangements to give babies less than a year old "alternative forms of milk" if Soviet fallout should contaminate the regular milk supply.
"It is not expected that the (fallout) level will be such that older children or adults would be endangered." Watkinson said.
Philosopher Lord Bertrand Russell delivered a personal protest to the Soviet Embassy in London, but left early in disgust over the same "old rigmarole and propaganda" he got in return from Soviet officials.
The latest major Soviet explosion probably was in the 30-megaton class exploded just below the tropopause—the area where the main portion of the earth's atmosphere ends and the stratosphere begins. It is about six miles above the earth in the Polar region where the Soviet test was conducted on the Arctic island of Novaya Zemlya.
LAST NIGHT, more than 12 hours after the Russians set off the biggest explosion ever engineered by man, eight nations failed in efforts to persuade the U.N. General Assembly's political Commit-
(Continued on page 8)
'Twist Again'
Hip Movements Take Over
THE WOMEN SPEAK:
"As long as a person doesn't have an ulterior motive, I guess it's all right."
"The idea is, you turn your top opposite from your bottom."
"Well, you stand on your feet,
and then..."
"I like everything about it... it's cool."
"I think it's obnoxious!"
"Sometimes it's OK, then again sometimes it isn't."
AND THEN THE MEN tako
AND THEN THE MEN take over:
"I think it's quite inviting...if you like that sort of thing."
"I haven't seen enough of it to know."
"If everyone else wasn't doing it,
I wouldn't be doing it."
"Ennhh...who needs it, anyway?"
"It really takes a whole lot of intelligence and coordination."
They called it the Charleston in 1924, the Tango in 1936, the Jitterbug in 1944, the Dirty Bop in 1956.
and the TWIST in 1961. It all involveships and a lot of music with a beat.
A working definition of the new national dance craze is: "It's just like a shimmy, only you twist your hips, instead of your shoulders.
KU is not to be left out of the craze. The Twist arrived on campus with the returning students in September. Since that time small and large groups have gathered to practice in private so they could perform in public. Some hipsters now twist to class instead of walking. Twist lessons are being taught at the Kansas Union.
THE ORIGIN of the Twist is buried deep in the cultural heritage of America. The slow, rhythmic dances of the Negro slave were blended with the hip-swinging motions of the hula dancer. The smashing gyrations of a stripper in New Orleans met up with the vibrant swishing of skirts in a Can-Can.
twist, kiddies? A loud record player, a partner, and a lotta haunch action. Then you too, can make a hip of yourself in public.
Happy
"I thought this part up myself."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 24.1961
Red China and War
The Communist Party Congress dissention in Moscow has revived the speculation on the ideological differences between Russia and Red China. The basic thing that the Red Chinese and the Russians disagree on is whether or not war is still a legitimate part of Communist policy. Russia maintains that it is not, that the Communist bloc can win its struggle without war. Red China insists that war is still a valid means of furthering the Communist cause.
The point has been made frequently that Russia does not want a war because it would mean the destruction of her industrial centers, which are concentrated west of the Ural mountains. The Red Chinese, however, have no such concentrated industrial complexes to lose in a war.
The result is that we know what Russia has done about its basic policy on war; it has developed the doctrine of co-existence. But what about Red China? What has it done to advance its doctrine that the use of war is still valid?
ABOUT A YEAR AGO THE OFFICIAL magazine of the Chinese Communist Party carried an article saying flatly that the sooner World War III came, the better it would be for the Communist cause. To this end tensions should be increased, not decreased. Red China has been working hard to realize that goal.
Within a few years, perhaps next year according to Western experts, Red China will explode its first nuclear device. Red Chinese leaders can be expected to continue the development of nuclear arms until they have a huge stockpile, just as the Soviet Union and the United States have done. If they hold to their present position, they will then start World War III.
THE RED CHINESE LEADERS HAVE ALSO been working hard on survival units for a nuclear war. They are called communes. They may
serve other purposes, but basically they are survival units. Each is a self-governing unit with its own small scale manufacturing, schools, medical facilities and the other personnel and equipment needed to be self-sustaining. Plans have also been made for 156 widely separated industrial centers, each of which would serve a number of communes.
At present Peking is having great difficulties with its communes. They have had to take a step backward toward the collective farm system. There have been crop failures this year (and for several years) and there is a strong possibility of famine this winter. Red China has also been suffering from a population explosion that is increasing its food problem (the population is nearly 700 million). Peking once experimented with birth control but dropped the project because of its effect on public morale and on the grounds that it would be admitting a weakness in the Communist system if they had to limit the population in order to produce enough for it.
THESE ARE SERIOUS PROBLEMS BUT there is no guarantee they will break the grip of China's Red rulers. The Soviet Union experienced famine and great internal strife during the years that Lenin and Stalin were consolidating Communist control in that country, but the Communists emerged triumphant.
The prospects for peace in the future as Red China continues to develop do not seem good. The big trouble is still a few years away and it does not press on the nation's consciousness, but it is taking shape fast. The situation is a dangerous one and at present the only things that might change it are a cooling of Red Chinese fanaticism or possibly the Soviet Union's efforts at restraining the Peking regime.
William H. Mullins
The Theater Scene
Arms and the Man - Two Views
By Mark Dull
"ARMS AND THE MAN," by George Bernard Shaw, produced by the Cleveland Playhouse as the guests of the University of Kansas Concert course. A play in three acts.
It was a bad night for heroes and noblesse oblige took a back seat to an undutiful Chocolate Cream Soldier in last night's production of "ARMS AND THE MAN" which was belted out to an appreciative one-half capacity crowd at Hoch Auditorium last night.
The action takes place in a small town in Bulgaria in 1885-86. Raina Petkoff is just retiring when her mother sweeps into the room and informs her that her betrothed, Sergius Sarnoff, in the Bulgarian army, has led a heroic cavalry charge against the Serbians, some of whom may be straggling through the town.
CAPTAIN BLUNTSCHILI. A Swiss mercenary in the Serbian army, climbs up the drainpipe into Raina's bedroom and threatens her life if she discloses his presence to the searching Bulgarians. She takes a fancy to the straight-forward Swiss who stuffs his mouth with cholocate creams while destroying her romantic notions about the battle. He vows that the cavalry charge, a strategic flasco, succeeded only because the Serbians had been supplied with the wrong cartridges. He finally escapes, wearing Major Petkoff's old coat. The good Major, in addition to being master of the house, is also the commander of the Bulgarian army.
Peace returns to Bulgaria and so do Petkoff and Sergius. They recapitulate for their lovelies a tale of two Bulgarian women who hide a Serbian from the authorities and even send him off in the master's coat. Captain Bluntschilli calls to return the coat and Petkoff believes he has come to see him.
Sergius soon gets involved with the impudent maid, Leuka, whom he finds less tedious than her pretentious mistress. Things get complicated when Louka tells Sergius that the story that has been circulating about the Serbian who was protected by the Bulgarian women actually took place in Raima's room and Raina spies Sergius in a compromising situation with the saucy Louka.
BLUNTSCHILI REVEALS the sham Sergius and the Major as amateur soldiers who can't even get their troops back home for all their own heroes, even as he is exposed as the soldier in Raina's boudour. However, our unsung hero reverses his field and emerges the victor, capturing the hand of the new and unaffected Raina.
Shaw wrote this witty satire in 1894, in an apparent attempt to acquaint audiences with his version of the small-caliber hero Shaw's play has survived with a deliverance of line and humorous dialogue that smacks as much of the modern play today as it must have five or six decades ago.
MICHAEL McGUIRE, WITH his convincing portrayal of Bluntschii (The Man), rendered a polished performance. His easy manner and resonant voice gave the natural personality to Bluntschii that contrasted so well with the other main characters in the play.
By Richard Byrum
Sally Noble, as Raina, delivered her lines with practice and case for the most part. There were several instances when hers and the lines of some of the characters were lost to the back of the stage.
The cast was highly competent although they seem to have lost some of their freshness and vitality along the road. The role of Petkoff, handled quite well by Richard Oberlin, was brought to this area some years back by the imittable Billy Gilbert in the popular light opera, "The Chocolate Soldier" by Oscar Strauss, adapted from "ARMS AND THE MAN."
Yesterday evening a sizable crowd enjoyed a performance of "Arms and the Man"—a comedy in three acts by George Bernard Shaw. The play was staged in
Hoch Auditorium by members of the Cleveland Playhouse, who are currently touring the country.
The name of George Bernard Shaw immediately brings a sense of awe and respect to the mind of a critic of drama or music.
Many of his most productive years were spent as a critic in the service of not only the theater and concert hall, but of politics, social structure, romance, medicine, and many other institutes as well.
"Arms and the Man" is a light comedy which finds its primary success in the mirroring of ideas and concepts typical of Shaw. The action centers around the daughter of a well-to-do officer in the Bulgarian Army. She is a young thing, well cognizant of her higher station in life, and desirous, as are most women, that all should be slave to her caprice. She is overflowing with story book ideas and affected mannerisms which she radiates in delightful school-girl fashion. Thoughts on romance, militarism, snobism, politics and the like are tossed about between her, the servants, members of the family and lovers, until they find adequate expression for Shaw's purposes.
The part of the daughter was excellently portrayed by Sally Noble. She was completely at ease in the role and lended remarkable personality to the evening. The Man was played by Michael McGuire whose comic interpretation proved interesting and on the whole successful.
THE ROLE OF SARANOFF, played by Alan Lindgren, was not acted with the pomp that it could have been. Before he entered he was alluded to as "like an operatic tenor," which Mr. Lindgren did not quite carry through while on stage.
The other roles were well portrayed and indeed each showed laudable sensitivity to his character and to the overall spirit of Shaw.
The scenery was very well executed and should stand as an example of what can be done on a limited budget when good taste is employed throughout.
LIBERALISM
NSA OR NOT?
CONSERVATISM
CAMPUS ELECTION
VOL. DECISION.
INDIVIDUALISM.
KU STUDENT
Sound and Fury
Thank God. At last I've been given the opportunity to express my reasons for getting out of the National Student Association. Really it's quite humorous when I see so many innocent people taken in by the argument that NSA costs too much for the benefits received here at KU.
Angry Voice on NSA
We who are dedicated to the destruction of NSA know that to get a point across to students it must affect them personally. Money is one way to accomplish this, but there are other more effective ways.
FOR EXAMPLE, IF WE WANT TO MAKE THE FRATERNIES and sororites hostile to NSA we tell them that the organization will soon launch a program to integrate their Greek system. It isn't true of course, but what difference does it make as long as the hostility grows, heh, heh.
Another way to alienate students is to spread rumors that the national organization is infested with Communists. Now if we were in an all-out campaign here, we would probably say that a John Bircher found 31, yes sir, 31 card carrying Communists among the delegates at the last NSA national congress. Yeap, it's quite likely that these 31 commies would walk right up to our Bircher friend and show him their Communist Party cards.
OF COURSE SPREADING RUMORS LIKE THESE TAKES a lot of work. We would certainly be thankful for a little league Birch group that could help us fight off the liberal infested—no I guess it's communist infested—NSA.
Really, though, we wouldn't have to do all the work in destroying NSA. Some of the national officers would help us along.
Dick Rettig, past president of NSA, would probably speak at the AWS national conference and say something to make the girls mad. And if the question of NSA affiliation came up these girls would undoubtedly look at the question objectively, sic.
How we would approach the problem of destroying NSA should be clear now. But perhaps you still don't know why we want to get rid of the organization.
It's really quite simple.
That silly hot-bed of liberalism is getting under our skin—what with support of sit-ins, and freedom riders, and that left-wing Peace Corps.
WHAT'S MORE. IF THEY CONTINUE TO HAVE THESE friendly relations with foreign students, it could affect the isolationism that we all want. Right?
Naturally we realize that there are two opposing international student organizations, one Communist controlled and the other NSA controlled. But the problem here is that we can't allow these wide-eyed liberals to mislead our foreign friends. We all know that the majority of American students are conservative. A recent L&M poll of 100 colleges proved this fact. Yet these NSAers go right ahead and tell the liberal student groups in other countries that American students agree with their political beliefs and want to be friends.
Even if NSA's friendliness keeps foreign students from Communist organizations it isn't right, is it?
Well, I'm sure you agree that this NSA group, with its terrible liberal policy, has got to go. We've got to be practical and fight this Communist menace with the only effective weapon we have, silence and isolationism.
Ba
-A.C.M.
Backstage Is Quiet
Page 3
Cleveland Players on Move
"Should I call 15?," the woman dressed as a maid called to the stage manager.
"Not yet, we're going to have to wait awhile," he replied. "It's pretty thin out there."
The woman peeked around the curtain to look out at the auditorium and nodded in agreement. She walked back to the dressing room.
On backstage Hoch Auditorium, the Cleveland Playhouse prepared itself to present George Bernard Shaw's "Arms and the Man."
Richard Harrison, an assistant manager, checked his lighting board with a paperback copy of the play. He marked places where various sequences would take place.
Susan Sadler, who played Louka,
asked him where everyone was.
Across the stage, Harrison said Miss Sadler walked across the stage and came back two minutes later.
"Across the stage," Harrison said.
"I should have brought my roller skates," she panted.
"This is one of the largest places we've played in," Harrison said.
The Playhouse left Cleveland on Oct. 1 to tour in the middle and far west. They move to Nebraska City, Neb., next, on to Missouri, then South Dakota and Iowa, returning to Cleveland Dec. 9.
"It's not bad," Harrison said of the jumping around the group does. "We've had good weather and you get into a pattern unloading and loading the scenery."
The Playhouse has a large amount of equipment to carry. They have three plays in repertory calling for varied settings. Besides "Arms and the Man," the troupe performs Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" and Sean O'Casey's "Pictures in the Hall." The plays are performed on alternate nights.
Board for Law Review Named
Jo Ann Finnell, who played Catherine, strolled by in a costume nightgown. The door opened and one of the actors brought a collie in.
The Board of Governors of the Kansas Law Review, one of the highest honors for University of Kansas law students, will be made up of nine KU third-year law students for the 1961-62 year.
The board is responsible for assigning, editing, and grading articles for the Kansas Law Review, a quarterly publication assembled by law students. The Review serves as the honor roll for the Law School and has 25 members or "writers" in addition to the board.
The members of the Board of Governors are:
Editor-in-Chief, C. Jepson Garland, Wellington; Sections Editor, Arlyn D. Haxton, Marysville; Associate Editors, Joel Sterrett, Topeka and James Lowe, Winfield; Note Editors, George Maier, Chicago, Ill. Donald H. Loudon. Kansas City, Kans., John E. (Jed) Hurley, Wichita, James Rose, Topeka, and D. Allen Frame, Wichita.
Garland and Hurley were members of the board last year.
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tuesday, October 24, 1961 University Daily Kansan
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Assistant Editors ... Merryfield,
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BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
"He's the campus dog," she exclaimed. "Everybody knows him." She walked him off across the stage showing him off to the rest of the troupe.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown ... Business Manager
It was close to curtain time. Harrison started the background music and finished dressing himself as the officer. Orison Bedell, the other assistant manager, called up to the control man to shut off the stage lights.
The bedroom scene progressed with Raina and her mother. When they came off the stage they lit cigarettes and talked about the acousties which had, apparently, thrown them for a bit.
At the end of the first act the cast pitched in to help set up the garden scene. Miss Sadler picked up a clothes basket and hung clothes on the line. Harrison and Bedell stapled the carpet together for a new arrangement of scenery.
Then he ordered:
"House lights out, please," and pulled the curtain up.
During the second act one of the understudies took out some contemporary cards and wrote them off to friends.
Michael McGuire, who played Captain Bluntschi, paced up and down the floor nearby, drawing quickly on his cigarette. Miss Finnell placed her hands behind her back and leaned on the bed which had been carried off.
"What's it like?," an actor asked two men sitting in the audience judging sound.
Miss Finnell peered intently at her nails, trimming them when she was off the set. McGuire continued to pace, lifting his legs straight up and out on the floor. His cigarette blazed.
After the second act Harrison and Bedell began to pack up. But as the act progressed, Bedell fell asleep on a table and Harrison read a book.
"It's coming out fine." they said.
Near the play's end, Harrison relaxed in a chair and listened to the lines. He laughed at Captain Bluntchili's method of proposing to Raina.
Campus Enrollment Passes 10,000 Mark
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 4,474; Graduate school, 1,880; Engineering and Architecture, 1,366;
The play ended with Blunttschili's exit. Harrison picked up his hammer and headed for the set. Nebraska was calling.
Aldon Bell, instructor of history, will speak on "Religion and Radicalism" at the Humanities Forum tonight at 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Mr. Bell's talk will deal with aspects of the radical movement among non-conformist Englishmen in the 19th century.
For the first time in the University's history, campus enrollment has passed the 10,000 mark, it was reported today by James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions.
Enrollment increased 734 this fall totaling 10.059. The University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City adds 732 students for a total of 10.571 this year.
Radicalism Is Forum Topic
The new student total of 3,592 includes 2,119 freshmen.
Hitt noted that "we're just filling the pipeline now and the University will have large enrollment increases the next two years even without any change in the number of new students."
THIS YEAR THERE ARE actually 94 fewer juniors and seniors than in 1950 with most of the changes in the senior class, Hitt explained, while the freshman-sophomore total of 4.-424 is up nearly 600.
"This year and next we'll be graduating small classes compared to the size of the large incoming classes." Hitt said. "When the pipeline is filled in 1964, those born in the first post-war year of 1946 will reach college age and new student totals may suddenly dwarf anything yet experienced."
The number of women at the University continues to rise more sharply than the men's gain. Of the 734 gain on the Lawrence campus, the women produced 434.
UNIVERSITY enrollment by schools is:
By classes, the Lawrence student body is: freshman, 2,621; sophomore, 1,803; junior, 1,624; senior, 1,787; post-graduate, 2,084; and special students, 140.
Education, 1.000; Medicine, 801; Fine Arts, 639; Business, 369; Law, 135;
Pharmacy, 86; and Journalism, 82.
Significant gains were registered in the College, up 686; Graduate School, up 208; and Education, up 123.
U.N. Celebrates 16th Anniversary
The concert is a highlight of a nationwide series of special events observing the 16th anniversary of the official establishment of the United Nations. Many communities are holding events throughout the week.
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI)
-Delegates celebrate United Nations Day today with an anniversary concert in the general assembly hall.
Sir Ernest Macmillan will conduct the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation symphony orchestra in the concert beginning at 3 p.m. Assembly President Mongi Slim of Tunisia will address the audience on the occasion.
This is the eighth U.N. Day to be celebrated by a concert here. Most English-speaking U.N. delegates of the 101 missions have been asked to make speeches at various places during the week.
Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson was the speaker at a public meeting in San Francisco, where the U.N. charter was framed in 1945. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, chairman of the board of the American Association for the United Nations, planned to interrupt a heavy speaking schedule to attend the concert here.
U. N. day and week were originated by the AAUN in 1946.The AAUN is the major U.S.membership organization designed to build U.S.citizen support for the world organization.
As part of the observance here, the International League for the Rights of Man sent to the permanent representatives of the 101 missions its annual report on a balance sheet for the forward and backward steps for human rights.
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PICASSO PRINTS—Prof. Klaus Berger displays one of the seven Picasso prints in an exhibition for "Picasso Day" at the University,
- Expert Service
Picasso Art Expresses Modern Look in Man
O ROS
He commenced the long struggle not to express what he could see but not to express the things he did not see, that is to say the things everybody is certain of seeing but which they do not really see.
This is a quotation from Gertrude Stein, an American writer in Paris who knew Picasso before anybody else did. That was at the beginning of this century. Ever since, the Spanish born painter has been at the head of artists who discovered the 20th century look in man, nature and events. Picasso changes his style every so often, he is always fresh and new, and always the same Picasso, Blue, pink, and Harlequin periods, Cubism and Surrealism are among the main directions of his art. At the age of eighty he surprises his admirers still by his continued productivity.
Picasso's paintings, prints, drawings and sculptures are now in public and private collections all over the world, from Sweden to Japan, from Russia to Argentina. American museums own many of his major works. Most everyone has seen a Picasso although almost nobody has seen Picasso.
The man who has changed modern vision more than anybody else defends his privacy in a retreat near the French Riviera. As a radical leftist he is not admitted to this country, cannot see his own works here and yet one of his pictures was ridiculed this summer by Khrushchev himself; he is indeed out of the party line. Modern man has to face many a paradoxical situation, Picasso as much as anybody.
A classic already at 50, he could see the illustrated catalogue of his complete works growing from volume to volume: twelve folios so far to cover the first quarter of the century. Moreover, 500 hitherto unrecorded pictures from the
early period in the artist's own collection are said to be shown tomorrow for the first time; Picasso's Picassos are his birthday surprise to his friends.
At many places the event will be celebrated. KU's Museum of Art is showing a selection of the master's prints. Tomorrow night at 7:30 and at 9:30 the much praised Picasso film will be presented there, and at 4 p.m. Klaus Berger, Professor of Art History, will give an illustrated lecture on Picasso and Tradition. Prof. Berger tells us that he has actually seen Picasso in the flesh vouching for the fact that he is neither a legendary figure nor an invention of art dealers.
One great reason why clergymen's households are generally unhappy is because the clergyman is so much at home and close about the house. —Samuel Butler
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 24, 1961
Kansas Legislature Needs Reapportionment, Titus Says
There is no doubt that the people of Kansas are not equally represented in the Kansas legislature, James E. Titus, assistant professor of political science, says.
Prof. Titus was commenting on a story in the Oct. 10 Kansas which said that four Kansas editors had filed a brief asking the U.S. Supreme Court to declare the apportionment of the Kansas legislature unconstitutional.
The case is similar to one now pending before the Supreme Court which tests the apportionment of the Tennessee legislature.
THE MINOR CHANGES made in 1059 show only 28 of the 125 districts have the equal representation as required. Twenty-nine districts are under-represented with 15 of these "seriously under-represented." Fifty-seven districts are "seriously over-represented," most of which are in the sparsely populated western sections of the state.
Prof. Titus and James W. Drury, associate professor of political science, wrote a pamphlet for the Governmental Research Center at KU on "Legislative Apportionment in Kansas: 1960."
The Kansas Senate has a maximum of 40 seats, four of which are under-represented. Of the remaining 36 seats, 25 are over-represented.
Prof. Titus said that according to the Kansas constitution the men responsible for the apportionment
Seaman-Scientist Is Lecture Subject
A renowned scientist who made his name on the high seas will be the subject of the University Library's ninth annual public lecture on books and bibliography Friday.
Joseph S. Shirman, librarian of the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, Mo., will speak on "William Dampier, Seaman-Scientist" in Bailey Auditorium at 4 p.m.
Dampier, a 17th century sea captain, sailed around the world three times but is remembered for his writings and observations on these trips. He published four journals of his voyages between 1697 and 1703, noteworthy for brilliant descriptions of areas he visited.
A skillful observer, his accounts are recognized for their scientific worth as well as literary value. His singular work, however, was a treatise on meterology, "A Discourse on the Winds," published in 1701 and considered to be a masterpiece of pre-scientific reporting.
Charlotte Albeck Joins Library Staff
Charlotte Albeck, of the Royal Library in Copenhagen, Denmark, has joined the KU Library staff as reference librarian.
She received a general certificate in modern languages at Ooregaard Gymnasium, Denmark, and had professional library training before joining the Royal Library staff in 1955.
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
of the Kansas legislature are members of the legislature themselves.
Thus the pamphlet says the members of the legislature are responsible for the unequal apportionment.
HE ADDED THAT he doubts if there is any legal basis for the Supreme Court to hand down a decision in the Tennessee case which would affect the Kansas case.
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Kansas Constitution calls for reaportionment every five years according to the annual agricultural census. Such reaportionments have not been made.
The House of Representatives has a maximum of 125 seats with each county receiving one seat. The other 20 are called "floating" seats which are assigned to the more populous counties.
"The basic proposal in the brief filed by the editors is probably the same, but each case is a little different. It is doubtful that any decision of the Court will force the Kansas legislature to reapportion in 1962 or '63," he said.
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The pamphlet says, "Thus despite the intent of the framers of the constitution to have frequent reapportionments it must be concluded that the representation" in the legislature "gives only limited consideration to the principle of democratic equality."
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Five students of the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts will be presented in an Honor Recital at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Hall.
Student Musicians In Honor Recital
The students were selected by vote of the faculty as a recognition of their superior performances in a series of informal recitals last spring.
The students appearing on the program are: Jo Archer, pianist
Ottawa sophomore; Beatrice Gordon, violinist, Wichita junior; Carol Moore, violinist, Independence, Mo., junior; Martha Shirley, soprano, and Fred Wiemer, pianist, Drumright, Okla., senior.
When you fall into a man's conversation, the first thing you should consider is, whether he has a greater inclination to hear you, or that you should hear him.-Sir Richard Steele
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Page 5
KUW
Around the BIG8
Colorado beat the Jayhawkers with a concentrated passing attack in the final 13 minutes of play and Saturday Kansas faces what could be at least as devastating an aerial game when the Oklahoma State Cowboys come here.
The OSU passers, quarterbacks Mike Miller and Bill Leming, have totaled 348 yards between them. This is all but nine of the 'Fokes team total yards gained in the air, which is second in the conference.
BUT, WHAT IS MORE impressive about the throwing of Coach Cliff Speegle's squad is that it has more completions (37) out of more attempts (81) for the best percentage (457) in the league.
In comparison to these impressive figures, the Jayhawker passing has netted only 247 yards for last place in the Big Eight. The Hawks, with John Hadl being the principle passer, have completed 19 of 48 for a .396 percentage.
On an individual basis, Hadl leads both the Cowboy passers, being third in the league behind leader Gale Weidner of Colorado and Dave Hoppmann of Iowa State. Miller is three lengths back at sixth and Leming is only two yards behind him.
ON THE RECEIVING END, Don Brewington ranks among the best in
CAMERON
Benny Boydston
the league for OSU. The 5-10, 175 pound junior halfback has snared seven throws for 104 yards to rank fourth behind Larry Montre of Iowa State, Ken Blair and Jerry Hillebrand of Colorado, and Andy Russell of Missouri.
The top receiver for the Jayhawk-ers, according to yardage, is senior flankman Benny Boydston who has gathered in two Hadl passes for 92 yards which places him seventh.
Although Kansas is the top rushing team in the league, it will not have a decisive advantage over the Pokes. KU has rolled to 1,199 yards overland while the Cowboys are a close third with 1,185. Nebraska, next week's opponent, is second with 1,192 yards.
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Sebastian's Queen Clue: the Queen's name contains the word "Lane"
25
Dave Hannah
FOUR OF THE CONFERENCE'S top 10 runners will perform as the two teams clash for the 20th time with the Jays holding a 14-5 series margin.
The top ball carrier will be OSU's Jim Dillard who has legged for 364 yards on 60 carries ranking third in the conference.
The league leader is Hoppmann who has 446 yards while Nebraska's Bill Thornton is second with 398 yards.
McClinton is fourth with 269 yards; Coleman is the leading sophomore runner with a seventh place 207 yard total and Hadi ranks ninth with 170 yards to his credit.
KU WILL PROVIDE the other three outstanding rushers in Curtis McClinton, Ken Coleman, and Hadl.
OU Has Injuries; O-State Healthy
Oklahoma's Sooners, off to the worst start in Bud Wilkinson's career as head coach, are badly crippled for this week's game with undefeated and untied Colorado.
By United Press International
The Sooners, who have dropped their first four games this season and were held to a meager 98 yards rushing and passing last week by Kansas, have halfbacks Mel Sandersfield and Jimmy Carpenter on the sidelines, along with guards Jimmy Gilstrap and Claude Hammon and tackle Tom Cox.
Oklahoma State Coach Cliff Speegle supervised a light workout as the Cowboys prepared yesterday for their game with Kansas. Heavy drills are on tap the rest of the week.
Oklahoma State came out of last week's 14-6 win over Nebraska with only a few minor bruises and should be in its best physical condition of the year this weekend.
Delts, Betas Post Victories
The stage was set last night for the fraternity A, division I intramural football championship game Nov. 2 as Delta Tau Delta and Beta Theta Pi both posted easy victories.
The Delts, who have been beaten once, eased past Phi Kappa Psi, 13-0 while the Betas, unbeaten in five seasons of intramural play, pounded Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 27-0.
A WIN FOR THE DELTS next week will give them a tie for the division title while a loss could result in a three way deadlock for the second rung.
Scoring for the Delts were Steve Lunsford and Dave Culp.
THE TOUCHDOWNS for the powerful Betas were by Les Nesmith, who raced for two tallies, Rick Phillips, and Jack Spotts.
In another fraternity A contest, Kappa Sigma rolled over last place Delta Chi, 31-0.
In other intramural play, in the fraternity B division, the Beta team walloped Pi Kappa Alpha, 45-0, and Triangle beat Theta Chi, 18-6.
Irwin Hildenhagen, Wichita inside left, scored all three goals to lead his team to a 3-0 win over the KU soccer team here Sunday.
KU Soccer Team Loses
GLASS
AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
Tuesday, October 24, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Folk Music on Records
Joan Baez Joan Baez Vol.2
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644
NCAA Wants Change In US Amateur Sports
NEW YORK—(UPI)—The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) today boldly went ahead with its plan for re-organization of amateur sports in the United States despite opposition from the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU).
The NCAA's policy - directing council yesterday approved and endorsed special and executive committee reports that call for a drastic change in the control of amateur sports by setting up associations from high schools, the NCAA, the AAU, Armed Forces, open competition and at-large groups.
"THE AAU HAS BEEN arbitrary and autocratic in many instances," said Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA, at the opening of the council's three-day meeting.
"We feel there is an acute need for new controlling organizations which will be more truly representative and which will operate along more democratic lines," Byers added.
He emphasized, however, that the NCAA's plan was in no way an effort "to take over or control" amateur sports in the United States.
THE NCAA PLAN WOULD affect both national and international athletics. The AAU has long served as the United States' governing body on major Olympic sports and
other amateur sports on international levels.
The NCAA voted in April 1960, not to respect AAU eligibility rulings and other sanctions applying to college sports. Since then the NCAA and AAU have met four times without any "appreciable" progress.
Byers said the plan "is a determined effort to gain equitable representation for a number of organizations deserving representation."
IF THE NCAA's PLAN gains approval, the AAU conceivably could lose control of its power over most amateur sports, notably basketball. The NCAA already has endorsed the U.S. Basketball Federation to replace the AAU as the U.S. representative in the International Amateur Basketball Federation.
In Columbus, Ohio, Nick Barackk, president of the AAU, denied that the AAU in any way wished to control any collegiate competition.
"The NCAA is attempting to enter other than the college field," he said. "Whether or not they rightfully belong there is a question. We feel there are two spheres of influence — one belonging to the scholastic and one that does not."
Misspending a man's time is kind of a self-homicide.—George Savile, Marquis of Halifax
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*Make your airline reservations now and pay for and pick up your tickets later, just before you go
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. October 24.190
KU-Y Initiates Program Of Teenage Guidance
Are you interested in working with youngsters who need help with their personalities and problems? The adolescent guidance program of the KU-Y gives you this opportunity.
This program will be presented tonight at 8:30 in the Kansas Union, when Larry Hatfield and Terry Gilbert. Lawrence juniors, co-chairmen of the adolescent guidance program explain the program.
The adolescent guidance program, newest program of the KU-Y, had its start last spring. The program developed many of its ideas from a similar program now in operation at Berkeley, Calif.
Hatfield said the objectives and purpose of the program are to establish a one-to-one relationship with a college student and a predelinquent youngster.
THE PROGRAM has been established with three main objectives:
- To be helpful in some way to young boys and girls in need of a guiding factor which will better equip them to become an integral part of harmonious society.
- To be especially interested in pre-delinquent, anti-social youngsters whose attitudes towards themselves and others are incompatible with well-adjusted living.
The project will provide an inservice training opportunity to University of Kansas students preparing for professional careers connected with teaching, coaching, criminology, police work, probation and social welfare.
With these objectives in mind, Hatfield said the program would be carried out as follows:
THE YOUNGSTER will be provided with a close friend (big brother or sister) in whom the youngster may confide and with whom he can identify. He said this approach is aimed at the assumption by the "little brother or sister" that values, ideals, methods of problem solving, and behavior patterns are similar to those observed by "big brother or sister."
In comparison with the Berkeley Big Brother Project the KU-Y program will not deal with youngsters who are already delinquents but with those who have a personality that may lead to delinquency. The Berkeley program has met with a great amount of success. Only 7.7 per cent of the youngsters in the program were committed to the Juvenile Court while in such a project. This leaves the assumption that 92.3 per cent made a more or less satisfactory adjustment.
Persons interested in the project and those already working on the project must expect to meet the following:
- The student must spend an average of five hours a week with his youngster.
- He must not get an inflated idea of his position by trying to take the place of the youngster's parents, church or school.
- ● THE "BIG BROTHER or sister" must offer the youngster companionship and show an interest in him.
- He must think carefully as to whether he can sustain a relationship for a length of time.
- The student must be able to work with the youngster for at least one and preferably more than one academic year.
The youngsters who will receive big brothers and big sisters are selected by the Lawrence school system, which has cooperated fully with the project.
Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
must submit an application to the KU-Y which inquires as to their interest in the program and why they wish to enter such a program.
TRAINING FOR the "big brothers and sisters" will consist of training sessions set up by the KU-Y, which will brief them on techniques and suggestions. The students working on the program will have full run of their youngsters and the program they set up for him.
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Anyone interested in working with these problem youngsters may inquire further at the KU-Y office and attend the informational meeting this evening in the Kansas Union.
Seven to Attend Conference in Iowa
Seven KU faculty members will attend the annual Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs at Grinnell College. Iowa, Friday and Saturday.
O. P. Backus, professor of history and chairman of the Soviet-Slavic Area Program, will be chairman of a session dealing with Russia. Edgar B. Wickberg, assistant professor of history, will present a paper entitled "China and the Philippine Island Chinese, 1880-1898" at another session.
Others who will attend the conference are George M. Beckmann, professor of history; T. R. Smith, professor of geography; Leon Zolbrod, instructor of Oriental languages; Klaus Pringsheim, instructor in political science, and Felix Moox, instructor in anthropology. All are members of the East Asian Studies committee.
All experience is an arch, to build upon. Henry Brooks Adams
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Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St.
TODAY
German Department Film, "Wozk." (Correction: Tuesday, Oct. 24 instead of December, Oct. 23). 3 showing=4, 6 and 8 ppm. 3 Ballet. Open to the public. English subtitles.
United Presbyterian Men: 7 p.m.
Washington College, "The
College Classroom," Rev. Don Hull.
Navy Reserve Meets Tonight
The Naval Research Reserve company will meet at 7:30 tonight in 105 Military Science Building for a program on research in high temperature chemistry being conducted by the Office of Naval Research.
guest speaker, followed by discussion period
TOMORROW
Anthropology Club: 12 noon. 12 Strong E. Election, of Officers.
La reunion du Cercle Francais aura
laureat des Jeux d'Armes.
Heures dans le salle de Forum de l'un
union. M.Kuhn fera un compte-rendu de
les Jeux d'Armes diens de l'université
de Kansas a Doris.
THURSDAY
Westminster Center Council: 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Oread.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Westminster Center Choir: 3.45 p.m.
Wake Forest University Choir
work practice followed by supper
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Tuesday, October 24. 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST
LOST. BROWN EYEGLASSES somewhere on campus. Would the finder return to 111 Flint Halt, Kansan. 10-24
FOR RENT
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward: tf
ROOM AND BOARD, $55 a month. Call
3-4385. 10-20
RENTALS: 1. Completely furn. 2 bdrm.
birch home. New washer, dryer and
furniture. Suitable for faculty or responsible
student. Avail. now till June 15. 2. Several
small furn. 3 bdrm. Inquire at Cain Resity, 927%
Mass. VI 3-8316, all hours. 10-50
COLLEGE BOYS or couples, child welcome — utilities paid, convenient location — Call VI 3-9776 or VI 3-9824 for appt. 10-25
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room,
kitchen and bath. Fenced back yard,
partly furnished, newly decorated. 439
Elm. Call VI 5-2602. 10-25
ROOM FOR TWO men. Priv. bath and
priv. entr. Only two blocks from Union.
Call VI 2-0685 or inquire at 1240 Ohio
after 6 p.m.
10-27
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
room. Washer-dryer, air conditioner.
$100 month. 221 Moundview Dr. Phone
3-5882 after 5 for appt. tf
FOR RENT, DUPLEX apartment: 4 rooms with bath. Furnished. 438% Elm. Call VI 3-1364 any afternoon. 10-24
2 BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, fireplace,
air conditioner, wall to wall carpeting,
drapes, kitchen with electric disposal,
dishwasher, range and refrigerator. Large
storage areas, garage. Skiing. Grand view. Call VI 3-3887 after
7 p.m. 10-24
Vacancy available for 2 men in com-
munity hall Rwell Rd. Ct. Co-
llege S-96535 for appointment, if
FOR SALE
FORTABLE WASHING MACHINE.
calc revolver. $12.50. Call VI 3-5283.
calc revolver. $12.50. Call VI 3-5283.
1955 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, good top and interior. Mechanically sound. Good tires, automatic trans., radio, heater. $500.
Call H. White, VI 3-6700. 10-20
EXTRA FINE. robust AKC Registered German Shepherd puppies. Call Baldwin 594-6975 or contact John Selfridge at KU ext. 367. 19-30
1956 FORD 6. Excellent mechanical con-
trols 3-1757 or see HOB 1524 Teen
10-27
1961 WHITE FORD FALCON. fordor.
(1962) FORD FALCON. fordor.
-$1,550, call Dave Phillips. VI 3-471.
TYPEWRITER WITH GERMAN CHARACTERS and accents, used heavy duty Adler portable in top condition. gum leather Lawrence Typewriter, 753 IV 3-3644 10-27
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals.ience Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644.
5 WEEK OLD portable tape recorder. 7 pounds with accessories. Tape your lectures. Call Buddy Spaeth, VI 3-5460.
FOLLOW YOUR FOOTBALL team by
listening in with a Magnavox transistor
or a Motorola microphone and earphone, only $19.95, 8 transistor,
$29.95, Petitt-Jelding, 723 Mass, 10-26
10-27
GELDING QUARTERHORSE. Is an all purpose pony. Have used him for pole bending, barrel racing, cutting and skiing. Bob Schneider at VI 3-6241, Delta Chi. 10-24
STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like
new. Call VI 3-2906 at 6 p.m. if
tf
Quarterback Club Meeting
—Exciting films of the K.U.-Oklahoma game
Narrated by a top player.
Forum Room Student Union
CONSOLE MAGNAVOX mahogany stereo reduced to $139. Slight damage on cabinet. See at Pettingill-Davis, 723 Mass. 10.98
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS.
counts for枪火. 1504 Tev. VI. x-7001.
counts for乘机. 1504 Tev. VI. x-7001.
Tuesday, Oct. 24
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES,
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-5778.
tf
7 p.m.
THE ONLY registered Seal Point kittens in Lawrence for sale, 10 weeks old, house broken, just the right age to start train see at 221 Moundview Dr. Jan. p.m. 10-25
AS A LIVING TEXTBOOK, as an aid to
educators and students. The Christian
library is stocked with books, art
and students this international daily
newspaper is offered at half price. 1 yr—
$30. To bring $9 mos. — $25.85; $5.50.
To place your subscription call VI
3-4206. 10-24
NEW $200 Guild Western guitar, 25% off — Call any evening. VI 3-4811. Also offering German Luger, 8 inch barrel.
George Johnson. 10-24
Western Civilization Notes
Free Admission & Cokes
All new and revised, 100 pages. minimegraphed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
BICYCLES, TYPEWRITERS, transistors.
103 Mass. Stanley Western.
10-25
Car For Sale: 52 Buick, $50.00 Dyna-
row. Call VI-2 5480 after 12:30 p.m. tf
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second
unowning car running condition,
$10, Call S1-4291, if
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonia, Colllus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, TI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tt
11-3
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
$225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up.
Service on all makes typewriters and
adding machines. Office printing and
business machines. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-1511. today. tf
BABYSITTING any time at 221 Mound-3
Experienced. Save the time for
reference. 10-25
BUSINESS SERVICES
OIL FORTRATRIS Painted. Lasting gift to
him, and up. Call VI 3-$807, ask for Robert.
DILLKEN'S "S.O.S." 1020 ... at now two
4014 ... at 1025.
awrence Ave. & 1021a . Mass.
Complete
TRAVEL SERVICE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. - VI 3-0152
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies, beds — harness — sweaters, socks, dresses. Shop everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn., In-Pet Center, Conn., Shop sectionized — save time and money. **tt**
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass, VI
3-3644. tf
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation. Ola Snuff.
939'i 599'. Mass. Chl VI 3-5264.
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. Sewing
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-
morning. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern self-service — open weeks day 8 to 6:30 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
loose paper bags. Plastic, party supply
for plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI - 3-
0350.
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS: Men and Women, learn
side you earn Inquire at 318 Wibson
Library
Wanted—Waiter: 7 days a week, two meal per day Call VI 3-7810 or apply III 4245.
1 OR 2 GIRLS to help with housework
and cook and cook in laundry privileges
with CV VI
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Contact us for your
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles PVI, VI 3-8379.
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Experience typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resumes to Mrs. Barlow, 408 W, 19th, VI 2-14 Mrs. Barlow, 408 W, 19th, VI 2-14
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, dissertations, rates.tes. dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Tess
EXPERIENCED TYPEPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, U 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impres-
press for reporters." For excelsi-
typing at standard rates, call Miss Lou-
Pope, III 3-1097.
Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter
Interested in thesis, term papers, etc
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker
Call VI 3-2001.
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, written reports, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-1485.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excursion, Mission Service, 5917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Suf. 2-2186
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, journals, Reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mc.Ifeldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Mc. tf
Typing: Will type reports, thesls etc.
Temperature, humidity: 1511 W 21 St. Ctl VI 3-6440
Temperature, humidity: 1511 W 21 St. Ctl VI 3-6440
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher for speech therapy; reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
home call VI 3-4136. Ms. Lov
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 24.196
Page 8
Cambodia Ends Thailand Ties
BANGKOK, Thailand — (UPI) Relations between Thailand and Cambodia sank to their lowest point today since diplomatic ties between the two countries were severed in late 1958.
The Cambodian government last night broke off diplomatic relations with Thailand following a charge by Thai Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat that the Communists planned to make Cambodia a jumping-off spot for attacks on nearby southeast Asia nations.
Less than three years ago, Cambodia suspended diplomatic relations with Thailand, which sealed off its border with Cambodia. The dispute was over the ownership of a border temple ruin.
THE CAMBODIAN parliament, in an emergency session, empowered the government to call on the Communist bloc for aid in event of war with Thailand.
THREE MONTHS later, the two nations announced the restoration of diplomatic ties.
The current showdown came to a head less than three weeks ago when Prince Sihanouk in Tokyo allegedly made disparaging remarks about his "pro-Western neighbors" at a news conference.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Lincoln White said yesterday that the U.S. government has appealed to Thailand and Cambodia for "statesmanlike" settlement of their differences in the face of a common threat from Communism.
Sihanouk denied Thanarat's charge and said Cambodia was "strictly neutral" and had no ties with the Communist camp.
Wozzeck' Shown Today in Film Series
"Wozzeck," a German film, is the second attraction of the University Film Series today in room 3 of Bailey Hall. The film will be shown at 4, 6 and 8 p.m. Admission is free.
"Wozzeck," written by Georg Buchner, is considered a prototype of expressionism 100 years before the technique had been fully developed.
The film tells of a soldier in the Prussian army who allows himself to be overpowered by his superiors. His only hold on life is his relationship with a prostitute by whom he had a child.
Roy Davis, radiochemist of the Brookhaven National Laboratory, will present a seminar on "Meteorites and Cosmic Rays" at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 122 Malol.
When his love is seduced by a Prussian soldier, Wozzeck, crazed with jealousy, kills her and commits suicide.
Chemist to Speak On Cosmic Rays
At Brookhaven Mr. Davis first developed a chemical method for detection of neutrino reactions. More recently he has been measuring the radioactivity present in meteorites, recovered Discoverer satellites and minerals exposed to cosmic ray bombardment for long periods of time.
Biochemistry Grant Awarded
Research by a biochemist at KU may hasten a breakthrough in science's understanding of virus multiplication in living systems.
Philip Newmark, associate professor of biochemistry, has received a new grant of $25,000 for two years' work on his project, which is entitled "Nucleic Acid, Protein and Virus Synthesis in Green Plants." The National Science Foundation is supporting the research, which is a continuation of studies begun six years ago.
Mr. Davis received his Ph.D. in 1942 from Yale University and has been with the Brookhaven National Laboratory since 1948.
A graduate assistant and undergraduate participants will be named later.
Soviet Explosion-
(Continued from page 1)
tee to act urgently on an appeal to the Kremlin not to explode its multi-megaton bomb.
The Russian people had not yet been told of the explosion, and it was not certain that even the Communist leaders attending the current Party Congress in Moscow had been informed.
While Western observers were unable to say definitely that the blast was the 50-megaton explosion predicted last week by Premier Nikita Khrushchev, it appeared certain that it had at least the force of 30 million tons of TNT—half again the power of any previous bomb.
Weather bureau experts in Washington predicted that a small portion of the radioactive fallout will reach the west coast of North America by Thursday or Friday, with much of the early fallout back-firing on Russia itself.
KU Advertising Group to K.C.
Flint Hall will be nearly empty Thursday when students interested in current advertising trends attend the seventh annual "Ideas Today" program in Kansas City.
More than 400 advertising men, sales executives, and students will hear seven leaders in advertising and related fields discuss new ideas at the Advertising and Sales Executives Club in Kansas City, Mo.
The daylong session, sponsored b. the Advertising Roundtable o. Kansas City, will feature the widely-known illustrator, Albert Dorne of Westport, Conn. Mr. Dorne will speak on "Does Art Really Sell Products?"
Guests will also hear ideas about marketing research, audio-visual materials, women's marketing, public relations, and the Federal Trade Commission.
The life which is unexamined is not worth living.-Socrates
Prof. Vanderwerf to Cornell
Calvin VanderWert, chairman of the KU chemistry department, will present the banquet address at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Association of Chemistry Teachers at Liberal Arts Collections (MACTLAC) at Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, on Friday, Oct. 27.
His speech. "Salt of the Earth," will discuss the role of liberal arts colleges in training scientists.
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NSA Program Comes too Late
By Scott Payne
With four hours left to live, a desperate KU National Student Association committee spent its meeting yesterday afternoon trying to strengthen its defenses by making campus activity plans.
to Wrighton Edward R. Murrow will not speak here as the committee planned; nor will the film "Harvest of Shame" be shown — the committee died at the All Student Council Meeting last night.
The committee had finally received the information when "Harvest of Shame" would be available. Judy Jamison, Ottawa junior, told the group she received a letter saying the film would be available in three weeks.
AT THE SAME TME, Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, announced that Mr. Murrow would be in Kansas City, Mo., in about three weeks for the rededication of the Liberty Memorial there.
"I think that we can get Murrow to speak to us on the film, since he is the producer of it," said Menghini.
he is the producer of it. The committee approved the showing of the film and bringing Mr. Murrow to KU.
Miss Jamison said she had received notice from another proposed speaker saying that he would not be able to come to KU this semester. The speaker in question was Michael Harrington, editor of the official socialist party publication.
Turning to other matters, Menghini introduced a motion to pass a resolution entitled "In Loco Parentes" (In Lieu of Parents).
"THIS IS A BASIC POLICY DECLARATION OF THE NSA which was passed at the last NSA Congress," Menghini said.
"The resolution declares NSA's objection to the paternalistic attitudes of many school administrations," he said while summarizing the lengthy resolution.
the length resolution. Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, said, "I don't quite see the logic in the committee passing this resolution.
"It seems to me that this is diametrically opposed to the stand on discrimination this committee took a week ago," he said.
(THE COMMITTEE'S STAND WAS supporting the action of a group of students who met in conference two weeks ago with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe protesting the "listing of discriminatory housing" policy of the University.)
Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior, said, "the resolution is in opposition to types of paternal attitudes which many Universities hold. For instance, many school administrations may censor the student press or put extreme limitations on student government and other areas in which students must have active voices."
Following further discussion and complaints that the resolution was vague, Robert Thomas, Marysville, Tenn., senior and NSA committee chairman, said, "Let's table this discussion for one week until copies of the resolution can be distributed and until we know what we're talking about."
DICKSON CHANGED THE DISCUSSION to the NSA disaffiliation issue to come before the All Student Council later that day.
"I'd like to introduce a motion that if ASC votes for disaffiliation we will appeal to continue this committee as the 'KU Student Association' or Current Events Committee," he said.
"This committee would be an integral part of student activity at KU." he added.
JERRY PALMER, EL DORADO SENIOR and chairman of the ASC, informed the committee that the resolution to go before the ASC asking for disaffiliation from NSA included several sections providing for a Current Events Committee.
"This committee," he said, "would probably have the same membership that the NSA committee has now."
(Continued on page 10)
Housing Progress Satisfies Marchers
A spokesman for the Negroes who marched across campus Oct. 13 says the majority of the marchers are satisfied with progress on housing discrimination since the demonstration.
In a telephone interview last night, Nolen Ellison, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said the marchers are not. however, "sitting back and relaxing."
He said the main reason for the march was to inform the University of the feelings of the Negro students.
(The march of 76 Negroes was a protest against the University's housing policy. At the end of the march, a list of grievances was presented to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.)
"ALL WE CAN DO IS let the University know how we feel. All we can do is hope that progress is and will be made concerning the problem," Ellison said.
He said that in a conference requested by the Chancellor, he "had been led to believe" that a committee had been set up to study the housing discrimination problem.
"The Chancellor asked me to come to his office on a Monday morning, I was pleased that he would take time out of a tough working day to speak to me. I talked to him as 'Nolen Ellison, the student' and we had a nice informal chat," Ellison said.
HE SAID THAT NO definite answer has been received from the Chancellor concerning the list of grievances, but that from indications observed by several marchers in meetings with KU officials, the University is "making definite progress" in regard to the discrimination problem.
"I AM DEFINITELY SURE that the people who took part in the march feel satisfied."
Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 29
ASC Kicks Out NSA, Drops Alternate Plan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
I
Who Needs NSA?
Wednesday, October 25, 1961
"If we don't agree with the administration nobody will listen so we don't need the committee," one student said. "If we do agree with the administration, they will represent us, so again there is no need for a committee."
ASC Sets Up Liaison Group
OPPOSITION TO THE bill contended that the students have to go through the administration, specifically Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, to get these groups to listen to the students.
The group, called the Student Liason Committee, will be headed by the student body president. The committee will "endear to meet" with the above named groups, according to the liaison bill.
In another action, the ASC set up a student committee to advise the Kansas Board of Regents, the Kansas Legislature, the Lawrence City Council, and the governor in matters concerning KU students.
Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, sponsored the bill. In an interview after the meeting, he was asked what the committee might advise the groups about.
"My intention wasn't to be specific. But, for example, take a budget pending before the legislature to build new classrooms. This committee could research needs for classrooms and present the legislature with the facts."
HE REPLIED:
He admitted that if the views were contrary, the liaison committee's influence "would be cut down," but said he "didn't think this is a valid reason for not having the committee especially when you consider that students here will be voting constituents of state legislators."
"This plan sets up a lobbying group for KU students," he said.
Deane said there is now a shortage of classroom space. The new class hours show this, he added.
IN REBUTTAL TO the argument that the administration can handle student needs, Deane said if the liaison committee "was aligned with the Chancellor, they could add something to his views."
When asked why he brought up the bill. Dean said his party's platform (Vox) called for it. He said the party had done the research into the need for the bill.
"I don't like the idea of going to class at 7:30 in the morning. We need measures to alleviate the classroom shortage," he said.
HE CONTINUED. "It is questionable if these groups will listen to the committee if it disagrees with the administration. But if only one does, it will be worthwhile.
Deane said he hopes the committee can gain influence with the groups as a "reliable source for finding student opinion."
HAS ANYONE TALKED to rep-
(Continued on page 10)
Bv Karl Koch
The All Student Council last night withdrew KU from the National Student Association. The vote was 14-8 with two abstentions.
The original bill before the ASC called for a substitute for the NSA committee on campus, the Current Events Committee. This proposal was deleted from the bill, however.
The committee would have taken over the functions of NSA in sounding campus opinion and providing education on current events by use of pamphlets and speakers.
★ ★ ★
Students Disagree
Spectator reaction last night was almost unanimous in disapproval of the All Student Council's National Student Association disaffiliation vote.
OF ABOUT 25 students interviewed when the meeting broke up, 23, including some NSA committee members, were opposed to the ASC's action.
Brian Cleave, British graduate student, said, "This decision tonight is regrettable as it comes at a time when two international student organizations are competing for membership from the new African states.
"One of the organizations is the International Student Conference to which NSA is affiliated and supports financially.
"The other is the Communist dominated International Union of Students," he added.
"KANSAS University has publicly cut itself off from the campaign to prevent further Communist subversion in these areas," he added.
Another committee member, Sandra Moore, Saskatchewan, Canada junior, said:
"I think that there was a lot more to the issue than $500. It can be summed up as a conflict between personalities and political philosophy."
Judy Jamison, Ottawa junior,
NSA committee member said:
"I am disturbed by the fact that those who opposed NSA resorted to political pressures to gain their majority and refused to discuss the real reasons for disaffiliation."
Only the part of the bill calling for disaffiliation with the NSA was voted on. Discussion lasted over an hour.
ONE OF THE SPEAKERS was the vice chairman of the NSA Missouri-Kansas region, Bruce Pemberton of Ottawa University. He made a last-ditch effort to convince the ASC to remain in the NSA.
In discussing NSA's international function, Pemberton read a letter from Willy Brandt, the mayor of Berlin, to the association's national office.
Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, who introduced the bill to disaffiliate at the last meeting, made most of the counter arguments. He contended that the issue came "irrefutably" down to "cost vs. benefits."
In the letter, Brandt thanked the NSA Congress for condemning the sealing of the East Berlin border.
"APPROPRIATIONS ARE GOING to be close this year," he said, "and other campus organizations need the money more." He said People-to-People was more deserving.
A motion by Thomas to vote by secret ballot also failed.
A vote was taken and the chair was supported.
A nand vote was taken, and Miss McMillen asked for a roll call vote. The vote remained essentially unchanged.
Weather
Fair today, tonight and Thursday, cooler tonight and locally today. Frost likely tonight. The high today will be around 60 and the low tonight around 40. Thursday's high will be in the 60's.
ASC Does Nothing About Housing Bias
The ASC last night tabled indefinitely a resolution to endorse the six groups who asked Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe on Oct. 9 to stop housing discrimination.
The decision came on the heels of a report by the Housing Committee and the Human Rights committee which stated in essence that the administration could adequately handle the housing discrimination problem.
Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junio and chairman of the housing committee and Roberta Johnson, Joiliet Ill. senior, a member of the Humai Rights committee, made the report to the ASC.
BOTH COMMITTEES reported that "to accept the resolution to back non-discrimination in housing would involve too much work, and would result in having to change the housing office setup completely, and wouldn't do much good."
The committee report continued:
The committee report continued "The size of the housing list is not too big a percentage of all the houses that students are now renting. And, there is no way to enforce a non-discrimination policy. We wouldn't know if rejection of a prospective renter was on grounds of race or on the basis of personal characteristics."
By tabling the resolution indefinitely, the ASC can bring it up any
time it chooses. It does not mean that the bill is necessarily dead.
ANOTHER RESOLUTION to table the bill until reports could be obtained from various groups interested in civil rights was defeated.
In regard to the administration being able to handle the discrimination problem. Miss Johnson said:
"We think the Chancellor and Dean Alderson are investigating. The administration is concerned. They are in a better position to know what they're doing, and to do something about discrimination."
Miss Johnson said the Chancellor has set up a committee including himself; Donald Alderson, dean of men; Emily Taylor, dean of women; L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, and J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, to study the housing discrimination problem.
SHE CITED A PETITION asking that groups leading active resistance against discrimination relax, and let organizations downtown work with Chancellor Wescoe in handling the problem.
The petition she referred to was signed by Mayor Ted Kennedy of Lawrence and William Binns, clinical psychologist at Watkins hospital
(Continued on page 10)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. October 25, 1961
Writers and Subversion
Two Austin, Texas, groups, the Daughters of the American Revolution and Texans for America, have asked the Texas state textbook committee to reject a number of texts on the grounds that they contain communist and socialist influences. A number of authors and writers who are mentioned in the texts are objected to on the grounds that their "statements, associations and affiliations" bring their loyalty into question. Among those objected to are Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Sinclair Lewis, Eugene O'Neill, and Carl Sandburg.
THIS EXCURSION INTO LITERATURE BY the DAR and the Texans for America is reminiscent of other groups who have decided they know more about education than the professional educators and whose sources of information on who is loyal and who is "questionable" or subversive are very doubtful indeed.
This action recalls the incidents in Wichita and at other universities where faculty members have received harrassing phone calls and letters
because some group does not agree with their teaching methods or the materials they use in their instruction.
THE TWO TEXAS GROUPS HAVE NOT gone this far; they have acted through legal channels. But the context of their statements is evidence of how far from reality these people are. The idea that Ernest Hemingway or Carl Sandburg have been subversives is ridiculous.
It is also rather difficult to see how any literature text could avoid mentioning Hemingway, Sandburg and many of the other authors termed questionable in their loyalty and still give an adequate picture of American literature.
The actions of groups like these two have done considerable harm to the freedom of speech and inquiry that is necessary to the educational process. Their many attempts at interference in this area represent a danger that needs to be carefully watched.
-William H. Mullins
Soviet Nuclear Testing
The current condemnation of the Soviet Union by nations around the world for its explosion of the largest nuclear weapon in history is quite logical and desirable. But it should not be taken too seriously.
THE SOVIET UNION HAS DONE MANY things in the past for which it has been condemned by the West and neutrals alike. But if we consider it for a moment, it becomes clear that most of those things have been forgotten and are certainly not a factor in the way many nations behave toward the Kremlin.
The Soviet Union was harshly condemned by almost every nation outside the Iron Curtain
when it suppressed the Hungarian Revolt, yet that crime has ceased to be anything but history to most nations after only five years.
THE SAME THING IS TRUE OF THE OTHER Communist giant, Red China. It was widely condemned by neutrals and the West for its aggression in Tibet. But what nation bothers to even talk about Tibet now?
Both the Communist giants have a long string of crimes on their records that have outraged public opinion. All of them have been forgotten or faded within a few years. We should not expect anything different this time.
—William H. Mullins
letters to the editor
Kausan Story Criticized Editor
Just before returning to school this fall, I saw a print entitled "The Statistical Man," by Robert Hodgell, a noted contemporary artist. In this print, a hapless fellow is pinned to a large sheet of graph paper by a curve line which rips through him on its trip from one side of the paper to the other. The print represents our society's tragic habit of making statistics out of persons. The thought of this picture has haunted me since I read the UDK article, "KU Traffic Record Still Intact After Near-Miss," a couple of weeks ago.
THE ARTICLE REFERED TO the car collision which was fatal to a KU student, Joseph O'Brien. This accident, according to the UDK, "came close to ruining one of KU's most cherished records." The accident occurred one block outside the University boundaries thus preserving a thirteen year string without a fatal accident on campus. The article continued, "Had the accident occurred one block further north, a fatality free traffic accident record going back at least to 1948 would have been ruined."
Do such thoughts arise whenever a student is killed? Are we actually thankful that Joe's blood was not spilled on our campus — that he made it across university boundaries before he died? Are we actually thankful his death will be written on the City of Lawrence traffic records instead of our own? If so, are his parents thankful? Are we not making a statistic out of Joseph O'Brien?
Sincerely,
Don Warner
Topeka junior
UDK Criticized
At the risk of sounding hypocritical, I feel that something must be said concerning the manner in which the recent issue on discrimination in off-campus housing has
Jane Dunlap Lawrence senior
AS ONE OF THOSE STUDENTS who is supposedly "against" the Chancellor. I would like to state that I definitely am not against him — and I do not reject his 'moral sausage' idea," although I still feel that something in addition to it is needed if the discrimination problem is to be resolved in any near future. I believe that this was the feeling of most of the other committee members. After much thought, I am beginning to see the position which the Chancellor is in, and I think he actually is trying to do something about this unjust situation in the best way he can.
been presented by the UDK. Seemingly, it has been inferred that all but one of the students who met with Chancellor Wescoe last week are quite dissatisfied with his ideas on contending with the discrimination issue.
THE MAJOR ISSUE IN THESE articles should not have been
Chancellor Wescoe versus justice and moral progress. The issue is how can we help all people, whether foreign or American, to have the Right of Opportunity — the opportunity to prove themselves acceptable or unacceptable as tenants or as friends because of the type of person they are; not to be rejected just on the basis of the color of their skin. I am sure that Chancellor Wescoe is as concerned
ith this real issue as any of us are, but perhaps he had a little more insight into the long-range effects and repercussions of the proposed plan than many of us on the committee did at that time. Nevertheless, regardless of the Chancellor's reasons for rejecting the plan, he is not a Simon Degree or a heartless tyrant — and I, for one, would appreciate it if the UDK would stop trying to make him appear that way.
Daily Hansan
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$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
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BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
F.B.R.
T-17
"WELL, THIS COLLEGE IS KNOWN FOR ITS VERY FRIENDLY,
HELPFUL FACULTY."
Guest Editorial
Recently, Kansas University officials announced that as of next fall, classes will run from 7:30 a.m. to 5:20 p.m. instead of following the present 8 a.m.-4:50 p.m. pattern.
Freedom to Change
The purpose of the new program is to get another hour's use of academic buildings. No sizable new classroom buildings are due soon, so greater use must be made of existing facilities.
No plan, however, is likely to meet full approval of a faculty and staff that numbers close to 600. It was only natural there would be complaints about this intended program. The most unrealistic criticism, however, came from a professor who pointed out the new schedule would force him to be available to his students for longer periods of time and would tend to curtail his personal research time.
There is a great deal to be said for teaching and there is a great deal to be said for personal research by faculty members. But the basic reason most people are on the faculty at KU is to teach students. This means they are expected to "be available to their students," and if they don't find that palatable, perhaps they should consider some other line of work.
As for research, that is excellent—and we all need more of it by capable people. But if a teacher has as his basic purpose to teach, then he unselfishly is going to have to devote more time to teaching and less time to his research, even if it is important to him. And if he can't do this, then it might be a good idea for him to enter some field where he need not worry about teaching and can concentrate on research.
Then he displayed faulty logic by remarking it's time KU officials started a restrictive admissions program that would force a new building program. It sounds fine on paper, but it doesn't work out quite that way, officials agree.
It stands to reason there will be some inconvenience and hardship, but again, the best interests of the University must be served. If those "best interests" create too much inconvenience or hardship on certain individuals then perhaps it is well for them to consider teaching or researching elsewhere.
This, faculty members should know better than anyone else, is one of the many blessings of the academic freedom we hear so much about.
The new KU time schedule was not arrived at haphazardly, frivolously or with the intent of harming anyone. Able people viewed the situation, decided what would be best under present conditions and announced a policy for what they considered the best interests of the University.
(Reprinted from the Oct. 24 Lawrence Journal-World)
Worth Repeating
THE END
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Page 3
It Looks This Way...
By Catherine Weinaug
The play, "Between Two Thieves," was a just indictment of every man's betrayal of his brother, and of those who sit silently by as well.
Our double standard, racially, is apparent, especially in Lawrence where representatives from many countries have a first-hand view of the violation of the principle of equality in the areas of housing, etc. Many of us would like to say to those who watch and wonder that we are not merely trying to buy your good will. We send our dollars to your countries because we do care what happens to other human beings; and we are ashamed of the inconsistencies which you see.
May I present, therefore, the following article as a reminder of the teachings of Christ in regard to the question, "Who Is My Brother?"
- * *
A teacher tells this story of an incident which occurred in her classroom. One day a small colored girl was missing from her desk. After a search, she was found outside behind a door, crying. Her hands were scarified and bleeding. The teacher inquired what had happened. The child sobbed, "I'm trying to scratch the black off!"
"AND BEHOLD, A CERTAIN LAWYER STOOD UP, AND asked, 'Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?'
"But he said unto Jesus, 'And who is my neighbour?' "
"Jesus answered, 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind: And thy neighbour as thyself.'
Jesus told him a story. It might have been about someone next door, or his dearest friend, or perhaps a member of his own family. He chose, instead, someone from another race. The Samaritan was the epitome of all the Jew hated and loathed. Jesus said to love him as his very self . . . if he wished to inherit life eternal, for "by this shall all men know that ye are my disciples."
THE CRITERION, "LOVE," IS DEFINED AS "A FEELING of strong personal attachment induced by sympathetic understanding or by ties of kinship; strong liking; good will."
How is love, as myself, shown? It cannot be expressed in intangibles, for "faith without works is dead." Christ did not classify the priest or Levite as neighbors to the man who fell among thieves. As Christians confronting the issue of race, we cannot "pass by on the other side." Pilate tried to straddle the fence to avoid making a vital decision. By passing the decision on to the people, did he not in fact make his own choice? Can we, as Christians, silently acquiesce exclusion and denial of opportunity to our brother, which would build in him the character and provide for him the training he is criticized for not possessing? In a "Christian" nation how can the constitutional rights of freedom and equality be explained in still segregated classrooms?
"AM I MY BROTHER'S KEEPER?" AND HOW IS THE Christian to "keep" his brother?
In the gospel of Jesus Christ, said Paul, "There is neither Jew nor Greek; for you are all one in Christ Jesus." Can we therefore truly worship God—behind doors that bar ANY brother for whom Christ died? ("For whosoever doeth the will of my father which is in heaven, the same IS my brother, and sister, and mother.) Will our brother's soul be saved when the Christian allows to be turned away, from any institution, the body God made "to be a temple of His Holy Spirit?"
At Joppa Peter saw a vision of a sheet let down from heaven—three times for emphasis—in which were represented the races he had termed outcast. And then he said, "God hath shewed me that I should not call any man common or unclean. Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons, but in every nation he that feareth Him and worketh righteousness is accepted with Him."
We seek to appear before the court of world opinion as a good neighbor; but can the dollars spent for any purpose justify that claim in the face of exclusion of the neighbor in our midst? And can we individually answer God's question, "Where is thy brother?"
How has HE been kept? Do we love him as ourselves?
Worth Repeating
Whatever happens, don't be seduced by your audience.—Gertrude Stein
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The thought has occurred to us that the best way to increase the popularity of our troops in most of these overseas bases is to start a rumor they are leaving.
The Rough Edge By Bill Mullins
By Bill Mullins
Campus politics will soon be stillborn.
- * *
The New Mexico board of regents condemns the University of New Mexico yearbook for not being a credit to the university. That shows you what can happen when a public relations sheet gets too big for its britches.
After thoughtful observation of various and sundry student couples, we have reached the conclusion that romance is a state of idiocy.
***
- * *
No one can accuse KU students of having partisan views on any subject. They are equally apathetic to everything.
Khrushchev implores God in his speech before the Communist Party Congress. Naughty Nik will be burned at the stake for heresy if he is not careful.
A new dance called the Twist has arrived at KU, and from the descriptions of it, it sounds like a rain dance we once saw some savages doing around a campfire.
We were counting up all the queen titles recently and it seems to us that it would be much simpler if all the KU coeds simply drew straws to see which title they get.
Short Ones
Question: What makes bees hum?
Answer: They don't know the words.
Question: What did the swan say?
Answer: Take me to your Leda.
Question: What did the rake say to the hoe?
Wednesday, October 25.1961 University Daily Kansan
Answer: Hi, hoe.
Women, who are, beyond all doubt, the mothers of all mischief, also nurse that babe to sleep when he is too noisy.-Richard Doddridge Blackmore
A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor.—Alexander Smith
Letters to the Editor
Red China and the UN
Editor:
With reference to the NSA resolution to exclude Red China from membership in the United Nations, I would like to mention the following lines for consideration.
The exclusion of Red China from the United Nations will accelerate the tension between the East and West, and help all the more to throw Red China into the arms of Soviet Russia. According to article I, the United Nations is to develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination of the people, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen the Universal peace.
NOW IF RED CHINA IS excluded from being a member of United Nations, how can article 1 of the charter hold good? The very name United Nations has become a misnomer and a mockery for what would more appropriately be called "Disunited Nations." According to Bentwich and Martin, what was designed to be an Institute of World Peace will prove to be a forum of world conflicts. In other words this has been almost solely political consideration to the determination of the membership of the United Nations. Almost one-fourth of the population of the world is at present excluded from membership through attempts to impose political conditions which have no relevancy to the provision of the charter.
I PERSONALLY FEEL THAT extraneous political consideration must be ignored by the Security Council while making recommendations regarding the admission of
new members, and "Package Deals" which are the result of hard bargaining between the rival groups in the United Nations must not be encouraged. The exclusion of Red China from the membership of the United Nations and the Security Council is contended that it is only hatred and suspicion of Communism that has been responsible for the present attitude of the United States towards this issue. But the anomaly of Nationalist China continuing to occupy a seat in the Security Council is too self-evident to require any explanation. It is a clear case of bolstering up forcibly for political reasons by the United States, with a view to strengthening her own position in the Security Council. This is devoid of logic and justice and has dealt a mortal blow to the prestige of the organization.
The only solution of such problem will be that the United States, the people of the United States, and the United Nations must function in the spirit of love, truth and non-violence, as not only preached by India, but also followed by her in her plans, policies, ideals and their execution. Racial arrogance and feelings of political domination must give away to the emphasis on a ceaseless endeavor to establish world peace. What is required is a necessary good will among the nations and it is only then that peace and prosperity can be possible in the world. Lastly, let me pray to almighty that the minds of the people be changed in such a way that their feeling may change hatred into love, fears into confidence, right into duty and exploitation into service.
Vinod Patel
India graduate student
S. U.A.
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Nov. 1, 1961
Wednesday, Nov. 1. 1961
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Register in Information Booth or in Union TROPHIES & REFRESHMENTS
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Tickets: $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50
PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS . . . Music from Broadway (76 Trombones, The Sound of Music, Camelot) . . . Till There was You . . . Gershwin's "An American in Paris" . . . Irving Berlin's Diablo . . . Can Can . . . and lots more!!
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 25,1961
Prof. Hoecker Is Building Shelter To Protect Against Fallout, Blast
By Dennis Farney
A KU professor of radiation biophysics is building an underground shelter designed to protect five persons against a nuclear blast and accompanying fallout.
Prof. Frank E. Hoecker, a member of the Kansas Civil Defense Council since 1950, designed the shelter himself. Construction of the shelter, located in the yard of his home at 1503 Haskell Ave., is nearly completed.
"THIS IS AN experimental shelter which I want to use as a basis for furnishing advice to other people," he said.
in building it, I hope to gain information that I can use in a series of lectures ("Safety in the Nuclear Age") I am helping to conduct in Lawrence.
Prof. Hoecker said it took him about three weeks to complete plans for the shelter, but added that he
East-West Clash On Berlin Rights
For more than five hours today a major East-West clash in Berlin hung only a trigger squeeze away.
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
And the issue which put British and 6.500 American troops on alert from 3:10 a.m. until 9:35 a.m. (Lawrence time) still is not resolved. The showdown still is to come, with one side or the other making a major retreat.
It hangs on U.S. and Allied insistence on their right of free entry into the walled off eastern sector of the city.
IT BROUGHT U.S. TANKS and armored cars with their cannon at the ready to the Friederichstrasse check point this morning when the Communists halted two U.S. Army buses containing women and children en route for the Army's weekly tour of East Berlin. The buses finally turned back.
At the moment, the crisis is in the hands of U.S. Maj. Gen. Albert Watson II and Soviet Commandant Col. A. V. Solovyev.
The Friederichstrasses check point is the only crossing permitted to foreigners and it lies in the American sector.
THE IMMEDIATE ISSUE is in the East German Communist demand for the right to check civilians using the crossing even though their automobiles carry American license plates.
The Americans have refused to recognize any East German authority over Allied personnel and this week armed MP's began escorting Allied vehicles through the crossing in defiance of the East German Vospos (People's Police).
AMERICAN MP'S check passports at a sentry house and then the vehicles move forward through a concrete maze past the tommy-gun carrying Vopos.
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Prof. Hoecker's shelter is a 12 by 16 by $ 6 \frac{1}{2} $ - foot structure, built of reinforced concrete.
has revised the original plans several times since he began the project last August.
It is connected to his basement by a 12-foot passageway, built of reinforced concrete and concrete blocks.
Prof. Hoecker emphasized the advantages of his shelter:
"A SHELTER OF this kind," he said, "provides much more protection than you can get in a basement shelter (in which a corner of the basement is walled off by concrete blocks), plus the advantage that it is fireproof.
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"The big weakness of a basement shelter is that it offers you no protection if the house itself burns."
The ceiling of Prof. Hoecker's shelter is 11 inches thick and contains more than 16 tons of concrete. It is designed to protect against a nuclear blast as near as five miles from Lawrence, he said.
BUT HE EMPHASIZED that the protection this type of shelter affords is dependent upon the type of bomb burst and the size of the bomb used.
A bomb that explodes high in the air, he explained, will produce different blast and fallout characteristics than one exploded near the ground.
"There just isn't any single answer to the problem of blast and fallout protection," he said. "Every shelter has to be designed for a specific set of circumstances."
PROF. HOECKER said he will equip the shelter with folding beds and a two-week supply of food for five people. The shelter will also be equipped with various instruments to detect the level of radiation within it.
Prof. Hoecker estimated the cost of material for the shelter at $1,200, but added that its total cost will depend on the amount of radiation detection equipment he installs.
WASHINGTON -- (UPI) — President Kennedy gave a go-ahead today for a nuclear test to be conducted in a New Mexico salt formation 1,200 feet underground. He invited observers from interested United Nations countries to witness the shot.
JFK Approves Nuclear Test
The White House declined to say specifically whether Russian observers would be welcome, leaving this to be spelled out by the AEC. But the White House said "the United States will welcome observers from interested United Nations countries, as well as news media and the scientific community."
The United States recently fired three underground shots which were
The experiment, known as "Project Gnome," will be conducted in about 60 days near Carlsbad, N.M., as part of the Atomic Energy Commission's program to develop peaceful uses of atomic energy.
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announced. In deciding to resume testing after Russia began her atmospheric series, however, the White House made it plain that not all U.S. underground tests would be announced.
Project Gnome is intended to develop information on possible use of byproduct heat from nuclear explosions for power purposes.
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21 Homecoming Candidates Named
Twenty-one KU women have been chosen to represent women's living groups in the competition for the title of 1961 Homecoming Queen.
Judging will be done by five KU faculty members and five Lawrence business and professional men. The preliminary judging will be Sunday. The final judging will be Nov. 2. The queen will be crowned Nov. 11 during halftime ceremonies at the KUK-State Homecoming football game.
Sharon Stark, Leawood sophmore, Alpha Chi Omega; Sue Ann Weston, Overland Park senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Rosalyn Anita Browne, Kansas City, sophmore, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Mary Ann Howard, St. Joseph Mo., senior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Francis Thompson, Evanston, Ill., junior, Alpha Phi.
THE CONTESTANTS are:
Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, Chi Omega; Janet McIntosh, Chapman senior, Delta Gamma; Mary Sheppeard, Clay Center junior, Gamma Phi Beta; Sharon Foster, Birmingham, Mich., junior, Kappa
Arbitrary and unclear restrictions on civil liberties in this country reflect a lessening of faith in democracy and tarnish the image of the U.S. Government.
Restrictions on Civil Liberties Harmful to U.S.
By Karl Koch
This is the thesis of Donald McCoy, associate professor of history, who spoke yesterday at the Faculty Forum.
OUR JUDICIARY'S SYSTEM OF using the criteria of "clear and present danger" or "a bad tendency" as a basis for ruling on subversion and treason are part of the "chipping away at the civil liberties of everyone." Prof. McCov said.
He asserted that these two criteria allow a court to say in essence, "He looks bad to me; we'd better throw him in jail."
Indefinite standards for determining violations of legislative acts have led to a "violation of the spirit and letter of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution," he said.
AS EXAMPLES, Prof. McCoy listed the Smith Act of 1940 against groups advocating violent overthrow of the government; investigations of legislative committees which do not have clear objectives, and state loyalty oaths for civil service jobs.
He cited the Registration Act of 1951 (which provides for registering of Communists) as one of the unclear acts which corrode civil liberty. He also mentioned the rounding up of aliens in World War II and the "infamous" Japanese relocation camps.
THUS, LABELS LIKE "right" or "left" or "radical" don't make a great deal of difference.
Prof. McCoy said that all major political movements have contributed to restrictions on civil liberties. He added that these same movements have at times contributed to the defense of civil liberties.
Alpha Theta; Marsha Wertzberger, Kansas City, Mo, senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior, Pi Beta Phi; Jenelyn Sue Hedlund, Overland Park junior, Sigma Kappa; Betty Jean Treloggen, Chanute freshman, Douthart Hall.
"They overlap into commonly shared impulses." Prof. McCoy said.
Regardless of who pushes the purported legislation to protect the government, "it is not applied equally across the board. When this legislation is used only against certain groups, it shouldn't be on the books," he said.
LEILA VAL LARSON, Merriam freshman, Holder Hall; Suzie Fisher, Prairie Village sophomore, Lewis Hall; Lawalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior, Lewis Hall; Patricia Wilson, Kansas City, junior, Lewis Hall; Sharon Tebenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., senior, Miller Hall; Sondra Sue Gumm, Joplin, Mo. senior, Sellards Hall; Joycelyn Cade, Quenemo junior, Watkins Hall; and Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior, Delta Delta Delta.
A lack of faith in democracy causes the profuse legislation attempting to protect it.
"Beware not of the extreme right and left, but beware of ourselves and our lack of faith in liberty and democracy." Prof. McCoy warned.
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Page 5
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LOS ANGELES - (UPI)—Americans should be allowed to witness nuclear tests so they will understand what could happen during a nuclear holocaust, a high Red Cross official believes.
US Must See Bomb Tests
Frank B. Ellis, director of the office of emergency planning, said that the government hopes to begin mass distribution before January 1 of two pamphlets giving information about nuclear war and fallout protection.
Robert F. Shea, national vice president of the Red Cross, told delegates to the 10th annual U.S. Civil Defense Council Conference yesterday that a ringside seat at such tests might make people realize that "fear of fear itself" is an important factor in human behavior.
In other remarks at the conference, the nation's top civil defense official said the federal government has not committed itself to one type of shelter but has set up standards for shelter construction.
"By watching tests, the American people would not only realize what they would have to face, but the mysterious aspect of the explosion itself would disappear and people would be able to see the situation more realistically," Shea said.
Popularity is a crime from the moment it is sought; it is only a virtue where men have it whether they will or no—George Savile, Marquess of Halifax
Wednesday, October 25, 1961University Daily Kansan
Local Weather Will Determine Fallout Extent
How much radioactive fallout Lawrence will receive from Russia's explosion of a huge bomb Monday will be determined by weather conditions here. Frank E. Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics, said yesterday.
"If we have a rain or a snow we could have a heavy fallout." Prof. Hoecker said. "But the effects, if there are any, will persist over some time."
THE RADIATION Biophysics department, which conducts measurement of fallout here, will know by Thursday or Friday just what effect the Russian blast will cause, Prof. Hoecker said.
"It will take several days before
the radioactive cloud gets here," he said.
Prior to the Russian blast fallout had maintained an average level of about seven or eight micro-micro-curies per cubic meter of air. The latest reading was 1.34. On Oct. 17 the reading was 21.24 micro-micro-curies per cubic meter of air.
SINCE THE RESUMPTION of nuclear tests by the Soviet Union Sept. 1, the radioactive fallout here has increased four or five times, Prof. Hoecker said.
The type of fallout Lawrence will get from the Russian test will be essentially the same material as recorded from previous Soviet testing, Prof. Hoecker continued.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 25, 1961
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
T. E. HARVEY
COWROY FULLBACK—Bill McFarland, Oklahoma State 5-11, 190 pound sophomore backfield standout, will be one of the top running backs to face the Kansas Jayhawkers here Saturday. McFarland is the 'Pokes fourth best ball carrier and is presently the second leading scorer for O-State, being tied for fifth in the Big Eight in this department.
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Frosh Gridders To Face K-State
The Jayhawker freshman football team faces its first test tomorrow when it meets Kansas State's frosh in Memorial Stadium. Kickoff time is 3 p.m.
QUARTERBACK Charlie Hess, Wellington; halfbacks Wayne Loving, Kansas City, and Gayle Sayers, Omaha, Neb., and fullback Dennis Ligget, King City, Mo., make up the starting offensive backfield.
Coach Tom Triplett, in his first year as freshman mentor, said, "We've accomplished a lot in such a short length of time." Triplett is quick to add that the yearlings have suffered "quite a few" injuries. The aches and pains range from a cracked rib to water on the knee.
"THEE HAVE BEEN so many injuries that we haven't had a good chance to look at some of the prospects," he said. "Some would be playing in tomorrow's game, but won't because of their injuries."
The game will be the Wildcats' second. In their opener against Iowa State, the Cyclones upset them with a wing-t offense.
Last year, the Hawks fought KSU to a 0-0 deadlock.
The Hawk forward wall averages 185 pounds per man and is considered "big" by Triplett. Starting at ends will be Larry Ledford, Wichita, and Mike Shinn, Topea. In the tackle slot will be Brian Schedwa, Lawrence, and Mike O'Brien, Liberal.
Defensive backfield men are Gary Duff, Salina; Fred Russell, Independence; and Phil Reinking, Arkansas City, Ark.
The starting guards will be Ron Marsh, Omaha, Neb., and Mike Patterson, Larned. Either Dick Pratt, Olathe, or Buddy Walker, Leavenworth, will be at center.
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TRIPLETT FEELS this year's team compares adequately with past editions. "We have some prospects that will help the varsity," Triplett said.
He added, "And, after all, that's what we're looking for."
Phi Delta Theta Posts 52-0 Win Over Sigma Nu in Intramural Play
Phi Delta Theta continued its march to the fraternity A division II intramural football title yesterday afternoon as it rolled on a beuddled Sigma Nu team, 52-0, to post the most impressive win of the afternoon and one of the most one-sided victories of the season.
In other A games Phi Gamma Delta whipped Sigma Phi Epsilon, 20-0, and Sigma Chi slipped past Alpha Tau Omega, 13-7.
The fraternity B action saw Delta Upson pound out an easy win over
Acacia, 37-0, while Alpha Tau Omega crunched Phi Kappa Psi, 37-7. Phi Gamma Delta also won, beating Phi Delta Theta, 27-7.
Fitted Waist Returns
Straw in the wind for 1961 . . . . . the return of the fitted waistline to dresses. Several Seventh Avenue manufacturers hint that the nipped-in-at-the-waist look is on its way, to replace the "fuid" or hint of a fit which has been around for the last few seasons.
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Sigmund Freud On Football
How would football have looked to the late Dr. Sigmund Freud? What the father of psychoanalysis might have said is presented in "Freud, Football and the Marching Virgins," a November Reader's Digest article by Thomas Hornsby Ferril, Denver poet, editor and publicist.
Page 7
"THE RITES BEGIN at the autumnal equinox and culminate on the first day of the New Year with great festivals identified with bowls of plenty; the festivals are associated with flowers such as roses, fruits such as oranges, farm crops such as cotton, and even sun worship and appeasement of great reptiles such as alligators. . . .
"Obviously, football is a syndrome of religious rites symbolizing the struggle to preserve the egg of life through the rigors of impending winter," he writes.
"The egg of life is symbolized by what is called 'the oval', an inflated bladder. The convention is repeated in the architectural oval-shaped design of the vast out-door churches in which the services are held. . . Literally millions attend . . . in anticipation of violent masochism and sadism about to be enacted by a highly trained priesthood of young men . . .
"The ceremony begins with colorful processions of musicians and semi-nude virgins who move in and out of ritualized patterns. This excites the worshipers to rise from their seats, shout frenzied poetry in unison and chant ecstatic anthems."
DR. FREUD'S only visit to the United States was to lecture at Clark University, Worcester, Mass., as part of the school's 20th anniversary celebration in September of 1909.
U.S. Berlin Troops Move To Protect Border Rights
By United Press International
BERLIN—Communist forces interfered with American traffic across the border of this divided city today, and shortly afterwards all American military forces in Berlin were placed on an official status of alert for more than five hours.
American and British tanks and troop reinforcements were moved up to the Friedrichstrasse crossing point and the Brandenburg Gate border sector.
"All Berlin command troops have been on a status of alert since 10 minutes past 10 (3:10 a.m. Lawrence time) this morning," a U.S. Army spokesman said.
THE 6,500 AMERICAN TROOPS were alerted as the Communists challenged the U.S. right of free access to East Berlin.
The spokesman added that the alert was lifted at 3:35 p.m. (8:35 a.m. Lawrence time).
The alert came at about the time U.S. soldiers drove three jeeps 400 yards into East Berlin to escort an American civilian automobile across the border.
The move apparently was a dramatic reiteration of American determination to maintain the right of free access to all parts of the divided city.
LATER, TWO U.S. ARMY tourist buses were stopped at the border by Communist police. The vehicles, with 37 Americans, including women and children aboard, returned to the American checkpoint at the Friedrichstrasse crossing after more than an hour. A U.S. spokesman said they were pulled back to prevent harrassment of the women aboard.
It was the second time in a week that U.S. soldiers moved across the city border into East Berlin. Last Sunday, a nine-man military police squad twice marched into East Berlin to escort the automobile of Alan E. Lightner Jr., head of the U.S. state department mission here, when he was stopped by the Reds. He drove through a third time without interference.
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Wednesday, October 25, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Edwards to Be Keynoter
Karl Edwards, professor of education, will deliver the keynote address Nov. 3 at the conference of the Tennessee State Association for Student Teaching. The talk will be on "Improving Supervisory Services in Student Teaching."
The conference will be held Nov. 3-4 at Memphis State University. Methods of bettering the supervision in student teaching will be discussed at the conference
Prof. Edwards will also deliver the summary address at the dinner meeting on the first day.
Divine Love always has met and always will meet every human need. Mary Baker Eddy
Lost Article Claims Open
A two-year accumulation of misplaced items ranging from a woman's raincoat to slide rules and men's cuff links have been turned over to the campus security office from the physiology department, Malott Hall.
Anyone wishing to claim any of the approximately 15 items, mostly notebooks, may call at the campus "lost and found" at the business office.
CRC Meets Tonight
PENNEY'S
The Civil Rights Council will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in the Kansas Union building. The meeting is open to the public.
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Page 8
University Daily KansanWednesday. October 25. 1961
Cheerleader Blasts Lack of Enthusiasm
KU's head cheerleader rapped the knuckles of the student body for radiating a sense of false intellectualism and forgetting about cheering. He cited the football games this year as evidence.
Bruce Bee, Mission senior said, "The students are trying to act like alums. They are trying to act like people 40 and 50 years old. They come to the game dressed in suits and ties and act like it's above them to cheer."
BEE SAID THAT SPIRIT at the football games is being lost in an effort to act mature and adult. "I think it is fine that we act mature and adult in the classroom, but at football games I think we should be college students," he said.
Much discussion arose when Kep Kepner, Wichita junior, said that
GSP Night Guest Leaves 4 Matches
Four burnt matchsticks were the only visible evidence left behind by a quick-walking but taciturn man who flitted through the basement of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall about 2:20 yesterday morning.
A GSP resident was in a basement study room when a man whose age was estimated between 22 and 25 years walked hurriedly through the room to a door leading to an exit.
The incident was reported to Mrs. Alice K. Hutchinson, housemother, and relayed to Lawrence and campus security police. A thorough check of the building and closets, produced no sign of the intruder, according to police.
But in an otherwise spotless kitchen, from which the man emerged in his journey through the study room, police found the four matchsticks, one on the floor and three on the stove.
the reserved seating plan was partially to blame for the lack of enthusiasm. "When you walk right in before the game to a reserved seat you don't feel like yelling," he said. "Last year when you had to stand in line for several hours to get a good seat, when you finally got in, you felt like cheering."
"I don't think it makes any difference where we sit," countered Bee. "They don't want to yell because of what an absolute stranger who they may never see again that is sitting in front of them might think. Others don't want to yell because somebody that they know is sitting several rows down from them and they might not like it."
"OUR STUDENTS ARE very conservative and reserved," said Tim Hamill, Colby sophomore. "A lot of times I don't think I'm noticed down there. I think we need some gimmick to attract attention. Colorado cheerleaders use a trampoline."
The cheerleaders were dismayed about the senior and junior support. They commented that the freshmen are the ones with the enthusiasm but they are way down at the end of the stadium.
THE CHEERLEADERS pointed to the absence of this lack of spirit at other schools. They agreed that, at Colorado, students were cheering hard for their team and having a good time doing it.
"The KU, cheering at Colorado was lousy," said Judy Kulowski, St. Joseph, Mo., junior. She said that there were 300 students at the Colorado game among the reported 2,300 KU fans. "There was one man on the front row that kept yelling at us Do a cheer, do a cheer." So we did one, and who was the only person velling? The man on the front row."
Justice Department Defends Negroes
"I was close to the Iowa State cheering section and they were doing a great job. There were not very many of them either," Miss Kulowski said.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Department of Justice has placed before the Supreme Court a brief branding as un-Constitutional the arrests and convictions of three Negro students engaged in sit-in demonstrations. If the court supports the position of the Attorney General, Southern prosecutors will have a much harder time charging integrationists with "disturbing the peace."
Burke Marshall, assistant attorney general for civil rights, made a distinction between sit-in demonstrators and freedom riders. He said, "The freedom riders have an absolutely unquestionable right to do what they are doing — testing state compliance with federal statutes. On the other hand, the legal status of non-interstate sit-ins is less clear."
The Justice Department filed a "friend of the court" brief alleging that in the three cases "there is no evidence that the students who sat down at previously 'white' lunch counters in Louisiana were disturbing the peace."
The Justice Department argues that the records in all three cases indicate the students were peaceful. If the students were not, in fact, disturbing the peace, then the Justice Department says they were deprived of their rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, which says persons cannot be deprived of "life, liberty, or property without due process of law."
The Justice Department further argues that if the students were violating the breach of the peace statute, then the statute is unconstitutional because it is so vague that no one could know when he was breaking the law.
Prof. Kleinberg to St. Louis
Jacob Kleinberg, professor of chemistry, will present the lecture on inorganic chemistry at this year's Midwest Award Day Symposium, Nov. 4.
His lecture is entitled "Some Adventures in Inorganic Synthesis."
Truth is on the march and nothing can stop it.-Emile Zola
MOSCOW — (UPI) — More than a dozen speakers at the Soviet Communist Party Congress heaped new abuse today on Georgi Malenkov, V. M. Molotov, and Lazar Kaganovich whose ouster from the party seemed certain.
Soviet Anti-Party Men Abused
Among the speakers were rank-and-file workers, coal miners, a farmer and representatives of the Venezuelan, Danish, French, Colombian, Australian and Lebanese Communist parties.
Spaceman Yuri Gagarin, just recovered from a bout of flu, attended the congress today. At the no recess, he and the second Cosmonaut, Gherman Titov, walked together through the lobby, attracting photographers and autograph hunters.
Meanwhile, the attacks continued on Malenkov, Molotov, and Kaganovich, members of the "anti-party" group who bucked Khrushev's plans five years ago. They were singled out yesterday for violent criticism by presidium member Nikolai Shvernik.
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Page 9
Lawrence Family Adopts Philippine Women Students
By Arthur Miller
(Editor's note: This is the second of a three part series on the People-to-People program at KU.)
Nearly 50 pounds of rice ago two Philippine women students came to the United States and KU.
SHORTLY THEREAFTER they found that their diet was not complete without rice. The Lawrence family with whom they lived decided to remedy the situation and in the past two months has gone through nearly 50 pounds of the oriental food.
This is but one of the unusual adjustments that the Hal L. Bigham family has experienced since they adopted the two Philippine students
"ONE THING ABOUT having these girls with us is that it makes an American more appreciative of what we have in this country," he added.
"True, we have been eating a lot of rice," Mr. Bigham commented. "Seriously, though, it's one of the finest experiences Mrs. Bigham and I have known."
Sitting in the living room of his new home three miles south of Lawrence, Mr. Bigham explained that he and Mrs. Bigham became interested in the students after reading about LIFE (Lawrence International Fellowship Enterprise). An article in the local newspaper asked for people who would like to share their home with a foreign student.
"Since we had a Philippine girl working in our restaurant for five years, and since we liked her so much, we decided to have the students live with us," Mr. Bigham said.
"WHEN THE GIRLS first arrived," Mrs. Bigham continued, "we had to adjust to having them with us, but otherwise our lives have gone on just the same."
The Bighams explained that the girls eat on the campus a lot since they are often busy at their restaurant.
"WE DO TRY to eat together several times a week," Mr. Bigham said. "In fact the girls often prepare Philippine dishes for us."
In the den of their home the Bighams are receiving instruction from the women in the Philippine language, Tagalog.
"We haven't been able to spend as much time as we'd like on the language lately," Mr. Bigham explained, "because we've been keeping pretty busy with our business."
The two women living with the Bighams are Josefina Tecson, San Miguel, Bulacan and Lilia Siasat, Taal, Batanges, graduate students.
WHEN ASKED IF the adjustment had been difficult, Miss Siasat said, "We felt at home right away, especially since Mr. and Mrs. Bigham were so kind to us."
The women explained that the People-to-People brother-sister program has also made them feel more at home.
Miss Tecson said that upon their
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St John's Church, 13th & Kentucky.
TODAY
La reunion du Cercle Francais aura à
beures dans le salte de Forum de l'union.
M.Kuhn fera un compete-rendu de
dients à dients de l'université de
Kansai Paris.
Westminster Center Council: 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204. Orcad.
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. Room 306,
Kansas Union, Instructor, Larry Bodle.
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch:
12 noon. Canterbury House.
Westminster Center Choir: 5.45 p.m.
Head of Head. Choir practice followed by supern.
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
p.m. Danforth Chapel,
Prayer Room: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel,
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
arrival they were contacted by their American sisters. They have also attended the People-to-People picnics and other activities.
The example of the Bigham story, however, is not unique.
A LOCAL DRUGGIST asked if he could have a French student live at his home, at no cost to the student, so his grade-school-age children could learn a foreign language.
A widow living on a farm near Lawrence said she would like to have several students live at her large home at no cost to the students.
A Lawrence businessman told Lawrence LIFE officials, "I know there will be one or two students,
for one reason or another, who will be difficult to place. I'd like to have one of these students live with my family. I don't care where he might come from."
WITHOUT THE combined effort of People-to-People and LIFE the foreign students at KU would probably still be left to gather among themselves as they did in the past.
(The final article in this series will cover the structure of People-to-People and the reaction of several foreign students to the program.)
Wednesday, October 25.1961 University Daily Kansan
I lay it down as a fact that, if all men knew what others say of them, there would not be four friends in the world.—Blaise Pascal
25 'Communist Agents' Arrested in Peru
LIMA, Peru — (UPI) — Government forces moved today to check political tension in Peru with arrest of 25 persons as Communist agents. The Communist Party is legally outlawed in Peru.
An official statement, accused Cuba's Fidel Castro regime of "inspiring and orienting" Monday night's rioting outside the National capitol in which a student was killed.
THE STATEMENT said the Cuban "Communist tyranny" was spearheading local subversion in the hopes of disrupting government plans for orderly general elections next year.
Professional agitators are taking advantage of the three-weeks-old
strike of 50,000 teachers to foment disorders, the government statement warned. It called on teachers to end their walkout.
Monday's street rioting followed a demonstration by teachers and university students in front of the capitol. Police moved in to break up the demonstrators when they started stoning the building.
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 25, 1961
Student Group Forms to Fight Campus Apathy
Bv Roy Miller
Disturbed by the general apathy of college students to the political threats facing the United States, twenty KU students sponsored an advertisement in Monday's Kansan urging students to "Stand Up and Be Counted."
The group feels that college students should become aware of the situation facing the United States and the world.
THE ADVERTISEMENT SAID:
"One of our basic rights is freedom of speech. Let's use it. Let's stand up and be counted!"
The idea for the ad and organization of the group was sparked when student apathy was suggested as a human relations study case. Most group members are in the same human relations class.
Among other things, the ad said,
"We feel that we must overcome
the complacency and apathy of
Americans so that we can become
concerned with the present chaotic
world conditions. . . "
BOB WILLIAMS, Wichita senior and organizer of the group, said, the proposed case "caught on like wildfire."
Monday's ad was a "test" according to Williams. Student reactions so far have been varied. Williams said many students have taken a "so what?" attitude.
The group has no general policy Williams said.
"It is for action, verbal or otherwise. We are against the general unconcern and general ignorance of the college student to world political problems."
AT PRESENT, no plans have been established. Williams said he hoped any action would be intelligent and nonpartisan.
Some proposed actions include writing articles, letters to the editor, and attending the various campus forums.
A march to the re-dedication of the Liberty Memorial Nov. 11 in Kansas City, Mo., was considered, then dropped.
Williams hopes the idea for student awareness will spread to other colleges.
WILLIAMS AND several other members of the group interviewed said the main threats today are the Berlin crisis and the spread of communism.
Williams termed Russia's latest nuclear explosion a "big bluff." He said it was a "terror weapon, or propaganda device."
Further plans for action were to be discussed this morning at the 11 a.m. class. The class is conducted by Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations.
ASC Sets Up-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) resentatives of the groups to see how they felt about the liaison committee?
"No. I thought they would be more receptive if the committee had already been established. I think Vox consulted with the Lawrence mayor or city council. This is where the idea for the committee sprung," he said. "If we consult with these groups, why not others?"
Do these groups need advice?
"IT WILL BE HARD to convince some groups, such as the Board of Regents. But even if it takes four or five years to get it, it will be beneficial.
"We just wanted to set up an official way to present campus views," he replied.
Correction
Ray Davis, radiochemist of the Brookhaven National Laboratory, will present a seminar on "Meteorites and Cosmic Rays" at 4 p.m. today in 122 Malott. It was previously stated that the meeting would take place Oct. 24.
New Russian Bomb Brings Big Protest
By United Press International
Russia exploded a new atomic bomb today in the face of a mounting wave of world-wide protests against its nuclear testing.
Sweden's Uppsala Seismological Institution said the explosive force of the new blast was equal to a "few megatons" of TNT, or about one-tenth of the strength of Monday's big blast.
BUT NEWS of the latest test triggered another round of protests and outcries in Sweden. Experts said that while today's explosion was "small" compared with Monday's blast it still was in the megaton range and would add to the already high degree of radioactivity in the atmosphere.
NSA Program-
(Continued from page 1)
A committee member asked Palmer if it was certain there would be a Current Events Committee in the event of disaffiliation.
"I don't think there's any doubt that the ASC will pass the whole bill if it approves disaffiliation," Palmer said.
(AT THE ASC MEETING last night, the bill's provision for a current events committee was voted down before the disaffiliation was brought up.)
Speaking on Dickson's motion, Menghini said, "I'd vote against this if the committee personnel were to remain the same."
"It would look pretty bad for us if the ASC considers re-affiliation next semester and we're on the Current Events Committee. It would imply approval of disaffiliation," he said.
CHANGING THE DISCUSSION, Miller asked Palmer, "What type of national representation will KU have if NSA would be disaffiliated?"
"We will not be represented nationally." Palmer said.
Menghini interposed, aking,
"Would the current events committee receive any money?"
Thomas interrupted this discussion by asking for a vote on Dickson's motion. The motion failed six to two.
Palmer received the floor again to admonish committee members about speaking at the ASC meeting.
"WHEN THE BILL is presented tonight" he said, "I want debate confined to NSA itself and the issues involved.
"I hope the arguments will not reach the personal level, and that no references will be made to outside organizations." he added.
The meeting was then adjourned permanently.
Parliaments, royalty and prime ministers joined ordinary citizens in expressing alarm over the Soviets continued nuclear testing and their big super-bomb. Demonstrators marched through the streets of European cities.
In Tokyo, the lower house of Japan's parliament passed a resolution calling for an end to all nuclear tests underground and in the atmosphere.
THE JAPANESE government, in a verbal protest to the Soviet embassy, accused Russia of "reckless nuclear testing" which it said would end in "dangers and unhappiness" for all mankind for generations to come.
In Copenhagen, some 4,000 persons marched in silent protest last night against the explosion of the Soviet super-bomb.
Aldon Bell, instructor of history, led the first Humanities Forum of the year yesterday with a talk entitled "Religion and Radicalism."
His talk, which concerned radicalism and the non-conformist religious movements in 19th century England, was based primarily on research for a doctoral degree. Following the talk, Mr.Bell led an informal discussion with the 18 faculty members, wives, and students present.
Bell Describes Early Radicals
Mr. Bell began his talk with the changes brought about by the Methodist movement in both the established church and in the non-conformist sects.
Mr. Bell traced the liberal movement through the century, telling how the liberals were incorporated into the radical movement. He said the attitude of the liberals was essentially negative and that any positive reforms came about in spite of, not because of, the liberals.
He said a radical in the early 19th century was defined as anyone advocating a thorough reform, and was not necessarily associated with a left-wing movement. A liberal at the time was one who was concerned with liberty, he said.
Mr. Bell traced the religious attitudes of the non-conformist sects through the century, and told how the radical religious movement moved from the lower classes into the upper classes during the century.
Housing Bias一
Miss Johnson said this morning that this petition which warns of the possibility of "offending Lawrence residents" by jumping into the discrimination problem too fast and too hard does not completely represent the views of the committee.
(Continued from page 1) and chairman of the Lawrence Human Relations committee.
HARDY SAID after the ASC meeting last night that the two committees had discussed presenting this petition to the ASC as a resolution themselves.
"I think such a resolution (to ask active resistance groups to cease their efforts) will come up in about two weeks. We'll make a complete report after elections," he said.
THE HOUSING and Human Relations committees made their reports on the basis of housing office information, conferences with the administration, Lawrence townpeople and samples of student opinion.
The groups who send representatives to the Chancellor two weeks ago to ask him to stop the housing office from listing renters who discriminate were: Civil Rights Council, People-to-People, the International Club, the KU-Y, the Wesley Foundation, and the Westminster Center.
Beat Bops by Bank, Leaves With Bread
GREENVILLE, N.C. — (UPI)
— A "beatnik" youth with bushy hair and a goatee robbed a drive-in branch bank at gunpoint today and pedaled away on a bicycle after firing one loud blank.
Officers said the bandit, about 21 years of age, wore a red coat, tan pants and white shoes.
He got away with $3.755.
Notice confirmed the bandit
"Yes, it was a bicycle," an amazed office desk sergeant said.
Police confirmed the bandit used a bicycle for his getaway.
"He was last seen going north as fast as he could pedal."
Then he pulled a pistol, either loaded with blanks or a toy, and stuck it in the ribs of the branch manager.
Officials said the youth "parked" his bicycle around the corner from the bank and went in and asked employees about opening a savings account
The bandit took the cash in a cloth bag, placed it in a large paper sack and rushed out. A customer approaching the bank saw him get on the bicycle and pedal away.
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Wednesday, October 25.1961 University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
One day, $0c; 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 28c for billing
All ads must be called or brought to the. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
LOST
FOR RENT
WILL THE PERSON who found the Post Versalog slide rule in 503 Summerfield please call Richard Johnson any night between 5-7. Reward: tf
ROOM AND BOARD, $55 a month. Call
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COLLEGE BOYS or couples, child welcome --- utilities paid, convenient location -- Call VI 3-9776 or VI 3-9824 for appt. 10-25
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MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
iced paper bags. Plicie, party supplies
Iced drink, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
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HELP WANTED
STUDENTS: Men and Women, learn while you earn. Inquire at 318 Watson Library. 10-26
Wanted—Walter: 7 days a week, two
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1 laundry privileges. Call VT 3-7863. 10-25
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BUSINESS SERVICES
OIL PORTRAITS painted. Lasting gift to
the couple and up. Call VI 3-8207, ask for Robert.
BABYSITTING any time at 221 Mound-
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10-25
MILKEN'S 'S.O.S.' — Now at two
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U. AUTO C.—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, washers, and linens; everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center . . . 1218 Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
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ALTERATIONS --- Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf
DRESH MAKING and alterations. For-
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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. tff
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center - most complete shop in mid-
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1955 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, good top and interior. Mechanically sound. Good tires, automatic trans., radio, heater. $500.
Call H. White, III 3-6700. 10-30
EXTRA FINE. robust AKC Registered German Shepherd puppies. Call Baldwin 594-6975 or contact John Selfridge at KU ext. 367. 10-30
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonia, Colliu, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf
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CONSOLE MAGNAVOX mahogany stereo reduced to $139. Slight damage on cabinet. See at Pettingill-Davis, 723 Mass. 11-6
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PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 25, 1961
FOOTBALL CONTEST
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST
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WIN $10.00 CASH
Closest prediction of the combined total points scored in the games listed in the advertisements on this page will receive a cash prize of $10.00 donated by these Merchants.
1. Check the games listed in each
2. Fill out & clip coupon.
3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 10-27.
In case of ties the $10 will be split.
Name
Address ___ Ph.
My prediction is ___ points.
LAST WEEK'S WINNER:
One entry per student.
Mrs. Adrian Lindsey ... 167 pts.
Actual Total ... 168 pts.
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N
S. C. A.
NSA IS GONE—Charles Patterson: "By disaffiliation with NSA . . . KU has lost a voice in international affairs."
A. M. B. A.
NSA IS GONE—Sandra Moore: "The whole issue... pure political philosophy. I hate to see the liberal voice suppressed."
ALBERTO MICHAELS
NSA IS GONE—Jerry Dickson: "There wasn't one meeting in which we didn't have to have a political argument."
Daily hansan
Thursday, October 26, 1961
59th Year, No.30
NSA Post-Mortem Is Not Conclusive
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
A Kansan Press Conference By Scott Payne
Ten members of the former National Student Association committee here met last night at a press conference to discuss the All Student Council action which dissolved the committee and disaffiliated KU from NSA.
Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, began the conference by saying. "As a member of the KU Young Republicans I am opposed to NSA as it now is—an extremely liberal body.
"I am willing to abide with the ASC decision but I am disappointed at the Council's failure to provide KU with a current events committee," he said.
"Such a committee," he said, "could have done much more here than the NSA committee because it would have been under far less pressure."
Replying to further questions, Dickson said, "No one campus political party has been responsible for KU's disaffiliation. In fact there was an NSA split in both parties. It was purely a personal decision on the part of ASC members."
Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior, told Dickson that he disagreed. "I've been told by three sorority and fraternity members that they were coerced and threatened in their voting. This could hardly be called personal decision."
Miller continued his remarks, mentioning that the Young Americans for Freedom had had a role in the disaffiliation measure.
Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior, interrupted Dickson.
"I am getting sick and tired of hearing that YAF is the guiding light in such happenings throughout the nation," McIlwaine said.
"I think it's very humorous for anyone to say that YAF is so powerful at KU it can dictate to the ASC—without even appearing there.
Interrupting McIlwaine's answer, Dickson said. "This is a good illustration of the trouble with the NSA committee this semester. There wasn't one meeting in which we didn't have to have a political argument," he said. "This is one reason KU was disaffiliated from NSA."
"Members of the committee persisted in arguing political philosophy on the national level," Dickson said. "A current events committee could have eliminated this whole problem."
Miller said, "I disagree with you again. Last year there was a great deal of political dissention on the committee. We spent most of our time arguing about politics," he said.
"This year," he said, "it's been different. Political discussion has not been prevelant at all. The only reason we couldn't get anything done was that we were not given a decent chance," he added.
Charles Patterson, Joplin, Mo., sophomore, interposed, saying, "I think the ASC has made a graye mistake in disaffiliating Kansas University from NSA.
"NSA was a tool of the ASC," he said, "and when it began to (Continued on page 12)
(Continued on page 12)
KU Peace Team Will Summit in Columbia
The KU-MU meeting to plan ways to prevent violence at the Nov. 25 football game here is now scheduled for Nov. 12.
The committee of seven KU students will go to the MU campus at Columbia early in the morning. They plan to meet with the MU committee for about 10 hours, Max Eberhard, Great Bend senior and KU student body president, said.
Committee members who will go to Columbia are Eberhart; Jerry Palmer, El Dorado, chairman of the All Student Council; Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence, member of the ASC; Bruce Bee, Mission, head cheerleader; Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott, member of the ASC; Larry Moore, Topeka, student body vice president; and Carrie Merryfield, Minneapolis. All are seniors.
USIA Calls To P-T-P for Help
Bv Arthur Miller
The United States Information Agency (USIA) has contacted People-to-People to help them find a solution to a foreign student problem in Washington, D.C.
William Dawson, Kansas City senior and chairman or People-to-People, said today that international students in the Capitol city area have been demonstrating against a lack of American student interest in foreign students.
"An assistant of Edward R. Murrow (USIA chief) telephoned Sam Montague of the Hallmark Foundation, who is also secretary of the National People-to-People program, asking for a solution to the problem," Dawson said.
HE ADDED that the foreign students were apparently disturbed because in Washington American students show little interest in helping them learn the American way of life.
"NEITHER THE State Department nor the USIA was able to find a solution to the foreign student problem." Dawson added, "and since the USIA representative is acquainted with People-to-People
(Continued on page 12)
Petition Asks Action Pause
By Zeke Wigglesworth
Two Lawrence leaders have signed a petition which urges curtailment of active civil rights demonstrations until the city of Lawrence and the Human Relations Commission have had an opportunity to study the discrimination problem in the community.
Lawrence Mayor Ted Kennedy and William Binns, chairman of the City of Lawrence Human Relations Commission, signed the petition which may be adopted by the All Student Council as a stand on solution to discrimination problems.
The petition reads:
"With due consideration to the problem of minority group student housing at the University of Kansas and the town of Lawrence, and to events of the past year that have so effectively demonstrated the opinion of individuals or groups of individuals on this problem; it is the recommendation of we the undersigned that any further action, either passive or active by these aforementioned individuals be curtailed until the organs duly authorized by city of Lawrence and University of Kansas have had sufficient time to examine the situation and make recommendations as to those steps necessary to alleviate the aforementioned problems."
Mr. Kennedy said he was in sympathy with what was set down in the document.
"We here in Lawrence have, for the first time, a human rights group to consider problems of discrimination. It would be wrong to start it off with a series of demonstrations."
HE SAID that the Human Relations Commission should be given a chance to solve the problems, and that his view of curtailment was simply a slacking off of pressure for a time so that the group could operate.
Mr. Binns, chairman of the commission and clinical psychologist at Watkins Hospital, said the petition seemed a good document.
"My only point in signing it was to show my feeling that these new groups at the University and in Lawrence should be given a chance
to operate effectively. I do not agree with the document in its entirely."
HE SAID he was signing the petition as a citizen and not as an official representative of the commission.
"It is my personal opinion that nothing can be accomplished by force. The commission, moreover, has been shown no proof that there are any problems of discrimination."
It was Mr. Binns' feeling that time was needed for the HRC to operate effectively.
The petition was first presented to the combined housing and human rights committee of the ASC by Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the ASC human rights committee.
IN A TELEPHONE INTERVIEW Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior and chairman of the committee, said he was opposed to the adoption of the petition as policy by the ASC.
"It slaps the hands of those groups which have been working on discrimination problems. The ASC should take a stand on the issue sometime, but this should not be it."
He said he believed in the basic idea of the petition, which is the use of non-force tactics in civil rights problems.
Roberta Johnson, Joliet, III, senior, and a member of the human rights committee of the ASC, said she didn't know who wrote the petition.
"IT WAS BROUGHT to the meeting by Brian Grace, chairman of the housing committee. I agree to it in theory, but I don't agree to the way it is worded. It is my feeling that instead of making these other groups stop, we should invite them to join with us. We are not going to do anything for awhile, and I wish they would do the same."
She reported that the combined Housing and Human Rights committee is split about 50-50 on the question.
Weather
Fair today and tonight and slightly cloudy tomorrow. High today will be around 60 and the low tonight about 30. Winds will switch to southerly and rising temperatures are predicted through Friday.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 26. 1961
On Campus Apathy
Apathy, as defined by Webster, is a lack of emotion or interest. Students at KU, as described by onlookers, have the qualities listed by Webster.
Last year, few people would have attempted to refute the KU student's lack of interest. This year there is a "revolt on the campus."
THE REVOLT IS NON-VIOLENT. IT IS not noisy or over-bearing. Sometimes it is so quiet we are hardly aware of its presence.
The revolt is a by-product of ideas, programs and a sudden interest in people, justice, equality, and politics. It is not a revolt for revolt's sake.
Awareness on the campus is shown in many ways, but mostly by action, by forming organizations that are beneficial for other people.
CONSIDER THESE RELATIVELY NEW organizations:
People-to-People, much publicized for it's national importance, was formed BECAUSE of apathy. P-T-P has created an understanding and a new spirit on the campus. It has created excitement among many students.
Two far-sighted students saw a need for communication between American students and foreign students. These two realized that little or nothing would be done by anyone else, so they took the steps to establish the individual system of communication. And they have been successful.
THE CIVIL RIGHTS COUNCIL CANNOT be called apathetic. It is interested in justice for a minority group. Their actions are non-violent.
although backed by emotion and personal convictions.
Young Americans for Freedom, the newest group to form, has said it is interested in creating awareness of national and international problems.
YAF says it is dedicated to what it considers basic American principles, advocating political and economic freedom and individual liberty. Their declared purpose is to inform other students of their beliefs and create in them an excitement for, a concern over and an interest in policies made by Congress that will directly or indirectly affect them as citizens.
Organizations on campus also try to acquaint the student with campus politics, their platforms, policies and purposes at KU.
Vox Populi and the University Party send representatives to organized living groups to inform the residents of issues concerning them.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
YET, WITH ALL OF THESE ORGANIZATIONS, their information and ideas, with all this revolt, what happens?
Some people are stirred, excited, interested. Other students are not.
Very little occurs that makes an onlooker change his opinion on KU apathy.
A student has an obligation to be aware of what is happening at his University, as much as a citizen does to be aware of what is happening in world events.
Those students who are aware now will be the informed, vital citizens of tomorrow. It is unfortunate their number is so few.
Israel and Russia Contrasted
Carrie Merryfield
To come to Israel with a knowledge of the Soviet Union is to sense vividly the contrast between two ways of national development, the authoritarian and the voluntary democratic. This contrast is all the more significant because of the frequently expressed theory that freedom is a luxury only an affluent society can afford, and that driving compulsion is the sole road to progress and prosperity for an economically retarded nation.
THE SOVIET method (employed even more ruthlessly by the Chinesese Communists) of achieving the twin goals of a highly industrialized society and a collectivized agriculture is characterized by an inhumanity that can only be appreciated by those who have seen it in operation. Stalin himself admitted to Churchill during a wartime conversation that the forcing of the peasants into collective farms was accompanied by brutalities on a scale matched only in a major war. Four million peasants staved to death in an avoidable political famine in 1932-33; millions more were deported to slave labor in North Russian and Siberian concentration camps.
Deportation was not limited to "kulaks"—i.e., peasants who did not want to submit to the new serifdom of the collective farm—but was applied indiscriminately to nationalist groups, dissident Communists, Poles and other inhabitants of areas overrun by the Red Army. In addition, under Stalin there were massive deportations on racial grounds; not only did innumerable individuals become "unpersons," but whole ethnic groups were simply erased from the Soviet map.
HOW DIFFERENT has been the record in Israel! Although a very small society compared with the huge Soviet Union, its enormous problems of survival and economic viability might seem to have required a strong authoritarian hand. The absorption of a million immigrants with extremely different traditions and cultural backgrounds was a tremendous task, even if one takes full account of generous aid from abroad, especially from the American Jewish community.
pioneer Zionists, choosing of their own free will to live on a communal basis.
Yet Israel has remained faithful to the principles of voluntarism and democracy. When some recent Soviet visitors saw an Israeli "kibbutz," or communal farm, they could hardly believe that no armed guards were needed to prevent the colonists from stealing grain from the common store. Here in a nutshell was the profound difference between Russian peasants, reluctantly herded into a system which they detested, and idealistic
APART FROM universal military service, which is a national necessity in a small country surrounded by avowed enemies, the Israeli citizen is left to the free exercise of his own judgment. He may live on a communal farm, he may try his hand at a more individualistic form of farming, or he may engage in some business or profession.
No authority comes to the newly arrived immigrant in Israel and tells him what he must do. Some financial inducements are offered by the World Jewish Agency to those who are willing to go to the "development areas," where living conditions are still somewhat harder and more primitive than in the settled communities. But if the immigrant chooses to try his luck in Tel Aviv, Haifa or Jerusalem, no one will stop him, nor will anyone prevent his leaving the country altogether, if he so wishes.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
AS IS USUALLY the case, political democracy goes hand in hand with a free and mixed economy. About 50 per cent of Israeli industry is in private hands; about 35 per cent belong to the Histadrut, the powerful trade-union federation; about 15 per cent is Government-owned. Israel's economy is dynamic and free of stagnation or unemployment. Local authorities are convinced that they could easily absorb another million or two immigrants within the present boundaries.
University of Kansas student newspaper
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$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
Ron Gallagher Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
These facts seem to support the theory that individual freedom is entirely compatible with economic growth and progress. As such, they should carry special weight in the underdeveloped African and Asian countries where Israeli technical aid missions are now active.
Tom Brown Business Manager Don Gergick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager: David Weins, National Advertising Manager; Charles Martinache, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager.
(From "Two Roads to National Development" by William Henry Chamberlin in the Oct. 16, 1961 New Leader)
Editor's note: We strive to print all letters that are in good taste and deal with public issues, as distinguished from attacks on personalities. Due to the limitations of space, the printing of letters of more than 250 words may be delayed.
Editor's Note
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From the Magazine Rack
The Control of War
By Charles J. Hitch and Roland M. McKean
We might establish a way for either nation to clear up ambiguity "if it wishes to do so." Suppose there is an accidental nuclear explosion in one country or, during a local war, a large group of bombers is sent out to deliver small nuclear or conventional bombs. Each side will be fearful of a pre-emptive strike by the other and for that reason may itself consider a pre-emptive strike. Anxiety will mount rapidly. A quick decision will have to be made. In this situation each side may desperately want to convey to the other that it had, or has, no intention of attacking.
We need some means for the nation initiating the provocative incident to prove quickly that it is not planning a surprise attack. Or a way for both nations to prove simultaneously that they are not launching attacks. Mere assertions will not be enough, but parading corroborative evidence before inspectors or radar or television cameras may be reassuring. To be sure, proof will become increasingly difficult when striking forces consist largely of missiles, but this is all the more reason for hard thinking about a "modus operandi" for situations of this sort."
By Harrison Brown and James Real
Tens of thousands of scientists and technicians have devoted all of their professional lives to the invention and construction of weapons. A majority of those who went to work "after" World War II are convinced that weaponry is a way of life for themselves and expect the U.S.-Soviet contest to continue forever. Many of them are articulate and highly valued consultants in every walk of American life, from the Congressional Committee to the P.T.A.
The military leaders themselves are quite naturally not enthusiastic for disarmament or for any steps that might curtail the freedom of action of the armed services. There is rather clearly a military elite emerging in the United States which is dedicated to a position of perpetual hostility towards the Soviet Union and which wields enormous political as well as military power.
Although these men are not generally openly political, they are in every sense the paramilitary-civilian soldiers. They have spent most of their adult lives in the direct or secondary employment of one or another of the services, and their sympathy for and concurrence with their uniformed colleagues are often marked and open. Should a showdown between the military and the civilian sectors occur, this group could be relied upon to staunchly back the handlers of the weapons they have so devotedly evolved.
The certainty of this wholly passive operation has in it a genuine deterrent effect. For an enemy attack is decided upon only after calculation of the damage it will inflict. The damage includes lives. If a proper Civil Defense is believed able to save half the lives in an impact area, the immediate damage in that respect would be reduced one-half, and the enemy calculations would be adjusted accordingly.
By Mark S. Watson
By Thomas K. Finletter
A Deterrent Force cannot surely guarantee the peace, and I make two conclusions from that. One is that we must try with all the determination of which we are capable for a world disarmament agreement, for that may save us from nuclear war. The second is that we must build up our military strength greatly and thereby put off nuclear war for as long as we can, and thus buy time within which we can try to persuade ourselves and the world to give up this obsolete and horrible business of war.
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Page 3
Thursday, October 26.1961 University Daily Kansan
By Safynaz Kazem
THE IMPORTANT THING, by Robert Granat, Random House,
$3.95
"When are you going to wake up, Jim?"
'Wake up?' James said automatically, momentarily dumfounded.
'What do you mean, wake up?'
"I mean wake up, come alive!"
This was the problem of young Yale student James Warsaw. He was always carrying the feeling of boredom and shallowness. He could discover no cause worth fighting for. He used to read that quotation Leonard—his college roommate—had tacked over his desk: "The important thing is to desire to desire what one should desire."
JAMES HAD BEEN AT ODDS WITH HIS FAMILY, his religion and himself. His upper-middle class Jewish background, his experience at school and at Yale University did not help him. He could project no goal, no ideal or image into the future. Yet 19-year-old James thought he had to feel alive, to do something important. It was 1943. America was at war. James accepted his induction with excitement. World War II seemed to offer a chance to participate and maybe even to find a meaning in life.
Walking into the house, almost floating without the heavy pack and weapons, he felt his being centered in his triceps, biceps, deltoid and pectoralis major. He felt big and brawny, ready for furious violence of some kind, any kind. It wasn't actually a thought as he stood in the little living room in little Valley Glenn surrounded by the little members of his family, but every word and gesture flowed from one realization that he could defend them against enemies or, for that matter, beat them all. Here he was on the very bottom of the pyramid of military rank, below ground practically, and he felt like a hero.
YET JAMES FOUND THE BATTLE DIFFERENT from what he had expected. Nothing was distilled except fatigue, hopelessness and an even stronger disbelief in what other men held sacred.
It was not until he came to understand and open his heart to "Trinidad Sanchez," his New Mexican buddy, that he began to recognize the pieces of his world which had been blown apart—and it was not until he came to know and love "Beate," a German girl, that he saw a way to put them together again. Was this The Important Thing?
Mr. Granat (36 years old) was born in Havana, Cuba, and lives in New Mexico. Though his novel is written in English, the reader will find many Spanish, French and German lines.
THIS REVIEWER WOULD SUGGEST that if Mr. Granat were rewriting his 343-page novel, it might be well to employ the foreign language phrases some other way, since the popular reader will not understand them. Also, the author of this promising first novel might balance his two different styles: the deep philosophical tone and the slangy, even vulgar language.
咕噜
THE EDUCATION OF A POKER PLAYER, by Herbert O. Yardley, Giant Cardinal Edition, 50 cents.
About three years ago I was sitting in a pot limit poker game in St. Louis. I had been dealt cold hands for half the night, but towards one in the morning I began to get hot, aces back to back in stud, three kings in five card draw, and so on. But it didn't matter. The fellow two hands to my left kept winning. I'd be betting my two pair hard, and he'd come up with three tens. I began to get conservative, and he started to bluff. In short, it was a bad night. At about four, I'd had it, and by mutual consent we wrapped up the game.
"Friend." I asked the winner. "How did you do it."
Now I've heard of leg men, shoulder blade men and the like. But a Yardley man?
"I M A YARDLEY MAN," he replied as he snapped a rubber band over a sheaf of bills.
"Herbert O. Yardley," he explained, and seeing the still raised eyebrows, he continued:
"Yardley is the author of 'The Education of a Poker Player,' the best investment since the Dutch bought Manhattan for 24 bucks worth of beads."
Now for four bits the secrets of the trade are available in this paperback. Yardley plays percentage poker, the only kind that consistently wins.
Letters
If you share Yardley's belief that poker is more intellectually challenging (and a helluva lot more fun) than bridge, then you will trot to the nearest bookstore and lay down the change. There are plenty of typical hands for the man who has to have things spelled out for him.—N.R.
Student Apathy Attacked Editor:
As an aware and concerned student and citizen. I wish to express my disappointment that there is really more apathy than I had thought. The students are less apathetic towards their own immediate interest groups (the even the important NSA question received little comment from the student body), yet lack interest and reject a plea for the expression of aware and concern over the world state of affairs.
Today, Oct. 24, it was determined that Russia had positively tested one of their huge bombs. And there were demonstrations all over the world by high school and college students, regrets expressed by individuals and governments, but nary a word on the KU campus. If this is not apathy, what is? Are you aware of the danger, concerned over the consequences, of not only this bomb, but Russia; the fate and determination of Berlin, encroaching imperialism, Communism, which defies all that we in a democracy stand for; love of a free and united western world and whole world?
If you are not, then let us sink under all that we disbelieve in; if you are, then say something. We are the voice of the people. We must show those in power what we think and how we feel. And not only those in power, but the world. What good is an apathetic America to a struggling Berlin? No good. Stand up and be counted — as one of the ones who care.
Patsy Coutts
El Dorado junior
* * *
CIGARETTEIQUETTE
America may have given the world tobacco, but we haven't exactly stinted on ourselves. Over 1,396,000,000 pounds were consumed in 1957 by well over 60,000,000 Americans.
Averaging the sometime smoker with the chain gang, those trying to taper off with those going full steam ahead, the mild-filter-tippers with the puffers of pungent cigars, it still adds up to an awful lot of smoke.
MUCH OF IT IS BLOWING the wrong way. It's surprising how many people who consider themselves the epitome of politeness are guilty of bad smoking manners.
You'll burn people up while failing to set your world on fire if you're persistently guilty of these smoking sins:
Showing a disregard for the nonsmoker. Unforgivable. Don't blow smoke in his direction—or anyone else's.
Talking with a cigarette drooping from the mouth. Appropriate only in gangster films, this habit is rude and unsightly anywhere else. The cigarette should never be between the lips except when you're actually taking a puff.
TAMPING OUT a cigarette on anything other than an ash tray—hogglish. Used tumblers, coffee cups, or plates, decorated with stubs and ashes, are a sickening sight.
Not chaperoning your cigarette—just letting it go out on its own. This highly dangerous practice can and has caused fire and death. At the very least it results in charred furniture and incensed hosts.
Scattering ashes over yourself, your chair, the carpet.
WHILE NOT ALWAYS a breach of manners, lighting one cigarette after another is never the gracious gesture. Heavy smoking is unattractive to watch.
Balancing a cigarette on the side of an ash tray, or placing it on the edge of the table. Quite dangerous.
In short; watch your smoking manners, don't smoke too much, and people will begin to notice that there's something refreshing about you. In fact, they may even tell you that you're just like a breath of fresh air!
THINK ABOUT IT John H. Ernest Junior
Short Ones
FLINT HALL FREDDIE says that those whistling lawyers must be studying Evidence and Future Interests.
From the Newsstand
JFK and the Presidency
It seems certain that for the rest of this century every government of the United States will be a crisis government, taking office during a time of emergency and dealing with enormous pressures from its earliest moments. Almost the whole brief history of the Kennedy Administration is a story of learning the ropes and finding a crisis at the end of each one. . .
KENNEDY IS A TOUGH MAN. He came to office further armored with a certain sense that he was a man of destiny, fated not only to be President of the United States but a great President in a cruel time. There was no great mystique in this; it was a self-evaluation based on knowledge of his own abilities and a study of the men who had held the office before. Bolstering his self-confidence, too, was his conviction that he had chosen the best possible men for the key jobs in the Administration, and had allowed for the freest possible play between their talents and his. Then came the test of reality.
Laos produced a strong Presidential statement in a televised news conference, an implied promise of American intervention. Cuba produced a real intervention without any strong statement. The failure of each had a sobering effect on the Administration. The former illustrated the danger of speaking without a full understanding of all the consequences, the latter pointed up the danger of acting without full consideration of all consequences.
The unfortunate Cuban disaster was most telling on the President. Officials who visit the White House regularly say they are still uncertain how deeply it has scarred him. The scars don't show; their effects do. Kennedy has returned to one of his original, basic attitudes—skepticism. He had listened to what he considered the best brains in the country. He had consulted the highest ranking experts left over from the previous Administration. He had followed their advice, and it had been wrong. Under those circumstances, he asked ruefully, where was he to turn?
The answer was: inward, to himself, to the only man holding the constitutional responsibility for making final decisions. . .
AT TIMES IT ALMOST seems that luck is owned by the Communists. The resignation of Brazilian President Janio Quadros, the unfortunate battle for Bizerte, the death of Dag Hammerskjold—it all made one aide say, "It's enough to persuade you that God is on Khrushchev's side." This must be taken as wry humor rather than as a sign of any weakening in the conviction that we are destined to come out on top in the world struggle if we can muster the will to win..
The President is aware that mustering America's will and determination is still his most urgent problem. He has often referred to this, but he has not expounded upon it and questions on the subject at his news conferences appear to embarrass him. One impediment is clear: He wants to avoid creating the image of a young President whipping up war spirit. For this could alarm not only the neutrals but the men in the Kremlin who, if sufficiently alarmed, might consider taking drastic preventive action.
Certain natural abilities serve Kennedy well: an ability to sleep quickly whenever opportunity presents itself, and an ability to feel that he and his associates have done the best they can. A study of history has taught him that soldiers and statesmen are not always in control of events: They sometimes can only do their best amid the conflicting currents of great forces and watch and wait to make the most of every opportunity or disaster.
ACTUALLY, KENNEDY himself remains determinedly cool. He relaxes with purpose, jokes about his regular weekends away from Washington and plans to continue them. He snatches time to watch the World Series, reads when possible, swims, sails at Hyannisport or Newport. His wit is as ready as ever, his temper just a trifle readier: When Republicans attack his foreign policy in public it bursts out with Irish fervor. But the temper is seldom on public view; only the sun-tanned faces, smiling and relaxed.
Events so far have demonstrated the President's capacity for standing up under the pressure of the bad news of the past months and the bad news he has said he expects for much of this decade. And he continues to be a source of what McGeorge Bundy has called that "steady flow of questions, of ideas., of executive energy which a strong President will give off like sparks."
(From "Kennedy Tightens the Reins" by George E. Herman in the October, 1961, New Leader)
Worth Repeating
So we are faced with a feeling of unfulfillment in the meaning of Excellence as it is coming from the academic world. A large segment of higher education has taken advantage of its national boom to define Excellence in the student as obedience to the call for stronger conventional preparation and more diligent study. We need to go further. Not much progress has yet been seen concerning an Excellence as it might refer to how we can produce people who show a more sympathetic awareness of society's demands upon themselves; a keener interest in tackling our hardest problems such as integration, overpopulation, farm surpluses, or world peace; more careful and impartial reasoning on public issues; creative imagination; livlier appreciation of order and beauty as preconditions for the good city; concern over national stagnation and cheapened ethics; or deeper thinking about the implications of the scientific revolution, which as C. P. Snow observes have been more fully grasped by the Soviets than by the Western peoples.—Louis T. Benezet, president of Colorado College
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 26. 1961
KU-Y's Teen-Age Program Explained
By Doug Farmer
Thirty-five enthusiastic University students attended the informational meeting of the KU-Y adolescent program Tuesday night.
The meeting was a question and answer session conducted by Larry Hatfield and Terry Gilbert, Lawrence juniors, and Mrs. June Smith, special education instructor for Lawrence schools.
The students learned that the pairing of a "big brother or sister" is to be done by Mrs. Helen Cornwell, counselor for the junior high schools in Lawrence. These pairings will be announced to the participating students next week.
MRS. SMITH SAID in answer to the question, "How do you know who are pre-delinquent children?" that the pre-delinquent children are spotted by their missing school, inability to conform in the classroom, and the noticing of the black-leather jacket types.
She said that actually no answer can be given to the parents' reaction to the program since the program hasn't been tried here, but that some parents will welcome the program and some won't let you in the front door. This is one of the problems we face in setting up the "big brother and sister" program, she said.
The group was presented with a number of suggested Do's and Don'ts which are as follows:
DO'S:
- Become acquainted with and keep in close contact with the youngster's family.
- Invite criticism, comments, and help from the parents. Build up a co-operative attitude. Discuss the general plan of action with the parents so the family will know what you are trying to do.
- If possible, talk about school on each visit. Also help him or her with his lessons if he or she needs it. If there is a major school problem, contact the school principal.
- Each child generally has several interests; use his interests as a central theme in conversation to get across information and provide guidance.
- Try to arrange meetings so that at least once a month you will be in an environment or be doing something that will be conducive to a good talk.
DON'TS:
- You should not give the parents the impression you are "taking over." Do not let them think you know it all (even if you do).
- You should not do anything that is contrary to the expressed wishes of the parents. Do not have an argument or a pointed discussion to win them over to your point of view.
- Do not let the child get the idea you are doing him a big favor, or that you are supposed to entertain him. And on the other hand, don't give him the idea you are "watching" him — that you are his "duty."
- Do not loan the child any money. Don't loan him any of your clothing or athletic gear unless for immediate and joint use while you are together.
Hatfield said the program would get into full swing next week when all channels have been cleared and the pairings have been made. Anyone who is interested in the adolescent guidance program may inquire at the KU-Y office.
There is only one certain means by which I can be sure never to see my country's ruin; I will die in the last ditch—William III, Prince of Orange
The local chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism recently served coffee and dessert to KU women interested in journalism.
Women Journalists Guests at Coffee
Fate makes our relatives, choice | The surest way to prevent war is makes our friends—Jacques Dellie| not to fear it—John Randolph
Guests at the rush coffee heard the nine chapter members discuss the purpose and future plans of Theta Sigma Phi. Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism and faculty adviser for the group, mentioned alumni activities of the national organization.
Theta Sigma Phi officers for 1961-62 are: Pres. Karen Kirk, Hutchinson senior; Vice Pres., Susan Ellermeier, Norton senior; Secretary, Kelly Smith, Wichita senior, and Treasurer, Martha Moser, Lyndon senior.
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Candidates for All Student Council living district representatives, and for freshman class officers have been selected.
Parties Choose Candidates
The living district candidates this year are all party affiliated. There were no non-partisan petitions turned in. Thirty-seven students will enter the primaries for the ASC offices.
Sixteen candidates for freshman offices will go into the primaries Nov. 6-7. The general election is Nov. 14-15. Freshman offices are not affiliated with either party. The primaries will drop freshman candidates to a maximum of three for each office.
Vox Populi will not drop any of their candidates after the primary under their "closed primary" system. The University Party, using the "open primary" system, will select on the basis of the primary vote the candidates they want to run for the general election.
Vox uses the primaries to get their candidates known to the students, and to get an indication of where work is needed for the general election.
University Party candidates are:
Fraternity — Lee Ayers, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore; David Gough,
NSA Roll Call-
(The Daily Kansan is providing the following information for those students who are interested in knowing how their respective ASC representatives voted on the resolution to disaffiliate with the National Student Association.)
The question—should KU remain affiliated with the NSA?
The ASC answer—14 no, 8 yes, and 2 abstentions.
Many reasons have been given for the ASC decision Tuesday. Likewise, many students argue, that several reasons were not given.
Among the most often heard reasons for disaffiliation from NSA were;
- **KU** is not receiving enough benefits for the money invested.
- NSA is much too liberal in its stands for the students at KU.
- The functions of the NSA committee could easily be fulfilled by an ASC Current Events committee without having to pay regional and national dues.
- Several of the former NSA committee members argue that other reasons for disaffiliation were used, but were not used openly. Among these were:
- That the National NSA officers had prescribed a four step plan on integration which included integration of fraternities and sororites.
- And that many of the national offices are connected with communist groups.
The final vote was to disaffiliate with Nebraska, representing representatives voting for disaffiliation. DeWitt was independent dependence sophomore; LoRee Antenzen, Bazine senior; John Erickson, Cley Center; Joseph Jollon, Mo. Senior; Richard Harper, Fieldmaster; senior; J乳乳 Jarvis, Winfield sophomore; Janice Wise, Kansas City, Mo.; junior; Wisconsin Wiserberg, awrence senior; Melville Wiserberg, awrence junior; graduate; Verne Gauby, Grand Island, Nebr., law student, Bill Rothenberger, Hays sophomore; James Jackson, Kan. Junior; and Jay Dean, Kansas City Junior
Those voting against disaffiliation were: Sharon Bkrestresser, Versailles, Mo., junior; Michael Ray Thomas, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior; William Breckenridge, Loussainburg senior; Tina Fletcher, Nancy Lane, Hoisington sophomore; Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., junior; and Ezequiel Munoz, Toneka senior.
The two ASC members who obstructed were Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Charlotte (Rusty) Masters. Advance, Mo., senior.
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Sorority — Nancy DeFever, Independence sophomore; Nancy Jasperson, Topica junior; Jeanne Maxwell, Mission sophmore; Martha Smith, Stockton junior; and Janice Wise, Kansas City, Mo. junior.
Chanute junior; and John Jones, Neodeshn junior.
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Large Women's Dorms — Patricia Wilson, Kansas City, Kan., junior.
Large Men's Dorms — Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior; William (Goby) Jobson, Prairie Village junior; and Kenny Kahmann, Springfield, Mo., senior.
Small Men's Dorms — Carl Logan, Holliday sophomore; Roger Poppe, Whitewater junior, and James L. Smith, Mission sophomore.
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Small Women's Dorms — Nancy Ray, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
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Unmarried - Unorganized — Michael Miner, Lawrence freshman, and Mike Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. senior.
Fraternity — Robert Cash, Lawrence junior; Jerry Dickson, Newton junior; David Knudson, Goodland junior; and Dean Salter, Garden City junior.
Vox Populi candidates are:
Sorority — Trudy Meserve, Abilene sophomore; Rebecca Shire, St. Joseph, Mo., senior; and Jo Snyder, Bethesda, Md., sophomore.
Small Women's Dorms — Carolyn Kranzler, Brookings, S.D., senior.
Small Men's Dorses — George Hahn, Scotch Plains, N.J., junior.
Large Women's Dorms — Karen Cowell, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore.
Large Men's Dorms -- William Brier, Overland Park freshman; Gary Grazda, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; and Jeffrey Hubrig, Lenexa freshman.
Unmarried - Unorganized
Charles Allphin, Lawrence sophomore.
Married — Douglas Reed, Cassoday senior.
Freshman Women's Dorms — Holly Thomson, Ottawa freshman, and Judy Smith, Barrington, Ill., freshman.
President — Ray Dorsett, Wichita;
Leonna Koehn, Dodge City; Rodney
Kuehn, Wakarusa; Robert Stewart,
Bartlesville, Okla.; Donald Williams,
Great Bend; and Henry (Jack) Zinn,
Shawnee Mission.
Candidates for freshman class offices are:
Secretary — S. J. Baker, Mission; Marilyn Huff, Wichita; Mary Ann McConahey, Concordia; and Arthur Spears, Kansas City.
Vice President — Sal Alessandro, Valley Stream, N.Y.; Michael Fisher, Wichita; and Fred Slicker, Tulsa, Okla.
Treasurer — Jon Alexiou, Mission; Carolyn (Kelly) Anderson, Riverside, Cal.; and Betty Ann Bennett, Topeka.
Man is a pliable animal, a being who gets accustomed to everything!—Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Page 5
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Thursday, October 26, 1961 University Daily Kansan
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 26, 1961 Professor Studies San
Korean Problems: Chopsticks, Ties
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
On May 16 of this year in the Republic of Korea sergeants who had become generals overnight, suddenly also became rulers overnight.
Which is not to decry sergeants, who, it is well known, supply the backbone of armies just as other non-commissioned officers supply know-how for navies and keep the war birds flying.
These, however, were not men who had achieved status through years of tradition, but rather as result of a crash program after World War II. These were the products of nearly 50 years of Japanese domination and, after 1845, the paternal but equally unyielding rule of President Syngman Rhee.
SO, FIVE MONTHS after May 16, it is not surprising that certain seeming incongruities should appear in the sincere but grim military administration now in charge of the future of the Republic of Korea.
One is the fact that the score of so young generals in South Korea's ruling junta concern themselves not only with the broad policies of a government whose keynote is austerity but also with its smallest details.
Take, for instance, chopsticks.
These instruments recently came under junta scrutiny and were judged an extravagance. The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry ruled that wooden chopsticks, used only once, not only were a drain on the nation's forests but also were costing more than $1.5 million annually to produce. Hence, no more wooden chopsticks. From now on, it would be plastic or metal.
THIS SAME GOVERNMENT ordered its workers out of neckties and into shapeless corduroy. So the chopsticks could not be considered a departure but rather another propaganda gesture truly to bring the austerity battle home.
But, as one correspondent noted,
When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary. — Thomas Paine
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it was like asking Koreans to use somebody else's toothbrush.
Take also the case of Lt. Gen Chang Do Young, former head of the ruling junta who this week was indicted and ordered to trial on charges of anti-revolutionary activity.
Up until May 16, Chang served as Korean army chief of staff and after the revolution became the junta chairman.
BUT HE WAS NEVER a very good revolutionary.
On May 18, a United Press International dispatch disclosed that on the night of the revolution Chang made a personal appeal to Gen. Carter B. Magruder, head of U.S. and U.N. forces in Korea, to intervene to halt the rebellion.
This, despite the fact that Chang was an active, although perhaps reluctant, party to it. Chang's disaffection could not have been unknown to his fellow revolutionaries but he continued to serve until July 2.
However, in spite of weaknesses, the junta has obtained U.S. support. It is fighting unemployment. It has curbed the greediness of the money-lenders and it is making sincere efforts to aid Korean farmers.
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Page 7
Football Probation to Be Lifted
Football P Little Attitude Change Expected
Today marks the end of the NCAA's probation on the University of Kansas football team.
On October 26, 1960, the NCAA's executive council ruled in San Francisco that KU be placed under one year's probation in football. A two year basketball ban was also meted out.
SINCE THE DECISION, KU has been disallowed post-season play in both sports. The remaining restriction now is that the basketball team may not participate in post-season competition.
A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, KU athletic director, said it is a "good feeling" that the football probation period has ended. Lonborg said, "It will be an even better feeling when we are completely off (probation)."
When the NCAA blow struck, KU's football team was a prime Orange Bowl possibility. Pre-season basketball hopes were high at the time, also. The Hawk quintet had been tabbed as the "hands down" Big Eight champion and was considered among the nation's top quintets.
CONTACTED LAST NIGHT, Jack Mitchell, Kansas football coach, said:
"I don't believe the probation has had any affect on the attitudes of players." Mitchell also said that he didn't feel the lifting of the ban would cause a change of player attitude.
The football probation stemmed from two infractions:
- KU was charged of talking to players of other schools without informing the NSA.
Thursday. October 26, 1961 University Daily Kansan
- The council charged that Bert Coan was lured to KU illegally when Bud Adams, a wealthy Houston oilman, flew Coan to Chicago to the all star game in 1959.
Coan, the Jays' leading rusher last season, is out for the entire season with a broken leg injured in spring practice. He has denied that the trip had anything to do with his coming to Kansas. Both Adams and Coan have insisted that Coan paid for his own transportation to Chicago for the game.
THE BASKETBALL BAN was enacted because of an alleged illegal method of recruiting in 1957. The NCAA charged that Wilt Chamberlain was induced to KU when he was given a year-old automobile valued at $1,500.
KU was under NCAA suspicion in April of 1960. At that time, the NCAA council meeting in Atlanta took no action against the University.
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Pratt JC Bids for 13 Straight
PRATT* — (UPI)—Pratt Junior College, with an eye on the Junior Rose Bowl, bids for its 13th straight win over a two-year span Saturday when it faces Arkansas City Junior College.
Pratt carries a season record of 6-0 into the contest, although the Kansas Junior College Conference shows the Beavers with a 0-6 mark—having forced a forfeit of all games played thus far because of the ineligibility of a third-string end.
NATIONALLY, HOWEVER. Pratt is regarded as unbeaten and a likely prospect for the New Year's Day classic at Pasadena, Calif.
Pratt has scored 304 points to the opposition's 21, an average of 50.6 points to 3.5.
Statistics are just as lopsided as the scores have been, with Pratt
holding a rushing edge of 1,843 yards to 340, passing advantage of 695 yards to 377, and a lead in first downs of 115 to 48.
Jim Beam, JRP Win in IM Play
There were two games played in the independent A division of intramural football yesterday afternoon with Jim Beam downing Templin, 6-0, and JRP defeating the Hawks, 19-13.
In independent B action the Navy whalloped the Baptists, 41-0, while Ace Pearson took a forfeit from JRP No.2.
In fraternity B play, Sigma Alpha Epsilon beat Tau Kappa Epsilon, 21-0.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. October 26,1961
Page 8
CRC Member Attacks Lawrence Group
The Lawrence Human Relations Commission, an official city group for the study of discrimination problems, was sharply attacked by a member of the Civil Rights Council last night.
In the CRC meeting last night in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union, Denis Kennedy, Lawrence graduate student, said that the Commission "doesn't want any action, doesn't plan any action and doesn't want action by any other groups concerned with civil rights.
All they want is a cheap prestige victory.
William Binns, chairman of the Human Relations Commission and clinical psychologist at Watkins Hospital, called the attack "totally unfair."
He said the Commission is a new organization which has had only one meeting so far, and that the group is interested in definite action on civil rights issues.
"The Commission wants responsible action. It wants to win the support of all citizens. I don't think
that a responsible person would make a charge like that, knowing that the Commission has only been in existence a short time," he said.
Lawrence mayor Ted Kennedy said that Denis Kennedy is wrong on all three counts.
"The Commission does want action. I think that prejudging a group of really people such as are on the Commission is not giving a fair consideration to the group. He (Kennedy) is wrong and should be corrected. I don't think he has looked at the situation."
Truth lies within a little and cerr- They that die by famine die by tain compass, but error is immense. inches—Matthew Henry
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Seniors Plan A Big Saturday
Seniors will celebrate their day Saturday with the announcement of the senior queen at the KU-OSU game and a party at the Big Barn.
The senior queen will be presented at the game during half time. Jim Deckert, Larned senior and president of the senior class, will announce the winner from the three finalists. The three finalists are Elaine Haines, Kansas City; Jane Dunlap, Lawrence; and Lois Ann Ragsdale, Kansas City.
The senior party will begin at 9 am, at the Big Barn. Because of the parking problem, buses will take the seniors from Strong Hall to the Big Barn. Four buses will leave Strong at 9 o'clock, two returning for stranglers.
Latecomers may drive.
The buses will return seniors at 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. for the game. Seniors are advised to wear their sweatshirts and senior pins to the party and game.
Seniors must bring their senior identification cards or present $1 to participate in Senior Day. Refreshments at the Big Barn will be free and Lawrence merchants will sell food.
The Phi Psi's will provide the music.
Giving calls for genius.—Ovid
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Thursday, October 26, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
'Search' to Add More Features
A 25 per cent boost in funds will enable Search, the honors student magazine, to expand its issue this spring.
Arnold Strassenberg, assistant professor of physics and chairman of Search's faculty committee, said the magazine will print five more papers this year. Last year's Search published seven papers.
One thousand copies of Search were printed last year for distribution among honors students here and on other campuses. The magazine received favorable comment from the faculty here and praise from honors programs at other universities.
Deadline for the issue to be published April 1 is Jan. 3.
But Search is not restricted to honors students alone. Students outside the honors program may submit papers for consideration by the student editorial board. The editorial board consists of seven honors students who select and edit the material for the magazine.
Caps Not Enough; Takes Wheels, Too
The magazine was established by the Honors Committee last year on a Carnegie Foundation grant. Its purpose is to offer honors students engaged in research a reward and an inspiration for their work.
Two wheels, complete with tires and hub caps, were taken from a woman student's car parked at the rear of the Kappa Alpha Theta house last weekend, according to a report filed with campus security police.
Mrs. James Vest, housemother, reported the theft, which took place while the owner was in Oklahoma for the KU-OU game last week. A third hub cap was also taken.
Police first thought the owner might have transferred the wheels to another car for transportation to the game. This theory was shattered when the owner confirmed that a theft had occurred.
Pharmacists Meet Monday
Rudolph Bly from Smith, Kline, and French Pharmaceutical Co. will speak on "Recent Developments in Pharmaceutical Research."
The KU chapter of the American Pharmaceutical Association will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Room 324, Malot Hall.
Refreshments will be served. Prepharmacy students are invited.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 26, 1961
Display Depicts Early Voyages
An era when voyages around the world were the excitement of the day is depicted in the exhibit in the main lobby of Watson Library. The exhibit, in honor of the Ninth Annual Public Lecture on Books and Bibliography, is centered around the books, travels and times of William Dampier (1652-1715). Dampier will be described in a lecture October 27 by Joseph Shipman, librarian of Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, as a "seaman-scientist." He apprenticed to a Weymouth trader at 16 and was a mariner most of his life. He recounted his travels to the Indies and Southern Seas in books published in 1697, 1699 and 1703. Original copies of these and other rare books are on display with the exhibit.
OTHER BOOKS from the University of Kansas special book collections which are in this display tell of the adventures of buccaneers like Woodes Rogers, who sailed from Bristol in 1708 against the Spanish and returned with a fortune after circumnavigating the globe. Lionel Wafer was another early voyager whose tales are recounted in the exhibit, telling how he fell in with the infamous Captains Cook and Lynch and went buccaneering on the Spanish Main.
Original copies of Jonathan Swift's
Gulliver's Travels are on display. Swift was highly impressed with Dampier as a cartographer and log keeper. He used Dampier's charts and records for placing the seven imaginary countries in the Travels
EQUALLY IMPRESSED with the works of Dampier was Daniel DeFoe, who was inspired to write Robinson Crusoe after reading Dampier's account of the rescue of Alexander Selkirk from four years isolation on Juan Fernandez Island.
This was truly an era of adventure, and while the charts of the times and the ideas of geography held by early voyagers were not entirely correct, many of their theories still hold up today. This exhibit, on display until Oct. 31 and again through December, is one everyone interested in adventure, sea lore, pirates and early science would want to see.
Students Prefer People
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — (UPI)
—Penn State students love to talk about people, politics and education.
They don't particularly care to talk about science.
The conclusions are based on an analysis of 1,000 speeches given by Penn State students last year in a speech course which is mandatory for most undergraduates.
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A Lawrence minister and a KU assistant professor of philosophy will be speakers Friday at the Currents Events Forum to discuss "Religion in a Modern Society."
Events Forum Topic
The speakers will be the Rev. Paul R. Davis, of the Plymouth Congregational Church, and Prof. Charles Landesman, Jr., of the KU philosophy department.
The events forum will be at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union Browsing Room.
Kansas Music Teachers to Be Here
Three hundred Kansas music teachers will attend the Golden Anniversary convention of the Kansas Music Teachers Association here Monday and Tuesday.
The convention, sponsored by the school of Fine Arts, will consist of panel discussions, forums, concerts and workshops.
A former KU faculty member, Roy
The bullet that will kill me is not yet cast.—Napoleon Bonaparte
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Underwood, dean of the division of Fine Arts at Michigan State, will be the guest speaker at Monday evening's banquet.
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Thursday. October 26. 1961 University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, October 26. 196
Page 12
Post-Mortem Inconclusive-
(Continued from page 1)
show some promise, the ASC threw it out.
"In disaffiliation with NSA," Patterson added, "KU has lost an information center, it has lost a voice in NSA, it has lost the chance to help change NSA to a more conservative viewpoint, and it has lost a voice in international circles.
"It was beneficial to the campus in light of the emphasis on international affairs at KU as expressed by the Chancellor at the convocation which opened the semester," he added.
Asked her feeling about disaffiliation from NSA, Sandra Moore Saskatchewan, Canada, sophomore, answered, "The All Student Council had such little excuse for voting disaffiliation on the financial issue.
"The whole issue," she said, "really turned out to be one of pure political philosophy, which is unfortunate. I hate to see the liberal voice at KU suppressed." she added.
Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, said:
Charles Menglin, it would have made little difference what we would have explained to the ASC members. A large majority of them had had their minds made up against NSA for some time."
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Information Agency Calls for P-T-P Help
he called Mr. Montague requesting help."
(Continued from page 1)
The KU People-to-People program will send the USIA a copy of its handbook on how to set up a similar program on campuses in the Washington area.
Dawson added, "If it looks like they're going to need a lot of help, Rick Barnes (representative from the Lawrence International Fellowship Enterprise) and I will fly to Washington next week."
THE REQUEST from the USIA comes just two weeks before the People-to-People national kickoff is scheduled to take place.
The kickoff will follow the rededication of the Liberty Memorial
Nov. 11 in Kansas City.Many national and international figures including former presidents Eisenhower,Truman,and Hoover,and Prime Minister Nehru of India will be present at the kickoff.
In preparation for the national event representatives of the "Big Eight" schools will meet at KU this Sunday.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will address the "Big Eight" conference following a breakfast meeting of the representatives.
Following the Chancellor's talk each committee of the pilot People-to-People project at KU will present a report on its phase of the program, Dawson said.
AFTER THE morning session the representatives will go to Kansas
City for a conference with the National People-to-People committee.
Dawson explained that the representatives will receive a copy of the handbook which details the procedure in setting up People-to-People programs.
In the two weeks between the "Big Eight" meeting and the national kickoff the representatives of the other schools will organize People-to-People programs on their own campuses.
At the November meeting the representatives will report on the progress they have made in setting up programs on their own campuses.
Love is God's essence; Power but his attribute; therefore his love is greater than his power. — Richard Garnett
I
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HEY FELLA, YOU MUST BE A SENIOR, I GUESS, MAYBE, HUH?
AND I GUESS YOU'RE GOING TO THE SENIOR DAY FESTINITIES AT THE BIG BARN, OCT. 28, SAT MORNING, 9 TO 12 PM, HUH?
AND I GUESS MAYBE YOU'RE GOING TO WEAR YOUR SENIOR SWEATSHIRT THERE (AND TO THE GAME) AND YOU'RE NOT GOING TO PARK ON THE ROAD THERE AND YOU'RE GOING TO EAT THE FOOD AND DRINK YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE.
THE AT SAT. -PM,HUH?
YOU'RE GOING SWEATSHIRT AND YOU'RE ON THE ROAD G TO EAT YOUR FAVORITE
THAT'S RIGHT, FROSH!
SAY, DO THOSE GIRLS LOVE YOU BECAUSE YOU'RE A SENIOR AND A BIG WHEEL AND STUFF,HUH?
THAT'S RIGHT, FROSH!
THAT'S IT, FROSH, AND I'M ALSO GOING TO DANCE TO THE LIVE MUSIC OF THE PHI PSI'S,TOO,HEY!
NO, I PAY THEM TO DO IT TO KEEP UP MY PUBLIC SENIOR-IMAGE FROSH!
UP
T that the t
J
vers
sas
and dur
University Party Presents Platform
The University Party adopted an eight point platform last night that includes consideration of a "stop week" and working to see that the traffic control plan will meet students' needs.
James Anderson, Lawrence senior, and co-chairman of the University Party, told the members at a meeting last night in the Kansas Union at which the party platform was finalized.
C. M. H. S.
Jim Anderson
"There is still a lot of student apathy on this campus. Get out and convince students that this campus, and UP in particular, are doing something."
ANDERSON SAID THE party had interviewed the UP candidates. "I think we have good candidates. We want to continue to run a clean and decent election. I think this will help us to draw votes," he said.
THE FOLLOWING is a summary of the platform. The UP pledges to;
- Support possibility of a "peace pact" with Missouri, such as the one we now have with Kansas State providing for suspension in cases of student violence.
- Reaffirm need for a stop day between the last day of classes and first day of finals, and investigate possibility of a "stop week," during which no term papers or tests would be due or given.
- Investigate methods of improving systems of enrollment, registration, fee payments, etc.
- Encourage People-to-People, and affirm need for increased ASC support of this organization, and support creation of a current events committee.
- ENDEAVOR TO SEE THAT the Chancellor's program for traffic control next fall will best meet the needs of the student.
- Support Associated Women Students receiving more money from the University for functions in the area of public relations or education.
- Propose elections under a direct primary system so any student who desires may run, and to attempt to get more time between the primary and general election so candidates may orient themselves to campaigning outside their own party.
- CAMPAIGN FOR DISTRIBUTION of current copies of the ASC constitution to all ASC members, to all political parties, and to all interested students in order to eliminate confusion over recent bills and amendments. Also, to propose that the student body vice president be responsible for personal notification of ASC committee members within a week of their appointment in order to facilitate committee work.
Platform Promises Made by Vox Party
Vox Populi's General Assembly last night unanimously ratified all but one plank of the Vox campaign platform for the coming All Student Council elections.
"The plank, broadly stated, is that Vox will continue supporting last year's three unfulfilled campaign promises," said James McDaniel. Little Rock, Ark., senior and chairman of the platform committee.
HE APOLOGIZED FOR not reading the plank to the Assembly because, "it's still in rough draft form and somebody forgot to bring the draft here tonight."
Among the planks adopted was one proposing either the elimination or reduction of residence hall parking area fees for residents of the halls in question.
Many members of the Assembly contended the unfairness of this because (1) students owning such permits cannot buy zone permits elsewhere on the campus and (2) such students must pay extra to leave their cars in certain residence hall zones during football games.
M.
otball games.
Ted Childers
ANOTHER PLANK CONCERNED extension of bus service (Continued on page 4)
Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 31
Friday, October 27, 1961
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Berlin Tension Brings Tanks to Border Area
BERLIN — (UPI) — American and Soviet tanks rolled up to opposite sides of the Berlin border today, and the U.S. garrison was put on alert.
Early last night, three Soviet T-54 tanks were poised on the East side of the border, facing four American M-58 Patton tanks 500 yards away on the other side.
THE ARMOR CONFRONTATION came after U.S. Army troops escorted an American-licensed car on a three-minute trip into East Berlin for the third straight day.
The American Berlin garrison was alerted earlier, and a West Berlin
Bulletin
BERLIN — (UPI) — A U.S.
Army spokesman announced tonight that the alert of the U.S. garrison in Berlin ended at 7:45 p.m. (12:45 p.m. CST). The alert was ordered at 5:10 p.m. (10:10 a.m. CST). It lasted two hours and 35 minutes.
police source said the Communist police announced the lone crossing point between the East and West portions of the city was closed "until this thing is cleared up."
But soon afterwards an American Military Police car drove through the Communist checkpoint at the Friedrichstrasse crossing. It went into East Berlin and came out again without difficulty, eyewitnesses said.
WITNESSES SAID THE Communists then barred other Western vehicles, West Berlin police sources reported the Reds suggested that pedestrians use the underground railway system to cross.
Three jeeps with four armed soldiers in each vehicle escorted the Military Police car one block deep into East Berlin without trouble.
Four soldiers got out of the jeeps and with two on each side, walked the car back through the Communist checkpoint.
SHORTLY AFTER the alert order was issued, American tanks rumbled up to the Western side of the Fried-
richstrasse crossing point for the second time today. A U.S. Army spokesman who disclosed the alert said it was ordered because of the seriousness of the situation.
The first time they came up was when three rolled to the border boundary and two stayed in reserve a block away to lend support for the initial three-minute trip into East Berlin by an American-licensed Volkswagen. Five other American tanks and five armored personnel carriers were reported in the area.
A FEW MINUTES after the Volkswagon, its civilian passengers and its three-jeep escort returned to the West the U.S. tanks withdrew.
Shortly afterwards, six Soviet tanks rolled up on the Eastern side of the crossing point. But before the American tanks returned to the border for the second time, the Soviet tanks withdrew about three city blocks from the border and out of sight. Later three Soviet tanks rolled to within 100 yards of the border again.
U.S. Launches Big Booster; Perhaps Largest in World
CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) America launched a 16-story "sky-scraper" moon rocket today on an eight-minute maiden test flight that proved successful beyond all expectations.
The rocket, a 460-ton space age collossus named Saturn, lifted from the sands of this missile test center with a thunderous roar at 11:06 a.m. EDT and lumbered into the skies spewing a blinding burst of smoke and flame from its 1.3 million-pound-thrust engines.
U. S. DEFENSE Department experts said it was possibly twice as powerful as any rocket the Russians are now flying.
President Kennedy watched the
Fallout Reading Remains the Same
Radioactive fallout here has continued at the level it has maintained the last few weeks, Edward Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, said yesterday.
Fallout for Wednesday, the latest reading, measured 4.85 micro-micro-curies per cubic foot of air in the morning. In the afternoon, fallout rose to a 3:34 reading.
Weather conditions, especially morning dew, generally increase the amount of fallout entering the atmosphere. To balance the measurement a second reading is taken in the afternoon. For example, fallout for Monday morning measured 12.81 micro-microcuries per cubic foot of air, while the afternoon reading was 4.12.
Two readings per day were instituted by the department of radiation biophysics to ascertain a more complete picture of fallout in Lawrence about a week ago.
Weather
Cloudy and mild this afternoon with southerly winds 20 to 35 miles per hour in East and South portions. Mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers or thunderstorms Southwest late tonight and over state Saturday. Warmer extreme East tonight turning cooler Northwest Saturday. Low tonight 45 Northwest to 55 Southeast. High Saturday generally in 60s.
firing of the big rocket on a television set at the White House. It is ticketed to carry teams of astronauts on round trips to the moon by the end of the decade.
Scientists said in advance of today's launching that they would be satisfied with a one-minute flight on this first shot.
They speculated that they had only about a 30 per cent chance of getting a full, eight-minute flight, and about a 75-80 per cent chance of achieving what they regarded as the main objectives of today's test—getting the rocket off the ground and keeping it in flight one minute.
When the big rocket continued to climb beyond that point, "All hell broke loose in the blockhouse," Bart Slattery of the Federal Space Agency Information Office said.
A FLIGHT OF at least one minute was important, because at that point the Saturn successfully passed the point where acrodynamic stresses and the chances of failure are the greatest.
The joy wasn't limited to this spit of sand. In Washington, one space official jubilantly announced:
"We're on our way to the moon."
The successful firing of the powerful Saturn rocket came at a time when East-West relations are strained to the near-breaking point over the Berlin issue.
COINCIDENTLY, the shot also came while the Communist Party Congress was meeting in Moscow. The Soviets usually time their major space feats to coincide with important political conclaves.
The eight engines that powered today's Saturn generate 165,000 pounds of thrust each. Four burned
K Says Albania Seeks Aid of West
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said today that Albania split with the rest of the Communist camp because it hopes for aid from the West.
"Obviously, they expect in this manner to clear the ground for winning the right to receive handouts from the imperialists," he told the 22nd Communist Party Congress.
for 109 seconds and the other four
for 115 seconds.
Dr. Robert Seamons, assistant administrator of the Federal Space Agency, called the shot "a very significant step forward for manned space exploration."
Famed German - born scientist Wernher von Braun described as "having lived with the project since it was a gleam in someone's eyes." said he was pleased.
Von Braun said today's shot showed "we are right on schedule."
MOSCOW—(UPI)—Former Soviet President Kliment Voroshlilov publicly apologized for his "errors" today and Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev told him he was partly forgiven.
Former Russian Chief Apologizes
Khrushchev also warned Communist leaders at the 22nd Soviet Party Congress not to build up new Stalin-like "cult of the personality" around himself. He said all Soviet decisions are collective ones.
VOROSHILOV and other members of the Stalinist anti-party group that tried to oust Khrushchev in 1957 have been condemned by speaker after speaker at the Congress.
The 80-year-old former president, a party member for 58 years sat on the Congress rostrum a few feet from Khrushchev. He asked the chairman to read his statement of repentance "for reasons of health."
Voroshilov asked the Congress to accept his apologies for "the mistakes in the early stages of the struggle against the party." He said he had not joined the anti-party group until June, 1957, and never before had taken part in factional fights.
HE AGREED with all the statements of condemnation in Khrushchev's first two speeches to the Congress.
Khrushchev told Vorosilov he had made "grave mistakes."
"But I consider that the approach to him must be different than to the other active participants of the anti-party group," he added, listing former Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, ex-Premier Georgi Malenkov, and former presidium member Lazar Gaganovich.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. October 27. 1961
Politics and Civil Rights
The University of Texas held its campus elections Wednesday.
The fact that a southern university has had a student body election isn't of great news value to KU students, nor is that simple statement worth comment—until the outcome of the election is examined.
A NEGRO WAS ELECTED, FOR THE FIRST time, to the student assembly.
Gwen Jordan, 22, was one of four representatives from the college of arts and sciences to be elected. She was second in a field of ten candidates.
What does the election mean now? Does it have any importance to KU?
First, Miss Jordan's victory in a campus election is also a moral victory for the Negro student, not only at her University, but for other Negro students on other campuses.
Perhaps it will be the beginning of a new trend in Negro student thought—interest on campus issues where he will be directly represented or will have a direct route to campus leaders through which he can voice his opinion.
OR MISS JORDAN'S ELECTION may encourage Negroes to participate in organized representative campus organizations where before they have been refused admittance.
It might suggest that the KU Negro become interested in campus political parties and affiliate with one and help to form the party's platform.
Could this one incident have bearing on KU?
THERE ARE RUMORS FLYING AROUND that neither party will take a firm stand on civil rights in this election; they would rather ignore the issue than face it.
If this is true, the KU Negro missed his chance for his voice, which could be very loud, to be heard on campus through campus politics.
No organized Negro living group is presently affiliated with either campus party. One Negro living group had expressed interest in learning more about the political structure of Vox Populi, but made no definite plans to do so.
It might also suggest that the KU Negro, after affiliating with a party, run a candidate for office.
Ridiculous? It would never work? The party would never allow a Negro to run for office? How can anyone be sure until it is tried?
Becoming active in campus politics takes time, but it is an effective means of voicing opinion. Vox Populi and University Party are designed to voice any and all student opinion, yet campus politics is a force the KU Negro has ignored.
Carrie Merryfield
Unrest in Trujillo's Nation
It is interesting to note the continuing foment in the Dominican Republic. The assassination of Gen. Rafael Trujillo last May ended his 30 year dictatorship and the government has allowed opposition parties to function—with a few exceptions. The national police have been rounding up and deporting Marxists and extreme socialists to prevent these parties from becoming strong.
OBVIOUSLY THE REASON BEHIND THIS suppression of Marxists and socialists is the fear among the ruling group of radical and perhaps violent change in the country's social and economic system.
The Dominican Republic's rulers will not be able to prevent change, however. The reasons for the unrest in that country must be dealt with positively if violent change is to be prevented, and any positive action will necessarily involve considerable peaceful change.
For it is not only the political repression that is the cause of the unrest. The poverty stricken, hungry and illiterate masses are beginning to stir. They are learning that their lot can be eased, that their suffering can be ended.
IT IS BECAUSE OF THE CLOSE INDENTIFICATION of Marxists and socialists with the masses and their traditional identification with violent methods in underdeveloped areas that the government has begun deporting members of these parties. It is an attempt to prevent any significant growth of power on their part that could mean trouble for the ruling group.
But the fundamental problem must be solved if the present government, or any future government, is to insure peace and stability. The condition of the great mass of poor must be improved, their demand for a decent life must be met.
—William H. Mullins
Editor Criticized
I somehow fail to comprehend the attitude of Mullins in his editorial on Soviet Nuclear Testing in the Oct. 25 UDK. How very narrow, complacent and I might add, apathetic. Isn't he interested? Doesn't he care? Or is he bitter? Regardless, I cannot understand. For do you not think that Russia's and Red China's outrageous crimes are remembered? Mullins seems to recall them, the Hungarians certainly do not forget and I feel certain that free nations do not forget; especially, the ransacked, rebellion-torn, Communist infiltrated nations do not forget. And perhaps all these crimes serve as a very real and horrifying reminder to all nations, showing the difference between Communism and freedom as we know it. And also as a reminder that the terrors of the two nations could be a substantial threat to them; that they might not be spared the horrors of Hungary, Tibet, Berlin, Korea.
NO. ACTIVE CONDEMNATION by those who are able, under freedom, to express themselves, lives. It is very much alive to all of us and this is better influence by each and every nation, in protest of tyranny, than any other type of world influence. Khrushchev is helping to defeat himself by opposing the world, but at the same time, succeeds, in accomplishing approval of his actions if the world remains silent and therefore, in acceptance.
... Letters ...
I take my freedom as a serious thing; it is of dire importance to me. And I am willing and ready to protect it. Since I am not a Communist, since I disagree with their directives, then I am opposed to their aggression and attempt to saturate the world with their power. I disagree with their motives
Daily Hansan
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. $3, 50 for 50 New York News-Voice magazines. United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $3 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday afternoons. Examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms Extension 276, business office
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Fred Zinnerman. Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith. Assistant Editor; Barbara Howell. Society Editor.
TOMA SOAP JANUARY 14
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullas and Carrie Merryfield,
Assistant Editorial Editors.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brennan,
Don Gergick, Advertising Manager;
Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager;
David Wiens, National Advertiser;
Steve Machee, Machine
Classified Advertising Manager; Hail Smith, Promotion Manager;
and I disagree with their "I-ownthe - world - so - I - can - do-with-it-as-I-please" attitude.
THERLFORE, I FEEL THAT IT is my duty to speak up against them and in doing so. I feel that I am helping to protect this precious freedom. This is what other tree nations can and are doing. We can begin to protect freedom by opposing tyrannyw and "un-freedom" thereby adhering one with another. There is more power in numbers, you know. I shall be concerned with imperialism. I shall openly oppose it, with others I shall join for this great cause of freedom. Only in this way does our fight begin.
Fatsy Coutts El Dorado junior
EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON
EM. BACH
He'd make a perfect husband. If you care for husbands."
Campus Election
It Looks This Way...
Campus elections are coming up early in November. As in past years, you often hear the comments "so what." "All this political stuff means nothing." "It's probably good experience for the people who are in it, but it doesn't affect me."
These are samples of the opinions often expressed by KU students unacquainted with campus political organization.
THAT WORD "UNACQUAINTED" IS IMPORTANT. It is the students who are unacquainted with the system who are usually so hasty to condemn.
Let's take a look at campus politics in recent years and see what it has meant to KU;
To start, let's clarify the relationship between the All Student Council, which governs student affairs within the limits set by the administration and the two political parties, Vox Populi and the University Party.
The All Student Council members are students who have been selected by the parties to run for an ASC office from one of the living districts on campus.
It seems evident from this that ASC representation is fairly well divided. The number of representatives each group has is determined by how many votes that district casts in the general election. The more votes, the more representation.
These districts, for the fall elections, are broken down into campus living groups—fraternity, sorority, large men's dormitories, small men's dormitories, or scholarship halls; large women's dormitories, small women's dormitories, unmarried-unorganized and married.
OKAY, WEVE GOT THE STUDENTS ON THE ASC. THEN what happens? Despite the often heard sentiment "nothing," something can happen and usually does.
Last year the ASC established a reserved seating plan for football games and a student driver-rider co-ordinating center to aid students in finding rides during vacations. Also, the ASC investigated discriminatory clauses in the constitutions of social fraternities and sororities on campus. It established a committee on human rights to hear opinions concerning minority groups and advise the ASC in these matters.
The above actions are merely samples. There were many other programs and actions that could be cited.
THE ASC ALSO SERVES AS A SOUNDING board for campus opinion that could be achieved in no other way. It provided student leadership by bringing up issues, whether it solved these issues or not
What the ASC does in solving campus problems is not nearly so important as its function as a representative body of KU students, with its airing of campus opinion.
Only an apathetic or uninformed student could dismiss campus politics as "nothing," or hold the opinion "it doesn't affect me."
It would be a pretty dull place if we went our merry way with scholastics, and forgot that people still have problems and opinions that need to be brought into the open. Campus politics can fulfill this need.
-Karl Koch
HOW tine
TH
Page 3
Books in Review
By A. J. Edwards Assistant Professor of Education
HOW TO RAISE YOUR CHILD'S I.Q., by David Engler, Ballantine Books, 50 cents.
Scholastic achievement has been demonstrated to be positively related to measures obtained with intelligence tests. The nature of this relationship, though far from perfect, is sufficiently high that schools frequently administer such tests for predictive purposes and for grouping. Since the purpose of intelligence tests is to measure "functional" intelligence, rather than innate capacity, what has been learned is a component with the score. These demonstrated points become a basis of departure by Engler, and, using them, he states three arguments.
To the first contention. Engler concentrates on children who are within a "few points" of the necessary cut-off limit for honors classes or similarly enriched programs. If a child obtains an I.Q. of 118, say, and the cut-off point for such programs is 120, the child is not allowed to participate in the program. Such rigid enforcement of score differences is a violation of measurement principles. The question must be raised, then, as to the occurrence of such violations. The argument rests on the ability of Engler to demonstrate that such enforcement commonly occurs. The assertion is made by him, but no evidence is offered. For what it may be worth, the writer in his brief experience has never known a school system which so rigidly enforced such a principle.
FIRST, SCHOOLS use intelligence quotients largely or solely for grouping purposes. For example, students are allowed to enter special or enriched programs on the basis of obtained I.Q.'s. Second, Engler states, evidence exists to show that the I.Q. can be raised. Finally, parents possess ability to raise a child's I.Q. given the proper tools and techniques.
IN SUPPORT OF HIS second contention, Engler refers to several studies indicating I.Q. change in an upward direction with environmental change. Such studies have limitations because of uncontrolled variables, though many psychologists and educators accept the importance of environment in functioning intelligently.
Friday, October 27. 1961 University Daily Kansan
The final argument, the tools and techniques for raising the I.Q. is the most interesting and least acceptable proposed by Engler. Transfer of training is possible, and the greater the similarity between materials, the more likely will transfer occur. For this reason, some 40 pages of exercises are included in this book, over one-fourth of the total volume. (Correct answers are included.) Engler believes that by practicing on these illustrative items, the child can raise his I.Q. the few critical points to receive a quality education rather than a mediocre one. For the child unfamiliar with standardized test procedures (and the exercises are most like items from group intelligence tests), the practice might provide familiarity with kinds of items used in tests. Whether such practice will "raise" scores obtained on items of different content is doubtful.
THERE IS INFORMATION of a useful nature for the layman in this book. Engler makes a sincere effort to explain the "I.Q." how it is measured, and many of its limitations. There is selectivity in the material he uses as evidence, so that a distinct bias is reflected. In many respects, the book is interestingly written, though to a person trained in the field of measurement there are too many loose statements and much superficial treatment. Such a book may lead to an emotional response rather than an intelligent one on the part of many readers. Since the basic arguments taken by Engler are debatable, the book should not be accepted too seriously.
By Mark Dull
THE BLACK ROSE, by Thomas B. Costain, Perma Books, 75 cents. "The Black Rose" is the story of the life and the loves of Walter of Gurine, a bastard Oxfordian Knight robbed of his birthright by the hands of fate, who seeks a name and a fortune in the mysterious world of Cathay.
Thomas B. Costain has taken this tale of adventure and romance from a legend found in a very few old English histories. He has coupled this legend with the lives of three remarkable men of the thirteenth century—Edward the First, the great English king who was called the Lawgiver; Bayan of the Hundred Eyes, the Mongolian General who captured China for Kubla Khan and Roger Bacon, a friar with a scientific bent.
MUCH CAN BE SAID FOR COSTAIN'S TREATMENT of the historical background that fills most of this costume novel. The capable historian's descriptions of the life and customs of the people of England, Greece, and the Orient are fascinating and extensive. In historical detail and local color the book is remarkable.
Unfortunately the plot is not capable of matching the magnificence of the historical build-up. The pure heart of this bastard son of the Earl of Lessford enables him to coup on countless evil villains and to win the love of a fair maiden despite fate's cruelest attempts to separate the lovers.
MEANWHILE WALTER FIGHTS A PRIVATE BATTLE within himself as an enlightened half-noble who has great sympathy with the common man. He wins the favor of the leaders from the far ends of the Earth, while the scales of justice sway from one pole to the other. His grasping mind learns the secrets of the East and the reader is lead to believe young Walter will bring the western world out of the Middle Ages and into the Industrial Revolution within his lifetime. The result is a little incredible.
It cannot compare with Costain's tale of Basil, the artisan who fashioned "The Silver Chalice," or his story of Jacques Couer, "The Moneyman" of Charles VII of France. A costume novel such as this can be popularly enjoyable for the high school to rocking-chair reader. However, it is not strongly recommended for the more discriminating reader.
From the Podium
I have lately had the opportunity of studying the reaction of the United Nations Assembly to the persistent use of the platform of the United Nations by the Russians and the Communist bloc to advance their own purposes in the cold war. There is hardly a delegation which does not detest Russian policies: the suppression of the independence of Hungary and East Germany, their attitude on nuclear tests, their censorship of all news circulating within the Soviet Union, their attitude to the inspection of armaments.
But there are far too few in the United Nations Assembly who stand up and back on their conviction by speech or vote. On the contrary, a sort of complex has assailed the Assembly which compels them to vent their feelings on the democracies rather than on the Communist powers.
SPEECH AFTER SPEECH I have listened to while in New York this year, were glaring examples of the double standard which is applied. Speeches and resolutions are directed against us, the United Kingdom as colonialists. They know perfectly well, particularly the Afro-Asian countries, that we have given independence to six hundred million people in the last few years, and that that process continues rapidly. Yet, resolution after resolution is framed and passed condemning the United Kingdom as colonialist and there is never a protest against the Russian conduct of their own empire, which consists of one occupied country after another.
The same is true of self-determination. That is pursued so far as the Africans and the Asians are concerned, with a sort of holy fervor; but when it comes to self-determination for the Eastern Europeans, that is said to be something rather different. On nuclear tests I heard speaker after speaker equating the attitude of the Soviet Union with that of the United States of America, making no allowance for the fact that it was the Soviet Union who broke the moratorium and tested in the atmosphere. But the performances of the Soviet Union and the United States were put by these speeches on the same level...
I think it is necessary constantly to call attention to this inability of the countries in the Assembly of the United Nations or a great many of them to apply principles with impartiality.
THIS IS NOT A MATTER, on our part, of injured pride or of feeling that there is ingratitude for what we have done. We have all lived long enough to know there is no gratitude in international politics. But the democracies are the backbone of the United Nations. The democracies are the people who observe and support the rules of the Charter. And we cannot remain silent and be made victims of attacks by people who know they are unfair but deliver them, and know they can deliver them safely, because they know we are nice tolerant people. We cannot allow—and I have no intention ever to allow—the case of the democracies to go by default, because if we do that in the Assembly of the United Nations any longer, the political standing of this country as a liberalizing influence in the world will be fatally impaired. If that were to happen it would do great damage, not only to the United Kingdom, but to the small nations, particularly the Afro-Asian nations themselves. It would deal a mortal blow to their hopes of a just and free world, and would imperil the organization which would give them assistance.
(From a speech by the Earl of Home, British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, before the House of Lords.)
The thing generally raised on city land is taxes.—Charles Dudley Warner
Short Ones
Every man is the center of a circle, whose fatal circumference he cannot pass.-John James Ingalls
the took world
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
WATER OF LIFE, by Henry Morton Robinson. Cardinal, 95 cents. This is one of those big old epics that attempts to tell the story of America as it ranges over three or four family generations. Like "Raintree County," if you remember that one. It is a curious intermixing of styles and approaches. Henry Morton Robinson tries a little of everything here, and the total result is not successful.
IT IS BEST WHEN IT TALKS about the "water of life" — whiskey. The Woodhulls are a whiskey-making family in Indiana; their bottles have the "Old Landmark" label on them. Anson Woodhull is a man of integrity; he also is a man who to the author is greater than life size. An incredible guy, that is, big and handsome and smart and well read and so dynamic that he sweeps a Brattle Street daughter of a Harvard professor off her feet and away she goes to become a farmer's wife in faraway Indiana.
Lots of stuff like that. Robinson, like practically everybody else writing today, gives us some visual scenes in the bedroom—and elsewhere. He gives us an amoral beating to death of the villain (he was a bad one, but was he that bad?) which is in the best tradition of Mickey Spillane.
THE CHAPTERS ABOUT WHISKEY MAKING are best, and there is a fine section describing a hearing in Washington just before the 18th amendment went into effect. There is an earlier episode in which Anson Woodhull testifies on whiskey adulteration in the days when the Pure Food and Drug Act was first being administered. This is of considerable interest, and though Robinson stacks the cards in favor of the straight whiskey interests as against the blended boys, the theme of integrity in business is firmly put before the reader.
TOPEKA MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
HALLOWEEN...TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31
Show and Dance—Starting 8:30 P.M.
DICK CLARK'S
"CARAVAN OF STARS"
CHUBBY
CHECKER
"LET'S TWIST AGAIN"
LINDA
SCOTT
"DON'T BET MONEY HONEY"
DUANE
EDDY
"THE
TWANY GUITAR"
THE
SHIRELLES
THING OF THE PAST"
Clarence Frogman
HENRY
"LONELY STREET"
The JIVE FIVE
"MY TRUE STORY"
A Paul Arnae
PRODUCTION
AND
The CARAVAN of STARS ORCH.
Tickets at Auditorium Box Office Advance $2.00; At the Door $2.50
You're Always Welcome
at
The Old Mission Inn 1904 Mass.
Take a Break . . .
Relax with Friends Enjoy Good Food,
Your Favorite Beverages and Friendly Service
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday. October 27,1961
Rockefeller Calls for U.S. To Resume Nuclear Testing
MIAMI BEACH — (UFI) — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York called on the United States today to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere despite any adverse world opinion.
Rockefeller expressed opposition to another moratorium on nuclear testing as proposed in the United Nations and urged speed in developing a neutron bomb and other "new weapons of greater precision and flexibility."
THE GOVERNOR, a possible 1964
Religion Review
"The Soviet Union — with massive disdain for world opinion — is finishing, in these days, a series of more than 20 nuclear tests in the atmosphere," Rockefeller said.
The United Campus Christian Fellowship (UCCF), a merger of four student religious groups, exists at KU in spirit and purpose but not as an organization.
UCCF was initiated nationally last year and initiated on a state level this March. But the nature of UCCF on the KU campus has not been determined yet.
The Rev. Robert Balch, campus minister of the Disciples Student Fellowship, said about the UCCF at KU:
The Rev. Mr. Balch explained that in large schools like KU there was no need for an organizational merger since each religious group had its own minister and facilities.
"IT IS UP to each college to establish the best UCCF structure for that school. At KU the UCCF is not an organizational merger. We merged on the basis of common witness to Jesus Christ as Lord of all life. Organization and structure will have to follow."
TOUGH THESE four student organizations no longer exist on the national or state level, they still function as individual groups at KU
Republican presidential candidate, issued his nuclear testing call in his first major speech on national issues since the election of Democratic President John F. Kennedy almost a year ago. The speech at the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society, was billed by his aides as non-political.
The four religious organizations that merged to form the UCCF are Disciples Student Fellowship of the International Convention of the Christian Churches; the Student Fellowship Council of the Evangelical United Brethren Church; the United Student Fellowship of the United Church of Christ; and the Westminster Student Fellowship of the United Presbyterian Church, U.S.A.
"But," the Rev. Mr. Balch said, "we feel there are certain areas in which we can operate together. We want to emphasize the common worship and common witness we feel."
"It would strengthen our witness to speak as a united effort," he said.
The Rev. Mr. Balch said the group could bring speakers to the campus in the name of UCCF, plan joint services and speak as a united voice on campus issues.
THE UCCF ALSO PLANS common study enterprises and joint worship services. It now participates with the Methodist Student Center in the State Hospital Visitation Program and with Westminster Fellowship in a drama reading group.
The operational body of UCCF at KU now is a provisional committee made up of the religious groups' campus pastors and two members from each organization. They meet every other week to discuss the UCCF at KU.
"We don't see any possibility of merging locally in one super fellowship," the Rev. Mr. Balch said. "But we are looking for ways to express the unity we feel. We believe in union but not in uniting. This is an important principle. Our union is not primarily an organizational one."
THE UCCF BEGAN more than five years ago as an idea to unite student religious organizations into one. All denominational groups spent three years studying the idea of merging. Many groups dropped out of the movement when a group would discover there was something they could not share in common with the others.
Finally, the four groups comprising UCCF met at Stephens College in Columbia, Mo., last year and voted themselves out of existence as national denominational groups. They created a united movement with their merger.
THE PURPOSE OF the UCCF is in part:
The basis of the UCCF is the faith "that God incarinate in Jesus Christ and present in the Holy Spirit wills to reconcile men to himself, and that he is acting in history, creating, judging and redeeming."
- To further the mission of the church within the campus community.
- To deepen the Christian faith of the members of the academic community and to broaden ecumenical understanding through common experiences in intercollegiate campus Christian movements.
- To increase sensitivity to and understanding of the responsibilities of the Christian community within the university.
- To deepen our understanding of and participation in the ecumenical movement in the church.
- To further conversation with our fellow campus Christian movements.
"The series," he added, "has already included the greatest blast of destructive power the world has ever witnessed. And upon completion of their tests, we must be prepared for the Soviet Union tq turn its face from the scene of the blast, with an air of virtue and innocence, and say to us: 'Now, shouldn't we all stop testing these awful weapons.'"
ROCKEFFELLER SAID we can prepare ourselves for the answer to that question by looking at a few hard facts;
Rockefeller said that if Russia had enjoyed a monopoly on the hydrogen bomb, "it is doubtful that we would still be in existence as a free society.
- "We know from the very nature of the recent Soviet tests that the period of the so-called moratorium after 1958 must have been used by Soviet science for intensive and major research in nuclear weapons development" and . . . "that the Soviets engaged in underground testing not subject to detection by the outside world.
"We can view with no more complacecy the chance of their winning so stunning a strategic advantage with a neutron bomb," he warned.
"Since the voluntary moratorium on nuclear testing in 1958, we have stood relatively still for the past three years in the development and improvement of nuclear weapons.
Rockefeller listed four steps this nation should take in the atomic field:
- "We simply do not know the extent of the technical advances scored by the Soviet Union throughout the moratorium and in their current tests in the atmosphere.
- We must improve our tactical weapons.
- We must reduce the weight of nuclear warheads.
- • We must develop anti-missile defenses.
- We must develop new weapons.
Rockefeller said the United States must prevent a Russian edge in the nuclear race "even though the decisions and actions required of us may not be acclaimed by world opinion of the moment or by plaudits of so-called 'neutralist' nations."
"It is one thing for America to be conscientiously concerned with the views of 'neutralist' nations," he said. "It would be a quite different and wholly preposterous thing for America to start behaving like one. Our basic responsibility — to ourselves, to all free people, and to future generations — is to do, confidently and firmly, not what is popular but what is right."
Club Plans Square Dance
Truth often suffers more by the heat of its defenders, than from the arguments of its opposers.—William Penn
The International Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Lawrence Community Center at 11th and Vermont. Activities for the evening will include square dancing and apple bobbing and later, regular dancing.
POST GAME BUFFET All You Can Eat—Roast Beef Baked Ham, Fried Chicken, Ribs
With many tasty side dishes SERVED BY CANDLELIGHT IN THE BEAUTIFUL CRYSTAL BALLROOM After the Game-8 p.m.
HOTEL ELDRIDGE
VI 3-0281
7th & Mass.
Vox Platform —
(Continued from page 1)
hours on campus to women who otherwise must walk to their dorms late at night.
"This will be a springboard for next year's traffic crackdown," said McDaniel. He explained that such bus service would include major women's living areas as well as the women's dorms.
Answering questions about the "unfulfilled promises," McDaniel listed them from Vox's last platform:
- II Communications
- Telephone facilities will be improved in the women's dormitories. ● V Student Opinion
- V Student Opinion
The ASC will establish a method whereby any student group would have at its disposal a method for obtaining student opinion on controversial issues that directly concern the group's interest.
Explaining that some effort had already been made to correct the telephone difficulties in women's dormitories, Theodore L. Childers, Wamego senior and Vox president, said the situation was still unsatisfactory.
- X Checks and Balances
The approval of the Student Body President will be required before legislation can be passed, subject to a two-thirds override vote of the ASC.
"WE PLAN TO DISCUSS the matter with the telephone company," he said. "However," he added, "we would also like the girls operating the switchboards in the women's dorms to take advantage of the free instruction the telephone company is offering."
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Student Enthusiasm Reviewed
Page 5
"Good," "Bad," "The team got off to a poor start." "The ASC Reserved Seating Bill." These were among answers expressed by KU students in a UDK campus interview on the question, "What do you think of student enthusiasm at varsity football games?"
"It's not half as good as last year's," said Vernon Vorehees, Kansas City sophomore. "It's down because the team is off to a poor start. I don't think that it'll get much better unless Colorado loses."
"I THINK ITS GOOD now, because we are winning," commented John Anderson, Kansas City sophomore. "I think school spirit here, at least, depends on whether you are winning or losing."
Judy Walker, Mankato freshman, disagreed.
I don't think there is much enthusiasm. There is too much interest in other things — girls and boys,
University Daily Kansan
"PRETTY GOOD," said Dave Schnellenbarger, Topeka freshman. "I think that it's directly proportional to the amount of enthusiasm that the student body thinks that the team needs down on the field. In close games there will be more, in games where we are way ahead there will be less."
bovs and beer."
"I THUNK IT WOULD be better if the freshmen had better seats that were closer to the rest of the student body," said Clare Casey, Alexandria, Va., freshman. "The enthusiasm was real good down at OU."
"I think it's real good. I do wish, though, that the cheerleaders would direct the freshmen in cheers, too." John Smith, Abilene freshman, said.
"It's not as good as last year because of the reserved seating," said John Hooper, Reading sophomore. "You are sitting by people that you don't know and I think this hinders
the cheering."
"IT'S GETTING better since the first of the year." said Chuck Moffett. Kansas City, Mo., senior. "It should be great Saturday because of the senior party in the morning."
"It's terrific compared to Kansas State's," said Mary Beth Pierce, a junior KSU transfer student from Hays. "KU does, however, have a reputation at other Big Eight schools of not having any distinct yells. All they do is stand up and say 'Hell yes.'"
"It's getting better," said Rueben McCnack, Abilene sophomore. "The first game was unorganized. Enthusiasm at the last game showed a remarkable change because the team had picked up. I think it will get better."
"Poor!" exclaimed Buzz Warren, Wichita junior. "I don't know how it can be improvised. I suppose by giving money to the students."
Official Bulletin
Liahona Fellowship; 7 p.m., hayride,
Bring your date to enjoy food, fun,
and fellowship. 50c per couple. Church location,
1800 University Drive.
TODAY
Halloween Party: 7:30 p.m., West-
minster, Center, 1204 Oread.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Community Building, 11th & Vermont. A Night of Nations, "American Night." Folk songs, square dancing, Halloween party
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
Inter-Club Kansas Union.
Chester, Chester Macauley.
Hillel Friday Evening Services: 7:30
Trash Fire Brings Uproar at Sellards
Lawrence firemen rushed to the scene of a fire last night too late to save a trash can charred in the blaze and a cigarette stub that was completely destroyed.
The scene of the fire was Sellards Hall, 1443 Alumni Place. Heroic girls managed to stamp out the fire before a firetruck and three firemen arrived.
The blaze was a trash fire known to have been started at 7:15 p.m. on the third floor when a girl flipped a cigarette stub into a trash can in a small utility closet.
RESIDENTS LATER, noticing smoke pouring from under the closet door, immediately sounded an alarm. As smoke and girls poured out of the hall, men's houses sent out rescue parties. Extending his arms, one rescue worker asked if any one needed saving. More than a hundred observers were at the scene.
Susan Hines, Olathe sophomore and social chairman of Sellards, dragged the offending trash can out of the hall shortly before firemen arrived.
After examining the trash can and the closet, firemen reported the danger was over. Later, a policeman made a thorough investigation of the fire. When he learned how the fire was started, he asked if any strange men had been seen in the house. The incident he referred to occurred Tuesday morning at 2:20 am. when a man was seen walking through the dining room at GSP.
p. m. Jewish Community Center. 917 Highland Drive
Hillel Oneg Shabat: 8:15 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 High Drive. Driver's Seat, Sokal, speaker, on the new Jewish Convention: The Commentary Symposium.
SUNDAY
Lutheran Church Services: 8:30 and 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Immunael Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont. 5 p.m. Wednesdays. Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Mass: 9 and 11 a.m., Fraser Hall. (Newman Club).
Lutheran Church Services; 9:15 and 11
amidst the Lutheran Church, 13th &
New Hampshire.
Green Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30
and 12:00 welcome to this silent Quaker meeting.
Faith & Life Seminars: 0-10:30 a.m.
Fitness & digestion: 1204 Oread Break-
fast & digestion
Morning Worship: 11 a.m., Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Dr. Andrew E. Newcomer. Administrator West-Central Area Anglicanism, Board of National Missions.
Sunday Evening Fellowship: 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Iread. Dean
Recurrence Woodruff will speak on "The
Relationship Between Evolution and the
Bible."
Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m. Danish Church, Dinner will show in the Cottionwood Room. University with the program presented at 6:15.
Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch:
12 noon, Canterbury House.
MONDAY
Officials to Explain Housing Policy
Two representatives of the administration will explain the administration's housing policy Sunday evening at the Canterbury Association meeting.
James G. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, and Emily Taylor, dean of women, will address the group and answer questions.
Canterbury Association, the Episcopal church for students, will take a stand on the issue Sunday evening or at the Tuesday noon meeting, according to Glen Gish, Harper graduate student and member of the association's ruling body.
"We found we didn't have enough information to vote on the issue, so we decided to ask a representative of the administration to explain its policy." he said.
Gish said Mr. Gunn and Dean Taylor were invited after a recent discussion on the housing issue by the group.
"As far as we know, we're the first campus organization which has done this," he added.
Editor's Day Here Tomorrow
Kansas newspaper editors will meet tomorrow morning at the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information in Flint Hall.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school of journalism, will preside over the Kansas Editor's Day opening session at which the selection of the editor to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame will be announced.
Saturday afternoon, the Kansas editors will attend the Kansas-Oklahoma State University football game as guests of the University.
The agenda for the day:
At 8:30 a.m. registration, William Allen White Memorial Reading Room, Flint Hall; coffee, courtesy of University Daily Kansan; special
displays, Reading Room; antique equipment, typography laboratory (Room 212 Flint Hall).
At 9:45 a.m. "Wrangle Session." Room 205, Flint Hall; Stewart Newlin, president of Kansas Press Association and publisher of The Wellington Daily News, presiding.
At 10:45 a.m. General Session,
Room 205, Flint Hall, Dean Burton
W. Marvin presiding; announcement of
election of a Kansas editor to the
Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame;
address: "The Impact of American
Journalism on Iran," Dean Marvin,
Fulbright Lecturer, University of
Tebran. 1960-61.
At 11:45 a.m., buffet luncheon.
Ballroom of the Kansas Union
Building, as guest of Chancellor W.
Clarke Waceco.
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William E. McEwen, professor of chemistry will leave KU next year to become Commonwealth Professor and head of the department of chemistry at the University of Massachusetts effective Sept. 1962.
KU Professor To Leave
Prof. McEwen is making the change because he feels the appointment is a good advancement. Also, it brings him closer to his original home. Yonkers, N.Y.
Prof. McEwen is an organic chemist who has taught here since his graduation from Columbia University in 1947. He specializes in the mechanics of organic reactions.
Prof. McEwen has written three texts in collaboration with KU chemistry men. The titles are; "Organic Chemistry: The Larger Course," with Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; "Organic Chemistry: A Brief Course," with Prof. Brewster and a "Workbook of Unitized Experiments in Organic Chemistry," with Prof. Brewster and Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry.
Prof. McEwen has had 70 of his research studies published. He is active in the American Chemical Society as chairman of the National Committee on Membership Affairs.
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AC is seeking qualified engineers and physicists to fill permanent positions in Milwaukee, Boston and Los Angeles. You may qualify for employment if you have a BS or MS degree in Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering or Physics. Advanced positions are also available for men who are completing their doctorates with specialization in navigation and related fields.
Our current projects include development and production of Inertial Guidance Systems for the TITAN II, THOR and MACE missiles. We are also the Systems Integration Manager for the modified B-52C&D Bombing Navigation System. In the commercial field, AC has developed and is now producing a new mobile radiotelephone. Research and development programs include navigation systems for mobile ICBMs, space vehicles, supersonic aircraft and ocean-going vessels.
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Advanced Concepts Research and Development On-the-Job Training Program - AC's Los Angeles Laboratory is occupied with advanced guidance research for space vehicles and ballistic missiles, plus advanced research in special purpose digital computers.
See your College Placement Office regarding an appointment for a personal interview with the General Motors and AC Representative.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Friday, November 3, 1961
If unable to apply in person send resume to Mr. G. F. Raasch,
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7929 South Howell, Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Ask your Placement Officer for AC's new Employment Brochure.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 27,196
Peace Corps Has Difficulties
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Peace Corps, which recently ran into criticism from former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Nigerian students, also is having recruiting troubles, officials said today.
Eisenhower criticized the Peace Corps as a "juvenile experiment." The Nigerian students criticized the Corps after Margery Michelmore, a member, wrote a post card saying she was shocked by primitive conditions in Nigeria.
Agriculture is supposed to be the second major overseas activity of the Corps — next to school-teaching. But it has proved the hardest field in which to find volunteers.
BUT NEITHER OF THESE pose the threat to the Corps that the recruiting troubles may. Officials said the agency particularly is having difficulty recruiting agricultural specialists.
BECAUSE OF RECRUTING difficulty agricultural projects in Malaysia and Thailand, which had been approved by the governments involved, have had to be temporarily shelved.
The Peace Corps wants 1,460 farm specialists by this time next year. It so far has only about 65 in training or on the job.
Officials said the Corps is conducting a major drive with the help of the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, county agents in all states, farm journals, the Grange, the 4-H movement and other organizations to recruit talent from America's farms.
Agricultural projects have begun or are going ahead in Colombia, Chile, Pakistan, and St. Lucia in the West Indies.
They are looking for these types of people;
- Holders of agricultural degrees to teach advanced courses, train local teachers or conduct agricultural research in foreign lands.
- People without degrees but with a 4-H type experience or even just a good farm background to work
British Author To Give Talk
Norman St. John-Stevas, British author, legal authority, and political correspondent of the Economist, will give a talk on Walter Bagehot, the nineteenth century political economist and man of letters, on Monday, Oct. 30, at 4 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium.
Mr. St. John-Stevas is the author of Obscenity and the Law, Women in Public Law, The English Censorship, Walter Bagehot, Birth Control and Public Policy, and Life, Death and the Law.
He has served as legal adviser to the Committee on Obscene Libel of the British Society of Authors and drafted the bill which went before the House of Commons to reform the obscenity law. During the recent London trial of Lady Chatterly's Lover he was a prominent witness on behalf of the novel.
Mr. St. John-Stevas is a graduate of both Oxford and Cambridge, holds doctorates in philosophy from London University and in law from Yale University, and has studied at the Universities of Rome and Bologna.
His visit to the University is being sponsored by the departments of English and political science.
with local farmers helping them build farm structures and stock ponds and teaching them modern wavs of tending livestock and crops.
No one seems to know exactly why agriculture has lagged behind the rest of the volunteer recruitment program. One logical reason is the difficulty of competing with the vast field of paying jobs now open to agricultural college graduates.
The Peace Corps eventually hopes to have roughly 25 per cent of its overseas workers in the field of agriculture.
Commissioning of the Constellation was delayed seven months by a tragic and costly fire, described by the Navy as "the worst Naval shipyard fire on record."
NEW YORK—(UPI)The world's largest fighting ship officially joins the US Navy today.
The sleek super-carrier USS Constellation, a 75,000-ton giant capable of launching 100 warplanes from its four-acre flight deck, is scheduled for commissioning at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
THE CONSTELLATION'S tradition is long and proud and its responsibility in a troubled world is great. Nearly a year ago, tragedy struck her. She was named for the Navy's first ship, the frigate Constellation, which went to sea in 1798 and served honorably for nearly 160 years before its decommissioning in 1955.
The modern Constellation is a showpiece of naval architecture with a warmaking potential that is fearsome. Its air group represents a powerful, nuclear-capable striking force and its all-missile anti-aircraft defense system is no less formidable.
The carrier was 85 per cent completed when it was swept last Dec. 19 by a blaze which took the lives of 50 men and caused extensive damage.
Biggest Carrier To Join Navy
BUT THE NAVY said it emerged a better ship. It was refitted with more modern radar, an extended flight deck and the latest type arresting gear for landing highspeed jet planes.
Today's commissioning, marking Navy Day and the 50th anniversary of Naval Aviation, came five years after the Bureau of Ships placed its order for the Constellation. The Navy said the cost of building the carrier was "more than $200 million."
The Constellation, 1,047 feet long and 25 stories high from keel to mast, eventually will have a crew of 4,100 officers and men, including its air group. The carrier is about 12 times as long as the post-revolutionary sailing ship for which it was named and its 1,000-foot flight deck, placed on an angle to its keel, would accommodate nearly four dozen copies of the original Constellation.
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — When a traffic officer stopped an exterminator for running a stop sign, Dallas Times Herald columnist Dick Hitt reported the event this way: "Police nab hired killer!"
PING PONG TOURNEY
Sensational Journalism?
Big 8 Room Kansas Union
S. U.A.
Wednesday, Nov.1,1961
6:30 p.m.
Prof. Quinn Reads Donne's Poetry
Donald Quinn, assistant professor of English, read poems by John Donne, 17th century English poet and preacher, at the poetry hour in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union yesterday.
Register in Information Booth or in Union TROPHIES & REFRESHMENTS
Fifty people listened to Prof. Quinn's interpretation of Donne's love poetry.
"Go, and catch a falling star, get with child a mandrake root . . .
Nowhere lives a woman true, and fair," Prof. Quinn read and the audience sighed in appreciation.
Concluding his reading Prof. Quinn read what is, perhaps, Donne's most famous poem. "No man is an island, entire of itself . . . therefore, send not to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee."
When Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war.-Nathaniel Lee
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Page 7
Foreigners Interested in P-T-P; Offer Advice and Criticism
By Arthur Miller
(Editor's note: This is the last of a three part series on the People-to-People program at KU.)
It was 7 o'clock last night.
PEOPLE
DE PLA
Several foreign students were gathered at a table in the Hawk's Nest of the Kansas Union.
INTEREST SHOWN—Foreign students show interest in People-to-People plans. Left to right are Jalal Razzak, Baghdad, Iraq; Inga Safholm, Stockholm, Sweden; Raja Naib, Jhelum, Pakistan; and Vinay Kothari, Bombay, India.
It was quiet, except for the mumble of the people talking.
As he started to answer the jukie box came to life pounding out its deafening beat.
One of the foreign students was asked what he thought of the People-to-People program.
Jalal Razzak, Baghdad, Iraq, spoke louder, "Visiting Lawrence families is really the way to learn about America. Any international student can go to classes but this is not learning the American way."
"People-to-People is doing a fine job," he continued, "but there are still some foreign students who don't know what the organization is."
Raja Naib, Jhelum, Pakistan, replied. "There is a coordinating committee working between People-to-People and the International Club. Still there is a need for more information about the program."
Naib interjected, "It is these personal contacts that impress me more than anything else. Herein lies the real basis of the People-to-People program, for personal contact becomes friendship and that is something you don't easily forget.
Still fighting the music Razzak added. "Yes there should be more cooperation. There should be more personal contact and not just at the International Club."
"Lately, however, there has been too much impersonal and mechanical contact" he said.
Inga Safhelm, Stockholm, Sweden, said. "One thing that few people mention about People-to-People is that we get to know a lot of foreign students as well as American students."
"One thing that bothers me," Vinay Kotheri, Bombay, India, said, "is that some of the international students have not been given an American brother or sister. They feel kind of left out."
nath interrupted to explain that the organization is extremely young and cannot be expected to function perfectly. All of the students agreed.
He said, "My brother is also at KU and he doesn't have an American brother. I know two girls who also don't have American sisters."
Razzak commented, "I have been here three years and I tell you its much different now than when I arrived at KU."
"Another thing," Kothari said, "Last year there was only one industrial tour. Since I am in engineering these trips interest me very much, and there are many more this year."
Turning to another subject, Naib remarked. "What we need is a lot of publicity on foreign students. We should write to the international student magazines such as 'Institute of International Education Bulletin' and 'The Asian Student.'
"I'm writing an article on People-to-People now and will send it to The Asian Student." he added.
Are foreign students interested in what People-to-People is doing?
The students met, spoke frankly,
and left.
Friday. October 27. 1961 University Daily Kansan
Definitely so, and they are not content with just appreciating what American students are doing. They are seriously concerned and want to offer suggestions on how to improve the program.
But what are the American students doing and what is the nature of the People-to-People program?
The nature of the organization can best be seen in the six operating committees of the program. They are:
- Public Relations Committee - It has three responsibilities; informing the university students of opportunities in the P-T-P and promoting the organization to attract outside interest and assistance; the release of all publications which may be desired by the various committees of P-T-P; and coordinating the correspondence and inter-committee communication.
- Forum Group Committee — It is to further closer international
understanding on both world situations and problems, and on local social and cultural activities.
- Job Placement Committee — It is responsible for procuring employment for international students and assisting them in the satisfactory execution of their work.
- $\textcircled{1}$ Brother-Sister Committee — It has the job of assigning American students to act as hosts and hostesses to the foreign student during his stay in America.
- American Student Abroad Committee — There are two main purposes of this committee. The first is to keep in contact with former foreign students who have returned to their native lands, and inform them as to what strides are being made on the KU campus in the field of international relations.
The second purpose is to prepare the American student who plans to travel abroad in such a way that he might create the least friction possible in his relations with those with whom he comes in contact.
Music Teachers To Hear KU Choir
The KU Concert Choir will sing for the Kansas Music Teachers' Association Convention at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 31, in Murphy Hall.
The program, directed by Professor Clayton Krehbiel, will be the "Ode to St. Cecelia" by Norman Dello Joio and the Motet No. 5 "Singet dem Herrn" by Bach. The Dello Joio work is a setting of the Dryden poem and was commissioned from the composer by the Concert Choir in 1958.
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- Hospitality Committee — Operating in several major areas the function of the committee is to provide an opportunity for foreign students to experience this country's hospitality and gain insight to our heritage.
This, then, is the People-to-People program from an idea to its present existence. This is the story in words, but words cannot express the feeling of friendship and understanding between American and foreign students.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 27,1961
University Daily Kansan
SPORTS
KU Grid Frosh Defeat K-State
Gale Savers led the KU freshmen to a 21-7 win over the Kansas State freshmen here yesterday, scoring all of the winner's three touchdowns.
Sayers, a 190-pound halfback from Omaha, Neb., scored on carries of 52. one, and 16 yards.
AN ALL-STATE CHOICE IN Nebraska high school play last year, Sayers racked up 160 yards in 25 carries, averaging 6.4 yards an effort from the right halfback slot.
The first KU touchdown came with 6:29 left in the first quarter. Sayer's tally from the Kansas 48-yard line capped a 70-yard Jayhawk drive. Coach Tom Triplett's fresh made the march in six plays.
DENNIS BENDER, Luray halfback, kicked all three Jayhawk extra points.
Early in the third quarter, Sayers drove over from the one. Two minutes later, Mike Shinn, Topeka left end, blocked a Wildcat punt, and Larry Ledford, Wichita right end, recovered for KU on the 16-yard stripe. Sayers skirted around the left end to score.
Betas Remain Undefeated
The Kansas freshmen's biggest
Beta Theta Pi remained undefeated, moving into the final round of regular play in intramural football next week, by downing Phi Kappa Psi, 20-6. This game was in the fraternity A division of play.
In two other games in the league, Delta Upsilon slipped past a scrappy Kappa Sigma squad, 13-7, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon outfought Delta Chi, 18-12.
The only other intramural play was in the fraternity B group.
Sigma Chi posted the most impressive win of the afternoon with a 27-6 drubbing of Phi Kappa Sigma. Phi Delta Theta #2 easily shut out Sigma Phi Epsilon, 12-0 while Phi Kappa Tau won by forfeit over Delta Sigma Phi.
Nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won.—Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
weakness appeared identical to the sore spot of their varsity counterparts. K-State completed nine passes during the game.
The Wildcats' lone score was sparked by four passes on a 54-yard touchdown march. Left halfback Charlie Brown, Wichita, scored on a two-yard plunge at the end of the first half.
THE ONLY OTHER K-S scoring threat was in the game's final seconds. KU intercepted a 'Cat pass in the end zone with less than a minute left to play, ending their threat.
The Kansas freshmen travel to Columbia for their final game against the Missouri frosh Nov. 10.
Hawker Harriers To Face Sooners
The Jayhawker cross country team, aiming toward its fifth straight win of the season and its 38th consecutive dual cross country win over a Big Eight opponent, travels to Norman, Okla., to meet the Sooners today at 4:30 p.m.
The Jayhawker's conference string stretches back to 1947, Coach Bill Faston's first season, when the Jayhawkers won their second league dual after dropping the opener.
SENIOR CAPTAIN and anchorman Bill Dotson will be shooting towards former Jayhawker Jerry McNeal's 1957 record of 14:54.5. Dotson ran 14:34.5 against the Chicago Track Club two weeks ago, and a 14:36.7 last week against Arkansas.
Behind Dotson will be the same crew that "grand slammed" Arkansas: junior Charlie Hayward, who has placed second to Dotson in each meet, senior Dan Ralston, senior Bill Thornton, junior Mike Fulghum, sophomore Tonnie Coane and sophomore George Cabrera.
Cabrera won a place on the squad last week when after being tentatively scheduled to run white shirt, he filled in for ailing Paul Acevedo and placed fifth.
LEADING THE SOONERS will
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Bill Sheldon
Kansas has moved through the first half of what was supposed to be the greatest in history with questionable success and now faces what should be the easier part of the schedule with Oklahoma State leading off the stretch run here tomorrow.
Beth squads will enter the game somewhat crippled. Kansas will be missing its starting tackles, Dick Davis and Stan Kirshman, and most of the ends are hampered with injuries. O-State has had no serious losses, but the team is in generally poor physical shape.
ANOTHER SIMILARITY between the teams is their staunch defenses, especially against the run. No running tally has been made against the Jayhawkers' first in eight straight games while the Cowboy forwards have denied a rushing score for four consecutive battles.
Also, both teams have had considerable trouble scoring although both are doing fine jobs offensively.
The visitors have a 2-3 record and sixth place conference standing while KU is 2-2-1 on the season and third in the Big Eight.
TOMORROW COULD BE the
chance for Coach Jack Mitchell's laddies to prove without a doubt they are still in contention for the league laurels. For, Oklahoma is due for an upset and the Sooners are playing the leaders, Colorado.
The Jayhawkers, with the successful shifting between halback and quarterback of John Haddl and Roger McFarland have opened up their offense considerably. The running defense has been solid all season and the pass defense showed signs of vast improvement last weekend.
The main problem which may face KU is the forced lack of depth in the line against the huge O-State linemen, many of whom will outweigh their Jayhawker opposites 30-40 pounds.
All things considered, the Jayhawkers, with their sights still on Mimi, should come out on top, 14-6.
In addition to last week's meet Oklahoma defeated Arkansas and Pittsburg State in a triangular and lost to Oklahoma State in a duel.
Oklahoma's major loss from last season's third place club is Gail Hodgson who in 1958 won the league individual title.
be Lee Smith who placed second in Oklahoma's triangular conquest of Wichita and Fort Hays. Oklahoma finished first with 31 points, Wichita second, 43, and Fort Hays third with 50.
The Oklahoma dual will be the Jayhawkers' last meet before the Big Eight showdown here on Nov. 11.
The KU-Oklahoma State football game here tomorrow can be heard on the following Lawrence area KU Sports Network stations with Tom Hedrick starting the broadcast at 1:15; KLWN, KJAY, KTOP-FM, KTOP, KMBC, KANU, KCKN.
KU-CSU Game on Radio
Portraits of Distinction
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass V1 3-0330
1/2 mile South on Highway 59
Chuck Wagon
摄影师
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
a bright 'n cheery treat!
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a bright 'n cheery treat!
Cherry sundae
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You will enjoy the informal western atmosphere and the friendly courteous service.
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S."
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1015 Lawrence
VI 3-5947
Come in Before or After the Game and Try Our Delicious
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- COMPLETE TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE.
When You Need Help - Remember SOS
Barbecue
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CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE For the Latest in FALL HAIR STYLINGS
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You will be welcomed by a staff of friendly, experienced beauticians who will help you to select the hair style that will flatter you most. We specialize in
PERMANENTS
RESTYLING
- HAIR COLORING
PENN LEE
Our shop is only a few minutes walk from the heart of the campus
V F
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Page 9
Variety of Events Scheduled For 50th KU Homecoming
Plans for KU's 50th annual Homecoming, now only two weeks away, are nearly complete.
Alumni, parents, faculty members, and students participating in the event—which begins at 4 p.m. Nov. 10 with alumni registration—will find a wide variety of events from which to choose, ranging from the University Theatre production of "Auntie Mame" to the football game with Kansas State University.
THREE HOMECOMING EVENTS are scheduled for Friday, Nov. 10. At 7 p.m., a varsity-freshman basketball game will be held in Allen Field House. Tickets for the game are $1.00.
The University Theatre production of "Auntie Mame" will begin at 9 p.m. in Murphy Hall. The production is being held especially for returning alumni. Students and faculty members are reminded that student identification cards or season tickets will not admit them to this performance. Admission to the performance is $1.50.
The third alternative being offered Friday night is a display of decorations at various organized houses on the campus.
ALL DECORATIONS THIS year are based on the theme of "Musical Comedies." More than 40 organized houses have already entered this year's decoration contest, using either an episode, a character or a song from a musical comedy as the basis for their exhibit.
"We have entries from 'Kiss Me Kate,' 'Can-Can,' 'Damn Yankees,' and many other musical comedies," said Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English and chairman of the house decorations committee.
"The committee considered 60 themes before selecting this one," he
said, "and as far as I know, KU has never used a musical comedies theme before."
HOUSES ENTERING the contest are divided into four groups; sororities, women's residence and scholarship halls, fraternities and men's residence and scholarship halls.
A total of 11 prizes.will be awarded to the best decorations in the four classes. A first, second, and third prize cup will be awarded to the three top entries in the sorority, fraternity and men's residence hall classes. First and second prize cups will be awarded in the women's residence and scholarship hall class.
Saturday morning will feature three open house receptions: the department of home economics open house, held from 9-11 in the home economics department dining room. Fraser Hall; the School of Business open house, from 9-11 in 208 Summerfield Hall; and the School of Law open house, held from 10 to 1 p.m. in the Library of Green Hall.
A GENERAL HOMECOMING reception will be held from 9-11 a.m. Saturday in the Lounge of the Kansas Union.
At the same time, the sixth annual engineering alumni reception will be held in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
Saturday morning will also feature free sightseeing bus tours of the campus from 9 to 11. The tours will begin at the Kansas Union.
A HOMECOMING BUFFET luncheon will be served in the Ball- room of the Kansas Union from 10:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. The 1961 Homecoming queen and her two attendants, yet to be chosen, will attend the luncheon. The price of the luncheon is $1.55.
Sports fans will have a field day Saturday with two events planned: the Big Eight Cross Country track meet in the morning and the football game with Kansas State in the afternoon.
THE KU-KANSA'S STATE football game, held at 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium, will climax the weekend.
All eight schools of the conference have entered seven-man teams in the track meet, which begins at 10:30 at the Lawrence Country Club. KU will be trying to recapture from Oklahoma State the team title which it has won 12 of the past 13 years.
step out
During half-time ceremonies the 1961 queen and her two attendants will be crowned. The 1950 Homecoming queen, Mrs. Ada Waugh, will also be honored.
This year's Homecoming dance, held from 9 p.m. Saturday to 1 a.m. Sunday, in the Ballroom and the cafeteria of the Kansas Union features a new twist — two bands.
Ralph Marterie's nationally known band will be featured in the Ballroom, while couples in the cafeteria will dance to the music of George Wynn's 15-piece band from Kansas City. Admission price is $2.50 per couple.
in CROSBY SQUARE STEP-INS
Correction
Malibu to Madison Avenue, men are stepping out in Crosby Square Step-Ins. They slip on as easily as gloves blend style and comfort . and stride confidently from desk to date. Choose from many styles.
Contrary to the Kansan story printed yesterday, Denis Kennedy, Lawrence graduate student was not attacking the Lawrence Human Relations Commission.
REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass.
$11.99 to $19.99
Friday, October 27, 1961 University Daily Kansan
In a telephone statement, Kennedy said his remarks were directed to the Civil Rights Committee of the All Student Council.
State Nurse to Peace Corps
Sadie J. Stout, Arkansas City, Kam. is one of 40 candidates for the Peace Corps Project in the Federation of Malaya.
The candidates, mostly nurses and lab technicians, started training Oct. 16. The intensive training program of 60 hours of instruction weekly will last through Dec. 15. Those chosen for Malaya will have about two weeks of home leave before leaving.
Miss Stout received her R.N. from the St. Francis Hospital School of Nursing, Colorado, in 1933.
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Cheeseburger ... 19c
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Coke ... 10c & 15c
Root Beer ... 10c & 15c
Orange ... 10c & 15c
Coffee ... 10c
Milk ... 10c
1618 West 23rd Street
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 27,1961
Page 10
KU Works at Exchange Program
KU is gradually working toward a large-scale foreign exchange program which proposes that one-half of each year's junior class study abroad.
Under the plan, proposed in 1960 and still many years away from realization, an equal number of foreign students would study here each year.
The plan is the result of a study requested by former Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Its broad aim, according to the Special Committee on University and World Affairs, is to create an "educational system that considers the world its classroom."
FRANCIS HELLER, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the chairman of the committee, said that the plan today can only be regarded as "an ideal to which we can aspire."
But he listed several steps taken by KU toward this long-range goal.
- Information concerning study abroad has been made available to KU students.
- The College Committee on Foreign Students and Foreign Study has prepared a partial guide to study abroad.
- A Language Institute, under which 65 selected KU students took summer courses in Spain, France and Germany, was initiated by the University last year.
- The KU-University of Costa Rica exchange plan now entering its third year, continues to be successful.
- More than 300 foreign students are attending KU this year.
"I think it is quite clear that interest here in undergraduate study abroad has been quite stimulated by the information given to KU students," he said.
HE ADDED, HOWEVER, that the present number of KU students studying abroad was substantially
less than the annual number of about 700 envisioned by the plan.
Page-Creighto
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-7694
The 300 foreign students studying here represents about one-half of the total number foreseen in the plan, he said.
Motor Tune-ups
Lubrication $1.00
All Major Brands
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Dean Heller emphasized that the two present KU exchange programs—the KU-University of Costa Rica exchange and the KU Summer Language Institute—both represent significant steps toward the long-range goal set for the proposed exchange program.
Under the Costa Rican program, KU faculty members and junior students exchange places with their University of Costa Rica counterparts.
are selected each year to study in Spain, France and Germany during the summer. While abroad, they tour the respective countries and view various cultural events, including theater productions and sports events.
UNDER THE Summer Language Institute, a number of KU juniors
"Each American student group should be accompanied by at least as many faculty members as (KU) would feel necessary to add to the staff if enrollment should increase by an equal number," the report states.
In addition to the large-scale exchange of students, the proposed plan also calls for a faculty exchange between KU and the foreign institutions involved.
Under the program, KU faculty members going abroad would teach the same subjects they teach here.
SANDY'S
THRIFT & SWIFT
DRIVE-IN
2120 West 9th
Across from Hillcrest
There Is No Waiting at Sandy's
KENTUCKY
MENU
Hamburgers 15c
Cheeseburgers 19c
Toasted Cheese 15c
French Fries 10c
Milk Shakes 20c
Coke, Coffee, Orange 10c
Milk, Root Beer 10c
Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef
Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef
BIG HITS!
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
WESTVIEW OMNIA
VISITAVISION®
Paramount presents
CARY GRANT
AND
SOPHIA LOREN
"HOUSEBOAT"
TECHNICOLOR*
MANTHA HYER • HARRY GUARDINO • ETHANIO CAMPANELLI
Produced by JACK ROSS, Directed by MICHAEL SHIRLETON
Written by NICOLLE SHIRLETON and JACK ROSS
WARNER BROS PRESENTS WB
CLINT CHEYENNE WALKER
FORT DOBBS
His First
Big Motion Picture!
understood to denounce as "provocations" U.S. attempts to enter East Berlin in defiance of East German regulations.
29th annual presents
CARY GRANT
SOPHIA LOREN
HOUSEBOAT'
TECHNIOCOLOR'
MARTINA AYER • HARRY GUARDINO • ELLENIO CABELLE
Produced by KAYA KOKE • Directed by NELLIE PARKER
Written by KOSILI SHIELDON and JACK KOKE
WIRINGA NINA BROWN RINALD RICHARD WRITEER KENNY MEDENE OREGON WORSE GEORGE - PRODUced BY MAYO KEITH EYER BY MARTIN DARKMAN - Directed BY GORDON DOUGLAS
The exchange of protests came as U.S. Army troops escorted an American-licensed auto into East Berlin for the third day in a row. The car crossed the border and returned without incident under the watchful eye of Allied tanks.
Two Bonus Hits Sat. Only
Newman Club Party Tonight
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 49
The Newman Club will hold a Halloween party tonight at 7:30 at the Catacombs. Those who desire rides are to meet at the St. Lawrence Student Center at that time. All members and their guests are invited. The affair is to be stag or drag.
U.S.-Russia Vie Over Access
Exclusive Engagement!
KIRK DOUGLAS • LAURENCE OLIVIER
JEAN SIMMONS • CHARLES LAUGHTON
PETER USTINOV • JOHN GAVIN
SPARTACUS
and TONY CURTIS as Antoninus
TECHNICOLOR" SUPER TECHNIRAMA" 70 LENSES BY PANAVISION
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States demanded today that Russia force Communist East Germany to permit free Allied access to East Berlin or face the prospect of no East-West Berlin negotiations.
Continuous Sat. & Sun.
At 1:00-4:15 & 7:30
The State Department charged that the Soviets violated four-power agreements by "looking the other way" while East German border guards demanded identification from U.S. officials entering the Communist sector in clearly marked official cars.
2nd Big Week! Week Day Mat. 2 p.m., Eve. 7:30
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
At the same time Gromyko handed Thompson a Soviet protest. It was
The United States issued its blunt warning in a terse public statement by the State Department in Washington and in a protest filed with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in Moscow by U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson.
VARSITY
THEATRE
Toronto York University 3265
WE'RE GIVING THREE CHEERS FOR ONE OF THE BIGGEST MOVIES OF THE NEW SEASON!
The fine stars...the brilliant color... the heart-tugging story will make you want to cheer too!
ONE OF THE BIGGEST MOVIES OF
THE NEW SEASON!
The fine stars...the brilliant color...
the heart-tugging story will make you want to cheer too!
FANNY HURST'S great novel that will linger in your heart forever!
SUSAN HAYWARD
JOHN GAVIN
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STARTS TOMORROW!
Last Time Tonite — "HONEYMOON MACHINE"
One da
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Friday. October 27. 1961 University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms Call: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25e for billing.
All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in person on the day before publication is desired.
That Conversation Piece From The BOOK NOOK "COBWEB" 1021 Mass.
LOST
WILL THE MAN who found the Theta
pin please call again. Phone no. was
10-31
RAINCOAT taken by mistake from bar-
party that has mined CVI 2-0416, 10-50
KAPPA KEY Sorority pin lost between
KAPPA KEY Kappa House. Reward — 11-1
V3-25600
FOR RENT
SPACIOUS 4 room duplex. Private bath,
bosement, garage. $80 a month. Call
Holmes, Peck & Brown Realtors. VI 5-2620,
VI 3-2788, or VI 3-171. 11-2
10 × 35 ft. trailer. Call VI 3-5193. W, D, L
11-2
FURNISHED apt; large living room,
large bedroom, study room, kitchen, bath,
screen porch, garage. First floor, modern
farm, and carport. Very convenient to
KU and downtown. $85 per month. For
appointment call VI 3-6265. 11-1
SLEEPING ROOM for male students. Close to campus. Call VI 2-1372. After 4 p.m. call VI 3-4890. Centrally located. 11-1
ROOM AND BOARD, $55 a month. Call
V113-4385. 19-20
RENTALS: 1. Completely furn. 2 bdrm.
birch home. 1. New washer, driver, and
ture. 1. New washer, driver, and
ture. Suitable for faculty or responsible
student. Avail. now till June 15. 2. Sev-
roll to school. Avail. now till June 15.
& apts. Inquire at Cain Realty, 927%,
Mass. VI 3-$816, all hours. 10-50
ROOM FOR TWO men. Priv. bath and
priv. entr. Only two blocks from Union.
Call VI 2-0685 or inquire at 1240 Ohio
after 6 p.m. 10-27
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
furn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond.
door, carport. Vard. fence.
$100 room, 221 Moundview Dr. Phone
VI 3-5882 after 5 for appt. Tee
Vacancy available for 2 men in com-
mission to the chell Rd. Col. Ci-
ty V-3-9635 for appointment:
TYPING
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST wants typing to
name. Electric machine VI
8-2651 10-39
TYPING: Accurate, neat tying by ex-
portions after 5, pm. Coli VI p-105; IH
imports after 8 pm.
TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4309. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. neat. accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379.
EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to tresses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m.
FORMER SECRETARY with plea type electric typewriter wants to do typing in papers, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-
tion in the matrices. Call for excretes typing at standard rates, Call Miss Louise
POE, VI 3-1607 . . .
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tt
Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter
Interested in tuesis, term papers, etc
Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker
Call VI 3-2001
Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Bairrow, 40 W. Width, 18th, VI ti 1648
Typing: Will type reports, thesics, etc.
Type in 1511. W1. St. CI. VI 3-6440.
Type in 1511. W1. St. CI. VI 3-6440.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts research papers neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485.
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. 5317 B Woods Mission, HE 2-7718 Eyes or Sat RA 2-2186
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher. Notes these thesis, reports accurately. Standard science. Mrs. Compton. 1319 Vt. apt. 3. St.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Reasonable haircut. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8681
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
EXPERIENCED --- call VI 3-13163 Mrs. Lor-
Gehbach
FOR SALE
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
ATTENTION SKATERS — Double action
Suit grip-pair skates roller skis.
Size: Up to 8' Width: V1-54-243
GIBSON ELECTRIC guitar with acoustic
In excellent condition. Phone 4511
4511
10-30
MOTORCYCLE, 58 BSA, 650 CC, excellent.
Call Mike Guth, VI 3-7212.
1958—80 Olds, in excellent condition.
Power steering and brakes, air conditioned,
4 new tires, 4 doors. Perfect interior.
1 owner. VI 3-5668. 11-1
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS
New & used guns & ammo. Special this
week: 45 ACP revolver. See at 1304 Tenn
VI 3-7001. 11-1
1955 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. good top and interior. Mechanically sound. Good tires, automatic trans. radio, heater $500.
Call H. White. V 3-6700. 10-20
ENTRA FINE, robust AKC Registereer German Shepherd puppies. Call Baldwin 534-6975 or contact John Selfridge at KU 10-37.
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Muscle, Begonia, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf
1956 FORD 6. Excellent mechanical condition
91 B-7137 or see BOB Hummel
1542 Tenn.
10-27
1961 WHITE FORD FALCON, fordor
r & h, excellent shape, good gas mileage
-$1,550, call Dave Phillips — VI 3-471.
TYPEWRITER WITH GERMAN CHAR- ACTERS and accents, used heavy duty potable in top condition, guaranteed Lawrence Typewriter, 735 10-27 I 3-5644
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-164.
5 WEEK OLD portable tape recorder. 7 pounds with accessories. Tape your lectures. Call Buddy Spaeth, VI 3-5460
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES,
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
1-5778.
tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tt
Car For Sale; 52 Buck, $50.00; Dyna-
low Call V1 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. tf
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 10 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new addition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
SACRIFICE - Student must sell second condition, $150. Call S91-4231.
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and making at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. Stn. Phone VI 3-1515 today. **tt**
OIL PORTRAITS painted. Lasting gift to loved ones. Perfect Christmas gift, $35 and up. Call VI 3-8207, ask for Robert.
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." ... Now at two
1021.75 2020-10-20 1021.45 1020
Lawrence Ave. & 1021.5% 1021.5%
BUSINESS SERVICES
For that Dance or Party
Complete Music Service Dreamy or Way Out
PARTY MUSIC, Inc.
For Reservations Call VI 2-1802
a subsidiary of Audio House
Save this ad for reference
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, etc., aquariums — cages — food and everything in pet field plus Turtles. Chameleon, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tt
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
EXCELENT SETUP FOR STUDENT with small capital, $1800 total to buy lo-
only 4 hours a week to operate. VI 3-9181. 11-1
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI
:3644. tf
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For
orders in 9319 ml, Call MV 3-2263.
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.
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-in Pet Center—most complete shop in midwest. Phone VI 3-2921. Modem. service — open weeks 8 to 10:30 p.m.
HELP WANTED
BABYSITTER
Baby-Sitter 3-5 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
child 1221
Ave. VI 367878 10-20
Wanted—Winter; 7 days a week, two
weeks VC; Tele VI 3-718-400 or
at 1225 Oread.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks.
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bats. Plastic, party supplies.
3350. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI.
3350.
Sebastian Says:
Join The
SENIOR RIDERS
Saturday, Oct. 28
Board Buses in Front of Strong Hall at 9:00 c.m. for the
Big Barn
and
A Party!
ID's or $1.00 on the bus or at the gate
KU
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
THE DATING SEASON
And how does a girl like to be treated? If you want to know, read and remember these four cardinal rules of dating:
The simple secret is simply this: a date is successful when the man knows how to treat the girl.
I have recently returned from a tour of 950,000 American colleges where I made a survey of undergraduate dating customs and sold mechanical dogs, and I have tabulated my findings and Lam now prepared to tell you the simple secret of successful dating.
1. A girl likes to be treated with respect.
When you call for your girl, do not drive up in front of the sorority house and yell, "Hey, fat lady!" Get out of your car. Walk respectfully to the door. Knock respectfully. When your girl comes out, tug your forelock and say respectfully, "Good evening, your honor." Then offer her a Mariboro, for what greater respect can you show your girl than to offer Mariboro with its fine flavor and exclusive selectrate filter? It will indicate immediately that you respect her taste, respect her discernment, respect her intelligence. So, good baddies, before going out on a date, always remember to buy some Mariboros, available in soft pack or flip-top box in all 50 of the United States and also Cleveland.
THE BUREAU
OF WEIGHTS
AND MEASURES
A girl likes to be taken to nice places
2. A girl likes a good listener.
Do not monopolize the conversation. Let her talk while you listen attentively. Make sure, however, that she is not herself a good listener. I recollect a date I had once with a coed named Greensleeves Sigafoas, a lovely girl, but unfortunately a listener, not a taker. I too was a listener so we just sat all night long, each with his hand cupped over his car, straining to catch a word, not talking hour after hour until finally a policeman came by and arrested us both for vagrancy. I did a year and a day. She got by with a suspended sentence because she was the sole support of her aged housemother.
3. A girl likes to be taken to nice places.
By "nice" places I do not mean expensive places. A girl does not demand luxury. All she asks is a place that is pleasant and gracious. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, for example. Or Mount Rushmore. Or the Taj Mahal. Or the Bureau of Weights and Measures. Find places like these to take your girl. In no circumstances must you take her to an oil-cracking plant.
4. A girl likes a man to be well-informed.
Come prepared with a few interesting facts that you can drop casually into the conversation. Like this: "Did you know, Snookiepuss, that when cattle, sheep, camels, goats, antelopes, and other members of the cud-chewing family get up, they always get up bind legs first?" Or this: "Are you aware, Hotlips, that corn grows faster at night?" Or this: "By the way, Loverhead, Oslo did not become the capital of Norway till July 11, 1924."
If you can slip enough of these nuggets into the conversation before dinner, your date will grow too torpid to eat. Some men save up to a half million dollars a year this way.
$\textcircled{1}$ 1931 Max Shulman
* * *
To the list of things girls like, add the king-size, unfiltered Philip Morris Commander. Girls, men—in fact everybody with a taste bud in his head—likes mild, natural Commander, co-sponsors with Martboro on this column.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday. October 27,1961
GO KANSAS
Kansas vs. Oklahoma State - Saturday, Oct. 28, 1:30 p.m.
PROBABLE KANSAS STARTING LINE-UP:
LE ___ Larry Allen (190)
LT ___ Dick Davis (225)
LG ___ Elvin Basham (180)
C ___ Kent Staab (188)
RG ___ Jim Mills (180)
RT ___ Stan Kirshman (210)
RE ___ Benny Boydston (183)
QB ___ John Hadl (205)
LH ___ Lee Flachsbarth (200)
RH ___ Curtis McClinton (212)
21
FB ___ Jim Jarrett (190)
PROBABLE O-STATE STARTING LINE-UP
LE ___ Rod Replogle
LT ___ Frank Parker
LG ___ Gary Cutsinger
C ___ Billy York
RG ___ Leland Slack
RT ___ John "Ed" Gardner
RE ___ Rusty Kraydill
QB ___ Bill Lemig
LH ___ Jim Dillard
RH ___ Ray Wesley
FB ___ Bill McFarland
FB ___ Bill McFarland
Gambles The Friendly Store
Douglas County State Bank The Bank of Friendly Service
Lawrence National Bank Where Your Savings Are Safe
VI 3-0664 Representatives:
Mac Colt, Don Pfutzenreuter, Jack McFarland,
Kirk Hagen, John Cost, Wayne Reeves, (Emporia)
Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Always A Jayhawk Booster
MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO.
SPUDNUT
SPUDNUT 1422 W.23rd Open before & after the game
Winter Oldsmobile-Rambler
800 New Hampshire
BILL'S APCO
9th & Iowa Apco Makes the Difference
1ST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. Motor Bank, 9th & Tenn.
SANDY'S
Thrift & Swift Drive-in Across From Hillcrest
Moore Burgers 1414 West 6th
59th Y
59th N W Q
T in se off t
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year, No.32
Monday, October 30, 1961
Nikita Explodes the Big One
World's Reaction Is Quick, Angry, Fearful
By United Press International
The Western world deplored the "arrogance" of the Soviet Union in setting off its monster bomb today in defiance of appeals to call off the test.
Adlai Stevenson, United States Ambassador to the United Nations, termed the Soviet explosion of a bomb with a yield of 50 million or more tons of TNT an "arrogant act" which has sent the world on "a great leap backward toward anarchy and disaster."
ON CAPITAL HILL in Washington, Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon said "Russia's explosion of the bomb is simply immoral." He told newsmen the super-blast marked a "sad hour in the history of civilization." He added "it is clear we are dealing with a desperate nation."
Sen. Henry Jackson of Washington, chairman of the Joint Subcommittee on Atomic Weapons, said the Russian bomb is "a weapon of intimidation, fear and blackmail." He said it must be answered by renewed U.S. testing in the atmosphere, although he said such tests should be limited in number and involve low yield weapons.
There was no immediate comment from President Kennedy, who was en route from Oklahoma to Washington.
IN LONDON, the Foreign Office said the British Government "deplored" the Soviet action and shared "the indignation which will be universally felt at this wanton disregard for the welfare and safety of the human race."
In Oslo, Norwegian Prime Minister Einar Gerhardsend said he and all others who had hoped the Soviet Union would refrain were bitterly disappointed. He added that the radioactive fallout from the super-bomb would cause unrest and fear all over the world.
Nikita Khrushchev
A
Acting Canadian Prime Minister Harold Green said in Ottawa
(Continued on page 8)
By Clayton Keller
Gunn, Taylor Give Housing Position
James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, and Emily Taylor, dean of women, made the statements before members of the Canterbury Association, the Episcopal church for students, at the regular Sunday evening meeting.
Two representatives of the administration said last night they do not believe the off-campus housing discrimination problem will be solved by refusing to list landlords who discriminate.
They said discrimination will be ended more quickly by quiet, individual action than by organized group action.
Mr. Gunn said it would be impossible to discover whether persons on the housing list were discriminating or not.
"IF A STUDENT HAD A HOUSING list and was turned down by a landlord, how could we prove he was turned down because of his race?" Mr. Gunn asked.
"No landlord rents to anyone who comes to his door," he added. "He judges on the basis of appearance or habits."
"The entire situation comes down to what will help most and what will hurt the situation," said Dean Taylor. "The administration doesn't know how purging the housing list would help. There would be no way to check."
A student suggested the University should add a rule prohibiting discrimination to its list of rules given landlords.
"Would anything as superficial as this really satisfy those people who
are pushing this?" Dean Taylor asked.
"I don't know. I don't think there's any accurate way to tell the extent of discrimination." Dean Taylor replied.
Mr. Gunn said the University would not solve anything by including such a rule unless it could be enforced.
A student suggested that by including such a rule, the University would be going on record against discrimination. The slower process of educating landlords could be carried on from this point, he said.
"Does this mean discrimination doesn't exist?" the student asked.
"I think we're dealing with something deeper than whether a person says he discriminates or not." Dean Taylor said. "Many people who discriminate say they aren't discriminating, and they actually believe it."
"IT WOULD BE A FAIRLY EASY way to get the administration off the hook," he said, "but how effective it would be. I don't know."
The student said that if a rule prohibiting discrimination was added, it could be enforced through complaints by students.
"THE UNIVERSITY SHOULD
"ONLY EIGHT STUDENTS have complained to the administration in the last six years," Dean Taylor answered. "The other cases we've heard about through the Kansan or the Civil Rights Council."
Mr. Gunn said a strong stand by the University might do more harm than good.
(Continued on page 6)
Extra Megatons 'No Accident'
WASHINGTON — (UPI) A scientist said today that the latest Soviet explosion may well have been bigger than expected.
But he scoffed at any notion that it "got out of control." Nuclear explosions by definition are uncontrolled releases of energy on a fantastic scale.
They cannot, however, trigger atomic chain reactions in the atmosphere or soil or anything else except the special materials packed into the bomb.
A speaker at the United Nations suggested earlier that Russia's blast might have got out of hand when it was set off this morning.
F. H. Corner, Deputy Secretary of New Zealand's External Affairs Department, told the General Assembly's main political committee the Novaya Zemiya explosion might have been 75 megatons instead of 50.
"WAS THIS the result of an accident?" he asked. "Or was it another gesture? Is the concept of humanity a bourgeois one? . . . A quite unnecessary act of political braggadocio has taken place."
Corner, pointing out that the blast might have had 75-megaton force, said that it was difficult to control the strength of nuclear reaction and suggested that Russia might have accidentally unloosed more power than it planned.
U. N. AMBASSADOR Adlai E. Stevenson told the 103-nation committee this was a "solemn day in the history of the United Nations and of international relations."
Stevenson said the most lethal explosion in history had been set off for no purpose other than "intimidation."
"This morning, we have heard the shocking news that the Soviet Union has exploded a bomb much larger than last week's and apparently even larger than 50 megatons," Stevenson said.
CHARGING SOVIET Premier Nikita Khrushchev with "violence unprecedented," Stevenson said he "exploded his bomb in cynical disregard of the United Nations."
The U.S. ambassador, who said last week his endorsement of cessation of nuclear weapons tests cost him many votes in his 1956 race for the U.S. Presidency, then read into the record the essence of a statement he had issued before the meeting.
Soviet Delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin, replying to Stevenson, neither confirmed nor denied that today's blast was the advertised 50-megaton explosion. He read to the committee a statement issued by Soviet Premier Nikita S. Krhushchev last Saturday to justify it.
New Bomb May Exceed Promised 50 Megatons
STOCKHOLM—(UPI)—The Soviet Union set off the biggest man-made explosion in history today, a blast that may have been bigger than its promised 50-megaton bomb.
Scientific instruments around the world recorded the Soviet blast at 2:33 a.m., Lawrence time, high in the air over the Arctic testing range on Novaya Zemlya Island and indicated its force may have approached a level equal to that of 100 million tons of TNT.
THE BLAST WAS DESCRIBED by some scientists as up to three times bigger than the Soviet Union's estimated 30-megaton bomb which was set off Oct.23. This would make it far larger than the 50-megaton bomb which Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev forecast would be detonated Oct.30 or 31 to wind up Russia's latest series of nuclear tests.
The British government was the first to register a protest. Within hours of the blast the foreign office in London said the British government "deplored" the explosion by the Soviets of their latest thermonuclear bomb.
In Oslo, Norwegian Prime Minister Einar Gerhardsen expressed bitter disappointment over the Soviet test.
THE BOMB EXPLODED today was the one announced to the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress in Moscow by Khrushchev on Oct.17.At the time,he said Russia would test a 50-megaton bomb, (a megaton equals 1 million tons of TNT) as well as the firing mechanism for a 100-megaton bomb by the end of the month. But he said then that he hoped no bomb of the larger size ever would have to be exploded.Russia itself, he said, would feel the effects of such a bomb.
Today's explosion was at least the 26th known Soviet bomb set off in the current test series. All but one underwater have been in the atmosphere, with resultant grave radioactive fallout dangers for the world. The United States set off its fourth fallout-free underground explosion yesterday since it resumed in the wake of the Soviet move earlier this month.
The Dutch Ambassador to the U.N. flatly called the Soviet blast "an act of terror against humanity."
THE SOVIET SUPER-BOMB, which was set off in defiance of world-wide protests and pleas from the United Nations and the White House, was universally condemned in the Western world.
The seismological institution of Sweden's Uppsala University reported the force of the explosion to be more than 2.5 times that of last Monday's 30-megaton blast—which would make today's superbomb equal to at least 75 million tons of TNT.
AT LONDON'S KEW OBSERVATORY, seismologist Jan Piega said "our records show that it is definitely a nuclear explosion of about 50 megatons."
He said his monitors could not determine the exact force of the explosion, but said the bomb was exploded at a "great altitude."
Similar reports of the explosion came from scientists at the Danish Seismographic Institute in Copenhagen, French seismologists at Strasbourg, The Finnish Institute of Radiophysics at Helsinki and the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute at Utrecht.
SWEDISH NUCLEAR SCIENTISTS said they believed today's device weighed about 15 tons, and probably was 16.25 feet high and 9.75 feet in diameter.
5 feet in distance.
They said they believed the bomb was rather "dirty."
The Japanese Meteorological Agency's observatory at Matsushiro said the maximum figure recorded on its machines was 2.5 times that of the Oct. 23 Soviet 30-megaton explosion.
SEVERAL HOURS AFTER THE Soviet blast first was reported, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission in Washington confirmed the test and said a statement would be issued later.
test and said a statement would be
It was believed that this latest Soviet explosion sent about 66 pounds of Strontium 90 and about 3,300 pounds of other radioactive by-products circling the earth with westerly winds.
The Stockholm Meteorological Institution reported that Arctic winds are blowing to the west over the Kara Sea and probably would carry any radioactive dust towards Siberia. The test area of Novaya Zemlya is a frozen wasteland of glaciers, polar bears and sparse population in the Arctic Ocean between the Kara and Barents Seas.
Although today's blast was the biggest and dirtiest ever set off by man, the bomb was of questionable value to the Soviet Union save as a propaganda weapon.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 30, 1961
A Futile Effort
Bertrand Russell, who recently led a group of "ban the bomb" marchers to the Soviet Embassy in London in protest over Khrushchev's decision to test a 50 megaton nuclear bomb, left in disgust when he got the same stale propaganda line. Lord Russell should have known better than to protest to the Soviets in the first place.
THE ACTIONS OF THE BAN THE BOMB marchers were futile, and so are those of the other groups who think they can influence Soviet policy by enlightened persuasion. The Kremlin has persistently shown itself immune to such methods. The Soviet Union's contempt for the opinions of other nations (when they are not backed by force) was shown quite forcefully by its announcement of a new series of nuclear tests at the start of the neutralists conference in Yugoslavia.
over a action that could bring suffering to many nations and peoples. Their march was an expression of public outrage over that action. That outrage was echoed all over the free world—in the press, in parliaments and by groups of concerned citizens in many nations.
There is no doubt that Lord Russell and his marchers were sincere. They were indignant
Yet it had no effect. It did not reach the Russian people, for there was no way it could. And if accurate reflections of world outrage had been allowed to enter the Soviet Union by the men in the Kremlin, it is doubtful they would have produced significant opposition to the Soviet nuclear tests.
THE UNPLEASANT TRUTH OF THE LACK of effect this outrage had on the Kremlin was put to the test when the Soviet Union exploded a giant nuclear blast last week. That explosion was the clearest evidence that the rulers of the Soviet Union do not consider world opinion worth bothering with if it does not suit their ends.
William H. Mullins
letters to the editor
Kansan Editors Criticized
Editors:
With your help Jerry Palmer and his YAF have succeeded in removing KU from the National Students Association. I hope you and he are rejoicing today at having also succeeded in helping to keep Kansas in its usual role of
isolationism and backwardness.
However, there may still be hope for KU and Kansas as long as there are a few outspoken and progressive young people like Miss McMillen and Charles Mengnih.
Wallace D. Johnson Jr.
New York City sophomore
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22,
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University
holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence,
Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors.
RUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom Brown ... Business Manager
by Dick Bibler
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
HOME
ECONOMICS
ROOM 208
0-37
B.BLEER
CALGARY
COLUMBIA POST
Bitter Voice On NSA
Editor:
"NO CLASS HERE 'TIL NINE."
Judi Jamison
One of these days, very soon, I'm sure those members of NSA and the ASC who supported the committee will be able to use the cliche, "I told you so." When KU becomes an isolated iceberg of Conservatism, now that NSA—this horrid "hot-bed of liberalism" — has been abolished (by the way, I am a moderate), when KU's voice has become faint and totally futile on a national level, perhaps the ASC will wake up. Whether it was total ignorance and apathy which determined the ASC vote, how many of the attempted pressures on certain members were effective, how much a lack of parliamentary knowledge and incorrect procedure allow the ASC to be manipulated by a few of the elite, I would hesitate to say.
Whether many members of the ASC realized their hypocrisy, as they typically contradicted the party platforms on which they themselves ran — supporting NSA — is also a question each concerned KU student must debate within his own mind.
Ottawa junior
\* \* \*
Answer to Apathy
Attention KU students and faculty!
Are you tired of being called apathetic? Are you getting impatient with the people who keep telling you you're doing nothing, when you don't know of anything to do? Well, there is something you can do.
In about two weeks, the KU-Y. in conjunction with Watson Library will sponsor a book drive for the Asia Foundation. The Asia Foundation is a non-profit, nonpolitical organization founded in 1951 in California and devoted to assistance to Asians. Its activities take the form of grants or loans to students wishing to study in the U.S., advisory personnel, supplies or equipment and books or other materials. It aids projects in many fields such as education, research, community development and social welfare. Its income is dependent on voluntary contributions.
What I'm getting at is that the book drive at KU is a chance and an opportunity for you to do something in international affairs. We are interested in collecting textbooks, technical books, classics and quality paperbacks. The Asia Foundation pays the entire shipping costs.
There will be more information about this soon, but keep it in mind now, won't you? It's your opportunity to answer the charge of apathy.
Special Projects KU-Y
McCarthyism Revised
Carolyn Shull
(Editor's note: Robert G. Colodny was a visiting assistant professor of history at KU during the 1957-58 and 1958-59 terms.)
It still happens. A University of Pittsburgh history professor has been under attack since early this year for his views on Castro and Cuba, his membership in allegedly subversive organizations, and his service with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War. The professor is Robert G. Colodny, formerly of the University of California, San Francisco State College, Wesleyan University (Conn.), and the University of Kansas. A specialist in the history of science and the history of revolutions, he came to Pitt in 1959.
Rohan Prabhakar
Robert G. Colodny
The attack has been led by the Pittsburgh Press — local outlet for the Scripps-Howard chain. It started with an interview carried on its front page for Sunday, January 15, in which the paper quoted Dr. Colodny as saying that he believed Cuba might become "another Spain" through outside intervention in her revolution.
WE
For example:
—Dr. Colodny has "signed a statement issued by the 'Fair Play For Cuba Committee,' an openly pro-Castro organization,' and among other signers were "drama critic Kenneth Tynan, who staged a British TV program last spring featuring, among other 'distinguished American dissenters,' Alger Hiss."
ALTHOUGH IN SUBSTANCE that was no more than many others were saying at the time. Press reporter William Gill, by using a series of italicized parenthetical editorial notes to link up the professor's statements with events and facts not immediately germane, made the article in effect a charge of subversion.
Two days after the article appeared, Pennsylvania state Representative John T. Walsh of nearby McKeesport — who in the intervening 48 hours had announced his candidacy for the mayoralty of that town in the Democratic primary — denounced Dr. Colodny in the state legislature and introduced a two-part resolution calling for an investigation for Pitt and of "anti-U.S. sentiment" in all state-aided schools.
Dr. Colodny was said to have fought with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War and, the story noted, "The Communist-led Abraham Lincoln Brigade still tops the Attorney General's list of subversive organizations..." (The University's student newspaper pointed out that the Attorney General's list is in alphabetical order.)
The professor had been employed in Mexico by the government while Lazaro Cardenas was President and, "Only this week it was disclosed in the Press that a Communist-linked Latin American 'peace congress' . . . was planned last month in the home of former Mexican President Lazaro Cardenas."
ON THE WALL BEHIND THE DOOR in the professor's University office was a souvenir poster from the Spanish Civil War. The poster bore the legend "UGT, Federacion Nacionale La Edificacion." The organization, reporter Gill explained, "was a known Communist organization during the Spanish Civil War."
cess
prog
Cosl
American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars groups in the area joined in the fracas and pressed for a state investigation. And, The Press asked editorially "how a scholar with the requisite degrees to land a place on the Pitt history faculty can so misread current events as to find that the murderous, Communist-dominated tyranny of Fidel Castro is merely an 'agrarian reform' movement."
PENNSYLVANIA SUPREME COURT JUSTICE Michael A. Musmanno, who apparently had no other connection with the case, told the Press that Dr. Colodny "would have to be deaf, dumb and blind not to know . . . that if anyone lifted Castro's beard he would find the Communist manifesto wrapped around his neck."
Rep. Francis E. Walter, D-Pa., Chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, disclosed exclusively to the Press that his Committee's files contained "many mentions" of Dr. Colodny, although the professor himself had never appeared before that body.
FOR HIS PART, DR. COLODNY told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the only other newspaper in the city following the demise of Hearst's Sum-Telegraph, that "under no circumstances could it be said that I either supported or attacked the Cuban Government." He claimed he had merely given his views as an historian and that they had been misconstrued. The Post-Gazette, in an editorial headed "Fair Play for Professor," called the proposed investigation "an educational witch-hunt."
Similarly worded criticisms of the Press and Representative Walsh also were expressed by American Association of University Professors' chapters and members at Pitt and neighboring Carnegie Tech, Chatham, Duquesne, and Mount Mercy colleges; the American Civil Liberties Union, SANE (Colodny is vice chairman of the local chapter). The Friends Meeting of the Quaker Church, and noted Pittsburgh Catholic priest, Father Charles Owen Rice.
To them, the Press replied: "The defenders of Dr. Robert G. Colodny . . . get more and more frenzied. . . Familiar words and phrases crop up in these defenses — 'smear,' 'innuendo,' 'witch-hunt,' and 'guilt by association' — phrases invariably invoked when left-wingers are exposed."
(Reprinted from the Oct. 23 New Republic. This is the first half of an article by Joseph G. Colangelo Jr. The second half will be printed tomorrow.)
Page 3
Wescoe Says Costa Rican Exchange Is a Big Success
By Jerry Musil
Four factors are essential for success of a faculty-student exchange program and the KU-University of Costa Rica program has all four.
Monday. October 30, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Chancellor W. Clarke Wesco made this statement before an overflow crowd at the Faculty Club last night.
HE SAID the four criteria are:
- Only senior faculty members proficient in the native language should be exchanged.
- Only students proficient in the native language should be exchanged.
- The students must enroll in regular university courses taught by local professors and not by American exchange professors.
- The students must live with native families, preferably with a family having a student enrolled at the university.
THE CHANCELLOR said only the KU-Costa Rican program has all four points and has had better success than the other three programs sponsored by the State Department..
He said the other programs sent graduate students who did not know the language and were not mature enough to handle the undergraduates they had to instruct.
THE OTHER THREE programs, he said, allowed the students to enroll in courses taught by the American exchange professors. The KU-Costa Rican program students are taught by Costa Rican professors.
ates they had to instruct. "Most of the students did not know the language and their year was wasted learning the language," Chancellor Wescoe said. "All KU students are proficient in the language."
Also the students from the other programs did not follow the Costa Rican academic year, but KU students follow the same schedule as Costa Rican students, he said. The Costa Rican school year is from March to November instead of September to June.
tember
encycler Wescoe said KU students live with families in San Jose while students from other programs live in special dormitories which isolate them from the other students.
The Chancellor said he has a conference scheduled with James McCain, president of Kansas State
Mary Lou Frisbie A Senior, Dies
Gread Aveyard Dr. R.I. Canuteson, administrator of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said death was from natural causes. He said Miss Frisbie had been under a doctor's care for several years.
Mary Lou Frisbie, 26, Stanford,
Ky., senior, was found dead this
morning in a room which she rented
at a private rooming house, 1230
Oread Ave.
Miss Frisbie, a senior in education, was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Howard I. Frisbie, of Stanford, Ky. She had been a student at KU since 1957.
since 1937. Burial will be Thursday from the Morgan & Fox Funeral Home in Stanford.
To Review Miller's 'Tropic of Cancer'
A book long banned in the United States and currently on the bestseller lists will be reviewed at 4 p.m. tomorrow.
"The Tropic of Cancer," famed creation of Henry Miller, will be discussed in the Music Room of the Kansas Union by Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English, at the Modern Book Review Forum.
When Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war. —Nathaniel Lee
Costa Rica He said KU is working with Louisiana State University on help for a medical school there.
University, to co-operate with KU on an agricultural program for Costa Rica.
CHANCELLOR WESCOE said 55 KU faculty members have applied to teach in Costa Rica under the program. He added that the University is looking for funds to bring Costa Rican students here.
Chancellor Wescoe said all the aims of the program have been completed except one, which the University is trying to remedy. That is bringing Costa Rican students to KU to study.
"So far, we have had two cadres of KU students study in Costa Rica. The second group will be returning in about two weeks," he said.
JACK ZINN for Freshman President
HE SAID THERE IS always one senior KU professor in Costa Rica.
In answer to questions at the end of the talk, the Chancellor said no Costa Rican student has come to KU because of lack of funds.
"The cost to the students is too high," he said. "Our fees are higher, the cost of travel to the US and the cost of living while here make it difficult.
"THE KU STUDENTS have their travel paid by the State Department. The only cost to them is living expenses which is inexpensive."
Chancellor Wescoe gave three reasons for the choice of Costa Rica for the program:
- The late Rector of the University and Franklin D. Murphy were good friends.
- good friends
- Costa Rica is the most stable country in Latin America as far as politics and economy are concerned.
- The University is better developed than others in Latin America.
"No one who has been to Costa Rica can fail to see that progress has been made," he said.
"THE COSTA RICAN sees Kansas as a second home," he said. "They now think of the US as Kansas with a little territory around it. And KU is in the middle of it."
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, October 30, 1961
Religion Discussed at Forum
By Richard Bonett
Man will be religious whether he wants to be or not, a Lawrence minister told more than 50 KU students Friday at a session of the Current Events Forum.
Speaking on the topic "Religion in a Modern Society," the Rev. Paul R. Davis, of the Plymouth Congregational Church, traded religious and philosophic views with Charles Landesman Jr., assistant professor of philosophy at KU.
PROF. LANDESMAN, speaking from what he called the "humanist or naturalist point of view," said the chief difference separating that view from traditional Christian views was the question of the existence of God.
There is a tendency on the part of religious individuals to overemphasize the difference whereas it is not critical." he said.
HOWEVER, it was the contention of Rev. Davis, whose 10-minute presentation followed that of Prof. Landesman, that there are no atheists and that it is in man's nature to be religious.
He said that the humanist concept concerning the moral conduct of man has much in common with the religious view in terms of what they both opposed.
At the close of what became a lively if short question period, Rev. Davis said, in effect, that humanism is a religion.
"Once man leaves the animal
state, he can not escape the religious quest," he said.
QUOTING HARRY EMERSON Fosdick, Rev. Davis said as long as man is going to be religious, he might as well direct his quest upward to the highest transcendental form, which he termed "the high and holy."
Prof. Landesman said certain viewpoints in the world seem antithetical to both religion and to humanism.
Both, he said, find themselves opposing moral relativism, which he described as a "sort of fuzzy idea that the condition of one's civilization, culture and geographic situation establishes the moral code."
THE RELATIVIST CONCEPT, he continued, might lead to the idea that any existing moral code is acceptable and that morals are not really important.
Another common antithesis, Prof. Landesman said, is "scientism," or the view that science can solve all man's problems.
"This is not to say that science can not solve some of the problems," he said. "It can point to methods for judging goals and means of achieving these goals."
BUT, HE ADDED,"our goals will not be obtained by scientific analysis, but in response to the experiences of life not wholly reducible to scientific terms."
Materialism, the concept that man
has no subjective existence, and provincialism, the acceptance of values that are not universal, are other ideas objectionable to both religion and humanism, the KU professor said.
He concluded, however, with the comment that religion has always admonished men to strive for saintliness. This should be tempered with some pessimism concerning man's capacity for achieving that goal, he said.
DURING THE USUAL question period, Prof. Landesman was asked what method the Humanist would use in arriving at the best society if the scientific method would not work.
"I'm not sure there is any difference between the Humanist method and the religious method. Both rely on sensitivity and reason, experience and thinking." he answered.
Referring back to a point made by Rev. Davis that religion exercised a social force by "providing a motive to improve the condition of man," a student asked:
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Page 3
New Formations Important As Hawkers Post Easy Win
There was something old and something new for the Kansas Jayhawkers Saturday as they rolled to their most impressive win of the season and the second highest scoring total in the Jack Mitchell regime in blasting Oklahoma State from Memorial Stadium, 42-8.
The new was an offensive formation devised by Coach Mitchell which provides for a much more varied and quick-hitting attack. Although the Hawkers had introduced this "flanker offense" at Norman last week, Saturday's win was the initial use of it as the basic offense.
FROM THE NEW FORMATION,
which featured more passing with
greater success on new and different
patterns, and the draw, KU ran with
ease through the much bigger O-
State defense for 253 yards rushing
and 102 passing and two touchdowns
in each of the final three periods.
Also new was the Jayhawker defense. The Crimson and Blue shuffled from a 6-1-4 to a 4-3-4 throughout most of the game and harnessed an active Cowboy aerial game effectively.
In the first half the visitors got only 28 yards passing, completing a mere four of 12 attempts. In the second half, mostly against the Kansas third and fourth units, they were able to throw 23 times and complete nine for 74 yards—mostly in a desperation attempt to catch the Hawkers.
AGAIN AMONG THE NEW, was the thrilling 53-yard scamper by sophomore Tony Leiker as he cracked right tackle on a double reverse in the final minute of play to raise the Kansas point total under Coach Mitchell to one point less than amassed against Kansas State last year.
And the old was the familiar outstanding performances of John Hadl. Curtis McClinton, Roger McFarland and the entire offense and defensive lines.
Hadi, rejuvenated from an early season slump with the aid of contact lenses, passed successfully on seven of 15 tries for 102 yards, rushed 10 times for 45 yards, scored one touchdown, threw for two others and an extra point, and intercepted a pass plus handling the punt returning duties, punting five times for 40.5 average, including boots of 61 and 74 yards.
McCLINTON CONTINUED to spark the KU passing attack with well-timed catches and devastating running as he snared two Hadl flips for 41 yards, both helping to set up the first two Kansas scores. He rushed only three times, but once for the fifth KU touchdown.
On McClinton's score, it looked like the McClinton who rambled through all comers last season as he streaked six yards behind the line of scrimmage before bolting around left end, weaving in and out for the score with only one defender touching him.
For McFarland it was a day of opportunism. The spirited Texas junior was in the right place at the right time to gather in two passes, one coming for a score in the third quarter as a Hadi toss spun through the finger-tips of end Pack St. Clair and into the awaiting arms of McFarland, standing in the end zone.
McFARLAND SCORED AGAIN with :23 remaining in the second quarter as he caught another Hadl pass, thrown as the KU quarterback was falling under the weight of two tacklers. McFarland, who also was a
big factor in the toughened KU pass defense, tipped the pass into the air, swayed off balance, recovered and clutched the oval as he dove for the second Hawker tally.
In the line, KU seemed far superior, and as Mitchell said after the win:
"Our line has probably whipped everybody we have played this season."
THE KU FORWARDS, including the third teamers, struck quickly and viciously on offense to provide ample holes for the Hawker backs.
Sophomore fullback Ken Coleman frequently had huge gaps in the O-State line to run through as he
charged up the middle all afternoon to lead all rushers with 78 yards on 14 carries, using the draw for substantial vardage.
Also, the Kansas pass protection was outstanding. Hadl got caught only once and frequently had enough time to choose from one of several receivers before the O-State lineman could come close. On one occasion, Hadl had six full seconds to throw.
O-State got only 58 yards in the first half and a mere six in the third quarter. It was not until the Pokes met the KU third unit in the final 17 minutes that they were able to move the ball with any effectiveness.
KU Should Be Wary of MU
"Watch out for the Missouri line," was the advice given by several Oklahoma State players to the Kansas Jayhawkers after Jack Mitchell's crew defeated them Saturday.
Comparing the "Big Three" of the Big Eight—Missouri, Colorado and Kansas—the Oklahoma Staters said that Colorado and Kansas played somewhat the same style of ball and rated the two clubs equal in their showing against OSU.
THE CONSENSUS WAS that Kansas and Colorado were all back-field with this especially applying to the Jayhawker club. Conversely Missouri did not have the "horses" in the backfield but utilized a fast, hard charging line to make itself "double tough."
"When you meet Missouri you are really in for a good battle," said Cowboy fullback Bill McFarland, who averaged four and one-half yards per carry. "Kansas has a real fine backfield. They're a good ball club."
"A REAL FINE BALL CLUB," said center Roy Peck. "The line play was real tough but not as tough as
Missouri's. The Missouri line is a lot cuicker."
"The difference in Kansas and other ball clubs we've played this season is the backfield," said tackle John Gardner, "that's Kansas' strong point. They're really tough back there."
"I think Kansas had several lucky breaks," said end George Walstead. "The KU backfield was very strong." Walstead also cited the hard blocking of Curtis McClinton upon the defensive end.
AFTER GOING IN MOTION McClinton would double back to throw what appeared to be the OSU ends a block that "came out of mid-air." "It was a tough day for defensive ends," said Walstead.
"John Hadl was the difference out there," said Cowboy Head Coach Cliff Speagle. "I think everyone in the stands could see that. That boy did everything but sweep the stadium."
The OSU coach declined comment upon the comparison of Missouri and Colorado to Kansas. "The teams play different kinds of ball," said the OSU mentor.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
KuKu Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union.
New Foreign Students: Seminar on Life in the U.S. 4 p.m., Forum Room, excuse from classes to attend, but please be in attendance if not in class.
Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute in Room 6534 of the Rockland Room. Kansas Union Speaker, Prof. Charles R. McGimsey U. of Arkansas: "Recent Developments in Arkansas Archaeology"
Quill Club: 8 p.m. Kansas Union, check bulletin board for room. Manuscripts will be read and discussed.
Stephenson Wins
All the play in intramural footfall last Friday was in the independent A and B divisions.
Stephenson downed Battenfeld, 13-0. ASCE nipped Jolliffe, 14-13, and Foster dropped Oread, 9-7, in A action.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Neurotic persons work best amid noise, according to University of Oklahoma psychologists.
In B play, Phi Beta Pi won by forfeit over JRP No. 2 and both the Bees and Carruth-O'Leary forfeited.
A recent study of noise shows that people with personality complexes work better in a din, probably, the researchers reported in the Catholic Digest, because noise distracts neurotics from their own unresolved emotional conflicts.
Noise Helps Neurotics
MISS EXCUSES to
enjoy your
favorite
beverage
at the
JAY HAWK
CAFE
todays
EXCUSE IS
BUY A DOUGHNUT DAY EXCUSE IS 5 days
Monday, October 30, 1961 University Daily Kansam
Modern Book Review Forum: 4 p.m.
Music Room, Kansas Union. Stewart Levine reviewing "Tropic of Cancer" by Henry Miller.
Epicapish Hoty Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
El Atenco e la reunirse a las cuatro de la tarde el miércoles, el primero de noviembre en la sala once de Fraser Hall. El programa será un discursos por Florentino Colmari Martí de Cid sobre la literatura precolombiana. Refrescos. Todos invitados.
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
University Women's Club. 7:30 p.m.
Watkins Room, Kansas Union.
Dotson Leads KU to 17-43 Victory
The Kansas cross country squad, in their final tune-up meet before the Big Eight championships here Nov. 11, handily defeated a Oklahoma Sooner squad 17-43, Friday at Norman.
Kansas' ace Bill Dotson continued his string of first places by crossing the finishline first in 14:54.5. Dotson has yet to be beaten this year.
Charlie Hayward, who has yet to place anything but second, came through again finishing two and one-half seconds behind Dotson.
Dotson and Hayward were far in front of the rest of the pack. Third place Dan Ralston was 15 seconds back of Hayward.
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
Lee Smith was the only Oklahoma runner to break the top five. Smith, who had placed second the week before in a Fort Hays-Wichita-OU triangular, finished 15 seconds behind Ralston.
Fifth-place Bill Thornton finished on Smith's heels but could not finish ahead of the Sooner ace. His time was two and one-half seconds slower than Smith's.
The win gave the Jayhawkers a 5-0 season record and was their 38th consecutive dual victory over a league opponent.
Doing easily what others find dif-
ficult is talent; doing what is im-
possible for talent is genius.—Henri-
ri-Frederic Amiel
OUR ADVERTISING MAN WENT TO THE GAME SATURDAY AND WAS SO HAPPY BECAUSE OF OUR VICTORY HE FORGOT TO MAKE UP AN ADVERTISEMENT TO FILL THIS SPACE.
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University Daily Kansan Monday. October 30, 1961
Page 6
Housing-
(Continued from page 1)
lead, but not apply force," he said. "We have a good community relationship at present; there is no towngown conflict. The activity you suggest might create a conflict."
"Isn't it possible there will be a bigger explosion later if the University doesn't do anything now?" he was asked.
"I don't think you can say the University hasn't done anything." Mr. Gunn answered. "The University has gone on record as opposing discrimination. We are working on the situation, but we feel it should be done quietly.
"In the past, group action has usually set the situation back," he added.
Dean Taylor reminded the students that housing for increased enrollment will have to be taken care of off-campus.
"We can't see how we'll solve any problems by making it more difficult for students to get rooms," she said.
Mr. Gunn said the Chancellor has asked a committee of administrators to study the off-campus housing situation in its entirety.
"I THINK IT IS MORE IMPORTant to view all segments of the housing problem, not just one aspect," he said.
"Members of the committee appointed by the Chancellor have spent a lot of time individually on the problem," Dean Taylor said. "We're not publicizing it, but a lot of good has been accomplished by working on an individual basis like this."
She suggested that the problem could be solved if each student would act individually to make his feelings known.
A STUDENT ASKED FOR the definition of "moral suasion."
"It means working on individual problems with individual persons on
(Continued on page 8)
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Monday, October 30, 1961 University Daily Kansas
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
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Close to campus. Call VI 2-1372. After 4 p.m. call VI 3-4890. Centrally located. 11,1
RENTALS: 1. Completely furn. 2 bdrm.
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i-800, i-900, i-1000, i-1100, i-1200, i-1300,
i-1400, i-1500, i-1600, i-1700, i-1800, i-1900, i-2000, i-2100, i-2200, i-2300, i-2400, i-2500, i-2600, i-2700, i-2800, i-2900, i-3000, i-3100, i-3200, i-3300, i-3400, i-3500, i-3600, i-3700, i-3800, i-3900, i-4000, i-4100, i-4200, i-4300, i-4400, i-4500, i-4600, i-4700, i-4800, i-4900, i-5000, i-5100, i-5200, i-5300, i-5400, i-5500, i-5600, i-5700, i-5800, i-5900, i-6000, i-6100, i-6200, i-6300, i-6400, i-6500, i-6600, i-6700, i-6800, i-6900, i-7000, i-7100, i-7200, i-7300, i-7400, i-7500, i-7600, i-7700, i-7800, i-7900, i-8000, i-8100, i-8200, i-8300, i-8400, i-8500, i-8600, i-8700, i-8800, i-8900, i-9000, i-9100, i-9200, i-9300, i-9400, i-9500, i-9600, i-9700, i-9800, i-9900, i-10000, i-10100, i-10200, i-10300, i-10400, i-10500, i-10600, i-10700, i-10800, i-10900, i-11000, i-11100, i-11200, i-11300, i-11400, i-11500, i-11600, i-11700, i-11800, i-11900, i-12000, i-12100, i-12200, i-12300, i-12400, i-12500, i-12600, i-12700, i-12800, i-12900, i-13000, i-13100, i-13200, i-13300, 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TYPING
Car For Call: 52 Buick, $50.00. Dyna-flow. Call VI 2-3480 after 12:30 p.m. t f
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, neat. accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST wants typing to
home. Electric machine
0 1-2651 10-30
Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-1648.
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, experimented on, Reason rates,heses used in the Reason rates. Merrilyn Hay. VI 3-2218. Mrs tf
TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression. We offer剧院. For excelsis at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1997.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf
Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter
Interested in the thesis, term papers, etc
Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker
Call VI 3-2001.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis etc.
seal, 1311 W. 21 St. Ct. VI 3-6440. . . ft
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday. October 30, 1961
World Reaction-
(Continued from page 1)
that Moscow's action will bring "revulsion" from people all around the world.
HE SAID the Russians had gone out on "a long, long limb" this time, and added it looked as though the Soviet leaders had decided to ignore world opinion.
Danish Prime Minister Viggo Kampmann said in Copenhagen that he had hoped up to the last minute that the Soviet Union would hold off on its big bomb. But now, he said, "I can only say I am deeply worried."
Housing Position—
(Continued from page 6)
a face-to-face basis," answered Dean Taylor.
A student asked how this could be put into practice.
Mr. Gunn suggested the All Student Council could urge each student to work in his own way on the problem.
HE POINTED OUT THAT MUCH improvement has been made in the racial situation since he was a student. At that time, he said, Negroes did not attend University social events and only one theater in Lawrence admitted Negroes.
Returning to group action, a student said:
"If something is to be accomplished, it usually gets done through organized action. Public statements by both sides in a controversy give
a basis for the individual person to judge his own standards.
"If such problems as discrimination in barber shops aren't brought out, many people wouldn't know about them," he suggested.
"I AGREE THAT PUBLICITY is needed to bring out these problems," Mr. Gunn said, "but where does one draw the line? Where does publicity end and work begin?"
In his final statement, Mr. Gunn reminded the students the Chancellor has said the present housing policy is in effect "for now."
"Consideration is being given to other things the University can do in this field," he said. "The University is not standing still and is not waiting for others to take action it should take itself."
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NIKITA HANGS IN EFFIGY-A group of unknown students early this morning hanged Nikita Khrushchev in effigy. The stuffed image of Khrushchev had a 50-megaton bomb hanging from his neck.A sign which read "Baby Deformer" labeled the effigy. University maintenance employees removed the effigy at 8 a.m.
Bomb Fallout May Not Hit Lawrence
Lawrence may not receive any radioactive fallout from the Russian explosion of a multi-megaton bomb yesterday, Edward Shaw, professor of radiation biophysics, said.
Prof. Shaw said such bombs tend to blow straight up, scattering atomic debris in the stratosphere and not in the earth's atmosphere.
IF THERE ARE ANY EFFECTS from the bomb, they will not show up for a week or more, Prof. Shaw said.
PROF. SHAW AGREED WITH two radiologists at the Clinical Assembly of the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons who described the current public concern over
The big bomb the Soviets exploded last Tuesday still has not caused any rise in fallout here. Friday radioactive fallout measured 4.64 micro-microcuries per cubic foot of air. Saturday the average rose to 6.49 micro-microcuries per cubic foot of air.
Sunday's rain may show a rise in fallout if any debris was in the atmosphere. Prof. Shaw said. Figures for that will not be compiled until later today.
Weather
Slowly decreasing cloudiness this forenoon, partly cloudy this afternoon through Wednesday. Cooler tonight. The high today will be around 60 and the low tonight in the low 40s. Thursday's high will be in the 60s.
He said this is the reason why the department of radiation biophysics was giving a series of lectures at Lawrence high school on radiation and its effects.
radioactive fallout as "mass hysteria" and a "radiation neurosis."
The two radiologists, D. W. Hendrickson of Wichita, and A. G. Reed of Tulsa, Okla., said the country had gone wild over the effects of radiation. Dr. Reed charged the furor has been caused by "irresponsible and non-scientific publications which play upon the dramatic."
TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Board of Health has warned that radioactive fallout from the latest Soviet nuclear test warrants continuous, intensive surveillance in Kansas.
State Health Board Warns of Fallout
Daily hansan
J. Lee Mayers, chief of industrial hygiene, said consideration of protective measures is under way on national, state and local levels. He said fallout in Kansas in the past two months has been from low-level concentrations of the radioactive particles produced by the current Soviet nuclear tests which number over 20.
He predicted that rains and snows in early spring of 1962 will bring the major quantity of the fallout to the world from its present location high in the stratosphere.
Tuesday, October 31, 1961
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
59th Year, No. 33
Students to Convene
All classes will be dismissed tomorrow morning at 9:30 for a convocation which will allow students to participate in the KU Statewide Activities. Convocation.
Students are asked to report to their county organizations as announced on placards around the campus. Each county in Kansas has its own student organization, headed by a student chairman. These groups are the centers of public relations work within the Statewide Activities.
The convocation tomorrow will follow regular convocation scheduling, with classes as follows:
Kansas City, Mo., area students should report to Summerfield 411, rather than Summerfield 166 as is posted on the convocation placards.
8:00-8:30, 8:40-9:10, 9:20-10:00
Convocation, 10:40-11:10, 11:20-
11:50
Opinion Voiced On ASC Group
The ASC Student Liaison Committee initiated last week has been generally approved by the governor of Kansas, the mayor of Lawrence, the speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives and the chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents.
But both Gov. John Anderson and Whitley Austin, chairman of Board of Regents, have voiced reservations regarding the new committee.
The function of the committee, as stated in the ASC resolution introducing it, will be to "endeavor to meet with the Lawrence City Council, the State Board of Regents, the State Legislature and the governor
Negro Student Says Protest Successful
A spokesman for the Negro students who held a protest march against the University's housing policy Oct. 13, said last night he believes the march was a success.
"I'm very optimistic about it (the administration's policy)" he said. "I feel something is being done, even if it's not dropping names off the housing list, as we had asked.
"The march accomplished what it was meant to accomplish," said Elmer Jackson, Kansas City senior. "It has brought the problem into the open."
He said that since the problem had been brought into the open, he now felt the administration's policy of working on the problem quietly and on an individual basis was the best way to proceed.
"Our list of grievances was merely
JACKSON SAID IF THE MARCH had created conflict, it was an unfortunate side effect.
a suggestion, and if the administration has seen some other way to solve the problem, I'm for it," he added.
"I'm a student here, too, and I don't want to spread a bad name for KU," he said. "The main thing I want as an individual is to see the thing solved, or to see some sort of action."
(Scientists in Western Europe and Japan reported that the big Soviet blast yesterday was about 2.5 times as large as the Oct. 23 explosion of 30 megatons — making it equal possibly to as much as the detonation of 75 million tons of TNT. In Washington, however, the United States Atomic Energy Commission said preliminary indications were that the latest explosion was equal to 50 megatons.
"I don't know what or when the administration's action will be put before the public, but from my talk with the chancellor and from talking to others who have met with him. I definitely feel the administration is concerned," he said. "This is what we wanted," he added.
Khrushchev Admits Bomb Size Is Mistake
"We shall not punish them (the scientists) for it," he said. The crowd in the auditorium burst into applause and laughter.
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Premier Nikita Khrushchev said today Soviet scientists made a mistake yesterday and exploded a nuclear bomb more powerful than 50 megatons.
(New Zealand's deputy foreign minister, F. H. Corner suggested at the United Nations yesterday that, since it is difficult to control the strength of a thermonuclear reaction of such size, Russia accidently might
Informed sources said Khrushchev told a cheering session of the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress that the scientists had intended to set off only the 50-megaton blast he had predicted in an earlier speech to the Congress.
But Khrushchev said, according to the sources, that the explosion turned out to be bigger than the scientists figured.
Khrushchev joked about the "mistake," according to those who heard him speak in the Kremlin's Palace of Congresses.
have loosed more power than it planned. Khrushchev's statement today apparently bore out that conjecture.)
One megaton is equal to one million tons of TNT. Yesterday's blast was by far the most powerful explosion yet triggered by man.
Khrushchev's statement was the first announcement from the Communist world acknowledging yesterday's explosion.
Khrushchev said only that the big blast was "multi-megaton" and did not specify the exact power of the test explosion.
Students Receive Downs This Week
Downslips, the University's way of indicating failing marks or incomplete work in a course, will be sent to KU students this week.
Duplicate downslips will be sent to the parents of all students with low marks in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This procedure will be followed in most, but not all of the other University schools and departments.
For freshman and sophomore students in the College, the downslips will be followed with a student-adviser conference period from Nov. 7 to 10. All freshman and sophomore students in the College — including those who receive no downslips — will be asked to see their advisers during this period.
of Kansas to advise them in matters concerning KU students."
IN A TELEPHONE interview, Gov. Anderson said the committee could be very helpful. But he added that it would be effective only so long "as it stays within the realm of that which is reasonable and if it stays within a limited volume of proposals.
"If a group of this sort makes too many proposals," he said, "its batting average goes down and it loses its effectiveness."
Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, will head the liaison committee and appoint its members. When told last night of the governor's comments about "proposals," Eberhart said that he conceived of the committee as not making proposals, but giving student opinion on proposals already made.
Eberhart said the committee wants to cooperate and show the groups that the students are interested in what affects them.
He said the governor probably thought the group might make proposals because people generally think that when a group forms, it wants something.
"I don't think our proposals will be different from ones to substantiate the chancellor," he said. "Most of our proposals will go through the chancellor. He is our direct representative.
"THE ADMINISTRATION knows these things. They live with them every day. I'm not sure what the committee could do but back up the chancellor," Eberhart said.
He did not rule out the possibility of the committee coming up with a plan that the chancellor had not thought about.
He also said the chancellor thought the liaison committee had merit.
The chairman of the Board of Regents, Whitley Austin, said he did know about the value of the liaison committee.
"The committee will have to be tested pragmatically," he said. "Of course, we always welcome student views, but we have to be careful that the committee does represent the views of the students."
The sponsor of the student liaison committee bill, Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, said last week that the committee "will, in effect, set up a lobbying group for KU students." Mr. Austin doubted the committee's effectiveness in this capacity.
"I HESITATE TO SAY that KU would gain by applying the committee as a lobbyist group," he said. "The last thing for the University to do is to be in politics."
"The Board of Regents can't sanction a political lobby as such. We're not political. We wouldn't recognize a lobbyist group."
Eberhart said he did not think of the committee as a "lobbyist group." He said the committee "was powerless to control" the governor, the mayor of Lawrence, the Kansas Legislature and the State Board of Regents.
"In contrast," he said, "a lobby group can use some power of influence."
Eberhart said the committee is an "informative group, not a lobby group," and added that "we just want to eliminate the guesswork."
TWO OTHER officials questioned strongly supported the committee.
William L. Mitchell, Hutchinson speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives, said the legislature would appreciate the committee.
"The more expert opinion we can get, the better off we are," he said. "The students know what the University needs. But we (the legisla-
(Continued on page 3)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. October 31, 1961
The Big Bomb
It is hard if not impossible to detect any logical reason for the 50 megaton Soviet nuclear test held yesterday.
CERTAINLY THE REACTION in the United Nations and announcements made by the governments of various nations indicate that the current Russian test series is anything but a propaganda advantage for the Soviets. New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller recently said, "the very undertaking of these tests defied not only world opinion but also all the years of Soviet Propaganda invested in the pretense of seeking a ban on nuclear testing.
Indian Prime Minister Nehru, a neutralist leader who agreed with the Soviet stand in Berlin, has been very critical of the resumption of nuclear tests.
MANY NATIONS, SUCH AS JAPAN, have been strongly resentful of the way in which the Russians have subjected many millions of innocent people to the perils of nuclear fallout. But most of these nations have not been receiving nearly as much fallout as has been falling in many parts of Russia.
The Soviets, in an attempt to prove their military might, have exposed their own people to the dangers of fallout. However, there is little reaction to this in Russia because the Russian press has carried very little news of the test series. Only a very few Russians are aware that health damaging nuclear fallout is falling on them.
SCIENTISTS HAVE STATED that although considerable knowledge has probably been gained from the whole series of tests it is doubtful that the two large tests added much to the overall knowledge gained.
The detonation of the bomb is obviously an attempt, by the Russians, to do more than a flexing of the Russian military muscle. Nikita Khrushchev is proving that he will go to any length to prove Russian military superiority to the world. Only this time it appears that world leaders are not impressed but resentful about this senseless display of military might.
The world must certainly be careful in its dealings with a nation that will buck so many disadvantages to release a weapon of fear.
-Ron Gallagher
Censors and Literature
We note that Henry Miller's "Tropic of Cancer" is being reviewed at 4 this afternoon in the Kansas Union. This controversial book was long banned in the United States and is still a target of harsh criticism.
The recent decision lifting the ban on the book was a welcome advance for literary freedom of expression. The unfortunate truth is that most of the censorship boards in the United States are not competent to pass judgment on whether or not a piece of literature is obscene. The board members can only apply their own personal values to the work, and that takes them into a very hazy area where the obscenity of a piece of literature is a matter of opinion. And we might note that even literary experts disagree on some books. D. H. Lawrence's novels are a good example.
OBVIOUSLY, THERE ARE SOME BOOKS which almost everyone would agree were obscene. They can be found in paperback form on many drugstore magazine racks. But even granted that the various censorship boards perform a
useful service in catching some of this type of trash, they still cannot prevent the flow of this kind of material by banning it.
The basic problem lies in the society the censorship boards have been set up to protect. There is a market for the kind of obscene paperbacks that are being produced in a steady flow or they would not be printed. If there is a market, there are people who will supply it, regardless of censorship boards and obscenity laws.
THIS IS PERFECTLY OBVIOUS IF YOU check the statute books of any state. There are far more laws on the books today than there were 30 years ago dealing with the problem of obscene literature. Yet there is more of the stuff around.
The problem is a moral one. Censorship boards can only soften the effects of bad public morality; they cannot correct it. So long as the public wants obscene literature, or will tolerate it, the flow of obscene material will continue.
William H. Mullins
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
TEST TODAY
1. WHAT KIND OF FLY DID I CATCH MY LIMIT OF FISH ON EAST JULY?
2. WHAT FUNNY REMARK DID MY DAUGHTER MAKE AT THE TABLE ?
3. WHAT YEAR DID MY BROTHER ESTABLISH HIS OWN BUSINESS ?
4. WHAT WAS MY MAJOR INTEREST IN HIGH SCHOOL ?
5. WHAT POSITION DID I PLAY ON THE FOOTBALL ROUND ?
6. WHAT DID 'PAT' SAY TO 'MIKE' ON THE
"REMEMBER KEI $\rightarrow$ I SAID THE TEST WOULD BE OVER CLASS DISCUSSION!"
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. St., New York 22. New York University. International Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms Extension 376, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Tom Turner Managing Editor
Linda Swander, Linda Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Schwarz, Barbara Howell Society Editor; Barbara Howell. Society Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield,
Assistant Editorial Editors.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Tom McCullough, Manager
Don Gergick, Advertising Manager;
Bonnie McCulough, Circulation Manager;
David Wiens, National Adver-
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Short Ones
FLINT HALL FREDDIE says that Kennedy is not going to be re-elected because, in another year or so, the women are going to get awfully tired of Jackie's hair-do!
From the Magazine Rack
McCarthyism Revised
(Editor's note: This is the second and last part of an article reprinted from the Oct. 23 New Republic on Robert G. Colodny. He was a visiting assistant professor of history at KU during the 1957-58 and 1958-59 terms. The first part was printed yesterday.)
Pitt's Chancellor Edward H. Litchfield also defended Dr. Colodny, saying that as required by law the University had attested to the professor's loyalty when it hired him and that it had "found nothing substantive to date which would cause us to doubt his loyalty now." But as the attacks mounted, Dr. Litchfield announced the appointment of a three-man fact-finding committee to inquire further into the matter.
If nothing else, the move had the effect of forestalling a state inquiry. When the Walsh resolution finally was brought up for a vote in the legislature on April 26, it was defeated 125 to 69 with 12 abstentions, despite the fact that Walsh claimed to have new information, including the transcript of a 1938 radio broadcast in Chicago on which Dr. Colodny allegedly admitted he was a Communist.
THE SUBJECT OF THE RADIO BROADCAST came up again in early June, when Dr. Colodny suddenly appeared in Washington as a subpoenaed witness before HUAC. The committee was investigating tax-exempt foundations. The professor once had applied to one of the suspect foundations for a research grant. He didn't get it, but HUAC called him in anyway. The hearing was supposed to be in executive session, but a committee member (reliably reported to be Rep. Gordon Scherer) leaked a purported summary of Dr. Colodny's testimony to the Press, which used it in a front-page story headlined: "Memory Has Failed, Colodny Tells Probe."
The substance of the Press' report was that Dr. Colodny's "memory had been affected by a head injury during the Spanish Civil War and he couldn't recall" the broadcast or labeling himself a Communist. The final make-over of the Press for June 1 dropped the reference to memory and merely reported that Colodny, while admitting membership and activity in a number of alleged fronts, had "declared under oath" that he was not and never had been a Communist Party member. But by that time, the initial story had been picked up by radio-TV and the damage had been done.
DR. COLODNY, IN THE NEXT MORNING'S Post-Gazette, said that while it was true he had suffered a head injury which affected his memory, he did recall the broadcast and had told the Committee so. He also said that he had told them the so-called transcript was actually an outline prepared before the broadcast; that it was inaccurate, and on the air he had described his political beliefs as "anti-fascist," not Communist. He told the Post-Gazette, too, that he had denied under oath before the Committee that he was or ever had been a Communist. Only two or three questions during his more than five hours of testimony, the professor added, had been related to tax-exempt foundations.
Meanwhile, the University's own investigating committee was going into the charges in great detail, though without fanfare. The report turned over to Cancellor Litchfield consisted of 150 pages of staff findings and several thousand pages of testimony.
THE CHANCELLOR'S FINDINGS were issued on June 12 in the form of a seven page open letter to Gwilym Price, Chairman of Pitt's Board of Trustees. In it, he absolved Dr. Colodny of charges of subversion and said the professor was "a loyal American . . . an exceptionally gifted scholar and inspiring teacher" who "exhibits exceptional independence of thought and action, according to his own conscience, in both his scholarly and societal pursuits. . . No action on the part of the University is warranted and none shall be forthcoming."
Dr. Litchfield also took the opportunity to lecture the community: "An American university is by definition a place of free inquiry. . . Its role in society postulates question, criticism, controversy, debate and doubt in all matters, social as well as scientific. . . The University embraces and supports the society in which it operates, but it knows no established doctrines, accepts no ordained patterns of behavior, acknowledges no truth as given...
"I WOULD RESPECTFULLY SUGGEST that those who publicly try by innuendo and condemn by inference are not different from those who purge without a hearing; that intemperance and absolutism are equally dangerous whether they arise within or without; that vigilance like Janus must look in both directions..."
The Press answered that. "It is a peculiar form of scholarship which focuses to such a large extent in the field of subversion... It is all very well for the pseudoliberals to hail the Litchfield report as a great victory for the spirit of inquiry and the defense of freedom... We find Dr. Litchfield's preachments on the subject less than reassuring."
Representative Walsh was quoted as decrying the report and objecting to the fact that the Chancellor had released only his own statement and not the entire record of the University investigating committee. "Tm just getting started on this," Walsh told the Press. He promised to push his fight through veterans groups around the state. In July, when the Veterans of Foreign Wars met in state convention at Pittsburgh, they passed a resolution calling on the state legislature to withhold all Pitt appropriations until the entire record of the Colodny hearing was made public.
BUT COLODNY IS STILL AT PITT. And when an editor of The National Review came to Pittsburgh several weeks ago and said he knew Colodny in Chicago Communist-front groups in the thirties, nobody got very excited.
UP Platform
(Editor's note: The following is the text of the University Party's platform for this fall's All Student Council elections.)
We, the Campus Committee of the University Party, dedicate this platform to the betterment of student government and the student body. With this platform the University Party seeks to broaden the base of student government, to enlarge its scope of interest and to create and maintain an atmosphere favorable to the free exchange of ideas and opinions. The University Party offers to each student the following:
In accordance with democratic principles, the University Party proposes that elections should be held under the direct primary system so that any candidate who so wishes may run for office. Because of a growing interest in debates between candidates the ones most versed in student government would win, not simply the most popular candidate.
Point I
rurthermore, the University Party believes that there is definite need for more time between the primary and general elections, so that candidates may orient themselves to campaigning outside their party.
Point II
In the interest of more democratic and efficient student government, the University Party contends that copies of the ASC Constitution must be distributed to all ASC members, to all political parties and to all interested students.
University Daily Kansan
Even though the Constitution has been published "in part" in the Student Directory, it does not include the recent amendments and new bills. We feel that this is unfair and definitely impedes the process of the student government. The University Party will do its utmost to distribute current copies of the constitution in total, in order to eliminate the confusion over recent bills and amendments.
Furthermore, the University Party believes that in order to facilitate committee work, chairmen and committee members should be officially notified of their appointments as early as possible. We propose that the student body vice president be responsible for the personal notification of committee members within a week after their appointment.
Point III
The University Party pledges to further encourage the nationally recognized People-to-People organization and will endeavor to insure that its potential is fulfilled by encouraging student interest. The University Party affirms the need for increased ASC financial support of this organization.
We of the University Party have always contended that the students should not limit themselves to campus problems. They should also be aware of the problems on the national and international scale. We realize that the ASC should channel its international efforts through People-to-People. We stand firmly behind committees and clubs, such as the International Club, which bring these problems to our attention. We support the creation of a current events committee to focus attention on national issues.
Point IV
Since in the past year an unfortunate display of hostility was exhibited by both the students and players at athletic events between KU and MU, we pledge our support to the possibility of a "Peace Pact" as now held between KU and K-State. We endorse the administrative stand that violence on the part of students from either Kansas University will result in their suspension from school, and believe that this position should be extended to cover our relations with Missouri.
Point V
The University Party proposes that the Associated Women Students should receive money from the University for those functions which are in the area of public relations or education, and that the AWS should continue to be supported by the ASC in all its other functions.
The University Party recognizes the prevalent traffic problem on the University Campus. Since the Chancellor has already proposed a plan to alleviate this problem within the next year, we will endeavor to see that the program selected will be the one which will best meet the needs of the student.
Point VI
Point VII
Because the present system of enrollment is both time-consuming and inconvenient, the University Party proposes to study various other methods of enrollment (including pre-enrollment) used on other campuses and to strive to find one which can be effectively used at this University in order to do away with much of the congestion at enrollment time. Furthermore, we propose to investigate methods of alleviating congestion in such matters as registration, fee payment, etc.
Point VIII
we reaffirm the need for a stop day as a day of rest between the final day of classes and the first day of final week each semester. We also wish to investigate the possibility of a "stop week" immediately preceding final week during which no term paper or tests would be due or given.
Eleven semi-finalists were chosen by Lawrence businessmen and professors from the original 21 Homecoming Queen contestants. They will be interviewed again this Thursday evening when the queen and her two attendants will be chosen.
11 Coeds Vie For Queen
The semi-finalists are: Sharon Stark, Leawood sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega; Sue Ann Weston, Overland Park senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, Chi Omega; Janet Meln忠, Chapman senior, Delta Gamma; Mary Shepeard, Clay Center junior, Gamma Phi Beta; and Marsha Wertzberger, Kansas City, Mo., senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Leila Val Larson, Merriam freshman, Hodder Hall; Suzie Fisher, Prairie Village sophomore, Lewis Hall; Lawla Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior, Lewis Hall; Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior, Lewis Hall; and Mary Nan Seamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior, Delta Delta Delta.
(Continued from page 1)
Opinion Voiced-
ture) will put the committee on the spot by asking questions about the University."
Ted Kennedy, mayor of Lawrence, said he did not see how the committee could "do any harm."
"It would serve as another avenue of communications to those making legislative decisions," he said. "I think anyone in politics would pay some attention to a group of this sort."
White House Trees
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The late President Theodore Roosevelt, an avid conversationalist, thought the cutting of evergreens for Christmas was a wasteful practice and forbade their use in the White House. He later was assured by Gifford Finchot, his adviser on conservation measures, that the supervised and proper harvesting of Christmas trees was good for the forests. Since then the White House has had a Christmas tree.
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
BRAKE SERVICE
WHEEL BALANCING
FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY
Tuesday, October 31, 1961
PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP
229 Elm
VI 3-2250
Young Democrats Have Position Open
Candidates for the vacant office of vice president of the Young Democrats at KU must announce their candidacy by tomorrow.
The post, vacated by Verne Gauby, third year law student, Grand Island, Neb., who is now president of the group, is open to members of the Young Democrats who submit reports of their candidacy to the Kansan by 11 a.m. tomorrow.
Elections for the office will be held Nov. 14 at a Young Democrats meeting. Present at the meeting will be George Hart, former Democratic treasurer for the state of Kansas and declared candidate for governor.
There is one certain means by which I can be sure never to see my country's ruin: I will die in the last ditch. —William III, Prince of Orange
Page-Creighton
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-7694
Motor Tune-ups
Lubrication $1.00
All Major Brands
of Oil
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass:
6:30 a.m. St.
John's Church, 12th & Kentucky.
New Foreign Students: Seminar on Life in the U.S. 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. You are not excused from this class. Please be in attendance if not in class.
Modern Book Review Forum: 4 p.m.
Music Room, Kansas University. Stewart Levine reviewing "Tropic of Cancer" by Henry Miller.
WEDNESDAY
—Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke
THURSDAY
KU Amateur Radio Club, 7:30 p.m., 201 E.E. Labs. Education of officers.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
El Atenzo e a复习re la as cuatro de la tarde el miércoles, el primero de noviembre, en la sala once de Fraser Hall. El programa sera un discurso per la semana Martina de Cid sobres literatura precolombiana. Refrescos. Todos invitados.
University Women's Club. 7:30 p.m.
Watkins Room, Kansas Union.
GLASS
AUTO GLASS
TABLE TOPS
Sudden Service
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
Photography
912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan.
VI 2-2300
by
Studio de Porta
---
Sororities & Fraternities
Contact us for your House Photography
- Portraits
- Application
Creative
Student Handbook — Being aware of the need for consolidation of the numerous publications concerning activities, organizations, and regulations, VOX supports the plan for a student handbook.
---
Color or Black & White
Vox Platform
Desiring to preserve and enhance the values of student government to the benefit of the student and University alike;
reaffirming the principles that have already been advocated by farseeing leaders in student government;
SERVICES
Vox Populi Affirms the principles set forth below as essential to the welfare of the student and all those engaged in University activities.
Parking — VOX proposes that the ASC investigate the possibility of eliminating fees for scholarship hall and residence hall parking lots
Study Facilities — Certain studies necessitate the use and constant availability of some University buildings. VOX believes that these buildings must remain open for studying 24 hours a day if the University is to fulfill its responsibility to the student and VOX will work toward that end.
Pre-enrollment — Realizing the need for improved enrollment procedures VOX proposes the adoption of a pre-enrollment plan.
Extended Bus Service — Interested in the welfare of undergraduate women, VOX proposes night bus service to women's residence areas.
PROGRESS IN STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Big-8 Student Government Association — Vox proposes that KU initiate the reactivation of the Big-8 Student Government Association to provide for increased co-operation and exchange of ideas and viewpoints among Big-8 Schools.
People-to-People - To further the People-to-People program, which VOX has supported and will continue to support. VOX advocates an increased appropriation for the People - to - People Committee.
STUDENT ISSUES
Seating Bill — VOX calls for a close audit of receipts and expenditures of the student seating plan to determine whether a reduction in the cost of student season ticket is practical.
Civil Rights - We continue our faithful support of the Human Relations Commission of Lawrence, the ASC, and the administration in their investigation and action on discriminatory practices which the KU student might encounter.
DO YOU HAVE THE CORRECT TIME?
. if not, better stop by Parson's Jewelry today. We specialize in the correct time. Whether it be watch repair or a new watch, Parson's is the place to go . Now!
725 Mass.
PARSON'S JEWELRY STORE
VI 3-4731
"Official Sante Fe Time Inspector"
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 31, 1961
FALL BOO
Starts Wednesday, Nove
ZEN FOR THE WEST, by Sohaku Ogata. A Japanese monk and teacher explains simply and beautifully the doctrines and experiences of Zen Buddhism that have so profoundly influenced such Westerners as Salinger, Kerouac, and Erich Fromm. Pub.at $3.75. - - Sale $1.49
★★
PICASSO: THE EARLY YEARS. Preface by Jean Cocteau Intro. by J. Padrta. Reproductions of 37 early works by the world's greatest living painter, 29 of them in full color, highlighting his development between 1905 and 1922. Nowhere has the birth and growth of Cubism been more precisely illustrated than in this book, and the collection upon which it is based has never been published before. $ \times10^{1 / 2} $ " , cloth. Pub. at $ 7.95. Sale $ 3.98
BOOK BARGAINS
Unprecedented offering of publishers' brand-new editions, including overstocks of recent best-sellers! Prices slashed to new lows on scores of wanted titles! Whether you read for pleasure or study you'll find many entertaining and useful books to choose from --and at these prices you can buy two, three, four or more books for what you usually pay for one. These outstanding bargains will not last long and quantities are limited.
THE BOOK OF SPORTS CARS, by Sherwin. Authoritative illustrated years of dual purpose sports mot outstanding cars, drivers, designer brought motor sport to its pre marizes the outstanding features achievements in race, rally or hc citing photographs tell the story 160 makes from a dozen countrie gift volume. Pub. at $15.00. -----
★★
PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS OF B. M. Wedge, M.D. An important versity Mental Hygiene staff of the fear of homosexuality, group ps ment of idiosyncratic adaptation in at $6.50.
★★
THE POETRY OF JOHN DONNE study of the 17th century poet ating his meaning for our own ti his most important and rewarding technical as well as philosophic $3.50.
★ ★ ★
JAMES JOYCE'S EARLY YEA KEEPER, by Stanislaus Joyce. Ed. T. S. Eliot. A vivid, scrupulously c the great writer through his twen the factual background behind A Dubliners, and Ulysses plus much unpublished material. Pub. at $5.0
KANSAS UNION
Tuesday, October 31, 1961 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
OK SALE
November 1-8:00 a.m.
LTS CARS, by C. L. Markmann & M.
we illustrated history of the past sixty
se sports motoring, presenting the
vers, designers and courses that have
t to its present popularity. Sum-
ming features of each marque and its
e, rally or hill-climb. Over 700 exell the story of the development of
ozen countries. Handsome $15.00. Sale $5.88
★★
OBLEMS OF COLLEGE MEN, ed. by an important survey by the Yale Uniene staff of the borderline student,ity, group psychotherapy, and treat adaptation in college students. Pub. Sale $1
★ ★ ★
JHN DONNE, by D. Louthan. A new century poet and his work, re-evaluor our own times. Contains some of and rewarding verse and clarifies his philosophical concepts. Pub. at Sale $1.49
★ ★ ★
EARLY YEARS: MY BROTHER'Slus Joyce. Ed. by R. Ellmann. Pref. by
crumpulously candid book that carries
ough his twenty-second year. Here is
und behind A Portrait of the Artist,
uses plus much new uncollected and
I. Pub. at $5.00. ---- Sale $1.98
LEONARDO DA VINCI: ON THE HUMAN BODY: The Anatomical, Physiological and Embryological Drawings of Leonardo da Vinci. With translations, emendations and a biographical introduction by Charles D. O'Malley and J. Saunders. Epitomized in more than 1,200 drawings from the Royal Library at Windsor. 9x12 inches, 506 pp., winner of graphic arts awards. Pub. at $25.00.
Sale $12.50
★ ★ ★
MAN, TIME & FOSSILS, by Ruth Moore. An absorbing encyclopedic account of the adventures and discoveries of the great biologists and anthropologists - from Darwin and Mendel to the newest theories of man's evolution based on radioactive Carbon-14. Illustrated with photographs and line drawings. Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.98
Tremendous Values SAVINGS from 50% to 70%
All Subjects! Hundreds of Bargains!
N BOOK STORE
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 31, 1961
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
44
SORRY, MR. JACKSON—Curtis McClinton is shown as he made his way through the Oklahoma State defense Saturday for an 18-yard touchdown gallop. O-State's Tommy Jackson (44) misses the elusive Jayhawker back. Other players are Leland Slack (69), Rusty Kraybill (87), Gary Cutsinger (79), and KU's Larry Lousch (74).
Leonard's Standard Service
9th and Indiana
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
Fraternity Jewelry
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
FANNIE HURST'S most compassionate romantic drama
A ROSS HUNTER-CARROLLTON PRODUCTION
SUSAN HAYWARD
JOHN GAVIN
"Back Street"
IN EASTMAN COLOR
VERA MILES CHARLES DRAKE · VIRGINIA GREY · REGINAID GARDINER
A Universal-International Release
NOW!
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Adm. 35c-85c
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THEATRE ... Towson Theatre V600 23-549
HURRY! ENDS WEDNESDAY!
WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!"
-TIME
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SEATS NOW AVAILABLE FOR ALL PERFORMANCES
NOW SHOWING!
Matinee $1.00
Matinee $1.00
Evenings $1.25
Shows at 2 p.m. & 7:30
Evenings $1.25
Kiddies 50c Anytime
Southeastern Conference powers besides Mississippi were: Alabama in the No. 4 spot; Georgia Tech in No. 6 and Louisiana State in No. 7.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Four teams from the Big Ten and Southeastern Conferences dominated the top 10 in the United Press International college football ratings today with Michigan State and Mississippi 1-2 for the second week in a row.
VARSITY
DECEMBER 2019
Campbell University
In between Michigan State and Minnesota were the Big Ten's Ohio State in fifth place and Iowa in ninth.
The only "outside" teams in this week's top 10 were third-ranked Texas and eighth-ranked Colorado.
Minnesota moved into the select group in the No. 10 spot following its 23-20 victory over Michigan. Notre Dame, ninth last week, dropped all the way to 20th after being upset by Northwestern.
Michigan State Remains Top KU Bowlers In National Poll:KU 18th Face Huskers
Missouri is ranked eleventh and
The United Press International college football ratings (with first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses):
Kansas is tied with UCLA in eighteenth.
Points
Team
3. Texas (5) (6-0)
7 D.m.
Team Points
1 Michigan State (29) (5 0) 283
Tuesday, Oct. 31
Alabama (2) (0-0) 251
5. Ohio State (4-0-1) 201
Free Admission & Cokes
6. Ohio State (4-0-1)
6. Georgia Tech (5-1) 136
Forum Room Student Union
7. Louisiana State 8. Colorado (5.0)
9. Iowa (4-1)
10. Minnesota (4-1)
Q
Quarterback Club Meeting
Exciting films of the KU-Okla. State game
second 10 teams—11, Missouri, 39
12. Purdue, 18; 13. Northwestern, 11.
14. Wyoming, 9; 15. Auburn, 8; 16.
Utah State, 7; 17. Michigan, 6; 18
(tie) Kansas and UCLA, 3 each; 20
Notre Dame 2.
Others-Penn State and Duke, each.
Narrated by a top player.
JACK ZINN
for
Freshman President
The University of Kansas bowling team makes its debut Saturday at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln.
Coach Bascom Fearing's squad will battle the Cornhusker kegglers after the KU-NU football game.
On the basis of averages, the top
Hawk keglers will make the trump
Ted Sexton's 199-206-230—635 was the best effort last week in intramural bowling at the Jay Bowl.
Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior,
rolled a high game of 216 en route
to a 592 series. Kartsonis bowls for
the Templin team in the Jay League.
Sexton, third year law student from Leavenworth, bowls for Jim Beam's Sleepers in the Cardinal League.
There can be prayers without words just as well as songs. I suppose.-George Louis Palmella Busson Du Maurier
Diamonds Gifts Jewelry
DANIELS JEWELRY
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
Birds on a branch
BIRD TV - RADIO
VI 3-8855
HOME RADIO
908 Mass.
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
SPOOKS... THEY'RE ALL COMIN'!
TO THE
SPOOK
SUMMIT MEETING
at our
HALLOWEEN
MIDNITE SHOW
Coming out of
THE SHADOWS
and on to our
GIANT SCREEN
You'll See...
It's "FRIGHT"
NITE!
n things are going
to happen here!
The Curse of the
WEREWOLF
COLOR
CLUFFORD J. LARS - OLUVER BELLO - YVORNE ROMAIN - CATHERINE JEELER
A HAMMER FILM PRODUCTION - A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL RELEASE
SHOCKING SUSPENSE
“THE SHADOW
OF THE CAT”
THERES A BONUS... If You're Still Here When The 'MEETIN' Ends!
TUESDAY! OCT.
31
VARSITY
AT 11 P.M.
ALL SEATS 85c
TAN ing Coml
WILI
pin
KAP
Jibra
VI 3
BEV ice close Ice 0350
13.
CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST
TAN RAINCOAT — Undergraduate read-
comb. VI 3-5944. Reward. 11-2
Comb. VI 3-5944. Reward. 11-2
Page 7
HELP WANTED
WILL THE MAN who found the Theta pin please call again. Phone no. was ___ 10-31
KAPPA KEY Sorority pin lost between
Kappa House. Reward — 11-1
V3-5600
WANTED—GIRL to share nice apartment. Call Virey, VI 2-3407. 11-6
MISCELLANEOUS
NEW! NEW! NEW! If you have ever sold anything in your life, look into this brand new item which everyone needs. Wonderful opportunity for part-time people. Age no barrier. For interviews call VI 2-0059. 11-6
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies.
plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI .
0350
LADIES AID of the EUB. Church is having homemade chicken & noodle dinner. Hot biscuits & pie included. $1.00.
5:30 to 7, Wed., Nov. 1. 11-1
FOR SALE
SMALL TIRE SALE. Volkswagen & small import sizes all at 3% discount. Free installation, 2 year road hazard warranty. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 11-13
'54 CHIEV 4 DOOR. Door, good tires.
Cali VI T-93285, Cali VI T-93285, 11-6
days, evenings I 3-9285
1950 Blue Mercury, Fordor. White sidewall tires, heater, $60. Call $9. 2-1235 after 5 p.m. or see Charles Bondurant at Apt. 9, Bldg. 3. Stouffer Apts. 11-1
SACRIFICE—Must sell second car. Old Car Call 3-4291. Running condition $4, $8 Call 3-4291.
ATTENTION SKATERS — Double action
stylist sure-grip professional roller skates.
Size 11½—$45. Call VI 3-4385 week days.
11-1
MOTORCYCLE, 58 BSA, 650 CC, excel-
lent cond. Call Mike Guth, VI 3-7212.
1958 - 88 Olds, in excellent condition.
Power steering and brakes, air conditioned, 4 new tires, 4 doors. Perfect interior. 1 owner. VI 3-5668. 11-1
GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS.
New & used guns & ammo. Special this week: 45 ACP revolver. At 1304 Tenn.
VI 3-7001. 11-1
HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Coltus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
TYPEWRITER WITH GERMAN CHAR-
ACTERS and accents, used heavy duty
Adler portable in top condition,
Laurence Typewriter, 735 Mass.
VI 3-1644
10-27
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals, at Laurence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI. If Laurence
GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
$3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI
3-5778. tf
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf
NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding lettering to graphics at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today.
BUSINESS SERVICES
I WOULD LIKE IO DO babysitting in my house, afternoons and evenings. Expired mother. References. Call VI 3-9159. 11-6
EX-TEACHER IN GERMANY will tutor German students. Come to 1121 Rhode Island, upstairs, anytime. 11-6
TUTOR FOR GERMAN Austrian gradu-
ation 1339 Ohio or higher V-1 5471-7, 6-11 p.m.
1340 Ohio or higher V-1 5471-7, 6-11 p.m.
Complete
TRAVEL SERVICE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. — VI 3-0152
OIL PORTRAITS painted. Lasting gift to loved ones. Perfect Christmas gift. $35 and up. Call VI 3-8207, ask for Robert.
LATERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-515,
or 921 Miss.
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-5947. 1015 Lawrence Ave. & 1021l Mass. tf
Dixie Carmel Shop
For Tops in
Taffy Apples—Popcorn Assorted Chocolates Carmel Corn—Mixed Nuts
also Stuffed Toys
1033 Mass. VI 3-6311
U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, dressers, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center. Our Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf
EXCELENT SETUP FOR STUDENT with small capital. $1800 total to buy low-volume of business that requires only 4 hours a week to operate. VI 3-9181. 11-1
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange 735 Mass., V.
3-3644. t
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
warder 101-6254. Call Ola Smith
9391% 9392%. Call MiI 3-5263.
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. tft
U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-Phone VI 3-2921. Your self-service — open weeks' day 8 to 6:30 p.m. tf
FOR RENT
SPACIOUS 4 room duplex. Private bath, basement, garage. $60 a month. Call Holmes, Peck & Brown Realtors. VI 3-0220, VI 3-3788, VI 3-0717. 11-2
ROOMS FOR RENT for men. Linens fur-
stall. Call VI 2-3322 or see at 111- 11- 3
do Dr.
Wednesday Nov.1,1961
S.U.A. Ping Pong Tourney
Big 8 Room Kansas Union
6:30 p.m.
Register in Union
Trophies and Refreshments
Tuesday, October 31, 1961 University Daily Kansan
10 x 35 ft. trailer. Call VI 3-5193. W. D.
Lansdown. 11-2
FURNISHED apt; large living room,
bedroom, kitchen, bathroom,
screen porch, garage. First floor, modern
burn, and carpeting. Very convenient to
workday. Monthly appointment call VI 3-6696. 11-1
SLEEPING ROOM for male students. Close to campus. Call VI 2-1372. After 4 pm. call VI 3-4890. Centrally located. 11-1
2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely
turn. Auto. washer-dryer, air cond._
air con. ward. Vard.
$100 month, 221 Mountview Dr. Phone
I 3-5882 after 5 for appt.
Vacancy available for 2 men in com-
mission for Rochelle Mall. Rc Cali
3-9635 for appointment; if
TYPING
LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a st
side, utilities paid, $50. Cali V 3-6294.
TYPING: Accurate, neat typing by ex-
ported data to p.m. CT Vol VI 3-1050 i-1
ports after 5 p.m. CT Vol VI 3-1050 i-
ports after 5 p.m. CT Vol VI 3-1050 i-1
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil, VI 3-8379.
Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable offer. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. V1 2-1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0588 1031 Miss. tf
TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf
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.
on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell,
1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 tf
FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, checks and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression by typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertation letters. Prompt service, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI T-37485
HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING,
punctuation & grammar? Former Eng.
great teacher. Reqs math &
reports accurately. Standard rates. See
Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. **tf**
FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excursion, Mission, Service, S017 B Machine, Mission, Heel 2-7718 Eves or Sat. RA 2-2186
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI A-1268. Mrs. Lt.
Gebhach.
TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will use type these, term papers,
papers and resumes. Russell rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8688. tt
EXPERT TYPIST Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf
PATRONIZE YOUR
- ADVERTISERS
Airlines Say "No" To Student Discounts
Effective November 19th,
Effective November 19th the nation's airlines have served notice to discontinue the "youth" fare discounts.
Complaining of too costly administration and unworkable rules; the domestic air carriers have filed suspension notices with CAB to cancel the promotional, discounted student fares which were on a "no reservation" basis.
This means for students planning to fly home on Thanksgiving and Christmas immediate reservations are necessary if students are to have a chance for a seat.
Reservations for flights during the holiday vacations are already nearly fully booked with long wait-lists existing for some of the more popular schedules.
The staff of Maupintour travel agency in Lawrence will do all possible to secure hard-to-get holiday flight reservations for students and faculty. Gene Drake, Manager of Maupintour, says, "We urge KU students and the faculty to make flight reservations immediately if they are going to have a fighting chance for convenient flights home during Thanksgiving and Christmas. The situation is really critical."
Definite advance reservation confirmations and possession of full-fare tickets will be necessary for college students similarly as for any other travelers planning to fly home for the holidays.
For AIRLINE RESERVATIONS and TICKETS,
Phone or see:
MAUPINTOUR Travel Agency
Phone VIking 3-1211 Now at
THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
711 West 23rd Street
"Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, October 31, 196
Around the Campus Vandals Damage Four Members Kappa Sigma House Added to Faculty
Kappa Sigma fraternity reported their house was vandalized Saturday evening.
Don Shearer, Kansas City, Mo.
junior, said he came home about
midnight and found cut flowers
scattered on the floor, two brass
lamp shades bent, one lamp shade
torn apart and seven trophies broke.
The damage estimate by the
fraternity is $110. The campus police are now investigating the vandalism.
Saturday night was the Kappa Sigma Red Dog party and no one was in the house at the time of the vandalism.
Homecoming Ball Tickets on Sale
Ralph Marterie and his 15-piece band will provide the music at this year's Homecoming Dance, Nov. 11 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The theme of the dance will be "Club Carnation."
Closing hours for women have been extended to 1:30 a.m. The dance will last from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The Homecoming Queen will be presented during the intermission.
Tickets for the dance costing $2.50 per couple are on sale at the Information Desk of the Kansas Union. They will be on sale Nov. 6 at the Information Booth in front of Flint Hall. Tickets will also be sold at the door the night of the dance.
Private rooms will be available for groups. Reservations must be made at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union, Thursday, from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
In addition to the Marterie orchestra, George Wynn and his 14-piece band will be playing throughout the evening in the cafeteria to eliminate congestion in the ballroom.
Members of Geology Faculty to Convention
Six staff members and five technical assistants from the geology department will attend the annual geologist's convention Nov. 1-4 in Cincinnati, Ohio.
The convention is the annual meeting of six geological societies and is sponsored under the general auspices of the Geological Society of America. Other organizations which will attend the convention are: Paleontology Society of America, Society of Economic Geologists, Mineralogical Society of America, Geochemical Society of America, and National Association of Geology Teachers.
Four new faculty members will have joined the sociology and anthropology department this semester.
They are: Associate Professor William N. Stephens, Associate Professor Norman C. Jacobs, Mr. Felix Moos and Mr. Ray D. Zinser.
Prof. Stephens currently holds a position as research sociologist at the KU Bureau of Child Development. He received his education degree at Harvard University.
Mr. Moos, a Fulbright lecturer and research fellow at the University of Tokyo in 1958-60, has joined the department as a lecturer in the East Asian Area Studies program.
Mr. Zinser is a visiting lecturer in sociology and is teaching courses in elements of sociology and juvenile delinquency. He is currently working on his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.
Prof. Jacobs, who has been associated with the International Cooperation Administration in Iran, will join the department as a staff member of the East Asian Studies group.
Theatre Showcase For New Talent
A farm system for KU theater has begun in the Experimental Theatre.
Experimental Theatre Showcase, an innovation by the Experimental Theatre, will offer students, faculty and Lawrence townpeople who do not participate in major KU productions a chance to act and be seen.
In the audience KU's theater directors will attentively watch the theater unknowns similar to sports scouts.
The programs will consist of oral readings, one act scenes and films made by students or professional actors. A series of films taken by the KU television lab will be shown.
AWS High School Leadership Day Will Be Held Here Nov.4
Directed by Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech, KU students will do scenes from August Strindberg's "Miss Julie," Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew," William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life," and George Axelrad's "The Seven Year Itch."
Reservists Will Hear Geologist
"Detection of Nuclear Explosions" will be discussed by James A. People, associate professor of geology, at the meeting of the Naval Reserve Research Company at 7:30 tonight in room 105 of the Military Science building.
The annual High School Leadership Day, sponsored by Associated Women Students will be conducted Saturday. AWS invites outstanding high school senior girls to KU for a day of workshops and discussions on college life, academic programs, and opportunities on the campus.
The program for Saturday is:
The program begins Friday with a fashion show in Bailey Hall at 8 p.m. That night, pajama parties at Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin will conclude the evening.
Janice Agin, Kansas City junior, leadership day director, said that invitations are sent to every Kansas high school. The principal and the student council pick the girls who are to attend. About 100 girls are expected this year.
REGISTRATION, 9:00 a.m. in the south lounge of the Kansas Union; 9:30. James Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, will offer the welcoming address; 10:30. faculty discussion groups; 11:45.
ONE HUNDRED freshman women are picked by the Steering Committee of AWS to act as hostesses. The girls petitioned for this job last week.
lunch in Corbin North dining room
At 1:30 in the afternoon, the girls will listen to a panel discussion on University life. Dean of Women Emily Taylor will moderate. Representatives of AWS, the sophomore, junior, and senior classes, and Cwens, sophomore honorary, will be panelists. An introduction to KU activities will begin at 2:45 p.m. KU-Y, Student Union Activities, People-to-People, All Student Council, and the Froshawks will be introduced. At 3:30, a film tour of the campus is planned, followed by informal tours of sororities, scholarship halls, the Natural History Museum, and other places of interest. The leadership day will conclude at 4:30 p.m.
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Drivers on Jayhawk Boulevard tonight should drive carefully and watch out for goblins. Goblin juice is messy and is bad for the tires and undercoating of cars, as well.
By Scott Payne
Happy Halloween
THEY WILL BE THERE, there is no doubt about that. The whole supernatural world has been very bold this semester. Yesterday, for example, a witch appeared right in front of the Information Booth.
She even had press coverage. She spoke some high-pitched gibberish into a microphone held by a clean-cut young man who was wavering in horror.
Goblins, Witches on Prowl
A photographer snapped a picture of her and fainted when she grim-aced.
THEN SHE FLITTED, like some evil light, right toward the campus policeman who was directing traffic. The cop was ready, though. He flashed a cross at the witch and she took a pat fall right in the middle of the intersection. It was just like in the movies.
The cop turned with magnificent unconcern and continued directing traffic. The witch headed for the Kansas Union.
She went into the Hawk's Nest for lunch where she was accepted with—apathy, what else?
IT IS TOO BAD THE University does not have extended bus service for women. Women had better not plan to study at the library tonight (chuckle).
Later in the day she adjourned to the Trail Room and was seen there last night about 9 o'clock trying to get someone to dance with her. That is the last that has been seen of her.
Now, what is going to happen tonight? Because of the unfavorable reception KU students gave to that witch we can expect recriminations.
The only suggestion for safety we can offer is for students to carry crosses or wolfbane to ward off these buddies of Beelzebub and Mephistopheles.
YAF to Discuss Program for Year
The Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) will hold a second organizational meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
Pat Allen, Lawrence first year law student and temporary chairman of the KU chapter of YAF, said the meeting would be a discussion of the organization and possible program for the year.
He added that membership applications would again be available.
Prof. Worth Awarded Grant
George J. Worth, assistant professor of English and assistant chairman of the department at the University of Kansas, has been awarded a grant by the American Philosophical Society to support his research while he is on sabbatical leave next semester.
Prof. Worth is writing a biographical and critical study of the nineteenth century British author James Hannay and will leave Lawrence in February to continue his investigations in London and Barcelona.
The club will present its band at a party. Club members are to meet in the Union building.
The newly-formed Latin-American Club will hold its first social function Saturday at 8 p.m.
New Club to Hold Party
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P-T-P Sets Up Kickoff National Meet Nov.11
KU's pilot People - to - People program took another step closer to reaching a national scale Sunday with the presentation of the program to representatives of the other seven "Big Eight" schools.
The delegates met at KU for a one-day conference in preparation for the National People-to-People kickoff Nov. 11 in Kansas City.
HANDBOOKS with suggestions on how to set up similar programs on their own campuses were given the representatives.
At a breakfast meeting the chairmen of the six People-to-People committees explained what they have done and what the committee purposes are.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe addressed the group on behalf of the KU administration. He said:
"THE ADMINISTRATION wants to give this student effort its warm cooperation and understandin $ \alpha $ .
"If anything is going to be accomplished, however, it must be done on a cooperative basis," he added.
Chancellor Wescoe explained,
"Nothing lasting can be done on the part of the student body without the complete cooperation of the administration."
He said that individuals and small groups did a tremendous job in the past, but what is important about People-to-People is that it requires the interest of the entire student body.
SPEAKING FOR THE KU students, Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student body president, said:
"We feel that American students are aware of international problems.
With the People-to-People program we can show the people of this country that the students here in the heart of the conservative belt can and do want to help with the foreign student problem."
Following the morning session the students traveled to Kansas City to hear an address by Joyce C. Hall, president of Hallmark Foundation and president or the National People-to-People program.
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